St Nicholas [serial] . THE FOUK TREES THAT CAME FROM THE BRANCHES OF A FALLEN TREE. (Photograph by Verne Morton, Groton, New York.) being broken, so that the tree kept on growing,and the four largest limbs followed the naturaltendency to turn and straighten themselves until,in time, they attained their present treelike four trees have no connection with theground except through the trunk and roots ofthe original tree. Note. The maple at the extreme right of thepicture has no connection with the others. Neil Morton. AN AUSTRALIAN NATIVE CAT »ral kinds of this little marsupial are found


St Nicholas [serial] . THE FOUK TREES THAT CAME FROM THE BRANCHES OF A FALLEN TREE. (Photograph by Verne Morton, Groton, New York.) being broken, so that the tree kept on growing,and the four largest limbs followed the naturaltendency to turn and straighten themselves until,in time, they attained their present treelike four trees have no connection with theground except through the trunk and roots ofthe original tree. Note. The maple at the extreme right of thepicture has no connection with the others. Neil Morton. AN AUSTRALIAN NATIVE CAT »ral kinds of this little marsupial are foundin Australia, Tasmania, New Guinea, and someof the adj!,*pfrt islands. Most of these are slender -<2 - —. AN AUSTRALIAN NATIVE CAT.(Illustration used by the courtesy of the National Zoological Park.) and weasel-like, but with hair longer than mostweasels have. All are more or less spotted. Theylive largely on birds and eggs, but also eat insects. MAKES A CROOKED TUBE FOR A HOME The shell-worm is quite common on the Atlanticcoast. It makes a hard, white tube on rocks, dead


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidstnicholasserial371dodg