The Boys of Columbia High on the Gridiron : or, the Struggle for the Silver Cup by Graham B Forbes
page 64 of 212 (30%)
page 64 of 212 (30%)
|
seen him for ten minutes."
"So long as that?" answered Frank, with a smile; "but we must get busy, and learn if any one saw Bones go out." "I did!" spoke up a girl just then. "When was this?" asked Frank, turning on her quickly. "Not more than seven or eight minutes ago. I was standing in the doorway, and had to move aside for him. And he spoke to me, too," came the reply. "And what did he say?" continued the other. "Why, you know Bones has a dog?" "Yes, a bulldog named Kaiser." "He brought him along to the hall to-night," continued the girl. "That's a fact, Frank; for the ugly brute came near taking a hunk out of my leg when, by the merest chance in the world, I happened to rub up against him!" declared Tom Budd, the boy gymnast, who was constantly doing stunts, as though possessed of an insatiable desire to stand on his head, walk on his hands, or throw somersaults. "The dog was howling, oh, so mournfully," continued the girl. "I heard him, and it really got on my nerves. Well, I guess it acted the same way with Bones, for he said that he was going out and remonstrate with Kaiser." |
|