The Lost Princess of Oz

BY L. FRANK BAUM

THE LOST PRINCESS OF OZ
by L. FRANK BAUM

This Book is Dedicated
To My Granddaughter
OZMA BAUM

To My Readers


Some of my youthful readers are developing wonderful
imaginations. This pleases me. Imagination has brought
mankind through the Dark Ages to its present state of
civilization. Imagination led Columbus to discover
America. Imagination led Franklin to discover
electricity. Imagination has given us the steam engine,
the telephone, the talking-machine and the automobile,
for these things had to be dreamed of before they
became realities. So I believe that dreams -- day
dreams, you know, with your eyes wide open and your
brain-machinery whizzing -- are likely to lead to the
betterment of the world. The imaginative child will
become the imaginative man or woman most apt to create,
to invent, and therefore to foster civilization. A
prominent educator tells me that fairy tales are of
untold value in developing imagination in the young. I
believe it.

Among the letters I receive from children are many
containing suggestions of "what to write about in the
next Oz Book." Some of the ideas advanced are mighty
interesting, while others are too extravagant to be
seriously considered -- even in a fairy tale. Yet I
like them all, and I must admit that the main idea in
"The Lost Princess of Oz" was suggested to me by a
sweet little girl of eleven who called to see me and to
talk about the Land of Oz. Said she: "I s'pose if Ozma
ever got lost, or stolen, ev'rybody in Oz would be
dreadful sorry."

That was all, but quite enough foundation to build
this present story on. If you happen to like the story,
give credit to my little friend's clever hint.

L. Frank Baum
Royal Historian of Oz

Contents

1 A Terrible Loss
2 The Troubles of Glinda the Good
3 The Robbery of Cayke the Cookie Cook
4 Among the Winkies
5 Ozma's Friends Are Perplexed
6 The Search Party
7 The Merry-Go-Round Mountains
8 The Mysterious City
9 The High Coco-Lorum of Thi
10 Toto Loses Something
11 Button-Bright Loses Himself
12 The Czarover of Herku
13 The Truth Pond
14 The Unhappy Ferryman
15 The Big Lavender Bear
16 The Little Pink Bear
17 The Meeting
18 The Conference
19 Ugu the Shoemaker
20 More Surprises
21 Magic Against Magic
22 In the Wicker Castle
23 The Defiance of Ugu the Shoemaker
24 The Little Pink Bear Speaks Truly
25 Ozma of Oz
26 Dorothy Forgives

THE LOST PRINCESS of OZ

CHAPTER 1 A TERRIBLE LOSS


	There could be no doubt of the fact: Princess Ozma, the lovely
girl ruler of the Fairyland of Oz, was lost.  She had completely
disappeared.  Not one of her subjects--not even her closest friends--knew
what had become of her.  It was Dorothy who first discovered it.  Dorothy
was a little Kansas girl who had come to the Land of Oz to live and had
been given a delightful suite of rooms in Ozma's royal palace just
because Ozma loved Dorothy and wanted her to live as near her as possible
so the two girls might be much together.
	Dorothy was not the only girl from the outside world who had been
welcomed to Oz and lived in the royal palace.  There was another named
Betsy Bobbin, whose adventures had led her to seek refuge with Ozma, and
still another named Trot, who had been invited, together with her
faithful companion Cap'n Bill, to make her home in this wonderful
fairyland.  The three girls all had rooms in the palace and were great
chums; but Dorothy was the dearest friend of their gracious Ruler and
only she at any hour dared to seek Ozma in her royal apartments.  For
Dorothy had lived in Oz much longer than the other girls and had been
made a Princess of the realm.
	Betsy was a year older than Dorothy and Trot was a year younger,
yet the three were near enough of an age to become great playmates and to
have nice times together.  It was while the three were talking together
one morning in Dorothy's room that Betsy proposed they make a journey
into the Munchkin Country, which was one of the four great countries of
the Land of Oz ruled by Ozma.  "I've never been there yet," said Betsy
Bobbin, "but the Scarecrow once told me it is the prettiest country in
all Oz."
	"I'd like to go, too," added Trot.
	"All right," said Dorothy.  "I'll go and ask Ozma.  Perhaps she
will let us take the Sawhorse and the Red Wagon, which would be much
nicer for us than having to walk all the way.  This Land of Oz is a
pretty big place when you get to all the edges of it."
	So she jumped up and went along the halls of the splendid palace
until she came to the royal suite, which filled all the front of the
second floor.  In a little waiting room sat Ozma's maid, Jellia Jamb, who
was busily sewing.  "Is Ozma up yet?" inquired Dorothy.
	"I don't know, my dear," replied Jellia.  "I haven't heard a word
from her this morning.  She hasn't even called for her bath or her
breakfast, and it is far past her usual time for them."
	"That's strange!" exclaimed the little girl.
	"Yes," agreed the maid, "but of course no harm could have
happened to her.  No one can die or be killed in the Land of Oz, and Ozma
is herself a powerful fairy, and she has no enemies so far as we know.
Therefore I am not at all worried about her, though I must admit her
silence is unusual."
	"Perhaps," said Dorothy thoughtfully, "she has overslept.  Or she
may be reading or working out some new sort of magic to do good to her
people."
	"Any of these things may be true," replied Jellia Jamb, "so I
haven't dared disturb our royal mistress.  You, however, are a privileged
character, Princess, and I am sure that Ozma wouldn't mind at all if you
went in to see her."
	"Of course not," said Dorothy, and opening the door of the outer
chamber, she went in.  All was still here.  She walked into another room,
which was Ozma's boudoir, and then, pushing back a heavy drapery richly
broidered with threads of pure gold, the girl entered the sleeping-room of
the fairy Ruler of Oz.  The bed of ivory and gold was vacant; the room
was vacant; not a trace of Ozma was to be found. Very much surprised, yet
still with no fear that anything had happened to her friend, Dorothy
returned through the boudoir to the other rooms of the suite.  She went
into the music room, the library, the laboratory, the bath, the wardrobe,
and even into the great throne room, which adjoined the royal suite, but
in none of these places could she find Ozma.
	So she returned to the anteroom where she had left the maid,
Jellia Jamb, and said, "She isn't in her rooms now, so she must have gone
out."
	"I don't understand how she could do that without my seeing her,"
replied Jellia, "unless she made herself invisible."
	"She isn't there, anyhow," declared Dorothy.
	"Then let us go find her," suggested the maid, who appeared to be
a little uneasy.  So they went into the corridors, and there Dorothy
almost stumbled over a queer girl who was dancing lightly along the
passage.
	"Stop a minute, Scraps!" she called.  "Have you seen Ozma this
morning?"
	"Not I!" replied the queer girl, dancing nearer.  "I lost both my
eyes in a tussle with the Woozy last night, for the creature scraped 'em
both off my face with his square paws.  So I put the eyes in my pocket,
and this morning Button-Bright led me to Aunt Em, who sewed 'em on again.
So I've seen nothing at all today, except during the last five minutes.
So of course I haven't seen Ozma."
	"Very well, Scraps," said Dorothy, looking curiously at the eyes,
which were merely two round, black buttons sewed upon the girl's face.
	There were other things about Scraps that would have seemed
curious to one seeing her for the first time.  She was commonly called
"the Patchwork Girl" because her body and limbs were made from a
gay-colored patchwork quilt which had been cut into shape and stuffed
with cotton.  Her head was a round ball stuffed in the same manner and
fastened to her shoulders.  For hair, she had a mass of brown yarn, and
to make a nose for her a part of the cloth had been pulled out into the
shape of a knob and tied with a string to hold it in place. Her mouth
had been carefully made by cutting a slit in the proper place and lining
it with red silk, adding two rows of pearls for teeth and a bit of red
flannel for a tongue.
	In spite of this queer make-up, the Patchwork Girl was magically
alive and had proved herself not the least jolly and agreeable of the
many quaint characters who inhabit the astonishing Fairyland of Oz.
Indeed, Scraps was a general favorite, although she was rather flighty
and erratic and did and said many things that surprised her friends. She
was seldom still, but loved to dance, to turn handsprings and
somersaults, to climb trees and to indulge in many other active sports.
	"I'm going to search for Ozma," remarked Dorothy, "for she isn't
in her rooms, and I want to ask her a question."
	"I'll go with you," said Scraps, "for my eyes are brighter than
yours, and they can see farther."
	"I'm not sure of that," returned Dorothy.  "But come along, if
you like."
	Together they searched all through the great palace and even to
the farthest limits of the palace grounds, which were quite extensive,
but nowhere could they find a trace of Ozma.  When Dorothy returned to
where Betsy and Trot awaited her, the little girl's face was rather
solemn and troubled, for never before had Ozma gone away without telling
her friends where she was going, or without an escort that befitted her
royal state.  She was gone, however, and none had seen her go.  Dorothy
had met and questioned the Scarecrow, Tik-Tok, the Shaggy Man,
Button-Bright, Cap'n Bill, and even the wise and powerful Wizard of Oz,
but not one of them had seen Ozma since she parted with her friends the
evening before and had gone to her own rooms.
	"She didn't say anything las' night about going anywhere,"
observed little Trot.
	"No, and that's the strange part of it," replied Dorothy.
"Usually Ozma lets us know of everything she does."
	"Why not look in the Magic Picture?" suggested Betsy Bobbin.
"That will tell us where she is in just one second."
	"Of course!" cried Dorothy.  "Why didn't I think of that before?"
And at once the three girls hurried away to Ozma's boudoir, where the
Magic Picture always hung.  This wonderful Magic Picture was one of the
royal Ozma's greatest treasures.  There was a large gold frame in the
center of which was a bluish-gray canvas on which various scenes
constantly appeared and disappeared.  If one who stood before it wished
to see what any person anywhere in the world was doing, it was only
necessary to make the wish and the scene in the Magic Picture would shift
to the scene where that person was and show exactly what he or she was
then engaged in doing.  So the girls knew it would be easy for them to
wish to see Ozma, and from the picture they could quickly learn where she
was.
	Dorothy advanced to the place where the picture was usually
protected by thick satin curtains and pulled the draperies aside.  Then
she stared in amazement, while her two friends uttered exclamations of
disappointment.  The Magic Picture was gone.  Only a blank space on the
wall behind the curtains showed where it had formerly hung.

CHAPTER 2 THE TROUBLES OF GLINDA THE GOOD


	That same morning there was great excitement in the castle of the
powerful Sorceress of Oz, Glinda the Good.  This castle, situated in the
Quadling Country, far south of the Emerald City where Ozma ruled, was a
splendid structure of exquisite marbles and silver grilles. Here the
Sorceress lived, surrounded by a bevy of the most beautiful maidens of
Oz, gathered from all the four countries of that fairyland as well as
from the magnificent Emerald City itself, which stood in the place where
the four countries cornered.  It was considered a great honor to be
allowed to serve the good Sorceress, whose arts of magic were used only
to benefit the Oz people.  Glinda was Ozma's most valued servant, for her
knowledge of sorcery was wonderful, and she could accomplish almost
anything that her mistress, the lovely girl Ruler of Oz, wished her to.
	Of all the magical things which surrounded Glinda in her castle,
there was none more marvelous than her Great Book of Records.  On the
pages of this Record Book were constantly being inscribed, day by day and
hour by hour, all the important events that happened anywhere in the
known world, and they were inscribed in the book at exactly the moment
the events happened.  Every adventure in the Land of Oz and in the big
outside world, and even in places that you and I have never heard of,
were recorded accurately in the Great Book, which never made a mistake
and stated only the exact truth.  For that reason, nothing could be
concealed from Glinda the Good, who had only to look at the pages of the
Great Book of Records to know everything that had taken place. That was
one reason she was such a great Sorceress, for the records made her wiser
than any other living person.
	This wonderful book was placed upon a big gold table that stood in
the middle of Glinda's drawing room.  The legs of the table, which were
incrusted with precious gems, were firmly fastened to the tiled floor,
and the book itself was chained to the table and locked with six stout
golden padlocks, the keys to which Glinda carried on a chain that was
secured around her own neck.  The pages of the Great Book were larger in
size than those of an American newspaper, and although they were
exceedingly thin, there were so many of them that they made an enormous,
bulky volume.  With its gold cover and gold clasps, the book was so heavy
that three men could scarcely have lifted it.  Yet this morning when
Glinda entered her drawing room after breakfast, the good Sorceress was
amazed to discover that her Great Book of Records had mysteriously
disappeared.  Advancing to the table, she found the chains had been cut
with some sharp instrument, and this must have been done while all in the
castle slept.  Glinda was shocked and grieved.  Who could have done this
wicked, bold thing?  And who could wish to deprive her of her Great Book
of Records?
	The Sorceress was thoughtful for a time, considering the
consequences of her loss.  Then she went to her Room of Magic to prepare
a charm that would tell her who had stolen the Record Book.  But when she
unlocked her cupboard and threw open the doors, all of her magical
instruments and rare chemical compounds had been removed from the
shelves.  The Sorceress has now both angry and alarmed.  She sat down in
a chair and tried to think how this extraordinary robbery could have
taken place.  It was evident that the thief was some person of very great
power, or the theft could not have been accomplished without her
knowledge.  But who, in all the Land of Oz, was powerful and skillful
enough to do this awful thing?  And who, having the power, could also have 
an object in defying the wisest and most talented Sorceress the world has
ever known?
	Glinda thought over the perplexing matter for a full hour, at the
end of which time she was still puzzled how to explain it.  But although
her instruments and chemicals were gone, her KNOWLEDGE of magic had not
been stolen, by any means, since no thief, however skillful, can rob one
of knowledge, and that is why knowledge is the best and safest treasure
to acquire.  Glinda believed that when she had time to gather more
magical herbs and elixirs and to manufacture more magical instruments,
she would be able to discover who the robber was and what had become of
her precious Book of Records.
	"Whoever has done this," she said to her maidens, "is a very
foolish person, for in time he is sure to be found out and will then be
severely punished."
	She now made a list of the things she needed and dispatched
messengers to every part of Oz with instructions to obtain them and bring
them to her as soon as possible.  And one of her messengers met the
little Wizard of Oz, who was seated on the back of the famous live
Sawhorse and was clinging to its neck with both his arms, for the
Sawhorse was speeding to Glinda's castle with the velocity of the wind,
bearing the news that Royal Ozma, Ruler of all the great Land of Oz, had
suddenly disappeared and no one in the Emerald City knew what had become
of her.
	"Also," said the Wizard as he stood before the astonished
Sorceress, "Ozma's Magic Picture is gone, so we cannot consult it to
discover where she is.  So I came to you for assistance as soon as we
realized our loss.  Let us look in the Great Book of Records."
	"Alas," returned the Sorceress sorrowfully, "we cannot do that,
for the Great Book of Records has also disappeared!"

