<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br/> <small>LOUISE HAS AN IDEA</small></SPAN></h2>
<p class="cap">Clearfield played Highland Hall Military
Academy four days later and it is safe to say
that practically the entire juvenile population
of the town turned out to see the first football
game of the season. Perhaps the weather had something
to do with the size of the audience that filled
the grandstand and overflowed on the field, for
there was a zest and a snap to the air that hinted
overcoats, and the sun played hide-and-seek behind
the scudding gray clouds. Brent Field, as the High
School athletic grounds are called, is only a scant
block and a half from the river and when the wind
is from the northwest, as it was this afternoon,
the few scattered buildings between field and river
afford but little protection.</p>
<p>Highland Hall had brought along most of its
Fourth Year Class—the Academy regulations forbade
members of other classes accompanying the
teams away from school—and the forty-odd boys
looked very fine and manly in their cadet-blue cape-coats,
below which tan-gaitered legs twinkled. They
assembled at one end of the stand and gave their
team a lusty welcome when it trotted on the gridiron,
waving their blue-and-blue banners proudly.
The dark blue and light blue of the flags was repeated
in the costumes of the players, and their
sweaters held the letters H. H. M. A. cunningly
arranged, the first H taking the form of a football
goal and the other letters appearing in the space
under the cross-bar. But, in spite of the neat attire
of players and supporters, Highland Hall was no
dangerous adversary. The fellows, as Fudge explained
to Gordon, were allowed only two hours a
day for recreation and were coached by the Commandant,
a grave martinet of a man who knew more
of military tactics than football. Fudge and Gordon
were seated on the bench, after a ten-minute workout,
and Fudge, who had more flesh than he needed,
was still breathing hard from his exertions.</p>
<p>“That’s the coach over there,” he said, nodding
across the gridiron. “He’s a terror, they say.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“You have a cousin at Highland, haven’t you?”
asked Gordon. “Is he here to-day?”</p>
<p>“No, he’s only in the Second Year Class, and they
don’t let any but the Fourth Year fellows go away
from school. They’re strict as anything. I’m glad
they didn’t send me there. Dad wanted to, but ma
and I were dead against it.” Fudge grinned reminiscently.
“I told ma I didn’t think I was strong
enough for it.”</p>
<p>“Fudge, you’re a fakir,” said Gordon cheerfully.
Fudge was starting to deny this indignantly when
Lanny White, returning from the center of the field
where he had won the toss-up, summoned the players.</p>
<p>“All right, fellows,” said Lanny. “They kick-off
and we take the west goal. Get into it, now, and
let’s get the drop on them!”</p>
<p>“Now let’s see who’s who,” murmured Gordon
as the team trotted out and spread over the west
end of the field. “Haley, center; Cable and Kent,
guards; Horsford and— Hello, Will Scott’s playing
right tackle! What’s the matter with Wayland?”</p>
<p>“Sick; has tonsilitis or something. Who’s that
going to play left end, Gordie?”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Jim Grover; and Toll is right end, Cottrell,
quarter, Lanny and Rob Hansard, halves, and Felker,
fullback. I guess that’s about the way we’ll line
up in the Springdale game, barring accidents; only,
of course, Way will get in, and Morris Brent.”
Gordon leaned forward and spoke along the bench.
“Aren’t you going to play, Morris?”</p>
<p>Morris shrugged the shoulders under the purple
sweater he wore. “I don’t know,” he answered.
“Maybe in the last quarter.”</p>
<p>Gordon nodded. “Hope so,” he said. And then,
to Fudge: “Lanny’s not taking any chances with
Morris, is he? There’s the whistle!”</p>
<p>Lanny got the kick-off and, unaided by interference,
raced back nearly twenty yards before he was
stopped. Clearfield set to work with the few plays
she had ready, simple attacks from a tandem formation
in which the runner relied more on speed
and force than deception. Two first downs were
gained and then a fumble necessitated a punt, and
Felker, who was called on, booted the ball almost
straight into the air and Clearfield not only lost
possession of the pigskin but some eight yards besides.</p>
<p>Highland started in with a will. She used a wide
open formation and on the first play attempted a
double pass which, had it succeeded, would have
netted much territory. But, perhaps more by good
luck than good management, Jack Toll nailed the
runner near the side line for a scant two-yard gain.
