summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--8550-8.txt7004
-rw-r--r--8550-8.zipbin0 -> 149211 bytes
-rw-r--r--8550-h.zipbin0 -> 545691 bytes
-rw-r--r--8550-h/8550-h.htm11535
-rw-r--r--8550-h/images/aw.jpgbin0 -> 102881 bytes
-rw-r--r--8550-h/images/bw.jpgbin0 -> 94322 bytes
-rw-r--r--8550-h/images/cw.jpgbin0 -> 99637 bytes
-rw-r--r--8550-h/images/dw.jpgbin0 -> 91155 bytes
-rw-r--r--8550.txt7004
-rw-r--r--8550.zipbin0 -> 149162 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/7hick10.txt6971
-rw-r--r--old/7hick10.zipbin0 -> 151401 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/8hick10.txt6971
-rw-r--r--old/8hick10.zipbin0 -> 151442 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/8hick10h.htm11490
-rw-r--r--old/8hick10h.zipbin0 -> 547450 bytes
19 files changed, 50991 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/8550-8.txt b/8550-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8f05e89
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7004 @@
+Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+Title: T. Haviland Hicks Senior
+
+Author: J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Posting Date: August 22, 2014 [EBook #8550]
+Release Date: July, 2005
+First Posted: July 22, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR
+
+BY J. RAYMOND ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+TO MASTER LLOYD ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+ II. "LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+ III. HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+ IV. QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+ V. HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+ VI. HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+ VII. HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY
+ VIII. COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+ IX. THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+ X. THOR'S AWAKENING
+ XI. "ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+ XII. THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+ XIII. HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+ XIV. THE GREATER GOAL
+ XV. HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+ XVI. THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+ XVII. HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+ XVIII. T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.'S HEADWORK
+ XIX. BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+ XX. "VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, SENIOR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+
+
+ "Oh, a bold, bad man was Chuckwalla Bill--
+ An' he lived in a shanty on Tom-cat Hill;
+ Ten notches on the six-gun he toted on his hip--
+ For he'd sent ten buckos on the One-way Trip!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister College football
+squad, his behemoth bulk swathed in heavy blankets and crowded into a
+narrow bunk, shifted his vast tonnage restlessly. He was dreaming of the
+wild and woolly West, and like a six-reel Western drama thrown on the
+screen in a moving-picture show, he visioned in his slumbers a vivid and
+spectacular panorama.
+
+The first lurid scene was the Deserted Limited held up at a tank station in
+the great Mojave Desert by a lone, masked bandit who winged the dreaming
+Butch in the shoulder, the latter being an express guard who resisted.
+After the desperado, Two-Gun Steve, had forced the engineer to run the
+train back to a siding, he had ordered Butch to vamoose. Quite naturally,
+then, the collegian next found himself staggering across the arid expanse,
+until at last, half dead from a burning thirst, seeking vainly for a
+water-hole, the vast stretch of sandy, sagebrush-studded wastes shimmered
+into a gorgeous ocean of sparkling blue waters. Then, as he collapsed on
+the scorching-hot sand, helpless, the cool water so near, suddenly the
+scene shifted.
+
+In quick and vivid succession, Butch Brewster beheld a burning stockade
+besieged by howling Indians, and a frontier town shot up by recklessly
+riding cowboys on a jamboree. Then he became a tenderfoot, badgered by
+yelling, shooting roisterers, and later a sheriff, bravely leading his
+posse to a sensational battle with that same Two-Gun Steve and his gang,
+entrenched in a rock-bound mountain defile.
+
+Finally, he stood with hands above his head in company with other
+passengers of the Sagebrush Stagecoach, while a huge, red-shirted Westerner
+with a fierce black mustache and a six-shooter in each hand belching
+bullets at Butch's dancing feet, roared out huskily: "Oh--I'm a ring-tailed
+roarer (_bang-bang_)! I'm a rip-snortin', high-falutin', loop-the-loopin'
+_bad_ man (_bang-bang_)! I'm wild an' woolly, an' full o' fleas, an' hard
+to curry below the knees--I'm a roarin' wild-cat, an' it's my night to howl
+(_bang-bang_)! Yip-yip-yip-_yeee_!"
+
+Big Butch, opening his eyes and starting up, gazed about him in sheer
+surprise; for an instant, in that state of bewilderment that comes with
+sudden awakening, he almost believed himself in a Western ranch bunkhouse,
+and that some happy cowboy outside roared a grotesque ballad. He gazed at
+the interior of a rough shack built of pine boards, with bunks constructed
+in tiers on both sides. There were figures in them--Western cowboys,
+perhaps. Then it seemed, somehow, that the voice drifting from the outside
+was strangely familiar. Back at Bannister College, where he remembered he
+had gone in the dim and dusty past, he had often heard that same fog-horn
+voice, roaring songs of a less blood-curdling character, and accompanied by
+that same banjo twanging, which tortured the campus, and bothered would-be
+studious youths!
+
+"I'm not in a moving-picture show," Butch informed himself, as he donned
+khaki trousers, football sweater, and heavy shoes. "I'm not on a Western
+ranch, either. I'm in the sleep-shack of Camp Bannister, the football
+training-camp of the Bannister College squad! Those fellows in the bunks
+are not cowboys, Indians, and bandits--they are my teammates! I did dream
+stuff that would shame a Wild West scenario, but I understand it all
+now--my dreams were influenced by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+At that dramatic moment, to substantiate his statement, the raucous voice,
+accompanied by resounding chords strummed on a banjo, sounded again. The
+vocal and instrumental chaos was frequently punctured by revolver reports,
+as the torturesome Caruso outside roared:
+
+ "Oh, Chuckwalla Bill thought life was sweet--
+ Till he met up with Sure-shot Pete;
+ A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+The pachydermic Butch, fully dressed--and awake, raging in his wrath like
+an active volcano, glanced at his watch, and discovered that it was exactly
+five A.M.! Intensely pacified by this knowledge, he lumbered toward the
+bunkhouse door and flung it open, determined to crush the pestersome youth
+who thus unfeelingly disturbed the quietude of Camp Bannister at such an
+unearthly hour! However, his grim purpose was temporarily thwarted--before
+him spread a beautiful panorama, a vast canvas painted in rich hues and
+colors, that indescribably charming masterpiece of nature, entitled dawn.
+
+Butch, gazing from the bunkhouse doorway toward the pebbly shore of the
+placid lake stretching out for two miles before him, beheld Old Sol,
+blood-red, peeping above the wooded hills on the far-off, opposite strand
+of Lake Conowingo; the luminous orb laid a flaming pathway across the
+shimmering waters, and golden bars of light, like gleaming fingers
+outstretched, fell athwart the tall pines that towered on the high bluff
+back of the camp. The glorious sunshine, succeeding a flood of rosy color,
+inundated the scene; it bathed in a gorgeous radiance the early autumn
+woods, it illumined the bunkhouse, and another rude shanty known to the
+squad as the grub-shack, it poured down on old Hinky-Dink, the ancient
+negro cookee, setting the breakfast tables just outside the canvas
+cook-tent.
+
+"Deed, cross mah heart, Mistah Butch," grinned old Hinky-Dink, seeing, as
+a motion picture director would express it, "Wrath registered on the
+countenance" of Butch Brewster, "Ah done tole dat young Hicks dat a bird
+what cain't sing an' will sing mus' be made _not_ to sing! Ah done info'med
+him dat yo'-all was layin' fo' him, cause he done bus' up yo' sleep!"
+
+A jay bird, a flashing bit of vivid blue, shot from a tall pine, jeering
+shrilly at Butch; out on the lake, a trout leaped above the water for an
+infinitesimal second, its shining scales gleaming in the sunshine. From the
+cook-tent, where old Hinky-Dink grumbled at the frying pan, the appetizing
+odor of frying fish assailed the football captain, softening his wrath.
+
+High above the shanties, on a tall flagpole made from a straight young
+pine, floated a big gold and green banner, its bright colors gleaming in
+the sunshine; it bore the words:
+
+ CAMP BANNISTER
+ TRAINING CAMP
+ THE FOOTBALL SQUAD
+ BANNISTER COLLEGE
+
+Head Coach Corridan, smashing the precedent that had made former Gold and
+Green squads have their training camp at Bannister College, had brought
+the Varsity and second-string stars to this camp on the shore of Lake
+Conowingo, in the Pennsylvania mountains. For two weeks, one of which had
+passed, they were to train at Camp Bannister, until college officially
+opened; swimming, hunting, cross-country runs, and a healthful outdoor
+existence would give the athletes superb condition, and daily scrimmages on
+the level field back of the bluff rounded out an eleven that promised to be
+the strongest in Bannister history.
+
+As big, good-natured Butch Brewster stood in the bunkhouse doorway, his
+wrath at the pestiferous Hicks forgotten, in his rapture at the glorious
+dawn, he saw something that showed why his dreams had been of the wild
+West! The expression of indignation, however, yielded to one of humorous
+affection, as he gazed toward the shore.
+
+"I can't be angry with Hicks!" breathed Butch, beholding a spectacle more
+impressive than dawn. "So, the irrepressible wretch has Coach Corridan's
+revolvers, used in starting our training sprints, and a lot of blank
+cartridges! He is giving an imitation of a Western bad man. No wonder
+I dreamed of Indians, cowboys, and hold-ups; I'll have revenge on the
+heartless villain, routing me out at five!"
+
+He saw a massive rock, rising thirty feet in air, its sheer walls scaled
+only by a rope-ladder the collegians had rigged up on one side. Atop of
+"Lookout There!" as the campers humorously designated the rock, roosted
+a youth who possessed the colossal structure of a splinter, and whose
+cherubic countenance was decorated with a Cheshire cat grin. Quite unaware
+that his riotous efforts had brought out the wrathful Butch Brewster,
+the youthful narrator of Chuckwalla Bill's stormy career continued his
+excessively noisy séance.
+
+His costume was strictly in character with his song. He wore a sombrero,
+picked up on his Exposition trip the past vacation, a lurid red
+outing-shirt, and he had wrapped a blanket around each locomotive limb to
+imitate a cowboy's chaps. Two revolvers suspended from a loosened belt, _à
+la_ wild West, and as Butch stared, the embryo Western bad man twanged a
+banjo noisily, and roared the concluding stanza of his desperado hero's
+history:
+
+ "Said Chuckwalla Bill, 'Oh, boys, plant me
+ With my boots on--on the wide prair-eee'--
+ Where the coyotes howl, they planted Bill--
+ An' so far as _I_ know, he's sleepin' there still!"
+
+"Here they come," grinned Butch, hearing a tumult in the bunkhouse, and
+a confused Babel of voices. "Hicks has awakened the camp. Now watch the
+fellows wreak summary vengeance on his toothpick frame!"
+
+From the sleep-shack, aroused at that weird hour by the clamor of the
+irrepressible youth, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., tumbled others of the squad,
+in varying stages of _déshabille_; big Beef McNaughton, right half-back,
+Roddy Perkins, the Titian-haired right-end, Pudge Langdon, a ponderous
+tackle, and Monty Merriweather, a clean-cut, aggressive candidate for left
+end. From within, other wrathy youths howled vociferous protests at their
+tormentor:
+
+"Stop that noise; put your muzzle on again, Hicks!"--"Where's the fire?
+Say, Hicks, muffle your exhaust!"--"Say, Coach, must we endure this day and
+night?"
+
+The bunkhouse fairly erupted angry collegians, boiling out like bees
+swarming from a disturbed hive; Hefty Hollingsworth, the Herculean
+center-rush. Biff Pemberton, left half-back, Bunch Bingham, Tug Cardiff,
+and Buster Brown, three huge last-year substitutes; second-string players,
+Don Carterson, Cherub Challoner, Skeet Wigglesworth, and Scoop Sawyer. A
+dozen others, from sheer laziness, hugged their bunks devotedly, despite
+the terrific turmoil outside.
+
+"It's a disgrace, a _howling_ shame!" exploded Beef, his elephantine frame
+swathed in blankets to conceal a lack of vestiture, "Last night, until
+midnight, that graceless wretch roosted on 'Lookout There' and because the
+glorious moonlight made him sentimental and slushy, he twanged his banjo
+and warbled such mushy stuff as 'My Love is young and fair. My Love has
+golden hair!' When does he expect us to sleep?"
+
+"He doesn't!" explained Monty Merriweather, with succinct lucidity,
+grinning at his comrades. "Say, fellows, you know how Hicks dreads a cold
+shower-bath; well, some of you rage at him from the other side of the rock,
+while _I_ climb up the rope-ladder and close with him! Then some of you
+prehistoric pachyderms ascend, and we'll chuck that pestersome insect into
+the cold, cold lake--"
+
+"Done!" chuckled Butch Brewster, delightedly. So, while he, Beef
+McNaughton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and others beguiled the jeering Hicks,
+expressing in dynamic, red-hot sentences their exact opinions of his
+perfidy, the athletic Monty imitated a mountain-scaling Italian soldier.
+He climbed stealthily up the swaying rope-ladder; nearer and nearer to the
+unsuspecting youth he crept, while the cherubic Hicks, to tantalize the
+group below, again burst forth:
+
+"_Whoop-eee_! I'm a bold, _bad_ man (_bang-bang_)! I got ten notches on my
+ole six-gun--I'm a _killer_. I wings a man before breakfast every day! I
+got a private burying-ground, where I plants my victims (_bang-bang_)!
+Yip-yip-yip-_yee_! Oh, I'm a--_Ouch_, Monty--leggo me--Oh, I'll be
+good--why didn't I pull that rope-ladder up here? Don't bust my
+banjo--don't let Butch get me--"
+
+Monty Merriweather, reaching the flat top of the rock, had courageously
+flung himself, without regard for the Bad Man's desperate record, on the
+startled Hicks, whose first thought was for his beloved banjo. While he
+held the blithesome tormentor helpless, Butch, Beef, and Roddy Perkins
+climbed the rope-ladder, and the grinning youth was soon in their clutches,
+while the collegians below, like a Roman, mob aroused by the oratory of Mr.
+Mark Antony, howled for revenge:
+
+"Bust the old banjo over his head, Butch!"--"Sing to him, Beef--that's
+an _awful_ revenge on Hicks!"--"Tie him to the rock--make him miss his
+breakfast!"
+
+"Hicks," growled Butch, eyeing his sunny comrade ominously, "you ought to
+be tarred and feathered, and shot at sunrise! When Bannister opens, you
+will be a Senior, and you'll disgrace '19's dignity! This is a sample of
+what we have endured at college for three years, and the worst is yet to
+come! You have committed the awful atrocity of awakening Camp Bannister
+at five A. M. with your ridiculous imitation, of a Western desperado. To
+dampen your ardor, we will chuck you into the cold lake--just as you are!"
+
+"Help! Assistance! Aid! Succor!" shouted the happy-go-lucky Hicks, as the
+behemoth Butch and Beef seized him, swinging him aloft with ludicrous ease,
+"Police! Fire! Murder! Take care of my banjo, Monty. Tell all the fellows
+at old Bannister I died game, and plant Hair-Trigger Bill with his boots
+on! _Oooo_, Beef, Butch, _have a heart_, that water is _cold_!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., relieved of banjo and revolvers, but his
+shadow-like structure still clad in shoes, trousers, with imitation "chaps"
+and flamboyant red shirt, with his classic head still adorned by
+the sombrero, was swung back and forth by the two bulky football
+stars--once--twice--
+
+"_Three_--Let him go!" shouted Butch Brewster, and like a falling meteor,
+the splinter-like youth, who had already fallen from grace, shot from the
+rock, head-first, disappearing with a spectacular splash in the icy waters
+of Lake Conowingo. Knowing Hicks to be as much at home in the water as a
+fish in an aquarium, the hilarious squad on shore prepared to jeer his
+reappearance above the water; however, their program was interrupted by
+old Hinky-Dink, who stood in the cook-tent doorway, belaboring a dishpan
+lustily with a soup-ladle, and shouting:
+
+"Breakfus' am served; fus' an' las' call fo' breakfus; all dem what am late
+don't git no breakfus!"
+
+"Breakfast!" exclaimed Monty Merriweather, who, with Roddy, Butch, and
+Beef, remained on the rock, despite the summons of the Cookee. "Hurry up,
+Hicks, I'm ravenous. Say, Butch, suppose all that Western regalia makes him
+water-logged; he's a terribly long while down there! Didn't he look like
+the hero in a moving-picture feature? We've given him the water-cure, but
+he will do that same stunt over again. That sunny-souled Hicks is simply
+Incorrigible!"
+
+A second later, the grinning, cheery countenance of T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., shot above the water, and simultaneously with his appearance, just as
+though he had been chanting below the surface, for the entertainment of the
+finny denizens of Lake Conowingo, the irrepressible youth roared:
+
+ "A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-Shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+
+
+Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, known to toil-tortured Gold and Green
+football squads from time immemorial as "the Slave-Driver," Captain Butch
+Brewster, and serious Deacon Radford, the star Bannister quarter-back,
+foregathered around a table in the Camp Bannister grub-shack.
+
+It was ten-thirty of the morning whose dawn T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+blithesomely hailed with an impromptu musicale and saengerfest on "Lookout
+There!" rock, and the football triumvirate were in togs. The squad, over in
+the bunkhouse, noisily donned gridiron armor for the morning practice, and
+the pestiferous Hicks was maintaining a mysterious silence, somewhere.
+
+This football trio, on whom rested the responsibility of rounding out a
+winning Bannister eleven, vastly resembled a coterie of German generals,
+back of the trenches, studying a war-map. Before them was spread what
+seemed to be a large checker-board. It was a miniature gridiron, with the
+chalk-marks painted in white; there were thumb-tacks stuck here and there,
+some with flat tops painted green and gold, others, representing the enemy,
+were solid red. The former had names printed on them, Butch, Roddy,
+Beef, and so on. By sticking these on the board, the three directors of
+Bannister's football destiny could work out new plays, and originate
+possible winning lineups.
+
+"We've just got to win the State Championship this season, Coach!" declared
+Butch, banging the table emphatically, as he stated a self-evident fact.
+"It's my last year for Old Bannister, and so with Beef and Pudge. I'll give
+every ounce of strength I possess In every game, to make that pennant float
+over Bannister Field!"
+
+"Bannister _will_ win it!" vowed the behemoth Beef, his good-natured
+countenance grim, and his jaw set. "Not for five years has a Gold and Green
+team won the Championship--not since the year before Butch and I were
+Freshmen! We've got a splendid bunch of material to build a team with,
+and--"
+
+"Our biggest problem is this," spoke Coach Corridan, as with a phenomenal
+display of strength he took Beef McNaughton between thumb and forefinger
+and placed him on the field. "We must strengthen both line and backfield,
+for we lost by graduation Babe McCabe, Heavy Hughes, and Jack Merritt. Now,
+to replace that lost power--"
+
+Just then, from directly beneath the open window by which they had
+gathered, like the midnight serenade of a romantic lover, sounded
+the well-known foghorn voice of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as to the
+plunkety-plunk of a banjo accompaniment, he warbled melodiously:
+
+ "Gone are the days--I used to spend with Car-o-li-nah!
+ She had the sunshine in her laughter (_plunkety-plunk_)
+ Just like that state they named her after--"
+
+"_Hicks_!" announced Butch, stealthily approaching the window, and
+beckoning his companions. "Easy--look at him, Deke, there he is, Hicks,
+the irrepressible! We might as well attempt to stab a rhinocerous to death
+with a humming-bird's feather, as to try and reform _him_!"
+
+Arrayed like a lily of the field, a model of sartorial splendor, Hicks
+occupied a chair beneath the window, tilted back gracefully against the
+side of the grub-shack. He had decked his splinter-structure with a
+dazzling Palm Beach suit, and a glorious pink silk shirt, off-set by a
+lurid scarf. A Panama hat decorated his head, white Oxfords and flamboyant
+hosiery adorned his feet, while the inevitable Cheshire cat grin beautified
+his cherubic countenance. A latest "best seller" was propped on his knees,
+and as he perused its thrilling pages, he carelessly strummed his beloved
+banjo, and in stentorian tones chanted a sentimental ballad:
+
+ "Gone are the days--the golden days I'm dreaming of,
+ I think I hear her softly calling (plunkety-plunk)
+ 'Will you be back? Will you be back? (plunk-plunk)
+ Back to the Car-o-li-nah you love?'"(plunkety-plunk),
+
+For three golden campus years T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had gayly pursued the
+even tenor (or _basso_, since he possessed a foghorn, subterranean voice)
+of his Bannister career. He absolutely refused to take life seriously, and
+he was forever arousing the wrath--mostly pretended, for no one could be
+really angry with the genial youth--of his comrades, by twanging his banjo
+and roaring out rollicking ballads at all hours. He was never so happy
+as when entertaining a crowd of happy students in his cozy quarters,
+or escorting a Hicks' Personally Conducted expedition downtown for a
+Beef-Steak Bust, at his expense, at Jerry's, the rendezvous of hungry
+collegians.
+
+However, despite his butterfly existence, Hicks, possessed of a
+scintillating mind, always set the scholastic pace for 1919, by means of
+occasional study-sprints, as he characteristically called them. But when it
+came to helping his beloved Dad realize a long-cherished ambition to behold
+his only son and heir shatter Hicks, Sr.'s, celebrated athletic records, it
+was a different story. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., ever since he committed
+the farcical _faux pas_ of running the wrong way with the pigskin in
+the Freshman-Sophomore football contest of his first year, had been a
+super-colossal athletic joke at old Bannister.
+
+His record to date, beside that reverse touchdown that won for the
+Sophomores, consisted of scoring a home-run with the bases congested, on a
+strike-out; of smashing hurdles and cross-bars on the track; endangering
+his heedless career with the shot and hammer; and making a ridiculous farce
+of every event he entered, to the vast hilarity of the students, who, with
+the exception of Butch Brewster, had no idea his ridiculous efforts were in
+earnest. In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable promise,
+which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.
+
+Hicks, the lovable, impulsive, and irrepressible, with his invariable sunny
+disposition, his generous nature, and his democratic, loyal comradeship
+for everybody, was loved by old Bannister. The students forgave him his
+pestersome ways, his frequent torturing of them with banjo-twanging and
+rollicking ballads. His classmates idolized him, Juniors and Sophomores
+were his true friends, and entering Freshmen always regarded this
+happy-go-lucky youth as a demigod of the campus.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who was forever futilely lecturing the heedless Hicks,
+thrust his head from the grub-shack window, fought down a grin, and sternly
+arraigned his graceless comrade:
+
+"Hicks, you frivolous, campus-cluttering, infinitesimal atom of nothing,
+you labor under the insane delusion that college life is a continuous
+vaudeville show. You absolutely refuse to take your Bannister years
+seriously, you banjo-thumping, pillow-punishing, campus-torturing
+nonentity. You will never grasp the splendid opportunities within your
+reach! You have no ambition but to strum that banjo, roar ridiculous songs,
+fuss up like a tailor's dummy, and pester your comrades, or drag them down
+to Jerry's for the eats! You won't be earnest, you Human Cipher, Before you
+entered Bannister, you formed your ideas and ideals of campus life from
+colored posters, moving-pictures, magazine stories, and stage dramas like
+'Brown of Harvard'; you have surely lived up, or down, to those ideals,
+you--"
+
+"Them's harsh words, Butch!" joyously responded the grinning Hicks,
+unchastened, for he knew good Butch Brewster would not, for a fortune, have
+him forsake his care-free nature. "Thou loyal comrade of my happy campus
+years, what wouldst thou of me?--have me don sack-cloth and ashes, strike
+'The Funeral March' on my golden lyre, and cry out in anguish, _'ai! ai_!
+'Nay, nay, a couple of nays; college years are all too brief; hence I
+shall, by my own original process, extract from them all the sunshine and
+happiness possible, and by my wonderful musical and vocal powers, bring joy
+to my colleagues, who--_Ouch_, Butch--look out for that nail, you inhuman
+elephant--"
+
+Big Butch, at that juncture of Hicks' monologue, had effectively terminated
+it by leaning from the window, grasping his unsuspecting comrade by the
+scruff of the neck, and dragging him over the window-ledge, into the
+grub-shack, and the presence of Coach Corridan and Deacon Radford.
+Strenuous objection was registered, both by the futilely struggling Hicks,
+and a nail projecting from the sill, which caught in the Palm Beach
+trousers and ripped a long rent in them; fortunately, Hicks' anatomy
+escaped a similar fate.
+
+"A ripping good move, eh-what?" chuckled Hicks, twisting like a
+contortionist, to view the damage done his vestiture, "Hello, what have we
+here?--the German field-map, by the Van Dyke beard of the Prophet! I
+bring the Kaiser's order, ham and eggs, and a cup of coffee. No, that's a
+mistake. General Hen Von Kluck, lead a brigade of submarines up yon hill to
+thunder the Russian fort! Von Hindering-Bug, send a flock of aeroplanes and
+Zeppelins to the Allied trenches, the enemy is shooting Russian caviare
+at--"
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster's indignation,
+"you are such a wonder at solving perplexing problems by your marvelous
+'inspirations,' suppose you turn the scintillating searchlight of your
+colossal intellect upon the question that Bannister must solve, to produce
+a championship eleven!"