CHAPTER 3 ROBBERY OF CAYKE THE COOKIE COOK


	One more important theft was reported in the Land of Oz that
eventful morning, but it took place so far from either the Emerald City
or the castle of Glinda the Good that none of those persons we have
mentioned learned of the robbery until long afterward.
	In the far southwestern corner of the Winkie Country is a broad
tableland that can be reached only by climbing a steep hill, whichever
side one approaches it.  On the hillside surrounding this tableland are
no paths at all, but there are quantities of bramble bushes with sharp
prickers on them, which prevent any of the Oz people who live down below
from climbing up to see what is on top.  But on top live the Yips, and
although the space they occupy is not great in extent, the wee country is
all their own.  The Yips had never--up to the time this story
begins--left their broad tableland to go down into the Land of Oz, nor
had the Oz people ever climbed up to the country of the Yips.
	Living all alone as they did, the Yips had queer ways and notions
of their own and did not resemble any other people of the Land of Oz.
Their houses were scattered all over the flat surface; not like a city,
grouped together, but set wherever their owners' fancy dictated, with
fields here, trees there, and odd little paths connecting the houses one
with another.  It was here, on the morning when Ozma so strangely
disappeared from the Emerald City, that Cayke the Cookie Cook discovered
that her diamond-studded gold dishpan had been stolen, and she raised
such a hue and cry over her loss and wailed and shrieked so loudly that
many of the Yips gathered around her house to inquire what was the
matter.
	It was a serious thing in any part of the Land of Oz to accuse
one of stealing, so when the Yips heard Cayke the Cookie Cook declare
that her jeweled dishpan had been stolen, they were both humiliated and
disturbed and forced Cayke to go with them to the Frogman to see what
could be done about it.  I do not suppose you have ever before heard of
the Frogman, for like all other dwellers on that tableland, he had never
been away from it, nor had anyone come up there to see him.  The Frogman
was in truth descended from the common frogs of Oz, and when he was first
born he lived in a pool in the Winkie Country and was much like any other
frog.  Being of an adventurous nature, however, he soon hopped out of his
pool and began to travel, when a big bird came along and seized him in
its beak and started to fly away with him to its nest.  When high in the
air, the frog wriggled so frantically that he got loose and fell down,
down, down into a small hidden pool on the tableland of the Yips.  Now
that pool, it seems, was unknown to the Yips because it was surrounded by
thick bushes and was not near to any dwelling, and it proved to be an
enchanted pool, for the frog grew very fast and very big, feeding on the
magic skosh which is found nowhere else on earth except in that one pool.
And the skosh not only made the frog very big so that when he stood on
his hind legs he was as tall as any Yip in the country, but it made him
unusually intelligent, so that he soon knew more than the Yips did and
was able to reason and to argue very well indeed.
	No one could expect a frog with these talents to remain in a
hidden pool, so he finally got out of it and mingled with the people of
the tableland, who were amazed at his appearance and greatly impressed by
his learning.  They had never seen a frog before, and the frog had never
seen a Yip before, but as there were plenty of Yips and only one frog,
the frog became the most important.  He did not hop any more, but stood
upright on his hind legs and dressed himself in fine clothes and sat in
chairs and did all the things that people do, so he soon came to be
called the Frogman, and that is the only name he has ever had.  After
some years had passed, the people came to regard the Frogman as their
adviser in all matters that puzzled them.  They brought all their
difficulties to him, and when he did not know anything, he pretended to
know it, which seemed to answer just as well.  Indeed, the Yips thought
the Frogman was much wiser than he really was, and he allowed them to
think so, being very proud of his position of authority.
	There was another pool on the tableland which was not enchanted
but contained good, clear water and was located close to the dwellings.
Here the people built the Frogman a house of his own, close to the edge
of the pool so that he could take a bath or a swim whenever he wished.
He usually swam in the pool in the early morning before anyone else was
up, and during the day he dressed himself in his beautiful clothes and
sat in his house and received the visits of all the Yips who came to him
to ask his advice.  The Frogman's usual costume consisted of
knee-breeches made of yellow satin plush, with trimmings of gold braid
and jeweled knee-buckles; a white satin vest with silver buttons in which
were set solitaire rubies; a swallow-tailed coat of bright yellow; green
stockings and red leather shoes turned up at the toes and having diamond
buckles.  He wore, when he walked out, a purple silk hat and carried a
gold-headed cane.  Over his eyes he wore great spectacles with gold rims,
not because his eyes were bad, but because the spectacles made him look
wise, and so distinguished and gorgeous was his appearance that all the
Yips were very proud of him.
	There was no King or Queen in the Yip Country, so the simple
inhabitants naturally came to look upon the Frogman as their leader as
well as their counselor in all times of emergency.  In his heart the big
frog knew he was no wiser than the Yips, but for a frog to know as much
as a person was quite remarkable, and the Frogman was shrewd enough to
make the people believe he was far more wise than he really was.  They
never suspected he was a humbug, but listened to his words with great
respect and did just what he advised them to do.
	Now when Cayke the Cookie Cook raised such an outcry over the
theft of her diamond-studded dishpan, the first thought of the people was
to take her to the Frogman and inform him of the loss, thinking that of
course he would tell her where to find it.  He listened to the story with
his big eyes wide open behind his spectacles, and said in his deep,
croaking voice, "If the dishpan is stolen, somebody must have taken it."
	"But who?" asked Cayke anxiously.  "Who is the thief?"
	"The one who took the dishpan, of course," replied the Frogman,
and hearing this all the Yips nodded their heads gravely and said to one
another, "It is absolutely true!"
	"But I want my dishpan!" cried Cayke.
	"No one can blame you for that wish," remarked the Frogman.
	"Then tell me where I may find it," she urged.
	The look the Frogman gave her was a very wise look, and he rose
from his chair and strutted up and down the room with his hands under his
coattails in a very pompous and imposing manner.  This was the first time
so difficult a matter had been brought to him, and he wanted time to
think.  It would never do to let them suspect his ignorance, and so he
thought very, very hard how best to answer the woman without betraying
himself.  "I beg to inform you," said he, "that nothing in the Yip
Country has ever been stolen before."
	"We know that already," answered Cayke the Cookie Cook
impatiently.
	"Therefore," continued the Frogman, "this theft becomes a very
important matter."
	"Well, where is my dishpan?" demanded the woman.
	"It is lost, but it must be found.  Unfortunately, we have no
policemen or detectives to unravel the mystery, so we must employ other
means to regain the lost article.  Cayke must first write a Proclamation
and tack it to the door of her house, and the Proclamation must read that
whoever stole the jeweled dishpan must return it at once."
	"But suppose no one returns it," suggested Cayke.
	"Then," said the Frogman, "that very fact will be proof that no
one has stolen it."
	Cayke was not satisfied, but the other Yips seemed to approve the
plan highly.  They all advised her to do as the Frogman had told her to,
so she posted the sign on her door and waited patiently for someone to
return the dishpan--which no one ever did.  Again she went, accompanied
by a group of her neighbors, to the Frogman, who by this time had given
the matter considerable thought.  Said he to Cayke, "I am now convinced
that no Yip has taken your dishpan, and since it is gone from the Yip
Country, I suspect that some stranger came from the world down below us
in the darkness of night when all of us were asleep and took away your
treasure.  There can be no other explanation of its disappearance.  So if
you wish to recover that golden, diamond-studded dishpan, you must go
into the lower world after it."
	This was indeed a startling proposition.  Cayke and her friends
went to the edge of the flat tableland and looked down the steep hillside
to the plains below.  It was so far to the bottom of the hill that
nothing there could be seen very distinctly, and it seemed to the Yips
very venturesome, if not dangerous, to go so far from home into an
unknown land.  However, Cayke wanted her dishpan very badly, so she
turned to her friends and asked, "Who will go with me?"
	No one answered the question, but after a period of silence one
of the Yips said, "We know what is here on the top of this flat hill, and
it seems to us a very pleasant place, but what is down below we do not
know.  The chances are it is not so pleasant, so we had best stay where
we are."
	"It may be a far better country than this is," suggested the
Cookie Cook.
	"Maybe, maybe," responded another Yip, "but why take chances?
Contentment with one's lot is true wisdom.  Perhaps in some other country
there are better cookies than you cook, but as we have always eaten your
cookies and liked them--except when they are burned on the bottom--we do
not long for any better ones."
	Cayke might have agreed to this argument had she not been so
anxious to find her precious dishpan, but now she exclaimed impatiently,
"You are cowards, all of you!  If none of you are willing to explore with
me the great world beyond this small hill, I will surely go alone."
	"That is a wise resolve," declared the Yips, much relieved.  "It
is your dishpan that is lost, not ours.  And if you are willing to risk
your life and liberty to regain it, no one can deny you the privilege."
	While they were thus conversing, the Frogman joined them and
looked down at the plain with his big eyes and seemed unusually
thoughtful. In fact, the Frogman was thinking that he'd like to see more
of the world.  Here in the Yip Country he had become the most important
creature of them all, and his importance was getting to be a little tame.
It would be nice to have other people defer to him and ask his advice,
and there seemed no reason so far as he could see why his fame should not
spread throughout all Oz.  He knew nothing of the rest of the world, but
it was reasonable to believe that there were more people beyond the
mountain where he now lived than there were Yips, and if he went among
them he could surprise them with his display of wisdom and make them bow
down to him as the Yips did.  In other words, the Frogman was ambitious
to become still greater than he was, which was impossible if he always
remained upon this mountain.  He wanted others to see his gorgeous
clothes and listen to his solemn sayings, and here was an excuse for him
to get away from the Yip Country.  So he said to Cayke the Cookie Cook,
"I will go with you, my good woman," which greatly pleased Cayke because
she felt the Frogman could be of much assistance to her in her search.
	But now, since the mighty Frogman had decided to undertake the
journey, several of the Yips who were young and daring at once made up
their minds to go along, so the next morning after breakfast the Frogman
and Cayke the Cookie Cook and nine of the Yips started to slide down the
side of the mountain.  The bramble bushes and cactus plants were very
prickly and uncomfortable to the touch, so the Frogman quickly commanded
the Yips to go first and break a path, so that when he followed them he
would not tear his splendid clothes. Cayke, too, was wearing her best
dress and was likewise afraid of the thorns and prickers, so she kept
behind the Frogman.
	They made rather slow progress and night overtook them before
they were halfway down the mountainside, so they found a cave in which
they sought shelter until morning.  Cayke had brought along a basket full
of her famous cookies, so they all had plenty to eat.  On the second day
the Yips began to wish they had not embarked on this adventure. They
grumbled a good deal at having to cut away the thorns to make the path
for the Frogman and the Cookie Cook, for their own clothing suffered many
tears, while Cayke and the Frogman traveled safely and in comfort.
	"If it is true that anyone came to our country to steal your
diamond dishpan," said one of the Yips to Cayke, "it must have been a
bird, for no person in the form of a man, woman or child could have
climbed through these bushes and back again."
	"And, allowing he could have done so," said another Yip, "the
diamond-studded gold dishpan would not have repaid him for his troubles
and his tribulations."
	"For my part," remarked a third Yip, "I would rather go back home
and dig and polish some more diamonds and mine some more gold and make
you another dishpan than be scratched from head to heel by these dreadful
bushes.  Even now, if my mother saw me, she would not know I am her son."
	Cayke paid no heed to these mutterings, nor did the Frogman.
Although their journey was slow, it was being made easy for them by the
Yips, so they had nothing to complain of and no desire to turn back.
Quite near to the bottom of the great hill they came upon a great gulf,
the sides of which were as smooth as glass.  The gulf extended a long
distance--as far as they could see in either direction--and although it
was not very wide, it was far too wide for the Yips to leap across it.
And should they fall into it, it was likely they might never get out
again.  "Here our journey ends," said the Yips.  "We must go back again."
	Cayke the Cookie Cook began to weep.  "I shall never find my
pretty dishpan again, and my heart will be broken!" she sobbed.
	The Frogman went to the edge of the gulf and with his eye
carefully measured the distance to the other side.  "Being a frog," said
he, "I can leap, as all frogs do, and being so big and strong, I am sure
I can leap across this gulf with ease.  But the rest of you, not being
frogs, must return the way you came."
	"We will do that with pleasure," cried the Yips, and at once they
turned and began to climb up the steep mountain, feeling they had had
quite enough of this unsatisfactory adventure.  Cayke the Cookie Cook did
not go with them, however.  She sat on a rock and wept and wailed and was
very miserable.
	"Well," said the Frogman to her, "I will now bid you goodbye.  If
I find your diamond-decorated gold dishpan, I will promise to see that
it is safely returned to you."
	"But I prefer to find it myself!" she said.  "See here, Frogman,
why can't you carry me across the gulf when you leap it?  You are big and
strong, while I am small and thin."
	The Frogman gravely thought over this suggestion.  It was a fact
that Cayke the Cookie Cook was not a heavy person.  Perhaps he could leap
the gulf with her on his back.  "If you are willing to risk a fall," said
he, "I will make the attempt."
	At once she sprang up and grabbed him around his neck with both
her arms.  That is, she grabbed him where his neck ought to be, for the
Frogman had no neck at all.  Then he squatted down, as frogs do when they
leap, and with his powerful rear legs he made a tremendous jump. Over the
gulf they sailed, with the Cookie Cook on his back, and he had leaped so
hard--to make sure of not falling in--that he sailed over a lot of
bramble bushes that grew on the other side and landed in a clear space
which was so far beyond the gulf that when they looked back they could
not see it at all.  Cayke now got off the Frogman's back and he stood
erect again and carefully brushed the dust from his velvet coat and
rearranged his white satin necktie.
	"I had no idea I could leap so far," he said wonderingly.
"Leaping is one more accomplishment I can now add to the long list of
deeds I am able to perform."
	"You are certainly fine at leap-frog," said the Cookie Cook
admiringly, "but, as you say, you are wonderful in many ways.  If we meet
with any people down here, I am sure they will consider you the greatest
and grandest of all living creatures."
	"Yes," he replied, "I shall probably astonish strangers, because
they have never before had the pleasure of seeing me.  Also, they will
marvel at my great learning.  Every time I open my mouth, Cayke, I am
liable to say something important."
	"That is true," she agreed, "and it is fortunate your mouth is so
very wide and opens so far, for otherwise all the wisdom might not be
able to get out of it."
	"Perhaps nature made it wide for that very reason," said the
Frogman. "But come, let us now go on, for it is getting late and we must
find some sort of shelter before night overtakes us."

