Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue lost no time in getting dressed that morning, and hurrying out to the tiny dining room where their mother was getting breakfast.
"Did you see it?" gasped Sue.
"Have the elephants gone past yet?" Bunny inquired, his eyes big with excitement.
"Oh, you mean the circus," said Mrs. Brown. "No, I haven't seen any elephants yet. The big wagons just started to go past."
"Then let's hurry up our breakfast and watch for the elephants and the tigers," cried Bunny, greatly worried lest he miss any of the animals.
"You have plenty of time," said Uncle Tad, who was out near the back steps of the automobile, sorting his fish lines and hooks. "The circus has just started to go past. Those wagons have in them the tent poles, the canvas for the tents, the things for the men to eat and the big stoves. These are always unloaded first—in fact, they are sent on ahead of the rest of the show.
"Not until later in the morning will the animals and the other wagons come along. The circus must have unloaded over at Kirkwell," and he pointed to a railroad station about a mile away. "The tents are going up on the other side of this town, I heard some of the circus drivers say."
"Oh, won't we have fun watching them go past?" cried Sue. "I wonder if they'll have a parade? If they do, and it goes past our house—I mean our automobile—we can see it better than anybody, can't we?"
"Yes. But the parade won't come this far out into the country," said Uncle Tad. "It will go through the streets of the town."
"Where are you going?" asked Bunny, suddenly looking at the old soldier.
"I thought I'd go fishing over to Blue Lake. Looked yesterday as if there were plenty of fish there. Want to go with me, Bunny Brown?"
"Huh? An' the circus comin' to town?" asked Bunny, clipping the end off his words. "Say, Mother, aren't we going to the circus?" he asked quickly.
"Well, I didn't hear anything about it," said Mrs. Brown slowly.
"Can't you take us, Uncle Tad?" pleaded Sue, for she, as much as did her brother, wanted to see the big show.
"Well, I suppose Icouldput off my fishing till another day," said Uncle Tad slowly. "Are yousureyou two want to go?"
"Are we!" cried Bunny.
"Oh, I want to go—so much!" and Sue showed just how much by putting her arms around Uncle Tad's neck and hugging him as hard as she could. That was her way of showing "how much."
"Well, if it's as much as that I guess I'll have to take you," laughed Uncle Tad. "Mind you, I don't want to go myself," and he looked at Mrs. Brown in a queer way. "I don't care anything about a circus—never did in fact. But if an old man has to give up his fishing trip, just to take two children to one of the wild animal shows, why I guess it will have to be done, that's all. But really I don't want to go," and he shook his head very seriously.
"Oh, Uncle Tad!" cried Sue. "Don't you want to see the elephants?"
"Nope," and the old soldier kept on shaking his head "crossways," as Bunny said.
"And don't you want to see the lions?"
"Nope."
"Nor the tigers?"
"Nope."
"Not even the camels and the monkeys and the men jumping over horses' backs, nor the giraffes with their long necks—don't you want to seeanyof them?" Sue was talking faster and faster all the while.
Uncle Tad did not say anything, but a funny look came into his eyes, and Bunny was almost sure the old soldier was laughing on one side of his face at Mother Brown. Then Bunny cried:
"Oh, Sue! He's just fooling! He wants to go as much as we do!"
"Oh, Uncle Tad, I'm so glad!" cried Sue."I love you—so—much!" and again she hugged him as hard as she could, and kissed him too.
"Now I'll surely have to go," he chuckled.
Breakfast was soon over, and by that time Bunny and Sue were so excited that they did not know what to do. Somehow they managed to get properly dressed, and by that time other circus wagons came along.
These wagons were gilded and painted more gaily than the first that had gone past. And from some of them came low growls or roars.
"Oh, they've got lions inside," said Sue, opening her eyes wide.
"And tigers, too," added Bunny in a wondering voice. "But I want to see the elephants," he added.
Pretty soon the big elephants came along, and behind them came camels and troops of horses. There were also a number of small boys and some girls who were following the circus to the lot where the big tents were already being put up.
"Say, I just like to see them!" cried Bunnyas the elephants swung past the "Ark," which some of the country boys took to be one of the circus wagons broken down. "Elephants are great! I guess I'm going to be an elephant rider when I grow up, instead of a policeman," he said, as he saw men sitting on the heads of the big elephants while they lumbered heavily along.
