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+
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+
+<title>
+The Project Gutenberg E-text of Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
+</title>
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Five Little Friends
+
+Author: Sherred Willcox Adams
+
+Illustrator: Maud and Miska Petersham
+
+Posting Date: March 27, 2014 [EBook #7801]
+Release Date: April, 2005
+First Posted: May 18, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, William Flis, Ted Garvin
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. HTML version
+by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>
+<br /><br /><br />
+FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS
+</h1>
+
+<p class="t3">
+BY
+</p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+SHERRED WILLCOX ADAMS
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+<i>ILLUSTRATED BY</i>
+<br />
+MAUD AND MISKA PETERSHAM
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p class="t3b">
+CONTENTS
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#school">
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS AT SCHOOL
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#vacation">
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS IN VACATION
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<h3>
+<a id="school"></a>
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS AT SCHOOL
+</h3>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy and little Dot are five little friends.
+They go to the same school. Many other children go to the school too,
+but these five little friends are the ones this story is about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob is the tall boy in the brown suit. Betty is the girl in the checked
+dress. Paul is the boy with the white blouse. Peggy is the girl with
+curls. Little Dot is the tiny child with bobbed hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy and little Dot have a very fine teacher.
+She is called Miss West. Many other children are in Miss West's room
+too. But the five little friends are the ones this story is about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One morning when the children came to school Miss West had a surprise
+for them. On her desk was something large and round. It was all covered
+with paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Guess what this is, children," said Miss West.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is a balloon," said Bob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I think it is a football," said Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, no, you are both wrong," said Miss West. She took the paper off.
+What do you think it was?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a big glass bowl. In it were six goldfish. They were swimming
+about in the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Little folks," said Miss West, "these are our school pets. We must feed
+them and give them fresh water. Then they will live a long time and we
+can have fun watching them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children stood around the bowl. They watched the fish swim and
+float. They laughed when one fish chased another round and round the
+bowl. He looked very funny with his big mouth wide open.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon Miss West showed the children how to feed the fish. After that they
+took turns in caring for them. Paul and Peggy had the first turn. Next
+Bob and Betty had their turn. After that little Dot took care of the
+fish all by herself. The other children had turns too. But this story is
+about the five little children whose names you know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Miss West said to the children, "How many of you little girls
+and boys have pets of your own?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A great many hands were raised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have!" said Bob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have!" said Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have," "I have," "I have," said Betty and Peggy and little Dot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have thought of a fine plan," said Miss West. "Each day one child may
+tell the other children about his pet."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What fun!" said Betty; and all the other children thought, "What fun
+that will be!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who will have the first turn?" asked Bob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We will play a game to see," said Miss West.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Miss West wrote the names of all the children on slips of paper. Then
+she put all the slips in Paul's cap. Next she blindfolded Peggy. Peggy
+put her hand in the cap and drew out a slip. What name do you think was
+on this slip? The name was <i>Dot</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the next day little Dot told about her pet. This is what she said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My pet is a white cat. Her name is Snowball. She is as white as snow.
+When she curls up in front of the fire she is round like a ball.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One day my daddy could not find his hat. He looked and looked and
+looked for it. At last he found it in a dark corner under the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There was something in the hat. First Daddy saw two bright eyes. Then
+he saw Snowball all curled up in the hat. By her side were two little
+baby kittens. They were just like their mother. We named them Fluff and
+Muff. Now we have a happy cat family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Daddy never got his hat back. At first the kittens slept in it. Now
+Fluff and Muff are so big they sleep in a box. But they like Daddy's hat
+to play with. Fluff gets on one side and Muff on the other. Then they
+pull and pull. Daddy's hat is almost worn out now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children liked little Dot's story very much. They laughed when they
+thought of Fluff on one side and Muff on the other and Daddy's hat in
+the middle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day Betty was blindfolded. She put her hand in the cap and drew
+a slip. This time <i>Paul</i> was written on the slip. So it was Paul's turn
+to tell about his pet. This is what he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My pet is a big collie dog. His name is Hero. When my mother goes to
+market she takes Hero with her. He trots by her side and carries a
+basket in his mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sometimes my mother sends Hero home with the meat and bread for dinner.
+He goes right along. He does not stop or look around. When he comes
+to our house he sets the basket down. Then he watches it until Mother
+comes. If anyone calls, 'Here, Hero,' he pricks up his ears, but he will
+not move from his place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One day I tried to coax him away with a big bone. I know the bone
+looked and smelled good to Hero. He sniffed the air and looked at the
+bone with hungry brown eyes, but he never moved from the basket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Last summer we went to the seashore. We took Hero with us. One day I
+was on the beach, playing in the sand. Hero was lying asleep in the sun.
+I was making a sand fort and my back was toward the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suddenly a big wave dashed in and knocked me down. Then another big
+wave came and carried me out into the water. As I did not know how to
+swim, I was very much frightened. I tried to call out, but my mouth was
+full of sea water. I could make only a little frightened sound; but Hero
+heard me. What do you think he did? He jumped into the water and swam
+out to me. I was too nearly drowned to catch hold of him. So he took my
+clothes in his mouth and began to swim with me to the shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was heavy, and Hero was almost worn out before he got there. But he
+never once let go. He kept right on until he dropped me on dry land.
+Then he lay panting on the sand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Just then Mother came to see where I was. When she saw what had
+happened she hugged me hard. Then she hugged Hero hard too. The next day
+she bought Hero a new collar with his name on it in big letters&mdash;HERO.
+That night Hero had a big bone with lots of meat on it for his supper."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children enjoyed Paul's story as much as they had Dot's. They
+thought Hero was a fine name for such a brave dog. They said Paul was
+a lucky boy to have a pet like that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On another day little Dot was blindfolded. The slip of paper she drew
+had this name on it&mdash;<i>Betty</i>. So it was Betty's turn to tell about her
+pet. This is what she told:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My pet is a pigeon. He is not just a common pigeon like the ones on
+the church roof. He is a carrier pigeon. My Uncle Fred brought him from
+France. He calls him the living airplane. Can you tell why?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is named Arrow. In France Arrow used to carry messages to the
+soldiers. These messages were written on tiny slips of paper and tied
+around Arrow's neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When Uncle Fred came home he taught Arrow to go from my grandmother's
+house to our house and straight back again. It was a ten mile trip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This is the way Uncle Fred did it. Almost every day he would feed Arrow
+at both places. It was easy for him to do this as he used to ride over
+to our house a great deal. When he took Arrow away from one place he
+would leave some grain there. Arrow knew this. So when he was let loose
+he would fly straight to the grain. He never seemed to lose his way or
+stop in the wrong place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On Valentine's Day, Uncle Fred wanted to surprise me. He turned Arrow
+loose at Grandmother's house with something tied around his neck by a
+ribbon. Uncle Fred did not tell anyone what it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Arrow flew straight to our house. When I saw him I ran out to his
+feeding place. I spied the ribbon and untied it. I found a tiny gold
+heart with my name on it. I liked this Valentine best of all."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boys and girls in the class enjoyed the story of Arrow. They liked
+it so much that Betty said she would ask Uncle Fred to come to school
+and tell about what Arrow did in France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another day when one of the pupils was blindfolded and drew a slip of
+paper, the name on the slip was <i>Bob</i>. So at last it was Bob's turn.
+This is the story Bob told:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My pet is a pony named Dandy. Grandfather bought him for me. He got him
+from a man who had a pony show. This man had taught Dandy many tricks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When I say, 'Dandy, how old are you?' Dandy lifts his right front foot
+and brings it down three times. This is how he says that he is three
+years old. When I say, 'Make a bow, Dandy,' he puts his front feet out
+and bows his head almost to the ground. His mane hangs over his eyes and
+he looks very funny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dandy can play 'Hide-and-Go-Seek' too. This is the way he does it. I
+take an ear of corn and show it to him. Then I run and hide it. I call,
+'Come, Dandy, come.' He comes and looks all around for the corn. When he
+finds it, he takes it in his mouth and trots around and around with it.
+When I say, 'Bring it to me, Dandy,' he comes to me with the ear of corn
+in his mouth. But when I try to take the corn, he shakes his head and
+trots away again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One day I tried to play 'Hide-and-Go-Seek' with a handkerchief instead
+of an ear of corn. Dandy did not like it this way. He looked at the
+handkerchief. Then he sniffed at it. At last he shook his head and
+turned away. He seemed to say, 'A game like that may be fun for a boy,
+but it isn't fun for a pony. I am not going to play.'"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Everyone liked the story of Dandy. Some of the children asked to hear
+some more about him. But Miss West said it was time for recess. So the
+children went out into the school yard and played "Pony" and
+"Hide-and-Go-Seek."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another day someone drew Peggy's name on the slip of paper. And this is
+what Peggy told:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My pet is a big green and red parrot. She has a cage in the living
+room. Mother calls her 'the General' because she likes to give orders.
+When we sit down Polly calls out, 'Get busy! Get busy! Get busy!' If we
+are too busy and do not notice Polly she rolls over on her back in the
+bottom of the cage and cries, 'Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick!
+Polly's sick!' In the evening we put a cloth over Polly's cage to keep
+her quiet. When the cloth is taken off in the morning she begins to
+shout, 'Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One evening we forgot to put the cloth over Polly's cage. That night,
+quite late, my big brother went down into the living room to find a book
+he had been reading. When he turned on the light, Polly thought it was
+day. She began to scream, 'Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everyone <i>did</i> wake up. At first we were frightened. But when we found
+out what had happened we laughed and laughed. We laughed more when we
+heard a voice croak, 'Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's
+sick!'"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girls and boys all laughed at the story of Polly. Paul wrote a poem
+about her. This is what he wrote:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon my word, Poll's a funny bird.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children went around at recess saying this. They said some of
+Polly's speeches too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Miss West told the children a true story that was very, very
+sad. It was about a blind man who sold papers. He had owned a little dog
+that used to lead him to his work and watch him all day; but the little
+dog had died. Now the poor man had no one to lead him. So he could not
+sell his papers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children were very sorry for him. They wanted to do something to
+help.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wouldn't it be fine," said Betty, "if we could buy him another dog?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But how can we get the money?" said Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We could give all our pennies, but that wouldn't be enough," said
+little Dot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know, I know!" cried Bob. "Let's give a show and have our pets for
+the show animals."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children thought this was a fine plan. Miss West thought so too. She
+let them plan for the show.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she let them make tickets. Each child made two tickets. They were
+like the funny picture in the middle of this page.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Everyone who came had to pay for a ticket. Even the children who had
+pets in the show had to pay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the big children heard about the Pet Show they bought tickets too.
+Then they helped the five little friends get ready for the show.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The school yard was the show ground. The big boys made a gate for the
+people to come through. They made pens for all the animals. Next they
+printed some big signs to put on the pens. The signs were like these
+only much, much bigger.
+</p>
+
+<pre>
+ +----------------+ +===========+
+ | THIS IS HERO | | HERE IS A |
+ | THE LIFE SAVER | | HAPPY CAT |
+ +----------------+ | FAMILY |
+ +===========+
+ +=================+
+ |/ THIS IS DANDY \|
+ | THE |
+ |\ TRICK PONY /|
+ +=================+
+ +-------------------+
+ +-----------------+ | YOU WANT TO |
+ | o o o o o o | | FEEL JOLLY |
+ | THE | | SEE GENERAL POLLY |
+ | LIVING AIRPLANE | | - - -o- - - |
+ +-----------------+ +-------------------+
+</pre>
+
+<p>
+At last it was the day of the Pet Show. Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy
+and little Dot came early with their pets. Soon the other children came
+too. There were big children, and middle-sized children, and little wee
+children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they stopped at the gate who do you think the ticket man was? It
+was Hero with a basket in his mouth. The children dropped their tickets
+into the basket. They patted Hero's shaggy head and called him "Good
+dog" and "Brave old fellow."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked very kind but very, very solemn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went to all the pens to see the show pets. Dandy stood in his pen.
+He looked very wise and very plump and shaggy. He poked his head out and
+let the children stroke his mane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Polly's pen nothing could be seen but a big cage with a black cover
+over it. Not one bright feather showed. Not a single sound came from the
+cage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Snowball and her kittens were curled up in their box. They were as quiet
+as mice. All three had red and blue ribbons around their necks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pen with Arrow's name on it was empty. On the ground some grain was
+scattered. By the grain were three light gray feathers. But no living
+airplane could be seen. "Where can he be?" the children asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just then Bob came out in front of the children. He was dressed like
+a real showman. He had on a high hat and a long coat. "Ladies and
+gentlemen," he said, in a funny deep voice, "the big show is about to
+begin. Will you please find seats in the show tent?" The children
+laughed and sat down on the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob went on talking like a showman. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said,
+"you are now to see Dandy, the trick pony." When he had said this, Bob
+went to the pen and brought Dandy out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now Dandy," he said, "tell the ladies and gentlemen how old you are."
+Dandy lifted his right foot and brought it down three times. The
+children clapped their hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Make a bow to the ladies and gentlemen, Dandy," said Showman Bob. Dandy
+put his front feet out. Then he bowed his head almost to the ground. His
+mane fell over his eyes and he looked very wise and funny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next Bob took an ear of corn from his pocket. He held it in front of
+Dandy's nose. "Dandy, do you see this?" he said. Dandy nodded his head.
+His mane fell over his eyes. He looked very funny and full of mischief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now Dandy," said Showman Bob, "shut your eyes." Dandy winked and
+blinked. Then he shut his eyes tight. "Keep your eyes shut till I call
+'Come,'" said Bob. Then Bob started off with the ear of corn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dandy kept his eyes shut just one little minute. Then he opened them
+and began to peep. He peeped very slyly to see where Bob was hiding the
+corn. The children shouted with joy! Then Showman Bob came back. The
+corn was still in his hand. He pretended to be angry. He made Dandy hide
+his eyes once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Dandy peeped slyly to see where Bob was hiding the corn. At last
+Showman Bob took little Dot's hat and tied it over Dandy's eyes. How the
+children did laugh! Dandy looked so funny with a little girl's hat on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Bob hid the ear of corn behind a box. He called, "Come, Dandy,
+come!" Dandy shook his head very hard. The hat rolled on the ground.
+Then Dandy began going round the show grounds. He stopped and sniffed at
+everything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh see!" said Peggy, "Dandy is looking with his nose!" Soon Dandy
+sniffed at the box and found the ear of corn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come, Dandy, come!" called Showman Bob. Dandy came trotting up with the
+ear of corn in his mouth. But when Bob put out his hand for the corn
+Dandy kicked up his heels and away he went. He ran round and round like
+a pony in a circus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children clapped their hands and shouted. Dandy went faster and
+faster. It was very exciting. At last Dandy stopped running. Then Bob
+led him back to the pen. There the little pony munched the corn happily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next it was Peggy's turn to show Polly. Showman Bob brought out a table.
+Then he helped Peggy put Polly's big cage on it. Peggy lifted the black
+cloth. There was Polly! She was the greenest, reddest, funniest parrot
+you ever saw. She winked her eyes, shook her feathers, and called out,
+"Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!" The children laughed; but they did not
+get up. So General Polly sang out, "Get busy! Get busy! Get busy!" The
+children soon knew what they must "get busy" about. Polly began to say
+in her most coaxing voice, "Polly wants a cracker! Poor Poll! Pretty
+Poll! Poor Polly wants a cracker!" This sounded so funny that everybody
+laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peggy had some crackers in her pocket. She took them out and let the
+children feed Polly. They poked bits of cracker through the wires of her
+cage. Polly was not very polite. She pecked and grabbed and talked to
+herself. But everything she did was so funny that the children enjoyed
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Polly had all the crackers she wanted. Then she grew tired and
+cross. She began to scream, "Bad boy! Go away! Go away! Go away!" The
+children ran back to their seats. General Polly was left all alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time she liked this. She swung on her perch and made queer noises
+to herself. Then she grew tired. She threw herself on the bottom of the
+cage and began to moan, "Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's
+sick!" Then Peggy came with the black cloth, and General Polly was taken
+to her pen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next it was little Dot's turn to show her cat family. She was too shy to
+play showman as Bob had done. She just came out in front of the children
+and stood there. Snowball was in her arms and Fluff and Muff were on her
+shoulders. She put Snowball down. Then she gave her shoulders a shake
+and Fluff and Muff scrambled down to the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next Dot took two red balls from her pocket. Each ball had a long rubber
+fastened to it. It would bounce high without rolling away. Dot put a
+ball near each kitten's paws. Just as Fluff and Muff sprang to get the
+balls, Dot pulled the rubber. You never saw such surprised kittens! They
+sat still and looked with wide-open eyes. These were queer balls indeed
+that flew up into the air instead of rolling on the floor. This was
+something new and strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next time Dot bounced the balls Fluff and Muff were ready. Up they
+jumped, with their paws raised, but the balls sprang out of reach. "The
+kittens are trying to be living airplanes, too," said Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next Dot went to the pen and brought something back. She held it up and
+said shyly, "This is Daddy's hat. It used to be the kittens' bed. Now it
+is their plaything."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she had said this she threw the hat on the ground. Quick as a wink
+Fluff was on one side of it and Muff was on the other. Then they began
+to paw and pull. Fluff pulled one way. Muff pulled the other. It was a
+real pulling match. Some of the children cried, "I think that Fluff will
+win." Others cried, "Hurrah for Muff."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just then a queer noise was heard. Can you guess what it was? It was the
+brim of Daddy's hat. It had torn all the way around&mdash;<i>rip, rip, rip</i>.
+Off it came so suddenly that both little kittens rolled over backward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the children clapped their hands and laughed aloud. This frightened
+Fluff and Muff. They scampered to their mother as fast as their little
+white feet could carry them. This ended the act of the cat family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next it was Betty's turn to show Arrow. But Arrow's pen was still empty.
+Betty whispered to Miss West. Miss West rose and said, "While we are
+waiting for the next act, let's sing together." She started a song
+everyone knew. All the children joined in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just as they were singing a second song, something happened. A light
+speck was seen moving through the air. It came nearer and nearer. At
+last it circled round the pen, where the grain was scattered. Then it
+flew slowly to the ground. It was Arrow, the living airplane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children crowded about the pen to see. "Look," said one of them.
+"There is something around Arrow's neck!" Betty bent over and looked.
+Yes, there <i>was</i> something. She untied it quickly. On a piece of paper
+was written, "This is Arrow's gift to the blind man." In the paper was a
+bright five dollar gold piece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betty read aloud what was on the paper. Then she held up the five dollar
+gold piece. How the children did shout and clap their hands. "Hurrah
+for Betty's Uncle Fred!" they cried. "Hurrah for the living airplane!
+Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!" When the last shout had been given, Showman
+Bob stepped out. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said in his deep showman's
+voice, "we thank you for coming to the Pet Show. We know the blind man
+will thank you too when he gets his new dog. The show will now close
+with a grand parade!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Bob made a showman's bow and went behind the school-house. Soon
+a drum began to beat&mdash;<i>tum, tum, tum</i>. The parade was coming! First
+marched Showman Bob beating the drum. Behind him was Betty carrying a
+big American flag. On her shoulder was Arrow, the living airplane. Next
+came brave old Hero pulling a little cart. In the cart were Snowball,
+Fluff, and Muff and what was left of Daddy's hat. Dot marched beside the
+cart. After them came Dandy. Paul was walking by his side and holding
+something on his back. It was Polly's cage with the black cover off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pretty Poll was peeping from behind the wires. She looked surprised and
+a little bit frightened. Suddenly she rolled on her back at the bottom
+of the cage. The last thing the children heard as the parade passed out
+of sight was, "Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's sick!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wish the children who read this book could hear about the blind man
+and his new dog but that is another story.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<h3>
+<a id="vacation"></a>
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS IN VACATION
+</h3>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p class="t3b">
+I
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon after the Pet Show, school closed for the summer vacation. The
+children said good-bye to each other and to Miss West.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For weeks everybody had been busy making plans for the summer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paul went to the seashore and you may be sure brave Hero was taken
+along.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob and his family went to the seashore too; and, what was best of all,
+they took a cottage not far from where Paul lived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dandy was sent out to the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betty's mother said, "I want to have my little girl spend a summer on a
+farm&mdash;a real farm," so they went to Mr. White's.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+See if you can guess who went with them!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No, it wasn't Arrow. The living airplane was left with Uncle Fred at
+Grandmother's. It wasn't Miss West. She went away on a long trip across
+the ocean. It was a very nice little person whose name begins with <i>D</i>,
+and it was another very nice little person whose name begins with <i>P</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peggy's mother went too, but Poll was sent to a bird shop. Little Dot's
+mother stayed in the city with Dot's father and the cat family to keep
+them from getting lonely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dot promised to be a good girl and to do just what the other mothers
+told her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a bright June afternoon when the three little girls and the two
+mothers got off the train at a little country station. Mr. White came to
+meet them. He and Billy, the hired man, piled all the trunks and bags in
+a wagon. Then Billy climbed up on the high seat and cracked his whip,
+saying, "Get-up! Get-up!" The horses pulled, the dust flew, and away the
+wagon went. Then Mr. White packed the mothers and the little girls into
+his automobile and away they also went to the farm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The farm was the very nicest place in the whole world. At least that is
+what the three little girls thought. Everything about it was nice. The
+rooms were big and cool and low. The wide side porch was a lovely place
+to eat dinner. The big low attic was splendid for rainy-day play; but
+the very, very nicest of all the nice things at the farm was Mary White.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary was nine years and she had lived on the farm all her life. She knew
+all the good places to play. She could call every animal on the farm by
+name. She could make up the most delightful games. What a splendid
+playmate she was!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First she took the children to the pasture to see the cows. There were
+three of them, Bonny-Belle, Bess, and Buttercup.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beside Buttercup was the dearest little calf with long thin legs and a
+soft tan coat. It was Don, Buttercup's first baby. He was just two
+months old and very full of life and mischief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is that another cow over there?" said Peggy, pointing to a field beyond
+the pasture. "Oh, no," said Mary, "That's Big Ben. He is a very wild and
+cross bull, so he has to have a home all by himself. No one ever goes
+into his field except Billy. Big Ben seems to hate people. But what he
+hates most is anything that is red."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children peeped in at Big Ben, with nice safe-afraid shivers going
+down their backs. Then Mary said, "Come let's go to the farmyard."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The farmyard was a very busy place. "I never saw so many pets in all my
+life," said Betty. But Mary knew them all. She showed them Mrs. Speckle
+with her family of little baby chicks that looked like fluffy, yellow
+balls bobbing around her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next she pointed out Mrs. Black Hen with her larger children. Some of
+these chickens were losing their feathers. How Mary did laugh when Peggy
+cried, "See, those poor little chickens are peeling off!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now," said Mary, "I will show you my trained chicken." First she went
+into the house and came out with two ripe, red cherries still on the
+stem. Then she called softly, "Come, come, Tom Thumb," and as she
+finished calling she put the stem of the cherries between her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out from among the other chickens came a beautiful little white rooster.
