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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65898 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65898)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Billy Whiskers in France, by Frances
-Trego Montgomery
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Billy Whiskers in France
-
-Author: Frances Trego Montgomery
-
-Illustrator: Florence White Williams
-
-Release Date: July 22, 2021 [eBook #65898]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: David E. Brown and The Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BILLY WHISKERS IN
-FRANCE ***
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “I ran straight on, regardless of bombs dropping all
-around me.” (Page 124)]
-
-
-
-
- BILLY WHISKERS
- IN FRANCE
-
- BY
-
- FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY
-
- AUTHOR OF “BILLY WHISKERS,” “BILLY WHISKERS’ KIDS,” “BILLY
- WHISKERS IN THE SOUTH,” “BILLY WHISKERS IN CAMP,”
- “ZIP, THE ADVENTURES OF A FRISKY FOX TERRIER,” ETC.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY FLORENCE WHITE WILLIAMS
-
- THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
- CHICAGO AKRON, OHIO NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- Copyright 1919,
- by
- The Saalfield Publishing Co.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I BILLY WHISKERS GROWS HOMESICK 7
-
- II BILLY UNEXPECTEDLY MEETS A FRIEND 15
-
- III AN INOPPORTUNE SNEEZE 23
-
- IV THE GENERAL RECAPTURES BILLY 35
-
- V BILLY NEARLY KILLS THE COOK 47
-
- VI BILLY RELATES SOME OF HIS ADVENTURES 59
-
- VII BUTTON FRIGHTENS TWO NURSES 75
-
- VIII BILLY MAKES PLANS TO LEAVE FRANCE 83
-
- IX BUTTON DISCOVERS SPIES IN THE HAYMOW 95
-
- X BUTTON MAKES THE FARMER FIGHTING MAD 109
-
- XI THE CHUMS ON A CANAL BOAT 123
-
- XII BUTTON HAS A FIGHT WITH A WHARF RAT 135
-
- XIII A DOG CEMETERY IN PARIS 143
-
- XIV WHAT THE CHUMS DID IN PARIS 153
-
- XV BLOWN UP BY A SUBMARINE 165
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- “I ran straight on, regardless of bombs dropping all
- around me” _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
-
- Every man of them jumped as if shot 30
-
- Billy gave one long, loud baa that resounded down the big, bare
- room 66
-
- Away went Billy, jerking the cook around trees, over stumps and
- beehives 92
-
- One thing Billy butted was a basket full of clothes 118
-
- The first thing Billy knew, he was rolling over something soft
- that squealed like a stuck pig and that kicked like a calf 148
-
-
-
-
-_Billy Whiskers in France_
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-BILLY WHISKERS GROWS HOMESICK
-
-
-As Billy Whiskers lay in an American camp somewhere over in France,
-he became very restless and soon had the blues from thinking of his
-dear Nannie so far away--away over in America, with that deep, deep,
-wide, blue ocean between them, infested not only with huge sea monsters
-belonging to the finny tribe, but also with death-dealing, quickly
-moving submarines and torpedo boats belonging to the German Kaiser.
-
-“I want dreadfully to go home! Still I hate to risk my life on any
-ship that sails the seas these days, for it may be blown sky high at
-any moment, or sunk to the nethermost depths of the ocean. There is no
-way to walk around, and I don’t suppose I could get any one to let me
-go with them in an airship. So here I must remain, or trust my life
-to some troop ship returning to America for more soldiers. I just
-believe I will do it! I have lost all interest in the War over here
-since my master was wounded and was invalided home. Home! The very word
-makes me so homesick I can’t see for tears. Well, I’ll just fix this
-homesickness, so I will! I start for there this very minute. It is a
-good dark night and I think I can slip out of camp easily as they have
-not been watching me so closely since my master was sent away.”
-
-Suiting the action to the words, Billy jumped up, shook himself, took
-a long breath and said to himself, “Here’s luck to you, old fellow, on
-your long, long, perilous journey! And may you reach the other side and
-once more see your loving little wife Nannie and all your children and
-grandchildren!”
-
-Then he gave a flick of his tail and started on a brisk run for the
-least guarded entrance to the camp, to try to sneak through.
-
-“My, but it is lonesome traveling by myself!” he thought. “I do wish
-Stubby and Button were here to accompany me on this journey.”
-
-Billy was so busy thinking of his old friends Stubby, the little yellow
-dog with a stubby tail, and Button, the big black cat with blazing eyes
-like buttons, that he reached the entrance to the camp before he knew
-it, and he managed to slip out without being stopped, for there was a
-jam at the gate caused by many big ambulances going out and army trucks
-coming in.
-
-“Humph!” said Billy to himself. “If I get over all my difficulties as
-easily as I got through that gate and past the guards, my journey will
-be a smooth and pleasant one.”
-
-He had been traveling some time when he heard some one say, “Hi, there,
-Billy Whiskers! What are you doing outside of camp? Looks to me as if
-you were trying to run away.” This from a driver of an ambulance who
-knew Billy was not to be allowed to escape from the camp. “Come here
-and I will give you a nice red apple.”
-
-“See anything green in my eye?” winked back Billy. “I know you! You
-would give me an apple with one hand and slip a rope around my neck
-with the other. Anyway, where’s your apple? _I_ don’t see any!”
-
-“Here, Billy! Stop, I tell you, and come here! If you don’t like
-apples, here is a handful of salt,” and the soldier held his hand out
-as if he had it full of salt.
-
-But Billy was too keen for him. He had seen him close his hand over
-nothing before offering it to him. So he kept right on walking as if he
-had not heard the soldier.
-
-“Say, Bill, this is no joke! It is the General’s orders that you are
-not to escape, but to be made to stay in camp until we go home. You are
-too valuable a goat to allow the Germans to make you up into chops and
-roasts. Besides, when we get home we want to show the goat that stole
-Von Luxemburg’s maps and plans from under his very nose, and also
-butted or hooked all his staff into a heap in the corner of his own
-little room. If you won’t come back for apples or salt or coaxing, very
-well! I’ll have to lasso you, or shoot you in one of your legs so you
-cannot run away,” and the soldier turned his back to look for a rope in
-the ambulance, as he preferred to lasso Billy rather than shoot him.
-He was an expert with the lasso, as he had come from a ranch away out
-in Montana to join the army, and was considered the best hand with the
-rope in all Montana.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Huh!” grunted Billy. “I must have run into Lasso Jake. If this is so,
-I better be getting a move on me and pushing my leg.”
-
-As luck would have it, right before Billy was a creek, with a temporary
-bridge across it. Down the bank beside the bridge plunged Billy, for he
-knew the bank was so high that the cowboy soldier could not throw his
-lasso so as to catch him. Instead of trying to climb out the other side
-of the creek, Billy kept on in the middle of the swift-flowing stream,
-swimming against the current, though he could not make much progress
-against it. Presently he heard voices and turning his head he saw two
-soldiers standing on the bridge and one was swinging a lasso over his
-head. Billy waited to see no more, but ducked. And just as his head
-disappeared under the water, he heard the splash of the rope as it hit
-the surface of the water just where his head had been.
-
-“Good thing I ducked! If I hadn’t, they would now be pulling me to
-shore with a lasso around my neck. Gee, but that was a close call,
-and that cowboy soldier is some lasso thrower! I never saw his equal,
-even in a circus. I think he better get a flying machine and fly over
-the German line and watch his chance to rope the Kaiser or the Crown
-Prince, some of the Generals and other high monkey-monks.” And Billy
-laughed to himself at the spectacle of the Kaiser being made to walk
-into an American camp with a lasso around his neck. Billy forgot he
-could not open his mouth to laugh under water, and he began to choke so
-he had to stop swimming under water and come to the surface.
-
-Just as he did so, his eye caught sight of a soldier standing on the
-bank of the stream with a lasso hanging from his hand ready to throw
-the moment Billy’s head appeared above the surface of the water. He
-was about to dive again when he heard a cry for help from the bridge.
-The soldier turned and ran to rescue a man who had fallen into the
-water, calling as he went down, “Save me! I can’t swim!”
-
-Billy crawled out of the stream and stood watching the soldier with the
-lasso trying to save his comrade. He was having a hard time for as the
-man went down he struck his head on a stone, which stunned him, and
-now he was being carried downstream by the swift current and knocked
-against the bowlders over which the water frothed. Try as he would, the
-cowboy soldier was put to it to catch up to him as the swift current
-bore his chum’s body ever and still ever ahead of him. But at last his
-comrade’s body caught between two rocks and was held there until the
-cowboy soldier overtook it. The cold water had revived the man, so that
-by the time his soldier chum reached him he was coming to his senses.
-Billy only waited to see that the man was alive and then he left them
-sitting in midstream, each on a big rock that raised its head above the
-water. He thought it wise to cut sticks for safety and ran into a thick
-woods he saw, which would serve to hide him from the soldiers should
-they cross the bridge and try to follow him. This, however, they did
-not do, knowing it would be useless to try to catch Billy when he had
-such a start.
-
-As soon as he could, Billy found his way out of the woods to the road
-he had left. After following it for some time he found it led out to
-the main highway to Paris. This road Billy knew he must follow or
-he could never find his way back to the seacoast. Once in Paris, he
-knew he must pass through it and then keep straight on in a westerly
-direction until he came to the English Channel. Once there, he would
-follow the coast until he came to a port from which boats were sailing
-for America. Then he would watch his chance to steal aboard and sail
-for home. Billy was very good at directions and from the moment he had
-landed in France he had taken special pains to keep the points of the
-compass straight in his head, so that if he ever wanted to return home
-alone he would find his way. Now it proved what a wise old goat he
-was, for all he had to do was to travel by the sun and North Star in
-a northeasterly direction until he came to Paris and from there in a
-westerly until he reached the English Channel, from one of whose ports
-he had disembarked when he came to France. But it was discouraging to
-think how very far it was and what privations and hardships he would
-have to endure and overcome before he reached his destination. But
-Billy Whiskers was a regular old soldier by this time and well used to
-hardships and hard knocks of all kinds. So he only heaved a long sigh
-and then ran all the faster, knowing that every step he took brought
-him just that much nearer home and Nannie.
-
-“If I tried to count the steps I shall have to take before reaching
-home, it would be like counting the sands of the sea. I shan’t try, but
-just push on and I know I shall get there some day.”
-
-“Bow-wow-wow!” barked a big Dane in his deep voice.
-
-“Bow! Wow! Wow!” came the short, sharp, snappy barks from a
-short-legged Scotch terrier as they bounded out of a gate beside the
-road, ready to pounce on Billy. They were followed by poodles, collies,
-St. Bernards, and all manner of dogs, both great and small. Billy
-thought he had never seen so many dogs of different breeds in one place
-in all his life. You see he had run into a dog hospital, and these were
-the convalescent dogs which were allowed to play together in the yard.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Not one of these dogs tried to bite Billy, and after they had given up
-trying to frighten him by barking in their fiercest way as if about to
-eat him alive, they quieted down and became as docile as lambs.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-BILLY UNEXPECTEDLY MEETS A FRIEND
-
-
-“Good-morning, friends!” baaed Billy. “Would you allow a tired traveler
-to rest under the shade of your trees, and give him a drink of water?
-For I am a stranger in a strange land, and have traveled far. I am an
-American.”
-
-“You an _American_?” exclaimed the dogs in chorus.
-
-“Now we surely are glad to meet you!” barked the big Dane. “For if
-there is any place on earth we dogs have longed to see, it is America.
-Probably you will tell us about it?”
-
-“Yes,” said another dog. “We have heard that every dog has his day over
-there and many of them two or three.”
-
-“We have also heard,” added a French poodle, “that all dogs are free
-over there, and can go and come as they like, and that they are never
-tied up, shut in a house or muzzled. Is that true?”
-
-“Yes and no,” replied Billy. “It depends on where you live and who your
-master or mistress is.”
-
-“Why, we have heard,” piped up a little black and tan, “that any dog
-can choose his own master or mistress, and that all he has to do if he
-doesn’t like them or isn’t pleased with the way they treat him is to
-walk off and follow the first person he sees that he thinks he would
-like to live with, and that they will take him home with them and feed
-and house him.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Again you are partly right and partly wrong,” replied Billy. “It
-depends on whom you run away from and whom you pick out to be your new
-master or mistress. You might happen to belong to some one who was very
-fond of you, though you might not be fond of them. In that case if you
-ran away they would advertise and try to get you back, but if you had
-proved yourself to be a good-for-nothing dog, they would let you go and
-say ‘Good riddance to bad rubbish!’ and never bother their heads about
-you.
-
-“Then again you might show poor judgment in selecting a new master and
-choose one who did not care for dogs, and when he found you following
-him he might throw sticks and stones at you. So you see you can’t
-always be sure of changing masters successfully.”
-
-“Did you just come from America?” asked a fourth.
-
-“Oh, no! I have been over here nearly a year now, with the army.”
-
-“You don’t mean to tell us that you have really and truly been with the
-army?”
-
-“Surely not at the front!” added another in amazement.
-
-“But I have!” Billy assured them. “I have crossed No-Man’s-Land many
-times, and been shot at and blown up once besides. See where a piece of
-my tail is gone? Well, I lost it at Verdun. A bomb exploded and threw
-me up in the air and also blew off part of my tail. I consider myself
-very lucky that it decided to blow a piece off that end of my body
-instead of the other, for if it had been my head in place of my tail,
-it would have killed me. I can’t get along without a head, but I can
-without a tail.”
-
-“Haw! Haw! Haw!” laughed the dogs.
-
-“You surely are a funny fellow!” said one. “Come on in and we will find
-something for you to eat and drink and also a place to rest. Then after
-you have rested, I hope you will tell us more of your experiences at
-the front. If you will do that, we will tell you our experiences in
-Paris before we left there, and we will introduce you to some of our
-celebrated police and Red Cross dogs who have been in the war and
-been wounded or gassed. They will relate some thrilling adventures and
-hairbreadth escapes. To-night will be a good time, after our keepers
-have gone to bed. Then we can sneak out under the trees in the little
-patch of woods behind the big stables and while you brave soldiers swap
-tales of the war we who have never been near the war can listen.
-
-“There goes one of our heroes now. See that dog crossing the lawn,
-wearing a Red Cross bandage on his chest?”
-
-Billy turned and took one long look at the dog. Then without a word
-of warning he put down his head and bounded toward him, taking ten or
-twelve feet at a single bound.
-
-The dogs stood spellbound. What was the big goat going to do? Butt
-their wounded hero? If so, why should he wish to butt a perfectly
-harmless dog he had never seen before? But had he never seen him
-before? Perhaps they had met and fought on the battlefield and were
-enemies. If so, they must all run and protect their hero from the long
-horns of the strange goat.
-
-But when the dogs arrived within speaking distance they were overjoyed
-to hear the goat baa out, “Hello, old chum! How in all that is
-wonderful did you get here? I heard you were dead; that you had been
-seen with a Red Cross ambulance which had first been gassed and then
-blown up by a shell. One of your friends said he saw you with his own
-eyes sitting in the back of the ambulance when the shell struck it,
-and the next thing he saw was the whole ambulance flying up in the air
-and then coming down in small pieces.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“What he saw all happened. I was there and sitting in the back of the
-ambulance with my gas mask on, for the signal had been given for all
-to put on their masks, and one of the doctors with the ambulance corps
-had just stopped and strapped mine in place when a shell hit us, and I
-found myself going up in the air at the rate of about a hundred miles
-a minute. When I came down, my mask had been blown off my face. How it
-ever was done without killing me or blowing my head off I don’t know,
-but it was. I thought I was all right until I began to see red, and I
-had a queer sensation in my head as if my brain were going round and
-round like a cat runs after its tail. Then I could not get my breath
-and I fell over, giving myself up for dead. But if you will believe it,
-the next thing I knew I opened my eyes and found myself in a long room
-with two rows of beds in it, all just like baby cribs. And bending
-over me was a sweet-faced lady nurse. I found myself all bound up in
-splints and cotton batting. You see an interne to another Red Cross
-ambulance who had come to look for the wounded, if any had possibly
-survived the blow-up, had found me senseless on the ground. So he
-picked me up and brought me here as this hospital for dogs was on the
-way to the hospital where he was stationed. This is now my fourth week
-here, and I want to tell you that only angels in human form live here.
-They are so good to one! They have nursed me back to life. I was only
-slightly gassed and so my lungs are all healed and I am also over my
-shell shock. I shall likely go back to the front in another week.”
-
-“You don’t mean that you are going back to the fighting line, do you?”
-asked a long white-haired collie that had fallen very much in love with
-the brave Red Cross dog. “Oh, why do you risk your life again?”
-
-“Why do I risk my life?” in astonishment. “To try to save some brave
-soldier, whose life is a thousand times more valuable than any dog’s
-ever will be. Yes, I am going back and back and back as long as I have
-eyes, teeth or claws to go back with, until this cruel war is over.”
-
-“Bully for you!” exclaimed Billy. “You make me feel like a slacker,
-getting homesick and running away from the army.”
-
-“Well, it is not too late yet to go back. I propose that you stay here
-and rest until next week and then go back with me.”
-
-“I’ll do it!” said Billy, and they rubbed noses together to seal the
-bargain. “I hear a bugle. What is that call for?”
-
-“Oh, that is our supper call,” said the Red Cross dog. “When they blow
-the bugle all the dogs that are running loose are supposed to go to
-the back kitchen door. There are long troughs there in which they put
-our suppers. Come ahead with us, and we will give you some food. There
-will be plenty for all of us and for you too, for they serve very
-bountifully here,” and all the dogs and Billy too moved off in the
-direction of the kitchen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-AN INOPPORTUNE SNEEZE
-
-
-“Well, well, well! Whom have we with us?” exclaimed the cook at the
-dog hospital as he stood in the kitchen door in apron and cap ready to
-throw some more food in the dogs’ trough. “Bless my soul, I believe it
-is Billy Whiskers!”
-
-Billy hearing his name spoken looked up, only to find himself gazing
-into the eyes of the cook who had once served the old General who had
-issued the strict orders for Billy not to be allowed to leave camp.
-
-“Billy, you old rascal, come here and let me pull your beard for luck
-and old times’ sake! I will bet my whole month’s wages that you have
-run away from camp.”
-
-All the time the cook was talking, he was walking toward Billy, wishing
-to get near enough to discover if the goat really wore around his neck
-a collar from which hung a medal engraved with his name.
-
-“Here, Billy, is a nice big carrot for you. Don’t jerk back. I am
-not going to hurt you. I am only going to pat your head. Don’t you
-remember the good old times in camp when I used to give you nice juicy
-apples and crisp lettuce heads?”
-
-By this time the cook was standing close by Billy, pretending to pat
-his head, but every time he put his fingers through his hair, he tried
-to feel for the collar and Billy would jerk his head away. He was
-afraid the cook was going to try to take off his collar and Billy had
-made up his mind many moons before this that if ever any one tried to
-take it off he would fight them to the death. Just then a little breeze
-blew Billy’s hair up so that it showed the medal with some engraving on
-it, and the cook saw it read:
-
-“This collar was presented to Billy Whiskers by the --th New York
-Regiment for his bravery in battle.”
-
-“Well, Billy, I certainly am glad to see you! But I bet you have left
-many sad hearts behind you. I am homesick to be back with my old
-regiment, but I can’t go. Perhaps you haven’t noticed that I have a
-wooden leg and that part of my right arm is gone. If it was only my leg
-that was gone, I would be back, leg or no leg. But without my arm, I
-can’t shoot or carry a bayonet. It breaks my heart to be near enough
-to hear the roar of battle as I am here, and know I can’t be in it,
-killing off those pigs of Germans!”
-
-Just then from down the road came the sound of a high powered motor
-car, and the cook, stepping on a big stone to see the better,
-exclaimed, “It is the General, by hookey! And I bet he is coming in
-here for a cup of coffee and a bite to eat, as he knows I can get it
-for him quicker than if he went on to the village restaurant, and
-better, too. He always said no one could make coffee like I can.”
-
-Billy waited to hear no more, but started to find a place to hide, well
-knowing the General would carry him back to camp if he saw him, even if
-he had to take him in the auto with him.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The cook had forgotten all about Billy in his excitement at seeing the
-General. Billy took advantage of this to whisper to the dogs, telling
-them what was up and they all followed him as he ran toward the stable
-to try to find a place to hide. Just as Billy was about to turn the
-corner of the stable, he saw the General’s big touring car turn in the
-lane.
-
-“Gee, fellows, I’m lost if that cook even mentions my being here! For
-the General is equal to sending a whole squad of soldiers to find me
-and bring me back to camp. It would not be the first time he has done
-it, either!”
-
-By this time Billy and the dogs had run into the little grove of trees
-spoken of before, but they stayed near enough the edge to be able to
-see if any one started to hunt for Billy.
-
-“I tell you what I think would be a good plan,” said the Red Cross
-dog. “Have one of the dogs go back and hang around where he could hear
-everything the cook says to the General. In that way we will know
-whether or not he tells the General that you are here.”
-
-“Excellent idea, that!” agreed Billy.
-
-“Pinky, you would be the best one to go. You are so small that you can
-squeeze in anywhere out of sight under a chair or sofa, and listen to
-all that is said.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t want to go! I am afraid they will kick me out if they
-should catch me listening. Besides, I want to stay here and hear Mr.
-Billy Whiskers relate his experiences. It is so dull here after Paris
-that I just long for some excitement, and I am sure Mr. Whiskers’ tales
-will be all that.”
-
-“You run along, Miss Pinky, and I’ll tell you just what I tell them
-some other time all by yourself. Besides, you won’t miss much as our
-friend here, the Red Cross dog, can tell you adventures a hundred times
-more exciting than I can.”
-
-“Oh, no, he can’t. But I will go if you promise to repeat word for word
-to me all you tell them when we are alone some time.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Thank you very much, Miss Pinky.”
-
-“Don’t call me Pinky! That is not my name! It is only a nasty, mean
-nickname the dogs have given me because I am afflicted with pink lids
-to my eyes, the same as many poodle dogs. I just _hate_ that name! But
-I can’t stop them from using it.”
-
-“And pray what is your real name?” asked Billy.
-
-“Rosie de la France. And it is such a pretty one I like to be called by
-it.”
-
-“Well, hereafter I will call you Mademoiselle Rosie de la France. But
-I cannot see much difference between Rosie and Pinky, as they are both
-pretty much the same color.”
-
-“Yes, if you look at it in that way. But it is the meaning hidden under
-it that I hate.”
-
-“Never mind now what you are called, but run along or you will be too
-late to hear all the cook says to the General,” said the Red Cross dog.
-
-The dogs then all lay down under the trees in a semi-circle around
-Billy and the Red Cross dog, so they could hear every word that was
-said by either of them, but every one of them kept an eye open for
-any one who might round the corner of the stable. Billy and the Red
-Cross dog had told them their most exciting experiences in the war,
-interposed by stories from the other dogs, when they heard the hum and
-buzz of the big motor as it drove out of the lane, and at the same time
-they saw Pinky running toward them so fast one could scarcely see her
-for dust.
-
-She ran into their midst panting and all out of breath, and between
-gasps tried to tell them that she had slipped into the sitting-room and
-sneaked under a big davenport with a cover thrown over it that hid her
-completely, but where she could hear every word that was spoken in the
-room. The General was sitting at a little table only a few feet from
-her, eating the good things the cook had brought to him on a tray.
-
-“He seemed in a very good humor,” she said, “and was laughing and
-joking with two officers who were with him when I had the misfortune to
-sneeze. You would have thought I had thrown a bomb the way those three
-men jumped to their feet and reached for their swords!
-
-“‘Who sneezed?’ thundered the General.
-
-“‘There is some one hiding in this room!’ exclaimed one of his staff.
-
-“‘Come out of the closet or from behind those curtains or wherever you
-are before I shoot!’ commanded the General.
-
-“Of course no one came out, and I crouched down nearer the floor than
-ever and prayed that they would not lift the cover of that davenport
-and see me. I could see through the thin ruffle of the davenport cover
-and there they all stood stock still, with eyes searching every nook
-and corner of the room. Then what do you think happened? I sneezed
-again, and expected to be killed on the spot, but I could not help it
-as there was a lot of moth balls right under my nose, put there to keep
-the moths from eating the carpet. Well, if you will believe it, every
-man of them jumped again as if shot. I could see their feet leave the
-floor. And one of the staff said in a stage whisper, ‘Spies behind that
-curtain!’ Then he marched toward it with sword in hand, and brushed the
-curtain aside. Of course there was no one there. Then the other staff
-officer flung open the closet door. No one there! Still they had heard
-two distinct sneezes. The General stalked to the window and looked
-out as it opened on the ground. I expect he thought some one might be
-hiding under the window, listening. No one there! Only a flower bed
-with bees droning and buzzing over it. And horror of horrors! As he
-leaned out of the window and the staff officers were looking behind
-chairs and under tables and even up to the ceiling I gave another big
-sneeze. I sneezed so hard it nearly blew my head off. I expect it was
-because of holding it in so long.
-
-“This of course was my undoing. One of the staff dropped on one knee to
-look under the davenport. The General jerked his head back through the
-window, and heard the staff officer exclaim in a loud voice, ‘Only a
-measley, sneaking little poodle dog!’ and with that he stuck his sword
-under the davenport to prod me out. It would have cut my leg off, or
-run right through me, I am sure, but just then the cook opened the
-door to come in to remove the dishes and I jumped over the sword and
-ran between the legs of the staff officer who was standing between the
-davenport and the door, and simply flew back here.
-
-[Illustration: Every man of them jumped as if shot.]
-
-“When I got outside I did sneak around under the window, and heard
-them all laughing over the fact that a little dog’s sneeze had given
-them such a fright. The General said ‘Better be on the right side than
-on the wrong, and many a warning as small as a sneeze gone unheeded
-has cost many lives. I would rather be too careful than not careful
-enough,’ You see they all thought I was a spy hidden in the room
-somewhere. Then I heard the cook say, ‘General, has the Regiment still
-got the big white goat they used to have as a mascot?’
-
-“‘No, I am sorry to say he has been missing since a week ago to-day,
-and we cannot get any trace of him. One of our ambulance drivers saw
-him on the road to Paris, and tried to catch him, but he could not. He
-nearly had him when a friend fell off a bridge into a creek, and would
-have drowned had he not left the goat and gone to his assistance. I
-would not have lost that goat for a thousand dollars. He knows more
-than most men.’
-
-“‘Well, General, you have lost your thousand dollars. I know where your
-goat is at this minute.’
-
-“‘You do? Well, produce him and the money is yours. You know Billy
-is like the proverbial flea. Now you have him and now you don’t. If
-you will show me that goat now, we’ll have him in my office at camp
-headquarters to-morrow. I’ll give you a check for one thousand dollars,
-too.’
-
-“‘I’ll do it for you gladly, General, as you have done me many a good
-turn, but I cannot accept your money. And now if you will step to the
-door, I will show you Billy, the Mascot of the Regiment, quietly eating
-out of a trough at the back kitchen door.’
-
-“The General and his staff picked up their caps and swords and followed
-the cook around the house to the dogs’ trough, but as you know, no goat
-was there.
-
-“The General had to laugh at the blank look on the cook’s face when
-he turned the corner of the hospital and saw that the goat and all
-his dogs too had disappeared as completely as if swallowed up by an
-earthquake.
-
-“‘Well, that beats everything I ever saw! He was here a few minutes
-ago. In fact, just when you drove in eight or ten of our dogs with
-Billy in their midst were all standing here eating and now not an
-animal is in sight anywhere. It beats all! I can’t explain it!’
-
-“‘I can,’ said the General. ‘That goat recognized my car, thought I was
-after him and lit out. He has done it before, and I doubt if any of us
-will ever see him again. I tell you he is sharper than the devil, whose
-cloven hoof he has!’
-
-“‘General, will you kindly do me the favor to wait till I blow my dog
-whistle? That is the signal for all the dogs to gather here. We will
-see if Billy does not come running with them.’
-
-“The General waited. The cook blew his whistle repeatedly but no dogs
-showed up. Then the cook ran to the barn and around it, looking in
-every known hiding place the dogs had, but no goat or dog did he see.
-And he came back to the General and said, ‘Well, General, I shall have
-to give up beaten. He has gone and, what is more, he has taken every
-dog with him that is not confined to a hospital bed. I can’t find hide
-or hair of any of them, but I am so mad that I am ready to devote
-months, if need be, to finding that tricky goat. And when I do I will
-return him to you even if I bring only his hide, horns and tail!’
-
-“‘Well, here is luck to you, but I hope you will bring him alive, and
-not in pieces for I could make use of a live goat, but I would be hard
-pressed to know what to do with a dead one!’
-
-“Then with a hearty laugh all around, the General and his staff got
-into their auto and whizzed out of the lane, and I scurried back here
-to tell you all this.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE GENERAL RECAPTURES BILLY
-
-
-“Thank you, Miss Rosie de la France, for finding out so much for me.
-You certainly did have a narrow escape when under that davenport and
-you sneezed for you might have had your legs cut off by that officer’s
-sword. So the cook is going to catch me and bring me to the General,
-alive or dead, is he? I can tell him right now that he will never be
-able to give so much as one hair of my beard to him!”
-
-“Here comes the cook now!” exclaimed one of the dogs. “We better scoot!”
-
-With that they all jumped up and ran in different directions, Billy
-choosing a long, circuitous course that would bring him out on the
-Paris road. Then and there he gave up the idea of returning to the war
-and entering the army again with the Red Cross dog.
-
-He soon reached the road, and once on it he put his head down like a
-race horse to resist the wind, and ran as he had never run before,
-jumping stones, ditches and uneven places on the roadway until he was
-completely winded. As it took a great deal to wind Billy Whiskers, you
-may know he traveled many, many miles and left the dogs’ hospital far
-behind.
-
-“I shall stop running when I come to the next stream, get a drink, take
-a bath, and eat whatever I can find by the roadside. Then after a good
-rest I shall start on again,” he planned.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-All of this he did, and he was hidden behind a big bush beside the road
-down by a stream, watching the big ambulances and high powered touring
-cars go thundering by in endless procession when, all plans to the
-contrary, he dropped asleep. It seemed but a minute to him after his
-eyes had closed when he felt something tight around his neck. He tried
-two or three times to loosen it by stretching his neck without taking
-the bother to open his eyes, but when at last he did open them, he saw
-standing around him three officers with broad grins on their faces. And
-behind them was the old General in his touring car, waiting for his
-officers to bring Billy to him!
-
-“I certainly was caught napping that time!” thought Billy to himself.
-“And they have me all right enough now with this strong rope around my
-neck. It is queer I did not hear them coming! It must have been I was
-so tired that it made me sleep like the dead.”
-
-“Come, get up, Billy, you old rascal, and come along without any fuss!
-For you are a smart enough goat to see that there is no use resisting
-with a rope around your neck and five men against you--we three
-officers with the General and his chauffeur.”
-
-Yes, Billy saw all this and as he walked along quietly behind them he
-wondered where they were going to put him. They could not mean to tie
-him behind the car as no goat, even if fitted out with twenty league
-boots, could keep up with the General’s car at the rate he drove. And
-with three staff officers, the General and the chauffeur he could not
-see where there would be room inside the car.
-
-“Well, Master Billy, you thought you had escaped from me for good,
-didn’t you? But you see you haven’t. And, what is more, you won’t
-escape in a hurry again, for I propose taking you right along with us,
-though it will crowd us some. Here I was blustering about and scolding
-the chauffeur for his carelessness in not seeing that we had water
-enough in the car to carry us through when the very lack of it led us
-to finding you. He got out to carry a bucket of water from the stream
-and found you so fast asleep behind the bush that you had not heard our
-approach in the car or even the chauffeur’s steps when within three or
-four feet of you. He had time to come back to the car and tell us what
-he had found, get a rope and the three officers to help me capture you
-while you slept on. Now, my dear Billy, you are my prisoner. If you
-behave, you shall have every care and comfort, but try to escape, and
-I shall send a bullet through you, for I shall stand no nonsense. Hear
-that?” and the General pulled Billy’s beard in a joking manner. But
-Billy knew he would do as he said if he tried to escape or cut up any
-monkeyshines. So he quietly let them help him into the car, where he
-stood between the two seats in the tonneau while they tied him to the
-rod at the back of the front seat on which the extra robes hung.
-
-Billy was experiencing one of his rare moments of dejection and
-discouragement, for he knew if they once succeeded in getting him back
-in camp it would be very difficult indeed to escape as they would use
-every precaution to keep him there and they might even put him inside
-the electrically charged barbed wire fence where they kept the German
-prisoners. That would be horrible indeed!
-
-“I must think up some way to escape before we reach camp or I am lost,”
-thought Billy. “How I ever can unless we have a breakdown is more than
-I can tell!”
-
-Presently they came to the dogs’ hospital and whizzed by it at full
-speed, but not too fast for Billy to see standing at the gate the cook,
-or for him to get the cook’s expression of surprise and wonder when he
-saw Billy in the General’s car. Billy also saw the Red Cross dog close
-at the cook’s heels.
-
-“I am glad they saw me for now the dog will know what has become of
-me,” thought Billy.
-
-Presently the big car slowed down and went bumping and sliding over a
-terrible piece of road that was being repaired.
-
-“Now would be my chance to jump out while they are going slower if I
-only were not tied. And I can’t chew the rope loose right under these
-men’s noses, either. Perhaps when they stop for supper I may get a
-chance.”
-
-Just then there was a terrible explosion as one of the tires blew out,
-and at the same time the car slipped on the soft, shifting gravel with
-which they were repairing the roadway and slid down into the ditch.
-
-“Now we are ditched and in for a long delay!” exclaimed the General. “I
-simply must get to camp with these plans within the next three hours.
-Stop the first car that passes here and I will make whoever is in it
-take me to camp while you officers stay here and help the chauffeur
-repair the damages and get the car out of the ditch. That should not be
-a hard job but only a tedious one for the men working on the highway
-can help you out of the ditch and the chauffeur can mend the tire for I
-expect the explosion was due to a bursted tube.”
-
-It was one thing to say get the men on the road to help but where were
-those men? Nowhere in sight, but several miles down the road working on
-another bad stretch.
-
-“I hear a car coming!” exclaimed the General. “Make ready to stop it,
-Lieutenant Strong!”
-
-In less time that it takes to tell it, the car had come, stopped and
-taken the General aboard. As the General waved good-by to them, he
-called back, “I wish you luck, gentlemen! I will keep your supper hot
-for you!” to which Billy replied with a loud baa. This made the staff
-officers laugh, for his voice sounded exactly like a cross old man
-saying “Bah!” in derision to the General’s joking remark.
-
-As soon as the General was out of sight, the officers fell to and tried
-to lift and push the car up into the road. But they might as well have
-tried to move a huge rock for it did not so much as budge an inch. It
-was embedded too deep in the sand and loose gravel.
-
-“This is most provoking!” said one of the officers. “It means that we
-must try to stop some passing car and get them to help us. When they
-see it is the General’s car that is in trouble they will feel in duty
-bound to aid us, no matter whether they really want to or not. But I
-just hate the job of stopping any one for that purpose as it always
-makes any one provoked to be so hailed on the road.”
-
-“Here comes a farmer driving a pair of horses hitched to an old wagon.
-Let us stop him. I think his horses can pull us out if we all push,”
-suggested another of the officers.
-
-“Now is my chance!” thought Billy, and he was just about to chew at the
-rope around his neck when the farmer came up and stopped opposite them
-to see if he could help them any.
-
-“Yes,” replied one of the officers. “You are just the man we have been
-looking for to give us a lift out of this ditch.”
-
-“Wal, that is a purty durn big car of your’n. But I guess my hosses kin
-pull her out. That is, if I only had a rope to tie to the back of my
-wagon, but I can’t get hide nor hair of any rope or chain or nothin’.”
-
-“We have a rope,” answered one of the officers. “We always carry a good
-strong rope for just such purposes under one of the seats. Here, Jean,
-get it out and we will see how soon these horses can pull us out.”
-
-Jean, the chauffeur, stopped working on the tire to get the rope, but
-alas! when he looked under the seat no rope was there. From the fury
-into which the officers flew, Billy thought they were going to kill the
-fellow on the spot for his carelessness, first running out of water and
-now finding no rope.
-
-“You are discharged the minute you get us to camp!” roared the superior
-officer. “And what is more, I shall see that the General has you
-severely punished. What if the enemy were at our heels and we were
-trying to escape from them, or we had important dispatches that must
-get to Headquarters to change some movement of the army that would mean
-the saving of hundreds and thousands of lives?”
-
-At last the chauffeur managed to say, “Could we not use the rope that
-is around the goat’s neck to pull the car out of the sand? It is a very
-long one. In fact, it is the rope that belongs under the seat. In my
-excitement I forgot I had used it to tie the goat.”
-
-“Of course we can! And to keep him from escaping we can tie him with
-one of the farmer’s reins.”
-
-“Here, you Billy, stand still while I take this rope off your neck.”
-The chauffeur stood on the step, leaning through the open door of the
-tonneau as he untied the rope that was around Billy’s neck, with the
-farmer standing behind him ready to hand him one of his reins to secure
-Billy again.
-
-“Here is a good chance to escape,” thought Billy. “To be sure, I will
-have to run the chance of one of the officers shooting me, but I will
-take it. For I would rather be shot than carried back to camp and shut
-up with a lot of German prisoners.”
-
-At the moment Billy was forming his plan of escape, all the officers
-were fussing on the car at one place or another trying to dig out the
-wheels by shoveling a path for them in the sand.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Seeing all this, Billy made up his mind he would butt the chauffeur
-so hard he would knock all the breath out of him so he could not cry
-out and give the alarm. So just as the farmer stepped close behind the
-chauffeur to hand him the rein, and the rope was off Billy’s neck,
-Billy gave a plunge forward and planted his head in the middle of the
-chauffeur’s stomach, sending him backward with all the breath knocked
-out of his body and with such force that he hit the farmer and sent him
-sprawling on his back, with his head hanging over the ditch. Now just
-as his head hit the ditch, the officer who was shoveling a path for the
-car raised up and the farmer in turn hit him and sent him flying into
-the ditch. There were three men disposed of in one butt. That left only
-two to shoot or pursue him, and both of these were on the far side of
-the auto and had not noticed anything as their heads were down and they
-were busy tugging big stones out of the way of the wheels. So Billy had
-a good start of a hundred yards or more before the officer who had been
-sent rolling into the ditch could right himself and give the alarm. By
-the time he found out what really had hit him, Billy had run to the
-side of the road, jumped a fence and disappeared in a thick woods. The
-officer’s anger knew no bounds, and he swore a blue streak and fired
-two shots after Billy.
-
-“Thunder and lightning, I would not have had that goat escape for a
-million dollars,” he exclaimed.
-
-“Bet your small change first,” counseled another.
-
-“Yes; his escape puts us in a pretty light, doesn’t it? Five
-able-bodied men not able to keep one goat in an auto! To be sure, one
-man was not a man, only an idiot of a chauffeur,” he stormed.
-
-“Say, Jean, you better stop working on that tire and go hang yourself
-with the rope in your hand!” scoffed the third, “for you are likely to
-be hung in earnest when you get to camp for all the mistakes you have
-made to-day, to say nothing of losing the goat besides.”
-
-But poor Jean heard this not at all for he was still unconscious from
-Billy’s terrific butt.
-
-“Some goat, that, misters!” said the farmer in a dry way.
-
-“I guess you would think so if you knew just a little of his history!”
-
-“You don’t mean to tell me that that there goat is the one they call
-the --th Regiment’s mascot, and the one the papers are always telling
-about?”
-
-“Same goat!”
-
-“Wal, I’ll be gosh darned!” in astonishment.
-
-Jean did not come to and one of the officers had to run to the auto for
-restoratives while Jean was stretched out on the back seat with his
-head in a second officer’s lap. In falling he had hit his head on a
-stone and the wound was now bleeding profusely. The soldiers tied their
-handkerchiefs around his head and tried to stop the flow of blood as
-best they could and after the car was out of the ditch they drove so
-fast they were in danger of breaking their necks or having the car turn
-turtle at every turn.
-
-When at last they did reach camp and got the chauffeur into the
-hospital and reported to the General for duty, they were in a pretty
-mess and looked as if they had been in a pitched battle with the enemy
-for they were covered with dirt and blood from their heads to their
-heels, which made the General exclaim when he saw them, “Well, bless my
-soul, you are a nice looking crowd! Whatever has happened to you?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BILLY NEARLY KILLS THE COOK
-
-
-When Billy was sure he was not being followed, he went a circuitous
-way back to the dogs’ hospital that he might stop and have the fun of
-telling them how he escaped from the old General.
-
-When at last he approached the hospital from the back, he saw no one
-about, not even a dog or cat. But all the windows and doors were open
-so he knew they were at home and around somewhere. He cautiously
-approached, keeping a sharp lookout for the cook, for he did not want
-him to catch him and deliver him into the old General’s hands. He was
-just rounding the pig pen when he saw driving into the lane one of the
-field hospital ambulances.
-
-“I expect it has come with a load of wounded dogs. I’ll just stay here
-and watch,” pondered Billy.
-
-The hum of the ambulance motor was heard in the hospital and presently
-a young doctor and two trained nurses appeared at the door ready to
-receive the new patients. Billy could hear the low groans and yelps
-of pain from the dogs as the stretchers were lifted and the dogs were
-carried inside. Several dogs tagged in after the stretcher bearers and
-as Billy had always wanted to have a look about the hospital wards, he
-determined to follow.
-
-Presently he found himself standing in the doorway of a long ward with
-tiny beds like babies’ cribs lining the wall all the way around, and in
-each bed was a dog, either curled up asleep or sitting upon its hind
-quarters watching the newcomers.
-
-Some of the dogs had their legs in slings; others had bandages over
-their eyes, while others were in plaster casts. Beside each cot was a
-little stand on which had been placed the medicine for that particular
-dog, along with a bowl of drinking water.
-
-“Gee!” exclaimed Billy. “A dog would not mind being sick in these
-quarters with all this comfort and the pretty nurses and the kind
-doctors to wait upon him. But what is that? Do my eyes deceive me, or
-am I seeing things? If so, I am a sick goat and I shall crawl into the
-first cot I find that is big enough to hold me. If I am not seeing
-things, then that big, black cat on the window sill is my dear old
-friend Button from the United States of America. Such being the case,
-Stubby, the other member of our trio, can’t be far off. Perhaps he is
-one of these wounded dogs that just came in the ambulance. I know how
-I’ll soon find out. I’ll just baa and if it is Button sitting in that
-window and Stubby is in one of these beds, I bet it will surprise them
-so that even if they are half dead they will come to life long enough
-to answer my baa.”
-
-Billy gave one long, loud baa that resounded down the big, bare room
-like a loud clanging bell. Every person and dog in the long hospital
-ward jumped as if a bomb had exploded in the room, and some of the
-weaker and more timid dogs fainted dead away from the shock. They were
-weak from loss of blood, and fatigued from their hard work on the
-battlefield, having been without anything to eat or drink for many
-hours. And I am sorry to say that Stubby was among them. Billy listened
-in vain for a familiar bark, but he was going forward to speak to the
-cat which meowed with joy in response to his baa when a doctor picked
-up a window pole and made towards Billy, while another grabbed the cat
-and threw it out of the window before the cat knew what was taking
-place. He had been so delighted to hear Billy’s familiar baa that he
-did not even see the man approaching.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The doctor chased out Billy and all the dogs that had tagged in, and
-shut the door behind them.