"It would be fun to ride on one of them," said Sue. "But come on, Uncle Tad. Take us to the circus. We want to see the parade."
"We want to seeeverything," added Bunny.
"The side shows andeverything, and, please, Mother, may we have some peanuts and popcorn?"
"Oh, I don't want you eating a lot of things that will make you ill," said Mrs. Brown.
"I mean to feed to the elephants," said Bunny. "Elephants love popcorn and peanuts a lot. Of course Sue and I could eat a little," he added.
"Well, averylittle," agreed his mother. "Elephants are not made ill so easily as little boys. But get ready, if you are going."
It did not take the children and Uncle Tadlong to get ready. As it was quite a distance from where the "Ark" was stationed beside the road to the circus ground, Uncle Tad hired Mr. Jason to drive him and the children over in the wagon.
"Oh, I see the tents!" cried Bunny, as they neared the ground.
"And I hear the music!" added Sue. "But we mustn't miss the parade."
The children were just in time for this, and when they had seen the procession wind its way about the streets they went back to the big white tents. Then the circus began.
What Bunny and Sue saw you can well imagine, for I think most of you have been to a circus, once at least. There were the wild animals—the lions and the tigers in their cages, the funny monkeys, the long-necked giraffes—and then came the performance. The clowns did funny tricks, the acrobats leaped high in the air, or fell into the springy nets. All this the children saw, and they ate some popcorn and peanuts, but fed more than they ate to the elephants.
Uncle Tad seemed to enjoy himself, too,though, every once in a while he would lean over and say to Bunny and Sue:
"Aren't you tired? Let's go home!"
And the performance was not half through! Bunny and Sue just looked at him and smiled. They knew he was joking.
But the circus came to an end at last, and though they were sorry they had to leave, Bunny and Sue were, late in the afternoon, well on their way to their automobile camp again. They talked of nothing but what they had seen, and every time they spoke of the show they liked it more and more.
"I wish we could go again to-night," said Bunny.
"It isn't good for little children to go to a circus at night," said Uncle Tad. "You've seen enough."
Of course Daddy Brown and Mother Brown had to hear all about it over the supper table, and they were glad the children had had such a good time. At night when they sat around a little campfire on the ground near the automobile, they could hear, in the distance, the music of the circus.
In the middle of the night Mr. and Mrs. Brown were awakened by hearing the noise of many persons rushing past on the road alongside of which their automobile was drawn up. Also the chugging of automobiles and the patter of horses' feet could be heard.
"I wonder what it can be," said Mrs. Brown. "Is it the circus coming back again?"
"No, they would be going the other way. I'll see if I can find out what it is."
Slipping on a bath robe, Mr. Brown went to the back door of the automobile. He saw a crowd of people rushing along.
"What's the matter?" he called.
"One of the circus lions is loose," was the answer, "and we're chasing it!"
BUNNY AND SUE FED THE ELEPHANTS.
BUNNY AND SUE FED THE ELEPHANTS.Bunny Brown and His Sister Sue on an Auto Tour. Page218.
"What's that? What's the matter?" asked Mrs. Brown. In the darkness she had slipped to her husband's side. She, too, looked out on the crowd of men and boys rushing past in the moonlight. "What has happened?" she asked again, as Mr. Brown did not appear to have heard what she said.
"As nearly as I could understand," he said slowly, speaking in a low voice, "one of the men who ran past said a lion had broken loose from the circus."
"Oh, how dreadful!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown. "What shall we do? Did Uncle Tad bring his gun with him?"
"Hush! Don't wake the children," said Mr. Brown. "They might be frightened if they heard that a lion was loose."
"Frightened? I should think any onewould be frightened!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown. "A savage lion raging around at night, trying to get something to eat——"
"Now please don't get excited," begged Mr. Brown. "There is no danger—at least I believe there isn't."
"No danger? And with a lion loose—a hungry lion!"
"That's where I think you're wrong," said her husband. "The circus people usually keep their lions and other wild animals well fed. They know the danger a hungry beast might be if he should get loose. And I dare say they often do get loose, for all sorts of things may happen when the cages are taken to so many different places.
"But though this lion has broken loose, I don't believe it would bite even a rooster if it crowed at him. I mean he won't be hungry, because he'll have been well fed before the circus started away."
