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diff --git a/old/10329.txt b/old/10329.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2ef42cf --- /dev/null +++ b/old/10329.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2809 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes, by Laura Rountree Smith + +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: Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes + +Author: Laura Rountree Smith + +Release Date: November 29, 2003 [EBook #10329] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SNUBBY NOSE AND TIPPY TOES *** + + + + +Produced by Ted Garvin, Carol David and PG Distributed Proofreaders + + + + +[Illustration: "BRING THE CAMPHOR! BRING THE SMELLING SALTS!"] + +SNUBBY NOSE + +AND + +TIPPY TOES + +BY + +LAURA ROUNTREE SMITH + +1917, 1922 + +CONTENTS + +SNUBBY NOSE AND TIPPY TOES + +CHAPTER I +CHAPTER II +CHAPTER III +CHAPTER IV +CHAPTER V +CHAPTER VI +CHAPTER VII +CHAPTER VIII +CHAPTER IX +CHAPTER X +CHAPTER XI +CHAPTER XII + + + +MORE COTTON TAIL STORIES + +CHAPTER I +CHAPTER II +CHAPTER III +CHAPTER IV + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + +"'BRING THE CAMPHOR! BRING THE SMELLING SALTS!'" + +"GRANDPA GRUMBLES HAD NOT SEEN DR. COTTONTAIL FOR TWO HUNDRED YEARS" + +"TIPPY TOES WASHED THE DISHES" + +"'MY NAME IS NOT SNUBBY NOSE'" + +"HE WAS SWEEPING THE CHIMNEY WITH HIS LONG, BEAUTIFUL TAIL" + +"THEY WERE SAILING AWAY WITH GRANDPA GRUMBLES" + +"BUSHY-TAIL WENT SPLASH, DASH, INTO THE LAKE" + +"'I WILL TUCK THEM IN MY SLEIGH'" + +"SOON THE CIRCUS COTTON-TAILS CAME IN VIEW" + +"BUNNY AND SUSAN WERE SITTING BY THE FIRE" + + + +SNUBBY NOSE AND TIPPY TOES + + + + + +CHAPTER I + + +Bunny and Susan Cotton-Tail sat by the fire one winter evening warming +their paws. + +"What's that?" asked Bunny. + +"What's that?" asked Susan. + +They went to the window and saw a very little Bunny stuck fast in a +snowdrift. + +"Help, help," cried Bunny, "I will get the snow-shovel." + +"Help, help," cried Susan, "I will get the wheelbarrow." + +Bunny and Susan went out to shovel the little Bunny out of the +snowdrift. Bunny said, "You dear little fellow, how did you get stuck +fast in the snowdrift?" + +Susan looked hard over her spectacles and said, "Why, it is our own +dear grandchild, Snubby Nose." + +Then Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! Bunny Cotton-Tail +shoveled as fast as he could, and in sixteen minutes he had Snubby Nose +out of the snowdrift. Susan put him in the wheelbarrow and wheeled him +to the house. All the time Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he +howled! + +Susan said, "Go and get the big tub and we will give Snubby Nose a hot +bath." + +Bunny got the tub and some warm water and he and Susan gave Snubby Nose +a hot bath. They rubbed him dry with a soft towel, and all the time +Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! + +Just at this very minute Grandpa Grumbles came in shaking the snow off +his fur and whiskers. He shook his green cotton umbrella. He came in +grumbling, + + "It's noisy here, I do declare, + I just came out to take the air." + +Snubby Nose stopped his noise and stared at Grandpa Grumbles. Bunny and +Susan said, "Sit down by the fire, Grandpa, and warm your paws." +Grandpa Grumbles sat down. + +Snubby Nose cried, "Grandpa Grumbles, tell us a story, please tell us a +story." + +Bunny Cotton-Tail said, in a whisper, "Please don't mention +_noses_." + +Susan Cotton-Tail said, "Please don't mention _snowdrifts_." + +Grandpa Grumbles was wet and cold, so he grumbled right out loud, "I +will tell about as many _noses_ and _snowdrifts_ as I please +in this story!" Then Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! + +Susan took him up in her arms. She carried him to bed and sang him a +nonsense song. By and by Snubby Nose fell asleep. Susan went back +downstairs and found Grandpa Grumbles asleep by the fire. + +Bunny said, "I wonder what makes him grumble so much?" + +Susan said, "T wonder what happened to Snubby Nose. He has such a funny +little nose!" + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +As they sat talking, "thump, bump" was heard, and Snubby Nose fell down +stairs! He fell right on his ugly little nose and broke it! + +"Get the camphor! Get the smelling salts! Help, help!" cried Bunny and +Susan. + +Grandpa Grumbles woke, up and cried, + + "Someone has a sad mishap, + Just when I try to take a nap." + +I do not know what in the world they would have done if Doctor +Cotton-Tail had not come in that very minute. He came in to dry his fur and +whiskers! + +He set Snubby Nose's little ugly nose and said, "It will not look very +pretty, but perhaps it did not look pretty before. You must wear a pink +wrapper, and drink tea out of a pink cup, and eat pink wintergreen +candy!" + +Snubby Nose liked the idea of wintergreen candy. He hugged Doctor +Cotton-Tail and stopped crying at once. + +Susan got a pink wrapper and got a pink china cup for his tea. Grandpa +Grumbles felt in his overcoat pocket and took out sixteen pieces of +Wintergreen candy. It was pink wintergreen candy of course! + +Susan said to Doctor Cotton-Tail, "How did you happen to come out in +this big snowstorm?" + +Doctor Cotton-Tail said, "I had a call to make, I was going to visit--" + +Just then Susan began to sneeze. She sneezed so hard she nearly sneezed +her head off! + +Doctor Cotton-Tail said, + + "Susan that is quite absurd, + Such sneezing I have never heard." + +Susan said by and by, "I beg your pardon, what were you saying when I +started to sneeze?" + +Doctor Cotton-Tail said, "I had a call, I was going to visit--" + +At this very minute Snubby Nose set up a shout, for dear Bunny +Cotton-Tail leaned too near the candle and burned one of his whiskers! + +Then Grandpa Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella fiercely and +said, + + "Such a noise I never heard, + I cannot hear a single word." + +[Illustration: "GRANDPA GRUMBLES HAD NOT SEEN DR. COTTON-TAIL FOR TWO +HUNDRED AND SIX YEARS"] + +Grandpa Grumbles had been sitting very still in a corner and Doctor +Cotton-Tail had not seen him up to this minute. He got up and shook +hands with him and said, "How do you do, sir, How do you do, sir!" + +Grandpa Grumbles was pleased as pleased could be. He had not seen +Doctor Cotton-Tail for two hundred and six years! He cried out, "How do +you do, sir! How do you do, sir!" + +All this time Snubby Nose sat up in his pink wrapper drinking tea out +of a pink cup and eating pink wintergreen candy. By and by Susan said, +"Doctor Cotton-Tail you were going to tell us where you were going to +call when you came here!" + +Doctor Cotton-Tail said, "I was on my way to call on little Tippy +Toes!" + +"My fur and whiskers," said Bunny, "I never had a grandchild named +Tippy Toes!" + +"Bless my buttons," said Susan, "What a cute little name." + +Then Grandpa Grumbles got up waving his green cotton umbrella and +shouted, + + "Though the stormy north wind blows, + I'll go with you to Tippy Toes." + +Then he and Doctor Cotton-Tail made a low bow and went out into the +snowstorm. + +Doctor Cotton-Tail called back, "Don't forget to eat wintergreen +candy." + +By this time Bunny and Susan and Snubby Nose were tired and sleepy, and +they all went to bed. Bunny began to snore and Susan began to snore, +but Snubby Nose was still wide awake. + +What do you suppose Snubby Nose did? You can give three guesses and you +will not guess what he did! + +He got out of bed and lit a candle. He said, "I believe I am the +ugliest little Bunny with the ugliest little nose of any Bunny alive." + +He began to dance before the mirror. He danced this way and that way +before the mirror. He danced very prettily on the tips of his toes. +Then he made a low bow and said, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Tippy Toes." + + +Then Snubby Nose went back to bed. He said, "To-morrow I will go and +find Tippy Toes." + + + +CHAPTER II + + +Where do you suppose Tippy Toes was, and what do you suppose he was +doing? He woke up in his warm little bed at home and said, "Oh, Ma! Oh, +Pa! I want to go and visit Bunny and Susan Cotton-Tail." + +Mother Cotton-Tail laughed and said, "You have read about Bunny +Cotton-Tail burning his paw by candle-light." + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "You have read about Susan's cookies!" + +Tippy Toes said, "Please, may I go and visit Bunny and Susan?" + +Tippy Toes was a homely little Bunny. He had a very ugly little nose, +but he was polite. He always said, "Thank you," and, "If you please." + +Mother Cotton-Tail said, "You may go and pay a visit to Bunny and +Susan. Go and pack your traveling bag at once." + +Tippy Toes was so pleased he hugged Mother Cotton-Tail and said, "Thank +you, Mother Cotton-Tail, I will go and pack my traveling bag." + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "I will go with you to the turn of the road." + +Soon they started merrily down the road and Mother Cotton-Tail called, +"Good-bye, good-bye." + +They had only gone a few steps when Mother Cotton-Tail called, "Come +back, come back, you have forgotten your umbrella. What if it should +rain?" + +Tippy Toes went dancing merrily back and Papa Cotton-Tail waited for +him. They started on again and this time Mother Cotton-Tail called, +"Come back, come back, you have forgotten your overshoes. What if there +should be a thunder storm?" + +So Tippy Toes went dancing merrily back and Papa Cotton-Tail waited for +him again. When they started the third time Tippy Toes said, "We have +nothing to go back for this time," but the wind whistled in his ears. + +Mother Cotton-Tail called again, "Come back, come back, Tippy Toes, you +have forgotten your red silk pocket handkerchief." + +This time Papa Cotton-Tail went back with Tippy Toes and he said, "Dear +Mother Cotton-Tail, do put on your thinking-cap and see if we have +forgotten anything else, or we shall never get off." + +Then they looked high and low, but they could not find Mother +Cotton-Tail's thinking-cap! + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "Never mind, I will put on _my_ thinking-cap +instead." So he put on his red silk thinking-cap and said, "Oh, I +know what we have forgotten; we have forgotten to send Bunny and Susan +a present!" + +"To be sure," said Mother Cotton-Tail, "Now what shall the present be?" + +Little Tippy Toes did not get started on