Winnowings for Lincoln's birthday . pical objectsof nature that illustrate the outdoor life of the Pacific Coast. Theteacher will not find all about fishes, but a study of Dr. JordansStory of a Salmon will start your pupils on a systematic study, andinsure an intelligent interest. The poppy, the nugget, the coyote, thebear, the quail, the raisin, are not strangers to our boys and girls. Theywill be interested in the study of the familiar objects of nature. Contents—To the Colorado Desert. How to Study Ants. A Studyof the Raisin. The Little Gold Miners of the Sierras. The Legend ofthe Coyote. S


Winnowings for Lincoln's birthday . pical objectsof nature that illustrate the outdoor life of the Pacific Coast. Theteacher will not find all about fishes, but a study of Dr. JordansStory of a Salmon will start your pupils on a systematic study, andinsure an intelligent interest. The poppy, the nugget, the coyote, thebear, the quail, the raisin, are not strangers to our boys and girls. Theywill be interested in the study of the familiar objects of nature. Contents—To the Colorado Desert. How to Study Ants. A Studyof the Raisin. The Little Gold Miners of the Sierras. The Legend ofthe Coyote. Story of the Salmon (Jordan). The Story of a Gold Coyote. A Family of Poppies. Treeing a Bear. A Glance at theBirds. The Valley and the Mountain Quail. The Perfumes of the Color of the West. The Shrimps. The Sierra Snow Plant. TheStory of a Shell. A valuable book for the teacher and school.—5fl« Francisco Call. We should be glad to see it in every library.—Z,(>J Angeles Times, Western Series of IVeaders. VOL. IV For Cales of Di$co<)ery onm Pacific Slope BY *gax*et GraKa-xn Hood Director of Training School in ArizonaNormal WITH INTRODUCTION BY SHKI^DON Third and Fourth Grades Illustrated with Twenty Full Page Historic Illustrations and Beautiful Colored Frontispiece, made from original drawings designed especially for this volume. Generally adopted both as a Text and Supplementary book in California schools Description—The Tales of Discovery include the most notablediscoveries of the Pacific Slope. Mrs. Hood has written the stories in anarrative form. They are as fascinating as a romance and are moreinteresting than myths because they are true. Mary Sheldon Barnes inher preface says: So a book like this which dips into the golden hoardand brings its beauty to the sight and touch of our children deservesgratitude and attention, for it brings an endowment to their best and mostenduring life, it widens iheir personality by a store


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