“‘HIS LITTLE ROUND STOMACH WAS SWOLLEN WITH HONEY, SO HE DID N’T CARE A PENNY. (SEE PAGE 236.)’”
TEDDY BEAR’S BEE-TREE
FIRST PAPER OF THE SERIES ENTITLED “BABES OF THE WILD”
BY CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS
“Perhaps,” he thought to himself, “if we keep very still indeed, they ‘ll come out and play.”
He was about to whisper this suggestion, cautiously, to Uncle Andy, when, from somewhere in the trees behind him, came a loud sound of scrambling, of claws scratching on bark, followed by a thud, a grunt, and a whining, and then the crash of some heavy creature careering through the underbrush.
The rabbits vanished. The Babe, startled, shrank closer to his uncle’s knees, and stared up at him with round eyes of inquiry.
“He ’s in a hurry, all right, and does n’t care who knows it!” chuckled Uncle Andy. But his shaggy brows were knit in some perplexity.
“Who ’s he?” demanded the Babe.
“Well, now,” protested Uncle Andy, as much231