<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>SQUINTY</h1>
<h2>THE COMICAL PIG</h2>
<h4>HIS MANY ADVENTURES</h4>
<h3>By<br/> Richard Barnum</h3>
<div class="lister">Author of "Slicko, the Jumping Squirrel," "Mappo, the Merry Monkey," "Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant," "Don, a Runaway Dog," etc.</div>
<h3><i>Illustrated by</i><br/> Harriet H. Tooker</h3>
<br/>
<h5>1915</h5>
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<SPAN name="contents" /><div class="contentsheader">CONTENTS<br/><span class="smaller"><SPAN href="#illustrations">illustrations</SPAN></span></div>
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<br/>
<SPAN href="#chap1">I. SQUINTY AND THE DOG</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap2">II. SQUINTY RUNS AWAY</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap3">III. SQUINTY IS LOST</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap4">IV. SQUINTY GETS HOME</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap5">V. SQUINTY AND THE BOY</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap6">VI. SQUINTY ON A JOURNEY</SPAN><br/><br/>
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<br/>
<SPAN href="#chap7">VII. SQUINTY LEARNS A TRICK</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap8">VIII. SQUINTY IN THE WOODS</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap9">IX. SQUINTY'S BALLOON RIDE</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap10">X. SQUINTY AND THE SQUIRREL</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap11">XI. SQUINTY AND THE MERRY MONKEY</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#chap12">XII. SQUINTY GETS HOME AGAIN</SPAN><br/><br/>
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<SPAN name="illustrations" /><div class="contentsheader">ILLUSTRATIONS<br/><span class="smaller"><SPAN href="#contents">contents</SPAN></span></div>
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<br/>
<SPAN href="#pic2">Squinty saw rushing toward him, Don, the big black and white dog</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#pic3">"Hop on," he said to the toad. "I won't bother you."</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#pic4">"Oh, Father!" exclaimed the boy, "do let me have just one little pig"</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#pic5">Squinty gave a little spring, and over the rope he went</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#pic6">The next moment Squinty felt himself lifted off the ground</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#pic1">Squinty looked at the beautiful wagons, and at the strange animals</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#pic7">"Why, I am Mappo, the merry monkey," was the answer</SPAN>
<br/><br/>
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<div class="text">
<h2>SQUINTY, THE COMICAL PIG</h2>
<br/>
<div class="chap1"><SPAN name="chap1" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER I</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY AND THE DOG</div>
<p>Squinty was a little pig. You could tell
he was a pig just as soon as you looked at
him, because he had the cutest little curly
tail, as though it wanted to tie itself into a bow,
but was not quite sure whether that was the right
thing to do. And Squinty had a skin that was as
pink, under his white, hairy bristles, as a baby's
toes.</p>
<p>Also Squinty had the oddest nose! It was just
like a rubber ball, flattened out, and when
Squinty moved his nose up and down, or sideways,
as he did when he smelled the nice sour
milk the farmer was bringing for the pigs' dinner,
why, when Squinty did that with his nose, it
just made you want to laugh right out loud.</p>
<p>But the funniest part of Squinty was his eyes,
or, rather, one eye. And that eye squinted just
as well as any eye ever squinted. Somehow or
other, I don't just know why exactly, or I would
tell you, the lid of one of Squinty's eyes was
heavier than the other. That eye opened only
half way, and when Squinty looked up at you
from the pen, where he lived with his mother
and father and little brothers and sisters, why
there was such a comical look on Squinty's face
that you wanted to laugh right out loud again.</p>
<p>In fact, lots of boys and girls, when they came
to look at Squinty in his pen, could not help
laughing when he peered up at them, with one
eye widely open, and the other half shut.</p>
<p>"Oh, what a comical pig!" the boys and girls
would cry. "What is his name?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I guess we'll call him Squinty," the
farmer said; and so Squinty was named.</p>
<p>Perhaps if his mother had had her way about
it she would have given Squinty another name,
as she did his brothers and sisters. In fact she
did name all of them except Squinty.</p>
<p>One of the little pigs was named Wuff-Wuff,
another Curly Tail, another Squealer, another
Wee-Wee, and another Puff-Ball. There were
seven pigs in all, and Squinty was the last one,
so you see he came from quite a large family.
When his mother had named six of her little
pigs she came to Squinty.</p>
<p>"Let me see," grunted Mrs. Pig in her own
way, for you know animals have a language of
their own which no one else can understand.
"Let me see," said Mrs. Pig, "what shall I call
you?"</p>
<p>She was thinking of naming him Floppy, because
the lid of one of his eyes sort of flopped
down. But just then a lot of boys and girls came
running out to the pig pen.</p>
<p>The boys and girls had come on a visit to the
farmer who owned the pigs, and when they
looked in, and saw big Mr. and Mrs. Pig, and the
little ones, one boy called out:</p>
<p>"Oh, what a queer little pig, with one eye
partly open! And how funny he looks at you!
What is his name?"</p>
<p>"Well, I guess we'll call him Squinty," the
farmer had said. And so, just as I have told you,
Squinty got his name.</p>
<p>"Humph! Squinty!" exclaimed Mrs. Pig, as
she heard what the farmer said. "I don't know
as I like that."</p>
<p>"Oh, it will do very well," answered Mr. Pig.
"It will save you thinking up a name for him.
And, after all, you know, he <i>does</i> squint. Not
that it amounts to anything, in fact it is rather
stylish, I think. Let him be called Squinty."</p>
<p>"All right," answered Mrs. Pig. So Squinty
it was.</p>
<p>"Hello, Squinty!" called the boys and girls,
giving the little pig his new name. "Hello,
Squinty!"</p>
<p>"Wuff! Wuff!" grunted Squinty.</p>
<p>That meant, in his language, "Hello!" you see.
For though Squinty, and his mother and father,
and brothers and sisters, could understand man
talk, and boy and girl talk, they could not speak
that language themselves, but had to talk in their
own way.</p>
<p>Nearly all animals understand our talk, even
though they can not speak to us. Just look at a
dog, for instance. When you call to him:
"Come here!" doesn't he come? Of course he
does. And when you say: "Lie down, sir!"
doesn't he lie down? that is if he is a good dog,
and minds? He understands, anyhow.</p>
<p>And see how horses understand how to go
when the driver says "Gid-dap!" and how they
stop when he says "Whoa!" So you need not
think it strange that a little pig could understand
our kind of talk, though he could not speak it
himself.</p>
<p>Well, Squinty, the comical pig, lived with his
mother and father and brothers and sisters in the
farmer's pen for some time. As the days went on
Squinty grew fatter and fatter, until his pink
skin, under his white bristles, was swelled out
like a balloon.</p>
<p>"Hum!" exclaimed the farmer one day, as he
leaned over the top of the pen, to look down on
the pigs, after he had poured their dinner into
the trough. "Hum! That little pig, with the
squinty eye, is getting pretty big. I thought he
was going to be a little runt, but he seems to be
growing as fast as the others."</p>
<p>Squinty was glad when he heard that, for he
wanted to grow up to be a fine, large pig.</p>
<p>The farmer took a corn cob, from which all the
yellow kernels of corn had been shelled, and with
it he scratched the back of Squinty. Pigs like
to have their backs scratched, just as cats like to
have you rub their smooth fur, or tickle them under
the ears.</p>
<p>"Ugh! Ugh!" grunted Squinty, looking up at
the farmer with his comical eyes, one half shut
and the other wide open. "Ugh! Ugh!" And
with his odd eyes, and one ear cocked forward,
and the other flopping over backward, Squinty
looked so funny that the farmer had to laugh out
loud.</p>
<p>"What's the matter, Rufus?" asked the farmer's
wife, who was gathering the eggs.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's this pig," laughed the farmer. "He
has such a queer look on his face!"</p>
<p>"Let me see!" exclaimed the farmer's wife.</p>
<p>She, too, looked down into the pen.</p>
<p>"Oh, isn't he comical!" she cried.</p>
<p>Then, being a very kind lady, and liking all the
farm animals, the farmer's wife went out in the
potato patch and pulled up some pig weed.</p>
<p>This is a green weed that grows in the garden,
but it does no good there. Instead it does harm,
and farmers like to pull it up to get rid of it.
But, if pig weed is no good for the garden, it is
good for pigs, and they like to chew the green
leaves.</p>
<p>"Here, Squinty!" called the farmer's wife,
tossing some of the juicy, green weed to the little
pig. "Eat this!"</p>
<p>"Ugh! Ugh!" grunted Squinty, and he began
to chew the green leaves. I suppose that was his
way of saying: "Thank you!"</p>
<p>As soon as Squinty's brothers and sisters saw
the green pig weed the farmer's wife had tossed
into the pen, up they rushed to the trough, grunting
and squealing, to get some too.</p>
<p>They pushed and scrambled, and even stepped
into the trough, so eager were they to get something
to eat; even though they had been fed only
a little while before.</p>
<p>That is one strange thing about pigs. They
seem to be always hungry. And Squinty's
brothers and sisters were no different from other
pigs.</p>
<p>But wait just a moment. They were a bit different,
for they were much cleaner than many
pigs I have seen. The farmer who owned them
knew that pigs do not like to live in mud and dirt
any more than do cows and horses, so this farmer
had for his pigs a nice pen, with a dry board
floor, and plenty of corn husks for their bed.
They had clean water to drink, and a shady place
in which to lie down and sleep.</p>
<p>Of course there was a mud bath in the pig pen,
for, no matter how clean pigs are, once in a while
they like to roll in the mud. And I'll tell you
the reason for that.</p>
<p>You see flies and mosquitoes and other pests
like to bite pigs. The pigs know this, and they
also know that if they roll in the mud, and get
covered with it, the mud will make a coating
over them to keep the biting flies away.</p>
<p>So that is why pigs like to roll in the mud once
in awhile, just as you sometimes see a circus elephant
scatter dust over his back, to drive away
the flies. And even such a thick-skinned animal
as a rhinoceros likes to plaster himself with mud
to keep away the insects.</p>
<p>But after Squinty and his brothers and sisters
had rolled in the mud, they were always glad
when the farmer came with the garden hose and
washed them clean again, so their pink skins
showed beneath their white, hairy bristles.</p>
<p>Squinty and the other pigs grew until they
were a nice size. They had nothing to do but
eat and sleep, and of course that will make anyone
grow.</p>
<p>Now Squinty, though he was not the largest of
the family of pig children, was by far the smartest.
He learned more quickly than did his
brothers and sisters, how to run to the trough to
eat, when his mother called him, and he learned
how to stand up against one side of the pen and
rub himself back and forth to scratch his side
when a mosquito had bitten him in a place he
could not reach with his foot.</p>
<p>In fact Squinty was a little too smart. He
wanted to do many things his brothers and sisters
never thought of. One day when Squinty and
the others had eaten their dinner, Squinty told his
brother Wuff-Wuff that he thought it would be
a nice thing to have some fun.</p>
<p>Wuff-Wuff said he thought so, too, but he
didn't just know what to do. In fact there was
not much one could do in a pig pen.</p>
<p>"If we could only get out of here!" grunted
Squinty, as he looked out through a crack in the
boards and saw the green garden, where pig weed
was growing thickly.</p>
<p>"Yes, but we can't," said Wuff-Wuff.</p>
<p>Squinty was not so sure about this. In fact he
was a very inquisitive little pig--that is, he always
wanted to find out about things, and why
this and that was so, and what made the wheels
go around, and all like that.</p>
<p>"I think I can get out through that place," said
Squinty to himself, a little later. He had found
another crack between two boards of the pen--a
large crack, and one edge of the board was loose.
Squinty began to push with his rubbery nose.</p>
<p>A pig's nose is pretty strong, you know, for it
is made for digging, or rooting in the earth, to
turn up acorns, and other good things to eat.</p>
<p>Squinty pushed and pushed on the board until
he had made it very loose. The crack was getting
wider.</p>
<p>"Oh, I can surely get out!" he thought. He
looked around; his mother and father and all the
little pigs were asleep in the shady part of the
pen.</p>
<p>"I'm going!" said Squinty to himself.</p>
<p>He gave one extra hard push, and there he was
through the big crack, and outside the pen. It
was the first time he had ever been out in his life.
At first he was a little frightened, but when he
looked over into the potato patch, and saw pig
weed growing there he was happy.</p>
<p>"Oh, what a good meal I shall have!" grunted
Squinty.</p>
<p>He ran toward a large bunch of the juicy,
green pig weed, but before he reached it he heard
a dreadful noise.</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow! Bow wow!" went some
animal, and then came some growls, and the next
moment Squinty saw, rushing toward him Don,
the big black and white dog of the farmer.
"Bow wow! Bow wow! Bow wow!" barked Don,
and that meant, in his language: "Get back in
your pen, Squinty! What do you mean by coming
out? Get back! Bow wow!"</p>
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<SPAN href="images/2_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic2" alt="Squinty saw rushing toward him, Don, the big black and white dog." src="images/2.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">Squinty saw rushing toward him, Don, the big black and white dog.</div>
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<p>"Oh dear! Oh dear!" squealed Squinty. "I
shall be bitten sure! That dog will bite me!
Oh dear! Why didn't I stay in the pen?"</p>
<p>Squinty turned on his little short legs, as
quickly as he could, and started back for the pen.
But it was not easy to run in a potato field, and
Squinty, not having lived in the woods and fields
as do some pigs, was not a very good runner.</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow!" barked Don, running
after Squinty.</p>
<p>I do not believe Don really meant to hurt the
comical little pig. In fact I know he did not, for
Don was very kind-hearted. But Don knew that
the pigs were supposed to stay in their pen, and
not come out to root up the garden. So Don
barked:</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow! Get back where you
belong, Squinty."</p>
<p>Squinty ran as fast as he could, but Don ran
faster. Squinty caught his foot in a melon vine,
and down he went. Before he could get up Don
was close to him, and, the next moment Squinty
felt his ear being taken between Don's strong,
white teeth.</p>
<p>"Oh dear! Oh dear! Oh dear!" squealed
Squinty, in his own queer, pig language. "What
is going to happen to me?"</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap2"><SPAN name="chap2" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER II</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY RUNS AWAY</div>
<p>Between the barking of Don, the dog,
and the squealing of Squinty, the comical
pig, who was being led along by his ear,
there was so much noise in the farmer's potato
patch, for a few moments, that, if you had been
there, I think you would have wondered what
was happening.</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow! Bow wow!" barked
Don, still keeping hold of Squinty's ear, though
he did not pinch very hard. "Bow wow! Get
back to your pen where you belong!"</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee! Squee!" yelled Squinty. "Oh,
please let me go! I'll be good!"</p>
<p>And so it went on, the dog talking in his barking
language, and Squinty squealing in his pig
talk; but they could easily understand one another,
even if no one else could.</p>
<p>Back in the pen Mrs. Pig suddenly awakened
from a nap. So did Mr. Pig, and all the little
pigs.</p>
<p>"Don't you hear something making a noise?"
asked Mrs. Pig of her husband.</p>
<p>"Why, yes, I think I do," he answered slowly,
as he looked in the feed trough, to see if the
farmer had left any more sour milk there for the
pig family to eat. But there was none.</p>
<p>"I hear someone squealing," said Wuff-Wuff,
the largest boy pig of them all.</p>
<p>"So do I," said Squeaker, a little girl pig.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pig sat up, and looked all over the pen.
