"Here are some fine pictures of horses. The first one is the cart-horse, a powerful animal for drawing heavy loads.
"This is the hunter. He carries his master on his back.
"This one is the race-horse, a very fleet runner."SUMMARY
The horse has sharp, cutting teeth in both jaws, and large, broad teeth for grinding. He does not chew the cud. His hoof is not cloven; it is really a single toe, covered with a horny case. His eyes are at the side of the head, and his ears are erect and very sharp. The cart-horse draws heavy loads; the hunter carries his master; the race-horse is a very ?eet runner.
Steel
"Fred," said Willie, "I have been thinking about our lesson ever since we left school. Steel must be a very wonderful metal. Why, we might almost say it is two metals all in one.""Well," replied Fred, "there are two kinds of steel, and each of them is very unlike the other in many ways.""How very strange, Fred," said Norah, "and yet I think you told me that all steel is simply iron in another form.""I can"t tell you exactly how the steel is made," said Fred. "It is kept for weeks in a furnace at one fixed heat, and then left to cool.