"Then you don't believe there is any danger?"
"Well, not enough to worry about. Another thing is that usually circus lions are sotame, having been caged so long, that they are fairly gentle."
"I read of one that bit his keeper," said Mrs. Brown.
"Oh, of course there aresomedangerous lions in circuses. But we won't believe this one that got away is that kind until we are sure. There's a man who seems tired of running. I think he's going to stop and I'll ask him how it happened."
One of the crowd of men and boys, racing past the "Ark," had slowed his pace, being tired it seemed. Mr. Brown leaned out of the back door and called to him:
"What is the matter? Did a lion really get loose from the circus?"
"That's what really did happen, sir. Are you one of the circus folks?"
"No, we are just travelers. We are stopping here because one of the springs of our automobile is broken."
"Oh, excuse me. I thought this was one of the circus wagons. Yes, as they were loading the lion's cage on the train a few hours ago, it slipped, fell on its side and broke. Thebiggest lion in the circus got away before they could catch him, and they say he headed down this way. The circus men started after him with nets and ropes, and they offered a reward of twenty-five dollars to whoever caught him. So a lot of us started out, but I guess I'll go back. I'm tired out. I didn't have an automobile like some."
"Then the lion didn't get loose while the circus performance was going on?" asked Mrs. Brown.
"Oh, no. And it's a good thing it didn't, or there'd have been a terrible scare and maybe lots of folks hurt in the rush. The show was over, and most of the animal tent stuff was loaded on the flat cars when the lion's cage broke."
"Aren't you afraid to try to catch him?" asked Mrs. Brown.
"Well, I didn't stop to think of that. I don't know though that I am. I just started off with a rush—the same as lots of others did who were watching the circus load—when the lion got loose. I thought maybe I could earn that twenty-five dollars. You seethat's given to whoever finds where the lion is hiding. The circus men just want to know that and then they'll do the catching. There really isn't much danger."
"Well, I shouldn't like to try it," murmured Mrs. Brown.
"I guess I'll give up, too," said the man.
He called a "good-night!" to Mr. and Mrs. Brown and went back along the road. There were no more people to be seen, those who had gone lion-hunting being now out of sight.
"Well, I'm glad the children didn't wake up," said Mrs. Brown, for, strange as it may seem, Bunny and Sue had slept all through the noise. But then they were tired because of having gone to the circus. "Shall you tell them about the lion being loose?"
"Oh, yes, to-morrow, of course. While I think there is little danger I would not want them to stray too far away, for the poor old lion may be hiding in the woods or among the rocks, and he might spring out on whoever passed his hiding place."
"Why do you call him a 'poor old lion'? I think he must be averysavage fellow."
"Oh, I think he'll turn out to be a gentle one," said her husband with a laugh.
Then Mr. and Mrs. Brown went to bed, after Uncle Tad had heard the story, and the rest of the night passed quietly. At the breakfast table Bunny and Sue were told of what had happened.
Bunny wanted to go right out with Uncle Tad, who was to take his gun.
"We'll hunt him and get the twenty-five dollars," said the little fellow.
"No. You'd better play around here for a while," ordered his father. "It will be safer."
"I wouldn't let him out of my sight for a million dollars!" cried Mrs. Brown.
"But we could take the two dogs, Dix and Splash, with us, and they could bite the lion if he chased us," said Bunny.
His mother shook her head, and Bunny knew there was no use teasing any more.
"I wouldn't go after any lion!" declared Sue. "And I want to find a good place to hide Sallie Malinda."
"What for?" asked Bunny.
"So the lion can't find her," said the little girl. "Lions don't like bears and this one might bite Sallie Malinda. Then maybe she couldn't flash her eyes any more." The Teddy bear had dried out after the fall into the lake, and was as good as ever.
So Bunny and Sue had to stay and play around the automobile, not going far away. Though at first they missed the long tramps in the fields and through the woods, they were good children and did as they were bid. Besides, deep down in his heart, Bunny was just alittle bitafraid of the lion, even though he had said he wanted to go hunting for him with Uncle Tad.
Two days passed, and the lion had not been found. The circus had gone on, leaving two men in the town near which the automobile was stranded. These men, with a spare cage which had been left with them, were ready to go out with nets and ropes and capture the lion as soon as any one should bring in word as to where it was hiding.