She was counting her children to see if they were
all there. She did not see Squinty, and at once
she became frightened.</p>
<p>"Squinty is gone!" cried Mrs. Pig. "Oh,
where can he be?"</p>
<p>The squealing noise became louder. So did
the barking of the dog.</p>
<p>"Look, there is a board off the side of the
pen," said Mr. Pig.</p>
<p>"Yes, Squinty wanted me to come outside with
him," said Wuff-Wuff. "But I wouldn't go."</p>
<p>"Oh, maybe my little boy pig is outside there,
making all that noise!" cried Mrs. Pig to her
husband.</p>
<p>"Well, he isn't making <i>all</i> that noise by himself,"
said the father pig. "Someone is helping
him make it, I'm sure."</p>
<p>They all listened, and heard the barking of
Don, as well as the squealing of Squinty.</p>
<p>"Oh, some animal has caught him!" cried Mrs.
Pig. Then she pushed as hard as she could with
her nose, against the loose board near the hole in
the pen, through which Squinty had run a little
while before. Mrs. Pig soon knocked off the
board, and then she ran out into the garden,
Mr. Pig and all the little pigs ran after her.</p>
<p>The first thing Mrs. Pig saw was her little boy
pig down on the ground in the middle of a row
of melon vines, with Don holding Squinty's ear.</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" barked Don.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee!" cried Squinty.</p>
<p>"Oh, you poor little pig!" grunted Mrs. Pig.
"What has happened to you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma!" squealed Squinty. "I--I ran
out of the pen to see what it was like outside, and
I was just eating some pig weed, when this big
dog chased after me."</p>
<p>"Yes, I did," said Don, growling in his deep
voice. "The place for pigs, little or big, is in
their pen. The farmer does not want you to
come out and spoil his garden. He tells me to
watch you, and to drive you back if you come in
it.</p>
<p>"This is the first time I have seen any of you
pigs in the garden," went on Don, still keeping
hold of Squinty's ear, "and I want you, please, to
go back in your pen."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'll go! I'll go!" cried Squinty. "Only
let loose of my ear, Mr. Dog, if you please!"</p>
<p>"What! Have you hold of Squinty's ear?"
asked Wuff-Wuff. "Oh, do please let him go!"</p>
<p>"Yes, I will, now that you are here," said Don,
and he took his strong, white teeth from the piggy
boy's ear. "I did not bite him hard enough to
hurt him," said Don. "But I had to catch hold
of him somewhere, and taking him by the ear was
better than taking him by the tail, I think."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, indeed!" agreed Mr. Pig. "Once,
when I was a little pig, a dog bit me on the tail,
and I never got over it. In fact I have the marks
yet," and he tried to look around at his tail, which
had a kink in it. But Mr. Pig was too fat to see
his own tail.</p>
<p>"So that's why I took hold of Squinty by the
ear," went on Don. "Did I hurt you very
much?" he asked the little pig who had run out
of the pen.</p>
<p>"Oh, no; not much," Squinty said, as he
rubbed his ear with his paw. Then, as he saw
a bunch of pig weed close to him, he began
nibbling that. And his brothers and sisters, seeing
him do this, began to eat the pig weed also.</p>
<p>"Come! This will never do!" barked Don,
the dog. "I am sorry, but all you pigs must go
back in your own pen. The farmer would not
like you to be out in his garden."</p>
<p>"Yes, I suppose we must," said Mrs. Pig, with
a sigh. "Yet it is very nice out in the garden.
But we must stay in our pen."</p>
<p>"Come, children," said Mr. Pig. "We must
stay in our own place, for if we rooted up the
farmer's garden, much as we would like to do it,
he would have no vegetables to eat this winter.
Then he might be angry at us, and would give us
no more sour milk. So we will go back to our
pen."</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow!" barked Don, running
here and there. "I will show you the way back
to your pen," he said, kindly.</p>
<p>And he capered about, here and there, driving
the pigs back to the place where Squinty had
run from, and where all the others had come
from, to see what had happened to him.</p>
<p>The farmer, who was hoeing corn, heard the
barking of his dog. He dropped the hoe and
ran.</p>
<p>"Something must have happened!" he cried.
"Maybe the big bull has gotten loose from his
field, and is chasing someone with a red dress."</p>
<p>Into the garden he ran, and then he saw Don
driving Squinty, and his brothers and sisters, and
mother and father, back to the pen.</p>
<p>"Ha! So the pigs got loose!" the farmer
cried. "Good dog! Chase 'em back!"</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" barked Don. "I will!"</p>
<p>But the pigs did not need much driving, for
they were very good, and did not want to cause
Don, or the farmer, any trouble if they could
help it.</p>
<p>Soon Squinty and the others were safely in the
pen again. The farmer looked at them carefully.</p>
<p>"So, you thought you'd like to get out and have
a run, did you?" he asked, speaking to pigs just
as if they could understand him. And they did,
just as your dog understands, and minds you
when you call to him to come to you.</p>
<p>"So you wanted a run in the garden, eh?" went
on the farmer. "Well, I don't blame you, for it
isn't much fun to stay cooped up in a pen all the
while. But still I can't have you out. But I'll
give you a nice lot of pig weed, just the same, for
you must be hungry."</p>
<p>Then the farmer pulled up some more of the
green stuff, and tossed it into the pen. He also
gave them plenty of sour milk, which pigs like
better than sweet milk. Besides, it is cheaper.</p>
<p>"Well, I guess you won't run away again," the
farmer went on, as he nailed back on the pen the
board which Squinty had pushed off. Perhaps
the farmer thought one of the big pigs--the papa
or mamma one--had made the hole for the others
to get out. I am sure he never thought little
Squinty, with his comical eye, did it. But we
know Squinty did, don't we?</p>
<p>For some time after this Squinty was a very-good
pig, indeed. Not that I mean to say he
was bad when he ran out of the pen, for he did
not know any better. But, after the board was
nailed on tightly again, he did not try to push it
off. Perhaps he knew he could not do it.</p>
<p>Squinty and his brothers and sisters had lots
of fun in the pen, even if they could not go out.
They played games in the straw, hiding away
from one another, and squealing and grunting
when they were found. They raced around the
pen, playing a game much like our game of tag,
and if they could have had someone to tie a hand-kerchief
over their eyes, they might have played
blind-man's buff. But of course they did not
really do this.</p>
<p>However, they raced about, and jumped over
each other's backs, and climbed upon the fat
sides of their father and mother while the big
pigs lay asleep in the shade.</p>
<p>Squinty was a pig very fond of playing tricks.
Sometimes he would take a choice, tender piece
of pig weed, which the farmer had tossed into
the pen, and hide it in the soft dirt in one corner.</p>
<p>"Now see who can find it!" Squinty would call
to his brothers and sisters, and they would hunt
all over for it, rooting up the earth with their
strong, rubbery noses.</p>
<p>Digging in the dirt was good practice for
them, and their mother and father would watch
them, saying:</p>
<p>"Ah, when they grow up they will be very
good rooting pigs indeed. Yes, very good!"</p>
<p>Then Squinty, or his brothers or sisters, would
root up the hidden pig weed, and the old pigs
would go to sleep again, for they did not need to
practice digging, having done so when they
were young. About all they did was to eat and
sleep, and tell the little pigs how to behave.</p>
<p>"Squinty, how is your ear that Don, the dog,
bit?" asked Mrs. Pig of her little boy pig one
day.</p>
<p>"Oh, it doesn't hurt me," answered Squinty.
"Don did not bite very hard. He only wanted
to catch me."</p>
<p>"Yes, Don is a good dog," said Mrs. Pig.
"But you must be careful of other dogs,
Squinty."</p>
<p>"Why, are not all dogs alike?" the little pig
boy asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, indeed!" answered Mrs. Pig. "Some
of them are very bad and savage. They would
bite you very hard if they got the chance. So,
whenever you see any dog, except Don, running
toward you, run away as fast as you can."</p>
<p>"I will," promised Squinty. And he did not
know how soon he would be glad to remember
his mother's good advice.</p>
<p>For some days nothing much happened in the
pig pen. Once or twice Squinty pushed his nose
against the board the farmer had nailed on, but
it was very tight, he found, and he could not push
it off.</p>
<p>"Are you trying to get out again?" asked Wuff-Wuff.</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know," Squinty would answer.
"I think it would be fun if we all could; don't
you?"</p>
<p>"No, indeed!" cried Wuff-Wuff. "Some big
dog might chase us. I want to stay in the pen."</p>
<p>But Squinty was a brave, bold, mischievous
little pig. He was not content to stay in the pen.
He wanted to have some adventures. He
wanted to get out in the garden, which looked
so nice and green.</p>
<p>Squinty looked all around the other sides of
the pen. He wanted to see if there was another
loose board. If there was, he made up his little
pig mind that he would go out again. But he
said nothing of this to his brothers or sisters, or
to his father or mother. He felt that they would
not like him to go away again.</p>
<p>"But there is not much fun staying in the pen
all the while," thought Squinty. "I wish I
could get out."</p>
<p>Squinty, you see, had made up his mind to run
away. Often horses run away, so I don't see why
pigs can't, also. Anyhow, that was what Squinty
intended to do.</p>
<p>But, for nearly a week after his first adventure
in the garden, Squinty had no chance to slip out
of the pen. All the boards seemed very tight.</p>
<p>Then, one day, it was very hot. The sun shone
brightly.</p>
<p>"Dig holes for yourselves in the cool ground,
and lie down in them," said Mrs. Pig. "That
will cool you off."</p>
<p>Each little pig dug a hole for himself, just as
a hen does when she wants to take a dust bath.
Squinty dug his hole near the lower edge of the
boards, on one side of the pen.</p>
<p>"I'll make a big hole," he thought to himself.</p>
<p>And, as Squinty dug down, he noticed that he
could see under the bottom of the boards. He
could look right out into the garden.</p>
<p>"That is very queer," thought the little pig
boy. "I believe I can get out of the pen by
crawling under a board, as well as by pushing
one loose from the side. I'll try it." Squinty
was learning things, you see.</p>
<p>So he dug the hole deeper and deeper, and
soon it was large enough for him to slip under
the bottom board.</p>
<p>"Now I can run away," he grunted softly to
himself. He looked all around the pen. His
father, mother, sisters and brothers were fast
asleep in their cool holes of earth.</p>
<p>"I'm going!" said Squinty, and the next moment
he had slipped under the side of the pen,
through the hole he had dug, and once more he
was out in the garden.</p>
<p>"Now for some adventures!" said Squinty, in a
jolly whisper--a pig's whisper, you know.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap3"><SPAN name="chap3" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER III</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY IS LOST</div>
<p>This was the second time Squinty had
run out of the pen and into the farmer's
garden. The first time he had been
caught and brought back by Don, the dog. This
time Squinty did not intend to get caught, if he
could help it.</p>
<p>So, after crawling out through the hole under
the pen, the little pig came to a stop, and looked
carefully on all sides of him. His one little
squinty eye was opened as wide as it would open,
and the other eye was opened still wider.
Squinty wanted to see all there was to be seen.</p>
<p>He cocked one ear up in front of him, to listen
to any sounds that might come from that direction,
and the other ear he drooped over toward
his back, to hear any noises that might come from
behind him.</p>
<p>What Squinty was especially listening for was
the barking of Don, the dog.</p>
<p>"For," thought Squinty, "I don't want Don to
catch me again, and make me go back, before I
have had any fun. It will be time enough to go
back to the pen when it is dark. Yes, that will
be time enough," for of course Squinty did not
think of staying out after the sun had gone down.
Or, at least, he did not imagine he would.</p>
<p>But you just wait and see what happens.</p>
<p>Squinty looked carefully about him. Even if
one eye did droop a little, he could still see out
of it very well, and he saw no signs of Don, the
big dog. Nor could Squinty hear him.</p>
<p>Don must be far away, the little pig thought,
far away, perhaps taking a swim in the brook,
where the dog often went to cool off in hot
weather.</p>
<p>"I think I'll go and have a swim myself,"
thought Squinty. He knew there was a brook
somewhere on the farm, for he could hear the
tinkle and fall of the water even in the pig pen.
But where the brook was he did not know exactly.</p>
<p>"But it will be an adventure to hunt for it,"
Squinty thought. "I guess I can easily find it.
Here I go!" and with that he started to walk between
the rows of potatoes.</p>
<p>Squinty made up his little mind that he was
going to be very careful. Now that he was
safely out of the pen again he did not want to be
caught the second time. He did not want Don,
or the farmer, to see him, so he crawled along,
keeping as much out of sight as he could.</p>
<p>"I wish my brothers, Wuff-Wuff or Squealer
were with me," said Squinty softly to himself, in
pig language. "But if I had awakened them,
and asked them to run away with me, mamma or
papa might have heard, and stopped us."</p>
<p>Squinty did not feel at all sorry about running
away and leaving his father and mother, and
brothers and sisters. You see he thought he
would be back with them again in a few hours,
for he did not intend to stay away from the pen
longer than that. But many things can happen
in a few hours, as you shall see.</p>
<p>"I won't eat any pig weed just yet," thought
Squinty, as he went softly on between the rows of
potato vines. "To pull up any of it, and eat it
now, would make it wiggle. Then Don or the
farmer might see it wiggling, and run over to find
out what it was all about. Then I'd be caught.
I'll wait a bit."</p>
<p>So, though he was very hungry, he would not
eat a bit of the pig weed that grew near the pen.
And he never so much as dreamed of taking any
of the farmer's potatoes. He did not yet know
the taste of them. But, let me tell you, pigs who
have eaten potatoes, even the little ones the
farmer cannot sell, are very fond of them. But,
so far, Squinty had never eaten even a little potato.</p>
<p>On and on went the little pig, looking back
now and then toward the pen to see if any of the
other pigs were coming after him. But none
were.</p>
<p>And there was no sign of Don, the barking
dog, nor the farmer, either. There was nothing
to stop Squinty from running away. Soon he
was some distance from the pen, and then he
thought it would be safe to nibble at a bit of pig
weed. He took a large mouthful from a tall,
green plant.</p>
<p>"Oh, how good that tastes!" thought Squinty.
"It is much better and fresher than the kind the
farmer throws into the pen to us."</p>
<p>Perhaps this was true, but I imagine the reason
the pig weed tasted so much better was because
Squinty was running away.</p>
<p>Perhaps you know how it is yourself. Did
you ever go out the back way, when mamma was
washing the dishes, and run over to your aunt's
or your grandma's house, and get a piece of
bread and jam? If you ever did, you probably
thought that bread and jam was much nicer than
the kind you could get at home, though really
there isn't any better bread and jam than mother
makes. But, somehow or other, the kind you
get away from home tastes differently, doesn't
it?</p>
<p>It was that way with Squinty, the comical pig.
He ate and ate the pig weed, until he had eaten
about as much as was good for him. And then,
as he saw one little potato on the ground, where
it had rolled out of the hill in which it grew with
the others, Squinty ate that. He did not think
the farmer would care.</p>
<p>"Oh, how good it is!" he thought. "I wish I
had not eaten so much pig weed, then I could eat
more of those funny, round things the farmer
calls potatoes. Now I will have to wait until I
am hungry again."</p>
<p>Squinty knew that would not be very long, for
pigs get hungry many times a day. That is what
makes them grow fat so fast--they eat so often.
