<h2><SPAN name="XX" id="XX"></SPAN>XX<br/>SPOT GOES TO TOWN</h2>
<p>The bays had to step lively that morning,
for Farmer Green's family didn't
want to be late for the circus parade in
the village.</p>
<p>There were many other teams on the
road, and almost nobody to be seen working
in the fields. It seemed to Johnnie
Green as if everybody had made up his
mind to go to the circus. The only thing
that troubled him was that his father
didn't drive fast enough to suit him.</p>
<p>Half way from the farm to the village
Farmer Green stopped the bays at a watering
trough. Johnnie jumped out of
the carryall to uncheck them, so they
could drink. And there, beneath the carriage,
was old dog Spot!</p>
<p>"Spot's followed us!" Johnnie Green
cried.</p>
<p>The old dog whisked out from between
the wheels and frolicked about Johnnie.
He didn't act at all guilty.</p>
<p>"Well, I never!" said Farmer Green.
"I certainly shut the barn door after I
shoved him inside."</p>
<p>Spot gave a few short, sharp barks, as
if to say, "Yes! But you forgot the window
that was open."</p>
<p>He had scrambled through the window
and overtaken the carryall before it
reached the gristmill.</p>
<p>Well, what could Farmer Green do?
They had come too far to send Spot back
home.</p>
<p>"We'll have to take him with us now,"
said Johnnie Green's father, "though
he'll be a nuisance because the village will
be crowded to-day."</p>
<p>As soon as the bays had had their drink
the party started on again. And old dog
Spot was content. He did not mind the
dust that the bays' heels kicked up as he
followed beneath the carriage. And the
faster they trotted, the more they pleased
him; for he was as anxious as Johnnie
Green to get to town and see the crowds
and the fun.</p>
<p>Once a surly dog ran out from a farmhouse
and tried to reach him. That made
Spot somewhat uneasy.</p>
<p>"I don't want to stop to fight this fellow,"
he thought. "If I do, I'll be left
behind."</p>
<p>Luckily Farmer Green cut at the
strange dog with his whip and bade him
be off.</p>
<p>Spot grinned as he sneaked away, yelping.</p>
<p>At last they entered the village. Main
Street was thronged with people. Carriages
and wagons of all sorts lined the
road on both sides—glistening buggies
with red ribbons tied in bows about the
whip stocks, old lumber wagons with
chairs set behind the driver's seat.</p>
<p>Johnnie Green had never seen such a
gathering—not even at the fair.</p>
<p>"The whole county's here!" he exclaimed.
"I hope we'll find a good place
to stop, where we can see the parade."</p>
<p>They did. Farmer Green backed the
bays into the last open space in the gutter.
And Johnnie Green was greatly relieved.</p>
<p>The crowd made such a roar, with its
talking and laughter, that old Spot cowered
down under the carryall and almost
wished he had stayed at home. The cries
of men selling peanuts and popcorn,
squawkers and toy balloons, mingled with
the shouts of small boys and the squeals
of their sisters.</p>
<p>"Goodness!" Spot murmured. "What
a racket! It hurts my ears."</p>
<p>A moment later he stuck his nose out
from beneath the carriage and burst into
a mournful howl.</p>
<p>"Keep still!" Farmer Green ordered.</p>
<p>Little did he know, then, what made
Spot cry like that. But in a minute or
two Johnnie Green heard the same thing
that Spot's sharp ears had caught first.
And Johnnie howled too.</p>
<p>"Hear the band!" he shouted. "Hurrah!
The parade's coming!"</p>
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