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<h1>THE EFFICIENCY EXPERT</h1>
<h4>by</h4>
<h2>Edgar Rice Burroughs</h2>
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<h3><SPAN name="Ch_I" name="Ch_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h3>
<h2>JIMMY TORRANCE, JR.</h2>
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<p>The gymnasium was packed as Jimmy Torrance stepped into the ring
for the final event of the evening that was to decide the boxing
championship of the university. Drawing to a close were the nearly
four years of his college career—profitable years, Jimmy
considered them, and certainly successful up to this point. In the
beginning of his senior year he had captained the varsity eleven,
and in the coming spring he would again sally forth upon the
diamond as the star initial sacker of collegedom.</p>
<p>His football triumphs were in the past, his continued baseball
successes a foregone conclusion—if he won to-night his cup of
happiness, and an unassailably dominant position among his fellows,
would be assured, leaving nothing more, in so far as Jimmy
reasoned, to be desired from four years attendance at one of
America’s oldest and most famous universities.</p>
<p>The youth who would dispute the right to championship honors
with Jimmy was a dark horse to the extent that he was a freshman,
and, therefore, practically unknown. He had worked hard, however,
and given a good account of himself in his preparations for the
battle, and there were rumors, as there always are about every
campus, of marvelous exploits prior to his college days. It was
even darkly hinted that he was a professional pugilist. As a matter
of fact, he was the best exponent of the manly art of self-defense
that Jimmy Torrance had ever faced, and in addition thereto he
outweighed the senior and outreached him.</p>
<p>The boxing contest, as the faculty members of the athletic
committee preferred to call it, was, from the tap of the gong, as
pretty a two-fisted scrap as ever any aggregation of low-browed
fight fans witnessed. The details of this gory contest, while
interesting, have no particular bearing upon the development of
this tale. What interests us is the outcome, which occurred in the
middle of a very bloody fourth round, in which Jimmy Torrance
scored a clean knock-out.</p>
<p>It was a battered but happy Jimmy who sat in his room the
following Monday afternoon, striving to concentrate his mind upon a
college text-book which should, by all the laws of fiction, have
been ‘well thumbed,’ but in reality, possessed
unruffled freshness which belied its real age.</p>
<p>“I wish,” mused Jimmy, “that I could have got
to the bird who invented mathematics before he inflicted all this
unnecessary anguish upon an already unhappy world. In about three
rounds I could have saved thousands from the sorrow which I feel
every time I open this blooming book.”</p>
<p>He was still deeply engrossed in the futile attempt of
accomplishing in an hour that for which the college curriculum set
aside several months when there came sounds of approaching
footsteps rapidly ascending the stairway. His door was
unceremoniously thrown open, and there appeared one of those
strange apparitions which is the envy and despair of the small-town
youth—a naturally good-looking young fellow, the sartorial
arts of whose tailor had elevated his waist-line to his arm-pits,
dragged down his shoulders, and caved in his front until he had the
appearance of being badly dished from chin to knees. His trousers
appeared to have been made for a man with legs six inches longer
than his, while his hat was evidently several sizes too large,
since it would have entirely extinguished his face had it not been
supported by his ears.</p>
<p>“Hello, Kid!” cried Jimmy. “What’s
new?”</p>
<p>“Whiskers wants you,” replied the other.
“Faculty meeting. They just got through with me.”</p>
<p>“Hell!” muttered Jimmy feelingly. “I
don’t know what Whiskers wants with me, but he never wants to
see anybody about anything pleasant.”</p>
<p>“I am here,” agreed the other, “to announce to
the universe that you are right, Jimmy. He didn’t have
anything pleasant to say to me. In fact, he insinuated that dear
old alma mater might be able to wiggle along without me if I
didn’t abjure my criminal life. Made some nasty comparison
between my academic achievements and foxtrotting. I wonder, Jimmy,
how they get that way?”</p>
<p>“That’s why they are profs,” explained Jimmy.