+
+It was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, inveterate habit, whenever a baffling
+situation, or what the French call an "_impasse_" presented itself, to
+state with the utmost confidence, "Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" On
+most occasions, when he made this remark, accompanied by a swaggering
+braggadocio that never failed to make good Butch Brewster wrathful, the
+happy-go-lucky youth possessed not the slightest idea of how the problem
+was to be solved. He just uttered his rash promise, and then trusted to his
+needed inspiration to illuminate a way out! And, as the Bannister campus
+well knew, Hicks had solved more than one torturing question by an
+inspiration that flashed on his intellect, when all hope of a satisfactory
+solution seemed dead.
+
+For example, in his Sophomore year, when the Freshman leader, James
+Roderick Perkins, that same Titian-haired Roddy who was now a bulwark at
+right end, became charged with a Napoleonic ambition, and organized a
+Freshman Equal Rights campaign, paralyzing Bannister football by refusing
+to allow Freshmen to try for athletic teams, unless their demands were
+granted. Hicks, when his inspiration finally smote him, smashed the
+Votes-for-Freshmen crusade, and quelled Roddy, Futilely racking his brain
+for a counter-attack, having blithely told the troubled campus, "Just leave
+it to Hicks," he had ceased to worry, and then the inspiration had come, By
+The Big Brotherhood of Bannister giving the upper-classmen full government
+over Freshmen, a scheme successfully carried through, the peril had been
+thwarted.
+
+"I got a letter from Dad yesterday," began Hicks, somewhat irrelevantly,
+considering the Coach's remarks, "and he said--"
+
+"'--Inclosed find the check you wrote for,'" quoth Deacon Radford,
+humorously. "'If you keep up this pace, I shall have to turn my steel
+mills to producing war munitions, to pay your college bills.' Say, Hicks,
+seriously, listen to our problem, and suggest what Coach Corridan should
+do."
+
+While Hicks' athletic powers were known to equal those of the paralyzed
+oldest inhabitant of a Civil War Veterans' Home, the sunny youth knew
+football thoroughly; often he originated plays that the team worked out
+with success, and his suggestions were always weighed carefully by the
+football directors. So, after he had adjusted his lurid scarf at the
+correct angle, and gazed ruefully at his torn habiliments, the sunshiny
+Senior seated himself at the table, before the "war-map," and gave heed to
+the Coach.
+
+[Illustration A: 'Here's the problem, Hicks']
+
+"Here's the problem, Hicks," said the Slave-Driver, indicating the
+Bannister eleven, represented by the gold and green topped thumb-tacks.
+"From the line we lost Babe, a tackle, Heavy, a guard, and Jack Merritt, a
+star end. Now, Monty Merriweather will hold down Jack's place O. K.--I can
+shift Beef from right half to guard, and put Butch at right-half, while
+Bunch Bingham can take care of Babe's old berth at tackle. But I have no
+one to shoot in at full-back, when I shift Butch; you see, Hicks, my plan
+is to build an eleven that can execute old-time, line-smashing football,
+and up-to-date open play as well; I want fast ends and halves, with a
+snappy quarter, and I have them; also, the backfield is heavy enough for
+line-bucking, if I get my beefy full-back. I must have a big, heavy, fast
+player, a giant who simply can't be stopped when he hits the line. With
+Butch and Biff at halves, Deke at quarter. Roddy and Monty ends, and my
+heavy line--why, a ponderous, irresistible Hercules at full-back will--"
+
+"Say!" grinned the irrepressible Hicks, as Coach Corridan warmed up to
+his vision, "you don't want _much_, Coach! Why don't you ask Ted Coy, the
+famous ex-Yale full-back, to give up his business and play the position for
+you? Maybe you can persuade Charlie Brickley, a _fair_ sort of dropkicker,
+to quit coaching Hopkins, and kick a few goals for old Bannister! I get
+you, Coach--you want a fellow about the size of the _Lusitania,_ made of
+structural steel, a Brobdingnagian Colossus who will guarantee to advance
+the ball fifteen yards per rush, or money refunded!
+
+"Why, Coach, while you are wanting things, just wish for a chap who will
+play the entire game himself, taking the ball down the field, while the
+rest of the team are pushed along in rolling-chairs, while imbibing pink
+tea. Get a prodigy who will instill such terror into our rivals that
+instead of playing the schedule, Bannister will simply arrange with other
+teams to mark themselves down defeated, and then agree what the scores
+shall be."
+
+"I knew it!" growled Butch Brewster, glowering at the jocular youth. "We
+should never have consulted him on this problem, for it is not one within
+his power to solve, even though he performed the miracle of talking
+seriously about it Now--"
+
+"Now--" echoed Hicks, with pretended seriousness, "Coach, you just hand me
+the blue-prints and specifications of said Gargantuan Hercules, and I'll
+try to corrall just such a phenomenon as you desire. Never hesitate to
+consult me on such important matters, for I am ever-ready to cast aside my
+own multifarious duties, when my Alma Mater needs my mental assistance,
+or--"
+
+"Hicks, are you _crazy_?" fleered Deacon Radford, moved to excitement,
+despite his great faith in the versatile youth. "Full-backs like that do
+not grow on trees; the only one I ever read of was _Ole Skjarsen_, in
+George Fitch's 'Siwash College Stories,' and he was purely fictitious. We
+know you have accomplished some great things by your 'inspirations,' but as
+for this--"
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks" quoth the irrepressible youth, swaggering toward
+the door with an affected nonchalant self-confidence that aroused Butch to
+wrath, and vastly amused his companions. "I'll admit a human juggernaut
+like Coach Corridan dreams of will be hard to round up, but, I'll have an
+inspiration soon. Don't worry about your old eleven, your problem will be
+solved, and you will have a team that can play fifty-seven varieties of
+football. _Raw revolver_, my comrades."
+
+When the graceless T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had sauntered gracefully out of
+the grub-shack, big Butch Brewster, almost exploding with suppressed wrath,
+stared at Slave-Driver Corridan and staid Deacon Radford a full minute;
+then he grinned,
+
+"That--Hicks!" he murmured, struggling against a desire to laugh. "What a
+ridiculous prophecy! 'Just leave it to Hicks!' Well, that means the problem
+goes unsolved, for though I confess he _is_ brilliant, and his so-called
+'inspirations' have helped old Bannister; when it comes to rushing out and
+lassoing a smashing. Herculean full-back--_bah_!"
+
+Ten minutes later, when Coach Corridan and the Gold and Green squad climbed
+the bluff to the field back of Camp Bannister, for morning signal drill,
+their last memory was of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., arrayed in radiant
+vestiture, his chair tilted against the bunkhouse--the chords of the banjo,
+and his foghorn voice drifting to them on the warm September air:
+
+ "Oh, father and mother pay all the bills (_plunk-plunk_)
+ And we have all the fun (_plunkety-plunk_)
+ With the money that we spend in college life!"
+
+Two hours afterward, as a tired, perspiring squad scrambled down the bluff,
+and made for the cool waters of Lake Conowingo, a mysterious silence,
+like a mighty wave, literally surged toward them. Camp Bannister seemed
+deserted, the sun was still shining, the birds sang as cheerily as ever,
+but instinctively the collegians felt an indescribable loneliness, a sense
+of tremendous loss.
+
+"_Hicks_!" shouted Butch Brewster, loudly, his voice shattering the
+stillness. "Hicks--ahoy! I say, Hicks--"
+
+Old Hinky-Dink, a letter in his hand, hobbled from the cook-tent toward
+them; like a sinister harbinger of evil he advanced, grinning deprecatingly
+at the squad:
+
+"Mistah Hicks am gone!" he announced importantly. "He done gib me fo' bits
+to row him ober to de village, to cotch de noon 'spress fo' Philadelphy!
+Heah am a letter what he lef'--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, to whom the _billet-doux_ was addressed in T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while the squad
+listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled youth;
+
+
+"DEAR BUTCH:
+
+"Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on! I'm called
+away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow it in the
+room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next century.
+Give my _adieux_ to Coach Corridan and the squad.
+
+"Yours truthfully,
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.
+
+"P.S.: Tell Coach Corridan he should worry--_not_! I'm hot on the trail of
+a fullback that will make Ted Coy at his coyest look like the paralyzed
+inmate of an old man's home. Just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+
+
+ "Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ _H-i-c-k-s_!
+ Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ If you've seen him, answer, 'Yes!'
+ He's tall and slim, and he wears a grin,
+ And his banjo-thumping is a sin.
+ Has _anybody_ here seen our Hicks--
+ Hicks--and his old banjo?"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, big Beef McNaughton, the Phillyloo Bird--that
+flamingo-like Senior--and little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous boner
+whom Bannister College called the "Human Encyclopedia," roosted on the
+sacred Senior Fence, between the Gymnasium and the Administration Building.
+A gloomy silence, like a somber mantle, enshrouded the four members of '19,
+as they listened to a rollicking parody on, "Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?"
+chanted by some Juniors in Nordyke, with T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the
+object of solicitude. Nor did the melancholy youths respond to the queries
+hurled down at them from the dormitories' windows:
+
+"Say, Butch Brewster, where is that crazy Hicks?"
+
+"Beef, ain't our Hicks a-comin' back here no more?"
+
+"Hello, Phillyloo, any word from our Hicks yet?"
+
+"Ahoy there, Theophilus, where is Hicks, the Missing?"
+
+The seven-thirty study-hour bell was ringing, its mellow chimes sounding
+from the Administration Building tower. From the windows of the dormitories
+gleams of light shot athwart the darkness. Over in Creighton Hall, the
+abode of Freshmen, a silence reigned, but in Smithson, where the Sophomores
+roomed, Nordyke, home of the Juniors, and Bannister, haunt of the solemn
+Seniors, pandemonium obtained. In these dorm. rooms and corridors that
+night, just as in the class-rooms, or on the campus, and Bannister Field
+that day, there was but one topic. Whenever two students met, came the
+query inevitable:
+
+"Where is Hicks? Isn't Hicks coming back this year?"
+
+The Freshmen, bewildered, quite naturally, at the furore made over
+one missing student, asked, "Who is Hicks?" Seeking information from
+upper-classmen they received innumerable tales, in the nature of Iliad
+and Odyssey, concerning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; they heard of his campus
+exploits, such as his originating The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, and
+they laughed, at recitals of his athletic fiascos. They were told of his
+inevitably sunny nature, his loyal comradeship, his generous disposition,
+and as a result, the Freshmen, too, became intensely interested in the
+all-important campus problem: "Where is T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.?"
+
+Little Theophilus Opperdyke, whose big-rimmed spectacles, high forehead,
+and bushy hair gave him an intensely owlish appearance, sighed
+tremendously, stared solemnly at his class-mates, and became the author of
+a most astounding statement: "I--I can't study," quavered the "boner,"
+he whose tender devotion to his books was a campus tradition, and whose
+loyalty to his firm friend, the blithesome Hicks, was as that of Damon
+to Pythias, "I just _can't_ care about my studies, without Hicks here!
+Somehow, it--it doesn't seem like old times, on the campus."
+
+"I should say not!" ejaculated the Phillyloo Bird, sepulchrally, his
+string-bean length draped with extreme decorative effect on the Senior
+Fence, "Life at old Bannister without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is about as
+interesting as 'The Annual Report of the Department of Agriculture!'
+Prexy thought he started the college on its Marathon three days ago, but
+Bannister will not be officially opened until Hicks stands by his window
+some study-hour, twangs that old banjo, and shatters the campus quietude
+with a ballad roared in his fog-horn voice!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, enshrouded in melancholy, instinctively gazed up at the
+windows of the room T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had reserved on the third floor
+of Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., as if he fully expected to behold
+the missing youth materialize. There, in lonely grandeur, waited the
+sunny-souled Senior's vast aggregation of trunks, crates, and packing
+boxes, together with Hicks' baggage brought down from Camp Bannister. The
+bothersome banjo had disappeared at the same time the youthful Caruso
+imitated the Arabs, folding his figurative tent, and stealing away.
+
+"It's a strange paradox," boomed Butch Brewster, finding that no Hicks
+appeared at the window, "but for three years Bannister has stormed at Hicks
+for bothering us during study-hour, or at midnight, with his saengerfest,
+and now I'd give anything to see him up there, and to hear that banjo, and
+his songs! It is just as if the sun doesn't shine on the campus, when T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., is away!"
+
+Bannister College had been running for three days "on one cylinder," as
+the Phillyloo Bird quaintly phrased it, on account of the gladsome Hicks'
+mysterious absence. Not a word had the Head Coach, Captain Brewster, the
+football squad, or any of the collegians received from the blithesome
+youth, since the _billet-doux_ he left with old Hinky-Dink at Camp
+Bannister. Old students, returning to the campus for another golden year,
+invaded Hicks' room in Bannister, ready to enjoy the cozy den of that
+jolly Senior, but they encountered silence and desolation. No one had the
+slightest knowledge of where the cheery Hicks could be; they missed his
+singing and banjo strumming, his pestersome ways, his cheerful good nature,
+his cozy quarters always open house to all, and his Hicks' Personally
+Conducted tours downtown to Jerry's for those celebrated Beefsteak Busts.
+
+A telegram to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., in Pittsburgh, sent by the
+worried Butch Brewster, had brought this concise response:
+
+No knowledge of Thomas' whereabouts. He should be at Bannister.
+
+"Queer," reflected Beef McNaughton, shifting his bulk on the protesting
+fence. "We know Hicks will be back, for all his luggage is stowed away
+in his room, and we are sure he is giving us all this mystery just for a
+joke--he dearly loves to arrange a sensational and dramatic climax--but
+we just can't get used to his not being on the campus. When Theophilus
+Opperdyke can't study, it's high time the S.O.S. signal was sent to T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+"That is not the worst of it," growled Captain Butch Brewster, his arm
+across little Theophilus' shoulders. "The football squad misses Hicks,
+Beef. For the past two seasons he has sat at the training-table, his
+invariable good-humor, his Cheshire cat grin, and his sunny ways have kept
+the fellows in fine mental trim so they haven't worried over the game. But
+now, just as soon as he left Camp Bannister, the barometer of their spirits
+went down to zero and every meal at training-table is a funeral. Coach
+Corridan can't inject any pep into the scrimmages, and he says if Hicks
+doesn't return soon, Bannister's chances of the Championship are gone."
+
+"As Theophilus says," responded the gloomy Beef, "we just can't get used
+to his not being here. We miss his good-nature, his sunny smile, the jolly
+crowds in his cozy quarters--why, the campus is talking of nothing but
+Hicks--and I don't know what Bannister will do after Hicks graduates--shut
+down, I suppose!"
+
+"Well, you know," grinned the Phillyloo Bird, his cadaverous structure
+humped over like a turkey on the roost, "our Hicks hath sallied forth on
+the trail of a full-back, a Hercules who will smash the other elevens to
+infinitesimal smithereens! He told the squad to just leave it to Hicks,
+so don't be surprised if he is making flying trips to Yale, Harvard, and
+Princeton, striving to corral some embryo Ted Coy. Remember how Hicks often
+fulfills his rash prophecies!"
+
+"A Herculean full-back--_Bah_!" fleered Butch, for all the campus knew of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, extremely rash vow to unearth a "phenom." "The
+truth of it is, fellows. Hicks has failed to locate such a wonder as Coach
+Corridac outlined, for there ain't no such animal! He doesn't like to
+come back to Bannister without having made good his promise, without that
+Gargantuan giant he vowed to round up for the Gold and Green."
+
+Just then, as if to substantiate Butch's jeering statement, a youth wearing
+the uniform and cap of The Western Union Telegraph Company and
+advancing across the campus at that terrific speed always exhibited by
+messenger-boys, appeared in the offing. Periscoping the four Seniors on the
+fence, he navigated his course accordingly and pulling a yellow envelope
+from his cap, he queried, in charmingly chaste English:
+
+"Say, kin youse tell me where to find a feller name o' Brewster, wot's
+cap'n o' de football bunch?"
+
+"Right here, Little Nemo," advised the Phillyloo Bird, solemnly. "Hast thou
+any messages from New York for me? John D. Rockefeller promised to wire me
+whether or not to purchase war-stocks."
+
+The Phillyloo Bird, at this stage of his monologue, was interrupted by a
+yell that would have caused a full-blooded Choctaw Indian to turn pale.
+This came from good Butch Brewster, who, having signed for the message,
+and imagined all manner of catastrophes, from world-wars, earthquakes,
+pestilence and loss of wealth, down to bad news from Hicks, after the
+fashion of those receiving telegrams but seldom, had scanned the yellow
+slip. Never before, or afterward, not even when the luckless Butch fell in
+love, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., assisted Cupid, did the pachydermic Butch
+act so insanely as on this occasion.
+
+"Whoop-_eee! Yee-ow! Wow-wow-wow_!" howled the supposedly solemn Senior,
+tumbling from the Senior fence and rolling on the campus like a decapitated
+rooster. "Hip-hip-_hooray_! Ring the bell, Beef, get the fellows out, have
+the Band ready, Oh, where is Coach Corridan? Read it, Beef, Theophilus,
+Phillyloo. Oh, Hicks is _coming_ and he's got--"
+
+It is possible that little Theophilus, who firmly believed that big Butch
+Brewster had gone emotionally insane, would have fled for help, but at that
+juncture members of the Gold and Green football squad, with Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan, appeared, marching funereally toward the Gym.,
+where a signal quiz was booked for seven forty-five. Beholding the
+paralyzing spectacle of their captain apparently in paroxysms on the grass,
+Hefty Hollingsworth, Biff Pemberton, Monty Merriweather and Pudge Langdon
+hurled themselves on his tonnage, while Roddy Perkins sat on his head, and
+wrested the telegram from his grasp,
+
+"Call up Matteawan," shouted Roddy, unfolding the slip, "Butch is getting
+barmy in the dome, he--Oh, Coach, fellows--_great joy_! Just heed."
+
+James Roderick Perkins, as excited as a Senator about to make his first
+speech, read aloud the telegram, on which the heedless Hicks had triple
+rates:
+
+
+"BUTCH:
+
+"Coming 8.30 P. M. express today. Discharge entire eleven--got whole team
+in one. Knock out partitions between five rooms. Make space for Thor, the
+Prodigious Prodigy! Leave it to Hicks!
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR."
+
+
+"_Hicks is coming_!" shrieked the Phillyloo Bird, soaring down from the
+Senior Fence like a condor. "He will be here in less than an hour; he sent
+this wire just before his train left Philadelphia. Money is no object, when
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister."
+
+"'Discharge entire eleven,'" quoth Butch Brewster, having somewhat subdued
+his frenzy. "'Got whole team in one--knock out partitions between _five_
+rooms--make space for Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy!' Now, what in the world
+has that lunatical Hicks done? Who can Thor be?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Buster Brown, Bunch Bingham, Scoop Sawyer, little Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Don Carterson, and Cherub Challoner, not having given their
+brawn to the subduing of Butch, now kindly donated their brain, in all
+manner of weird suggestions. According to their various surmises, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., had lured the Strong Man away from Barnum and Bailey's
+Circus, had in some way reincarnated the mythical Norse god, Thor, had
+hired some Greco-Roman wrestler, or by other devices too numerous and
+ridiculous to mention, had produced a full-back according to Coach
+Corridan's blue-prints and specifications.
+
+Big Beef McNaughton, seized with an inspiration that supplied
+locomotive-power to his huge frame, lumbered into the Gym., and soon
+appeared with monster megaphones, used in "rooting" for Gold and Green
+teams, which he handed out to his comrades. Then the riotous squad, at his
+suggestion, sprinted for the Quad., that inner quadrangle or court around
+which the four class dormitories, forming the sides of a square, were
+built; anyone desiring an audience could be sure of it here, since the
+collegians in all four dorms. could rush to the Quadrangle side and look
+down from the windows. In the Quadrangle, under the brilliant arc-lights,
+the exuberant youths paused,
+
+"One--two--three--let 'er go!" boomed Beef, and the football squad, in
+_basso profundo_, aided by the Phillyloo Bird's uncertain tenor, and
+Theophilus' quavery treble, roared in a tremendous vocal explosion that
+shook the dormitories:
+
+"Hicks is coming! Hicks is coming! Everybody out on the campus! Get ready
+to welcome our T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.! Hicks is bringing Bannister's
+full-back--a _Prodigious Prodigy_!"
+
+Windows rattled up, heads were thrust out, a fusillade of questions
+bombarded the squad in the Quadrangle below; from the three upper-class
+dormitories erupted hordes of howling, shouting youths, and soon the Quad.
+was filled with a singing, yelling, madly happy crowd. The Bannister Band,
+that famous campus musical organization, following a time-honored habit of
+playing on every possible occasion, gladsomely tuned up and soon the
+noise was deafening, while study-hour, as prescribed by the Faculty, was
+forgotten.
+
+"Everybody on the campus, at once!" Butch Brewster, Master-of-Ceremonies,
+boomed through his megaphone, having aroused excitement to the highest
+pitch by reading Hicks' telegram. "Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus will soon
+heave into sight. Let the Band blare, make a _big noise_. Let's show Hicks
+how glad we are to have him back to old Bannister."
+
+It is historically certain that Mr. Napoleon Bonaparte returning from Jena
+and Austerlitz, Mr. Julius Caesar, home at Rome from his Conquests, or Mr.
+Alexander the Great (Conqueror, not National League pitcher) never received
+such a welcome as did T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., from his Bannister comrades
+that night. To the excited students, massed on the campus before the Gym.
+awaiting his arrival, every second seemed a century; everybody talked at
+once until the hubbub rivaled that of a Woman's Suffrage Convention. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and he was
+bringing "The Prodigious Prodigy," whatever that was, with him. Knowing the
+cheery Senior's intense love of doing the dramatic and his great ambition
+to startle his Alma Mater with some sensational stunt, they could hardly
+wait for old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus to roll up the driveway,
+
+"Here he comes!" shrieked, little Skeet Wigglesworth, an excitable Senior,
+who had climbed a tree to keep watch. "Here comes our Hicks!"
+
+"Honk--Honk!" To the incessant blaring of a raucous horn, old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney-bus moved up the driveway. The genial Irish Jehu, who
+for over twenty years had transported Bannister collegians and alumni
+to and from College Hill in a ramshackle hack drawn by Lord Nelson, an
+antiquated, somnambulistic horse, had yielded to modern invention at
+last. Lord Nelson having become defunct during vacation, Old Dan, with
+a collection taken up by several alumni at Commencement, had bought a
+battered Ford, and constructed therewith a jitney-bus. This conveyance was
+fully as rattle-trap in appearance as the traditional hack had been, but
+the returning collegians hailed it with glee.
+
+"All hail Hicks!" howled Butch Brewster, beside himself with joy,
+"Altogether--the Bannister yell for--_Hicks_!"
+
+With half the collegians giving the yell, a number shouting
+indiscriminately, the Bannister Band blaring furiously, "Behold, The
+Conquering Hero Comes," with the youths a yelling, howling, shrieking,
+dancing mass, old Dan Flannagan, adding his quota of noises with the
+Claxon, brought his bus to a stop. This was a hilarious spectacle in
+itself, for on its sides the Bannister students had painted:
+
+ HENRY FORD'S "PIECE-OF-A-SHIP," _THE DOVE_! ALL RIDING IN THIS JIT DO
+ SO AT THEIR OWN RISK! TEN CENTS FOR A JOY-RIDE TO COLLEGE HILL! YES,
+ IT'S A _FORD_! WHAT DO YOU CARE? GET ABOARD!
+
+On the roof of "The Dove," or "The Crab," as the collegians called it when
+it skidded sideways, perched precariously that well-known, beloved youth,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. He clutched his pestersome banjo and was vigorously
+strumming the strings and apparently howling a ballad, lost in the
+unearthly turmoil. As the jitney-bus stopped, the grinning Hicks arose, and
+from his lofty, position made a profound bow.
+
+"Speech! Speech! Speech!" A mighty shout arose, and Hicks raised his hand
+for silence, which was immediately delivered to him.
+
+"Fellows, one and all," he shouted, a mist before his eyes, for his
+impulsive soul was touched by the ovation, "I--I am _glad_ to be back!
+Say--I--I--well, I'm glad to be back--that's all!"
+
+At this masterly oration, which, despite its brevity, contained volumes of
+feeling, the Bannister students went wild--for a longer period than any
+political convention ever cheered a nominated candidate, they cheered T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Roar--roar--roar--_roar_!" in deafening sound-waves,
+the noise swept across the campus; never had football idol, baseball hero,
+or any athletic demigod, in all Bannister's history, been accorded such a
+tremendous ovation.
