Childhoods Favorites and Fairy Stories

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Favorites and Fairy Stories, by
Various

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Title: Childhood's Favorites and Fairy Stories The Young Folks
Treasury, Volume 1
Author: Various
Editor: Hamilton Wright Mabie, Edward Everett Hale, and William
Byron Forbush
Release Date: December 2, 2006 [EBook #19993]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
CHILDHOOD'S FAVORITES ***

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek and the Online
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CHILDHOOD'S FAVORITES
AND FAIRY STORIES
HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
WILLIAM BYRON FORBUSH
Editors
JENNIE ELLIS BURDICK
Assistant Editor
Volume One [Illustration: The Young Folks Treasury]
NEW YORK
THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY
INCORPORATED
1927
COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY INC.
COPYRIGHT, 1909, 1917, BY THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY INC.
EDITORS
HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE, L.H.D., LL.D. EDWARD EVERETT
HALE, D.D., LL.D. WILLIAM BYRON FORBUSH, Ph.D., Litt.D.
ASSISTANT EDITOR
JENNIE ELLIS BURDICK
Partial List of Authors and Editors Represented in The Young Folks

Treasury by Selections from Their Writings:
WOODROW WILSON, Twenty-eighth President of the United States.
THEODORE ROOSEVELT, Twenty-sixth President of the United
States. HENRY VAN DYKE, poet, essayist, and diplomatist. LYMAN
ABBOTT, editor of "The Outlook." RUDYARD KIPLING, poet and
story-teller. GENERAL SIR R. S. BADEN-POWELL, founder of the
Boy Scouts. BECKLES WILLSON, author of "The Romance of
Canada." IDA PRENTICE WHITCOMB, author of "Young People's
Story of Art." ELLEN VELVIN, writer of animal stories. MARY
MACGREGOR, author of "King Arthur's Knights," etc. RALPH
HENRY BARBOUR, author of boys' stories. T. GILBERT PEARSON,
executive secretary, National Association of Audubon Societies.
JOSEPH JACOBS, authority upon folklore. THEODORE WOOD,
writer on natural history. ERNEST THOMPSON SETON, writer of
stories about natural history and founder of the Woodcraft League.
AMY STEEDMAN, writer on biography. EVERETT T. TOMLINSON,
author of boys' stories. RALPH D. PAINE, author of boys' stories. A.
FREDERICK COLLINS, author of boys' books. DON C. BLISS,
educator. BLISS CARMAN, poet and essayist. SIR JAMES
MATTHEW BARRIE, novelist. WILLIAM CANTON, story-teller.
HERMANN HAGEDORN, poet. ELBRIDGE S. BROOKS, writer of
boys' stories. ALFRED G. GARDINER, editor of "The London News."
FRANKLIN K. LANE, United States Secretary of the Interior. JOEL
CHANDLER HARRIS, creator of "Uncle Remus." ERNEST
INGERSOLL, naturalist. WILLIAM L. FINLEY, State biologist,
Oregon. CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS, writer of animal stories. E.
NESBIT, novelist and poet. ARCHIBALD WILLIAMS, author of
"How It Is Done," etc. IRA REMSEN, former president of Johns
Hopkins University. GIFFORD PINCHOT, professor of forestry, Yale
University. GUSTAVE KOBBÉ, writer of biographies. JACOB A.
RIIS, philanthropist and author. EMILY HUNTINGTON MILLER,
story-writer and poet. JOHN LANG, writer of children's books.
JEANIE LANG, writer of children's books. JOHN H. CLIFFORD,
editor and writer. HERBERT T. WADE, editor and writer on physics.
CHARLES R. GIBSON, writer on electricity. LILIAN CASK, writer
on natural history. BLANCHE MARCHESI, opera singer and teacher.

JOHN FINNEMORE, traveler and writer of boys' stories.
ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL, inventor of the telephone. JAMES
WHITCOMB RILEY, poet. CHARLES H. CAFFIN, author of "A
Guide to Pictures." JAMES CARDINAL GIBBONS. ANDREW F.
CURRIER, M.D., popular medical writer. HELEN KELLER, the blind
and deaf writer. OLIVER HERFORD, humorist and illustrator.

GENERAL INTRODUCTION
* * * * *
Books are as much a part of the furnishing of a house as tables and
chairs, and in the making of a home they belong, not with the luxuries
but with the necessities. A bookless house is not a home; for a home
affords food and shelter for the mind as well as for the body. It is as
great an offence against a child to starve his mind as to starve his body,
and there is as much danger of reducing his vitality and putting him at a
disadvantage in his lifework in the one as in the other form of
deprivation. There was a time when it was felt that shelter, clothing,
food and physical oversight comprised the whole duty of a charitable
institution to dependent children; to-day no community would permit
such an institution to exist unless it provided school privileges. An
acute sense of responsibility toward children is one of the prime
characteristics of American society, shown in the vast expenditures for
public education in all forms, in the increasing attention paid to light,
ventilation, and safety in school buildings, in the opening of play
grounds in large cities, in physical supervision of children in schools,
and the agitation against the employment of children in factories, and in
other and less obvious ways.
Children are helpless to protect themselves and secure what they need
for health of body
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