Pansy wrote Four Girls at Chautauqua. Ruth Erskine, the unmarried daughter of the metropolis's wealthiest family, became a female who noticed life as not anything more than a place to revel in a calming time. Eureka J. Mitchell, Ruth's closest friend. Eurie become lighthearted and unconcerned, and she understood a way to chortle and communicate in any state of affairs. Flossy Shipley, born into a prosperous own family, merits to be loved and cherished in her personal unique and treasured manner. Marion Wilbur is a younger woman from a low-profits own family who works difficult. She wore stark black or brown clothes with little, if any, embellishment. And yet, in spite of her seeming simplicity, she dominated all of them. Though they didn't realise it, all 4 were about to embark on the adventure of their lives. Isabella Alden, Grace Livingston Hill's aunt, stocks heartwarming anecdotes of religion and love. Each novel has a comparable style and tone to Hill's and is about in the overdue 1800s and early 1900s.
Pansy was an American author. Her best-known works include Four Girls at Chautauqua, Chautauqua Girls at Home, Tip Lewis and His Lamp, Three People, Links in Rebecca's Life, Julia Ried, Ruth Erskine's Crosses, The King's Daughter, The Browning Boys, From Different Standpoints, Mrs. Harry Harper's Awakening, The Measure, and Spun from Fact. Alden also wrote the Westminster Teacher's primary lesson department, edited the Presbyterian Primary Quarterly and the children's journal Pansy, and published a serial story in the Herald and Presbyter of Cincinnati each winter. Alden was involved in Sunday school elementary teaching and oversaw more than a hundred children every Sunday for many years. Four of her books, Three People, The King's Daughter, One Commonplace Day, and Little Fishers and their Nets, were specifically about temperance, and the notion of total abstention persisted throughout her writings. Isabella Macdonald was born in Rochester, New York, to highly educated parents Isaac and Myra Spafford Macdonald. Her father supported the temperance and abolitionist movements, feeling that slavery was a sin. Her mother was committed to everything "pure and of good report." She was also engaged in temperance and had joined the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.