+He looked almost like a toy, he was so tiny. With a glad little crow
+he flew straight up to Mary's shoulder, where he began to peck at the
+cherries. He ate very daintily. Sometimes he would stop eating and
+cuddle down on Mary's shoulder. When the ripe red treat was all eaten
+he gave another glad crow and flew down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betty and Dot and Peggy loved to help feed the chickens. Every morning
+after breakfast Mrs. White would come out into the yard with a big pan
+of corn-meal mush and Mary would follow with a smaller pan of bread
+crumbs. Then both mother and little girl would call, "Chick, chick,
+chick! Chick, chick, chick! Chick, chick, chick!" as if they were
+singing the same tune over and over. At this, such a hurry and scurry as
+there would be!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed as if every fowl on the farm heard the call and was coming.
+There were big hens and little hens, brown hens, black hens, white hens,
+and speckled hens. There were fluffy baby chicks and long-legged
+middle-sized chickens. There were proud roosters with bright combs and
+gay, glossy feathers. There were stately turkeys with long necks and
+great fan-like tails. There were ducks with long fat bodies and big
+flat feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hurry, scurry! Scurry, hurry! "Cluck, cluck." "Peep-peep." "Groo-groo."
+"Gobble-gobble." "Quack, quack." Such noise and excitement you never
+heard!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such table manners you never saw! All were talking at once. Everyone was
+pecking and pushing and grabbing!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One morning at the farmyard breakfast Mrs. White said, "Where can Brown
+Betty be? I haven't seen her for two or three weeks. I am afraid she has
+gone off and hidden her nest somewhere. I wish I knew where, for turkey
+eggs are scarce this year. If you four children will find her nest I
+will pay you ten cents for each egg in it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little girls were very much excited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Just suppose," said Betty, "that we find a nest with six eggs in it.
+That will be sixty cents. What shall we buy with so much money?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wouldn't it be fun to get Father to take us to the store and let us buy
+things for a picnic?" said Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, yes, let's have a picnic," cried Peggy and Betty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But first," said wise little Dot, "we must find Brown Betty's nest."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That very day the children began to hunt for the hidden eggs. They
+climbed up into the barn loft and looked in the hay. Here they found
+Mrs. Nicker on her nest. When they came near she ruffled up her feathers
+and gave an angry cluck. "Don't be afraid," laughed Betty; "we are
+looking for something worth much more than one little hen's egg."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then hidden down in the hay they came across a mouse's home with four
+baby mice in it. They looked very small and young and funny. Their tiny
+eyes were shut tight. "You are cunning little things but you won't buy
+us a picnic," said Peggy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the eaves of the barn they found a swallow's nest, but the baby birds
+had flown away. Only some pieces of eggshell were left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All that day and part of the next and the next and the next the children
+hunted and hunted but no Brown Betty and no turkey eggs could they find.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One bright June morning Mary said, "Let's go into the woods to play."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, may we?" Betty and Peggy asked their mothers. And little Dot said,
+"Oh, please may I?" and looked from one mother to the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, let them go," said Mrs. White. "The woods are not far away and
+there is nothing to harm them there."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the four little girls started out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went down a shady lane and through a meadow. Then they came to the
+woods and wandered about for a while. At last they stopped by the side
+of a little brook that flowed merrily on its way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes, shoes and stockings were taken off and the children
+were wading in the cool, rippling water. It was lots of fun, but the
+water was very cold. Soon they were glad to dry their feet in the soft
+grass and put on their shoes and stockings again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let's make a tree playhouse," said Mary; "I'll show you how." So they
+set to work with Mary as leader. They found a hollow tree with plenty
+of room in it. Next they gathered all the soft, velvety moss they could
+find. With this they made a thick green carpet on the floor. Then they
+made green moss furniture too. They had a bed, a couch, a table, and a
+chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We should have some one to live in our green, mossy house," said Peggy.
+"Let's go to the meadow and gather some daisies and make little flower
+people out of them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So off the children went. In a little while, back they came with their
+hands full of flowers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peggy was the first one to reach the tree house. She looked in and then
+began to laugh and call to the others to come quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We needn't make any flower people for our house," she said. "It's
+already rented." And sure enough, there on the green moss couch was a
+fat brown toad. He was winking and blinking and looking much pleased
+with his new home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children sat down to rest and watch Mr. Toad. All of a sudden they
+heard a queer sound. "Cheep-cheep! Cheep-cheep! Cheep-cheep-cheep!" It
+seemed to come from the bushes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It must be some little birds," said Betty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps it is a mother quail and her babies," said Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very carefully the four little girls peeped through the leaves and
+bushes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Can you guess what they saw?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There, walking about in an open place in the woods, was Brown Betty, and
+running beside her and talking to her in turkey talk were eight baby
+turkeys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How excited the children were! They all wanted to run to the farmhouse
+with the good news. But at last they drew lots to see who should go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will hold four daisies," said Peggy, "and each of you may take one.
+The girl who gets the daisy with the longest stem may run ahead. If you
+leave the longest one in my hand, I will go."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes," said Mary, "and the other children may drive Brown Betty and her
+brood back to the farmyard."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they drew the daisies and little Dot had the one with the longest
+stem. Away she ran as fast as her short legs could carry her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, Mrs. White," she cried, as she reached the farmhouse, "we found
+Brown Betty in the woods, but her eggs have all turned into little
+turkeys."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While Mrs. White was laughing over Dot's way of telling the news, the
+other children came up with Brown Betty and her brood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dear, dear," said Mrs. White, "as the eggs have turned into turkeys I
+will let the money I promised turn into a picnic. Let me see, to-day is
+Tuesday. Will you be ready to go on Thursday?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed we will!" cried the children. "Thank you so much."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Wednesday morning Mary woke up very, very early.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Mary woke Betty and Peggy and little Dot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They all dressed as quickly as they could and hurried out of doors.
+The sun was just rising and the sky was a beautiful red and gold. The
+dew sparkled on the grass, and in the tree tops the birds were just
+beginning to chirp and call.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where are you going, my pretty maids?" laughed Mr. White.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We're 'going a-milking, sir, she said,'" Mary replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then each little girl took a tin cup and followed Mr. White and Billy to
+the pasture where Bonny-Belle and Bess stood waiting. Billy let down the
+bars and the cows came into the barnyard. Mr. White milked Bonny-Belle
+and Billy milked Bess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little girls stood near and watched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How Mr. White and Billy laughed when little Dot said, "Oh, is that the
+way you get milk on a farm? We get ours out of bottles."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before milking time was over each little girl held her cup and had it
+milked full of fresh, new milk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first the children thought they would carry the cups home and drink
+the milk for breakfast. But they were so hungry they couldn't wait,
+so they drank it standing in the barnyard, with Bonny-Belle and Bess
+looking at them with soft, kind eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That afternoon Mary had some work to do and Betty and Peggy went for a
+walk with their mothers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Little Dot was tired from her early morning visit to the barnyard. So
+she took a book of fairy stories and went out into the near-by field.
+She settled herself cozily under a big maple tree and began to read.
+After a little while the book slid from her hands. Her head nodded and
+nodded and then rested on the grass. Her eyes winked and winked and then
+closed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She must have slept almost an hour when she woke with a start. Something
+very soft and moist was moving over her nose and cheeks. It felt almost
+as if her face were being washed with a sticky cloth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dot opened her sleepy blue eyes and looked right into the big brown eyes
+of Don, Buttercup's baby calf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh! Oh!" cried the little girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ma-a-a," replied Don as he frisked away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are a dear little thing," Dot called after him, "but I wish you
+wouldn't kiss me with your tongue all over my face."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morning of the picnic was bright and clear. There was great
+excitement in the kitchen and pantry. Mrs. White and Molly, the maid,
+were fixing the lunch, but the four little girls couldn't help popping
+in every few minutes to take a peep. The two other mothers peeped too.
+What they saw made them wish that they were to be invited to the picnic.
+But this time only the four little girls who had found Brown Betty were
+to go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last the lunch was packed in four baskets and off the children went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On their way they found some wild strawberries. They stopped to pick
+them, and Mary showed the others how to make leaf baskets to hold
+berries. They gathered broad, flat leaves and fastened them together
+with little twigs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they went on until at last they came to the loveliest spot you ever
+saw. It was an open space with trees all around it. Near-by was a little
+bubbling spring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children set their baskets in the shade and began to romp and play.
+They played "Hide-and-Go-Seek" and a new game which they called "Echo."
+Can you guess how to play this game?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last they grew tired and hungry and began to unpack their baskets
+and to put their lunch on a mossy spot near the brook. Such a feast you
+never saw! Everything a child likes best came out of those baskets. How
+the four children did eat and eat and eat! And when they had eaten and
+eaten and eaten until they could eat no more, there were still some good
+things left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let's rest a while," said Mary, "and perhaps we'll be hungry again.
+Shall I tell you a fairy story?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, please do," said Betty; and Peggy and Dot echoed together, "Please
+do."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Mary told them of a fairy ball where all the little fairies came out
+of their flower cups and danced by the light of the moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wouldn't this spot be a lovely place for a fairy ball?" said Peggy,
+when Mary had finished the story. "I wonder if there are any fairies in
+this wood."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know how we can find out," cried Betty. "We can give the fairies a
+party."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But they only come out at night," said Dot, "so we couldn't see them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But," replied Betty, "we can make a feast for them; and, if the next
+morning we find the feast is gone, we shall know the fairies really
+came."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, let's do it," cried Dot and Peggy. And Mary said, "If we want the
+fairies to come we must make a magic ring of flowers." "That will be
+lots of fun," cried the children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So for the rest of the afternoon they were very busy indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went to the meadow and gathered clover blossoms. Then they sat down
+on the moss and made a magic ring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the magic ring was placed around a lovely mossy spot they began to
+set the table for the feast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We'll give them cake and some ripe strawberries," said Betty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But fairies eat dewdrops served on rose leaves," said Peggy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When they come to a party given by little girls, they eat just what
+little girls give them. You'll see," said Betty. So the moss table was
+set with leaf plates, and on each plate were a ripe, red strawberry
+and a fairy-size piece of cake. When everything was ready the children
+danced around the magic ring three times to make it more magic. Then
+they packed their baskets and went home, feeling very tired but very
+happy and much pleased with the picnic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night Betty could not go to sleep for a long, long time. She lay in
+bed and watched the moonbeams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wonder," she thought, "whether the fairies will come. I wonder
+whether the man in the moon is looking down at them now. I wonder"&mdash;and
+then she went to sleep and dreamed that she was dancing around and
+around the magic ring with the man in the moon. All around them fairies
+were sliding up and down from the tree tops to the mossy ground, on
+silver moonbeams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day the children went to the woods to see whether the fairies
+had been there. Betty reached the spot first and cried out joyfully,
+"They came! They came!" And sure enough, the leaf plates were empty.
+Every strawberry, every crumb of cake, was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The fairies really came," said the other little girls as they stood
+around the magic ring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tweet-tweet-tweet," sang a bird in a tree top; "tweet-tweet-tweet."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He cocked his little head and looked very wise and knowing. But
+"Tweet&mdash;tweet&mdash;tweet; tweet&mdash;tweet-tweet" was all he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the things Peggy and Betty and Dot liked best to do was to watch
+Mrs. White skim the rich cream from the great pans of milk in the dairy.
+The dairy was down by the brook and the pans of milk were on shelves
+near the water, so that they were kept fresh and cool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One very warm day Mary said, "Let's play dairy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right," said Betty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right," echoed Peggy and Dot. "You show us how."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Mary brought two big pans and two pieces of soap from the kitchen.
+She filled the pans with water and put a piece of soap in each pan. Then
+she told the other children to watch the cream rise. She began to shake
+the soap about in the water, and the suds rose higher and higher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's rather <i>white</i> cream," she said, "but we can play it comes from a
+cow named Snowball."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's splendid cream," cried the three little girls. "May we help make
+it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wonder whether Molly will let us use her cream skimmers," said Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Molly heard her name and came to the kitchen door to see what mischief
+those blessed children were up to now. She saw the pans on a seat built
+round a big maple tree and the four little girls bobbing about, very
+busy indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Molly, will you please let us have the skimmers?" Peggy cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well," replied Molly, "as it's clean dirt you're making I suppose I
+must."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Mary and Betty made the cream rise, and Dot and Peggy skimmed it and
+poured it into bottles and old cans to "sell."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While they were in the midst of the fun, Red Chief, the proudest rooster
+in the farmyard, came strutting along.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He put his head on one side and looked at the pans. "Too-ok, too-ok,
+too-ok. Is it feeding time?" he said. "Too-ok, too-ok, too-ok. I must
+see; I must see; I must see." With that he flapped his great red wings
+and flew up on the side of the pan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Red Chief was a heavy rooster and the pan was not very firm. Down
+tumbled the pan and Red Chief together. The make-believe cream and milk
+went all over him. Such a wet, cross, disgusted rooster you never saw!
+"Too-ok, too-ok, too-ok," he croaked, as he shook the soapsuds from his
+feathers. Then away he marched, scolding to himself about little girls
+who played silly games.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon the children were out in the orchard playing "lady." Mary
+and Betty were the mothers in the game. Peggy and Dot were the children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betty had on a long skirt and a fine grown-lady's hat. Mary had a scarf
+trailing on the ground instead of a long skirt, and she carried her
+mother's very best umbrella. It was a bright red one that could be used
+for sun as well as rain. It made Mary feel very grown-up indeed. The two
+"play" families made their homes under the trees. They paid visits back
+and forth. They gave tea parties. The children had measles and mumps and
+were put to bed on the grass with leaf plasters over their faces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary was Mrs. Ray and Dot was her little daughter, Lily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Mrs. Ray sent Lily to the meadow to buy some flowers. Dot danced
+gaily away. Just as she was gathering the flowers, a bright, blue
+butterfly lighted near her and then flew a little farther on. He seemed
+to be inviting her to race with him. So off Dot started.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her fat little legs seemed to twinkle over the grass, but the butterfly
+went faster still. Away he flew across the pasture, away over the fence
+into the next lot. Dot paused only a minute, then she slipped under the
+wire of the fence and followed. On and on she went. She did not notice
+where she was going. But the butterfly fluttered far ahead and was soon
+out of sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Dot stopped and looked around. She was in a strange field. No
+living thing was about. Yes, something was moving over in the far
+corner. It turned around and seemed to sniff the air. Poor little Dot
+stood almost frozen with fright. It was Big Ben.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Dot did the worst thing she could have done. She gave a loud cry
+and began to run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Big Ben shook himself and sniffed the air again. Then he began to come
+toward her in great bounds, with his head down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Back in the orchard the make-believe Mrs. Ray had begun to wonder why
+her little girl was staying so long. At last with her scarf across her
+shoulders and her umbrella over her head she went out to find her
+daughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary reached the meadow just as Dot screamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment she stood still and looked around. The meadow was empty.
+Then she knew that little Dot was in the field with Big Ben.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swift as the wind Mary ran on, closing the umbrella as she went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under the fence she crept and ran toward Dot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor little Dot was running and stumbling and crying. Big Ben was
+bounding nearer and nearer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't be afraid," Mary called, as she came up to the little girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Mary did a strange thing. She opened the red umbrella and whirled
+it around and around. Then she threw it toward Big Ben as far as it
+would go. It went rolling over the grass, with Big Ben bounding wildly
+after it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The red umbrella made him so angry that he forgot all about the little
+girls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary and Dot crept under the fence to safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O Mother," sobbed Mary, when the children reached home and told the
+story, "O Mother, your lovely red umbrella is all ruined!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But my little girl is safe," said Mrs. White, "and she has saved the
+life of her little friend." Mrs. White put her arm around Mary and held
+her tightly, and drew little Dot to her, too, just as Dot's own mother
+would have done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wish you could hear all the things Betty, Peggy, and little Dot did on
+the farm. It would take a great, big book to hold the story; and this is
+a little book for little folks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last the summer vacation was over. The three little girls and the two
+mothers had to leave their friends on the farm and go back to the city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little girls said good-bye to every living thing on the place&mdash;to
+the little pet rooster, to Red Chief, to the Speckle family, and to
+Mrs. Black Hen and her children who were now almost grown and had whole
+suits of clothes on. They said good-bye to Brown Betty and her children.
+They went to the pasture and said good-bye to Bonny-Belle, Bess, and
+Buttercup, and to frisky little Don. They even stood at the fence and
+waved good-bye to bad Big Ben.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the two mothers and the three little girls said good-bye to Mrs.
+White and Billy and Molly and last of all to dear little Mary, who
+promised to come and visit them at Christmas time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good-bye, good-bye, good-bye!" they called as Mr. White tucked them
+into the automobile and drove away. "We've had a happy, happy summer!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they reached the city, little Dot's father was at the station to
+meet them. How glad he was to see his little girl again! And how happy
+Dot was to put her arms around dear Daddy's neck!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How is Mother?" she said, "and how are Snowball and Fluff and Muff?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everyone is well," said Daddy, "and I have a grand surprise for you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it, Daddy?" cried little Dot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betty and Peggy came near to listen too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's telling," laughed Daddy. "I'd rather show you when we get home."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"May Betty and Peggy go with us?" he asked the two mothers. I think the
+two mothers must have known the secret. They smiled and said, "Yes,
+indeed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So off the three little girls went with Dot's father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they reached Dot's house no one was at the door to meet them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This seemed strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the head of the stairs a strange lady with a cap and apron on was
+standing and smiling at them. She led them into the front room, still
+smiling but saying nothing. This made it very exciting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There in an easy chair was Dot's mother. She was holding something in
+her arms. At her feet were Snowball and the kittens sound asleep in
+their basket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O, Mother, Mother!" cried little Dot running to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My own little girl!" said Mother. "See, here is a darling new pet for
+you and Daddy and me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She held out the bundle in her arms, and it was a dear little baby
+brother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The very best pet in all the world!" said little Dot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Betty and Peggy thought so too.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p class="t3b">
+II
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what have Paul and Bob been doing all this time? We will have to go
+back to the beginning of vacation and see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The place where they spent the summer was called Fairport. At Fairport
+there was a wide, smooth, sandy beach. Here the boys went in bathing,
+built sand forts, and gathered shells.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On one part of the shore the beach was very narrow. Great rocks rose
+like a fort above it. Paul and Bob liked to play on the rocks. Sometimes
+they played that they were Indians and sometimes that they were cave
+men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They found a place under the rocks for their cave. When they pretended
+that they were pirates, they hid their treasures in the cave. Their
+treasures were things they found on the beach. There were shells and
+boxes, and bottles and queer bits of china and glass. Hero was a fierce
+monster guarding the treasure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes the boys put Hero in the cave and pretended he was a lion.
+Then they stole into his den and captured him and sold him to a circus
+man. The circus man was Roy, a little boy who liked to play with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Bob and Paul and Roy saw some big boys standing on the wharf.
