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Arnold, Gertrude Weld

"A Mother's List of Books for Children"

43)
from one of them, is awful indeed.

CRANE, WALTER (Illustrator).
Beauty and the Beast.
Lane. .25
Charming illustrations accompany this prose version of the ancient
favorite which will long endure because of the great truth underlying
the grotesque tale.

CRANE, WALTER (Illustrator).
Cinderella.
Lane. .25
May every little girl find the fairy prince of her imagination!

CRANE, WALTER (Illustrator).
The Frog Prince.
Lane. .25
The story of the frog who was transformed into the handsome prince is
as immortal as childhood. May we all remember the King's command to
his daughter: "He who helped you in the time of your trouble must not
now be despised."

CRANE, WALTER (Illustrator).
Jack and the Bean-Stalk.
Lane. .25
Ogre-like indeed is the giant, and we breathe a sigh of relief when
verses as well as pictures make it quite certain that Jack has escaped
for the third time with his golden treasure. The beans of King (p. 44)
Alfred's day seem to have closely resembled the wild oats of our own.

CRANE, WALTER (Illustrator).
The Sleeping Beauty.
Lane. .25
"So sweet a face, so fair--was never
beauty such as this;
He stands--he stoops to gaze--he kneels--
he wakes her with a kiss.


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