-
-Now Billy had not heard the answering meow, and so was still in some
-doubt as to whether or not the cat was Button, or if his old friend
-Stubby was one of the wounded dogs. As he thought of this he walked
-toward the back of the hospital into the yard. All the dogs which had
-been driven out with him were following him and telling him how they
-had enjoyed the commotion he had caused, and were plying him with
-questions as to how he got away from the General and back so soon, and
-how far he had gotten on the journey before he was caught. Billy paid
-not the slightest attention to any of them. In fact, he did not even
-hear what they were saying, he was so busy thinking of his two friends
-and wondering how they ever got to France for when he had last seen
-them they were in New York state.
-
-He had gotten just this far in his musings when he turned the corner
-of the hospital and saw the black cat sitting on a packing box,
-looking up at the window from which he had been thrown. Billy knew in
-a second that the black cat was his old friend sure enough. On seeing
-Billy, the black cat made one spring and lit squarely on Billy’s back.
-Then he jumped off and ran up a tree, then down and over and under a
-wheelbarrow that was standing near, then in among the dogs that were
-surrounding Billy as if to try to save him from the onslaught of this
-crazy acting cat which they all thought was having a fit.
-
-Yes, it was a fit, but not from sickness, but rather from joy at
-beholding Billy alive and in the flesh when he had been given up long
-ago for dead.
-
-Presently the cat quieted down and came and stood before Billy, and
-gazed and gazed and gazed into his eyes without saying a word. And
-Billy gazed back, wondering in his own mind what on earth had made the
-dignified Button act so crazily. After this long scare, the cat meowed,
-“Well, Billy, old fellow, I see it is really you in the flesh and not
-some other goat that looks like you. But how you ever managed to keep
-from being killed is more than I know. All of us had given you up as
-dead and mourned for you for months. Nannie, your poor little wife,
-is still bewailing your loss. You see, we thought you were done for
-from an item in the newspaper, which I heard my master read aloud one
-morning. I can’t give it to you just as it was written, but the gist of
-the matter was that the --th Regiment with its celebrated white goat
-mascot, Billy Whiskers, had marched to the front on May twenty-first
-but that, sad to relate, few returned and those that did were badly
-wounded. A great many had been taken prisoners and whether their mascot
-had been killed or captured, those returning did not know. Stub and I
-did not feel you were killed, and that if you were captured you would
-find some way to escape. We then and there made up our minds to cross
-the ocean and look for you, for we were bound to find you if you still
-lived. And here we two have stumbled into you just when we had given
-up all hope of you being alive.” And off went Button, running up one
-tree and then another, around in circles and jumping over and through
-hedges and flower beds. Once he made the dogs all laugh for by mistake
-he ran up an old gardener’s back as he was stooping over digging away,
-thinking it was a stump, he was so nearly the color of the trees and
-grasses of the garden. The old fellow was so surprised that he fell
-headlong into the ditch he was digging.
-
-“You see, Billy, I am so delighted to see you I can’t keep still.”
-
-“I am just as glad to see you, but I can’t jump around like a crazy
-loon to show it. Come here until we rub noses in the place of a kiss!”
-said Billy.
-
-“I must run and tell Stubby. He will be so delighted it will help him
-stand his pain and he will get well sooner. But how am I to get into
-this blooming building again? Aren’t there some back stairs, fire
-escapes or something of the like I could go up to get to his ward?”
-
-“No, there are no fire escapes on any of these country buildings that
-have been turned into hospitals,” replied the Red Cross dog. “What we
-need more than fire escapes is a bomb proof cellar large enough to
-carry our patients into when we have an air raid.”
-
-“I’ll tell you how you can get in,” spoke up Pinky. “Wait until the
-nurses begin to carry suppers up to their patients, and then you can
-creep along at their heels and, being black, you can hide in the
-shadows until they leave the ward. Only the night nurse will then be on
-duty and she will soon fall asleep. Then you can creep out and go to
-your friend’s cot and tell him all the news.”
-
-“Splendid idea! Thank you very much! Won’t some one introduce me to
-this dog?”
-
-“Goodness gracious me! Do excuse me, Button, for being so impolite, but
-joy at seeing you drove all my good manners out of my mind. It is not
-too late now, and I wish to introduce you to all my friends you see
-standing around us.”
-
-After they had all been presented to Button, they went over to the
-grove of trees where the dogs always went when they wished to talk
-without interruption, and they agreed to stay there until time for the
-patients to have their supper, for they were very curious to hear how
-the big, black cat got all the way from the United States of America to
-France, and also to hear how Billy got away from the old General.
-
-They were all trotting along as fast as they could through the barnyard
-with heads down, thinking what a fine time was in store for them
-listening to the goat and cat relate their adventures, when the Red
-Cross dog heard a peculiar croak and, looking around, he saw the cook
-astride Billy’s back, trying to get a rope around his neck. Now the
-rope had just slipped over Billy’s head and the cook gave it a pull
-that nearly strangled him and made him make the croaking noise that
-caused the Red Cross dog to turn around.
-
-“Gee, that is too bad!” sighed the dog, and Pinky said:
-
-“Just my luck! I never counted on having a good time that _some_thing
-did not come along and spoil it! I expect the cook won’t rest now until
-he has delivered Billy to the old General.”
-
-“I wonder where the cook is going to put him now he has him,” said one
-of the dogs.
-
-“Goodness knows! _I_ don’t!” replied Pinky.
-
-“Why, look! He is going over toward the hospital with him,” said
-another.
-
-“Let’s follow and see what he is going to do with him,” suggested the
-Red Cross dog. “But keep out of sight and don’t let the cook know we
-are following him,” he warned.
-
-So they all separated, slinking along in the shadows, dodging behind
-trees, boxes and barrels, their eyes glued to the cook’s back.
-
-Instead of hiding, Pinky walked out in plain sight, and trotted along
-at the cook’s heels, and she heard him mutter to himself: “I’ll just
-put this foxy old goat in that vacant room in the hospital and lock
-him in and _then_ we will see if he is smart enough to butt down the
-hospital!”
-
-“He might not try,” whispered Pinky to herself. “But I bet he could
-butt down the door if he took it into his head he wanted to do it.”
-
-The cook got Billy to the foot of the stairs leading to the porch of
-the hospital. Here the cook went ahead and tried to lead Billy up. But
-all of a sudden Billy planted his fore feet straight in front of him
-and pulled back. His quick stop accompanied by the jerk nearly cracked
-the cook’s head off his shoulders and Billy, giving a second pull just
-then, jerked the cook backwards off the steps where he landed at the
-bottom, sitting straight up and facing Billy, with their noses not
-three inches apart. He looked so comical with his legs spread apart,
-cap on one side of his head and his hair standing straight up, that
-Billy had to laugh. Surely the cook’s startled expression was a study
-as he gazed into Billy’s eyes.
-
-On seeing this, the dogs all laughed out loud. The cook jumped up and
-looked around to see who was making sport of him, but of course he saw
-no one. So he thought some one must have been leaning out of one of the
-upper windows, then quickly ducked after they laughed. Anyway, he would
-make Billy pay for his discomfort. He jerked him up the steps and was
-about to shove him into the room he had just unlocked when Billy gave
-a big, big pull and started to run off the porch. He ran so fast and
-was so strong that he jerked the cook along as if he had been a rag.
-Along the porch they went until Billy came to one end. Here there were
-no steps, so Billy just gave a big leap and landed in the middle of a
-flower bed, the cook sailing on behind, hanging on to the rope that was
-still around Billy’s neck. And it was a lucky thing for the cook that
-there happened to be a nice soft flower bed right there for him to fall
-in; otherwise he might have broken his back.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Billy gave another pull to the rope which brought the cook to his feet,
-and away went Billy across the lawn and down the lane, jerking the cook
-around trees, over stumps and beehives, upsetting them and causing all
-the bees to come out to see what was the matter. For a while the air
-seemed to Billy to be black with bees. Then they stung the cook so that
-he let go the rope and rolled in the grass to try to keep them off his
-face. But they settled on him thick as flies on a molasses covered
-paper.
-
-“Run for the watering trough in the barnyard!” called a nurse who saw
-all this, and the cook did, diving headfirst into the water to drive
-off the bees, which it did effectively.
-
-Billy thought they could not sting up through his long hair, and he
-stood enjoying seeing the cook trying to fight them off. But all of a
-sudden one bee stung him on the ear. The pain made him frantic and he
-started for the watering trough, regardless of the fact that the cook
-was still sitting on the edge, rubbing his swollen face and hands and
-putting mud on them to take out the burning, stinging pain. Strange as
-it may seem, neither the cook nor Billy paid the slightest attention to
-each other. They were too much occupied each in trying to stop the pain
-of the bee stings.
-
-Presently the cook got up and limped into the kitchen, saying to
-himself as he went, “That goat sure has the devil inside of him!
-I’ll never try to capture him again for the General. No, not for the
-President of the United States himself! I am done! What with having
-my head jerked off, my spine driven through the top of my head, and
-my legs nearly broken off, to say nothing of running me into stumps,
-trees and beehives, I’ve got enough of that goat, even with one
-thousand dollars as a reward offered for his return. No! No more at
-all, at all, do I ever have anything to do with goats!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-BILLY RELATES SOME OF HIS ADVENTURES
-
-
-“Oh, Billy, are you hurt?” whined Pinky at his heels.
-
-“Yes. I have a bee sting on my ear that hurts like the very mischief.
-And, by Jove, I believe I have another over my eye for it is fast
-swelling shut.”
-
-“Come with us,” said the Red Cross dog, “over to the grove before it
-closes entirely and you can’t see where to walk. When we get there I’ll
-fix you up for I know what is good for stings.”
-
-On the way they had to cross over a little stream with a soft, muddy
-bank, and the Red Cross dog stopped there and said, “Now stoop down and
-rub your head in the mud so it will cover your eye and get into the lid
-where the sting is. As soon as the mud closes over it you will find
-that the pain will stop almost instantly. I have seen my master rub mud
-on too many stings not to know it is a sure cure.”
-
-“Gee, but I hate to get that nasty mud in my ear and all over my face!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Never mind the dirt! It is clean mud and will dry and fall off itself
-so it won’t be hard to get out of your ear or off your face. Should it
-be, you can just shut your eyes, hold your breath and dip your head up
-and down in the trough until your hair is as white as snow again.”
-
-“Well, I’ve got to do something, dirt or no dirt, for this pain is
-setting me crazy. So here goes!”
-
-Billy knelt down and rubbed and rubbed and rubbed one side of his head
-up and down in the soft mud until it was as brown as an African’s face.
-When at last he stood up all the dogs tried not to laugh, but finally
-they went off in a perfect howl of merriment.
-
-“What you laughing at?” asked Billy.
-
-“Just step here where the water is clear and look at yourself,” said
-the Red Cross dog.
-
-This Billy did, and then he too began to laugh, for he was a most
-comical sight. One side of his face looked twice as large as the other,
-and on this side the eye was swollen shut with a bump as big as a hen’s
-egg standing out above it. And this whole side of his head was as brown
-as could be while the other was white, which made him look exactly as
-if his head had been made in two parts and they were misfits.
-
-“Hurry!” said a hound that was with them. “We better get to the woods.
-I hear some one coming!” and away scampered the dogs and goat to the
-grove, their old trysting place.
-
-I should like to have had a picture of them as they stood beside the
-clear stream, with the dogs surrounding the mumpsy looking goat,
-laughing at his discomfort.
-
-There was the big St. Bernard, majestic and tall; the long, sleek,
-black hound with tan ears and feet; the fluffy white French poodle with
-pinkish eyes; and the Red Cross Belgian dog with his short, sharp ears,
-wide-awake face and short, glossy black hair, while over his breast was
-still the white band with the Red Cross on it.
-
-Once in the woods and comfortably fixed, Billy related to them the
-story of his life and how and where he first met the big black cat
-they had just seen, and the little yellow dog that was now wounded and
-in the hospital.
-
-“Before you begin, Billy,” said the Red Cross dog, “I want to ask if
-the pains in your ear and eye are better?”
-
-“Why, bless my soul, they don’t hurt at all! Even the swelling is going
-down. You sure are some doctor!”
-
-“Now go on with your story, and excuse me for having interrupted you.”
-
-“Well, to begin with, all three of us--the little yellow dog named
-Stubby, the big black cat called Button and myself--were born in the
-United States of America. We have known each other for years and been
-great chums. Why, we have scarcely been out of sight of one another for
-years until I joined the army. My regiment left so unexpectedly for
-France that I had no way of letting them know I was going, as they were
-away at the time on a vacation. And I bet you we will find out when I
-get a chance to talk to them that the minute they got home and found
-I was gone they managed to make friends with some of the soldier boys
-and made themselves so useful that they brought them along. Why, do you
-know that we three have crossed the big American continent twice, and
-we have been from Northern Wisconsin away down to the Gulf of Mexico?
-Not being satisfied with that, we have crossed the Pacific to Japan
-and we all three were in the war between Russia and Japan as mascots.
-Before that we crossed the Atlantic Ocean, sailed through the Straits
-of Gibraltar and over the Mediterranean Sea to Constantinople. We are
-some little globe trotters, don’t you think?”
-
-“Heavens! It makes my head dizzy to even think of it!” said Pinky.
-
-“And you lived to tell the tale!” said the big St. Bernard.
-
-“Yes, as I shall live to tell the tale of this war and about all of you
-to my grandchildren when I get home,” replied Billy.
-
-“But you must have had a great many narrow escapes and thrilling
-experiences,” suggested the hound.
-
-“I should think so! More than would fill a book the size of Webster’s
-dictionary. As for hurts, bruises and scars, I have been wounded so
-many times I don’t believe there is a square inch on my body that has
-not a scar of some kind on it. It is a good thing I am not a hairless
-goat, like those little hairless dogs they have in Mexico, for if I
-was, I would look like a tattooed man,” said Billy.
-
-“Tell us of your most thrilling experience,” begged the Red Cross dog.
-
-“Heavens! I have had so many hairbreadth escapes I would not know which
-one to pick out.”
-
-“Tell us two or three of them,” said Pinky. “I just love to hear you
-tell of your adventures.”
-
-“Yes, do!” exclaimed all the other dogs in chorus.
-
-Just then Billy gave his head a shake and a big clod of dry mud fell
-off his eye, leaving it practically well and the swelling gone.
-
-“A mighty quick cure, I should say,” remarked Billy. “I recommend you,
-Doctor Red Cross!”
-
-“Turn your head to one side and shake it and I think the rest of the
-mud will fall off. Then by holding your head well over on one side, the
-mud will fall out of your ear.”
-
-All this Billy did.
-
-“My, but it certainly does feel good to be able to see out of both eyes
-and hear with both ears once again! So you all want to hear of some
-thrilling adventure I have had? Well, let me see which one I shall
-tell first, about being wrecked at sea, falling in the crack of an
-earthquake that opened at my feet, or being blown up by a bomb in this
-war or--”
-
-“Oh, don’t tell us anything about bombs!” exclaimed Pinky. “They are
-too common around here. We want to hear something we don’t know so much
-about.”
-
-“Well, then I guess I’ll tell you about the earthquake experience. It
-happened when Stubby, Button and myself were in San Francisco.
-
-“One day we were trotting along one of the streets in Chinatown, the
-name given to the Chinese quarters of that city. It was about lunch
-time, and Button had jumped up into a milk wagon that had stopped
-opposite us, to see if he could not find some milk to drink, Stubby
-had run into a butcher shop to see if he could find some meat, and I
-decided to sneak into some Chinaman’s back yard and see what I could
-find to make a meal.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Presently I came to a long, narrow, dark passageway that led to a back
-yard. I sneaked in quickly, so a Chinaman looking out the window would
-not see me. But alas, he did, and I had scarcely gotten half way down
-the passage when I heard a door slam shut behind me and a bolt slipped
-into place. I knew before I even turned around, when I heard that bolt
-slip into place, that I was caught in a trap like as not. But I went
-right on pretending I did not hear the Chinaman shut the door.
-
-“The end of the passage opened into the back yard of a Chinese laundry
-and there were lines and lines stretched from one side of the yard to
-the other, but there were no clothes hanging on them when I went in.
-Without paying any attention to me, the Chinaman began to take down the
-lines, but instead of taking them all down, he only took a short one,
-I noticed. Then he made a slip knot in one end, whistling as he walked
-toward the laundry. He went inside, still without looking at me, and I
-was beginning to think I had been mistaken and he had not seen me enter
-and that the rope was not to tie me up, when out he came with a carrot
-in one hand, the rope still in the other.
-
-“He came straight toward me, holding out the carrot in one hand while
-he kept the other behind him. As he approached me he kept saying, ‘Nice
-little goatee! Nice little goatee! Have a carrot!’
-
-“And I thought to myself, ‘You might as well try to catch a bird by
-putting salt on its tail as to try to catch me with a carrot in one
-hand and a rope hidden in the other behind your back, especially when
-that rope has a slip knot in it. Oh, no, Mr. Chinaman, I was not born
-yesterday or the day before! And unless you open that door quickly and
-let me out, you are going to be carried out of it on my horns. I am in
-no mood for play or jokes!’
-
-“Just then another Chinaman came out of the laundry with a basket
-heaped up with clothes to hang on the line, and the Chinaman with the
-carrot said, ‘Yum, you watcha me catcha little goatee. Keep little
-goatee. Him bring heap money at butcher’s!’
-
-[Illustration: Billy gave one long, loud baa that resounded down the
-big, bare room. (Page 49)]
-
-“‘So-ho! You would sell me for chops and roasts, would you? Well, just
-you come a little nearer and see what happens to one little Chinaman!’
-
-“The Chinaman with the clothes began to hang them on the line, singing
-a queer, monotonous refrain in his cackling language. By this time the
-first Chinaman was within three feet of me, holding the carrot straight
-out before him and staring into my eyes. Evidently he was not used to
-goats, and felt a little uncertain as to what I would do. While I was
-watching him, expecting he would try to throw the rope over my head
-every minute, to surprise him I stretched my neck out quickly, grabbed
-the carrot out of his hand and ate it up. Then he came boldly up to me,
-as this gave him the assurance I was not going to butt him. But when
-he tried to put the rope around my neck, I simply lowered my head and
-butted him over flat on his back. This infuriated him, and he leaped
-up and grabbed a clothes pole to hit me with it. Then the chase began.
-Around and around that small back yard we went, upsetting everything,
-he trying to hit me all the while and I dodging him but trying to
-butt or hook him at every turn. Then I took to butting everything and
-anything that came in my way. One thing I butted was the basket full of
-clothes the second Chinaman had left, having sought a place of safety
-when first the chase began. Now he sat cross-legged on the low roof of
-the back porch grinning from ear to ear and watching the sport. When
-I butted the basket, it shot straight up in the air, spilling out the
-clothes as it soared, which the wind caught and carried over into the
-other yards.
-
-“Presently from all the doors and windows of the adjacent buildings one
-could see grinning faces. But not one person came to help that Chinaman
-I was butting and chasing. He must have been thoroughly disliked by his
-neighbors for them to act as they did. Their jeers and calls made him
-madder and madder and every time he tried to hit me with the long pole
-and missed, they would call:
-
-“‘Try it again! Try it again! Don’t give up!’
-
-“Once the pole just grazed my back, and for this I went to the
-clothesline and taking a shirt sleeve in my teeth I jerked it off the
-line, stamped on it and then tore it to pieces. He nearly foamed at
-the mouth when he saw this. And I was just walking up to get another
-when some one slipped up behind me and threw a blanket over my head.
-Well, of all the rolling and tumbling that went on then you never saw
-the like! First I was on top, then the two Chinamen were. My legs were
-loose and you better believe I used them. I kicked and kicked. Then all
-of a sudden it seemed as if every Chinaman in all Chinatown was sitting
-on top of me. They came from over the fences, from all directions, and
-every one that came proceeded to sit on me. At last there were so many
-of them I could not move. They tied all four of my feet together and
-strung me on a pole, which they suspended over a place where a bonfire
-had been made over which to make soap. Some one removed the big kettle
-of soap and then they put me right where the kettle had been. Next they
-took the blanket off my head and began dancing around me, and spit at
-me and jabbed me with sticks, doing everything they could possibly
-think of to torture me.
-
-“The blood ran into my head so from being hung upside down that I could
-scarcely see, and the ropes binding my feet cut into me until I bled.
-But still these heathen Chinese showed no mercy and I was beginning to
-wonder if they intended leaving me to die a slow death when the first
-Chinaman said, ‘Let’s build a fire under him and cook him alive! Roast
-goatee is velly, velly good, me hear.’
-
-“This seemed to please the crowd, and they joined hands and ran around
-and around me, chanting some heathen song until the old Chinaman who
-had proposed cooking me alive came with some matches and shavings to
-start the fire.
-
-“Then for the first time I began to be worried, and thought, ‘Well,
-at last I am in a tight place I can’t get out of,’ when I heard howls
-of pain and rage and the fierce growl of a dog. Opening my eyes to
-see what was taking place, I saw Stubby biting the heels of the
-Chinaman as he stooped to light the fire, while Button sat on his back
-scratching the very shirt off him. In about two minutes the yard was
-cleared of Chinamen, I can tell you! Stubby bit and Button clawed them
-until they were glad enough to climb the fences to get away alive.
-
-“They had frightened the Chinamen off and saved me from being roasted
-to death. But how were they ever to get me off that pole?
-
-“At last I thought, ‘Perhaps if I wriggle and squirm my weight will
-break the pole. Anyway, I am going to try it.’
-
-“And soon I found that by moving my body in a certain way I could start
-a certain motion that made me swing up and down and the more I moved
-the higher I went and the pole began to creak. Then presently it broke
-in two and came down all in a heap. I had scarcely touched the ground
-when Stubby and Button began to gnaw the ropes that bound me, and in a
-jiffy they had gnawed them through and I was loose.
-
-“Do you think I ran away when I was free once more? No, indeed, I
-did not! I stayed right there to get even with Mr. Chinaman who had
-proposed to cook me alive. It was very dark in the yard now as night
-had closed in while all the fuss was going on. So I proposed to hide
-and wait for the Chinaman to show himself in the yard. Well, all I can
-say is that if he ever did show himself I had made up my mind to kill
-him. Stubby and Button hid too, and then we waited. And as we waited
-the earth under our feet began to quiver and shake and low, rumbling
-noises were heard like distant thunder. These shakings and tremblings
-of the earth continued growing more and more violent until they threw
-me off my feet once or twice, while the ripping, roaring noises grew
-louder and more frequent. Presently fire bells began to ring and the
-night sky was illuminated with vivid red reflections from huge fires.
-But still we three watched for those Chinamen to come out of the house.
-
-“‘Come on, Billy!’ Stubby barked in a whisper. ‘Let us get out of here.
-We must be having one of those terrible earthquakes they sometimes have
-out here in this country.’
-
-“‘Yes, come, Billy,’ urged Button, ‘and leave the Chinaman to the mercy
-of the ’quake. Perhaps the earth will open and swallow him!’
-
-“‘Hope it does, but I am going to give him a butt that will break his
-back first. I’ll teach him not to torture goats in the future!’
-
-“‘S-s-s-s-h-h-h!’ exclaimed Button. ‘I see him through the window. He
-is coming now.’
-
-“Cautiously the door opened a crack, and the Chinaman’s crafty face
-peered out. His eyes searched every nook and corner of the yard, but
-he saw no goat, dog or cat. Button was so black one could not see him
-as he sat on top of the fence. Stubby was hidden under a pile of old
-chairs, tables and so on, while I was close against the house behind
-the door the Chinaman had just opened. I got there on purpose so that
-when once he stepped into the yard he could not go back unless he
-passed me for I would be between the man and the house.
-
-“‘What has he in his hand that smokes so?’ I wondered. ‘Why, it is a
-dipper of boiling water! Gee, I bet he intended to throw that on me
-when he saw me. Well, I’ll just sneak up behind him and give him a butt
-in the back and make him spill it on himself and then he can see how he
-would like boiling water thrown on him.’
-
-“I did not dare to try to walk up behind him for fear I might stumble
-over something and then he would hear me and throw the water, so I made
-one big jump from behind the door and butted him squarely in the back.
-Well, I made the jump all right, but just as my feet left the earth
-it opened under me with a ripping, tearing noise and swallowed the
-Chinaman with his dipper of hot water, and closed again so quickly that
-when I came down from my jump I lit on solid ground where but half a
-second before had been a yawning chasm. Whoo! That was a narrow escape,
-for had I stood still the earth would have opened under me or if I
-had not happened to jump high enough I would have landed right in the
-opening and been crushed or killed as had the Chinaman.
-
-“The ’quake that swallowed the Chinaman had extended far and shaken
-down lots of the old rickety buildings in the neighborhood, and
-buildings were tottering and falling all around. So Stubby, Button and
-I lost no time in getting out of that place, I can tell you. I simply
-butted down the door the Chinaman had bolted when I came in, and we all
-three ran out and down the street towards the Bay. I won’t stop to tell
-you of the destruction of the beautiful city and the fearful, gruesome
-sights and sounds we saw and heard, or how the flames licked up the
-handsome buildings after the earthquake had shaken them down, for the
-destruction of San Francisco has passed into history and any one of you
-who wish to hear more of it can listen as some one is reading aloud
-about it. This ends the tale of one of my most thrilling adventures.”
-
-“Oh, thank you! Thank you so much, Mr. Whiskers, for telling us this
-story,” exclaimed the facile Pinky. “I have enjoyed hearing it so much,
-though you did make my skin creep and my hair stand on end when you
-were telling of how they proposed to cook you alive.”
-
-Then all the other dogs thanked him also for relating to them this
-wonderful tale.
-
-“I think we better go back to the hospital and look for Button and see
-if we cannot find a way for me to slip in and see Stubby,” remarked
-Billy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BUTTON FRIGHTENS TWO NURSES
-
-
-While Billy had been relating his adventures Button had been lying in a
-box under Stubby’s window, trying to think of a way to get to him and
-tell him that Billy was here in this very place.
-
-“If there was only a fire escape!” he sighed. “Then I could easily make
-it.”
-
-It was getting near supper time but he was still puzzling his brain
-over the matter when he saw one of the nurses in Stubby’s room come to
-the window and let down a rope with a basket on it. When it reached the
-ground she still stood there holding on to the rope as if waiting for
-some one to come.
-
-“What in the world can be going on now, I wonder,” mused Button.
-
-Presently from around the corner of the hospital from the kitchen he
-saw another nurse appear with a tray loaded down with the dogs’ supper.
-There not being an elevator in this old building, the nurses had
-thought out this way of saving them climbing the long flight of steps
-with the heavy trays on which they carried the dogs’ food to them. One
-nurse would go to the kitchen, get the food prepared by the cook,
-and then bring it around to this window, place it in the basket, and
-the nurse in the window would pull it up. When the dogs had finished
-their meal, the dishes were lowered in the basket just as they had been
-hauled up, carried back to the kitchen and washed. So you see what a
-saving of steps this basket elevator really was.
-
-“My, if I could only manage to get in that basket and have her pull me
-up!” thought Button.
-
-The cat watched the nurses raise and lower the basket until presently a
-nurse came from the kitchen, put the food in the basket and went off,
-forgetting to pull a string which rang a bell, the signal that the
-basket was ready to be pulled up.
-
-“Gee, she has forgotten to pull the string and gone off. I can see the
-nurse in the window waiting for the signal. She will get tired waiting
-pretty soon and pull it up, I believe. I am going over and eat up what
-is in that basket and hop in myself, and then I shall be pulled up. If
-the basket feels heavy, the nurse will think there must be an extra
-amount of dishes in this trip.”
-
-Suiting the action to the thought, Button hurried over to it, lapped
-up a cup of milk, ate some cold chicken and potatoes, and then he saw
-the basket begin to move. Without a moment’s hesitation he jumped in
-and sat on the soiled dishes and the remaining suppers. Up, up he was
-slowly drawn, and he heard the nurse mumble to herself, “Wonder what
-they have in this basket to-night? It feels like a basket of bricks, it
-is so heavy.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Now if she only doesn’t see me until the basket is safely on the
-window ledge I shall be lucky. I am afraid if she sees me, it will
-frighten her and she will let go the basket and down I will fall with a
-dull thud.”
-
-But just as the basket reached the ledge of the window her attention
-was called to something inside and she turned her head to look, at the
-same time reaching her hand out and pulling the basket on to the window
-sill from force of habit. When she turned back to the window, there
-on the sill sat a black cat with big, yellow eyes looking at her. It
-startled her so she screamed and pulled the basket in off the sill,
-and then let go the handle, and it rolled under the bed of one of the
-patients, spilling out bottles of milk, biscuits, sliced chicken, and
-many other good things.
-
-Taking advantage of the confusion, Button jumped down from the window
-and ran under the beds until he came to the one occupied by Stubby.
-Then he moved softly so as not to frighten Stubby, and crawled in bed
-under the sheets so no one could see him. No one did see him do it for
-every dog in the ward was sitting up in bed, straining their eyes to
-see what had happened by the window.
-
-“The cat! The cat! Where did it go?” the nurse kept calling in an
-excited voice. For when she turned to look for him, the cat she had
-seen was gone. After all the nurses had looked under every bed and in
-all the corners and in every other conceivable place, they began to
-tease her and tell her it was an illusion, that she had only imagined
-she saw a cat. After awhile she began to think that perhaps this was
-the case. Still what would make her think she saw a cat when she did
-not? Especially as she had not even been thinking of cats? The only
-thing that looked as if she had seen one was that half the dogs’
-suppers had been eaten or at least they were short some food. That
-nurse went to bed that night with a headache from trying to decide
-whether or not she had seen a cat.
-
-Soon after supper the dogs in the hospital were given their last dose
-of medicine, their bandages were straightened, and then they were ready
-to be tucked in for the night. The nurses patted the dogs on their
-heads and said good-night to them just as if they were people. Then
-they turned down the lights and went out, leaving only the night nurse
-in charge in one corner of the room where she sat by a shaded light
-knitting for the soldiers and dreaming and praying for the safe return
-of her brothers and sweetheart after the war was over. Button did not
-stir until Stubby stuck his head under the sheet and whispered to him
-that he could talk now, as the nurse was so occupied in picking up some
-stitches in her knitting that she had dropped that she would not hear
-them.
-
-So there the two lay all curled up under the sheet, Button telling
-of the finding of Billy and Stubby listening with all his ears. When
-Button had finished, Stubby gave a great sigh and said, “Isn’t it
-wonderful to think that we should have found him in this big, big
-country across the sea? My, I am so glad it will make me well soon. For
-life was not half worth living without our dear chum Billy. I know you
-agree with me, Button.”
-
-“I surely do!” exclaimed Button. “How is your leg, old fellow? Healing
-fast, I hope.”
-
-“Oh, yes. The nurse said they would take the splints off to-morrow, and
-she doesn’t think I am going to be lame, it was healed so straight and
-fine. Isn’t that grand? For I would hate to be bothered limping along
-on a lame leg on our trips. It would be very inconvenient when I wished
-to run away when some one was chasing us, too. I hate to hurry you off,
-Button, but the night nurse will be coming around soon to straighten
-our beds and give us our last drink for the night so I am afraid she
-might lift up the sheet and find you. But how are you going to get out
-of the door into the hall, as it is shut?”
-
-“Trust me! I will get out as I came--by the window.”
-
-“I did not know there was a fire escape by the window,” said Stubby.
-
-“There isn’t. I came up on the food basket.” And then Button told him
-how he had come up in the basket and nearly scared a nurse to death.
-
-“But you can’t go down that way because there is no one here to let the
-basket down,” objected Stubby.
-
-“I don’t need any basket to go down in. All I need is the rope, and as
-it is fastened to the wall I will just have to slide down it.”
-
-“Oh, Button, but you are a smart cat! You should have been born a man,
-not a cat. If you had, the world would have heard of wonderful things
-you had done, I am sure.”
-
-“If you wish I had been born a man, I wish the three of us had.
-Wouldn’t Billy have made a splendid brigadier general, while you would
-have made a dandy lieutenant!”
-
-“S-s-s-s-sh-h-h! I hear the nurse coming. Scoot! Drop out of bed on the
-side nearest the wall and run under the beds until you are near the
-window,” advised Stubby.
-
-The nurse was walking down the aisle of the ward that faced the window
-when the moon came out from under a cloud and shone straight into the
-room. And she saw not only the moon, but a big black cat as it jumped
-up on the window sill. She shut her eyes, looked again and again, and
-the cat had disappeared!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“It must be the same cat that Nurse Mollie saw, and now it has
-disappeared again as completely as it did when she saw it. She got
-one glimpse and it was gone. I got another, and it faded in thin air.
-Heavens! We must be going to be bombarded for black cats bring bad
-luck, they say, and this cat has come to warn us. I’ll just run to the
-window and see if I can’t see it. It could not jump out of the window
-because it is too high from the ground, and it isn’t in this room, and
-cats can’t fly, so where is it?”
-
-The nurse went to the window and looked out. No tree, roof or shed was
-near enough for the cat to have jumped to them and then to the ground,
-so of course it must have been a spook cat for no cat was in sight. She
-never looked close to the building, or she would have seen a rope to
-which clung a black cat, hanging on desperately as it lowered itself to
-the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-BILLY MAKES PLANS TO LEAVE FRANCE
-
-
-While Button was hanging on to the rope Billy and the dogs came around
-the hospital to look for him.
-
-“There! I told you Button was the smartest cat you ever heard of, and
-I bet he would find a way to see Stubby. There he comes now, down that
-rope from Stubby’s window!” said Billy.
-
-When nearly to the ground Button jumped from the rope and landed at
-Billy’s feet.
-
-“Hello, Billy and friends! How do you find yourselves? I have just been
-up to pay Stub a visit, and I accidentally frightened two nurses nearly
-to death and made them both believe they saw a spook cat instead of a
-live one.”
-
-“But how am I to see Stubby? That is what I want to know,” asked Billy.
-
-“I am afraid you can’t get into the hospital to see him, Billy. But
-you will probably have a fine chance to see him to-morrow. I heard
-the nurse say she was going to take all the convalescent patients
-out under a tree in the yard if it was a nice day. And as the sun set
-clear, I think you will have a chance to talk to him to-morrow. If you
-cannot get near enough to him to chat, at least you can see him.”
-
-“How is his leg getting along?”
-
-“Oh, splendidly! He will be able to use it in a few days. They are
-taking off the splints to-morrow.”
-
-“That is good news indeed. Now it will be only a short time before we
-can start once again on our journey home.”
-
-“Our journey home!” exclaimed Button. “Who said Stubby and I were going
-with you?”
-
-“I did. Or rather I planned taking you both along with me. You don’t
-suppose I am going without you now I have found you again, do you? Not
-by a long way!”
-
-“But what if we refuse to go? You can’t carry us, one on each horn, can
-you?”
-
-“Yes, I could, but I don’t want you to go that way, or against your
-will. I want you to _want_ to go. And I know perfectly well that I can
-offer enough inducements to coax you both to go with me.”
-
-“But how about deserting our regiments?”
-
-“You have already deserted yours in following Stubby here,” answered
-Billy.
-
-“But I had to follow a wounded friend! Besides, they would be delighted
-to see me back.”
-
-“That is all well enough! But you fellows are coming back home with
-me just as soon as Stubby is able to travel. And I will tell you why.
-In the first place you both have had about enough of war to last you
-all your lives. Again the war will soon be over now the United States
-army is in the thick of the fight. And again you both have come to
-the conclusion that there is no country you would care to live in but
-America, and the United States of America part of it at that.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“You are right, Billy. I was only teasing you to hear what arguments
-you would put up. But none of them are the real reason why we would
-leave the army now and go home. The only thing that would induce us to
-leave it before the war is over is the same thing that made us join it.”
-
-“And pray may I ask what that is?”
-
-“Yes. It is yourself. We left home to find you. Having found you, we
-are ready to leave everything and follow you whether you go home or
-away from home.”
-
-“Bravo! Bravo!” cheered the dogs. “You and Stubby surely are bully
-friends for a goat to have. We congratulate you, Billy, on having such
-true and loyal ones.”
-
-“Thanks,” bowed Billy. “Do you know the way to make and keep true,
-sincere and loyal friends? I’ll tell you. Be one yourself.”
-
-“Hurrah for you, Billy! You will always have the last word.”
-
-“Do you mind telling me a part of your immediate plan and how you
-propose getting from here to where we are to embark? Or are you
-thinking of stealing a ride home in an airship?” asked Button.
-
-At this the dogs laughed. The idea of a goat, dog and cat riding in an
-airship!
-
-“Well, my friends, you need not laugh and think that is impossible, for
-I already have crossed the American continent from New York City to San
-Francisco in an airship,” said Billy.
-
-“Will you tell us what you haven’t done, Mr. Billy Whiskers?” asked
-Pinky.
-
-“I could not; it would take too long. Well, in the first place,” he
-continued, turning to Button, “I thought unless a better plan offered,
-I would go straight to Paris and from Paris to the seacoast and get on
-the first boat sailing for America. I had not decided on any special
-port to sail from. I just left that to chance, for probably we would
-have to try many before I could sneak on board. But the hardest part of
-the trip will be from here to Paris, as we are known by the soldiers
-around here, and we run the risk of being carried back to the army any
-minute. If we leave the main highway that leads to Paris, I am afraid
-we may lose our way and go a long, roundabout route and possibly we
-might fall into the hands of the Germans.”
-
-“Billy, I’ll tell you what I will do,” spoke up the Red Cross dog.
-“I’ll leave going back to the army long enough to show you the way to
-Paris and across that city. You could easily find your way to Paris,
-but I doubt if you could find your way out. It is a big city, and the
-roads out are all well guarded now by soldiers who might recognize
-you, capture you and send you back. I know every step of the way, and
-we could slip out at night or swim the river Seine where it runs out
-of the city. After I had accompanied you to within sight of the sea I
-could come back. I need a vacation and the trip would be one for me.”
-
-“Thank you, my dear Duke,” for that was the name of the Red Cross dog.
-“I will accept your offer. But I cannot allow you to carry out one part
-of it, and that part is to leave us and go back into the army. They
-have plenty of Red Cross dogs and police dogs, too, so they can spare
-you now. As you have expressed a desire to see America many times, why
-not continue on with us and visit our fair land?”
-
-“Just the thing!” exclaimed Button. “You may never have such another
-chance to visit our country in such good company as a goat, dog and cat
-of world renown--a-hem, a-hem!”
-
-At this they all laughed and Pinky said, “Why, yes; why don’t you go,
-Duke? I only wish I had the chance.”
-
-“Well, you have!” said Billy. “I extend my invitation to all here.”
-
-“Oh dear! Oh dear! Much as I should love to go, I dislike the hardships
-of travel too much, and I know I should be seasick. I was when I
-crossed the Channel once to go with my mistress to visit some friends
-in London. But I should dearly love to go as far as Paris with you and
-see the surprised face of my mistress when I came trotting in. You know
-she sent me here so I would be safe when they began to bombard Paris
-with those extra long range guns. Besides, she said she had so much Red
-Cross war work to do that she could not take the time to look after me
-properly and see that I had my walk in the Boulevard or in the Park
-every day. And it would be unkind of me to run away to America and
-leave her when she has been so kind to me.”
-
-“I must go back to my mountains,” said the big St. Bernard, “as soon
-as I am able and help find the travelers that get lost in the heights
-and would die of starvation if it was not for me.”
-
-So none of them accepted Billy’s invitation to go except Pinky and even
-she was going only as far as Paris.
-
-“Listen! I thought I heard the sound of an automobile turning into the
-lane,” said Button.
-
-“You did,” said the hound. “I just saw the flash of its lamps through
-the trees.”
-
-Billy and the dogs talked for a while longer, and they were about to
-say good-night when they heard voices coming in their direction.
-
-“S-s-s-sh-h-h!” said Billy. “I thought I recognized that voice! It is
-the old General’s chauffeur. Now what can he be wanting here at this
-time of the evening? I’ll just listen and find out. No, I will get
-Button to creep up close and listen for his black coat won’t show in
-the dark like my white one would.”
-
-Button crept through the long grass until he was right near where the
-chauffeur and the cook stood talking. There being a tree near them,
-Button ran up it and sat on a limb listening to every word they spoke.
-
-“Well, Jean,” said the cook, “what important business have you on
-your mind this evening, or have you come to take away some of our
-convalescent patients?”
-
-“My business is most important, and I have come straight from the
-General.”
-
-“Hoity-toity! You don’t say so! Whatever can it be about?”
-
-“That blasted old Billy goat that the General sets such stores by.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“You don’t mean it!” said the cook. “And why are you looking for him
-here when you took him away with you only two days ago? You don’t mean
-to tell me that the slippery old rascal has escaped from camp again?”
-
-“No; he did not escape from camp, because we never succeeded in getting
-him within miles of it. We hadn’t gotten ten miles from here when we
-broke down and that pesky old goat escaped.”
-
-“Oh, you are fooling! He could not escape one General, three officers
-and a smart chauffeur like you!”
-
-“Oh, couldn’t he? You don’t know that old goat if you think that. He
-could escape a whole regiment if he wanted to.”
-
-“And why do you come looking for him here?”
-
-“Because we found him here and as he seemed to be having a pretty good
-time with the dogs, we thought he might come back.”
-
-“Oh, you did, did you? Well, you reasoned well, for he did come back,
-and I tried to catch him so I could claim the thousand dollars reward.
-You see my right arm is in a sling, don’t you? Well, it is all on
-account of trying to capture that same old goat.”
-
-“You don’t mean to tell me that he really is here? Divide the thousand
-dollars with me and I will help you catch him again.”
-
-“Never again do I monkey with that goat! I once swore I would not, and
-nothing would induce me to try it again. Would you like to know what he
-did to me and how I broke my arm?”
-
-“Yes, I would.”
-
-“Well, it happened in this way. He did come back and I thought I would
-catch him and claim the reward. One might as well try to catch the
-devil asleep as to try to catch that goat off his guard. Do you see
-those steps that lead up onto the hospital porch? And that cherry tree
-down the lane the other side of those beehives? Well, just imagine me,
-fat as I am, at the end of a rope, being jerked off the porch where
-there are no steps, pulled around the yard, down past the beehives,
-upsetting them, chased and stung by the bees, wrapped around that
-cherry tree so tight I could not move and then the rope pulled out of
-my hands so fast it blistered them while the goat ran on, stopped to
-look around, saw me stuck to the tree, and then he gave a baa, swished
-his tail and disappeared. I have not seen him since. I hope the bees
-stung him so he will remember the day as long as he lives, for I know
-I shall. Why, I could not see out of my eyes for two days, they were
-swollen so, and my ears looked like a jackass’s, they were so swollen
-out of shape. No, thank you! You may have all the honor of catching
-that goat yourself, and the reward that goes with it. I’ll be a goat
-catcher no more.”
-
-Button could see in his imagination just what Billy did to the fellow,
-and he laughed so to himself that he nearly fell out of the tree.
-
-“If you would like to hear it, I will tell you how he escaped the five
-of us,” offered the chauffeur. Then he told the cook what you already
-know, the recital of which pleased the cook immensely, as misery likes
-company, and he was glad to know that he was not the only one Billy had
-gotten the best of.
-
-“I tell you what let’s do,” suggested the chauffeur. “There are two of
-us against one goat. We will lay a plan and get him. Then we can divide
-that thousand dollars between us. We won’t try to get him in a hurry,
-but we will lay a plan that can’t fail.”
-
-“Can’t fail?” laughed the cook. “_Any_ plan would fail with that old
-goat unless you killed him outright. And we don’t want to do that for
-the General’s reward is for him alive, not dead.”
-
-[Illustration: Away went Billy, jerking the cook around trees, over
-stumps and beehives. (Page 56)]
-
-“Well, it is a pity with such a big reward in sight if we can’t get
-ahead of one old goat! I’ll eat my shirt if I don’t capture him alive
-within three days after I lay eyes on him.”