+They were catching crabs. First they baited their lines and then threw
+them into the water. When the crabs "bit" they drew them in. It looked
+very exciting. The three little boys wanted to try.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they found strings and the big boys gave them some bait. Bob and Roy
+had good luck. But Paul was so excited he couldn't pull his line in
+quickly enough to catch a crab. At last he thought, "If I wade into the
+water I'll be near the crabs. Then it won't be so hard to pull them in."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So down he climbed and into the water he waded. Soon Bob and Roy heard
+him call, "Oh, Oh, Oh, come quick!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" called Bob. "Have you caught a big crab?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, no," said Paul. He was half laughing and half crying, and all the
+time he was shaking his foot as hard as he could. "Oh, no, I haven't
+caught a crab. A&mdash;crab&mdash;has&mdash;caught me!" And sure enough, a big fat crab
+had nipped Paul's toe and was holding it fast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob climbed down and pulled it off. Paul went home and tied up his sore
+toe. Then he came back and sat on the wharf and watched the others.
+Somehow, he didn't feel like catching crabs. So he pretended he was a
+sailor who had been bitten by a big shark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Bob and Paul found a very nice bottle on the beach. It had a
+tight cork so that the water could not soak in. At first they thought
+they would hide it in their treasure cave. But that didn't seem exciting
+enough. So they thought and thought what to do with it. At last Bob
+said, "I know! Let's write our names and where we live on a piece of
+paper and put it in the bottle. Then let's throw the bottle out to sea."
+So he wrote:
+</p>
+
+<pre>
+ +----------------------+
+ | Bob Johnson |
+ | Paul Ray |
+ | Fairport, Maine |
+ +----------------------+
+</pre>
+
+<p>
+They put the paper in the bottle and corked the bottle tightly. Then
+they threw it out into the ocean. At first the bottle bobbed up and down
+in the water. But soon a big wave caught it and carried it out of sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suppose," said Paul, "the bottle goes way out to sea and a big whale
+swallows it. And suppose it makes the big whale so sick that he swims
+near to the shore. Then some fishermen will catch him and kill him. When
+they cut him open they will find the bottle, and when they read our
+names they will know we are the boys who helped them get the great big
+whale."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or," said Bob, "suppose the bottle goes out to sea and a man in a
+seaplane sees it and opens it. And suppose he comes flying to Fairport
+and when he lands here he asks where we are. Then when he finds us he
+takes us for a long, long ride in his seaplane."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was great fun supposing. The next morning Bob and Paul went to the
+beach all ready to have some more supposes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what was that small thing lying on the sand? It looked very much
+like a bottle. Yes, it was. It was <i>the</i> bottle!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob picked it up and looked rather disappointed. Paul looked
+disappointed too. "Our supposes are no good now," he said. "Oh yes,"
+cried Bob, "I know a fine suppose. It's so good it's almost true. Let's
+pretend a big wave was the parcel postman. When he saw the bottle away
+out in the ocean with our names in it, he brought it straight to us."
+"Why, of course," said Paul. "The parcel postman had to bring the bottle
+to us. He couldn't take it to the whale or to the man with the seaplane.
+It wasn't addressed to them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Bob's father took Paul and Bob out fishing. They carried their
+bait in a tin can and they took a larger can to hold their fish. They
+stood on a high rock and threw their lines out into the deep water. The
+fish bit very well. Mr. Johnson caught five or six. But the boys were
+so excited they could not wait. They drew up their lines too soon. Once
+Paul felt a pull and waited. When he felt another pull he drew in his
+line. On it was a very tiny fish. "It's too small to keep," said Mr.
+Johnson. So he took it carefully off the hook and threw it back into the
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a little while Bob felt a pull on his line. He held it very still and
+waited. Soon there was another pull&mdash;a very strong one. Then there came
+a jerk that almost threw him down. "Now draw in your line," said Mr.
+Johnson. "Steady, steady!" Bob pulled. His line almost broke. He pulled
+and tugged and pulled again. Then up came the line and on it was a
+fish&mdash;a big, beautiful fish flapping and twisting. "Good, good," cried
+Mr. Johnson. "That's a prize catch."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How proud Bob felt as he landed his fish. He wouldn't let his father
+help take it off the hook. He did it all himself. For a moment he stood
+with the beautiful prize fish in his hand. Some people were fishing
+near-by and he wanted them to see. He wanted them to know of his prize
+catch. He felt very proud. "Look," said one of them; "what a great big
+fish!" Bob heard and felt prouder than ever. He threw his fish into the
+can as if he were saying, "Oh, that's nothing, I <i>always</i> catch the
+biggest fish." Then he began to bait his hook again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just then Paul cried out, "Oh, Oh, Oh!" quickly. Bob turned just in time
+to see his prize fish flop out of the can and back into the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, Oh, Oh!" He was no longer a proud fisherman. He was just a very sad
+little boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On another day Bob and Paul stopped in front of a little cottage. A man
+was in the yard mending a him. The man was a strong young fisherman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the door of the cottage sat an old, old man with white hair. A cane
+was by his side. He spoke to Bob and Paul and let them come in and sit
+on the steps near him. He was the fisherman's father. He was called
+Captain John. He had once been a fisherman himself. Now he was too old
+to work, but he knew many stories of the sea. Bob and Paul never grew
+tired of hearing them. Every day they came to the cottage. Captain John
+was always there sitting in the doorway, with his cane by his side. He
+was always ready to tell them an exciting true story of the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day a big gray cat was curled up at Captain John's feet. "Is pussy
+your pet, Captain John?" asked Bob. "No, little lad," said the old man.
+"She belongs to my daughter. My pet is almost as old as I am. She's a
+brave old friend. We have stuck by each other for over fifty years.
+We've seen hard times and good times together. And now we are growing
+old side by side."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will you show her to us, please, Captain John?" said the two little
+boys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, yes," replied the old man; "come with me." He took his cane and
+walking very, very slowly, he took the boys around the cottage to a tiny
+garden. There was one spot in the garden that was bright with flowers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Captain John led them there. "Here she is," he said. "Here's my old
+friend, the <i>Sea Gull</i>, dressed up in her Sunday clothes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boys looked and saw that the <i>Sea Gull</i> was a boat. She was Captain
+John's pet&mdash;almost as old as he was. She was his brave old friend who
+had stuck by him for over fifty years. Now she was too old for the sea
+so she had a home in the tiny garden. The flowers that had been planted
+in her were her "Sunday clothes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She seems alive to me," said Captain John. "I am glad we can grow old
+side by side."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wish you could hear of all the good times Bob and Paul had at
+Fairport. Every day was packed with fun and both little boys grew taller
+and very brown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last vacation time was nearly over. Bob left Fairport first. He and
+his family went home in his father's automobile. They camped out every
+night. The camping tents and the pots and pans were strapped on the back
+of the automobile. They rode all day. They went over hills, through
+valleys, and into cities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day they passed a flower farm. "Oh, Mother," begged Bob, "May I stop
+and buy some flowers?" "Why, Bob," said his mother, "What do you want
+with flowers? We haven't any room for them in the automobile."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't want them to take home," said Bob, "I want to send them by the
+postman to Captain John. They are for the <i>Sea Gull</i>."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the automobile stopped and Bob spent his birthday money at the flower
+farm. The next day the parcel post brought Captain John a box of spring
+bulbs and fall plants. With them was a card in Bob's very best writing:
+</p>
+
+<pre>
+ +-----------------------+
+ | To Captain John's Pet |
+ | The "Sea Gull" |
+ | from |
+ | B.J. |
+ | Guess who this is. |
+ +-----------------------+
+</pre>
+
+<p>
+Paul stayed in Fairport a week after Bob had left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not lonely, for his daddy had come. Paul and his daddy were great
+friends. They went around together like two chums.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The day before Daddy's week was up they went out for a long sail. Mrs.
+Ray was afraid to go, but Paul was not. He felt very big and brave. With
+Daddy to sail the boat everything would be all right. The sun shone,
+the wind blew, and away they started. The boat seemed to skim along as
+lightly as a sea gull.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last they landed on a little island. Paul helped his daddy gather
+sticks and build a fire. Mr. Ray put four ears of corn under the wood.
+Paul thought they would burn up, but they didn't. The husks covered
+them. Next Mr. Ray put a pan on the fire and fried some bacon and
+some potatoes. Paul unpacked a basket of sandwiches, and by that time
+everything was ready. They had no plates and no napkins. They ate with
+their fingers, in just the way little boys sometimes wish to do and
+mustn't, when they are at the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Daddy told stories of camping and hunting as they sat by the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Time passed very quickly. It was four o'clock before they knew it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All aboard," cried Mr. Ray, and in a very few minutes the lunch things
+were packed up and they were in the boat. At first the sails filled and
+the boat moved swiftly on. But suddenly the sky grew dark. Great claps
+of thunder were heard. Lightning played all around the boat. The wind
+blew fiercely. The waves dashed so high that the boat was almost upset.
+Paul felt very small and almost afraid, but not quite. His big, brave
+daddy was there. "Sit still, hold tight," Daddy called. His voice
+sounded far away, the storm was making such a noise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed hours and hours that Paul sat still and held tight. He grew
+cold and stiff and wet. The sky became blacker and blacker. The wind
+howled louder and louder. Sometimes Daddy shouted, hoping that some one
+in a bigger boat would hear and come to help him. But no help came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All at once a clear, bright light shone over the water. "The
+lighthouse!" cried Mr. Ray, "The lighthouse! We are saved."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned the boat and steered toward the light. It shone into the
+darkness like a kind eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fighting the wind and storm was hard work, but at last the boat reached
+the island on which the lighthouse stood. As the boat came to the shore
+Mr. Ray called and called. At last the door of the lighthouse opened and
+the keeper came out. He helped pull the boat to shore. Then he lifted
+Paul out and carried him into the lighthouse and Mr. Ray followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first Paul was too wet and cold and too much frightened to care about
+anything. But when he had been warmed and his clothes dried he began to
+look around. He was in a cheerful room with the lighthouse keeper and
+his wife. His dear daddy was there, too. And there was another person
+in the room. This was a little boy with a very pale face. He sat in a
+wheeled chair. His poor back was so weak he could not walk. But his face
+was bright and smiling. He held out his hand to Paul. "I'm Dick," he
+said, "I came to the lighthouse in a storm too, and I've been here ever
+since."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, please tell me about it," said Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was eight years ago," began Dick, "when Father Moore found me in a
+boat. There had been a shipwreck and I must have been in it. I don't
+remember anything about it. I was only two years old and my back had
+been hurt. But Father Moore saved me and he and Mother Moore took me to
+be their little boy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, he's our little boy," said the lighthouse keeper, who was "Father
+Moore." "We live here together and keep the light."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't you get lonely?" Paul asked Dick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, no," said Dick, "I have a great many things to play with. See!" And
+he pointed to a big table near his chair. On it were many small toys.
+There was a farm with fences, houses, horses, cows, and chickens. There
+were people too&mdash;a man, a woman, and two children. Everything was made
+of clay. There was a tall clay lighthouse and around it were clay ships
+and boats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What splendid toys," said Paul. "Did Santa Claus bring them?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I made them myself," said Dick proudly. "My back and legs aren't much
+good but my fingers do whatever I want them to. Whenever I am lonely I
+think of something to make and then my fingers make it. I think," he
+went on laughing, "I'll make you and your father after you have gone."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paul hated to leave the lighthouse and brave little Dick. But he and
+Daddy had to go as soon as the storm was over. They knew Mrs. Ray would
+be greatly worried about them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll write to you," said Paul to Dick, "and I'll send you some of my
+books with pictures in them. Then you can make more things."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How glad Paul's mother was when her little boy and his daddy reached
+home. That night she came in to tuck him snugly in bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is my little boy sorry this is his last night at Fairport?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, Mother," said Paul. "I hate to leave Captain John, and the cave,
+and the beach, and the ocean; but I want to get home. I want to see Bob
+and Betty and Peggy and Dot. I want them to help me do something for
+Dick."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you want to do, dear?" asked Mrs. Ray.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want to send him something to keep his fingers busy, perhaps a tool
+chest and some wood," said Paul. "And, O Mother, do you think we could
+do something to make his back strong?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps we can," answered Mrs. Ray. "We must see what we can do to help
+him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You may be sure that some happy days came to Dick after the five little
+friends had put their heads together.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+
+</html>
+
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new file mode 100644
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+++ b/7801.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,1794 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Five Little Friends
+
+Author: Sherred Willcox Adams
+
+Illustrator: Maud and Miska Petersham
+
+Posting Date: March 27, 2014 [EBook #7801]
+Release Date: April, 2005
+First Posted: May 18, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, William Flis, Ted Garvin
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. HTML version
+by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS
+
+BY
+
+SHERRED WILLCOX ADAMS
+
+
+_ILLUSTRATED BY_
+
+MAUD AND MISKA PETERSHAM
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS AT SCHOOL
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS IN VACATION
+
+
+
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS AT SCHOOL
+
+
+Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy and little Dot are five little friends.
+They go to the same school. Many other children go to the school too,
+but these five little friends are the ones this story is about.
+
+Bob is the tall boy in the brown suit. Betty is the girl in the checked
+dress. Paul is the boy with the white blouse. Peggy is the girl with
+curls. Little Dot is the tiny child with bobbed hair.
+
+Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy and little Dot have a very fine teacher.
+She is called Miss West. Many other children are in Miss West's room
+too. But the five little friends are the ones this story is about.
+
+One morning when the children came to school Miss West had a surprise
+for them. On her desk was something large and round. It was all covered
+with paper.
+
+"Guess what this is, children," said Miss West.
+
+"It is a balloon," said Bob.
+
+"I think it is a football," said Paul.
+
+"No, no, you are both wrong," said Miss West. She took the paper off.
+What do you think it was?
+
+It was a big glass bowl. In it were six goldfish. They were swimming
+about in the water.
+
+"Little folks," said Miss West, "these are our school pets. We must feed
+them and give them fresh water. Then they will live a long time and we
+can have fun watching them."
+
+The children stood around the bowl. They watched the fish swim and
+float. They laughed when one fish chased another round and round the
+bowl. He looked very funny with his big mouth wide open.
+
+Soon Miss West showed the children how to feed the fish. After that they
+took turns in caring for them. Paul and Peggy had the first turn. Next
+Bob and Betty had their turn. After that little Dot took care of the
+fish all by herself. The other children had turns too. But this story is
+about the five little children whose names you know.
+
+One day Miss West said to the children, "How many of you little girls
+and boys have pets of your own?"
+
+A great many hands were raised.
+
+"I have!" said Bob.
+
+"I have!" said Paul.
+
+"I have," "I have," "I have," said Betty and Peggy and little Dot.
+
+"I have thought of a fine plan," said Miss West. "Each day one child may
+tell the other children about his pet."
+
+"What fun!" said Betty; and all the other children thought, "What fun
+that will be!"
+
+"Who will have the first turn?" asked Bob.
+
+"We will play a game to see," said Miss West.
+
+So Miss West wrote the names of all the children on slips of paper. Then
+she put all the slips in Paul's cap. Next she blindfolded Peggy. Peggy
+put her hand in the cap and drew out a slip. What name do you think was
+on this slip? The name was _Dot_.
+
+So the next day little Dot told about her pet. This is what she said:
+
+"My pet is a white cat. Her name is Snowball. She is as white as snow.
+When she curls up in front of the fire she is round like a ball.
+
+"One day my daddy could not find his hat. He looked and looked and
+looked for it. At last he found it in a dark corner under the stairs.
+
+"There was something in the hat. First Daddy saw two bright eyes. Then
+he saw Snowball all curled up in the hat. By her side were two little
+baby kittens. They were just like their mother. We named them Fluff and
+Muff. Now we have a happy cat family.
+
+"Daddy never got his hat back. At first the kittens slept in it. Now
+Fluff and Muff are so big they sleep in a box. But they like Daddy's hat
+to play with. Fluff gets on one side and Muff on the other. Then they
+pull and pull. Daddy's hat is almost worn out now."
+
+The children liked little Dot's story very much. They laughed when they
+thought of Fluff on one side and Muff on the other and Daddy's hat in
+the middle.
+
+The next day Betty was blindfolded. She put her hand in the cap and drew
+a slip. This time _Paul_ was written on the slip. So it was Paul's turn
+to tell about his pet. This is what he said:
+
+"My pet is a big collie dog. His name is Hero. When my mother goes to
+market she takes Hero with her. He trots by her side and carries a
+basket in his mouth.
+
+"Sometimes my mother sends Hero home with the meat and bread for dinner.
+He goes right along. He does not stop or look around. When he comes
+to our house he sets the basket down. Then he watches it until Mother
+comes. If anyone calls, 'Here, Hero,' he pricks up his ears, but he will
+not move from his place.
+
+"One day I tried to coax him away with a big bone. I know the bone
+looked and smelled good to Hero. He sniffed the air and looked at the
+bone with hungry brown eyes, but he never moved from the basket.
+
+"Last summer we went to the seashore. We took Hero with us. One day I
+was on the beach, playing in the sand. Hero was lying asleep in the sun.
+I was making a sand fort and my back was toward the sea.
+
+"Suddenly a big wave dashed in and knocked me down. Then another big
+wave came and carried me out into the water. As I did not know how to
+swim, I was very much frightened. I tried to call out, but my mouth was
+full of sea water. I could make only a little frightened sound; but Hero
+heard me. What do you think he did? He jumped into the water and swam
+out to me. I was too nearly drowned to catch hold of him. So he took my
+clothes in his mouth and began to swim with me to the shore.
+
+"I was heavy, and Hero was almost worn out before he got there. But he
+never once let go. He kept right on until he dropped me on dry land.
+Then he lay panting on the sand.
+
+"Just then Mother came to see where I was. When she saw what had
+happened she hugged me hard. Then she hugged Hero hard too. The next day
+she bought Hero a new collar with his name on it in big letters--HERO.
+That night Hero had a big bone with lots of meat on it for his supper."
+
+The children enjoyed Paul's story as much as they had Dot's. They
+thought Hero was a fine name for such a brave dog. They said Paul was
+a lucky boy to have a pet like that.
+
+On another day little Dot was blindfolded. The slip of paper she drew
+had this name on it--_Betty_. So it was Betty's turn to tell about her
+pet. This is what she told:
+
+"My pet is a pigeon. He is not just a common pigeon like the ones on
+the church roof. He is a carrier pigeon. My Uncle Fred brought him from
+France. He calls him the living airplane. Can you tell why?
+
+"He is named Arrow. In France Arrow used to carry messages to the
+soldiers. These messages were written on tiny slips of paper and tied
+around Arrow's neck.
+
+"When Uncle Fred came home he taught Arrow to go from my grandmother's
+house to our house and straight back again. It was a ten mile trip.
+
+"This is the way Uncle Fred did it. Almost every day he would feed Arrow
+at both places. It was easy for him to do this as he used to ride over
+to our house a great deal. When he took Arrow away from one place he
+would leave some grain there. Arrow knew this. So when he was let loose
+he would fly straight to the grain. He never seemed to lose his way or
+stop in the wrong place.
+
+"On Valentine's Day, Uncle Fred wanted to surprise me. He turned Arrow
+loose at Grandmother's house with something tied around his neck by a
+ribbon. Uncle Fred did not tell anyone what it was.
+
+"Arrow flew straight to our house. When I saw him I ran out to his
+feeding place. I spied the ribbon and untied it. I found a tiny gold
+heart with my name on it. I liked this Valentine best of all."
+
+The boys and girls in the class enjoyed the story of Arrow. They liked
+it so much that Betty said she would ask Uncle Fred to come to school
+and tell about what Arrow did in France.
+
+Another day when one of the pupils was blindfolded and drew a slip of
+paper, the name on the slip was _Bob_. So at last it was Bob's turn.
+This is the story Bob told:
+
+"My pet is a pony named Dandy. Grandfather bought him for me. He got him
+from a man who had a pony show. This man had taught Dandy many tricks.
+
+"When I say, 'Dandy, how old are you?' Dandy lifts his right front foot
+and brings it down three times. This is how he says that he is three
+years old. When I say, 'Make a bow, Dandy,' he puts his front feet out
+and bows his head almost to the ground. His mane hangs over his eyes and
+he looks very funny.
+
+"Dandy can play 'Hide-and-Go-Seek' too. This is the way he does it. I
+take an ear of corn and show it to him. Then I run and hide it. I call,
+'Come, Dandy, come.' He comes and looks all around for the corn. When he
+finds it, he takes it in his mouth and trots around and around with it.
+When I say, 'Bring it to me, Dandy,' he comes to me with the ear of corn
+in his mouth. But when I try to take the corn, he shakes his head and
+trots away again.
+
+"One day I tried to play 'Hide-and-Go-Seek' with a handkerchief instead
+of an ear of corn. Dandy did not like it this way. He looked at the
+handkerchief. Then he sniffed at it. At last he shook his head and
+turned away. He seemed to say, 'A game like that may be fun for a boy,
+but it isn't fun for a pony. I am not going to play.'"
+
+Everyone liked the story of Dandy. Some of the children asked to hear
+some more about him. But Miss West said it was time for recess. So the
+children went out into the school yard and played "Pony" and
+"Hide-and-Go-Seek."
+
+Another day someone drew Peggy's name on the slip of paper. And this is
+what Peggy told:
+
+"My pet is a big green and red parrot. She has a cage in the living
+room. Mother calls her 'the General' because she likes to give orders.
