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Elsie at the World's Fair

Martha Finley

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Book Excerpt: 
. . . as you would think no living creature would want to eat."

"They look very big and strong, papa," remarked the little boy, gazing at them with great interest.

"Yes; they are so strong that one can easily carry two men on his back."

"Is that what they are good for, papa?"

"That is one thing; and their feathers are very valuable. For that reason ostrich farms have been established for the raising of the birds, and have proved very profitable."

"Don't folks eat ostriches, papa?" asked Elsie.

"Sometimes a young one; and their eggs are eaten too. They are so large that each one is about equal to two dozen ordinary hen's eggs; to cook one they usually set it up on end over a fire, and having first broken a hole in the top, they stir it with a forked stick while it is cooking. The shells are very thick and strong and the Africans use them for water vessels."

"Do they have nests to lay their eggs in, like our chicke. . . Read More

Community Reviews

Aside from the usual proselytizing in these books, this one wasn't as bad. As the title implies, the families visit the Columbia Exposition, and it was interesting to hear a contemporary fictional account, especially as Martha Finley got her information from primary sources and never visited it hers