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قراءة كتاب The Gayton Scholarship: A School Story

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The Gayton Scholarship: A School Story

The Gayton Scholarship: A School Story

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE GAYTON SCHOLARSHIP

THE GAYTON
SCHOLARSHIP

A SCHOOL STORY

BY

HERBERT HAYENS

Author of "At the Point of the Sword," "An Emperor's Doom,"
"Clevely Sahib," "Under the Lone Star,"
&c. &c.

THOMAS NELSON AND SONS
London, Edinburgh, and New York
1904

CONTENTS.

  1. THE DEANERY CANDIDATES

  2. THE CHALLENGE SHIELD

  3. A NEWSPAPER PARAGRAPH

  4. FURTHER NEWS OF THE "MORNING STAR"

  5. JIM STARTS WORK

  6. THE EXAMINATION

  7. "IT'S ALL MY FAULT"

  8. "DID I SAVE HIM?"

  9. THE RESULT OF THE EXAMINATION

  10. GOING DOWN HILL

  11. IS JIM A THIEF?

  12. WHERE IS THE MISSING MONEY?

  13. AN AMATEUR DETECTIVE

  14. CURLY AND COMPANY

  15. "WHEN THIEVES FALL OUT"

  16. A FRESH START

  17. A STARTLING SURPRISE

THE GAYTON SCHOLARSHIP.

CHAPTER I.

THE DEANERY CANDIDATES.

"Good-morning, Mrs. Hartland. Isn't Jim ready? All right; I'll wait for him. Do you think Susie would care for these wild flowers and grasses? I picked them this morning. Rover and I have been for a splendid run over the common, nearly as far as the forest."

"Thanks, Dick," said Mrs. Hartland, with a pleased smile; "Susie will be delighted with them. Poor girl! it's little chance she has to see them growing herself. What a pretty white dog-rose!"

"Isn't it a beauty? I thought Susie would like that.—Hullo, Jim!" as his chum appeared from an inner room; "come on, old lazy-bones. I expected to find you in a tremendous hurry this morning.—Good-bye, Mrs. Hartland; I hope Susie will be pleased with the flowers."

Most people liked Dick Boden. He was a comical youngster, fond of all kinds of fun and frolic, and always keeping an eye on the bright side of things. In school he was a regular pickle, and yet his teachers spoke well of him, for there was nothing mean about Dick, and he was as honest as the day.

"Full of animal spirits and a trifle impetuous, but a good little chap at bottom," said Mr. Holmore, the head-master of the Deanery School.

He was a round-faced, curly-haired fellow, with laughing blue eyes, a most engaging smile, and such an innocent expression that a lady artist once painted his portrait as a study of an angel. This greatly amused the Deaneryites, who promptly dubbed him the Angel.

Of course he was very popular with his school-fellows, but his one particular chum was Jim Hartland, a sailor's son, and one of the head boys in the school.

"Grinding for the exam.?" he asked, as they waved a last adieu to Mrs. Hartland, who stood on the doorstep watching them as they went down the street.

"Hardly," said Jim, "until we know who are to be the candidates."

"Oh, you'll be one for certain, and Perce Braithwaite another."

"And you."

"If Holmore gives me the chance, I'll work like a nigger for the honour of the school. The scholarship wouldn't be any good to me though; it only pays for the fees and books, and you have to stay till you are sixteen. Mother couldn't afford to keep me at school as long as that."

There was at this time great excitement among the boys of the elementary schools in the seaport town of Beauleigh. The governors of Gayton Public School had offered a scholarship, to be competed for by three selected candidates from every school in the town, and the offer had produced a feeling of intense rivalry.

The names of the chosen boys from the Deanery were to be made known that morning, and every one was on the tiptoe of

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