Part 3 (2/2)
”To hang your trousers on, sah,” was the enlightening answer
”There's hooks for the rest of your clothes just outside the berths”
”This looks pretty good to h the screenedof his berth
”Reo to sleep in the woodbox behind the stove where I lived last year in Eded about his berth trying to accusto car, so it was all new and strange to him
”Say, who sleeps upstairs?” he called to the porter
”The performers, sah--some of them This heah is the perforet up there? On a rope ladder?”
Phil shouted
”You ninny, this isn't a circus performance No; of course they don't cli a trapeze act”
”How, then?”
”The porter brings out a little step ladder, and it's just like walking upstairs, only it isn't”
”Huh!” grunted Teddy ”Do they have a net under theht?”
”A net? What for?”
”Case they fall out of bed”
”Put hied in settling themselves in their own quarters ”He's too new for this outfit”
Phil drew his co soTeddy to keep his ears and eyes open instead
Teddy gru
Inquiry for their trunks developed the fact that they would have to look for these in the baggage car; that no trunks were allowed in the sleepers
Everything about the car was new and fresh, the linen white and clean, while the wash roolass mirrors and upholstered seats, was quite thethat Teddy had ever seen
He called to Phil to come and look at it
”Yes, it is very handsoet to be very fond of our ho out now to see if our trunks have arrived”
Phil, after soe man of the train, from whom he learned that the trunks had arrived and were packed away in the baggage car