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"Well, this is a sell, if ever there was one," murmured Tom, after looking into the various cages.
"I feel like going out to the butcher shop and buying something with which to feed that tiger," answered d.i.c.k. "He looks as if he hadn't had a square meal for a week."
"I'm going to give the monkeys some peanuts, that's the best I can do for them," put in Sam.
"If the ring show isn't better than this we are stuck sure," was Fred's comment.
"Hullo, there's that handbill man now," cried Tom, as Giles Frozzler came into the tent. "Won't he laugh when he sees how Sam and Fred have been stuck?"
Two of the circus employees were near by and from their talk Fred learned that the s...o...b..ll man was the proprietor of the circus.
"He certainly must be a one-horse fellow, or he wouldn't be throwing out his own s...o...b..lls," said Sam, on hearing this.
Frozzler wore a soft hat, and as he stood near the monkey cage Tom threw some peanuts into the crown of the head covering.
Instantly the monkeys crowded forward. One seized a peanut and another, to get the rest of the nuts, caught hold of the hat and pulled it into the cage.
"Hi! give me my hat!" roared Giles Frozzler, and put his hand into the cage to get the article in question.
The monkeys thought he had more peanuts and, being half starved, they grabbed his hand and pulled it this way and that, while one gave the man a severe nip.
"Oh! oh!" screamed the circus man. "Let go my hand, you pesky rascal!"
"Hullo, dat monkey am got a limb dat don't belong to no tree," sang out Aleck.
"You shut your mouth!" growled Frozzler "Hi! give me my hat!" he went on to the monkeys. But the animals paid no attention to him. They ate up the peanuts as fast as they could and then one began an investigation by pulling the band from the hat.
The head covering was a new one, purchased but two days before, and to see it being destroyed made Giles Frozzler frantic.
"Give me that, you rascals!" he roared, and began to poke at the monkeys with a sharp stick. But two of them caught the stick and, watching their chance, jerked it away from him.
"Hurrah! score one for the monks!" sang out Tom, and this made the crowd laugh.
"If you don't shut up I'll have you put out," came angrily from Giles Frozzler.
"Why don't you buy hats for the pool' dear monkeys?" went on Tom. "Then they wouldn't want yours."
"Oh, you keep quiet!"
"Those monkeys are about starved," said Sam. "Let us get up a subscription for their benefit. I don't believe they have had a square meal in a year."
"All of the animals look starved," said d.i.c.k, loudly.
"Dat am a fac'," added Aleck.
"This is a b.u.m show," cried a burly farmer boy standing close by. "Why, they have more animals nor this in a dime museum."
"Will you fellows shut up?" cried Giles Frozzler. "This show is all right."
"Of course you'd say so--you're the feller wot put out them bills," said the burly country boy.
"If you don't like the show you can get out."
"All right, Mr. Billman, give me back my quarter."
"Yes, give me my quarter and I'll go too," put in one of the shopkeepers of Oak Run.
"And so will I go," added a woman.
"Me, too," came in a voice from the rear of the crowd.
"Oh, you people make me tired," grumbled Giles Frozzler, and then, fearing that the people would really demand their money back he sneaked off, leaving the monkeys to continue the destruction of his head covering.
CHAPTER XV
ACTS NOT ON THE BILLS
It was now almost time for the ring performance to begin. d.i.c.k had purchased so-called reserved seats for the crowd, paying an additional ten cents for each seat, but when they reached the tent with the ring they found that the reserved seats were merely a creation of fancy on the part of the circus owner. Giles Frozzler had had imitation chair bottoms painted on the long boards used for seats and each of these b.u.t.tons was numbered.
"This is a snide, sure," said Sam.
"Well, there is one thing about it, they can't crowd you," answered d.i.c.k. And that was the one advantage the "reserved seats" afforded.
On the common seats the spectators were crowded just as closely as possible, until the seats threatened to break down with the weight put upon them.
There was a delay in opening the ring performance and for a very good reason. In the dressing tent Giles Frozzler was having great difficulty in persuading his leading lady rider and his clown to go on. Both wanted their pay for the past two weeks.
"I shall not ride a step until I am paid," said the equestrienne, with a determined toss of her head.
"And I don't do another flip-flap," put in the clown.
"Oh, come, don't talk like that," argued Giles Frozzler. "I'll pay you to-morrow, sure."
"No."
"I'll pay you to-night--just as soon as the performance is over. Just see what a crowd we have--the money is pouring in."
At this the lady bareback rider hesitated, and finally said she would go on. But the clown would not budge.
"I may be a clown in the ring, but not in the dressing room," said he, tartly. "I want my pay, or I don't go on."
"All right then, you can consider yourself discharged," cried Giles Frozzler.
He had started in the circus business as a clown and thought he could very well fill his employee's place for a day or two. In the meantime he would send to the city for another clown whom he knew was out of a situation.
At last the show began with what Frozzler termed on his handbills the Grand Opening Parade, consisting of the two elephants, two ladies on horseback, two circus hands on horseback, the little bear, who was tame, and several educated dogs. In the meantime the band, consisting of seven pieces, struck up a march which was more noise than harmony.