Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue eBook

Laura Lee Hope
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 176 pages of information about Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue.

Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue eBook

Laura Lee Hope
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 176 pages of information about Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue.

CHAPTER

I. Aunt Lu arrives
II.  The lost ring
III.  Wango, the monkey
IV.  The empty house
V. Locked in
VI.  Adrift in A boat
VII.  Bunny goes fishing
VIII.  Sue falls in
IX.  The Rescue dog
X. A trolley ride
XI.  Lost
XII.  Found
XIII.  Sue and the goat
XIV.  A little party
XV.  George Watson’s trick
XVI.  The lemonade stand
XVII.  The moving pictures
XVIII.  Wango and the candy
XIX.  Bunny in A queer place
XX.  Splash runs away
XXI.  How sue found the eggs
XXII.  Aunt Lu is sad
XXIII.  An automobile ride
XXIV.  The Punch and Judy show
XXV.  The lobster claw

CHAPTER I

AUNT LU ARRIVES

“Bunny!  Bunny!  Wake up!  It’s time!”

“Wha—­what’s matter?” sleepily mumbled little Bunny Brown, making his words all run together, like molasses candy that has been out in the hot sun.  “What’s the matter, Sue?” Bunny asked, now that he had his eyes open.  He looked over the side of his small bed to see his sister standing beside it.  She had left her own little room and had run into her brother’s.

“What’s the matter, Sue?” Bunny asked again.

“Why, it’s time to get up, Bunny,” and Sue opened her brown eyes more widely, as she tried to get the “sleepy feeling” out of them.  “It’s time to get up!”

“Time to get up—­so early?  Oh, Sue!  It isn’t Christmas morning; is it, Sue?” and with that thought Bunny sat up suddenly in his bed.

“Christmas?  No, of course not!” said Sue, who, though only a little over five years of age (a year younger than was Bunny), sometimes acted as though older than the blue-eyed little chap, who was now as widely awake as his sister.

“Well, if it isn’t Christmas, and we don’t have to go to the kindergarten school, ’cause it’s closed, why do I have to get up so early?” Bunny wanted to know.

Bunny Brown was a great one for asking questions.  So was his sister Sue; but Sue would often wait a while and find things out for herself, instead of asking strangers what certain things meant.  Bunny always seemed in a hurry, and his mother used to say he could ask more questions than several grown folks could answer.

“Why do you want me to get up so early?” Bunny asked again.  He was wide awake now.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.