The countrymen and the boys, who had no other work to do, still kept up the lion hunt,some with dogs, but the big circus animal was well hidden.
"If he was playing hide-and-go-seek," said Bunny, "I'd holler 'Givie-up! Givie-up! Come on in free!' For I never could find him, he has hidden himself so good."
"Well, I wish he would go and hide himself far, far away," almost snapped Sue. "Then we could go around like we used to, and go on the lake."
"I wish so too," agreed Bunny.
It was getting rather tiresome for the children to stay so close to "home," as they called the automobile, but Mr. Brown said the new spring would arrive in a few days, and then they would travel on again, far from where the lion was hiding.
"And we can keep on looking for Fred Ward," said Bunny. In the excitement over the circus the runaway boy had been almost forgotten.
It was three days after the lion had broken loose, and evening was approaching, when Mrs. Jason, wife of the farmer who had been so kind to the Browns, came hurrying downto the automobile beside the road. She was out of breath and seemed much excited.
"Oh, Mr. Brown!" she exclaimed. "Do you know anything about doctoring?"
"About doctoring! Why? Is Mr. Jason ill?"
"No, but I've got a badly hurt boy up at my house. He's all scratched up."
"Has he been picking berries?" asked Bunny.
"No. They're worse scratches than that. Big, deep ones on his face, hands and shoulders. I've bandaged him as best I could, and sent Mr. Jason for the doctor; but I was wondering if you could do anything until Dr. Fandon came."
"A scratched boy?" repeated Mr. Brown slowly. "What scratched him?"
"A great big lion, he says!" exclaimed Mrs. Jason. "I declare I'm so excited I don't know what to do!" and she sat down on a stool Mrs. Brown placed for her near the back steps of the automobile.
Mr. and Mrs. Brown, not to say Bunny, Sue and Uncle Tad, were very, very much surprised when Mrs. Jason said the boy had been scratched by a lion.
"Are you sure about it?" asked the children's father.
"That's what he says," replied the farmer's wife. "He is certainly badly scratched, as I could see for myself. Whether it was by a lion or something else I can't say, never having seen a lion's scratches. The boy might be making up some story, but he certainlyisscratched."
"The circus lion!" cried Mrs. Brown. "Oh, that must be the one that did it! The lion must be roaming around here! We must lock the automobile and stay inside!"
"Now please don't get excited," begged Mr. Brown. "In the first place this boy maynot be telling the truth. He is scratched, for Mrs. Jason has seen the marks and bandaged them up, she says. But it may be the boy fell down in the bushes, or among the rocks and got scratched that way. Or it may have been some other wild animal in the woods that attacked him. There are some animals around here, aren't there?" he asked the farmer's wife.
"Well, skunks, groundhogs and the like of that, with maybe a fox or two. Of course foxes or groundhogs will bite if any one tries to catch them, but I don't know that they'd scratch, though they might if they were put to it. I never saw such scratches as these. And, as you say, Mrs. Brown, itmayhave been the circus lion which is hiding around here."
"You don't seem very frightened over it," said Mrs. Brown.
"Well, what's the use of being frightened until I see it?" asked Mrs. Jason. "I'm more worried about that poor boy. I wish I could do something for him to ease his pain until Dr. Fandon comes. He may be a long while."
"I'll come up with you and see what I can do," promised Mr. Brown. "Uncle Tad knows something about soldiers' wounds, and perhaps he could——"
"Oh, don't take Uncle Tad with you!" pleaded Mrs. Brown. "We needoneman around here if there's a lion loose in the woods. Come back as soon as you can," she begged her husband as he walked toward the farmhouse with Mrs. Jason.
"How did you happen to see the boy?" asked Mr. Brown.
"I was out gathering the eggs near the henhouse," said Mrs. Jason, "and I heard a sort of groaning noise. Then I saw somebody coming toward me.
"At first I thought it was a tramp, and I was just going to call my husband or one of the men, when I heard crying, and then I saw it was only a boy, and that he was bleeding."
"How long ago was it that you found the scratched boy?" asked Mr. Brown.
"Nearly an hour now. As soon as I saw what the matter was I hurried him into the house and got him on a couch. Mr. Jasonand I did what bandaging we could, and then I made him go for the doctor."
"Did you know the boy, and did he say where the lion attacked him?" asked Mr. Brown.