his journey that day, for it +took four days and fourteen hours for them to decide what to send Bunny +and Susan. All this time Tippy Toes was as merry as you please. He +danced about on the tips of his toes and sang, + + "A present, a present, if all things go well, + What shall be the present? No one can tell." + +Suddenly, at breakfast next morning Mother Cotton-Tail said, "I will go +to town and buy Bunny and Susan a big parlor lamp." + +"A lamp with a pink shade," said Tippy Toes. + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "A lamp with a tall chimney." + +Mother Cotton-Tail said, "I will buy a lamp with a pink shade and a +tall chimney for Bunny, because he burns his paw in the candle." + +Then Tippy Toes danced this way, and he danced that way, and said, "Oh, +Ma, may I go with you to town to help buy the lamp?" + +Mother Cotton-Tail said, "Papa Cotton-Tail has to go to work. If I go +to town and you go, too, who will tend the fire? Who will wash the +dishes?" + +Tippy Toes wanted to go to town, but he was a good little Bunny, so he +said, + + "Who will tend the fire? Whom do you suppose? + Who will wash the dishes? Little Tippy Toes." + +So Mother Cotton-Tail put on her best sunbonnet and took her purse and +shopping basket with her, and went off with Papa Cotton-Tail calling, +"Good-bye, I will be home to supper at five o'clock sharp." + +Then Tippy Toes danced a little fairylike dance before the mirror and +sang, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Snubby Nose." + +Tippy Toes said, "I have danced that dance before, and I sing that song +very often, but the mirror always gives me the same answer. Who is +Snubby Nose? I wonder if he has a real ugly little nose like I have?" + +Then Tippy Toes made up the fire and washed the dishes and began to get +things ready to cook for supper. He said, "I do wish I could go and +find Snubby Nose; I wonder if Bunny and Susan can tell me about him." + +[Illustration: "TIPPY TOES WASHED THE DISHES"] + +Tippy Toes sat down in front of the clock and began to count the hours +until Mother Cotton-Tail would come home. He fell asleep and dreamed +that he saw a little Bunny exactly like himself stuck fast in a +snowdrift. When he woke up it was five o'clock and Papa Cotton-Tail had +just come home. + +They got supper and waited, and waited, for Mother Cotton-Tail. At +exactly six o'clock she came in. She was an hour late. + +She came on the stroke of the clock. She said, "I have been shopping +all day." + +Mother Cotton-Tail took a wonderful lamp from her basket. It had a pink +shade and a tall chimney. + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "If you send the lamp to Bunny I must send +something to Susan. I will go to town to-morrow and get Susan a pair of +spectacles." + +Tippy Toes said, "Oh Pa, may I go with you to town to-morrow?" + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "Who will roll out the cookies for Mother +Cotton-Tail? Who will run her little errands all day?" + +Then Tippy Toes danced this way, and he danced that way, and sang, + + "Who will do errands? Whom do you suppose? + Who will roll cookies? Little Tippy Toes." + +So, they had a merry time at supper that evening and lighted the new +lamp, and Papa Cotton-Tail read fairy tales. + +Tippy Toes did not tell what the mirror had answered him. He kept that +as a secret. He said to himself, "I do wonder _who_ Snubby Nose +is!" + + + +CHAPTER III + + +Next day Tippy Toes woke up early and cried out, "Oh, Mother +Cotton-Tail, it is time to wake up! Oh, Papa Cotton-Tail, it is time to +wake up!" + +Sure enough it was time for Bunnies to wake up because it was sunrise. + +Tippy Toes helped to get breakfast. He went to the well to draw water. +He began to sing a little fairy song, + + "Ding, dong bell, + Pussy's in the well." + +"Poor Pussy, I wonder if she is still in the well," he said. He peeped +down to look into the well. + +Papa Cotton-Tail called, "Hurry, hurry, it is time for breakfast." + +Then Tippy Toes drew a bucket full of water and said, "Is poor Pussy +still in the well?" + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "If you ever read your Mother Goose you would +know she is not in the well." + +"Who pulled her out?" asked Tippy Toes. + +Mother Cotton-Tail said, "Hush, be still, you ask too many questions!" + +Tippy Toes wondered all day who pulled poor Pussy out. He danced this +way, and he danced that way, and he set the table for breakfast. + +He said, "If you are home by dinner time Papa Cotton-Tail, may I go and +visit Bunny and Susan?" + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "If I get home in time with Susan's spectacles +you may go to-day." + +Papa Cotton-Tail put on his big fur coat and went merrily down the +road. Mother Cotton-Tail began to make cookies and Tippy Toes rolled +them out for her. Now, will you believe it? before they had a single +pan of cookies baked, Papa Cotton-Tail was back home again. + +Mother Cotton-Tail said, "Why are you back so soon?" + +Tippy Toes said, "Did you get the spectacles already?" + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "I met a peddler and he had a pair of black +spectacles in his pack." + +Papa Cotton-Tail put on the black spectacles and he looked so funny +that Mother Cotton-Tail said, "Let me try them on," and Tippy Toes +cried, "Please let me try them on!" + +Mother Cotton-Tail said, "I will pack Bunny's lamp and Susan's +spectacles and you may start on your long journey at once." + +Tippy Toes put on his best coat and cap and kissed his mother good-bye. +Papa Cotton-Tail went with him again to the bend of the road. Suddenly +Tippy Toes stopped still. He stopped stock-still in the road. He said, +"Oh, Pa, I must go back, I forgot something!" + +What do you suppose Tippy Toes forgot? + +He always danced up and down before the mirror before he went out. So, +he went back home, hoppity, skippity, hop; and Papa Cotton-Tail waited +for him at the bend of the road. + +Tippy Toes stood before the mirror and he danced this way and he danced +that way and said, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Snubby Nose." + +Then Tippy Toes laughed and laughed. + +"I will go and find Snubby Nose," he said, "for he must be as ugly as I +am with my little turned-up nose." + +He went running down the road and was soon off and away. The wind +whistled in his ears. + +At that very minute he heard Papa Cotton-Tail crying, "Hello, hello! +Come back to the bend in the road, Tippy Toes." + +Tippy Toes said to himself, "What can Papa Cotton-Tail want? Shall I +never get started?" + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "How will you know the house when you come to +it?" + +Tippy Toes said, "I will ask any one I meet." + +Papa Cotton-Tail said, "That is right, and be sure to bow when you meet +Grandpa Grumbles." + +Then they said "Good-bye" again, and Tippy Toes went merrily along. He met +Bushy-Tail, the sly old Fox. Bushy-Tail asked, "Where are you going in +such a hurry, Snubby Nose?" + +Then Tippy Toes danced this way and he danced that way, and he said, + + "That is a matter I do not disclose, + But, sir, my name is not Snubby Nose." + +[Illustration: "'MY NAME IS NOT SNUBBY NOSE'"] + +Bushy-Tail was surprised you may be sure. He said, "Well, you and +Snubby Nose are as much alike as two peas." + +Tippy Toes bowed and said, "Will you please tell me how I may know when +I have passed by the house Bunny and Susan Cotton-Tail live in?" + +Tippy Toes did not say he was going to stop and see Bunny and Susan. + +Bushy-Tail looked cross-eyed. He said, "If you will tell me your name +little fellow, I will take you straight to Bunny Cotton-Tail's house +in the woods." + +I do not know what would have happened next if Grandpa Grumbles and +Doctor Cotton-Tail had not come along. + +Grandpa Grumbles thought it was Snubby Nose, of course, and he shouted, + + "You're a careless Bunny, it is not funny, + The Doctor costs us a lot of money." + +Then whisk! Before Tippy Toes or Doctor Cotton-Tail could say a word, +Grandpa Grumbles opened his green cotton umbrella and set Tippy Toes +inside and carried him through the woods. The wind whistled in their +ears as they went. Grandpa Grumbles kept saying over and over to +himself, + + "You were ill, and it is not funny, + To call the Doctor and pay out money." + +Tippy Toes shouted at last so loud he could be heard, + + "Grandpa, I have a funny nose, + But my real name is Tippy Toes." + +Grandpa Grumbles answered him, + + "Snubby Nose, you can't fool me, + Though I'm foolish as can be." + +Then Tippy Toes stuffed his furry little paw into his mouth to keep +from laughing out loud. + +"I wonder if Bunny and Susan will think I am Snubby Nose, too," he +said. "What fun that will be. I will visit them until Snubby Nose comes +home." + +By and by they came to Bunny Cotton-Tail's house. Grandpa Grumbles set +Tippy Toes down on the doorstep and shouted, + + "The house is dark, as you can see, + You'll have to come and visit me." + +So, they went on through the woods to Grandpa Grumble's house; for, +sure enough, Bunny and Susan had gone to bed and turned out all the +lights. + +When they got to Grandpa Grumble's house a fire was burning merrily on +the hearth, and they went up and warmed their paws. Tippy Toes danced +up and down before the mirror and cried, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Snubby Nose." + +Grandpa Grumbles looked at Tippy Toes over his spectacles and said, "I +have not heard you cry or scream or howl for thirty minutes." + +Tippy Toes did not know what this meant, for he had never cried or +screamed or howled in all his life. + +He went up to Grandpa Grumbles and made a low bow and said, "Dear +Grandpa Grumbles, I want to thank you for the ride in your green cotton +umbrella." + +Grandpa Grumbles could hardly believe his ears. He grumbled, + + "You might be fooling me I suppose, + Except for your ugly little nose." + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +What do you suppose Snubby Nose was doing all this time? He woke early +one morning and danced before the mirror and asked, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Tippy Toes." + +Snubby Nose cried, "That settles it, broken nose, or no broken nose, I +will go out and find Tippy Toes to-day. Perhaps he will be a fine +playmate for me." + +Snubby Nose crept down stairs. He ran down the road and was soon out