A second attempt, a forward pass straight over the
middle of the line, went better and Highland made
her distance easily. An involved play in which quarter
faked a kick and then passed to a halfback for
a run around the short side, only resulted in the ball
being taken in about where it had gone into play.
A plunge at tackle on the left gained three yards
and, with six to go on third down, Highland punted.
The ball was well handled and well kicked and Cottrell
got it behind his goal and touched it back.
On her twenty yards Clearfield started her advance
once more and carried almost to midfield before she
was again forced to punt.</p>
<p>This time Felker did better, although the ball
covered but a scant twenty-five yards. Highland,
failing to gain at center, returned the kick and the
ball was Clearfield’s on her forty-five yards. Rob
Hansard got away around right end for a first down
and on the next play repeated the performance for
four more. Lanny made the distance off left
tackle. The Blue-and-Blue was proving weak at her
wings and Lanny wisely continued the assault at
those positions. Both he and Hansard got around
without much difficulty until the ball was on the
opponent’s twenty-yard line. Then Lanny was nailed
for a five-yard loss, and Cottrell, faking a forward
pass, tossed the ball to Felker and that youth
banged his way straight through the middle of the
enemy’s line for twelve yards. From there, in three
plays, Clearfield took the ball over, Hansard securing
the touchdown. Cable missed the try-at-goal.</p>
<p>The first quarter ended after the kick-off, the
score 6 to 0.</p>
<p>The second period saw one more score for the
home team. Highland fumbled on her forty yards
and Cottrell picked up the ball and tore off fifteen
yards before he was stopped. A fake forward pass
with the ball going to Lanny failed to gain, but
Felker smashed through for four and Hansard
barely gained first down by sliding off right tackle.
Felker fumbled but Lanny recovered for a two-yard
loss and then skirted the opponent’s left end for a
touchdown in the corner of the field. The punt-out
placed the ball directly in front of goal and
just back of the fifteen-yard line, and this time Bert
Cable had no difficulty in negotiating the extra
point. For the rest of the period Clearfield played
on the defensive and kicked frequently, and the
half ended with the ball in Highland Hall’s possession
on her own forty-three yards.</p>
<p>Dick watched the game from the grandstand in
company with Louise Brent, who, like most of the
High School girls, was an ardent football lover.
Between the halves, however, Louise abandoned the
game long enough to announce the progress of the
Fund.</p>
<p>“It was forty-three dollars and sixty cents this
noon, Dick,” she said. “That isn’t bad, but I
thought we’d have lots more by this time. The
girls have done heaps better than the boys. They’ve
given almost two-thirds of the total. Do you think
the boys really dislike Mr. Grayson; many of them,
I mean?”</p>
<p>“No, but most of the younger fellows don’t have
much spending money, Louise, and I suppose they
think they need sodas and candy and such things
more than Mr. Grayson needs a new desk!” Dick
smiled at his companion’s expression of disapproval.
“They’ll fall into line in the end, though, I guess.
Gordon told me last night that most of the fellows
he has been after have only given twenty-five or
fifty cents.”</p>
<p>“Well, you’ve done beautifully,” said Louise.</p>
<p>“I’ve bullied the chaps,” laughed Dick. “Anyway,
it’s easier to get money from the seniors.
They’ve got more, in the first place, and then they’re
more willing to give it up. Some of the younger
boys have it in for Mr. Grayson for one reason or
another, I suppose. We’ll get the full amount finally,
I think. It would be a lot easier if we didn’t
have to be so secret about it. We could call a meeting
some day at recess and pretty nearly get the
whole amount, I’ll bet. But it would surely get
around if we did that and Mr. Grayson would hear
of it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and half the fun will be in surprising him,”
said Louise. “We’re going to take Miss Turner into
the secret and she will let us into Mr. Grayson’s
office the night before his birthday. Won’t it be
exciting?”</p>
<p>“Terribly,” agreed Dick. “Imagine us tiptoeing
in there in the dark, you carrying the desk and May
the revolving book-case and Nell the—the arm-chair——”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“No, don’t let her take the arm-chair,” begged
Louise. “She’ll be sure to set it down and go to
sleep in it. What are you going to carry?”</p>
<p>“I thought I’d take the small chair,” replied Dick
gravely. “I’m very unselfish, you see. I leave the
larger honors to the rest of you.”</p>
<p>“Yes, larger and heavier,” laughed the girl.