+
+"Fellows," called T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., climbing down from his precarious
+perch, "stand back; I have brought to Bannister the 'Prodigious Prodigy.'
+I have rounded up a full-back who will beat Ballard all by himself. Behold
+the new Gold and Green football eleven, 'Thor'!"
+
+From the grinning Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, like a Russian bear charging
+from its den, lumbered a being whose enormous bulk fairly astounded the
+speechless youths; Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Tug Cardiff, Bunch
+Bingham, Buster Brown, and Pudge Langdon were popularly regarded as the
+last word in behemoths, but this "Thor" dwarfed them, towered above them
+like a Colossus over Lilliputians. He was a youth, and yet a veritable
+Hercules. Over six feet he stood, with a massive head, covered with tousled
+white hair, a powerful neck, broad shoulders, a vast chest. To a judge of
+athletes, he would tip the scales at a hundred and ninety pounds, all solid
+muscle, for that superb physique held not an ounce of superfluous flesh.
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, gazing at the mountain of
+muscle, "if _size_ means anything, you have brought old Bannister an entire
+football squad! What splendid material to train for the Big Games, why--he
+will be irresistible!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+
+
+ "I didn't raise my _Ford_ to be a _jitney_--
+ To run the streets, and stay out late at night!
+ Who dares to put a jitney sign, upon it--
+ And send my _peace-ship_ out for fares to fight?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., standing by his open window at 3 P. M. one
+afternoon a week after his sensational return to Bannister College, with
+the "Prodigious Prodigy" in tow, indulged in the soul-satisfying pastime of
+twanging his banjo, and roaring, in his subterranean voice, a parody on "I
+Didn't Raise My Boy to be a Soldier." It was actually the first Caruso-like
+outburst of the pestersome youth that year, but his saengerfest brought
+vociferous howls of protest from campus and dormitories:
+
+"_Bow-wow-wow_! The Grand Opery season is starting!"
+
+"Sing some records for a talking-machine company, Hicks!"
+
+"Kill that tom-cat! Listen to the back-fence musicale!"
+
+"Say, Hicks--we'll take your word for that noise!"
+
+On the Gym. steps, loafing a few moments before jogging out to Bannister
+Field for a strenuous scrimmage under the personal supervision of
+Slave-Driver Corridan, the Gold and Green football squad had gathered. It
+was from these stalwart gridiron gladiators that the caustic criticism of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, vocal atrocities emanated, and the imitation of a
+mournful hound by "Ichabod," the skyscraping Senior, was indeed phenomenal.
+Added to the howls, whistles, jeers, and shouts of the squad, were like
+condemnations from other collegians, sky-larking on the campus, or in the
+dorms.
+
+"At that," grinned Captain Butch Brewster happily, "it surely makes me feel
+jubilant to hear Hicks' foghorn voice shattering the echoes, with his
+banjo strumming disturbing the peace--for which offense it shall soon be
+arrested. We can truly say that old Bannister is now officially opened for
+another year, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., has performed his annual rite--"
+
+"Right--!" scoffed big Pudge Langdon, indignantly, as he gazed up at the
+happy-go-lucky youth, at the window of his room on the third-floor, campus
+side, of Bannister Hall, "Hicks ought to be tarred and feathered; there is
+_nothing right_ in the way he has acted since his return to college! He
+struts around like Herman, the Master-Magician, and all the fellows fully
+expect to see him produce white rabbits from his cap, or make varicolored
+flags out of his handkerchief."
+
+"We ought to toss him in a blanket," stormed Beef McNaughton, in ludicrous
+rage. "Ever since he mystified Bannister by going out and corralling a
+Hercules who is an entire eleven in himself, Hicks has maintained that
+sphinx-like silence as to how he achieved the feat, and he swaggers around,
+enshrouded in _mystery_! All we know is that 'Thor' is John Thorwald, of
+Norwegian descent. If we ask _him_ for information, that wretch Hicks has
+him trained to say, 'Ask the little fellow, Hicks!'"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in truth, had acted in a most reprehensible manner
+since that memorable night when he brought "Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy,"
+to the campus. Not that he ceased to be the same sunny-souled, popular and
+friendly youth. The collegians, happy at finding his room open-house again,
+flocked to his cozy quarters, Freshmen _fell_ under the spell of his
+generous nature, his Beef-Steak Busts, down at Jerry's were nightly
+occurrences, and he was the same Hicks as of old. But, after the dramatic
+manner in which Hicks had mysteriously made good the rash vow uttered at
+Camp Bannister and had brought to Coach Corridan a blond-haired giant who
+seemed destined to perform prodigies at full-back, the sunny Senior had
+evidently labored under the delusion that he was "Kellar, The Great
+Magician."
+
+Instead of relieving the tortured curiosity of the students, wild to know
+how and where Hicks had unearthed this physical Hercules, who in every way
+filled the details of Head Coach Corridan's "blue-prints," T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., enjoying to the full this novel method of torturing his
+comrades, made a baffling mystery of the affair, much to the indignation of
+his friends.
+
+_"Just leave it to Hicks,"_ he would say, when the Bannister youths
+cajoled, implored, threatened, or argued. "Thor is eligible to play four
+years of football at old Bannister. I call him Thor, after the great Norse
+god, Thor; he is of Norwegian descent. That is all of the Billion-Dollar
+Mystery I can disclose; ten thousand dollars offered for the correct
+solution."
+
+"Here comes Scoop Sawyer," said Monty Merriweather, as that Senior, waving
+his arms in air, catapulted from Bannister Hall, and strode toward the
+squad on the Gym. steps; his appearance registered wrath, in photo-play
+parlance, and on reaching his comrades he immediately acquainted them with
+its cause.
+
+"Listen to that Hicks!" he exploded, gesticulating with a sheaf of papers.
+"Hicks, the mocking-bird! He is mocking _us_--with his 'Billion-Dollar
+Mystery!' Say--here I am writing to Jack Merritt; he played football four
+years for old Bannister; he was captain of the Gold and Green eleven; last
+Commencement he graduated, and the last thing he said to me was, 'Scoop,
+old pal, write to me next fall, tell me everything about the football
+season; keep me posted as to new material!' _Everything_--keep him posted
+as to new material--_Bah_! If I write that Hicks has brought a fellow he
+calls 'Thor,' who spreads the regulars over the field, Jack will want
+to know the details, and--that villainous Hicks won't divulge his dread
+secret!"
+
+At this moment, Scoop Sawyer, so-called because he was ambitious to be a
+newspaper reporter, after graduation, and for his humorous articles in the
+_Bannister Weekly_, had his intense wrath soothed by that which has
+"power to soothe the savage breast"; T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., displaying a
+wonderful originality by composing, then chanting, his parody, concluded
+the chorus roaring lustily, to a rollicking banjo accompaniment:
+
+ "If street car companies gave seats to all patrons
+ The strap-hangers in jitneys would not ride.
+ There'd be no jits. today
+ If Ford owners would say,
+ I didn't raise my Ford to be a--jitney!"
+
+"That is too much!" raged Captain Butch Brewster, facing his excited
+colleagues. "Come on, fellows, we'll invade Hicks' room, read him Scoop's
+letter to Jack Merritt, and _make_ him solve the Mystery! We're done with
+diplomacy; now, we'll deliver the ultimatum; when the squad returns from
+scrimmage, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., will tell us all about Thor, or be
+tossed in a blanket! Are you with me?"
+
+"We are _ahead_ of you!" howled Roddy Perkins, leading a wild charge for
+the entrance to Bannister Hall. Following him up the two flights of stairs
+with thunderous tread came Butch, Beef, Monty, Biff, Hefty, Pudge, Tug,
+Ichabod, Bunch, Buster, Bus Norton, and several second-team players,
+Cherub, Chub Chalmers, Don, Skeet, and Scoop Sawyer with his letter. With
+a terrific, blood-chilling clatter, and hideous howls, the Hicks-quelling
+Expedition roared down the third corridor of Bannister, and surged into the
+room of that tantalizing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!
+
+"Safety first!" shrieked that cheery collegian, stowing his banjo in the
+closet and making a strenuous but futile effort to dive head-first beneath
+the bed, being forcibly restrained by Beef, who clung to his left ankle.
+"Say, to what am I indebted for the honor of this call? Why, when I got
+back to Bannister, you fellows gushed, 'Oh, we're _so_ glad you're back,
+Hicks, old top; we missed even your saengerfests,' and when I start one--"
+
+"Hicks," pronounced Butch Brewster grimly, holding the genial offender
+by the scruff of the neck, "you tantalizing, aggravating, irritating,
+lunatical, conscienceless degenerate! You assassin of Father Time, you
+disturber of the peace, _heed_! Scoop Sawyer is writing to Jack Merritt, to
+tell about the football team, and Bannister's chances of the Championship;
+he wants to tell Jack all about this Thor! Now, you have acted like
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston long enough, and hear our final word. Read Scoop's
+letter, and if when you finish its perusal you fail to give us full
+information, and answer all questions about Thor--"
+
+"The football team will toss you in a blanket until you do!" finished Monty
+Merriweather, "We intended to wait until after the scrimmage, but Butch
+evidently believes we should end your bothersome mystery as once, and--"
+
+"'Curiosity killed the cat!'" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; then seeing
+the avenues and boulevards of escape were closed, but fighting for time,
+"let me peruse said missive indited by our literarily overbalanced Scoop. I
+am reluctant to dispel the clouds of mystery, but--"
+
+Scoop Sawyer thrust the typewritten pages of the letter--composed on
+the battered old typewriter in the editorial sanctum of the _Bannister
+Weekly_--into Hicks' grasp and with a grin, that blithesome youth read:
+
+
+Bannister College, Sept, 27.
+
+DEAR OLD JACK:
+
+There is so _much_ to tell you, old pal, that I scarcely know where to
+start, but you want to know about the football eleven, so I'll write about
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his 'Billion-Dollar Mystery,' as he calls it;
+about Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. You well know what a scatter-brained
+wretch Hicks is, and how he dearly loves to plot dramatic climaxes--to
+mystify old Bannister. Just now Hicks has the campus as wrathful as it is
+possible to be with that lovable youth; he has originated a great mystery,
+and achieved a seemingly impossible feat, and instead of explaining it, he
+swaggers around like a Hindoo mystic enshrouded in mystery and the fellows
+are wild enough to tar and feather the incorrigible villain!
+
+To get off to a sprint-start, up in Camp Bannister, before college opened,
+when the squad was in training camp, Butch Brewster says that Coach
+Corridan one day, before Hicks, expressed a fervid ambition to find a huge,
+irresistible fullback--
+
+
+Here the chronicle must hang fire, while T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning
+at the wrath his mysterious behavior aroused, peruses those sections of
+Scoop Sawyer's epistle telling of two scenes already described; first,
+the one in the Camp Bannister grub-shack, where Head Coach Corridan
+blue-printed the Gargantuan athlete he desired, and the blithesome Hicks
+confidently requested that the Herculean task be left to him; second, the
+scene of intense excitement on the campus the night that the missing Hicks
+returned personally conducting that mountain of muscle, the blond-haired
+Thor.
+
+Having grinned at these descriptions, the pestiferous Hicks scanned a
+picturesque description by Scoop of the events that transpired between that
+memorable night and the present invasion of the sunny Senior's room by the
+indignant squad.
+
+--Naturally, Jack, old Bannister was intensely curious to know who this
+"Thor" could be, and how Hicks unearthed such a giant. But, instead of
+swaggering a trifle, as he inevitably does, and saying, 'Oh, I told you
+just to leave it to Hicks!' then telling all about it, after accomplishing
+what everyone believed a ridiculously impossible quest, he maintains that
+provokingly mysterious silence, and John Thorwald (we know his name,
+anyway) stolidly refers us to Hicks. So where Thor originated or how under
+the sun Hicks got on his trail, after making his rash vow to corral a
+mighty fullback, is a deep, dark mystery.
+
+Now for Thor himself. Words cannot describe that Prodigious Prodigy; he
+must be seen to be believed! We do know that he is John Thorwald, and of
+distinctly Norwegian descent, so that calling him after the mythic Norse
+god is extremely appropriate. And he is reminiscent of the great Thor, with
+his vast strength and prowess. Thanks to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, love of
+mystery, and of tantalizing old Bannister, we know nothing of Thorwald's
+past, but we are sure he has lived and toiled among _men_, to possess
+that powerful build. I can't describe him, old man, without resorting to
+exaggeration, for ordinary words and phrases are utterly inadequate with
+Thor! Conjure up a vision of Gulliver among the Lilliputians and you can
+picture him towering over us. He is a Viking of old, with his fair features
+and blond hair. Probably twenty-five years old, he has a powerful frame and
+prodigious strength, he dwarfs such behemoths as Butch and Beef, and makes
+such insignificant mortals as little Theophilus and myself seem like
+insects!
+
+Thor is so _big_, Jack, that when he gets in a room, he crowds everyone
+into the corridor, and fills it alone. No wonder Hicks telegraphed to knock
+out the partitions between five rooms to make space for Thor! When he
+stands on the campus he blots out several sections of scenery, and the
+college disappears, giving the impression he has swallowed it. Thor is a
+slow-minded being, but possessed of a grim determination. To get an idea
+into his mind requires a blackboard and Chautauqua lecturer, but once he
+masters it, he never lets go; so it will be with football signals, once let
+him grasp a play, he will never be confused. He is simply a huge, stolid
+giant. He has a bulldog purpose to get an education, and nothing else
+matters. As for college spirit, the glad comradeship of the campus, he has
+no time for it; he pays no attention to the fellows at all, only to Hicks.
+
+His devotion to that wretch is pathetic! He follows Hicks around like a
+huge mastiff after a terrier, or an ocean leviathan towed by a tug-boat; he
+seems absolutely helpless without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and so we have
+a daily Hicks' personally conducted tour of Thor to interest us. Briefly,
+Jack, John Thorwald is a slow-moving, slow-minded, grimly bulldog giant,
+who has come to Bannister to study, and as for any other phase of campus
+existence, he has never awakened to it!
+
+Now for the football story: Well, the day after Hicks' sensational arrival,
+which I described, Coach Corridan, Captain Butch Brewster, Beef, Buster,
+Pudge, Monty, and Roddy with yours truly, went to Thor's room in Creighton
+just before football practice. We found that Colossus, who had matriculated
+as a Freshman, aided by Hicks, patiently masticating mental food as served
+by Ovid. Coach Corridan said, 'Come on, Thorwald, over to the Gym.; we'll
+fix you out with togs, if we can get two suits big enough to make one for
+your bulk! Ever play the game?' 'I play some,' rumbled Thor stolidly, never
+raising his eyes from his Latin. 'Don't bother me, I want to _study._
+I have not time for such foolishness. I am here to study, to get an
+education!' 'But,' urged the coach earnestly, 'you _must_ play football for
+your Alma Mater, for old Bannister. Why, you--you _must_, that's all!' Thor
+gazed at Hicks questioningly--I forgot to add that insect's name--and
+asked, 'Is it so, Hicks? I _got_ to play for the college?' And when Hicks
+grinned, '_Sure_, Thor, it must be did. Bannister expects you to smear the
+other teams over the landscape,' that blond Norwegian Viking said, 'Well,
+then, I play.'
+
+All Bannister turned out to behold the "Prodigious Prodigy" on the football
+field. Somewhere--Hicks won't divulge where--Thor has learned the rudiments
+of the game. With that bulldog tenacity of his, he has learned them well.
+Hence he was ready for the scrubs, and in the practice game it was a
+veritable slaughter of the innocents. The 'Varsity could not stop Thor.
+Remember 'Ole' Skjarsen, the big Swede of George Fitch's 'Siwash College'
+tales? Thor, after the ten minutes required to teach him a play, would take
+the ball and just wade through the regulars for big gains. The only way to
+stop him was for the entire eleven to cling affectionately to his bulk,
+and then he transported them several yards. He is a phenom, a veritable
+Prodigious Prodigy, and maybe old Bannister isn't _wild_ with enthusiasm.
+His development will be slow but sure, and by the time the big games for
+the championship come, he will be a whole team in himself. Right now he
+goes through daily scrimmage as solemnly as if performing a sacred rite. He
+doesn't thrill with college spirit, but as for football--
+
+Leaving Hicks to read the rest of Scoop Sawyer's long missive, terminating
+with indignant condemnation of the sunny youth's love of mystery, the
+terrific enthusiasm roused at old Bannister by the daily appearance on
+Bannister Field of Thor, and his irresistible marches through the 'Varsity,
+must be chronicled and explained.
+
+Not for five seasons, not since the year before Hicks, Pudge, Butch, Beef
+and the others of 1919 were Freshmen, had the Gold and Green corraled that
+greatest glory, The State Intercollegiate Football Championship! In Captain
+Butch's Sophomore year, he had flung his bulk into the fray, training,
+sacrificing, fighting like a Trojan, only to see the pennant lost by a
+scant three inches, as Jack Merritt's forty-yard drop-kick for the goal
+that would have won the Championship struck the cross-bar and bounded back
+into the field. And the past season-old Bannister could still vision that
+tragic scene of the biggest game.
+
+The students could picture Captain Brewster, with the Bannister eleven a
+few yards from Ballard's goal-line, and the touchdown that would give the
+Gold and Green that supreme glory. One minute to play; Deacon Radford had
+given Butch the pigskin, and like a berserker, he fought entirely through
+the scrimmage. But a kick on the head had blinded him, in the _mêlée_--free
+of tacklers, with the goal-line, victory, and the Championship so near, he
+staggered, reeled blindly, crashed into an upright, and toppled backward,
+senseless on the field, while the Referee's whistle announced the end of
+the game, and glory to Ballard. Even then, after the first terrible shock
+of the loss, of the cruel blow fate dealt the Gold and Green two
+successive seasons, the slogan was: "_Next year_--Bannister will win the
+Championship--_next year_!"
+
+It was now "next year!" Losing only Jack Merritt, Babe McCabe and Heavy
+Hughes from the line-up, and having Monty Merrlweather and Bunch Bingham,
+fully as good, Coach Corridan's Gold and Green eleven, before the season
+started, seemed a better fighting machine than even the one of the year
+before. But when the irrepressible T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in some
+mysterious fashion making good his rash vow to produce a smashing full-back
+that can't be stopped, towed that stolid, blond Colossus, Thor, to old
+Bannister, enthusiasm broke all limits!
+
+Mass-meetings were held every night. Speeches by Coaches, Captain, players,
+Faculty, and students, aroused the campus to the highest pitch; every day,
+the entire student-body, with The Bannister Band, turned out on Bannister
+Field to cheer the eleven, and to watch the Prodigious Prodigy perform
+valorous deeds, like the god Thor. "Bannister College--State Championship!"
+was the cry, and with the giant Thor to present an irresistible catapulting
+that could not be stopped, the Gold and Green exultantly awaited the big
+games with Hamilton and Ballard.
+
+And yet, the stolid, unemotional, unawakened Thor, on whom every hope of
+the Championship was based, whom all Bannister came out to watch every day,
+practiced as he studied, doggedly, silently. It was evident to all that
+he hated the grind, that he wanted to quit, that his heart was not in the
+game, but for some cause, he drove his Herculean body ahead, and could not
+be stopped!
+
+"Now, you abandoned wretch," said Butch Brewster grimly, as the
+happy-go-lucky Hicks finished Scoop's letter, and glanced about him wildly
+seeking a way of escape, "in one minute you will tell us all about John
+Thorwald, alias 'Thor,' or be tossed sky-high in a blanket by the football
+squad, and please believe me, you'll break all altitude records!"
+
+"Spare me, you banditti!" pleaded Hicks, reluctant to cease torturing
+Bannister with his Billion-Dollar Mystery, yet equally unwilling to aviate
+from a blanket heaved by the husky athletes. "Why seek ye to question the
+ways of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.? You have your Prodigious Prodigy--your
+smashing full-back is distributing the 'Varsity over the scenery with
+charming nonchalance that promises dire catastrophe for other teams, once
+he makes the regulars, so--"
+
+At that dramatic moment, just as Butch Brewster glanced at Hicks'
+alarm-clock, to start the minute of grace, a startling interruption saved
+the gladsome youth from having to make a decision. A heavy, creaking tread
+shook the corridor, and the squad beheld, looming up in the doorway, Thor.
+He was not in football togs, and as he started to speak his fair face as
+stolid and expressionless as that of a sphinx, Captain Butch Brewster
+stepped toward him.
+
+"Thor!" he exclaimed, seizing the blond Colossus by the arm, "You aren't
+ready for the scrimmage; hustle over to the Gym. and get on your suit."
+
+But John Thorwald, as passive of feature as though he announced something
+of the most infinitesimal importance, and were not hurling a bomb-shell
+whose explosion, was to shake old Bannister terrifically, spoke in a
+matter-of-fact manner: "I shall not play football--any more."
+
+"_What_!" Every collegian in Hicks' room, including that dazed producer
+of the Prodigious Prodigy, chorused the exclamation; to them it was as
+stunning a shock as the nation would suffer if its President calmly
+announced, "I'm tired of being President of the United States. I shall not
+report for work tomorrow." Bannister College, ever since the night that
+Thor arrived on the campus, had talked or thought of nothing but how this
+huge, blond-haired Hercules would bring the Championship to the Gold and
+Green; his prodigies on the gridiron, his ever-increasing prowess, had
+aroused enthusiasm to fever heat, and now--
+
+"I was told wrong," said Thor, shifting his vast tonnage awkwardly from one
+foot to the other, and evidently bewildered at the consternation caused by
+what he believed a trifling announcement, "I understood that I _had_ to
+play football, that the Faculty required it of me, and the students let me
+think so. I have just learned from Doctor Alford that such is not true,
+that I do not have to play unless I choose, hence, I quit. I came to
+college to study, to gain an education. I have toiled long and hard for
+the opportunity, and now I have it, I shall not waste my time on such
+foolishness."
+
+Then, utterly unconscious that he had spoken sentences which would create
+a mighty sensation at old Bannister, that might doom the Gold and Green
+to defeat, lose his Alma Mater the Championship, and bring on himself the
+cruel ostracism and bitter censure of his fellows, John Thorwald lumbered
+down the corridor. A moment of tense silence followed and then Captain
+Butch Brewster groaned.
+
+"It's all over, it's all over, fellows!" he said brokenly, "Bannister loses
+the Championship! We know it is impossible to move Thor on the football
+field, and now that he has said 'No!' to playing football, dynamite can not
+move him from his decision."
+
+Then, crushed and disconsolate, the football squad filed silently from the
+room, to break the glad news to Coach Corridan, and to spread the joyous
+tidings to old Bannister. When they had gone, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+staring at the figurative black cloud that lowered over his Alma Mater,
+strove to find its silver lining, and at last he partially succeeded.
+
+"Anyway," said Hicks, with a lugubrious effort to grin, "Thor's
+announcement shocked the squad so much that I was not forced to explain my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+
+
+"In the famous words of Mr. Somebody-Or-Other," quoth T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., "something has _got_ to be did, and immediately to once!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster nodded assent. So did Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan,
+Beef McNaughton, Team Manager Socks Fitzpatrick, Monty Merriweather, Dad
+Pendleton, President of the Athletic Association, and Deacon Radford,
+quarter-back, also Shad Fishpaw, who, being Freshman Class-Chairman,
+maintained a discreet silence. Instead of the usual sky-larking, care-free
+crowd that infested the cozy quarters of the happy-go-lucky Hicks, every
+collegian present, except the ever-cheerful youth, seemed to have lost his
+best friend and his last dollar at one fell swoop!
+
+"Oh, yes, something has got to be did!" fleered Beef McNaughton, the
+davenport creaking under the combined tonnage of himself and Butch
+Brewster, "But who will do it? Where's all that Oh-just-leave-it-to-Hicks
+stuff you have pulled for the past three years, you pestiferous insect?
+_Bah_! You did a lot; you dragged a Prodigious Prodigy to old Bannister,
+enshrouded him in darkest mystery, and now, when he pushed the 'Varsity off
+the field and promised to corral the Championship, single-handed, he puts
+his foot down, and says, '_No_--I will not play football!' Get busy, Little
+Mr. Fix-It."
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" accommodated that blithesome Senior, with a
+cheeriness he was far from feeling. "You all do know why Thor won't
+play football; it is not like last season, when Deke Radford, a star
+quarter-back, refused either to play, or to explain his refusal. Let me
+get an inspiration, and then Thor will once again gently but firmly thrust
+entire football elevens down the field before him!"
+
+As evidence of how intensely serious was the situation, let it be
+chronicled that, for the first time in his scatter-brained campus career,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., did not dare strum his banjo and roar out ballads
+to torture his long-suffering colleagues. Popular and beloved as he was,
+the gladsome youth hesitated to shatter the quietude of the campus with
+his saengerfest, knowing as he did what a terrible blow Thor's utterly
+astounding announcement had been to the college.