of +sight. + +Bunny and Susan woke up and they looked in Snubby Nose's little bed, +but he was not there. They expected to hear him cry and scream and howl +any minute. They looked in the big chair. There was the pink flannel +wrapper but Snubby Nose was gone. + +Bunny cried, "My fur and whiskers, he has gone out with his broken +nose." + +Susan cried, "Bless my buttons, I expect to see him back any minute." + +At that very minute Tippy Toes came tripping along, swinging his basket +to and fro and singing a nonsense song. + +"My fur and whiskers, here he comes," cried Bunny, "and he is not +crying, but he is singing a song." + +"Bless my buttons," said Susan, "he is not crying this time." + +Tippy Toes came in and said, "Good morning Bunny and Susan, I have +brought you a present this fine winter morning." + +Bunny and Susan could scarcely believe their ears, but Tippy Toes +opened his basket and took out the lamp and spectacles, and Bunny and +Susan were pleased, you may be sure. + +Bunny lighted the lamp, saying, "How can I ever thank you, Snubby Nose? +Now I shall not burn my paw, as I read by candle-light." + +Tippy Toes tried not to laugh when he was called "Snubby Nose." He +said, "Please tell me how you burned your paw, I am never tired hearing +about it." + +Bunny Cotton-Tail began, "Once when I was young--" + +"Rap-a-tap" was heard on the door, and Tippy Toes was so polite he went +to the door and brought the milk in. + +Tippy Toes curled up then at Bunny Cotton-Tail's feet and begged, "Do +tell me now why you liked to read by candlelight." + +Bunny Cotton-Tail began again, "Once when I was young--" + +"Rap-a-tap" sounded on the door. + +Tippy Toes went and let in the Grocer boy. He curled up again at Bunny +Cotton-Tail's feet and said, "Now Bunny, please tell me the story." + +Bunny Cotton-Tail began again, "Once, when I was young--" + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +Soot began to pour down the chimney. It flew all over the room. It +covered the carpet and furniture and pictures. + +Bunny shouted, "My fur and whiskers, what can be the matter?" + +Susan said, "Bless my buttons, there is soot all over the room." Tippy +Toes danced on this foot, and danced on that foot, and said, + + "Let me go up the chimney because, + I think it may be Santa Claus." + +Then Bunny and Susan laughed, but soon Bunny Cotton-Tail coughed, and +Susan sneezed, so Tippy Toes knew something must be done at once. He +ran outdoors and looked up at the chimney. + +There was Bushy-Tail, the sly old Fox acting as a chimney-sweep. He was +sweeping the chimney with his long, beautiful tail. + +[Illustration: "HE WAS SWEEPING THE CHIMNEY WITH HIS LONG, BEAUTIFUL +TAIL"] + +Tippy Toes cried, "Please come down and I will show you how to dance." +Bushy-Tail was surprised you may be sure. He thought it was Snubby +Nose, and Snubby Nose never said, "Please." + +He jumped off the roof with a bound and howled, "Oh, ho! So you will +show me how to dance, will you?" + +Then Bushy-Tail chased Tippy Toes away and away and away in the woods. + +Tippy Toes said to himself, + + "I'm in a corner without a doubt, + But if I keep cheerful I will get out." + +At that very minute they met old Grandpa Grumbles. He said, + + "It is getting cold I've heard it said, + Bushy-Tail where are your mittens, red?" + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +Bushy-Tail gave a howl and ran away as fast as his legs could carry +him. + +"What does it all mean?" asked Tippy Toes. + +Grandpa Grumbles replied, "Why, Snubby Nose, you have a poor memory if +you have forgotten about the red mittens. Don't you remember that Santa +Claus gave Bushy-Tail a pair of magic mittens?" + +Tippy Toes said, politely, "Please tell me about it." + +Grandpa Grumbles said, "Bushy-Tail put on the red magic mittens and +they pinched his paws." + +"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed Tippy Toes, "How long did he have to wear those +mittens?" Grandpa Grumbles answered, + + "Really, now, I cannot say, + But I guess it was a year and a day." + +Then Tippy Toes laughed so hard that he doubled right up in a little +ball and rolled over and over. + +"Come, come," said Grandpa Grumbles, "You had better go back to see +Bunny and Susan, they may think Bushy-Tail has eaten you up." + +So they traveled back together to see Bunny and Susan. When they came +to the house there was soot on everything. There was soot on the carpet +and furniture and pictures. There was soot on the new lamp, and on +Susan's spectacles. + +Grandpa Grumbles shouted, + + "You are careless folks, I do declare, + To let the soot blow everywhere." + +Bunny Cotton-Tail coughed, and Susan sneezed, and Grandpa Grumbles +said, + + "Into the kitchen, one, seven, three, + You are as careless as can be." + +He made Bunny and Susan go into the kitchen; then he said to Tippy +Toes, + + "Come, get a broom and an apron or two, + We'll clean this room, that's what we'll do." + +Soon Grandpa Grumbles and Tippy Toes had everything out of the room. It +did not take long to make it as clean as a pin. + +Grandpa Grumbles looked hard at Tippy Toes. + +"How does your nose feel?" he asked. "Come, sir, why don't you cry any +more?" + +Tippy Toes danced this way, and danced that way, and sang to the big +mirror that hung on the wall, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Snubby Nose." + + + +CHAPTER V + + +"My fur and whiskers, the room is all clean!" Bunny Cotton-Tail cried. + +Susan Cotton-Tail cried, "Bless my buttons, everything is in order." + +Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "There is a mystery in the air, + There is something strange, I do declare." + +Tippy Toes cried, "Good night Bunny and Susan, good night dear Grandpa +Grumbles," and he danced this way, and danced that way, and he danced +himself right up to bed. + +"How polite he is," said Bunny Cotton-Tail. Susan said, "He does not +seem to mind when we speak of noses!" + +Grandpa Grumbles said, "He does not cry any more." + +They all sat by the fire warming their paws. Grandpa Grumbles was +thinking. At last he said to Bunny and Susan, "One day I heard Snubby +Nose talking as he stood before a mirror, and he said," + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answered, "Tippy Toes." + +Now this Little Cotton-Tail dances before the mirror, and he says, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answers, "Snubby Nose." + +"Snubby Nose, Tippy Toes," repeated Bunny and Susan over and over as +they warmed their paws by the fire. + +By and by Grandpa Grumbles said, talking very fast, "Suppose there were +two little Cotton-Tails, one named Snubby Nose, and one named Tippy +Toes, suppose--just suppose they looked as much alike as two peas." + +Bunny Cotton-Tail said, "My fur and whiskers, it seems like a fairy +tale, but Snubby Nose always cried, and this little Cotton-Tail is so +polite." + +Susan cried, "Hark! I hear a rap-a-tap, who can be coming at this hour +of the night?" + +The door opened; in fell Snubby Nose in a heap, and he cried and he +screamed and he howled! + +Bunny and Susan and Grandpa Grumbles cried, "Hush, be still, stop +crying, and tell us what is the matter." + +Grandpa Grumbles asked, "Did you hurt your ugly little nose?" + +Then Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled louder than ever. + +Bunny asked, "Did you get stuck fast in another snowdrift?" + +Snubby Nose cried so loudly that they did not hear the "patter, patter, +patter" of little feet. They did not know that Tippy Toes was coming +down the staircase. Tippy Toes came dancing into the room, singing at +the top of his lungs, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + The mirror answers, "Snubby Nose?" + +Then for one single minute Snubby Nose was still. He looked at Tippy +Toes. He looked him up and down. + +Tippy Toes kissed him on both cheeks and nearly hugged the life out of +him. + +Bunny and Susan and Grandpa Grumbles said, "They are as much alike as +two peas. They both have ugly noses!" + +When Snubby Nose heard them speak of _noses_ he cried and he +screamed and he howled! + +Tippy Toes said, "Don't care about your nose. People know you wherever +you go." + +Snubby Nose pricked up his ears and asked, "Don't you mind about your +ugly nose at all." + +Tippy Toes danced this way and he danced that way and answered, + + "I don't mind noses, for you see, + I am polite as I can be." + +Then Snubby Nose stopped crying and hugged Tippy Toes and said, "I am +so glad to find you, Tippy Toes. How do you make up those funny little +rhymes. They tickle my eardrums." + +All this time Grandpa Grumbles was thumping on the floor with his +umbrella. He made such a noise that Bunny said, "Hush, listen, Grandpa +Grumbles has something to say." + +Susan said, "Hush, be still, Grandpa Grumbles wants to speak." + +At last Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes stopped talking and dancing, and +they all listened to Grandpa Grumbles. He said, + + "I want you both to come and stay, + With Grandpa Grumbles a year and a day." + +Tippy Toes answered, "Thank you, Grandpa Grumbles, I will come and +visit you for a year and a day," but Snubby Nose cried and he screamed +and he howled. + +I don't know what would have happened next, but Grandpa Grumbles went +outside, and opened wide his green cotton umbrella, and invited Snubby +Nose and Tippy Toes to step inside. + +They did so, and in less time than it takes to tell it they were +sailing away with Grandpa Grumbles in his green cotton umbrella! + +[Illustration: "THEY WERE SAILING AWAY WITH GRANDPA GRUMBLES"] + +Bunny and Susan said, "How will he ever get along with Snubby Nose for +a year and a day? We wish Tippy Toes was back. He was such a good +little fellow." + +Susan picked up the pink wrapper and Bunny picked up the pink cup and +saucer. Bunny Cotton-Tail said, "We will have a long quiet evening +alone." + +"Don't be too sure of that," sang the wind as it whistled down the +chimney. + +Susan said, "I will put on my new spectacles and we will read by the +new lamp." + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +The Seventeen Little Bears came tumbling in the doors and windows! +They came in laughing and shouting, + + "The Circus Cotton-Tails you see + Are just as funny as can be." + +They got out their seventeen little stools and sat by the fire. + +Bunny and Susan said, "What do you know about the