+When we sit down Polly calls out, 'Get busy! Get busy! Get busy!' If we
+are too busy and do not notice Polly she rolls over on her back in the
+bottom of the cage and cries, 'Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick!
+Polly's sick!' In the evening we put a cloth over Polly's cage to keep
+her quiet. When the cloth is taken off in the morning she begins to
+shout, 'Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'
+
+"One evening we forgot to put the cloth over Polly's cage. That night,
+quite late, my big brother went down into the living room to find a book
+he had been reading. When he turned on the light, Polly thought it was
+day. She began to scream, 'Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'
+
+"Everyone _did_ wake up. At first we were frightened. But when we found
+out what had happened we laughed and laughed. We laughed more when we
+heard a voice croak, 'Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's
+sick!'"
+
+The girls and boys all laughed at the story of Polly. Paul wrote a poem
+about her. This is what he wrote:
+
+Upon my word, Poll's a funny bird.
+
+The children went around at recess saying this. They said some of
+Polly's speeches too.
+
+One day Miss West told the children a true story that was very, very
+sad. It was about a blind man who sold papers. He had owned a little dog
+that used to lead him to his work and watch him all day; but the little
+dog had died. Now the poor man had no one to lead him. So he could not
+sell his papers.
+
+The children were very sorry for him. They wanted to do something to
+help.
+
+"Wouldn't it be fine," said Betty, "if we could buy him another dog?"
+
+"But how can we get the money?" said Paul.
+
+"We could give all our pennies, but that wouldn't be enough," said
+little Dot.
+
+"I know, I know!" cried Bob. "Let's give a show and have our pets for
+the show animals."
+
+The children thought this was a fine plan. Miss West thought so too. She
+let them plan for the show.
+
+Then she let them make tickets. Each child made two tickets. They were
+like the funny picture in the middle of this page.
+
+Everyone who came had to pay for a ticket. Even the children who had
+pets in the show had to pay.
+
+When the big children heard about the Pet Show they bought tickets too.
+Then they helped the five little friends get ready for the show.
+
+The school yard was the show ground. The big boys made a gate for the
+people to come through. They made pens for all the animals. Next they
+printed some big signs to put on the pens. The signs were like these
+only much, much bigger.
+
+ +----------------+ +===========+
+ | THIS IS HERO | | HERE IS A |
+ | THE LIFE SAVER | | HAPPY CAT |
+ +----------------+ | FAMILY |
+ +===========+
+ +=================+
+ |/ THIS IS DANDY \|
+ | THE |
+ |\ TRICK PONY /|
+ +=================+
+ +-------------------+
+ +-----------------+ | YOU WANT TO |
+ | o o o o o o | | FEEL JOLLY |
+ | THE | | SEE GENERAL POLLY |
+ | LIVING AIRPLANE | | - - -o- - - |
+ +-----------------+ +-------------------+
+
+At last it was the day of the Pet Show. Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy
+and little Dot came early with their pets. Soon the other children came
+too. There were big children, and middle-sized children, and little wee
+children.
+
+When they stopped at the gate who do you think the ticket man was? It
+was Hero with a basket in his mouth. The children dropped their tickets
+into the basket. They patted Hero's shaggy head and called him "Good
+dog" and "Brave old fellow."
+
+He looked very kind but very, very solemn.
+
+They went to all the pens to see the show pets. Dandy stood in his pen.
+He looked very wise and very plump and shaggy. He poked his head out and
+let the children stroke his mane.
+
+In Polly's pen nothing could be seen but a big cage with a black cover
+over it. Not one bright feather showed. Not a single sound came from the
+cage.
+
+Snowball and her kittens were curled up in their box. They were as quiet
+as mice. All three had red and blue ribbons around their necks.
+
+The pen with Arrow's name on it was empty. On the ground some grain was
+scattered. By the grain were three light gray feathers. But no living
+airplane could be seen. "Where can he be?" the children asked.
+
+Just then Bob came out in front of the children. He was dressed like
+a real showman. He had on a high hat and a long coat. "Ladies and
+gentlemen," he said, in a funny deep voice, "the big show is about to
+begin. Will you please find seats in the show tent?" The children
+laughed and sat down on the ground.
+
+Bob went on talking like a showman. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said,
+"you are now to see Dandy, the trick pony." When he had said this, Bob
+went to the pen and brought Dandy out.
+
+"Now Dandy," he said, "tell the ladies and gentlemen how old you are."
+Dandy lifted his right foot and brought it down three times. The
+children clapped their hands.
+
+"Make a bow to the ladies and gentlemen, Dandy," said Showman Bob. Dandy
+put his front feet out. Then he bowed his head almost to the ground. His
+mane fell over his eyes and he looked very wise and funny.
+
+Next Bob took an ear of corn from his pocket. He held it in front of
+Dandy's nose. "Dandy, do you see this?" he said. Dandy nodded his head.
+His mane fell over his eyes. He looked very funny and full of mischief.
+
+"Now Dandy," said Showman Bob, "shut your eyes." Dandy winked and
+blinked. Then he shut his eyes tight. "Keep your eyes shut till I call
+'Come,'" said Bob. Then Bob started off with the ear of corn.
+
+Dandy kept his eyes shut just one little minute. Then he opened them
+and began to peep. He peeped very slyly to see where Bob was hiding the
+corn. The children shouted with joy! Then Showman Bob came back. The
+corn was still in his hand. He pretended to be angry. He made Dandy hide
+his eyes once more.
+
+Again Dandy peeped slyly to see where Bob was hiding the corn. At last
+Showman Bob took little Dot's hat and tied it over Dandy's eyes. How the
+children did laugh! Dandy looked so funny with a little girl's hat on.
+
+Then Bob hid the ear of corn behind a box. He called, "Come, Dandy,
+come!" Dandy shook his head very hard. The hat rolled on the ground.
+Then Dandy began going round the show grounds. He stopped and sniffed at
+everything.
+
+"Oh see!" said Peggy, "Dandy is looking with his nose!" Soon Dandy
+sniffed at the box and found the ear of corn.
+
+"Come, Dandy, come!" called Showman Bob. Dandy came trotting up with the
+ear of corn in his mouth. But when Bob put out his hand for the corn
+Dandy kicked up his heels and away he went. He ran round and round like
+a pony in a circus.
+
+The children clapped their hands and shouted. Dandy went faster and
+faster. It was very exciting. At last Dandy stopped running. Then Bob
+led him back to the pen. There the little pony munched the corn happily.
+
+Next it was Peggy's turn to show Polly. Showman Bob brought out a table.
+Then he helped Peggy put Polly's big cage on it. Peggy lifted the black
+cloth. There was Polly! She was the greenest, reddest, funniest parrot
+you ever saw. She winked her eyes, shook her feathers, and called out,
+"Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!" The children laughed; but they did not
+get up. So General Polly sang out, "Get busy! Get busy! Get busy!" The
+children soon knew what they must "get busy" about. Polly began to say
+in her most coaxing voice, "Polly wants a cracker! Poor Poll! Pretty
+Poll! Poor Polly wants a cracker!" This sounded so funny that everybody
+laughed.
+
+Peggy had some crackers in her pocket. She took them out and let the
+children feed Polly. They poked bits of cracker through the wires of her
+cage. Polly was not very polite. She pecked and grabbed and talked to
+herself. But everything she did was so funny that the children enjoyed
+it.
+
+At last Polly had all the crackers she wanted. Then she grew tired and
+cross. She began to scream, "Bad boy! Go away! Go away! Go away!" The
+children ran back to their seats. General Polly was left all alone.
+
+For a time she liked this. She swung on her perch and made queer noises
+to herself. Then she grew tired. She threw herself on the bottom of the
+cage and began to moan, "Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's
+sick!" Then Peggy came with the black cloth, and General Polly was taken
+to her pen.
+
+Next it was little Dot's turn to show her cat family. She was too shy to
+play showman as Bob had done. She just came out in front of the children
+and stood there. Snowball was in her arms and Fluff and Muff were on her
+shoulders. She put Snowball down. Then she gave her shoulders a shake
+and Fluff and Muff scrambled down to the ground.
+
+Next Dot took two red balls from her pocket. Each ball had a long rubber
+fastened to it. It would bounce high without rolling away. Dot put a
+ball near each kitten's paws. Just as Fluff and Muff sprang to get the
+balls, Dot pulled the rubber. You never saw such surprised kittens! They
+sat still and looked with wide-open eyes. These were queer balls indeed
+that flew up into the air instead of rolling on the floor. This was
+something new and strange.
+
+The next time Dot bounced the balls Fluff and Muff were ready. Up they
+jumped, with their paws raised, but the balls sprang out of reach. "The
+kittens are trying to be living airplanes, too," said Paul.
+
+Next Dot went to the pen and brought something back. She held it up and
+said shyly, "This is Daddy's hat. It used to be the kittens' bed. Now it
+is their plaything."
+
+When she had said this she threw the hat on the ground. Quick as a wink
+Fluff was on one side of it and Muff was on the other. Then they began
+to paw and pull. Fluff pulled one way. Muff pulled the other. It was a
+real pulling match. Some of the children cried, "I think that Fluff will
+win." Others cried, "Hurrah for Muff."
+
+Just then a queer noise was heard. Can you guess what it was? It was the
+brim of Daddy's hat. It had torn all the way around--_rip, rip, rip_.
+Off it came so suddenly that both little kittens rolled over backward.
+
+All the children clapped their hands and laughed aloud. This frightened
+Fluff and Muff. They scampered to their mother as fast as their little
+white feet could carry them. This ended the act of the cat family.
+
+Next it was Betty's turn to show Arrow. But Arrow's pen was still empty.
+Betty whispered to Miss West. Miss West rose and said, "While we are
+waiting for the next act, let's sing together." She started a song
+everyone knew. All the children joined in.
+
+Just as they were singing a second song, something happened. A light
+speck was seen moving through the air. It came nearer and nearer. At
+last it circled round the pen, where the grain was scattered. Then it
+flew slowly to the ground. It was Arrow, the living airplane.
+
+The children crowded about the pen to see. "Look," said one of them.
+"There is something around Arrow's neck!" Betty bent over and looked.
+Yes, there _was_ something. She untied it quickly. On a piece of paper
+was written, "This is Arrow's gift to the blind man." In the paper was a
+bright five dollar gold piece.
+
+Betty read aloud what was on the paper. Then she held up the five dollar
+gold piece. How the children did shout and clap their hands. "Hurrah
+for Betty's Uncle Fred!" they cried. "Hurrah for the living airplane!
+Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!" When the last shout had been given, Showman
+Bob stepped out. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said in his deep showman's
+voice, "we thank you for coming to the Pet Show. We know the blind man
+will thank you too when he gets his new dog. The show will now close
+with a grand parade!"
+
+Then Bob made a showman's bow and went behind the school-house. Soon
+a drum began to beat--_tum, tum, tum_. The parade was coming! First
+marched Showman Bob beating the drum. Behind him was Betty carrying a
+big American flag. On her shoulder was Arrow, the living airplane. Next
+came brave old Hero pulling a little cart. In the cart were Snowball,
+Fluff, and Muff and what was left of Daddy's hat. Dot marched beside the
+cart. After them came Dandy. Paul was walking by his side and holding
+something on his back. It was Polly's cage with the black cover off.
+
+Pretty Poll was peeping from behind the wires. She looked surprised and
+a little bit frightened. Suddenly she rolled on her back at the bottom
+of the cage. The last thing the children heard as the parade passed out
+of sight was, "Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's sick!"
+
+I wish the children who read this book could hear about the blind man
+and his new dog but that is another story.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS IN VACATION
+
+
+I
+
+Soon after the Pet Show, school closed for the summer vacation. The
+children said good-bye to each other and to Miss West.
+
+For weeks everybody had been busy making plans for the summer.
+
+Paul went to the seashore and you may be sure brave Hero was taken
+along.
+
+Bob and his family went to the seashore too; and, what was best of all,
+they took a cottage not far from where Paul lived.
+
+Dandy was sent out to the country.
+
+Betty's mother said, "I want to have my little girl spend a summer on a
+farm--a real farm," so they went to Mr. White's.
+
+See if you can guess who went with them!
+
+No, it wasn't Arrow. The living airplane was left with Uncle Fred at
+Grandmother's. It wasn't Miss West. She went away on a long trip across
+the ocean. It was a very nice little person whose name begins with _D_,
+and it was another very nice little person whose name begins with _P_.
+
+Peggy's mother went too, but Poll was sent to a bird shop. Little Dot's
+mother stayed in the city with Dot's father and the cat family to keep
+them from getting lonely.
+
+Dot promised to be a good girl and to do just what the other mothers
+told her.
+
+It was a bright June afternoon when the three little girls and the two
+mothers got off the train at a little country station. Mr. White came to
+meet them. He and Billy, the hired man, piled all the trunks and bags in
+a wagon. Then Billy climbed up on the high seat and cracked his whip,
+saying, "Get-up! Get-up!" The horses pulled, the dust flew, and away the
+wagon went. Then Mr. White packed the mothers and the little girls into
+his automobile and away they also went to the farm.
+
+The farm was the very nicest place in the whole world. At least that is
+what the three little girls thought. Everything about it was nice. The
+rooms were big and cool and low. The wide side porch was a lovely place
+to eat dinner. The big low attic was splendid for rainy-day play; but
+the very, very nicest of all the nice things at the farm was Mary White.
+
+Mary was nine years and she had lived on the farm all her life. She knew
+all the good places to play. She could call every animal on the farm by
+name. She could make up the most delightful games. What a splendid
+playmate she was!
+
+First she took the children to the pasture to see the cows. There were
+three of them, Bonny-Belle, Bess, and Buttercup.
+
+Beside Buttercup was the dearest little calf with long thin legs and a
+soft tan coat. It was Don, Buttercup's first baby. He was just two
+months old and very full of life and mischief.
+
+"Is that another cow over there?" said Peggy, pointing to a field beyond
+the pasture. "Oh, no," said Mary, "That's Big Ben. He is a very wild and
+cross bull, so he has to have a home all by himself. No one ever goes
+into his field except Billy. Big Ben seems to hate people. But what he
+hates most is anything that is red."
+
+The children peeped in at Big Ben, with nice safe-afraid shivers going
+down their backs. Then Mary said, "Come let's go to the farmyard."
+
+The farmyard was a very busy place. "I never saw so many pets in all my
+life," said Betty. But Mary knew them all. She showed them Mrs. Speckle
+with her family of little baby chicks that looked like fluffy, yellow
+balls bobbing around her.
+
+Next she pointed out Mrs. Black Hen with her larger children. Some of
+these chickens were losing their feathers. How Mary did laugh when Peggy
+cried, "See, those poor little chickens are peeling off!"
+
+"Now," said Mary, "I will show you my trained chicken." First she went
+into the house and came out with two ripe, red cherries still on the
+stem. Then she called softly, "Come, come, Tom Thumb," and as she
+finished calling she put the stem of the cherries between her lips.
+
+Out from among the other chickens came a beautiful little white rooster.
+He looked almost like a toy, he was so tiny. With a glad little crow
+he flew straight up to Mary's shoulder, where he began to peck at the
+cherries. He ate very daintily. Sometimes he would stop eating and
+cuddle down on Mary's shoulder. When the ripe red treat was all eaten
+he gave another glad crow and flew down.
+
+Betty and Dot and Peggy loved to help feed the chickens. Every morning
+after breakfast Mrs. White would come out into the yard with a big pan
+of corn-meal mush and Mary would follow with a smaller pan of bread
+crumbs. Then both mother and little girl would call, "Chick, chick,
+chick! Chick, chick, chick! Chick, chick, chick!" as if they were
+singing the same tune over and over. At this, such a hurry and scurry as
+there would be!
+
+It seemed as if every fowl on the farm heard the call and was coming.
+There were big hens and little hens, brown hens, black hens, white hens,
+and speckled hens. There were fluffy baby chicks and long-legged
+middle-sized chickens. There were proud roosters with bright combs and
+gay, glossy feathers. There were stately turkeys with long necks and
+great fan-like tails. There were ducks with long fat bodies and big
+flat feet.
+
+Hurry, scurry! Scurry, hurry! "Cluck, cluck." "Peep-peep." "Groo-groo."
+"Gobble-gobble." "Quack, quack." Such noise and excitement you never
+heard!
+
+Such table manners you never saw! All were talking at once. Everyone was
+pecking and pushing and grabbing!
+
+One morning at the farmyard breakfast Mrs. White said, "Where can Brown
+Betty be? I haven't seen her for two or three weeks. I am afraid she has
+gone off and hidden her nest somewhere. I wish I knew where, for turkey
+eggs are scarce this year. If you four children will find her nest I
+will pay you ten cents for each egg in it."
+
+The little girls were very much excited.
+
+"Just suppose," said Betty, "that we find a nest with six eggs in it.
+That will be sixty cents. What shall we buy with so much money?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be fun to get Father to take us to the store and let us buy
+things for a picnic?" said Mary.
+
+"Oh, yes, let's have a picnic," cried Peggy and Betty.
+
+"But first," said wise little Dot, "we must find Brown Betty's nest."
+
+That very day the children began to hunt for the hidden eggs. They
+climbed up into the barn loft and looked in the hay. Here they found
+Mrs. Nicker on her nest. When they came near she ruffled up her feathers
+and gave an angry cluck. "Don't be afraid," laughed Betty; "we are
+looking for something worth much more than one little hen's egg."
+
+Then hidden down in the hay they came across a mouse's home with four
+baby mice in it. They looked very small and young and funny. Their tiny
+eyes were shut tight. "You are cunning little things but you won't buy
+us a picnic," said Peggy.
+
+In the eaves of the barn they found a swallow's nest, but the baby birds
+had flown away. Only some pieces of eggshell were left.
+
+All that day and part of the next and the next and the next the children
+hunted and hunted but no Brown Betty and no turkey eggs could they find.
+
+One bright June morning Mary said, "Let's go into the woods to play."
+
+"Oh, may we?" Betty and Peggy asked their mothers. And little Dot said,
+"Oh, please may I?" and looked from one mother to the other.
+
+"Yes, let them go," said Mrs. White. "The woods are not far away and
+there is nothing to harm them there."
+
+So the four little girls started out.
+
+They went down a shady lane and through a meadow. Then they came to the
+woods and wandered about for a while. At last they stopped by the side
+of a little brook that flowed merrily on its way.
+
+In a few minutes, shoes and stockings were taken off and the children
+were wading in the cool, rippling water. It was lots of fun, but the
+water was very cold. Soon they were glad to dry their feet in the soft
+grass and put on their shoes and stockings again.
+
+"Let's make a tree playhouse," said Mary; "I'll show you how." So they
+set to work with Mary as leader. They found a hollow tree with plenty
+of room in it. Next they gathered all the soft, velvety moss they could
+find. With this they made a thick green carpet on the floor. Then they
+made green moss furniture too. They had a bed, a couch, a table, and a
+chair.
+
+"We should have some one to live in our green, mossy house," said Peggy.
+"Let's go to the meadow and gather some daisies and make little flower
+people out of them."
+
+So off the children went. In a little while, back they came with their
+hands full of flowers.
+
+Peggy was the first one to reach the tree house. She looked in and then
+began to laugh and call to the others to come quickly.
+
+"We needn't make any flower people for our house," she said. "It's
+already rented." And sure enough, there on the green moss couch was a
+fat brown toad. He was winking and blinking and looking much pleased
+with his new home.
+
+The children sat down to rest and watch Mr. Toad. All of a sudden they
+heard a queer sound. "Cheep-cheep! Cheep-cheep! Cheep-cheep-cheep!" It
+seemed to come from the bushes.
+
+"It must be some little birds," said Betty.
+
+"Perhaps it is a mother quail and her babies," said Mary.
+
+Very carefully the four little girls peeped through the leaves and
+bushes.
+
+Can you guess what they saw?
+
+There, walking about in an open place in the woods, was Brown Betty, and
+running beside her and talking to her in turkey talk were eight baby
+turkeys.
+
+How excited the children were! They all wanted to run to the farmhouse
+with the good news. But at last they drew lots to see who should go.
+
+"I will hold four daisies," said Peggy, "and each of you may take one.
+The girl who gets the daisy with the longest stem may run ahead. If you
+leave the longest one in my hand, I will go."
+
+"Yes," said Mary, "and the other children may drive Brown Betty and her
+brood back to the farmyard."
+
+So they drew the daisies and little Dot had the one with the longest
+stem. Away she ran as fast as her short legs could carry her.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. White," she cried, as she reached the farmhouse, "we found
+Brown Betty in the woods, but her eggs have all turned into little
+turkeys."
+
+While Mrs. White was laughing over Dot's way of telling the news, the
+other children came up with Brown Betty and her brood.
+
+"Dear, dear," said Mrs. White, "as the eggs have turned into turkeys I
+will let the money I promised turn into a picnic. Let me see, to-day is
+Tuesday. Will you be ready to go on Thursday?"
+
+"Indeed we will!" cried the children. "Thank you so much."
+
+On Wednesday morning Mary woke up very, very early.
+
+Then Mary woke Betty and Peggy and little Dot.
+
+They all dressed as quickly as they could and hurried out of doors.