+
+It was nine o'clock, one night two weeks after the day when John Thorwald,
+better known as Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, so mysteriously produced by
+Hicks, had stolidly paralyzed old Bannister by unemotionally stating his
+decision to play no more football. Since then, to quote the Phillyloo Bird,
+"Bannister has staggered around the ring like a prizefighter with the
+Referee counting off ten seconds and trying to fight again before he takes
+the count." In truth, the students had made a fatal mistake in building
+all their hopes of victory on that blond giant, Thor; seeing his wonderful
+prowess, and beholding how, in the first week of the season, the Norwegian
+Colossus had ripped to shreds the Varsity line which even the heavy Ballard
+eleven of the year before could not batter, it was but natural that the
+enthusiastic youths should think of the Championship chances in terms of
+_Thor_. For one week, enthusiasm and excitement soared higher and higher,
+and then, to use a phrase of fiction, everything fell with a dull,
+sickening thud!
+
+In vain did Coach Corridan, the staff of Assistant Coaches, Captain Butch
+Brewster, and others strive to resuscitate football spirit; nightly
+mass-meetings were held, and enough perfervid oratory hurled to move a
+Russian fortress, but to no avail. It was useless to argue that, without
+Thor, Bannister had an eleven better than that of last year, which so
+nearly missed the Championship. The campus had seen the massive Thor's
+prodigies; they knew he could not be stopped, and to attempt to arouse the
+college to concert pitch over the eleven, with that mountain of muscle
+blotting out vast sections of scenery, but not in football togs, was not
+possible.
+
+"One thing is sure," spoke Dad Pendleton seriously, gazing gloomily from
+the window, "unless we get Thor in the line-up for the Big Games, our last
+hope of the Championship is dead and interred! And I feel sorry for the big
+fellow, for already the boys like him just about as much as a German
+loves an Englishman; yet, arguments, threats, pleadings, and logic have
+absolutely no effect on him. He has said 'No,' and that ends it!"
+
+"He doesn't understand things, fellows," defended T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+with surprising earnestness. "Remember how bewildered he seemed at our
+appeal to his college spirit, and his love for his Alma Mater. We might as
+well have talked Choctaw to him!"
+
+Butch Brewster, Socks Fitzpatrick, Dad Pendleton, Beef McNaughton, Deacon
+Radford, Monty Merriweather, and Shad Fishpaw well remembered that night
+after Thor's tragic decision, when they--part of a Committee formed of the
+best athletes from all teams, and the most representative collegians of old
+Bannister, had invaded Thor's room in Creighton Hall, to wrestle with the
+recalcitrant Hercules. Even as Hicks spoke, they visioned it again.
+
+A cold, cheerless room, bare of carpet or pictures, with just the
+study-table, bed, and two chairs. At the study-table, his huge bulk
+sprawling on, and overflowing, a frail chair, they had found the massive
+John Thorwald laboriously reading aloud the Latin he had translated,
+literally by the sweat of his brow. The blond Colossus, impatient at the
+interruption, had shaken his powerful frame angrily, and with no regard for
+campus tradition, had addressed the upperclassmen in a growl: "Well, what
+do you want? Hurry up, I've got to study."
+
+And then, to state it briefly, they had worked with (and on) the stolid
+Thorwald for two hours. They explained how his decision to play no more
+football would practically kill old Bannister's hopes of the Championship,
+would assassinate football spirit on the campus, and cause the youths to
+condemn Thor, and to ostracise him. Waxing eloquent, Butch Brewster had
+delivered a wonderful speech, pleading with John Thorwald to play the
+game. He tried to show that obviously uninterested mammoth that, like the
+Hercules he so resembled, he stood at the parting of the ways.
+
+"You are on the threshold of your college career, old man!" he thundered
+impressively, though he might as well have tried to shoot holes in a
+battleship with a pop-gun, "What you do now will make or break you. Do you
+want the fellows as friends or as enemies; do you want comradeship, or
+loneliness and ostracism? You have it in your power to do two _big_ things,
+to win the Championship for your Alma Mater, and to win to yourself the
+entire student-body, as friends; will you do that, and build a firm
+foundation for your college years, or betray your Alma Mater, and gain the
+enmity of old Bannister!"
+
+Followed more fervid periods, with such phrases as, "For your Alma Mater,"
+"Because of your college spirit," "For dear old Bannister," and "For
+the Gold and Green!" predominating; all of which terms, to the stolid,
+unimaginative Thorwald being fully as intelligible as Hindustani. They
+appealed to him not to betray his Alma Mater; they implored him, for his
+love of old Bannister; they besought him, because of his college spirit;
+and all the time, for all that the Prodigious Prodigy understood, they
+might as well have remained silent.
+
+"I will tell you something," spoke Thor, at last, with an air of impatient
+resignation, "and don't bother me again, please! I have come to Bannister
+College to get an education, and I have the right to do so, without being
+pestered. I pay my bills, and I am entitled to all the knowledge I can
+purchase. I look from my window, and I see boys, whose fathers are toiling,
+sacrificing, to send them here. Instead of studying, to show their
+gratitude, they loaf around the campus, or in their rooms, twanging banjos
+and guitars, singing silly songs, and sky-larking. I don't know what all
+this rot is you are talking of; 'college spirit,' 'my Alma Mater,' and so
+on. I do not want to play football; I do not like the game; I need the time
+for my study, so I will not play. Both my father and myself have labored
+and sacrificed to send me to college. The past five years, with one great
+ambition to go to college and learn, I have toiled like a galley-slave.
+
+"And now, when opportunity is mine, do you ask me to _play_? You want me to
+loaf around, wasting precious time better spent in my studies. What do I
+care whether the boys like me, or hate me? Bah! I can take any two of you,
+and knock your heads together! Their friendship or enmity won't move me. I
+shall study, learn. I will not waste time in senseless foolishness, and I
+_won't_ play football again."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. was silent as he stood by the window of his room,
+gazing down at the campus where the collegians were gathering before
+marching to the Auditorium for the nightly mass-meeting that would vainly
+strive to arouse a fighting spirit in the football "rooters." That
+blithesome, heedless, happy-go-lucky youth was capable of far more serious
+thought than old Bannister knew; and more, he possessed the rare ability
+to read character; in the case of Thor, he saw vastly deeper than his
+indignant comrades, who beheld only the surface of the affair. They knew
+only that John Thorwald, a veritable Colossus, had exhibited football
+prowess that practically promised the State Championship to old Bannister,
+and then--he had quit the game. They understood only that Thor refused to
+play simply because he did not want to, and as to why their appeals to his
+college spirit and his love for his Alma Mater were unheeded they were
+puzzled.
+
+But the gladsome Hicks, always serious beneath his cheerful exterior, when
+old Bannister's interests were at stake, or when a collegian's career
+might be blighted, when the tragedy could be averted, fully understood. Of
+course, as originator of the Billion-Dollar Mystery, and producer of the
+Prodigious Prodigy, he knew more about the strange John Thorwald than did
+his mystified comrades. He knew that Thor, as he named him, was just a vast
+hulk of humanity, stolid, unimaginative of mind, slow-thinking, a dull,
+unresponsive mass, as yet unstirred by that strange, subtle, mighty thing
+called college spirit. He realized that Thor had never had a chance to
+understand the real meaning of campus life, to grasp the glad fellowship of
+the students, to thrill with a great love for his Alma Mater. All that must
+come in time. The blond giant had toiled all his life, had labored among
+men where everything was practical and grim. Small wonder, then, that he
+failed utterly to see why the youths "loafed on the campus, or in their
+rooms, twanging banjos and guitars, singing silly songs, and skylarking."
+
+"I must save him," murmured Hicks softly, for the others in his room were
+talking of Thor. "Oh, imagine that powerful body, imbued with a vast love
+for old Bannister, think of Thor, thrilling with college spirit. Why,
+Yale's and Harvard's elevens combined could not stop his rushes, then. I
+must save him from himself, from the condemnation of the fellows, who just
+don't understand. I must, some way, awaken him to a complete understanding
+of college life in its entirety, but how? He is so different from Roddy
+Perkins, or Deke Radford."
+
+It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every year of his
+campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath, deserved or
+otherwise, of the students. In his Freshman first term, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., indignant at the way little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+nervous "grind," had been alarmed at the idea of being hazed, had by a
+sensational escape from a room locked, guarded, and filled with Sophomores,
+gained immunity for himself and the boner for all time, thus winning the
+loyal, pathetic devotion of the Human Encyclopedia. As a Sophomore, by
+crushing James Roderick Perkins' Napoleonic ambition to upset tradition,
+and make Freshmen equal with upperclassmen, Hicks had turned that
+aggressive youth's tremendous energy in the right channels, and made him a
+power for good on the campus.
+
+And, a Junior, he had saved good Deacon Radford. When that serious youth, a
+famous prep. quarter, entered old Bannister, the students were wild at the
+thought of having him to run the Gold and Green team, but to their dismay,
+he refused either to report for practice or to explain his decision. Hicks,
+promising blithely, as usual, to solve the mystery and get Deke to play,
+discovered that the youth's mother, called "Mother Peg" by the collegians,
+was head-waitress downtown at Jerry's and that she made her son promise
+not to own the relationship, and that while she worked to get him through
+college, Deacon would not play football. The inspired Hicks had gotten
+Mother Peg to start College Inn, and board Freshmen unable to get rooms
+in the dormitories, and Deacon had played wonderful football. For this
+achievement, the original youth failed to get glory, for he sacrificed it,
+and swore all concerned to secrecy.
+
+"But Roddy and Deke were different," reflected Hicks, pondering seriously.
+"Both had been to Prep. School, and they understood college life and campus
+spirit. It was Roddy's tremendous ambition that had to be curbed, and Deke
+was the victim of circumstances. But Thorwald--it is just a problem of how
+to awaken in him an understanding of college spirit. The fellows don't
+understand him, and--"
+
+A sudden thought, one of his inspirations, assailed the blithesome Hicks.
+Why not make the fellows understand Thor? Surely, if he explained the
+"Billion-Dollar Mystery," as he humorously called it, and told why
+Thorwald, as yet, had no conception of college life, in its true meaning,
+they would not feel bitter against him; perhaps, instead, though regretful
+at his decision not to play the game, they would all strive to awaken the
+stolid Colossus, to stir his soul to an understanding of campus
+tradition and existence. But that would mean--"I surely hate to lose my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., remembering
+the intense indignation of his comrades at his Herman-Kellar-Thurston
+atmosphere of mystery, "It is more fun than, my 'Sheerluck Holmes'
+detective pose or my saengerfests. Still, for old Bannister, and for Thor."
+
+It would seem only a trifle for the heedless Hicks to give up his mystery,
+and tell Bannister all about Thor; yet, had the Hercules reconsidered, and
+played football, the torturesome youth would have bewildered his colleagues
+as long as possible, or until they made him divulge the truth. He dearly
+loved to torment his comrades, and this had been such an opportunity for
+him to promise nonchalantly to produce a Herculean full-back, then, to
+return to the campus with the Prodigious Prodigy in tow, and for him to
+perform wonders on Bannister Field, naturally aroused the interest of the
+youths, and he had enjoyed hugely their puzzlement, but now--
+
+"Say, fellows," he interrupted an excited conversation of a would-be
+Committee of Ways and Means to make Thor play football, "I have an
+announcement to make."
+
+"Don't pester us, Hicks!" warned Captain Butch Brewster, grimly. "We love
+you like a brother, but we'll crush you if you start any foolishness,
+and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with the study-table between himself and his
+comrades, assumed the attitude of a Chautauqua lecturer, one hand resting
+on the table and the other thrust into the breast of his coat, and
+dramatically announced:
+
+"In the Auditorium--at the regular mass-meeting tonight--T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., will give the correct explanation of Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and
+will solve the Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+
+
+The announcement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had practically the same
+effect on Head Coach Corridan and the cheery Senior's comrades as a German
+gas-bomb would have on the inmates of an Allied trench. For several seconds
+they stared at the blithesome youth, in a manner scarcely to be called
+aimless, since their looks were aimed with deadly accuracy at him, but in
+general, with the exception of Hicks, those in the room resembled vastly
+some of the celebrated Madame Tussaud's wax-works in London.
+
+"Oh," breathed Monty Merriweather, with the appearance of dawning
+intelligence, "that's so, Coach, Hicks never has disclosed the details of
+his achievement; we were about to extort a confession from him, when Thor
+broke up the league with his announcement, and since then, Bannister has
+been too worried over Thorwald to trifle with Hicks!"
+
+"That's a good idea!" exclaimed Coach Corridan, who had been remarkably
+silent, for him, pondering the football crisis, "Hicks can make his
+explanation at the regular mass-meeting tonight, in the Auditorium. I'll
+post an announcement of his purpose, and you fellows spread the news among
+the students, stating that Hicks will tell how he rounded up Thor. Some
+have shirked these meetings since Thorwald quit the game, and this will
+bring them out, so maybe we can arouse the fighting spirit again!"
+
+So well did Butch, Beef, Socks, Monty, Dad, Deacon, and Shad tell the news,
+that when the bell in the Administration Hall tower rang at ten o'clock it
+was ascertained by score-keepers that every youth at Bannister, Freshmen
+included, except that Hercules, Thor, had assembled in the Auditorium. That
+stolid behemoth, who regarded the football mass-meeting as foolishness, was
+reported as boning in his cheerless room, fulfilling the mission for which
+he came to college, namely, to get his money's worth of knowledge, which he
+evidently regarded as some commodity for which Bannister served merely as a
+market.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, on the stage of the Auditorium, the big assembly-hall
+of the college, along with Coach Corridan, several of the Gold and Green
+eleven, two members of the Faculty, several Assistant Coaches, and T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., stepped forward and stilled the tumult of the excited
+youths with upraised hand.
+
+"We have with us tonight," he spoke, after the fashion of introducing
+after-dinner speakers, "Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the celebrated
+Magician and Mystifier, who will present for your approval his world-famous
+Billion-Dollar Mystery, and give the correct solution to Thor, the problem
+no one has been able to solve. I take great pleasure in introducing to you
+this evening, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+The collegians, firmly believing it was another of the pestiferous Hicks'
+jokes, and wholly unaware of the deep purpose of the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible youth's speech, went into paroxysms of glee, as the
+shadow-like Hicks stepped forward. For several minutes, the hall echoed
+with jeers, shouts, groans, whistles, and sarcastic comments:
+
+"Hire a hall, Hicks; tell it to Sweeney!"--"Bryan better look out. Hicks,
+the _Chau-talker;_"--"Spill the speech, old man; spread the oratory!"--"Oh,
+where are my smelling-salts? I know I shall faint!"--"You'd better play a
+banjo-accompaniment to it, Hicks!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for once in his campus career, fervidly wished he
+had not been such a happy-go-lucky, care-free collegian, for now, when he
+was serious, his comrades refused to believe him to be in such a state.
+However, quiet was obtained at last, thanks to the fact that the youths
+possessed all the curiosity of the proverbial cat who died thereby, and the
+sunny Senior plunged earnestly into his famous speech, that was destined,
+at old Bannister, to rank with that of Demosthenes "On The Crown," or any
+of W. J, Bryan's masterpieces.
+
+"Fellows," began Hicks, without preface, "I know I've built myself the
+reputation of being a scatterbrained, heedless nonentity, and it's too late
+to change now. But tonight, please believe me to be thoroughly in earnest.
+Bannister faces more than one crisis, more than one tragedy. It is true
+that the football eleven is crippled by the defection of Thor, that we
+fellows have somewhat unreasonably allowed his quitting the game to shake
+our spirit, but there is more at stake than football victories, than even
+the State Intercollegiate Football Championship! The future of a student,
+of a present Freshman, his hopes of becoming a loyal, solid, representative
+college man, a tremendous power for good, at old Bannister, hang in the
+balance at this moment! I speak of John Thorwald. You students have it in
+your power to make or break him, to ruin his college years and make him a
+recluse, a misanthrope, or to gradually bring him to a full realization of
+what college life and campus tradition really mean."
+
+"I have made a great mystery of Thor, just for a lark, but the enmity and
+condemnation of the campus for him because he quit football suddenly, shows
+me that the time for skylarking is past. For his sake, I must plead. He is
+not to blame, altogether, for quitting. Myself, and you fellows, gave him
+the impression that it was a Faculty requirement for him to play football,
+for we feared he would not play, otherwise; when he learned that it was not
+a Faculty rule, he simply quit."
+
+Here T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., seeing that at last he had convinced the
+collegians of his earnestness, though they seemed fairly paralyzed at the
+phenomenon, paused, and produced a bundle of papers before resuming.
+
+"Now, I'll try to explain the 'mystery' as briefly and as clearly as
+possible. Up at Camp Bannister, before college opened, Coach Corridan, as
+you know, outlined to Butch, Deke, and myself, his dream of a Herculean,
+irresistible full-back; I said, 'Just leave It to Hicks!' and they believed
+that I, as usual, just made that remark to torment them. But such was not
+the case. When I joined them, I remarked that I had a letter from my Dad;
+Deke made some humorous remarks, and I forgot to read it aloud, as I
+intended. Then, after Coach Corridan blue-printed his giant full-back, I
+kept silent as to Dad's letter, for reasons you'll understand. But, after
+all, there was no mystery about my leaving Camp Bannister, after making a
+seemingly rash vow, and returning to college with a 'Prodigious Prodigy'
+who filled specifications, In fact, before I left Camp Bannister, at the
+moment I made my rash promise--I had Thor already lined up!"
+
+"I shall now read a dipping or two, and a letter or two from my Dad. The
+clippings came in Dad's letter to me at Camp Bannister, the letter I
+intended to read to Coach Corridan, Deke, and Butch, but which I decided to
+keep silent about, after the Coach told of the full-back he wanted, for
+I knew I had him already! First, a clipping from the _San Francisco
+Examiner_, of August 25:
+
+MAROONED SAILOR RESCUED--TEN YEARS ON SOUTH SEA ISLAND! SOLE SURVIVOR OF
+ILL-FATED CRUISE OF THE ZEPHYR
+
+"The trading-schooner _Southern Cross_, Captain Martin Bascomb, skipper,
+put into San Francisco yesterday with a cargo of copra from the South Sea
+Islands. On board was John Thorwald, Sr., who for the past ten years
+has been marooned on an uninhabited coral isle of the Southern Pacific,
+together with 'Long Tom' Watts, who, however, died several months ago.
+Thorwald's story reads like a thrilling bit of fiction. He was first mate
+of the ill-fated yacht _Zephyr_, which cleared from San Francisco ten years
+ago with Henry B. Kingsley, the Oil-King, and a pleasure party, for a
+cruise under the southern star. A terrific tornado wrecked the yacht, and
+only Thorwald and 'Long Tom' escaped, being cast upon the coral island,
+where for ten years they existed, unable to attract the attention of the
+few craft that passed, as the isle was out of the regular lanes. Only when
+Captain Martin Bascomb, in the trading-schooner _Southern Cross_, touched
+at the island, hoping to find natives with whom to trade supplies for
+copra, were they found, and 'Long Tom' had been dead some months."
+
+"Despite the harrowing experiences of his exile, Thorwald, a vast hulk of a
+stolid, unimaginative Norwegian, who reminds one of the Norse god, 'Thor,'
+intends to ship as first mate on the New York-Christiania Steamship Line.
+It is said that Thorwald has a son, at this time about twenty-five years of
+age, somewhere In this country, whom he will seek, and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., at this juncture, terminated the newspaper story,
+and finding that his explanation held his comrades spellbound, he produced
+a letter, and drew out the message, after stating the youths could read the
+entire news-story of John Thorwald, Sr., later.
+
+"This is the letter I received from my Dad," he explained to the intensely
+interested Bannister youths, who were giving a concentrated attention that
+members of the Faculty would have rejoiced to receive from them. "Up at
+Camp Bannister--I was just about to read it to Coach Corridan, Butch, and
+Deke Radford, when Deke chaffed me, and then the Coach outlined the mammoth
+full-back he desired, so I kept quiet. I'll now read it to you:
+
+
+"Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept, 17.
+
+"DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+"Read the inclosed clipping from the _San Francisco Examiner_ of August 25,
+and then pay close attention to the following facts: At the time of this
+news-story I was in 'Frisco on business, as you will recall, and for
+reasons to be outlined, when I read of the _Southern Cross_ finding the
+marooned John Thorwald, and bringing him to that city, I was particularly
+interested, so much so that I at once looked up the one-time first mate of
+the ill-starred _Zephyr_ and brought him to Pittsburgh in my private car.
+My reason was this; in my employ, in the International Steel Combine's
+mill, was John Thorwald's son, John Thorwald, Jr.
+
+"To state facts as briefly as possible, almost a year ago, as I took some
+friends through the steel rolling mill, I chanced to step directly beneath
+a traveling crane, lowering a steel beam; seeing my peril, I was about to
+step aside when I caught my foot and fell. Just then a veritable giant,
+black and grimy, leaped forward, and with a prodigious display of strength,
+placed his powerful back under the descending weight, staving it off until
+I rolled over to safety!
+
+"Well, of course, I had the fellow report to my office, and instinctively
+feeling that I wanted to show my gratitude, without being patronizing, he
+responded to my question as to what I could do to reward him, by asking
+simply that I get him some job that would allow him to attend night school.
+He stated that, owing to the fact that he worked alternate weeks at night
+shift he was unable to do so. Questioning him further, I learned the
+following facts:
+
+"He was John Thorwald, Jr., only son of John Thorwald, Sr., a Norwegian;
+his mother was also a Norwegian, but he is a natural born American.
+Realizing the opportunities for an educated young man in our land,
+Thorwald's parents determined that he should gain knowledge, and until he
+was fifteen years old, he attended school in San Francisco. When he was
+fifteen, his father signed as first mate on the yacht _Zephyr_, going with
+the oil-king, Henry B. Kingsley, on a pleasure cruise in the Southern
+Pacific; Thorwald, Sr.'s, story you read in the paper. Soon after the news
+of the _Zephyr's_ wreck, with all on board lost, as was then supposed,
+Thorwald's mother died. Her dying words (so young Thorwald told me, and I
+was moved by his simple, straightforward tale) were an appeal to her
+boy. She made him promise, for her sake, to study, study, study to gain
+knowledge, and to rise in the world! Thorwald promised. Then, believing
+both his parents dead, the young Norwegian, a youth of fifteen without
+money, had to shift for himself.
+
+"Thomas, Jack London could weave his adventures into a gripping
+masterpiece. Starting in as cabin-boy on a freighter to Alaska, young
+Thorwald, in the past ten years, has simply crowded his life with
+adventure, thrill, and experience, though thrills mean nothing to him. He
+was in the Klondike gold-fields, in the salmon canneries, a prospector, a
+lumber-jack in the Canadian Northwest, a cowboy, a sailor, a worker in the
+Panama Canal Zone, on the Big Ditch, and too many other things to remember.
+Finally, he drifted to Pittsburgh, where his prodigious strength served him
+in the steel-mills, and, let me add, served _me_, as I stated.
+
+"And ever, no matter where he wandered, or what was his toil, whenever
+possible, Thorwald studied. His promise to his mother was always his goal,
+and in the cities he studied, or in the wilds he read all the books he
+could find. The past year, finding he had a good-pay job in Pittsburgh, he
+settled to determined effort, and by sheer resolution, by his wonderful
+power to grasp facts and ideas for good once he gets them, he made great
+progress in night school, until he was shifted, a week before he saved my
+life, to work that required him to toil nightly, alternate weeks. So, for a
+year, Thor has had every possible advantage, some, unknown to him, I paid
+for myself; I got him clerical work, with shorter hours, he went to night
+school, and I employed the very best tutor obtainable, letting Thorwald
+pay him, as he thought, though his payments wouldn't keep the tutor in
+neckties. The gratitude of the blond giant is pathetic, and suspecting that
+I paid the tutor something, he insisted on paying all he could, which I
+allowed, of course.
+
+"Well, in August, a year after Thorwald rescued me from serious injury,
+perhaps death, I was in 'Frisco, and read of Thorwald, Sr.'s rescue and
+return. Overjoyed, I took the father to Pittsburgh, to the son. I witnessed
+their meeting, with the father practically risen from the dead, and all
+those stolid, unimaginative Norwegians did was to shake hands gravely!
+Young Thorwald told of his mother's last words, and of his promise, of his
+having studied all the years, and of his late progress, so that he was
+ready to enter college. His father, happy, insisted that he enter this
+September, and he would pay for his son's college course, to make up for
+the years the youth struggled for himself--Kingsley's heirs, I believe,
+gave Thorwald, Sr., five thousand dollars on his return. So, though
+grateful to me for the aid I offered, they would receive no financial
+assistance, for they want to work it out themselves, and help the youth
+make good his promise to his dying mother.