CHAPTER 4 AMONG THE WINKIES


	The settled parts of the Winkie Country are full of happy and
contented people who are ruled by a tin Emperor named Nick Chopper, who
in turn is a subject of the beautiful girl Ruler, Ozma of Oz.  But not
all of the Winkie Country is fully settled.  At the east, which part lies
nearest the Emerald City, there are beautiful farmhouses and roads, but
as you travel west, you first come to a branch of the Winkie River,
beyond which there is a rough country where few people live, and some of
these are quite unknown to the rest of the world. After passing through
this rude section of territory, which no one ever visits, you would come
to still another branch of the Winkie River, after crossing which you
would find another well-settled part of the Winkie Country extending
westward quite to the Deadly Desert that surrounds all the Land of Oz and
separates that favored fairyland from the more common outside world.  The
Winkies who live in this west section have many tin mines, from which
metal they make a great deal of rich jewelry and other articles, all of
which are highly esteemed in the Land of Oz because tin is so bright and
pretty and there is not so much of it as there is of gold and silver.
	Not all the Winkies are miners, however, for some till the fields
and grow grains for food, and it was at one of these far-west Winkie
farms that the Frogman and Cayke the Cookie Cook first arrived after they
had descended from the mountain of the Yips.  "Goodness me!" cried
Nellary the Winkie wife when she saw the strange couple approaching her
house.  "I have seen many queer creatures in the Land of Oz, but none
more queer than this giant frog who dresses like a man and walks on his
hind legs.  Come here, Wiljon," she called to her husband, who was eating
his breakfast, "and take a look at this astonishing freak."
	Wiljon the Winkie came to the door and looked out.  He was still
standing in the doorway when the Frogman approached and said with a
haughty croak, "Tell me, my good man, have you seen a diamond-studded
gold dishpan?"
	"No, nor have I seen a copper-plated lobster," replied Wiljon in
an equally haughty tone.
	The Frogman stared at him and said, "Do not be insolent, fellow!"
	"No," added Cayke the Cookie Cook hastily, "you must be very
polite to the great Frogman, for he is the wisest creature in all the
world."
	"Who says that?" inquired Wiljon.
	"He says so himself," replied Cayke, and the Frogman nodded and
strutted up and down, twirling his gold-headed cane very gracefully.
	"Does the Scarecrow admit that this overgrown frog is the wisest
creature in the world?" asked Wiljon.
	"I do not know who the Scarecrow is," answered Cayke the Cookie
Cook.
	"Well, he lives at the Emerald City, and he is supposed to have
the finest brains in all Oz.  The Wizard gave them to him, you know."
	"Mine grew in my head," said the Frogman pompously, "so I think
they must be better than any wizard brains.  I am so wise that sometimes
my wisdom makes my head ache.  I know so much that often I have to forget
part of it, since no one creature, however great, is able to contain so
much knowledge."
	"It must be dreadful to be stuffed full of wisdom," remarked
Wiljon reflectively and eyeing the Frogman with a doubtful look.  "It is
my good fortune to know very little."
	"I hope, however, you know where my jeweled dishpan is," said the
Cookie Cook anxiously.
	"I do not know even that," returned the Winkie.  "We have trouble
enough in keeping track of our own dishpans without meddling with the
dishpans of strangers."
	Finding him so ignorant, the Frogman proposed that they walk on
and seek Cayke's dishpan elsewhere.  Wiljon the Winkie did not seem
greatly impressed by the great Frogman, which seemed to that personage as
strange as it was disappointing.  But others in this unknown land might
prove more respectful.
	"I'd like to meet that Wizard of Oz," remarked Cayke as they
walked along a path.  "If he could give a Scarecrow brains, he might be
able to find my dishpan."
	"Poof!" grunted the Frogman scornfully.  "I am greater than any
wizard.  Depend on ME.  If your dishpan is anywhere in the world, I am
sure to find it."
	"If you do not, my heart will be broken," declared the Cookie
Cook in a sorrowful voice.
	For a while the Frogman walked on in silence.  Then he asked,
"Why do you attach so much importance to a dishpan?"
	"It is the greatest treasure I possess," replied the woman.  "It
belonged to my mother and to all my grandmothers since the beginning of
time.  It is, I believe, the very oldest thing in all the Yip Country--or
was while it was there--and," she added, dropping her voice to an awed
whisper, "it has magic powers!"
	"In what way?" inquired the Frogman, seeming to be surprised at
this statement.
	"Whoever has owned that dishpan has been a good cook, for one
thing. No one else is able to make such good cookies as I have cooked, as
you and all the Yips know.  Yet the very morning after my dishpan was
stolen, I tried to make a batch of cookies and they burned up in the
oven!  I made another batch that proved too tough to eat, and I was so
ashamed of them that I buried them in the ground.  Even the third batch
of cookies, which I brought with me in my basket, were pretty poor stuff
and no better than any woman could make who does not own my
diamond-studded gold dishpan.  In fact, my good Frogman, Cayke the Cookie
Cook will never be able to cook good cookies again until her magic
dishpan is restored to her."
	"In that case," said the Frogman with a sigh, "I suppose we must
manage to find it."

CHAPTER 5 OZMA'S FRIENDS ARE PERPLEXED


	"Really," said Dorothy, looking solemn, "this is very s'prising.
We can't even find a shadow of Ozma anywhere in the Em'rald City, and
wherever she's gone, she's taken her Magic Picture with her."  She was
standing in the courtyard of the palace with Betsy and Trot, while
Scraps, the Patchwork Girl, danced around the group, her hair flying in
the wind.
	"P'raps," said Scraps, still dancing, "someone has stolen Ozma."
	"Oh, they'd never dare do that!" exclaimed tiny Trot.
	"And stolen the Magic Picture, too, so the thing can't tell where
she is," added the Patchwork Girl.
	"That's nonsense," said Dorothy.  "Why, ev'ryone loves Ozma.
There isn't a person in the Land of Oz who would steal a single thing she
owns."
	"Huh!" replied the Patchwork Girl.  "You don't know ev'ry person
in the Land of Oz."
	"Why don't I?"
	"It's a big country," said Scraps.  "There are cracks and corners
in it that even Ozma doesn't know of."
	"The Patchwork Girl's just daffy," declared Betsy.
	"No, she's right about that," replied Dorothy thoughtfully.
"There are lots of queer people in this fairyland who never come near
Ozma or the Em'rald City.  I've seen some of 'em myself, girls.  But I
haven't seen all, of course, and there MIGHT be some wicked persons left
in Oz yet, though I think the wicked witches have all been destroyed."
	Just then the Wooden Sawhorse dashed into the courtyard with the
Wizard of Oz on his back.  "Have you found Ozma?" cried the Wizard when
the Sawhorse stopped beside them.
	"Not yet," said Dorothy.  "Doesn't Glinda the Good know where she
is?"
	"No.  Glinda's Book of Records and all her magic instruments are
gone. Someone must have stolen them."
	"Goodness me!" exclaimed Dorothy in alarm.  "This is the biggest
steal I ever heard of.  Who do you think did it, Wizard?"
	"I've no idea," he answered.  "But I have come to get my own bag
of magic tools and carry them to Glinda.  She is so much more powerful
than I that she may be able to discover the truth by means of my magic
quicker and better than I could myself."
	"Hurry, then," said Dorothy, "for we've all gotten terr'bly worried."
	The Wizard rushed away to his rooms but presently came back with
a long, sad face.  "It's gone!" he said.
	"What's gone?" asked Scraps.
	"My black bag of magic tools.  Someone must have stolen it!"
	They looked at one another in amazement.  "This thing is getting
desperate," continued the Wizard.  "All the magic that belongs to Ozma or
to Glinda or to me has been stolen."
	"Do you suppose Ozma could have taken them, herself, for some
purpose?" asked Betsy.
	"No indeed," declared the Wizard.  "I suspect some enemy has
stolen Ozma and for fear we would follow and recapture her has taken all
our magic away from us."
	"How dreadful!" cried Dorothy.  "The idea of anyone wanting to
injure our dear Ozma!  Can't we do ANYthing to find her, Wizard?"
	"I'll ask Glinda.  I must go straight back to her and tell her
that my magic tools have also disappeared.  The good Sorceress will be
greatly shocked, I know."
	With this, he jumped upon the back of the Sawhorse again, and the
quaint steed, which never tired, dashed away at full speed.  The three
girls were very much disturbed in mind.  Even the Patchwork Girl seemed
to realize that a great calamity had overtaken them all.  Ozma was a
fairy of considerable power, and all the creatures in Oz as well as the
three mortal girls from the outside world looked upon her as their
protector and friend.  The idea of their beautiful girl Ruler's being
overpowered by an enemy and dragged from her splendid palace a captive
was too astonishing for them to comprehend at first.  Yet what other
explanation of the mystery could there be?
	"Ozma wouldn't go away willingly, without letting us know about
it," asserted Dorothy, "and she wouldn't steal Glinda's Great Book of
Records or the Wizard's magic, 'cause she could get them any time just by
asking for 'em.  I'm sure some wicked person has done all this."
	"Someone in the Land of Oz?" asked Trot.
	"Of course.  No one could get across the Deadly Desert, you know,
and no one but an Oz person could know about the Magic Picture and the
Book of Records and the Wizard's magic or where they were kept, and so be
able to steal the whole outfit before we could stop 'em.  It MUST be
someone who lives in the Land of Oz."
	"But who--who--who?" asked Scraps.  "That's the question.  Who?"
	"If we knew," replied Dorothy severely, "we wouldn't be standing
here doing nothing."
	Just then two boys entered the courtyard and approached the group
of girls.  One boy was dressed in the fantastic Munchkin costume--a blue
jacket and knickerbockers, blue leather shoes and a blue hat with a high
peak and tiny silver bells dangling from its rim--and this was Ojo the
Lucky, who had once come from the Munchkin Country of Oz and now lived in
the Emerald City.  The other boy was an American from Philadelphia and
had lately found his way to Oz in the company of Trot and Cap'n Bill.
His name was Button-Bright; that is, everyone called him by that name and
knew no other.  Button-Bright was not quite as big as the Munchkin boy,
but he wore the same kind of clothes, only they were of different colors.
As the two came up to the girls, arm in arm, Button-Bright remarked,
"Hello, Dorothy.  They say Ozma is lost."
	"WHO says so?" she asked.
	"Ev'rybody's talking about it in the City," he replied.
	"I wonder how the people found it out," Dorothy asked.
	"I know," said Ojo.  "Jellia Jamb told them.  She has been asking
everywhere if anyone has seen Ozma."
	"That's too bad," observed Dorothy, frowning.
	"Why?" asked Button-Bright.
	"There wasn't any use making all our people unhappy till we were
dead certain that Ozma can't be found."
	"Pshaw," said Button-Bright, "it's nothing to get lost.  I've
been lost lots of times."
	"That's true," admitted Trot, who knew that the boy had a habit
of getting lost and then finding himself again, "but it's diff'rent with
Ozma.  She's the Ruler of all this big fairyland, and we're 'fraid that
the reason she's lost is because somebody has stolen her away."
	"Only wicked people steal," said Ojo.  "Do you know of any wicked
people in Oz, Dorothy?"
	"No," she replied.
	"They're here, though," cried Scraps, dancing up to them and then
circling around the group.  "Ozma's stolen; someone in Oz stole her; only
wicked people steal; so someone in Oz is wicked!"
	There was no denying the truth of this statement.  The faces of
all of them were now solemn and sorrowful.  "One thing is sure," said
Button-Bright after a time, "if Ozma has been stolen, someone ought to
find her and punish the thief."
	"There may be a lot of thieves," suggested Trot gravely, "and in
this fairy country they don't seem to have any soldiers or policemen."
	"There is one soldier," claimed Dorothy.  "He has green whiskers
and a gun and is a Major-General, but no one is afraid of either his gun
or his whiskers, 'cause he's so tender-hearted that he wouldn't hurt a
fly."
	"Well, a soldier is a soldier," said Betsy, "and perhaps he'd
hurt a wicked thief if he wouldn't hurt a fly.  Where is he?"
	"He went fishing about two months ago and hasn't come back yet,"
explained Button-Bright.
	"Then I can't see that he will be of much use to us in this
trouble," sighed little Trot.  "But p'raps Ozma, who is a fairy, can get
away from the thieves without any help from anyone."
	"She MIGHT be able to," answered Dorothy reflectively, "but if
she had the power to do that, it isn't likely she'd have let herself be
stolen.  So the thieves must have been even more powerful in magic than
our Ozma."
	There was no denying this argument, and although they talked the
matter over all the rest of that day, they were unable to decide how Ozma
had been stolen against her will or who had committed the dreadful deed.
Toward evening the Wizard came back, riding slowly upon the Sawhorse
because he felt discouraged and perplexed.  Glinda came later in her
aerial chariot drawn by twenty milk-white swans, and she also seemed
worried and unhappy.  More of Ozma's friends joined them, and that
evening they all had a big talk together.  "I think," said Dorothy, "we
ought to start out right away in search of our dear Ozma.  It seems cruel
for us to live comf'tably in her palace while she is a pris'ner in the
power of some wicked enemy."
	"Yes," agreed Glinda the Sorceress, "someone ought to search for
her. I cannot go myself, because I must work hard in order to create some
new instruments of sorcery by means of which I may rescue our fair Ruler.
But if you can find her in the meantime and let me know who has stolen
her, it will enable me to rescue her much more quickly."
	"Then we'll start tomorrow morning," decided Dorothy.  "Betsy and
Trot and I won't waste another minute."
	"I'm not sure you girls will make good detectives," remarked the
Wizard, "but I'll go with you to protect you from harm and to give you my
advice.  All my wizardry, alas, is stolen, so I am now really no more a
wizard than any of you, but I will try to protect you from any enemies
you may meet."
	"What harm could happen to us in Oz?" inquired Trot.
	"What harm happened to Ozma?" returned the Wizard.  "If there is
an Evil Power abroad in our fairyland, which is able to steal not only
Ozma and her Magic Picture, but Glinda's Book of Records and all her
magic, and my black bag containing all my tricks of wizardry, then that
Evil Power may yet cause us considerable injury.  Ozma is a fairy, and so
is Glinda, so no power can kill or destroy them, but you girls are all
mortals and so are Button-Bright and I, so we must watch out for
ourselves."
	"Nothing can kill me," said Ojo the Munchkin boy.
	"That is true," replied the Sorceress, "and I think it may be
well to divide the searchers into several parties, that they may cover
all the land of Oz more quickly.  So I will send Ojo and Unc Nunkie and
Dr. Pipt into the Munchkin Country, which they are well acquainted with;
and I will send the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman into the Quadling
Country, for they are fearless and brave and never tire; and to the
Gillikin Country, where many dangers lurk, I will send the Shaggy Man and
his brother, with Tik-Tok and Jack Pumpkinhead.  Dorothy may make up her
own party and travel into the Winkie Country.  All of you must inquire
everywhere for Ozma and try to discover where she is hidden."
	They thought this a very wise plan and adopted it without
question. In Ozma's absence, Glinda the Good was the most important
person in Oz, and all were glad to serve under her direction.

