Contents
| I | Frisky Squirrel Finds Much To Do | [9] |
| II | Frisky Squirrel has a Fall | [13] |
| III | The Stone that Walked | [17] |
| IV | The Picnic | [22] |
| V | Some Lively Dodging | [27] |
| VI | Mr. Hawk Returns | [31] |
| VII | A Brave Little Bird | [35] |
| VIII | Uncle Sammy Coon | [40] |
| IX | A Bag of Corn | [44] |
| X | Tails and Ears | [49] |
| XI | Jimmy Rabbit is too Late | [53] |
| XII | Frisky Visits the Gristmill | [57] |
| XIII | Fun on the Milldam | [62] |
| XIV | Mrs. Squirrel Has a Visitor | [67] |
| XV | Helpful Mr. Crow | [72] |
| XVI | Caught in the Attic | [77] |
| XVII | Farmer Green’s Cat | [82] |
| XVIII | The Threshing-machine | [86] |
| XIX | Frisky’s Prison | [91] |
| XX | Johnnie Green Forgets Something | [95] |
| XXI | That Disagreeable Freddie Weasel | [101] |
| XXII | Catching Freddie Weasel Asleep | [106] |
THE TALE OF FRISKY SQUIRREL
I
Frisky Squirrel Finds Much To Do
Frisky Squirrel was a lively little chap. And he was very bold, too. You see, he was so nimble that he felt he could always jump right out of danger—no matter whether it was a hawk chasing him, or a fox springing at him, or a boy throwing stones at him. He would chatter and scold at his enemies from some tree-top. And it was seldom that he was so frightened that he ran home and hid inside his mother’s house.