+
+"Much as I love old Bannister, my Alma Mater, I would not have tried to
+send Thorwald there, had I not deemed it a good place for him. However,
+since it is a liberal, not a technical, education he wants, it is all
+right; and that prodigious strength will serve the Gold and Green on the
+football field. Now, Thomas, I want you to meet him in Philadelphia, and
+take him to Bannister, look out for him, get him started O. K., and do all
+you can for him. Get him to play football, if you can, but don't condemn
+if he refuses. Remember, his life has been grim and unimaginative; he has
+toiled and studied, it is probable he will not understand college life at
+first."
+
+
+"That's all I need to read of Dad's letter, fellows," concluded T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. "After I got it, and Coach Corridan, Butch, and Beef heard my
+seemingly rash vow to round up a giant full-back, I made a mystery of it; I
+loafed in Philadelphia and Atlantic City until I met Thor, and brought him
+here. You have all the data regarding Thor, 'The Billion-Dollar Mystery.'"
+
+The students, almost as one, drew a deep breath. They had been enthralled
+by the story, and their feeling toward Thor had undergone a vast change.
+Stirred by hearing of his promise to his dying mother, thrilled at the way
+the stolid, determined Norwegian had ceaselessly studied to make something
+of himself for the sake of his mother's sacred memory, the Bannister youths
+now thought of football, of the Championship, as insignificant, beside the
+goal of Thorwald, Jr. The blond Colossus, whom an hour ago all Bannister
+reviled and condemned for not playing the game, who was a campus outcast,
+was now a hero; thanks to the erstwhile heedless Hicks, whose intense
+earnestness in itself was a revelation to the amazed collegians, Thor stood
+before them in a different light, and the impulsive, whole-souled, generous
+youths were now anxious to make amends.
+
+_"Thor! Thor! Thor!"_ was the thunderous cry, and the Bannister yell for
+the Prodigious Prodigy shattered the echoes. Then T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+ecstatically joyous, again stilled the tumult, and spoke in behalf of John
+Thorwald.
+
+"We all understand Thor now, fellows," he said, beaming on his comrades.
+"We want him to play football, and we'll keep after him to play, but we
+won't condemn him if he refuses. At present, Thor is simply a stolid,
+unimaginative, dull mass of muscle. As you can realize, his nature, his
+life so far have not tended to make him appreciate the gayer, lighter side
+of college life, or to grasp the traditions of the campus. To him, college
+is a market; he pays his money and he takes the knowledge handed out. We
+can not blame him for not understanding college existence in its entirety,
+or that the gaining of knowledge is a small part of the representative
+collegian's purpose.
+
+"Now, boys, here's our job, and let's tackle it together: To awaken in
+Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to stir his
+practical soul. Let every fellow be his friend, let no one speak against
+him, because of football. We must work slowly, carefully, gradually making
+him grasp college traditions, and once he awakens to the real meaning of
+campus life, what a power he will be in the college and on the athletic
+field! Maybe he will not play football this season, but let us help him to
+awaken!"
+
+With wild shouts, the aroused collegians poured from the Auditorium, an
+excited, turbulent mass of youthful humanity, a tide that swept T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., on the shoulders of several, out on the campus. Massed beneath
+the window of John Thorwald's room, in Creighton Hall, the Bannister
+students, now fully understanding that stolid Hercules, and stirred to
+admiration of him by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, great speech, cheered the
+somewhat mystified Thor again and again; in vast sound waves, the shouts
+rolled up to his open window:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah-rah-rah! _Thor! Thor! Thor_!" Captain Brewster, through a
+big megaphone, roared; "Fellows--What's the matter with _Thor_?"
+
+And in a terrific outburst which, as the Phillyloo Bird afterward said,
+"Like to of busted Bannister's works!" the enthusiastic collegians
+responded:
+
+"_He's_--all--right!"
+
+Then Butch, apparently in quest of information, persisted:
+
+"_Who's_ all right?"
+
+To which the three hundred or more youths, all seemingly equipped with
+lungs of leather, kindly answered:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor!"
+
+Still, though the Phillyloo Bird declared that this vocal explosion caused
+the seismographs as Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and in Salt Lake
+City, Utah, to register an earthquake somewhere, it had on the blond
+Freshman a strange effect. The vast mountain of muscle lumbered heavily
+across the room, gazed down at the howling crowd of collegians without
+emotion, then slammed down the window, and returned to study.
+
+"_Good night_" called Hicks. "The show is over! Let him have another yell,
+boys, to show we aren't insulted; then we'll disband!"
+
+Considering Thorwald's cool reception of their overtures, which some youth
+remarked, "Were as noisy as that of a Grand Opera Orchestra," it was quite
+surprising to the students, in the morning, when what occurred an hour
+after their serenade was revealed to them. As the story was told by those
+who witnessed the scene, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, Beef, Monty, Pudge,
+Roddy, Biff, Hefty, Tug, Buster, and Coach Corridan after the commotion
+subsided, retired to the sunny Hicks' quarters, where the football
+situation was discussed, along with ways and means to awaken Thor, when
+that colossal Freshman himself loomed up in the doorway.
+
+As they afterward learned, several excited Freshmen had dared to invade
+Thor's den, even while he studied, and give him a more or less correct
+account of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s masterly oration in his defense. Out of
+their garbled descriptions, big John Thorwald grasped one salient point,
+and straightway he started for Hicks' room, leaving the indignant Freshmen
+to tell their story to the atmosphere.
+
+"Hicks," said Thor, not bothering with the "Mr." required of all Freshmen,
+as his vast bulk crowded the doorway, "is it true that Mr. Thomas Haviland
+Hicks, Sr., wants me to play football? He has been very kind to me, and
+has helped me, and so have you, here at college. After a year of study, I
+should have had to stop night-school, but for him--instead, I got another
+year, and prepared for Bannister. I did not know that _he_ desired me to
+play, but if he does, I feel under obligation to show my great gratitude,
+both for myself and for my father."
+
+A moment of silence, for the glorious news could not be grasped in a
+second; those in the room, knowing Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.'s, brilliant
+athletic record at old Bannister, and understanding his great love for
+his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister to play
+football for the Gold and Green, though, as he had written his son, he
+would not have done so had he honestly believed that another college would
+suit the ambitious Goliath better.
+
+"Does he?" stammered the dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while the others
+echoed the words feebly, "Yes, I should say he _does_!"
+
+For a second, the ponderous young Colossus hesitated, and then, as calmly
+as though announcing he would add Greek to his list of studies, and wholly
+unaware that his words were to bring joy to old Bannister, he spoke
+stolidly.
+
+"Then I shall play football."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY.
+
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the Devil had done for the rest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+T HAVILAND HICKS, JR., his chair tilted at a perilous angle, and his feet
+thrust gracefully atop of the study-table, in his cozy room, one Friday
+afternoon two weeks after John Thorwald's return to the football squad, was
+fathoms deep in Stevenson's "Treasure Island." As he perused the thrilling
+pages, the irrepressible youth twanged a banjo accompaniment, and roared
+with gusto the piratical chantey of Long John Silver's buccaneer crew;
+Hicks, however, despite his saengerfest, was completely lost in the
+enthralling narrative, so that he seemed to hear the parrot shrieking,
+"Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!" and the wild refrain:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+He was reading that breathlessly exciting part where the cabin-boy of the
+_Hispaniola_, and Israel Hands have their terrible fight to the death, with
+the dodging over the dead man rolling in the scuppers, the climbing up the
+mast, and the dirk pinning the boy's shoulder, before Hands is shot and
+goes to join his mate on the bottom; just at the most absorbing page, as he
+twanged his beloved banjo louder, and roared the chantey, there sounded,
+"Tramp--tramp--tramp!" in the corridor, the heavy tread of many feet
+sounded, coming nearer. Instinctively realizing that the pachydermic parade
+was headed for _his_ room, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., rushed to the closet,
+murmuring, "Safety first!" as usual, and stowed away his banjo. He was just
+in the nick of time, for a second later there crowded into his room Captain
+Butch, Pudge, Beef, Hefty, Biff, Monty, Roddy, Bunch, Tug, Buster, Coach
+Corridas, and Thor, the latter duo bringing up the rear.
+
+"Hicks, you unjailed public nuisance!" said Butch Brewster, affectionately.
+"We, whom you behold, are going for to enter into that room across the
+corridor from your boudoir, and hold a football signal quiz and confab. We
+should request that you permit a thunderous silence to originate in your
+cozy retreat, for the period of at least a hour! A word to the _wise_ is
+sufficient, so I have spoken several, that even you may comprehend my
+meaning."
+
+"I gather you, fluently!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., taking up
+"Treasure Island" and his graceful pose once more. "Leave me to peruse the
+thrilling pages of this classic blood-and-thunder book, and I'll cause a
+beautiful serenity to obtain hither."
+
+"See that you do, you pestiferous insect!" threatened Beef McNaughton,
+ominously. "Come on, fellows, Hicks can't escape our vengeance, if
+he bursts into what he fatuously believes is song. Just let him act
+hippicanarious, and--"
+
+When the Gold and Green eleven, half of which, to judge by size, was
+Thor, had gone with Coach Corridan into the room across from that of the
+blithesome Hicks, the sunny-souled Senior tried to resume his perusal of
+"Treasure Island," but somehow the spell had been broken by the invasion of
+his cozy quarters. So, after vainly essaying to take up the thread of the
+story again, Hicks arose and stood by the window, gazing across the campus
+to Bannister Field, deserted, since the football team rested for the game
+of the morrow. As he stood there, the gladsome Hicks reflected seriously.
+He thought of "Thor," and decided sorrowfully that the problem of awakening
+that stolid Colossus to a full understanding of campus life was as unsolved
+as ever.
+
+"But I _won't_ give it up!" declared Hicks, determinedly. "I have always
+been good at math, and I won't let this problem baffle me."
+
+Since the night, two weeks back, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had made his
+memorable speech, explaining to his fellow-students the "Billon-Dollar
+Mystery," and arousing in them a vast admiration for the slow-minded,
+plodding John Thorwald, every collegian had done his best to befriend the
+big Freshman. Upperclassmen helped him with his studies. Despite his almost
+rude refusal to meet any advances, the collegians always had a cheery
+greeting for him, and his class-mates, in fear and trembling, invaded
+his den at times, to show him they were his friends. Yet, despite these
+whole-hearted efforts, only two of old Bannister did the silent Thor
+seem to desire as comrades: the festive Hicks, for reasons known,
+and--remarkable to chronicle--little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+studious "Human Encyclopedia."
+
+"Colossus and Lilliputian!" the Phillyloo Bird quaintly observed once when
+this strangely assorted duo appeared on the campus. "Say, fellows--some
+time Thor will accidentally sit on Theophilus, and we'll have another
+mystery, the disappearance of our boner!"
+
+The generous Hicks, longing for Thor's awakening to come, was not in the
+least jealous of his loyal little friend, Theophilus. In fact, he was
+sincerely delighted that the unemotional Hercules desired the comradeship
+of the grind, and he urged the Human Encyclopedia to strive constantly to
+arouse in Thor a realization of college existence, and a true knowledge of
+its meaning. At least one thing, Theophilus reported, had been achieved by
+Hicks' defense of Thorwald, and the subsequent attitude of the collegians--
+the colossal Freshman was puzzled, quite naturally. When over three hundred
+youths criticized, condemned, and berated him one night, and the next, even
+before he reconsidered his decision about football, came under his window
+and cheered him, no wonder the young Norwegian was bewildered.
+
+On the football field, with his dogged determination, his bulldog way of
+hanging on to things until he mastered them, big Thor progressed slowly,
+and surely; the past Saturday, against the heavy Alton eleven, the blond
+Freshman had been sent in for the second half, and, to quote an overjoyed
+student, he had "busted things all up!" It seemed simply impossible to stop
+that terrible rush of his huge body. Time after time he plowed through the
+line for yards, and old Bannister, visioning Thor distributing Hamilton and
+Ballard over the field, in the big games, literally hugged itself.
+
+And yet, despite Thorwald's invincible prowess, despite the vast joy of
+old Bannister at the chances of the Championship, some intangible
+shadow hovered over the campus. It brooded over the training-table, the
+shower-rooms after scrimmage, on Bannister Field during practice; as yet,
+no one had dared to give it form, by voicing his thought, but though no
+youth dared admit it, something was wrong, there was a defective cog in the
+machinery of that marvelous machine, the Gold and Green eleven.
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks," quoth that sunny youth, at length, turning
+from the window; "I'll solve the problem, or what is more probable,
+Theophilus may stir that sodden hulk of humanity, after awhile. I won't
+worry about it, for that gets me nothing, and it will all come out O.K.,
+I'm positive!"
+
+At this moment, just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., picked up "Treasure Island"
+again, he heard drifting across the corridor from the room opposite, in
+Butch Brewster's familiar voice:
+
+"--Yes, I'll win three more Bs'--one each in football, baseball and track;
+next spring, I'll annex my last B at old Bannister, fellows--"
+
+His _last_ B--The words struck the blithesome Hicks with sledge-hammer
+force. Big Butch Brewster was talking of his last B, when he, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., had never won his first; with a feeling almost of alarm, the
+sunny youth realized that this was his final year at old Bannister, his
+last chance to win his athletic letter, and to make happy his beloved Dad,
+by helping him to realize part of his life's ambition--to behold his son
+shattering Hicks, Sr.'s, wonderful record. His final chance, and outside of
+his hopes of winning the track award in the high-jump, Hicks saw no way to
+win his B.
+
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., as has been chronicled, the beloved Dad of the
+cheery Senior, a Pittsburgh millionaire Steel King, was a graduate of old
+Bannister, Class of '92. While wearing the Gold and Green, he had made
+an all-round athletic record never before, or afterward, rivaled on
+the campus. At football, basketball, track, and baseball, he was a
+scintillating star, annexing enough letters to start an alphabet, had they
+been different ones. Quite naturally, when the Doctor, speaking anent
+the then infantile Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., said, "Mr. Hicks, it's a
+boy!"--the one-time Bannister athlete straightway began to dream of the day
+when his only son and heir should follow in his Dad's footsteps, shattering
+the records made at Bannister, and at Yale, by Hicks, _père_.
+
+However, to quote a sporting phrase, the son of the Steel King "upset the
+dope!" At the start of his Senior year, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had not
+annexed a single athletic honor, nor did the signs point to any records
+being in peril of getting shattered by his prowess; as Hicks himself
+phrased it, "Dame Nature was _some stingy_ when she handed out the Hercules
+stuff to me!" The happy-go-lucky youth, when he matriculated as a Freshman
+at Bannister College, was builded on the general lines of a toothpick, and
+had he elected to follow a pugilistic career, a division somewhat lighter
+than the tissue paperweight class would have had to be devised to
+accommodate the splinter-student. A generous, sunny-souled, intensely
+democratic collegian, despite his father's wealth, the festive Hicks, with
+his room always open-house to all; his firm friendship for star athlete
+or humble boner, his never-failing sunny nature, together with his famous
+Hicks Personally Conducted Expeditions downtown to the Beef-Steak Busts he
+had originated, in his three years at old Bannister, had made himself the
+most popular and beloved youth on the campus, but, he had not won his B!
+
+And he had tried. With a full realization, of his Dad's ambition, his
+life-dream to behold his son a great athlete, the blithesome Hicks had
+tried, but with hilariously futile results. Nature had endowed him, as he
+told his loyal comrade, Butch Brewster, with "the Herculean build of a
+Jersey mosquito," and his athletic powers neared zero infinity. In his
+Freshman year, he inaugurated his athletic career by running the wrong way
+in the Sophomore-Freshman football game, scoring a touchdown that won for
+the enemy, and naturally, after that performance, every athletic effort was
+greeted with jeers by the students.
+
+"I _have_ tried!" said Hicks, producing two letters from the study-table,
+"But not like I should have tried. I could never have played on the eleven,
+or on the nine, but I have a chance in the high-jump. I know I've been
+indolent and care-free, and I ought to have trained harder. Well, I just
+must win my track B this spring, but as to keeping the rash promise I made
+to Butch as a Freshman--not a chance!"
+
+It had been at the close of his Freshman year, after Hicks, in the
+Interclass Track Meet, had smashed hurdles, broken high-jumping cross-bars,
+finished last in several events, and jeopardized his life with the shot and
+hammer, that he made the rash vow to which he now had reference. Butch,
+believing his sunny friend had entered all the events just to entertain the
+crowd, in his fun-loving way, was teasing him about his ridiculous fiascos,
+when Hicks had told him the story--how his Dad wanted him to try and be a
+famous athlete; he showed Butch a letter, received before the meet, asking
+his son to try every event, and to keep on training, so as to win his B
+before he graduated. Butch, great-hearted, was surprised and moved by the
+revelation that the gladsome youth, even as he was jeered by his friendly
+comrades, who thought he performed for sport, was striving to have his
+Dad's dream come true; he had sympathized with his classmate, and then his
+scatter-brained colleague had aroused his indignation by vowing, with a
+swaggering confidence:
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks!' Remember this, Butch, before I graduate from
+old Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!"
+
+Butch had snorted incredulously. To win the football or the baseball B,
+the gold letter for the former, and the green one for the latter sport,
+an athlete had to play in three-fourths of the season's games, on the
+"'Varsity"; to gain the white track letter, one had to win a first place in
+some event, in a regularly scheduled track meet with another team. And now,
+Butch's skepticism seemed confirmed, for at the start of his last year at
+college, Hicks had not annexed a single B, though he bade fair to corral
+one in the spring in the high-jump.
+
+"Heigh-ho!" chuckled Hicks, at length. "Here I am threatening to get gloomy
+again! Well I'll sure train hard to win my track letter, and that seems
+all I can do! I'd like to win my three B's, and jeer at Butch, next June,
+but--_it can't be did_! I shall now twang my trusty banjo, and drive dull
+care away."
+
+Quite forgetful of the football conclave across the corridor, and of Butch
+Brewster's request for quiet, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. dragged out his
+beloved banjo, caressed its strings lovingly, and roared:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the--"
+
+"_Hicks_!" Big Butch Brewster crashed across the corridor, both doors being
+open. "Is this how you maintain a quiet? I'm going to call Thor over and
+make him sit down on you! Why, you--"
+
+"Have mercy!" plead the grinning Hicks. "Honest, Butch, I didn't go to bust
+up the league--I--I heard you talk about your B's, and I got to thinking
+that _I_ have but little time to make my Dad happy; see, here's proof--read
+these letters I was perusing--"
+
+Puzzled, Butch scanned the first one, dated back in the May of their
+Freshman year; Hicks had received it before the class track meet, and, as
+chronicled, he had heard from his sunny comrade later, how it impelled the
+splinter youth to try every event, while Bannister believed him to enter
+them for fun. The letter was post-marked "Pittsburgh, Pa.," and it read:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+Your last term's report gratified me immensely, and I am proud of your
+class record, and scholastic achievements. Pitch in, and lead your class,
+and make your Dad happy.
+
+But there is something else of which I want to write, Thomas. As you must
+know, it has always been a cause of keen regret to me that you have never
+seemed to care for athletics of any sort; you appear to be too indolent and
+ease-loving to sacrifice, or to endure the hardships of training. I suppose
+it is because of my athletic record both at Bannister and at old Yale that
+I am so eager to see you become a star; in fact, it is my life's most
+cherished ambition to have you become as famous as your Dad.
+
+However, I realize that my fond dream can never come true. Nature has not
+made you naturally strong and athletic, and what athletic success you may
+gain, must come from long and hard training and practice. If you can only
+win your college letter, your B, Thomas, while at Bannister, I shall be
+fully content.
+
+I said nothing when you failed even to try for the teams at your
+Preparatory School, but I did hope that at Bannister, under good coaches
+and trainers, you would at least endeavor to win your letter. I must admit
+that I am disappointed, for you have not even made an earnest effort to
+find your event. Often, by trying everything, especially in a track meet, a
+fellow finds his event, and later stars in it.
+
+I really believe that if you would start in now to develop yourself by
+regular, systematic gymnasium work, and if you would only try, in a year
+or so you could make a Bannister team. Theodore Roosevelt, you know, was a
+puny, weakly boy, but he built himself up, and became an athlete. If you
+want to please me, start now and find your event. Attempt all the sports,
+all the various track and field events, and always build yourself up by
+exercise in the Gym.
+
+And you owe it to your Alma Mater, my son! Even if, after conscientious
+effort, you fail to win your B, to know that you have given your college
+and teams what help you could, will please your Dad. Remember, the fellow
+who toils on the scrubs is the true hero. If you become good enough to give
+the first eleven, the first nine, the first five, or the first track squad
+a hard rub and a fast practice, you are serving Bannister.
+
+I don't ask you to do this, Thomas, I only say that it will make me happy
+just to know you are striving. If you never get beyond the scrubs, just to
+hear you are serving the Gold and Green, giving your best, in that humble
+unhonored way, will please me. And if, before you graduate, you _can_ win
+your B, I shall be so glad! Don't get discouraged, it may take until your
+Senior year, but once you start, _stick_.
+
+Your loving
+
+DAD.
+
+
+"Read this one, too, Butch," requested Hicks, hurriedly, as a hail of, "Oh,
+you Hicks, come here!" sounded down the corridor, from Skeet Wigglesworth's
+abode. "I'll be back as soon as Skeet finishes his foolishness. Don't wait
+for me, though, if I am delayed, for you want to be talking football."
+
+Left alone, big Butch Brewster, who of all the collegians that had known
+and loved the sunny Hicks, some now graduated, understood that his athletic
+efforts, jeered good-naturedly by the students, were made because of a
+great desire to win his B and make happy his Dad, read the second letter,
+dated a few days before:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+You are starting the last lap, son, your Senior year, and your final chance
+to win your B! Don't forget how happy it will make your Dad if you win your
+letter just once! Of course, you cannot gain it in football, for nature
+gave you no chance, nor in baseball; but in track work it is up to you.
+Train hard, Thomas, and try to win a first place; just win your track B,
+and I'll rest content!
+
+Your college record gives me great pleasure. You stand at the top in your
+studies, and you are vastly popular, while the Faculty speak highly of you.
+Let your B come as a climax to your career, and I'll be so proud of you.
+Don't forget, you are the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and those sons of old
+Eli want you to win the letter. As to football, you cannot win your gold B
+by playing three-fourths of a season's games, but you might get in a big
+game, even win it, if you'll get confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan
+about yourself. Don't mind the jeers of your comrades--they just don't
+know how you've tried to please your Dad; you owe it to your Alma Mater
+to tell, and, take my word as a football star, you have the goods! Your
+peculiar prowess has won many a contest, and old Bannister needs it this
+season, I hear--
+
+
+There was more, but big Butch scarcely saw it, bewildered as the behemoth
+Senior was; what new mystery had Hicks set afoot? What did Hicks, Sr.,
+mean by writing, "You might get in a big game, even win it, if you'll get
+confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan about yourself? You owe it to your
+Alma Mater to tell, and take my word, as a football star, you have the
+goods--" Why, everyone knew that T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., possessed no more
+football ability than a Jersey mosquito, and yet--
+
+"Another Hicks mystery," groaned Butch, holding the two letters
+thoughtfully. "And father and son are in it, But if Hicks don't get his B,
+it will be a shame. _Say, I know--_"
+
+A few moments later, good-hearted Butch Brewster, in the behalf of his
+sunny comrade, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was making to the Gold and Green
+eleven and Coach Corridan, as eloquent a speech as that blithesome youth,
+two weeks before, had made in defense of the condemned and ostracized Thor!
+He read them the two letters of Hicks' beloved Dad, and told how the cheery
+collegian wanted to win his B for his father's sake; graphically, he
+related Hicks, Sr.'s, great ambition, and how Hicks, Jr., for three years
+had vainly tried to make good at some athletic sport, and to win his
+letter. Big Butch, warming to his theme, spoke of how T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., letting the students believe that he entered every event in the track
+meet of his Freshman year just for fun, had been trying to find his event,
+and train for it; he explained that the festive youth, ever sunny-natured,
+under the good-humored jeers of his comrades, who did not know his real
+purpose, really yearned to win his B.
+
+"You fellows, and you, Coach," he thundered, "all know how Hicks, unable
+to make the 'Varsity, has always done humble service for old Bannister,
+cheerfully, gladly; how he keeps the athletes in good spirits at the
+training-table, and is always on hand after scrimmage to rub them out. He
+is chock-full of college spirit, and is intensely loyal to his Alma Mater.
+Why, look how he rounded up Thor--he ought to have his B for that!"