-
-“You’ll eat your shirt then, young man, and I will sit by and see you
-do it if he doesn’t bung up both my eyes so I can’t see out of them
-before then.”
-
-“Now let’s plan how I shall go about it,” said the chauffeur.
-
-Button waited to hear no more, but ran to tell Billy that they were
-laying plans to capture him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-BUTTON DISCOVERS SPIES IN THE HAYMOW
-
-
-When Button got back where he had left Billy and the dogs, he found
-them all gone.
-
-“I guess Billy thought they better hide somewhere until I came back. I
-can soon find them, however, by running up a tall tree and looking over
-the place, for even in this twilight I can see Billy’s white coat. Yes,
-there is a white object about his size moving toward the woods. I will
-follow it and I bet it will turn out to be Billy. It is too big for a
-dog, and too small for a cow.” So Button ran after the white object and
-soon came up to Billy and the dogs.
-
-“There, didn’t I tell you dogs he would find us?” said Billy. “Button,
-our friends here did not want to leave until you came back. They were
-afraid you could not find us, and that you would feel hurt at our going
-off when you had gone to get information for me. They do not know us,
-do they? That we always understand one another and know that every move
-we make is for the best and our safety. Well, what did you find out?”
-
-“That the two are at this very minute plotting to capture you so they
-can get the reward offered by the General,” and Button began to laugh.
-
-“What are you laughing at? Tell us,” said Pinky.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“It is at what those two said. They have you down fine, Billy, and
-think you are a foxy old rascal with brains. So the two are going to
-lay a deep plot and are not going at it hastily so as to be sure to
-catch you. The chauffeur has promised to eat his shirt if he can’t
-catch you in three days.”
-
-“They better lay a deep, dark plot and keep it under their hats if they
-intend to catch me within three days, for I am leaving in about fifteen
-minutes,” answered Billy.
-
-“Oh, Mr. Whiskers, you don’t mean that! You surely don’t mean to leave
-us so soon. Besides, if I am to go with you to Paris, I can’t possibly
-get ready in that time. Why, I have all the chickens, ducks, pigs and
-the other fowls and animals on the place to say good-by to, let alone
-all my friends in the hospital!”
-
-“Then you can’t travel with me, Miss Rosie de la France, as we three
-never know ten minutes ahead where we will be next, or what our next
-move will be. My being alive now is all due to my being able to think
-and act quickly. And I must leave here before those two plotting my
-capture set eyes on me again. Now here are my plans. I made them while
-walking over here. I will go ahead to the outskirts of the next town.
-There I will wait for Stubby, Button, Duke and yourself, if you still
-feel like risking your life with us, and taking all the hardships that
-come along without a whimper or complaint. For it is our motto never
-to complain or cry over spilt milk. What is done is past and gone; why
-spoil the present and becloud the future by dwelling on it?”
-
-“Thank you, Mr. Whiskers, but I think probably I better stay here until
-my mistress comes for me. My surprising her might turn out not to be
-pleasant after all.”
-
-“I think you are wise in your decision, for these are troublous times
-to be running around loose without a particular friend, and I think
-you are not enough accustomed to hard knocks to travel with three such
-hardened travelers as we are.”
-
-“I am glad that sniffly-nosed, red-eyed little poodle is not going with
-us,” mused Button to himself. “I never _could_ abide poodles, anyway,
-and this one seems to be a sentimental fuss-and-feathers kind of one.”
-
-“Time’s up, boys! Glad to have met you all, and hope if any of you ever
-come to America that I shall have the good luck to run into you and the
-chance of returning some of the hospitality you have extended to me as
-well as that I may show you some of our beautiful country. Remember,
-Button, as soon as Stubby is able to travel to meet me on the outskirts
-of the next town. Good-by, good-by, kind friends!” and Billy was off.
-
-He had scarcely disappeared in the darkness when the dogs heard the
-chauffeur and the cook coming toward the woods. They were sneaking
-along, looking carefully under every bush and behind every pile of
-stones for Billy.
-
-“I tell you,” said the cook, “I saw him running in this direction after
-we had the mix-up with the bees.”
-
-“Skedaddle, all of you!” mewed Button. “Don’t let them find us all
-together.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“How long ago did you see him coming in this direction?” asked the
-chauffeur.
-
-“Oh, about three hours.”
-
-“Three _hours_! Oh, the dickens! In that time he might be half way to
-Paris. I thought you had seen him just before I came.”
-
-“Well, he is somewhere around here, I bet.”
-
-“If he is, he is probably laughing inside himself at the spectacle we
-make creeping along in the dark looking for him.”
-
-Button went right back to the hospital and climbed up the rope that was
-still hanging from the window of Stubby’s ward. He thought he better
-go tell Stubby the latest plans while the rope was still there. He had
-very good luck indeed, and succeeded in getting to Stubby without being
-seen and in telling him what he had heard the men say and of Billy’s
-plans for them to join him as soon as he, Stubby, was able to use his
-leg.
-
-“Isn’t it too provoking that I have to be laid up with a broken leg?
-Why couldn’t it have been my tail or an ear that got hurt? Then I could
-have traveled.”
-
-“Never mind, old fellow! You will be all right in a day or two. In
-the meantime Billy can amuse himself by getting in more mischief, and
-I can pass the time by trying _not_ to get into any here. I think I
-better vamoose now or some one will be coming and find me as I see it
-is about time they change the night shifts. I’ll see you in the garden
-to-morrow. Good-night and pleasant slumbers free from pain!”
-
-Just as Button was on the window sill about to jump for the rope, the
-second night nurse who was to relieve the one now on duty came in the
-room, and it happened to be the one who had seen Button first and had
-been trying to argue herself into believing that she had not seen a
-big, black cat sitting on the window sill in the moonlight. On seeing
-the same cat again in the same place, she screamed and threw up her
-hands to cover her eyes. Her cry startled Button so that he nearly
-lost his hold of the rope, for he was just sticking his claws into it
-preparatory to climbing down when the nurse opened the door.
-
-When she took her hands from her eyes to look once more and be sure
-that the cat was still there, the cat had disappeared, just as it had
-done before.
-
-“There is something horrible going to happen to the hospital, I know,”
-she said to the other nurse, “for that is twice I have seen the vision
-of a big black cat.”
-
-“And I too. I also saw it this evening, just where you did, when I
-first came in to take your place. I do hope it is not the forerunner of
-a German raid or that the Germans are going to drop bombs on us.”
-
-It amused Button greatly to see how superstitious the nurses were about
-a black cat.
-
-“I wonder how I shall pass the time until Stubby is taken out into the
-yard to-morrow,” he thought. “I think I will go over to the haymow and
-catch a mouse and see if French mice taste like American ones.”
-
-He had crawled through a hole in the side of the barn and was quietly
-making his way toward where he thought the haymow would most likely
-be when he heard whispering voices. He stopped to listen and made out
-that they were speaking in German, not in French. And he immediately
-thought, “Spies, or escaped prisoners!”
-
-“I’ll just listen and hear what they have to say,” he decided, “but
-I’ll try to get a little closer.”
-
-Being black as a coal, he could not be seen easily unless the light
-struck his eyes. So he crept cautiously toward where the sound of the
-voices came from, and found it was in the haymow above his head. It
-took but a minute for Button to climb the ladder that led up to the
-mow, but as he stepped from the ladder onto the hay, it gave way and he
-fell into a hole in the hay made by one of the men’s legs when he had
-stepped off the ladder.
-
-“What was that noise I heard?” said one of the two voices in a
-frightened tone.
-
-“S-s-sh-h-h-h! Keep still and listen!” commanded the other.
-
-“I hope it is not that French colonel who has been on our track for
-days,” answered the other.
-
-Button never moved, and in fact he held his breath until the men began
-talking again.
-
-“It was probably a rat you heard in the hay,” said the man who had
-spoken last. “Don’t you think it is about dark enough for us to get to
-our work and blow up this Red Cross hospital, so we can get back to our
-line before daylight?”
-
-“So-ho!” thought Button. “You two think because this hospital has a big
-red cross on a white ground painted on its roof that it is a regular
-hospital for wounded soldiers instead of just one for dogs. And you
-have been sent to blow it up! Well, I’ll fix you! I’ll scratch your
-eyes out so you can’t see to blow it up.”
-
-Then and there Button began to act as if he had a fit. He flew out of
-the hole he had been hiding in and right for the men, whom he could see
-plainly with his cat eyes in the dark mow. Before they knew what was
-happening, he ran up one’s back, reached around his neck as he sat on
-his shoulder and scratched both his eyes out.
-
-“How do you like the feeling? _That_ is for scratching out the eyes of
-little Belgian children!”
-
-The man cried out from pain, but what cared Button? He jumped from this
-fellow’s shoulders straight into the other’s face and out went his eyes.
-
-“Now you two can sit here and repent of your sins and think how the
-little children suffered whose eyes you dug out! And the Germans are
-planning to blow up this hospital, are they? Such being the case, I
-must get Stubby away from here at the earliest possible moment. I know
-what I can do. I can carry him on my back, he is such a little fellow,
-and he is so thin now that I can easily do it. Then when we reach
-Billy, he can carry him and in this way, by taking turns, we can get
-him far away from here before the Germans raid the hospital.”
-
-And this is just what Button did. The very next day when Stubby’s nurse
-carried him out of the hospital and placed him on a cushion under a
-tree, with the splints off his leg, Button came along and told him what
-he had done the night before and that he feared the Germans would blow
-up or set fire to the hospital that very night. By first coaxing, then
-scolding, he at last persuaded Stubby to consent to ride on his back
-and let him take him where Billy was waiting for them on the outskirts
-of the town seven miles away. They bade all the dogs good-by and the
-Red Cross dog insisted that as he was larger and stronger than Button
-he should carry Stubby on his back part of the journey. “Besides,” he
-said, “I have a cloth bandage around my body with the Red Cross sewed
-on the front. Now this bandage will be an excellent thing for Stubby
-to stick his claws in to help him hold on. It will be much easier
-trying to do that than trying to stick them into your short hair, more
-especially as he has only three legs he can use.”
-
-And thus they started on their journey, keeping close to the road, but
-going just inside the fields and orchards that bordered either side of
-the highway. They made very good progress, and the Red Cross dog did
-not feel the weight of Stubby at all. They rested a little after noon,
-and Button and the Red Cross dog left Stubby behind a straw stack in a
-barnyard while they sneaked up to the house to see if they could not
-find something to eat and to carry back to Stubby.
-
-“Bow wow!” barked a big dog, jumping out at them from his kennel. “Who
-are you that comes prowling around here? Oh, I beg your pardon! I did
-not notice you wore the badge of a Red Cross dog or I should not have
-barked, for all Red Cross dogs are welcome in this place and the farmer
-and his family will do all they can for you. Just go up to the house
-and when they see you wear a Red Cross badge they will give you a hot
-supper and a soft bed to sleep on if you care to stay over night. I
-would go up to the house with you, but, as you see, I am chained. They
-will bring some dinner to me and I will share it with your friend here,
-the black cat.”
-
-“I am sure that is very kind of you,” replied Duke, the Red Cross dog.
-“Since you say the family here is kind to Red Cross dogs, I will walk
-boldly up to the house.”
-
-“You will find them all I say they are, for my master used to train
-dogs to be police dogs, and he sold them to the police in Paris. Then
-when the war began he trained them for Red Cross work. But all his
-dogs are sold now or gone to war. He was such a good trainer that he
-got very high prices for his dogs. I should not wonder but that you may
-have met some of the dogs trained by him if you have been at the front
-lately, as many of them are in active service there now.”
-
-“Your master’s name could not possibly be Jean Baptiste Frère, could
-it?”
-
-“That is just what it is!”
-
-“Well, well, well! I declare! That is too queer! My chum was trained
-by him and lots of the dogs I know. My chum’s name is Sharp Ears, or
-rather that is what the Red Cross people call him, for he seems to be
-able to hear things long before any one else can detect the slightest
-noise. For that reason he is kept on police duty with the sentinels
-that have to tramp up and down, up and down in the deep woods on guard
-all night. He will hear or scent an enemy long before he comes in
-sight, and he always gives warning by pricking up his ears and looking
-straight into the sentry’s face, but he never barks to betray the
-sentry to the enemy. Then he turns his face in the direction from which
-the sound comes. If it is one of our soldiers, he will keep perfectly
-still. If it is a German, Austrian or any of the enemy soldiers, he
-will give a scarcely audible growl. He has saved many a sentry’s life
-by warning him in this way that some one was coming.”
-
-“How can he tell whether it is an enemy or a friend coming when he
-can’t see them?”
-
-“I asked him that very question, and he said he can always tell a
-German by the scent as they smell like pigs, and that he had never made
-a mistake yet.”
-
-“I did not know before that the German soldiers have an odor peculiarly
-their own.”
-
-“Nor I until he told me! Here they come with my dinner now, and as they
-don’t like cats very well, I think your friend better hide in my dog
-house. I will stand before the door so they can’t see inside.”
-
-“Hello, Towser!” called out the farmer when he saw Duke. “I see you
-have company and most distinguished company at that. Come here and let
-me see by your badge to what regiment you belong.”
-
-Duke went up to the farmer who had a very strong but kindly face and
-allowed him to read what was engraved on the tag that dangled from his
-collar.
-
-“Why, bless my soul! You are from the same regiment that my son is in
-and also the one that owns my best trained dog. Oh, if you could only
-talk and tell me how they are faring out on that battlefront!” And he
-gave a deep sigh. So did Duke for he too wished he could talk and tell
-the farmer of some of the noble, brave deeds his son had performed and
-also some of the clever, smart things his dog had done.
-
-“Come with me up to the house and I will give you a dinner that will
-make your sides stick out and ready to split,” which he certainly did.
-Duke ate and ate and still he could not see the bottom of his plate.
-There was fried chicken, with mashed potatoes and gravy fit for a king
-to eat. He ate all he possibly could for he knew it would be a long
-time before he ever was offered such a dinner again. But all the time
-he ate he kept thinking of how Stubby would enjoy the big chicken leg
-he was going to carry to him in his mouth when the farmer left him and
-he could slip away. He was just wondering how he was going to get away
-from the farmer when some one in the house called him to say that he
-was wanted on the telephone.
-
-He had not disappeared inside the door when Duke picked up the chicken
-leg and ran with it to Stubby, and as he rounded the stack from one
-side Button did from the other with a second drumstick in his mouth. So
-you see Stubby fared pretty well.
-
-“Those people seem to be very kind,” said Stubby, “and I guess it will
-be a good while before we meet any one their equal again.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-BUTTON MAKES THE FARMER FIGHTING MAD
-
-
-Stubby was nibbling on his chicken leg with Duke and Button nearly half
-asleep when they were all startled by the farmer coming round the straw
-stack unexpectedly. But if they were surprised, the farmer was more
-so. To come unexpectedly upon two stray dogs and a black cat and one
-of those dogs the Red Cross dog he had just been feeding was enough to
-surprise any one.
-
-“Well, well, well! Where did you all come from, I should like to know?
-And if here isn’t another Red Cross dog! But no, I am mistaken. You are
-a cat, but a cat with a regimental tag around your neck. Come here,
-little dog, and let me read what your tag says,” but when Stubby got
-up and tried to limp to him, the farmer saw that his leg was hurt, so
-he went to him and taking him in his arms, he felt of the injured leg
-and found it had been broken. As he had set many broken legs for dogs,
-he knew what to do for Stubby and he said, “You two follow me. I am
-going to take this little dog to my office and rub his leg with some
-strengthening liniment I have which will make it heal quicker. And I am
-also going to give him a tonic to brace him up for I see he is very
-thin and weak.”
-
-Stubby licked the farmer’s hand to show how he appreciated all this
-kindness.
-
-When they reached the office, the farmer put his glasses on and read
-the tags on all their necks, and when he got through he called to his
-wife to come quickly, that he had made a wonderful discovery. “Just you
-read that, wife,” he said, after he had read Stubby’s tag once again.
-“This cat and dog are the long lost and much advertised mascots of two
-American regiments, which are offering large sums for their recovery.
-Bless me but this is lucky! For I was just needing some extra money to
-repair the roof of the house and to fix up the place.”
-
-“And I too. I need a new dress and bonnet badly,” said his wife.
-
-“We’ll just fix them comfortably here in the office for to-night,
-so there will be no danger of them getting away while I am making
-arrangements for returning them to their own regiments and collecting
-the reward money. A thousand dollars for each! To think that that cat
-is the celebrated black cat from the Black Cat Regiment, and the dog
-the yellow dog from the regiment called after him, the Yellow Dog
-Regiment!”
-
-The two dogs and Button looked at one another and either winked or
-rolled their eyes to let the others know that they were in a pretty
-fix and in danger of being carried back to the army. Then they all
-thought of Billy waiting on the outskirts of the town for them to come.
-
-“One thing,” thought Button, “he won’t wait long. If we don’t come
-along on the third day, he will come back to look for us for he will
-know that trouble has detained us. A day’s rest here with the excellent
-care the farmer is going to give Stubby and plenty of good food for us
-all will help us along on our journey more than anything else would,
-as we are all run down, first from our hard work in the front and then
-from our wounds.”
-
-Presently the farmer and his wife had them all fixed comfortably for
-the night, with Stubby on a nice soft sofa, and Duke and Button on old
-shawls and blankets in one of the corners of the room, and a dish of
-water for them to drink should they grow thirsty. As soon as the farmer
-and his wife left them alone they talked over their predicament, but
-all agreed it was for the best and soon they all fell asleep.
-
-For two days they stayed with the farmer and each morning and evening
-he rubbed Stubby’s leg and gave him a tonic. He fed Duke and Button up
-fine too until they were so fat they could scarcely run. All day long
-all they did was to eat and sleep, “getting in condition to travel
-fast,” said Button.
-
-The third day the farmer became very much excited when he read the
-mail for in it were two letters for him from the colonels of the
-regiments of which Stubby and Button were the mascots. They stated that
-they would give the reward to the person who delivered the dog and cat
-to them unhurt and in perfect health.
-
-“This certainly is fine news, wife, and you better go along with me so
-you can pick out your new dress and bonnet while we are in town, for
-their headquarters, where I am to deliver the dog and cat, are in a
-large town where there are plenty of big stores. We will start early
-to-morrow morning, about daylight, as it is a long ways and we want to
-reach these headquarters before noon so as to get our money and have
-the whole afternoon to shop.”
-
-Stubby heard all this as he lay on his end of the sofa pretending to be
-asleep. The minute the farmer and his wife left the room, he to get the
-automobile in shape for the trip in the morning, and his wife to lay
-out her best clothes, Stubby barked for Button and Duke to come in to
-share the news he had just heard.
-
-They both listened without interrupting until Stubby had finished, then
-Button said:
-
-“It is a good thing your leg has healed so you can walk on it and
-that you are feeling so strong and well, for if they mean to take us
-to headquarters to-morrow morning, we must manage to escape some time
-to-night.”
-
-“You are right,” replied Duke. “But why wait until night? It would be
-easier to escape some time this afternoon before we are shut in for the
-night. The farmer never seems to think we will try to run away until
-dark as he leaves us pretty much alone all day but at the first hint of
-darkness he shuts us in.”
-
-“That is all true. So let us wait and get a good dinner and then when
-he lies down to take his twenty winks of sleep, as he does every
-afternoon, we will skedaddle. His wife will be so busy getting her
-finery ready to wear to-morrow that she won’t have time even to look
-out of the window.”
-
-And so it was planned for them to push on to where Billy waited for
-them.
-
-It is a good thing that they decided to go when they did for Billy was
-getting terribly restless waiting for them, and was likely to get in
-mischief if they did not arrive soon.
-
-The three simply stuffed themselves at dinner time. And as they were
-finishing, Button said, “Isn’t it too bad we haven’t pockets in our
-skins so we could take some of this fine food along with us to eat when
-we can’t find anything along the roadside?”
-
-“It surely is,” said Stubby, “and I don’t see why we could not have had
-our tails so constructed that we could have hung packages on them like
-the opossums carry their young, hanging over their mother’s tail with
-all their little tails curled around hers to hold them on.”
-
-“You two do think of the most outlandish things I ever heard of,” said
-Duke. “Any one could tell you were from the United States of America.
-You are so clever and original. Now a European would be too staid and
-too conventional to think of a thing like that.”
-
-While they were talking, not one of them had taken his eyes off the
-farmer who had been lying on the sofa to take his nap. But to-day he
-was slower than ever in dropping off to sleep, due, I suppose, to the
-excitement of the reward he was thinking of getting. But presently
-habit was too much for him and he fell fast asleep. At the first snore
-he made the three chums crept out of the office and sneaked away toward
-the garden. One by one they squeezed themselves through a hole under
-the fence and came out in the garden, right under the noses of the
-farmer’s wife and son who were picking raspberries.
-
-“Why, what are you doing here? Trying to escape us?” and with that the
-woman stooped and grabbed Stubby up in her arms while her son grasped
-Duke, but Button escaped them.
-
-“You naughty, naughty dogs and cat to try to run away from us when we
-have been so good to you!” Then she turned to her son and said, “I
-think they heard your father and me talking of taking them back to the
-army and probably they don’t want to go back, and that is why they were
-trying to run away.”
-
-“Bet you that is it!” replied the son. “They are so smart they can
-understand every word that is said.”
-
-“I told your father not to trust them out alone, but he said he was
-feeding them so well that they would not try to run away. It is a good
-thing that I decided to pick those raspberries to take to your Aunt
-to-morrow, or we would not have caught them. And then I hate to think
-of how it would have affected your father.”
-
-When they reached the office, the farmer was still asleep and from the
-smile on his face he was probably dreaming he was buying things with
-the reward money. Just as they opened the door he called out, “Thieves!
-Thieves!” and jumped up from the sofa. He was dreaming that some
-thieves had stolen his pocketbook. “Why, what are you doing here with
-the dogs in your arms? They haven’t been hurt, have they?” he asked at
-last.
-
-“No; worse than that. We caught them trying to run away,” said his wife.
-
-“You don’t say so! That would have been a calamity.”
-
-And then his wife explained to him how she and her son had caught
-Stubby and Duke.
-
-“But the worst of it is that black cat is still loose. Still I don’t
-think he will run away and leave the two dogs behind.”
-
-“Neither do I, but we won’t take any chances. Come and see if we can’t
-catch him. We’ll lock the two dogs in and then see if the three of us
-can’t catch the cat. Where did you leave him?”
-
-“Up a tree beside the garden gate.”
-
-“I’ll get a nice piece of meat and see if I can’t coax him down,” said
-the farmer. So while he went for the meat his wife and his son went to
-the tree where they had left Button. But alas! alack! when they got
-there he was gone and nowhere in sight though they searched everywhere
-for him and called, “Kitty! Kitty! Kitty! Pussy! Pussy! Pussy!”
-
-The farmer was nearly crazy to think that with the cat gone he would
-lose half of the reward he had been counting on so much.
-
-“We must find him, I tell you!” and he began to scold his wife and son
-as if it was their fault that the cat was gone. At last his wife grew
-angry and said:
-
-“Shut up! I have heard enough of your complaining. If it had not been
-for me, they both would have been gone for good. Why, I told you to
-keep them under lock and key; that they were too valuable to let run
-loose. But you go accusing us of losing them, while you sleep and let
-them sneak off. Don’t you suppose I want a new dress and bonnet with
-that reward money as much as you want to spend it on fixing up the
-place?”
-
-This was good logic, so the farmer stopped his scolding. In the first
-place he knew it was not her fault but like some men he tried to lay
-everything that went wrong on some one else. Whoever happened to be
-near at the time usually got the scolding.
-
-“Gee, how I hate a man who lays everything that goes wrong on his
-wife!” said Duke.
-
-Button had hid under some currant bushes and was having great fun
-watching them hunt for him. When supper time came they put his supper
-outside the kitchen door on a plate but left the door part way open,
-so they could open it quickly and grab him if he came to eat the food.
-But they waited in vain, for Button had seen the crack and knew what it
-meant.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“I am not very hungry, and I can wait for my supper until you go to
-sleep. You will have to go to bed,” he thought.
-
-At last the farmer could stand waiting no longer. He wanted to find
-that cat and lock him up so he could go to bed and be ready for an
-early start to headquarters in the morning. With no cat, there would be
-no use in going.
-
-“I have it!” he at last exclaimed to his wife. “I’ll go unchain Towser
-and get him to smell out the cat for me. That dog is a crackajack for
-finding cats. He hates them so--or most of them. This cat is the only
-one I ever saw him make friends with.”
-
-So Towser was unchained and set to looking for Button. He ran around
-and around, smelling everywhere and he barked up the tree that Button
-had climbed. But still he had not found the missing cat. At last he got
-the scent, but just before he got to him Button shot out from under the
-bushes and ran up a tree.
-
-“He has found him, found him!” called the farmer to his wife. The
-farmer had been close on Towser’s heels all the time, a bag in his
-hand. He had intended to put the cat in it when Towser caught him by
-the nape of his neck as he did most cats. But Button was too quick for
-them. He was up a tree before they could wink. The next thing was to
-get him down. The farmer, his wife and son coaxed and coaxed Button to
-come down but he just sat on a limb and blinked at them.
-
-“Climb the tree and see if you can’t catch him,” said the farmer to his
-son.
-
-[Illustration: One thing Billy butted was a basket full of clothes.
- (Page 67)]
-
-This the boy did, and Button let him come within reaching distance of
-him. Then he climbed a little higher up the tree. This kept on until
-he was away up in the topmost branches, and away out on a limb so thin
-that it would not bear the weight of the boy. When he saw this he took
-hold of the limb and tried to shake Button off by swinging the limb
-backwards and forwards with all his might. But he might just as well
-have tried to dislodge the bark itself as Button. He simply stuck his
-sharp claws down deeper into the tree and enjoyed the swinging of the
-branch.
-
-“Come down, Pierre!” called his mother. “We will try smoking him out.”
-
-Pierre climbed down and they all busily set about building a big smudge
-fire under the tree. As it was a still evening, with no wind, the smoke
-rose straight in the air to where Button sat, but by shutting his eyes
-he did not mind it much and he sat on. The smoke made the farmer, his
-wife and son sneeze and cough and their eyes smart and water. That was
-all the good their fire did, for when the fire at last died out and the
-smoke had cleared away, they looked up in the tree and there sat Button
-as composedly as ever.
-
-“Darn that cat!” exclaimed the farmer.
-
-“Father, you must not swear, and before our son at that.”
-
-“I can’t help it, for I am so mad at that cat I could kill him. And if
-he doesn’t come down pretty soon, I’ll shoot him and take his hide to
-headquarters.”
-
-“That would do no good, for they say in their letter the reward will
-only be given if the dog and cat are alive and well,” replied his wife.
-
-“Well, what next can we do to get him down? I am at the end of my
-string of suggestions.”
-
-The three sat down under the tree, their heads on their hands and
-elbows on knees, to try to think of some way to capture Button. After
-sitting there for about ten minutes, the son exclaimed, “I have it! I
-know how we can get him down and not hurt him in the least.”
-
-“Let’s hear your plan, quick!” said the father.
-
-“I’ll go up and saw off the limb he is sitting on, while you and mother
-hold a net under the limb. Then when it falls, the cat and limb will
-fall in the net and the cat won’t be hurt.”
-
-“An excellent idea, my son,” commended his mother.
-
-“But where are we going to get the net?” asked his father.
-
-“We can use my tennis net.”
-
-“Run and get it while I go for a saw and, mother, you stay here to keep
-him from escaping while we are away,” said the father.
-
-Presently the father and son were back with the saw and the net. The
-boy climbed the tree, while the father and mother stood under the limb,
-waiting to catch Button when the limb should be sawed off. Button never
-stirred while the boy sawed the limb, for he had made up his mind what
-he was going to do when the limb fell into the net. This it did in
-about two minutes. The branch had scarcely touched the net when Button
-with a bound ran up the side of the net, jumped to the ground and ran
-up the next tree. And could you have looked into the faces of those
-three people, you would have said you never had looked into three more
-disappointed ones in your life.
-
-“That cat is possessed of the devil!” said the father.
-
-“I truly believe he is!” said the mother.
-
-“Well, gosh darn his skin, I say!” exclaimed their son.
-
-“I have another idea,” said the father. “You go get your fish net and
-then you can climb the tree he is now in, and throw it over his head,
-and we will have him.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The boy went after his round net on a long pole, climbed the tree and
-threw it over Button’s head, but just as it came down Button gave a
-leap for the next tree which was six feet away and lit on a limb as
-nicely as if he had been a flying squirrel and used to jumping from
-tree to tree all his life.
-
-“Well, that cat surely beats the devil! He can stay in that tree for
-all of me! I shan’t try to catch him any more. But I’ll just go and get
-some sleep, and in the morning we will go to town and get the reward
-for the little dog and say nothing about ever having seen the cat. Then
-when we come back, if he is still seen around the premises we will try
-some other plans to capture him.”
-
-When they had all three gone to bed, Button came down out of the tree
-and ate the supper they had put out for him early in the evening. After
-finishing it he went over to the office and jumping up on the window
-sill he talked to Stubby and Duke through the window and told them how
-he had been having some fun with the family.
-
-“Don’t worry, boys! You will be able to give him the slip as he takes
-you to town. And if you don’t, you can get away in a few days. I will
-go on and tell Billy what has happened and then the two of us will come
-back and help you escape.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE CHUMS ON A CANAL BOAT
-
-
-“No need to go for Billy or to tell him what has happened,” said a
-voice behind Button, “for I have heard it all.” Turning around, Button
-saw Billy standing under the window.
-
-“Billy!” the three exclaimed in one breath. “Where did you come from?”
-
-“The town where I was to meet you. I waited and waited and at last made
-up my mind that something must have happened to you, so I went back to
-the hospital, or at least I got nearly there last night when I saw ten
-or fifteen aeroplanes circling over the hospital. I made out that half
-were German planes and half American. The Germans evidently were trying
-to blow up the hospital by dropping bombs on it, and the Americans were
-trying to fight them off. As I looked, I heard a terrible explosion and
-by the light of the fire that followed I saw a big building go up in
-smoke and flames, and as I watched I saw distinctly two human figures
-outlined on the sky, flying up in the air with the débris. But when
-the smoke cleared away, I saw that the hospital still stood there and
-that it was the big barn they had blown up. So the two figures I saw
-must have been those of the two spies who were going to try to bomb the
-hospital--those whose eyes you scratched out, Button. So you see they
-got their just deserts and were blown up themselves just as they had
-planned to blow up others. I was so thankful to see that it was the
-barn instead of the hospital that I ran straight on regardless of bombs
-dropping all around me. All I thought of was to see if Stubby was still
-in the hospital, and trying to save him, but before I reached there
-the American aeroplanes had driven off the Germans, and I saw three of
-their machines lying in wrecks on the ground, the work of the Americans.
-
-“I went on to the hospital, and ran straight to Stubby’s ward to see if
-he was there, well knowing that in the confusion nobody would molest
-me. I passed the cook on the stairs and he was so excited and scared he
-did not pay the slightest attention to me. When I reached your ward,
-Stubby, I found your bed empty so took it for granted that you had
-started to meet me and that I had missed you somewhere on the road. So
-I started back, stopping at every farm I passed to look the place over
-to see if I could hear or see anything of any of you. A rooster at the
-next farm told me he had seen two dogs and a black cat pass their place
-at sunrise five days ago. Then I knew that you were either prisoners
-somewhere or I had passed you on your way to meet me. Now tell me how
-it happens that you two dogs are locked in and Button still running
-outside.”
-
-Between them they told Billy all that had happened since he left them,
-ending by relating how they were to be carried to headquarters early
-the next morning.
-
-“Well, I guess not! Not if my name is Billy Whiskers will you two stay
-prisoners another minute. I’ll just hook the glass out of this window
-and you two can crawl out and then we will make a merry chase for the
-next village.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Billy did this, and as they passed the house, the soft-hearted Stubby
-said to the farmer and his wife, “I am sorry to make you lose your
-reward for my capture, as you have been very good to all of us. But
-even for you I can’t be a prisoner just so you can get some money by
-delivering me to headquarters. So _au revoir_, old friends!”
-
-“Good-by,” meowed Button. “And may you have better luck the next time
-you try to catch a black cat! Had you only remembered that black cats
-are said to bring bad luck, you would not have wasted so much valuable
-time in trying to capture me.”
-
-“And many, many thanks for the good meals you gave us,” barked Duke.
-Then the four passed on into the darkness and were lost to the farmer
-forever.
-
-“I think the best thing we can do,” said Billy, “is to push on to Paris
-just as fast as we can, and that won’t be very rapidly, as we shall
-have to travel by night most of the time and lie hidden in the daytime,
-since there are so many looking for us who are sparing no expense in
-advertising and searching for us. We are like regular escaped prisoners
-with a price on our heads.”
-
-“The nearer we get to Paris,” said Duke, “the harder it will be to keep
-hidden, for the country is very thickly populated for miles and miles
-outside the city. But an idea just flashed across my mind that, if
-carried out, would get us inside Paris without much trouble.”
-
-“What is it?” asked Billy.
-
-“It is this: that we enter Paris by boat instead of on foot.”
-
-“And how can we do that?” inquired Stubby.
-
-“I’ll tell you. We will go to the banks of the river Seine, about five
-miles out of Paris, and try to get on one of the flat canal boats that
-run right into the heart of the city, and we might be lucky enough to
-get on a boat that would pass right through Paris and continue on to
-the sea, where we could embark for America, as the river empties into
-the sea at a very large shipping port called the city of Havre. From
-this port there are big merchant ships sailing to all parts of the
-world, and we would get on one bound for America. If we could only
-accomplish this it would save us all that long, tiresome walk of about
-one hundred and twenty-five miles.”
-
-“Gee!” exclaimed Button. “Your plans sound good to me! Saving a hundred
-and twenty-five mile walk, dodging people, bad boys and troublesome
-dogs, is worth trying.”
-
-“I should think it did sound good!” said Billy, “and I feel quite
-sure we can carry it out, for Stubby, Button and I have had lots of
-experience sneaking on ocean-going vessels, steamers, and so on. We
-have stolen on board a vessel going from Japan to America, and on still
-another sailing from Boston for Constantinople, and another plying up
-and down the Mississippi River, with others too numerous to mention. So
-I guess we can manage to get aboard a slow going canal boat.”
-
-“Of course we can!” said Stubby. “I feel like thanking you for thinking
-of such a plan. It is such a good one for us all but more especially
-for me with my lame leg.”
-
-“About how far do you think we are from Paris now?”
-
-“I should say fully twenty-five miles. But only about seven from the
-river if we take a straight line to the east until we come to it.”
-
-“Then me for the straight line to the river!” declared Billy.
-
-“Same here!” said Button.
-
-“And I follow wherever you lead,” avowed Stubby.
-
-The four made such good time that by daybreak they were in sight of the
-river, catching their first glimpse of it from the top of a high hill.
-
-And joy! they saw straight ahead of them a small town at whose dock
-lay a long white-and-green boat with a flat top. It was so early in
-the morning that no one was astir in the town when they reached it, so
-they were not molested as they ran through it straight for the boat.
-When they came close to the dock they proceeded more cautiously and hid
-behind boxes and barrels until they could find out what kind of people
-were on the boat. But no one appearing and the dock being deserted at
-this time of the morning, they decided to chance finding nice people
-on board, and crept on deck. This they did easily as the owner had
-neglected to pull in his gangplank before he went to bed.
-
-“It looks as if our good angel was with us and it was intended we were
-to make this trip in this way,” remarked Stubby.
-
-“Now we must all secrete ourselves and keep hid until the boat is
-loaded and pushed off shore. Then they will have to take us with them
-until they reach the next stopping place, and if the worst comes to the
-worst we can jump overboard and swim, for it is not far to shore and
-the boat is not high above the water line.”
-
-Billy secreted himself behind a pile of bags filled with hops, while
-Stubby and Button climbed on top of them and hid themselves between two
-of the top bags, and Duke squeezed himself under them in a hole made
-by two of the bags which had not been packed closely. So by the time
-the sun was well up and the people began to arise, they were all stowed
-away as comfortably as could be.
-
-The first person on deck proved to be a big, comfortable looking fat
-man, followed by his grandson, a little fellow with curly, flaxen hair
-and big, blue eyes, whom it was easy to see the grandfather fairly
-worshiped.
-
-Then three men came up from below and began fussing around on deck.
-About this time the delicious odor of boiling coffee, fried potatoes
-and bacon was wafted up the hatchway.
-
-“Gee! The fumes from that cooking make me hungry as a bear!” said
-Button.
-
-“Me too!” agreed Stubby.
-
-“And it reminds me that none of us has had a bite to eat for hours. We
-were so busy getting away from our pursuers that we forgot to stop to
-look for something to eat,” said Duke.
-
-“That may smell good to you fellows, but that white clover beside the
-dock, with the dew still on it, smells better to me. And when they go
-in to breakfast, if they still keep that gangplank out, I am going to
-come out of this hiding place, skip ashore and eat a mouthful or two
-before any of the people on board are through their meal and come up on
-deck again,” said Billy.
-
-“You are lucky that you can live on grass and green things,” replied
-Duke. “I wish _I_ could.”
-
-“That is the only trouble dogs and cats have when traveling,” said
-Stubby; “this matter of food. One has to steal it, or eat it raw, and
-run the risk of being clubbed or stoned unless he falls in with some
-one who is kind to animals and doesn’t think it is too much trouble to
-feed and water them.”
-
-“Most people seem to forget that animals have to eat and drink the same
-as human beings. They know better, but they just do not think,” said
-Button.
-
-Billy did as he had planned and slipped off the boat and made a hearty
-breakfast of clover and took a good drink of water out of the river.
-Then he was fixed for the day if need be.
-
-“Mew! Mew! Mew!”
-
-“Hark! I hear a cat mewing!” whispered Button to Stubby who were close
-together upon the pile of hops.
-
-“I see her,” said Stubby. “It is only a little kitten. Sh-sh-sh! Here
-comes a woman up from below with a plate of food for the kitten.”
-
-“Kitty! Kitty! Kitty!” called the woman, looking around for the cat and
-paying no attention to the mewing kitten at her feet.
-
-“Evidently she is looking for the mother of the kitten,” whispered
-Button.
-
-As they watched, they saw a big yellow cat jump out from a pile of rope
-up near the prow of the boat and walk lazily toward her. A black and
-white spotted cat also came running from the opposite side of the deck.
-
-“They seem to have a whole family on board,” remarked Stubby.
-
-When the woman saw them coming, she set down a heaping plate of food
-for them and said, “Well, lazybones,” addressing the yellow cat, “did
-you catch that big wharf rat I saw run on board last night? If you did
-not, you better hustle and get him if you want any more to eat from
-me. I am not going to feed you anything until that rat is killed. Do
-you hear me? Old Mouser has been doing all the work lately in catching
-the rats and mice, and it is time you did something, for we want no
-free lazy passengers on this boat. Baby,” addressing the kitten, “stop
-crying and mewing around my heels. If you are hungry, eat something
-on the plate. Oh, I forgot, you are too young to care for meat and
-potatoes. Come with me and I will get you some milk to drink,” and she
-picked up the kitten and went below.
-
-The cats were evidently not very hungry, for they scarcely touched the
-food on the plate, but walked off and left it, the spotted cat going
-down the hatchway and the yellow cat back to the pile of rope up front.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Now is our chance, Stubby,” whispered Button, “before any one comes up
-from breakfast!”
-
-The two of them climbed down from the hops and made a good meal of what
-the cats had left, as the woman had brought up a plate heaping full.
-
-“Tell you what, that tasted good!” said Button.
-
-“Indeed it did!” replied Stubby. “I did not know I was so hungry. But
-I was as thirsty as the very dickens. I hate to chance going off the
-boat for a drink, but I’ve simply got to have water. I think I can
-chance it to run off and lap a few mouthsful before they come up and
-pull in the gangplank. I am going to try it anyway. Are you coming?”
-
-“No; cats drink very little water, and I do not feel the least bit
-thirsty now.”
-
-Stubby succeeded in getting his drink and was safely back on board
-before any one appeared. But he did not have a minute to spare as his
-short, stubby tail only just disappeared out of sight when all the men,
-including the Captain, came on deck. Then the Captain bawled out in his
-big voice for them to heave in the gangplank and cut loose. In less
-than fifteen minutes the old boat was out in the middle of the river,
-floating down toward Paris on the swift moving current.
-
-“Gee, it seems good to be in a safe place once more,” said Billy,
-“where one can sleep without keeping one eye open for fear of capture
-or of being blown sky high by a carelessly dropped German bomb. I am
-just going to sleep and sleep and sleep while on this trip and get good
-and rested.”
-
-“And I am going to do the same,” replied Duke.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-BUTTON HAS A FIGHT WITH A WHARF RAT
-
-
-All day long the four of them kept hidden. At noon Stubby, Duke and
-Button ate what the cats left, and Billy ran ashore and ate a little
-grass by the river bank, where the boat had tied up for noon.
-
-The Captain and his crew seemed in no hurry to get to Paris or anywhere
-else, for that matter. All they seemed to do was to eat, sleep, tell
-stories and smoke.
-
-It was getting to be about half past nine, and the dogs and Button
-were growing hungry for their supper which they could see on the plate
-by the gangway, but could not go to get it as the sailors were still
-lounging on deck talking and smoking.
-
-“Will they never stop their silly talk and go to bed?” sighed Button.
-
-He could not hear a word of what they said, but he called it silly
-because he was so cross at them for not going to bed. And as they
-talked, a big black wharf rat sneaked up behind them and began to help
-himself to the meat on the plate. It was too much for the hungry Button
-to lie there and see his supper or what he considered his, eaten up
-before his eyes by a nasty old rat. Forgetting that he might be caught
-by the sailors, he sneaked off the pile of hops and crept to within
-jumping distance of the rat. Then with one long flying leap, he landed
-on the rat’s back and buried his teeth in his neck and his claws in his
-sides. It was a powerful rat, as I said before, and gave fight. Soon
-the two of them were rolling around on the deck, with first one on top
-and then the other. The scuffle they made added to the squeal of the
-rat brought all the sailors to their feet and there they stood watching
-the fight and wondering where the big black cat came from.
-
-All of a sudden the rat let go of Button’s ear and buried its teeth
-in his neck, causing the blood to flow freely. On seeing this Stubby
-forgot all caution and came running to Button’s assistance.
-
-“Holy Moses! And where did this dog come from?” asked the Captain. “He
-must have dropped from the sky.”
-
-Stubby tried to grab the rat by the back of its neck as it clung to
-Button’s throat, but he could not as they kept rolling over and over
-each other so that first one was on top and then the other. At last in
-trying to stoop and get a grip he turned his broken leg the wrong way
-and the pain was so intense that he fainted dead away and the sailors
-thought he was dead. So did Duke, who was watching the struggle from
-the top of the hop pile with Billy. When they saw Stubby roll over and
-stretch out they both bounded off the hops and appeared on the scene.
-
-“Jumping Jupiter! What have we here? A menagerie?” exclaimed the
-Captain. The sailors all stared at Duke and Billy as if an elephant had
-appeared in their midst, while from the other end of the boat came the
-yellow cat and Mouser. And still the fight went on, with the Captain,
-three sailors, two cats, one dog and a goat watching, all having formed
-a ring around the fighters.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Billy saw that Button was growing weak from loss of blood and though
-he did not wish to interfere in Button’s fight, still he felt it best
-under the circumstances to do so. So he watched his chance and ran one
-long horn right through the rat, killing him instantly. Then with the
-rat still sticking to his horns, he walked to the side of the boat and
-scraped it off, and it fell into the water.
