This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
38148 | Does the valley find the stream or the stream the valley? |
38148 | How are they acquired? |
18562 | The question now arises, What becomes of the matter which has been broken up by the wave action? |
18562 | Why does the sun not behave in the same manner as the moon? |
6019 | Are the birds thus attracted by new lights, flocks in migration? |
6019 | Is this drought due to the destruction of ancient forests or to some other cause? |
3066 | Why? |
3066 | But where did man make the change from a four- handed, tree- dwelling little ape to a much larger, upright creature with two hands and two feet? |
3066 | Is there one chance in a thousand that even his indomitable spirit could have kept his craft headed steadily into the west? |
3066 | River and plain and mighty peak-- and who could stand unawed? |
3066 | Was there once a bridge of land from Asia to America in this region? |
3066 | What''s the matter?" |
3066 | Why does the American Indian differ from the Negro, and the European from both? |
3066 | Why were not the most advanced Indian tribes found in the same places where white civilization is today most advanced? |
3066 | Why, then, did the energizing effect of climate apparently have less effect upon them than upon the other great races? |
22302 | Are there any upon the Atlantic coast or neighboring highlands? |
22302 | But what becomes of all this mud? |
22302 | Does the Grand Cañon look as you thought it would? |
22302 | How could a river cut a channel for itself so far below the ocean level? |
22302 | How is the water to be sent over the land? |
22302 | How many of us living at the present time have ever seen one of these animals in its native haunts? |
22302 | What do you think would happen if such an underground stream of water came in contact with hot or molten rocks far below the surface? |
22302 | What excuse is there for the wanton destruction of a noble tree like this one? |
22302 | What is the use of all this work? |
22302 | Where are the springs and running streams which usually abound in mountainous regions? |
22302 | Where shall we go to find these volcanoes? |
22302 | Why did not Astoria or Fort Vancouver develop into the metropolis of the Columbia basin? |
22302 | Why is the lake receding now? |
22302 | Why not wait for the rains to come and wet the earth, as the farmer does in the eastern United States? |
37957 | What if,says Dumont,"instead of happening in October, that is between harvest and seedtime, they had occurred before the crops were secured? |
37957 | And why, indeed, should he wish to marry, when he could scarcely save enough to maintain himself? |
37957 | For the rest, if Pope is dethroned what remains? |
37957 | How was it beaten smaller and ever smaller by the waves? |
37957 | If we represent the power of calcareous sand to retain heat by 100, we have, according to Schubler, For[ silicious?] |
37957 | Is the great power of accomodation to climate possessed by them due to this circumstance? |
37957 | This subject has been discussed by Perris in the_ Annales de la Société Entomologique de la France_, for 1851(? |
37957 | To what was it once fixed? |
37957 | What power broke it loose? |
37957 | When will the world be wise enough to unite in adopting the French metrical and monetary systems? |
37957 | Whence come the sudden floods of our rivers? |
37957 | Where was the original quartz crystal, of which this is a fragment, first formed? |
37957 | Who can wonder at the hostility of the French plebeian classes toward the aristocracy in the days of the Revolution? |
37957 | Why is a crop near the borders of a marsh cut off by frost, while a field upon a hillock, a few stone''s throws from it, is spared?" |
37957 | Why should not so easy a method of economizing fuel be resorted to in Italy, and even in more northerly climates? |
37957 | Will not this fact exert an influence on the condition of many springs, whose basin of supply thus undergoes a partial or complete transformation? |
37957 | [ 28] What is there, in the influence of brute life, that corresponds to this? |
14565 | 17th of July( 17th to the 26th of July?). |
14565 | Are these currents, as in Seebeck''s experiments, thermo- magnetic, and excited directly from unequal distribution of heat? |
14565 | But whence comes this form, which was first recognized by Schreiber as characteristic of the''severed''part of a rotating planetary body? |
14565 | Dare we hazard a conjecture on that which can not be an object of actual geognostic observation? |
14565 | Do gaseous fluids rise from the interior of the earth, and mix with the atmosphere? |
14565 | Indeed how can any facts of one observer in one place falsify the facts of another observer in another place? |
