The High School Pitcher eBook

H. Irving Hancock
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about The High School Pitcher.

The High School Pitcher eBook

H. Irving Hancock
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about The High School Pitcher.

“We don’t need to get the word around,” smiled Dick.  “If we passed 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, Dick has the scheme hatching, or he wouldn’t talk about it,” declared Dave Darrin, confidently.

“Why, if all you want is to send the whole student body on Monday morning, each with fifteen copper cents to hand the Prin., that can be fixed up easily enough,” Dick pronounced, judicially.

“How are we going to do it?” asked Dalzell, dubiously.

“Well, let us see how many pennies would be needed?  There are close to two hundred and fifty students, but a few might refuse to go into the trick.  Let us say two hundred and forty times fifteen.  That’s thirty-six hundred, isn’t it?  That means we want to get thirty-six dollars’ worth of pennies.  Well, we’ll get them!”

We will?” demanded Dan, with a snort.  “Dick, unless you’ve got more cash on hand than the rest of us then I don’t believe a dragnet search of this crowd would turn up two dollars.  Thirty-six?  That’s going some and halfway back!”

“There are three principal ways of buying goods of any kind,”
Dick continued.   “One way is with cash-----”

“That’s the street we live on!” broke in Harry Hazelton, with a laugh.

“The second way,” Dick went on, “is to pay with a check.  But you must have cash at the bank behind the check, or you get into trouble.  Now the third way is to buy goods on credit.”

“That’s just as bad,” protested Dan.  “Where, in the whole town, could a bunch of youngsters like us, get thirty-six dollars’ worth of real credit?”

“I can,” declared Dick, coolly.

“You?  Where?  With your father?”

“No; Dad rarely takes in much in the way of pennies.  I don’t suppose he has two dollars’ worth of pennies on hand at any time.  But, fellows, you know that ‘The Morning Blade’ is a one cent paper.  Now, the publisher of ‘The Blade’ must bank a keg of pennies every day in the week.  I can see Mr. Pollock, the editor, this afternoon, right after luncheon.  He has probably sent most of the pennies to bank today, but I’ll ask him if he’ll have to-morrow’s pennies saved for us.”

“Say, if he’ll only do that!” glowed Dan, his eyes flashing.

“He will,” declared Dave Darrin.  “Mr. Pollock will do anything, within reason, that Dick asks.”

“Now, fellows, if I can put this thing through, we can meet in my room to-morrow afternoon at one o’clock.  Pennies come in rolls of fifty each, you know.  We’ll have to break up the rolls, and make new ones, each containing fifteen pennies.”

Dave Darrin stopped where he was, and began to laugh.  Tom Reade quickly joined in.  The others were grinning.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The High School Pitcher from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.