Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's
something about boats. "You got to stuff up all the cracks and holes with putty, Laddie."

   "All right; I'll do that," said the little fellow. "I like a boat. I'll give you a nice ride, Vi, a real long one, after I stuff up the holes."

   "No, I guess I don't want to ride in the boat any more," said the little girl, who was

   wading in the shallow water near shore, "This is more fun."

   "Well, I'll go in the boat myself," said Laddie, taking the box from his brother. "Got any putty?" he asked.

   "No. But maybe Jerry Simms has," answered Russ. "He was putting a new window glass in the barn yesterday, and he had putty then."

   Laddie ran off to beg some putty from the good-natured Jerry, and Vi, after paddling about a little longer in the brook, went back to the house with her mother and Norah.

   "I guess I'll make me a boat, too," decided Russ. "I can fix the box for my things to-morrow."

   He went to the barn with Laddie, and soon the two boys were building "boats" out of soap boxes, stuffing the cracks and holes with putty which Jerry gave them.

   Then they went down to the brook and floated the boxes. They did not sink so quickly as had the one with Vi in it, and Russ and Laddie had lots of fun until supper time.

   "I'm so tired I don't know what to do!"

   said Mrs. Bunker after supper. "I've packed two trunks, and I've helped rescue Mun Bun from a balloon and Vi from a sinking boat that wasn't a riddle after all." And the whole family, including the six little Bunkers, laughed as they thought of the queer things that had happened that day.

   "I'll tell you what we can do," said Daddy Bunker. "It's early, and there is a nice moving picture show in town. We'll all go down and see it. That will rest you, Mother."

   "Oh, yes! Let's go!" cried Rose.

   And so they did.

   The show was very nice, and there were some funny pictures. But Mun and Margy fell asleep before the show was over, and might have had to be carried home, only Jerry Simms came along in the automobile, which he had taken down to the shop to be repaired, and they rode to the house in that.


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