Encyclopedia Brown Shows the Way

BOOK: Encyclopedia Brown Shows the Way
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Table of Contents
 
 
Did he really see a ghost?
The Browns were sitting in the living room after dinner when Otto Beck burst into the house.
He opened his mouth to speak but couldn’t utter a word.
“Otto, what is it?” exclaimed Mrs. Brown. “What’s frightened you?”
“I—I saw
h-her!”
gasped Otto.
“Who?” asked Chief Brown.
Otto tried to tell. But the name stuck in a fresh chattering of teeth. Instead he said, “I ran all the way from Heartbreak Cove.”
“But that’s seven miles,” Encyclopedia protested. “Your feet must be killing you.”
“My feet never touched the ground,” said Otto.
After a while he recovered his strength. He blinked twice and said, “I saw Jennifer MacIntosh!”
Encyclopedia gave a start.
Jennifer MacIntosh had lived in Idaville a hundred years ago.
Read all the books in the
Encyclopedia Brown seriesl
No. 1 Encyclopedia Brown Boy Detective
No. 2 Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Secret Pitch
No. 3 Encyclopedia Brown Finds the Clues
No. 4 Encyclopedia Brown Gets His Man
No. 5 Encyclopedia Brown Solves Them All
No. 6 Encyclopedia Brown Keeps the Peace
No. 7 Encyclopedia Brown Saves the Day
No. 8 Encyclopedia Brown Tracks Them Down
No. 9 Encyclopedia Brown Shows the Way
No. 10 Encyclopedia Brown Takes the Case
No. 11 Encyclopedia Brown Lends a Hand
No. 12 Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Dead Eagles
No. 13 Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Midnight Visitor
For Gwen and Bill Hallstrom and Ann and Will, too
PUFFIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
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Registered Offices: Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
 
First published in the United States of America by Dutton Children’s Books,
a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 1972
Published by Puffin Books, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2008
 
Copyright © Donald J. Sobol, 1972
(Member of the Authors League of America, Inc.)
Illustrations copyright ©
Thomas
Nelson Inc., 1972
All rights reserved
 
THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS HAS CATALOGED
THE DUTTON CHILDREN’S BOOKS EDITION AS FOLLOWS:
Sobol, Donald J.
Encyclopedia Brown shows the way.
(His Encyclopedia Brown book no. 9)
Summary: Encyclopedia Brown, brilliant fifth-grade amateur detective, solves ten crimes.
The reader may match solutions with those at the end of the book.
eISBN : 978-1-101-04238-0
[1. Detective stories] 1. Shortall, Leonard W., illus. II. Title.
PZ7.S68524Eru [Fic] 72-2911
 
 
 
The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.

http://us.penguingroup.com

The Case of the Growling Dog
Crime was increasing everywhere in the United States. Except in Idaville.
No one—child or grown-up—got away with breaking the law in Idaville.
Apart from catching crooks lickety-quick, Idaville was like most seaside towns its size. It had rich families and poor families, lovely beaches, three movie theaters, and two delicatessens. It had churches, a synagogue, and a Little League.
And it had ten-year-old Encyclopedia Brown, America’s Sherlock Holmes in sneakers.
Encyclopedia’s father was chief of police. People across the country thought he was the smartest police chief on earth.
Chief Brown was smart. His officers were brave. But once in a while they came up against a crime they could not solve.
Then Chief Brown knew what to do. He went home.
Over dinner, he told Encyclopedia about the case. If Encyclopedia didn’t solve the mystery before he finished his first glass of milk, his mother was disappointed. He was an only child.
Chief Brown would have liked to see a statue of Encyclopedia placed outside the FBI building. He hated keeping his son’s detective work a secret.
But what good would it do to tell?
Who would believe that the mastermind behind Idaville’s wonderful police record could live happily on bubble gum and popcorn? So Chief Brown said nothing.
Encyclopedia never breathed a word about the help he gave his father. He didn’t want to seem different from other fifth-graders.
But he was stuck with his nickname.
Only his parents and his teachers called him by his real name, Leroy. Everyone else called him Encyclopedia.
An encyclopedia is a book or set of books filled with facts from A to Z. So was Encyclopedia’s head. He was really more like an entire library, only better! His pals could ask him questions without having to whisper.
One evening over soup, Chief Brown said, “I think I know who stole Mr. Dale’s electric drill last night.”
“Who?” asked Mrs. Brown.
“Ed Baker,” answered Chief Brown.
“Isn’t he the teen-ager who stole a car in January and wrecked it over in Glenn City?” asked Encyclopedia.
Chief Brown nodded. “Ed was seen running near Mr. Dale’s house last night around the time someone broke into the garage and stole the electric drill and some other tools.”
“Did you arrest him, dear?” asked Mrs. Brown.
“I can’t prove he did it,” said Chief Brown. “Ed claims he was running to get in shape for football. He says he ran by Mr. Dale’s house, but didn’t stop.”
“Don’t you have any clues?” asked Encyclopedia.
“Two,” replied Chief Brown. “We found one perfect footprint in the back yard. A left sneaker print. It was made in a spot of soft earth.”
“Does it match Ed’s sneaker?” asked Mrs. Brown.
“It’s a half size too small,” said Chief Brown heavily.
“Perhaps Mr. Dale made the print himself,” suggested Mrs. Brown.
“Mr. Dale insists that no one has been in the back yard for nearly a week,” said Chief Brown. “The rain yesterday afternoon washed out all the old footprints.”
“So the sneaker print is new,” said Encyclopedia. “It has to be the thief’s. What’s the second clue, Dad?”
“A piece of a shirt,” said Chief Brown. “It got caught on a branch six inches above the ground.”
“Did you find a torn shirt at Ed’s house?” inquired Mrs. Brown.
“No,” said Chief Brown. “Ed probably didn’t realize he had left a footprint. But he would have discovered the rip and thrown the shirt away.”
Chief Brown took a spoonful of soup. Then he continued.
“Ed must have been crawling on his stomach in order not to be seen,” he said.
“What makes you think that?” asked Mrs. Brown.
“If Ed had been walking, the low branch would have ripped the bottom of his trousers, not his shirt,” said Chief Brown. “But what he did next is the puzzler.”
“How come?” said Encyclopedia.
“But the question is, how did he get past Rover?”
“The low branch is outside the fence that goes around Mr. Dale’s house and garage,” said Chief Brown. “At night, a big German shepherd named Rover runs loose inside the fence.”
“Hmmm,” said Encyclopedia. “Ed crawled to the fence so as not to be seen and climbed over. But the question is, how did he get past Rover?”
“Is Rover such a good watchdog?” asked Mrs. Brown.
“Rover is an attack dog,” said Chief Brown. “He’s trained to bark at strangers and to seize their sleeves or trousers in his teeth.”
“Ed could have fed him something to keep him quiet,” said Mrs. Brown.
“Rover won’t take food from anyone except Mr. Dale,” replied Chief Brown.
“Didn’t Mr. Dale hear anything at all last night?” asked Encyclopedia.
“He heard Rover growling,” said Chief Brown. “Since Rover is trained to
bark
at strangers, Mr. Dale thought the dog was chasing a frog or a rabbit. He didn’t get out of bed to look.”
“Perhaps Ed clubbed Rover and knocked him out,” offered Mrs. Brown.
“Rover wasn’t hurt,” said Chief Brown. “Well... not in the usual way.”
“What do you mean, Dad?” inquired Encyclopedia.
“This morning Mr. Dale found Rover curled up by the back door, whimpering,” said Chief Brown. “The poor dog has been that way ever since. He won’t eat. It’s as if he had a nervous breakdown last night.”

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