-
-This was such a smart thing for a goat to do that the Captain clapped
-his hands and cried, “Bravo! Bravo! Bravo!” in which all the sailors
-joined him. Their clapping and cheering brought the Captain’s wife on
-deck to see what all the commotion was about, and when she saw the
-strange animals on board, she said,
-
-“When did you buy this menagerie? I never laid eyes on them before.”
-
-“Nor any of us,” answered the Captain, “until two or three minutes
-ago,” and he related to her what had taken place.
-
-“This fight never would have happened if that lazy yellow cat of ours
-had done his duty and caught that rat.”
-
-“But if he had, none of us would ever have witnessed the most desperate
-bloody battle any of us ever saw between a cat and a rat.”
-
-“I wonder to whom these animals belong and when they came on board,”
-mused the Captain’s wife.
-
-“They must have come on board the night we forgot and left the
-gangplank out,” said the Captain.
-
-“That is just when it must have happened,” agreed the sailors.
-
-“They probably belong to some one person as they are all together, and
-I should judge from their appearance that they are very valuable. See,”
-said the Captain’s wife, “they all have medals around their necks, and
-one dog wears a Red Cross badge sewed on his body.”
-
-The Captain stooped down in front of Billy and began to read what was
-on his badge.
-
-“Wife, come here! Come here!” he called in excited tones. “What do you
-think I find engraved on this badge? This goat is the celebrated Billy
-Whiskers, the Mascot of the --th New York Regiment!”
-
-“You don’t mean it? Not the goat that the big reward is offered for?
-You don’t mean _that_, do you?”
-
-“Yes, I do! The very same!”
-
-“And this little dog and the black cat are mascots, too, other
-regiments offering a big reward for their return. I read about these
-very animals in one of the Paris papers this morning. I’ll go get the
-paper and read it to you,” she said.
-
-In a jiffy she disappeared inside the boat but came out again, waving
-the paper. “Here it is! Now listen while I read to you all what it says:
-
- LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN
-
- One large white goat, belonging to the --th Regiment of New York
-
- One small yellow dog, belonging to the --th Regiment of Pennsylvania
-
- One big black cat, belonging to the --th Regiment of Illinois.
-
- Any person or persons returning the same to their respective
- Headquarters will receive $1,000 reward for each animal alive and
- well.”
-
-She jumped up and went springing and dancing around the deck.
-
-“Here we have all three of them right here on our boat! Ho for the
-reward! I see where we get it when we return from this trip. We will
-take the best of care of them, but keep them hidden from others until
-our return trip. Then we will take them to Headquarters and claim the
-reward.”
-
-“Well, you won’t get any reward for either the cat or the dog if you
-don’t fix up the wounds where that rat bit them, for they are losing so
-much blood it will kill them,” said the Captain.
-
-“Here, some of you give me a hand and help me dress their wounds,” said
-the Captain’s wife, who was as good as any trained nurse when it came
-to dressing wounds and looking after the sick. “I’ll go ahead and get
-warm water, witch hazel and bandages ready, while you carry them down
-to my stateroom and lay them on the bunk.”
-
-When Stubby came out of his fainting spell, he found himself lying
-on a bunk beside Button, who had a bandage wrapped around his neck,
-and smelling strong of witch hazel, besides having several crosses of
-adhesive plaster on his sides and on the tip of his nose.
-
-“How did we get here and what has happened to us?” he asked.
-
-“What a fool thing for me to faint just when you needed me most!” said
-Stubby.
-
-“How did you happen to do it?” asked Button.
-
-“I turned my broken leg the wrong way, and over I went.”
-
-“But who helped you in the end? Did some of those men come to your
-rescue? I should think they would have helped you before and not stood
-there and see that monster rat biting you with its poisonous teeth.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“No, Billy came to my help as usual. He forgot he was in hiding and
-jumped in and ran his horn straight through the rat, which made it
-let go my throat, as he had killed it instantly. I never met such a
-big rat before or one with such long, sharp teeth. When it cried, its
-voice sounded like a baby’s. I shall be all right soon as the Captain’s
-wife has fixed me up fine so the poison from the rat’s teeth won’t
-hurt me. As it turned out, this fight was the best thing that could
-have happened, for since they read our medals, every one is as keen on
-keeping us on board as we are in staying. They have found out who we
-are, and are now looking out for the reward. But they intend to take us
-along with them to the coast and on their return will hand us over to
-our respective regiments and claim the money.”
-
-“How did they know there is a reward offered for us?”
-
-“Why, the Captain’s wife had just finished reading about us in one of
-the Paris papers.”
-
-“We certainly are in luck! Here we shall have the best of care and get
-clear through to Havre without walking one step. And when there we can
-give them the slip as we did the farmer and his wife.”
-
-“I know; but it does seem a shame that we always have to run off and
-appear so ungrateful to our kind friends, doesn’t it?” said Stubby.
-
-“Yes, it does; but it really can’t be helped,” replied Button. “Where
-are Billy and Duke now?”
-
-“Oh, they are having the time of their lives being petted and fed by
-all on board. You see we will fare like princes for the rest of our
-journey.”
-
-Button was right. Nothing was too good for them and the way they were
-fed, watered, combed and brushed would have satisfied a king.
-
-“My, don’t they all look fat, sleek and shiny!” said the Captain’s wife
-after they had bathed and curried all four of them. She had taken off
-the dirty bandage that was around Duke’s body and put on a nice clean
-white one with a lovely Red Cross embroidered on it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-A DOG CEMETERY IN PARIS
-
-
-The rest of the journey to Paris was quite uneventful. They arrived
-there one evening just as the sun was setting behind the city, throwing
-the Eiffel Tower and the big square dome of Notre Dame in bold relief
-against the deep red sky.
-
-Just on the outskirts of the city they came to an island on which was a
-good-sized cemetery.
-
-“What a nice place for a cemetery!” exclaimed Stubby.
-
-“There seem to be a good many people buried there from all the
-monuments I can count,” said Billy.
-
-“You may count the monuments and walk or drive down the broad paved
-roads and walks but you will never pass one grave where a human being
-is buried,” said Duke.
-
-“You are joking!” said Button. “What do you mean? That there is no one
-buried there now and that all the bodies have been removed? Bet I hear
-men chiseling monuments at this minute and soon can see them at work in
-their shops.”
-
-“True again. But for all that there is not a human being buried there,
-for it is a dog cemetery where only pet dogs are buried.”
-
-“Well, wouldn’t that beat the Dutch!” exclaimed Billy. “A regular
-cemetery with flowers on the graves and flower-bordered walks and
-fenced-in lots and monuments just like people have! It certainly does
-take the French to think of odd things!”
-
-“Why shouldn’t pet dogs have a nice resting place?” inquired Duke.
-“They are man’s companions and guard and watch over him as if they were
-human. Yes, and they are more faithful than the dearest human friends,
-for they stick when adversity overtakes one, when often a human friend
-one has counted on proves false. But never a dog! There is one monument
-there that has this inscription on it in French, but I will translate
-it for you into English. It reads: ‘The more I see of men, the more I
-love dogs.’ Pretty hard on his friends, wasn’t he?”
-
-“I bet some one he loved played him false, don’t you?”
-
-“It would seem like it from that inscription,” answered Billy.
-
-“But hush! I hear a bell tolling,” said Button.
-
-“Yes, they toll the bell when a funeral enters the gate just as they do
-in all cemeteries,” explained Duke.
-
-“Look, fellows!” said Stubby. “There comes a little white hearse just
-like the ones they use to take babies to the cemetery, and see the
-autos that are following! Why, it is a regular funeral, with a wreath
-of flowers on the casket and everything else complete!”
-
-“Certainly! Everything is done just as it is in a cemetery for people
-and not one thing is left out,” replied Duke. “If you should walk
-through, you would see on some of the graves the playthings the dogs
-liked when alive.”
-
-“Really?” said Stubby in amazement.
-
-“Yes, really!” replied Duke. “I had hoped to be buried there myself
-some day, but now I expect my grave will be a shell hole on the field
-of battle.”
-
-“Oh, no, it won’t now since you are going to America with us.”
-
-“Over there your grave will probably be made under a rose bush or in
-some nice quiet orchard or back yard of the family with whom you live,”
-said Billy.
-
-While they had been talking, the boat drifted away past the cemetery
-and they were getting near Paris. They had just fixed themselves
-comfortably on deck to enjoy the approach to the city and watch the
-people on the banks and wharfs as the boat floated by when the Captain
-appeared and said,
-
-“Sorry to disturb you, fellows, but it is necessary that we shut you
-below while we are in the city. If we don’t, some one may see you who
-has read the papers offering a reward for you and they would come
-aboard and take you off.”
-
-“Oh, bother that old reward!” from Billy. “I don’t want to be shut in
-out of the air in that stuffy cabin. I want to be out here where I can
-stretch my legs and breathe good fresh air.”
-
-Just the same, Billy with the others was shut in a stuffy little cabin
-scarcely large enough to hold them. There the four of them fretted and
-grumbled and pouted, but to no purpose.
-
-They had been there about two hours when they felt the boat scrape
-along the side of a dock, and they found their porthole looked out on
-the wharf side of the boat. Button soon took advantage of his powers of
-climbing and sat in the porthole, from which place he could look out
-and tell the others what he saw.
-
-The boat had come to dock right opposite the Eiffel Tower and on that
-side of the river. By sticking his head out of the hole he could also
-see the big Hippodrome with its grassy lawn and flower beds and benches
-for tired pedestrians to rest on.
-
-“Gee!” exclaimed Billy, “but I would like to get out of this and kick
-my legs on that lawn and eat some of the grass, for I am awfully tired
-of the food on this boat. It is all right for people, cats and dogs,
-but rather dry for goats.”
-
-The next morning the Captain appeared at their door and said, “Now,
-Chums, here is a good breakfast for you, and a drink of water. Awfully
-sorry to shut you in, but I have to under the circumstances. Ta-ta
-until night! We are going up into the city to do some shopping, but
-One-Eyed Dick is going to stay aboard to look after things. Again
-ta-ta!” and he slammed the door and was gone.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Drat him!” exclaimed Billy. “I want to go walking in the park!”
-
-The four ate their breakfast in silence, then lay down to sulk the
-day away, when all of a sudden Button jumped up and climbed into the
-porthole again.
-
-“Heigho, fellows! The way this boat lies now I can jump from this
-porthole onto the dock. And if I don’t leap as far as I mean to do, I
-will only fall back on deck and not go into the river. I am going to
-try it anyway. So here goes!”
-
-With a long, flying leap he made it, landing right in front of a dog
-that chanced to be wandering along the dock just then. The dog made a
-bound for Button. But Button, contrary to the ways of most cats, stood
-his ground instead of running and before the dog knew what had happened
-to him, Button had slapped his face and scratched his nose, leaving a
-long, red mark down its length, and had disappeared up the path leading
-to the park.
-
-“I heard Button spit as if he were mad, and then a dog barked,” said
-Stubby. “I bet he met a dog.”
-
-“I know what we can do,” said Billy. “I can stand under the porthole
-and then, Duke, you and Stubby can get on my back and jump through the
-porthole. I am quite sure I am high enough so you can make the jump.”
-
-“But what good will it do even if we can reach the hole? We don’t want
-to go ashore and leave you here alone.”
-
-“That is just like you, Stubby, to spoil your whole day to stay with
-a friend that can’t get out. You are too generous. I shan’t let you
-sacrifice yourself like that for me. You and Duke go, and then you can
-come back and tell me what you saw. If you stay, I have to stay just
-the same, and lose the fun of hearing what you fellows do ashore. So
-jump up on my back and let’s see if you can make the hole.”
-
-Stubby demurred, and so did Duke, but Billy at last prevailed on them
-to go.
-
-[Illustration: The first thing Billy knew, he was rolling over
-something soft that squealed like a stuck pig and that kicked like a
-calf. (Page 155)]
-
-Stubby made the hole and landed on the wharf all right, but Duke was
-large and the first jump he made he hit his head and fell back into the
-cabin. He was so fat he made a tight squeeze for the hole but on the
-second trial he made it. Then he attempted to push and squeeze himself
-through the hole. To do this he had to go head first, which made him
-fall on the deck on his nose. But it did not hurt much and no one saw
-him. He barked back to Billy that he was all right and was going to run
-up into the city and visit some of his old haunts.
-
-“I’ll steal a bunch of carrots for you from some vegetable stand,” he
-barked back.
-
-Billy fussed and fussed and kicked around until the cabin looked as
-if a whole drove of kicking mules had been shut in it. Then all of a
-sudden he stopped and said to himself,
-
-“What a fool I am, kicking and butting things around here! Why don’t I
-butt down that old door? It will be easy to do and then I too can go up
-into the city.”
-
-To think was to do with Billy. And crash! went the door and out through
-the wreck went Billy. When he arrived at the top of the hatchway he
-met One-Eyed Dick coming down to see what had caused all the noise. On
-seeing Billy, he tried to shut the hatchway to keep Billy in by sitting
-on it. But the next thing he knew the door was lifted up under him and
-he found himself slipping off. Before he could get to his feet Billy
-was out and off the boat, and that was the last he saw of Billy for
-that day.
-
-Duke had just reached the front door of his old home when who should
-come out of the house but his old master, the one who had taken him to
-war with him and made him a Red Cross dog.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Duke, you old sport, where have you been and how did you happen to
-turn up here just now when I was returning to the front and planning to
-stop at the dog hospital to get you?”
-
-His master picked him up in his arms and hugged and hugged him until
-Duke thought his ribs would be crushed in.
-
-“I am so glad you came for now I shall not have to go out of my way to
-get you. We are on the eve of a big battle and we will both be needed
-at the front.”
-
-“Here is where I give up going to America,” thought Duke. “But it is
-all for the best, for since I have seen my old master again and found
-how he loves me, I think it would have been a mean trick to desert him
-while he is in danger of his life every moment. But I _do_ wish I could
-have gone back first and said good-by to Billy, Stubby and Button. They
-are the three finest friends a dog ever had.”
-
-While Duke was thinking this, his master was carrying him to a big
-touring car and in a few seconds they were breaking the speed laws of
-the city.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-WHAT THE CHUMS DID IN PARIS
-
-
-As soon as Billy found himself on shore he ran as fast as ever he
-could up into the city to try to find a grocery store where he could
-get some fresh juicy vegetables or fruit. He was tired to death of dry
-hay, straw and carrots that had been fed to him on the boat, though the
-Captain thought he was giving Billy just what goats like best.
-
-Stubby and Button saw him disappearing down a side street and started
-to follow him.
-
-“How in the wide, wide world do you think he managed to get out of that
-cabin?” asked Stubby.
-
-“I am sure I don’t know,” answered Button, “for I am sure he could not
-possibly crawl through that porthole even if he could reach it. He is
-too big.”
-
-“You don’t suppose he butted down the cabin door, do you?” asked Stubby.
-
-“I should not wonder in the least if he did, and come to think of it,
-I bet that is just what he did do, for that is the only way he could
-possibly leave that cabin. Perhaps old One-Eyed Dick opened the door
-to give him a drink or to get something out of the cabin, and Billy
-butted him over and escaped. However, we will soon find out when we
-overtake him.”
-
-“But where is he? I don’t see him anywhere,” said Stubby.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-When Stubby and Button reached the side street down which they had seen
-Billy disappearing, no Billy was in sight. But as they stood there
-debating what had become of him, and wondering where they would look
-for him, they saw Billy run out of a fruit store with a big apple in
-his mouth, followed by an angry Frenchman madly jabbering and waving
-a broom over his head, with which he was trying to hit Billy. He was
-just about to bring it down on Billy’s back when Stubby ran between the
-man’s legs and tripped him. He got up with an oath and started to chase
-Stubby when Button ran in front of him and down he went again. He was
-so busy watching Billy and Stubby that he had not time to cast his eyes
-down to see what was under his feet or where he was stepping. This time
-he fell flat on his stomach, which knocked the breath out of him so he
-could not rise again and chase them. And he sat there trying to get his
-breath until he saw them turn a corner and disappear, though he had
-the fun of seeing a man knocked over as he himself had been by Billy
-running into him as he turned the corner. Billy did not see the man
-as his head was turned to see if the fruit dealer was still pursuing
-him. And when he looked ahead, he was surprised to find both Stubby and
-Button following him. He still had his head turned when he ran into a
-fat woman going the same way he was, a big basket of clean clothes on
-her head. The first thing Billy knew, he was rolling over something
-soft that squealed like a stuck pig and that kicked like a calf. He
-lost his own balance and rolled over in the gutter. All this commotion
-caused a crowd to gather around them in no time, and Stubby had to bark
-and growl and nip the heels of the people to make a clearing so Billy
-could get up. Soon the police were upon them, swinging their clubs and
-crying out in French for the crowd to make way and clear the street.
-
-The fat woman was crying and trying to gather up her wash which had
-spilled in all directions, and she was afraid the people would steal
-some of the pieces or step on the clean snow-white bosoms of the
-shirts.
-
-“Here, don’t you put your dirty hands on that shirt!” she called to a
-boy who was going to try to help her pick up her scattered things.
-
-“Police! Police! Stop that woman! She is trying to hide a lady’s skirt
-under her shawl!”
-
-Stubby felt sorry for the poor laundress and he watched to see if any
-of the crowd tried to steal her things.
-
-Presently a bootblack picked up a nice fine white dress shirt and
-attempted to hide it under his short jacket, but the shirt was too long
-to conceal even when folded, and when it unfolded a long white tail
-stuck out. A policeman made a grab for it but the boy dodged and ran
-down the street with the shirt dangling between his legs. When Stubby
-saw this, he started in pursuit and soon overtook the boy. He made a
-snap at the flying tail, caught it in his mouth, gave a jerk and the
-shirt slipped from the boy’s hold, wound itself round his leg and
-tripped him. The policeman coming up just then caught the boy and gave
-him two or three sharp raps with his club together with a kick and told
-him to go about his business while he carried the much prized shirt
-back to the laundress.
-
-“Thank you! Thank you, sir, for saving that shirt! It belongs to the
-man at the head of the Police Department and I’ll tell him how smart
-you are on your beat and get you promoted for helping a poor working
-woman out of her troubles,” and she wiped her eyes and began to count
-her pieces to see if they were all there.
-
-While the police was keeping the crowd from bothering her, the three
-Chums sneaked away and decided to return to the boat for they did not
-want to be left in Paris. Their destination was Havre for the present
-and America next.
-
-About six o’clock when the Captain, his wife and the sailors came back
-to the boat, they found Billy, Stubby and Button all lying out on deck
-enjoying themselves.
-
-“Look, will you?” exclaimed the Captain. “There are those animals I
-locked in the cabin quietly lying on deck. One-Eyed Dick must have let
-them out. I’ll fix _him_ for disobeying orders!”
-
-But when he came aboard there was no One-Eyed Dick to be found.
-
-“So-ho! When we left, Dick must have decided to go too and while he was
-away these animals have broken out of the cabin.”
-
-While the Captain was talking, his wife had gone below to take a look
-at the cabin and find out if possible how they got out. She found,
-as you know, everything kicked and scratched to pieces and the door
-smashed to bits. She called to the Captain to come see what had
-happened. But just as he was leaving the deck he saw old One-Eyed Dick
-running toward the boat, all excitement.
-
-“What is up, Dick? And why are you running?”
-
-“Come quick! Come quick! I am on the track of the three of them!”
-
-“Three what?” asked the Captain.
-
-“Why, the runaway animals! Don’t stop! Don’t stop to talk a moment or
-we will never catch them! I’ve been all day trying to get track of them
-and now I have, come quick or we will never lay eyes on them again!”
-
-“Are you crazy, man, wanting me to run find animals that are already
-found?”
-
-“What do you mean?” asked Dick.
-
-“Look over on the other side of the deck and you will see what I mean.”
-
-“Jupiter! How ever did they get here? And me following them from place
-to place only to be told they had just been seen turning a corner here
-and a corner there!”
-
-“But why did you let them out in the first place?”
-
-“_Me_ let them out? Why, bless your life, that big goat let _himself_
-out after breaking up the whole of the inside of our boat and butting
-the door down as if it had been made of paper and me off the hatchway
-as if I had been a bale of cotton. You don’t know that goat, you
-don’t!”
-
-“Come down here, I say, and see all the damage that goat did,” called
-the Captain’s wife again.
-
-“Well, thunder and lightning! He _did_ leave a pretty mess, didn’t he?”
-exclaimed the Captain when he saw what Billy had done.
-
-“Oh, Captain, come up! There is a man wants to see you,” called
-One-Eyed Dick down the hatchway.
-
-When the Captain went on deck, he saw standing talking to Dick a poorly
-dressed, shifty-eyed individual. “Well, my man, what can I do for you?”
-asked the Captain, but as he passed one of his sailors he said in a low
-voice to him, “Get those animals below as fast as you can, and keep
-them out of sight!”
-
-The sailor obeyed, and he got Stubby and Button down but when he came
-up for Billy he heard the man say,
-
-“I’ve come for me pets. And you need not try to hide them. I tracked
-’em here not half an hour ago and I been waitin’ for youse to come back
-as I didn’t like to take ’em without tellin’ ye that them belongs to
-me.”
-
-“You hear? Get off this boat or I’ll have Billy butt you over the
-Eiffel Tower! What do you mean by coming here and telling me such a
-cock and bull story as that?”
-
-“’Deed them _is_ my pets! And if you don’t give ’em up to me I’ll call
-me chum and prove it.”
-
-“Get off my boat, you stupid liar, or I’ll call the police!”
-
-“I’ll go get the police meself and have you arrested for holdin’ stolen
-goods!”
-
-“You will, will you? Well, here, on your way there you better take a
-bath in the river and wash up. They’ll be better pleased to see you
-after you have had a clean-up than the way you look now,” and with
-that the Captain walked over to the man, took him by the seat of his
-trousers and the collar of his coat and threw him overboard into the
-river. The fellow being a regular wharf rat swam ashore, swearing
-vengeance on the Captain, but he never showed up afterwards.
-
-“Well, that fellow displayed more cheek than I ever saw before,
-asking me to give up Billy, Stubby and Button on the strength of his
-saying they were his pets. But it goes to show that he had read the
-advertisements in the paper, and since others may have read them also,
-I guess we better pull up anchor and proceed on our way.”
-
-It was an hour after this when all were at supper but Dick, who was
-sitting whistling and braiding ropes, when a dapper young American
-orderly appeared at the gangplank and called out: “Hey, there! Have you
-seen a big white goat, a little yellow dog and a black cat around here
-any time to-day?”
-
-“No, sir; I haven’t laid me two eyes on them,” said Dick with a
-straight face, though his good eye did wink once or twice at the fib.
-“Why, sir? Have you lost them?”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“No, _I_ haven’t, but one of them belongs to my regiment and the other
-two to two other regiments. And we have been looking everywhere for
-them and advertising in all the papers. But every time we hear that
-they have been seen in a certain locality and go to get them, they are
-gone. And I just heard this afternoon that three animals answering to
-their description had been seen coming this way.”
-
-“Well, I have been here nearly all day, and I haven’t laid me two eyes
-on any goat, cat or dog.”
-
-No, to be sure he had not laid his _two_ eyes on them for he had but
-one eye with which to see.
-
-The young orderly went off, inquiring on every boat that lay along the
-dock if they had seen a goat, dog or cat anywhere around there that day.
-
-“Captain! Captain!” called Dick down the hatchway. “We have had another
-close call. A young orderly from the very regiment Billy belongs to was
-here inquiring for him and the other two.”
-
-“And what did you tell him?”
-
-“Just said, ‘No, I have not laid me two eyes on them.’”
-
-“Haw, haw, haw!” laughed the Captain. “You did well to turn him off in
-that way, even if it was half a lie. But it shows we must not tarry
-another minute here or the next thing we know they will be sending the
-police for them. Here, call the other sailors and let us heave to and
-be off.”
-
-And presently Billy said to Button, “We are moving! Thank goodness we
-have started on our homeward journey once more!”
-
-Nothing of interest happened on the rest of the trip to Havre except
-when a little bird flew on deck with a message for Billy from Duke.
-
-“Why, I did not even know he was gone!” exclaimed Billy. “I took it for
-granted he had returned to the boat when I was away, and was now asleep
-somewhere on it. What did you say he said, and where was he when he
-told you?”
-
-“He was in a big touring car, just leaving the outskirts of Paris. He
-was with his old master who is a celebrated surgeon at the front and
-they were both going back to his hospital. Duke told me to tell you
-that he was very sorry to leave you all without a chance to thank you
-for being so good to him and to say good-by. When he left the boat
-he had only intended to run up in the city and take a look at his
-old home, but when he got there who should he see coming out of the
-house but his old master, who was just going to get him at the dogs’
-hospital, where he thought Duke had been all this time. And Duke said
-to tell you that when he saw his old master again, all his love for him
-came back and he could not bear to leave him to run away to America.”
-
-“Well, if that doesn’t beat all!” exclaimed Button.
-
-“I think it is just as well he left us,” said Stubby, “for I am afraid
-he would not understand our free and easy life in America after living
-all his life with formal people.”
-
-“Guess you are right,” agreed Stubby and Billy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-BLOWN UP BY A SUBMARINE
-
-
-You will be surprised to learn that the Chums had no trouble whatever
-in sneaking off the canal boat and secreting themselves on a packet
-bound for Queenstown that night.
-
-Before boarding the boat Billy said, “This boat is not sailing for
-America, but we must take any boat we can get on to escape from France
-where we are so well known. If we don’t, we will be captured and sent
-back into the army in no time. When we get to Queenstown, we can ship
-on another bound for the United States of America, for many boats stop
-there before crossing the ocean to pick up the last mail from England.”
-
-The boat they were on left the dock at about half past nine, with all
-lights out, as was necessary to avoid attracting the attention of the
-submarines that infested those waters. For a wonder the Channel was
-smooth as glass and as the night was clear, with a big moon shining,
-anything afloat on the water could be seen for miles.
-
-“Keep your weather eye peeled for submarine periscopes!” said Billy to
-Stubby and Button as they lay on the forward deck, looking out over the
-water.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was after midnight and every one was in bed but the officers of the
-ship and the sailors on the lookout for submarines when Billy’s sharp
-eyes saw something that looked like a log of wood standing straight up
-in the water. Before he could call out, “A periscope!” a black object
-was seen skipping over the surface of the water and the next thing he
-knew he was flying up in the air amid a spray of water. When he came
-down he struck the water about a hundred feet from where he went up and
-he felt himself going down, down, down toward the bottom of the ocean.
-But it was too deep for him to strike bottom here, so after going down,
-down, down, he began to come up, up, up, and when he got to the surface
-and shook the water out of his eyes, he looked around to see if he
-could discover Stubby or Button. And oh, joy! there they both were
-swimming towards him unhurt.
-
-Luckily for them, not one of them had been injured in the least. Just
-then a big piece of wreckage that would act as a raft floated near
-them and they all crawled upon it, and were just in time to see what
-was left of the packet sink beneath the waves. They also saw that two
-lifeboats were afloat toward which many black heads could be seen
-swimming. Soon the swimmers reached the boats and climbed into them,
-and Billy saw they were the Captain and officers of the ship along
-with some of the sailors and passengers. As soon as they were in the
-lifeboats, they began picking up the people they saw in the water,
-and as there were but few passengers aboard all were saved. For a
-wonder the U-boat did not send another torpedo after them which in all
-probability they would have done had they not been frightened away by
-a guard boat coming to the rescue. After it had chased the submarine
-away, it came back and picked up all the passengers of the lifeboats
-and steamed away toward Ireland with them as they happened to be very
-near Queenstown.
-
-Now none of the people had seen or heard the Chums on their raft though
-Billy baaed, Stubby barked and Button mewed.
-
-“Well, there are two or three things to be thankful for,” said Billy.
-“First of all, we are alive and unhurt. The next is that the tide is
-carrying us inshore instead of out to sea, and the wind is blowing
-that way too. But most important of all is the fact that we are not far
-from land, and if the tide doesn’t turn and carry us out to sea, we
-should reach land at the rate we are floating now in about two hours.
-If we see the tide is turning, we can jump off the raft and swim for
-shore.”
-
-“You would see some good in every situation, even if your home was
-burning,” declared Button.
-
-“Well, wouldn’t you?” asked Billy.
-
-“No. I nearly always feel despondent when in bad luck until I get mad
-and think what is the use. Then I make the best of whatever comes,
-while patient little Stubby here says nothing but just saws wood, as
-the saying is.”
-
-Soon after daylight the raft touched the shore, and the Chums lost no
-time in leaving it, I can tell you. In the distance up the shore they
-saw a number of fishermen’s cottages. Stubby and Button proposed to
-walk up to them and see if they could not get something to eat, while
-Billy waited for them near by and made his breakfast of shamrock, for
-they were on Irish soil, the native heath of the shamrock.
-
-The fishermen received them kindly, and gave them plenty to eat and
-drink. Then a quarrel arose as to who should own the dog and cat that
-had come to them so strangely. At last it was proposed to auction them
-off. The bidding was in kegs of fish instead of in money, however.
-
-While the excitement of the bidding was going on, Stubby and Button
-thought it a good time to steal away and join Billy. The last Stubby
-heard were these words, “I’ll give three kegs of fresh fish for the
-little dog!”
-
-When they got back to Billy, they hurriedly told him what was up and
-explained that the men Billy saw waving their arms and shouting were
-only bidding in the auction and not preparing to fight each other.
-
-“But we better scoot out of here before they miss us or we will be
-captured and tied up.” And for the next half hour the Chums ran
-straight inland, only stopping long enough to get their breath, then
-running on some more. They were not followed, however, and at last they
-slowed down beside the roadside to listen to the passersby, to try to
-find out what part of Ireland they were in and how far it was to the
-nearest seaport from which large vessels sailed. Imagine their joy when
-they found they were only four miles from Queenstown and on the direct
-road that led there!
-
-It was no trick at all to reach that city and when they arrived they
-went straight to the wharf to look for a boat to carry them still
-nearer America.
-
-“Look! Billy, look!” exclaimed Stubby. “There is a big camouflaged
-troop ship lying at the dock. They can’t fool _me_ with their
-camouflaged ships; I have seen too many of them.”
-
-For the next few minutes you could not see the Chums for dust as they
-ran toward the ship. Sure enough, it was just as Stubby said. It was
-an empty troop ship returning to the United States of America for more
-soldiers, and had only stopped here for coal and provisions. There not
-being any troops aboard, it was easy for the Chums to steal on board
-and hide themselves until the ship was away out to sea before showing
-themselves.
-
-“I bet you,” said Stubby, “that that old submarine that blew us up was
-waiting for this troop ship in the hopes of blowing it up and while
-waiting for it to put to sea, they just blew up the packet we were on
-to keep their hands in.”
-
-“I shouldn’t wonder in the least,” replied Stubby, “if that was just
-what they were up to. And perhaps we will be torpedoed again.”
-
-“Well, I will take my chance, won’t you, fellows?” said Billy, “for I
-am anxious to set foot on American soil once more, and I want it to be
-the U. S. part of it, not South America or Mexico.”
-
-“Listen!” commanded Button. “I hear the propeller beginning to move.”
-This so excited Button that he jumped up and ran up and down the big
-coal pile beside which he had been hiding. This started the coal to
-rolling so that it nearly buried Stubby and Billy under it, and filled
-their eyes with coal dust.
-
-“You stupid, stop that!” barked Stubby. “Do you want to bury us alive,
-or have some one come to see why the coal started rolling?”
-
-“No, of course not, but I am so glad to be on the last lap of our
-journey home that I had to express myself in action or blow up.”
-
-“I should think you had had enough blow-ups for one while. And you are
-likely to have another before we reach New York harbor, for which port
-I hear this ship is bound,” said Billy.
-
-“New York, did you say?” asked Stubby. “Oh, I am so glad we are sailing
-for New York instead of for Philadelphia, Baltimore or some other port.
-I always like to return to America by way of New York and have the
-Goddess of Liberty welcome me home with extended arms.”
-
-The trip across the Atlantic was a fast and pleasant one and the Chums
-made friends of all on board, just as they always did wherever they
-were.
-
-They waited until the second day at sea before they showed themselves,
-and when they came slowly walking up on deck and stood before the
-Captain as much as to say, “Here we are! You may do with us what you
-will,” he nearly fell over with surprise and then took pity on them,
-for they were a sorry, hungry looking trio after having been shut in
-the coal bunker for a day and a night. He ordered them scrubbed and
-fed, and when he saw them again he did not recognize them at once, for
-he thought they were all three black. Now the dust was washed off them,
-he found only one was black, while one was yellow and the other white.
-
-As he stood looking at them, the sailor who had been ordered to wash
-them came up and after saluting the Captain said,
-
-“Captain, will you kindly read what is on the medals around their
-necks? They each have one, but they do not show unless you look for
-them as they are concealed by their hair. When we went to work on them
-we found each wore a medal around his neck.”
-
-While the Captain was reading the medal Billy wore, he had a good
-look at the Captain and was surprised that he had not noticed before
-that this Captain was the very same one with whom he had crossed when
-he sailed for France with his regiment. At the same time the Captain
-recognized Billy.
-
-“Well, well, Billy, old boy, how are you? But no need to ask, for you
-are looking fine. And the only thing different I see about you is that
-you have lost the end of your tail. Blown off by a bomb, I bet! But
-where did you pick up your two friends? Wait; I will read what their
-medals say and perhaps that will throw some light on who they are.
-Lieutenant, come here!” called the Captain to a second lieutenant who
-was passing. “Just read these medals and see whom we have with us.”
-
-“Holy Moses!” exclaimed the lieutenant. “This is a find! Didn’t you
-know that there is a reward of one thousand dollars offered for each of
-these animals by the regiments they belong to?”
-
-“Jumping ginger! You don’t mean it?” exclaimed the Captain. “They must
-have gotten homesick and run away.”
-
-“You have said it!” baaed Billy, “and there is no place like home when
-that home is in the United States of America.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-ZIP
-
-The Adventures of a Frisky Fox Terrier
-
-BY FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY
-
-The Well-Known Author of
-
-THE BILLY WHISKERS SERIES
-
-
-Zip is the adventure-loving, frolicsome pet of the popular doctor of
-a small village. He goes wherever his master goes--and ventures to
-undertake much at which the physician would shake his head in fear. In
-fact, Zip dares anything and anybody. He is known and beloved by all
-the village folk, who are kept on the _qui vive_ wondering what will be
-Zip’s next outbreak.
-
-His life is far from one of peace. The unexpected is continually
-happening--every page bristles with the unusual adventures of this
-active little, dear little, frisky little Zip. He will be found to be a
-splendid story-book play-fellow by every boy and girl.
-
-
- _Quarto, bound in boards, with cover, jacket and four full-page
- illustrations in colors--$.60 postpaid._
-
-
-The Saalfield Publishing Company
-
-AKRON, OHIO
-
-
-
-
-Billy Whiskers Series
-
-(TRADE MARK.)
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-By FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS
-
-Billy Whiskers is a mischievous creature, full of wickedness and folly,
-whose antics have furnished fun for a million readers. The child enjoys
-every moment after he is introduced to the irresistible fellow.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS’ KIDS
-
-“Recounting the adventures of Day and Night, twin kids of the
-nursery-famous Billy Whiskers. This is a stirring tale of travel and
-trouble and mischief that will delight the little world.”--_Galveston
-News._
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS, JR.
-
-“Night, now grown, is known as Billy Whiskers, Jr. and as he has
-all the personal traits which made his father’s career one round of
-surprising activity and astonishing adventure, the son will be quite as
-well beloved as his sire.”--_Chicago Record Herald._
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS’ TRAVELS
-
-In which the ever active Billy tours Europe, each city in turn
-furnishing ample opportunity for fun for sight-seeing Billy.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS AT THE CIRCUS
-
-“Everything goes well enough with Billy until a circus comes to town,
-and then just like the small boy, he made up his mind to go, come what
-might and cost what it would. He made preparations for a week and went,
-there to meet with all manner of adventures, becoming so infatuated
-with the life that he joined it.”--_Des Moines Capital._
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS AT THE FAIR
-
-In going to the Fair, Billy Whiskers didn’t leave a single prank at
-home. He had more fun to the minute than most others have to the hour.
-What he didn’t do and didn’t see is not worth relating.
-
-
- Each volume bound in boards, cover and jacket in colors, six full-page
- illustrations in colors, with scores of text drawings, quarto,
- postpaid, per volume $1.25
-
-
-THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO., AKRON, OHIO
-
-
-
-
-Billy Whiskers Series
-
-(TRADE MARK.)
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-By FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS’ FRIENDS
-
-This story of how Billy Whiskers and his wife Nannie journey west in
-search of their son, Billy Whiskers, Jr., teems with exciting incident
-and ludicrous situation.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS, JR. AND HIS CHUMS
-
-The Chums are a black cat and a yellow dog, and together this trio make
-a trip from San Francisco immediately after the great earthquake back
-to Billy’s former home in the east.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS’ GRANDCHILDREN
-
-Being a laughable record of the adventures that come to Punch and Judy,
-Billy’s grandchildren.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS’ VACATION
-
-Promising his faithful wife to be back within a year and a day, active
-Billy starts on another ramble, to meet as many exciting adventures as
-in his younger days.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS KIDNAPED
-
-Because Billy is a valuable goat, two men determine to kidnap him, and
-after many attempts they succeed. The Chums unearth the plot, and take
-up the trail--but what happens it is the right of the author to tell in
-her own charming way.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS’ TWINS
-
-Billy’s twin children go to a famous summer resort, now being owned
-by children who sojourn there each year. Father Billy and the Chums
-follow, and the five make merry during the season, enjoying it fully as
-much as any of the cottagers.
-
-
-BILLY WHISKERS IN AN AEROPLANE
-
-Billy keeps step with the progress of the world, and here we find him
-making a cross-country flight in an aeroplane race, with the Chums in
-rival machines.
-
-
- Each volume in boards, cover and jacket in colors, six full-page
- illustrations in colors, with scores of text drawings, quarto,
- postpaid, per volume $1.25
-
-
-THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO., AKRON, OHIO
-
-
-
-
-_FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY’S BOOKS_
-
-
-The Wonderful Electric Elephant
-
-“A new and fascinating sort of fairy story.”--_Salt Lake Tribune._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“A book in which youth will take keen pleasure.”--_The Bookseller._
-
-Among the tales of travel for boys and girls there are few which record
-such strange adventures as befell the owners of the wonderful Electric
-Elephant.
-
-By a fortunate chance, Harold Fredericks comes into possession of a
-wonderful mechanical elephant, so ingeniously contrived that it will
-pass for a real animal, even under closest inspection. The interior is
-fitted up luxuriously, affording the finest accommodations for Harold
-and the traveling companion whom he secures by another lucky chance.
-The young folks have a journey quite unlike any on record, meeting
-adventures both on land and sea.
-
-The boy or girl who wants something new in the story line will surely
-find it in this chronicle.
-
- Elaborately illustrated with 50 full-page halftones, bound in cloth,
- 12mo, postpaid $1.50
-
-
-ON A LARK TO THE PLANETS
-
-“The colored illustrations are a feature of delight.”--_Grand Rapids
-Herald._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“This sprightly author holds the record for
-inventiveness.”--_Philadelphia Item._
-
-
-Some time ago a book appeared which has been a delight to thousands of
-boys and girls. It was “The Wonderful Electric Elephant.” Frances Trego
-Montgomery has published a sequel to that book and calls it “On a Lark
-to the Planets.” The contents of this new volume makes a feast for the
-young mind, telling of a journey Harold and Ione took to the planets.
-
-“As a gift book to the children, nothing could be more desirable. It is
-an assurance of happiness for any young person to be the possessor of
-this charming story.”--_Birmingham Ledger._
-
- Beautifully illustrated in colors, bound substantially in cloth, 12mo,
- postpaid $1.50
-
-
-A CHRISTMAS WITH SANTA CLAUS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_The Buffalo Courier_ says:
-
-“Frances Trego Montgomery has the happy faculty of knowing what the
-small boy and his sister like in the way of fiction.”
-
-
-“A CHRISTMAS WITH SANTA CLAUS” is the title of an ideal Christmas book
-by Frances Trego Montgomery, illustrated in colors in a most bewitching
-way.
-
-The story recites the adventures of Jack and Gladys, whom Santa picks
-up and whisks away to the Northland. There they make the acquaintance
-of Mrs. Santa, and help fill the Saint’s chimney bags. When all is
-ready and the sleigh is packed, they accompany old Santa on his annual
-trip.
-
-“If you doubt the joys of a ‘Christmas with Santa Claus,’ read of the
-pleasures that awaited two little waifs the big-hearted Christian saint
-gathered into his home. Mrs. Montgomery introduces you to his motherly
-wife. She is as good as another grandmother. Try her!”--_New York
-World._
-
-
-SANTA CLAUS’ TWIN BROTHER
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Boston Ideas_ says:
-
-“Mrs. Montgomery’s ideas are touched with the sparkle of real genius.
-It’s a delight to travel in her company.”
-
-
-Can anyone make a better play-fellow than Santa himself? That is the
-question every child ponders after reading “A Christmas with Santa
-Claus.” And likely they would ask it in vain if Mrs. Montgomery had not
-written “Santa Claus’ Twin Brother.” This lively story convinces them
-that there is one other who enters into their moods just as thoroughly
-as the merry old fellow with ruddy face and snowy beard, and why should
-he not, for he is Kris Kringle, twin brother of Santa.
-
-Four little children are fortunate enough to have a frolic with these
-two merry fellows, and their laughter rings through every page of the
-captivating story.
-
-
- Each volume illustrated in colors, with colored cover and jacket,
- quarto, bound in boards postpaid, per volume $1.00
-
-
-THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO., AKRON, OHIO
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
-Italicized or underlined text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
-Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BILLY WHISKERS IN FRANCE ***
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Billy Whiskers in France, by Frances Trego Montgomery</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Billy Whiskers in France</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Frances Trego Montgomery</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Florence White Williams</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 22, 2021 [eBook #65898]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: David E. Brown and The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BILLY WHISKERS IN FRANCE ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-f001.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">&#8220;I ran straight on, regardless of bombs dropping<br /> all around me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="floatright">(Page <a href="#Page_124">124</a>)</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>BILLY WHISKERS<br />
-IN FRANCE</h1>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="large">FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY</span><br />
-
-AUTHOR OF &#8220;BILLY WHISKERS,&#8221; &#8220;BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; KIDS,&#8221; &#8220;BILLY<br />
-WHISKERS IN THE SOUTH,&#8221; &#8220;BILLY WHISKERS IN CAMP,&#8221;<br />
-&#8220;ZIP, THE ADVENTURES OF A FRISKY FOX TERRIER,&#8221; ETC.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/titlelogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Illustrated By FLORENCE WHITE WILLIAMS</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large">THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY</span><br />
-CHICAGO <span class="gap">AKRON, OHIO</span><span class="gap"> NEW YORK</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p class="center">
-Copyright 1919,<br />
-by<br />
-The Saalfield Publishing Co.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span></td><td> &nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><span class="small">PAGE</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I</td><td> <span class="smcap">Billy Whiskers Grows Homesick</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_7"> 7</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II</td><td> <span class="smcap">Billy Unexpectedly Meets a Friend</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_15"> 15</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III</td><td> <span class="smcap">An Inopportune Sneeze</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_23"> 23</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV</td><td> <span class="smcap">The General Recaptures Billy</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_35"> 35</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V</td><td> <span class="smcap">Billy Nearly Kills the Cook</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_47"> 47</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI</td><td> <span class="smcap">Billy Relates Some of His Adventures</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_59"> 59</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Button Frightens Two Nurses</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_75"> 75</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Billy Makes Plans to Leave France</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83"> 83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX</td><td> <span class="smcap">Button Discovers Spies in the Haymow</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_95"> 95</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X</td><td> <span class="smcap">Button Makes the Farmer Fighting Mad</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_109"> 109</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Chums on a Canal Boat</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_123"> 123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Button has a Fight with a Wharf Rat</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135"> 135</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Dog Cemetery in Paris</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_143"> 143</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV</td><td> <span class="smcap">What the Chums Did in Paris</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_153"> 153</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV</td><td> <span class="smcap">Blown Up by a Submarine</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_165"> 165</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;I ran straight on, regardless of bombs dropping all
-around me&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_0"> <i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><span class="small">PAGE</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Every man of them jumped as if shot</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_30"> 30</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Billy gave one long, loud baa that resounded down the big, bare
-room </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_66"> 66</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Away went Billy, jerking the cook around trees, over stumps and
-beehives</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_92"> 92</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>One thing Billy butted was a basket full of clothes</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_118"> 118</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The first thing Billy knew, he was rolling over something soft
-that squealed like a stuck pig and that kicked like a calf </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_148"> 148</a></td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>Billy Whiskers in France</i></p>
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BILLY WHISKERS GROWS HOMESICK</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p007.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">AS Billy Whiskers lay in an American camp somewhere
-over in France, he became very restless and soon had the
-blues from thinking of his dear Nannie so far away&mdash;away
-over in America, with that deep, deep, wide, blue
-ocean between them, infested not only with huge sea monsters belonging
-to the finny tribe, but also with death-dealing, quickly moving
-submarines and torpedo boats belonging to the German Kaiser.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want dreadfully to go home! Still I hate to risk my life on any
-ship that sails the seas these days, for it may be blown sky high at
-any moment, or sunk to the nethermost depths of the ocean. There
-is no way to walk around, and I don&#8217;t suppose I could get any one to
-let me go with them in an airship. So here I must remain, or trust
-my life to some troop ship returning to America for more soldiers.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-I just believe I will do it! I have lost all interest in the War over
-here since my master was wounded and was invalided home. Home!
