He was hungry, and he
imagined, perhaps, if he did that trick, the men would give him
something to eat.
"Look at the little chap!" cried one of the men. "He's showing off all
right."
"Yes, he's a smart pig," said the other. "He must be a trick pig, and I
guess whoever owns him will be sorry he is lost."
"Hu! I'm sorry myself!" thought Squinty to himself, as he walked around
on his hind legs.
"I wonder if these men are ever going to give me anything to eat," he
went on. He looked at them from his queer, squinting eye, but the men
did not seem to know that the little pig was hungry.
On and on sailed the balloon, being blown by the wind like a sailboat.
Squinty dropped down on his four legs, since he found that walking on
his hind ones brought him no food. Then, as he made his way about the
basket, he saw some more of those queer bags filled with something.
There were a great many of them in the balloon, and Squinty thought they
must have something good in them.
Squinty squatted down beside one, and, with his strong teeth, he soon
had bitten a hole in the cloth.
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