CHAPTER 6 THE SEARCH PARTY


	Next morning as soon as the sun was up, Glinda flew back to her
castle, stopping on the way to instruct the Scarecrow and the Tin
Woodman, who were at that time staying at the college of Professor H. M.
Wogglebug, T.E., and taking a course of his Patent Educational Pills.  On
hearing of Ozma's loss, they started at once for the Quadling Country to
search for her.  As soon as Glinda had left the Emerald City, Tik-Tok and
the Shaggy Man and Jack Pumpkinhead, who had been present at the
conference, began their journey into the Gillikin Country, and an hour
later Ojo and Unc Nunkie joined Dr.  Pipt and together they traveled
toward the Munchkin Country.  When all these searchers were gone, Dorothy
and the Wizard completed their own preparations.
	The Wizard hitched the Sawhorse to the Red Wagon, which would
seat four very comfortably.  He wanted Dorothy, Betsy, Trot and the
Patchwork Girl to ride in the wagon, but Scraps came up to them mounted
upon the Woozy, and the Woozy said he would like to join the party.  Now
this Woozy was a most peculiar animal, having a square head, square body,
square legs and square tail.  His skin was very tough and hard,
resembling leather, and while his movements were somewhat clumsy, the
beast could travel with remarkable swiftness. His square eyes were mild
and gentle in expression, and he was not especially foolish.  The Woozy
and the Patchwork Girl were great friends, and so the Wizard agreed to
let the Woozy go with them.
	Another great beast now appeared and asked to go along.  This was
none other than the famous Cowardly Lion, one of the most interesting
creatures in all Oz.  No lion that roamed the jungles or plains could
compare in size or intelligence with this Cowardly Lion, who--like all
animals living in Oz--could talk and who talked with more shrewdness and
wisdom than many of the people did.  He said he was cowardly because he
always trembled when he faced danger, but he had faced danger many times
and never refused to fight when it was necessary. This Lion was a great
favorite with Ozma and always guarded her throne on state occasions.  He
was also an old companion and friend of the Princess Dorothy, so the girl
was delighted to have him join the party.
	"I'm so nervous over our dear Ozma," said the Cowardly Lion in
his deep, rumbling voice, "that it would make me unhappy to remain behind
while you are trying to find her.  But do not get into any danger, I beg
of you, for danger frightens me terribly."
	"We'll not get into danger if we can poss'bly help it," promised
Dorothy, "but we shall do anything to find Ozma, danger or no danger."
	The addition of the Woozy and the Cowardly Lion to the party gave
Betsy Bobbin an idea, and she ran to the marble stables at the rear of
the palace and brought out her mule, Hank by name.  Perhaps no mule you
ever saw was so lean and bony and altogether plain looking as this Hank,
but Betsy loved him dearly because he was faithful and steady and not
nearly so stupid as most mules are considered to be.  Betsy had a saddle
for Hank, and he declared she would ride on his back, an arrangement
approved by the Wizard because it left only four of the party to ride on
the seats of the Red Wagon--Dorothy and Button-Bright and Trot and
himself.
	An old sailor man who had one wooden leg came to see them off and
suggested that they put a supply of food and blankets in the Red Wagon
inasmuch as they were uncertain how long they would be gone.  This sailor
man was called Cap'n Bill.  He was a former friend and comrade of Trot
and had encountered many adventures in company with the little girl.  I
think he was sorry he could not go with her on this trip, but Glinda the
Sorceress had asked Cap'n Bill to remain in the Emerald City and take
charge of the royal palace while everyone else was away, and the
one-legged sailor had agreed to do so.
	They loaded the back end of the Red Wagon with everything they
thought they might need, and then they formed a procession and marched
from the palace through the Emerald City to the great gates of the wall
that surrounded this beautiful capital of the Land of Oz.  Crowds of
citizens lined the streets to see them pass and to cheer them and wish
them success, for all were grieved over Ozma's loss and anxious that she
be found again.  First came the Cowardly Lion, then the Patchwork Girl
riding upon the Woozy, then Betsy Bobbin on her mule Hank, and finally
the Sawhorse drawing the Red Wagon, in which were seated the Wizard and
Dorothy and Button-Bright and Trot.  No one was obliged to drive the
Sawhorse, so there were no reins to his harness; one had only to tell him
which way to go, fast or slow, and he understood perfectly.
	It was about this time that a shaggy little black dog who had
been lying asleep in Dorothy's room in the palace woke up and discovered
he was lonesome.  Everything seemed very still throughout the great
building, and Toto--that was the little dog's name--missed the customary
chatter of the three girls.  He never paid much attention to what was
going on around him, and although he could speak, he seldom said
anything, so the little dog did not know about Ozma's loss or that
everyone had gone in search of her.  But he liked to be with people, and
especially with his own mistress, Dorothy, and having yawned and
stretched himself and found the door of the room ajar, he trotted out
into the corridor and went down the stately marble stairs to the hall of
the palace, where he met Jellia Jamb.
	"Where's Dorothy?" asked Toto.
	"She's gone to the Winkie Country," answered the maid.
	"When?"
	"A little while ago," replied Jellia.
	Toto turned and trotted out into the palace garden and down the
long driveway until he came to the streets of the Emerald City.  Here he
paused to listen, and hearing sounds of cheering, he ran swiftly along
until he came in sight of the Red Wagon and the Woozy and the Lion and
the Mule and all the others.  Being a wise little dog, he decided not to
show himself to Dorothy just then, lest he be sent back home, but he
never lost sight of the party of travelers, all of whom were so eager to
get ahead that they never thought to look behind them.  When they came to
the gates in the city wall, the Guardian of the Gates came out to throw
wide the golden portals and let them pass through.
	"Did any strange person come in or out of the city on the night
before last when Ozma was stolen?" asked Dorothy.
	"No indeed, Princess," answered the Guardian of the Gates.
	"Of course not," said the Wizard.  "Anyone clever enough to steal
all the things we have lost would not mind the barrier of a wall like
this in the least.  I think the thief must have flown through the air,
for otherwise he could not have stolen from Ozma's royal palace and
Glinda's faraway castle in the same night.  Moreover, as there are no
airships in Oz and no way for airships from the outside world to get into
this country, I believe the thief must have flown from place to place by
means of magic arts which neither Glinda nor I understand."
	On they went, and before the gates closed behind them, Toto
managed to dodge through them.  The country surrounding the Emerald City
was thickly settled, and for a while our friends rode over nicely paved
roads which wound through a fertile country dotted with beautiful houses,
all built in the quaint Oz fashion.  In the course of a few hours,
however, they had left the tilled fields and entered the Country of the
Winkies, which occupies a quarter of all the territory in the Land of Oz
but is not so well known as many other parts of Ozma's fairyland.  Long
before night the travelers had crossed the Winkie River near to the
Scarecrow's Tower (which was now vacant) and had entered the Rolling
Prairie where few people live.  They asked everyone they met for news of
Ozma, but none in this district had seen her or even knew that she had
been stolen.  And by nightfall they had passed all the farmhouses and
were obliged to stop and ask for shelter at the hut of a lonely shepherd.
When they halted, Toto was not far behind.  The little dog halted, too,
and stealing softly around the party, he hid himself behind the hut.
	The shepherd was a kindly old man and treated the travelers with
much courtesy.  He slept out of doors that night, giving up his hut to
the three girls, who made their beds on the floor with the blankets they
had brought in the Red Wagon.  The Wizard and Button-Bright also slept
out of doors, and so did the Cowardly Lion and Hank the Mule.  But Scraps
and the Sawhorse did not sleep at all, and the Woozy could stay awake for
a month at a time if he wished to, so these three sat in a little group
by themselves and talked together all through the night.
	In the darkness, the Cowardly Lion felt a shaggy little form
nestling beside his own, and he said sleepily, "Where did you come from,
Toto?"
	"From home," said the dog.  "If you roll over, roll the other way
so you won't smash me."
	"Does Dorothy know you are here?" asked the Lion.
	"I believe not," admitted Toto, and he added a little anxiously,
"Do you think, friend Lion, we are now far enough from the Emerald City
for me to risk showing myself, or will Dorothy send me back because I
wasn't invited?"
	"Only Dorothy can answer that question," said the Lion.  "For my
part, Toto, I consider this affair none of my business, so you must act
as you think best."  Then the huge beast went to sleep again, and Toto
snuggled closer to the warm, hairy body and also slept.  He was a wise
little dog in his way, and didn't intend to worry when there was
something much better to do.
	In the morning the Wizard built a fire, over which the girls
cooked a very good breakfast.  Suddenly Dorothy discovered Toto sitting
quietly before the fire, and the little girl exclaimed, "Goodness me,
Toto! Where did YOU come from?"
	"From the place you cruelly left me," replied the dog in a
reproachful tone.
	"I forgot all about you," admitted Dorothy, "and if I hadn't, I'd
prob'ly left you with Jellia Jamb, seeing this isn't a pleasure trip but
stric'ly business.  But now that you're here, Toto, I s'pose you'll have
to stay with us, unless you'd rather go back again.  We may get ourselves
into trouble before we're done, Toto."
	"Never mind that," said Toto, wagging his tail.  "I'm hungry,
Dorothy."
	"Breakfas'll soon be ready, and then you shall have your share,"
promised his little mistress, who was really glad to have her dog with
her.  She and Toto had traveled together before, and she knew he was a
good and faithful comrade.
	When the food was cooked and served, the girls invited the old
shepherd to join them in the morning meal.  He willingly consented, and
while they ate he said to them, "You are now about to pass through a very
dangerous country, unless you turn to the north or to the south to escape
its perils."
	"In that case," said the Cowardly Lion, "let us turn, by all
means, for I dread to face dangers of any sort."
	"What's the matter with the country ahead of us?" inquired
Dorothy.
	"Beyond this Rolling Prairie," explained the shepherd, "are the
Merry-Go-Round Mountains, set close together and surrounded by deep gulfs
so that no one is able to get past them.  Beyond the Merry-Go-Round
Mountains it is said the Thistle-Eaters and the Herkus live."
	"What are they like?" demanded Dorothy.
	"No one knows, for no one has ever passed the Merry-Go-Round
Mountains," was the reply, "but it is said that the Thistle-Eaters hitch
dragons to their chariots and that the Herkus are waited upon by giants
whom they have conquered and made their slaves."
	"Who says all that?" asked Betsy.
	"It is common report," declared the shepherd.  "Everyone believes
it."
	"I don't see how they know," remarked little Trot, "if no one has
been there."
	"Perhaps the birds who fly over that country brought the news,"
suggested Betsy.
	"If you escaped those dangers," continued the shepherd, "you might
encounter others still more serious before you came to the next branch of
the Winkie River.  It is true that beyond that river there lies a fine
country inhabited by good people, and if you reached there, you would
have no further trouble.  It is between here and the west branch of the
Winkie River that all dangers lie, for that is the unknown territory that
is inhabited by terrible, lawless people."
	"It may be, and it may not be," said the Wizard.  "We shall know
when we get there."
	"Well," persisted the shepherd, "in a fairy country such as ours,
every undiscovered place is likely to harbor wicked creatures.  If they
were not wicked, they would discover themselves and by coming among us
submit to Ozma's rule and be good and considerate, as are all the Oz
people whom we know."
	"That argument," stated the little Wizard, "convinces me that it
is our duty to go straight to those unknown places, however dangerous
they may be, for it is surely some cruel and wicked person who has stolen
our Ozma, and we know it would be folly to search among good people for
the culprit.  Ozma may not be hidden in the secret places of the Winkie
Country, it is true, but it is our duty to travel to every spot, however
dangerous, where our beloved Ruler is likely to be imprisoned."
	"You're right about that," said Button-Bright approvingly.
"Dangers don't hurt us.  Only things that happen ever hurt anyone, and a
danger is a thing that might happen and might not happen, and sometimes
don't amount to shucks.  I vote we go ahead and take our chances."
	They were all of the same opinion, so they packed up and said
goodbye to the friendly shepherd and proceeded on their way.