+
+Thanks to Butch's speech, the Gold and Green football stars, most of whom
+were Hicks' closest friends, saw the scatter-brained, happy-go-lucky
+youth in a new light; his eloquent defense of John Thorwald had shown old
+Bannister that he could be serious, but the knowledge that T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., even as he made a ridiculous farce in athletics, was ambitious
+to win his B, just to make his Dad happy, stunned them. For three years,
+the sunny Hicks' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a team, had
+meant a small-sized riot of jeers and good-natured ridicule at his expense;
+but Hicks had always grinned _à la_ Cheshire cat,--and no one but good
+Butch Brewster, all the time, had known how in earnest the lovable
+collegian was.
+
+"Now," concluded Butch, "Hicks _may_ win a B in track work, if he gets a
+first place in the high-jump, and if so, O.K., but if he does not--"
+
+"You mean--" Monty Merriweather--understood, "if he fails, then the
+Athletic Association ought to--"
+
+"Present him with a B!" said Butch, earnestly, "as a deserved reward for
+his faithful loyalty and service to old Bannister's athletic teams. Don't
+let him graduate without gaining his letter, and making his Dad realize a
+part of his ambition--a two-thirds vote of the Athletic Association can
+award him his letter, and when all the students know the truth about his
+ridiculous fiasco on Bannister Field, and realize the serious purpose
+beneath them all, they--"
+
+"_We'll give him his B_!" shouted Beef, loudly, "If he fails in track work
+next spring, we'll vote him his letter, anyway!"
+
+Out in the corridor, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., returning from Skeet
+Wigglesworth's room and entering his own cozy quarters, could not help
+hearing the conversation, as the doors of both his den and the room across
+the corridor were open. A great love for his comrades came to his impulsive
+heart, and a mist before his eyes, as he heard how they wanted to vote him
+his B in case he failed to win it in track work; he thrilled at Butch's
+speech, but--
+
+[Illustration B: 'Fellows,...I--I thank you from the bottom of my heart']
+
+"Fellows," he startled them by appearing in the doorway, "I--I thank you
+from the bottom of my heart. I couldn't help hearing, you know--I _do_
+appreciate your generous thoughts, but--I can't and won't accept my B
+unless I win it according to the rule of the Athletic Association."
+
+A silence, and then Butch Brewster, gripping his comrade's hand
+understandingly, held out to him the two letters.
+
+"Forgive me, old man," he breathed, "for reading them aloud, but I wanted
+the fellows to know, to appreciate you! And say, Hicks, what does your Dad
+mean by saying that you are the _'Class Kid'_ of Yale, '96, and that those
+sons of old Eli want you to win your letter? And what does he mean by
+saying that you may get in a _big game_--may _win_ it--that you have
+the goods in football, but lack the confidence to announce it to Coach
+Corridan? Also that old Bannister needs just the peculiar brand you
+possess?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his sunny, Cheshire cat grin illuminating his
+cherubic countenance, beamed on the eleven and Coach Corridan a moment.
+
+"Oh, that's a _mystery_," he said, cheerfully. "If I _do_ gain the courage
+and confidence, I'll explain, but unless I do--it remains a--_mystery_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+
+
+"ALL MEMBERS OF THE FIRST ELEVEN ARE URGENTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT IN
+THE ROOM OF T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.--AT EIGHT P. M. TONIGHT; YOU WILL BE
+DETAINED ONLY A FEW MINUTES, BUT LET EVERY PLAYER COME, AS A MATTER OF
+EXTREME IMPORTANCE WILL BE PRESENTED. PATRICK HENRY COERIDAN, HEAD-COACH."
+
+"Now, what do you suppose is up Coach Corridan's sleeve?" demanded T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cheerfully. "Has Ballard learned our signals, or some
+Bannister student sold them to a rival team, as per the usual football
+story? Though the notice doth not herald it, I am to be present, for my
+room is to be used, and the Coach gave me a special invitation to cut the
+Gordian knot with my keen intellect."
+
+The sunny Hicks, with Butch, Beef, Tug, and Monty, had just come from
+"Delmonico's Annex," the college dining-hall, after supper; they had paused
+before the Bulletin Board at the Gymnasium entrance, where all college
+notices were posted, and the Coach's urgent request had caught their gaze.
+The announcement had caused quite a stir on the campus. The Bannister
+youths stood in excited groups talking of it, and in the dormitories it
+superseded all thought of study; however, there seemed little chance that
+any but the "'Varsity" and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., who was always consulted
+in football problems, would know what took place in this meeting.
+
+"There is only one way to find out, Hicks," responded big Butch Brewster,
+his arm across his blithesome comrade's shoulders, "and that is, attend
+the meeting! You can wager that every member of the eleven will be there,
+except Thor--he regards it as 'foolishness,' I suppose, and he won't spare
+that precious time from his studies."
+
+At five minutes past eight, Butch's prophecy was fulfilled, for every
+member of the eleven _was_ in Hicks' cozy room, except Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy, whose presence would have caused a mild sensation. It was an
+extremely quiet and orderly gathering, for Coach Corridan, who had the
+floor, was so grave that he impressed the would-be sky-larking youths.
+Having their undivided attention, he proceeded to make a speech that, to
+all intents and purposes, had much the same effect on the team and Hicks as
+a Zeppelin's bombs on London:
+
+"Boys," he spoke, in forceful sentences, driving straight to the point,
+"I am going to take the eleven, and Hicks, whose suggestions are always
+timely, into my confidence, in the hope that we, working together, may
+carry out an idea of mine for the awakening of Thor to a realization
+of things! I ask you not to let what I shall tell you be known to the
+student-body, but you fellows play with Thor every day, and you will
+understand the crisis, and appreciate _why_ it is done, if I decide it
+necessary to drop John Thorwald from the football squad."
+
+"Drop Thor from the squad!" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., staggered, and
+then pandemonium broke loose among the players. Drop the Prodigious Prodigy
+from the squad, why, what _could_ the Slave-Driver be thinking of? Why,
+look how Thorwald, on the scrubs, tore through the heavy 'Varsity line for
+big gains. He was simply unstoppable; and yet, almost on the eve of the big
+game that old Bannister depended on Thor to win by his splendid prowess, he
+might be dropped from the squad! Excited exclamations sounded from Captain
+Butch Brewster, Beef, and the others of the Gold and Green eleven:
+
+"Why not give the big games to Ballard and Ham, Coach?"
+
+"Say, shoot Theophilus Opperdyke in at full-back!"
+
+"Good-by, championship! No hopes now, fellows!"
+
+"If Thor doesn't play in the Big Games--good night!"
+
+A greater sensation could not have been caused even had kindly white-haired
+Prexy announced his intention of challenging Jess Willard for the World's
+Heavy-Weight Championship. Dropping that human battering-ram, Thor, from
+the football, squad was something utterly undreamed-of. Coach Corridan
+raised his hand for silence, and the youths subsided.
+
+"Hear me carefully, boys," he urged, "I know that old Bannister has come to
+regard John Thorwald as invincible, to use his vast bulk as a foundation
+on which to build hopes of the Championship, which is a bad policy, for no
+team can be a _one-man_ team and win. I realize that as a football player,
+Thor hasn't an equal in the State today, and if he had the right spirit, he
+would have few in the country. It would be ridiculous to decry his prowess,
+for he is a physical phenomenon. But you remember T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+splendid defense of Thor, a week or so ago? Hicks gave you a full and clear
+explanation of the big fellow, and showed you _why_ he does not know what
+college spirit is, what loyalty and love for one's Alma Mater mean! His
+masterly speech changed your attitude toward Thor, and even before he
+decided to play football, for Mr. Hicks' sake, you admired him, because
+of his indomitable purpose, his promise to his dying mother. Now _I_ am
+telling you why he may be dropped from the squad, because I want you
+fellows to give Thor a square deal, to remember what Hicks told you of him,
+and to keep on striving to awaken him to the true meaning of campus years,
+to make him realize that college life is more than a mere buying of
+knowledge. I want to keep him on the squad, if humanly possible, and I
+shall outline my plot later.
+
+"Tomorrow we play Latham College. It is the last game before the big games
+for The State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Saturday after this,
+we play Hamilton, and the following week Ballard, the Champions! The eleven
+I send in against those teams must be a solid unit, _one_ in spirit and
+purpose--every member of the Gold and Green team must be welded with his
+team-mates, and they must forget everything but that their Alma Mater must
+win the Championship! With no thought of self-glory, no other purpose in
+playing than a love for old Bannister, every fellow must go into those
+games to fight for his Alma Mater! Now, as for Thor, I need not tell you
+that he is not in sympathy with our ambition; he simply does not understand
+campus tradition and spirit. He is as yet not possessed of an Alma Mater;
+he plays football only because of gratitude to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., and he hates to lose the time from his studies for the practice.
+The football squad knows that his presence is a veritable wet blanket on
+enthusiasm and the team's fighting spirit."
+
+It was true. That intangible shadow of something wrong, brooding over
+training-table, shower-room, and Bannister Field, that self-evident
+truth which almost every collegian had for days confessed to himself yet
+hesitated to voice, had been given definite form by Coach Corridan talking
+to the eleven. The good that Thorwald might do for the team by his superb
+prowess and massive bulk was more than offset and nullified by his
+attitude.
+
+To the blond Colossus, daily practice was unutterable mental torture. His
+mind was on his studies, to which his bulldog purpose shackled him; he
+begrudged the time spent on Bannister Field; he was stolid, silent, aloof.
+He scarcely ever spoke, except when addressed. He reported for practice at
+the last second, went through the scrimmage like a great, dumb, driven ox,
+doing as he was ordered; and when the squad was dismissed he hurried to his
+room. He was among the squad, but not of them; he neither understood nor
+cared about their love for old Bannister, their vast desire to win for
+their Alma Mater; he played football because he was grateful to Hicks, Sr.,
+for helping him to get started toward his goal, but as Coach Corridan now
+told the 'Varsity, he killed the squad's enthusiasm,
+
+"All of this cannot fail to damage the _esprit de corps_, the _morale_, of
+the eleven," declared Coach Corridan, having outlined Thor's attitude. "I
+know that every member of the squad, if Thor played the game because of
+college spirit, for love of old Bannister, would rejoice at his prowess.
+But as it is they are justly resentful that he is not in the spirit of the
+game. What we may gain by his playing, we lose because the others cannot do
+their best with his example to hurt their fighting spirit. I do not want,
+nor will I have on my eleven, any player who plays for other reasons than a
+love for his Alma Mater, be he a Hogan, Brickley, Thorpe, or Mahan. I have
+waited, hoping Thorwald would be awakened, as Hicks explained, but now I
+must act. Tomorrow's game with Latham must see Thor awakened, or I must,
+for the sake of the eleven, drop him from the squad for the rest of the
+season.
+
+"Yet I beg of you, in case the plan I shall propose fails, remember Hicks'
+appeal! Do not condemn or ostracize John Thorwald in any degree. He has
+three more seasons of football, so let us keep on trying to make him
+understand campus life, college tradition. Be his friends, help him all you
+can, and sooner or later he will awaken. Something may suddenly shock him
+to a true understanding of what old Bannister means to a fellow. Or perhaps
+the awakening will be slow, but it must come. And Bannister can win without
+Thor, don't forget that! We'll make one final effort to awaken Thor, and
+if it fails, just forget him, boys, so far as football goes, and watch the
+Gold and Green win that championship."
+
+"What is your scheme, Coach?" questioned Captain Butch Brewster, his honest
+countenance showing how heavily the responsibility of team-leader weighed
+upon him. "You are right; as Thor is now, he is a handicap to the eleven,
+but--"
+
+"My idea is this," explained the Slave-Driver earnestly. "Select some
+student to go to Thorwald and try to show him that unless he gets into the
+game and plays for old Bannister, he will be dropped from the squad. If
+possible, let the fellow make him understand that, in his case, it will be
+a shame and a dishonor. Now, Butch, you and Hicks can probably approach
+Thor, or perhaps you know of someone who--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cherubic countenance showed the light of dawning
+inspiration, and Coach Corridan paused, as the sunny youth exhibited a
+desire to say something, with him not by any means a phenomenal
+happening; given the floor, the blithesome youth burst forth excitedly:
+"Theophilus--Theophilus Opperdyke is the one! He has more influence over
+Thor than any other student, and the big fellow likes the little boner.
+Thor will at least listen to Theophilus, which Is more than any of us can
+gain from him."
+
+After the meeting had adjourned, and the last inspection had been made in
+the other dorms, the Seniors being exempt, several members of the Gold and
+Green team--Captain Butch, Beef, Pudge, Monty, Roddy, and Bunch, together
+with little Theophilus Opperdyke, dragged from his studies--foregathered in
+the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; those who had heard the
+coach's talk were still stunned at the ban likely to be placed on the
+Brobdingnagian Thor. On the campus outside Creighton Hall, a horde of
+Bannister youths, incited by Tug Cardiff, who gave them no reason for his
+act, were making a strenuous effort to awaken the Prodigious Prodigy,
+evidently depending on noise to achieve that end, for a vast sound-wave
+rolled up to Hicks' windows--"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!
+He's--all--right!"
+
+"Listen!" exploded T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., indignantly. "You and I,
+Theophilus, would give a Rajah's ransom just to hear the fellows whoop it
+up for us like that, and it has no more effect on that sodden hulk of a
+Thor than bombarding an English super-dreadnaught with Roman candles!
+Howsomever, Coach Corridan exploded a shrapnel bomb on old Bannister's
+eleven tonight."
+
+Then Hicks carefully outlined to the dazed little boner the substance of
+the coach's talk to the team, and Theophilus was alarmed when he thought of
+Thor's being dropped from the squad. When Captain Butch had outlined the
+Slave-Driver's plot for striving to awaken the Colossus to a realization of
+what a disgrace it would be to be sent from the gridiron, though he did not
+announce that the Human Encyclopedia had been elected to carry out Coach
+Corridan's last-hope idea, Theophilus sat on the edge of the chair,
+blinking owlishly at them over his big-rimmed spectacles.
+
+"After all, fellows," quavered Theophilus nervously, "Coach Corridan, if he
+drops Thor from the squad, won't create such a riot on the campus as you
+might expect. You see, the students, even as they built and planned on
+Thor, gradually came to know that there is vastly more to be considered
+than physical power. That great bulk actually acts as a drag on the eleven,
+because Thor isn't in sympathy with things! Still, if he could only be
+aroused, awakened, wouldn't the team play football, with him striving for
+old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for Hicks' dad?
+Oh, I _do_ hope the Coach's plan succeeds, and he awakens tomorrow; I
+know the boys won't condemn him, if he doesn't, but--I--I want him to
+understand!"
+
+"It's his last chance this season," reflected T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+enshrouded in a penumbra of gloom. "I made a big boast that I would round
+up a smashing full-back. I returned to Bannister with the Prodigious
+Prodigy. I made a big mystery of him, and then--biff!--Thor quit football.
+Then I explained the mystery, and got the fellows to admire him, and when
+Thor decided to play the game I thought 'All O.K.; I'll just wait until
+he scatters Hamilton and Ballard over Bannister Field, then I'll swagger
+before Butch and say, "Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!"' But now
+Thor has spilled the beans again."
+
+"I--I hope that the one you have chosen to appeal to Thor--" spoke
+Theophilus timorously, "will succeed, for--Oh, I _don't_ want him to be
+dropped from the squad, and--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who had been gazing at little Theophilus Opperdyke with
+a basilisk glare that perturbed the bewildered Human Encyclopedia, suddenly
+strode across the room and placed his hand on the grind's thin shoulders.
+
+"Theophilus, old man, it's up to you!" he said earnestly. "Thor has a
+strong regard for you; in fact, outside of his good-natured tolerance
+for Hicks, you alone have his friendship. Now I want you to go to him,
+Theophilus, and make a last appeal to Thor. Try to awaken him, to make him
+understand his peril of being dropped from the squad, unless he plays
+the game for his college! It's for old Bannister, old man, for your Alma
+Mater--"
+
+"Go to it, Theophilus!" urged Beef McNaughton. "Coach Corridan said Thor
+might be suddenly awakened by a shock, but no electric battery can shock
+that Colossus, and, besides, miracles don't happen nowadays. Yes, it's up
+to you, old man."
+
+For a moment little Theophilus, his big-rimmed spectacles falling off
+as fast as he replaced them, and his puny frame tense with excitement,
+hesitated. Sitting on the extreme edge of the chair, he surveyed his
+comrades solemnly and was convinced that they were in earnest. Then, "I--I
+will _try_, sir!" exclaimed Theophilus, who would _never_ forget his
+Freshman training. "I'm _sure_ Hicks, or somebody, could do It better than
+I; but--I'll try!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+
+
+ "College ties can ne'er be broken--
+ Loyal will remain each heart;
+ Though the last farewell be spoken--
+ And from Bannister we part!
+
+ "Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee--
+ Till we from life shall part!"
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous, intensely studious Human Encyclopedia,
+stood at the window of John Thorwald's study room. That behemoth, desiring
+quiet, had moved his study-table and chair to a vacant room across the
+second-floor corridor of Creighton, the Freshman dormitory, when the
+Bannister youths cheered him, and he was still there, so that Theophilus,
+on his mission, had finally located him by his low rumblings, as he
+laboriously read out his Latin. The little Senior was gazing across the
+brightly lighted Quadrangle. He could see into the rooms of the other
+class dormitories, where the students studied, skylarked, rough-housed,
+or conversed on innumerable topics; from a room in Nordyke, the abode of
+care-free Juniors, a splendidly blended sextette sang songs of their
+Alma Mater, and their rich voices drifted across the Quad. to Thor and
+Theophilus:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+ Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!"
+
+Theophilus turned from the window, and looked despairingly at that young
+Colossus, Thor. The behemoth Norwegian, oblivious to everything except the
+geometry problem now causing him to sweat, rested his massive head on his
+palms, elbows on the study-table, and was lost in the intricate labyrinth
+of "Let the line ABC equal the line BVD." The frail chair creaked under his
+ponderous bulk. On the table lay an unopened letter that had come in the
+night's mail, for, tackling one problem, the bulldog Hercules never let go
+his grip until he solved it, and nothing else, not even Theophilus, could
+secure his attention. Hence the Human Encyclopedia, trembling at the
+terrific importance of the mission entrusted to him, waited, thrilled by
+the Juniors' songs, which failed to penetrate Thor's mind.
+
+"Oh, what _can_ I do?" breathed Theophilus, sitting down nervously on the
+edge of a chair and peering owlishly over his big-rimmed spectacles at the
+stolid John Thorwald. "I am sure that, in time, I can help Thor to--to know
+campus life better; but--_tomorrow_ is his last chance! He will be dropped
+from the squad, unless--"
+
+As Thor at last leaned back and gazed at his little comrade, just then, to
+the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," an augmented chorus drifted across the
+Quadrangle:
+
+ "And we'll sing one song
+ For the college that we love--
+ For our dear old Bannister--good-by"
+
+To the Bannister students there was something tremendously queer in the
+friendship of Theophilus and Thor. That the huge Freshman, of all the
+collegians, should have chosen the timorous little boner was most puzzling.
+Yet, to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a keen reader of human nature, it was
+clear; Thorwald thought of nothing but study, Theophilus was a grind,
+though he possessed intense college spirit, hence Thor was naturally drawn
+to the little Senior by the mutual bond of their interest in books, and
+Theophilus, with his hero-worshiping soul, intensely admired the splendid
+purpose of John Thorwald, toiling to gain knowledge, because of the promise
+of his dying mother. The grind, who thought that next to T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., Thor was the "greatest ever," as Hicks phrased it, had been, doing
+what that care-free collegian termed "missionary work," with the stolid,
+unimaginative Prodigious Prodigy for some weeks. Thrilled with the thought
+that he worked for his Alma Mater, he quietly strove to make Thorwald
+glimpse the true meaning and purpose of college life and its broadness of
+development. The loyal Theophilus lost no opportunity of impressing his
+behemoth friend with the sacred traditions of the campus, or of explaining
+why Thor was wrong in characterizing all else than study as foolishness and
+waste of time.
+
+"Thor," began Theophilus timidly yet determinedly, for he was serving old
+Bannister now, "old man, do you feel that you are giving the fellows at
+Bannister a square deal?"
+
+John Thorwald, slowly tearing open the letter that had come that night,
+and had lain, unnoticed, on the study-table while he wrestled with his
+geometry, turned suddenly. The Human Encyclopedia's vast earnestness and
+the strange query he had fired at Thor, surprised even that stolid mammoth.
+
+"Why, what do you mean, Theophilus?" spoke Thor slowly. "A square deal?
+Why, I owe them nothing! I sacrifice my time for them, leaving my studies
+to go out and waste precious time foolishly on football. Why--"
+
+"I mean this," Theophilus kept doggedly on, his earnest desire to stir Thor
+conquering his natural timidity. "You were brought to old Bannister by
+Hicks, who made a great mystery of you, so we knew nothing of you; but the
+fellows all thought you were willing to play football. Then, after they
+got enthused, and builded hopes of the championship on _you_, came
+your quitting. Hicks defended you, Thor, and changed the boys' bitter
+condemnation to vast admiration, by telling of your life, your father's
+being a castaway, your mother's dying wish, your toil to get learning, and
+your inability to grasp college life. Then from gratitude to Mr. Hicks you
+started to play again--naturally, the students waxed enthusiastic, when you
+ripped the 'Varsity to pieces, but now you may be dropped by the coach,
+after tomorrow, because you don't play for old Bannister, and your
+indifference kills the team's fighting spirit. You do not care if you are
+dropped; it will give you more time to study, and relieve you of your
+obligation, as you so quixotically view it, to play because Mr. Hicks will
+be glad; but--think of the fellows.
+
+"They, Thor, disappointed in you, their hopes of your bringing by your
+massive body and huge strength the Championship to old Bannister shattered,
+are still your friends--they of the eleven, I mean especially, for, as yet,
+the rest do not know you may be dropped. And the fellows came beneath your
+window tonight to cheer you; they will do so, Thor, even if you are dropped
+and they know that you will not use that prodigious power for their Alma
+Mater in the big games; they will stand by you, for they understand! Just
+think, old man; haven't the fellows, despite your rude rebuffs, _tried_
+to be your comrades? Haven't they helped you to get settled to work and
+assisted you with your studies? Why, you have been a big boor, cold and
+aloof, you have upset their hopes of you in football, and yet they have no
+condemnation for you, naught but warm friendliness.
+
+"You are not giving them or yourself a square deal, Thor! You won't even
+_try_ to understand campus life, to grasp its real purpose, to realize what
+tradition is! The time will come, Thor, when you will see your mistake; you
+will yearn for their good fellowship, you will learn that getting knowledge
+is not all of college life. You will know that this 'silly foolishness' of
+singing songs and giving the yell, of rooting for the eleven, of loyalty
+and love for one's Alma Mater, is something worth while. And you may find
+it out too late. Oh, if you could only understand that it isn't what you
+take from old Bannister that makes a man of you, it is what you give to
+your college--in athletics, in your studies, in every phase of campus life;
+that in toiling and sacrificing for your Alma Mater you grow and develop,
+and reap a rich reward!"
+
+Could T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and Green eleven
+have heard little Theophilus' fervent and eloquent appeal to John Thorwald,
+they would have felt like giving three cheers for him. They loved this
+pathetic little boner, who, because of his pitifully frail body, could
+never fight for old Bannister on gridiron, diamond, or track, and they
+tremendously admired him for working for his college and for the redemption
+of Thor. Timorous and shrinking by nature, whenever his Alma Mater, or a
+friend, needed him the Human Encyclopedia fought down his painful timidity
+and came up to scratch nobly.
+
+It was Theophilus whose clear logic had vastly aided T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., to originate The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, in 1919's Sophomore
+year, and quell Roddy Perkins' Freshman Equal Rights campaign. In fact, it
+had been the boner's suggestion that gave Hicks his needed inspiration.
+And, a Junior, Theophilus had been elected business manager of the
+_Bannister Weekly_, with Hicks as editor-in-chief as a colossal joke. The
+entire burden of that almost defunct periodical had been thrust on those
+two, and, thanks to the grind's intensely humorous "copy," the _Weekly_ had
+been revived and rebuilt. And Theophilus, in writing the humorous articles,
+had been moved by a great ambition to do something for old Bannister.
+
+"Look at me, Thor!" continued Theophilus Opperdyke, his puny body dwarfed
+as he faced the colossal Prodigious Prodigy. "A poor, weak, helpless
+nothing! I'd cheerfully sacrifice all the scholastic honor or glory I ever
+won, or shall win, just to make a touchdown for the Gold and Green, just to
+win a baseball game, or to break the tape in a race for old Bannister!
+And you--_you_, with that tremendous body, that massive bulk, that vast
+strength--you won't play the game for your Alma Mater, you won't throw
+that big frame into the scrimmage, thrilled with a desire to win for your
+college! Oh, what wonderful things you _could_ do with your powerful build;
+but it means nothing to you, while _I--_ Oh, you don't care, you just won't
+awaken; and, unless you do, in tomorrow's game you'll be dropped from the
+squad, a disgrace."
