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BROWNIES AT SCHOOL, THE. Verses. (Illustrated by the Author).
BROWNIES AT THE SEA-SIDE, THE. Verses. (Illustrated by the Author)
BUSY WORLD, THE....

BUTTERFLIES, The. Poem. (Illustrated by H. P. Share)
BY THE SEA. Picture, drawn by Albert E. Sterner..
CASED IN ARMOR. (Illustrated by J. C. Beard)

CHILDREN OF THE COLD, THE. (Illustrated by W. Taber).

CIRCUS CLOWN'S DREAM, THE. Verses. (Illustrated)...
CLOTILDA OF BURGUNDY. (Illustrated by R. B. Birch)
COASTING IN AUGUST. (Illustrated by Frank M. Gregory)

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Five Little WHITE HEADS. Verses. (Illustrated by Laura Hoyle Burr)... Walter Learned

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Frank R. Stockton...

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Agatha Tunis..

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HARVEST MOON, THE. Picture, drawn by Jessie McDermott.

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HELEN'S PRIZE DINNER.

HIS ONE FAULT. (Illustrated by W. A. Rogers)

(Illustrated by R. B. Birch and others)..

Clotilda of Burgundy: The Girl of the French Vineyards..

Pulcheria of Constantinople: The Girl of The Golden Horn
HONEY-HUNTERS. (Illustrated by J. M. Nugent).
HOUSE OF STRING, A. (Illustrated by W. J. Fenn).
How PAUL CALLED OFF THE DOG...

How SCIENCE WON THE GAME. (Illustrated by F. T. Merrill).
"HULLO, OLD STIFF-LEGS! Picture, drawn by Culmer Barnes
HUNTER'S MOON, THE. Picture, drawn by Jessie McDermott.
HURRY AND WORRY. Verse..

IN PRIMROSE TIME. Poem. (Illustrated).

IN SEPTEMBER. Poem ...

INVENTOR'S HEAD, THE. (Illustrated by William Mason).
"IT MAY SEEM VERY FOOLISH." Jingle.
JAPANESE CREEPING BABY, THE. Verses.
JAUNTY JAY, THE. Jingle.
JINGLES...

(Illustrated).

John R. Coryell.

Margaret Meredith.
Lavinia S. Goodwin..

George B. M. Harvey.

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KNOWING LITTLE FISH, THE. Verses. (Illustrated by Bo7)..
LADY GOLDEN-ROD. Poem. (Illustrated).

LAND WITHOUT A NAME, THE. Poem. (Illustrated).

LIBERTY BELL, The. Poem. (Illustrated by W. H. Goater).
LITTLE BRITOMARTIS. (Illustrated by H. Sandham)..
LITTLE DAME FORTUNE. (Illustrated by R. B. Birch).
LITTLE GRAY POCKET, THE. Poem. (Illustrated).

"LITTLE MAID, PRETTY MAID." Verse. (Illustrated by Walter Bobbett).

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Marion Satterlee.

Allen G. Bigelow..

Henry Frederic Reddall.
Laura M. Marquand.

PEGGY'S GARDEN and What GREW THEREIN. (Illustrated by R. B. Birch). . Celia Thaxter..
PERSONALLY CONDUCTED. (Illustrated by Joseph Pennell).
Little Pisa and Great Rome..

PICTURES

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Laura E. Richards.

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REIGN OF THE ROLLER-SKATE, THE. Picture, drawn by Jessie Curtis Shepherd.
ROYAL GAME OF TENNIS, THE. (Illustrated)...
SCHOOL AFLOAT, A. (Illustrated by H. A. Johnson)..

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A Polite Mule-A Cannibal Daisy-bug - Fifteen Owners Wanted (illustrated) — The Golden
Gate, 550; Introduction The Ink-plant - A Moon-rainbow More About Ants - Why Golden Gate?
"Sing, Sweet Bird" (illustrated), 632; Introduction - Fifteen Feet and their Owners - An Apple-tree
Indeed-Thousands for One Gown - Some People's Queer Notions Butterfly Head-dresses (illustrated)—
Those Pet Beetles - Illuminated Frogs, 712; Introduction — Fifteen Owners Found - The Illuminated Frogs
Again An Illuminated Fish - A Tamed Welsh Rabbit - White Squirrels - Ship Ahoy!" (illustrated),
792; Introduction - Moon Rainbows and All Sorts of Things - Other Lunar Rainbows - Where Do They
Come From? How the Turtle Winks A Good Book Hemiptera Homoptera (illustrated), 870; Intro-
duction" Dear Apple,-Wake Up!"- Baby Lions and Cats - How Some Bees Were Deceived-More
About Surnames -What a Squirrel Mother Did (illustrated) — What About This? 950.

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"All on the Road to Alibazan," by R. B. Birch, facing Title-page of Volume-"Old Pipes and the Dryad,"
by Kenyon Cox, facing page 561 "The Pet Fawn," by Mary Hallock Foote, facing page 643" Little
Dame Fortune," by R. B. Birch, facing page 723 —“A Trip Around the World,” facing page 803 —“ Friends
or Foes?" facing page 883.

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FRED HUMPHREYS was a boy of an original mind; that is to say, he was very fond of thinking for himself and doing things of which he had never either heard or read. This may or may not be a good disposition in a boy. It depends altogether upon what kind of a boy he is. If he mixes a great deal of reason with his original thinking, if he is able to see when he has made a mistake, and is willing to acknowledge it,—and if he is of a prudent turn of mind, and is not willing to dive into a new enterprise until he knows how deep it is and whether or not the current is too strong for him, it may be very well for him to do his own thinking. But if he does not possess these requisites, it would be better, until he is older, to let some one else attend to this matter for him.

Fred was an only son, and his father was desirous that he should find out as much as possible for himself during his boyhood. He was to be a business man, and would probably have a great many ups and downs in the course of his life; and Mr. Humphreys had an idea that if his son could get through with some of the " downs" during his minority, the experience he would thereby gain would prevent his having just as many of them in after life, when they would be much more important.

When the bicycle came into use in this country, Fred Humphreys was one of the first boys who had one. When an improved form of the machine was invented, Fred sold his old one, and his father added money enough to what he received to buy

VOL. XII.-31.

one of the new kind. This change from good to better occurred several times; and when the tricycle came before the public, Fred gave up his last bicycle, and bought one of the three-wheeled machines, and, after using this for some months, he disposed of it, and became the possessor of a first-class double tricycle, that would carry two persons. Sometimes with his sister, and sometimes with a boy friend, Fred made excursions in this tricycle through the country round about the town in which he lived.

This town was situated in the interior of one of our Northern States. It was much frequented in the summer-time as a watering-place, and some of the roads leading to hotels and places of popular resort in the neighborhood were unusually smooth and well made, and, therefore, admirably adapted to bicycles and tricycles. On these fine roads Fred and his machine soon became almost as well known as were the famous "tally-hos," with four or six horses, which in the season made regular trips between the town and various pleasant spots in the surrounding country.

But, much as Fred enjoyed his tricycle, he became convinced in time that there might be something better; and as nothing better had, as yet, been invented by any one else, he determined, if possible, to invent it himself. The idea which gradually developed itself in his mind was this: If a boy can pull a vehicle, say a tricycle, at the rate of a certain number of miles per hour, and with an amount of exertion which he can keep up for a

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