-The very word makes me so homesick I can&#8217;t see for tears. Well,
-I&#8217;ll just fix this homesickness, so I will! I start for there this very
-minute. It is a good dark night and I think I can slip out of camp
-easily as they have not been watching me so closely since my master
-was sent away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Suiting the action to the words, Billy jumped up, shook himself,
-took a long breath and said to himself, &#8220;Here&#8217;s luck to you, old
-fellow, on your long, long, perilous journey! And may you reach
-the other side and once more see your loving little wife Nannie and
-all your children and grandchildren!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then he gave a flick of his tail and started on a brisk run for the
-least guarded entrance to the camp, to try to sneak through.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My, but it is lonesome traveling by myself!&#8221; he thought. &#8220;I do
-wish Stubby and Button were here to accompany me on this journey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy was so busy thinking of his old friends Stubby, the little yellow
-dog with a stubby tail, and Button, the big black cat with blazing
-eyes like buttons, that he reached the entrance to the camp before he
-knew it, and he managed to slip out without being stopped, for there
-was a jam at the gate caused by many big ambulances going out and
-army trucks coming in.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>&#8220;Humph!&#8221; said Billy to himself. &#8220;If I get over all my difficulties
-as easily as I got through that gate and past the guards, my journey
-will be a smooth and pleasant one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had been traveling some time when he heard some one say,
-&#8220;Hi, there, Billy Whiskers! What are you doing outside of camp?
-Looks to me as if you were trying to run away.&#8221; This from a driver
-of an ambulance who knew Billy was not to be allowed to escape from
-the camp. &#8220;Come here and I will give you a nice red apple.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;See anything green in my eye?&#8221; winked back Billy. &#8220;I know you!
-You would give me an apple with one hand and slip a rope around
-my neck with the other. Anyway, where&#8217;s your apple? <i>I</i> don&#8217;t see
-any!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here, Billy! Stop, I tell you, and come here! If you don&#8217;t like
-apples, here is a handful of salt,&#8221; and the soldier held his hand out
-as if he had it full of salt.</p>
-
-<p>But Billy was too keen for him. He had seen him close his hand
-over nothing before offering it to him. So he kept right on walking
-as if he had not heard the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say, Bill, this is no joke! It is the General&#8217;s orders that you are
-not to escape, but to be made to stay in camp until we go home. You
-are too valuable a goat to allow the Germans to make you up into
-chops and roasts. Besides, when we get home we want to show the
-goat that stole Von Luxemburg&#8217;s maps and plans from under his very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-nose, and also butted or hooked all his staff into a heap in the corner
-of his own little room. If you won&#8217;t come back for apples or salt or
-coaxing, very well! I&#8217;ll have to lasso you, or shoot you in one of
-your legs so you cannot run
-away,&#8221; and the soldier
-turned his back to look for a
-rope in the ambulance, as
-he preferred to lasso Billy
-rather than shoot him. He
-was an expert with the
-lasso, as he had come from
-a ranch away out in Montana
-to join the army, and
-was considered the best
-hand with the rope in all
-Montana.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p010.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Huh!&#8221; grunted Billy.
-&#8220;I must have run into
-Lasso Jake. If this is so, I
-better be getting a move on me and pushing my leg.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As luck would have it, right before Billy was a creek, with a temporary
-bridge across it. Down the bank beside the bridge plunged
-Billy, for he knew the bank was so high that the cowboy soldier could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-not throw his lasso so as to catch him. Instead of trying to climb out
-the other side of the creek, Billy kept on in the middle of the swift-flowing
-stream, swimming against the current, though he could not
-make much progress against it. Presently he heard voices and turning
-his head he saw two soldiers standing on the bridge and one was
-swinging a lasso over his head. Billy waited to see no more, but
-ducked. And just as his head disappeared under the water, he
-heard the splash of the rope as it hit the surface of the water just
-where his head had been.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good thing I ducked! If I hadn&#8217;t, they would now be pulling me
-to shore with a lasso around my neck. Gee, but that was a close call,
-and that cowboy soldier is some lasso thrower! I never saw his
-equal, even in a circus. I think he better get a flying machine and
-fly over the German line and watch his chance to rope the Kaiser or
-the Crown Prince, some of the Generals and other high monkey-monks.&#8221;
-And Billy laughed to himself at the spectacle of the Kaiser
-being made to walk into an American camp with a lasso around his
-neck. Billy forgot he could not open his mouth to laugh under
-water, and he began to choke so he had to stop swimming under water
-and come to the surface.</p>
-
-<p>Just as he did so, his eye caught sight of a soldier standing on the
-bank of the stream with a lasso hanging from his hand ready to throw
-the moment Billy&#8217;s head appeared above the surface of the water.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-He was about to dive again when he heard a cry for help from the
-bridge. The soldier turned and ran to rescue a man who had fallen
-into the water, calling as he went down, &#8220;Save me! I can&#8217;t swim!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy crawled out of the stream and stood watching the soldier with
-the lasso trying to save his comrade. He was having a hard time for
-as the man went down he struck his head on a stone, which stunned
-him, and now he was being carried downstream by the swift current
-and knocked against the bowlders over which the water frothed.
-Try as he would, the cowboy soldier was put to it to catch up to him
-as the swift current bore his chum&#8217;s body ever and still ever ahead
-of him. But at last his comrade&#8217;s body caught between two rocks and
-was held there until the cowboy soldier overtook it. The cold water
-had revived the man, so that by the time his soldier chum reached
-him he was coming to his senses. Billy only waited to see that the
-man was alive and then he left them sitting in midstream, each on a
-big rock that raised its head above the water. He thought it wise
-to cut sticks for safety and ran into a thick woods he saw, which
-would serve to hide him from the soldiers should they cross the bridge
-and try to follow him. This, however, they did not do, knowing it
-would be useless to try to catch Billy when he had such a start.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he could, Billy found his way out of the woods to the
-road he had left. After following it for some time he found it led
-out to the main highway to Paris. This road Billy knew he must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-follow or he could never find his way back to the seacoast. Once in
-Paris, he knew he must pass through it and then keep straight on in
-a westerly direction until he came to the English Channel. Once
-there, he would follow the coast until he came to a port from which
-boats were sailing for America. Then he would watch his chance
-to steal aboard and sail for home. Billy was very good at directions
-and from the moment he had landed in France he had taken special
-pains to keep the points of the compass straight in his head, so that
-if he ever wanted to return home alone he would find his way. Now
-it proved what a wise old goat he was, for all he had to do was to
-travel by the sun and North Star in a northeasterly direction until he
-came to Paris and from there in a westerly until he reached the
-English Channel, from one of whose ports he had disembarked when
-he came to France. But it was discouraging to think how very far it
-was and what privations and hardships he would have to endure and
-overcome before he reached his destination. But Billy Whiskers
-was a regular old soldier by this time and well used to hardships and
-hard knocks of all kinds. So he only heaved a long sigh and then
-ran all the faster, knowing that every step he took brought him just
-that much nearer home and Nannie.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I tried to count the steps I shall have to take before reaching
-home, it would be like counting the sands of the sea. I shan&#8217;t try,
-but just push on and I know I shall get there some day.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>&#8220;Bow-wow-wow!&#8221; barked a big Dane in his deep voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bow! Wow! Wow!&#8221; came the short, sharp, snappy barks from
-a short-legged Scotch terrier as they bounded out of a gate beside
-the road, ready to pounce on Billy. They were followed by poodles,
-collies, St. Bernards, and all manner of dogs, both great and small.
-Billy thought he had never seen so many dogs of different breeds in
-one place in all his life. You see he had run into a dog hospital, and
-these were the convalescent dogs which were allowed to play together
-in the yard.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p014.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Not one of these dogs tried to bite Billy, and after they had given
-up trying to frighten him by barking in their fiercest way as if about
-to eat him alive, they quieted down and became as docile as lambs.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BILLY UNEXPECTEDLY MEETS A FRIEND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p015.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">GOOD-MORNING, friends!&#8221; baaed Billy. &#8220;Would
-you allow a tired traveler to rest under the shade of your
-trees, and give him a drink of water? For I am a
-stranger in a strange land, and have traveled far. I am
-an American.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You an <i>American</i>?&#8221; exclaimed the dogs in chorus.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we surely are glad to meet you!&#8221; barked the big Dane.
-&#8220;For if there is any place on earth we dogs have longed to see, it is
-America. Probably you will tell us about it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said another dog. &#8220;We have heard that every dog has
-his day over there and many of them two or three.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have also heard,&#8221; added a French poodle, &#8220;that all dogs are
-free over there, and can go and come as they like, and that they are
-never tied up, shut in a house or muzzled. Is that true?&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p016.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes and no,&#8221; replied Billy. &#8220;It depends on where you live and
-who your master or mistress is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, we have heard,&#8221; piped up a little black and tan, &#8220;that any
-dog can choose his own master or mistress, and that all he has to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-do if he doesn&#8217;t like them or isn&#8217;t
-pleased with the way they treat him
-is to walk off and follow the first
-person he sees that he thinks he
-would like to live with, and that they
-will take him home with them and
-feed and house him.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p>&#8220;Again you are partly right and
-partly wrong,&#8221; replied Billy. &#8220;It
-depends on whom you run away
-from and whom you pick out to be
-your new master or mistress. You
-might happen to belong to some one
-who was very fond of you, though
-you might not be fond of them. In
-that case if you ran away they would
-advertise and try to get you back,
-but if you had proved yourself to be
-a good-for-nothing dog, they would
-let you go and say &#8216;Good riddance
-to bad rubbish!&#8217; and never bother
-their heads about you.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then again you might show poor judgment in selecting a new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-master and choose one who did not care for dogs, and when he found
-you following him he might throw sticks and stones at you. So you
-see you can&#8217;t always be sure of changing masters successfully.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you just come from America?&#8221; asked a fourth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no! I have been over here nearly a year now, with the army.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean to tell us that you have really and truly been with
-the army?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Surely not at the front!&#8221; added another in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I have!&#8221; Billy assured them. &#8220;I have crossed No-Man&#8217;s-Land
-many times, and been shot at and blown up once besides. See
-where a piece of my tail is gone? Well, I lost it at Verdun. A bomb
-exploded and threw me up in the air and also blew off part of my tail.
-I consider myself very lucky that it decided to blow a piece off that
-end of my body instead of the other, for if it had been my head in
-place of my tail, it would have killed me. I can&#8217;t get along without
-a head, but I can without a tail.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Haw! Haw! Haw!&#8221; laughed the dogs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You surely are a funny fellow!&#8221; said one. &#8220;Come on in and we
-will find something for you to eat and drink and also a place to rest.
-Then after you have rested, I hope you will tell us more of your
-experiences at the front. If you will do that, we will tell you our
-experiences in Paris before we left there, and we will introduce you
-to some of our celebrated police and Red Cross dogs who have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-in the war and been wounded or gassed. They will relate some
-thrilling adventures and hairbreadth escapes. To-night will be a
-good time, after our keepers have gone to bed. Then we can sneak
-out under the trees in the little patch of woods behind the big stables
-and while you brave soldiers swap tales of the war we who have
-never been near the war can listen.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There goes one of our heroes now. See that dog crossing the
-lawn, wearing a Red Cross bandage on his chest?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy turned and took one long look at the dog. Then without a
-word of warning he put down his head and bounded toward him,
-taking ten or twelve feet at a single bound.</p>
-
-<p>The dogs stood spellbound. What was the big goat going to do?
-Butt their wounded hero? If so, why should he wish to butt a perfectly
-harmless dog he had never seen before? But had he never
-seen him before? Perhaps they had met and fought on the battlefield
-and were enemies. If so, they must all run and protect their
-hero from the long horns of the strange goat.</p>
-
-<p>But when the dogs arrived within speaking distance they were
-overjoyed to hear the goat baa out, &#8220;Hello, old chum! How in all
-that is wonderful did you get here? I heard you were dead; that you
-had been seen with a Red Cross ambulance which had first been
-gassed and then blown up by a shell. One of your friends said he
-saw you with his own eyes sitting in the back of the ambulance when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-the shell struck it, and the next thing he saw was the whole ambulance
-flying up in the air and then coming down in small pieces.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p019.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;What he saw all happened. I was there and sitting in the back
-of the ambulance with my gas
-mask on, for the signal had been
-given for all to put on their
-masks, and one of the doctors
-with the ambulance corps had
-just stopped and strapped mine
-in place when a shell hit us, and
-I found myself going up in the
-air at the rate of about a hundred
-miles a minute. When I
-came down, my mask had been
-blown off my face. How it
-ever was done without killing
-me or blowing my head off I don&#8217;t know,
-but it was. I thought I was all right until
-I began to see red, and I had a queer sensation in my head as if
-my brain were going round and round like a cat runs after its
-tail. Then I could not get my breath and I fell over, giving myself
-up for dead. But if you will believe it, the next thing I knew I
-opened my eyes and found myself in a long room with two rows of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-beds in it, all just like baby cribs. And bending over me was a sweet-faced
-lady nurse. I found myself all bound up in splints and cotton
-batting. You see an interne to another Red Cross ambulance who
-had come to look for the wounded, if any had possibly survived the
-blow-up, had found me senseless on the ground. So he picked me up
-and brought me here as this hospital for dogs was on the way to the
-hospital where he was stationed. This is now my fourth week here,
-and I want to tell you that only angels in human form live here.
-They are so good to one! They have nursed me back to life. I was
-only slightly gassed and so my lungs are all healed and I am also over
-my shell shock. I shall likely go back to the front in another
-week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean that you are going back to the fighting line, do
-you?&#8221; asked a long white-haired collie that had fallen very much in
-love with the brave Red Cross dog. &#8220;Oh, why do you risk your life
-again?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do I risk my life?&#8221; in astonishment. &#8220;To try to save some
-brave soldier, whose life is a thousand times more valuable than
-any dog&#8217;s ever will be. Yes, I am going back and back and back
-as long as I have eyes, teeth or claws to go back with, until this cruel
-war is over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bully for you!&#8221; exclaimed Billy. &#8220;You make me feel like a
-slacker, getting homesick and running away from the army.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>&#8220;Well, it is not too late yet to go back. I propose that you stay here
-and rest until next week and then go back with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do it!&#8221; said Billy, and they rubbed noses together to seal the
-bargain. &#8220;I hear a bugle. What is that call for?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that is our supper call,&#8221; said the Red Cross dog. &#8220;When
-they blow the bugle all the dogs that are running loose are supposed
-to go to the back kitchen door. There are long troughs there in
-which they put our suppers. Come ahead with us, and we will give
-you some food. There will be plenty for all of us and for you too, for
-they serve very bountifully here,&#8221; and all the dogs and Billy too
-moved off in the direction of the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">AN INOPPORTUNE SNEEZE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p023.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WELL, well, well! Whom have we with us?&#8221; exclaimed
-the cook at the dog hospital as he stood in the kitchen
-door in apron and cap ready to throw some more food in
-the dogs&#8217; trough. &#8220;Bless my soul, I believe it is Billy
-Whiskers!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy hearing his name spoken looked up, only to find himself
-gazing into the eyes of the cook who had once served the old General
-who had issued the strict orders for Billy not to be allowed to leave
-camp.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Billy, you old rascal, come here and let me pull your beard for
-luck and old times&#8217; sake! I will bet my whole month&#8217;s wages that
-you have run away from camp.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>All the time the cook was talking, he was walking toward Billy,
-wishing to get near enough to discover if the goat really wore around
-his neck a collar from which hung a medal engraved with his name.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here, Billy, is a nice big carrot for you. Don&#8217;t jerk back. I am
-not going to hurt you. I am only going to pat your head. Don&#8217;t you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-remember the good old times in camp when I used to give you nice
-juicy apples and crisp lettuce heads?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>By this time the cook was standing close by Billy, pretending
-to pat his head, but every time he put his fingers through his hair,
-he tried to feel for the collar and Billy would jerk his head away.
-He was afraid the cook was going to try to take off his collar
-and Billy had made up his mind many moons before this that if
-ever any one tried to take it off he would fight them to the death.
-Just then a little breeze blew Billy&#8217;s hair up so that it showed the
-medal with some engraving on it, and the cook saw it read:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This collar was presented to Billy Whiskers by the &mdash;th New
-York Regiment for his bravery in battle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Billy, I certainly am glad to see you! But I bet you have
-left many sad hearts behind you. I am homesick to be back with
-my old regiment, but I can&#8217;t go. Perhaps you haven&#8217;t noticed
-that I have a wooden leg and that part of my right arm is gone.
-If it was only my leg that was gone, I would be back, leg or no
-leg. But without my arm, I can&#8217;t shoot or carry a bayonet. It
-breaks my heart to be near enough to hear the roar of battle as I
-am here, and know I can&#8217;t be in it, killing off those pigs of Germans!&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p025.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Just then from down the road came the sound of a high powered
-motor car, and the cook, stepping on a big stone to see the better,
-exclaimed, &#8220;It is the General, by hookey! And I bet he is coming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-in here for a cup of coffee and a bite to eat, as he knows I can get
-it for him quicker than if he went on to the village restaurant, and
-better, too. He always said no one could make coffee like I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy waited to hear no more, but started to find a place to hide,
-well knowing the General
-would carry him back to
-camp if he saw him, even
-if he had to take him in the
-auto with him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>The cook had forgotten
-all about Billy in his excitement
-at seeing the
-General. Billy took advantage
-of this to whisper
-to the dogs, telling them
-what was up and they
-all followed him as he ran
-toward the stable to try to
-find a place to hide. Just
-as Billy was about to turn the corner of the stable, he saw the General&#8217;s
-big touring car turn in the lane.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee, fellows, I&#8217;m lost if that cook even mentions my being here!
-For the General is equal to sending a whole squad of soldiers to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-find me and bring me back to camp. It would not be the first time
-he has done it, either!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>By this time Billy and the dogs had run into the little grove of
-trees spoken of before, but they stayed near enough the edge to be
-able to see if any one started to hunt for Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I tell you what I think would be a good plan,&#8221; said the Red
-Cross dog. &#8220;Have one of the dogs go back and hang around where
-he could hear everything the cook says to the General. In that way
-we will know whether or not he tells the General that you are
-here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Excellent idea, that!&#8221; agreed Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pinky, you would be the best one to go. You are so small that
-you can squeeze in anywhere out of sight under a chair or sofa, and
-listen to all that is said.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t want to go! I am afraid they will kick me out if
-they should catch me listening. Besides, I want to stay here and
-hear Mr. Billy Whiskers relate his experiences. It is so dull here
-after Paris that I just long for some excitement, and I am sure Mr.
-Whiskers&#8217; tales will be all that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You run along, Miss Pinky, and I&#8217;ll tell you just what I tell
-them some other time all by yourself. Besides, you won&#8217;t miss much
-as our friend here, the Red Cross dog, can tell you adventures a
-hundred times more exciting than I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>&#8220;Oh, no, he can&#8217;t. But I will go if you promise to repeat word for
-word to me all you tell them when we are alone some time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p027.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you very much, Miss Pinky.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t call me Pinky! That is not my name! It is only a nasty,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-mean nickname the dogs have given me because I am afflicted with
-pink lids to my eyes, the same as many poodle dogs. I just <i>hate</i>
-that name! But I can&#8217;t stop them from using it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And pray what is your real name?&#8221; asked Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rosie de la France. And it is such a pretty one I like to be called
-by it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, hereafter I will call you Mademoiselle Rosie de la France.
-But I cannot see much difference between Rosie and Pinky, as they
-are both pretty much the same color.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, if you look at it in that way. But it is the meaning hidden
-under it that I hate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind now what you are called, but run along or you will
-be too late to hear all the cook says to the General,&#8221; said the Red
-Cross dog.</p>
-
-<p>The dogs then all lay down under the trees in a semi-circle around
-Billy and the Red Cross dog, so they could hear every word that
-was said by either of them, but every one of them kept an eye open
-for any one who might round the corner of the stable. Billy and
-the Red Cross dog had told them their most exciting experiences
-in the war, interposed by stories from the other dogs, when they
-heard the hum and buzz of the big motor as it drove out of the lane,
-and at the same time they saw Pinky running toward them so fast
-one could scarcely see her for dust.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>She ran into their midst panting and all out of breath, and between
-gasps tried to tell them that she had slipped into the sitting-room
-and sneaked under a big davenport with a cover thrown over it that
-hid her completely, but where she could hear every word that was
-spoken in the room. The General was sitting at a little table only
-a few feet from her, eating the good things the cook had brought
-to him on a tray.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He seemed in a very good humor,&#8221; she said, &#8220;and was laughing
-and joking with two officers who were with him when I had the
-misfortune to sneeze. You would have thought I had thrown a bomb
-the way those three men jumped to their feet and reached for their
-swords!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Who sneezed?&#8217; thundered the General.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;There is some one hiding in this room!&#8217; exclaimed one of his
-staff.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Come out of the closet or from behind those curtains or wherever
-you are before I shoot!&#8217; commanded the General.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course no one came out, and I crouched down nearer the
-floor than ever and prayed that they would not lift the cover of
-that davenport and see me. I could see through the thin ruffle
-of the davenport cover and there they all stood stock still, with
-eyes searching every nook and corner of the room. Then what do
-you think happened? I sneezed again, and expected to be killed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-on the spot, but I could not help it as there was a lot of moth balls
-right under my nose, put there to keep the moths from eating the
-carpet. Well, if you will believe it, every man of them jumped again
-as if shot. I could see their feet leave the floor. And one of the
-staff said in a stage whisper, &#8216;Spies behind that curtain!&#8217; Then
-he marched toward it with sword in hand, and brushed the curtain
-aside. Of course there was no one there. Then the other staff
-officer flung open the closet door. No one there! Still they had
-heard two distinct sneezes. The General stalked to the window
-and looked out as it opened on the ground. I expect he thought
-some one might be hiding under the window, listening. No one
-there! Only a flower bed with bees droning and buzzing over it.
-And horror of horrors! As he leaned out of the window and the
-staff officers were looking behind chairs and under tables and even
-up to the ceiling I gave another big sneeze. I sneezed so hard it
-nearly blew my head off. I expect it was because of holding it
-in so long.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p030b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">Every man of them jumped as if shot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This of course was my undoing. One of the staff dropped on
-one knee to look under the davenport. The General jerked his
-head back through the window, and heard the staff officer exclaim
-in a loud voice, &#8216;Only a measley, sneaking little poodle dog!&#8217; and
-with that he stuck his sword under the davenport to prod me out.
-It would have cut my leg off, or run right through me, I am sure,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-but just then the cook opened the door to come in to remove the
-dishes and I jumped over the sword and ran between the legs
-of the staff officer who was standing between the davenport and the
-door, and simply flew back here.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>&#8220;When I got outside I did sneak around under the window, and
-heard them all laughing over the fact that a little dog&#8217;s sneeze had
-given them such a fright. The General said &#8216;Better be on the right
-side than on the wrong, and many a warning as small as a sneeze
-gone unheeded has cost many lives. I would rather be too careful
-than not careful enough,&#8217; You see they all thought I was a spy
-hidden in the room somewhere. Then I heard the cook say, &#8216;General,
-has the Regiment still got the big white goat they used to have as a
-mascot?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;No, I am sorry to say he has been missing since a week ago to-day,
-and we cannot get any trace of him. One of our ambulance drivers
-saw him on the road to Paris, and tried to catch him, but he could
-not. He nearly had him when a friend fell off a bridge into a creek,
-and would have drowned had he not left the goat and gone to his
-assistance. I would not have lost that goat for a thousand dollars.
-He knows more than most men.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Well, General, you have lost your thousand dollars. I know
-where your goat is at this minute.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;You do? Well, produce him and the money is yours. You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-know Billy is like the proverbial flea. Now you have him and now
-you don&#8217;t. If you will show me that goat now, we&#8217;ll have him
-in my office at camp headquarters to-morrow. I&#8217;ll give you a check
-for one thousand dollars, too.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;I&#8217;ll do it for you gladly, General, as you have done me many
-a good turn, but I cannot accept your money. And now if you
-will step to the door, I will show you Billy, the Mascot of the Regiment,
-quietly eating out of a trough at the back kitchen door.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The General and his staff picked up their caps and swords and
-followed the cook around the house to the dogs&#8217; trough, but as you
-know, no goat was there.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The General had to laugh at the blank look on the cook&#8217;s face
-when he turned the corner of the hospital and saw that the goat and
-all his dogs too had disappeared as completely as if swallowed up
-by an earthquake.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Well, that beats everything I ever saw! He was here a few
-minutes ago. In fact, just when you drove in eight or ten of our
-dogs with Billy in their midst were all standing here eating and now
-not an animal is in sight anywhere. It beats all! I can&#8217;t explain
-it!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;I can,&#8217; said the General. &#8216;That goat recognized my car, thought
-I was after him and lit out. He has done it before, and I doubt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-if any of us will ever see him again. I tell you he is sharper than
-the devil, whose cloven hoof he has!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;General, will you kindly do me the favor to wait till I blow
-my dog whistle? That is the signal for all the dogs to gather here.
-We will see if Billy does not come running with them.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The General waited. The cook blew his whistle repeatedly but
-no dogs showed up. Then the cook ran to the barn and around it,
-looking in every known hiding place the dogs had, but no goat or
-dog did he see. And he came back to the General and said, &#8216;Well,
-General, I shall have to give up beaten. He has gone and, what is
-more, he has taken every dog with him that is not confined to a
-hospital bed. I can&#8217;t find hide or hair of any of them, but I am
-so mad that I am ready to devote months, if need be, to finding that
-tricky goat. And when I do I will return him to you even if I
-bring only his hide, horns and tail!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Well, here is luck to you, but I hope you will bring him alive,
-and not in pieces for I could make use of a live goat, but I would
-be hard pressed to know what to do with a dead one!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then with a hearty laugh all around, the General and his staff
-got into their auto and whizzed out of the lane, and I scurried back
-here to tell you all this.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">THE GENERAL RECAPTURES BILLY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p035.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THANK you, Miss Rosie de la France, for finding out so
-much for me. You certainly did have a narrow escape
-when under that davenport and you sneezed for you
-might have had your legs cut off by that officer&#8217;s sword.
-So the cook is going to catch me and bring me to the General, alive
-or dead, is he? I can tell him right now that he will never be able
-to give so much as one hair of my beard to him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here comes the cook now!&#8221; exclaimed one of the dogs. &#8220;We
-better scoot!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With that they all jumped up and ran in different directions,
-Billy choosing a long, circuitous course that would bring him out
-on the Paris road. Then and there he gave up the idea of returning
-to the war and entering the army again with the Red Cross dog.</p>
-
-<p>He soon reached the road, and once on it he put his head down
-like a race horse to resist the wind, and ran as he had never run
-before, jumping stones, ditches and uneven places on the roadway
-until he was completely winded. As it took a great deal to wind
-Billy Whiskers, you may know he traveled many, many miles and
-left the dogs&#8217; hospital far behind.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>&#8220;I shall stop running when I come to the next stream, get a
-drink, take a bath, and eat whatever I can find by the roadside.
-Then after a good rest I shall start on again,&#8221; he planned.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p036.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>All of this he did, and he was
-hidden behind a big bush beside
-the road down by
-a stream, watching
-the big ambulances
-and
-high powered
-touring cars
-go thundering
-by in
-endless procession
-when,
-all plans to
-the contrary,
-he dropped
-asleep. It
-seemed but a minute
-to him after his eyes
-had closed when he felt something tight around his neck. He tried
-two or three times to loosen it by stretching his neck without taking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-the bother to open his eyes, but when at last he did open them, he saw
-standing around him three officers with broad grins on their faces.
-And behind them was the old General in his touring car, waiting for
-his officers to bring Billy to him!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I certainly was caught napping that time!&#8221; thought Billy to
-himself. &#8220;And they have me all right enough now with this strong
-rope around my neck. It is queer I did not hear them coming!
-It must have been I was so tired that it made me sleep like the dead.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come, get up, Billy, you old rascal, and come along without
-any fuss! For you are a smart enough goat to see that there is
-no use resisting with a rope around your neck and five men against
-you&mdash;we three officers with the General and his chauffeur.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Billy saw all this and as he walked along quietly behind them
-he wondered where they were going to put him. They could not
-mean to tie him behind the car as no goat, even if fitted out with
-twenty league boots, could keep up with the General&#8217;s car at the
-rate he drove. And with three staff officers, the General and the
-chauffeur he could not see where there would be room inside the
-car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Master Billy, you thought you had escaped from me for
-good, didn&#8217;t you? But you see you haven&#8217;t. And, what is more,
-you won&#8217;t escape in a hurry again, for I propose taking you right
-along with us, though it will crowd us some. Here I was blustering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-about and scolding the chauffeur for his carelessness in not
-seeing that we had water enough in the car to carry us through
-when the very lack of it led us to finding you. He got out to
-carry a bucket of water from the stream and found you so fast
-asleep behind the bush that you had not heard our approach in the
-car or even the chauffeur&#8217;s steps when within three or four feet
-of you. He had time to come back to the car and tell us what he
-had found, get a rope and the three officers to help me capture
-you while you slept on. Now, my dear Billy, you are my prisoner.
-If you behave, you shall have every care and comfort, but try to
-escape, and I shall send a bullet through you, for I shall stand no
-nonsense. Hear that?&#8221; and the General pulled Billy&#8217;s beard in
-a joking manner. But Billy knew he would do as he said if he
-tried to escape or cut up any monkeyshines. So he quietly let
-them help him into the car, where he stood between the two seats
-in the tonneau while they tied him to the rod at the back of the
-front seat on which the extra robes hung.</p>
-
-<p>Billy was experiencing one of his rare moments of dejection and
-discouragement, for he knew if they once succeeded in getting him
-back in camp it would be very difficult indeed to escape as they
-would use every precaution to keep him there and they might even
-put him inside the electrically charged barbed wire fence where
-they kept the German prisoners. That would be horrible indeed!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>&#8220;I must think up some way to escape before we reach camp or
-I am lost,&#8221; thought Billy. &#8220;How I ever can unless we have a
-breakdown is more than I can tell!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Presently they came to the dogs&#8217; hospital and whizzed by it at
-full speed, but not too fast for Billy to see standing at the gate
-the cook, or for him to get the cook&#8217;s expression of surprise and
-wonder when he saw Billy in the General&#8217;s car. Billy also saw
-the Red Cross dog close at the cook&#8217;s heels.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am glad they saw me for now the dog will know what has
-become of me,&#8221; thought Billy.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the big car slowed down and went bumping and sliding
-over a terrible piece of road that was being repaired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now would be my chance to jump out while they are going
-slower if I only were not tied. And I can&#8217;t chew the rope loose
-right under these men&#8217;s noses, either. Perhaps when they stop
-for supper I may get a chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Just then there was a terrible explosion as one of the tires blew
-out, and at the same time the car slipped on the soft, shifting gravel
-with which they were repairing the roadway and slid down into
-the ditch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we are ditched and in for a long delay!&#8221; exclaimed the
-General. &#8220;I simply must get to camp with these plans within
-the next three hours. Stop the first car that passes here and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-will make whoever is in it take me to camp while you officers stay
-here and help the chauffeur repair the damages and get the car
-out of the ditch. That should not be a hard job but only a tedious
-one for the men working on the highway can help you out of the
-ditch and the chauffeur can mend the tire for I expect the explosion
-was due to a bursted tube.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was one thing to say get the men on the road to help but
-where were those men? Nowhere in sight, but several miles down
-the road working on another bad stretch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hear a car coming!&#8221; exclaimed the General. &#8220;Make ready
-to stop it, Lieutenant Strong!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In less time that it takes to tell it, the car had come, stopped
-and taken the General aboard. As the General waved good-by
-to them, he called back, &#8220;I wish you luck, gentlemen! I will
-keep your supper hot for you!&#8221; to which Billy replied with
-a loud baa. This made the staff officers laugh, for his voice sounded
-exactly like a cross old man saying &#8220;Bah!&#8221; in derision to the General&#8217;s
-joking remark.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the General was out of sight, the officers fell to and
-tried to lift and push the car up into the road. But they might
-as well have tried to move a huge rock for it did not so much as
-budge an inch. It was embedded too deep in the sand and loose
-gravel.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>&#8220;This is most provoking!&#8221; said one of the officers. &#8220;It means that
-we must try to stop some passing car and get them to help us. When
-they see it is the General&#8217;s car that is in trouble they will feel in
-duty bound to aid us, no matter whether they really want to or not.
-But I just hate the job of stopping any one for that purpose as it
-always makes any one provoked to be so hailed on the road.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here comes a farmer driving a pair of horses hitched to an old
-wagon. Let us stop him. I think his horses can pull us out if
-we all push,&#8221; suggested another of the officers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now is my chance!&#8221; thought Billy, and he was just about to
-chew at the rope around his neck when the farmer came up and
-stopped opposite them to see if he could help them any.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; replied one of the officers. &#8220;You are just the man we
-have been looking for to give us a lift out of this ditch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wal, that is a purty durn big car of your&#8217;n. But I guess my
-hosses kin pull her out. That is, if I only had a rope to tie to the
-back of my wagon, but I can&#8217;t get hide nor hair of any rope or
-chain or nothin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have a rope,&#8221; answered one of the officers. &#8220;We always
-carry a good strong rope for just such purposes under one of the
-seats. Here, Jean, get it out and we will see how soon these horses
-can pull us out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jean, the chauffeur, stopped working on the tire to get the rope,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-but alas! when he looked under the seat no rope was there. From
-the fury into which the officers flew, Billy thought they were going
-to kill the fellow on the spot for his carelessness, first running out
-of water and now finding no rope.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are discharged the minute you get us to camp!&#8221; roared
-the superior officer. &#8220;And what is more, I shall see that the General
-has you severely punished. What if the enemy were at our
-heels and we were trying to escape from them, or we had important
-dispatches that must get to Headquarters to change some movement
-of the army that would mean the saving of hundreds and thousands
-of lives?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At last the chauffeur managed to say, &#8220;Could we not use the
-rope that is around the goat&#8217;s neck to pull the car out of the sand?
-It is a very long one. In fact, it is the rope that belongs under
-the seat. In my excitement I forgot I had used it to tie the goat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course we can! And to keep him from escaping we can tie
-him with one of the farmer&#8217;s reins.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here, you Billy, stand still while I take this rope off your neck.&#8221;
-The chauffeur stood on the step, leaning through the open door of
-the tonneau as he untied the rope that was around Billy&#8217;s neck, with
-the farmer standing behind him ready to hand him one of his reins
-to secure Billy again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here is a good chance to escape,&#8221; thought Billy. &#8220;To be sure,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-I will have to run the chance of one of the officers shooting me,
-but I will take it. For I would rather be shot than carried back
-to camp and shut up with a lot of German prisoners.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At the moment Billy was forming his plan of escape, all the
-officers were fussing on the car at one place or another trying to
-dig out the wheels by shoveling a path for them in the sand.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p043.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Seeing all this, Billy made up his mind he would butt the chauffeur
-so hard he would knock all the breath out of him so he could not
-cry out and give the alarm. So just as the farmer stepped close
-behind the chauffeur to hand him the rein, and the rope was off
-Billy&#8217;s neck, Billy gave a plunge forward and planted his head
-in the middle of the chauffeur&#8217;s stomach, sending him backward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-with all the breath knocked out of his body and with such force
-that he hit the farmer and sent him sprawling on his back, with
-his head hanging over the ditch. Now just as his head hit the
-ditch, the officer who was shoveling a path for the car raised up
-and the farmer in turn hit him and sent him flying into the ditch.
-There were three men disposed of in one butt. That left only two
-to shoot or pursue him, and both of these were on the far side of
-the auto and had not noticed anything as their heads were down
-and they were busy tugging big stones out of the way of the wheels.
-So Billy had a good start of a hundred yards or more before the
-officer who had been sent rolling into the ditch could right himself
-and give the alarm. By the time he found out what really had
-hit him, Billy had run to the side of the road, jumped a fence and
-disappeared in a thick woods. The officer&#8217;s anger knew no bounds,
-and he swore a blue streak and fired two shots after Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thunder and lightning, I would not have had that goat escape
-for a million dollars,&#8221; he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bet your small change first,&#8221; counseled another.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; his escape puts us in a pretty light, doesn&#8217;t it? Five able-bodied
-men not able to keep one goat in an auto! To be sure, one
-man was not a man, only an idiot of a chauffeur,&#8221; he stormed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say, Jean, you better stop working on that tire and go hang
-yourself with the rope in your hand!&#8221; scoffed the third, &#8220;for you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-are likely to be hung in earnest when you get to camp for all the
-mistakes you have made to-day, to say nothing of losing the goat
-besides.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But poor Jean heard this not at all for he was still unconscious
-from Billy&#8217;s terrific butt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some goat, that, misters!&#8221; said the farmer in a dry way.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess you would think so if you knew just a little of his history!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean to tell me that that there goat is the one they
-call the &mdash;th Regiment&#8217;s mascot, and the one the papers are always
-telling about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Same goat!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wal, I&#8217;ll be gosh darned!&#8221; in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>Jean did not come to and one of the officers had to run to the
-auto for restoratives while Jean was stretched out on the back seat
-with his head in a second officer&#8217;s lap. In falling he had hit his
-head on a stone and the wound was now bleeding profusely. The
-soldiers tied their handkerchiefs around his head and tried to stop
-the flow of blood as best they could and after the car was out of
-the ditch they drove so fast they were in danger of breaking their
-necks or having the car turn turtle at every turn.</p>
-
-<p>When at last they did reach camp and got the chauffeur into
-the hospital and reported to the General for duty, they were in
-a pretty mess and looked as if they had been in a pitched battle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-with the enemy for they were covered with dirt and blood from
-their heads to their heels, which made the General exclaim when
-he saw them, &#8220;Well, bless my soul, you are a nice looking crowd!
-Whatever has happened to you?&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BILLY NEARLY KILLS THE COOK</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p023.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN Billy was sure he was not being followed, he
-went a circuitous way back to the dogs&#8217; hospital that he
-might stop and have the fun of telling them how he
-escaped from the old General.</p>
-
-<p>When at last he approached the hospital from the back, he saw
-no one about, not even a dog or cat. But all the windows and
-doors were open so he knew they were at home and around somewhere.
-He cautiously approached, keeping a sharp lookout for the
-cook, for he did not want him to catch him and deliver him into
-the old General&#8217;s hands. He was just rounding the pig pen when
-he saw driving into the lane one of the field hospital ambulances.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I expect it has come with a load of wounded dogs. I&#8217;ll just
-stay here and watch,&#8221; pondered Billy.</p>
-
-<p>The hum of the ambulance motor was heard in the hospital and
-presently a young doctor and two trained nurses appeared at the
-door ready to receive the new patients. Billy could hear the low
-groans and yelps of pain from the dogs as the stretchers were lifted
-and the dogs were carried inside. Several dogs tagged in after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-the stretcher bearers and as Billy had always wanted to have a look
-about the hospital wards, he determined to follow.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he found himself standing in the doorway of a long
-ward with tiny beds like babies&#8217; cribs lining the wall all the way
-around, and in each bed was a dog, either curled up asleep or sitting
-upon its hind quarters watching the newcomers.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the dogs had their legs in slings; others had bandages
-over their eyes, while others were in plaster casts. Beside each
-cot was a little stand on which had been placed the medicine for
-that particular dog, along with a bowl of drinking water.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee!&#8221; exclaimed Billy. &#8220;A dog would not mind being sick
-in these quarters with all this comfort and the pretty nurses and
-the kind doctors to wait upon him. But what is that? Do my
-eyes deceive me, or am I seeing things? If so, I am a sick goat and
-I shall crawl into the first cot I find that is big enough to hold me.
-If I am not seeing things, then that big, black cat on the window
-sill is my dear old friend Button from the United States of America.
-Such being the case, Stubby, the other member of our trio, can&#8217;t
-be far off. Perhaps he is one of these wounded dogs that just came
-in the ambulance. I know how I&#8217;ll soon find out. I&#8217;ll just baa
-and if it is Button sitting in that window and Stubby is in one of
-these beds, I bet it will surprise them so that even if they are half
-dead they will come to life long enough to answer my baa.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p049.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Billy gave one long, loud baa that resounded down the big,
-bare room like a loud clanging bell. Every person and dog in
-the long hospital ward jumped as if a bomb had exploded in the
-room, and some of the weaker
-and more timid dogs fainted
-dead away from the shock. They
-were weak from loss of blood,
-and fatigued from their hard
-work on the battlefield, having
-been without anything to eat or
-drink for many hours. And I
-am sorry to say that Stubby was
-among them. Billy listened in
-vain for a familiar bark, but he
-was going forward to speak to the
-cat which meowed with joy in response
-to his baa when a doctor picked
-up a window pole and made towards
-Billy, while another grabbed the
-cat and threw it out of the window before
-the cat knew what was taking place. He had been so delighted
-to hear Billy&#8217;s familiar baa that he did not even see the man approaching.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>The doctor chased out Billy and all the dogs that had tagged in,
-and shut the door behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Now Billy had not heard the answering meow, and so was still
-in some doubt as to whether or not the cat was Button, or if his old
-friend Stubby was one of the wounded dogs. As he thought of
-this he walked toward the back of the hospital into the yard. All
-the dogs which had been driven out with him were following
-him and telling him how they had enjoyed the commotion he had
-caused, and were plying him with questions as to how he got away
-from the General and back so soon, and how far he had gotten
-on the journey before he was caught. Billy paid not the slightest
-attention to any of them. In fact, he did not even hear what they
-were saying, he was so busy thinking of his two friends and wondering
-how they ever got to France for when he had last seen them
-they were in New York state.</p>
-
-<p>He had gotten just this far in his musings when he turned the
-corner of the hospital and saw the black cat sitting on a packing
-box, looking up at the window from which he had been thrown.