14565 | Must not these lie in deep valleys? |
14565 | Must we suppose that changes are actually in progress in the nebulous ring? |
14565 | On what did these so- called''most ancient''formations rest, if gneiss and mica schist must be regarded as changed sedimentary strata? |
14565 | When the questions are asked, what is it that burns in the volcano? |
14565 | Where, in this case, are we to seek the concealed channels by which the Plutonic action is conveyed? |
14565 | Why should the crust of the Earth have lost its property of being elevated in the ridges? |
14565 | and how much the mean annual temperature of Canada and the United States is lower than that of corresponding latitudes in Europe? |
14565 | multo clarius apparet, non tam reparandorum animalium causa, quam figurandarum variarum gentium(?) |
14565 | or are these meteorological processes the action of atmospheric electricity disturbed by the earthquake? |
14565 | or should we not rather regard them as induced by the position of the Sun and by solar heat? |
14565 | what excites the heat, fuses together earths and metals, and imparts to lava currents of thick layers a degree of heat that lasts for many years? |
28274 | What more,said Hutton long ago,"is required to explain the configuration of our mountains and valleys? |
28274 | ''"[ 3] Is my life vulgar, my fate mean, Which on such golden memories can lean? |
28274 | ; while Ennerdale Water lies nearly E. by W. Can we account in any way, and if so how, for these varied directions? |
28274 | But is this necessarily so? |
28274 | But what is the love of Nature? |
28274 | But why should flowers sleep? |
28274 | But why should the rivers, after running for a certain distance in the direction of the main axis, so often break away into lateral valleys? |
28274 | But why should we sleep? |
28274 | Does it result from some innate tendency in each species? |
28274 | How has this come to pass? |
28274 | In this case, therefore, there was one, and there are now two exactly similar; but are these two individuals? |
28274 | Is it intentionally designed to delight the eye of man? |
28274 | Is this love of Nature? |
28274 | It is not any part of the process that will be disputed; but, after allowing all the parts, the whole will be denied; and for what? |
28274 | Now, why has the flower this peculiar form? |
28274 | Of what use is the fringe of hairs? |
28274 | Oh wind, If winter comes, can spring be long behind? |
28274 | Or has the form and size and texture some reference to the structure and organisation, the habits and requirements of the whole plant? |
28274 | Since, then, there is so much complex structure in a single leaf, what must it be in a whole plant? |
28274 | The Rabbit is said to reach 10 years, the Dog and Sheep 10- 12, the Pig 20, the Horse 30, the Camel 100, the Elephant 200, the Greenland Whale 400(? |
28274 | To what then are lakes due? |
28274 | What advantage is the honey to the flower? |
28274 | What is the Sun made of? |
28274 | What is the use of the arch? |
28274 | What lesson do the little teeth teach us? |
28274 | What regulates the length of the tube? |
28274 | What, then, has that history been? |
28274 | What, then, is the use and purpose of this complex organisation? |
28274 | Whence comes the breath which you draw; the light by which you perform the actions of your life? |
28274 | Who is there who has not watched them with admiration? |
28274 | Why does the stigma project beyond the anthers? |
28274 | Why have deserts replaced cities? |
28274 | Why have not the still more level, the greener and more fertile pampas, which are serviceable to mankind, produced an equal impression? |
28274 | Why is the corolla white, while the rest of the plant is green? |
28274 | Why is there this melancholy change? |
28274 | Why should I exchange you, even for the sight of all the Alps?" |
28274 | Why should flowers do so? |
28274 | Why should some flowers do so, and not others? |
28274 | Why then this marvellous variety? |
28274 | Why then-- and the case is not peculiar to myself-- have these arid wastes taken so firm possession of my mind? |
28274 | or how shall we follow its eternal cheerfulness of feeling? |
28274 | the blood by which your life is maintained? |
28274 | the blood by which your life is maintained? |
28274 | the meat by which your hunger is appeased?... |
28274 | the meat by which your hunger is appeased?... |
28274 | this inexhaustible treasury of beautiful forms? |
47119 | Why,he asks,"did not this mineral matter come down in like quantity all the time of the deposit of the brown clay which underlies it? |
47119 | ; Alpine{ Lands(? |