But eating often is not good for boys and girls.</p>
<p>Squinty had now come some distance away
from the pen, where he lived with his mother,
father, sisters and brothers. He wondered if
they had awakened yet, or had seen the hole out
of which he had crawled, and if they were
puzzled as to where he had gone.</p>
<p>"But they can't find me!" said Squinty, with
something that sounded like a laugh. I suppose
pigs can laugh--in their own way, at any rate.</p>
<p>"No, they can't find me," thought Squinty,
looking all around. All he saw were the rows
of potato vines, and, farther off, a field of tall,
green corn.</p>
<p>"Well, I have the whole day to myself!"
thought Squinty. "I can do as I please, and not
go back until night. Let me see, what shall I do
first? I guess I will go to sleep in the shade."</p>
<p>So he stretched out in the shade of a big potato
vine, and, curling up in a little pink ball, he
closed his eyes, the squinty one as well as the good
one. But first Squinty looked all around to
make sure Don, the dog, was not in sight. He
saw nothing of him.</p>
<p>When Squinty awakened he felt hungry, as he
always did after a sleep.</p>
<p>"Now for some more of those nice potatoes!"
he said to himself. He liked them, right after
his first taste. He did not look around for the
little ones that might have fallen out of the hills
themselves. No, instead, Squinty began rooting
them out of the earth with his strong, rubbery
nose, made just for digging.</p>
<p>I am not saying Squinty did right in this. In
fact he did wrong, but then he was a little pig,
and he knew no better. In fact it was the first
time he had really run away so far, and he was
quite hungry. And potatoes were better than
pig weed.</p>
<p>Squinty ate as many potatoes as he wanted, and
then he said to himself, in a way pigs have:</p>
<p>"Well, I guess I'll go on to the brook, and cool
off in the water. That will do me good. After
that I'll look around and see what will happen
next."</p>
<p>Squinty had a good nose for smelling, as most
animals have, and, tilting it up in the air, Squinty
sniffed and snuffed. He wanted to smell the
water, so as to take the shortest path to the brook.</p>
<p>"Ha! It's right over there!" exclaimed
Squinty to himself. "I can easily find the water
to take a bath."</p>
<p>Across the potato field he went, taking care to
keep well down between the rows of green vines,
for he did not want to be seen by the dog, or the
farmer.</p>
<p>Once, as Squinty was walking along, he saw
what he thought was another potato on the
ground in front of him. He put his nose out
toward it, intending to eat it, but the thing gave a
big jump, and hopped out of the way.</p>
<p>"Ha! That must be one of the hop toads I
heard my mother tell about," thought Squinty.
"I must not hurt them, for they are good to
catch the flies that tickle me when I try to sleep.
Hop on," he said to the toad. "I won't bother
you."</p>
<table width="210px" cellpadding="5px" align="right" >
<tr>
<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/3_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic3" alt="'Hop on,' he said to the toad, 'I won't bother you.'" src="images/3.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">'Hop on,' he said to the toad, 'I won't bother you.'</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>The toad did not stop to say anything. She
just hopped on, and hid under a big stone.
Maybe she was afraid of Squinty, but he would
not have hurt her.</p>
<p>Soon the little pig came to the brook of cool
water, and after looking about, to see that there
was no danger near, Squinty waded in, and took
a long drink. Then he rolled over and over
again in it, washing off all the mud and dirt, and
coming out as clean and as pink as a little baby.
Squinty was a real nice pig, even if he had run
away.</p>
<p>"Let me see," he said to himself, after his bath.
"What shall I do now? Which way shall I go?"</p>
<p>Well, he happened to be hungry after his
swim. In fact Squinty was very often hungry, so
he thought he would see if he could find anything
more to eat.</p>
<p>"I have had potatoes and pig weed," he
thought, "and now I would like some apples. I
wonder if there are any apple trees around
here?"</p>
<p>He looked and, across the field of corn, he
thought he saw an apple tree. He made up his
mind to go there.</p>
<p>And that is where Squinty made another mistake.
He made one when he ran away from the
pen, and another one when he started to go
through the corn field.</p>
<p>Corn, you know, grows quite high, and pigs,
even the largest of them, are not very tall. At
least not until they stand on their hind legs.
That was a trick Squinty had not yet learned.
So he had to go along on four legs, and this made
him low down.</p>
<p>Now he had been able to look over the tops of
the potato vines, as they were not very high, but
Squinty could not look over the top of the corn
stalks. No sooner had he gotten into the field,
and started to walk along the corn rows, than
he could not see where he was going. He could
not even see the apple tree in the middle of the
field.</p>
<p>"Well, this is queer," thought Squinty. "I
guess I had better go back. No, I will keep on.
I may come to the apple tree soon."</p>
<p>He hurried on between the corn rows. But,
though he went a long distance, he did not come
to the apple tree.</p>
<p>"I guess I will go back to the brook, where I
had my bath, and start over again from there,"
thought Squinty. "I will not try to get any
apples to-day. I will eat only potatoes and pig
weed. Yes, I will go back."</p>
<p>But that was not so easy to do as he had
thought. Squinty went this way and that,
through the rows of corn, but he could not find
the brook. He could not find his way back, nor
could he find the apple tree. On all sides of
him was the tall corn. That was all poor
Squinty could see.</p>
<p>Finally, all tired out, and dusty, the little pig
stopped, and sighed:</p>
<p>"Oh dear! I guess I am lost!"</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap4"><SPAN name="chap4" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER IV</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY GETS HOME</div>
<p>The rows of corn, in the field where
Squinty the comical pig was lost, were
like the streets of a city. They were
very straight and even, just like the street where
your house is, and, if you liked, you could pretend
that each hill of corn was a house.</p>
<p>Perhaps Squinty pretended this, if pigs ever
do pretend. At any rate the little lost pig
wandered up and down in the rows of corn, peering
this way and that, to see which way to go so
he could get home again. He began to think
that running away was not so much fun as he
had at first thought.</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" Squinty grunted, in his funny,
squealing voice. "I wonder if I'll ever see my
mamma and papa again?"</p>
<p>Squinty ran this way and that up and down the
rows of corn, and you can easily imagine what
happened. He soon became very tired. "I
think I will take a rest," thought Squinty, talking
to himself, because there was no one else
to whom he could speak. I think the little pig
would have been very glad, just then, to speak
even to Don, the dog. But Don was not there.</p>
<p>Squinty, wondering what happened to little
pigs when they were lost, and if they ever got
home again, stretched out on the dirt between
two rows of corn. It was shady there, but over-head
the hot sun was shining. Squinty's breath
came very fast, just as when a dog runs far on a
warm day.</p>
<p>But the earth was rather cool, and Squinty
liked it. He would much rather have been
down by the cool brook, but he knew he could
not have a swim in it until he found it. And, just
now, he seemed a good way off from it.</p>
<p>Poor Squinty! It was bad enough to be tired
and warm, but to be lost was worse, and to be
hungry was worse than all--especially to a little
pig. And, more than this, there was nothing to
eat.</p>
<p>Squinty had tried to nibble at some of the
green corn stalks, but he did not like the taste of
them. Perhaps he had not yet learned to like
them, for I have seen older pigs eat corn stalks.
And pigs are very fond of the yellow corn itself.
They love to gnaw it off the cob, and chew it,
just as you chew popcorn.</p>
<p>But the corn was not yet ripe, and Squinty was
too little to have eaten it, if it had been ripe.
Later on he would learn to do this. Just now he
cared more about finding his way home, and
also finding something that he could eat.</p>
<p>For some time the little lost pig rested on the
cool earth, in the shade of the rows of corn.
Then he got up with a grunt and a squeal, and
began rooting in the ground.</p>
<p>"Perhaps I may find some potatoes, or some
pig weed, here," thought Squinty. "Who
knows?"</p>
<p>But all he could root up, with his queer, rubbery
nose, was some round stones. Some of
these were brown, and looked so much like the
little potatoes, that Squinty tried to chew one.
But when he felt the hard stone on his little white
teeth he cried out in pain.</p>
<p>"Ouch!" squealed Squinty. "That hurt!
Those are funny potatoes! I never knew they
could be so hard."</p>
<p>Later on he learned that what he supposed
were potatoes were only stones. You see it takes
a little pig some time to learn all the things he
needs to know.</p>
<p>Squinty let the stone roll out of his mouth,
and he looked at it with such an odd look on his
face, peering at it with his squinty eye, and with
one ear cocked up sort of sideways, that, if you
had seen him, you could not have helped laughing.
No one could, if they had seen Squinty
then, but there was no one in the field to watch
him.</p>
<p>"Well," thought Squinty, after a bit, "this
will never do. I can't stay here. I must try to
find my way back home. Let me see; what had
I better do? I guess the first thing is to find that
field of real potatoes, and not the make-believe
ones like this," and he pushed the stone away
with his nose.</p>
<p>"When I find the potato field," he went on,
still talking to himself, "I am sure I can find the
brook where I had a swim. And when I find
the brook I will know my way home, for there is
a straight path from there to our pen."</p>
<p>So Squinty started off once more to walk
through the rows of corn. As he walked along
on his little short legs he grunted, and rooted in
the earth with his nose. Sometimes he stumbled
over a big stone, or a clod of dirt, and fell down.</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" exclaimed poor Squinty, when he
got up after falling down about six times, "Oh
dear! This is no fun. I wish I had stayed in
the pen with my brothers and sisters. I wonder
what they are doing now?"</p>
<p>Just then Squinty felt more hungry than ever,
and he thought it must be feeding-time back in
the pen.</p>
<p>"Oh, they must be having some nice sour milk
just now!" thought Squinty. "How I wish I
were back with them!"</p>
<p>And then, as he fancied he could smell the
nice sour milk, which the farmer or his wife was
pouring into the eating trough of the pen,
Squinty just howled and squealed with hunger.
Oh, what a noise he made!</p>
<p>Then this gave him an idea.</p>
<p>"Ha!" he exclaimed to himself, in a way pigs
have, "why didn't I think of that before? I
must squeal for help. My mamma, or papa,
may hear me and come for me."</p>
<p>Then Squinty happened to think that the hole,
by which he had gotten out of the pen, was not
large enough for his fat papa or mamma to
crawl through.</p>
<p>"No, they can't get out to come for me,"
Squinty thought. "They'll have to send Wuff-Wuff,
or Squealer. And maybe they'll get lost,
the same as I did. Oh dear, I guess I won't
squeal any more. It's bad enough for me to be
lost, without any of my brothers or sisters getting
lost, too."</p>
<p>So Squinty stopped squealing, and walked on
and on between the rows of corn, trying to find
his way home to the pen all by himself. Squinty
was really quite a brave pig, wasn't he?</p>
<p>By this time, as you can well believe, Mr. and
Mrs. Pig, in the pen, had awakened from their
afternoon sleep. And all the little pigs had
awakened too, for they were beginning to feel
hungry again.</p>
<p>"Isn't it about time the farmer came with
some sour milk for us?" asked Mr. Pig of Mrs.
Pig.</p>
<p>"I think it is," she said, looking up at the sun,
for the sun is the only clock that pigs, and other
animals, have. When they see the sun in the
east, low down, they know it is morning. When
it shines directly over their heads, high in the
sky, they know it is noon. And when the sun
sinks down in the west the pigs know it is getting
toward night, and supper time.</p>
<p>The sun was low down in the west now, and
Mr. and Mrs. Pig knew it must be nearly time
for their evening meal.</p>
<p>"Come, Wuff-Wuff. Come, Squealer. Come,
Squinty, and all the rest of you!" called Mrs. Pig
in her grunting voice. "Come, get ready for
supper. I think I hear the farmer coming with
the nice sour milk!"</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee! Squee!" squealed all the little
pigs, for they were very hungry indeed.
"Squee! Squee! Squee!"</p>
<p>They all made a rush to see who would get to
the eating trough first. Some of them even put
their feet in, they were so anxious. Pigs are
always that way. They know no better, so we
must excuse them. If they had been taught not
to do that, and then did it, we would not excuse
them.</p>
<p>"Here comes the farmer with the sour milk,"
grunted Mr. Pig. "Oh, how good it smells!"</p>
<p>Just then Squealer cried:</p>
<p>"Why, where's Squinty?"</p>
<p>His brothers and sisters looked around.</p>
<p>Squinty, the comical pig, was not to be seen.
But we know where he was, even if his mamma
and papa and brothers and sisters did not.
Squinty was in the cornfield, trying to find his
way back to the pen.</p>
<p>"Why, where can Squinty be?" asked Mrs.
Pig. "Squinty! Squinty!" she called, grunting
and squealing as she always did. "Come to the
trough!" she went on. "Supper is ready!"</p>
<p>But Squinty did not come. The farmer
poured the sour milk down the slide, where it
ran into the trough, and the little pigs began to
eat. But Mr. and Mrs. Pig began looking for
Squinty. They turned up the straw, thinking
he might be asleep under it. No Squinty was
to be seen. Then Mr. Pig saw the hole under
the side boards of the pen.</p>
<p>"Ha!" exclaimed Mr. Pig, speaking to Mrs.
Pig, "I think perhaps Squinty went out there."</p>
<p>"Oh, so he did!" said Mrs. Pig. "What shall
we do?"</p>
<p>Just then the farmer looked over in the pen
to see how fat the pigs were getting. He
counted the little pigs. Then a queer look came
over his face.</p>
<p>"Hello!" he exclaimed. "Only six here!
One of those pigs has gotten out. I must look
into this!"</p>
<p>Quickly he glanced all about the pen. He
saw the hole out of which Squinty had run away.</p>
<p>"I thought so!" exclaimed the farmer. "One
of the pigs has rooted his way out. I'll have to
go after him. Here, Don!" he called to his dog.
"A pig is loose! We must catch him!" and he
whistled for the big black and white dog, who
ran up, barking and leaping about.</p>
<p>At first Squinty's brothers and sisters were paying
so much attention to drinking their sour
milk, that they did not notice what the farmer
said, even though they missed Squinty at the
trough. But when they heard the dog barking,
they wondered what had happened. Then they
saw their mamma and papa looking anxious, and
talking together in their grunting language, and
Wuff-Wuff asked:</p>
<p>"Has anything happened?"</p>
<p>"Squinty is lost!" said Mrs. Pig, rubbing her
nose up against that of Curly Tail, the littlest
girl pig of them all. "He must have run out of
the pen when we were asleep."</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" cried all the little pigs, and they
felt very badly.</p>
<p>"Never mind," said Mr. Pig, "I heard the
farmer call Don, the dog, to go off and find
Squinty. I think he'll bring him back."</p>
<p>"Oh, but maybe Don will bite Squinty," said
Wuff-Wuff.</p>
<p>"I guess not," answered Mr. Pig. "Don is a
gentle dog. But, anyhow, we want Squinty
back, and the only way we can get him is to have
the farmer and his dog go after him."</p>
<p>The other little pigs finished their supper of
sour milk, with some small potatoes which the
farmer's wife threw in to them. Mr. and Mrs.
Pig ate a little, and then the farmer, after stopping
up the hole where Squinty got out, so no
more of the pigs could run away, started off over
the fields, calling to his dog.</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow! Bow wow!" barked
Don. That meant, in dog language, "I'll find
Squinty and bring him back."</p>
<p>Meanwhile Squinty had tried his best to find a
way out of the cornfield. But all he did was to
walk up one row, and down another. If he had
been tall enough to stand up and look over the
tops of the corn stalks, he might have seen which
way to go, but he was not yet large enough for
that.</p>
<p>Pretty soon Squinty looked up, and he saw
that the sun was not as bright as it had been.