+The sun was just rising and the sky was a beautiful red and gold. The
+dew sparkled on the grass, and in the tree tops the birds were just
+beginning to chirp and call.
+
+"Where are you going, my pretty maids?" laughed Mr. White.
+
+"We're 'going a-milking, sir, she said,'" Mary replied.
+
+Then each little girl took a tin cup and followed Mr. White and Billy to
+the pasture where Bonny-Belle and Bess stood waiting. Billy let down the
+bars and the cows came into the barnyard. Mr. White milked Bonny-Belle
+and Billy milked Bess.
+
+The little girls stood near and watched.
+
+How Mr. White and Billy laughed when little Dot said, "Oh, is that the
+way you get milk on a farm? We get ours out of bottles."
+
+Before milking time was over each little girl held her cup and had it
+milked full of fresh, new milk.
+
+At first the children thought they would carry the cups home and drink
+the milk for breakfast. But they were so hungry they couldn't wait,
+so they drank it standing in the barnyard, with Bonny-Belle and Bess
+looking at them with soft, kind eyes.
+
+That afternoon Mary had some work to do and Betty and Peggy went for a
+walk with their mothers.
+
+Little Dot was tired from her early morning visit to the barnyard. So
+she took a book of fairy stories and went out into the near-by field.
+She settled herself cozily under a big maple tree and began to read.
+After a little while the book slid from her hands. Her head nodded and
+nodded and then rested on the grass. Her eyes winked and winked and then
+closed.
+
+She must have slept almost an hour when she woke with a start. Something
+very soft and moist was moving over her nose and cheeks. It felt almost
+as if her face were being washed with a sticky cloth.
+
+Dot opened her sleepy blue eyes and looked right into the big brown eyes
+of Don, Buttercup's baby calf.
+
+"Oh! Oh!" cried the little girl.
+
+"Ma-a-a," replied Don as he frisked away.
+
+"You are a dear little thing," Dot called after him, "but I wish you
+wouldn't kiss me with your tongue all over my face."
+
+The morning of the picnic was bright and clear. There was great
+excitement in the kitchen and pantry. Mrs. White and Molly, the maid,
+were fixing the lunch, but the four little girls couldn't help popping
+in every few minutes to take a peep. The two other mothers peeped too.
+What they saw made them wish that they were to be invited to the picnic.
+But this time only the four little girls who had found Brown Betty were
+to go.
+
+At last the lunch was packed in four baskets and off the children went.
+
+On their way they found some wild strawberries. They stopped to pick
+them, and Mary showed the others how to make leaf baskets to hold
+berries. They gathered broad, flat leaves and fastened them together
+with little twigs.
+
+Then they went on until at last they came to the loveliest spot you ever
+saw. It was an open space with trees all around it. Near-by was a little
+bubbling spring.
+
+The children set their baskets in the shade and began to romp and play.
+They played "Hide-and-Go-Seek" and a new game which they called "Echo."
+Can you guess how to play this game?
+
+At last they grew tired and hungry and began to unpack their baskets
+and to put their lunch on a mossy spot near the brook. Such a feast you
+never saw! Everything a child likes best came out of those baskets. How
+the four children did eat and eat and eat! And when they had eaten and
+eaten and eaten until they could eat no more, there were still some good
+things left.
+
+"Let's rest a while," said Mary, "and perhaps we'll be hungry again.
+Shall I tell you a fairy story?"
+
+"Oh, please do," said Betty; and Peggy and Dot echoed together, "Please
+do."
+
+So Mary told them of a fairy ball where all the little fairies came out
+of their flower cups and danced by the light of the moon.
+
+"Wouldn't this spot be a lovely place for a fairy ball?" said Peggy,
+when Mary had finished the story. "I wonder if there are any fairies in
+this wood."
+
+"I know how we can find out," cried Betty. "We can give the fairies a
+party."
+
+"But they only come out at night," said Dot, "so we couldn't see them."
+
+"But," replied Betty, "we can make a feast for them; and, if the next
+morning we find the feast is gone, we shall know the fairies really
+came."
+
+"Oh, let's do it," cried Dot and Peggy. And Mary said, "If we want the
+fairies to come we must make a magic ring of flowers." "That will be
+lots of fun," cried the children.
+
+So for the rest of the afternoon they were very busy indeed.
+
+They went to the meadow and gathered clover blossoms. Then they sat down
+on the moss and made a magic ring.
+
+When the magic ring was placed around a lovely mossy spot they began to
+set the table for the feast.
+
+"We'll give them cake and some ripe strawberries," said Betty.
+
+"But fairies eat dewdrops served on rose leaves," said Peggy.
+
+"When they come to a party given by little girls, they eat just what
+little girls give them. You'll see," said Betty. So the moss table was
+set with leaf plates, and on each plate were a ripe, red strawberry
+and a fairy-size piece of cake. When everything was ready the children
+danced around the magic ring three times to make it more magic. Then
+they packed their baskets and went home, feeling very tired but very
+happy and much pleased with the picnic.
+
+That night Betty could not go to sleep for a long, long time. She lay in
+bed and watched the moonbeams.
+
+"I wonder," she thought, "whether the fairies will come. I wonder
+whether the man in the moon is looking down at them now. I wonder"--and
+then she went to sleep and dreamed that she was dancing around and
+around the magic ring with the man in the moon. All around them fairies
+were sliding up and down from the tree tops to the mossy ground, on
+silver moonbeams.
+
+The next day the children went to the woods to see whether the fairies
+had been there. Betty reached the spot first and cried out joyfully,
+"They came! They came!" And sure enough, the leaf plates were empty.
+Every strawberry, every crumb of cake, was gone.
+
+"The fairies really came," said the other little girls as they stood
+around the magic ring.
+
+"Tweet-tweet-tweet," sang a bird in a tree top; "tweet-tweet-tweet."
+
+He cocked his little head and looked very wise and knowing. But
+"Tweet--tweet--tweet; tweet--tweet-tweet" was all he said.
+
+One of the things Peggy and Betty and Dot liked best to do was to watch
+Mrs. White skim the rich cream from the great pans of milk in the dairy.
+The dairy was down by the brook and the pans of milk were on shelves
+near the water, so that they were kept fresh and cool.
+
+One very warm day Mary said, "Let's play dairy."
+
+"All right," said Betty.
+
+"All right," echoed Peggy and Dot. "You show us how."
+
+So Mary brought two big pans and two pieces of soap from the kitchen.
+She filled the pans with water and put a piece of soap in each pan. Then
+she told the other children to watch the cream rise. She began to shake
+the soap about in the water, and the suds rose higher and higher.
+
+"It's rather _white_ cream," she said, "but we can play it comes from a
+cow named Snowball."
+
+"It's splendid cream," cried the three little girls. "May we help make
+it?"
+
+"I wonder whether Molly will let us use her cream skimmers," said Mary.
+
+Molly heard her name and came to the kitchen door to see what mischief
+those blessed children were up to now. She saw the pans on a seat built
+round a big maple tree and the four little girls bobbing about, very
+busy indeed.
+
+"Molly, will you please let us have the skimmers?" Peggy cried.
+
+"Well," replied Molly, "as it's clean dirt you're making I suppose I
+must."
+
+So Mary and Betty made the cream rise, and Dot and Peggy skimmed it and
+poured it into bottles and old cans to "sell."
+
+While they were in the midst of the fun, Red Chief, the proudest rooster
+in the farmyard, came strutting along.
+
+He put his head on one side and looked at the pans. "Too-ok, too-ok,
+too-ok. Is it feeding time?" he said. "Too-ok, too-ok, too-ok. I must
+see; I must see; I must see." With that he flapped his great red wings
+and flew up on the side of the pan.
+
+Now Red Chief was a heavy rooster and the pan was not very firm. Down
+tumbled the pan and Red Chief together. The make-believe cream and milk
+went all over him. Such a wet, cross, disgusted rooster you never saw!
+"Too-ok, too-ok, too-ok," he croaked, as he shook the soapsuds from his
+feathers. Then away he marched, scolding to himself about little girls
+who played silly games.
+
+One afternoon the children were out in the orchard playing "lady." Mary
+and Betty were the mothers in the game. Peggy and Dot were the children.
+
+Betty had on a long skirt and a fine grown-lady's hat. Mary had a scarf
+trailing on the ground instead of a long skirt, and she carried her
+mother's very best umbrella. It was a bright red one that could be used
+for sun as well as rain. It made Mary feel very grown-up indeed. The two
+"play" families made their homes under the trees. They paid visits back
+and forth. They gave tea parties. The children had measles and mumps and
+were put to bed on the grass with leaf plasters over their faces.
+
+Mary was Mrs. Ray and Dot was her little daughter, Lily.
+
+At last Mrs. Ray sent Lily to the meadow to buy some flowers. Dot danced
+gaily away. Just as she was gathering the flowers, a bright, blue
+butterfly lighted near her and then flew a little farther on. He seemed
+to be inviting her to race with him. So off Dot started.
+
+Her fat little legs seemed to twinkle over the grass, but the butterfly
+went faster still. Away he flew across the pasture, away over the fence
+into the next lot. Dot paused only a minute, then she slipped under the
+wire of the fence and followed. On and on she went. She did not notice
+where she was going. But the butterfly fluttered far ahead and was soon
+out of sight.
+
+Then Dot stopped and looked around. She was in a strange field. No
+living thing was about. Yes, something was moving over in the far
+corner. It turned around and seemed to sniff the air. Poor little Dot
+stood almost frozen with fright. It was Big Ben.
+
+Then Dot did the worst thing she could have done. She gave a loud cry
+and began to run.
+
+Big Ben shook himself and sniffed the air again. Then he began to come
+toward her in great bounds, with his head down.
+
+Back in the orchard the make-believe Mrs. Ray had begun to wonder why
+her little girl was staying so long. At last with her scarf across her
+shoulders and her umbrella over her head she went out to find her
+daughter.
+
+Mary reached the meadow just as Dot screamed.
+
+For a moment she stood still and looked around. The meadow was empty.
+Then she knew that little Dot was in the field with Big Ben.
+
+Swift as the wind Mary ran on, closing the umbrella as she went.
+
+Under the fence she crept and ran toward Dot.
+
+Poor little Dot was running and stumbling and crying. Big Ben was
+bounding nearer and nearer.
+
+"Don't be afraid," Mary called, as she came up to the little girl.
+
+Then Mary did a strange thing. She opened the red umbrella and whirled
+it around and around. Then she threw it toward Big Ben as far as it
+would go. It went rolling over the grass, with Big Ben bounding wildly
+after it.
+
+The red umbrella made him so angry that he forgot all about the little
+girls.
+
+Mary and Dot crept under the fence to safety.
+
+"O Mother," sobbed Mary, when the children reached home and told the
+story, "O Mother, your lovely red umbrella is all ruined!"
+
+"But my little girl is safe," said Mrs. White, "and she has saved the
+life of her little friend." Mrs. White put her arm around Mary and held
+her tightly, and drew little Dot to her, too, just as Dot's own mother
+would have done.
+
+I wish you could hear all the things Betty, Peggy, and little Dot did on
+the farm. It would take a great, big book to hold the story; and this is
+a little book for little folks.
+
+At last the summer vacation was over. The three little girls and the two
+mothers had to leave their friends on the farm and go back to the city.
+
+The little girls said good-bye to every living thing on the place--to
+the little pet rooster, to Red Chief, to the Speckle family, and to
+Mrs. Black Hen and her children who were now almost grown and had whole
+suits of clothes on. They said good-bye to Brown Betty and her children.
+They went to the pasture and said good-bye to Bonny-Belle, Bess, and
+Buttercup, and to frisky little Don. They even stood at the fence and
+waved good-bye to bad Big Ben.
+
+Then the two mothers and the three little girls said good-bye to Mrs.
+White and Billy and Molly and last of all to dear little Mary, who
+promised to come and visit them at Christmas time.
+
+"Good-bye, good-bye, good-bye!" they called as Mr. White tucked them
+into the automobile and drove away. "We've had a happy, happy summer!"
+
+When they reached the city, little Dot's father was at the station to
+meet them. How glad he was to see his little girl again! And how happy
+Dot was to put her arms around dear Daddy's neck!
+
+"How is Mother?" she said, "and how are Snowball and Fluff and Muff?"
+
+"Everyone is well," said Daddy, "and I have a grand surprise for you."
+
+"What is it, Daddy?" cried little Dot.
+
+Betty and Peggy came near to listen too.
+
+"That's telling," laughed Daddy. "I'd rather show you when we get home."
+
+"May Betty and Peggy go with us?" he asked the two mothers. I think the
+two mothers must have known the secret. They smiled and said, "Yes,
+indeed."
+
+So off the three little girls went with Dot's father.
+
+When they reached Dot's house no one was at the door to meet them.
+
+This seemed strange.
+
+At the head of the stairs a strange lady with a cap and apron on was
+standing and smiling at them. She led them into the front room, still
+smiling but saying nothing. This made it very exciting.
+
+There in an easy chair was Dot's mother. She was holding something in
+her arms. At her feet were Snowball and the kittens sound asleep in
+their basket.
+
+"O, Mother, Mother!" cried little Dot running to her.
+
+"My own little girl!" said Mother. "See, here is a darling new pet for
+you and Daddy and me."
+
+She held out the bundle in her arms, and it was a dear little baby
+brother.
+
+"The very best pet in all the world!" said little Dot.
+
+And Betty and Peggy thought so too.
+
+
+II
+
+But what have Paul and Bob been doing all this time? We will have to go
+back to the beginning of vacation and see.
+
+The place where they spent the summer was called Fairport. At Fairport
+there was a wide, smooth, sandy beach. Here the boys went in bathing,
+built sand forts, and gathered shells.
+
+On one part of the shore the beach was very narrow. Great rocks rose
+like a fort above it. Paul and Bob liked to play on the rocks. Sometimes
+they played that they were Indians and sometimes that they were cave
+men.
+
+They found a place under the rocks for their cave. When they pretended
+that they were pirates, they hid their treasures in the cave. Their
+treasures were things they found on the beach. There were shells and
+boxes, and bottles and queer bits of china and glass. Hero was a fierce
+monster guarding the treasure.
+
+Sometimes the boys put Hero in the cave and pretended he was a lion.
+Then they stole into his den and captured him and sold him to a circus
+man. The circus man was Roy, a little boy who liked to play with them.
+
+One day Bob and Paul and Roy saw some big boys standing on the wharf.
+They were catching crabs. First they baited their lines and then threw
+them into the water. When the crabs "bit" they drew them in. It looked
+very exciting. The three little boys wanted to try.
+
+So they found strings and the big boys gave them some bait. Bob and Roy
+had good luck. But Paul was so excited he couldn't pull his line in
+quickly enough to catch a crab. At last he thought, "If I wade into the
+water I'll be near the crabs. Then it won't be so hard to pull them in."
+
+So down he climbed and into the water he waded. Soon Bob and Roy heard
+him call, "Oh, Oh, Oh, come quick!"
+
+"What is it?" called Bob. "Have you caught a big crab?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Paul. He was half laughing and half crying, and all the
+time he was shaking his foot as hard as he could. "Oh, no, I haven't
+caught a crab. A--crab--has--caught me!" And sure enough, a big fat crab
+had nipped Paul's toe and was holding it fast.
+
+Bob climbed down and pulled it off. Paul went home and tied up his sore
+toe. Then he came back and sat on the wharf and watched the others.
+Somehow, he didn't feel like catching crabs. So he pretended he was a
+sailor who had been bitten by a big shark.
+
+One day Bob and Paul found a very nice bottle on the beach. It had a
+tight cork so that the water could not soak in. At first they thought
+they would hide it in their treasure cave. But that didn't seem exciting
+enough. So they thought and thought what to do with it. At last Bob
+said, "I know! Let's write our names and where we live on a piece of
+paper and put it in the bottle. Then let's throw the bottle out to sea."
+So he wrote:
+
+ +----------------------+
+ | Bob Johnson |
+ | Paul Ray |
+ | Fairport, Maine |
+ +----------------------+
+
+They put the paper in the bottle and corked the bottle tightly. Then
+they threw it out into the ocean. At first the bottle bobbed up and down
+in the water. But soon a big wave caught it and carried it out of sight.
+
+"Suppose," said Paul, "the bottle goes way out to sea and a big whale
+swallows it. And suppose it makes the big whale so sick that he swims
+near to the shore. Then some fishermen will catch him and kill him. When
+they cut him open they will find the bottle, and when they read our
+names they will know we are the boys who helped them get the great big
+whale."
+
+"Or," said Bob, "suppose the bottle goes out to sea and a man in a
+seaplane sees it and opens it. And suppose he comes flying to Fairport
+and when he lands here he asks where we are. Then when he finds us he
+takes us for a long, long ride in his seaplane."
+
+It was great fun supposing. The next morning Bob and Paul went to the
+beach all ready to have some more supposes.
+
+But what was that small thing lying on the sand? It looked very much
+like a bottle. Yes, it was. It was _the_ bottle!
+
+Bob picked it up and looked rather disappointed. Paul looked
+disappointed too. "Our supposes are no good now," he said. "Oh yes,"
+cried Bob, "I know a fine suppose. It's so good it's almost true. Let's
+pretend a big wave was the parcel postman. When he saw the bottle away
+out in the ocean with our names in it, he brought it straight to us."
+"Why, of course," said Paul. "The parcel postman had to bring the bottle
+to us. He couldn't take it to the whale or to the man with the seaplane.
+It wasn't addressed to them."
+
+One day Bob's father took Paul and Bob out fishing. They carried their
+bait in a tin can and they took a larger can to hold their fish. They
+stood on a high rock and threw their lines out into the deep water. The
+fish bit very well. Mr. Johnson caught five or six. But the boys were
+so excited they could not wait. They drew up their lines too soon. Once
+Paul felt a pull and waited. When he felt another pull he drew in his
+line. On it was a very tiny fish. "It's too small to keep," said Mr.
+Johnson. So he took it carefully off the hook and threw it back into the
+water.
+
+In a little while Bob felt a pull on his line. He held it very still and
+waited. Soon there was another pull--a very strong one. Then there came
+a jerk that almost threw him down. "Now draw in your line," said Mr.
+Johnson. "Steady, steady!" Bob pulled. His line almost broke. He pulled
+and tugged and pulled again. Then up came the line and on it was a
+fish--a big, beautiful fish flapping and twisting. "Good, good," cried
+Mr. Johnson. "That's a prize catch."
+
+How proud Bob felt as he landed his fish. He wouldn't let his father
+help take it off the hook. He did it all himself. For a moment he stood
+with the beautiful prize fish in his hand. Some people were fishing
+near-by and he wanted them to see. He wanted them to know of his prize
+catch. He felt very proud. "Look," said one of them; "what a great big
+fish!" Bob heard and felt prouder than ever. He threw his fish into the
+can as if he were saying, "Oh, that's nothing, I _always_ catch the
+biggest fish." Then he began to bait his hook again.
+
+Just then Paul cried out, "Oh, Oh, Oh!" quickly. Bob turned just in time
+to see his prize fish flop out of the can and back into the sea.
+
+"Oh, Oh, Oh!" He was no longer a proud fisherman. He was just a very sad
+little boy.
+
+On another day Bob and Paul stopped in front of a little cottage. A man
+was in the yard mending a him. The man was a strong young fisherman.
+
+At the door of the cottage sat an old, old man with white hair. A cane
+was by his side. He spoke to Bob and Paul and let them come in and sit
+on the steps near him. He was the fisherman's father. He was called
+Captain John. He had once been a fisherman himself. Now he was too old
+to work, but he knew many stories of the sea. Bob and Paul never grew
+tired of hearing them. Every day they came to the cottage. Captain John
+was always there sitting in the doorway, with his cane by his side. He
+was always ready to tell them an exciting true story of the sea.
+
+One day a big gray cat was curled up at Captain John's feet. "Is pussy
+your pet, Captain John?" asked Bob. "No, little lad," said the old man.
+"She belongs to my daughter. My pet is almost as old as I am. She's a
+brave old friend. We have stuck by each other for over fifty years.
+We've seen hard times and good times together. And now we are growing
+old side by side."
+
+"Will you show her to us, please, Captain John?" said the two little
+boys.
+
+"Yes, yes," replied the old man; "come with me." He took his cane and
+walking very, very slowly, he took the boys around the cottage to a tiny
+garden. There was one spot in the garden that was bright with flowers.
+
+Captain John led them there. "Here she is," he said. "Here's my old
+friend, the _Sea Gull_, dressed up in her Sunday clothes."
+
+The boys looked and saw that the _Sea Gull_ was a boat. She was Captain
+John's pet--almost as old as he was. She was his brave old friend who
+had stuck by him for over fifty years. Now she was too old for the sea
+so she had a home in the tiny garden. The flowers that had been planted
+in her were her "Sunday clothes."
+
+"She seems alive to me," said Captain John. "I am glad we can grow old
+side by side."
+
+I wish you could hear of all the good times Bob and Paul had at
+Fairport. Every day was packed with fun and both little boys grew taller
+and very brown.
+
+At last vacation time was nearly over. Bob left Fairport first. He and
+his family went home in his father's automobile. They camped out every
+night. The camping tents and the pots and pans were strapped on the back
+of the automobile. They rode all day. They went over hills, through
+valleys, and into cities.