-Billy knew in a second that the black cat was his old friend sure
-enough. On seeing Billy, the black cat made one spring and lit
-squarely on Billy&#8217;s back. Then he jumped off and ran up a tree,
-then down and over and under a wheelbarrow that was standing
-near, then in among the dogs that were surrounding Billy as if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-to try to save him from the onslaught of this crazy acting cat which
-they all thought was having a fit.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, it was a fit, but not from sickness, but rather from joy at
-beholding Billy alive and in the flesh when he had been given up
-long ago for dead.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the cat quieted down and came and stood before Billy,
-and gazed and gazed and gazed into his eyes without saying a word.
-And Billy gazed back, wondering in his own mind what on earth had
-made the dignified Button act so crazily. After this long scare,
-the cat meowed, &#8220;Well, Billy, old fellow, I see it is really you in
-the flesh and not some other goat that looks like you. But how
-you ever managed to keep from being killed is more than I know.
-All of us had given you up as dead and mourned for you for
-months. Nannie, your poor little wife, is still bewailing your loss.
-You see, we thought you were done for from an item in the newspaper,
-which I heard my master read aloud one morning. I can&#8217;t
-give it to you just as it was written, but the gist of the matter was
-that the &mdash;th Regiment with its celebrated white goat mascot, Billy
-Whiskers, had marched to the front on May twenty-first but that,
-sad to relate, few returned and those that did were badly wounded.
-A great many had been taken prisoners and whether their mascot
-had been killed or captured, those returning did not know. Stub
-and I did not feel you were killed, and that if you were captured<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-you would find some way to escape. We then and there made up
-our minds to cross the ocean and look for you, for we were bound
-to find you if you still lived. And here we two have stumbled
-into you just when we had given up all hope of you being alive.&#8221;
-And off went Button, running up one tree and then another, around
-in circles and jumping over and through hedges and flower beds.
-Once he made the dogs all laugh for by mistake he ran up an old
-gardener&#8217;s back as he was stooping over digging away, thinking it
-was a stump, he was so nearly the color of the trees and grasses of
-the garden. The old fellow was so surprised that he fell headlong
-into the ditch he was digging.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see, Billy, I am so delighted to see you I can&#8217;t keep still.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am just as glad to see you, but I can&#8217;t jump around like a crazy
-loon to show it. Come here until we rub noses in the place of a
-kiss!&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must run and tell Stubby. He will be so delighted it will help
-him stand his pain and he will get well sooner. But how am I to get
-into this blooming building again? Aren&#8217;t there some back stairs,
-fire escapes or something of the like I could go up to get to his
-ward?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, there are no fire escapes on any of these country buildings
-that have been turned into hospitals,&#8221; replied the Red Cross dog.
-&#8220;What we need more than fire escapes is a bomb proof cellar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-large enough to carry our patients into when we have an air raid.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you how you can get in,&#8221; spoke up Pinky. &#8220;Wait until
-the nurses begin to carry suppers up to their patients, and then you
-can creep along at their heels and, being black, you can hide in the
-shadows until they leave the ward. Only the night nurse will then
-be on duty and she will soon fall asleep. Then you can creep out
-and go to your friend&#8217;s cot and tell him all the news.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Splendid idea! Thank you very much! Won&#8217;t some one introduce
-me to this dog?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Goodness gracious me! Do excuse me, Button, for being so impolite,
-but joy at seeing you drove all my good manners out of my
-mind. It is not too late now, and I wish to introduce you to all
-my friends you see standing around us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After they had all been presented to Button, they went over to the
-grove of trees where the dogs always went when they wished to talk
-without interruption, and they agreed to stay there until time for
-the patients to have their supper, for they were very curious to hear
-how the big, black cat got all the way from the United States of
-America to France, and also to hear how Billy got away from the
-old General.</p>
-
-<p>They were all trotting along as fast as they could through the
-barnyard with heads down, thinking what a fine time was in store for
-them listening to the goat and cat relate their adventures, when the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-Red Cross dog heard a peculiar croak and, looking around, he saw
-the cook astride Billy&#8217;s back, trying to get a rope around his neck.
-Now the rope had just slipped over Billy&#8217;s head and the cook gave
-it a pull that nearly strangled him and made him make the croaking
-noise that caused the Red Cross dog to turn around.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee, that is too bad!&#8221; sighed the dog, and Pinky said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just my luck! I never counted on having a good time that <i>some</i>thing
-did not come along and spoil it! I expect the cook won&#8217;t
-rest now until he has delivered Billy to the old General.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wonder where the cook is going to put him now he has him,&#8221;
-said one of the dogs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Goodness knows! <i>I</i> don&#8217;t!&#8221; replied Pinky.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, look! He is going over toward the hospital with him,&#8221;
-said another.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s follow and see what he is going to do with him,&#8221; suggested
-the Red Cross dog. &#8220;But keep out of sight and don&#8217;t let the cook
-know we are following him,&#8221; he warned.</p>
-
-<p>So they all separated, slinking along in the shadows, dodging
-behind trees, boxes and barrels, their eyes glued to the cook&#8217;s back.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of hiding, Pinky walked out in plain sight, and trotted
-along at the cook&#8217;s heels, and she heard him mutter to himself:
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll just put this foxy old goat in that vacant room in the hospital<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-and lock him in and <i>then</i> we will see if he is smart enough to butt
-down the hospital!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He might not try,&#8221; whispered Pinky to herself. &#8220;But I bet he
-could butt down the door if he took it into his head he wanted to
-do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The cook got Billy to the foot of the stairs leading to the porch of
-the hospital. Here the cook went ahead and tried to lead Billy
-up. But all of a sudden Billy planted his fore feet straight in front
-of him and pulled back. His quick stop accompanied by the jerk
-nearly cracked the cook&#8217;s head off his shoulders and Billy, giving a
-second pull just then, jerked the cook backwards off the steps where
-he landed at the bottom, sitting straight up and facing Billy, with
-their noses not three inches apart. He looked so comical with his
-legs spread apart, cap on one side of his head and his hair standing
-straight up, that Billy had to laugh. Surely the cook&#8217;s startled expression
-was a study as he gazed into Billy&#8217;s eyes.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p056.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>On seeing this, the dogs all laughed out loud. The cook jumped
-up and looked around to see who was making sport of him, but of
-course he saw no one. So he thought some one must have been leaning
-out of one of the upper windows, then quickly ducked after they
-laughed. Anyway, he would make Billy pay for his discomfort.
-He jerked him up the steps and was about to shove him into the room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-he had just unlocked when Billy gave a big, big pull and started
-to run off the porch. He ran so fast and was so strong that he jerked
-the cook along as if he had been a rag. Along the porch they
-went until Billy came to one end. Here there were no steps, so
-Billy just gave a big leap
-and landed in the
-middle of a flower
-bed, the cook sailing
-on behind, hanging
-on to the rope
-that was still
-around Billy&#8217;s
-neck. And it was
-a lucky thing for
-the cook that
-there happened to
-be a nice soft
-flower bed right there for him to fall in; otherwise he might have
-broken his back.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Billy gave another pull to the rope which brought the cook to
-his feet, and away went Billy across the lawn and down the lane,
-jerking the cook around trees, over stumps and beehives, upsetting
-them and causing all the bees to come out to see what was the matter.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-For a while the air seemed to Billy to be black with bees. Then
-they stung the cook so that he let go the rope and rolled in the grass
-to try to keep them off his face. But they settled on him thick as
-flies on a molasses covered paper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Run for the watering trough in the barnyard!&#8221; called a nurse
-who saw all this, and the cook did, diving headfirst into the water
-to drive off the bees, which it did effectively.</p>
-
-<p>Billy thought they could not sting up through his long hair, and
-he stood enjoying seeing the cook trying to fight them off. But
-all of a sudden one bee stung him on the ear. The pain made him
-frantic and he started for the watering trough, regardless of the
-fact that the cook was still sitting on the edge, rubbing his swollen
-face and hands and putting mud on them to take out the burning,
-stinging pain. Strange as it may seem, neither the cook nor Billy
-paid the slightest attention to each other. They were too much
-occupied each in trying to stop the pain of the bee stings.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the cook got up and limped into the kitchen, saying
-to himself as he went, &#8220;That goat sure has the devil inside of him!
-I&#8217;ll never try to capture him again for the General. No, not for
-the President of the United States himself! I am done! What
-with having my head jerked off, my spine driven through the top
-of my head, and my legs nearly broken off, to say nothing of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-running me into stumps, trees and beehives, I&#8217;ve got enough of
-that goat, even with one thousand dollars as a reward offered for
-his return. No! No more at all, at all, do I ever have anything
-to do with goats!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BILLY RELATES SOME OF HIS ADVENTURES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p059.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OH, Billy, are you hurt?&#8221; whined Pinky at his
-heels.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. I have a bee sting on my ear that
-hurts like the very mischief. And, by Jove, I believe
-I have another over my eye for it is fast swelling
-shut.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come with us,&#8221; said the Red Cross dog, &#8220;over to the grove
-before it closes entirely and you can&#8217;t see where to walk.
-When we get there I&#8217;ll fix you up for I know what is good for
-stings.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>On the way they had to cross over a little stream with a soft,
-muddy bank, and the Red Cross dog stopped there and said, &#8220;Now
-stoop down and rub your head in the mud so it will cover your eye
-and get into the lid where the sting is. As soon as the mud closes
-over it you will find that the pain will stop almost instantly. I
-have seen my master rub mud on too many stings not to know it
-is a sure cure.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>&#8220;Gee, but I hate to get that nasty mud in my ear and all over
-my face!&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p060.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind the dirt! It is clean
-mud and will dry and fall off itself so it won&#8217;t
-be hard to get out of your ear or off your face.
-Should it be, you can just shut your eyes, hold
-your breath and dip your head up and down in
-the trough until your hair is as white as snow
-again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve got to do something,
-dirt or no dirt, for this
-pain is setting me crazy. So
-here goes!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy knelt down and
-rubbed and rubbed and
-rubbed one side of his head
-up and down in the soft
-mud until it was as brown
-as an African&#8217;s face. When
-at last he stood up all
-the dogs tried not to laugh,
-but finally they went off in a perfect howl of merriment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What you laughing at?&#8221; asked Billy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>&#8220;Just step here where the water is clear and look at yourself,&#8221;
-said the Red Cross dog.</p>
-
-<p>This Billy did, and then he too began to laugh, for he was a
-most comical sight. One side of his face looked twice as large as
-the other, and on this side the eye was swollen shut with a bump
-as big as a hen&#8217;s egg standing out above it. And this whole side
-of his head was as brown as could be while the other was white,
-which made him look exactly as if his head had been made in two
-parts and they were misfits.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hurry!&#8221; said a hound that was with them. &#8220;We better get to
-the woods. I hear some one coming!&#8221; and away scampered the
-dogs and goat to the grove, their old trysting place.</p>
-
-<p>I should like to have had a picture of them as they stood beside
-the clear stream, with the dogs surrounding the mumpsy looking
-goat, laughing at his discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>There was the big St. Bernard, majestic and tall; the long, sleek,
-black hound with tan ears and feet; the fluffy white French poodle
-with pinkish eyes; and the Red Cross Belgian dog with his short,
-sharp ears, wide-awake face and short, glossy black hair, while
-over his breast was still the white band with the Red Cross
-on it.</p>
-
-<p>Once in the woods and comfortably fixed, Billy related to them
-the story of his life and how and where he first met the big black<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-cat they had just seen, and the little yellow dog that was now wounded
-and in the hospital.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Before you begin, Billy,&#8221; said the Red Cross dog, &#8220;I want to
-ask if the pains in your ear and eye are better?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, bless my soul, they don&#8217;t hurt at all! Even the swelling
-is going down. You sure are some doctor!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now go on with your story, and excuse me for having interrupted
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, to begin with, all three of us&mdash;the little yellow dog named
-Stubby, the big black cat called Button and myself&mdash;were born in
-the United States of America. We have known each other for years
-and been great chums. Why, we have scarcely been out of sight
-of one another for years until I joined the army. My regiment left
-so unexpectedly for France that I had no way of letting them know
-I was going, as they were away at the time on a vacation. And I
-bet you we will find out when I get a chance to talk to them that the
-minute they got home and found I was gone they managed to make
-friends with some of the soldier boys and made themselves so useful
-that they brought them along. Why, do you know that we three
-have crossed the big American continent twice, and we have been
-from Northern Wisconsin away down to the Gulf of Mexico? Not
-being satisfied with that, we have crossed the Pacific to Japan and we
-all three were in the war between Russia and Japan as mascots.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-Before that we crossed the Atlantic Ocean, sailed through the Straits
-of Gibraltar and over the Mediterranean Sea to Constantinople.
-We are some little globe trotters, don&#8217;t you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heavens! It makes my head dizzy to even think of it!&#8221; said
-Pinky.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you lived to tell the tale!&#8221; said the big St. Bernard.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, as I shall live to tell the tale of this war and about all of
-you to my grandchildren when I get home,&#8221; replied Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you must have had a great many narrow escapes and thrilling
-experiences,&#8221; suggested the hound.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should think so! More than would fill a book the size of Webster&#8217;s
-dictionary. As for hurts, bruises and scars, I have been
-wounded so many times I don&#8217;t believe there is a square inch on my
-body that has not a scar of some kind on it. It is a good thing I am
-not a hairless goat, like those little hairless dogs they have in Mexico,
-for if I was, I would look like a tattooed man,&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell us of your most thrilling experience,&#8221; begged the Red Cross
-dog.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heavens! I have had so many hairbreadth escapes I would not
-know which one to pick out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell us two or three of them,&#8221; said Pinky. &#8220;I just love to hear
-you tell of your adventures.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, do!&#8221; exclaimed all the other dogs in chorus.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>Just then Billy gave his head a shake and a big clod of dry mud
-fell off his eye, leaving it practically well and the swelling gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A mighty quick cure, I should say,&#8221; remarked Billy. &#8220;I recommend
-you, Doctor Red Cross!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Turn your head to one side and shake it and I think the rest of
-the mud will fall off. Then by holding your head well over on one
-side, the mud will fall out of your ear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>All this Billy did.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My, but it certainly does feel good to be able to see out of both
-eyes and hear with both ears once again! So you all want to hear
-of some thrilling adventure I have had? Well, let me see which
-one I shall tell first, about being wrecked at sea, falling in the crack
-of an earthquake that opened at my feet, or being blown up by a
-bomb in this war or&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t tell us anything about bombs!&#8221; exclaimed Pinky.
-&#8220;They are too common around here. We want to hear something we
-don&#8217;t know so much about.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, then I guess I&#8217;ll tell you about the earthquake experience.
-It happened when Stubby, Button and myself were in San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One day we were trotting along one of the streets in Chinatown,
-the name given to the Chinese quarters of that city. It was about
-lunch time, and Button had jumped up into a milk wagon that had
-stopped opposite us, to see if he could not find some milk to drink,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-Stubby had run into a butcher shop to see if he could find some
-meat, and I decided to sneak into some Chinaman&#8217;s back yard and
-see what I could find to make a meal.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p065.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Presently I came to a long, narrow, dark passageway that led to
-a back yard. I sneaked in quickly, so a Chinaman looking out the
-window would not see me. But alas, he did, and I had scarcely
-gotten half way down the passage when I heard a door slam shut
-behind me and a bolt slipped into place. I knew before I even
-turned around, when I heard that bolt slip into place, that I was
-caught in a trap like as not. But I went right on pretending I
-did not hear the Chinaman shut the door.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>&#8220;The end of the passage opened into the back yard of a Chinese
-laundry and there were lines and lines stretched from one side of
-the yard to the other, but there were no clothes hanging on them
-when I went in. Without paying any attention to me, the Chinaman
-began to take down the lines, but instead of taking them all
-down, he only took a short one, I noticed. Then he made a slip
-knot in one end, whistling as he walked toward the laundry. He
-went inside, still without looking at me, and I was beginning to
-think I had been mistaken and he had not seen me enter and that
-the rope was not to tie me up, when out he came with a carrot in
-one hand, the rope still in the other.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He came straight toward me, holding out the carrot in one hand
-while he kept the other behind him. As he approached me he
-kept saying, &#8216;Nice little goatee! Nice little goatee! Have a carrot!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I thought to myself, &#8216;You might as well try to catch a bird
-by putting salt on its tail as to try to catch me with a carrot in one
-hand and a rope hidden in the other behind your back, especially
-when that rope has a slip knot in it. Oh, no, Mr. Chinaman, I
-was not born yesterday or the day before! And unless you open
-that door quickly and let me out, you are going to be carried out
-of it on my horns. I am in no mood for play or jokes!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just then another Chinaman came out of the laundry with a
-basket heaped up with clothes to hang on the line, and the Chinaman
-with the carrot said, &#8216;Yum, you watcha me catcha little goatee.
-Keep little goatee. Him bring heap money at butcher&#8217;s!&#8217;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p066b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">Billy gave one long, loud baa that resounded down the big,<br /> bare room.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="floatright">(Page <a href="#Page_49">49</a>)</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>&#8220;&#8216;So-ho! You would sell me for chops and roasts, would you?
-Well, just you come a little nearer and see what happens to one little
-Chinaman!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Chinaman with the clothes began to hang them on the line,
-singing a queer, monotonous refrain in his cackling language. By
-this time the first Chinaman was within three feet of me, holding
-the carrot straight out before him and staring into my eyes. Evidently
-he was not used to goats, and felt a little uncertain as to what
-I would do. While I was watching him, expecting he would try
-to throw the rope over my head every minute, to surprise him I
-stretched my neck out quickly, grabbed the carrot out of his hand
-and ate it up. Then he came boldly up to me, as this gave him the
-assurance I was not going to butt him. But when he tried to put the
-rope around my neck, I simply lowered my head and butted him over
-flat on his back. This infuriated him, and he leaped up and grabbed
-a clothes pole to hit me with it. Then the chase began. Around
-and around that small back yard we went, upsetting everything,
-he trying to hit me all the while and I dodging him but trying to
-butt or hook him at every turn. Then I took to butting everything
-and anything that came in my way. One thing I butted was the
-basket full of clothes the second Chinaman had left, having sought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-a place of safety when first the chase began. Now he sat cross-legged
-on the low roof of the back porch grinning from ear to ear
-and watching the sport. When I butted the basket, it shot straight
-up in the air, spilling out the clothes as it soared, which the wind
-caught and carried over into the other yards.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Presently from all the doors and windows of the adjacent buildings
-one could see grinning faces. But not one person came to help
-that Chinaman I was butting and chasing. He must have been
-thoroughly disliked by his neighbors for them to act as they did.
-Their jeers and calls made him madder and madder and every
-time he tried to hit me with the long pole and missed, they would
-call:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Try it again! Try it again! Don&#8217;t give up!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Once the pole just grazed my back, and for this I went to the
-clothesline and taking a shirt sleeve in my teeth I jerked it off the
-line, stamped on it and then tore it to pieces. He nearly foamed
-at the mouth when he saw this. And I was just walking up to
-get another when some one slipped up behind me and threw a
-blanket over my head. Well, of all the rolling and tumbling that
-went on then you never saw the like! First I was on top, then
-the two Chinamen were. My legs were loose and you better believe
-I used them. I kicked and kicked. Then all of a sudden it seemed
-as if every Chinaman in all Chinatown was sitting on top of me.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-They came from over the fences, from all directions, and every one
-that came proceeded to sit on me. At last there were so many of
-them I could not move. They tied all four of my feet together
-and strung me on a pole, which they suspended over a place where
-a bonfire had been made over which to make soap. Some one removed
-the big kettle of soap and then they put me right where
-the kettle had been. Next they took the blanket off my head and
-began dancing around me, and spit at me and jabbed me with sticks,
-doing everything they could possibly think of to torture me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The blood ran into my head so from being hung upside down
-that I could scarcely see, and the ropes binding my feet cut into
-me until I bled. But still these heathen Chinese showed no mercy
-and I was beginning to wonder if they intended leaving me to die
-a slow death when the first Chinaman said, &#8216;Let&#8217;s build a fire under
-him and cook him alive! Roast goatee is velly, velly good, me hear.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This seemed to please the crowd, and they joined hands and ran
-around and around me, chanting some heathen song until the old
-Chinaman who had proposed cooking me alive came with some
-matches and shavings to start the fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then for the first time I began to be worried, and thought,
-&#8216;Well, at last I am in a tight place I can&#8217;t get out of,&#8217; when I heard
-howls of pain and rage and the fierce growl of a dog. Opening
-my eyes to see what was taking place, I saw Stubby biting the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-heels of the Chinaman as he stooped to light the fire, while Button
-sat on his back scratching the very shirt off him. In about two
-minutes the yard was cleared of Chinamen, I can tell you! Stubby
-bit and Button clawed them until they were glad enough to climb
-the fences to get away alive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They had frightened the Chinamen off and saved me from being
-roasted to death. But how were they ever to get me off that pole?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At last I thought, &#8216;Perhaps if I wriggle and squirm my weight
-will break the pole. Anyway, I am going to try it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And soon I found that by moving my body in a certain way I
-could start a certain motion that made me swing up and down and
-the more I moved the higher I went and the pole began to creak.
-Then presently it broke in two and came down all in a heap. I had
-scarcely touched the ground when Stubby and Button began to gnaw
-the ropes that bound me, and in a jiffy they had gnawed them through
-and I was loose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you think I ran away when I was free once more? No,
-indeed, I did not! I stayed right there to get even with Mr. Chinaman
-who had proposed to cook me alive. It was very dark in the
-yard now as night had closed in while all the fuss was going on. So
-I proposed to hide and wait for the Chinaman to show himself
-in the yard. Well, all I can say is that if he ever did show himself
-I had made up my mind to kill him. Stubby and Button hid too,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-and then we waited. And as we waited the earth under our feet
-began to quiver and shake and low, rumbling noises were heard
-like distant thunder. These shakings and tremblings of the earth
-continued growing more and more violent until they threw me off
-my feet once or twice, while the ripping, roaring noises grew louder
-and more frequent. Presently fire bells began to ring and the night
-sky was illuminated with vivid red reflections from huge fires. But
-still we three watched for those Chinamen to come out of the house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Come on, Billy!&#8217; Stubby barked in a whisper. &#8216;Let us get out
-of here. We must be having one of those terrible earthquakes
-they sometimes have out here in this country.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Yes, come, Billy,&#8217; urged Button, &#8216;and leave the Chinaman to
-the mercy of the &#8217;quake. Perhaps the earth will open and swallow
-him!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Hope it does, but I am going to give him a butt that will break
-his back first. I&#8217;ll teach him not to torture goats in the future!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;S-s-s-s-h-h-h!&#8217; exclaimed Button. &#8216;I see him through the window.
-He is coming now.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cautiously the door opened a crack, and the Chinaman&#8217;s crafty
-face peered out. His eyes searched every nook and corner of the
-yard, but he saw no goat, dog or cat. Button was so black one could
-not see him as he sat on top of the fence. Stubby was hidden under
-a pile of old chairs, tables and so on, while I was close against the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-house behind the door the Chinaman had just opened. I got there
-on purpose so that when once he stepped into the yard he could
-not go back unless he passed me for I would be between the man
-and the house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;What has he in his hand that smokes so?&#8217; I wondered. &#8216;Why,
-it is a dipper of boiling water! Gee, I bet he intended to throw
-that on me when he saw me. Well, I&#8217;ll just sneak up behind him
-and give him a butt in the back and make him spill it on himself
-and then he can see how he would like boiling water thrown on
-him.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I did not dare to try to walk up behind him for fear I might
-stumble over something and then he would hear me and throw the
-water, so I made one big jump from behind the door and butted him
-squarely in the back. Well, I made the jump all right, but just as
-my feet left the earth it opened under me with a ripping, tearing
-noise and swallowed the Chinaman with his dipper of hot water,
-and closed again so quickly that when I came down from my jump
-I lit on solid ground where but half a second before had been a
-yawning chasm. Whoo! That was a narrow escape, for had I stood
-still the earth would have opened under me or if I had not happened
-to jump high enough I would have landed right in the opening and
-been crushed or killed as had the Chinaman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The &#8217;quake that swallowed the Chinaman had extended far and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-shaken down lots of the old rickety buildings in the neighborhood,
-and buildings were tottering and falling all around. So Stubby,
-Button and I lost no time in getting out of that place, I can tell you.
-I simply butted down the door the Chinaman had bolted when I
-came in, and we all three ran out and down the street towards the
-Bay. I won&#8217;t stop to tell you of the destruction of the beautiful
-city and the fearful, gruesome sights and sounds we saw and heard,
-or how the flames licked up the handsome buildings after the earthquake
-had shaken them down, for the destruction of San Francisco
-has passed into history and any one of you who wish to hear more
-of it can listen as some one is reading aloud about it. This ends
-the tale of one of my most thrilling adventures.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, thank you! Thank you so much, Mr. Whiskers, for telling
-us this story,&#8221; exclaimed the facile Pinky. &#8220;I have enjoyed hearing
-it so much, though you did make my skin creep and my hair
-stand on end when you were telling of how they proposed to cook
-you alive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then all the other dogs thanked him also for relating to them this
-wonderful tale.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think we better go back to the hospital and look for Button
-and see if we cannot find a way for me to slip in and see Stubby,&#8221;
-remarked Billy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BUTTON FRIGHTENS TWO NURSES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p023.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHILE Billy had been relating his adventures Button had
-been lying in a box under Stubby&#8217;s window, trying to
-think of a way to get to him and tell him that Billy was
-here in this very place.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If there was only a fire escape!&#8221; he sighed. &#8220;Then I could easily
-make it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was getting near supper time but he was still puzzling his brain
-over the matter when he saw one of the nurses in Stubby&#8217;s room come
-to the window and let down a rope with a basket on it. When it
-reached the ground she still stood there holding on to the rope as
-if waiting for some one to come.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What in the world can be going on now, I wonder,&#8221; mused Button.</p>
-
-<p>Presently from around the corner of the hospital from the kitchen
-he saw another nurse appear with a tray loaded down with the dogs&#8217;
-supper. There not being an elevator in this old building, the nurses
-had thought out this way of saving them climbing the long flight
-of steps with the heavy trays on which they carried the dogs&#8217; food
-to them. One nurse would go to the kitchen, get the food prepared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-by the cook, and then bring it around to this window, place it in
-the basket, and the nurse in the window would pull it up. When
-the dogs had finished their meal, the dishes were lowered in the
-basket just as they had been hauled up, carried back to the kitchen
-and washed. So you see what a saving of steps this basket elevator
-really was.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My, if I could only manage to get in that basket and have her
-pull me up!&#8221; thought Button.</p>
-
-<p>The cat watched the nurses raise and lower the basket until presently
-a nurse came from the kitchen, put the food in the basket and
-went off, forgetting to pull a string which rang a bell, the signal that
-the basket was ready to be pulled up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee, she has forgotten to pull the string and gone off. I can
-see the nurse in the window waiting for the signal. She will get
-tired waiting pretty soon and pull it up, I believe. I am going
-over and eat up what is in that basket and hop in myself, and then
-I shall be pulled up. If the basket feels heavy, the nurse will think
-there must be an extra amount of dishes in this trip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Suiting the action to the thought, Button hurried over to it, lapped
-up a cup of milk, ate some cold chicken and potatoes, and then he
-saw the basket begin to move. Without a moment&#8217;s hesitation he
-jumped in and sat on the soiled dishes and the remaining suppers.
-Up, up he was slowly drawn, and he heard the nurse mumble to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-herself, &#8220;Wonder what they have in this basket to-night? It feels
-like a basket of bricks, it is so heavy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p077.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now if she only doesn&#8217;t see
-me until the basket is safely on
-the window ledge I shall be
-lucky. I am afraid if she sees
-me, it will frighten her and she
-will let go the basket and
-down I will fall with a dull thud.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But just as the basket reached the
-ledge of the window her attention was called
-to something inside and she turned her
-head to look, at the same time reaching her
-hand out and pulling the basket on to
-the window sill from force of habit.
-When she turned back to the window,
-there on the sill sat a black
-cat with big, yellow eyes looking at
-her. It startled her so she screamed
-and pulled the basket in off the sill,
-and then let go the handle, and it rolled under the
-bed of one of the patients, spilling out bottles of milk, biscuits, sliced
-chicken, and many other good things.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>Taking advantage of the confusion, Button jumped down from
-the window and ran under the beds until he came to the one occupied
-by Stubby. Then he moved softly so as not to frighten Stubby, and
-crawled in bed under the sheets so no one could see him. No one
-did see him do it for every dog in the ward was sitting up in bed,
-straining their eyes to see what had happened by the window.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The cat! The cat! Where did it go?&#8221; the nurse kept calling
-in an excited voice. For when she turned to look for him, the cat
-she had seen was gone. After all the nurses had looked under every
-bed and in all the corners and in every other conceivable place, they
-began to tease her and tell her it was an illusion, that she had only
-imagined she saw a cat. After awhile she began to think that perhaps
-this was the case. Still what would make her think she saw
-a cat when she did not? Especially as she had not even been thinking
-of cats? The only thing that looked as if she had seen one was that
-half the dogs&#8217; suppers had been eaten or at least they were short some
-food. That nurse went to bed that night with a headache from trying
-to decide whether or not she had seen a cat.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after supper the dogs in the hospital were given their last
-dose of medicine, their bandages were straightened, and then they
-were ready to be tucked in for the night. The nurses patted the
-dogs on their heads and said good-night to them just as if they were
-people. Then they turned down the lights and went out, leaving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-only the night nurse in charge in one corner of the room where she
-sat by a shaded light knitting for the soldiers and dreaming and
-praying for the safe return of her brothers and sweetheart after the
-war was over. Button did not stir until Stubby stuck his head under
-the sheet and whispered to him that he could talk now, as the nurse
-was so occupied in picking up some stitches in her knitting that she
-had dropped that she would not hear them.</p>
-
-<p>So there the two lay all curled up under the sheet, Button telling
-of the finding of Billy and Stubby listening with all his ears. When
-Button had finished, Stubby gave a great sigh and said, &#8220;Isn&#8217;t it
-wonderful to think that we should have found him in this big, big
-country across the sea? My, I am so glad it will make me well
-soon. For life was not half worth living without our dear chum
-Billy. I know you agree with me, Button.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I surely do!&#8221; exclaimed Button. &#8220;How is your leg, old fellow?
-Healing fast, I hope.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes. The nurse said they would take the splints off to-morrow,
-and she doesn&#8217;t think I am going to be lame, it was healed
-so straight and fine. Isn&#8217;t that grand? For I would hate to be
-bothered limping along on a lame leg on our trips. It would be
-very inconvenient when I wished to run away when some one was
-chasing us, too. I hate to hurry you off, Button, but the night nurse
-will be coming around soon to straighten our beds and give us our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-last drink for the night so I am afraid she might lift up the sheet
-and find you. But how are you going to get out of the door into
-the hall, as it is shut?&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p081.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Trust me! I will get out as I came&mdash;by the window.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I did not know there was a fire escape by the window,&#8221; said
-Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t. I came up on the food basket.&#8221; And then Button
-told him how he had come up in the basket and nearly scared a
-nurse to death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you can&#8217;t go down that way because there is no one here
-to let the basket down,&#8221; objected Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t need any basket to go down in. All I need is the rope,
-and as it is fastened to the wall I will just have to slide down it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Button, but you are a smart cat! You should have been
-born a man, not a cat. If you had, the world would have heard
-of wonderful things you had done, I am sure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you wish I had been born a man, I wish the three of us had.
-Wouldn&#8217;t Billy have made a splendid brigadier general, while you
-would have made a dandy lieutenant!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;S-s-s-s-sh-h-h! I hear the nurse coming. Scoot! Drop out of
-bed on the side nearest the wall and run under the beds until you
-are near the window,&#8221; advised Stubby.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>The nurse was walking down the aisle of the ward that faced
-the window when the moon came out from under a cloud and shone
-straight into the room. And she saw not only the moon, but a big
-black cat as it jumped up on the window sill. She shut her eyes,
-looked again and again, and the cat had disappeared!</p>
-
-
-
-<p>&#8220;It must be the same cat that
-Nurse Mollie saw, and now it has
-disappeared again as completely
-as it did when she saw it. She
-got one glimpse and it was gone.
-I got another, and it faded in
-thin air. Heavens! We must be
-going to be bombarded for black
-cats bring bad luck, they say, and
-this cat has come to warn us. I&#8217;ll
-just run to the window and see if
-I can&#8217;t see it. It could not jump
-out of the window because it is
-too high from the ground, and it isn&#8217;t in this room, and cats can&#8217;t
-fly, so where is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The nurse went to the window and looked out. No tree, roof
-or shed was near enough for the cat to have jumped to them and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-then to the ground, so of course it must have been a spook cat for
-no cat was in sight. She never looked close to the building, or
-she would have seen a rope to which clung a black cat, hanging
-on desperately as it lowered itself to the ground.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BILLY MAKES PLANS TO LEAVE FRANCE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p023.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHILE Button was hanging on to the rope Billy and the
-dogs came around the hospital to look for him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There! I told you Button was the smartest cat you
-ever heard of, and I bet he would find a way to see
-Stubby. There he comes now, down that rope from Stubby&#8217;s window!&#8221;
-said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>When nearly to the ground Button jumped from the rope and
-landed at Billy&#8217;s feet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hello, Billy and friends! How do you find yourselves? I have
-just been up to pay Stub a visit, and I accidentally frightened two
-nurses nearly to death and made them both believe they saw a
-spook cat instead of a live one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how am I to see Stubby? That is what I want to know,&#8221;
-asked Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am afraid you can&#8217;t get into the hospital to see him, Billy.
-But you will probably have a fine chance to see him to-morrow.
-I heard the nurse say she was going to take all the convalescent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-patients out under a tree in the yard if it was a nice day. And as
-the sun set clear, I think you will have a chance to talk to him
-to-morrow. If you cannot get near enough to him to chat, at least
-you can see him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How is his leg getting along?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, splendidly! He will be able to use it in a few days. They
-are taking off the splints to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is good news indeed. Now it will be only a short time
-before we can start once again on our journey home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Our journey home!&#8221; exclaimed Button. &#8220;Who said Stubby and
-I were going with you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I did. Or rather I planned taking you both along with me.
-You don&#8217;t suppose I am going without you now I have found you
-again, do you? Not by a long way!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what if we refuse to go? You can&#8217;t carry us, one on each
-horn, can you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I could, but I don&#8217;t want you to go that way, or against your
-will. I want you to <i>want</i> to go. And I know perfectly well that
-I can offer enough inducements to coax you both to go with
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how about deserting our regiments?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have already deserted yours in following Stubby here,&#8221;
-answered Billy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>&#8220;But I had to follow a wounded friend! Besides, they would be
-delighted to see me back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is all well enough! But you fellows are coming back home
-with me just as soon as Stubby is able to travel. And I will
-tell you why. In the first place you both have had about
-enough of war to last you
-all your lives. Again the
-war will soon be
-over now the United
-States army is in
-the thick of the fight.
-And again you both have come to
-the conclusion that there is
-no country you would care
-to live in but America, and
-the United States of America part of it at that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p085.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are right, Billy. I was only teasing you to hear what arguments
-you would put up. But none of them are the real reason
-why we would leave the army now and go home. The only thing
-that would induce us to leave it before the war is over is the same
-thing that made us join it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And pray may I ask what that is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. It is yourself. We left home to find you. Having found<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-you, we are ready to leave everything and follow you whether you
-go home or away from home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bravo! Bravo!&#8221; cheered the dogs. &#8220;You and Stubby surely are
-bully friends for a goat to have. We congratulate you, Billy, on
-having such true and loyal ones.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks,&#8221; bowed Billy. &#8220;Do you know the way to make and keep
-true, sincere and loyal friends? I&#8217;ll tell you. Be one yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hurrah for you, Billy! You will always have the last word.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you mind telling me a part of your immediate plan and how
-you propose getting from here to where we are to embark? Or are
-you thinking of stealing a ride home in an airship?&#8221; asked Button.</p>
-
-<p>At this the dogs laughed. The idea of a goat, dog and cat riding
-in an airship!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, my friends, you need not laugh and think that is impossible,
-for I already have crossed the American continent from New York
-City to San Francisco in an airship,&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will you tell us what you haven&#8217;t done, Mr. Billy Whiskers?&#8221;
-asked Pinky.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I could not; it would take too long. Well, in the first place,&#8221;
-he continued, turning to Button, &#8220;I thought unless a better plan
-offered, I would go straight to Paris and from Paris to the seacoast
-and get on the first boat sailing for America. I had not decided on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-any special port to sail from. I just left that to chance, for probably
-we would have to try many before I could sneak on board. But
-the hardest part of the trip will be from here to Paris, as we are
-known by the soldiers around here, and we run the risk of being
-carried back to the army any minute. If we leave the main highway
-that leads to Paris, I am afraid we may lose our way and go a
-long, roundabout route and possibly we might fall into the hands
-of the Germans.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Billy, I&#8217;ll tell you what I will do,&#8221; spoke up the Red Cross dog.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll leave going back to the army long enough to show you the way
-to Paris and across that city. You could easily find your way to
-Paris, but I doubt if you could find your way out. It is a big city,
-and the roads out are all well guarded now by soldiers who might
-recognize you, capture you and send you back. I know every step
-of the way, and we could slip out at night or swim the river Seine
-where it runs out of the city. After I had accompanied you to within
-sight of the sea I could come back. I need a vacation and the trip
-would be one for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you, my dear Duke,&#8221; for that was the name of the Red
-Cross dog. &#8220;I will accept your offer. But I cannot allow you to
-carry out one part of it, and that part is to leave us and go back into
-the army. They have plenty of Red Cross dogs and police dogs,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-too, so they can spare you now. As you have expressed a desire to
-see America many times, why not continue on with us and visit our
-fair land?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just the thing!&#8221; exclaimed Button. &#8220;You may never have such
-another chance to visit our country in such good company as a goat,
-dog and cat of world renown&mdash;a-hem, a-hem!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this they all laughed and Pinky said, &#8220;Why, yes; why don&#8217;t
-you go, Duke? I only wish I had the chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you have!&#8221; said Billy. &#8220;I extend my invitation to all here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear! Oh dear! Much as I should love to go, I dislike the
-hardships of travel too much, and I know I should be seasick. I
-was when I crossed the Channel once to go with my mistress to visit
-some friends in London. But I should dearly love to go as far as
-Paris with you and see the surprised face of my mistress when I
-came trotting in. You know she sent me here so I would be safe
-when they began to bombard Paris with those extra long range guns.
-Besides, she said she had so much Red Cross war work to do that
-she could not take the time to look after me properly and see that
-I had my walk in the Boulevard or in the Park every day. And
-it would be unkind of me to run away to America and leave her
-when she has been so kind to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must go back to my mountains,&#8221; said the big St. Bernard, &#8220;as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-soon as I am able and help find the travelers that get lost in the
-heights and would die of starvation if it was not for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So none of them accepted Billy&#8217;s invitation to go except Pinky
-and even she was going only as far as Paris.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen! I thought I heard the sound of an automobile turning
-into the lane,&#8221; said Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You did,&#8221; said the hound. &#8220;I just saw the flash of its lamps
-through the trees.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy and the dogs talked for a while longer, and they were about
-to say good-night when they heard voices coming in their direction.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;S-s-s-sh-h-h!&#8221; said Billy. &#8220;I thought I recognized that voice!
-It is the old General&#8217;s chauffeur. Now what can he be wanting
-here at this time of the evening? I&#8217;ll just listen and find out. No,
-I will get Button to creep up close and listen for his black coat won&#8217;t
-show in the dark like my white one would.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Button crept through the long grass until he was right near where
-the chauffeur and the cook stood talking. There being a tree near
-them, Button ran up it and sat on a limb listening to every word
-they spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Jean,&#8221; said the cook, &#8220;what important business have you
-on your mind this evening, or have you come to take away some
-of our convalescent patients?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>&#8220;My business is most important, and I have come straight from
-the General.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hoity-toity! You don&#8217;t say so! Whatever can it be about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That blasted old Billy goat that the General sets such stores by.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p090.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean it!&#8221; said the cook. &#8220;And
-why are you looking for him here when you took
-him away with you only two days ago?
-You don&#8217;t mean to tell me that the slippery
-old rascal has escaped from camp again?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; he did not escape from camp, because
-we never succeeded in getting him
-within miles of it. We hadn&#8217;t gotten ten
-miles from here when we broke down
-and that pesky old goat escaped.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you are fooling! He could
-not escape one General,
-three officers and
-a smart chauffeur like
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, couldn&#8217;t he?
-You don&#8217;t know that old goat if you think that. He could escape
-a whole regiment if he wanted to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And why do you come looking for him here?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>&#8220;Because we found him here and as he seemed to be having a
-pretty good time with the dogs, we thought he might come back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you did, did you? Well, you reasoned well, for he did come
-back, and I tried to catch him so I could claim the thousand dollars
-reward. You see my right arm is in a sling, don&#8217;t you? Well, it
-is all on account of trying to capture that same old goat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean to tell me that he really is here? Divide the
-thousand dollars with me and I will help you catch him again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never again do I monkey with that goat! I once swore I would
-not, and nothing would induce me to try it again. Would you like
-to know what he did to me and how I broke my arm?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I would.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it happened in this way. He did come back and I thought
-I would catch him and claim the reward. One might as well try
-to catch the devil asleep as to try to catch that goat off his guard.
-Do you see those steps that lead up onto the hospital porch? And
-that cherry tree down the lane the other side of those beehives?
-Well, just imagine me, fat as I am, at the end of a rope, being jerked
-off the porch where there are no steps, pulled around the yard, down
-past the beehives, upsetting them, chased and stung by the bees,
-wrapped around that cherry tree so tight I could not move and then
-the rope pulled out of my hands so fast it blistered them while the
-goat ran on, stopped to look around, saw me stuck to the tree, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-then he gave a baa, swished his tail and disappeared. I have not
-seen him since. I hope the bees stung him so he will remember the
-day as long as he lives, for I know I shall. Why, I could not see
-out of my eyes for two days, they were swollen so, and my ears looked
-like a jackass&#8217;s, they were so swollen out of shape. No, thank you!
-You may have all the honor of catching that goat yourself, and the
-reward that goes with it. I&#8217;ll be a goat catcher no more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Button could see in his imagination just what Billy did to the
-fellow, and he laughed so to himself that he nearly fell out of the
-tree.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you would like to hear it, I will tell you how he escaped the
-five of us,&#8221; offered the chauffeur. Then he told the cook what you
-already know, the recital of which pleased the cook immensely, as
-misery likes company, and he was glad to know that he was not
-the only one Billy had gotten the best of.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I tell you what let&#8217;s do,&#8221; suggested the chauffeur. &#8220;There are
-two of us against one goat. We will lay a plan and get him. Then
-we can divide that thousand dollars between us. We won&#8217;t try to
-get him in a hurry, but we will lay a plan that can&#8217;t fail.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t fail?&#8221; laughed the cook. &#8220;<i>Any</i> plan would fail with that
-old goat unless you killed him outright. And we don&#8217;t want to do
-that for the General&#8217;s reward is for him alive, not dead.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p092b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Away went Billy, jerking the cook around trees,<br /> over stumps and beehives.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="floatright">(Page <a href="#Page_56">56</a>)</span></p>
-
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it is a pity with such a big reward in sight if we can&#8217;t get<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-ahead of one old goat! I&#8217;ll eat my shirt if I don&#8217;t capture him
-alive within three days after I lay eyes on him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll eat your shirt then, young man, and I will sit by and see
-you do it if he doesn&#8217;t bung up both my eyes so I can&#8217;t see out of
-them before then.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now let&#8217;s plan how I shall go about it,&#8221; said the chauffeur.</p>
-
-<p>Button waited to hear no more, but ran to tell Billy that they were
-laying plans to capture him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BUTTON DISCOVERS SPIES IN THE HAYMOW</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p023.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN Button got back where he had left Billy and the
-dogs, he found them all gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess Billy thought they better hide somewhere
-until I came back. I can soon find them, however, by
-running up a tall tree and looking over the place, for even in this
-twilight I can see Billy&#8217;s white coat. Yes, there is a white object
-about his size moving toward the woods. I will follow it and I
-bet it will turn out to be Billy. It is too big for a dog, and too small
-for a cow.&#8221; So Button ran after the white object and soon came
-up to Billy and the dogs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There, didn&#8217;t I tell you dogs he would find us?&#8221; said Billy.