Squinty knew what this meant. The sun was
going down, and it would soon be night.</p>
<p>"Oh dear! I wonder if I shall have to stay
out all alone in the dark night," thought poor
Squinty. "Oh, I'll never run away again;
never!"</p>
<p>Just then he heard, off through the rows of
corn, a dog barking.</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow! Bow wow!" went the
dog.</p>
<p>"Oh, what shall I do? Where shall I
hide?" thought Squinty. "A bad dog is after
me."</p>
<p>He ran this way and that, stumbling and falling
down. The barking of the dog sounded
nearer. Then Squinty heard a man's voice saying:</p>
<p>"Get after him, Don! Find him! Find that
pig!"</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" was the barking answer.</p>
<p>"Ha!" thought Squinty. "Don! That's the
name of the good dog on our farm! I wonder
if he is coming after me?"</p>
<p>Just then the farmer, who had been following
the tracks left in the soft ground by Squinty's
feet, came to the cornfield. The farmer saw
where the pig had been walking between the
green rows of corn.</p>
<p>"He's here, somewhere, Don," the farmer said.
"Find him!"</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" barked Don. "I will!"</p>
<p>Just then Squinty stumbled over a big stone,
and he could not help grunting. He also gave a
little squeal.</p>
<p>"Here he is, Don!" called the farmer. "Take
him by the ear, and lead him back to the pen.
Easy, now!"</p>
<p>Squinty stood still. He did not want to run
away from Don. Squinty was only too anxious
to be found, and taken home.</p>
<p>The next minute, through the rows of corn,
came bounding Don, the dog. He was followed
by the farmer.</p>
<p>"Ah, there he is! The little runaway!" cried
the farmer man as he saw the pig. "After him,
Don! But don't hurt him!"</p>
<p>Don raced up beside Squinty, and took him
gently by the ear.</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" barked the dog, and that meant:
"Come along with me, if you please. You have
been away from your pen quite long enough."</p>
<p>Squinty gave a loud squeal when Don took
him by the ear, but when the little pig found that
the dog did not mean to hurt him, he grew quiet,
and went along willingly enough.</p>
<p>"I must make that pig pen a great deal tighter,
if they are going to get out and run away every
day," said the farmer to himself, as he walked
along behind Don and Squinty.</p>
<p>Soon they were at the pig pen, and Oh! how
glad Squinty was to see it again. The farmer
picked the little pink fellow, now all tired out
and covered with dirt, up in his arms and
dropped him down inside the pen with the other
pigs.</p>
<p>"There!" cried the farmer. "I guess you'll
stay in after this."</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" barked Don, jumping about, for
he thought it was fun to chase runaway pigs.</p>
<p>And so Squinty got safely back home. But
very soon he was to have some more adventures.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap5"><SPAN name="chap5" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER V</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY AND THE BOY</div>
<p>Did you ever have a little brother or sister
who ran away from home, and was very
glad to run back, or be brought back
again, by a policeman, perhaps? Of course your
little brother or sister may not have intended to
run away, it may have been that they only wandered
off, around the corner, toward the candy
store, and could not find their way back again.
But, when he or she did get home--how glad you
were to see them! Weren't you?</p>
<p>It was just like that at the pen where Squinty,
the comical pig, lived. When the farmer picked
him up, and dropped him down among his
brothers and sisters, in the clean straw, Wuff-Wuff,
Squealer, and Curly Tail, and the others,
were so glad to see Squinty that they grunted,
and squealed and walked all over one another, to
be the first to get close to him.</p>
<p>"Oh, Squinty, where were you?"</p>
<p>"Where did you go?"</p>
<p>"What did you do?"</p>
<p>"Weren't you awfully scared?"</p>
<p>"Where did the dog find you?"</p>
<p>"Did he bite you very hard?"</p>
<p>These were some of the questions Squinty's
brothers and sisters asked of the little runaway
pig. They pressed close up to him, rubbing
their funny, wiggling, rubber-like noses against
him, and snuggling up against him, for they
liked Squinty very much indeed.</p>
<p>Then, after the young pigs had had their turn,
Mr. Pig and Mrs. Pig began asking questions.</p>
<p>"What made you run away?" asked Squinty's
papa.</p>
<p>"Oh, I wanted to have an adventure," said
Squinty.</p>
<p>"Well, did you have one?" asked his mamma.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, lots of them," answered the little
pig. "But I didn't find very much to eat."
Squinty was very hungry now.</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" exclaimed Mrs. Pig. "You are
just too late for supper. It is all eaten up. We
did not see that you were not here until too late.
It's too bad!"</p>
<p>Squinty thought so himself, for the smell of
the sour milk that had been in the feeding trough
made him more hungry than ever.</p>
<p>Squinty walked over and tried to find a few
drops in the bottom of the wooden trough.
These he licked up with his red tongue. But
there was not nearly enough.</p>
<p>"Ha! I guess that little pig must be hungry,"
said the farmer looking down in the pen, after
he had put some more stones and a board over
the hole where Squinty had gotten out. "I
guess I'll have to feed him, for the others have
had their supper."</p>
<p>And how glad Squinty was when the farmer
went over to the barrel, where the pigs' feed was
kept, and mixed a nice pailful of sour milk with
some corn meal, and poured it into the trough.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee!" cried Squinty as he made a
rush over to get his supper.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee!" cried all the other little pigs,
as they, too, made a rush to get more to eat.</p>
<p>"Here! Hold on! Come back!" cried Mr.
Pig. "That is Squinty's supper. You must not
touch it. You have had yours!" and he and
Mrs. Pig would not let Squinty's brothers and
sisters shove him away from the trough. For
sometimes pigs are so hungry that they do
this, you know. Being pigs they know no better.</p>
<p>So Squinty had his supper, after all, though
he did run away. Perhaps he should have been
punished by being sent to bed without having
had anything to eat, but you see the farmer
wanted his pigs to be fat and healthy, so he fed
them well. Squinty was very glad of that.</p>
<p>"Now all of you go to sleep," said Mrs. Pig,
when it grew darker and darker in the pen. So
she made them all cuddle down in the straw,
pulling it over them with her nose and paws, like
a blanket, to keep them warm. For only part
of the pen had a roof over it, and though it was
summer, still it was cool at night.</p>
<p>But Squinty's brothers and sisters had no notion
of going to sleep so soon. They wanted to
hear all about what had happened to him when
he had run away, and they wanted him to tell
them of his adventures. So they grunted and
whispered among themselves.</p>
<p>"What happened to you, Squinty?" asked
Wuff-Wuff.</p>
<p>"Oh, I had a fine swim in a brook," said
Squinty.</p>
<p>"I wish that had happened to me," said Wuff-Wuff.
"What else?"</p>
<p>"I found a nice field of corn," went on
Squinty, "but I did not like the taste of it. I got
lost in the cornfield."</p>
<p>"That's too bad," said Wuff-Wuff. "Did anything
else happen?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I found some pig weed, and ate that, and
some little potatoes."</p>
<p>"Oh, how nice!" exclaimed Twisty Tail. "I
wish that had happened to me. Did you do anything
else, Squinty?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said the comical little pig. "I saw
something I thought was a potato, and it jumped
away from me. It was a hoptoad."</p>
<p>"That was funny," said Squealer. "I wish I
had seen it. Did anything else happen?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Squinty. "I thought I saw another
potato, but when I bit on it I found it was
only a stone, and it hurt my teeth."</p>
<p>"That's too bad," said Wuff-Wuff. "I am
glad that did not happen to me. Tell us what
else you saw."</p>
<p>But just then Mrs. Pig grunted out:</p>
<p>"Come, now! All you little pigs must keep
quiet and go to sleep. Go to sleep at once!"</p>
<p>So Squinty and the others cuddled closer together,
snuggled down in the soft straw, and soon
were fast asleep. Now and then they stirred, or
grunted during the night, but they did not wake
up until morning. They were running around
the pen before breakfast, squealing as loudly as
they could, for the farmer to come and feed
them. But the farmer had his cows and horses
and chickens to feed, as well as the pigs, and he
did not get to the pen until last. And when he
did, all the pigs were so hungry, even Mr. and
Mrs. Pig, that they were squealing as hard as
they could.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes!" cried the farmer, as though he
were talking to the pigs. "I'm coming as fast
as I can."</p>
<p>Soon the farmer poured some sour milk and
corn meal down into the trough, and how eagerly
Squinty and the others did eat it! Some of the
smaller pigs even put two feet in the trough, they
were so anxious to get their share. Squinty had
an especially good appetite, from having run
away, so perhaps he got a little more than the
others.</p>
<p>But finally the breakfast was all gone, and the
pigs had nothing more to do until dinner time--that
is, all they had to do was to lie down and
rest, or get up now and then to scratch a
mosquito, or a fly bite.</p>
<p>"Well, I guess none of you will get out again,"
said the farmer, after a while, as he nailed a
bigger board over the hole by which Squinty had
gotten out. "Don, watch these pigs," the
farmer went on. "If they get out, grab them by
the ear, and bring them back."</p>
<p>"Bow wow!" barked Don, and that meant he
would do as his master had told him.</p>
<p>For several days after this nothing happened
in the pigs' pen except that they were washed
off with the hose now and then, to clean them of
mud and make them cool. Once in a while the
farmer would take a corn cob and scratch the
back of Mr. or Mrs. Pig, and they liked this very
much. The other pigs were almost too little for
the farmer to reach over the top of the pen.</p>
<p>One day the pigs heard merry shouts and
laughter up at the farmhouse. There were the
sounds of boys' and girls' voices. Then came
the patter of many feet.</p>
<p>"Oh, look at the pigs!" someone cried, and
Squinty, and his brothers and sisters, looking up,
saw, over the edge of the pen, some boys and girls
looking down on them.</p>
<p>"Oh, aren't they cute!" exclaimed a girl.</p>
<p>"Just lovely!" said another girl. "Pigs are so
nice!"</p>
<p>"I wonder if any of them can do any tricks?"
asked a boy who stood looking down into the
pen.</p>
<p>"These aren't trained circus pigs," spoke one
of the girls. "They can't do tricks."</p>
<p>The boy and the girls stayed for a little while,
watching the pigs. Then the boy said:</p>
<p>"Let's pull some weeds and feed them."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, let's!" cried the girls. The pigs
were glad when they heard this, and they were
more glad when the boy and the girls threw pig
weed, and other green things from the garden,
into the pen. The pigs ate them all up, and
wanted more.</p>
<p>After that, for several days, Squinty and his
brothers and sisters could hear the boy and the
girls running about the garden, but they could
not see them because the boards around the pig
pen were too high. The boy and the girls
seemed to be having a fine time.</p>
<p>Squinty could hear them talking about hunting
the hens' eggs, and feeding the little calves
and sheep, and riding on the backs of horses.</p>
<p>Then, one day Squinty looked up out of the
pen, and, leaning over the top board he saw the
farmer, the boy and another man.</p>
<p>"Oh, Father!" exclaimed the boy, "do let me
have just one little pig. They are so nice!"</p>
<table width="210px" cellpadding="5px" align="left" >
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<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/4_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic4" alt="'Oh, Father!' exclaimed the boy, 'do let me have just one little pig.'" src="images/4.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">'Oh, Father!' exclaimed the boy, 'do let me have just one little pig.'</div>
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</table>
<p>"A pig!" cried Father. "What would you do
with a pig in our town? We are not in the
country. Where would you keep a pig?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I could build a little pen for him in our
yard. Look, let me have that one, he is so pink
and pretty and clean."</p>
<p>"Ha! So you want that pig, do you?" asked
the farmer. The boy and his father and sisters
were paying a visit to the farm.</p>
<p>"Yes, I want a pig very much!" the boy said.
"And I think I'd like that one," and he pointed
straight at Squinty. Poor Squinty ran and tried
to hide under the straw, for he knew the boy was
talking about him.</p>
<p>"Oh, see him run!" cried the boy. "Yes, I
think he is the nicest pig in the lot. I want him.
Has he any name?"</p>
<p>"Well, we call him Squinty," the farmer said.
"He has a funny, squinting eye."</p>
<p>"Then I'll call him Squinty, too," the boy went
on. "Please, Father, may I have that little
pig?"</p>
<p>"Well, I don't know," said his father slowly,
scratching his head. "A pig is a queer pet. I
suppose you might have him, though. You
could keep him in the back yard. Yes, I guess
you could have him, if Mr. Jones will sell him,
and if the pig will behave. Do you think that
little pig will be good, Mr. Jones?" asked the
father of the farmer man.</p>
<p>"Well, yes, I guess so," answered the farmer.
"He has run away out of the pen a couple of
times, but if you board up a place good and tight,
I guess he won't get out."</p>
<p>"Oh, I do hope he'll be good!" exclaimed the
boy. "I do so want a little pet pig, and I'll be
so kind to him!"</p>
<p>When Squinty heard that, he made up his
mind, if the boy took him, that he would be as
good as he knew how.</p>
<p>"When can I have my little pig?" asked the
boy, of his father.</p>
<p>"Oh, as soon as Mr. Jones can put him in a box,
so we can carry him," was the answer. "We
can't very well take him in our arms; he would
slip out and run away."</p>
<p>"I guess so, too," laughed the boy.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap6"><SPAN name="chap6" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER VI</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY ON A JOURNEY</div>
<p>"Mamma, did you hear what they were
saying about Squinty?" asked Wuff-Wuff,
as the boy and the two men
walked away from the pig pen.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I heard," said Mrs. Pig. "I shall be
sorry to lose Squinty, but then we pigs have to go
out and take our places in this world. We cannot
always stay at home in the pen."</p>
<p>"Yes, that is so," spoke Mr. Pig. "But
Squinty is rather young and small to start out.
However, it may all be for the best. Now,
Squinty, you had better keep yourself nice and
clean, so as to be ready to go on a journey."</p>
<p>"What's a journey?" asked the comical little
pig, squinting his eye up at the papa pig.</p>
<p>"A journey is going away from home," answered
Mr. Pig.</p>
<p>"And does it mean having adventures?" asked
Squinty, flopping his ears backward and forward.</p>
<p>"Yes, you may have some adventures," replied
his mother. "Oh dear, Squinty! I wish you
didn't have to go and leave us. But still, it may
be all for your good."</p>
<p>"We might hide him under the straw," suggested
Wuff-Wuff. "Then that boy could not
find him when he comes to put him in a box, and
take him away."</p>
<p>"No, that would never do," said Mr. Pig.
"The farmer is stronger and smarter than we are.
He would find Squinty, no matter where we hid
him. It is better to let him do as he pleases,
and take Squinty away, though we shall all miss
him."</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" cried Curly Tail, for she liked her
little brother very much, and she loved to see him
look at her with his funny, squinting eye. "Do
you want to go, Squinty?"</p>
<p>"Well, I don't want to leave you all," answered
the comical little pig, "but I shall be glad to go
on a journey, and have adventures. I hope I
don't get lost again, though."</p>
<p>"I guess the boy won't let you get lost," spoke
Mr. Pig. "He looks as though he would be kind
and good to you."</p>
<p>The pig family did not know when Squinty
would be taken away from them, and all they
could do was to wait. While they were doing
this they ate and slept as they always did.