“There are two kinds of people in this world—human
beings and profs. When does he want me?”</p>
<p>“Now.”</p>
<p>Jimmy arose and put on his hat and coat. “Good-by,
Kid,” he said. “Pray for me, and leave me one cigarette
to smoke when I get back,” and, grinning, he left the
room.</p>
<p>James Torrance, Jr., was not greatly abashed as he faced the
dour tribunal of the faculty. The younger members, among whom were
several he knew to be mighty good fellows at heart, sat at the
lower end of the long table, and with owlish gravity attempted to
emulate the appearance and manners of their seniors. At the head of
the table sat Whiskers, as the dignified and venerable president of
the university was popularly named. It was generally believed and
solemnly sworn to throughout the large corps of undergraduates that
within the knowledge of any living man Whiskers had never been
known to smile, and to-day he was running true to form.</p>
<p>“Mr. Torrance,” he said, sighing, “it has been
my painful duty on more than one occasion to call your attention to
the uniformly low average of your academic standing. At the earnest
solicitation of the faculty members of the athletic committee, I
have been influenced, against my better judgment, to temporize with
an utterly insufferable condition.</p>
<p>“You are rapidly approaching the close of your senior
year, and in the light of the records which I have before me I am
constrained to believe that it will be utterly impossible for you
to graduate, unless from now to the end of the semester you devote
yourself exclusively to your academic work. If you cannot assure me
that you will do this, I believe it would be to the best interests
of the university for you to resign now, rather than to fail of
graduation. And in this decision I am fully seconded by the faculty
members of the athletic committee, who realize the harmful effect
upon university athletics in the future were so prominent an
athlete as you to fail at graduation.”</p>
<p>If they had sentenced Jimmy to be shot at sunrise the blow could
scarcely have been more stunning than that which followed the
realization that he was not to be permitted to round out his fourth
successful season at first base. But if Jimmy was momentarily
stunned he gave no outward indication of the fact, and in the brief
interval of silence following the president’s ultimatum his
alert mind functioned with the rapidity which it had often shown
upon the gridiron, the diamond, and the squared circle.</p>
<p>Just for a moment the thought of being deprived of the pleasure
and excitement of the coming baseball season filled his mind to the
exclusion of every other consideration, but presently a less
selfish impulse projected upon the screen of recollection the
figure of the father he idolized. The boy realized the
disappointment that this man would feel should his four years of
college end thus disastrously and without the coveted diploma.</p>
<p>And then it was that he raised his eyes to those of the
president.</p>
<p>“I hope, sir,” he said, “that you will give me
one more chance—that you will let me go on as I have in the
past as far as baseball is concerned, with the understanding that
if at the end of each month between now and commencement I do not
show satisfactory improvement I shall not be permitted to play on
the team. But please don’t make that restriction binding yet.
If I lay off the track work I believe I can make up enough so that
baseball will not interfere with my graduation.”</p>
<p>And so Whiskers, who was much more human than the student body
gave him credit for being, and was, in the bargain, a good judge of
boys, gave Jimmy another chance on his own terms, and the
university’s heavyweight champion returned to his room filled
with determination to make good at the eleventh hour.</p>
<p>Possibly one of the greatest obstacles which lay in
Jimmy’s path toward academic honors was the fact that he
possessed those qualities of character which attracted others to
him, with the result that there was seldom an hour during the day
that he had his room to himself. On his return from the faculty
meeting he found a half-dozen of his classmates there, awaiting his
return.</p>
<p>“Well?” they inquired as he entered.</p>
<p>“It’s worse than that,” said Jimmy, as he
unfolded the harrowing details of what had transpired at his
meeting with the faculty. “And now,” he said, “if
you birds love me, keep out of here from now until commencement.
There isn’t a guy on earth can concentrate on anything with a
roomful of you mental ciphers sitting around and yapping about
girls and other non-essential creations.”</p>
<p>“Non-essential!” gasped one of his visitors, letting
his eyes wander over the walls of Jimmy’s study, whereon were
nailed, pinned or hung countless framed and unframed pictures of
non-essential creations.</p>
<p>“All right, Jimmy,” said another. “We are with
you, horse, foot and artillery. When you want us, give us the
high-sign and we will come. Otherwise we will leave you to your
beloved books. It is too bad, though, as the bar-boy was just
explaining how the great drought might be circumvented by means of
carrots, potato peelings, dish-water, and a raisin.”</p>
<p>“Go on,” said Jimmy; “I am not
interested,” and the boys left him to his
“beloved” books.</p>
<p>Jimmy Torrance worked hard, and by dint of long hours and
hard-working tutors he finished his college course and won his
diploma. Nor did he have to forego the crowning honors of his last
baseball season, although, like Ulysses S. Grant, he would have
graduated at the head of his class had the list been turned upside
down.</p>
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