+
+John Thorwald-Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, that Gargantuan Freshman of
+whom Bannister said he possessed no soul--stirred uneasily, shifted his
+vast tonnage from one foot to the other, and stared at little Theophilus
+Opperdyke. That solemn Senior, who had not seen the slightest effect his
+"Missionary Work" was having on the stolid Thor, was in despair; but he did
+not know the truth. As Hicks had once said, "You don't know nothing what
+goes on in Thor's dome. There's a wall of solid concrete around the
+machinery of his mind, and you can't see the wheels, belts, and cogs at
+work!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with all his keen insight into human nature, had
+failed utterly to diagnose Thor's case, had not even stumbled on the true
+cause of that young giant's aloofness. The truth was unknown to anyone,
+but there was one natural reason for John Thorwald's not mingling with his
+fellows of the campus-the blond Colossus was inordinately bashful! From his
+fifteenth year, Thor had seen the seamy side of life, had lived, grown and
+developed among men. In his wanderings in the Klondike, the wild Northwest,
+in Panama, his experiences as cabin-boy, miner, cowboy, lumber-jack, and
+Canal Zone worker, he had existed where everything was roughness and
+violence, where brawn, not brain, usually held sway, where supremacy was
+won, kept, and lost by fists, spiked boots, or guns! In his adventurous
+career, young Thorwald had but seldom encountered the finer things of life,
+and his nature, while wholesome, was sturdy and virile, not likely to be
+stirred by sentiment; so that now, among the good-natured, friendly boys of
+old Bannister, he, accustomed to rude surroundings and rough acquaintances,
+was bashful.
+
+And Theophilus, as well as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., shot far wide of the
+mark in believing that the big Hercules had no power to feel; he possessed
+that power, but, with it the ability to conceal his feelings. They thought
+nothing appealed to him, had stirred his soul, at college, but they were
+wrong; true, Thor was unable to understand this new, strange life; he was
+puzzled when the collegians condemned and ostracized him at first, when
+he quit football because it was not a Faculty rule to play, but he was
+grateful when Hicks defended him, and the admiration of the student-body
+was welcome to him. He had thought he was doing all they desired of him,
+when he went back to the game, and now--when Theophilus told him that he
+might be dropped from the squad, he was bewildered. He could not understand
+just why this could be, when he was reporting for scrimmage every day!
+
+But the friendliness of the youths, their kind help with his studies,
+the assistance of the genial Hicks, and, more than all, above even
+the admiration of the Freshmen for his promise and purpose, the daily
+missionary work of little Theophilus, for whom the massive Thor felt a real
+love, had been slowly, insidiously undermining John Thorwald's reserve. No
+longer did he condemn what he did not understand. At times he had a vague
+feeling that all was not right, that, after all, he was missing something,
+that study was not all; and yet, bashful as he was, fearing to appear
+rough, crude, and uncouth among these skylarking youths, Thor kept on his
+silent, lonely way, and they thought him untouched by their overtures. Of
+late, when unobserved, the big Freshman had stood by the window, watching
+the collegians on the campus, listening to their songs of old Bannister,
+and yet because he felt embarrassed when with them, he gave no sign that he
+cared.
+
+Now, however, the splendid appeal of loyal, timorous Theophilus stirred
+Thor, and yet he could not break down the wall of reserve he had builded
+around himself. He had deluded himself that this comradeship was not for
+him, that he could never mingle with these happy-go-lucky youths, that
+he must plod straight ahead, and live to himself, because his past had
+roughened him.
+
+"You are a Freshman!" spoke Theophilus, unaware that forces were at work on
+Thor, and making a last effort. "You stand on the very threshold of your
+campus years; everything is before you. I am at the journey's end--very
+nearly, for in June I graduate from old Bannister. I never had the chance
+to fight for my Alma Mater on the athletic field, and you--Oh, think of
+what you can do! About to leave the campus, I, and my class-mates, realize
+how dear our college has become to us. If _you_ could just know that
+Bannister means something to you, even now, if you only felt it, you
+could make your years mean great things to you. Thor, could you leave old
+Bannister tomorrow without regret, without one sigh for the dear old place?
+We, who soon shall leave it forever, fully understand Shakespeare, when in
+a sonnet he wrote:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well which thou must leave ere long!"
+
+There was a silence, and then Thor slowly drew out a letter from its
+envelope, scanning the scrawl across its pages. A few moments, while its
+meaning seemed to seep into his slow-acting mind, and then a look of
+helpless bewilderment, as though the stolid Freshman just could not
+understand at all, came to his face; a minute John Thorwald stood, as in a
+trance, staring dully at the letter.
+
+"Thor! Thor! What's the matter? What's wrong?" quavered the alarmed
+Theophilus, "Have you gotten bad news?"
+
+"Read it, read it," said the big Freshman lifelessly, extending the letter
+to the startled Senior. "It's all over, I suppose, and I've got to go to
+work again. I've got to leave college, and toil once more, and save. My
+promise to my mother can't be fulfilled--yet. And just as I was getting
+fairly started."
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke hurriedly perused the message, which had come to Thor
+in that night's mail but which the blond giant had let lie unnoticed while
+he tackled his geometry. With difficulty Theophilus deciphered the scrawl
+on an official letterhead:
+
+
+THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANA STEAMSHIP LINE
+
+(New York Offices)
+
+Nov. 4, 19--.
+
+DEAR SON:
+
+I am writing to tell you that I've run into a sort of hurricane, and you
+and I have got a hard blow to weather. I started you at college on the
+$5,000 received from the heirs of Henry B. Kingsley, on whose yacht, as
+you know, I was wrecked in the South Seas, and marooned for ten years. I
+figured on giving you an education with that sum, eked out by my wages, and
+what you earn in vacations.
+
+I had the $5,000, untouched, in a New York bank, and I wanted to take it
+over to Christiania; when I was about to sail on my last voyage, I drew out
+the sum, and put it in care of the Purser of the _Norwhal_, on which I
+was mate, intending, of course, to get it on docking, and deposit it in
+Christiania. At the last hour I was transferred to the _Valkyrie_, to sail
+a few days later, and I knew the _Norwhal's_ purser would leave the $5,000
+for me in the Company's Christiania offices, so I did not bother to
+transfer it to the _Valkyrie_.
+
+Perhaps you read in the newspapers that the _Norwhal_ struck a floating
+mine, and went down with a heavy loss of life. The Purser was among those
+lost, and none of the ship's papers were saved; my $5,000, of course, went
+down also.
+
+I am sorry, John, but there seems nothing to do but for you to leave
+college and work. For your mother's sake, I wish we could avoid it; but we
+must wait and work and tackle it again. Your first term expenses are paid,
+so stay until the term is out. Perhaps Mr. Hicks can give you a job in one
+of his steel mills again, but we must work our own way, son. Don't lose
+courage, we'll fight this out together with the memory of your promise to
+your dying mother to spur you on. The road may be long and rocky but we'll
+make it. Just work and save, and in a year or two you can start at college
+again. You can study at night, too, and keep on learning.
+
+I'll write later. Stay at college till the term is up, and in the meantime
+try to land a job. However, you won't have any trouble to do that. Keep
+your nerve, boy, for your mother's sake. It's a hard blow, but we'll
+weather it, never fear, and reach port.
+
+Your father,
+
+JOHN THORWALD, SR.
+
+P.S. I am sailing on the _Valkyrie_ today, will write you on my return to
+New York, in a few weeks.
+
+
+Theophilus looked at the massive young Norwegian, who had taken this
+solar-plexus blow with that same stolid apathy that characterized his every
+action. He wanted to offer sympathy, but he knew not how to reach Thor. He
+fully understood how terrific the blow was, how it must stagger the
+big, earnest Freshman, just as he, after ten years of grinding toil, of
+sacrifice, of grim, unrelenting determination, had conquered obstacles and
+fought to where he had a clear track ahead. Just as it seemed that fate had
+given him a fair chance, with his father rescued and five thousand dollars
+to give him a college course, this terrible misfortune had befallen him.
+Theophilus realized what it must mean to this huge, silent Hercules, just
+making good his promise to his dying mother, to give up his studies, and go
+back to work, toil, labor, to begin all over again, to put off his college
+years.
+
+"Leave me, please," said Thor dully, apparently as unmoved by the blow
+as he had been by Theophilus' appeal. "I--I would like to be alone, for
+awhile."
+
+Left alone, John Thorwald stood by the window, apparently not thinking of
+anything in particular, as he gazed across the brightly lighted Quad. The
+huge Freshman seemed in a daze--utterly unable to comprehend the disaster
+that had befallen him; he was as stolid and impassive as ever, and
+Theophilus might have thought that he did not care, even at having to give
+up his college course, had not the Senior known better.
+
+Across the Quadrangle, from the room of the Caruso-like Juniors,
+accompanied by a melodious banjo-twanging, drifted:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+
+ "'Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!'
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee
+ Till we from life shall part."
+
+Strangely enough, the behemoth Thorwald was not thinking so much of having
+to give up his studies, of having to lay aside his books and take up again
+the implements of toil. He was not pondering on the cruelty of fate in
+making him abandon, at least temporarily, his goal; instead, his thoughts
+turned, somehow, to his experiences at old Bannister, to the football
+scrimmages, the noisy sessions in "Delmonico's Annex," the college
+dining-hall, to the skylarking he had often watched in the dormitories. He
+thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks, good Butch
+Brewster, loyal little Theophilus; and as he reflected, he heard those
+Juniors, over the way, singing. Just now they were chanting that
+exquisitely beautiful Hawaiian melody, "Aloha Oe," or "Farewell to Thee,"
+making the words tell of parting from their Alma Mater. There was something
+in the refrain that seemed to break down Thor's wall of reserve, to melt
+away his aloofness, and he caught himself listening eagerly as they sang.
+
+Somehow he felt no desire to condemn those care-free youths, to call their
+singing silly foolishness, to say they were wasting their time and their
+fathers' money. Queer, but he actually liked to hear them sing, he realized
+he had come to listen for their saengerfests. Now that he had to leave
+college, for the first time he began to ponder on what he must leave. Not
+alone books and study, but--
+
+As he stood there, an ache in his throat, and an awful sorrow overwhelming
+him, with the richly blended voices of the happy Juniors drifting across to
+him, chanting a song of old Ballard, big Thor murmured softly:
+
+"What did little Theophilus say? What was it Shakespeare wrote? Oh, I have
+it:
+
+ "'This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THOR'S AWAKENING
+
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+"In the famous words of the late Mike Murphy," said T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+"the celebrated Yale and Penn track trainer, 'you can beat a team that
+can't be beat, but--you can't beat a team that won't be beat!' Latham must
+be in the latter class."
+
+It was the Bannister-Latham game, and the first half had just ended.
+Captain Butch Brewster's followers had trailed dejectedly from Bannister
+Field to the Gym, where Head Coach Corridan was flaying them with a tongue
+as keen as the two-edged sword that drove Adam and Eve from the Garden of
+Eden. A cold, bleak November afternoon, a leaden sky lowered overhead, and
+a chill wind swept athwart the field; in the concrete stands, the loyal
+"rooters" of the Gold and Green, or of the Gold and Blue, shivered,
+stamped, and swung their arms, waiting for the excitement of the scrimmage
+again to warm them. Yet, the Bannister cohorts seemed silent and
+discouraged, while the Latham supporters went wild, singing, cheering,
+howling. A look at the score-board explained this:
+
+ END OF FIRST HALF: SCORE:
+ Bannister ........ 0
+ Latham ........... 3
+
+The statement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a gold and green
+blanket and humped on the Bannister bench, to shivering little Theophilus
+Opperdyke, the Phillyloo Bird, Shad Weatherby, and several more collegians
+who had joined him when the half ended, was singularly appropriate. In
+Latham's light, fast eleven, trained to the minute, coached to a shifty,
+tricky style of play with numberless deceptive fakes from which they worked
+the forward pass successfully, Bannister seemed to have encountered, as
+Mike Murphy phrased it, "A team that won't be beat!" According to the
+advance dope of the sporting writers, who, in football, are usually as good
+prophets as the Weather Bureau, Bannister was booked to come out the winner
+by at least five touchdowns to none. But here a half was gone, and Latham
+led by three points, scored on a rather lucky field-goal!
+
+The psychology of football is inexplicable. Yale, beaten by Virginia,
+Brown, and Wash-Jeff, with the Blue's best gridiron star ineligible to
+play, a team that seemed at odds with itself and the 'Varsity, mismanaged,
+poorly coached, journeys to Princeton to battle with old Nassau; the Tiger,
+Its tail as yet untwisted, presents its best eleven for several seasons, a
+great favorite in the odds, and yet the final score is Yale, 14; Princeton,
+7! A strange fear of the Bulldog, bred of many bitter defeats, of similar
+occasions when a feeble Yale team aroused itself and trampled an invincible
+Orange and Black eleven, when the Blue fought old Nassau with a team that
+"wouldn't" be beat, gave victory to the poorer aggregation. So many things
+unforeseen often enter into a football contest, shifting the balance of
+power from the stronger to the weaker team. One eleven gets the jump on the
+other, the favorite weirdly goes to pieces--team dissension may exist, a
+dozen other causes--but, boiled down, Mike Murphy's statement was most
+appropriate now.
+
+Latham simply _would not_ be beat! The sporting pages had said: "Latham
+simply can't beat Bannister!" Here the team, that could not be beaten was
+being defeated, and the team that would not be defeated was, so far, the
+victor. Perhaps the threatened dropping of Thor from the Gold and Green
+squad shook somewhat Captain Butch's players; more likely, the Latham
+aggregation got the jump on Bannister, opening up a bewildering attack of
+criss-crosses, line plunges, cross-bucks, and tandems, from all of which
+the forward pass frequently developed; they literally overwhelmed a
+supposedly unbeatable team. And once they got the edge, it was hard for
+Bannister to regain poise and to smother the fast plays that swept through
+or around the bewildered eleven.
+
+"We have _got_ to beat 'em!" growled Shad, "Mike Murphy or not. Why,
+if little old Latham cleans us up, smash go our chances of the State
+Championship! Oh, look at Thor--the big mountain of muscle. Why doesn't he
+wake up, and go push that team off the field?"
+
+Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, his vast hulk unprotected from the cold wind
+by a football blanket, squatted on the ground, on the side-line, apparently
+in a trance. Ever since the night before, when his father's letter had
+dealt such a knock-out blow to his hopes of fulfilling the promise to his
+dying mother, had rudely side-tracked him from the climb to his goal, the
+blond giant had maintained that dumb apathy. If anything, it seemed that
+the cruel blow of fate had only served to make Thor more stolid and
+impassive than ever, and Theophilus wondered if the Colossus had really
+grasped the import of the tragic letter as yet. The news had spread over
+the college and campus, and the students were sincerely sorry for Thor. But
+to offer him sympathy was about as difficult as consoling a Polar bear with
+the toothache.
+
+Coach Corridan, carrying out his plot, had decided not to start Thor in
+the first half of the game. So the Norwegian Hercules, having received no
+orders to the contrary, however, donned togs and appeared on the side-line,
+where he had sat, paying not the slightest heed to the scrimmage and
+seemingly unaware that the Gold and Green was facing defeat and the loss of
+the Championship, for a game lost would put the team out of the running.
+All big John Thorwald knew was, in a few weeks he must leave old Bannister,
+must give up, for a time, his college course. Just when the grim battle was
+won, he must leave, to work. Not that the Viking cared about toil. It was
+the delay that chafed even his stolid self. He was stunned at having to
+wait, maybe two years, before starting again.
+
+And yet, as he squatted on the side-line, oblivious to everything but his
+bitter reflections, the Theophilus-quoted words of Shakespeare persisted in
+intruding on his thoughts:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long."
+
+Try as he would, he could not fight away the keen realization that
+books and study were not all he would regret to leave. He was forced to
+acknowledge that his mind kept wandering to other things. He found himself
+pondering on the parting with Theophilus Opperdyke, with that crazy Hicks;
+he wondered if he, out in the world again, toiling his lonely way, would
+miss the glad fellowship of these care-free youths that he had watched,
+but never shared, if he would ever think of the weeks at old Bannister.
+Somehow, he felt that he would often vision the Quad at night, brightly
+lighted, dormitories' lights agleam, students crossing and recrossing,
+shouting at studious comrades. He would hear again the melodious
+banjo-twanging, the gleeful saengerfests, the happy skylarking of the boys.
+He had never entered into all this, and yet he knew he would miss it all;
+why, he would even miss the daily scrimmage on Bannister Field; the noisy
+shower-room, with its clouds of steam, and white forms flitting ghostlike.
+He would miss the classrooms; in brief, _everything_!
+
+John Thorwald was awakening! Even had this blow not befallen him, the huge,
+slow-minded Norwegian, in time, with Theophilus Opperdyke's missionary
+work, would have gradually come to understand things better--at least, to
+know he was wrong in his ideas, which is the beginning of wisdom. Already,
+he had ceased to condemn all this as foolishness, to rail at the youths
+for wasting time and money. Already something stirred within him, and yet,
+stolid as he was, bashful among the collegians, he was apparently the same.
+But the sudden shock Head Coach Corridan spoke of had come. His father's
+letter telling of his loss and that Thor must leave Bannister had awakened
+him to the startling knowledge that he did care for something more than
+study, that all the things that had puzzled him, that he had sneered at,
+meant something to his existence, that he dreaded leaving other things than
+his books.
+
+"I--I don't understand things," thought Thorwald. "But--if I could only
+stay, I'd want to learn. I'd try to get this 'college' spirit! Oh, I've
+been all wrong, but if I could only stay--"
+
+As if in answer to his unspoken thought, the big Freshman beheld marching
+toward him Theophilus Opperdyke, his spectacles off, and his face aglow,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., evidently in the throes of emotional insanity; a
+Senior whom he knew as Parson Palmetter; Registrar Worthington, and Doctor
+Alford, the kindly, beloved Prexy of old Bannister. The last named placed
+his hand on the puzzled behemoth's ponderous shoulder.
+
+"Thorwald," he said kindly, "Hicks, Opperdyke and Brewster, last night,
+came to my study and acquainted me with your misfortune. They told me of
+your life-history, of your splendid purpose to gain knowledge, to make
+something of yourself, for your dying mother's sake. Old Bannister needs
+men like you, Thorwald. Perhaps you do not understand campus ways and
+tradition yet, perhaps you are not in sympathy with everything here; but
+once a love for your Alma Mater is awakened, you will be a power for good
+for your college.
+
+"Now I at once took up the matter with Mr. Palmetter, President of The
+Students' Aid Bureau. This year, for the first time in our history, we have
+dispensed with janitors and sweeps in the dormitories, and with dining-hall
+waiters, so that needy and deserving students may work their way through
+Bannister. Owing to the fact that Mr. Deane, a Senior, has given up his
+dormitory, Creighton Hall, as he has funds for the year and needs the time
+to study, we can offer you board and tuition, in exchange for your work in
+the dormitory, and waiting on tables in the dining-hall. Since your first
+term bills, until January first, are paid, if you will start to work at
+once, we will credit any work done this term on books and incidentals for
+next term. By this means--"
+
+"Why, you don't--you _can't_ mean--" rumbled Thor, who had just dimly
+grasped the greatest point in Prexy's speech. "Why, then I won't have to
+leave Bannister--I won't have to quit my studies! Oh, thank you, sir; thank
+you! I will work _so_ hard. I am not afraid of work; I love it--a chance to
+toil and earn my education, that's what I want! Thank you!"
+
+"And in addition," said the Registrar, "Mr. Palmetter reports that he can
+secure you, downtown, a number of furnaces to tend this winter, which you
+can do early in the morning and at night; this will bring you an income for
+living expenses, and in the spring something else will offer itself. It
+means every moment of your time will be crowded, but Bannister needs
+workers--"
+
+Something stirred in John Thorwald. His heart had been touched at last. He
+thought of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, and little Theophilus worried
+at his having to leave college, going to Doctor Alford; of Prexy, the
+Registrar, and Parson Palmetter, working to keep Thor at old Bannister.
+He recalled how sympathetic all the youths had been, how they admired his
+purpose and determination; and he had rewarded their friendliness with
+cold aloofness. He felt a thrill as he visioned himself working for his
+education, rising in the cold dawn, tending furnaces, working in the dorm.,
+waiting on tables--studying. With what fierce joy he would assail his
+tasks, glad that he could stay! He knew the students would rejoice, that
+they would not look down on him; instead, they would respect and admire
+him, toiling to grow and develop, to attain his goal!
+
+"Go to it, Thor!" urged T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "We all want you to stay,
+old man; we'll give you a lift with your studies. Old Bannister _wants_
+you, _needs_ you, so _stick_!"
+
+"Stay, please!" quavered little Theophilus. "You don't want to leave your
+Alma Mater; stay, Thorwald, and--you'll understand things soon,"
+
+"Report at the Registrar's office at seven tonight, Thorwald," said Prexy,
+and then, because he understood boys and campus problems, "and to show your
+gratitude, you might go out there and spank that team which is trying to
+lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald, when Doctor Alford and the Registrar had gone, arose and
+stood gazing across Bannister Field. He saw not the white-lined gridiron,
+the gaunt goal-posts, the concrete stands filled with spectators, or the
+gay banners and pennants. He saw the buildings and campus of old Bannister,
+the stately old elms bordering the walks; he beheld the Gym., the four
+dormitories--Bannister, Nordyke, Smithson, and Creighton--the white Chapel,
+the ivy-covered Library, the Administration and Recitation Halls; he
+glimpsed the Memorial Arch over the entrance driveway, and big Alumni Hall.
+All at once, like an inundating wave, the great realization flashed on
+Thor that he did not have to leave it all! Often again would he hear the
+skylarking youths, the gay songs, the banjo-strumming; often would he see
+the brightly lighted Quad., would gaze out on the campus! It was still
+his--the work, the study, and, if he tried, even the glad comradeship of
+the fellows, the bigger things of college life, which as yet he did not
+understand.
+
+The big slow-minded youth could not awaken, at once, to a full knowledge
+and understanding of campus life and tradition, to a knowledge of college
+spirit; but, thanks to the belief that he had to leave it all, he had
+awakened to the startling fact that already he loved old Bannister. And
+now, joyous that he could stay, John Thorwald suddenly felt a strong desire
+to do something, not for himself, but for these splendid fellows who had
+worried for his sake, had worked to keep him at college. And just then he
+remembered the somewhat unclassical, yet well meant, words of dear old
+Doctor Alford, "And to show your gratitude, you might go out there and
+spank that team, which is trying to lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald for the first time looked at the score-board; he saw, in big
+white letters:
+
+ BANNISTER .......... 0
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+From the Gym. the Gold and Green players--grim, determined, and yet worried
+by the team that "won't be beat!"--were jogging, followed by Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan. The Latham eleven was on the field, the Gold and
+Blue rooters rioted in the stands. From the Bannister cohorts came a
+thunderous appeal:
+
+ "Hold 'em, boys--hold 'em, boys--hold--hold--_hold_!
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!"
+
+A sudden fury swayed the Prodigious Prodigy; it was his college, his
+eleven, and those Blue and Gold youths were actually beating old Bannister!
+The Bannister boys had admired him, some of them had helped him in his
+studies, three had told Doctor Alford of him, had made it possible for him
+to stay, to keep on toward his goal. _They_ would be sorrow-stricken if
+Latham won! A feeling of indignation came to Thor. How dare those fellows
+think they could beat old Bannister! Why, _he_ would go out there and show
+them a few things!
+
+Head Coach Corridan, let it be chronicled, was paralyzed when he ducked
+under the side-line rope--stretched to hold the spectators back--to collide
+with an immovable body, John Thorwald, and to behold an eager light on that
+behemoth's stolid face. Grasping the Slave-Driver in a grip that hurt, Thor
+boomed:
+
+"Mr. Corridan, let me play, _please_! Send me out this half. We can win.
+We've _got_ to win! I want to do something for old Bannister. Why, if we
+lose today, we lose the Championship! I don't understand things yet, but I
+do love the college. I want to fight for Bannister. _Please_ let me play!"
+
+The astonished coach and the equally dazed Gold and Green eleven, with the
+bewildered collegians who heard Thor's earnest appeal, were silent a few
+moments, unable to grasp the truth. Then Captain Brewster, his face aglow,
+seized the big Freshman's arm excitedly.
+
+"_Sure_ you'll play, Thor!" he shouted. "Fullback, old man! Come on, team.
+Thor's awake! He wants to fight for his Alma Mater; he wants Bannister to
+win! Oh, watch us shove Latham off the field--everybody together now--the
+yell, for Thor!"
+
+"Right here," grinned an excitedly happy T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., when the
+yell was given, "is where a team that won't be beat gets licked by a chap
+what can lick 'em!"
