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The Wdrd End Ev.ryd.y-Botencal.tupn-W J £1 • M ' ng Over a new P aoo ' n Wonder tUI 111 Mature the Living Book of Nature. Gradually we are learning to read the Great Laws that govern the maze of Living Things, from the tiniest animal Germ to the Gigantic Whale. All that man haa learne.d. Is In the "Book of Knowledge." The Marvels hidden m the Ant-hill.. The Hidden Marvels of Familiar Flowers. Barnacles that Cripple Big Ships. Ants that Strike Terror into the Heart of the Lion. The Workshop of the Bees. How the Beaver Builds his House and Fells Trees. The Queer, Quaint and Curious m Bird-Land. V The Armoured Bandits of the Insect World. Fairieß_in the Insect World. The Great .Cat Family. , Animals that Lay Eggs. . ;. ' • The Bear Family In its Native Haunt. The 6tory of the Banana. • . „ How the Apricot came from China more than '2000 Years ago. ' How the Romans brought the Apple to England* Etc., etc. - There are Thousands of Interesting facts about the Stranga Things m Nature — of'Bir,d.s» Beasts, Insects, Plants, Tr*-"y Flowers, etc., m the "Book of Knowledge." f[_» __ A f _- The absorbing Facts of Scientific Know- 3 ; Dciencc ior , ■ .... : ... . , ; a _ ledge are told, with amazing clearness, 1 dVeryOlie and are invested with a fascination and I Interest that has never been surpassed. n , How the Keystone Locks the Arch. ' H Asbestos— a Stone which is woven into Cloth, and H which cannot be burnt. • 'Bj Asphalt — a Mineral dug from a Field that Never . °B Gets Less. H Why Apes Cannot Talk— How they differ from ' ' §3 Ourselves. ' ' H Why the "Missing Link"' is still missing. 0 Why Animals are not Plants. ' |j How Long Animals Live. ' fl Aluminium, the Lightest Metal Known — its won* 'N derful Properties. . . H Amber — How Flies were Buried m it. H Where we Got our A B C. Jj The Wonderful Story of Evolution. , . -H The Marvellous Machinery of the Brain. B How Breakwaters are Built. ' : H Who Invented the Telescope, and. What it Reveals H V to us of the Stars. raj How the Barometer Tells us the Height of Mouni H tains. .■•.'■■ B How a Turkey Carpet is Made. „ - S How the "Book of Knowledge" is Produced. ra The Battleships of. the British Nayy — How the Big X Guns are Worked. . g Here is told the Whole Story of Man's Wonderful Inven- H - tiona, the Marvellous Things of Science, the Clever Mach- H Ines and Engines that the World's Great Men of Genius H have created* " fl GloriOUS Pa^eS T i e cp ' C storles oT Human Endea- H £ « j ° your, Courage and Renown, are all fl OI AdVentlire entrancmglytold. | The Fearless Seekers of the Unknown. ' @ The Age-long Fight for the Poles. The Romantjo ra Stories of Polar Exploration. fif Climbing the World's Highest Peaku . H Through Darkest Africa — with Stanley and Living- m Stone on the African Continent; with Cook, H Cabot, and Columbus Across the Unchartered H Seas. . H Man's Conquest of the Air.. , B Probing the depths of the Volcano — Plumbing ths B Ocean Deeps. X Across the trackless. Deserts. ll Penetrating the heart'of Jungles and Swamps of H the great Continents. H Traversing the mighty Amazon River. H The Conquest of Mount. Diane— The Attempt on B Mount Everest. . M A I^OVel "passolj's Book of Knowledge?' is a Whole I Ij. , Library of Adventure of Man's Efforts at I 'eatUre probing the Secrets of the Unknown. I Apart from the Great FACT-INDEX which summarizes all j the knowledge contained m the whole work under one J readily accessible heading, quoting every page on w.hich I Information on that subject may be found, a further great H feature, making still more accessible the wonderful store- H. house of knowledge, is the section, m which every subject 0 Is classified un.d.er subdivisions of knowledge dealing with— Q Botany, .Geology, Art; Natural History, Biology, H Geography, Language and Literature, Physical and H Applied Science, History — Ancient and Modern. fl Thus the reader has at once immediate' access to every B. page that treats with any special subject on which he may B ■Hih to obtain .xact information. B

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTR19290228.2.85.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

NZ Truth, Issue 1213, 28 February 1929, Page 17

Word count
Tapeke kupu
694

Page 17 Advertisements Column 1 NZ Truth, Issue 1213, 28 February 1929, Page 17

Page 17 Advertisements Column 1 NZ Truth, Issue 1213, 28 February 1929, Page 17

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