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The High School Pitcher.
by H. Irving Hanc.o.c.k.
CHAPTER I
THE PRINc.i.p.aL HEARS SOMETHING ABOUT "PENNIES"
Clang!
"Attention, please."
The barely audible droning of study ceased promptly in the big a.s.sembly room of the Gridley High School.
The new princ.i.p.al, who had just stepped into the room, and who now stood waiting behind his flat-top desk on the platform, was a tall, thin, severe-looking man of thirty-two or three.
For this year Dr. Carl Thornton, beloved princ.i.p.al for a half-score of years, was not in command at the school. Ill health had forced the good old doctor to take at least a year's rest, and this stranger now sat in the Thornton chair.
"Mr. Harper," almost rasped out Mr. Cantwell's voice, "stop rustling that paper."
Harper, a little freshmen, who had merely meant to slip the paper inside his desk, and who was not making a disturbing noise thereby, flushed pink and sat immobile, the paper swinging from one hand.
From the princ.i.p.al's att.i.tude and his look of seriousness, something unusual was pending. Some of the girls permitted their apprehension to be seen. On the faces of several of the boys rested a look of half defiance, for this princ.i.p.al was unpopular, and, by the students, was considered unjust.
"It being now in the early part of December," went on Mr. Cantwell, "we shall, on Monday, begin rehearsing the music for the special exercises to be held in this school on the day before Christmas.
To that end, each of you found, on returning from recess, the new Christmas music on your desk."
Mr. Cantwell paused an instant for this important information to sink in. Several slight, little sighs of relief escaped the students, especially from the girls' side of the great room.
This speech did not presage anything very dreadful to come.
"This sheet music," continued Mr. Cantwell, "is to be sold to the pupils at cost to the Board of Education. This cost price is fifteen cents."
Again Mr. Cantwell paused. It was a trick of his, a personal peculiarity. Then be permitted himself a slight smile as he added:
"This being Friday, I will ask you all to be sure to bring, on Monday morning, the money, which you will pay to me. Don't forget, please; each of you bring me his little fifteen pennies. Now, return to your studies until the beginning of the fourth period is announced."
As he bent his head low behind a bulky textbook, Dan Dalzell, of the soph.o.m.ore cla.s.s, glanced over at d.i.c.k Prescott with sparkling mischief gleaming in his eyes.
d.i.c.k, who was now a soph.o.m.ore, and one of the a.s.sured leaders in sports and fun, guessed that Dan Dalzell was hatching another of the wild schemes for which Dalzell was somewhat famous. d.i.c.k even guessed that he knew about what was pa.s.sing in Dan's mind.
Though moderate whispering was permitted, at need, in the a.s.sembly room, there was no chance for d.i.c.k and Dan to pa.s.s even a word at this time, for almost immediately the bell for the fourth period of the morning's work sounded, and the sections rose and filed out to the various recitation rooms.
To readers of the preceding volume in this series, d.i.c.k & Co.
will need no introduction. All six of the youngsters were very well introduced in "The High School Freshmen."
Such readers will remember their first view of d.i.c.k & Co. With brown-haired d.i.c.k Prescott as leader, the other members of this unique firm of High School youngsters, were Tom Reade, Dan Dalzell, Harry Hazelton, Gregory Holmes and Dave Darrin.
The six had been chums at the Central Grammar School, and had stuck together like burrs through the freshman year at the Gridley High School. In fact, even in their freshmen period, when new students are not expected to have much to say, and are given no chance at the school athletics, d.i.c.k & Co. had made themselves abundantly felt.
Our readers will recall how the Board of Education had some notion of prohibiting High School football, despite the fact that the Gridley H.S. eleven was one of the best in the United States.
Readers will also recall the prank hatched by d.i.c.k & Co., by means of which the Board was quickly shown how unpopular such a move would be in the city.
Our readers will also recollect that, though freshmen were barred from active part in sports, yet d.i.c.k & Co. found the effective way of raising plentiful funds for the Athletics Committee. In the annual paper chase the freshmen hounds, under d.i.c.k Prescott's captaincy, beat the soph.o.m.ore hares---for the first time in many years. In the skating events, later on, d.i.c.k and his chums captured, for the freshman cla.s.s, three of the eight events. From the start, d.i.c.k & Co. had shown great ingenuity in "boosting" football, in return for which, many of the usual restrictions on freshmen were waived where d.i.c.k & Co. were concerned.
