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Four Mothers at Chautauqua

Pansy 
(1841 - 1930)

Read by Tricia G.

Running Time:8:06:16 in in 7 Audio CDs

Final book in the Chautauqua Girls series. The four original girls return to Chautauqua on the 25 year anniversary of the trip that changed their lives forever. They have with them some children that could use the lessons they themselves learned there.
Music for the hymn in Chapters 9 & 26 is titled "Chautauqua" by William, F. Sherman, 1877.
Music for the children's song in Chapter 19 is adapted from "Love Lifted Me" by Howard E. Smith, 1912.

Previous book in series:Ruth Erskine's Son

00 - Foreword
01 - 'Where Are the Girls?'
02 - 'Let Us Go'
03 - Another Mother
04 - On the Threshold
05 - The Unexpected
06 - 'In Spite of Things'
07 - Possibilities
08 - The Climax
09 - The Problem
10 - The Problem Solved
11 - Clothes, and Perplexities
12 - Some Settled Things
13 - Forced into Argument
14 - Puzzling Questions
15 - Almost
16 - Storm
17 - 'Common'
18 - Dilemmas
19 - 'We'll Do It Together'
20 - 'Sing Paeans Over the Past'
21 - Maiden Efforts
22 - New Departures
23 - 'Where Two or Three'
24 - Links in the Chain
25 - A Conflict with 'Moral Flabbiness'
26 - 'I Have Something to Tell You'
27 - Memorials
28 - 'Sing a Song of Years!'

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Public domain books

A public-domain book is a book with no copyright, a book that was created without a license, or a book where its copyrights expired or have been forfeited.

In most countries the of copyright expires on the first day of January, 70 years after the death of the latest living author. The longest copyright term is in Mexico, which has life plus 100 years for all deaths since July 1928.

A notable exception is the United States, where every book and tale published before 1926 is in the public domain; American copyrights last for 95 years for books originally published between 1925 and 1978 if the copyright was properly registered and maintained.