“There they come again! Do you know, I sort of
half wish Highland Hall would score, Dick?
They’re such nice-looking boys, and their uniforms
are so stunning!”</p>
<p>“They’ve certainly got us beaten on appearance,”
said Dick. “Hello, Lanny’s sending the same fellows
back.”</p>
<p>“Shouldn’t he?”</p>
<p>“There’s no law against it, only, with a lead of
thirteen points, it seems to me it would be a good
chance to let some of the subs smell gunpowder.
I guess he knows what he’s doing, though.”</p>
<p>“I do hope he has a successful season,” said
Louise. “I like Lanny, and he always works so
hard at everything that he deserves to win.”</p>
<p>“He’s pretty well handicapped just now. The
team really does need a coach, and the Athletic Committee
didn’t make any kind of a popular hit with
the school when it decided against paying for one
the other night. The fellows blame Mr. Grayson
for that, by the way, and I suppose that’s one reason
why they don’t subscribe more liberally to the Fund.
There’s a wretched kick-off for you!”</p>
<p>“Did Bert Cable do that, Dick? I thought he
usually kicked splendidly.”</p>
<p>“He does the best he can considering that he
doesn’t think it worth while to cock the ball any,”
replied Dick dryly. “Bert evidently thinks that pile
of sand out there is to look at. If he’d tee the ball
up properly and— Good work, Clearfield!”</p>
<p>Kent, the purple-legged right guard had broken
through and smeared Highland’s play behind her
line, and an approving cheer arose from the stand.
Highland tried an end run and made four yards
and then attempted a forward pass which failed.
With almost ten yards to go, she got a fine long punt
away and her ends raced up the field under it and,
undisturbed by the wretched attempt at interference
put up by the Clearfield backs, nailed Cottrell in his
tracks. For six of the ten minutes constituting the
third period Highland, playing desperately, held
her opponent away from her goal line. Then a
fumble by Lanny worked to Clearfield’s advantage,
for Chester Cottrell recovered the ball as it trickled
back, dodged a plunging Highland forward, put an
end out with a straight-arm and suddenly found
himself clear. That run began on Clearfield’s
thirty-seven yards and would certainly have resulted
in a touchdown had not Cottrell, in evading a tackle
by the opposing quarter, slipped one foot across the
side line. Although Cottrell kept on and landed
the ball under the cross-bar, and although Clearfield
expressed its delight with much shouting, the referee
called the ball back and put it in play on Highland’s
twenty-three yards. The Blue-and-Blue won
the admiration of friend and foe alike then, for
she disputed every inch of the ground and Clearfield
won her first down only after the hardest
work and by a margin so slim that the linesmen
had to trot in with the chain and measure the distance.
Lanny’s attempt on the next play to circle
the opponent’s left wing failed and Felker could
make only three yards through the line. With
seven to go on the third down, Lanny and Cottrell
put their heads together and Lanny called in Morris
Brent.</p>
<p>The ball was then almost opposite the center of
the goal and on the ten-yard line. Morris dropped
back to kicking position, swung one sturdy leg experimentally
and held up his hands. Highland,
shouting, “<em>Block it! Block it!</em>”, poised, ready to
break through. Then back shot the ball. Morris
barely caught it as it tried to pass over his head.