In the nearly three months, now, that the new school year had gone along, d.i.c.k & Co. had proved that, as sophs, they were youngsters of great importance in the student body. They were highly popular with most of their fellow-students; but of course that very popularity made them some enemies among those who envied or disliked them.
For one thing, neither d.i.c.k nor any of his partners came of families of any wealth. Yet it was inevitable that some of the boys and girls of Gridley H.S. should come from families of more or less wealth.
It is but fair to say that most of these scions of the wealthier families were agreeable, affable and democratic---in a word, Americans without any regard to the size of the family purse.
A few of the wealthier young people, however, made no secret of their dislike for smiling, happy, capable d.i.c.k & Co. One of the leaders in this feeling was Fred Ripley, son of a wealthy, retired lawyer.
During the skating events of the preceding winter, d.i.c.k Prescott, aided by his chums, had saved the life of Ripley, who had gone through thin ice. However, so haughty a young man as Fred Ripley, though he had been slightly affected by the brave generosity, could not quite bring himself to regard d.i.c.k as other than an interloper in High School life.
Ripley had even gone so far as to bribe Tip Scammon, worthless, profligate son of the honest old janitor of the High School, to commit a series of robberies from the locker rooms in the school bas.e.m.e.nt while d.i.c.k carried the key as monitor there. The "plunder"
had been found in d.i.c.k's own room at home, and the young man had been suspended from the High School for a while. Thanks, however, to Laura Bentley and Belle Meade, two girls then freshmen and now sophs, Tip had been run down. Then the police made Tip confess, and he was sent away to the penitentiary for a short term. Tip, however, refused to the last to name his accomplice. d.i.c.k knew that Ripley was the accomplice, but kept his silence, preferring to fight all his own battles by himself.
So Fred Ripley was now a junior, in good standing as far as scholars.h.i.+p and school record went.
So far, during this new year, Ripley had managed to smother his hatred for d.i.c.k & Co., especially for d.i.c.k himself.
Lessons and recitations on this early December morning went off as usual. In time the hands of the clock moved around to one o'clock in the afternoon, at which time the High School closed for the day.
The partners of d.i.c.k & Co. went down the steps of the building and all soon found their way through the surging crowds of escaped students. This s.e.xtette turned down one of the streets and trudged along together. At first several of the other High School boys walked along near them. Finally, however, the crowd thinned away until only d.i.c.k & Co. were together.
"Dan," said d.i.c.k, smilingly, "something struck you hard this morning, when Mr. Cantwell asked us all to bring the music-money on Monday."
"He didn't say exactly 'money,'" retorted Dan Dalzell, quickly.
"What Prin. did say was that each one of us was to bring fifteen _pennies_."
"Yes, I remember," laughed d.i.c.k.
"Now, we couldn't have held that mob when school let out," pursued Dan. "And now it's too late. But say, if the Prin. had only sprung that on us _before_ recess-----"
"Well, suppose he had?" interrupted Greg Holmes, a trifle impatiently.
"Why, then," retorted Dan, mournfully, "we could have pa.s.sed word around, at recess, to have everybody bring just what the Prin.
called for---_pennies_!"
"Hm!" grinned Dave Darrin, who was never slow to see the point of anything. "Then you had a vision of the unpopular Prin. being swamped under a deluge of pennies---plain, individual little copper cents?"
"That's it!" agreed Dan. "But now, we won't see more than a few before we go to school again Monday. Oh---wow! What a chance that takes away from us. Just imagine the Prin. industriously counting away at thousands of pennies, and a long line of boy and girl students in line, each one waiting to pa.s.s him another handful of _pennies_! Say, can you see the Prin.---just turning white and muttering to himself? But there's no chance to get the word around, now!"
"We don't need to get the word around," smiled d.i.c.k. "If we pa.s.sed the word around, it might get to the Prin.'s ears before Monday, and he'd hatch up some way to head us off."
"If you can see how to work the trick at this late hour, you can see further than I can," muttered Dan, rather enviously.
"Oh, d.i.c.k has the scheme hatching, or he wouldn't talk about it,"