CHAPTER 7 THE MERRY-GO-ROUND MOUNTAINS


	The Rolling Prairie was not difficult to travel over, although it
was all uphill and downhill, so for a while they made good progress.  Not
even a shepherd was to be met with now, and the farther they advanced the
more dreary the landscape became.  At noon they stopped for a "picnic
luncheon," as Betsy called it, and then they again resumed their journey.
All the animals were swift and tireless, and even the Cowardly Lion and
the Mule found they could keep up with the pace of the Woozy and the
Sawhorse.
	It was the middle of the afternoon when first they came in sight
of a cluster of low mountains.  These were cone-shaped, rising from broad
bases to sharp peaks at the tops.  From a distance the mountains appeared
indistinct and seemed rather small--more like hills than mountains--but
as the travelers drew nearer, they noted a most unusual circumstance: the
hills were all whirling around, some in one direction and some the
opposite way.
	"I guess these are the Merry-Go-Round Mountains, all right," said
Dorothy.
	"They must be," said the Wizard.
	"They go 'round, sure enough," agreed Trot, "but they don't seem
very merry."
	There were several rows of these mountains, extending both to the
right and to the left for miles and miles.  How many rows there might be
none could tell, but between the first row of peaks could be seen other
peaks, all steadily whirling around one way or another. Continuing to
ride nearer, our friends watched these hills attentively, until at last,
coming close up, they discovered there was a deep but narrow gulf around
the edge of each mountain, and that the mountains were set so close
together that the outer gulf was continuous and barred farther advance.
At the edge of the gulf they all dismounted and peered over into its
depths.  There was no telling where the bottom was, if indeed there was
any bottom at all.  From where they stood it seemed as if the mountains
had been set in one great hole in the ground, just close enough together
so they would not touch, and that each mountain was supported by a rocky
column beneath its base which extended far down in the black pit below.
From the land side it seemed impossible to get across the gulf or,
succeeding in that, to gain a foothold on any of the whirling mountains.
	"This ditch is too wide to jump across," remarked Button-Bright.
	"P'raps the Lion could do it," suggested Dorothy.
	"What, jump from here to that whirling hill?" cried the Lion
indignantly.  "I should say not!  Even if I landed there and could hold
on, what good would it do?  There's another spinning mountain beyond it,
and perhaps still another beyond that.  I don't believe any living
creature could jump from one mountain to another when both are whirling
like tops and in different directions."
	"I propose we turn back," said the Wooden Sawhorse with a yawn of
his chopped-out mouth as he stared with his knot eyes at the
Merry-Go-Round Mountains.
	"I agree with you," said the Woozy, wagging his square head.
	"We should have taken the shepherd's advice," added Hank the Mule.
	The others of the party, however they might be puzzled by the
serious problem that confronted them, would not allow themselves to
despair. "If we once get over these mountains," said Button-Bright, "we
could probably get along all right."
	"True enough," agreed Dorothy.  "So we must find some way, of
course, to get past these whirligig hills.  But how?"
	"I wish the Ork was with us," sighed Trot.
	"But the Ork isn't here," said the Wizard, "and we must depend
upon ourselves to conquer this difficulty.  Unfortunately, all my magic
has been stolen, otherwise I am sure I could easily get over the
mountains."
	"Unfortunately," observed the Woozy, "none of us has wings.  And
we're in a magic country without any magic."
	"What is that around your waist, Dorothy?" asked the Wizard.
	"That?  Oh, that's just the Magic Belt I once captured from the
Nome King," she replied.
	"A Magic Belt!  Why, that's fine.  I'm sure a Magic Belt would
take you over these hills."
	"It might if I knew how to work it," said the little girl.  "Ozma
knows a lot of its magic, but I've never found out about it.  All I know
is that while I am wearing it, nothing can hurt me."
	"Try wishing yourself across and see if it will obey you,"
suggested the Wizard.
	"But what good would that do?" asked Dorothy.  "If I got across,
it wouldn't help the rest of you, and I couldn't go alone among all those
giants and dragons while you stayed here."
	"True enough," agreed the Wizard sadly.  And then, after looking
around the group, he inquired, "What is that on your finger, Trot?"
	"A ring.  The Mermaids gave it to me," she explained, "and if
ever I'm in trouble when I'm on the water, I can call the Mermaids and
they'll come and help me.  But the Mermaids can't help me on the land,
you know, 'cause they swim, and--and--they haven't any legs."
	"True enough," repeated the Wizard, more sadly.
	There was a big, broad, spreading tree near the edge of the gulf,
and as the sun was hot above them, they all gathered under the shade of
the tree to study the problem of what to do next.  "If we had a long
rope," said Betsy, "we could fasten it to this tree and let the other end
of it down into the gulf and all slide down it."
	"Well, what then?" asked the Wizard.
	"Then, if we could manage to throw the rope up the other side,"
explained the girl, "we could all climb it and be on the other side of
the gulf."
	"There are too many 'if's' in that suggestion," remarked the
little Wizard.  "And you must remember that the other side is nothing but
spinning mountains, so we couldn't possibly fasten a rope to them, even
if we had one."
	"That rope idea isn't half bad, though," said the Patchwork Girl,
who had been dancing dangerously near to the edge of the gulf.
	"What do you mean?" asked Dorothy.
	The Patchwork Girl suddenly stood still and cast her button eyes
around the group.  "Ha, I have it!" she exclaimed.  "Unharness the
Sawhorse, somebody.  My fingers are too clumsy."
	"Shall we?" asked Button-Bright doubtfully, turning to the
others.
	"Well, Scraps has a lot of brains, even if she IS stuffed with
cotton," asserted the Wizard.  "If her brains can help us out of this
trouble, we ought to use them."
	So he began unharnessing the Sawhorse, and Button-Bright and
Dorothy helped him.  When they had removed the harness, the Patchwork
Girl told them to take it all apart and buckle the straps together, end
to end.  And after they had done this, they found they had one very long
strap that was stronger than any rope.  "It would reach across the gulf
easily," said the Lion, who with the other animals had sat on his
haunches and watched this proceeding.  "But I don't see how it could be
fastened to one of those dizzy mountains."
	Scraps had no such notion as that in her baggy head.  She told
them to fasten one end of the strap to a stout limb of the tree, pointing
to one which extended quite to the edge of the gulf.  Button-Bright did
that, climbing the tree and then crawling out upon the limb until he was
nearly over the gulf.  There he managed to fasten the strap, which
reached to the ground below, and then he slid down it and was caught by
the Wizard, who feared he might fall into the chasm.  Scraps was
delighted.  She seized the lower end of the strap, and telling them all
to get out of her way, she went back as far as the strap would reach and
then made a sudden run toward the gulf.  Over the edge she swung,
clinging to the strap until it had gone as far as its length permitted,
when she let go and sailed gracefully through the air until she alighted
upon the mountain just in front of them.
	Almost instantly, as the great cone continued to whirl, she was
sent flying against the next mountain in the rear, and that one had only
turned halfway around when Scraps was sent flying to the next mountain
behind it.  Then her patchwork form disappeared from view entirely, and
the amazed watchers under the tree wondered what had become of her.
"She's gone, and she can't get back," said the Woozy.
	"My, how she bounded from one mountain to another!" exclaimed the
Lion.
	"That was because they whirl so fast," the Wizard explained.
"Scraps had nothing to hold on to, and so of course she was tossed from
one hill to another.  I'm afraid we shall never see the poor Patchwork
Girl again."
	"I shall see her," declared the Woozy.  "Scraps is an old friend
of mine, and if there are really Thistle-Eaters and Giants on the other
side of those tops, she will need someone to protect her.  So here I go!"
He seized the dangling strap firmly in his square mouth, and in the same
way that Scraps had done swung himself over the gulf.  He let go the
strap at the right moment and fell upon the first whirling mountain.
Then he bounded to the next one back of it--not on his feet, but "all
mixed up," as Trot said--and then he shot across to another mountain,
disappearing from view just as the Patchwork Girl had done.
	"It seems to work, all right," remarked Button-Bright.  "I guess
I'll try it."
	"Wait a minute," urged the Wizard.  "Before any more of us make
this desperate leap into the beyond, we must decide whether all will go
or if some of us will remain behind."
	"Do you s'pose it hurt them much to bump against those
mountains?" asked Trot.
	"I don't s'pose anything could hurt Scraps or the Woozy," said
Dorothy, "and nothing can hurt ME, because I wear the Magic Belt.  So as
I'm anxious to find Ozma, I mean to swing myself across too."
	"I'll take my chances," decided Button-Bright.
	"I'm sure it will hurt dreadfully, and I'm afraid to do it," said
the Lion, who was already trembling, "but I shall do it if Dorothy does."
	"Well, that will leave Betsy and the Mule and Trot," said the
Wizard, "for of course I shall go that I may look after Dorothy.  Do you
two girls think you can find your way back home again?" he asked,
addressing Trot and Betsy.
	"I'm not afraid.  Not much, that is," said Trot.  "It looks
risky, I know, but I'm sure I can stand it if the others can."
	"If it wasn't for leaving Hank," began Betsy in a hesitating
voice.
	But the Mule interrupted her by saying, "Go ahead if you want to,
and I'll come after you.  A mule is as brave as a lion any day."
	"Braver," said the Lion, "for I'm a coward, friend Hank, and you
are not.  But of course the Sawhorse--"
	"Oh, nothing ever hurts ME," asserted the Sawhorse calmly.
"There's never been any question about my going.  I can't take the Red
Wagon, though."
	"No, we must leave the wagon," said the wizard, "and also we must
leave our food and blankets, I fear.  But if we can defy these
Merry-Go-Round Mountains to stop us, we won't mind the sacrifice of some
of our comforts."
	"No one knows where we're going to land!" remarked the Lion in a
voice that sounded as if he were going to cry.
	"We may not land at all," replied Hank, "but the best way to find
out what will happen to us is to swing across as Scraps and the Woozy
have done."
	"I think I shall go last," said the Wizard, "so who wants to go
first?"
	"I'll go," decided Dorothy.
	"No, it's my turn first," said Button-Bright.  "Watch me!"  Even
as he spoke, the boy seized the strap, and after making a run swung
himself across the gulf.  Away he went, bumping from hill to hill until
he disappeared.  They listened intently, but the boy uttered no cry until
he had been gone some moments, when they heard a faint "Hullo-a!" as if
called from a great distance.  The sound gave them courage, however, and
Dorothy picked up Toto and held him fast under one arm while with the
other hand she seized the strap and bravely followed after Button-Bright.
	When she struck the first whirling mountain, she fell upon it
quite softly, but before she had time to think, she flew through the air
and lit with a jar on the side of the next mountain.  Again she flew and
alighted, and again and still again, until after five successive bumps
she fell sprawling upon a green meadow and was so dazed and bewildered by
her bumpy journey across the Merry-Go-Round Mountains that she lay quite
still for a time to collect her thoughts.  Toto had escaped from her arms
just as she fell, and he now sat beside her panting with excitement.
Then Dorothy realized that someone was helping her to her feet, and here
was Button-Bright on one side of her and Scraps on the other, both
seeming to be unhurt.  The next object her eyes fell upon was the Woozy,
squatting upon his square back end and looking at her reflectively, while
Toto barked joyously to find his mistress unhurt after her whirlwind
trip.
	"Good!" said the Woozy.  "Here's another and a dog, both safe and
sound.  But my word, Dorothy, you flew some!  If you could have seen
yourself, you'd have been absolutely astonished."
	"They say 'Time flies,'" laughed Button-Bright, "but Time never
made a quicker journey than that."
	Just then, as Dorothy turned around to look at the whirling
mountains, she was in time to see tiny Trot come flying from the nearest
hill to fall upon the soft grass not a yard away from where she stood.
Trot was so dizzy she couldn't stand at first, but she wasn't at all
hurt, and presently Betsy came flying to them and would have bumped into
the others had they not retreated in time to avoid her.  Then, in quick
succession, came the Lion, Hank and the Sawhorse, bounding from mountain
to mountain to fall safely upon the greensward.  Only the Wizard was now
left behind, and they waited so long for him that Dorothy began to be
worried.  But suddenly he came flying from the nearest mountain and
tumbled heels over head beside them.  Then they saw that he had wound two
of their blankets around his body to keep the bumps from hurting him and
had fastened the blankets with some of the spare straps from the harness
of the Sawhorse.

