Old Granny Fox
may think a
e positive
your tempe
least to
Grann
boy. Sammy wouldn't have believed it if any one had told him. No, Sir, he wouldn't. But he had seen it with his own eyes, and it tickled him almost to pieces to think that Old Grann
y Fox was. He had boasted of it so much that everybody was sick of hearing him. When he saw Reddy trotting along t
h a stupid
who think th
ld boast of
y myself q
sh of Reddy to be angry, and still more foolish to show that he was angry. Had he stopped a minute to think, he would have known that Sammy was saying such a mean, provoking thing jus
ny Fox is stup
my Jay promptly. "I
on all the Green Meadows. She is smarter than anybody else in
h to fool Farmer Brown
anny Fox?" Reddy forgot his anger in a sudden great fe
ht her napping in broad daylight," replied
believe a word of it! Nobody ever yet caught
ieve it or not; it's so, for
ou-" began
ee if it isn't true. He saw h
ly threw a snowball at her and let her run away without shoot
t and Sammy Jay told Reddy all about what they had seen, how Farmer Brown's boy had surprised Old Granny Fox and then allowed her to go unharmed. Reddy had to believe it. If Tomm
for being careless," muttered Reddy, with a sly grin. "Then I'll see
ing sorry that Old Granny Fox had had such a fright, he was planning how he