<h2><SPAN name="IV" id="IV"></SPAN>IV<br/>THE WOODPILE</h2>
<p>Farmer Green always had a woodpile in
the back yard. Sometimes it was big.
Sometimes it was little. Sometimes it
was mostly made up of four-foot logs.
Sometimes the logs were all split and
sawed, ready to burn.</p>
<p>When Farmer Green and the hired
man had nothing more pressing to do they
set to work on the woodpile. It was surprising
how fast the big sticks grew into
firewood under their axes and saws.</p>
<p>One day they started sawing and splitting
when Johnnie Green and old dog
Spot were roaming through the woods.
And when Johnnie and Spot came back
home, just in time for dinner, they found
a great heap of firewood lying on the
ground where there had been nothing but
dirt when they started for the woods some
hours before.</p>
<p>Old dog Spot ran straight to the woodpile
and began sniffing and scratching and
whining.</p>
<p>If Johnnie Green hadn't been hungry
he would have paid more heed to Spot's
behavior. But the men had already gone
into the house. And Johnnie hurried
after them, leaving Spot to nose about the
woodpile as he pleased.</p>
<p>"Humph!" Spot growled. "Seems to
me Johnnie Green might stay here a while
and help me. I've been chasing woodchucks
and squirrels for him all the morning.
And I showed him a few birds,
too."</p>
<p>Spot never once left the woodpile while
Johnnie was eating his dinner. When
Johnnie and his father and the hired man
came out of the house later old Spot began
to yelp. He made frantic efforts to burrow
down beneath the pile of firewood,
stopping now and then to run up to his
young master and bark.</p>
<p>Now that he had had his dinner, Johnnie
Green was all ready for any sort of
fun.</p>
<p>"Spot smells some kind of game in the
woodpile!" Johnnie exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Perhaps he does," said his father.
"But I don't see how he's going to get
hold of it unless we move the woodpile.
And I don't believe we'll quit work to help
the old dog catch a chipmunk—or maybe
a rat."</p>
<p>"Come on!" Spot begged Johnnie, as
plainly as he could bark. "Move some of
this wood for me! There's something
under it that I want to get my teeth on."</p>
<p>"All right! All right!" Johnnie told
him. And to his father Johnnie said,
"Do you care if I throw some of the stove
wood over on the other side of the pile?"</p>
<p>"If you're going to move any wood—"
Farmer Green replied with a wink at the
hired man—"if you're going to move any
wood you might as well move it into the
woodshed and pile it up neatly."</p>
<p>When he heard that suggestion Johnnie
Green looked very glum. For a minute
or two he thought he wouldn't bother to
help old Spot find what he was looking
for. But Spot teased and teased. And
Johnnie couldn't help being curious to
know what it was that Spot was after.</p>
<p>"Maybe there's a muskrat here," he
said to himself. "If there is, I'll have
his skin to pay me for my trouble."</p>
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