Squinty, several times, looked at the hole under
the pen, by which he had once gotten out. He
felt sure he could again push his way through,
and run away. But he did not do it.</p>
<p>"No, I will wait and let the boy take me
away," thought Squinty.</p>
<p>Several times after this the boy and his sisters
came to look down into the pig pen. The pigs
could tell, by the talk of the children, that they
were brother and sisters. And they had come to
the farm to spend their summer vacation, when
there was no school.</p>
<p>"That's the pig I am going to take home with
me," the boy would say to his sisters, pointing to
Squinty.</p>
<p>"How can you tell which one is yours?" asked
one of the little girls.</p>
<p>"I can tell by his funny squint," the boy would
answer. "He always makes me want to laugh."</p>
<p>"Well, I am glad I am of some use in this
world," thought Squinty, who could understand
nearly all that the boy and his sisters said. "It
is something just to be jolly."</p>
<p>"I wouldn't want a pig," said the other girl.
"They grunt and squeal and are not clean. I'd
rather have a rabbit."</p>
<p>"Pigs are so clean!" cried the boy. "Squinty
is as clean as a rabbit!"</p>
<p>Only that day Squinty had rolled over and
over in the mud, but he had had a bath from the
hose, so he was clean now. And he made up
his mind that if the boy took him he would never
again get in the mud and become covered with
dirt.</p>
<p>"I will keep myself clean and jolly," thought
Squinty.</p>
<p>A few days after this Squinty heard the noise
of hammering and sawing wood outside the pig
pen.</p>
<p>"The farmer must be building another barn,"
said Mr. Pig, for he and his family could not see
outside the pen. "Yes, he must be building
another barn, for once before we heard the
sounds of hammering and sawing, and then a new
barn was built."</p>
<p>But that was not what it was this time.</p>
<p>Soon the sounds stopped, and the farmer and
the boy came and looked down into the pig pen.</p>
<p>"Now you are sure you want that squinty
one?" the farmer asked the boy. "Some of the
others are bigger and better."</p>
<p>"No, I want the squinty one," the boy said.
"He is so comical, he makes me laugh."</p>
<p>"All right," answered the farmer. "I'll get
him for you, now that you have the crate all made
to carry him home in on the cars."</p>
<p>Over into the pig pen jumped the farmer.
He made a grab for Squinty and caught him.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee! Squee!" squealed Squinty, for
he had never been squeezed so tightly before.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm not going to hurt you," said the
farmer, kindly.</p>
<p>"Squinty, be quiet," ordered his papa, in the
pig language. "Behave yourself. You are going
on a journey, and will be all right."</p>
<p>Then Squinty stopped squealing, as the farmer
climbed out of the pen with him.</p>
<p>"At last I am going on a journey, and I may
have many adventures," thought the little pig.
"Good-by!" he called to his papa and mamma
and brothers and sisters, left behind in the pen.
"Good-by!"</p>
<p>"Good-by!" they all grunted and squealed.
"Be a good pig," said his mamma.</p>
<p>"Be a brave pig," said his papa.</p>
<p>"And--and come back and see us, sometime,"
sniffled little Curly Tail, for she loved Squinty
very much indeed.</p>
<p>"I'll come back!" said the comical little pig.
But he did not know how much was to happen
before he saw his pen again.</p>
<p>"There you go--into the box with you!" cried
the farmer, as he dropped Squinty into a wooden
box the boy had made for his pet, with a hammer,
saw and nails.</p>
<p>Squinty found himself dropped down on a bed
of clean straw. In front of him, behind him,
and on either side of him were wooden slats--the
sides of the box. Squinty could look out, but
the slats were as close together as those in a
chicken coop, and the little pig could not get out.</p>
<p>He did not want to, however, for he had made
up his mind that he was going to be a good pig,
and go with the boy who had bought him for a
pet from the farmer.</p>
<p>Over the top of the box was nailed a cover with
a handle to it, and by this handle the pig in the
little cage could be easily carried.</p>
<p>"There you are!" exclaimed the farmer.
"Now he'll be all right until you get him home."</p>
<p>"And, when I do, I'll put him in a nice big
pen, and feed him well," said the boy. Squinty
smacked his lips at that, for he was hungry even
now.</p>
<p>"Oh, have you caged him up? Isn't he cute!"
exclaimed one of the boy's sisters. "I'll give
him the core of my apple," and she thrust it in
through the slats of the box. Squinty was very
glad, indeed, to get the apple core, and he soon
ate it up.</p>
<p>"Come on!" cried the boy's father. "Is the
pig nailed up? We must go for the train!"</p>
<p>"I wonder what the train is," thought Squinty.
He was soon to know. The boy lifted him up,
cage and all, and put him into the wagon that
was to go to the depot. Squinty knew what a
wagon was and horses, for he had seen them
many times.</p>
<p>Then away they started. Squinty gave a loud
squeal, which was his last good-by to the other
pigs in the pen, and then the wagon rattled away
along the road.</p>
<p>Squinty had started on his journey.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap7"><SPAN name="chap7" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER VII</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY LEARNS A TRICK</div>
<p>Squinty, the comical pig, tried to look
out through the slats of the box, in which
he was being taken away, to see in
which direction he was going. He also wanted
to watch the different sights along the road.
But the sides of the farm wagon were so high
that the little pig could see nothing. He
stretched his fat neck as far as it would go, but
that did no good either. Squinty wished he
were as big as his papa or his mamma.</p>
<p>"Then I could see what is going on," he
thought.</p>
<p>But just wishing never made anyone larger or
taller, not even a pig, and Squinty stayed the
same size.</p>
<p>He could hear the farmer and the children
talking. Now and then the boy who had bought
Squinty, and who was taking him home, would
look around at his pet in the slatted box.</p>
<p>"Is he all right?" one of the girls would ask.</p>
<p>"He seems to be," the boy would say. "I am
glad I got him."</p>
<p>"Well, he acts real cute," said another girl,
who was called Sallie, "but I never heard of
having a pig for a pet before."</p>
<p>"You just wait until I teach him some tricks,"
said the boy, whose name was Bob. "Then
you'll think he's fine!"</p>
<p>"Ha! So I am to learn tricks," thought
Squinty in his box. "I wonder what tricks are,
anyhow? Does it mean I am to have good
things to eat? I hope so."</p>
<p>You see Squinty, like most little pigs, thought
more of something to eat than of anything else.
But we must not blame him for that, since he
could not help it.</p>
<p>Pretty soon the wagon rattled over some stones,
and then came to a stop.</p>
<p>"Here we are!" called the children's father.
"Bring along your little pig, Bob. Here comes
the train."</p>
<p>"Ha! It seems I am to go on a train," thought
Squinty. "I wonder what a train is?"</p>
<p>Squinty had many things to learn, didn't he?</p>
<p>The little pig in the box felt himself being
lifted out of the wagon. Then he could look
about him. He saw a large building, in front of
which were long, slender strips of shining steel.
These were the railroad tracks, but Squinty did
not know that. Then all at once, Squinty heard
a loud noise, which went like this:</p>
<p>"Whee! Whee! Whee-whee!"</p>
<p>"Oh my! what a loud squeal that pig has!" exclaimed
Squinty. "He can squeal much louder
than I can, I think. Let me try."</p>
<p>So Squinty went:</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee! Squee!"</p>
<p>And then the big noise sounded again, louder
than before:</p>
<p>"Whee! Whee! Toot! Toot!"</p>
<p>"Oh my!" said Squinty to himself, snuggling
down in the straw of his box. "I never can
squeal as loud as that. Never!"</p>
<p>He looked out and saw a big black thing rushing
toward him, with smoke coming out of the
top, and then the big black thing cried out again:</p>
<p>"Whee! Whee! Toot! Toot!"</p>
<p>"Oh, what a terrible, big black pig!" thought
Squinty. And he was a bit frightened. But it
was not a big black pig at all. It was only the
engine drawing the train of cars up to the station
to take the passengers away. And it was going
to take Squinty, also.</p>
<p>Squinty thought the engine whistle was a pig's
squeal, but it wasn't, of course.</p>
<p>Pretty soon the train stopped. The passengers
made a rush to get in the cars. Bob, the
boy, caught up the handle of Squinty's box, and,
after some bumping and tilting sideways, the
little pig found himself set down in a rather dark
place, for the boy had put the box on the floor of
the car by his seat, near his feet.</p>
<p>And there Squinty rode, seeing nothing, but
hearing many strange noises, until, after many
stops, he was lifted up again.</p>
<p>"Here we are!" the little pig heard the
children's papa say. "Have you everything?
Don't forget your pig, Bob."</p>
<p>"I won't," answered the boy, with a jolly
laugh.</p>
<p>"Well, I wonder what will happen next?"
thought Squinty, as he felt himself being carried
along again. He could see nothing but a crowd
of persons all about the boy who carried the box.</p>
<p>"I don't know whether I am going to like this
or not--this coming to live in town," thought the
little pig. "Still, I cannot help myself, I suppose.
But I do wish I had something to eat."</p>
<p>I guess the boy must have known Squinty was
hungry, for, when he next set down the box, this
time in a carriage, the boy gave the little pig a
whole apple to eat. And how good it did taste
to Squinty!</p>
<p>"Are you going to make a pen for him?" asked
one of the boy's sisters, as the carriage drove off.</p>
<p>"Yes, as soon as we get to the house," said the
boy.</p>
<p>By this time Squinty was thirsty. There was
no water in his cage, but, a little later, when he
saw through the slats, that he was being carried
toward a large, white house, he was given a tin
of water to drink.</p>
<p>"I'll just leave him in that box until I can
fix a larger one for him," the boy said, and then,
for a while, Squinty was left all to himself. But
he was still in the box, though the box was set
in a shady place on the back porch.</p>
<p>All this while Mr. Pig and Mrs. Pig, as well
as the brother and sister pigs, in the pen at home,
were wondering what had happened to Squinty.</p>
<p>"Where do you think he is now, Mamma?"
Wuff-Wuff would ask.</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know," Mrs. Pig answered.</p>
<p>"And will he ever come back to us?" asked
Twisty Tail.</p>
<p>"Perhaps, some day. I hope so," said Mrs.
Pig, sort of sighing.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I think he will," said Mr. Pig.
"When he gets quite large the boy will get tired
of having him for a pet, and perhaps bring him
back."</p>
<p>"Were you ever carried off that way, Papa?"
asked Grunter, as he rubbed his back, where a
mosquito had bitten him, against the side of the
pen.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, once," answered Mr. Pig. "I was
taken away from my pen, when I was pretty
large, and given to a little girl for a pet. But
she did not keep me long. I guess she would
rather have had her dolls, so I was soon brought
back to my pen. And I was glad of it."</p>
<p>"Well, I hope they will soon bring Squinty
back," Wuff-Wuff said. "It is lonesome without
him."</p>
<p>But, after a while, the other pigs found so
many things to do, and they were kept so busy,
eating sour milk, and getting fat, that they nearly
forgot about Squinty.</p>
<p>But, all this time, something was happening to
the comical little pig.</p>
<p>Toward evening of the first day that Squinty
had been put in the new little cage, the boy, who
had not been near him in some time, came back
to look at his pet.</p>
<p>"Now I have a larger place for you," the boy
said, speaking just as though Squinty could understand
him. And, in fact, Squinty did know
much of what was said to him, though he could
not talk back in boy language, being able to
speak only his own pig talk.</p>
<p>"And I guess you are hungry, too, and want
something to eat," the boy went on. "I will
feed you!"</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee! Squee!" squealed Squinty. If
there was one word in man-talk that he understood
very well, it was "feed." He had often
heard the farmer say:</p>
<p>"Well, now I must feed the pigs."</p>
<p>And right after that, some nice sour milk
would come splashing down into the trough of
the pen. So when Squinty heard the word
"feed" again, he guessed what was going to
happen.</p>
<p>And he guessed right, too.</p>
<p>The boy picked Squinty up, box and all, and
carried him to the back yard.</p>
<p>"Now I'll give you more room to run about,
and then I'll have a nice supper for you," the boy
said, talking to his little pig just as you would to
your dog, or kittie.</p>
<p>With a hammer the boy knocked off some of
the slats of the small box in which Squinty had
made his journey. Then the boy lifted out the
comical little pig, and Squinty found himself
inside a large box, very much like the pen at
home. It had clean straw in it, and a little
trough, just like the one at his "home," where
he could eat. But there was nothing in the
trough to eat, as yet, and the box seemed quite
lonesome, for Squinty was all alone.</p>
<p>"Here you are now! Some nice sour milk,
and boiled potatoes!" cried the boy, and then
Squinty smelled the most delicious smell--to him
at least. Down into the trough came the sour
milk and potatoes.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee!" yelled Squinty in delight,
And how fast he ate! That was because he was
hungry, you see, but pigs nearly always eat fast,
as though they were continually in a hurry.</p>
<p>"Oh, isn't it cute!" exclaimed a voice over
Squinty's head. He looked up, half shutting
his one funny eye, and cocking one ear up, and
letting the other droop down. But he did not
stop eating.</p>
<p>"Oh, isn't he funny!" cried another voice.
And Squinty saw the boy and his sisters looking
at him.</p>
<p>"Yes, he surely is a nice pig," the boy said,
"In a few days, when he gets over being strange,
I'm going to teach him some tricks."</p>
<p>"Ha! There's that word tricks again!"
thought Squinty. "I wonder what tricks are?
But I shall very soon find out."</p>
<p>For a few days Squinty was rather lonesome
in his new pen, all by himself. He missed his
papa and mamma and brothers and sisters. But
the boy came to see Squinty every day, bringing
him nice things to eat, and, after a bit, Squinty
came to look for his new friend.</p>
<p>"I guess you are getting to know me, aren't
you, old fellow?" the boy said one day, after
feeding Squinty, and he scratched the little pig
on the back with a stick.</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty. That, I suppose,
was his way of saying:</p>
<p>"Of course I know you, and I like you, boy."</p>
<p>One day, about a week after he had come to
his new home, Squinty heard the boy say:</p>
<p>"Now I think you are tame enough to be let
out. I don't believe you will run away, will
you? But, anyhow, I'll tie a string to your leg,
and then you can't."</p>
<p>Squinty wished he could speak boy language,
and tell his friend that he would not run away as
long as he was kindly treated, but of course
Squinty could not do this. Instead, he could
only grunt and squeal.</p>
<p>The boy tied a string to Squinty's leg, and let
him out of the pen. The comical little pig was
glad to have more room in which to move about.
He walked first to one side, and then the other,
rooting in the dirt with his funny, rubbery nose.
The boy laughed to see him.</p>
<p>"I guess you are looking for something to
eat," the boy said. "Well, let's see if you can
find these acorns."</p>
<p>The boy hid them under a pile of dirt, and
watched. Squinty smelled about, and sniffed.
He could easily tell where the acorns had been
hidden, and, a moment later, he had rooted them
up and was eating them.</p>
<p>"Oh, you funny little pig!" cried the boy.
"You are real smart! You know how to find
acorns. That is one trick."</p>
<p>"Ha! If that is a trick, it is a very easy one--just
rooting up acorns," thought Squinty to himself.</p>
<p>Squinty walked around, as far as the rope tied
to his leg would let him. The other end of the
rope was held by the boy. Once the rope got
tangled around Squinty's foot, and he jumped
over it to get free. The boy saw him and cried:</p>
<p>"Oh, I wonder if I could teach you to jump
the rope? That would be a fine trick. Let me
see."</p>
<p>The boy thought a moment, and then lifted
Squinty up, and set him down on one side of the
rope, which he raised a little way from the
ground, just as girls do when they are playing a
skipping game.</p>
<table width="210px" cellpadding="5px" align="right" >
<tr>
<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/5_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic5" alt="Squinty gave a little spring, and over the rope he went." src="images/5.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">Squinty gave a little spring, and over the rope he went.</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>On the other side of the rope the boy put an
apple.</p>
<p>"Now, Squinty," said Bob, "if you want that
apple you must jump the rope to get it. Come
on."</p>
<p>At first Squinty did not understand what was
wanted of him. He saw nothing but the apple,
and thought how much he wanted it. He started
for it, but, before he could get it the boy pulled
up the rope in front of him. The rope stopped
Squinty.</p>
<p>"Jump over the rope if you want the apple,"
said the boy.