Before he could get back into position the Blue-and-Blue
was on him. Wisely, he made no effort to
kick, for the ball would surely have been blocked,
but instead ran back and desperately attempted a
forward pass to Grover. The ball, however,
grounded and there was a minute of time during
which Highland tried to persuade the referee that
the pass was illegal, that Morris had purposely
grounded the ball to save a loss of territory. But
the official decided that the play had been fair and
the teams lined up on the twenty-one yards and
again Morris walked back. The chance of scoring
by drop-kick was pretty slim now, for the kicker
was near the thirty-yard line and Highland had
just demonstrated her ability to break through.
But Morris did it. The pass was straight and
breast-high and the ball left his toe quickly and surmounted
the upstretched hands of the leaping enemy.
There was an instant of doubt as the pigskin
seemed to hesitate at the bar, but it went over,
although by inches only, and Clearfield’s thirteen
points became sixteen.</p>
<p>As the teams lined up again for the kick-off
Morris retired once more, receiving an ovation as he
walked to the bench. Nelson Beaton took his place
for the few seconds remaining. Then the whistle
blew and the third period was at an end.</p>
<p>When the teams faced each other again on Clearfield’s
thirty yards substitutes were much in evidence.
Jones was in place of Grover, Arthur Beaton
for Haley, Tupper for Hansard and Kirke for Cottrell,
and Felker was back at full. Highland Hall,
too, had run new men on. Clearfield started rushing
again and was soon past the center of the field.
Kirke, the substitute quarter, got his signals mixed
then and there was a ten-yard loss, and Clearfield
kicked. Highland caught the ball on her twenty-five-yard
line and came back twelve, the Purple’s
ends showing up poorly. In the next scrimmage
Beaton, Clearfield’s substitute center, received a
blow on the head and retired in favor of Pete
Robey. Pete had been trying for guard position
and the duties of center rush were none too familiar
to him, and, in spite of Lanny’s coaching, he was
very weak on defense. Twice Highland made big
gains through him before the secondary defense
came to his assistance. Near the middle of the
field Highland was forced to punt and Tupper fumbled
on his twelve yards, recovered, tried to advance
by a run across the field and was finally stopped for
no gain. A fake-kick play with Felker taking the
ball for a try around left end resulted in a loss and
Felker kicked on second down. Highland signaled
fair-catch and held the ball on Clearfield’s thirty-seven
yards. A forward pass went diagonally to
the right end and that youth plunged through half
the Clearfield team before he was forced out near
the twenty-yard line. The blue-coated adherents of
the visiting team cheered lustily and implored a
touchdown.</p>
<p>A wide end run gained a scant three yards and
took the ball well over to the Clearfield side of the
gridiron. Another forward pass was tried but was
incompleted, and, with seven to go on third down,
the Highland right tackle fell out of the line and
walked back to about the thirty yards, while the
quarterback knelt in front of him and patted the
turf.</p>
<p>“I hope he makes a goal,” declared Louise Brent,
in the grandstand.</p>
<p></p>
<p>“He won’t this time,” answered Dick, as Highland
arranged her men to protect the kicker. Louise
looked a question. “Highland has two downs yet,”
he continued, “and that angle is almost impossible
for anyone but a Brickley. They’ve made our fellows
spread out and open their line and they’ll either
snap the ball to that fellow who pretends he is going
to place-kick and he will try a forward or the ball
will go to one of those backs for a run straight
through the middle. At least, that’s the way I size
it up. We’ll see now.”</p>
<p>As Dick ended the ball shot back from center
into the hands of the second back from the line and
that youth put down his head and sprang straight
ahead and went through for all of five yards before
the secondary defense stopped him. Once more
Highland Hall cheered loudly, and, almost before
they had ceased, the Blue-and-Blue had added another
three yards by an attack on right tackle and
had gained her first down and shifted the ball a
good twelve feet nearer the center of the field.