+
+One day they passed a flower farm. "Oh, Mother," begged Bob, "May I stop
+and buy some flowers?" "Why, Bob," said his mother, "What do you want
+with flowers? We haven't any room for them in the automobile."
+
+"I don't want them to take home," said Bob, "I want to send them by the
+postman to Captain John. They are for the _Sea Gull_."
+
+So the automobile stopped and Bob spent his birthday money at the flower
+farm. The next day the parcel post brought Captain John a box of spring
+bulbs and fall plants. With them was a card in Bob's very best writing:
+
+ +-----------------------+
+ | To Captain John's Pet |
+ | The "Sea Gull" |
+ | from |
+ | B.J. |
+ | Guess who this is. |
+ +-----------------------+
+
+Paul stayed in Fairport a week after Bob had left.
+
+He was not lonely, for his daddy had come. Paul and his daddy were great
+friends. They went around together like two chums.
+
+The day before Daddy's week was up they went out for a long sail. Mrs.
+Ray was afraid to go, but Paul was not. He felt very big and brave. With
+Daddy to sail the boat everything would be all right. The sun shone,
+the wind blew, and away they started. The boat seemed to skim along as
+lightly as a sea gull.
+
+At last they landed on a little island. Paul helped his daddy gather
+sticks and build a fire. Mr. Ray put four ears of corn under the wood.
+Paul thought they would burn up, but they didn't. The husks covered
+them. Next Mr. Ray put a pan on the fire and fried some bacon and
+some potatoes. Paul unpacked a basket of sandwiches, and by that time
+everything was ready. They had no plates and no napkins. They ate with
+their fingers, in just the way little boys sometimes wish to do and
+mustn't, when they are at the table.
+
+Daddy told stories of camping and hunting as they sat by the fire.
+
+Time passed very quickly. It was four o'clock before they knew it.
+
+"All aboard," cried Mr. Ray, and in a very few minutes the lunch things
+were packed up and they were in the boat. At first the sails filled and
+the boat moved swiftly on. But suddenly the sky grew dark. Great claps
+of thunder were heard. Lightning played all around the boat. The wind
+blew fiercely. The waves dashed so high that the boat was almost upset.
+Paul felt very small and almost afraid, but not quite. His big, brave
+daddy was there. "Sit still, hold tight," Daddy called. His voice
+sounded far away, the storm was making such a noise.
+
+It seemed hours and hours that Paul sat still and held tight. He grew
+cold and stiff and wet. The sky became blacker and blacker. The wind
+howled louder and louder. Sometimes Daddy shouted, hoping that some one
+in a bigger boat would hear and come to help him. But no help came.
+
+All at once a clear, bright light shone over the water. "The
+lighthouse!" cried Mr. Ray, "The lighthouse! We are saved."
+
+He turned the boat and steered toward the light. It shone into the
+darkness like a kind eye.
+
+Fighting the wind and storm was hard work, but at last the boat reached
+the island on which the lighthouse stood. As the boat came to the shore
+Mr. Ray called and called. At last the door of the lighthouse opened and
+the keeper came out. He helped pull the boat to shore. Then he lifted
+Paul out and carried him into the lighthouse and Mr. Ray followed.
+
+At first Paul was too wet and cold and too much frightened to care about
+anything. But when he had been warmed and his clothes dried he began to
+look around. He was in a cheerful room with the lighthouse keeper and
+his wife. His dear daddy was there, too. And there was another person
+in the room. This was a little boy with a very pale face. He sat in a
+wheeled chair. His poor back was so weak he could not walk. But his face
+was bright and smiling. He held out his hand to Paul. "I'm Dick," he
+said, "I came to the lighthouse in a storm too, and I've been here ever
+since."
+
+"Oh, please tell me about it," said Paul.
+
+"It was eight years ago," began Dick, "when Father Moore found me in a
+boat. There had been a shipwreck and I must have been in it. I don't
+remember anything about it. I was only two years old and my back had
+been hurt. But Father Moore saved me and he and Mother Moore took me to
+be their little boy."
+
+"Yes, he's our little boy," said the lighthouse keeper, who was "Father
+Moore." "We live here together and keep the light."
+
+"Don't you get lonely?" Paul asked Dick.
+
+"Oh, no," said Dick, "I have a great many things to play with. See!" And
+he pointed to a big table near his chair. On it were many small toys.
+There was a farm with fences, houses, horses, cows, and chickens. There
+were people too--a man, a woman, and two children. Everything was made
+of clay. There was a tall clay lighthouse and around it were clay ships
+and boats.
+
+"What splendid toys," said Paul. "Did Santa Claus bring them?"
+
+"I made them myself," said Dick proudly. "My back and legs aren't much
+good but my fingers do whatever I want them to. Whenever I am lonely I
+think of something to make and then my fingers make it. I think," he
+went on laughing, "I'll make you and your father after you have gone."
+
+Paul hated to leave the lighthouse and brave little Dick. But he and
+Daddy had to go as soon as the storm was over. They knew Mrs. Ray would
+be greatly worried about them.
+
+"I'll write to you," said Paul to Dick, "and I'll send you some of my
+books with pictures in them. Then you can make more things."
+
+How glad Paul's mother was when her little boy and his daddy reached
+home. That night she came in to tuck him snugly in bed.
+
+"Is my little boy sorry this is his last night at Fairport?" she asked.
+
+"No, Mother," said Paul. "I hate to leave Captain John, and the cave,
+and the beach, and the ocean; but I want to get home. I want to see Bob
+and Betty and Peggy and Dot. I want them to help me do something for
+Dick."
+
+"What do you want to do, dear?" asked Mrs. Ray.
+
+"I want to send him something to keep his fingers busy, perhaps a tool
+chest and some wood," said Paul. "And, O Mother, do you think we could
+do something to make his back strong?"
+
+"Perhaps we can," answered Mrs. Ray. "We must see what we can do to help
+him."
+
+You may be sure that some happy days came to Dick after the five little
+friends had put their heads together.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Five Little Friends
+
+Author: Sherred Willcox Adams
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7801]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on May 18, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, William Flis, Ted Garvin
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS
+
+BY
+
+SHERRED WILLCOX ADAMS
+
+
+_ILLUSTRATED BY_
+
+MAUD AND MISKA PETERSHAM
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS AT SCHOOL
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS IN VACATION
+
+
+
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS AT SCHOOL
+
+
+Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy and little Dot are five little friends.
+They go to the same school. Many other children go to the school too,
+but these five little friends are the ones this story is about.
+
+Bob is the tall boy in the brown suit. Betty is the girl in the checked
+dress. Paul is the boy with the white blouse. Peggy is the girl with
+curls. Little Dot is the tiny child with bobbed hair.
+
+Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy and little Dot have a very fine teacher.
+She is called Miss West. Many other children are in Miss West's room
+too. But the five little friends are the ones this story is about.
+
+One morning when the children came to school Miss West had a surprise
+for them. On her desk was something large and round. It was all covered
+with paper.
+
+"Guess what this is, children," said Miss West.
+
+"It is a balloon," said Bob.
+
+"I think it is a football," said Paul.
+
+"No, no, you are both wrong," said Miss West. She took the paper off.
+What do you think it was?
+
+It was a big glass bowl. In it were six goldfish. They were swimming
+about in the water.
+
+"Little folks," said Miss West, "these are our school pets. We must feed
+them and give them fresh water. Then they will live a long time and we
+can have fun watching them."
+
+The children stood around the bowl. They watched the fish swim and
+float. They laughed when one fish chased another round and round the
+bowl. He looked very funny with his big mouth wide open.
+
+Soon Miss West showed the children how to feed the fish. After that they
+took turns in caring for them. Paul and Peggy had the first turn. Next
+Bob and Betty had their turn. After that little Dot took care of the
+fish all by herself. The other children had turns too. But this story is
+about the five little children whose names you know.
+
+One day Miss West said to the children, "How many of you little girls
+and boys have pets of your own?"
+
+A great many hands were raised.
+
+"I have!" said Bob.
+
+"I have!" said Paul.
+
+"I have," "I have," "I have," said Betty and Peggy and little Dot.
+
+"I have thought of a fine plan," said Miss West. "Each day one child may
+tell the other children about his pet."
+
+"What fun!" said Betty; and all the other children thought, "What fun
+that will be!"
+
+"Who will have the first turn?" asked Bob.
+
+"We will play a game to see," said Miss West.
+
+So Miss West wrote the names of all the children on slips of paper. Then
+she put all the slips in Paul's cap. Next she blindfolded Peggy. Peggy
+put her hand in the cap and drew out a slip. What name do you think was
+on this slip? The name was _Dot_.
+
+So the next day little Dot told about her pet. This is what she said:
+
+"My pet is a white cat. Her name is Snowball. She is as white as snow.
+When she curls up in front of the fire she is round like a ball.
+
+"One day my daddy could not find his hat. He looked and looked and
+looked for it. At last he found it in a dark corner under the stairs.
+
+"There was something in the hat. First Daddy saw two bright eyes. Then
+he saw Snowball all curled up in the hat. By her side were two little
+baby kittens. They were just like their mother. We named them Fluff and
+Muff. Now we have a happy cat family.
+
+"Daddy never got his hat back. At first the kittens slept in it. Now
+Fluff and Muff are so big they sleep in a box. But they like Daddy's hat
+to play with. Fluff gets on one side and Muff on the other. Then they
+pull and pull. Daddy's hat is almost worn out now."
+
+The children liked little Dot's story very much. They laughed when they
+thought of Fluff on one side and Muff on the other and Daddy's hat in
+the middle.
+
+The next day Betty was blindfolded. She put her hand in the cap and drew
+a slip. This time _Paul_ was written on the slip. So it was Paul's turn
+to tell about his pet. This is what he said:
+
+"My pet is a big collie dog. His name is Hero. When my mother goes to
+market she takes Hero with her. He trots by her side and carries a
+basket in his mouth.
+
+"Sometimes my mother sends Hero home with the meat and bread for dinner.
+He goes right along. He does not stop or look around. When he comes
+to our house he sets the basket down. Then he watches it until Mother
+comes. If anyone calls, 'Here, Hero,' he pricks up his ears, but he will
+not move from his place.
+
+"One day I tried to coax him away with a big bone. I know the bone
+looked and smelled good to Hero. He sniffed the air and looked at the
+bone with hungry brown eyes, but he never moved from the basket.
+
+"Last summer we went to the seashore. We took Hero with us. One day I
+was on the beach, playing in the sand. Hero was lying asleep in the sun.
+I was making a sand fort and my back was toward the sea.
+
+"Suddenly a big wave dashed in and knocked me down. Then another big
+wave came and carried me out into the water. As I did not know how to
+swim, I was very much frightened. I tried to call out, but my mouth was
+full of sea water. I could make only a little frightened sound; but Hero
+heard me. What do you think he did? He jumped into the water and swam
+out to me. I was too nearly drowned to catch hold of him. So he took my
+clothes in his mouth and began to swim with me to the shore.
+
+"I was heavy, and Hero was almost worn out before he got there. But he
+never once let go. He kept right on until he dropped me on dry land.
+Then he lay panting on the sand.
+
+"Just then Mother came to see where I was. When she saw what had
+happened she hugged me hard. Then she hugged Hero hard too. The next day
+she bought Hero a new collar with his name on it in big letters--HERO.
+That night Hero had a big bone with lots of meat on it for his supper."
+
+The children enjoyed Paul's story as much as they had Dot's. They
+thought Hero was a fine name for such a brave dog. They said Paul was
+a lucky boy to have a pet like that.
+
+On another day little Dot was blindfolded. The slip of paper she drew
+had this name on it--_Betty_. So it was Betty's turn to tell about her
+pet. This is what she told:
+
+"My pet is a pigeon. He is not just a common pigeon like the ones on
+the church roof. He is a carrier pigeon. My Uncle Fred brought him from
+France. He calls him the living airplane. Can you tell why?
+
+"He is named Arrow. In France Arrow used to carry messages to the
+soldiers. These messages were written on tiny slips of paper and tied
+around Arrow's neck.
+
+"When Uncle Fred came home he taught Arrow to go from my grandmother's
+house to our house and straight back again. It was a ten mile trip.
+
+"This is the way Uncle Fred did it. Almost every day he would feed Arrow
+at both places. It was easy for him to do this as he used to ride over
+to our house a great deal. When he took Arrow away from one place he
+would leave some grain there. Arrow knew this. So when he was let loose
+he would fly straight to the grain. He never seemed to lose his way or
+stop in the wrong place.
+
+"On Valentine's Day, Uncle Fred wanted to surprise me. He turned Arrow
+loose at Grandmother's house with something tied around his neck by a
+ribbon. Uncle Fred did not tell anyone what it was.
+
+"Arrow flew straight to our house. When I saw him I ran out to his
+feeding place. I spied the ribbon and untied it. I found a tiny gold
+heart with my name on it. I liked this Valentine best of all."
+
+The boys and girls in the class enjoyed the story of Arrow. They liked
+it so much that Betty said she would ask Uncle Fred to come to school
+and tell about what Arrow did in France.
+
+Another day when one of the pupils was blindfolded and drew a slip of
+paper, the name on the slip was _Bob_. So at last it was Bob's turn.
+This is the story Bob told:
+
+"My pet is a pony named Dandy. Grandfather bought him for me. He got him
+from a man who had a pony show. This man had taught Dandy many tricks.
+
+"When I say, 'Dandy, how old are you?' Dandy lifts his right front foot
+and brings it down three times. This is how he says that he is three
+years old. When I say, 'Make a bow, Dandy,' he puts his front feet out
+and bows his head almost to the ground. His mane hangs over his eyes and
+he looks very funny.
+
+"Dandy can play 'Hide-and-Go-Seek' too. This is the way he does it. I
+take an ear of corn and show it to him. Then I run and hide it. I call,
+'Come, Dandy, come.' He comes and looks all around for the corn. When he
+finds it, he takes it in his mouth and trots around and around with it.
+When I say, 'Bring it to me, Dandy,' he comes to me with the ear of corn
+in his mouth. But when I try to take the corn, he shakes his head and
+trots away again.
+
+"One day I tried to play 'Hide-and-Go-Seek' with a handkerchief instead
+of an ear of corn. Dandy did not like it this way. He looked at the
+handkerchief. Then he sniffed at it. At last he shook his head and
+turned away. He seemed to say, 'A game like that may be fun for a boy,
+but it isn't fun for a pony. I am not going to play.'"
+
+Everyone liked the story of Dandy. Some of the children asked to hear
+some more about him. But Miss West said it was time for recess. So the
+children went out into the school yard and played "Pony" and "Hide-and-
+Go-Seek."
+
+Another day someone drew Peggy's name on the slip of paper. And this is
+what Peggy told:
+
+"My pet is a big green and red parrot. She has a cage in the living
+room. Mother calls her 'the General' because she likes to give orders.
+When we sit down Polly calls out, 'Get busy! Get busy! Get busy!' If we
+are too busy and do not notice Polly she rolls over on her back in the
+bottom of the cage and cries, 'Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick!
+Polly's sick!' In the evening we put a cloth over Polly's cage to keep
+her quiet. When the cloth is taken off in the morning she begins to
+shout, 'Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'
+
+"One evening we forgot to put the cloth over Polly's cage. That night,
+quite late, my big brother went down into the living room to find a book
+he had been reading. When he turned on the light, Polly thought it was
+day. She began to scream, 'Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'
+
+"Everyone _did_ wake up. At first we were frightened. But when we found
+out what had happened we laughed and laughed. We laughed more when we
+heard a voice croak, 'Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's
+sick!'"
+
+The girls and boys all laughed at the story of Polly. Paul wrote a poem
+about her. This is what he wrote:
+
+Upon my word, Poll's a funny bird.
+
+The children went around at recess saying this. They said some of
+Polly's speeches too.
+
+One day Miss West told the children a true story that was very, very
+sad. It was about a blind man who sold papers. He had owned a little dog
+that used to lead him to his work and watch him all day; but the little
+dog had died. Now the poor man had no one to lead him. So he could not
+sell his papers.
+
+The children were very sorry for him. They wanted to do something to
+help.
+
+"Wouldn't it be fine," said Betty, "if we could buy him another dog?"
+
+"But how can we get the money?" said Paul.
+
+"We could give all our pennies, but that wouldn't be enough," said
+little Dot.
+
+"I know, I know!" cried Bob. "Let's give a show and have our pets for
+the show animals."
+
+The children thought this was a fine plan. Miss West thought so too. She
+let them plan for the show.
+
+Then she let them make tickets. Each child made two tickets. They were
+like the funny picture in the middle of this page.
+
+Everyone who came had to pay for a ticket. Even the children who had
+pets in the show had to pay.
+
+When the big children heard about the Pet Show they bought tickets too.
+Then they helped the five little friends get ready for the show.
+
+The school yard was the show ground. The big boys made a gate for the
+people to come through. They made pens for all the animals. Next they
+printed some big signs to put on the pens. The signs were like these
+only much, much bigger.
+
+ +----------------+ +===========+
+ | THIS IS HERO | | HERE IS A |
+ | THE LIFE SAVER | | HAPPY CAT |
+ +----------------+ | FAMILY |
+ +===========+
+ +=================+
+ |/ THIS IS DANDY \|
+ | THE |
+ |\ TRICK PONY /|
+ +=================+
+ +-------------------+
+ +-----------------+ | YOU WANT TO |
+ | o o o o o o | | FEEL JOLLY |
+ | THE | | SEE GENERAL POLLY |
+ | LIVING AIRPLANE | | - - -o- - - |
+ +-----------------+ +-------------------+
+
+At last it was the day of the Pet Show. Bob and Betty, Paul and Peggy
+and little Dot came early with their pets. Soon the other children came
+too. There were big children, and middle-sized children, and little wee
+children.
+
+When they stopped at the gate who do you think the ticket man was? It
+was Hero with a basket in his mouth. The children dropped their tickets
+into the basket. They patted Hero's shaggy head and called him "Good
+dog" and "Brave old fellow."
+
+He looked very kind but very, very solemn.
+
+They went to all the pens to see the show pets. Dandy stood in his pen.
+He looked very wise and very plump and shaggy. He poked his head out and
+let the children stroke his mane.
+
+In Polly's pen nothing could be seen but a big cage with a black cover
+over it. Not one bright feather showed. Not a single sound came from the
+cage.
+
+Snowball and her kittens were curled up in their box. They were as quiet
+as mice. All three had red and blue ribbons around their necks.
+
+The pen with Arrow's name on it was empty. On the ground some grain was
+scattered. By the grain were three light gray feathers. But no living
+airplane could be seen. "Where can he be?" the children asked.
+
+Just then Bob came out in front of the children. He was dressed like
+a real showman. He had on a high hat and a long coat. "Ladies and
+gentlemen," he said, in a funny deep voice, "the big show is about to
+begin. Will you please find seats in the show tent?" The children
+laughed and sat down on the ground.
+
+Bob went on talking like a showman. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said,
+"you are now to see Dandy, the trick pony." When he had said this, Bob
+went to the pen and brought Dandy out.
+
+"Now Dandy," he said, "tell the ladies and gentlemen how old you are."
+Dandy lifted his right foot and brought it down three times. The
+children clapped their hands.
+
+"Make a bow to the ladies and gentlemen, Dandy," said Showman Bob. Dandy
+put his front feet out. Then he bowed his head almost to the ground. His
+mane fell over his eyes and he looked very wise and funny.
+
+Next Bob took an ear of corn from his pocket. He held it in front of
+Dandy's nose. "Dandy, do you see this?" he said. Dandy nodded his head.
+His mane fell over his eyes. He looked very funny and full of mischief.
+
+"Now Dandy," said Showman Bob, "shut your eyes." Dandy winked and
+blinked. Then he shut his eyes tight. "Keep your eyes shut till I call
+'Come,'" said Bob. Then Bob started off with the ear of corn.
+
+Dandy kept his eyes shut just one little minute. Then he opened them
+and began to peep. He peeped very slyly to see where Bob was hiding the
+corn. The children shouted with joy! Then Showman Bob came back. The
+corn was still in his hand. He pretended to be angry. He made Dandy hide
+his eyes once more.
+
+Again Dandy peeped slyly to see where Bob was hiding the corn. At last
+Showman Bob took little Dot's hat and tied it over Dandy's eyes. How the
+children did laugh! Dandy looked so funny with a little girl's hat on.
+
+Then Bob hid the ear of corn behind a box. He called, "Come, Dandy,
+come!" Dandy shook his head very hard. The hat rolled on the ground.
+Then Dandy began going round the show grounds. He stopped and sniffed at
+everything.
+
+"Oh see!" said Peggy, "Dandy is looking with his nose!" Soon Dandy
+sniffed at the box and found the ear of corn.
+
+"Come, Dandy, come!" called Showman Bob. Dandy came trotting up with the
+ear of corn in his mouth. But when Bob put out his hand for the corn
+Dandy kicked up his heels and away he went. He ran round and round like
+a pony in a circus.