47119 | And how, we may ask, could the postulated geographical changes bring about the glaciation of the mountainous tracts on the Pacific sea- board? |
47119 | And if they did not sail eastwards, what became of them? |
47119 | And what about the second glacial epoch? |
47119 | And what evidence of such local glaciation might we now expect to find? |
47119 | And who will take his place in the Long Island? |
47119 | Are we then to suppose that all the lands within the Northern Hemisphere were extensively and contemporaneously upheaved? |
47119 | Are we to infer the former existence of an extremely lofty range of Bohemian Alps which has since vanished? |
47119 | Are we to suppose that once more the lands were greatly uplifted, and that convenient Isthmus of Panama was again depressed? |
47119 | Are we to suppose, then, that it flowed in from the south or south- west? |
47119 | Are we, then, prepared to admit that the close of the Ice Age coincided with the dawn of Egyptian civilisation? |
47119 | At what horizon, then, does this steppe- fauna make its appearance? |
47119 | But how could this be, seeing that the Criffel and Cumbrian erratics occur side by side in one and the same deposit? |
47119 | But putting that consideration aside, what evidence have we that the Isthmus of Panama was submerged during the glacial epoch? |
47119 | But why should this wind have propelled the floating- ice so far and no further in an easterly direction? |
47119 | Can a big ice- sheet push down the earth''s crust by its weight? |
47119 | Can the weight of a great ice- sheet shift the earth''s centre of gravity, and, if so, to what extent? |
47119 | Did the ice, as we might have supposed, come out of the mountain- valleys and overflow the low country? |
47119 | Did the last great ice- sheet reach as far south as its predecessor? |
47119 | Did the reader ever indulge in such a mountain- bath? |
47119 | Did these also come at a different time? |
47119 | Did they all melt away immediately when they came into the ice- laden current that flowed towards the south- east? |
47119 | Having learned that no truly abysmal rocks enter into the composition of our continents, of what kind of rocks, we may ask, are the islands composed? |
47119 | He speaks of cold and warm currents, but where do we find any traces of the marine organisms which must have abounded in those waters? |
47119 | How are these to be accounted for? |
47119 | How can this be done by the land- ice theory? |
47119 | How do the supporters of the"earth- movement hypothesis"explain this remarkable succession of climatic changes? |
47119 | How is it then, if the bottom beds be really of Silurian and the igneous rocks of Old Red Sandstone age, that a gap is said to exist between them? |
47119 | How is the existing distribution of land and water to be accounted for? |
47119 | How, then, can we explain the appearance of local glaciers in these latitudes during Mesozoic times? |
47119 | In what region under the sun does anything like that happen at the present day? |
47119 | Is it possible, then, to explain the climatic vicissitudes of the Pleistocene period by means of such oscillations? |
47119 | Now what do all these appearances mean? |
47119 | Now, I ask, is it possible to believe that a sheet of ice of that thickness actually pressed down the crust of the earth for not less than 3600 feet? |
47119 | These beds have yielded remains of elk(_ Cervus alces_), rhinoceros( species not determined), a small fox(? |
47119 | Upon what kind of surface did it fall? |
47119 | What are_ roches moutonnées_ but the rounded relics of what were formerly rough uneven tors, projecting bosses, and prominent rocks? |
47119 | What areas have been covered with perennial snow and ice? |
47119 | What could have blocked its passage in that direction? |
47119 | What is the meaning of these intercalated glacial accumulations? |
47119 | What might not be expected to happen were the Gulf Stream to be excluded from northern regions? |
47119 | What now, let us ask, are the outstanding features of the coast- lines of the Atlantic Ocean? |
47119 | What was it that defined the southern limits of these northern boulders? |
47119 | What will archæologists say to this conclusion? |
47119 | What would result from such an unhappy change? |
47119 | What, in the first place, is greywacké? |
47119 | What, then, it may be asked, were the causes which allowed of the much broader distribution of species in former ages? |
47119 | Where are the raised sea- beaches which must have marked the retreat of the sea? |
47119 | Where did the warm wind come from? |
47119 | Where do we encounter any organic relics that might help us to map out the zones of shallow and deep water? |