CHAPTER 8 THE MYSTERIOUS CITY


	There they sat upon the grass, their heads still swimming from
their dizzy flights, and looked at one another in silent bewilderment.
But presently, when assured that no one was injured, they grew more calm
and collected, and the Lion said with a sigh of relief, "Who would have
thought those Merry-Go-Round Mountains were made of rubber?"
	"Are they really rubber?" asked Trot.
	"They must be," replied the Lion, "for otherwise we would not
have bounded so swiftly from one to another without getting hurt."
	"That is all guesswork," declared the Wizard, unwinding the
blankets from his body, "for none of us stayed long enough on the
mountains to discover what they are made of.  But where are we?"
	"That's guesswork," said Scraps.  "The shepherd said the
Thistle-Eaters live this side of the mountains and are waited on by
giants."
	"Oh no," said Dorothy, "it's the Herkus who have giant slaves,
and the Thistle-Eaters hitch dragons to their chariots."
	"How could they do that?" asked the Woozy.  "Dragons have long
tails, which would get in the way of the chariot wheels."
	"And if the Herkus have conquered the giants," said Trot, "they
must be at least twice the size of giants.  P'raps the Herkus are the
biggest people in all the world!"
	"Perhaps they are," assented the Wizard in a thoughtful tone of
voice. "And perhaps the shepherd didn't know what he was talking about.
Let us travel on toward the west and discover for ourselves what the
people of this country are like."
	It seemed a pleasant enough country, and it was quite still and
peaceful when they turned their eyes away from the silently whirling
mountains.  There were trees here and there and green bushes, while
throughout the thick grass were scattered brilliantly colored flowers.
About a mile away was a low hill that hid from them all the country
beyond it, so they realized they could not tell much about the country
until they had crossed the hill.  The Red Wagon having been left behind,
it was now necessary to make other arrangements for traveling. The Lion
told Dorothy she could ride upon his back as she had often done before,
and the Woozy said he could easily carry both Trot and the Patchwork
Girl.  Betsy still had her mule, Hank, and Button-Bright and the Wizard
could sit together upon the long, thin back of the Sawhorse, but they
took care to soften their seat with a pad of blankets before they  
started.  Thus mounted, the adventurers started for the hill, which was
reached after a brief journey.
	As they mounted the crest and gazed beyond the hill, they
discovered not far away a walled city, from the towers and spires of
which gay banners were flying.  It was not a very big city, indeed, but
its walls were very high and thick, and it appeared that the people who
lived there must have feared attack by a powerful enemy, else they would
not have surrounded their dwellings with so strong a barrier. There was
no path leading from the mountains to the city, and this proved that the
people seldom or never visited the whirling hills, but our friends found
the grass soft and agreeable to travel over, and with the city before
them they could not well lose their way.  When they drew nearer to the
walls, the breeze carried to their ears the sound of music--dim at first,
but growing louder as they advanced.
	"That doesn't seem like a very terr'ble place," remarked Dorothy.
	"Well, it LOOKS all right," replied Trot from her seat on the
Woozy, "but looks can't always be trusted."
	"MY looks can," said Scraps.  "I LOOK patchwork, and I AM
patchwork, and no one but a blind owl could ever doubt that I'm the
Patchwork Girl."  Saying which, she turned a somersault off the Woozy
and, alighting on her feet, began wildly dancing about.
	"Are owls ever blind?" asked Trot.
	"Always, in the daytime," said Button-Bright.  "But Scraps can
see with her button eyes both day and night.  Isn't it queer?"
	"It's queer that buttons can see at all," answered Trot.  "But
good gracious!  What's become of the city?"
	"I was going to ask that myself," said Dorothy.  "It's gone!"
	The animals came to a sudden halt, for the city had really
disappeared, walls and all, and before them lay the clear, unbroken sweep
of the country.  "Dear me!" exclaimed the Wizard.  "This is rather
disagreeable.  It is annoying to travel almost to a place and then find
it is not there."
	"Where can it be, then?" asked Dorothy.  "It cert'nly was there a
minute ago."
	"I can hear the music yet," declared Button-Bright, and when they
all listened, the strains of music could plainly be heard.
	"Oh!  There's the city over at the left," called Scraps, and
turning their eyes, they saw the walls and towers and fluttering banners
far to the left of them.
	"We must have lost our way," suggested Dorothy.
	"Nonsense," said the Lion.  "I, and all the other animals, have
been tramping straight toward the city ever since we first saw it."
	"Then how does it happen--"
	"Never mind," interrupted the Wizard, "we are no farther from it
than we were before.  It is in a different direction, that's all, so let
us hurry and get there before it again escapes us."
	So on they went directly toward the city, which seemed only a
couple of miles distant.  But when they had traveled less than a mile, it
suddenly disappeared again.  Once more they paused, somewhat discouraged,
but in a moment the button eyes of Scraps again discovered the city, only
this time it was just behind them in the direction from which they had
come.  "Goodness gracious!" cried Dorothy.  "There's surely something
wrong with that city.  Do you s'pose it's on wheels, Wizard?"
	"It may not be a city at all," he replied, looking toward it with
a speculative glance.
	"What COULD it be, then?"
	"Just an illusion."
	"What's that?" asked Trot.
	"Something you think you see and don't see."
	"I can't believe that," said Button-Bright.  "If we only saw it,
we might be mistaken, but if we can see it and hear it, too, it must be
there."
	"Where?" asked the Patchwork Girl.
	"Somewhere near us," he insisted.
	"We will have to go back, I suppose," said the Woozy with a sigh.
	So back they turned and headed for the walled city until it
disappeared again, only to reappear at the right of them.  They were
constantly getting nearer to it, however, so they kept their faces turned
toward it as it flitted here and there to all points of the compass.
Presently the Lion, who was leading the procession, halted abruptly and
cried out, "Ouch!"
	"What's the matter?" asked Dorothy.
	"Ouch!  Ouch!" repeated the Lion and leaped backward so suddenly
that Dorothy nearly tumbled from his back.  At the same time, Hank the
Mule yelled "Ouch!" almost as loudly as the Lion had done, and he also
pranced backward a few paces.
	"It's the thistles," said Betsy.  "They prick their legs."
	Hearing this, all looked down, and sure enough the ground was
thick with thistles, which covered the plain from the point where they
stood way up to the walls of the mysterious city.  No pathways through
them could be seen at all; here the soft grass ended and the growth of
thistles began.  "They're the prickliest thistles I ever felt," grumbled
the Lion.  "My legs smart yet from their stings, though I jumped out of
them as quickly as I could."
	"Here is a new difficulty," remarked the Wizard in a grieved
tone. "The city has stopped hopping around, it is true, but how are we to
get to it over this mass of prickers?"
	"They can't hurt ME," said the thick-skinned Woozy, advancing
fearlessly and trampling among the thistles.
	"Nor me," said the Wooden Sawhorse.
	"But the Lion and the Mule cannot stand the prickers," asserted
Dorothy, "and we can't leave them behind."
	"Must we all go back?" asked Trot.
	"Course not!" replied Button-Bright scornfully.  "Always when
there's trouble, there's a way out of it if you can find it."
	"I wish the Scarecrow was here," said Scraps, standing on her
head on the Woozy's square back.  "His splendid brains would soon show us
how to conquer this field of thistles."
	"What's the matter with YOUR brains?" asked the boy.
	"Nothing," she said, making a flip-flop into the thistles and
dancing among them without feeling their sharp points.  "I could tell you
in half a minute how to get over the thistles if I wanted to."
	"Tell us, Scraps!" begged Dorothy.
	"I don't want to wear my brains out with overwork," replied the
Patchwork Girl.
	"Don't you love Ozma?  And don't you want to find her?" asked
Betsy reproachfully.
	"Yes indeed," said Scraps, walking on her hands as an acrobat
does at the circus.
	"Well, we can't find Ozma unless we get past these thistles,"
declared Dorothy.
	Scraps danced around them two or three times without reply.  Then
she said, "Don't look at me, you stupid folks.  Look at those blankets."
	The Wizard's face brightened at once.  "Of course!" he exclaimed.
"Why didn't we think of those blankets before?"
	"Because you haven't magic brains," laughed Scraps.  "Such brains
as you have are of the common sort that grow in your heads, like weeds in
a garden.  I'm sorry for you people who have to be born in order to be
alive."
	But the Wizard was not listening to her.  He quickly removed the
blankets from the back of the Sawhorse and spread one of them upon the
thistles, just next the grass.  The thick cloth rendered the prickers
harmless, so the Wizard walked over this first blanket and spread the
second one farther on, in the direction of the phantom city.  "These
blankets," said he, "are for the Lion and the Mule to walk upon.  The
Sawhorse and the Woozy can walk on the thistles."
	So the Lion and the Mule walked over the first blanket and stood
upon the second one until the Wizard had picked up the one they had
passed over and spread it in front of them, when they advanced to that
one and waited while the one behind them was again spread in front.
"This is slow work," said the Wizard, "but it will get us to the city
after a while."
	"The city is a good half mile away yet," announced Button-Bright.
	"And this is awful hard work for the Wizard," added Trot.
	"Why couldn't the Lion ride on the Woozy's back?" asked Dorothy.
"it's a big, flat back, and the Woozy's mighty strong.  Perhaps the Lion
wouldn't fall off."
	"You may try it if you like," said the Woozy to the Lion.  "I can
take you to the city in a jiffy and then come back for Hank."
	"I'm--I'm afraid," said the Cowardly Lion.  He was twice as big
as the Woozy.
	"Try it," pleaded Dorothy.
	"And take a tumble among the thistles?" asked the Lion
reproachfully. But when the Woozy came close to him, the big beast
suddenly bounded upon its back and managed to balance himself there,
although forced to hold his four legs so close together that he was in
danger of toppling over.  The great weight of the monster Lion did not
seem to affect the Woozy, who called to his rider, "Hold on tight!" and
ran swiftly over the thistles toward the city.  The others stood on the
blanket and watched the strange sight anxiously.  Of course, the Lion
couldn't "hold on tight" because there was nothing to hold to, and he
swayed from side to side as if likely to fall off any moment.  Still, he
managed to stick to the Woozy's back until they were close to the walls of 
the city, when he leaped to the ground.  Next moment the Woozy came
dashing back at full speed.
	"There's a little strip of ground next the wall where there are
no thistles," he told them when he had reached the adventurers once more.
"Now then, friend Hank, see if you can ride as well as the Lion did."
	"Take the others first," proposed the Mule.  So the Sawhorse and
the Woozy made a couple of trips over the thistles to the city walls and
carried all the people in safety, Dorothy holding little Toto in her
arms.  The travelers then sat in a group on a little hillock just outside
the wall and looked at the great blocks of gray stone and waited for the
Woozy to bring Hank to them.  The Mule was very awkward, and his legs
trembled so badly that more than once they thought he would tumble off,
but finally he reached them in safety, and the entire party was now
reunited.  More than that, they had reached the city that had eluded them
for so long and in so strange a manner.
	"The gates must be around the other side," said the Wizard.  "Let
us follow the curve of the wall until we reach an opening in it."
	"Which way?" asked Dorothy.
	"We must guess that," he replied.  "Suppose we go to the left.
One direction is as good as another."  They formed in marching order and
went around the city wall to the left.  It wasn't a big city, as I have
said, but to go way around it outside the high wall was quite a walk, as
they became aware.  But around it our adventurers went without finding
any sign of a gateway or other opening.  When they had returned to the
little mound from which they had started, they dismounted from the
animals and again seated themselves on the grassy mound.
	"It's mighty queer, isn't it?" asked Button-Bright.
	"There must be SOME way for the people to get out and in,"
declared Dorothy.  "Do you s'pose they have flying machines, Wizard?"
	"No," he replied, "for in that case they would be flying all over
the Land of Oz, and we know they have not done that.  Flying machines are
unknown here.  I think it more likely that the people use ladders to get
over the walls."
	"It would be an awful climb over that high stone wall," said
Betsy.
	"Stone, is it?" cried Scraps, who was again dancing wildly
around, for she never tired and could never keep still for long.
	"Course it's stone," answered Betsy scornfully.  "Can't you see?"
	"Yes," said Scraps, going closer.  "I can SEE the wall, but I
can't FEEL it."  And then, with her arms outstretched, she did a very
queer thing.  She walked right into the wall and disappeared.
	"For goodness sake!" cried Dorothy, amazed, as indeed they all
were.