Of course Squinty could not exactly understand
this talk. He tried once more to get the
apple, but, every time he did, he found the rope
in front of him, in the way.</p>
<p>"Well!" exclaimed Squinty to himself, "I am
going to get that apple, rope or no rope. I guess
I'll have to get over the rope somehow."</p>
<p>So the next time he started for the juicy apple,
and the rope was pulled up in front of him,
Squinty gave a little spring, and over the rope he
went, jumping with all four legs, coming down
on the other side, like a circus man jumping over
the elephant's back.</p>
<p></p>
<p>"Oh, fine! Good!" cried the boy, clapping his
hands. "Squinty has learned to do another
trick!"</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty, as he chewed
the apple. "So that's another trick, is it?"</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap8"><SPAN name="chap8" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER VIII</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY IN THE WOODS</div>
<p>Bob, the boy who had bought Squinty, the
comical pig, laughed and clapped his
hands. His two sisters, who were playing
with their dolls in the shade of an evergreen
tree, heard their brother, and one of them called
out:</p>
<p>"What is it, Bob? What is it?"</p>
<p>"Oh, come and see my pig do a trick!" answered
the boy. "He is too funny for anything!"</p>
<p>"Can he really do a trick?" asked the smaller
sister, whose name was Mollie.</p>
<p>"Indeed he can," the boy said. "He can do
two tricks--find hidden acorns, and jump a
rope."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, not really jump a rope!" cried Sallie.</p>
<p>"You just come and see!" the boy called.</p>
<p>All this while Squinty was chewing on the
apple which he had picked up from the ground
after he had jumped over the rope. He heard
what the boy said, and Squinty made up his
mind.</p>
<p>"Well," said the little pig to himself, "if it is
any fun for that boy and his sisters to watch me
jump over a rope, and dig up acorns, I don't
mind doing it for them. They call them tricks,
but I call it getting something to eat."</p>
<p>And they were both right, you see.</p>
<p>Sallie and Mollie, the two sisters, laid down
their dolls in the shade, and ran over toward
their brother, who still held one end of the rope,
that was fast to Squinty's leg.</p>
<p>"Make him do some tricks for us," begged
Mollie.</p>
<p>"Show us how he jumps the rope," said Sallie.</p>
<p>"First, I'll have him dig up the acorns, as
that's easier," spoke Bob. "Here, Squinty!" he
called. "Find the acorns! Find 'em!"</p>
<p>While Squinty had been munching on the
apple, the boy had dug a hole, put some sweet
acorn nuts into it, and covered them up with
dirt. Squinty had not seen him do this, but
Squinty thought he could find the nuts just the
same.</p>
<p>There were two ways of doing this. Squinty
had a very sharp-smelling nose. He could smell
things afar off, that neither you nor I could smell
even close by. And Squinty could also tell, by
digging in the ground with his queer, rubbery
nose, just where the ground was soft and where it
was hard. And he knew it would be soft at the
place where the boy had dug a hole in which to
hide the acorns.</p>
<p>So, when Bob called for Squinty to come and
find the acorn nuts, even though the little pig
had not seen just where they were hidden,
Squinty felt sure he could dig them up.</p>
<p>"He'll never find them!" said Sallie.</p>
<p>"Just you watch!" exclaimed the boy.</p>
<p>He pulled on the rope around Squinty's leg.
At first the little pig was not quite sure what was
wanted of him. He thought perhaps he was to
jump over the rope after another apple. But he
saw no fruit waiting for him. Then he looked
carefully about and smelled the air. The boy
was very gentle with him, and waited patiently.</p>
<p>And I might say, right here, that if you ever
try to teach your pets any tricks, you must be
both kind and gentle with them, for you know
they are not as smart as you are, and cannot think
as quickly.</p>
<p>"Ha! I smell acorns!" thought Squinty to
himself. "I guess the boy must want me to do
the first trick, as he calls it, and dig up the acorns.
I'll do it!"</p>
<p>Carefully Squinty sniffed the air. When he
turned one way he could smell the acorns quite
plainly. When he turned the other way he
could not smell them quite so well. So he
started off in the direction where he could most
plainly smell the nuts he loved so well.</p>
<p>Next he began rooting in the ground. At first
it was very hard for his nose, but soon it became
soft. Then he could smell the acorns more
plainly than before.</p>
<p>"See, he is going right toward them!" cried
the boy.</p>
<p>"There, he has them!" exclaimed Sallie.</p>
<p>"Oh, so he has!" spoke Mollie. "I wouldn't
have thought he could!"</p>
<p>And, by that time, Squinty had found the hole
where the boy had covered the acorns with dirt,
and Squinty was chewing the sweet nuts.</p>
<p>"Now make him jump the rope," said Mollie.</p>
<p>"I will, as soon as he eats the acorns," replied
the boy.</p>
<p>"Ha! I am going to have another apple, just
for jumping a rope," thought Squinty, in delight.</p>
<p>You see the little pig imagined the trick was
done just to get him to eat the apple. He did
not count the rope-jumping part of it at all,
though that, really, was what the boy wanted.</p>
<p>Once more Bob placed the apple on the
ground, on the far side of the rope. One end of
the rope the boy held in his hand, and the other
was around Squinty's leg, but a loop of it was
made fast to a stick stuck in the ground, so the
boy could pull on the rope and raise or lower it,
just as you girls do when you play.</p>
<p>"Come on, now, Squinty! Jump over it!"
called the boy.</p>
<p>The little pig saw the apple, and smelled it.
He wanted very much to get it. But, when he
ran toward it, he found the rope raised up in
front of him. He forgot, for a moment, his second
trick, and stood still.</p>
<p>"Oh, I thought you said he would jump the
rope!" said Mollie, rather disappointed.</p>
<p>"He will--just wait a minute," spoke the boy.
"Come on, Squinty!" he called.</p>
<p>Once more Squinty started for the apple.
This time he remembered that, before, he had
to jump the rope to get it. So he did it again.
Over the rope he went, with a little jump, coming
down on the side where the apple was, and,
in a second he was chewing the juicy fruit.</p>
<p>"There!" cried the boy. "Didn't he jump the
rope?"</p>
<p>"Oh, well, but he didn't jump it fast, back and
forth, like we girls do," said Mollie.</p>
<p>"But it was pretty good--for a little pig," said
Sallie.</p>
<p>"I think so, too," spoke the boy. "And I am
going to teach him to jump real fast, and without
going for an apple each time. I'm going to
teach him other tricks, too."</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" thought Squinty, when he heard
this. "So I am to learn more tricks, it seems.
Well, I hope they will all be eating ones."</p>
<p>"Make him do it again," suggested Mollie,
after a bit.</p>
<p>"No, I haven't any more apples," the boy answered.
"And at first I'll have to make him
jump for an apple each time. After a bit I'll
not give him an apple until he has done all his
tricks. Come on now, Squinty, back to your
pen."</p>
<p>The boy lifted up his pet, and put him back
in the pen that had been especially built for the
little pig. As soon as he was in it Squinty ran
over to the trough, hoping there would be some
sour milk in it. But there was none.</p>
<p>"You've had enough to eat for a while," said
the boy with a laugh. "Later on I'll give you
your milk."</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty, and I suppose
he meant he would be glad to have the milk now.
But he got none, so he curled himself up in the
clean straw and went to sleep.</p>
<p>When he awakened, he thought at first he was
back in the pen at home, and he cried out:</p>
<p>"Oh, Wuff-Wuff! Oh, Twisty Tail. I had
the queerest dream! I thought a boy had me,
and that I could jump a rope, and hunt acorns,
and do lots of tricks. But I--!"
And then Squinty stopped. He looked
around and found himself all alone in the new
pen. None of his brothers or sisters was near
him, and he could not hear his mamma or papa
grunting near the feed trough.</p>
<p>"Ha! It wasn't a dream, after all," thought
Squinty, a bit sorrowfully. "It's all real--I can
do tricks, and a boy has me."</p>
<p>Every few days after that the boy took Squinty
out of his pen, and let him do the rope-jumping
and the acorn-hunting tricks. And it did not
take Squinty long to learn to jump the rope when
there was no apple on the other side. The boy
would say:</p>
<p>"Jump over the rope, Squinty!"</p>
<p>And over it the little pig would go. But if he
did not get the apple as soon as he jumped, he did
get it afterward, which was just as good. It was
sort of a reward for his tricks, you see.</p>
<p>"Now you must learn a new trick," said the
boy one day. "I want you to learn how to walk
on your hind legs, Squinty. It is not going to
be easy, either. But I guess you can do it. And
I am going to take the rope off your leg, for
I do not believe you will run away from me
now."</p>
<p>So the rope was taken off Squinty's leg. And
he liked the boy so much, and liked his new
home, and the nuts and apples he got to eat were
so good, that Squinty did not try to run away.</p>
<p>"Up on your hind legs!" cried the boy, and, by
taking hold of Squinty's front feet, Bob raised
his pet up on the hind legs.</p>
<p>"Now stand there!" the boy cried, but when
he took away his hands of course Squinty came
down on all four legs. He did not know what
the boy meant to have him do.</p>
<p>"I guess I'll have to stand you in a corner to
start with," the boy said. "That will brace you
up."</p>
<p>Then, kindly and gently, the boy took Squinty
over to the place where the corn crib was built
on to the barn. This made a corner and the
little pig was stood up on his hind legs in that.
Then, with something to lean his back against, he
did not feel like falling over, and he remained
standing up on two legs, with his front feet stuck
out in front of him.</p>
<p>"That's the way to do it!" cried Bob. "Soon
you will be able to stand up without anything to
lean against. And, a little later, you will be
able to walk on your hind legs. Now here's an
apple for you, Squinty!"</p>
<p>So you see Squinty received his reward for
starting to learn a new trick.</p>
<p>In a few days, just as the boy had said, the little
pig found that he could sit up on his hind legs
all alone, without anything to lean back against.</p>
<p>But learning to walk on his hind legs was a
little harder.</p>
<p>The boy, however, was patient and kind to
him. At first Bob held Squinty's front feet, and
walked along with him so the little pig would get
used to the new trick. Then one day Bob said:</p>
<p>"Now, Squinty, I want you to walk to me all
by yourself. Stand up!"</p>
<p>Squinty stood up on his hind legs. The boy
backed away from him, and stood a little distance
off, holding out a nice, juicy potato this time.</p>
<p>"Come and get the potato," called the boy.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee!" grunted Squinty. "I can't!"
I suppose he meant to say.</p>
<p>"Come on!" cried the boy. "Don't be afraid.
You can do it!"</p>
<p>Squinty wanted that potato very much. And
the only way to get it was to walk to it on his
hind legs. If he let himself down on all four
legs he knew the boy would not give him the
potato. So Squinty made up his little pig mind
that he would do this new trick.</p>
<p>Off he started, walking by himself on his hind
legs, just like a trained bear.</p>
<p>"Fine! That's the way to do it! I knew you
could!" the boy cried when Squinty reached him,
and took the potato out of his hand. "Good little
pig!" and he scratched Squinty's back with
a stick.</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" squealed Squinty, very much
pleased.</p>
<p>And from then on the comical little pig learned
many tricks.</p>
<p>He could stand up a long time, on his hind
legs, with an apple on his nose. And he would
not eat it until the boy called:</p>
<p>"Now, Squinty!"</p>
<p>Then Squinty would toss the apple up in the
air, off his nose, and catch it as it came down.
Oh, how good it tasted!</p>
<p>Squinty also learned to march around with a
stick for a gun, and play soldier. He liked this
trick best of all, for he always had two apples
to eat after that.</p>
<p>Many of Bob's boy friends came to see his
trained pig. They all thought he was very
funny and cute, and they laughed very hard
when Squinty looked at them with his queer,
drooping eye. They would feed him apples, potatoes
and sometimes bits of cake that Bob's
mother gave them. Squinty grew very fond of
cake.</p>
<p>Then one day something happened. Bob always
used to lock the door of the new pig pen
every night, for, though he knew his pet was
quite tame now, he thought, if the door were left
open, Squinty might wander away. And that is
exactly what Squinty did.
He did not mean to do wrong, but he knew no
better. One evening, after he had done many
tricks that day, when Squinty found the door
of his pen part way open, he just pushed it the
rest of the way with his strong nose, and out he
walked! No one saw him.</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty, looking about,
"I guess I'll go take a walk by myself. I may
find something good to eat."</p>
<p>Out of the pen he went. There was no garden
here, such as the farmer had at Squinty's first
home. But, not far from the pig pen was the
big, green wood.</p>
<p>"I'll go over in there and see what happens,"
thought Squinty. "Perhaps I may find some
acorns."</p>
<p>And so Squinty ran away to the woods.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap9"><SPAN name="chap9" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER IX</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY'S BALLOON RIDE</div>
<p>This was the third time Squinty had run
away. But not once did he intend to
do any wrong; you see he knew no better.
He just found his pen door open and
walked out--that was all there was to it.</p>
<p>"I wonder what will happen to me this time?"
thought the comical little pig, as he hurried
along over the ground, toward the woods. "I
don't believe Don, the dog, will find me here,
for he must be back on the farm. But some
other dog might. I had better be careful, I
guess."</p>
<p>When Squinty thought this he stopped and
looked carefully around for any signs of a barking
dog. But he saw none. It was very still
and quiet, for it was nearly supper time in the
big house where Bob lived, and he and his sisters
were waiting for the bell to ring to call them
to the table.</p>
<p>But Squinty had had his supper, and, for the
time, he was not hungry.</p>
<p>"And if I do get hungry again, I may find
something in the woods," he said to himself.
"Acorn nuts grow in the woods, and they are
very good. I'll root up some of them."</p>
<p>Once or twice Squinty looked back toward the
pen he had run away from, to see if Bob, his master,
were coming after him. But Bob had no
idea his little pet had run away. In fact, just
then, Bob was wondering what new trick he
could teach Squinty the next day.</p>
<p>On and on ran the comical pig. Once he
found something round and yellow on the
ground.</p>
<p>"Ha! That looks like a yellow apple,"
thought Squinty, and he bit it hard with his
white teeth. Then his mouth all puckered up,
he felt a sour taste, and he cried out:</p>
<p>"Wow! I don't like that. Oh, that isn't an
apple at all!"</p>
<p>And it wasn't--it was a lemon the grocery boy
had dropped.</p>
<p>"Oh! How sour!" grunted Squinty. "I'd
like a drink of water to take the taste of that out
of my mouth."</p>
<p>Squinty lifted his nose up in the air, and sniffed
and snuffed. He wanted to try to smell a spring
of water, and he did, just on the edge of the big
wood. Over to the spring he ran on his little
short legs, and soon he was having a fine drink.</p>
<p>"Now I feel better," Squinty said. "What
will happen next?"</p>
<p>Nothing did for some time, and, when it did
it was so strange that Squinty never forgot it as
long as he lived. I'll tell you all about it.</p>
<p>He walked on through the woods, Squinty did,
and, before very long, he found some acorns.