+
+The children clapped their hands and shouted. Dandy went faster and
+faster. It was very exciting. At last Dandy stopped running. Then Bob
+led him back to the pen. There the little pony munched the corn happily.
+
+Next it was Peggy's turn to show Polly. Showman Bob brought out a table.
+Then he helped Peggy put Polly's big cage on it. Peggy lifted the black
+cloth. There was Polly! She was the greenest, reddest, funniest parrot
+you ever saw. She winked her eyes, shook her feathers, and called out,
+"Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!" The children laughed; but they did not
+get up. So General Polly sang out, "Get busy! Get busy! Get busy!" The
+children soon knew what they must "get busy" about. Polly began to say
+in her most coaxing voice, "Polly wants a cracker! Poor Poll! Pretty
+Poll! Poor Polly wants a cracker!" This sounded so funny that everybody
+laughed.
+
+Peggy had some crackers in her pocket. She took them out and let the
+children feed Polly. They poked bits of cracker through the wires of her
+cage. Polly was not very polite. She pecked and grabbed and talked to
+herself. But everything she did was so funny that the children enjoyed
+it.
+
+At last Polly had all the crackers she wanted. Then she grew tired and
+cross. She began to scream, "Bad boy! Go away! Go away! Go away!" The
+children ran back to their seats. General Polly was left all alone.
+
+For a time she liked this. She swung on her perch and made queer noises
+to herself. Then she grew tired. She threw herself on the bottom of the
+cage and began to moan, "Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's
+sick!" Then Peggy came with the black cloth, and General Polly was taken
+to her pen.
+
+Next it was little Dot's turn to show her cat family. She was too shy to
+play showman as Bob had done. She just came out in front of the children
+and stood there. Snowball was in her arms and Fluff and Muff were on her
+shoulders. She put Snowball down. Then she gave her shoulders a shake
+and Fluff and Muff scrambled down to the ground.
+
+Next Dot took two red balls from her pocket. Each ball had a long rubber
+fastened to it. It would bounce high without rolling away. Dot put a
+ball near each kitten's paws. Just as Fluff and Muff sprang to get the
+balls, Dot pulled the rubber. You never saw such surprised kittens! They
+sat still and looked with wide-open eyes. These were queer balls indeed
+that flew up into the air instead of rolling on the floor. This was
+something new and strange.
+
+The next time Dot bounced the balls Fluff and Muff were ready. Up they
+jumped, with their paws raised, but the balls sprang out of reach. "The
+kittens are trying to be living airplanes, too," said Paul.
+
+Next Dot went to the pen and brought something back. She held it up and
+said shyly, "This is Daddy's hat. It used to be the kittens' bed. Now it
+is their plaything."
+
+When she had said this she threw the hat on the ground. Quick as a wink
+Fluff was on one side of it and Muff was on the other. Then they began
+to paw and pull. Fluff pulled one way. Muff pulled the other. It was a
+real pulling match. Some of the children cried, "I think that Fluff will
+win." Others cried, "Hurrah for Muff."
+
+Just then a queer noise was heard. Can you guess what it was? It was the
+brim of Daddy's hat. It had torn all the way around--_rip, rip, rip_.
+Off it came so suddenly that both little kittens rolled over backward.
+
+All the children clapped their hands and laughed aloud. This frightened
+Fluff and Muff. They scampered to their mother as fast as their little
+white feet could carry them. This ended the act of the cat family.
+
+Next it was Betty's turn to show Arrow. But Arrow's pen was still empty.
+Betty whispered to Miss West. Miss West rose and said, "While we are
+waiting for the next act, let's sing together." She started a song
+everyone knew. All the children joined in.
+
+Just as they were singing a second song, something happened. A light
+speck was seen moving through the air. It came nearer and nearer. At
+last it circled round the pen, where the grain was scattered. Then it
+flew slowly to the ground. It was Arrow, the living airplane.
+
+The children crowded about the pen to see. "Look," said one of them.
+"There is something around Arrow's neck!" Betty bent over and looked.
+Yes, there _was_ something. She untied it quickly. On a piece of paper
+was written, "This is Arrow's gift to the blind man." In the paper was a
+bright five dollar gold piece.
+
+Betty read aloud what was on the paper. Then she held up the five dollar
+gold piece. How the children did shout and clap their hands. "Hurrah
+for Betty's Uncle Fred!" they cried. "Hurrah for the living airplane!
+Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!" When the last shout had been given, Showman
+Bob stepped out. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said in his deep showman's
+voice, "we thank you for coming to the Pet Show. We know the blind man
+will thank you too when he gets his new dog. The show will now close
+with a grand parade!"
+
+Then Bob made a showman's bow and went behind the school-house. Soon
+a drum began to beat--_tum, tum, tum_. The parade was coming! First
+marched Showman Bob beating the drum. Behind him was Betty carrying a
+big American flag. On her shoulder was Arrow, the living airplane. Next
+came brave old Hero pulling a little cart. In the cart were Snowball,
+Fluff, and Muff and what was left of Daddy's hat. Dot marched beside the
+cart. After them came Dandy. Paul was walking by his side and holding
+something on his back. It was Polly's cage with the black cover off.
+
+Pretty Poll was peeping from behind the wires. She looked surprised and
+a little bit frightened. Suddenly she rolled on her back at the bottom
+of the cage. The last thing the children heard as the parade passed out
+of sight was, "Come quick! Come quick! Polly's sick! Polly's sick!"
+
+I wish the children who read this book could hear about the blind man
+and his new dog but that is another story.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FIVE LITTLE FRIENDS IN VACATION
+
+
+I
+
+Soon after the Pet Show, school closed for the summer vacation. The
+children said good-bye to each other and to Miss West.
+
+For weeks everybody had been busy making plans for the summer.
+
+Paul went to the seashore and you may be sure brave Hero was taken
+along.
+
+Bob and his family went to the seashore too; and, what was best of all,
+they took a cottage not far from where Paul lived.
+
+Dandy was sent out to the country.
+
+Betty's mother said, "I want to have my little girl spend a summer on a
+farm--a real farm," so they went to Mr. White's.
+
+See if you can guess who went with them!
+
+No, it wasn't Arrow. The living airplane was left with Uncle Fred at
+Grandmother's. It wasn't Miss West. She went away on a long trip across
+the ocean. It was a very nice little person whose name begins with _D_,
+and it was another very nice little person whose name begins with _P_.
+
+Peggy's mother went too, but Poll was sent to a bird shop. Little Dot's
+mother stayed in the city with Dot's father and the cat family to keep
+them from getting lonely.
+
+Dot promised to be a good girl and to do just what the other mothers
+told her.
+
+It was a bright June afternoon when the three little girls and the two
+mothers got off the train at a little country station. Mr. White came to
+meet them. He and Billy, the hired man, piled all the trunks and bags in
+a wagon. Then Billy climbed up on the high seat and cracked his whip,
+saying, "Get-up! Get-up!" The horses pulled, the dust flew, and away the
+wagon went. Then Mr. White packed the mothers and the little girls into
+his automobile and away they also went to the farm.
+
+The farm was the very nicest place in the whole world. At least that is
+what the three little girls thought. Everything about it was nice. The
+rooms were big and cool and low. The wide side porch was a lovely place
+to eat dinner. The big low attic was splendid for rainy-day play; but
+the very, very nicest of all the nice things at the farm was Mary White.
+
+Mary was nine years and she had lived on the farm all her life. She knew
+all the good places to play. She could call every animal on the farm by
+name. She could make up the most delightful games. What a splendid
+playmate she was!
+
+First she took the children to the pasture to see the cows. There were
+three of them, Bonny-Belle, Bess, and Buttercup.
+
+Beside Buttercup was the dearest little calf with long thin legs and a
+soft tan coat. It was Don, Buttercup's first baby. He was just two
+months old and very full of life and mischief.
+
+"Is that another cow over there?" said Peggy, pointing to a field beyond
+the pasture. "Oh, no," said Mary, "That's Big Ben. He is a very wild and
+cross bull, so he has to have a home all by himself. No one ever goes
+into his field except Billy. Big Ben seems to hate people. But what he
+hates most is anything that is red."
+
+The children peeped in at Big Ben, with nice safe-afraid shivers going
+down their backs. Then Mary said, "Come let's go to the farmyard."
+
+The farmyard was a very busy place. "I never saw so many pets in all my
+life," said Betty. But Mary knew them all. She showed them Mrs. Speckle
+with her family of little baby chicks that looked like fluffy, yellow
+balls bobbing around her.
+
+Next she pointed out Mrs. Black Hen with her larger children. Some of
+these chickens were losing their feathers. How Mary did laugh when Peggy
+cried, "See, those poor little chickens are peeling off!"
+
+"Now," said Mary, "I will show you my trained chicken." First she went
+into the house and came out with two ripe, red cherries still on the
+stem. Then she called softly, "Come, come, Tom Thumb," and as she
+finished calling she put the stem of the cherries between her lips.
+
+Out from among the other chickens came a beautiful little white rooster.
+He looked almost like a toy, he was so tiny. With a glad little crow
+he flew straight up to Mary's shoulder, where he began to peck at the
+cherries. He ate very daintily. Sometimes he would stop eating and
+cuddle down on Mary's shoulder. When the ripe red treat was all eaten
+he gave another glad crow and flew down.
+
+Betty and Dot and Peggy loved to help feed the chickens. Every morning
+after breakfast Mrs. White would come out into the yard with a big pan
+of corn-meal mush and Mary would follow with a smaller pan of bread
+crumbs. Then both mother and little girl would call, "Chick, chick,
+chick! Chick, chick, chick! Chick, chick, chick!" as if they were
+singing the same tune over and over. At this, such a hurry and scurry as
+there would be!
+
+It seemed as if every fowl on the farm heard the call and was coming.
+There were big hens and little hens, brown hens, black hens, white hens,
+and speckled hens. There were fluffy baby chicks and long-legged middle-
+sized chickens. There were proud roosters with bright combs and gay,
+glossy feathers. There were stately turkeys with long necks and great
+fan-like tails. There were ducks with long fat bodies and big flat feet.
+
+Hurry, scurry! Scurry, hurry! "Cluck, cluck." "Peep-peep." "Groo-groo."
+"Gobble-gobble." "Quack, quack." Such noise and excitement you never
+heard!
+
+Such table manners you never saw! All were talking at once. Everyone was
+pecking and pushing and grabbing!
+
+One morning at the farmyard breakfast Mrs. White said, "Where can Brown
+Betty be? I haven't seen her for two or three weeks. I am afraid she has
+gone off and hidden her nest somewhere. I wish I knew where, for turkey
+eggs are scarce this year. If you four children will find her nest I
+will pay you ten cents for each egg in it."
+
+The little girls were very much excited.
+
+"Just suppose," said Betty, "that we find a nest with six eggs in it.
+That will be sixty cents. What shall we buy with so much money?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be fun to get Father to take us to the store and let us buy
+things for a picnic?" said Mary.
+
+"Oh, yes, let's have a picnic," cried Peggy and Betty.
+
+"But first," said wise little Dot, "we must find Brown Betty's nest."
+
+That very day the children began to hunt for the hidden eggs. They
+climbed up into the barn loft and looked in the hay. Here they found
+Mrs. Nicker on her nest. When they came near she ruffled up her feathers
+and gave an angry cluck. "Don't be afraid," laughed Betty; "we are
+looking for something worth much more than one little hen's egg."
+
+Then hidden down in the hay they came across a mouse's home with four
+baby mice in it. They looked very small and young and funny. Their tiny
+eyes were shut tight. "You are cunning little things but you won't buy
+us a picnic," said Peggy.
+
+In the eaves of the barn they found a swallow's nest, but the baby birds
+had flown away. Only some pieces of eggshell were left.
+
+All that day and part of the next and the next and the next the children
+hunted and hunted but no Brown Betty and no turkey eggs could they find.
+
+One bright June morning Mary said, "Let's go into the woods to play."
+
+"Oh, may we?" Betty and Peggy asked their mothers. And little Dot said,
+"Oh, please may I?" and looked from one mother to the other.
+
+"Yes, let them go," said Mrs. White. "The woods are not far away and
+there is nothing to harm them there."
+
+So the four little girls started out.
+
+They went down a shady lane and through a meadow. Then they came to the
+woods and wandered about for a while. At last they stopped by the side
+of a little brook that flowed merrily on its way.
+
+In a few minutes, shoes and stockings were taken off and the children
+were wading in the cool, rippling water. It was lots of fun, but the
+water was very cold. Soon they were glad to dry their feet in the soft
+grass and put on their shoes and stockings again.
+
+"Let's make a tree playhouse," said Mary; "I'll show you how." So they
+set to work with Mary as leader. They found a hollow tree with plenty
+of room in it. Next they gathered all the soft, velvety moss they could
+find. With this they made a thick green carpet on the floor. Then they
+made green moss furniture too. They had a bed, a couch, a table, and a
+chair.
+
+"We should have some one to live in our green, mossy house," said Peggy.
+"Let's go to the meadow and gather some daisies and make little flower
+people out of them."
+
+So off the children went. In a little while, back they came with their
+hands full of flowers.
+
+Peggy was the first one to reach the tree house. She looked in and then
+began to laugh and call to the others to come quickly.
+
+"We needn't make any flower people for our house," she said. "It's
+already rented." And sure enough, there on the green moss couch was a
+fat brown toad. He was winking and blinking and looking much pleased
+with his new home.
+
+The children sat down to rest and watch Mr. Toad. All of a sudden they
+heard a queer sound. "Cheep-cheep! Cheep-cheep! Cheep-cheep-cheep!" It
+seemed to come from the bushes.
+
+"It must be some little birds," said Betty.
+
+"Perhaps it is a mother quail and her babies," said Mary.
+
+Very carefully the four little girls peeped through the leaves and
+bushes.
+
+Can you guess what they saw?
+
+There, walking about in an open place in the woods, was Brown Betty, and
+running beside her and talking to her in turkey talk were eight baby
+turkeys.
+
+How excited the children were! They all wanted to run to the farmhouse
+with the good news. But at last they drew lots to see who should go.
+
+"I will hold four daisies," said Peggy, "and each of you may take one.
+The girl who gets the daisy with the longest stem may run ahead. If you
+leave the longest one in my hand, I will go."
+
+"Yes," said Mary, "and the other children may drive Brown Betty and her
+brood back to the farmyard."
+
+So they drew the daisies and little Dot had the one with the longest
+stem. Away she ran as fast as her short legs could carry her.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. White," she cried, as she reached the farmhouse, "we found
+Brown Betty in the woods, but her eggs have all turned into little
+turkeys."
+
+While Mrs. White was laughing over Dot's way of telling the news, the
+other children came up with Brown Betty and her brood.
+
+"Dear, dear," said Mrs. White, "as the eggs have turned into turkeys I
+will let the money I promised turn into a picnic. Let me see, to-day is
+Tuesday. Will you be ready to go on Thursday?"
+
+"Indeed we will!" cried the children. "Thank you so much."
+
+On Wednesday morning Mary woke up very, very early.
+
+Then Mary woke Betty and Peggy and little Dot.
+
+They all dressed as quickly as they could and hurried out of doors.
+The sun was just rising and the sky was a beautiful red and gold. The
+dew sparkled on the grass, and in the tree tops the birds were just
+beginning to chirp and call.
+
+"Where are you going, my pretty maids?" laughed Mr. White.
+
+"We're 'going a-milking, sir, she said,'" Mary replied.
+
+Then each little girl took a tin cup and followed Mr. White and Billy to
+the pasture where Bonny-Belle and Bess stood waiting. Billy let down the
+bars and the cows came into the barnyard. Mr. White milked Bonny-Belle
+and Billy milked Bess.
+
+The little girls stood near and watched.
+
+How Mr. White and Billy laughed when little Dot said, "Oh, is that the
+way you get milk on a farm? We get ours out of bottles."
+
+Before milking time was over each little girl held her cup and had it
+milked full of fresh, new milk.
+
+At first the children thought they would carry the cups home and drink
+the milk for breakfast. But they were so hungry they couldn't wait,
+so they drank it standing in the barnyard, with Bonny-Belle and Bess
+looking at them with soft, kind eyes.
+
+That afternoon Mary had some work to do and Betty and Peggy went for a
+walk with their mothers.
+
+Little Dot was tired from her early morning visit to the barnyard. So
+she took a book of fairy stories and went out into the near-by field.
+She settled herself cozily under a big maple tree and began to read.
+After a little while the book slid from her hands. Her head nodded and
+nodded and then rested on the grass. Her eyes winked and winked and then
+closed.
+
+She must have slept almost an hour when she woke with a start. Something
+very soft and moist was moving over her nose and cheeks. It felt almost
+as if her face were being washed with a sticky cloth.
+
+Dot opened her sleepy blue eyes and looked right into the big brown eyes
+of Don, Buttercup's baby calf.
+
+"Oh! Oh!" cried the little girl.
+
+"Ma-a-a," replied Don as he frisked away.
+
+"You are a dear little thing," Dot called after him, "but I wish you
+wouldn't kiss me with your tongue all over my face."
+
+The morning of the picnic was bright and clear. There was great
+excitement in the kitchen and pantry. Mrs. White and Molly, the maid,
+were fixing the lunch, but the four little girls couldn't help popping
+in every few minutes to take a peep. The two other mothers peeped too.
+What they saw made them wish that they were to be invited to the picnic.
+But this time only the four little girls who had found Brown Betty were
+to go.
+
+At last the lunch was packed in four baskets and off the children went.
+
+On their way they found some wild strawberries. They stopped to pick
+them, and Mary showed the others how to make leaf baskets to hold
+berries. They gathered broad, flat leaves and fastened them together
+with little twigs.
+
+Then they went on until at last they came to the loveliest spot you ever
+saw. It was an open space with trees all around it. Near-by was a little
+bubbling spring.
+
+The children set their baskets in the shade and began to romp and play.
+They played "Hide-and-Go-Seek" and a new game which they called "Echo."
+Can you guess how to play this game?
+
+At last they grew tired and hungry and began to unpack their baskets
+and to put their lunch on a mossy spot near the brook. Such a feast you
+never saw! Everything a child likes best came out of those baskets. How
+the four children did eat and eat and eat! And when they had eaten and
+eaten and eaten until they could eat no more, there were still some good
+things left.
+
+"Let's rest a while," said Mary, "and perhaps we'll be hungry again.
+Shall I tell you a fairy story?"
+
+"Oh, please do," said Betty; and Peggy and Dot echoed together, "Please
+do."
+
+So Mary told them of a fairy ball where all the little fairies came out
+of their flower cups and danced by the light of the moon.
+
+"Wouldn't this spot be a lovely place for a fairy ball?" said Peggy,
+when Mary had finished the story. "I wonder if there are any fairies in
+this wood."
+
+"I know how we can find out," cried Betty. "We can give the fairies a
+party."
+
+"But they only come out at night," said Dot, "so we couldn't see them."
+
+"But," replied Betty, "we can make a feast for them; and, if the next
+morning we find the feast is gone, we shall know the fairies really
+came."
+
+"Oh, let's do it," cried Dot and Peggy. And Mary said, "If we want the
+fairies to come we must make a magic ring of flowers." "That will be
+lots of fun," cried the children.
+
+So for the rest of the afternoon they were very busy indeed.
+
+They went to the meadow and gathered clover blossoms. Then they sat down
+on the moss and made a magic ring.
+
+When the magic ring was placed around a lovely mossy spot they began to
+set the table for the feast.
+
+"We'll give them cake and some ripe strawberries," said Betty.
+
+"But fairies eat dewdrops served on rose leaves," said Peggy.
+
+"When they come to a party given by little girls, they eat just what
+little girls give them. You'll see," said Betty. So the moss table was
+set with leaf plates, and on each plate were a ripe, red strawberry
+and a fairy-size piece of cake. When everything was ready the children
+danced around the magic ring three times to make it more magic. Then
+they packed their baskets and went home, feeling very tired but very
+happy and much pleased with the picnic.
+
+That night Betty could not go to sleep for a long, long time. She lay in
+bed and watched the moonbeams.
+
+"I wonder," she thought, "whether the fairies will come. I wonder
+whether the man in the moon is looking down at them now. I wonder"--and
+then she went to sleep and dreamed that she was dancing around and
+around the magic ring with the man in the moon. All around them fairies
+were sliding up and down from the tree tops to the mossy ground, on
+silver moonbeams.
+
+The next day the children went to the woods to see whether the fairies
+had been there. Betty reached the spot first and cried out joyfully,
+"They came! They came!" And sure enough, the leaf plates were empty.
+Every strawberry, every crumb of cake, was gone.
+
+"The fairies really came," said the other little girls as they stood
+around the magic ring.
+
+"Tweet-tweet-tweet," sang a bird in a tree top; "tweet-tweet-tweet."
+
+He cocked his little head and looked very wise and knowing. But "Tweet--
+tweet--tweet; tweet--tweet-tweet" was all he said.
+
+One of the things Peggy and Betty and Dot liked best to do was to watch
+Mrs. White skim the rich cream from the great pans of milk in the dairy.
+The dairy was down by the brook and the pans of milk were on shelves
+near the water, so that they were kept fresh and cool.