CHAPTER 9 THE HIGH COCO-LORUM OF THI


	And now the Patchwork Girl came dancing out of the wall again.
"Come on!" she called.  "It isn't there.  There isn't any wall at all."
	"What?  No wall?" exclaimed the Wizard.
	"Nothing like it," said Scraps.  "It's a make-believe.  You see
it, but it isn't.  Come on into the city; we've been wasting our time."
With this, she danced into the wall again and once more disappeared.
Button-Bright, who was rather venture-some, dashed away after her and
also became invisible to them.  The others followed more cautiously,
stretching out their hands to feel the wall and finding, to their
astonishment, that they could feel nothing because nothing opposed them.
They walked on a few steps and found themselves in the streets of a very
beautiful city.  Behind them they again saw the wall, grim and forbidding
as ever, but now they knew it was merely an illusion prepared to keep
strangers from entering the city.
	But the wall was soon forgotten, for in front of them were a
number of quaint people who stared at them in amazement as if wondering
where they had come from.  Our friends forgot their good manners for a
time and returned the stares with interest, for so remarkable a people had
never before been discovered in all the remarkable Land of Oz.  Their
heads were shaped like diamonds, and their bodies like hearts.  All the
hair they had was a little bunch at the tip top of their diamond-shaped
heads, and their eyes were very large and round, and their noses and
mouths very small.  Their clothing was tight fitting and of brilliant
colors, being handsomely embroidered in quaint designs with gold or
silver threads; but on their feet they wore sandals with no stockings
whatever.  The expression of their faces was pleasant enough, although
they now showed surprise at the appearance of strangers so unlike
themselves, and our friends thought they seemed quite harmless.
	"I beg your pardon," said the Wizard, speaking for his party,
"for intruding upon you uninvited, but we are traveling on important
business and find it necessary to visit your city.  Will you kindly tell
us by what name your city is called?"
	They looked at one another uncertainly, each expecting some other
to answer.  Finally, a short one whose heart-shaped body was very broad
replied, "We have no occasion to call our city anything.  It is where we
live, that is all."
	"But by what name do others call your city?" asked the Wizard.
	"We know of no others except yourselves," said the man.  And then
he inquired, "Were you born with those queer forms you have, or has some
cruel magician transformed you to them from your natural shapes?"
	"These are our natural shapes," declared the Wizard, "and we
consider them very good shapes, too."
	The group of inhabitants was constantly being enlarged by others
who joined it.  All were evidently startled and uneasy at the arrival of
strangers.  "Have you a King?" asked Dorothy, who knew it was better to
speak with someone in authority.
	But the man shook his diamond-like head.  "What is a King?" he
asked.
	"Isn't there anyone who rules over you?" inquired the Wizard.
	"No," was the reply, "each of us rules himself, or at least tries
to do so.  It is not an easy thing to do, as you probably know."
	The Wizard reflected.  "If you have disputes among you," said he
after a little thought, "who settles them?"
	"The High Coco-Lorum," they answered in a chorus.
	"And who is he?"
	"The judge who enforces the laws," said the man who had first
spoken.
	"Then he is the principal person here?" continued the Wizard.
	"Well, I would not say that," returned the man in a puzzled way.
"The High Coco-Lorum is a public servant.  However, he represents the
laws, which we must all obey."
	"I think," said the Wizard, "we ought to see your High Coco-Lorum
and talk with him.  Our mission here requires us to consult one high in
authority, and the High Coco-Lorum ought to be high, whatever else he is."
	The inhabitants seemed to consider this proposition reasonable,
for they nodded their diamond-shaped heads in approval.  So the broad one
who had been their spokesman said, "Follow me," and turning led the way
along one of the streets.  The entire party followed him, the natives
falling in behind.  The dwellings they passed were quite nicely planned
and seemed comfortable and convenient.  After leading them a few blocks,
their conductor stopped before a house which was neither better nor worse
than the others.  The doorway was shaped to admit the strangely formed
bodies of these people, being narrow at the top, broad in the middle and
tapering at the bottom.  The windows were made in much the same way,
giving the house a most peculiar appearance.  When their guide opened the
gate, a music box concealed in the gatepost began to play, and the sound
attracted the attention of the High Coco-Lorum, who appeared at an open
window and inquired, "What has happened now?"
	But in the same moment his eyes fell upon the strangers and he
hastened to open the door and admit them--all but the animals, which were
left outside with the throng of natives that had now gathered. For a
small city there seemed to be a large number of inhabitants, but they did
not try to enter the house and contented themselves with staring
curiously at the strange animals.  Toto followed Dorothy.
	Our friends entered a large room at the front of the house, where
the High Coco-Lorum asked them to be seated.  "I hope your mission here
is a peaceful one," he said, looking a little worried, "for the Thists
are not very good fighters and object to being conquered."
	"Are your people called Thists?" asked Dorothy.
	"Yes.  I thought you knew that.  And we call our city Thi."
	"Oh!"
	"We are Thists because we eat thistles, you know," continued the
High Coco-Lorum.
	"Do you really eat those prickly things?" inquired Button-Bright
wonderingly.
	"Why not?" replied the other.  "The sharp points of the thistles
cannot hurt us, because all our insides are gold-lined."
	"Gold-lined!"
	"To be sure.  Our throats and stomachs are lined with solid gold,
and we find the thistles nourishing and good to eat.  As a matter of
fact, there is nothing else in our country that is fit for food.  All
around the City of Thi grow countless thistles, and all we need do is to
go and gather them.  If we wanted anything else to eat, we would have to
plant it, and grow it, and harvest it, and that would be a lot of trouble
and make us work, which is an occupation we detest."
	"But tell me, please," said the Wizard, "how does it happen that
your city jumps around so, from one part of the country to another?"
	"The city doesn't jump.  It doesn't move at all," declared the
High Coco-Lorum.  "However, I will admit that the land that surrounds it
has a trick of turning this way or that, and so if one is standing upon
the plain and facing north, he is likely to find himself suddenly facing
west or east or south.  But once you reach the thistle fields, you are on
solid ground."
	"Ah, I begin to understand," said the Wizard, nodding his head.
"But I have another question to ask: How does it happen that the Thists
have no King to rule over them?"
	"Hush!" whispered the High Coco-Lorum, looking uneasily around to
make sure they were not overheard.  "In reality, I am the King, but the
people don't know it.  They think they rule themselves, but the fact is I
have everything my own way.  No one else knows anything about our laws,
and so I make the laws to suit myself.  If any oppose me or question my
acts, I tell them it's the law and that settles it.  If I called myself
King, however, and wore a crown and lived in royal style, the people
would not like me and might do me harm.  As the High Coco-Lorum of Thi, I
am considered a very agreeable person."
	"It seems a very clever arrangement," said the Wizard.  "And now,
as you are the principal person in Thi, I beg you to tell us if the Royal
Ozma is a captive in your city."
	"No," answered the diamond-headed man.  "We have no captives.  No
strangers but yourselves are here, and we have never before heard of the
Royal Ozma."
	"She rules over all of Oz," said Dorothy, "and so she rules your
city and you, because you are in the Winkie Country, which is a part of
the Land of Oz."
	"It may be," returned the High Coco-Lorum, "for we do not study
geography and have never inquired whether we live in the Land of Oz or
not.  And any Ruler who rules us from a distance and unknown to us is
welcome to the job.  But what has happened to your Royal Ozma?"
	"Someone has stolen her," said the Wizard.  "Do you happen to
have any talented magician among your people, one who is especially
clever, you know?"
	"No, none especially clever.  We do some magic, of course, but it
is all of the ordinary kind.  I do not think any of us has yet aspired to
stealing Rulers, either by magic or otherwise."
	"Then we've come a long way for nothing!" exclaimed Trot
regretfully.
	"But we are going farther than this," asserted the Patchwork
Girl, bending her stuffed body backward until her yarn hair touched the
floor and then walking around on her hands with her feet in the air.
	The High Coco-Lorum watched Scraps admiringly.  "You may go
farther on, of course," said he, "but I advise you not to.  The Herkus
live back of us, beyond the thistles and the twisting lands, and they are
not very nice people to meet, I assure you."
	"Are they giants?" asked Betsy.
	"They are worse than that," was the reply.  "They have giants for
their slaves and they are so much stronger than giants that the poor
slaves dare not rebel for fear of being torn to pieces."
	"How do you know?" asked Scraps.
	"Everyone says so," answered the High Coco-Lorum.
	"Have you seen the Herkus yourself?" inquired Dorothy.
	"No, but what everyone says must be true, otherwise what would be
the use of their saying it?"
	"We were told before we got here that you people hitch dragons to
your chariots," said the little girl.
	"So we do," declared the High Coco-Lorum.  "And that reminds me
that I ought to entertain you as strangers and my guests by taking you
for a ride around our splendid City of Thi."  He touched a button, and a
band began to play.  At least, they heard the music of a band, but
couldn't tell where it came from.  "That tune is the order to my
charioteer to bring around my dragon-chariot," said the High Coco-Lorum.
"Every time I give an order, it is in music, which is a much more
pleasant way to address servants than in cold, stern words."
	"Does this dragon of yours bite?" asked Button-Bright.
	"Mercy no!  Do you think I'd risk the safety of my innocent
people by using a biting dragon to draw my chariot?  I'm proud to say
that my dragon is harmless, unless his steering gear breaks, and he was
manufactured at the famous dragon factory in this City of Thi.  Here he
comes, and you may examine him for yourselves."
	They heard a low rumble and a shrill squeaking sound, and going
out to the front of the house, they saw coming around the corner a car
drawn by a gorgeous jeweled dragon, which moved its head to right and
left and flashed its eyes like headlights of an automobile and uttered a
growling noise as it slowly moved toward them.  When it stopped before
the High Coco-Lorum's house, Toto barked sharply at the sprawling beast,
but even tiny Trot could see that the dragon was not alive. Its scales
were of gold, and each one was set with sparkling jewels, while it walked
in such a stiff, regular manner that it could be nothing else than a
machine.  The chariot that trailed behind it was likewise of gold and
jewels, and when they entered it, they found there were no seats.
Everyone was supposed to stand up while riding. The charioteer was a
little, diamond-headed fellow who straddled the neck of the dragon and
moved the levers that made it go.
	"This," said the High Coco-Lorum pompously, "is a wonderful
invention. We are all very proud of our auto-dragons, many of which are
in use by our wealthy inhabitants.  Start the thing going, charioteer!"
	The charioteer did not move.  "You forgot to order him in music,"
suggested Dorothy.
	"Ah, so I did."  He touched a button and a music box in the
dragon's head began to play a tune.  At once the little charioteer pulled
over a lever, and the dragon began to move, very slowly and groaning
dismally as it drew the clumsy chariot after it.  Toto trotted between
the wheels.  The Sawhorse, the Mule, the Lion and the Woozy followed
after and had no trouble in keeping up with the machine.  Indeed, they
had to go slow to keep from running into it.  When the wheels turned,
another music box concealed somewhere under the chariot played a lively
march tune which was in striking contrast with the dragging movement of
the strange vehicle, and Button-Bright decided that the music he had
heard when they first sighted this city was nothing else than a chariot
plodding its weary way through the streets.
	All the travelers from the Emerald City thought this ride the
most uninteresting and dreary they had ever experienced, but the High
Coco-Lorum seemed to think it was grand.  He pointed out the different
buildings and parks and fountains in much the same way that the conductor
does on an American "sightseeing wagon" does, and being guests they were
obliged to submit to the ordeal.  But they became a little worried when
their host told them he had ordered a banquet prepared for them in the
City Hall.  "What are we going to eat?" asked Button-Bright suspiciously.
	"Thistles," was the reply.  "Fine, fresh thistles, gathered this
very day."
	Scraps laughed, for she never ate anything, but Dorothy said in a
protesting voice, "OUR insides are not lined with gold, you know."
	"How sad!" exclaimed the High Coco-Lorum, and then he added as an
afterthought, "but we can have the thistles boiled, if you prefer."
	"I'm 'fraid they wouldn't taste good even then," said little
Trot. "Haven't you anything else to eat?"
	The High Coco-Lorum shook his diamond-shaped head.  "Nothing that
I know of," said he.  "But why should we have anything else when we have
so many thistles?  However, if you can't eat what we eat, don't eat
anything.  We shall not be offended, and the banquet will be just as merry and delightful."
	Knowing his companions were all hungry, the Wizard said, "I trust
you will excuse us from the banquet, sir, which will be merry enough
without us, although it is given in our honor.  For, as Ozma is not in
your city, we must leave here at once and seek her elsewhere."
	"Sure we must!" agreed Dorothy, and she whispered to Betsy and
Trot, "I'd rather starve somewhere else than in this city, and who knows,
we may run across somebody who eats reg'lar food and will give us some."
	So when the ride was finished, in spite of the protests of the
High Coco-Lorum, they insisted on continuing their journey.  "It will
soon be dark," he objected.
	"We don't mind the darkness," replied the Wizard.
	"Some wandering Herku may get you."
	"Do you think the Herkus would hurt us?" asked Dorothy.
	"I cannot say, not having had the honor of their acquaintance.
But they are said to be so strong that if they had any other place to
stand upon they could lift the world."
	"All of them together?" asked Button-Bright wonderingly.
	"Any one of them could do it," said the High Coco-Lorum.
	"Have you heard of any magicians being among them?" asked the
Wizard, knowing that only a magician could have stolen Ozma in the way
she had been stolen.
	"I am told it is quite a magical country," declared the High
Coco-Lorum, "and magic is usually performed by magicians.  But I have
never heard that they have any invention or sorcery to equal our
wonderful auto-dragons."
	They thanked him for his courtesy, and mounting their own animals
rode to the farther side of the city and right through the Wall of
Illusion out into the open country.  "I'm glad we got away so easily,"
said Betsy.  "I didn't like those queer-shaped people."
	"Nor did I," agreed Dorothy.  "It seems dreadful to be lined with
sheets of pure gold and have nothing to eat but thistles."
	"They seemed happy and contented, though," remarked the Wizard,
"and those who are contented have nothing to regret and nothing more to
wish for."


CHAPTER 10 TOTO LOSES SOMETHING


	For a while the travelers were constantly losing their direction,
for beyond the thistle fields they again found themselves upon the
turning-lands, which swung them around one way and then another.  But by
keeping the City of Thi constantly behind them, the adventurers finally
passed the treacherous turning-lands and came upon a stony country where
no grass grew at all.  There were plenty of bushes, however, and although
it was now almost dark, the girls discovered some delicious yellow
berries growing upon the bushes, one taste of which set them all to
picking as many as they could find.  The berries relieved their pangs of
hunger for a time, and as it now became too dark to see anything, they
camped where they were.
	The three girls lay down upon one of the blankets--all in a
row--and the Wizard covered them with the other blanket and tucked them
in. Button-Bright crawled under the shelter of some bushes and was asleep
in half a minute.  The Wizard sat down with his back to a big stone and
looked at the stars in the sky and thought gravely upon the dangerous
adventure they had undertaken, wondering if they would ever be able to
find their beloved Ozma again.  The animals lay in a group by themselves,
a little distance from the others.  "I've lost my growl!" said Toto, who
had been very silent and sober all that day. "What do you suppose has
become of it?"
	"If you had asked me to keep track of your growl, I might be able
to tell you," remarked the Lion sleepily.  "But frankly, Toto, I supposed
you were taking care of it yourself."
	"It's an awful thing to lose one's growl," said Toto, wagging his
tail disconsolately.  "What if you lost your roar, Lion?  Wouldn't you
feel terrible?"
	"My roar,"replied the Lion, "is the fiercest thing about me.  I
depend on it to frighten my enemies so badly that they won't dare to
fight me."
	"Once," said the Mule, "I lost my bray so that I couldn't call to
Betsy to let her know I was hungry.  That was before I could talk, you
know, for I had not yet come into the Land of Oz, and I found it was
certainly very uncomfortable not to be able to make a noise."
	"You make enough noise now," declared Toto.  "But none of you
have answered my question: Where is my growl?"
	"You may search ME," said the Woozy.  "I don't care for such
things, myself."
	"You snore terribly," asserted Toto.
	"It may be," said the Woozy.  "What one does when asleep one is
not accountable for.  I wish you would wake me up sometime when I'm
snoring and let me hear the sound.  Then I can judge whether it is
terrible or delightful."
	"It isn't pleasant, I assure you," said the Lion, yawning.
	"To me it seems wholly unnecessary," declared Hank the Mule.
	"You ought to break yourself of the habit," said the Sawhorse.
"You never hear me snore, because I never sleep.  I don't even whinny as
those puffy meat horses do.  I wish that whoever stole Toto's growl had
taken the Mule's bray and the Lion's roar and the Woozy's snore at the
same time."
	"Do you think, then, that my growl was stolen?"
	"You have never lost it before, have you?" inquired the Sawhorse.
	"Only once, when I had a sore throat from barking too long at the
moon."
	"Is your throat sore now?" asked the Woozy.
	"No," replied the dog.
	"I can't understand," said Hank, "why dogs bark at the moon.
They can't scare the moon, and the moon doesn't pay any attention to the
bark.  So why do dogs do it?"
	"Were you ever a dog?" asked Toto.
	"No indeed," replied Hank.  "I am thankful to say I was created a
mule--the most beautiful of all beasts--and have always remained one."
	The Woozy sat upon his square haunches to examine Hank with care.
"Beauty," he said, "must be a matter of taste.  I don't say your judgment
is bad, friend Hank, or that you are so vulgar as to be conceited.  But
if you admire big, waggy ears and a tail like a paintbrush and hoofs big
enough for an elephant and a long neck and a body so skinny that one can
count the ribs with one eye shut--if that's your idea of beauty, Hank,
then either you or I must be much mistaken."
	"You're full of edges," sneered the Mule.  "If I were square as
you are, I suppose you'd think me lovely."
	"Outwardly, dear Hank, I would," replied the Woozy.  "But to be
really lovely, one must be beautiful without and within."
	The Mule couldn't deny this statement, so he gave a disgusted
grunt and rolled over so that his back was toward the Woozy.  But the
Lion, regarding the two calmly with his great, yellow eyes, said to the
dog, "My dear Toto, our friends have taught us a lesson in humility.  If
the Woozy and the Mule are indeed beautiful creatures as they seem to
think, you and I must be decidedly ugly."
	"Not to ourselves," protested Toto, who was a shrewd little dog.
"You and I, Lion, are fine specimens of our own races.  I am a fine dog,
and you are a fine lion.  Only in point of comparison, one with another,
can we be properly judged, so I will leave it to the poor old Sawhorse to
decide which is the most beautiful animal among us all. The Sawhorse is
wood, so he won't be prejudiced and will speak the truth."
	"I surely will," responded the Sawhorse, wagging his ears, which
were chips set in his wooden head.  "Are you all agreed to accept my
judgment?"
	"We are!" they declared, each one hopeful.
	"Then," said the Sawhorse, "I must point out to you the fact that
you are all meat creatures, who tire unless they sleep and starve unless
they eat and suffer from thirst unless they drink.  Such animals must be
very imperfect, and imperfect creatures cannot be beautiful.  Now, I am
made of wood."
	"You surely have a wooden head," said the Mule.
	"Yes, and a wooden body and wooden legs, which are as swift as
the wind and as tireless.  I've heard Dorothy say that 'handsome is as
handsome does,' and I surely perform my duties in a handsome manner.
Therefore, if you wish my honest judgment, I will confess that among us
all I am the most beautiful."
	The Mule snorted, and the Woozy laughed; Toto had lost his growl
and could only look scornfully at the Sawhorse, who stood in his place
unmoved.  But the Lion stretched himself and yawned, saying quietly,
"Were we all like the Sawhorse, we would all be Sawhorses, which would be
too many of the kind.  Were we all like Hank, we would be a herd of
mules; if like Toto, we would be a pack of dogs; should we all become the
shape of the Woozy, he would no longer be remarkable for his unusual
appearance.  Finally, were you all like me, I would consider you so
common that I would not care to associate with you.  To be individual, my
friends, to be different from others, is the only way to become
distinguished from the common herd.  Let us be glad, therefore, that we
differ from one another in form and in disposition. Variety is the spice
of life, and we are various enough to enjoy one another's society; so let
us be content."
	"There is some truth in that speech," remarked Toto reflectively.
"But how about my lost growl?"
	"The growl is of importance only to you," responded the Lion, "so
it is your business to worry over the loss, not ours.  If you love us, do
not afflict your burdens on us; be unhappy all by yourself."
	"If the same person stole my growl who stole Ozma," said the 
little dog, "I hope we shall find him very soon and punish him as he 
deserves.  He must be the most cruel person in all the world, for to 
prevent a dog from growling when it is his nature to growl is just as
wicked, in my opinion, as stealing all the magic in Oz."

