Paul and the Printing Press
Burmingham High School that first turned Paul
press cost?" he inquired one ev
wha
nting
p quizzically from th
u a trifle
lau
ut I have often heard you say,
father's tu
cy take its flight tow
Paul ben
e finest the Burmingham High ever graduated. I want it to leave a record behind it, and do things no othe
was all at
Mr. Calder, who is at the head of the English department, asse
kle light his
but up at school we call it a poem. It was about the war. And Eva Ha
on't s
-accounts of the games, and notices of the matches to be played. And the girls want to boo
daily, I should think," rem
he joke goo
. "Do printing presses cost much? And where do you get them
eaned back i
lars to equip a plant that would do creditable work. The preparation of copy and the task of getting it out would also take a great
e lad's f
" he hastened to add, "would be to have your
e do it
are always firms that are glad to get ex
was a
"You see we haven't any class treasury to draw on
exchange
d the elder man. "Surely you are not going to g
make what we wrote worth selling. We'd make people pay for it. But we couldn't charge much. Most
you think you could g
out it. Perhaps a dollar, or a dollar an
mbers would be l
medit
e thing simply to the doings of the seniors. We should put in not only general school news but items about the lower classes as well so that the pape
d the price of pape
cost much," was th
nly can but do,"
we couldn't have
not say
an we couldn'
ting press and operate it with the money you would probably have at hand. Nevertheless there are, as I said before,
ow
ate of about how much money you would be likely to secure, go and see some printer and put the question up to him. Tell him what you would want and find out exactly what he
iliar with his father's habits, did not follow him, for he knew that from now unti
been he was in no frame of mind to attack it to-night. A myriad of schemes and problems occu
ves as they dropped from the trees and blew idly along the sidewalk. There was a tang o
le bell broke the silence. He wheeled about. Noiselessly threading his way down the ved Paul. "Hold on!
heel by rising erect on its pe
s up,
d into his subject. He spoke ear
you think of '20 sta
eat hat, Kip
s Paul's
to rea
rited retort. "Aren't we all red-eyed already with Lat
id not
th a paper, Kipper?"
obituaries in," he answered. "To ex
r lau
ffectionately knocking Pau
dding, Cart.
other newspaper! Scott! I don't. I ne
"I mean a zippy little monthly with all the school news in it-hockey, footbal
ied young Carter, a gleam of
e paused thoughtfully. "But the money, Kip-the
take subsc
a subscrip,
responded vaguely.
is going to pay a perfectly good dollar and a quarter for the privilege
himself Pa
ouldn't know
y! Nix! Don't they
other things in-grinds on the
worse, would it?" declared
g a hole in the earth with the
ed at length. "But the ducats-where would those
press second-hand and do our
sident. Why, man alive, a printing press that's any good costs a small fortune-more money than the whole Hi
sig
firmed reluctantly. "He suggested we g
at all right if we
ons would net u
could we
dea," Paul
s their money or their life-death or a subscription to the-what are you going to call this rich and rare
far as that," ans
o start with a slogan-something spectacular and thrilling. Buy the Nutcracker! Subscribe to the Fire-eater! Have a copy of the Jabberwock! For goodness sake, christen it something! Start out with a punch or you'll ne
hand on his fri
. "You've hit it, Cart! The March Hare it is!
e a sample copy first, wou
ke the whole thing as spooky and mysterious as we can. Nobody s
d all your money you find you can'
st comes to worst we can give the money back again. But I shan
ted with enthusiasm. "You'
ling something that doesn't even exist! I see you years hence o
"Quit your joshing! I'm serious. You've got to help me,
are when I know that not a line of it ha
ur
lle g
ave a nerve!
to do it just
Cameron which had won for him his leadership at s
second into his chum's
th you, Kipper. We'll see what we
money people pay for it. There shall be no fake about it. To-morrow I shall call a class meeting and we'll elect an editorial st
is friend with undi
arch Hare! I can hear the shekels chinking into our pockets this minute. Put me do
dollar and a quarter, or
as well go in big while we're at it. What is one-fifty for
ted into his
over his shoulder. "Got to do som
pend on y
ur March Hare with all my lungs.
he turn in the road. Then, straightening his shoulders with resolution, he