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قراءة كتاب Keep-Well Stories for Little Folks

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‏اللغة: English
Keep-Well Stories for Little Folks

Keep-Well Stories for Little Folks

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

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A Wonderful Stream 52 Two Mills 57 A Child's Calendar 61 The Toothbrush Brigade 62 Mr. Fly and Mrs. Mosquito 64 A Hygiene Song 70 Our Little Enemies 71 One Little Girl 77 Clovis, the Boy King 78 What Temperance Brings 85 The White Ship 86 A Queer Case 94 Breathe More 97 The Little Girl and the Butterfly 97 Little Barefoot 103 The Little Fairies 107 The Red Cross Seal 111 The Sand Bed 119 The House That Jack Built 120 A New Story of the Lion and the Mouse 124 First Aid To the Injured and the Boy Scouts 127 An Invitation 131 A Great Fight 132 The Five Best Doctors 135 Glossary 136

KEEP-WELL STORIES FOR LITTLE FOLKS


Train

A WONDERFUL ENGINE

We all have seen a steam engine, have we not? There are engines that pull trains on the railroad, and there are engines that make factories, gins, and saw-mills work. Then there are engines that run great ships on the water. How many know what must be done to one of these engines before it can do all this work? "It must have coal, or wood, or gasoline put into it." That is right.

Now this coal or wood or gasoline, when it is used in an engine to make it work, is called fuel. Would we put rotten or green wood into the engine? No. We must always put in the kind of thing that will burn best, and make the most heat and do the most work.

Let us see how this wood or coal we call fuel makes the engine work. First, we must burn the fuel. Second, when the fuel burns, it heats the water in the boiler. Third, the water changes into steam, and this steam gives the engine the power to work.

Now we see how an engine is made to move and do work, such as hauling great trains of cars, and pulling great ships across the wide ocean. But we must remember that the engine will not do this work unless there is a man near-by to put the fuel

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