My daughter has a book called "But No Elephants". It's about an old woman (Grandma Tildy) who lives in a tiny house and she keeps taking in animals from a traveling salesman. He's finally left with only an elephant, and she says "But NO Elephants", so the elephant is left and he stays outside until it starts snowing and he's covered with snow. The old woman finally gives in and lets him come inside, but the floor breaks and he gets stuck. So she decides it's time for a change and the elephant "walks" the house to Florida where they all live happily ever after. Is that the book you're thinking of?
Jerry Smath is the author!
2006-09-07 09:48:40
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answer #1
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answered by grahamma 6
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contained in the source I appropriate the most universal names, both male and woman, contained in the Nineteen Thirties. It lists the real 2 hundred for each. i'm no longer positive in case you've been searching for some thing a touch extra "unique", yet i don't think of there have been many unusual names again immediately (that's, as there are literally). a number of my favorites for male and woman, although, are below. solid success! lady: Virginia, Marilyn, Gloria, Anna, Anita, Lena, Hattie, Emily, Georgia, and so on. Male: William, Henry, Roy, Samuel, Phillip, Douglas, Theodore, Harvey, Patrick, Alan, Max, Virgil, Everett, Sidney, Oliver, and so on. some very last names: Hartley, Mayfield, Kendrick, Shirley, Odell, Andersen, Childs, Stinson, Crowley, Tatum, Godfrey, Simms, Lyons, Mayes, Seymour, Milton, Milligan, Sheehan, McKinley, Lund and Daley.
2016-11-06 20:31:20
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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