"I never saw him before, that I know of. But he just managed to say the beast jumped out of the bushes at him when he was coming through our rocky glen, then all of a sudden he fainted."
"Where is this rocky glen of yours where you say the lion jumped out at the boy?"
"About two miles from here, back in the hills. Waste land, mostly. You aren't thinking of going there, are you?"
"Not now, though I think I'd better send word to the circus people that their lion is around here."
"Yes, it would be a good thing."
By this time Mr. Brown and Mrs. Jason were at the house.
"I'll take a look at him," said Mr. Brown.
He saw, lying on a couch, a tall lad, whose face and hands were covered with bandages. The youth was tossing to and fro and murmuring, but what he said could not well be understood, except that now and then he spoke of a lion.
"I didn't dare take his coat off to get at the scratches on his shoulders," said Mrs. Jason. "I thought I'd let the doctor do that."
"Yes, I guess it will be best. But if you have any sweet spirits of nitre in the house I'll give him that to quiet him and keep down the fever."
"Oh, we always keep nitre on hand," and Mrs. Jason helped Mr. Brown give some to the lad. In a little while he grew quieter, and then Dr. Fandon came in with Mr. Jason.
The two men helped the physician get the youth undressed and into a spare bed, and then the doctor, with Mrs. Jason's help, dressed the wounds on the boy's face and shoulders, while the men waited outside.
Then, having done what he could for the boy, and promising to call in the morning, when he could tell more about the boy's condition, the doctor went home, while Mr. Brown and Mr. Jason planned to get word ofthe lion to the two circus men who were still at the hotel in the village.
"I'll drive over with you," said the farmer. This they did, though it was late to drive to town, being after nine o'clock, stopping at the "Ark" on the way to tell what had taken place at the farmhouse.
"Poor fellow!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown. "We must try to help him."
"I'll let him play with my Teddy bear when he gets well," said Sue, and all the others laughed.
"The circus men will get after the lion in the morning," said the farmer when he and Mr. Brown were back at the "Ark" on their return from town.
Though they were excited, and not a little afraid, Bunny and Sue were at last in bed, but only after Uncle Tad had promised to sit up all night, as he used to do when a sentry in the war, and, with his gun, watch for any sign of the lion.
"And if you have to shoot him, which I hope you don't," said Bunny, "call me first so I can look at him. But I don't want to seehim shot. Just make him go back to the circus."
"I will," promised Uncle Tad.
Bunny and Sue were up early the next morning, and even before breakfast they wanted their father to go up to the farmhouse to find out about the scratched boy, and also whether or not the lion had been caught.
"We'll see about the boy first," said Mr. Brown. "I guess it won't do any harm for me to take the children up," he said to his wife.
"You will be careful, won't you?" she begged.
"Indeed I will," he promised.
So Bunny, with his sister and his father, walked up to Mr. Jason's home. Dix and Splash went along, of course, and stood expectant at the door as Mr. Brown rang.
"Oh, good morning!" cried Mrs. Jason as she answered the bell. "Our scratched boy is much better this morning. He is not as badly hurt as we feared. Come in."
Mr. Brown and the children entered, and of course the dogs followed.
"Go back, Dix and Splash," ordered Mr. Brown. Splash turned and went out on the stoop, but Dix kept on. The dog was acting in a strange manner. The door to a downstairs bedroom, where the wounded boy was lying, was open. Dix ran in and the next moment he began to bark wildly, getting on the bed with his forefeet.
"Down, Dix! Down!" cried Mr. Brown. "What do you mean, sir?"
But Dix kept on barking and whining. He tried to lick the hands of the scratched boy.
"Oh, drive him away!" cried Mrs. Jason. "He'll hurt the boy."
But the boy, who seemed much better indeed, rose up in bed and cried:
"Don't send him away! That's Dix, my dog! Oh, Dix, you found me, didn't you?"
What with the barking of Dix, in which Splash, out on the porch, joined, the manner in which the scratched boy hugged the half-wild animal on his bed, the astonishment of Bunny Brown, his sister, his father and Mrs. Jason—well, there was enough excitement for a few minutes to satisfy even the children.
Sue did not know what to make of the strange actions of Dix on the bed where the injured boy had been sleeping, and she whispered to Bunny:
"Maybe Dix wants to bite him!"
But Bunny shook his head. He understood what had happened.
