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d.i.c.k had been busily engaged in making up his line and backfield. There was some delay while Tom Craig accomplished this same thing.
"Now, one thing that all you youngsters want to remember," declared Len, "is that no player can play off-side. All ready?"
Both young football captains called out that they were. Len had provided himself with a pocket whistle loaned by one of the fifth-grade boys.
Trill-ll! Tom Craig kicked the ball himself, but it was a poor kick. The pigskin soon struck the ground.
"I'll try that over again," announced Tom.
But d.i.c.k and his own fighting line had already started. d.i.c.k, at center, with Dave on his right hand and Greg Holmes on his left, s.n.a.t.c.hed up the ball and started with it for the Rustlers' goal.
A bunch of Rustlers opposed and tackled Prescott. d.i.c.k succeeded, by the help of Dave and Greg, in breaking through the line, but the Rustlers turned and were after him. Down went d.i.c.k, but he had the pigskin under him.
"Take it away from him, fellows!" panted Craig. But Len blew his whistle, following up the signal by some sharp commands that brought the struggle to a close.
"Prescott's side have the ball," declared Len, "and will now play off a snap-back. And, boys, one thing I must emphasize. I've told you that under the rules no man may play off-side. So, hereafter, if I find any of you off-side, I'm going to penalize that eleven."
d.i.c.k was whispering to some of his players, for, without any code of signals, he must thus instruct his fellows in the play that was to be made with the ball.
Then the whistle sounded. The Rangers put the ball through the Rustlers'
line, and onward for some fifteen yards before the ball was once more down.
"Good work, Prescott," nodded Len Spencer. "Now, pa.s.s your orders for the next play, then hustle into line and snap-back."
Len placed the whistle between his lips and was about to blow it when Dave Darrin darted forward, holding up one hand.
"What's the trouble?" asked Len.
"Mr. Referee, count the men on the other team."
"Fifteen players," summed up Len. "That's too many. Captain Craig, you'll have to shed four men."
"Oh, let him have 'em all," begged d.i.c.k serenely. "Craig'll need 'em all to keep us from breaking through with the ball."
At blast of the whistle the pigskin was promptly in play again, both teams starting in with Indian yells. There was plenty of enthusiasm, but little or no skill. The thing became so mixed up that Len ran closer.
A human heap formed. Greg Holmes was somewhere down near the bottom of that mix-up, holding on to the ball for all he was worth. Over him sprawled struggling Rangers and fighting Rustlers. Other players, from both teams, darted forward, hurling themselves onto the heap with immense enthusiasm.
"The ball is down," remarked one eager young spectator disgustedly. "Len oughter blow his whistle."
"Yes, where's the whistle?" demanded other close-by spectators.
From somewhere away down toward the bottom of the heap came Len Spencer's m.u.f.fled remark:
"I'll blow the whistle all right, if half a hundred of you Indians will get off my face for a minute!"
"Come out of that tangle, all of you," ordered Tom Craig, after pulling himself out of the squirming heap of boys. "It's against the rules to smother the referee to death. He has to be killed painlessly."
When the tangle had been straightened out Greg Holmes was found to be still doubled up, holding doggedly to the pigskin that had been his to guard.
"Get ready for the next snap-back," ordered Captain d.i.c.k.
"Don't do anything of the sort," countermanded Len. "I can see that what you youngsters need more than play, just at present, is a working knowledge of the rules. So listen, and I'll introduce you to a few principles of the game."
After ten minutes of earnest talk Len Spencer allowed the ball to be put once more in play.
At one time it was discovered that Craig, reinforced by enthusiastic onlookers from the sidelines, had seventeen men in his team. d.i.c.k, on the other hand, kept an alert eye to see that no more than eleven ranged up with his team.
"Now, that's enough for the first day," called out Len at last. "Neither side won, but the Rangers had by far the better of it. Now, before you fellows play to-morrow I advise you all to do some earnest studying of the rules of the game."
"Don't make too much fun of us in the 'Blade,' will you, Mr. Spencer?"
begged d.i.c.k. "We really want to get a good Central Grammar eleven at work. We want to play the other Grammar Schools in town."
"Oh, no one but a fool could find it in his heart to make fun of boys who display as much earnestness as you youngsters showed to-day,"
Spencer replied soothingly.
"It's the first time we ever tried real play, you know," d.i.c.k went on.
"Yes; and you'll have to do a lot more practising before you can convince any one that you are doing any real playing," Len nodded. "Go after the rules. Memorize 'em. And watch the High School crowd play football. That will teach you a lot."
"I know we need it," d.i.c.k sighed. "But then, you see, Grammar School football is a brand-new thing."
"Why, now I come to think of it, I don't believe I ever did hear before of a Grammar School eleven," Len Spencer admitted.
At least twenty other boys followed d.i.c.k and his chums from the field on the way home.
"Say, d.i.c.k," called Tom Craig, "is the Central Grammar team going to have a uniform?"
"Why, I suppose we must have one," d.i.c.k answered.
"Where are we going to get the money?"
d.i.c.k looked blank at that. A football uniform costs at least a few dollars, and who ever heard of an average Grammar School boy having a few dollars, all his own to spend?
"I hadn't thought of that," muttered Prescott. "Oh, well, we'll have to find some way of getting uniforms. We've got to have 'em. That's all there is to it."
"'Where there's a will there's a way,'" quoted Tom Reade blithely.
But most of the fellows shook their heads.
"We can't get uniforms," declared several of the older eighth-grade boys.
"Then, if we can't we'll have to play without uniforms," d.i.c.k maintained. "We've got to play somehow. I hope you fellows won't go and lose your enthusiasm. Let's all hang together for football."
One by one the other boys dropped off, until only d.i.c.k and his five chums were left at a corner on Main Street.
"I'm afraid a lot of the fellows will go and let their enthusiasm cool over night," declared Harry Hazelton.
"Remember, fellows, we've got to have our football eleven, and we've got to keep at it until we can really play a good game," insisted d.i.c.k.