47119 | Where does all this sand come from? |
47119 | Where, then, did the ice come from? |
47119 | Where, then, we are asked, is there any evidence in Palæozoic, Mesozoic, or Cainozoic strata of former widespread glacial conditions? |
47119 | Why are coast- lines in some regions extremely regular, while elsewhere they are much indented? |
47119 | Why does n''t he put his money in the savings- bank, and by- and- by die and leave it to those who come after him? |
47119 | With such a map could our meteorologists infer what the climatic conditions must have been? |
47119 | _ The Extent of Glaciation in Europe._ To what extent, then, let us ask, has Europe been glaciated? |
47119 | and does the crust rise again as the ice melts away? |
47119 | caprea_[? |
47119 | cinerea_), hazel, poplar(? |
38066 | Am I seeing double? |
38066 | And what about all those nuts? 38066 And who has a better right?" |
38066 | But does he hold his breath all this time? 38066 But how on earth do the roots do this? |
38066 | But suppose you lived where there was n''t any land to speak of that did n''t tip up; in New England, say-- what would you do then? |
38066 | But what starts the movement? |
38066 | But, what are you going to do about it? |
38066 | For goodness sake, where_ did_ you learn your trade? |
38066 | Horns and hoofs? 38066 Well,"you say,"is there anything left that these farmers_ do n''t_ do?" |
38066 | Where can I get a man like that? |
38066 | Yes, but how does the head make the arm do the pulling? 38066 You ca n''t change the slope of the hills, can you? |
38066 | ( Ca n''t you almost hear him say it?) |
38066 | ( Did you know that whether you spell this weird little creature''s first name,"praying,"with an"e"or an"a"you''d be correct?) |
38066 | ( What kind do you see in the picture of the beaver dam?) |
38066 | 12 came out beautifully, did n''t it? |
38066 | A LITTLE NAP Queer notion, sleeping on one leg like that, is n''t it? |
38066 | A fish or a lizard? |
38066 | A foot? |
38066 | And did you ever count an earthworm''s rings? |
38066 | And do you know how she opens the flowers for the bees on sunshiny days? |
38066 | And do you know that Nature also employs the propeller principle, not only in the operation of the wings of birds but in the wing feathers themselves? |
38066 | And how Mrs. P. puts a stone roof on her house? |
38066 | And how are the little folks?" |
38066 | And how many kinds of earthworms do you suppose there are? |
38066 | And how much work do you suppose these farmers do in grinding up and fertilizing the soil? |
38066 | And how the phoebes that make green nests keep them green? |
38066 | And how the sun acts as a pump for the plant world? |
38066 | And how? |
38066 | And is n''t it curious, when one comes to think of it, why a man should take pleasure in seeing a beautiful deer fall dead with a bullet in its heart? |
38066 | And what for, do you suppose? |
38066 | And what have you been doing? |
38066 | And when these two motions-- the up and down and right and left-- are put together, do n''t you see what you get? |
38066 | And who do you suppose had most to do with teaching men they were really brothers, and so bringing them up to the civilized life we know to- day? |
38066 | And why swamps are such poor producers? |
38066 | Anyhow, whoever it was, I think he was more than half right, do n''t you? |
38066 | Because of this hinge he could open his mouth wider without putting anything out of place, do n''t you see? |
38066 | But do you know what_ I_ think? |
38066 | But how did it learn it? |
38066 | But how does the tip send back word?" |
38066 | But if a breath of wind would carry them away so easily, how could they_ stay_ on a rock, these tiny lichen travellers? |
38066 | But is there anything in that old weather saw? |
38066 | But it''s queer, is n''t it, what different ways people have of looking at things? |
38066 | But what did Mrs. M. B. do for ground- up stone in the long ages before man came along with his carts? |
38066 | But, speaking of Papa Ostrich''s parental duties, did you know that it''s_ Mr._ Puffin, and not_ Mrs._ Puffin, who digs the family burrow? |
38066 | But, speaking of the way swallows take to human society, do you know where our barn- swallows came from? |
38066 | By the way, do you know who that man is? |
38066 | Can you guess why? |
38066 | Can you guess, when I tell you it''s from a French word meaning"honeycomb"? |
38066 | Canst work i''the earth so fast? |
38066 | Could you do it? |
38066 | DO EARTHWORMS COME DOWN WITH THE RAIN? |
38066 | Did anybody ever tell you how the volcanoes help the winds to help the plants to get their breath? |
38066 | Did the brownies or the gnomes tell it; or was it some of the spirits of the wind that go everywhere and see everything? |
