| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I. | Preparations for School. | [7] |
| II. | The Journey. | [25] |
| III. | The Dinner Episode. | [55] |
| IV. | The Reception. | [81] |
| V. | A Box From Home. | [113] |
| VI. | How “Smiles” Was Scalped. | [143] |
| VII. | Defying the Powers. | [167] |
| VIII. | Midnight Confidences. | [199] |
| IX. | Joe’s Message. | [227] |
| X. | Clouds and Gathering Storms. | [249] |
| XI. | The Proud, Humbled. | [273] |
| XII. | The Seniors Outwitted. | [299] |
| XIII. | Imprisonment. | [323] |
| XIV. | Retaliation. | [339] |
| XV. | Victory. | [361] |
ELIZABETH HOBART AT
EXETER HALL.
CHAPTER I.
PREPARATIONS FOR SCHOOL.
Bitumen was what its name suggested. There was soft coal and smoke everywhere. Each day the clothes on the line were flecked with black. The buildings had the dull, dingy look which soot alone can give. The houses sagged on either side of narrow, unpaved streets, where during a rainy period ducks clattered about with their broods, and a few portly pigs led their shoats for a mud bath.
During a summer shower barefooted urchins waded knee-deep in the gutters, their trousers rolled to their thighs. Irish-Americans shot mud balls at black-eyed Italians; Polanders and Slavs together tried the depths of the same puddles; while the little boys of the Russian Fatherland played in a group by themselves at one end of the square.