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Updated: June 19, 2025
He was too busy to talk, for he dropped the long-handled crab net, ran down to the pier and, jumping off himself, grabbed Mun Bun. Luckily the water was not deep hardly over Mun Bun's head and his father soon lifted the little fellow up out of danger. "There!" cried Daddy Bunker, laughing to show Mun Bun that there was no more danger. "Now the crab can't get you!"
Do you want to fall in again?" she cried, for the little fellow, still wet from his first bath, had nearly slipped off the edge of the pier once more, as he jumped back when the big crab again climbed to the top of the peach basket. "Come! I must take you up to the house and get dry clothes on you," said Mun Bun's mother to him. "Then we must begin to pack and get ready to go home.
"Where is the balloon, and what do you mean by pulling Mun Bun up in the basket that way?" she asked. "Mun Bun's in the balloon!" cried Russ. "We got him up, but we can't get him down," added Laddie. "The rope's stuck." And that is just what had happened. I think you can guess the kind of game Russ and Laddie had been playing when the accident happened?
"Oh, what has happened now?" exclaimed Mother Bunker as she looked around the depot to see if any of the children was in mischief. She noticed Rose and Russ, Laddie and Vi, and Margy. But Mun Bun was not in sight. "Did he fall out of a window?" asked Violet. "Mercy! I hope not," cried Mrs. Bunker. Then they all heard Mun Bun's voice saying, rather tearfully: "I I didn't mean to do it.
The attic was a great place to have jolly times. "And I don't believe there's any ghost up there, either," said Russ to Rose that night. "First I thought it might be him pulling Mun Bun's hair, but it wasn't. There's no ghost there." "I'm glad of it," said Rose. The weather became somewhat warmer again, and the six little Bunkers could play out in the snow.
"But you haven't any tennis rackets," observed Laddie. "And you can't get any on the train, lessen maybe the boy that had Mun Bun's popgun has some." "They don't play lawn tennis in winter," said Rose. "Hush, children, dear," begged Mrs. Bunker, for they were raising their voices as they talked. "We want to hear what the trainman says."
Whack had asked him what he had meant by such actions he had been almost too feeble to speak. "I couldn't think of a word," he said, "for, of course, the only thing I could say was that I had been looking at Bunty Bun's little droopy ears, and that would have made everybody laugh, and been much worse.
He had five cents that Jerry Simms gave him, Mun had, and he bought the balloon, and it had a long string to it, and it got caught up in a tree the balloon did and Mun Bun's got hold of the string and he won't come away, 'cause if he does he'll maybe break the string and the balloon and " Rose had to stop, she was so out of breath, but she had told all there was need to tell. Mrs.
No more was heard of the mutiny; nor were there afterwards, during Colonel Bun's command, any false alarms. This soldier belonged to Wayne's brigade; and some of the officers talked of having Colonel Burr arrested, and tried by a court-martial, for the act; but the threat was never carried into execution.
"Neither one," answered Laddie. "It isn't anybody." "Nobody pulling Mun Bun's hair?" asked Russ. "Then what's he hollering for?" "'Cause the spinning wheel's pulling it. Look! He's caught in one of the spinning wheels, and his leg is tangled in one of the string belts we left on, and he made the wheel go around himself." Russ dropped his candle-mould gun and ran over to his little brother.
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