+
+One very warm day Mary said, "Let's play dairy."
+
+"All right," said Betty.
+
+"All right," echoed Peggy and Dot. "You show us how."
+
+So Mary brought two big pans and two pieces of soap from the kitchen.
+She filled the pans with water and put a piece of soap in each pan. Then
+she told the other children to watch the cream rise. She began to shake
+the soap about in the water, and the suds rose higher and higher.
+
+"It's rather _white_ cream," she said, "but we can play it comes from a
+cow named Snowball."
+
+"It's splendid cream," cried the three little girls. "May we help make
+it?"
+
+"I wonder whether Molly will let us use her cream skimmers," said Mary.
+
+Molly heard her name and came to the kitchen door to see what mischief
+those blessed children were up to now. She saw the pans on a seat built
+round a big maple tree and the four little girls bobbing about, very
+busy indeed.
+
+"Molly, will you please let us have the skimmers?" Peggy cried.
+
+"Well," replied Molly, "as it's clean dirt you're making I suppose I
+must."
+
+So Mary and Betty made the cream rise, and Dot and Peggy skimmed it and
+poured it into bottles and old cans to "sell."
+
+While they were in the midst of the fun, Red Chief, the proudest rooster
+in the farmyard, came strutting along.
+
+He put his head on one side and looked at the pans. "Too-ok, too-ok,
+too-ok. Is it feeding time?" he said. "Too-ok, too-ok, too-ok. I must
+see; I must see; I must see." With that he flapped his great red wings
+and flew up on the side of the pan.
+
+Now Red Chief was a heavy rooster and the pan was not very firm. Down
+tumbled the pan and Red Chief together. The make-believe cream and milk
+went all over him. Such a wet, cross, disgusted rooster you never saw!
+"Too-ok, too-ok, too-ok," he croaked, as he shook the soapsuds from his
+feathers. Then away he marched, scolding to himself about little girls
+who played silly games.
+
+One afternoon the children were out in the orchard playing "lady." Mary
+and Betty were the mothers in the game. Peggy and Dot were the children.
+
+Betty had on a long skirt and a fine grown-lady's hat. Mary had a scarf
+trailing on the ground instead of a long skirt, and she carried her
+mother's very best umbrella. It was a bright red one that could be used
+for sun as well as rain. It made Mary feel very grown-up indeed. The two
+"play" families made their homes under the trees. They paid visits back
+and forth. They gave tea parties. The children had measles and mumps and
+were put to bed on the grass with leaf plasters over their faces.
+
+Mary was Mrs. Ray and Dot was her little daughter, Lily.
+
+At last Mrs. Ray sent Lily to the meadow to buy some flowers. Dot danced
+gaily away. Just as she was gathering the flowers, a bright, blue
+butterfly lighted near her and then flew a little farther on. He seemed
+to be inviting her to race with him. So off Dot started.
+
+Her fat little legs seemed to twinkle over the grass, but the butterfly
+went faster still. Away he flew across the pasture, away over the fence
+into the next lot. Dot paused only a minute, then she slipped under the
+wire of the fence and followed. On and on she went. She did not notice
+where she was going. But the butterfly fluttered far ahead and was soon
+out of sight.
+
+Then Dot stopped and looked around. She was in a strange field. No
+living thing was about. Yes, something was moving over in the far
+corner. It turned around and seemed to sniff the air. Poor little Dot
+stood almost frozen with fright. It was Big Ben.
+
+Then Dot did the worst thing she could have done. She gave a loud cry
+and began to run.
+
+Big Ben shook himself and sniffed the air again. Then he began to come
+toward her in great bounds, with his head down.
+
+Back in the orchard the make-believe Mrs. Ray had begun to wonder why
+her little girl was staying so long. At last with her scarf across her
+shoulders and her umbrella over her head she went out to find her
+daughter.
+
+Mary reached the meadow just as Dot screamed.
+
+For a moment she stood still and looked around. The meadow was empty.
+Then she knew that little Dot was in the field with Big Ben.
+
+Swift as the wind Mary ran on, closing the umbrella as she went.
+
+Under the fence she crept and ran toward Dot.
+
+Poor little Dot was running and stumbling and crying. Big Ben was
+bounding nearer and nearer.
+
+"Don't be afraid," Mary called, as she came up to the little girl.
+
+Then Mary did a strange thing. She opened the red umbrella and whirled
+it around and around. Then she threw it toward Big Ben as far as it
+would go. It went rolling over the grass, with Big Ben bounding wildly
+after it.
+
+The red umbrella made him so angry that he forgot all about the little
+girls.
+
+Mary and Dot crept under the fence to safety.
+
+"O Mother," sobbed Mary, when the children reached home and told the
+story, "O Mother, your lovely red umbrella is all ruined!"
+
+"But my little girl is safe," said Mrs. White, "and she has saved the
+life of her little friend." Mrs. White put her arm around Mary and held
+her tightly, and drew little Dot to her, too, just as Dot's own mother
+would have done.
+
+I wish you could hear all the things Betty, Peggy, and little Dot did on
+the farm. It would take a great, big book to hold the story; and this is
+a little book for little folks.
+
+At last the summer vacation was over. The three little girls and the two
+mothers had to leave their friends on the farm and go back to the city.
+
+The little girls said good-bye to every living thing on the place--to
+the little pet rooster, to Red Chief, to the Speckle family, and to
+Mrs. Black Hen and her children who were now almost grown and had whole
+suits of clothes on. They said good-bye to Brown Betty and her children.
+They went to the pasture and said good-bye to Bonny-Belle, Bess, and
+Buttercup, and to frisky little Don. They even stood at the fence and
+waved good-bye to bad Big Ben.
+
+Then the two mothers and the three little girls said good-bye to Mrs.
+White and Billy and Molly and last of all to dear little Mary, who
+promised to come and visit them at Christmas time.
+
+"Good-bye, good-bye, good-bye!" they called as Mr. White tucked them
+into the automobile and drove away. "We've had a happy, happy summer!"
+
+When they reached the city, little Dot's father was at the station to
+meet them. How glad he was to see his little girl again! And how happy
+Dot was to put her arms around dear Daddy's neck!
+
+"How is Mother?" she said, "and how are Snowball and Fluff and Muff?"
+
+"Everyone is well," said Daddy, "and I have a grand surprise for you."
+
+"What is it, Daddy?" cried little Dot.
+
+Betty and Peggy came near to listen too.
+
+"That's telling," laughed Daddy. "I'd rather show you when we get home."
+
+"May Betty and Peggy go with us?" he asked the two mothers. I think the
+two mothers must have known the secret. They smiled and said, "Yes,
+indeed."
+
+So off the three little girls went with Dot's father.
+
+When they reached Dot's house no one was at the door to meet them.
+
+This seemed strange.
+
+At the head of the stairs a strange lady with a cap and apron on was
+standing and smiling at them. She led them into the front room, still
+smiling but saying nothing. This made it very exciting.
+
+There in an easy chair was Dot's mother. She was holding something in
+her arms. At her feet were Snowball and the kittens sound asleep in
+their basket.
+
+"O, Mother, Mother!" cried little Dot running to her.
+
+"My own little girl!" said Mother. "See, here is a darling new pet for
+you and Daddy and me."
+
+She held out the bundle in her arms, and it was a dear little baby
+brother.
+
+"The very best pet in all the world!" said little Dot.
+
+And Betty and Peggy thought so too.
+
+
+II
+
+But what have Paul and Bob been doing all this time? We will have to go
+back to the beginning of vacation and see.
+
+The place where they spent the summer was called Fairport. At Fairport
+there was a wide, smooth, sandy beach. Here the boys went in bathing,
+built sand forts, and gathered shells.
+
+On one part of the shore the beach was very narrow. Great rocks rose
+like a fort above it. Paul and Bob liked to play on the rocks. Sometimes
+they played that they were Indians and sometimes that they were cave
+men.
+
+They found a place under the rocks for their cave. When they pretended
+that they were pirates, they hid their treasures in the cave. Their
+treasures were things they found on the beach. There were shells and
+boxes, and bottles and queer bits of china and glass. Hero was a fierce
+monster guarding the treasure.
+
+Sometimes the boys put Hero in the cave and pretended he was a lion.
+Then they stole into his den and captured him and sold him to a circus
+man. The circus man was Roy, a little boy who liked to play with them.
+
+One day Bob and Paul and Roy saw some big boys standing on the wharf.
+They were catching crabs. First they baited their lines and then threw
+them into the water. When the crabs "bit" they drew them in. It looked
+very exciting. The three little boys wanted to try.
+
+So they found strings and the big boys gave them some bait. Bob and Roy
+had good luck. But Paul was so excited he couldn't pull his line in
+quickly enough to catch a crab. At last he thought, "If I wade into the
+water I'll be near the crabs. Then it won't be so hard to pull them in."
+
+So down he climbed and into the water he waded. Soon Bob and Roy heard
+him call, "Oh, Oh, Oh, come quick!"
+
+"What is it?" called Bob. "Have you caught a big crab?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Paul. He was half laughing and half crying, and all the
+time he was shaking his foot as hard as he could. "Oh, no, I haven't
+caught a crab. A--crab--has--caught me!" And sure enough, a big fat crab
+had nipped Paul's toe and was holding it fast.
+
+Bob climbed down and pulled it off. Paul went home and tied up his sore
+toe. Then he came back and sat on the wharf and watched the others.
+Somehow, he didn't feel like catching crabs. So he pretended he was a
+sailor who had been bitten by a big shark.
+
+One day Bob and Paul found a very nice bottle on the beach. It had a
+tight cork so that the water could not soak in. At first they thought
+they would hide it in their treasure cave. But that didn't seem exciting
+enough. So they thought and thought what to do with it. At last Bob
+said, "I know! Let's write our names and where we live on a piece of
+paper and put it in the bottle. Then let's throw the bottle out to sea."
+So he wrote:
+
+ +----------------------+
+ | Bob Johnson |
+ | Paul Ray |
+ | Fairport, Maine |
+ +----------------------+
+
+They put the paper in the bottle and corked the bottle tightly. Then
+they threw it out into the ocean. At first the bottle bobbed up and down
+in the water. But soon a big wave caught it and carried it out of sight.
+
+"Suppose," said Paul, "the bottle goes way out to sea and a big whale
+swallows it. And suppose it makes the big whale so sick that he swims
+near to the shore. Then some fishermen will catch him and kill him. When
+they cut him open they will find the bottle, and when they read our
+names they will know we are the boys who helped them get the great big
+whale."
+
+"Or," said Bob, "suppose the bottle goes out to sea and a man in a
+seaplane sees it and opens it. And suppose he comes flying to Fairport
+and when he lands here he asks where we are. Then when he finds us he
+takes us for a long, long ride in his seaplane."
+
+It was great fun supposing. The next morning Bob and Paul went to the
+beach all ready to have some more supposes.
+
+But what was that small thing lying on the sand? It looked very much
+like a bottle. Yes, it was. It was _the_ bottle!
+
+Bob picked it up and looked rather disappointed. Paul looked
+disappointed too. "Our supposes are no good now," he said. "Oh yes,"
+cried Bob, "I know a fine suppose. It's so good it's almost true. Let's
+pretend a big wave was the parcel postman. When he saw the bottle away
+out in the ocean with our names in it, he brought it straight to us."
+"Why, of course," said Paul. "The parcel postman had to bring the bottle
+to us. He couldn't take it to the whale or to the man with the seaplane.
+It wasn't addressed to them."
+
+One day Bob's father took Paul and Bob out fishing. They carried their
+bait in a tin can and they took a larger can to hold their fish. They
+stood on a high rock and threw their lines out into the deep water. The
+fish bit very well. Mr. Johnson caught five or six. But the boys were
+so excited they could not wait. They drew up their lines too soon. Once
+Paul felt a pull and waited. When he felt another pull he drew in his
+line. On it was a very tiny fish. "It's too small to keep," said Mr.
+Johnson. So he took it carefully off the hook and threw it back into the
+water.
+
+In a little while Bob felt a pull on his line. He held it very still and
+waited. Soon there was another pull--a very strong one. Then there came
+a jerk that almost threw him down. "Now draw in your line," said Mr.
+Johnson. "Steady, steady!" Bob pulled. His line almost broke. He pulled
+and tugged and pulled again. Then up came the line and on it was a fish
+--a big, beautiful fish flapping and twisting. "Good, good," cried Mr.
+Johnson. "That's a prize catch."
+
+How proud Bob felt as he landed his fish. He wouldn't let his father
+help take it off the hook. He did it all himself. For a moment he stood
+with the beautiful prize fish in his hand. Some people were fishing
+near-by and he wanted them to see. He wanted them to know of his prize
+catch. He felt very proud. "Look," said one of them; "what a great big
+fish!" Bob heard and felt prouder than ever. He threw his fish into the
+can as if he were saying, "Oh, that's nothing, I _always_ catch the
+biggest fish." Then he began to bait his hook again.
+
+Just then Paul cried out, "Oh, Oh, Oh!" quickly. Bob turned just in time
+to see his prize fish flop out of the can and back into the sea.
+
+"Oh, Oh, Oh!" He was no longer a proud fisherman. He was just a very sad
+little boy.
+
+On another day Bob and Paul stopped in front of a little cottage. A man
+was in the yard mending a him. The man was a strong young fisherman.
+
+At the door of the cottage sat an old, old man with white hair. A cane
+was by his side. He spoke to Bob and Paul and let them come in and sit
+on the steps near him. He was the fisherman's father. He was called
+Captain John. He had once been a fisherman himself. Now he was too old
+to work, but he knew many stories of the sea. Bob and Paul never grew
+tired of hearing them. Every day they came to the cottage. Captain John
+was always there sitting in the doorway, with his cane by his side. He
+was always ready to tell them an exciting true story of the sea.
+
+One day a big gray cat was curled up at Captain John's feet. "Is pussy
+your pet, Captain John?" asked Bob. "No, little lad," said the old man.
+"She belongs to my daughter. My pet is almost as old as I am. She's a
+brave old friend. We have stuck by each other for over fifty years.
+We've seen hard times and good times together. And now we are growing
+old side by side."
+
+"Will you show her to us, please, Captain John?" said the two little
+boys.
+
+"Yes, yes," replied the old man; "come with me." He took his cane and
+walking very, very slowly, he took the boys around the cottage to a tiny
+garden. There was one spot in the garden that was bright with flowers.
+
+Captain John led them there. "Here she is," he said. "Here's my old
+friend, the _Sea Gull_, dressed up in her Sunday clothes."
+
+The boys looked and saw that the _Sea Gull_ was a boat. She was Captain
+John's pet--almost as old as he was. She was his brave old friend who
+had stuck by him for over fifty years. Now she was too old for the sea
+so she had a home in the tiny garden. The flowers that had been planted
+in her were her "Sunday clothes."
+
+"She seems alive to me," said Captain John. "I am glad we can grow old
+side by side."
+
+I wish you could hear of all the good times Bob and Paul had at
+Fairport. Every day was packed with fun and both little boys grew taller
+and very brown.
+
+At last vacation time was nearly over. Bob left Fairport first. He and
+his family went home in his father's automobile. They camped out every
+night. The camping tents and the pots and pans were strapped on the back
+of the automobile. They rode all day. They went over hills, through
+valleys, and into cities.
+
+One day they passed a flower farm. "Oh, Mother," begged Bob, "May I stop
+and buy some flowers?" "Why, Bob," said his mother, "What do you want
+with flowers? We haven't any room for them in the automobile."
+
+"I don't want them to take home," said Bob, "I want to send them by the
+postman to Captain John. They are for the _Sea Gull_."
+
+So the automobile stopped and Bob spent his birthday money at the flower
+farm. The next day the parcel post brought Captain John a box of spring
+bulbs and fall plants. With them was a card in Bob's very best writing:
+
+ +-----------------------+
+ | To Captain John's Pet |
+ | The "Sea Gull" |
+ | from |
+ | B.J. |
+ | Guess who this is. |
+ +-----------------------+
+
+Paul stayed in Fairport a week after Bob had left.
+
+He was not lonely, for his daddy had come. Paul and his daddy were great
+friends. They went around together like two chums.
+
+The day before Daddy's week was up they went out for a long sail. Mrs.
+Ray was afraid to go, but Paul was not. He felt very big and brave. With
+Daddy to sail the boat everything would be all right. The sun shone,
+the wind blew, and away they started. The boat seemed to skim along as
+lightly as a sea gull.
+
+At last they landed on a little island. Paul helped his daddy gather
+sticks and build a fire. Mr. Ray put four ears of corn under the wood.
+Paul thought they would burn up, but they didn't. The husks covered
+them. Next Mr. Ray put a pan on the fire and fried some bacon and
+some potatoes. Paul unpacked a basket of sandwiches, and by that time
+everything was ready. They had no plates and no napkins. They ate with
+their fingers, in just the way little boys sometimes wish to do and
+mustn't, when they are at the table.
+
+Daddy told stories of camping and hunting as they sat by the fire.
+
+Time passed very quickly. It was four o'clock before they knew it.
+
+"All aboard," cried Mr. Ray, and in a very few minutes the lunch things
+were packed up and they were in the boat. At first the sails filled and
+the boat moved swiftly on. But suddenly the sky grew dark. Great claps
+of thunder were heard. Lightning played all around the boat. The wind
+blew fiercely. The waves dashed so high that the boat was almost upset.
+Paul felt very small and almost afraid, but not quite. His big, brave
+daddy was there. "Sit still, hold tight," Daddy called. His voice
+sounded far away, the storm was making such a noise.
+
+It seemed hours and hours that Paul sat still and held tight. He grew
+cold and stiff and wet. The sky became blacker and blacker. The wind
+howled louder and louder. Sometimes Daddy shouted, hoping that some one
+in a bigger boat would hear and come to help him. But no help came.
+
+All at once a clear, bright light shone over the water. "The
+lighthouse!" cried Mr. Ray, "The lighthouse! We are saved."
+
+He turned the boat and steered toward the light. It shone into the
+darkness like a kind eye.
+
+Fighting the wind and storm was hard work, but at last the boat reached
+the island on which the lighthouse stood. As the boat came to the shore
+Mr. Ray called and called. At last the door of the lighthouse opened and
+the keeper came out. He helped pull the boat to shore. Then he lifted
+Paul out and carried him into the lighthouse and Mr. Ray followed.
+
+At first Paul was too wet and cold and too much frightened to care about
+anything. But when he had been warmed and his clothes dried he began to
+look around. He was in a cheerful room with the lighthouse keeper and
+his wife. His dear daddy was there, too. And there was another person
+in the room. This was a little boy with a very pale face. He sat in a
+wheeled chair. His poor back was so weak he could not walk. But his face
+was bright and smiling. He held out his hand to Paul. "I'm Dick," he
+said, "I came to the lighthouse in a storm too, and I've been here ever
+since."
+
+"Oh, please tell me about it," said Paul.
+
+"It was eight years ago," began Dick, "when Father Moore found me in a
+boat. There had been a shipwreck and I must have been in it. I don't
+remember anything about it. I was only two years old and my back had
+been hurt. But Father Moore saved me and he and Mother Moore took me to
+be their little boy."
+
+"Yes, he's our little boy," said the lighthouse keeper, who was "Father
+Moore." "We live here together and keep the light."
+
+"Don't you get lonely?" Paul asked Dick.
+
+"Oh, no," said Dick, "I have a great many things to play with. See!" And
+he pointed to a big table near his chair. On it were many small toys.
+There was a farm with fences, houses, horses, cows, and chickens. There
+were people too--a man, a woman, and two children. Everything was made
+of clay. There was a tall clay lighthouse and around it were clay ships
+and boats.
+
+"What splendid toys," said Paul. "Did Santa Claus bring them?"
+
+"I made them myself," said Dick proudly. "My back and legs aren't much
+good but my fingers do whatever I want them to. Whenever I am lonely I
+think of something to make and then my fingers make it. I think," he
+went on laughing, "I'll make you and your father after you have gone."
+
+Paul hated to leave the lighthouse and brave little Dick. But he and
+Daddy had to go as soon as the storm was over. They knew Mrs. Ray would
+be greatly worried about them.
+
+"I'll write to you," said Paul to Dick, "and I'll send you some of my
+books with pictures in them. Then you can make more things."
+
+How glad Paul's mother was when her little boy and his daddy reached
+home. That night she came in to tuck him snugly in bed.
+
+"Is my little boy sorry this is his last night at Fairport?" she asked.
+
+"No, Mother," said Paul. "I hate to leave Captain John, and the cave,
+and the beach, and the ocean; but I want to get home. I want to see Bob
+and Betty and Peggy and Dot. I want them to help me do something for
+Dick."
+
+"What do you want to do, dear?" asked Mrs. Ray.
+
+"I want to send him something to keep his fingers busy, perhaps a tool
+chest and some wood," said Paul. "And, O Mother, do you think we could
+do something to make his back strong?"
+
+"Perhaps we can," answered Mrs. Ray. "We must see what we can do to help
+him."
+
+You may be sure that some happy days came to Dick after the five little
+friends had put their heads together.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Five Little Friends, by Sherred Willcox Adams
+
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