dwellers Taught their Children 53
Alone on the Wooded Hills 56
How Bodo Found Wild Honey 59
Bodo Follows the Wild Horses 61
Ancestors of Our Mammals 66
The Story of the Wild Horse 69
How Bodo Learned to Make Tools and Weapons 72
Bodo's Hammer and Knife 75
What Bodo and One-Ear Found in the Alders 81
How the Hyenas Hunted 85
Frightened by Fire 89
How People Got their First Homes 93
How the Tree-dwellers Formed a Clan 99
How the Women Made a Shelter 102
How Sharptooth Made a Basket 106
How Bodo Used Fire 112
How Bodo Saved One-Ear's Life 116
How People Learned to Hunt Large Animals 119
Why People Began to Wear Ornaments 122
The Coming of the Musk Sheep 125
The Woolly Rhinoceros 128
How We Have Learned About the Tree-dwellers 130
_Suggestions to Teachers_ 132
a. _Method_ 134
b. _Typical Modes of Activity_ 136
c. _Supplementary Facts_ 142
d. _Animal Life_ 142
e. _Special Suggestions_ 147
ILLUSTRATIONS
[Illustration]
FULL PAGE
Page
_A map of the Tree-dwellers' country_ Frontispiece
"_Many wild beasts lived then_" 14
"_Sharptooth was afraid of wild animals_" 19
"_She made a safe place for the baby to sleep_" 32
"_There were a great many wild cattle
when the Tree-dwellers lived_" 34
_The upper part of the river valley_ 39
"_Hippopotamuses were snorting and blowing_" 41
"_Bodo watched them wade through the
shallow water_" 62
"_Sometimes Bodo threw stones_" 73
"_They crept up so
|