"Don't you see, Sue!" he said. "He's been found."
"O-o-oh!" gasped the little girl.
"Yes, sir, Fred Ward, the boy who ran away from next door to us, has been found.That's his dog, Dix. And Dix knows him, just as we thought he would, even though his face is pretty well bandaged up. That's Fred Ward!"
"Is that your name?" asked Mr. Brown, who also understood what had happened.
"Well, I guess it is," was the slow answer. "But it isn't the name I've been going by lately. I called myself Professor Rombodno Prosondo, but now——"
"Then, itwasyou all blacked up like a minstrel!" cried Bunny.
"Yes, I was playing on the banjo for Dr. Perry's medicine show, but when I saw you in the crowd I managed to get away. Then I joined the circus and now——"
"Don't talk and excite yourself," said Mrs. Jason. "The doctor will be here in a little while and perhaps he can take the bandages off your face, so your friends will know you."
"Dix knows him all right," said Mr. Brown, and indeed the dog was half wild with joy at having found his master.
Dr. Fandon came in a few minutes later and said Fred was much better. When theface bandages were taken off, so new ones could be put on, Bunny and Sue at once recognized Fred, though his face was badly scratched.
Dix tried to lick his master's face, but had to be stopped for fear he might do Fred harm. So the dog had to show his joy by thumping his tail and whining softly.
Then Fred told his story. As has been said, he ran away from home because he felt his father should not have punished him.
"But I've had a good deal worse punishment since," the lad said, "and I'm sorry I ever ran away. I'd have gone home long ago only I was ashamed."
"Well, you needn't be," said Mr. Brown. "Your father and your mother both want you back. We have been looking for you as well as we could on our auto tour. But it was Dix who knew you first."
"I wish he had seen me before the lion did," said Fred, smiling a little. "I wonder where he went to after clawing me?"
At that moment there was a noise out in the yard back of the farmhouse. The crowingof roosters and the squawking of hens could be heard, mingled with a woman's voice.
"That's my wife!" cried Mr. Jason, jumping up, but at that moment his wife came into the room.
"I've caught it," she said coolly, though her face was flushed.
"Caught what?" they all cried.
"The circus lion," she answered. "I went out to the henhouse, and there he was crouching down in a corner, and looking as if he intended to have his choice of my fat pullets."
"What did you do?" asked Mr. Brown and Mr. Jason together.
"Well, I happened to have a broom stick in my hand so I hit him a smart blow over the nose to teach him to let my hens alone, and then I drove the chickens outside and locked the lion in the henhouse. He's there now. You'd better send for the circus folks to take him away. I don't want him around the place scaring the fowls."
"Didn't he scare you?" asked Mr. Brown.
"I never stopped to think whether he did or not," was the cool answer. "I just whackedhim over the nose and he whined and cuddled up in a corner like a whipped dog."
"Oh, let's go out and look at the lion in the chicken coop!" cried Bunny.
"No, indeed," said his father. "Wait until the circus men come and put him in the cage."
A neighboring farmer had a telephone, and word was sent to one of the circus men who had stayed at the village hotel, while his companion had gone to the rocky glen with a crowd of men and boys to try to find the lion there, after the alarm given by Mr. Jason.
The circus man, who had remained in the hotel, came with a light cage, drawn by horses, and the lion was easily driven from the henhouse into the cage and was soon safe behind locks and bars.
"Mrs. Jason caught the lion!" cried the crowd that gathered to watch what happened.
"Did he bite you?" she was asked.
"Never a bite," she answered smiling.
"What! Poor old Tobyhanna bite?" cried one of the circus men. "Why, he hasn't but two teeth in his head and we have to feed him on boiled meat. He's no more dangerousthan a tame dog, and when you hit him over the nose with your broom, lady, you must have hurt his feelin's dreadful."
"Well, I didn't mean to berough," said Mrs. Jason with a smile, "but it's the first time I ever caught a lion."
"Yes, and you get the reward, too," added the circus man, as he paid the farmer's wife.
Then he started away with the lion in the cage to ship him back to the circus. And poor, old, almost toothless Tobyhanna, curled up in the corner of his cage and ate some bread and milk the farmer's wife gave him. He was happy he had been caught.
Fred Ward's story was soon told. After running away from home he joined the medicine show, because it gave him a chance to play the banjo he liked so well. He left Dr. Perry because he saw the Browns and feared they might have him sent home.
