Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's
start off! All aboard! Toot! Toot!" Russ Bunker made
ose, his sister. "I was helping mother sweep, and I forgot to put th
eyes. They were dark, too, and, just now, were shining in eagerness as he looked at a queer collection of
merry tune as he moved a footstool over to one side. "That's one of the paddle-wheels," he told his smalle
eels always went around!" Vi, as Violet was usually called, loved to ask questions, and sometimes they were the ki
ool go around if it's a
s head on one side and stopping halfway thro
of asking riddles as Vi was of giving out questions. "What kind of a wheel do
now that he had the footstool fixed where he
and looking up with her gray eyes at her brother, whose locks
ose, who had come back from putting away the broom, and wa
nsisted Vi. "I like to gues
Laddie again, smiling at his brothers and sister
a make-believe wheel. It's the nearest like a steamboat paddle-wheel I could find,"
tle fellow. "That's a riddle! What
then we'll get in the make-believe steamboat Russ has made, a
oesn't go 'round
cried Rose. "The w
you put things in," went on Laddie. "Tha
t on the steamboat and we'll have a ride," and he began to whistle a little bit
little to have all those letters for herself. So she was just called Margy. "Where is steamboat?" she
" went on Russ. "But we're making believe this is a steamboat in here," and he pointed to the barrel, the boxes, the chairs and the footstool, w
poke up the sixth member of th
said Rose. "You may sit with me in
lly Munroe Ford Bunker, but it seemed such a big name for such a little chap, that it w
of the light, golden brown kind, with sugar on top. For Mun, as
family of six little Bunkers, and the leader in all the fun
suddenly called Vi. "Is there any
answered. "You couldn't make
who seemed started on her favo
minute, looking at
red. "'Bout ten miles deep. W
her on a steamboat where the water is deep lessen I have a bathing-suit for her. Wait a min
s or a blue one?" Vi turn
!" called Russ. "This steamboat won't ev
thes belonging to her dolls, and ran back to the place where the "steamboat
p in one of the chairs behind the big, empty flour barrel that M
Russ, stopping his whistling a
red Vi. "Don't you kn
to a horse. It's what you tell
d Vi, smoothing out her dress, and
dap' when you want that to start!" exclaim
Margy and Mun, who had climbed up together
to be the fireman, and, of course, they always rode away down inside the steamboat. "I know a nice
aid Rose. "You can tell us some other time. We're going to
cause a horse doesn't wear stocking
d!" cried
d!" repeat
. She was a jolly little girl and ha
k blue sea," went on Rose. "It's an aw
rrel. "Start the steam going. I'm going to steer the boat," and Russ took his place astride the front end of the barrel, and began twisti
, and he began to hiss like steam coming from a pipe. Then he bega
ed Russ from up on top. "'You're jiggling
the rough ocean and the steamboat's got to rock! Look at he
coming apart! Look! Oh, dear!
ed in on Laddie. Then the chairs, behind the barrel, where Rose, Vi and Margy and Mun were sitting, toppled over. In another instant the