"And then, all of a sudden there was a growl and a sniff and a snuff, and, instead of a _man_ crawling out the other end of the log, there was a big, s.h.a.ggy _bear_!"

"Really?" asked Jan, her eyes big with surprise.

"Really and truly," said Uncle Frank.

"Oh! Oh!" gasped Teddy. "Weren"t you scared?"

"Well, I didn"t have time to be," answered Uncle Frank. "You see, I didn"t know it was a bear that had crawled into the log to sleep with me until he crawled out, and there wasn"t any use in getting frightened then.

"Out of the log scrambled the bear, and I guess he was as much surprised as I was to find he"d been sleeping in the same hollow-tree-hotel with a man. Away he ran! I could see him running down the hill when I crawled out of the log. Morning had come, the snow had stopped, and I could see to find my way back to the town I had left. But I was glad the bear got in the log with me, for he helped keep me warm. And, all the while, I thought it was another man with a fur coat on like mine.

"There, now that"s all the story, and you Curlytops must go to bed!

h.e.l.lo! Trouble"s asleep already!"

And so the little fellow was, in Uncle Frank"s arms.

"Oh, that was an awful nice story!" said Jan. "Thank you!"

"Yes, it was," added her brother. "I"m awful glad you came to see us,"

he went on. "I hope you"ll stay forever and tell us a story every night.

We like stories!"

"Well, one every night would be quite a lot," said his uncle. "But I"ll see about it. Anyhow, Aunt Jo and I are glad to be here--at least I am,"

and Aunt Jo nodded to show that she was also.

"Come, children!" called Mrs. Martin. "Uncle Frank was very good to tell you such a nice, funny story. But now you really must go to bed.

To-morrow is another day, and our company will be here then, and for some time longer."

"Did you know they were coming, Mother?" asked Jan, as she slid off her uncle"s knee.

"Well, I had an idea," was the smiling answer.

"Is this the surprise daddy was talking about?" Ted queried.

"Yes, this is it," answered his father. "Do you like it?"

"Um, yes!" laughed Ted, and Jan smiled to show that she was of the same mind.

When the Curlytops were in bed Aunt Jo and Uncle Frank told Mr. and Mrs.

Martin of their journey. For some time each one had been planning to come to visit their relatives, Aunt Jo from her home in Clayton and Uncle Frank from his Western ranch in Montana. Of course he had started some time before Aunt Jo did, as he had farther to travel. But they both reached the railroad junction, not far from Cresco, at the same time.

Then they came the rest of the way together, arriving in the midst of the storm.

"Well, we"re glad you"re here," said Mrs. Martin, "and the children are delighted. They knew we had some surprise for them, though we did not tell them you were expected. Now I expect they"ll hardly sleep, planning things to do in the snow and on the ice."

Indeed Ted and Jan did not go to sleep at once, but talked to each other from their rooms until Mrs. Martin sent Nora up to tell them if they did not get quiet they could not have fun with Aunt Jo and Uncle Frank.

"Oh, it"s snowing yet, Jan!" cried Ted, as he jumped out of bed the next morning. "It"s going to be a fine storm!"

"That"s good!" laughed Janet. "I wonder if Uncle Frank knows how to build a snow house."

"We"ll ask him. Come on! Let"s hurry down and see if he"s up yet."

Uncle Frank was up, and so was Aunt Jo and the whole family, except Trouble, for it was later than the Curlytops thought.

"Make a snow house? Of course I know how!" laughed Uncle Frank. "Many a one I"ve made out on the prairie when I"ve been caught in a blizzard."

"Why don"t you build a snow bungalow?" asked Aunt Jo.

"What"s a bungalow?" asked Jan.

"Well, it"s a sort of low, one-story house, with all the rooms on one floor," explained her aunt. "There is no upstairs to it."

"We did build a snow house, and it hadn"t any upstairs," said Ted. "But Nicknack, our goat, saw his picture in one of the gla.s.s-ice windows, and he b.u.t.ted a hole in the wall."

"Well, he"s a great goat!" laughed Uncle Frank. "But if you"re going to build another snow house, do as Aunt Jo says, and make it a low bungalow. Then it won"t be so easy to knock down. We build low houses out West so the wind storms won"t knock them down so easily, and you can pretend your goat is a wind storm."

"That"ll be fun!" laughed Ted.

"And we"ll make the bungalow with sides and a roof of wood," went on Aunt Jo, "and cover the boards with snow. Then it will look just like a snow house, but it will be stronger. I"ll help you. I"m going to build a bungalow myself this summer," she went on, "and I"d like to practise on a snow one first."

"Come on!" cried Ted. "We"ll build the snow bungalow!"

"Better get your breakfasts first," said his mother.

This did not take long, for Ted and Jan were anxious to be at their fun.

And a little later, with Aunt Jo and Uncle Frank to help, the snow bungalow was started.

CHAPTER XII

TROUBLE IS LOST

"What sort of house are you going to build, Uncle Frank?" asked Ted, as he and his sister watched their uncle and their aunt out in the big yard back of the house.

"Well, I call it a shack, though your aunt calls it a bungalow," was the answer. "Between us I guess we"ll manage to make something in which you Curlytops can have fun. I"ve made "em like this on the prairies--those are the big, wide plains, you know, out West, where there are very few trees, and not much lumber," he went on. "We have to use old boards, tree limbs, when we can find them, and anything else we come across.

"It used to be that way, though there is more lumber now. But I"ve often taken a few sticks and boards and made a sort of shelter and then covered it with snow. It will stand up almost all winter, if you don"t let a goat knock it down," he added with a laugh.

"We won"t let Nicknack knock this snow bungalow down," said Janet.

"No, we"ll coax him to be good," added Aunt Jo.

It had stopped snowing, though heavy clouds overhead seemed to hold more that might fall down later, and the Curlytops had not given up hope of being snowed in, though really they did not know all the trouble that might be caused by such a thing.

There were plenty of boards and sticks in the Martin barn and around it, and Aunt Jo and Uncle Frank had soon made a framework for the bungalow.

It was larger than the first snow house the children had made, and it was to have a wooden door to it so the cold could be kept out better than with a blanket.

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