CHAPTER 11 BUTTON-BRIGHT LOSES HIMSELF


	The Patchwork Girl, who never slept and who could see very well in
the dark, had wandered among the rocks and bushes all night long, with
the result that she was able to tell some good news the next morning.
"Over the crest of the hill before us," she said, "is a big grove of
trees of many kinds on which all sorts of fruits grow.  If you will go
there, you will find a nice breakfast awaiting you."  This made them
eager to start, so as soon as the blankets were folded and strapped to
the back of the Sawhorse, they all took their places on the animals and
set out for the big grove Scraps had told them of.
	As soon as they got over the brow of the hill, they discovered it
to be a really immense orchard, extending for miles to the right and left
of them.  As their way led straight through the trees, they hurried
forward as fast as possible.  The first trees they came to bore quinces,
which they did not like.  Then there were rows of citron trees and then
crab apples and afterward limes and lemons.  But beyond these they found
a grove of big, golden oranges, juicy and sweet, and the fruit hung low
on the branches so they could pluck it easily.
	They helped themselves freely and all ate oranges as they
continued on their way.  Then, a little farther along, they came to some
trees bearing fine, red apples, which they also feasted on, and the
Wizard stopped here long enough to tie a lot of the apples in one end of
a blanket.  "We do not know what will happen to us after we leave this
delightful orchard," he said, "so I think it wise to carry a supply of
apples with us.  We can't starve as long as we have apples, you know."
	Scraps wasn't riding the Woozy just now.  She loved to climb the
trees and swing herself by the branches from one tree to another.  Some
of the choicest fruit was gathered by the Patchwork Girl from the very
highest limbs and tossed down to the others.  Suddenly, Trot asked,
"Where's Button-Bright?" and when the others looked for him, they found
the boy had disappeared.
	"Dear me!" cried Dorothy.  "I guess he's lost again, and that
will mean our waiting here until we can find him."
	"It's a good place to wait," suggested Betsy, who had found a
plum tree and was eating some of its fruit.
	"How can you wait here and find Button-Bright at one and the same
time?" inquired the Patchwork Girl, hanging by her toes on a limb just
over the heads of the three mortal girls.
	"Perhaps he'll come back here," answered Dorothy.
	"If he tries that, he'll prob'ly lose his way," said Trot.  "I've
known him to do that lots of times.  It's losing his way that gets him
lost."
	"Very true," said the Wizard.  "So all the rest of you must stay
here while I go look for the boy."
	"Won't YOU get lost, too?" asked Betsy.
	"I hope not, my dear."
	"Let ME go," said Scraps, dropping lightly to the ground.  "I
can't get lost, and I'm more likely to find Button-Bright than any of
you." Without waiting for permission, she darted away through the trees
and soon disappeared from their view.
	"Dorothy," said Toto, squatting beside his little mistress, "I've
lost my growl."
	"How did that happen?" she asked.
	"I don't know," replied Toto.  "Yesterday morning the Woozy nearly
stepped on me, and I tried to growl at him and found I couldn't growl a
bit."
	"Can you bark?" inquired Dorothy.
	"Oh, yes indeed."
	"Then never mind the growl," said she.
	"But what will I do when I get home to the Glass Cat and the Pink
Kitten?" asked the little dog in an anxious tone.
	"They won't mind if you can't growl at them, I'm sure," said
Dorothy. "I'm sorry for you, of course, Toto, for it's just those things
we can't do that we want to do most of all; but before we get back, you
may find your growl again."
	"Do you think the person who stole Ozma stole my growl?"
	Dorothy smiled.  "Perhaps, Toto."
	"Then he's a scoundrel!" cried the little dog.
	"Anyone who would steal Ozma is as bad as bad can be," agreed
Dorothy, "and when we remember that our dear friend, the lovely Ruler of
Oz, is lost, we ought not to worry over just a growl."
	Toto was not entirely satisfied with this remark, for the more he
thought upon his lost growl, the more important his misfortune became.
When no one was looking, he went away among the trees and tried his best
to growl--even a little bit--but could not manage to do so.  All he could
do was bark, and a bark cannot take the place of a growl, so he sadly
returned to the others.
	Now Button-Bright had no idea that he was lost at first.  He had
merely wandered from tree to tree seeking the finest fruit until he
discovered he was alone in the great orchard.  But that didn't worry him
just then, and seeing some apricot trees farther on, he went to them.
Then he discovered some cherry trees; just beyond these were some
tangerines.  "We've found 'most ev'ry kind of fruit but peaches," he said
to himself, "so I guess there are peaches here, too, if I can find the
trees."
	He searched here and there, paying no attention to his way, until
he found that the trees surrounding him bore only nuts.  He put some
walnuts in his pockets and kept on searching, and at last--right among
the nut trees--he came upon one solitary peach tree.  It was a graceful,
beautiful tree, but although it was thickly leaved, it bore no fruit
except one large, splendid peach, rosy-cheeked and fuzzy and just right
to eat.
	Button-Bright had some trouble getting that lonesome peach, for
it hung far out of reach, but he climbed the tree nimbly and crept out on
the branch on which it grew, and after several trials during which he was
in danger of falling he finally managed to pick it.  Then he got back to
the ground and decided the fruit was well worth his trouble. It was
delightfully fragrant, and when he bit into it, he found it the most
delicious morsel he had ever tasted.  "I really ought to divide it with
Trot and Dorothy and Betsy," he said, "but p'rhaps there are plenty more
in some other part of the orchard."
	In his heart he doubted this statement, for this was a solitary
peach tree, while all the other fruits grew upon many trees set close to
one another; but that one luscious bite made him unable to resist eating
the rest of it, and soon the peach was all gone except the pit.
Button-Bright was about to throw this peach pit away when he noticed that
it was of pure gold.  Of course, this surprised him, but so many things
in the Land of Oz were surprising that he did not give much thought to
the golden peach pit.  He put it in his pocket, however, to show to the
girls, and five minutes afterward had forgotten all about it.
	For now he realized that he was far separated from his
companions, and knowing that this would worry them and delay their
journey, he began to shout as loud as he could.  His voice did not
penetrate very far among all those trees, and after shouting a dozen
times and getting no answer, he sat down on the ground and said, "Well,
I'm lost again. It's too bad, but I don't see how it can be helped."
	As he leaned his back against a tree, he looked up and saw a
Bluefinch fly down from the sky and alight upon a branch just before him.
The bird looked and looked at him.  First it looked with one bright eye
and then turned its head and looked at him with the other eye.  Then,
fluttering its wings a little, it said, "Oho!  So you've eaten the
enchanted peach, have you?"
	"Was it enchanted?" asked Button-Bright.
	"Of course," replied the Bluefinch.  "Ugu the Shoemaker did
that."
	"But why?  And how was it enchanted?  And what will happen to one
who eats it?" questioned the boy.
	"Ask Ugu the Shoemaker.  He knows," said the bird, preening its
feathers with its bill.
	"And who is Ugu the Shoemaker?"
	"The one who enchanted the peach and placed it here--in the exact
center of the Great Orchard--so no one would ever find it.  We birds
didn't dare to eat it; we are too wise for that.  But you are
Button-Bright from the Emerald City, and you, YOU, YOU ate the enchanted
peach!  You must explain to Ugu the Shoemaker why you did that."  And
then, before the boy could ask any more questions, the bird flew away and
left him alone.
	Button-Bright was not much worried to find that the peach he had
eaten was enchanted.  It certainly had tasted very good, and his stomach
didn't ache a bit.  So again he began to reflect upon the best way to
rejoin his friends.  "Whichever direction I follow is likely to be the
wrong one," he said to himself, "so I'd better stay just where I am and
let THEM find ME--if they can."
	A White Rabbit came hopping through the orchard and paused a
little way off to look at him.  "Don't be afraid," said Button-Bright.
"I won't hurt you."
	"Oh, I'm not afraid for myself," returned the White Rabbit.
"It's you I'm worried about."
	"Yes, I'm lost,' said the boy.
	"I fear you are, indeed," answered the Rabbit.  "Why on earth did
you eat the enchanted peach?"
	The boy looked at the excited little animal thoughtfully.  "There
were two reasons," he explained.  "One reason was that I like peaches,
and the other reason was that I didn't know it was enchanted."
	"That won't save you from Ugu the Shoemaker," declared the White
Rabbit, and it scurried away before the boy could ask any more questions.
	"Rabbits and birds," he thought, "are timid creatures and seem
afraid of this shoemaker, whoever he may be.  If there was another peach
half as good as that other, I'd eat it in spite of a dozen enchantments
or a hundred shoemakers!"
	Just then, Scraps came dancing along and saw him sitting at the
foot of the tree.  "Oh, here you are!" she said.  "Up to your old tricks,
eh?  Don't you know it's impolite to get lost and keep everybody waiting
for you?  Come along, and I'll lead you back to Dorothy and the others."
	Button-Bright rose slowly to accompany her.  "That wasn't much of
a loss," he said cheerfully.  "I haven't been gone half a day, so there's
no harm done."
	Dorothy, however, when the boy rejoined the party, gave him a
good scolding.  "When we're doing such an important thing as searching
for Ozma," said she, "it's naughty for you to wander away and keep us
from getting on.  S'pose she's a pris'ner in a dungeon cell!  Do you want
to keep our dear Ozma there any longer than we can help?"
	"If she's in a dungeon cell, how are you going to get her out?"
inquired the boy.
	"Never you mind.  We'll leave that to the Wizard.  He's sure to
find a way."
	The Wizard said nothing, for he realized that without his magic
tools he could do no more than any other person.  But there was no use
reminding his companions of that fact; it might discourage them.  "The
important thing just now," he remarked, "is to find Ozma, and as our
party is again happily reunited, I propose we move on."
	As they came to the edge of the Great Orchard, the sun was
setting and they knew it would soon be dark.  So it was decided to camp
under the trees, as another broad plain was before them.  The Wizard
spread the blankets on a bed of soft leaves, and presently all of them
except Scraps and the Sawhorse were fast asleep.  Toto snuggled close to
his friend the Lion, and the Woozy snored so loudly that the Patchwork
Girl covered his square head with her apron to deaden the sound.

CHAPTER 12 THE CZAROVER OF HERKU


	Trot wakened just as the sun rose, and slipping out of the
blankets, went to the edge of the Great Orchard and looked across the
plain. Something glittered in the far distance.  "That looks like another
city," she said half aloud.
	"And another city it is," declared Scraps, who had crept to Trot's
side unheard, for her stuffed feet made no sound.  "The Sawhorse and I
made a journey in the dark while you were all asleep, and we found over
there a bigger city than Thi.  There's a wall around it, too, but it has
gates and plenty of pathways."
	"Did you get in?" asked Trot.
	"No, for the gates were locked and the wall was a real wall.  So
we came back here again.  It isn't far to the city.  We can reach it in
two hours after you've had your breakfasts."
	Trot went back, and finding the other girls now awake, told them
what Scraps had said.  So they hurriedly ate some fruit--there were
plenty of plums and fijoas in this part of the orchard--and then they
mounted the animals and set out upon the journey to the strange city.
Hank the Mule had breakfasted on grass, and the Lion had stolen away and
found a breakfast to his liking; he never told what it was, but Dorothy
hoped the little rabbits and the field mice had kept out of his way.  She
warned Toto not to chase birds and gave the dog some apple, with which he
was quite content.  The Woozy was as fond of fruit as of any other food
except honey, and the Sawhorse never ate at all.
	Except for their worry over Ozma, they were all in good spirits
as they proceeded swiftly over the plain.  Toto still worried over his
lost growl, but like a wise little dog kept his worry to himself. Before
long, the city grew nearer and they could examine it with interest.  In
outward appearance the place was more imposing than Thi, and it was a
square city, with a square, four-sided wall around it, and on each side
was a square gate of burnished copper.  Everything about the city looked
solid and substantial; there were no banners flying, and the towers that
rose above the city wall seemed bare of any ornament whatever.
	A path led from the fruit orchard directly to one of the city
gates, showing that the inhabitants preferred fruit to thistles.  Our
friends followed this path to the gate, which they found fast shut.  But
the Wizard advanced and pounded upon it with his fist, saying in a loud
voice, "Open!"
	At once there rose above the great wall a row of immense heads,
all of which looked down at them as if to see who was intruding.  The
size of these heads was astonishing, and our friends at once realized
that they belonged to giants who were standing within the city.  All had
thick, bushy hair and whiskers, on some the hair being white and on
others black or red or yellow, while the hair of a few was just turning
gray, showing that the giants were of all ages.  However fierce the heads
might seem, the eyes were mild in expression, as if the creatures had
bee