He ate as many as he wanted and then, as he
always felt sleepy after he had eaten, he thought
he would lie down and have a nap.</p>
<p>He found a place, near a big stump, where
there was a soft bed of dried leaves, nearly as
nice as his straw bed in the pen at home. On this
he stretched out, and soon he was fast asleep.</p>
<p>When Squinty awoke it was real dark. He
jumped up with a little grunt, and said to himself:</p>
<p>"Well, I did not mean to stay away from my
pen so long. I guess I had better go back."</p>
<p>Squinty started to go back the way he had
come, but I guess you can imagine what happened.
It was so dark he could not find the
path. He walked about, stumbling over sticks
and stones and stumps, sometimes falling down
on soft moss, and again on the hard ground.
Finally Squinty thought:</p>
<p>"Well, it is of no use. I can't get back tonight,
that is sure. I shall have to stay here.
Oh dear! I hope there are no dogs to bite me!"</p>
<p>Squinty listened carefully. He could hear no
barks. He hunted around in the dark until he
found another soft bed of leaves, and on that he
cuddled himself up to go to sleep for the night.
He was a little afraid, but, after all, he was used
to sleeping alone, and, even though he was outside
of his pen now, he did not worry much.</p>
<p>"In the morning I shall go back to the boy
who taught me tricks," thought Squinty.</p>
<p>But something else happened in the morning.</p>
<p>Squinty was awake when the sun first peeped
up from behind the clouds. The little pig
scratched his ear, where a mosquito had bitten
him during the night. Then he stretched first
one leg and then the others, and said:</p>
<p>"Ha! Ho! Hum! Uff! Uff! I guess I'll have
some acorns for my breakfast."</p>
<p>It was a very easy matter for Squinty to get
his breakfast. He did not have to wash, or
comb his hair, or even dress. Just as he was he
got up out of his leaf-bed, and began rooting
around in the ground for acorns. He soon found
all he wanted, and ate them. Then he felt
thirsty, so he looked around until he had found
another spring of cool water, where he drank as
much as he needed.</p>
<p>"And now to go back home, to the boy who
taught me tricks," said Squinty to himself. "I
guess he is wondering where I am."</p>
<p>And indeed that boy, Bob, and his sisters Mollie
and Sallie, were wondering where Squinty
was. They saw the open door of the pen, and
the boy recalled that he had forgotten to lock it.</p>
<p>"Oh, Squinty is gone!" he cried, and he felt
very badly indeed. But I have no time to tell
you more of that boy now. I must relate for you
the wonderful adventures of Squinty.</p>
<p>Squinty went this way and that through the
woods, but he could not find the path that led to
his pen. He tried and tried again, but it was of
no use.</p>
<p>"Well," said Squinty, at last, sitting down beside
a hollow log, "I guess I am lost. That is all
there is to it I am lost in the big woods! Oh
dear! I almost wish Don, the dog, or the
farmer would come and find me now."</p>
<p>He waited, but no one came. He listened but
he heard nothing.</p>
<p>"Well, I might as well eat and go to sleep
again," said Squinty, "Maybe something will
happen then."</p>
<p>Soon he was asleep again. But he was suddenly
awakened. He heard a great crashing in
the trees over his head.</p>
<p>"Gracious! I hope that isn't a dog after me!"
cried the little pig.</p>
<p>He looked up, Squinty did. He saw coming
down from the sky, through the branches of the
trees, a big round thing, like more than ten thousand
rubber balls, made into one. Below the
round thing hung a square basket, with many
ropes, and other things, fast to it. And in the
basket were two men. They looked over the
edge of the basket. One of them pulled on a
rope, and the big thing, which was a balloon,
though Squinty did not know it, came to the
ground with a bang.</p>
<p>"Well, at last we have made a landing," said
one of the men.</p>
<p>"Yes," said the other. "And we shall have to
throw out some bags of sand to go up again."</p>
<p>Squinty did not know what this meant. But
I'll explain to you that a "landing" is when a
balloon comes down to the ground. And when
the men in it want to go up again, they have to
toss out some of the bags of sand, or ballast, they
carry to make the balloon so light that the gas
in it will take it up again.</p>
<p>The men began tossing out the bags of sand.
Squinty saw them, but he was not afraid. Why
should he be? for no men or boys had ever been
cruel to him.</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty, getting up and
going over to one of the bags of sand. "Maybe
that is good to eat!" he thought. "If it is I will
take a bite. I am hungry."</p>
<p>"Oh, look at that pig!" suddenly called one
of the men in the balloon basket.</p>
<p>"Sure enough, it is a pig!" exclaimed the
other. "And what a comical little chap he is!"
he went on. "See the funny way he looks at
you."</p>
<p>At that moment Squinty looked up, as he often
did, with one eye partly closed, the other open,
and with one ear cocked frontwards, and the
other backwards.</p>
<p>"Say, he's a cute one all right," said the first
man. "Let's take him along."</p>
<p>"What for?" asked his friend. "We'd only
have to toss out as much sand as he weighs so we
could go up."</p>
<p>"Oh, let's take him along, anyhow," insisted
the other. "Maybe he'll be a mascot for us."</p>
<p>"Well, if he's a mascot, all right. Then we'll
take him. We need some good luck on this
trip."</p>
<table width="210px" cellpadding="5px" align="left" >
<tr>
<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/6_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic6" alt="The next moment Squinty felt himself lifted off the ground." src="images/6.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">The next moment Squinty felt himself lifted off the ground.</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>Squinty did not know what a mascot was.
Perhaps he thought it was something good to
eat. But I might say that a mascot is something
which some persons think brings them good luck.
Often baseball nines, or football elevens, will
have a small boy, or a goat, or a dog whom they
call their mascot. They take him along whenever
they play games, thinking the mascot helps
them to win. Of course it really does not, but
there is no harm in a mascot, anyhow.</p>
<p>"Yes, we'll take him along in the balloon with
us," said the taller of the two men. "See, he
doesn't seem to be a bit afraid."</p>
<p>"No, and look! He must be a trick pig!
Maybe he got away from some circus!" cried the
other man. For, at that moment Squinty stood
up on his hind legs, as the boy had taught him,
and walked over toward the big balloon basket.
What he really wanted was something to eat,
but the men did not know that.</p>
<p>"He surely is a cute little pig!" cried the tall
man. "I'll lift him in. You toss out another
bag of sand, and we'll go up."</p>
<p></p>
<p>The next moment, before he could get out of
the man's grasp if he had wanted to, Squinty felt
himself lifted off the ground. He was put
down in the bottom of the basket, which held
many things, and, a second later, Squinty, the
comical pig, felt himself flying upward through
the air.</p>
<p>Squinty was off on a trip in a balloon.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap10"><SPAN name="chap10" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER X</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY AND THE SQUIRREL</div>
<p>Up, up, and up some more went Squinty,
the comical pig. At first the fast
motion in the balloon made him a little
dizzy, just as it might make you feel queer the
first time you went on a merry-go-'round.</p>
<p>"Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty. He was so surprised
at this sudden adventure that, really, he
did not know what to say.</p>
<p>"I wonder if he's afraid?" said one of the men.</p>
<p>"He acts so," the other answered. "But he'll
get used to it. How high up are you going?"</p>
<p>"Oh, about a mile, I guess."</p>
<p>Squinty cuddled down in the basket of the
balloon, between two bags full of something, and
shivered.</p>
<p>"My goodness me!" thought poor Squinty.
"A mile up in the air! That's awfully high."</p>
<p>He knew about how far a mile was on land,
for it was about the distance from the farmhouse,
near where his pen used to be, to the village
church. He had often heard the farmer man
say so.</p>
<p>"And if it was a mile from my pen to the
church, and that mile of road was stood straight
up in the air," thought Squinty, "it would be a
terrible long way to fall. I hope I don't fall."</p>
<p>And it did not seem as if he would--at least
not right away. The basket in which he was
riding looked good and strong. Squinty had
shut his eyes when he heard the men speak about
going a mile up in the air, but now, as the balloon
seemed to have stopped rising, the little pig
opened his eyes again, and peered all about him.</p>
<p>"Look!" exclaimed one of the men with a
laugh. "Hasn't that pig the most comical face
you ever saw?"</p>
<p>"That's what he has," answered the other.
"He makes me want to laugh every time I look
at him, with that funny half-shut eye of his."</p>
<p>"Well," thought Squinty, "I'm glad somebody
is happy and jolly, and wants to laugh, for I'm
sure I don't. I wish I hadn't run away from the
nice boy who taught me the tricks."</p>
<p>Then, as Squinty remembered how he had
been taught to stand up on his hind legs, he
thought he would do that trick now. He was
hungry, and he imagined, perhaps, if he did
that trick, the men would give him something
to eat.</p>
<p>"Look at the little chap!" cried one of the men.
"He's showing off all right."</p>
<p>"Yes, he's a smart pig," said the other. "He
must be a trick pig, and I guess whoever owns
him will be sorry he is lost."</p>
<p>"Hu! I'm sorry myself!" thought Squinty to
himself, as he walked around on his hind legs.</p>
<p>"I wonder if these men are ever going to give
me anything to eat," he went on. He looked at
them from his queer, squinting eye, but the men
did not seem to know that the little pig was
hungry.</p>
<p>On and on sailed the balloon, being blown by
the wind like a sailboat. Squinty dropped
down on his four legs, since he found that walking
on his hind ones brought him no food.
Then, as he made his way about the basket, he
saw some more of those queer bags filled with
something. There were a great many of them in
the balloon, and Squinty thought they must have
something good in them.</p>
<p>Squinty squatted down beside one, and, with
his strong teeth, he soon had bitten a hole in the
cloth. Then he took a big bite, but oh dear!</p>
<p>All at once he found his mouth filled with
coarse sand, that gritted on his teeth, and made
the cold shivers run down his back.</p>
<p>"Oh, wow!" thought poor Squinty. "That's
no good! Sand! I wonder if those men eat
sand?"</p>
<p>Of course they didn't. The sand in the bags
was "ballast." The balloon men carried it with
them, and when they found the balloon coming
down, because some of the gas had leaked out of
the round ball above the basket, they would let
some of the sand run out of the bags to the
ground below. This would make the balloon
lighter, and it would rise again.</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee! Uff! Uff!" grunted Squinty,
as he wiped the sand off his tongue on one of his
legs. "I don't like that. I'm hungry."</p>
<p>"Why, what's the matter with the little pig?"
asked one of the men, turning around and looking
at Squinty.</p>
<p>"He must be hungry," said the other. "See,
he has bitten a hole in one of our sand bags.
Let's feed him."</p>
<p>"All right. Give him something to eat, but
we didn't bring any pig food along with us."</p>
<p>"I'll give him some bread and milk," the other
man said. "We won't want much more ourselves,
for we are nearly at our last landing
place."</p>
<p>"Squee! Squee!" squealed Squinty, when he
heard this. He watched the man put some bread
and milk in a tin pan, and set it down on the floor
of the basket. Then Squinty put his nose in the
dish and began to eat.</p>
<p>And Oh! how good it tasted! Of course the
milk was sweet, instead of sour, for men do not
usually like sour milk. Squinty had a good
meal, and then he went to sleep.</p>
<p>What happened while Squinty slept, the little
pig did not know. But when he woke up it was
all dark, and he knew it must be night, so he went
to sleep again. And the next time he awakened
the sun was shining, so he felt sure it was morning.</p>
<p>And then, all of a sudden, something happened.
One of the men called out:</p>
<p>"There is a good place to land!"</p>
<p>"Yes, we'll go down there," agreed the other.
Then he pulled a string. Squinty did not know
what it was for, but I'll tell you. It was to open
a hole in the balloon so the gas would rush out.
Then the balloon would begin to fall.</p>
<p>And that is what happened. Down, down
went the balloon. It went very fast, and Squinty
felt dizzy. Faster and faster fell the balloon,
until, at last it gave such a bump down on the
ground that Squinty was bounced right over the
side of the basket.</p>
<p>Right out of the basket the comical little pig
was bounced, but he came down in a soft bed of
leaves, so he was not hurt in the least. He
landed on his feet, just like a cat, and gave a loud
squeal, he was so surprised.</p>
<p>And then Squinty ran away. Almost anybody
would have run, too, I guess, after falling down
in a balloon, and being bounced out that way.
Squinty had had enough of balloon riding.</p>
<p>"I don't know where I'm going, nor what will
happen to me now," thought Squinty, "but I am
going to run and hide."</p>
<p>And run he did. He found himself in the
woods; just the same kind of woods as where he
had first met the two balloon men, only, of course,
it was much farther off, for he had traveled a
long way through the air.</p>
<p>On and on ran Squinty. All at once, in a tree
over his head, he heard a funny chattering noise.</p>
<p>"Chipper, chipper, chipper! Chat! Chat!
Whir-r-r-r-r-!" went the noise.</p>
<p>Squinty looked up in the tree, and there he saw
a lovely little girl squirrel, frisking about on the
branches. Then Squinty was no longer afraid.
Out of the leaves he jumped, giving a squeal and
a grunt which meant:</p>
<p>"Oh, how do you do? I am glad to see you.
My name is Squinty. What is your name?"</p>
<p>"My name is Slicko," answered the lively little
girl squirrel, as she jumped about. "Come on
and play!"</p>
<p>Squinty felt very happy then.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap11"><SPAN name="chap11" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER XI</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY AND THE MERRY MONKEY</div>
<p>"Where do you live, Squinty?" asked
Slicko, the jumping squirrel, as she
skipped from one tree branch to
another, and so reached the ground near the comical little pig.</p>
<p>"Oh, I live in a pen," answered Squinty, "but
I'm not there now."</p>
<p>"No, I see you are not," spoke Slicko, with a
laugh, which showed her sharp, white teeth.
"But what are you doing so far away from your
pen? Or, perhaps it is close by, though I never
saw you in these woods before," she went on,
looking around as if she might see the pig pen
under one of the trees.</p>
<p>"No, I have never been here before," Squinty
answered. "My pen is far from here. My
master is a boy who taught me to do tricks, such
as jumping rope, but I ran away and had a balloon
ride."</p>
<p>"What's a balloon?" asked Slicko, as she
combed out her tail with a chestnut burr. Squirrels
always use chestnut burrs for combs.</p>
<p>"A balloon is something that goes up in the
air," answered Squinty, "and it has bags of sand
in it."</p>
<p>"Well, I can go up in the air, when I climb a
tree," went on Slicko, with a jolly laugh. "Am
I a balloon?"</p>
<p>"No, you are not," said Squinty. "A balloon
is very different."</p>
<p>"Well, I know where there is some sand,"
spoke Slicko. "I could get some of that and put
it in leaf-bags. Would that make me a balloon?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, of course not," Squinty answered.
"You could never be a balloon. But if you know
where there is some sand perhaps you know
where there is some sour milk. I am very hungry."</p>
<p>"I never heard of sour milk," replied the girl
squirrel. "But I know where to find some nuts.
Do you like hickory nuts?"</p>
<p>"I--I guess so," answered Squinty, thinking,
perhaps, they were like acorns. "Please show
me where there are some."</p>
<p>"Come on!" chattered Slicko. She led the
way through the woods, leaping from one tree
branch to another over Squinty's head. The
little pig ran along on the ground, through the
dry leaves. Sometimes he went on four feet and
sometimes he stood up straight on his hind feet.</p>
<p>"Can you do that?" he asked the squirrel. "It
is a trick the boy taught me."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I can sit up on my hind legs, and eat
a nut," the squirrel girl said. "But nobody
taught me. I could always do it. I don't call
that a trick."</p>
<p>"Well, it is a trick for me," said Squinty.