-&#8220;Button, our friends here did not want to leave until you came back.
-They were afraid you could not find us, and that you would feel
-hurt at our going off when you had gone to get information for me.
-They do not know us, do they? That we always understand one
-another and know that every move we make is for the best and our
-safety. Well, what did you find out?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That the two are at this very minute plotting to capture you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-so they can get the reward offered by the General,&#8221; and Button
-began to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are you laughing at? Tell us,&#8221; said Pinky.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p096.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is at what those two said. They have you down fine, Billy,
-and think you are a foxy old rascal with brains. So the two are
-going to lay a deep plot and are not going at it
-hastily so as to be sure to catch you. The
-chauffeur has promised to eat his shirt if he
-can&#8217;t catch you in three days.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They better lay a deep, dark plot and keep
-it under their hats if they intend to catch
-me within three days, for I am leaving
-in about fifteen minutes,&#8221; answered
-Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Mr. Whiskers, you don&#8217;t mean
-that! You surely don&#8217;t mean to
-leave us so soon. Besides, if I am to go with you
-to Paris, I can&#8217;t possibly get ready in that time. Why, I have all the
-chickens, ducks, pigs and the other fowls and animals on the place to
-say good-by to, let alone all my friends in the hospital!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you can&#8217;t travel with me, Miss Rosie de la France, as we
-three never know ten minutes ahead where we will be next, or what
-our next move will be. My being alive now is all due to my being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-able to think and act quickly. And I must leave here before those
-two plotting my capture set eyes on me again. Now here are my
-plans. I made them while walking over here. I will go ahead to
-the outskirts of the next town. There I will wait for Stubby, Button,
-Duke and yourself, if you still feel like risking your life with us,
-and taking all the hardships that come along without a whimper or
-complaint. For it is our motto never to complain or cry over spilt
-milk. What is done is past and gone; why spoil the present and
-becloud the future by dwelling on it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you, Mr. Whiskers, but I think probably I better stay
-here until my mistress comes for me. My surprising her might turn
-out not to be pleasant after all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think you are wise in your decision, for these are troublous
-times to be running around loose without a particular friend, and
-I think you are not enough accustomed to hard knocks to travel
-with three such hardened travelers as we are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am glad that sniffly-nosed, red-eyed little poodle is not going
-with us,&#8221; mused Button to himself. &#8220;I never <i>could</i> abide poodles,
-anyway, and this one seems to be a sentimental fuss-and-feathers kind
-of one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Time&#8217;s up, boys! Glad to have met you all, and hope if any
-of you ever come to America that I shall have the good luck to run
-into you and the chance of returning some of the hospitality you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-have extended to me as well as that I may show you some of our
-beautiful country. Remember, Button, as soon as Stubby is able to
-travel to meet me on the outskirts of the next town. Good-by,
-good-by, kind friends!&#8221; and Billy was off.</p>
-
-<p>He had scarcely disappeared in the darkness when the dogs heard
-the chauffeur and the cook coming toward the woods. They were
-sneaking along, looking carefully under every bush and behind every
-pile of stones for Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I tell you,&#8221; said the cook, &#8220;I saw him running in this direction
-after we had the mix-up with the bees.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Skedaddle, all of you!&#8221; mewed Button. &#8220;Don&#8217;t let them find us
-all together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p098.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;How long ago
-did you see him coming
-in this direction?&#8221;
-asked the chauffeur.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, about
-three hours.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three
-<i>hours</i>! Oh, the dickens!
-In that
-time he might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-be half way to Paris. I thought you had seen him just before I
-came.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, he is somewhere around here, I bet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If he is, he is probably laughing inside himself at the spectacle
-we make creeping along in the dark looking for him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Button went right back to the hospital and climbed up the rope
-that was still hanging from the window of Stubby&#8217;s ward. He
-thought he better go tell Stubby the latest plans while the rope was
-still there. He had very good luck indeed, and succeeded in getting
-to Stubby without being seen and in telling him what he had heard
-the men say and of Billy&#8217;s plans for them to join him as soon as he,
-Stubby, was able to use his leg.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it too provoking that I have to be laid up with a broken
-leg? Why couldn&#8217;t it have been my tail or an ear that got hurt?
-Then I could have traveled.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind, old fellow! You will be all right in a day or two.
-In the meantime Billy can amuse himself by getting in more mischief,
-and I can pass the time by trying <i>not</i> to get into any here.
-I think I better vamoose now or some one will be coming and find
-me as I see it is about time they change the night shifts. I&#8217;ll see
-you in the garden to-morrow. Good-night and pleasant slumbers
-free from pain!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Just as Button was on the window sill about to jump for the rope,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-the second night nurse who was to relieve the one now on duty came
-in the room, and it happened to be the one who had seen Button first
-and had been trying to argue herself into believing that she had not
-seen a big, black cat sitting on the window sill in the moonlight. On
-seeing the same cat again in the same place, she screamed and threw
-up her hands to cover her eyes. Her cry startled Button so that
-he nearly lost his hold of the rope, for he was just sticking his claws
-into it preparatory to climbing down when the nurse opened the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>When she took her hands from her eyes to look once more and
-be sure that the cat was still there, the cat had disappeared, just
-as it had done before.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is something horrible going to happen to the hospital, I
-know,&#8221; she said to the other nurse, &#8220;for that is twice I have seen the
-vision of a big black cat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I too. I also saw it this evening, just where you did, when
-I first came in to take your place. I do hope it is not the forerunner
-of a German raid or that the Germans are going to drop bombs on
-us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It amused Button greatly to see how superstitious the nurses were
-about a black cat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wonder how I shall pass the time until Stubby is taken out into
-the yard to-morrow,&#8221; he thought. &#8220;I think I will go over to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-haymow and catch a mouse and see if French mice taste like American
-ones.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had crawled through a hole in the side of the barn and was
-quietly making his way toward where he thought the haymow would
-most likely be when he heard whispering voices. He stopped to
-listen and made out that they were speaking in German, not in French.
-And he immediately thought, &#8220;Spies, or escaped prisoners!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll just listen and hear what they have to say,&#8221; he decided, &#8220;but
-I&#8217;ll try to get a little closer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Being black as a coal, he could not be seen easily unless the light
-struck his eyes. So he crept cautiously toward where the sound of
-the voices came from, and found it was in the haymow above his
-head. It took but a minute for Button to climb the ladder that led
-up to the mow, but as he stepped from the ladder onto the hay,
-it gave way and he fell into a hole in the hay made by one of the
-men&#8217;s legs when he had stepped off the ladder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What was that noise I heard?&#8221; said one of the two voices in a
-frightened tone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;S-s-sh-h-h-h! Keep still and listen!&#8221; commanded the other.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope it is not that French colonel who has been on our track
-for days,&#8221; answered the other.</p>
-
-<p>Button never moved, and in fact he held his breath until the men
-began talking again.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>&#8220;It was probably a rat you heard in the hay,&#8221; said the man who
-had spoken last. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you think it is about dark enough for us
-to get to our work and blow up this Red Cross hospital, so we can
-get back to our line before daylight?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So-ho!&#8221; thought Button. &#8220;You two think because this hospital
-has a big red cross on a white ground painted on its roof that it is
-a regular hospital for wounded soldiers instead of just one for dogs.
-And you have been sent to blow it up! Well, I&#8217;ll fix you! I&#8217;ll
-scratch your eyes out so you can&#8217;t see to blow it up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then and there Button began to act as if he had a fit. He flew
-out of the hole he had been hiding in and right for the men, whom
-he could see plainly with his cat eyes in the dark mow. Before they
-knew what was happening, he ran up one&#8217;s back, reached around
-his neck as he sat on his shoulder and scratched both his eyes out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How do you like the feeling? <i>That</i> is for scratching out the
-eyes of little Belgian children!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man cried out from pain, but what cared Button? He jumped
-from this fellow&#8217;s shoulders straight into the other&#8217;s face and out
-went his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now you two can sit here and repent of your sins and think how
-the little children suffered whose eyes you dug out! And the Germans
-are planning to blow up this hospital, are they? Such being
-the case, I must get Stubby away from here at the earliest possible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-moment. I know what I can do. I can carry him on my back, he
-is such a little fellow, and he is so thin now that I can easily do it.
-Then when we reach Billy, he can carry him and in this way, by
-taking turns, we can get him far away from here before the Germans
-raid the hospital.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And this is just what Button did. The very next day when Stubby&#8217;s
-nurse carried him out of the hospital and placed him on a cushion
-under a tree, with the splints off his leg, Button came along and
-told him what he had done the night before and that he feared the
-Germans would blow up or set fire to the hospital that very night.
-By first coaxing, then scolding, he at last persuaded Stubby to consent
-to ride on his back and let him take him where Billy was waiting for
-them on the outskirts of the town seven miles away. They bade all
-the dogs good-by and the Red Cross dog insisted that as he was larger
-and stronger than Button he should carry Stubby on his back part
-of the journey. &#8220;Besides,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I have a cloth bandage around
-my body with the Red Cross sewed on the front. Now this bandage
-will be an excellent thing for Stubby to stick his claws in to help
-him hold on. It will be much easier trying to do that than trying
-to stick them into your short hair, more especially as he has only
-three legs he can use.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And thus they started on their journey, keeping close to the road,
-but going just inside the fields and orchards that bordered either<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-side of the highway. They made very good progress, and the Red
-Cross dog did not feel the weight of Stubby at all. They rested a
-little after noon, and Button and the Red Cross dog left Stubby
-behind a straw stack in a barnyard while they sneaked up to the
-house to see if they could not find something to eat and to carry
-back to Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bow wow!&#8221; barked a big dog, jumping out at them from his
-kennel. &#8220;Who are you that comes prowling around here? Oh,
-I beg your pardon! I did not notice you wore the badge of a Red
-Cross dog or I should not have barked, for all Red Cross dogs are
-welcome in this place and the farmer and his family will do all they
-can for you. Just go up to the house and when they see you wear
-a Red Cross badge they will give you a hot supper and a soft bed
-to sleep on if you care to stay over night. I would go up to the
-house with you, but, as you see, I am chained. They will bring some
-dinner to me and I will share it with your friend here, the black
-cat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure that is very kind of you,&#8221; replied Duke, the Red Cross
-dog. &#8220;Since you say the family here is kind to Red Cross dogs, I
-will walk boldly up to the house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will find them all I say they are, for my master used to train
-dogs to be police dogs, and he sold them to the police in Paris. Then
-when the war began he trained them for Red Cross work. But all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-his dogs are sold now or gone to war. He was such a good trainer
-that he got very high prices for his dogs. I should not wonder but that
-you may have met some of the dogs trained by him if you have
-been at the front lately, as many of them are in active service there
-now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your master&#8217;s name could not possibly be Jean Baptiste Fr&egrave;re,
-could it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is just what it is!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, well, well! I declare! That is too queer! My chum was
-trained by him and lots of the dogs I know. My chum&#8217;s name is
-Sharp Ears, or rather that is what the Red Cross people call him,
-for he seems to be able to hear things long before any one else can
-detect the slightest noise. For that reason he is kept on police duty
-with the sentinels that have to tramp up and down, up and down
-in the deep woods on guard all night. He will hear or scent an
-enemy long before he comes in sight, and he always gives warning
-by pricking up his ears and looking straight into the sentry&#8217;s face,
-but he never barks to betray the sentry to the enemy. Then he turns
-his face in the direction from which the sound comes. If it is one
-of our soldiers, he will keep perfectly still. If it is a German,
-Austrian or any of the enemy soldiers, he will give a scarcely audible
-growl. He has saved many a sentry&#8217;s life by warning him in this
-way that some one was coming.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>&#8220;How can he tell whether it is an enemy or a friend coming when
-he can&#8217;t see them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I asked him that very question, and he said he can always tell
-a German by the scent as they smell like pigs, and that he had never
-made a mistake yet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I did not know before that the German soldiers have an odor
-peculiarly their own.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nor I until he told me! Here they come with my dinner now,
-and as they don&#8217;t like cats very well, I think your friend better hide
-in my dog house. I will stand before the door so they can&#8217;t see
-inside.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hello, Towser!&#8221; called out the farmer when he saw Duke. &#8220;I
-see you have company and most distinguished company at that.
-Come here and let me see by your badge to what regiment you
-belong.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Duke went up to the farmer who had a very strong but kindly
-face and allowed him to read what was engraved on the tag that
-dangled from his collar.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, bless my soul! You are from the same regiment that my
-son is in and also the one that owns my best trained dog. Oh, if
-you could only talk and tell me how they are faring out on that
-battlefront!&#8221; And he gave a deep sigh. So did Duke for he too
-wished he could talk and tell the farmer of some of the noble, brave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-deeds his son had performed and also some of the clever, smart things
-his dog had done.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come with me up to the house and I will give you a dinner that
-will make your sides stick out and ready to split,&#8221; which he certainly
-did. Duke ate and ate and still he could not see the bottom
-of his plate. There was fried chicken, with mashed potatoes and
-gravy fit for a king to eat. He ate all he possibly could for he knew
-it would be a long time before he ever was offered such a dinner
-again. But all the time he ate he kept thinking of how Stubby
-would enjoy the big chicken leg he was going to carry to him in his
-mouth when the farmer left him and he could slip away. He was
-just wondering how he was going to get away from the farmer when
-some one in the house called him to say that he was wanted on the
-telephone.</p>
-
-<p>He had not disappeared inside the door when Duke picked up the
-chicken leg and ran with it to Stubby, and as he rounded the stack
-from one side Button did from the other with a second drumstick
-in his mouth. So you see Stubby fared pretty well.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Those people seem to be very kind,&#8221; said Stubby, &#8220;and I guess
-it will be a good while before we meet any one their equal again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BUTTON MAKES THE FARMER FIGHTING MAD</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p109.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">STUBBY was nibbling on his chicken leg with Duke and
-Button nearly half asleep when they were all startled
-by the farmer coming round the straw stack unexpectedly.
-But if they were surprised, the farmer was more
-so. To come unexpectedly upon two stray dogs and a black cat and
-one of those dogs the Red Cross dog he had just been feeding was
-enough to surprise any one.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, well, well! Where did you all come from, I should like
-to know? And if here isn&#8217;t another Red Cross dog! But no, I am
-mistaken. You are a cat, but a cat with a regimental tag around
-your neck. Come here, little dog, and let me read what your tag
-says,&#8221; but when Stubby got up and tried to limp to him, the farmer
-saw that his leg was hurt, so he went to him and taking him in his
-arms, he felt of the injured leg and found it had been broken. As
-he had set many broken legs for dogs, he knew what to do for
-Stubby and he said, &#8220;You two follow me. I am going to take this
-little dog to my office and rub his leg with some strengthening
-liniment I have which will make it heal quicker. And I am also<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-going to give him a tonic to brace him up for I see he is very thin
-and weak.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stubby licked the farmer&#8217;s hand to show how he appreciated
-all this kindness.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the office, the farmer put his glasses on and
-read the tags on all their necks, and when he got through he called
-to his wife to come quickly, that he had made a wonderful discovery.
-&#8220;Just you read that, wife,&#8221; he said, after he had read Stubby&#8217;s tag
-once again. &#8220;This cat and dog are the long lost and much advertised
-mascots of two American regiments, which are offering large
-sums for their recovery. Bless me but this is lucky! For I was
-just needing some extra money to repair the roof of the house and
-to fix up the place.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I too. I need a new dress and bonnet badly,&#8221; said his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll just fix them comfortably here in the office for to-night,
-so there will be no danger of them getting away while I am making
-arrangements for returning them to their own regiments and collecting
-the reward money. A thousand dollars for each! To think
-that that cat is the celebrated black cat from the Black Cat Regiment,
-and the dog the yellow dog from the regiment called after him, the
-Yellow Dog Regiment!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The two dogs and Button looked at one another and either winked
-or rolled their eyes to let the others know that they were in a pretty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-fix and in danger of being carried back to the army. Then they
-all thought of Billy waiting on the outskirts of the town for them
-to come.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One thing,&#8221; thought Button, &#8220;he won&#8217;t wait long. If we don&#8217;t
-come along on the third day, he will come back to look for us for
-he will know that trouble has detained us. A day&#8217;s rest here with
-the excellent care the farmer is going to give Stubby and plenty
-of good food for us all will help us along on our journey more than
-anything else would, as we are all run down, first from our hard
-work in the front and then from our wounds.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Presently the farmer and his wife had them all fixed comfortably
-for the night, with Stubby on a nice soft sofa, and Duke and Button
-on old shawls and blankets in one of the corners of the room, and
-a dish of water for them to drink should they grow thirsty. As
-soon as the farmer and his wife left them alone they talked over
-their predicament, but all agreed it was for the best and soon they
-all fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>For two days they stayed with the farmer and each morning and
-evening he rubbed Stubby&#8217;s leg and gave him a tonic. He fed Duke
-and Button up fine too until they were so fat they could scarcely run.
-All day long all they did was to eat and sleep, &#8220;getting in condition to
-travel fast,&#8221; said Button.</p>
-
-<p>The third day the farmer became very much excited when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-read the mail for in it were two letters for him from the colonels
-of the regiments of which Stubby and Button were the mascots.
-They stated that they would give the reward to the person who
-delivered the dog and cat to them unhurt and in perfect health.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This certainly is fine news, wife, and you better go along with
-me so you can pick out your new dress and bonnet while we are in
-town, for their headquarters, where I am to deliver the dog and
-cat, are in a large town where there are plenty of big stores. We
-will start early to-morrow morning, about daylight, as it is a long
-ways and we want to reach these headquarters before noon so as
-to get our money and have the whole afternoon to shop.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stubby heard all this as he lay on his end of the sofa pretending
-to be asleep. The minute the farmer and his wife left the room,
-he to get the automobile in shape for the trip in the morning, and
-his wife to lay out her best clothes, Stubby barked for Button and
-Duke to come in to share the news he had just heard.</p>
-
-<p>They both listened without interrupting until Stubby had finished,
-then Button said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is a good thing your leg has healed so you can walk on it and
-that you are feeling so strong and well, for if they mean to take us
-to headquarters to-morrow morning, we must manage to escape
-some time to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are right,&#8221; replied Duke. &#8220;But why wait until night? It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-would be easier to escape some time this afternoon before we are
-shut in for the night. The farmer never seems to think we will try
-to run away until dark as he leaves us pretty much alone all day
-but at the first hint of darkness he shuts us in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is all true. So let us wait and get a good dinner and then
-when he lies down to take his twenty winks of sleep, as he does
-every afternoon, we will skedaddle. His wife will be so busy getting
-her finery ready to wear to-morrow that she won&#8217;t have time even
-to look out of the window.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And so it was planned for them to push on to where Billy waited
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>It is a good thing that they decided to go when they did for
-Billy was getting terribly restless waiting for them, and was likely
-to get in mischief if they did not arrive soon.</p>
-
-<p>The three simply stuffed themselves at dinner time. And as they
-were finishing, Button said, &#8220;Isn&#8217;t it too bad we haven&#8217;t pockets in
-our skins so we could take some of this fine food along with us to eat
-when we can&#8217;t find anything along the roadside?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It surely is,&#8221; said Stubby, &#8220;and I don&#8217;t see why we could not
-have had our tails so constructed that we could have hung packages
-on them like the opossums carry their young, hanging over their
-mother&#8217;s tail with all their little tails curled around hers to hold
-them on.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>&#8220;You two do think of the most outlandish things I ever heard of,&#8221;
-said Duke. &#8220;Any one could tell you were from the United States
-of America. You are so clever and original. Now a European
-would be too staid and too conventional to think of a thing like
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While they were talking, not one of them had taken his eyes off
-the farmer who had been lying on the sofa to take his nap. But
-to-day he was slower than ever in dropping off to sleep, due, I suppose,
-to the excitement of the reward he was thinking of getting. But
-presently habit was too much for him and he fell fast asleep. At
-the first snore he made the three chums crept out of the office and
-sneaked away toward the garden. One by one they squeezed themselves
-through a hole under the fence and came out in the garden,
-right under the noses of the farmer&#8217;s wife and son who were picking
-raspberries.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, what are you doing here? Trying to escape us?&#8221; and
-with that the woman stooped and grabbed Stubby up in her arms
-while her son grasped Duke, but Button escaped them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You naughty, naughty dogs and cat to try to run away from us
-when we have been so good to you!&#8221; Then she turned to her son
-and said, &#8220;I think they heard your father and me talking of taking
-them back to the army and probably they don&#8217;t want to go back,
-and that is why they were trying to run away.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>&#8220;Bet you that is it!&#8221; replied the son. &#8220;They are so smart they
-can understand every word that is said.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I told your father not to trust them out alone, but he said he
-was feeding them so well that they would not try to run away. It
-is a good thing that I decided to pick those raspberries to take to
-your Aunt to-morrow, or we would not have caught them. And
-then I hate to think of how it would have affected your father.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the office, the farmer was still asleep and from
-the smile on his face he was probably dreaming he was buying things
-with the reward money. Just as they opened the door he called
-out, &#8220;Thieves! Thieves!&#8221; and jumped up from the sofa. He was
-dreaming that some thieves had stolen his pocketbook. &#8220;Why, what
-are you doing here with the dogs in your arms? They haven&#8217;t been
-hurt, have they?&#8221; he asked at last.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; worse than that. We caught them trying to run away,&#8221;
-said his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t say so! That would have been a calamity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And then his wife explained to him how she and her son had
-caught Stubby and Duke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But the worst of it is that black cat is still loose. Still I don&#8217;t
-think he will run away and leave the two dogs behind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Neither do I, but we won&#8217;t take any chances. Come and see
-if we can&#8217;t catch him. We&#8217;ll lock the two dogs in and then see<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-if the three of us can&#8217;t catch the cat. Where did you leave
-him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Up a tree beside the garden gate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get a nice piece of meat and see if I can&#8217;t coax him down,&#8221;
-said the farmer. So while he went for the meat his wife and his
-son went to the tree where they had left Button. But alas! alack!
-when they got there he was gone and nowhere in sight though they
-searched everywhere for him and called, &#8220;Kitty! Kitty! Kitty! Pussy!
-Pussy! Pussy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The farmer was nearly crazy to think that with the cat gone he
-would lose half of the reward he had been counting on so much.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We must find him, I tell you!&#8221; and he began to scold his wife
-and son as if it was their fault that the cat was gone. At last his
-wife grew angry and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shut up! I have heard enough of your complaining. If it had
-not been for me, they both would have been gone for good. Why,
-I told you to keep them under lock and key; that they were too
-valuable to let run loose. But you go accusing us of losing them,
-while you sleep and let them sneak off. Don&#8217;t you suppose I want
-a new dress and bonnet with that reward money as much as you
-want to spend it on fixing up the place?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was good logic, so the farmer stopped his scolding. In the
-first place he knew it was not her fault but like some men he tried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-to lay everything that went wrong on some one else. Whoever happened
-to be near at the time usually got the scolding.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee, how I hate a man who lays everything that goes wrong on
-his wife!&#8221; said Duke.</p>
-
-<p>Button had hid under some currant bushes and was having great
-fun watching them hunt
-for him. When supper
-time came they put his supper
-outside the kitchen
-door on a plate but left
-the door part way open, so
-they could open it quickly
-and grab him if he came
-to eat the food. But they waited in vain, for
-Button had seen the crack and knew what it meant.</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p117.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not very hungry, and I can wait for my supper until you
-go to sleep. You will have to go to bed,&#8221; he thought.</p>
-
-<p>At last the farmer could stand waiting no longer. He wanted
-to find that cat and lock him up so he could go to bed and be ready
-for an early start to headquarters in the morning. With no cat,
-there would be no use in going.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have it!&#8221; he at last exclaimed to his wife. &#8220;I&#8217;ll go unchain
-Towser and get him to smell out the cat for me. That dog is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-crackajack for finding cats. He hates them so&mdash;or most of them.
-This cat is the only one I ever saw him make friends with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So Towser was unchained and set to looking for Button. He
-ran around and around, smelling everywhere and he barked up the
-tree that Button had climbed. But still he had not found the missing
-cat. At last he got the scent, but just before he got to him Button
-shot out from under the bushes and ran up a tree.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He has found him, found him!&#8221; called the farmer to his wife.
-The farmer had been close on Towser&#8217;s heels all the time, a bag in
-his hand. He had intended to put the cat in it when Towser caught
-him by the nape of his neck as he did most cats. But Button was
-too quick for them. He was up a tree before they could wink.
-The next thing was to get him down. The farmer, his wife and
-son coaxed and coaxed Button to come down but he just sat on
-a limb and blinked at them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Climb the tree and see if you can&#8217;t catch him,&#8221; said the farmer
-to his son.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p118b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">One thing Billy butted was a basket full of clothes.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="floatright">(Page <a href="#Page_67">67</a>)</span></p>
-
-
-<p>This the boy did, and Button let him come within reaching distance
-of him. Then he climbed a little higher up the tree. This kept
-on until he was away up in the topmost branches, and away out on
-a limb so thin that it would not bear the weight of the boy. When
-he saw this he took hold of the limb and tried to shake Button off
-by swinging the limb backwards and forwards with all his might.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-But he might just as well have tried to dislodge the bark itself as
-Button. He simply stuck his sharp claws down deeper into the tree
-and enjoyed the swinging of the branch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come down, Pierre!&#8221; called his mother. &#8220;We will try smoking
-him out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Pierre climbed down and they all busily set about building a big
-smudge fire under the tree. As it was a still evening, with no wind,
-the smoke rose straight in the air to where Button sat, but by shutting
-his eyes he did not mind it much and he sat on. The smoke made
-the farmer, his wife and son sneeze and cough and their eyes smart
-and water. That was all the good their fire did, for when the fire
-at last died out and the smoke had cleared away, they looked up
-in the tree and there sat Button as composedly as ever.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Darn that cat!&#8221; exclaimed the farmer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Father, you must not swear, and before our son at that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t help it, for I am so mad at that cat I could kill him. And
-if he doesn&#8217;t come down pretty soon, I&#8217;ll shoot him and take his
-hide to headquarters.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That would do no good, for they say in their letter the reward
-will only be given if the dog and cat are alive and well,&#8221; replied
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what next can we do to get him down? I am at the end
-of my string of suggestions.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>The three sat down under the tree, their heads on their hands
-and elbows on knees, to try to think of some way to capture Button.
-After sitting there for about ten minutes, the son exclaimed, &#8220;I have
-it! I know how we can get him down and not hurt him in the
-least.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s hear your plan, quick!&#8221; said the father.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go up and saw off the limb he is sitting on, while you and
-mother hold a net under the limb. Then when it falls, the cat and
-limb will fall in the net and the cat won&#8217;t be hurt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An excellent idea, my son,&#8221; commended his mother.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But where are we going to get the net?&#8221; asked his father.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We can use my tennis net.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Run and get it while I go for a saw and, mother, you stay here
-to keep him from escaping while we are away,&#8221; said the father.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the father and son were back with the saw and the net.
-The boy climbed the tree, while the father and mother stood under
-the limb, waiting to catch Button when the limb should be sawed
-off. Button never stirred while the boy sawed the limb, for he had
-made up his mind what he was going to do when the limb fell into
-the net. This it did in about two minutes. The branch had scarcely
-touched the net when Button with a bound ran up the side of the
-net, jumped to the ground and ran up the next tree. And could
-you have looked into the faces of those three people, you would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-have said you never had looked into three more disappointed ones
-in your life.</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p121.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;That cat is possessed of the devil!&#8221; said the father.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I truly believe he is!&#8221; said the mother.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, gosh darn his
-skin, I say!&#8221; exclaimed
-their son.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have another
-idea,&#8221; said the father.
-&#8220;You go get your fish
-net and then you
-can climb the tree
-he is now in, and
-throw it over his
-head, and we will have
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p>The boy went after
-his round net on a long pole,
-climbed the tree and threw it over Button&#8217;s head, but just as it came
-down Button gave a leap for the next tree which was six feet away
-and lit on a limb as nicely as if he had been a flying squirrel and used
-to jumping from tree to tree all his life.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, that cat surely beats the devil! He can stay in that tree<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-for all of me! I shan&#8217;t try to catch him any more. But I&#8217;ll just
-go and get some sleep, and in the morning we will go to town and
-get the reward for the little dog and say nothing about ever having
-seen the cat. Then when we come back, if he is still seen around
-the premises we will try some other plans to capture him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When they had all three gone to bed, Button came down out of
-the tree and ate the supper they had put out for him early in the
-evening. After finishing it he went over to the office and jumping
-up on the window sill he talked to Stubby and Duke through the
-window and told them how he had been having some fun with the
-family.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t worry, boys! You will be able to give him the slip as
-he takes you to town. And if you don&#8217;t, you can get away in a few
-days. I will go on and tell Billy what has happened and then the
-two of us will come back and help you escape.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">THE CHUMS ON A CANAL BOAT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p123.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">NO need to go for Billy or to tell him what has happened,&#8221;
-said a voice behind Button, &#8220;for I have heard it all.&#8221;
-Turning around, Button saw Billy standing under the
-window.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Billy!&#8221; the three exclaimed in one breath. &#8220;Where did you
-come from?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The town where I was to meet you. I waited and waited and
-at last made up my mind that something must have happened to you,
-so I went back to the hospital, or at least I got nearly there last
-night when I saw ten or fifteen aeroplanes circling over the hospital.
-I made out that half were German planes and half American. The
-Germans evidently were trying to blow up the hospital by dropping
-bombs on it, and the Americans were trying to fight them off. As
-I looked, I heard a terrible explosion and by the light of the fire
-that followed I saw a big building go up in smoke and flames, and
-as I watched I saw distinctly two human figures outlined on the sky,
-flying up in the air with the d&eacute;bris. But when the smoke cleared
-away, I saw that the hospital still stood there and that it was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-big barn they had blown up. So the two figures I saw must have
-been those of the two spies who were going to try to bomb the
-hospital&mdash;those whose eyes you scratched out, Button. So you see
-they got their just deserts and were blown up themselves just as they
-had planned to blow up others. I was so thankful to see that it
-was the barn instead of the hospital that I ran straight on regardless
-of bombs dropping all around me. All I thought of was to see
-if Stubby was still in the hospital, and trying to save him, but before
-I reached there the American aeroplanes had driven off the Germans,
-and I saw three of their machines lying in wrecks on the
-ground, the work of the Americans.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I went on to the hospital, and ran straight to Stubby&#8217;s ward
-to see if he was there, well knowing that in the confusion nobody
-would molest me. I passed the cook on the stairs and he was so
-excited and scared he did not pay the slightest attention to me.
-When I reached your ward, Stubby, I found your bed empty so
-took it for granted that you had started to meet me and that I had
-missed you somewhere on the road. So I started back, stopping
-at every farm I passed to look the place over to see if I could hear
-or see anything of any of you. A rooster at the next farm told me
-he had seen two dogs and a black cat pass their place at sunrise
-five days ago. Then I knew that you were either prisoners somewhere
-or I had passed you on your way to meet me. Now tell me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-how it happens that you two dogs are locked in and Button still
-running outside.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Between them they told Billy all that had happened since he
-left them, ending by relating how they were to
-be carried to headquarters early
-the next morning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I guess not! Not
-if my name is Billy
-Whiskers will you two
-stay prisoners another
-minute. I&#8217;ll just hook
-the glass out of this window
-and you two can crawl
-out and then we will make
-a merry chase for the next
-village.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p125.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Billy did this, and as they
-passed the house, the soft-hearted
-Stubby said to the farmer
-and his wife, &#8220;I am sorry to make you lose your reward for my
-capture, as you have been very good to all of us. But even for you
-I can&#8217;t be a prisoner just so you can get some money by delivering
-me to headquarters. So <i>au revoir</i>, old friends!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>&#8220;Good-by,&#8221; meowed Button. &#8220;And may you have better luck the
-next time you try to catch a black cat! Had you only remembered
-that black cats are said to bring bad luck, you would not have
-wasted so much valuable time in trying to capture me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And many, many thanks for the good meals you gave us,&#8221; barked
-Duke. Then the four passed on into the darkness and were lost
-to the farmer forever.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think the best thing we can do,&#8221; said Billy, &#8220;is to push on to
-Paris just as fast as we can, and that won&#8217;t be very rapidly, as we shall
-have to travel by night most of the time and lie hidden in the daytime,
-since there are so many looking for us who are sparing no
-expense in advertising and searching for us. We are like regular
-escaped prisoners with a price on our heads.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The nearer we get to Paris,&#8221; said Duke, &#8220;the harder it will
-be to keep hidden, for the country is very thickly populated for
-miles and miles outside the city. But an idea just flashed across
-my mind that, if carried out, would get us inside Paris without
-much trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; asked Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is this: that we enter Paris by boat instead of on foot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And how can we do that?&#8221; inquired Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you. We will go to the banks of the river Seine, about
-five miles out of Paris, and try to get on one of the flat canal boats<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-that run right into the heart of the city, and we might be lucky
-enough to get on a boat that would pass right through Paris and
-continue on to the sea, where we could embark for America, as the
-river empties into the sea at a very large shipping port called the
-city of Havre. From this port there are big merchant ships sailing
-to all parts of the world, and we would get on one bound for America.
-If we could only accomplish this it would save us all that long, tiresome
-walk of about one hundred and twenty-five miles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee!&#8221; exclaimed Button. &#8220;Your plans sound good to me! Saving
-a hundred and twenty-five mile walk, dodging people, bad boys
-and troublesome dogs, is worth trying.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should think it did sound good!&#8221; said Billy, &#8220;and I feel quite
-sure we can carry it out, for Stubby, Button and I have had lots
-of experience sneaking on ocean-going vessels, steamers, and so on.
-We have stolen on board a vessel going from Japan to America,
-and on still another sailing from Boston for Constantinople, and
-another plying up and down the Mississippi River, with others too
-numerous to mention. So I guess we can manage to get aboard a
-slow going canal boat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course we can!&#8221; said Stubby. &#8220;I feel like thanking you for
-thinking of such a plan. It is such a good one for us all but more
-especially for me with my lame leg.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About how far do you think we are from Paris now?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>&#8220;I should say fully twenty-five miles. But only about seven from
-the river if we take a straight line to the east until we come to it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then me for the straight line to the river!&#8221; declared Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Same here!&#8221; said Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I follow wherever you lead,&#8221; avowed Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>The four made such good time that by daybreak they were in
-sight of the river, catching their first glimpse of it from the top
-of a high hill.</p>
-
-<p>And joy! they saw straight ahead of them a small town at whose
-dock lay a long white-and-green boat with a flat top. It was so
-early in the morning that no one was astir in the town when they
-reached it, so they were not molested as they ran through it straight
-for the boat. When they came close to the dock they proceeded
-more cautiously and hid behind boxes and barrels until they could
-find out what kind of people were on the boat. But no one appearing
-and the dock being deserted at this time of the morning, they decided
-to chance finding nice people on board, and crept on deck.
-This they did easily as the owner had neglected to pull in his gangplank
-before he went to bed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It looks as if our good angel was with us and it was intended
-we were to make this trip in this way,&#8221; remarked Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we must all secrete ourselves and keep hid until the boat
-is loaded and pushed off shore. Then they will have to take us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-with them until they reach the next stopping place, and if the worst
-comes to the worst we can jump overboard and swim, for it is not
-far to shore and the boat is not high above the water line.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Billy secreted himself behind a pile of bags filled with hops,
-while Stubby and Button climbed on top of them and hid themselves
-between two of the top bags, and Duke squeezed himself
-under them in a hole made by two of the bags which had not been
-packed closely. So by the time the sun was well up and the people
-began to arise, they were all stowed away as comfortably as could
-be.</p>
-
-<p>The first person on deck proved to be a big, comfortable looking
-fat man, followed by his grandson, a little fellow with curly, flaxen
-hair and big, blue eyes, whom it was easy to see the grandfather
-fairly worshiped.</p>
-
-<p>Then three men came up from below and began fussing around
-on deck. About this time the delicious odor of boiling coffee, fried
-potatoes and bacon was wafted up the hatchway.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee! The fumes from that cooking make me hungry as a bear!&#8221;
-said Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Me too!&#8221; agreed Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And it reminds me that none of us has had a bite to eat for hours.
-We were so busy getting away from our pursuers that we forgot
-to stop to look for something to eat,&#8221; said Duke.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>&#8220;That may smell good to you fellows, but that white clover beside
-the dock, with the dew still on it, smells better to me. And when
-they go in to breakfast, if they still keep that gangplank out, I am
-going to come out of this hiding place, skip ashore and eat a mouthful
-or two before any of the people on board are through their meal
-and come up on deck again,&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are lucky that you can live on grass and green things,&#8221; replied
-Duke. &#8220;I wish <i>I</i> could.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is the only trouble dogs and cats have when traveling,&#8221;
-said Stubby; &#8220;this matter of food. One has to steal it, or eat it raw,
-and run the risk of being clubbed or stoned unless he falls in with
-some one who is kind to animals and doesn&#8217;t think it is too much
-trouble to feed and water them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Most people seem to forget that animals have to eat and drink
-the same as human beings. They know better, but they just do not
-think,&#8221; said Button.</p>
-
-<p>Billy did as he had planned and slipped off the boat and made
-a hearty breakfast of clover and took a good drink of water out of
-the river. Then he was fixed for the day if need be.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mew! Mew! Mew!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hark! I hear a cat mewing!&#8221; whispered Button to Stubby who
-were close together upon the pile of hops.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>&#8220;I see her,&#8221; said Stubby. &#8220;It is only a little kitten. Sh-sh-sh!
-Here comes a woman up from below with a plate of food for the
-kitten.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Kitty! Kitty! Kitty!&#8221; called the woman, looking around for the
-cat and paying no attention to the mewing kitten at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Evidently she is looking for the mother of the kitten,&#8221; whispered
-Button.</p>
-
-<p>As they watched, they saw a big yellow cat jump out from a pile
-of rope up near the prow of the boat and walk lazily toward her.
-A black and white spotted cat also came running from the opposite
-side of the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They seem to have a whole family on board,&#8221; remarked Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>When the woman saw them coming, she set down a heaping plate
-of food for them and said, &#8220;Well, lazybones,&#8221; addressing the yellow
-cat, &#8220;did you catch that big wharf rat I saw run on board last night?
-If you did not, you better hustle and get him if you want any more
-to eat from me. I am not going to feed you anything until that
-rat is killed. Do you hear me? Old Mouser has been doing all
-the work lately in catching the rats and mice, and it is time you did
-something, for we want no free lazy passengers on this boat.
-Baby,&#8221; addressing the kitten, &#8220;stop crying and mewing around my
-heels. If you are hungry, eat something on the plate. Oh, I forgot,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-you are too young to care for meat and potatoes. Come with me
-and I will get you some milk to drink,&#8221; and she picked up the kitten
-and went below.</p>
-
-<p>The cats were evidently not very hungry, for they scarcely touched
-the food on the plate, but walked off and left it, the spotted cat
-going down the hatchway and the yellow cat back to the pile of
-rope up front.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p132.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now is our chance, Stubby,&#8221; whispered Button, &#8220;before any one
-comes up from breakfast!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The two of them climbed down from the hops and made a good
-meal of what the cats had left, as the woman had brought up a plate
-heaping full.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell you what, that tasted good!&#8221; said Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Indeed it did!&#8221; replied Stubby. &#8220;I did not know I was so hungry.
-But I was as thirsty as the very dickens. I hate to chance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-going off the boat for a drink, but I&#8217;ve simply got to have water.
-I think I can chance it to run off and lap a few mouthsful before
-they come up and pull in the gangplank. I am going to try it anyway.
-Are you coming?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; cats drink very little water, and I do not feel the least bit
-thirsty now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stubby succeeded in getting his drink and was safely back on board
-before any one appeared. But he did not have a minute to spare
-as his short, stubby tail only just disappeared out of sight when all
-the men, including the Captain, came on deck. Then the Captain
-bawled out in his big voice for them to heave in the gangplank and
-cut loose. In less than fifteen minutes the old boat was out in the
-middle of the river, floating down toward Paris on the swift moving
-current.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee, it seems good to be in a safe place once more,&#8221; said Billy,
-&#8220;where one can sleep without keeping one eye open for fear of capture
-or of being blown sky high by a carelessly dropped German
-bomb. I am just going to sleep and sleep and sleep while on this
-trip and get good and rested.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I am going to do the same,&#8221; replied Duke.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BUTTON HAS A FIGHT WITH A WHARF RAT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p007.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ALL day long the four of them kept hidden. At noon
-Stubby, Duke and Button ate what the cats left, and Billy
-ran ashore and ate a little grass by the river bank, where
-the boat had tied up for noon.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain and his crew seemed in no hurry to get to Paris or
-anywhere else, for that matter. All they seemed to do was to eat,
-sleep, tell stories and smoke.</p>
-
-<p>It was getting to be about half past nine, and the dogs and Button
-were growing hungry for their supper which they could see on the
-plate by the gangway, but could not go to get it as the sailors were
-still lounging on deck talking and smoking.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will they never stop their silly talk and go to bed?&#8221; sighed Button.</p>
-
-<p>He could not hear a word of what they said, but he called it silly
-because he was so cross at them for not going to bed. And as they
-talked, a big black wharf rat sneaked up behind them and began to
-help himself to the meat on the plate. It was too much for the
-hungry Button to lie there and see his supper or what he considered
-his, eaten up before his eyes by a nasty old rat. Forgetting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-that he might be caught by the sailors, he sneaked off the pile of
-hops and crept to within jumping distance of the rat. Then with one
-long flying leap, he landed on the rat&#8217;s back and buried his teeth in
-his neck and his claws in his sides. It was a powerful rat, as I said
-before, and gave fight. Soon the two of them were rolling around
-on the deck, with first one on top and then the other. The scuffle
-they made added to the squeal of the rat brought all the sailors to
-their feet and there they stood watching the fight and wondering
-where the big black cat came from.</p>
-
-<p>All of a sudden the rat let go of Button&#8217;s ear and buried its teeth in
-his neck, causing the blood to flow freely. On seeing this Stubby
-forgot all caution and came running to Button&#8217;s assistance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Holy Moses! And where did this dog come from?&#8221; asked the
-Captain. &#8220;He must have dropped from the sky.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stubby tried to grab the rat by the back of its neck as it clung to
-Button&#8217;s throat, but he could not as they kept rolling over and over
-each other so that first one was on top and then the other. At last in
-trying to stoop and get a grip he turned his broken leg the wrong way
-and the pain was so intense that he fainted dead away and the sailors
-thought he was dead. So did Duke, who was watching the struggle
-from the top of the hop pile with Billy. When they saw Stubby roll
-over and stretch out they both bounded off the hops and appeared on
-the scene.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>&#8220;Jumping Jupiter! What have we here? A menagerie?&#8221; exclaimed
-the Captain. The sailors all stared at Duke and Billy as if
-an elephant had appeared in their midst, while from the other end of
-the boat came the yellow cat and Mouser. And still the fight went
-on, with the Captain,
-three sailors,
-two cats, one
-dog and a goat
-watching, all having
-formed a ring
-around the fighters.</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p137.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Billy saw that
-Button was growing
-weak from
-loss of blood and
-though he did not wish to interfere
-in Button&#8217;s fight, still he
-felt it best under the circumstances to do so. So he watched his
-chance and ran one long horn right through the rat, killing him instantly.
