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First Across the Continent
A concise story of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
By Noah Brooks
Illustrated. $1.50 net

“For any one who has an interest in travel, in adventure, and in the hardihood of the pioneer this is a great story.”—Baltimore Herald.

“Probably no incident in the Winning of the West exceeds or even equals in romantic interest that pioneer journey across the continent by Lewis and Clark.”—The Churchman.

“It is concise, comprehensive, and readable, and will be useful to young and old alike. The book is illustrated by reproductions of drawings from Catlin, Schoolcraft, and other early observers. Ernest Thompson Seton contributes four animal drawings.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

“More readable than a romance, full of hair-breadth escapes and imminent perils from savage man and beast, by storm and flood, by sickness and cold and starvation.”—Chicago Post.


CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS

The Boy’s King Arthur
Being Sir Thomas Mallory’s History of King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table
Edited by Sidney Lanier
Illustrated. $2.00

“Unconsciously as he reads of the brave deeds, the boy’s heart is thrilled and his higher nature throbs with knightly longings.”—Philadelphia Times.

The Boy’s Percy
Edited by Sidney Lanier
Illustrated. $2.00

“He who walks in the way these following ballads point will be manful in necessary fight, fair in trade, loyal in love, tender in the household, plain in speech, simple in behavior, and honest in all things.”

From Mr. Lanier’s Introduction.
The Boy’s Froissart
Being Sir John Froissart’s Chronicles of Adventure, Battle, and Custom in England, France, Spain, etc.
Edited by Sidney Lanier
Illustrated. $2.00

“It is quite the beau ideal of a book for a present to an intelligent boy or girl.”—Baltimore Gazette.

The Knightly Legends of
Wales
Or the Boy’s Mabinogion
Edited by Sidney Lanier
Illustrated. $2.00

“Amid all the strange and fanciful scenery of these stories, character and the ideals of character remain at the simplest and purest.”—The Independent.


CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS

The Story of Rustem
And Other Persian Hero Tales from Firdusi
By Elizabeth D. Renninger
Illustrated by J. L. S. Williams
$1.50 net

The great hero stories of Persia retold from the Shah Naameh and beautifully illustrated. What Homer was to Greece and Virgil to Rome, Firdusi was to Persia, and there are no more thrilling stories of fighting and adventure than those of Rustem, the champion of the Heroic Age of Persia, quite different as they are from the tales of every other nation. Rustem was as brave and chivalrous as any of King Arthur’s knights and had just as many adventures and trials, and the story of his heroism and knightly courtesy, coupled with all the mysticism and splendor of the East, make this book a fascinating one. The book has a striking cover of Persian design.


CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS

The Boy’s Catlin
My Life Among the Indians
By George Catlin
Edited and arranged for boys, with Biographical Introduction, by Mary Gay Humphreys
With 16 illustrations front Catlin’s drawings
$1.50 net

The most interesting parts of Catlin’s famous book about the North American Indians and their history and habits and customs in war, peace, and hunting, arranged for boys and superbly illustrated from reproductions of the author’s drawings. George Catlin, the Indian painter, lived among the Indians and studied them at close range, and his story of the dangers and hardships of the war-path, the hunting and trapping, and life in the villages when they were at peace with their neighbors, and the illustrations cannot fail to interest the American boy who is fond of healthy out-door sports and adventures. The book is edited and arranged for boys by Mary Gay Humphreys.


CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS

Transcriber’s Note

The punctuation of the index, especially the use of semi-colons and commas, seemed inconsistent, and has been regularized to use commas to separate page references.

Spelling, in quotations from original documents, has been left as printed, due to the idiosyncratic nature of the orthography of the various times. Occasionally, odd (to the modern eye) phrases are seemingly misquoted. Our 'as soon as' is most frequently spelled, in Hakluyt, 'assoone as', and where another variant (e.g., 'assoonas' on p. 319) appears, the typical spelling is provided.

Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the original.

60.1 As[ ]soone therefore as we came to the Court Inserted.
64.20 [n/m]ay not of any other of our subjects be frequented Replaced.
97.3 one of them called “The Dominus [R/V]obiscum.” Replaced.
129.26 carried cargoes of Engp[il/li]sh merchandise Transposed.
164.6 followed at a safe di[ts/st]ance Transposed.
171.12 began an ass[ua/ua]lt with a flight of arrows Transposed.
217.30 for the performances of the premisses;[”] Added.
243.3 He headed one c[a/o]mpany Replaced.
307.10 A[t] length, after “great torment of weather and perill of drowning,” Inserted.
319.24 but [assoonas/assoone as] she espied Replaced.
396.11 “Menatonon,” [I]ndian king, Restored.
400.30 “Second Colony of Virginia,[”] Added.