"But where are the hickory nuts you spoke
of?"</p>
<p>"Right here," answered Slicko, the jumping
squirrel, hopping about as lively as a cricket, and
she pointed to a pile of nuts in a hollow stump.
Squinty tried to chew some, but, as soon as he
took them in his mouth he cried out:</p>
<p>"Oh my! How hard the shells are! This is
worse than the sand! I can't chew hickory nuts!
Have you no other kind?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I know where there are some acorns,"
answered Slicko, "but I do not care for them as
well as for hickory nuts."</p>
<p>"Oh, please show me the acorns," begged
Squinty.</p>
<p>"Here they are," spoke Slicko, jumping a little
farther, and she pointed to a pile of acorns in
another hollow stump.</p>
<p>"Oh, these are fine! Thank you!" grunted
Squinty, and he began to eat them. All at once
there sounded through the woods a noise like:</p>
<p>"Chat! Chat! Chatter! Whir-r-r-r-r-r!"
"My, what's that?" cried Squinty, turning
quickly around.</p>
<p>"That is my mamma calling me," said Slicko,
the jumping squirrel. "I shall have to go home
to my nest now. Good-by, Squinty. I like you
very much, and I hope I shall soon see you
again."</p>
<p>"I hope so, too," spoke Squinty, and while he
went on eating the acorns, Slicko ran along the
tree branches to her nest. And in another book
I shall tell you some more stories about "Slicko,
the Jumping Squirrel," but in this book I have
room to write only about Squinty.</p>
<p>The little comical pig was rather lonesome
after Slicko had left him, but he was no longer
hungry, thanks to the acorns.</p>
<p>So he walked on and on, and pretty soon he
came to a road. And down the road he saw
coming the strangest sight.</p>
<table width="210px" cellpadding="5px" align="left" >
<tr>
<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/1_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic1" alt="Squinty looked at the beautiful wagons, and at the strange animals." src="images/1.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">Squinty looked at the beautiful wagons, and at the strange animals.</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>There were a lot of big wagons, all painted
red and green and gold. Many horses drew each
wagon, the big wheels of which rattled like thunder,
and beside the wagons there were many
strange animals walking along--animals which
Squinty had never seen before.</p>
<p>"Oh my!" cried Squinty. "This is worse than
the balloon! I must run away!"</p>
<p>But, just as he turned to run, he saw a little
animal jump out of one of the big wagons, and
come toward him. This animal was something
like a little boy, only, instead of clothes, he was
covered with hairy fur. And the animal had a
long tail, which Squinty knew no boy ever had.</p>
<p>Squinty was so surprised at seeing the strange
animal that the little pig stood still. The hairy
animal, with the long tail, came straight for the
bush behind which Squinty was hiding, and
crawled through. Then the two stood looking
at one another, while the big wagons rumbled
past on the road.</p>
<p>"Hello!" Squinty finally exclaimed. "Who
are you?"</p>
<p>"Why, I am Mappo, the merry monkey," was
the answer, as he curled his long tail around a
stick of wood. "But I don't need to ask who you
are. You are a pig, I can see that, for we have
one in our circus, and the clown rides him around
the ring, and it is too funny for anything."</p>
<table width="210px" cellpadding="5px" align="right" >
<tr>
<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/7_l.jpg" target="_blank"><ANTIMG align="bottom" id="pic7" alt="'Why, I am Mappo, the merry monkey,' was the answer." src="images/7.jpg" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">'Why, I am Mappo, the merry monkey,' was the answer.</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>"Ha, so you are a monkey?" asked Squinty.
"But what do you mean by a circus?"</p>
<p>"That's a circus," answered Mappo, pointing
with one paw through a hole in the bush, at the
queer animals, and the red, gold and green wagons.
"That is, it will be a circus when they put
up the big tent, and all the people come. Didn't
you ever see a circus?"</p>
<p>"Never," answered Squinty. "Did you ever
ride in a balloon?"</p>
<p>"Never," answered Mappo.</p>
<p>"Well, then we are even," said Squinty.
"Now you tell me about a circus, and I'll tell you
about the balloon."</p>
<p>"Well," said the monkey, "a circus is a big
show in a tent, to make people laugh. There are
clowns, and animals to look at. I am one of the
animals, but I ran out of my cage when the door
flew open."</p>
<p>"Why did you run away?" asked Squinty.</p>
<p>"Oh, I got tired of staying in a cage. And I
was afraid the big tiger might bite me. I'll
run back again pretty soon, before they miss me.
Now you tell me about your balloon ride."</p>
<p>So Squinty told the merry monkey all about
running away, and learning tricks, and having a
ride in the queer basket.</p>
<p>"I can do tricks, too," said Mappo. "But just
now I am hungry. I wonder if any cocoanut
trees are in these woods?"</p>
<p>"I don't know what a cocoanut is," answered
Squinty, "but I'll give you some of my acorns."</p>
<p>The comical little pig and the merry monkey
hid under the bush and ate acorns as they
watched the circus procession go past. It was
not a regular parade, as the show was going only
from one town to-another. Squinty looked at
the beautiful wagons, and at the strange animals,
some with big humps on their backs. At last he
saw some very big creatures, and he cried out:</p>
<p>"Oh, Mappo! What are those animals?
They have a tail at each end!"</p>
<p>"Those are elephants," said Mappo, "and they
do not have two tails. One is a tail, and the other
is their trunk, or long nose, by which they pick
up peanuts, and other things to eat, and they can
drink water through it, too."</p>
<p>"Oh, elephants, eh!" exclaimed Squinty.
"But who is that big, fierce-looking one, with two
long teeth sticking out. I would be afraid of
him."</p>
<p>"Ha! Ha! You wouldn't need to be," said
Mappo, with a merry laugh. "That is Tum-Tum,
the jolliest elephant in the whole circus.
Why, he is so kind he wouldn't hurt a fly, and he
is so happy that every one loves him. He is always
playing jokes."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm glad he is so jolly," spoke Squinty,
as he watched Tum-Tum and the other elephants
march slowly along the road on their big feet,
like wash tubs, swinging their long trunks.</p>
<p>Then Mappo the monkey, and Squinty, the
comical pig, started off through the woods.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<div class="chap12"><SPAN name="chap12" />
<div class="chaphead">CHAPTER XII</div>
<div class="chapdes">SQUINTY GETS HOME AGAIN</div>
<p>"Squinty, I don't believe we're going to
find any cocoanut trees in this woods,"
said Mappo, the monkey, after he and
the little pig had wandered on for some time.</p>
<p>"It doesn't seem so, does it?" spoke Squinty,
looking all around, first with his wide-open eye,
and then with his queer, droopy one.</p>
<p>The monkey ran along, now on the ground, and
now and then swinging himself up in the
branches of trees, by his long legs, each one of
which had a sort of hand on the end. Sometimes
he hung by his tail, for monkeys are made
to do that.</p>
<p>"My, I wish I could get up in the trees the way
you do," said Squinty. "Do you think I could
hang by my tail, Mappo?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," answered the monkey, scratching
his head. "Your tail has a nice little curl
in it, almost like mine. Did you ever try to
hang by your tail?"</p>
<p>"No, I never did."</p>
<p>"Well, you don't know what you can do until
you try," said Mappo.</p>
<p>The two animal friends soon came to where
some of the acorn nuts had fallen off a tree, and
they ate as many as they wanted. Mappo said
they were not as good as cocoanuts, but he liked
them pretty well, because he was hungry. And
Squinty thought acorns were just the best things
he had ever tasted, except apples, and potatoes or
perhaps sour milk.</p>
<p>By this time it was getting dark, and Squinty
said:</p>
<p>"Oh dear, I wonder where we can sleep tonight?"</p>
<p>"Oh, do not let that worry you," said Mappo.
"I am used to living in the woods. When I was
little, before I was caught and put in the circus,
I lived in the woods all the while. See, here is
a nice hollow stump, filled with leaves, for you to
sleep in, and I will climb a tree, and sleep in
that."</p>
<p>"Couldn't you sleep down in the stump with
me?" asked Squinty. "It's sort of lonesome, all
by yourself in the dark."</p>
<p>"Yes, I'll sleep with you," said Mappo.
"Now we'll make up a nice bed."</p>
<p>But, just as they were piling some more leaves
in the hollow stump, they heard many voices of
men shouting in the woods.</p>
<p>"Here he is! Here is that runaway monkey!
I see him! Come and catch him!" cried the
men.</p>
<p>"Oh, they're from the circus! They're after
me!" cried Mappo. "I must run and hide.
Good-by, Squinty. I'll see you again sometime,
maybe. You had better run, also, or the circus
men may catch you."</p>
<p>Squinty looked through the trees, and saw a
number of men coming toward him and the
monkey. Then Mappo climbed up in a tall
tree, and Squinty ran away as fast as his little
short legs would take him.</p>
<p>"Never mind the pig! Get the monkey!"
Squinty heard one man cry, and then the comical
little pig dodged under a bush, and kept on
running.</p>
<p>When Squinty stopped running it was quite
dark. He could hardly see, and he had run into
several trees, and bumped his nose a number of
times. It hurt him very much.</p>
<p>"Well, I guess I'm lost again," thought
Squinty. "And I am all alone. Oh, what a lot
of things has happened to me since I was in the
pen with my mamma and papa and sisters and
brothers! I wish I were back with them again."</p>
<p>Squinty felt very sad and lonesome. He wondered
if the circus men had caught Mappo.
Then he felt that he had better find a place where
he could cover himself up with the dry leaves,
and go to sleep.</p>
<p>He walked about in the dark until, all of a sudden,
he stumbled into a hole that was filled with
dried grass.</p>
<p>"I guess I had better stay here," thought
Squinty. So he pulled some of the grass over
him, and went to sleep.</p>
<p>When he awoke the sun was shining.</p>
<p>"I must get my breakfast," thought Squinty.
He hunted about until he had found some acorns,
and then, coming to a little brook of water he
took a long drink. Something about the brook
made Squinty look at it carefully.</p>
<p>"Why--why!" he exclaimed to himself: "It
seems to me I have been here before! Yes, I am
sure I have. This is the place where I first came
to get a drink, when first I ran away. It is near
the pen where I used to live! Oh, I wonder if I
can find that?"</p>
<p>The heart of Squinty was beating fast as he
looked around at the scenes he had seen when
he was a very little pig, some weeks before. Yes,
it was the same brook. He was sure of it. And
there was the garden of potatoes, and the cornfield
where he had first lost his way.</p>
<p>Hark! What was that?</p>
<p>Off in the rows of corn he heard a dog barking.
Somehow he knew that dog's bark.</p>
<p>"If that could be Don!" thought Squinty,
hopefully.</p>
<p>The barking sounded nearer. Squinty turned
around, standing on the edge of the little brook,
and waited, his heart beating faster and faster.</p>
<p>All at once there came running through the
potato field a black and white dog. Squinty
knew him at once.</p>
<p>It was Don!</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow!" barked Don. "Well,
if there isn't that comical little pig, Squinty!
Where in the world did you come from?
You've been running away, I'll be bound! Now
I'm going to take you back to the pen!"</p>
<p>"Oh, Don! I am so glad to see you!" squealed
Squinty. "I--I did run away, but I never will
any more. I am lost. Oh, Don, don't take me
by the ear. I'll go with you."</p>
<p>"All right," barked Don, kindly. "Come
along. Your pen isn't far off," and he ran along
beside the little pig, who, after many adventures
had wandered back home. Squinty and Don
came to the edge of the potato field.</p>
<p>"Well, I never!" exclaimed the farmer man,
who was there hoeing the potatoes. "If there
isn't that comical little pig I sold to that boy Bob.
I wonder where he came from?"</p>
<p>"Bow wow! Bow wow! I found him," barked
Don, but of course the farmer did not understand.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll put you back in the pen again until
that boy sends for you," said the farmer, as he
lifted Squinty over into the pen where his
mamma and papa and brothers and sisters were.</p>
<p>"Why--why, it's Squinty!" cried Mrs. Pig.</p>
<p>"He's come back!" grunted Mr. Pig.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm so glad!" said Wuff-Wuff.</p>
<p>"And so am I," added Twisty Tail, as she
rubbed her nose against Squinty's. "Where have
you been, and what happened to you?" she asked
her brother.</p>
<p>"Oh, many things," he said. "I have learned
some tricks, I have been up in a balloon, I met
Slicko the jumping squirrel, Mappo, the merry
monkey, and I saw Tum-Tum, the jolly circus
elephant. Now I am home again."</p>
<p>"And which did you like best of all?" asked
Mrs. Pig, when they had finished asking him
questions.</p>
<p>"Getting back home," answered Squinty, as he
took a big drink of sour milk.</p>
<p>And that is the story of Squinty, the comical
pig. The farmer sent word to the boy that his
pet was back in the pen, but the boy said he
thought he did not want a pet pig any more, so
Squinty, for the time being, stayed with his
family.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="footers" id="footer1">
<table cellpadding="10px" width="100%" summary="Stories for children from 5 to 10 years old.">
<tr>
<td>
<br/>
<h4>STORIES FOR CHILDREN
FROM 5 TO 10 YEARS OLD</h4>
<h3> * * * * *</h3>
<h3>THE KNEETIME ANIMAL STORIES <br/> By Richard Barnum</h3>
<br/>
Large 12mo. Cloth. Illustrated
<br/>
Price per volume 40 cents Postpaid
<br/>
<p>In all nursery literature animals have played a conspicuous
part; and the reason is obvious for nothing entertains a child
more than the funny antics of an animal. These stories
abound in amusing incidents such as children adore and the
characters are so full of life, so appealing to a child's imagination
that none will be satisfied until they have met all of their
favorites--Squinty, Slicko, Mappo, Tum Tum and Don.</p>
<p><b>Squinty, the Comical Pig<br/>
Slicko, the Jumping Squirrel<br/>
Mappo, the Merry Monkey<br/>
Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant<br/>
Don, A Runaway Dog.</b></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table></div>
<br/><br/>
<div class="footers" id="footer2">
<table cellpadding="10px" width="100%" summary="Books for boys.">
<tr>
<td>
<br/>
<h3>BOOKS FOR BOYS</h3>
<h3> * * * * *</h3>
<h4>THE BOBBY BLAKE SERIES<br/>
By Frank A. Warner</h4>
<br/>
Large 12mo. Cloth. Illustrated.
<br/>Price per volume 50 cents, net.
<br/>
<p>True stories of life at a modern American boarding
school. Bobby attended this institution of learning with his
particular chum and the boys had no end of good times.
The tales of outdoor life, especially the exciting times they
have when engaged in sports against rival schools, are written
in a manner so true, so realistic, that the reader, too, is sure
to share with these boys their thrills and pleasures.</p>
<p><b>BOBBY BLAKE AT ROCKLEDGE SCHOOL</b>
OR WINNING THE MEDAL OF HONOR</p>
<p><b>BOBBY BLAKE AT BASS COVE</b>
OR THE HUNT FOR THE MOTOR BOAT GEM</p>
<p><b>BOBBY BLAKE ON A CRUISE</b>
OR THE CASTAWAYS OF VOLCANO ISLAND</p>
<p>For sale at all book stores.</p>
</td>
</tr>
</table></div>
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