-Then with the rat still sticking to his horns, he walked to
-the side of the boat and scraped it off, and it fell into the water.</p>
-
-<p>This was such a smart thing for a goat to do that the Captain
-clapped his hands and cried, &#8220;Bravo! Bravo! Bravo!&#8221; in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-all the sailors joined him. Their clapping and cheering brought the
-Captain&#8217;s wife on deck to see what all the commotion was about,
-and when she saw the strange animals on board, she said,</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When did you buy this menagerie? I never laid eyes on them
-before.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nor any of us,&#8221; answered the Captain, &#8220;until two or three minutes
-ago,&#8221; and he related to her what had taken place.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This fight never would have happened if that lazy yellow cat of
-ours had done his duty and caught that rat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But if he had, none of us would ever have witnessed the most
-desperate bloody battle any of us ever saw between a cat and a rat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wonder to whom these animals belong and when they came on
-board,&#8221; mused the Captain&#8217;s wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They must have come on board the night we forgot and left the
-gangplank out,&#8221; said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is just when it must have happened,&#8221; agreed the sailors.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They probably belong to some one person as they are all together,
-and I should judge from their appearance that they are very
-valuable. See,&#8221; said the Captain&#8217;s wife, &#8220;they all have medals
-around their necks, and one dog wears a Red Cross badge sewed on
-his body.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Captain stooped down in front of Billy and began to read what
-was on his badge.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>&#8220;Wife, come here! Come here!&#8221; he called in excited tones.
-&#8220;What do you think I find engraved on this badge? This goat is
-the celebrated Billy Whiskers, the Mascot of the &mdash;th New York
-Regiment!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean it? Not the goat that the big reward is offered
-for? You don&#8217;t mean <i>that</i>, do you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I do! The very same!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And this little dog and the black cat are mascots, too, other regiments
-offering a big reward for their return. I read about these
-very animals in one of the Paris papers this morning. I&#8217;ll go get the
-paper and read it to you,&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>In a jiffy she disappeared inside the boat but came out again,
-waving the paper. &#8220;Here it is! Now listen while I read to you all
-what it says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN</p>
-
-<p>One large white goat, belonging to the &mdash;th Regiment of New
-York</p>
-
-<p>One small yellow dog, belonging to the &mdash;th Regiment of Pennsylvania</p>
-
-<p>One big black cat, belonging to the &mdash;th Regiment of Illinois.</p>
-
-<p>Any person or persons returning the same to their respective
-Headquarters will receive $1,000 reward for each animal alive and
-well.&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>She jumped up and went springing and dancing around the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here we have all three of them right here on our boat! Ho<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-for the reward! I see where we get it when we return from this trip.
-We will take the best of care of them, but keep them hidden from
-others until our return trip. Then we will take them to Headquarters
-and claim the reward.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you won&#8217;t get any reward for either the cat or the dog if
-you don&#8217;t fix up the wounds where that rat bit them, for they are
-losing so much blood it will kill them,&#8221; said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here, some of you give me a hand and help me dress their
-wounds,&#8221; said the Captain&#8217;s wife, who was as good as any trained
-nurse when it came to dressing wounds and looking after the sick.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll go ahead and get warm water, witch hazel and bandages ready,
-while you carry them down to my stateroom and lay them on the
-bunk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When Stubby came out of his fainting spell, he found himself
-lying on a bunk beside Button, who had a bandage wrapped around
-his neck, and smelling strong of witch hazel, besides having several
-crosses of adhesive plaster on his sides and on the tip of his nose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did we get here and what has happened to us?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a fool thing for me to faint just when you needed me
-most!&#8221; said Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did you happen to do it?&#8221; asked Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I turned my broken leg the wrong way, and over I went.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But who helped you in the end? Did some of those men come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-to your rescue? I should think they would have helped you before
-and not stood there and see that monster rat biting you with its
-poisonous teeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p141.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, Billy came to my help as usual. He forgot he was in hiding
-and jumped in and ran his horn straight through the rat, which
-made it let go
-my throat, as he
-had killed it instantly.
-I never
-met such a big rat
-before or one
-with such long,
-sharp teeth.
-When it cried,
-its voice sounded
-like a baby&#8217;s. I
-shall be all right
-soon as the Captain&#8217;s wife has fixed me up fine so the poison from the
-rat&#8217;s teeth won&#8217;t hurt me. As it turned out, this fight was the best
-thing that could have happened, for since they read our medals, every
-one is as keen on keeping us on board as we are in staying. They
-have found out who we are, and are now looking out for the reward.
-But they intend to take us along with them to the coast and on their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-return will hand us over to our respective regiments and claim the
-money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did they know there is a reward offered for us?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, the Captain&#8217;s wife had just finished reading about us in one
-of the Paris papers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We certainly are in luck! Here we shall have the best of care and
-get clear through to Havre without walking one step. And when
-there we can give them the slip as we did the farmer and his wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know; but it does seem a shame that we always have to run off
-and appear so ungrateful to our kind friends, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221; said
-Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it does; but it really can&#8217;t be helped,&#8221; replied Button.
-&#8220;Where are Billy and Duke now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, they are having the time of their lives being petted and fed
-by all on board. You see we will fare like princes for the rest of
-our journey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Button was right. Nothing was too good for them and the way
-they were fed, watered, combed and brushed would have satisfied a
-king.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My, don&#8217;t they all look fat, sleek and shiny!&#8221; said the Captain&#8217;s
-wife after they had bathed and curried all four of them. She
-had taken off the dirty bandage that was around Duke&#8217;s body and put
-on a nice clean white one with a lovely Red Cross embroidered on it.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">A DOG CEMETERY IN PARIS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p035.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE rest of the journey to Paris was quite uneventful.
-They arrived there one evening just as the sun was setting
-behind the city, throwing the Eiffel Tower and
-the big square dome of Notre Dame in bold relief
-against the deep red sky.</p>
-
-<p>Just on the outskirts of the city they came to an island on which
-was a good-sized cemetery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a nice place for a cemetery!&#8221; exclaimed Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There seem to be a good many people buried there from all the
-monuments I can count,&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You may count the monuments and walk or drive down the
-broad paved roads and walks but you will never pass one grave
-where a human being is buried,&#8221; said Duke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are joking!&#8221; said Button. &#8220;What do you mean? That
-there is no one buried there now and that all the bodies have been
-removed? Bet I hear men chiseling monuments at this minute
-and soon can see them at work in their shops.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>&#8220;True again. But for all that there is not a human being buried
-there, for it is a dog cemetery where only pet dogs are buried.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, wouldn&#8217;t that beat the Dutch!&#8221; exclaimed Billy. &#8220;A
-regular cemetery with flowers on the graves and flower-bordered
-walks and fenced-in lots and monuments just like people have! It
-certainly does take the French to think of odd things!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why shouldn&#8217;t pet dogs have a nice resting place?&#8221; inquired
-Duke. &#8220;They are man&#8217;s companions and guard and watch over him
-as if they were human. Yes, and they are more faithful than the
-dearest human friends, for they stick when adversity overtakes one,
-when often a human friend one has counted on proves false. But
-never a dog! There is one monument there that has this inscription
-on it in French, but I will translate it for you into English.
-It reads: &#8216;The more I see of men, the more I love dogs.&#8217; Pretty
-hard on his friends, wasn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I bet some one he loved played him false, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would seem like it from that inscription,&#8221; answered Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But hush! I hear a bell tolling,&#8221; said Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, they toll the bell when a funeral enters the gate just as they
-do in all cemeteries,&#8221; explained Duke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look, fellows!&#8221; said Stubby. &#8220;There comes a little white hearse
-just like the ones they use to take babies to the cemetery, and see
-the autos that are following! Why, it is a regular funeral, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-a wreath of flowers on the casket and everything else complete!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly! Everything is done just as it is in a cemetery for
-people and not one thing is left out,&#8221; replied Duke. &#8220;If you should
-walk through, you would see on some of the graves the playthings
-the dogs liked when alive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really?&#8221; said Stubby in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, really!&#8221; replied Duke. &#8220;I had hoped to be buried there
-myself some day, but now I expect my grave will be a shell hole
-on the field of battle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no, it won&#8217;t now since you are going to America with us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Over there your grave will probably be made under a rose bush
-or in some nice quiet orchard or back yard of the family with whom
-you live,&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>While they had been talking, the boat drifted away past the
-cemetery and they were getting near Paris. They had just fixed
-themselves comfortably on deck to enjoy the approach to the city
-and watch the people on the banks and wharfs as the boat floated
-by when the Captain appeared and said,</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry to disturb you, fellows, but it is necessary that we shut
-you below while we are in the city. If we don&#8217;t, some one may see
-you who has read the papers offering a reward for you and they
-would come aboard and take you off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, bother that old reward!&#8221; from Billy. &#8220;I don&#8217;t want to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-shut in out of the air in that stuffy cabin. I want to be out here
-where I can stretch my legs and breathe good fresh air.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Just the same, Billy with the others was shut in a stuffy little cabin
-scarcely large enough to hold them. There the four of them fretted
-and grumbled and pouted, but to no purpose.</p>
-
-<p>They had been there about two hours when they felt the boat
-scrape along the side of a dock, and they found their porthole looked
-out on the wharf side of the boat. Button soon took advantage of
-his powers of climbing and sat in the porthole, from which place
-he could look out and tell the others what he saw.</p>
-
-<p>The boat had come to dock right opposite the Eiffel Tower and on
-that side of the river. By sticking his head out of the hole he
-could also see the big Hippodrome with its grassy lawn and flower
-beds and benches for tired pedestrians to rest on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gee!&#8221; exclaimed Billy, &#8220;but I would like to get out of this and
-kick my legs on that lawn and eat some of the grass, for I am awfully
-tired of the food on this boat. It is all right for people, cats and
-dogs, but rather dry for goats.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The next morning the Captain appeared at their door and said,
-&#8220;Now, Chums, here is a good breakfast for you, and a drink of
-water. Awfully sorry to shut you in, but I have to under the circumstances.
-Ta-ta until night! We are going up into the city to do
-some shopping, but One-Eyed Dick is going to stay aboard to look<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-after things. Again ta-ta!&#8221; and he slammed the door and was gone.</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p147.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Drat him!&#8221; exclaimed Billy. &#8220;I want to go walking in the
-park!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The four ate their
-breakfast in silence,
-then lay down to sulk
-the day away, when
-all of a sudden Button
-jumped up and
-climbed into the porthole
-again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heigho, fellows!
-The way this boat lies
-now I can jump
-from this porthole onto
-the dock. And
-if I don&#8217;t leap as far as I
-mean to do, I will only fall back
-on deck and not go into the river. I am going to try it anyway. So
-here goes!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With a long, flying leap he made it, landing right in front of a
-dog that chanced to be wandering along the dock just then. The
-dog made a bound for Button. But Button, contrary to the ways of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-most cats, stood his ground instead of running and before the dog
-knew what had happened to him, Button had slapped his face and
-scratched his nose, leaving a long, red mark down its length, and
-had disappeared up the path leading to the park.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I heard Button spit as if he were mad, and then a dog barked,&#8221;
-said Stubby. &#8220;I bet he met a dog.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know what we can do,&#8221; said Billy. &#8220;I can stand under the
-porthole and then, Duke, you and Stubby can get on my back and
-jump through the porthole. I am quite sure I am high enough
-so you can make the jump.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what good will it do even if we can reach the hole? We
-don&#8217;t want to go ashore and leave you here alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is just like you, Stubby, to spoil your whole day to stay
-with a friend that can&#8217;t get out. You are too generous. I shan&#8217;t let
-you sacrifice yourself like that for me. You and Duke go, and then
-you can come back and tell me what you saw. If you stay, I have
-to stay just the same, and lose the fun of hearing what you fellows
-do ashore. So jump up on my back and let&#8217;s see if you can make
-the hole.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stubby demurred, and so did Duke, but Billy at last prevailed on
-them to go.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p148b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">The first thing Billy knew, he was rolling over something soft<br /> that squealed
-like a stuck pig and that kicked like a calf.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="floatright">(Page <a href="#Page_155">155</a>)</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Stubby made the hole and landed on the wharf all right, but Duke<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-was large and the first jump he made he hit his head and fell back
-into the cabin. He was so fat he made a tight squeeze for the hole
-but on the second trial he made it. Then he attempted to push
-and squeeze himself through the hole. To do this he had to go head
-first, which made him fall on the deck on his nose. But it did not
-hurt much and no one saw him. He barked back to Billy that he
-was all right and was going to run up into the city and visit some
-of his old haunts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll steal a bunch of carrots for you from some vegetable stand,&#8221;
-he barked back.</p>
-
-<p>Billy fussed and fussed and kicked around until the cabin looked
-as if a whole drove of kicking mules had been shut in it. Then all
-of a sudden he stopped and said to himself,</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a fool I am, kicking and butting things around here!
-Why don&#8217;t I butt down that old door? It will be easy to do and
-then I too can go up into the city.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To think was to do with Billy. And crash! went the door and
-out through the wreck went Billy. When he arrived at the top of
-the hatchway he met One-Eyed Dick coming down to see what
-had caused all the noise. On seeing Billy, he tried to shut the
-hatchway to keep Billy in by sitting on it. But the next thing he
-knew the door was lifted up under him and he found himself slipping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-off. Before he could get to his feet Billy was out and off the
-boat, and that was the last he saw of Billy for that day.</p>
-
-<p>Duke had just reached the front door of his old home when who
-should come out of the house but his old master, the one who had
-taken him to war with him and made him a Red Cross dog.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p150.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Duke, you old sport, where
-have you been and how
-did you happen to turn
-up here just now when
-I was returning to
-the front and planning
-to stop at
-the dog hospital to
-get you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His master picked him up in his arms
-and hugged and hugged him until
-Duke thought his ribs would be crushed in.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am so glad you came for now I shall not have to go out of my
-way to get you. We are on the eve of a big battle and we will both
-be needed at the front.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here is where I give up going to America,&#8221; thought Duke.
-&#8220;But it is all for the best, for since I have seen my old master again
-and found how he loves me, I think it would have been a mean trick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-to desert him while he is in danger of his life every moment. But
-I <i>do</i> wish I could have gone back first and said good-by to Billy,
-Stubby and Button. They are the three finest friends a dog ever
-had.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While Duke was thinking this, his master was carrying him to a
-big touring car and in a few seconds they were breaking the speed
-laws of the city.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">WHAT THE CHUMS DID IN PARIS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p007.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">AS soon as Billy found himself on shore he ran as fast as
-ever he could up into the city to try to find a grocery
-store where he could get some fresh juicy vegetables or
-fruit. He was tired to death of dry hay, straw and carrots
-that had been fed to him on the boat, though the Captain
-thought he was giving Billy just what goats like best.</p>
-
-<p>Stubby and Button saw him disappearing down a side street
-and started to follow him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How in the wide, wide world do you think he managed to get
-out of that cabin?&#8221; asked Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; answered Button, &#8220;for I am sure he
-could not possibly crawl through that porthole even if he could
-reach it. He is too big.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t suppose he butted down the cabin door, do you?&#8221;
-asked Stubby.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should not wonder in the least if he did, and come to think of
-it, I bet that is just what he did do, for that is the only way he
-could possibly leave that cabin. Perhaps old One-Eyed Dick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-opened the door to give him a drink or to get something out of the
-cabin, and Billy butted him over and escaped. However, we will
-soon find out when we overtake him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But where is he? I don&#8217;t see him anywhere,&#8221; said Stubby.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-p154.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>When Stubby and Button reached the side
-street down which they had
-seen Billy disappearing, no
-Billy was in sight. But as they
-stood there debating
-what had become of
-him, and wondering
-where they would look
-for him, they saw Billy
-run out of a fruit store
-with a big apple in his
-mouth, followed by an
-angry Frenchman madly
-jabbering and waving
-a broom over his head,
-with which he was trying to hit Billy. He was just about to bring it
-down on Billy&#8217;s back when Stubby ran between the man&#8217;s legs and
-tripped him. He got up with an oath and started to chase Stubby
-when Button ran in front of him and down he went again. He was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-so busy watching Billy and Stubby that he had not time to cast his
-eyes down to see what was under his feet or where he was stepping.
-This time he fell flat on his stomach, which knocked the breath out
-of him so he could not rise again and chase them. And he sat
-there trying to get his breath until he saw them turn a corner and
-disappear, though he had the fun of seeing a man knocked over as
-he himself had been by Billy running into him as he turned the
-corner. Billy did not see the man as his head was turned to see if
-the fruit dealer was still pursuing him. And when he looked ahead,
-he was surprised to find both Stubby and Button following him. He
-still had his head turned when he ran into a fat woman going the
-same way he was, a big basket of clean clothes on her head. The first
-thing Billy knew, he was rolling over something soft that squealed
-like a stuck pig and that kicked like a calf. He lost his own balance
-and rolled over in the gutter. All this commotion caused a crowd
-to gather around them in no time, and Stubby had to bark and growl
-and nip the heels of the people to make a clearing so Billy could
-get up. Soon the police were upon them, swinging their clubs and
-crying out in French for the crowd to make way and clear the street.</p>
-
-<p>The fat woman was crying and trying to gather up her wash which
-had spilled in all directions, and she was afraid the people would
-steal some of the pieces or step on the clean snow-white bosoms of
-the shirts.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>&#8220;Here, don&#8217;t you put your dirty hands on that shirt!&#8221; she called
-to a boy who was going to try to help her pick up her scattered
-things.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Police! Police! Stop that woman! She is trying to hide a
-lady&#8217;s skirt under her shawl!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stubby felt sorry for the poor laundress and he watched to see
-if any of the crowd tried to steal her things.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a bootblack picked up a nice fine white dress shirt and
-attempted to hide it under his short jacket, but the shirt was too long
-to conceal even when folded, and when it unfolded a long white tail
-stuck out. A policeman made a grab for it but the boy dodged and
-ran down the street with the shirt dangling between his legs. When
-Stubby saw this, he started in pursuit and soon overtook the boy.
-He made a snap at the flying tail, caught it in his mouth, gave a jerk
-and the shirt slipped from the boy&#8217;s hold, wound itself round his
-leg and tripped him. The policeman coming up just then caught
-the boy and gave him two or three sharp raps with his club together
-with a kick and told him to go about his business while he carried
-the much prized shirt back to the laundress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you! Thank you, sir, for saving that shirt! It belongs
-to the man at the head of the Police Department and I&#8217;ll tell him
-how smart you are on your beat and get you promoted for helping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-a poor working woman out of her troubles,&#8221; and she wiped her eyes
-and began to count her pieces to see if they were all there.</p>
-
-<p>While the police was keeping the crowd from bothering her, the
-three Chums sneaked away and decided to return to the boat for
-they did not want to be left in Paris. Their destination was Havre
-for the present and America next.</p>
-
-<p>About six o&#8217;clock when the Captain, his wife and the sailors came
-back to the boat, they found Billy, Stubby and Button all lying out
-on deck enjoying themselves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look, will you?&#8221; exclaimed the Captain. &#8220;There are those
-animals I locked in the cabin quietly lying on deck. One-Eyed Dick
-must have let them out. I&#8217;ll fix <i>him</i> for disobeying orders!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But when he came aboard there was no One-Eyed Dick to be
-found.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So-ho! When we left, Dick must have decided to go too and
-while he was away these animals have broken out of the cabin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While the Captain was talking, his wife had gone below to take
-a look at the cabin and find out if possible how they got out. She
-found, as you know, everything kicked and scratched to pieces and
-the door smashed to bits. She called to the Captain to come see
-what had happened. But just as he was leaving the deck he saw
-old One-Eyed Dick running toward the boat, all excitement.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>&#8220;What is up, Dick? And why are you running?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come quick! Come quick! I am on the track of the three of
-them!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three what?&#8221; asked the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, the runaway animals! Don&#8217;t stop! Don&#8217;t stop to talk a
-moment or we will never catch them! I&#8217;ve been all day trying to
-get track of them and now I have, come quick or we will never lay
-eyes on them again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you crazy, man, wanting me to run find animals that are already
-found?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; asked Dick.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look over on the other side of the deck and you will see what
-I mean.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Jupiter! How ever did they get here? And me following them
-from place to place only to be told they had just been seen turning
-a corner here and a corner there!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But why did you let them out in the first place?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Me</i> let them out? Why, bless your life, that big goat let <i>himself</i>
-out after breaking up the whole of the inside of our boat and butting
-the door down as if it had been made of paper and me off the hatchway
-as if I had been a bale of cotton. You don&#8217;t know that goat, you
-don&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>&#8220;Come down here, I say, and see all the damage that goat did,&#8221;
-called the Captain&#8217;s wife again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, thunder and lightning! He <i>did</i> leave a pretty mess, didn&#8217;t
-he?&#8221; exclaimed the Captain when he saw what Billy had done.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Captain, come up! There is a man wants to see you,&#8221; called
-One-Eyed Dick down the hatchway.</p>
-
-<p>When the Captain went on deck, he saw standing talking to Dick
-a poorly dressed, shifty-eyed individual. &#8220;Well, my man, what can
-I do for you?&#8221; asked the Captain, but as he passed one of his sailors
-he said in a low voice to him, &#8220;Get those animals below as fast as
-you can, and keep them out of sight!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The sailor obeyed, and he got Stubby and Button down but when
-he came up for Billy he heard the man say,</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve come for me pets. And you need not try to hide them. I
-tracked &#8217;em here not half an hour ago and I been waitin&#8217; for youse
-to come back as I didn&#8217;t like to take &#8217;em without tellin&#8217; ye that them
-belongs to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You hear? Get off this boat or I&#8217;ll have Billy butt you over the
-Eiffel Tower! What do you mean by coming here and telling me
-such a cock and bull story as that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Deed them <i>is</i> my pets! And if you don&#8217;t give &#8217;em up to me
-I&#8217;ll call me chum and prove it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>&#8220;Get off my boat, you stupid liar, or I&#8217;ll call the police!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go get the police meself and have you arrested for holdin&#8217;
-stolen goods!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will, will you? Well, here, on your way there you better
-take a bath in the river and wash up. They&#8217;ll be better pleased to
-see you after you have had a clean-up than the way you look now,&#8221;
-and with that the Captain walked over to the man, took him by the
-seat of his trousers and the collar of his coat and threw him overboard
-into the river. The fellow being a regular wharf rat swam
-ashore, swearing vengeance on the Captain, but he never showed up
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, that fellow displayed more cheek than I ever saw
-before, asking me to give up Billy, Stubby and Button on the strength
-of his saying they were his pets. But it goes to show that he had
-read the advertisements in the paper, and since others may have
-read them also, I guess we better pull up anchor and proceed on
-our way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was an hour after this when all were at supper but Dick,
-who was sitting whistling and braiding ropes, when a dapper young
-American orderly appeared at the gangplank and called out: &#8220;Hey,
-there! Have you seen a big white goat, a little yellow dog and a
-black cat around here any time to-day?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir; I haven&#8217;t laid me two eyes on them,&#8221; said Dick with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-straight face, though his good eye did wink once or twice at the fib.
-&#8220;Why, sir? Have you lost them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-p161.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, <i>I</i> haven&#8217;t, but one of them belongs to my
-regiment and the other two to two other regiments.
-And we have been looking everywhere
-for them and advertising in all
-the papers. But every time
-we hear that they
-have been seen in a
-certain locality and go
-to get them, they are
-gone. And I just
-heard this afternoon
-that three animals answering
-to their description
-had
-been seen coming
-this way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I have been here
-nearly all day, and I haven&#8217;t
-laid me two eyes on any goat, cat or dog.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>No, to be sure he had not laid his <i>two</i> eyes on them for he had but
-one eye with which to see.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>The young orderly went off, inquiring on every boat that lay along
-the dock if they had seen a goat, dog or cat anywhere around there
-that day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Captain! Captain!&#8221; called Dick down the hatchway. &#8220;We
-have had another close call. A young orderly from the very regiment
-Billy belongs to was here inquiring for him and the other
-two.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what did you tell him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just said, &#8216;No, I have not laid me two eyes on them.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Haw, haw, haw!&#8221; laughed the Captain. &#8220;You did well to turn
-him off in that way, even if it was half a lie. But it shows we
-must not tarry another minute here or the next thing we know they
-will be sending the police for them. Here, call the other sailors
-and let us heave to and be off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And presently Billy said to Button, &#8220;We are moving! Thank
-goodness we have started on our homeward journey once more!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nothing of interest happened on the rest of the trip to Havre
-except when a little bird flew on deck with a message for Billy
-from Duke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, I did not even know he was gone!&#8221; exclaimed Billy. &#8220;I
-took it for granted he had returned to the boat when I was away,
-and was now asleep somewhere on it. What did you say he said,
-and where was he when he told you?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>&#8220;He was in a big touring car, just leaving the outskirts of Paris.
-He was with his old master who is a celebrated surgeon at the front
-and they were both going back to his hospital. Duke told me to
-tell you that he was very sorry to leave you all without a chance to
-thank you for being so good to him and to say good-by. When he
-left the boat he had only intended to run up in the city and take a
-look at his old home, but when he got there who should he see coming
-out of the house but his old master, who was just going to get
-him at the dogs&#8217; hospital, where he thought Duke had been all this
-time. And Duke said to tell you that when he saw his old master
-again, all his love for him came back and he could not bear to leave
-him to run away to America.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, if that doesn&#8217;t beat all!&#8221; exclaimed Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think it is just as well he left us,&#8221; said Stubby, &#8220;for I am afraid
-he would not understand our free and easy life in America after
-living all his life with formal people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guess you are right,&#8221; agreed Stubby and Billy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-
-<span class="small">BLOWN UP BY A SUBMARINE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-p165.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">YOU will be surprised to learn that the Chums had no
-trouble whatever in sneaking off the canal boat and secreting
-themselves on a packet bound for Queenstown
-that night.</p>
-
-<p>Before boarding the boat Billy said, &#8220;This boat is not sailing for
-America, but we must take any boat we can get on to escape from
-France where we are so well known. If we don&#8217;t, we will be captured
-and sent back into the army in no time. When we get to
-Queenstown, we can ship on another bound for the United States of
-America, for many boats stop there before crossing the ocean to
-pick up the last mail from England.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The boat they were on left the dock at about half past nine, with
-all lights out, as was necessary to avoid attracting the attention of
-the submarines that infested those waters. For a wonder the Channel
-was smooth as glass and as the night was clear, with a big moon
-shining, anything afloat on the water could be seen for miles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Keep your weather eye peeled for submarine periscopes!&#8221; said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-Billy to Stubby and Button as they lay on the forward deck, looking
-out over the water.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p166.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>It was after midnight and every one was in bed but the officers of
-the ship and the sailors on the lookout for submarines when Billy&#8217;s
-sharp eyes saw something that looked like a log of wood standing
-straight up in the water. Before he could call out, &#8220;A periscope!&#8221;
-a black object was seen skipping over the surface of the water and
-the next thing he knew he was flying up in the air amid a spray of
-water. When he came down he struck the water about a hundred
-feet from where he went up and he felt himself going down, down,
-down toward the bottom of the ocean. But it was too deep for him
-to strike bottom here, so after going down, down, down, he began
-to come up, up, up, and when he got to the surface and shook the
-water out of his eyes, he looked around to see if he could discover<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-Stubby or Button. And oh, joy! there they both were swimming
-towards him unhurt.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily for them, not one of them had been injured in the least.
-Just then a big piece of wreckage that would act as a raft floated
-near them and they all crawled upon it, and were just in time to see
-what was left of the packet sink beneath the waves. They also saw
-that two lifeboats were afloat toward which many black heads could
-be seen swimming. Soon the swimmers reached the boats and
-climbed into them, and Billy saw they were the Captain and officers
-of the ship along with some of the sailors and passengers. As soon
-as they were in the lifeboats, they began picking up the people they
-saw in the water, and as there were but few passengers aboard all
-were saved. For a wonder the U-boat did not send another torpedo
-after them which in all probability they would have done had they
-not been frightened away by a guard boat coming to the rescue.
-After it had chased the submarine away, it came back and picked
-up all the passengers of the lifeboats and steamed away toward
-Ireland with them as they happened to be very near Queenstown.</p>
-
-<p>Now none of the people had seen or heard the Chums on their
-raft though Billy baaed, Stubby barked and Button mewed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, there are two or three things to be thankful for,&#8221; said Billy.
-&#8220;First of all, we are alive and unhurt. The next is that the tide
-is carrying us inshore instead of out to sea, and the wind is blowing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-that way too. But most important of all is the fact that we are not
-far from land, and if the tide doesn&#8217;t turn and carry us out to sea,
-we should reach land at the rate we are floating now in about two
-hours. If we see the tide is turning, we can jump off the raft and
-swim for shore.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You would see some good in every situation, even if your home
-was burning,&#8221; declared Button.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, wouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221; asked Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. I nearly always feel despondent when in bad luck until I
-get mad and think what is the use. Then I make the best of whatever
-comes, while patient little Stubby here says nothing but just
-saws wood, as the saying is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Soon after daylight the raft touched the shore, and the Chums
-lost no time in leaving it, I can tell you. In the distance up the
-shore they saw a number of fishermen&#8217;s cottages. Stubby and Button
-proposed to walk up to them and see if they could not get something
-to eat, while Billy waited for them near by and made his breakfast
-of shamrock, for they were on Irish soil, the native heath of the
-shamrock.</p>
-
-<p>The fishermen received them kindly, and gave them plenty to
-eat and drink. Then a quarrel arose as to who should own the dog
-and cat that had come to them so strangely. At last it was proposed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-to auction them off. The bidding was in kegs of fish instead of in
-money, however.</p>
-
-<p>While the excitement of the bidding was going on, Stubby and
-Button thought it a good time to steal away and join Billy. The
-last Stubby heard were these words, &#8220;I&#8217;ll give three kegs of fresh
-fish for the little dog!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When they got back to Billy, they hurriedly told him what was
-up and explained that the men Billy saw waving their arms and
-shouting were only bidding in the auction and not preparing to
-fight each other.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we better scoot out of here before they miss us or we will
-be captured and tied up.&#8221; And for the next half hour the Chums
-ran straight inland, only stopping long enough to get their breath,
-then running on some more. They were not followed, however, and
-at last they slowed down beside the roadside to listen to the passersby,
-to try to find out what part of Ireland they were in and how far it
-was to the nearest seaport from which large vessels sailed. Imagine
-their joy when they found they were only four miles from Queenstown
-and on the direct road that led there!</p>
-
-<p>It was no trick at all to reach that city and when they arrived
-they went straight to the wharf to look for a boat to carry them
-still nearer America.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>&#8220;Look! Billy, look!&#8221; exclaimed Stubby. &#8220;There is a big camouflaged
-troop ship lying at the dock. They can&#8217;t fool <i>me</i> with their
-camouflaged ships; I have seen too many of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the next few minutes you could not see the Chums for dust
-as they ran toward the ship. Sure enough, it was just as Stubby said.
-It was an empty troop ship returning to the United States of America
-for more soldiers, and had only stopped here for coal and provisions.
-There not being any troops aboard, it was easy for the Chums to
-steal on board and hide themselves until the ship was away out to
-sea before showing themselves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I bet you,&#8221; said Stubby, &#8220;that that old submarine that blew us
-up was waiting for this troop ship in the hopes of blowing it up
-and while waiting for it to put to sea, they just blew up the packet
-we were on to keep their hands in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t wonder in the least,&#8221; replied Stubby, &#8220;if that was
-just what they were up to. And perhaps we will be torpedoed
-again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I will take my chance, won&#8217;t you, fellows?&#8221; said Billy,
-&#8220;for I am anxious to set foot on American soil once more, and I want
-it to be the U. S. part of it, not South America or Mexico.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen!&#8221; commanded Button. &#8220;I hear the propeller beginning
-to move.&#8221; This so excited Button that he jumped up and ran up
-and down the big coal pile beside which he had been hiding. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-started the coal to rolling so that it nearly buried Stubby and Billy
-under it, and filled their eyes with coal dust.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You stupid, stop that!&#8221; barked Stubby. &#8220;Do you want to bury
-us alive, or have some one come to see why the coal started rolling?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, of course not, but I am so glad to be on the last lap of our
-journey home that I had to express myself in action or blow up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should think you had had enough blow-ups for one while. And
-you are likely to have another before we reach New York harbor,
-for which port I hear this ship is bound,&#8221; said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;New York, did you say?&#8221; asked Stubby. &#8220;Oh, I am so glad we
-are sailing for New York instead of for Philadelphia, Baltimore or
-some other port. I always like to return to America by way of New
-York and have the Goddess of Liberty welcome me home with extended
-arms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The trip across the Atlantic was a fast and pleasant one and the
-Chums made friends of all on board, just as they always did
-wherever they were.</p>
-
-<p>They waited until the second day at sea before they showed themselves,
-and when they came slowly walking up on deck and stood
-before the Captain as much as to say, &#8220;Here we are! You may do
-with us what you will,&#8221; he nearly fell over with surprise and then
-took pity on them, for they were a sorry, hungry looking trio after
-having been shut in the coal bunker for a day and a night. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-ordered them scrubbed and fed, and when he saw them again he
-did not recognize them at once, for he thought they were all three
-black. Now the dust was washed off them, he found only one was
-black, while one was yellow and the other white.</p>
-
-<p>As he stood looking at them, the sailor who had been ordered to
-wash them came up and after saluting the Captain said,</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Captain, will you kindly read what is on the medals around their
-necks? They each have one, but they do not show unless you look
-for them as they are concealed by their hair. When we went to
-work on them we found each wore a medal around his neck.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While the Captain was reading the medal Billy wore, he had a
-good look at the Captain and was surprised that he had not noticed
-before that this Captain was the very same one with whom he had
-crossed when he sailed for France with his regiment. At the same
-time the Captain recognized Billy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, well, Billy, old boy, how are you? But no need to ask,
-for you are looking fine. And the only thing different I see about
-you is that you have lost the end of your tail. Blown off by a bomb,
-I bet! But where did you pick up your two friends? Wait; I
-will read what their medals say and perhaps that will throw some
-light on who they are. Lieutenant, come here!&#8221; called the Captain
-to a second lieutenant who was passing. &#8220;Just read these medals
-and see whom we have with us.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>&#8220;Holy Moses!&#8221; exclaimed the lieutenant. &#8220;This is a find!
-Didn&#8217;t you know that there is a reward of one thousand dollars offered
-for each of these animals by the regiments they belong to?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Jumping ginger! You don&#8217;t mean it?&#8221; exclaimed the Captain.
-&#8220;They must have gotten homesick and run away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have said it!&#8221; baaed Billy, &#8220;and there is no place like home
-when that home is in the United States of America.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-p173.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">ZIP</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph2">The Adventures of a Frisky Fox Terrier</p>
-
-<p class="center">BY FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY</p>
-
-<p class="center">The Well-Known Author of<br />
-
-<span class="large">THE BILLY WHISKERS SERIES</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Zip is the adventure-loving, frolicsome pet of the
-popular doctor of a small village. He goes
-wherever his master goes&mdash;and ventures to undertake
-much at which the physician would
-shake his head in fear. In fact, Zip dares anything
-and anybody. He is known and beloved
-by all the village folk, who are kept on the <i>qui
-vive</i> wondering what will be Zip&#8217;s next outbreak.</p>
-
-<p>His life is far from one of peace. The unexpected
-is continually happening&mdash;every page
-bristles with the unusual adventures of this active
-little, dear little, frisky little Zip. He will
-be found to be a splendid story-book play-fellow
-by every boy and girl.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>Quarto, bound in boards, with cover, jacket and four full-page
-illustrations in colors&mdash;$.60 postpaid.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p class="ph3">The Saalfield Publishing Company<br />
-
-AKRON, OHIO</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2">Billy Whiskers Series</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">(<span class="smcap">Trade Mark.</span>)</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-q003.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Frances Trego Montgomery</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS</p>
-
-<p>Billy Whiskers is a mischievous creature, full of wickedness and folly, whose antics have
-furnished fun for a million readers. The child enjoys every moment after he is introduced to the
-irresistible fellow.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; KIDS</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Recounting the adventures of Day and Night, twin kids of the nursery-famous Billy
-Whiskers. This is a stirring tale of travel and trouble and mischief that will delight the little
-world.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Galveston News.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS, JR.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Night, now grown, is known as Billy Whiskers, Jr. and as he has all the personal traits
-which made his father&#8217;s career one round of surprising activity and astonishing adventure, the
-son will be quite as well beloved as his sire.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago Record Herald.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; TRAVELS</p>
-
-<p>In which the ever active Billy tours Europe, each city in turn furnishing ample opportunity
-for fun for sight-seeing Billy.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS AT THE CIRCUS</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Everything goes well enough with Billy until a circus comes to town, and then just like
-the small boy, he made up his mind to go, come what might and cost what it would. He made
-preparations for a week and went, there to meet with all manner of adventures, becoming so
-infatuated with the life that he joined it.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Des Moines Capital.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS AT THE FAIR</p>
-
-<p>In going to the Fair, Billy Whiskers didn&#8217;t leave a single prank at home. He had more fun
-to the minute than most others have to the hour. What he didn&#8217;t do and didn&#8217;t see is not worth
-relating.</p>
-
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><b>Each volume bound in boards, cover and jacket in colors, six full-page
-illustrations in colors, with scores of text drawings, quarto, postpaid,
-per volume <span class="floatright2"> $1.25</span></b></p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p class="ph3">THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO., AKRON, OHIO</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2">Billy Whiskers Series</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">(<span class="smcap">Trade Mark.</span>)</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-q004.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Frances Trego Montgomery</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; FRIENDS</p>
-
-<p>This story of how Billy Whiskers and his wife Nannie journey west in search of their son,
-Billy Whiskers, Jr., teems with exciting incident and ludicrous situation.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS, JR. AND HIS CHUMS</p>
-
-<p>The Chums are a black cat and a yellow dog, and together this trio make a trip from San
-Francisco immediately after the great earthquake back to Billy&#8217;s former home in the east.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; GRANDCHILDREN</p>
-
-<p>Being a laughable record of the adventures that come to Punch and Judy, Billy&#8217;s grandchildren.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; VACATION</p>
-
-<p>Promising his faithful wife to be back within a year and a day, active Billy starts on
-another ramble, to meet as many exciting adventures as in his younger days.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS KIDNAPED</p>
-
-<p>Because Billy is a valuable goat, two men determine to kidnap him, and after many attempts
-they succeed. The Chums unearth the plot, and take up the trail&mdash;but what happens it is the
-right of the author to tell in her own charming way.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS&#8217; TWINS</p>
-
-<p>Billy&#8217;s twin children go to a famous summer resort, now being owned by children who
-sojourn there each year. Father Billy and the Chums follow, and the five make merry during
-the season, enjoying it fully as much as any of the cottagers.</p>
-
-
-<p class="largebold">BILLY WHISKERS IN AN AEROPLANE</p>
-
-<p>Billy keeps step with the progress of the world, and here we find him making a cross-country
-flight in an aeroplane race, with the Chums in rival machines.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><b>Each volume in boards, cover and jacket in colors, six full-page illustrations
-in colors, with scores of text drawings, quarto, postpaid, per
-volume<span class="floatright2"> $1.25</span></b></p>
-
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p class="ph3">THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO., AKRON, OHIO</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2"><span class="u">FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY&#8217;S BOOKS</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="ph1">The
-Wonderful
-Electric
-Elephant</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-q005a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;A new and fascinating sort of
-fairy story.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Salt Lake Tribune.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;A book in which youth will take
-keen pleasure.&#8221;&mdash;<i>The Bookseller.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Among the tales of travel for boys and girls there are few which record such strange
-adventures as befell the owners of the wonderful Electric Elephant.</p>
-
-<p>By a fortunate chance, Harold Fredericks comes into possession of a wonderful mechanical
-elephant, so ingeniously contrived that it will pass for a real animal, even under closest
-inspection. The interior is fitted up luxuriously, affording the finest accommodations for Harold
-and the traveling companion whom he secures by another lucky chance. The young folks have
-a journey quite unlike any on record, meeting adventures both on land and sea.</p>
-
-<p>The boy or girl who wants something new in the story line will surely find it in this
-chronicle.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><b>Elaborately illustrated with 50 full-page halftones, bound in cloth, 12mo,
-postpaid <span class="floatright2"> $1.50</span></b></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">ON A
-LARK
-TO THE
-PLANETS</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i-q005b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;The colored illustrations are
-a feature of delight.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Grand
-Rapids Herald.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;This sprightly author holds the
-record for inventiveness.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
-Item.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>Some time ago a book appeared which has been a delight to thousands of boys and girls.
-It was &#8220;The Wonderful Electric Elephant.&#8221; Frances Trego Montgomery has published a sequel
-to that book and calls it &#8220;On a Lark to the Planets.&#8221; The contents of this new volume makes a
-feast for the young mind, telling of a journey Harold and Ione took to the planets.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As a gift book to the children, nothing could be more desirable. It is an assurance of
-happiness for any young person to be the possessor of this charming story.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Birmingham Ledger.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><b>Beautifully illustrated in colors, bound substantially in cloth, 12mo, postpaid <span class="floatright2"> $1.50</span></b></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<div class="figleft"><img src="images/i-q006a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="ph1">A CHRISTMAS WITH SANTA CLAUS</p>
-
-
-
-<p><i>The Buffalo Courier</i>
-says:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Frances Trego Montgomery
-has the happy
-faculty of knowing what
-the small boy and his sister
-like in the way of
-fiction.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A CHRISTMAS WITH SANTA CLAUS&#8221; is the title of an
-ideal Christmas book by Frances Trego Montgomery, illustrated in
-colors in a most bewitching way.</p>
-
-<p>The story recites the adventures of Jack and Gladys, whom
-Santa picks up and whisks away to the Northland. There they make
-the acquaintance of Mrs. Santa, and help fill the Saint&#8217;s chimney
-bags. When all is ready and the sleigh is packed, they accompany
-old Santa on his annual trip.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you doubt the joys of a &#8216;Christmas with Santa Claus,&#8217; read
-of the pleasures that awaited two little waifs the big-hearted Christian
-saint gathered into his home. Mrs. Montgomery introduces you to
-his motherly wife. She is as good as another grandmother. Try her!&#8221;&mdash;<i>New
-York World.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<div class="figright"><img src="images/i-q006b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="ph1">SANTA CLAUS&#8217; TWIN BROTHER</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p><i>Boston Ideas</i> says:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Montgomery&#8217;s
-ideas are touched with
-the sparkle of real
-genius. It&#8217;s a delight to
-travel in her company.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Can anyone make a better play-fellow than Santa himself?
-That is the question every child ponders after reading &#8220;A Christmas
-with Santa Claus.&#8221; And likely they would ask it in vain if Mrs.
-Montgomery had not written &#8220;Santa Claus&#8217; Twin Brother.&#8221; This
-lively story convinces them that there is one other who enters into
-their moods just as thoroughly as the merry old fellow with ruddy
-face and snowy beard, and why should he not, for he is Kris Kringle,
-twin brother of Santa.</p>
-
-<p>Four little children are fortunate enough to have a frolic with
-these two merry fellows, and their laughter rings through every page
-of the captivating story.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><b>Each volume illustrated in colors, with colored cover and jacket, quarto,
-bound in boards postpaid, per volume <span class="floatright2"> $1.00</span></b></p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO., AKRON, OHIO</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_backcover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph3">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-</div></div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BILLY WHISKERS IN FRANCE ***</div>
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