Circus Cotton-Tails?" + +The Seventeen Little Bears said, + + "You only see them now at Fairs, + But we've become the Circus Bears." + +"Have you got a Circus tent? Have you got a merry-go-round?" asked +Bunny and Susan. "Do tell us how long you have been Circus Bears." + +The Seventeen Little Bears got on top of their seventeen little stools +and shouted, "We have just become Circus Bears today, that is the +reason we came tumbling in the door and windows." + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +The Seventeen Little Bears woke up early next morning. They all +whispered together so they would not wake Bunny and Susan. + +The Seventeen Little Bears tiptoed very softly out of bed, and +"pitter-patter, pitter-patter" went their little feet down the stairs. + + "We can stew, we can bake, + If we make no mistake." + +They made the fire and began to stew and bake. They made coffee and +fried sausages and cakes. By and by Bunny and Susan woke up. + +"My fur and whiskers, I smell something cooking," said Bunny. + +Susan said, "Bless my buttons, I smell something cooking, too." + +The Seventeen Little Bears said, "Ha, ha, ha! Bunny is talking about +his fur and whiskers. Ha, ha, ha! Susan is talking about her buttons. +We will give old Bunny and Susan something new to talk about!" + +The Seventeen Little Bears shouted at the top of their lungs, + + "We are Circus Bears, as all can see, + The merry-go-round waits you and me." + +Susan called, "Hurry, hurry, hurry! Bunny do get dressed! Let us see +what the Seventeen Little Bears mean. How I do love to ride in a +merry-go-round!" + +When Bunny and Susan got downstairs they were surprised to see a fine +breakfast ready for them all on the table. They all sat down and had a +very merry time. + +After breakfast the Seventeen Little Bears began to practice their +tricks. They slid on the banister and came downstairs head first. + +Soon they were all crying, "Oh," and "Ah, how I hurt my head;" and +"Oh," and "Ah, how I hurt my toes!" + +Bunny cried, "Bring the camphor! Bring the smelling salts, while they +are practicing their tricks!" + +Susan Cotton-Tail sat down in the corner. She wiped her eyes. + +Bunny said, "Have you lost your spectacles?" + +Susan Cotton-Tail said, "Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear!" + +The Seventeen Little Bears all came crowding around Susan to see what +was the matter. + +Susan still rocked to and fro and said, "Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear!" + +Bunny said, "Will you never tell us what is the matter?" Susan said +finally, + + "I have some pride, but thought to ride, + In the merry-go-round, above the ground." + +Then the Seventeen Little Bears all turned somersaults at once, and +Susan cried, "Stop them, stop them, or they will break their little +bones." + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +The Seventeen Little Bears made a low bow and said, + + "In the merry-go-round we'll go, + Laughing gayly, ha, ha, ho, ho!" + +They ran out the back door and Bunny and Susan went after them. There +stood a neat little merry-go-round, as fine as you please. + +"Where?" and "How?" and "Why?" and "Please tell us about it," said +Bunny and Susan. + +The Seventeen Little Bears replied, + + "Get inside, and have a ride, + Bunny and Susan, side by side." + +They all jumped into the merry-go-round and rode in seats side by +side. Round and round and round they went. + +Bunny waved his hat and Susan waved her red sunbonnet! The Seventeen +Little Bears shouted, "Hurrah, hurrah!" + +They went faster and faster. Bunny said, "I am afraid the wind will +blow off my fur and whiskers." + +Susan said, "The wind will blow off my spectacles." + +Faster, faster, faster they went! Would they never stop? + +The Seventeen Little Bears said, + + "This is a very funny business, + It gives us all a little dizziness." + +Faster, faster, faster they went! It began to rain. First the rain fell +with a few drops, then it came down in sheets. My! how wet they were! + +Faster, faster, faster went the merry-go-round. + +Suddenly Bushy-Tail ran and jumped right into the merry-go-round and +said, "What will you give me if I stop the merry-go-round?" + +Bunny said, "I will give you a warm seat by the fire, sir." + +Susan said, "I will give you a basket of cookies." + +The Seventeen Little Bears said, "We will give you seventeen pieces of +peppermint candy." + +"Help, help, help!" they all cried, "Do stop the merry-go-round!" + +Bushy-Tail looked as saucy as you please. + +"I can ride faster than this," he said, "I was brought up in a +merry-go-round. I want Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes to come and pay me +a visit." + +Bushy-Tail said no more, and Bunny saw there was no use to mince +matters, and the rain was coming down harder and harder. + +Bunny said, "If Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes want to pay you a visit I +have no objection." + +Then the merry-go-round went slower and slower, and slower, and finally +stopped. + +Bushy-Tail said, "Go get Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes for me or _I will +eat you all up!_" + +They all went into the house. They pretended to look for Snubby Nose +and Tippy Toes, though they knew they had gone away. They looked in +every nook and corner, but knew well enough that Snubby Nose and Tippy +Toes had gone sailing away with Grandpa Grumbles. + +Bushy-Tail was angry. He went down the road calling, "Woo, woo, woo!" +He would not even stop for his basket of cookies. + +Bushy-Tail called back, + + "Where they have gone to nobody knows, + I'll find Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes." + +Bunny and Susan said, "We are glad to get out of the merry-go-round, +but we must send word to Grandpa Grumbles not to let Snubby Nose and +Tippy Toes out. Who will carry the message?" + +The First Little Bear said, "It is so far to go." + +The Second Little Bear said, "I am all out of breath." + +The Third Little Bear said, "Oh wait 'till to-morrow." + +Now, will you believe it? The Seventeen Little Bears sat on their +seventeen little stools as though, nothing had happened! + +Bunny and Susan got ready to go out in the rain. They took their +raincoats and caps and umbrellas. They went to Grandpa Grumbles' house. + +The Seventeen Little Bears said in a sing-song way, + + "We really are not quite polite, + We're selfish as can be, + We sit on stools around the fire, + Just singing merrily!" + + + +CHAPTER VII + + +When Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes rode home with Grandpa Grumbles in his +green cotton umbrella they sang a merry song, + + "Oh, ho! It is fun to go riding along, + Singing and whistling a right merry song." + +The umbrella came to the chimney of Grandpa Grumbles' house. It began +to close up a little. + +"Help, help!" cried Snubby Nose, "we shall be squeezed to death!" + +Tippy Toes sat very still. He made himself as small as possible. + +Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Down my chimney every one goes, + How we shall travel the umbrella knows!" + +Then whisk! Before they could wink an eyelash they were safely down the +chimney. + +Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! + +Tippy Toes danced this way, and he danced that way, and said, "Oh, +Grandpa Grumbles, how I enjoyed the ride!" + +Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Off to bed when the merry winds blow, + So back up the chimney old Grandpa can go." + +Snubby Nose said, "You are not going to leave us alone in this house +are you?" Then he cried and he screamed and he howled! + +Tippy Toes danced this way, and danced that way, and before they could +say another word, whisk! up the chimney old Grandpa Grumbles was off +and away. He went off to ride in his green cotton umbrella. + +Tippy Toes kissed Snubby Nose and led him before the mirror, singing, + + "Who will visit us to-day?" + +The mirror answered, + + "Bushy-Tail is on his way." + +Snubby Nose said, "What fun it is to have the mirror talk. Come, let us +bolt the doors and windows. We will not let Bushy-Tail in." + +They danced again before the mirror and sang, + + "We're locked in safely, that we know," + +The mirror said, + + "Down the chimney he can go." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes said, "Oh" and "Ah," and "Oh" and "Ah." "We +never thought of the chimney! What shall we do with the chimney?" + +They built a roaring fire, and none too soon, for they could hear the +"patter, patter, patter" of feet upon the roof. + +Bushy-Tail climbed down from the roof. He looked in at the window and +said, "Please let me in, please let me in." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes sat as still as they could in their little +chairs by the fire and never winked an eyelash. + +Bushy-Tail said, "Let me in or I will come down the chimney, fire or no +fire." + +Then Snubby Nose coughed and Tippy Toes sneezed. + +Bushy-Tail climbed the roof once more. Out came the smoke in great +puffs. He gave it up and then went away down the path growling every +step of the way. + +All this time Bunny and Susan were coming nearer every minute. They +said, "What if we should meet Bushy-Tail?" + +In less time than it takes to tell it, Bushy-Tail came down the bend of +the road scolding and waving his beautiful tail to and fro. + +He howled, "Bring out Snubby Nose, bring out Tippy Toes or _I will +eat you up_." + +I do not know what in the world would have happened if Grandpa Grumbles +had not come sailing along just then. He came sailing down in his green +cotton umbrella and said, looking hard at Bushy-Tail, + + "Jump inside and have a ride, + There's room for you and me beside." + +Bushy-Tail jumped into the umbrella. He was pleased you may be sure. +They rode away, and away, and away, over houses, over tree-tops, and +over a big blue lake. Then they began to sail slowly down, down, down. + +Bushy-Tail said, "Oh, Grandpa Grumbles, don't land us in the lake! Oh, +Grandpa Grumbles, look out what you are doing!" + +Grandpa Grumbles then said loudly, + + "Speak into my better ear, + I am so deaf I cannot hear." + +Bushy-Tail cried out as loud as he could, "Oh, Grandpa Grumbles, we are +going down into the lake! Look out, look out! We shall be drowned!" + +Grandpa Grumbles shouted, + + "Speak a little louder, please, + Shall we sail above the trees?" + +Bushy-Tail got so excited he did not