38066 | Did you ever notice how big boulders in a field are frequently sunk into the ground as if dropped from a great height? |
38066 | Did you ever try it? |
38066 | Do n''t you see, he''s getting his dinner? |
38066 | Do n''t you think he looks it? |
38066 | Do n''t you think so? |
38066 | Do n''t you think so? |
38066 | Do you know how men dig subways; like those under New York City and Boston, for instance? |
38066 | Do you know how the rains help to get the mineral food up into the plant? |
38066 | Do you know what a gold mill is? |
38066 | Do you know what a human nitrogen factory is like? |
38066 | Do you know why the phoebe bird so often uses moss in building her nest? |
38066 | Do you know why? |
38066 | Do you wonder that the wise men of London laughed at the idea that there is any such creature-- even when they were looking right at one?] |
38066 | Does n''t it seem funny that one of the little farmer birds-- a burrower-- should go into partnership with a lizard? |
38066 | Does our saliva do for us anything like what it does for the earthworm; and our pancreatic juice? |
38066 | Especially as they have no roots? |
38066 | FIND THE THIRD Do n''t they look happy-- these two tow- heads? |
38066 | Finally, if what we call flesh and blood can think and talk, why not a grain of dust? |
38066 | First, they float down- stream, as you know, but when autumn comes on, what do you suppose they do? |
38066 | For, what do you suppose the winds take for millstones in grinding down the mountains into dust? |
38066 | From a force of sixty pounds, when it was a mere baby, what do you suppose its push amounted to when it had reached full squashhood in October? |
38066 | HIDE AND SEEK IN THE LIBRARY Did you know that the ash and maple seeds actually have screw propellers, like a ship, so that they can ride on the wind? |
38066 | HIDE AND SEEK IN THE LIBRARY What have burrowing animals to do with the drainage system of the land? |
38066 | HIDE AND SEEK IN THE LIBRARY Who was that in Mother Goose that went a- fishing"for to catch a whale"? |
38066 | HOW DID THESE FARMERS LEARN TO STORE? |
38066 | HOW MR. LICHEN EATS UP STONES But how could such feeble creatures, as they seem to be, ever eat anything so hard as rock? |
38066 | Have n''t you done it to your sorrow? |
38066 | Have you any idea how far seed may be carried by a hurricane? |
38066 | He rubs his little blinking eyes, So heavy from long sleep, That he may read the tell- tale skies-- Which is it-- wake or sleep?" |
38066 | Here''s the_ next_ problem: Shall the mixing be done where the building is going up over there? |
38066 | How can he?" |
38066 | How could a tempest that blew down a tree help its seeds to get a start? |
38066 | How did they do it? |
38066 | How do angleworms help drain the soil? |
38066 | How do the forests help make good use of the rain that falls, not only for themselves but for the rest of us? |
38066 | How do the rains help to warm the ground in the spring? |
38066 | How do they differ in the way of using their noses? |
38066 | How do you suppose deserts that get so little rain themselves could_ help make it rain_ in other places? |
38066 | How do you suppose such a strange idea ever got started? |
38066 | How do you suppose they get there? |
38066 | How does the earthworm''s method of pushing his way in the world with the end of his nose compare with the way a root works along in the ground? |
38066 | How long do you suppose they are, these big fishworms? |
38066 | How many hearts do you suppose an earthworm has? |
38066 | How much do you know about the little brains scattered through our bodies(_ Ganglia_)? |
38066 | How would you do it; even if you had tools? |
38066 | If so, why? |
38066 | If the worms were drowned out it would be the other way around, do n''t you see? |
38066 | If we use untrimmed trees, which end shall we put up- stream? |
38066 | In fact, what is flesh and blood but dust come back to life? |
38066 | In what way does the wind help to_ produce_ the seed of grasses as well as carry and plant them? |
38066 | Is n''t that a story for you? |
38066 | Is n''t that queer? |
38066 | Is n''t that right? |
38066 | Looks like another fine day, does n''t it?" |
38066 | Maybe this is their way of saying"Good morning,"or"How do you do?" |
38066 | Money? |
38066 | Mrs. Mason- Bee fills these cells with honey, lays an egg in the honey, and when the babies come along-- don''t you see? |
38066 | Not a very pretty picture, is it? |
38066 | Now here''s a thing; you stow away a lot of seeds in a little hill where, of course, there''s moisture, and what''s going to happen? |
