CHAPTER IV
THE ODE TO SPRING
With the advent of that first warm spring-*like
weather the High School athletic activities
began in earnest. During March
the baseball candidates had practiced to some extent
indoors and occasionally on the field, but not a great
deal had been accomplished. The "cage" in the basement
of the school building was neither large nor
light, while cold weather, with rain and wet ground,
had made outdoor work far from satisfactory. Of
the Baseball Team, Clearfield had high hopes this
spring. There was a wealth of material left from
the successful Nine of the previous spring, including
two first-class pitchers, while the captain, Warner
Jones, was a good leader as well as a brainy player.
Then too, and in the judgment of the school this
promised undoubted success, the coaching had been
placed in the hands of Dick Lovering. Dick had
proven his ability as a baseball coach the summer
before and had subsequently piloted the football