know what he was doing. He got +right out of the umbrella and went splash, dash, into the lake. + +[Illustration: "BUSHY-TAIL WENT SPLASH, DASH, INTO THE LAKE"] + +Grandpa Grumbles, as he sailed homeward, said, + + "Sink or swim, just as you please, + For I have no desire to tease." + +He left poor Bushy-Tail to swim to shore. + +When Grandpa Grumbles got home he saw smoke coming out of his chimney. +He grumbled, + + "It seems to me quite like a bore, + To have to enter by the door." + +He was so used to sailing down the chimney! + +The door opened for him and there stood Bunny and Susan. Snubby Nose +and Tippy Toes danced up to him and told him how Bushy-Tail had tried +to get in. + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his green umbrella fiercely and said, + + "He will not come this way again, + Either in sunshine or in rain." + +Then Bunny and Susan and Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes begged Grandpa +Grumbles to tell what had become of Bushy-Tail, but Grandpa Grumbles +would only say, + + "I am so deaf 'tis hard to hear, + Come, speak a little louder, dear." + +Then Bunny spoke into his right ear, and Susan spoke into his left ear, +and asked him to tell where he had left Bushy-Tail. + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his head and said, + + "Bunny and Susan, what do you say? + I am so old and deaf to-day." + +Then Snubby Nose cried into his right ear, and Tippy Toes cried into +his left ear, but Grandpa Grumbles only said, + + "I can't hear, my deafness grows; + Ask the umbrella, for it knows." + +Then the Cotton-Tails asked the umbrella what had become of Bushy-Tail +and the umbrella said, + + "Bushy-Tail went swimming away, + But he'll come back in a year and a day." + +"Oh" and "Ah" and "Oh" and "Ah," cried all the little Cotton-Tails, +"Bushy-Tail is swimming away is he?" + +They all went merrily to bed. + + + +CHAPTER VIII + + +The next morning Grandpa Grumbles called out, + + "The Cotton-Tails are all in bed, + Every one is a sleepy-head." + +"My fur and whiskers, we have overslept," said Bunny Cotton-Tail. "It +is nine o'clock by my little silver watch." + +"Bless my buttons," cried Susan, "I meant to get up and get breakfast." + +Tippy Toes was the first down stairs after Grandpa Grumbles. He danced +this way and he danced that way, and set the table for breakfast. + +Grandpa Grumbles had a fine breakfast ready. They all sat down except +Snubby Nose. Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Where is Snubby Nose? 'tis plain, + He must have gone to sleep again." + +Now, what do you suppose happened next? Grandpa Grumbles went upstairs +and took Snubby Nose by the feet and dragged him out of bed. He made +him dress in a hurry and come down to breakfast! All the time Snubby +Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! + +Bunny and Susan and Grandpa Grumbles soon finished their breakfast. +They went for a walk but Tippy Toes sat at the table and said, "Oh, +Snubby Nose, why do you cry so much? I have just as ugly a nose as you +have." + +Then Snubby Nose stopped crying. He stared at Tippy Toes. Sure enough, +Tippy Toes had a very ugly nose. + +Snubby Nose shouted, "Pass me the cream! Pass me the butter! Pass me +the bread! Can't you see I am starving?" + +The mirror spoke up suddenly, + + "Snubby Nose it's no use to tease, + You might say, 'Thank you,' and 'if you please.'" + +Tippy Toes slipped down from his chair and ran out after Bunny and +Susan. + +Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! He reached for the +sugar bowl and it sailed away in the air! He reached for the bread and +butter but they went farther out of his reach. He was very hungry and +he cried and he screamed and he howled, but there was no one to answer +him. By and by he danced before the mirror and said, + + "Mirror, mirror, I'll be good, + And speak politely as I should." + +The mirror said, + + "If you say, 'Thank you' I suppose, + You'll be loved like Tippy Toes." + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +Snubby Nose said, "Thank you for a bowl of milk." The milk stood at his +plate. Then he said, "Thank you for cookies and sugar and pie." The +cookies and sugar and pie stood by his plate. He had never had so much +fun before in all his life. He kept on ordering things and they came +before him. + +By and by Snubby Nose cleared off the table and washed the dishes, +saying over and over, + + "I must forget to try to tease, + I will say, 'Thank you' and 'If you Please.'" + +At this very minute in came the Seventeen Little Bears. They cried, + + "Hurrah, hurrah, old Snubby Nose! + What has happened, do you suppose?" + +Snubby Nose made a low bow and said, "If you please I should like to +know what has happened." + +The Seventeen Little Bears stared at Snubby Nose. They had never seen +him so polite before. + +They said, "We met Bunny and Susan and Grandpa Grumbles and they said +we could go up in the garret and get skates and go skating." + +No sooner said than done. Up to the garret danced the Seventeen Little +Bears. They found seventeen pairs of skates and danced out again. + +Snubby Nose was left alone in the house. He forgot to be polite. He +cried and he screamed and he howled! + +The mirror said, + + "If you're polite, as you should be, + Perhaps a pair of skates you'll see." + +Snubby Nose looked about the house. He looked high and low, but he +could not find any skates. He rubbed his eyes and he rubbed his little +red nose. He put on his cap and mittens and went to the pond. Tippy +Toes came to meet him. He had two pairs of skates and cried, + + "Where were you so long, goodness knows, + Here are your skates. Come Snubby Nose." + +He kissed Snubby Nose on both cheeks. + +The Seventeen Little Bears sat on the bank trying to fasten their +skates. Their little paws got colder and colder every minute. Snubby +Nose helped them fasten their skates and Tippy Toes helped them too. +Then they put on their own skates and went skating away, and away, and +away. + +By and by Bunny and Susan said, + + "'Tis rather sad now to relate, + We are too old and stiff to skate.'" + +Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Chilly business this sport I think, + Let's go roller-skating in a rink." + +Bunny and Susan said they must really go home and Grandpa Grumbles said +he, too, would go to his own home. + +He shouted to the Seventeen Little Bears, + + "Don't skate where the ice is thin, + You'll make a hole and tumble in." + +The Seventeen Little Bears skated on and on, the wind whistling in +their ears. + +Snubby Nose said to Tippy Toes, "What if the Seventeen Little Bears +should fall into the water, what would we do?" + +Tippy Toes said, "The wind blows so hard they cannot hear. I hope they +know where the ice is thin." + +The Seventeen Little Bears formed a circle and skated round. Suddenly +the ice gave way. Splash, dash, they all fell into the water! + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced this way, and they danced that way, +and shouted, "Help, help, help! The Seventeen Little Bears have fallen +into the water!" + +Doctor Cotton-Tail was riding by in his sleigh. He said, "Come, we will +pull them out of the water." So they all helped pull the Seventeen +Little Bears out of the water. + +Doctor Cotton-Tail said, "I will tuck them in my sleigh and take them +to Bunny and Susan. They will tuck them up warm in bed." + +[Illustration: "I WILL TUCK THEM IN MY SLEIGH"] + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes hung on to the back of the sleigh and they +went whizzing merrily homeward, the wind whistling in their ears. The +Seventeen Little Bears sneezed all the way. + +Did Bunny and Susan tuck them up warm in bed? Well, I guess they did, +and Doctor Cotton-Tail gave them hoarhound candy. + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes smacked their lips and said, "If we had +fallen in the water we could have had candy too." + +Doctor Cotton-Tail said, "You cunning little things, you look as much +alike as two peas. You shall each have a stick of lemon candy." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced this way, and danced that way, and +said, + + "Lemon candy is good to eat, + We always think it quite a treat." + +Susan said, "Hush; be still. Don't wake the Seventeen Little Bears; +they are all asleep." + + + +CHAPTER IX + + +The Seventeen Little Bears took cold when they fell through the ice +into the water, so they had to stay in bed all day. They cried, "Tell +us a story, please tell us a story." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced this way, and that way, before the +mirror and cried out together, + + "Who is so ugly? Nobody knows." + +The mirror answered, + + "Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes." + +The Seventeen Little Bears clapped their little paws and cried, "Tell +it again, tell it again!" + +Then Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced this way, and that way, before +the mirror and asked, + + "Who took cold when they fell through the ice?" + +The mirror would not answer this time. + +The Seventeen Little Bears wept and wailed. Bunny and Susan came +upstairs to see what was the matter. + +Bunny said, "Never mind, I will tell you a story about my reading by +candle-light." + +Then the Seventeen Little Bears cried, "Oh, Bunny, tell us a new story, +please." + +Now, Bunny could not think of a new story to tell to save his life, so +Susan said, "I will tell you about the Circus cookies that came alive." + +Then, the Seventeen Little Bears shouted, "We know that story by heart, +we know every word of it." + +They took out their seventeen little red pocket handkerchiefs and cried +and cried. + +All this time Grandpa Grumbles was sitting in an easy chair by the +fire. He grumbled, + + "'Tis silly to make such a dreadful noise, + You are worse than seventeen girls and boys." + +Then he took his green cotton umbrella and went upstairs. + +As soon as the Seventeen Little Bears caught sight of Grandpa Grumbles +they set up a shout, "A story, a story, do tell us a story." + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella fiercely and shouted, + + "Every one must keep as still as a mouse, + So you can hear a pin drop in the house." + +Then, will you believe it? The Seventeen Little Bears were so still you +could hear a pin drop. + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes were so still they did not wink an eyelash. +They sat on two little stools in the corner. + +Grandpa Grumbles said, "You can guess all day and you can guess all +night, but you cannot one of you guess what kind of a shop I am going +to open." + +Then the Seventeen Little Bears begged for Bunny Cotton-Tail's +thinking-cap. They put it on in turn and guessed and guessed what kind +of a shop Grandpa Grumbles would open. + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes said, "Will it be a candy-shop?" + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella fiercely and +grumbled, "I told you, you could not guess. I am going to open a Toy +Shop!" + +"A Toy Shop!" shouted the Seventeen Little Bears at the top of their +lungs. "A Toy Shop!" + +"Who is telling this story?" asked Grandpa Grumbles. He began to tell +the story in real earnest. He said, "I am going to open a Toy Shop in +the woods." + +"Not a real Toy Shop," said Snubby Nose. "You don't mean a real Toy +Shop," said Tippy Toes. + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella and grumbled, "Now, I +shall have to start all over again." + +So he began once more, "I am going to open a Toy Shop in the woods." + +"Will you make a rocking-horse?" asked the First Little Bear. + +"Will you make drums?" asked the Second Little Bear. + +"Will you make horns? Toot, toot, toot!" said the Third Little Bear. + +Now, will you believe it? All the Seventeen Little Bears put their paws +to their mouths as though they had horns and cried, "Toot, toot, toot!" + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his umbrella fiercely and shouted, + + "I will not tell the story to-day, + I will take my umbrella and go away." + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +Grandpa Grumbles held fast to the handle of the umbrella and sailed out +through the open window! + +"Oh," and "Ah," said Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes, "that was rather +sudden!" + +"Oh," and "Ah," said the Seventeen Little Bears, "how fast he went!" + +Then they were as merry as you please. Whenever any one would cough or +sneeze the other ones would say, "Let us talk about Grandpa Grumbles' +Toy Shop! Can you hear him hammer away? Can you hear him saw?" + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes put on their hats and coats and danced this +way, and that way, and said, "We will go and, visit Grandpa Grumbles' +Toy Shop." + +At this very minute, to the surprise of all, Grandpa Grumbles came +sailing in through the window. He said, + + "If I were little and young and gay, + I'd sail away for a year and a day." + +The Seventeen Little Bears shouted, "Please tell us about the Toy +Shop!" + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his umbrella. Out fell a little rocking horse. +He shook it again. Out fell a horn. He shook it again. Out fell a drum. + +The Seventeen Little Bears shouted, "Hurrah, hurrah! It is really true, +Grandpa Grumbles, you are going to open a Toy Shop." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes and the Seventeen Little Bears did not know +whether Grandpa Grumbles was teasing or not. They did not know if he +meant to open a real Toy Shop. + +The Seventeen Little Bears said, "Will you tell us the whole story +to-morrow?" + + + +CHAPTER X + + +The Seventeen Little Bears still had to stay in bed next day. Snubby +Nose and Tippy Toes danced about the room and cried, "Grandpa Grumbles, +do tell us the story of the Toy Shop!" + +Grandpa Grumbles came upstairs leaning on his green cotton umbrella. He +coughed six times and then he sat down in the rocking-chair by the +Window. He said, "The story of the Toy Shop begins with a question." + +The Seventeen Little Bears clapped their paws and shouted, "Hear, hear, +the story is going to begin!" + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced this way, and danced that way, and +cried, "Hear, hear, the story is going to begin!" + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +Grandpa Grumbles pointed his green cotton umbrella at Snubby Nose and +asked, "Which of your toys did you break first at Christmas?" + +Snubby Nose could not remember, so he cried and he screamed and he +howled! + +Grandpa Grumbles said, "I cannot begin this story until I have nineteen +questions answered." + +Tippy Toes said, "Grandpa Grumbles, I can tell you which toy I broke +first, I broke my little rocking-horse." + +Then Snubby Nose shouted, "I broke my rocking-horse too." + +Grandpa Grumbles pointed to the First Little Bear and said, "Which toy +did you break first?" + +The First Little Bear said, "I broke my little red drum." + +Then the Seventeen Little Bears all held up their paws and said, "Let +me tell, let me tell next which toy I broke at Christmas!" + +Now, will you believe it? They all made such a noise that Grandpa +Grumbles could not sit still another minute. He went downstairs shaking +his green cotton umbrella, fiercely, and grumbling to himself as he +went. + +The Seventeen Little Bears cried, "Oh, come back and tell the story! We +will be good." + +Then Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced downstairs and said. "We will, +be good, indeed we will be good." + +Grandpa Grumbles still looked very cross. He grumbled, + + "Speak into my other ear, + 'Tis very hard indeed to hear." + +Then Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes shouted into his other ear, "Please +come back upstairs and tell us about the Toy Shop. We will be good, +indeed we will." + +Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Speak a little louder, please, + If you do not want to tease." + +Bunny and Susan saw that something must be done to make Grandpa +Grumbles happy again, so Susan made a bowl of fine soup for him, and +Grandpa Grumbles drew up to the table. He said, + + "In cooking you can never fail, + Thank you, dear Susan Cotton-Tail." + +Then Bunny went upstairs and said to the Seventeen Little Bears, "You +may get up and put on your little red wrappers and sit by the fire +downstairs." + +So the Seventeen Little Bears got up and put on their little red +wrappers and crept downstairs. They crept down so softly that Grandpa +Grumbles never heard a sound. + +By and by when Grandpa Grumbles went back into the sitting-room there +sat the Seventeen Little Bears on their seventeen little stools by the +fire. Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes sat on the arm of Grandpa Grumbles' +chair. He was surprised you may be sure. + +He began to tell his story quite as if nothing had happened. He said, +"Last Christmas I went about and picked up all the broken toys I could +find and I said I would open a Toy Shop and mend them so you could not +tell them from new toys!" + +"Hear, hear!" cried the Seventeen Little Bears softly. + +"Hush, hush!" said Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes, "Grandpa Grumbles is +talking." + +Grandpa Grumbles went on, "On long winter evenings I sat and mended and +glued and pasted the toys and soon they looked as good as new." + +"Rap-a-tap," sounded on the door, "Rap-a-tap." + +Bunny took the candle and went to the door. There stood Doctor +Cotton-Tail. + +He said, "Good evening, how are the Seventeen Little Bears? I heard +they fell in the water!" + +The Seventeen Little Bears stuffed their little paws into their mouths +to keep from laughing, for they felt as well as ever, sitting before +the fire in their little red wrappers. + +Doctor Cotton-Tail took a seat by the fire and began to warm his paws, +first one paw and then the other. + +"Chilly spring weather, but most time to make garden," he said. + +"Chilly weather," said Bunny Cotton-Tail. + +"Chilly weather," said Susan. + +_Then the most surprising thing happened_! + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella and out came flower +seeds falling everywhere. The Seventeen Little Bears scrambled to pick +them up. + +"Who will make your garden?" asked Doctor Cotton-Tail, looking at Bunny +and Susan. + +Bunny and Susan said, "We do not know, we are too old and stiff to make +a garden." + +"You will miss the turnips and cabbages," said Doctor Cotton-Tail. +Then he added, + +"I came in a wagon, and as the Seventeen Little Bears are quite well, +I can take them home." + +Then the Seventeen Little Bears began to weep loud and long. They wept +into their seventeen little pocket handkerchiefs. + +Bunny and Susan said, "Never mind, dears, you can come to visit us +again." + +Soon the Seventeen Little Bears were tucked safely into the wagon and +Doctor Cotton-Tail took them home. + +"Bless my buttons," said Susan, "you did not finish your story Grandpa +Grumbles." + +"My fur and whiskers," said Bunny, "I should like to visit your Toy +Shop!" + +Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "At night I always shake my head, + 'Tis time for all to go to bed." + +The Cotton-Tail family knew that it was no use to tease, so they went +merrily to bed. + +Snubby Nose set his little alarm clock. He set it at four o'clock in +the morning. He said, kissing Tippy Toes good night, "We must get up +early in the morning and make a garden for Bunny and Susan." + + + +CHAPTER XI + + +"Tinkle, tinkle" went the alarm clock next morning. Snubby Nose put his +paw on it so it would not ring too loudly. He whispered to Tippy Toes, +"Get up, it is time to make the garden." + +They took the seeds Grandpa Grumbles had thrown from his umbrella. They +planted the seeds in even rows. They worked so fast, they had the +garden planted and were back in bed by eight o'clock. + +Grandpa Grumbles woke up next. He went downstairs and out of doors. He +saw a little garden all planted in even rows. He shook his green cotton +umbrella and said, + + "Radishes it is time to grow, + For spring has come again you know." + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +The radishes began to peep up and show their little green heads. + +Grandpa Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella again and said, + + "Young cabbage heads, all in a row, + Wake up, wake up, it's time to grow." + +The cabbages came up as big and round as you please. Then Grandpa +Grumbles shook his green cotton umbrella again and said, + + "Turnips come, wake up, 'tis clear + Merry, merry spring is here." + +The turnips came up nodding in the sunshine, and Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Open green umbrella and sail away, + They were magic seeds, good day, good day." + +He opened the green cotton umbrella and sailed away, and away, and +away. + +Bunny Cotton-Tail woke up and looked out of the window. "My fur and +whiskers, look at the garden," he shouted. + +Susan woke and looked out the window and said, "Bless my buttons there +is a real little garden." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes woke up again and said, "Hurrah, hurrah, how +fast the seeds grow! We must ask Grandpa Grumbles if they were magic +seeds that he gave us." + +But Grandpa Grumbles had sailed away, and away, and away! + +At that very minute the Postman brought two letters. The letters were +for Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes. They were from their Mothers asking +them to come home. + +When Snubby Nose read his letter he cried and he screamed and he +howled! + +When Tippy Toes read his letter he said, "Never mind, Snubby Nose, we +can go together to the bend of the road." + +Before they had breakfast, Susan got out her rolling-pin and flour and +sugar and said, "I will make you some cookies to take with you." + +Bunny said, "My fur and whiskers, I have two neat little baskets. I +will pack them with your lunch." + +So Susan made cookies and Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes packed their +little traveling bags and Bunny packed their lunches in the little +baskets. + +Bunny said, "I will take you in my wheelbarrow to the bend in the road, +then Snubby Nose goes east and Tippy Toes goes west." + +Snubby Nose cried and he screamed and he howled! He did not want to go +home. Tippy Toes did not want to go home either, but he said, "Thank +you Bunny for the ride." + +Soon Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes were ready to go. They stood before the +mirror and danced this way and that way and sang, + + "Tell us, good mirror, whom shall we meet?" + +The mirror answered, + + "Circus Cotton-Tails in the street." + +Then Snubby Nose held his breath and Tippy Toes held his breath. + +Snubby Nose said, "I was one of the Circus Cotton-Tails once myself." + +They went downstairs and kissed Susan good-bye. + +Then they jumped into the wheelbarrow and Bunny wheeled them to the +turn in the road. He kissed them good-bye and Snubby Nose cried and he +screamed and he howled! Tippy Toes said, "Never mind, we shall meet +again some day and my nose is as ugly as yours is!" + +Snubby Nose said, "_I beg you not to talk about noses_," and he +cried and he screamed and he howled, louder than ever. + +Tippy Toes saw something must be done, so he said, "Oh, never mind, I +will go home with you. It will be a long walk around then to my house." + +They both went east. + +Snubby Nose said, "Listen, what is that? It sounds like a band!" + +Tippy Toes said, "What is that? It sounds like the roar of a Lion." + +They did not know whether to go east any longer or not. They hid behind +some bushes by the roadside, and all the while the sound of the band +came nearer and nearer. All the while the lion roared louder and +louder. They peeped through the branches. Soon the Circus Cotton-Tails +came in view. + +[Illustration: "SOON THE CIRCUS COTTON-TAILS CAME IN VIEW"] + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced out of their hiding places and cried, +"Hurrah for the Circus Cotton-Tails! They have formed a real little +Circus!" + +There was the band wagon. There were the elephants and camels. There +were the animals in cages. + +The Circus Cotton-Tails cried, "Hurrah, hurrah! Here are Snubby Nose +and Tippy Toes. Come and join the Big Parade." + +Bunny Bright Eyes said, "Can you walk a tight rope?" + +Tippy Toes said he did not know, but Snubby Nose said he had walked a +tight rope off and on all his life! + +Tippy Toes drew a little mirror out of his pocket and said, + + "Who will walk the tight rope? Whom do you suppose?" + +The mirror answered, + + "Two cunning little Bunnies, Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes!" + + + +CHAPTER XII + + +Bunny and Susan sat quietly by the cheerful fire warming their paws. + +Bunny said, "My fur and whiskers, I hope Snubby Nose got home safely." + +Susan said, "Bless my buttons, I was thinking of Tippy Toes this very +minute. Those two cunning little Bunnies are as much alike as two peas! +We could not tell them apart if Snubby Nose did not cry so much." + +Bunny said, "I suppose we shall have no visitors for some time now." + +"Don't be too sure of that," said a gruff old voice, "Here I am +standing now." There stood Grandpa Grumbles in the doorway. He had +never looked so happy in all his life. He struck the floor fiercely +with his green cotton umbrella and said, + + "The Circus Cotton-Tails will come, + A-rat-a-tat, just hear the drum." + +Bunny and Susan listened. Sure enough, they heard the "rat-a-tat," of a +drum. Soon they heard the Lion roar in his cage. They all went out as +fast as they could. + +_There came the Circus Cotton-Tails on parade!_ + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes danced in front beating a drum. + +Bunny and Susan and Grandpa Grumbles cried, "Hurrah, hurrah, for the +Big Parade!" + +Grandpa Grumbles waved his green cotton umbrella and shouted, "Have you +a merry-go-round?" + +The Circus Cotton-Tails stood still. They cried "Hurrah, Bunny! Hurrah, +Susan! Of course we have a merry-go-round." + +Then the real little Circus Parade stopped. The Circus Cotton-Tails +cried, "Hurry, hurry! Help us unpack." + +They went to one of the wagons and began to unpack the merry-go-round. +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes helped and Bunny and Susan helped too. +Grandpa Grumbles cried, + + "One for the money, ten for the show, + Put up the tent, and away we go." + +He forgot to grumble. He had never been so happy before in all big +life. + +It took the Circus Cotton-Tails and Bunny and Susan just exactly one +hour and sixteen minutes to put up the merry-go-round, and Grandpa +Grumbles bossed the job. + +"Will it go?" asked Bunny and Susan under their breath. + +Grandpa Grumbles was the first to get in. He cried, + + "I'm the first to get inside, + Come one and all and have a ride." + +Susan said, "Oh, dear! I have lost my spectacles." + +It took the Circus Cotton-Tails one hour and sixteen minutes to find +Susan's spectacles. There they were safe and sound upon her forehead +all the time! Then Bunny went in-doors and burned his paw again by +candle-light and it took one hour and sixteen minutes to get his paw +well. + +Grandpa Grumbles did not grumble a bit. He only sat patiently in the +merry-go-round and said to Susan, + + "Now, the spectacles are found, + All jump in the merry-go-round." + +Then he called good-naturedly to Bunny, + + "If you'll use a lamp dear Bunny, + It will save you time and money." + +Bunny and Susan got into the merry-go-round, and the Circus +Cotton-Tails got in too. + +They were all ready for a ride when Grandpa Grumbles said, + + "Some are absent, whom do you suppose?" + +The Circus Cotton-Tails shouted in one breath, + + "_Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes!_" + +Snubby Nose was so little he could not climb up into the merry-go-round +without help. He cried and he screamed and he howled! Tippy Toes was so +little he could not climb in either but he waited patiently below. + +Grandpa Grumbles saw what was the matter. He lowered his green cotton +umbrella and helped Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes up into the merry-go-round. +Now they were ready to start. They all cried, + + "Give three cheers, away we go, + The Circus Cotton-Tails, ho, ho!" + +The merry-go-round would not start. They all got out to see what was +the matter. + +_Then the most surprising thing happened!_ + +Doctor Cotton-Tail jumped out from under the merry-go-round and said, + + "A-riding, too, I'd like to go, + Though I may take a nap or so." + +Grandpa Grumbles said cheerfully, + + "You'll take no nap when with us you go, + We may ride too fast, but never slow!" + +Doctor Cotton-Tail took a seat in the merry-go-round. + +The music began to play and they went round, and round, and round, +faster and faster. Bunny began to talk about his fur and whiskers. +Susan began to talk about her buttons. Grandpa Grumbles shouted, + + "I'm just as happy as I can be, + The Circus life is the life for me." + +Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes jumped down from the merry-go-round and +danced this way and danced that way, and for all I know they are +dancing yet! + + + + + +More Cotton Tail Stories + + + +CHAPTER I + + +Bunny Cotton-Tail and Susan were sitting by the fire, warming their +paws. + +[Illustration: "BUNNY AND SUSAN WERE SITTING BY THE FIRE"] + +"The evenings are growing cold," said Bunny Cotton-Tail. "It feels like +snow to-night." + +"Oh, joy!" cried Bunny Boy, "how I do love snow!" Then he began to jump +around the room so fast that Susan was afraid he would upset the table. + +"I am going to play that the sofa is a hill, and slide down!" he cried. + +Then Susan said if Bunny Boy did not sit down in his little red rocking +chair and be good, she would put him in a bag! + +So Bunny Boy sat down, but he began to cry. There is no telling what +would have happened just then if a soft "tap, tap," had not been heard +on the window. + +Susan looked out. There stood Bushy Tail with his traveling bag in his +hand! + +Susan was a little afraid to let him in, but there was nothing else to +do, so she opened the door, and whisk! bound! Bushy Tail was in, +hugging Bunny Cotton-Tail! + +"Who is the youngster!" asked Bushy Tail, pointing to Bunny Boy. + +Then Bunny Boy made himself as small as possible. He did not care for +Bushy Tail. + +Bushy Tail said he must tell about his trip. Besides, he had something +for Bunny and Susan in his bag. + +It had begun to snow, and Bushy Tail was very wet. He stood by the fire +and warmed his paws. Susan whispered to Bunny that she had never seen +so handsome a fox in her life. + +All the time Bushy Tail had a cunning look in his eyes. After his fur +was dry, and he had had a bowl of soup, he opened his bag, and my! what +fine things he took out! + +There was dried fruit for Susan. There was fresh cabbage for Bunny. And +there were oranges, and peaches, and pears! They had a fine feast, but +the greatest fun of all was just before they went to bed, when Bushy +Tail took from his bag a little telephone. He hung it on the wall