Then he joined the circus, the very one from which the lion had escaped. In that show Fred had been one of a group who blacked up and played on mandolins and guitars and banjos, and though he had played in front ofBunny, Sue and Uncle Tad, none of them knew him, nor did Fred see them.
The night the show left the town, and just before the lion escaped, Fred had a quarrel with one of the managers and left. He was not paid his money and, quite miserable, he wandered away, not knowing what to do. He became lost in the woods, and finally he reached the rocky gulch where the lion attacked him.
"It was just an accident. Tobyhanna didn't mean to hurt me," said Fred. "I'd often fed him and scratched his nose for him in the circus. But I walked right over him as he was asleep in between some rocks, and when he jumped out, as much scared as I was he happened to scratch me. Then I managed to get to this house and I guess I must have gone out of my head or fainted or something."
"You did," said Dr. Fandon, "but you are all right now."
"We must send word to your father that you are safe," said Mr. Brown, and this was done.
Fred was not quite well enough to bemoved, but his father came for him the next day, and he made a great fuss over his boy. They understood each other better after that.
Mr. Ward thanked everybody who had done anything to help his son, and a few days later took Fred and Dix home, for the dog would not leave his master, much as he liked Splash, Bunny and Sue.
In due time Tobyhanna, the lion, was taken back to the circus, and he never got out of his cage again, as far as I ever heard.
"Well, I think we can keep on with our tour now," said Mr. Brown, a few days after the new spring had arrived.
"It seems almost like leaving home to go away from here," said Mother Brown, as they prepared to leave.
"We've had such fun camping here," added Sue.
"And lots of things have happened, too!" added Bunny. "I never was near where a lion was locked up in a chicken coop before."
"And I don't want to be again," said his mother.
"All aboard!" cried Uncle Tad.
And once more the "Ark," was traveling along the country road back toward Bellemere. The auto trip had been a great success, and Bunny and Sue talked of it many times, and of how Fred Ward had been found, and of the escaped lion that had scratched him.
But now it is time to say good-bye, though you must not think this is the last of the adventures of Bunny and Sue, even though there are no more in this book. There were more ahead of them, but, for the present, we will leave them.
Author of the Popular "Bobbsey Twins" Books
Wrapper and text illustrations drawn byFLORENCE ENGLAND NOSWORTHY
12mo. DURABLY BOUND. ILLUSTRATED. UNIFORM STYLE OF BINDING
These stories by the author of the "Bobbsey Twins" Books are eagerly welcomed by the little folks from about five to ten years of age. Their eyes fairly dance with delight at the lively doings of inquisitive little Bunny Brown and his cunning, trustful sister Sue.
Bunny was a lively little boy, very inquisitive. When he did anything, Sue followed his leadership. They had many adventures, some comical in the extreme.
BUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUEBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE ON GRANDPA'S FARMBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE PLAYING CIRCUSBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE AT CAMP REST-A-WHILEBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE AT AUNT LU'S CITY HOMEBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE IN THE BIG WOODSBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE ON AN AUTO TOURBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE AND THEIR SHETLAND PONYBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE GIVING A SHOWBUNNY BROWN AND HIS SISTER SUE AT CHRISTMAS TREE COVE
Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers, New York
For Little Men and Women
Author of "The Bunny Brown" Series, Etc.
12mo. DURABLY BOUND. ILLUSTRATED. UNIFORM STYLE OF BINDING
Copyright publications which cannot be obtained else-where. Books that charm the hearts of the little ones, and of which they never tire.
THE BOBBSEY TWINSTHE BOBBSEY TWINS IN THE COUNTRYTHE BOBBSEY TWINS AT THE SEASHORETHE BOBBSEY TWINS AT SCHOOLTHE BOBBSEY TWINS AT SNOW LODGETHE BOBBSEY TWINS ON A HOUSEBOATTHE BOBBSEY TWINS AT MEADOW BROOKTHE BOBBSEY TWINS AT HOMETHE BOBBSEY TWINS IN A GREAT CITYTHE BOBBSEY TWINS ON BLUEBERRY ISLANDTHE BOBBSEY TWINS ON THE DEEP BLUE SEATHE BOBBSEY TWINS IN THE GREAT WEST
Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers, New York