38066 | Of course, the moles do cut a root here and there occasionally when it happens to be in the way, as they tunnel along, but what does that amount to? |
38066 | Once there was a London banker who used to go around with-- what do you think-- in his pockets? |
38066 | Or how_ does_ he do it? |
38066 | Or shall we use both trimmed and untrimmed trees? |
38066 | Or the beeches before the pines? |
38066 | Or the maples before the beeches? |
38066 | Or, why should a boy want to kill a little bird? |
38066 | Rather a clever unloading device, too; do n''t you think so? |
38066 | SEE IF YOU''RE AS CLEVER AS MR. BEAVER"Right across the dam,"you would say, would n''t you? |
38066 | Say you''ve got your trees up to where the dam is to be; now how are you going to set them in building the dam? |
38066 | See the granary and the roads leading to it? |
38066 | See the point? |
38066 | Seems incredible, does n''t it? |
38066 | Serious thing for that little boy, was n''t it? |
38066 | Shall we use trees with the branches still on them or trees trimmed down like sticks of cord- wood? |
38066 | So why should n''t they? |
38066 | Speaking of"wind ploughs,"what is the object of ploughing anyway? |
38066 | Suppose we had a stomach like the earthworm, would n''t it be fun? |
38066 | THAT MYSTERY ABOUT THE BEAVER''S TAIL Then what_ do_ they do with those tails? |
38066 | THE TERMITES AND THEIR TOWERS OF BABEL But speaking of big buildings, did you ever hear of a skyscraper a mile high? |
38066 | That picture looks as if it had a tremendous lot of flamingoes in it, does n''t it? |
38066 | That''s what any live boy would ask, would n''t he? |
38066 | The butt or the tip? |
38066 | The science people call them"Bacteria,"but what of that? |
38066 | Then how do they ever get up and get planted on the shore? |
38066 | Then how, in the name of common sense, did their bones get up into the mountains?" |
38066 | Then what are you going to do? |
38066 | Then what would you do; that is, if_ you_ were an ant? |
38066 | This is what I_ felt_ like saying:"What if they do? |
38066 | Three feet? |
38066 | Two feet? |
38066 | Was that the dormouse speaking? |
38066 | Well, I guess we''ll have to tell him we do n''t know, wo n''t we? |
38066 | What do you suppose he did that for? |
38066 | What do you think that man did once? |
38066 | What for? |
38066 | What good to the soil do the insects do that eat up dead- wood? |
38066 | What happened then? |
38066 | What happened to it?" |
38066 | What kind of an edge would_ you_ put on a door to make it fit tight? |
38066 | What makes them do it?" |
38066 | What then? |
38066 | What then?" |
38066 | What''s the connection?" |
38066 | Where are you going? |
38066 | Where? |
38066 | Who''s got a better right?" |
38066 | Why ca n''t they let a fellow alone?" |
38066 | Why is it that, with the exception of a straggler here and there, the first trees to climb the stony mountainsides are the pines? |
38066 | Why should n''t the oaks come before the maples? |
38066 | Why, how_ are_ you? |
38066 | Why, what always happens? |
38066 | Why? |
38066 | Yes, I suppose so; but what else? |
38066 | Yet the ducks just could n''t take it into their families either, for what else do you think it does? |
38066 | You could n''t keep your hands off a book with a name like that, could you? |
38066 | You got fooled that time, did n''t you? |
38066 | You have heard about the lazy man down in Arkansas with the hole in his roof? |
38066 | You know who Hornaday is, do n''t you? |
38066 | You see how handy that would come in, do n''t you? |
38066 | You see why that is, do n''t you? |
38066 | You see why, do n''t you? |
38066 | You would n''t open the door by pushing that dear, little tender head of his against it, would you? |
38066 | You''d hardly think that, would you? |
38066 | [ 17] You''ve often noticed them, have n''t you? |
38066 | [ 20] Is n''t that the way a toad swallows an angleworm? |
38066 | [ Illustration: A HEAP OF GRIST FROM AN ANT SOIL MILL Something of an ant- hill, is n''t it? |
38066 | [ Illustration: A HOME IN THE DESERT Does n''t look much like a home in the desert, does it? |
38066 | [ Illustration: AN ANT CARRYING ONE OF HER COWS] You know about how ants keep cows, little bugs called aphids? |
38066 | [ Illustration: HIGHWAYS OF GROUND- SQUIRREL TOWN Almost as crooked as the streets of London town, are n''t they? |
38066 | [ Illustration: MR. GROUND- HOG AND HIS SHADOW"But is there anything in the old weather saw? |
38066 | [ Illustration: THE SEQUOIAS; THE SUNLIGHT AND THE SHADE Wonderful sunlight effect, is n''t it? |
38066 | [ Illustration: WHAT HAPPENS TO THE LAND WHEN THE TREES ARE GONE Could anything be more desolate? |
38066 | [ Illustration: WHOSE AUTOGRAPH IS THIS? |