and +fooled the rabbits with it for nearly an hour. + +It had a little bell and a receiver, and one could call "hello" into +it. + +Perhaps Bunny and Susan would never have known the joke about the +telephone if it had not been for Bunny Boy. Bunny Boy crept out from +under the sofa, where he had been hiding, and climbed up in a chair and +pulled the receiver hard. Then, bang! the top of the telephone came +off, and showed that it was only a candy box! + +Bushy Tail did not like this, but Bunny Cotton-Tail said he would +rather have it a candy-box, after all, as he was a little afraid of +telephones! + +Then they shook one another's paws, and went to bed. + +Bushy Tail slept on a sofa in the parlor. About eleven o'clock he got +up and began, to stir around. There was the same cunning look in his +eyes. + +First he went and looked at Susan Cotton-Tail, and thought, "I have +half a mind to eat you up." Then he went and looked at Bunny Cotton-Tail +and thought, "I have half a mind to eat you up." Then he saw Bunny +Boy out in the kitchen, wide awake, eating mince pie! Bushy said, "I +have you, and I will eat you up!" + +But Bunny Boy was too quick for him. He ran down the stairs, into the +cellar, and had hopped through the cellar window in less than no time. + +Then Bushy Tail took a mince pie and put it in his right-hand coat +pocket. He took a currant pie and put it in his left-hand coat pocket. +He hid an apple pie in his hat, and he went slyly out of the door with +a piece of blueberry pie in his mouth! + +Next morning, when Bunny and Susan awoke, they saw that their pies were +gone, and they saw that Bushy Tail and Bunny Boy were gone too! + +Susan Cotton-Tail cried, and Bunny Cotton-Tail whistled. + + + +CHAPTER II + + +Why do you suppose Susan Cotton-Tail had made so many pies? There was +going to be a fair, and Susan had been asked to make pies for it. All +the animals were going to the fair. + +"We cannot go when we have no pies to sell," said Susan. + +"All the animals will come to find out why we are not there," said +Bunny. + +Now Bunny Cotton-Tail was a very clever rabbit, even though he was +getting old. He put on his overcoat and took a card and a hammer, and +went out. + +He was out a long time, tacking something up on the front door. + +When he had finished, he asked Susan to come out and get a breath of +air. + +They walked up and down in front of the house. Then Susan began to +laugh, and then she began to sneeze, and then she laughed and sneezed +together, and what do you suppose was the matter? + +Bunny Cotton-Tail had put up this sign on the house, + +SCARLET FEVER HERE + +"Well," said Bunny, "if you don't want to go anywhere or have any one +come to see you, just put up a sign like that, and see how well it will +work!" + +Bunny and Susan went back into the house and peeped out their front +window to see how the animals would act when they saw the sign. + +First came Bushy Tail, big as life, trotting along. When he saw the +sign he waved his beautiful tail in the air and ran down the road as +fast as his legs could carry him! + +Next came Mr. Owl. He read the sign aloud, and flew away. + +So all day long, animals came to ask why Bunny and Susan did not come +to the fair, and all were frightened and ran away. + +Early in the evening old Grizzly came. He had followed Bushy Tail from +California. + +"What a beautiful bear!" said Susan. + +"He looks kind," said Bunny. + +Old Grizzly read the sign. He did not pass by as the other animals had +done. He went straight up to the front door and knocked. + +"Perhaps he can't read," said Bunny, so he shouted, "Scarlet Fever +here!" + +Old Grizzly nodded his head. He said he had had scarlet fever three +times, and he was not afraid to have it again. + +So they opened the door and let old Grizzly in. Then they all had a +jolly time, and Bunny told why he put up the sign on the house. + +"You may have a new kind of scarlet fever," said Old Grizzly, "maybe I +shall catch it!" and they all laughed. + +Old Grizzly had been in a circus, and had traveled in the East and in +the West. He could tell lovely stories, so he stayed a long time and +told stories, and Susan Cotton-Tail went out in the kitchen and came +back with a mince pie in each hand. (These pies had been hidden away in +a tin.) + +They all enjoyed the pies, and then Bunny asked old Grizzly to spend +the night with them. Old Grizzly said, "No, thank you." The house next +door was vacant and he was going to live there. + +Susan held the candle at the door and old Grizzly went to his new home. + +"I like him, but I am glad he went out for the night," said Bunny. +"Just think!" Susan said, "he has promised to come in every night and +tell us a story!" + + + +CHAPTER III + + +When old Grizzly came next evening he had a book tucked under his arm. + +"What have you there?" asked Bunny and Susan together. + +It was some time before old Grizzly would tell. Then he coughed and +said he had one story that every one liked so well that he had written +it down, and drawn pictures for it. + +The two rabbits begged so hard to see the pictures that old Grizzly +opened the book and showed them all the pictures before he began to +read. And this is the story he read: + +Once there was a gentleman who wrote stories. He had a fine large cat +called Whiskers. + +One day Whiskers thought he would see the man write his story, so he +sat up on the desk beside him. + +The man started to write a story about an elephant. It was to be a long +story with big words in it. + +Whiskers wanted to be petted just then, and as the man did not notice +him, he gave the pen a little slap, and it made a funny mark down the +page. + +"Never mind," said the man, "that will do for the path along which the +elephant walked." + +The man's pen was a lovely thing to play with, but Whiskers had a nicer +plaything himself. He began to go round and round after his own tail. +Round and round he went, until he upset the ink. Then he was so scared +that he ran and hid. + +The man only laughed, and said he would draw funny little figures where +the blots of ink were. + +He called Whiskers back and went on with his story. He was just +wondering how he would draw the seats inside the circus tent, when +Whiskers put his paw down on the wet page, and the man said: + +"Why, Whiskers, you certainly are an artist." + +Then he began to wonder how he could show what a big space the elephant +covered when he walked, and just then the cat walked over the paper, to +show him! + +The man was so pleased then, that he laid down his pen and gave +Whiskers a big hug. + +"Pooh!" said Whiskers, "that was nothing. I could write a better story +than you can, any day!" + +You see, Whiskers was not a polite cat. + +"Did Whiskers write the story?" asked Bunny. + +Susan winked at Bunny and said: + +"Old Grizzly, that is the best story of all, and I believe you made it +up yourself!" + +Then old Grizzly blushed under the fur on his cheeks, and Bunny ran and +got a big bouquet and stuck it in his paw! + +Old Grizzly went home feeling very happy indeed. + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +The next evening Susan begged old Grizzly to tell her another story +about Whiskers. Grizzly said he knew one, but he kept it in the back of +his head and he could not find it. So he told them the story of Carlo, +instead. + +Carlo was a fine dog. He had but one fault. He liked to suck eggs. + +Day after day the cook went out into the hen-house to get eggs, and day +after day there were no eggs to be found. + +At first she thought it must be a rat that stole her eggs, and she set +a trap. A clever old rat came and ate the cheese, but he never got +caught. + +One day the cook saw Carlo sucking an egg. Whisk! she was after him +with a broom, and gave him a sound beating! But this did not cure Carlo +of his bad habit. He went into the hen-house and stole eggs whenever he +pleased. + +The cook said she was not going to allow this, so one day she called +the dog to her in a most friendly way, and held out half an egg in her +hand. + +Carlo thought that the cook had made up her mind to let him eat all the +eggs he wanted, so he took the egg in his mouth, and swallowed it +quickly. + +Then he began to behave very strangely. He yelped with pain, and ran +out into the yard and rolled over and over in the snow. + +"Good! Now you will steal no more eggs," said the cook. + +What do you suppose was the matter with Carlo? The egg the cook had +given him was full of red pepper, and his mouth burned as though on +fire. There is no telling what the poor dog would have done if a little +girl had not come along just then. + +The little girl had found out what the cook had done. She crept out of +the house and said: + +"Poor Carlo, poor doggie, come to me!" and then she took snow and +washed out Carlo's mouth and patted him on the head until he felt all +right again. + +Carlo never forgot the little girl's kindness, and he never stole eggs +any more. + +Just as old Grizzly stopped speaking, "Tap, tap," was heard on the +window. They looked up and saw Bushy Tail outside. + +"Let him in. I'll see that he does no harm," said old Grizzly. They +opened-the door, and Bushy Tail jumped in. + +Now, Bushy Tail would not have come if he had not had something to say, +for he felt a little ashamed about the pies. + +What do you suppose Bushy Tail had come to say? He had heard of a big +gold mine in the West, and he wanted Grizzly Bear and the Cotton-Tail +family to go west with him to buy the gold mine. + +Old Grizzly was delighted with the idea, but Bunny and Susan said they +would rather stay at home. As they were talking, "Tap, tap," was heard +on the window again, and there stood Bunny Boy. He had come home from +his travels! + +Bunny Boy's head was tied up and he looked as though he had had a hard +time. Susan asked if he would like to go west and look for gold, but +Bunny Boy only shook his head. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Snubby Nose and Tippy Toes, by Laura Rountree Smith + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SNUBBY NOSE AND TIPPY TOES *** + +***** This file should be named 10329.txt or 10329.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/3/2/10329/ + +Produced by Ted Garvin, Carol David and PG Distributed Proofreaders + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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