The play was just inside the home team’s ten-yard
line now and Clearfield supporters were hoarsely
commanding the defenders of the east goal to
“Hold ’em!” The time-keeper trotted on to announce
two minutes left as the Highland quarterback
piped his signals again. A half was sent hurtling
against the left of Clearfield’s line for a scant
yard, and a plunge at center, with quarterback
carrying the ball, netted but two more. Again the
tackle stepped back, this time apparently for a drop-kick,
since the quarter did not accompany him, and
again the defenders spread their line. The angle to
the goal was by no means impossible now and the
watchers held their breaths as the teams crouched.</p>
<p>“Block this!” implored Lanny. “Block this
kick!”</p>
<p>“Watch for a fake!” counseled Kirke shrilly from
between his goal-posts. Then came the signals, a
halfback moved slightly forward, the ball shot back
to the outstretched hands of the waiting tackle and
the teams sprang together. The tackle’s long leg
swung, and a few of the opponents who were cut
off from sight of the ball, leaped into the air, but
there was no thud of ball against shoe, for the tackle
stepped nimbly to the right, poised the pigskin and
hurled it straight and hard across the battling lines
to where an undetected back had stolen around and
behind the goal line. Though frenzied hands strove
to intercept the ball, it settled into the catcher’s
hands and stayed there while he was hurled to the
ground two yards back of goal.</p>
<p>Perhaps the blue flags weren’t waved then as the
cape-coated squad sprang to their feet and hurled
joyous shrieks to the sky! And perhaps that crafty
back wasn’t thumped and hugged when he was at
last pulled to his feet! For Highland had done
what she had never done before in ten years of
Clearfield contests; she had crossed the Purple’s
goal-line!</p>
<p>Disgustedly, Clearfield lined up under her goal as
the ball was taken out for the try, and still more
disgustedly she saw it pass a minute later straight
over the bar, while Highland Hall shouted and
waved riotously. Over at the score-board the small
sophomore who officiated there smeared out the figure
6 after “Highland Hall” and, protest in every
movement, chalked up a big white 7.</p>
<p>Clearfield tried to take revenge in the remaining
sixty-odd seconds and fought desperately, but the
time was too short and the last whistle blew with
the ball in Highland’s possession near her thirty
yards.</p>
<p>“I’m glad they scored,” said Louise a trifle defiantly
as Dick put his crutches under his arms preparatory
to descending the stand. “They deserved
to, didn’t they?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Dick agreed doubtfully. Then he repeated
the word ungrudgingly. “Yes, they did deserve
to, Louise. Any team deserves to win who is smart
enough to take advantage of its opponents’ mistakes.
And that is what Highland Hall did.”</p>
<p>“That,” responded Louise, as they waited for the
aisle to clear, “sounds as if you thought the others
didn’t really earn that score, Dick.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean it to. Highland earned her touchdown,
all right. Profiting by the other fellow’s
mistakes is more than half the game.”</p>
<p>“But I thought our boys played a very good
game,” objected Louise loyally.</p>
<p>“Far be it from me to dispute you,” replied Dick,
with a smile.</p>
<p>“But didn’t they?” she insisted. “Of course,
Dick, I don’t know very much about such things,
but I want to learn. Didn’t they play well?”</p>
<p>“Clearfield,” answered Dick, “was at least twenty-four
points better than Highland Hall, Louise.
She won by the score of sixteen to seven. As Mr.
Grayson says, I invite your consideration.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” said Louise. “What was the matter, Dick?”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Well,” replied the other, as he stumped cautiously
down the steps, “it’s the general who watches the
battle through a pair of field glasses who sees best
what’s going on. Clearfield needed a general. It
was a good fight on Clearfield’s part, but there was
an unnecessary loss of lives!”</p>
<p>“Oh, you mean we needed a coach!”</p>
<p>“Badly,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“Then—then why don’t you do it?” exclaimed
Louise. “Dick! Why don’t you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, you mustn’t think that just because I can
criticize I could have managed that game any better,”
laughed Dick. “Almost anyone can be a critic,
but football coaches are a scarce article, Louise.”</p>
<p>“Just the same, I believe you could, Dick! And
I think it’s funny Lanny hasn’t thought of it!”</p>
<p>“I don’t,” Dick replied. “I’d think it funny if
he did, considering that I’ve never played it and have
to toddle around on a pair of sticks!”</p>
<p>“That has nothing to do with it,” replied Louise
convincedly. “I shall speak to him about it right
away. Isn’t it perfectly fine that I thought of it?”</p>
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