Six Girls and the Tea Room

Previous

CONTENTS

ILLUSTRATIONS

CHAPTER I THE PATTY-PANS AGAIN

CHAPTER II "PLEASED TO MEET YOU"

CHAPTER III THE CUP THAT CHEERS

CHAPTER IV CHRISTMAS, AND AN INVITATION

CHAPTER V "THE HANDSOME MISS ANGELA KEY-STONE"

CHAPTER VI UP-STAIRS AND DOWN-STAIRS

CHAPTER VII AN OPEN DOOR

CHAPTER VIII HARD TRAVELING

CHAPTER IX AN UNPREJUDICED VIEW

CHAPTER X "SEEING IS BELIEVING"

CHAPTER XI THE ELASTIC PATTY-PANS

CHAPTER XII THE TWO KEREN-HAPPUCHS

CHAPTER XIII A HINT OF SPRING

CHAPTER XIV LITTLE SERENA

CHAPTER XV "'MONGST THE HILLS OF SOMERSET, WISHT I WAS A-ROAMIN' YET!"

CHAPTER XVI HAPPIE GRANTS AMNESTY

CHAPTER XVII JONES-DEXTER PRIDE

CHAPTER XVIII A SIEGESLIED

CHAPTER XIX PATTY-PANS NO MORE

CHAPTER XX EAST AND WEST

Title: Six Girls and the Tea Room

Author: Marion Ames Taggart

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

E-text prepared by Beth Baran
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
HathiTrust Digital Library
(http://www.hathitrust.org/digital_library)

Note: Images of the original pages are available through HathiTrust Digital Library. See http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39076002272016;view=1up;seq=1



(Sequel to "Six Girls and Bob")

SIX GIRLS AND
THE TEA ROOM

A STORY

BY

MARION AMES TAGGART

Author of "Six Girls and Bob," "The Little Grey House," "The Wyndham Girls," etc.

ILLUSTRATED BY
WILLIAM F. STECHER

W. A. WILDE COMPANY
BOSTON      CHICAGO


Copyrighted, 1907
BY W. A. WILDE COMPANY
All rights reserved

SIX GIRLS AND THE TEA ROOM


To Gertrude,
amid the mountains:

Again a story of the Six Girls of whom we are fond, is dedicated to you. It will tell you what delightful things grew out of their Tea Room, and how the "Patty-Pans flat" was filled with happiness till it overflowed into a larger home.

It proves—what you know—that the best times are not always great times. Our Six Girls—and the boys—are busy young folk, and the good things that have come to them they won by courage, perseverance and the merry hearts that are part of innocence and sweetness.

More than all, our Six Girls—and one boy—love one another so dearly that they cannot help being successful and happy. We believe—do we not?—that a loving home alone is a real home.

Margery, Happie, Gretta and Bob know well that "'tis love that makes the world go 'round." They ask love of those who read the story of their Tea Room which brought happiness to so many, in such unforeseen ways. It is the story of a winter, but a winter all sunshine.

Remembering how it was written is it fittingly dedicated to you, dear Gertrude.



Top of Page
Top of Page