+
+What took place when the blond Prodigious Prodigy lumbered on Bannister
+Field at the start of the last half of the Bannister-Latham game can be
+imagined by the final score-board figures:
+
+ BANNISTER ......... 27
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+It can best be described with the aid of Scoop Sawyer's account in the next
+_Bannister Weekly:_
+
+--At the start of the second half, however, the Latham cohorts were given
+a shock when they beheld a colossal being almost as big as the entire Gold
+and Blue eleven, go in at fullback for Bannister. And the Latham eleven
+received a series of shocks when Thor began intruding that massive body
+of his into their territory. Tennyson's saying, "The old order changeth,
+yielding place to new" was aptly illustrated in the second half; for
+Bannister's bugler quit sounding "Retreat!" and blew "Charge!" Four
+touchdowns and three goals from touchdowns, in one half, is usually
+considered a fair day's work for an entire team. Even Yale or Harvard; but
+when one player corrals four touchdowns in a half--he is going some! Well,
+Thor went some! Most of the half he furnished free transportation for
+two-thirds of the Latham team, carrying them on his back, legs, and neck,
+as he strode down the field; a writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped
+the blond Colossus. Anyone would have stood more show to stop an Alpine
+avalanche than to slow up Thor, and the stretcher was constantly in
+evidence, for Latham knockouts.
+
+[Illustration C: 'A writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped the blond
+Colossus']
+
+The game turned into a Thor's Personally Conducted Tour. Thorwald, escorted
+by the Gold and Green team, made four quick tours to the Latham goal-line.
+It was simply a matter of giving the ball to the Prodigious Prodigy, then
+waving the linesmen to move down twenty yards or more toward Latham's line.
+Thor was simply unstoppable, and more beneficial even than his phenomenal
+playing was his encouragement to the team. He kept urging them to action,
+his foghorn growl of, "Come on, boys!" was a slogan of victory! Judging by
+Thor's awakening, and his work of the Latham game, Bannister's hopes of The
+State Intercollegiate Football Championship are as roseate as the blush on
+a maiden's cheek at her first kiss, and--
+
+That night, in the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., John Thorwald,
+supremely happy yet withal as uncomfortable as a whale on the Sahara
+Desert, overflowed an easy-chair. The room was filled, or what space Thor
+left, with the Bannister eleven, second-team players, Coach Corridan, and
+several students; on the campus a riotous crowd of Bannister youths "raised
+merry Heck," as Hicks phrased it, and their cheer floated up to the
+windows:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor! He's--all--right!"
+
+"Come, fellows," spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+
+"Let's sing to the captain, good old Butch! Let 'er go!"
+
+ "Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink it down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink It down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster--
+ He plays football like he _uster--_
+ Drink it down! Drink it down--down--down--down!"
+
+A strange sound startled the joyous youths; it was a rumbling noise,
+like distant thunder, and at first they could not place it. Then, as It
+continued, they located the disturbance as coming from the prodigious body
+of Thor, and at last the wonderful phenomenon dawned on them.
+
+"Thor is singing college songs!" quavered little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+so happy that his big-rimmed spectacles rode the end of his nose. "Oh,
+Hicks--Butch--Thor is awake at last! He is trying to get college spirit, to
+understand campus life--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., suddenly realized that what he had so ardently
+longed for had come to pass; aided by Theophilus' missionary work and by
+the sudden shock of Thorwald, Sr.'s, letter. Thor was awakened, had come to
+know that he loved old Bannister. His awakening, as shown in the football
+game, had been splendid. How he had towered over the scrimmage, in every
+play, urging his team to fight, himself doing prodigies for old Bannister.
+Thor, who had been so silent and aloof! Then the sunny-souled youth
+remembered.
+
+"Oh, I told you I'd awaken Thor, Butch!" he began, but that behemoth
+quelled him with an ominous look.
+
+"_You_!" he growled, with pretended wrath, "_you_! It was Theophilus
+Opperdyke who did the most of it, and Thorwald's father did the rest! Don't
+you rob Theophilus of his glory, you feeble-imitation-of-some-thing-human!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinned _à la_ Cheshire cat. The happy-go-lucky
+Senior was vastly glad that Thor had awakened, that now he would try
+to grasp the real meaning of college existence. He felt that the young
+Hercules, from now on, would slowly and surely develop to a splendid
+college man, that he would do big things for his Alma Mater. And the
+generous Hicks gave Theophilus all the credit, and impressed on that
+happy Human Encyclopedia the fact that he had done a great deed for old
+Bannister. Just so, Thor was awakened.
+
+"Oh, I say, Deke Radford, Coach, and Butch," Hicks chortled, getting the
+attention of that triumvirate as well as that of the others in the room,
+"remember up in Camp Bannister, in the sleep-shack, when Coach Corridan
+outlined a smashing full-back he wanted?"
+
+"Sure!" smiled Deke. "What of it, Hicks?"
+
+Then T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., that care-free, lovable, irrepressible youth,
+whose chance to swagger before this same trio had been postponed so long
+and seemingly lost forever, satiated his fun-loving soul and reaped his
+reward. Calling their attention to Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and asking
+them to remember his playing against Latham that day, the sunny Senior
+strutted before them vaingloriously.
+
+"Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!" he declared, grinning happily.
+"I promised to round up an unstoppable fullback, a Gargantuan Hercules, and
+I did! Just think of what he will do to Hamilton and Ballard in the big
+games! As I have often told you, _always_--leave It to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+
+
+ "Oh, what we'll do to Ballard
+ Will surely be a shame!
+ We'll push their team clear off the field
+ And win the football game!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one night three days after the first big game, that
+with Hamilton, a week following Thor's great awakening in the Latham game,
+sat in his cozy room, having assumed his favorite position--chair tilted
+back at a perilous angle and feet thrust atop of the radiator. The
+versatile youth, having just composed a song with which to encourage
+Bannister elevens in the future, was reading it aloud, when his mind was
+torpedoed by a most startling thought.
+
+"Land o' Goshen!" reflected the sunny-souled Senior, aghast. "I haven't
+twanged my ole banjo and held forth with a saengerfest for a coon's age! I
+surely can do so now without arousing Butch to wrath. Thor has awakened,
+Hamilton is walloped, and Bannister will surely win the Championship!
+Everything is happy, an' de goose hangs high, so here goes!"
+
+Holding his banjo _à la_ troubadour, the blithesome Hicks, who as a Senior
+was harassed by no study-hours or inspections, strode from his room and out
+into the corridor, up and down which he majestically paced, like a sentinel
+on his beat, twanging his beloved banjo with abandon, and roaring in his
+foghorn, subterranean voice:
+
+ "Oh, the way we walloped Hamilton
+ Surely was a shame!
+ And we're going to win the Championship--
+ For we'll do Ballard the same!
+
+ "And Bannister shall flaunt the flag
+ For at least three seasons more;
+ Because--no team can win a game
+ While the Gold and Green has Thor!"
+
+On Bannister Field, three days before, the Gold and Green had crushed the
+strong team from "old Ham" to the tune of 20 to 0; Thor's magnificent
+ground-gaining, in which he smashed through the supposedly impregnable
+defense of the enemy, was a surprise to his comrades and a shock to
+Hamilton. Time and again, on the fourth down, the ball was given to
+Thorwald, and the blond Colossus, with several of old Ham's players
+clinging to him, plunged ahead for big gains. So now with a monster
+mass-meeting in half an hour, the exultant Bannister youths pretended to
+study, but prepared to parade on the campus, cheer the eleven and Thor,
+and arouse excitement for the winning of the biggest game, a victory over
+Ballard, a week later.
+
+From the rooms of would-be studious Seniors on both sides of the corridor,
+as Hicks patrolled it, came vociferous protests and classic criticisms,
+gathering in force and volume as the breezy youth's foghorn voice roared
+his song; that heedless collegian grinned as he heard:
+
+"R-r-rotten! Give that Jersey calf more rope!"
+
+"Hicks has had a relapse! _Sing-Sing_ for yours, old man!"
+
+"Arrest Hicks, under the Public Nuisance Act!"
+
+"_Woof! Woof_! Shoot it quick! Don't let it suffer!"
+
+Just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., strumming the banjo blithely and Carusoing
+with glee, reached the end of the corridor and executed a brisk 'bout-face,
+he heard a terrific commotion on the stairway, and, a moment later, Butch
+Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Deacon Radford and Monty Merriweather gained the
+top of the stairs. As they were now between the offending Hicks and
+his quarters, there seemed no chance for the sunny Senior to play his
+safety-first policy; so he waited, panic-stricken, as Butch and Beef
+lumbered heavily down the corridor.
+
+"Help! Aid! Succor! Relief! Assistance!" shrieked Hicks, leaning his
+beloved banjo against the wall and throwing himself into what he
+fatuously believed was an intensely pugilistic pose. "I am a believer in
+preparedness. You have me cornered, so beware! I am a follower of Henry
+Ford, but even _I_ will fight--at bay!"
+
+"Well, you are at _sea_ now!" growled Beef, tucking the splinter youth
+under one arm and striding down the corridor, followed by Butch with the
+banjo, and Monty with Deacon. "You desperado, you destroyer of peace and
+quietude, you one-cylinder gadabout! You're off again! We'll instruct you
+to annoy real students, you faint shadow of something human!"
+
+"Them's harsh sentences, Beef!" chuckled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as that
+behemoth kicked open Hicks' door, bore the futilely squirming, kicking
+youth into the room, and hurled him on the davenport. "Watch my banjo,
+there, Butch; have a couple of cares! Say, what'smatter wid youse guys,
+anyhow? This is my first saengerfest for eons. Old Bannister has a clear
+track ahead at last, the Championship is won for _sure_, and Thor, that
+mighty engine of destruction to Ham's and Ballard's hopes, after much
+tinkering, is hitting on all twelve cylinders. Why, I prithee, deny me the
+pleasure of a little joyous song?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., since the memorable Latham game, when Thor had
+awakened between halves, and the Prodigious Prodigy had shown himself
+worthy of his title by winning the game after defeat leered at old
+Bannister, had suffered a relapse, and was again his old sunny, heedless,
+happy-go-lucky self. Now that John Thorwald had been startled into
+realizing that he loved his college and had been saved from having to
+leave, now that he played football for his Alma Mater, and Bannister's
+hopes of the Championship were roseate, the blithesome Hicks had abandoned
+himself to a golden existence of Beefsteak Busts downtown at Jerry's,
+entertaining jolly comrades in his cozy room, and pestering the campus with
+his banjo and ridiculous imitations of Sheerluck Holmes, the Dachshund
+Detective. Big Butch Brewster, lecturing him for his care-free ways, as
+futilely as he had done for three years past, gave up in despair.
+
+"I might as well be showing moving-pictures to the inmates of a blind
+asylum," he growled on one occasion, "as to persuade you to quit acting
+like a lunatic! You, a Senior--acting like an escaped inhabitant of
+Matteawan! Bah!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, drawing a chair up to the davenport, assumed the manner
+of a physician toward a recalcitrant patient, while Beef carefully stowed
+the banjo in the closet and Deacon Radford, an interested spectator, sat
+on the bed. The happy-go-lucky Hicks, at a loss to account for the strange
+expressions of his comrades, tried to arise, but the football captain
+pinned him down with one hand.
+
+"Seriously, Hicks," spoke Butch, "your saengerfest came at a lamentably
+inopportune time! I regret to Inform you that old Bannister faces another
+problem, with regard to Thor, and unless it is solved, I fear--"
+
+"Thor has balked again?" gasped the dazed Hicks, whom Butch now allowed to
+sit up, as he showed interest. "Has the engine of destruction stalled?
+Why, as fast as we get him lined up, off he slides at an angle! Well, you
+fellows did perfectly right to bring this baffling problem, whatever it is,
+to me. What is the trouble--won't Thor play football?"
+
+The irrepressible Hicks was bewildered at hearing that a new problem
+regarding Thor had arisen, and, naturally, he at once connected it with
+football, since the big Freshman had twice balked in that respect. Since
+his awakening, effected by Theophilus' missionary work, his last appeal,
+and Thor's letter from his father, Thor had earnestly striven to grasp the
+true meaning of college life, to understand campus tradition. No longer did
+he hold aloof, boning always, in his lonely room. Instead, he mingled with
+his fellows, lingering with the team for the skylarking in the shower-room
+after scrimmage, turning out for the nightly mass-meeting. Often, as the
+youths practiced songs and yells on the campus, Thor's terrific rumble was
+heard--some had even dared to slap his massive back and say, "Hello, Thor,
+old man!" and the big Freshman had responded. It was evident to all that
+Thorwald was striving to become a collegian, and knowing his slow, bulldog
+nature, there was no doubt as to his ultimate success; hence T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., was vastly puzzled now.
+
+"Oh, Thor hasn't backslid!" smiled Beef. "You see, Hicks, it's this way:
+Owing to Mr. Thorwald's losing the five thousand dollars, Thor, as you
+know, is working his way at Bannister. Well, with his hustling, his studies
+and football scrimmage, he simply does not have a minute for the other
+phases of college life, for the comradeship with his fellows--"
+
+"Here is his day's schedule," chimed in Deacon, referring to a paper: "Rise
+at four-thirty A. M. Hustle downtown to tend several furnaces until seven.
+Breakfast at seven. Till nine, make beds and sweep dormitory rooms.
+Nine till three-fifteen P. M., recitation periods and dormitory work,
+sandwiched. Then until supper, football practice, and nights study. Add
+to that waiting on tables for the three meals, and what time has Thor to
+broaden and develop, to take in all the big things of campus existence, to
+grow into an all-round college man?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wonderful to chronicle, was silent. He was
+reflecting on the irony of fate; as Deacon said, now that Thor had
+awakened, and earnestly wanted to be a collegian, he had no time to enter
+into campus life. Glad at being able to stay at old Bannister, to keep on
+with his studies, climbing steadily toward his goal, and finding a joy in
+his new relationship with the students, the ponderous Thorwald had flung
+himself into his hustling, as the youths called working one's way at
+college, with zeal. To the huge Freshman, toil was nothing, and since it
+meant that he could keep on with his study, he was content. The collegians
+vastly admired his grim determination; they aided all they could with
+his studies, and helped with his work, so he could have more time for
+scrimmage, and yet another phase of the problem came to Hicks.
+
+It seemed unjust that John Thorwald, after his long years of hard physical
+toil, and his mental struggles, often after hours of grinding work, at the
+very time when the five thousand dollars from Henry B. Kingsley's heirs
+promised him a chance to study without a body tortured and exhausted,
+should be forced again to take up his stern fight for knowledge. And it
+was cruel that Thor, just awakening to the true meaning of college life,
+striving to grasp campus tradition, and eager to serve his Alma Mater in
+every way, should have so little time to mingle with his fellows. He should
+be with them on the campus, on the athletic field, in the dorms., the
+literary society halls, the Y. M. C. A. He should be realizing the golden
+years of college life, the glad comradeship of the campus. Instead, he must
+arise in the bitter cold, gray dawn, and from then until late night toil
+and study unceasingly.
+
+"It's a howling shame!" declared the serious Hicks, a heart full of
+sympathy for Thor. "Just as he wakes up and is trying to understand things
+at old Bannister, bang! the _Norwhal_ is blown up by a stray mine, and
+down goes his dad's money. Why didn't Mr. Thorwald get the five thousand
+transferred to the _Valkyrie_? Oh, if that money hadn't gone down to Davy
+Jones' locker, Thor would be awakened and have time for college life, too!"
+
+Butch Brewster started to speak when the thunderous tread of John Thorwald
+sounded in the corridor. The Prodigious Prodigy seemed approaching at
+double-quick time, and the youths stared at each other. However, when
+Thor appeared in the doorway, a letter in hand, they gazed at him in
+bewilderment, for his face fairly glowed.
+
+"Read it, fellows, read it!" he breathed, with what, for him, was almost
+excitement. "It just came! Oh, isn't that good news? Read it out, Captain
+Butch. Won't we wallop Ballard now!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, mystified by Thor's happiness, and urged on by his
+equally puzzled comrades, drew out the letter, and a glad smile coming to
+his honest countenance, he read aloud:
+
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA. STEAMSHIP LINE (New York Office)
+
+"Nov. 18, 19--.
+
+"MR. JOHN THORWALD, JR., Bannister College.
+
+"DEAR SIR:
+
+"We beg to state that your father, first mate on our liner, the _Valkyrie_,
+three days outbound from New York to Christiania, sent a message, _via_
+wireless, to our New York offices by the inbound Dutch Line's _Rotterdam_.
+The _Rotterdam_ relayed the message to us, and we forward it herewith,
+_verbatim:_
+
+"'DEAR SON: Purser of my ship, the _Valkyrie_, informed me today that the
+purser of the ill-fated _Norwhal_, learning of my transfer to this liner,
+transferred my $5,000 to the _Valkyrie_ before he sailed to his fate. I am
+sending this _via_ the _Rotterdam_, inbound, and our office will forward it
+to you. Will write on arriving at Christiania. Father.'
+
+"We are sorry for the delay in forwarding this message, but through an
+accident, it was mislaid in our office for a few days.
+
+"Yours truly,
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA STEAMSHIP LINE,
+
+"per J. L. G."
+
+
+A moment of silence; outside on the campus the Bannister youths, preparing
+for the mass-meeting in the Auditorium, started cheering. Someone caught
+sight of Thor, standing now by the window of Hicks' room, on the third
+floor of Bannister Hall, and a few seconds later there sounded:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor! Thor will bring the Championship to old Bannister! Rah!
+Rah! Rah!--Thor!"
+
+"Oh," shouted T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning happily, his arm across
+Thor's massive shoulders, "'All's well that ends well,' as Bill Shakespeare
+says. It's all right now, Thor. Fate dealt you a hard punch, but it served
+its purpose; for it made you realize how you would regret to leave college.
+Now you won't have to hustle and have all your time filled with toil and
+study; you can go after every phase of campus life, and serve old Bannister
+in so many ways."
+
+John Thorwald stood, a contented look on his placid, impassive face,
+gazing down at the campus below and hearing the plaudits of the excited
+collegians. The stately old elms, gaunt and bare, tossed their limbs
+against a leaden sky; a cold, dreary wind sent clouds of dry leaves
+scurrying down the concrete walks. In the faint moonlight that struggled
+through the clouds, the towers and spires of old Bannister were limned
+against the sky-line. Across the campus, on Bannister Field, the
+goal-posts, skeleton-like, kept their lonely vigil. On that field, in
+less than a week, the Gold and Green must face the crucial test--against
+Ballard's championship eleven, in the Biggest Game; and now, almost on the
+eve of battle, the shackles had been knocked from him; he was free of the
+great burden, free to serve his Alma Mater, to fight for the Gold and
+Green, to grow and develop into an all-round, representative college man.
+
+All of a sudden it dawned on the slow-thinking young Norwegian just how
+much this freedom to grow and expand meant to him, and he turned from the
+window. From below, the shouts of "Thor! Thor! Thor!" drifted, stirring his
+blood, as he looked at Hicks, Butch, Beef, Monty and Deacon.
+
+"'All's well that ends well,' you say. Hicks," he spoke slowly, his face
+joyous. "That's true; but I'm just starting, fellows. I'm just _beginning_
+to live my college years, not for myself, but for old Bannister, for my
+Alma Mater, for I am awake, and _free_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+
+
+Big Butch Brewster, a life-sized picture of despair, roosted dejectedly on
+the Senior Fence, between the Gym and the Administration Building. It was
+quite cold, and also the beginning of the last study-period before Butch's
+final and most difficult recitation of the day, Chemistry. Yet instead
+of boning in his warm room, the behemoth Senior perched on the fence and
+stared gloomily into space.
+
+As he sat, enveloped in a penumbra of gloom, the campus entrance door of
+Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., opened suddenly, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., that happy-go-lucky youth, came out cautiously, after the fashion of a
+second-story artist, emerging from his crib with a bundle of swag, the
+last item being represented by a football tucked under Hicks' left arm.
+Beholding Butch Brewster on the Senior Fence, the sunny-souled Senior
+exhibited a perturbation of spirit seeming undecided whether to beat a
+retreat or to advance.
+
+"Now what's ailin' _you_?" demanded Butch wrathily, believing the
+pestersome Hicks to be acting in that burglarious manner for effect. "Why
+should _you_ sneak out of a dorm., bearing a football like it was an auk's
+egg? Why, you resemble a nigger, making his get-away after robbing a
+hen-roost! Don't torment me, you accident-somewhere-on-its-way-to-happen. I
+feel about as joyous as a traveling salesman who has made a town and gotten
+nary a order!"
+
+"It's _awful_!" soliloquized T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., perching beside the
+despondent Butch on the Senior Fence. "I am not a fatalist, old man, but
+it _does_ seem that fate hasn't destined Thor to play football for old
+Bannister this season! Here, after he won the Ham game, and we expected him
+to waltz off with Ballard's scalp and the Championship, he has to tumble
+downstairs! Oh, it's tough luck!"
+
+It was two days before the biggest game, with Ballard--the contest that
+would decide the State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Ballard, the
+present champions, discounting even Hamilton's stories of Thor's prowess,
+were coming to Bannister with an eleven more mighty than the one that had
+crushed the Gold and Green the year before, with a heavy, stonewall line,
+fast ends, and a powerful, shifty backfield. The Ballard team was confident
+of victory and the pennant. Bannister, building on the awakened Thorwald,
+superbly sure of his phenomenal strength and power, of his unstoppable
+rushes, serenely practiced the doctrine of preparedness, and awaited the
+day.
+
+And then John Thorwald, the Prodigious Prodigy, whose gigantic frame seemed
+unbattered by the terrific daily scrimmage, whom it was impossible to
+hurt on the gridiron, the day before, going downstairs in Creighton Hall,
+hurrying to a class, had caught his heel on the top step, and crashed to
+the bottom! And now, with a broken ankle, the blond Colossus, heartbroken
+at not being able to win the Championship for old Bannister, hobbled about
+on crutches. Without Thor, the Gold and Green must meet the invincible
+Ballard team! It was a solar-plexus blow, both to the Bannister youths,
+confident in Thor's prowess, building on his Herculean bulk, and to the
+big Freshman. Thorwald, awakened, striving to grasp campus tradition, to
+understand college life, was eager to fling himself into the scrimmage, to
+give every ounce of his mighty power, to offer that splendid body, for his
+Alma Mater, and now he must hobble impotently on the side-line, watching
+his team fight a desperate battle.
+
+"If Bannister only had a sure, accurate drop-kicker!" reflected Captain
+Butch hopelessly. "One who could be depended on to average eight out of ten
+trials, we'd have a fighting chance with Ballard. Deke Radford is a wonder.
+He can kick a forty-five-yard goal, but he's erratic! He might boot the
+pigskin over when a score is needed from the forty-yard line, and again he
+might miss from the twenty-yard mark. Oh, for a kicker who isn't brilliant
+and spectacular, but who can methodically drop 'em over from, say, the
+thirty-five-yard line! Hello, what's the row, Hicks?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., started to speak, changed his mind, coughed, grew
+red and embarrassed, and acted in a most puzzling manner. At any other
+time, big Butch would have been bewildered; but with Thor's loss weighing
+on his mind, the Gold and Green captain gave his comrade only a cursory
+glance.
+
+"I--I--Oh, nothing, Butch!" stammered Hicks, to whom, being "fussed," as
+Bannister termed embarrassment, was almost unknown. "I--I guess I'll
+take this football over to my locker in the Gym. I ought to glance at my
+Chemistry, too. So-long, Butch; see you later, old top!"
+
+When the splinter-youth had drifted into the Gym., Butch Brewster,
+remembering his strange actions, actually managed to transfer his thoughts
+for a time from the eleven to the care-free T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. The
+behemoth Senior reflected that, to date, the pestiferous Hicks had not
+explained his baffling mystery he recalled the day when he had told the
+Gold and Green eleven of the loyal Hicks' ambition to please his dad by
+winning his B, when he had described the youth's intense college spirit
+and had suggested that if Hicks failed to corral his letter the Athletic
+Association award him one for his loyalty to old Bannister. And Butch saw
+again the bewildering sentences in the letter from Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., to his son.
+
+"Evidently," meditated Butch, literally and figuratively "on the fence,"
+"Hicks has failed to summon up enough self-confidence to explain his
+mystery; queer, too, for he usually is bubbling with faith in himself. He
+has acted like a bashful schoolgirl at frequent times--he starts to tell
+me something, then he gets embarrassed, back-fires, and stalls. He and
+Theophilus have been sneaking out in the early dawn, too. Wow! What did he
+sneak out of the dorm. that way, with a football, for? He looked like a
+yeggman working night shift. Why should _he_ skulk out with a football? He
+has never explained his dad's letter, or told just what Mr. Hicks meant by
+calling him the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and saying those members of old
+Eli wanted him to star! Oh, he's a tantalizing wretch, and I'd like to
+solve his mystery, without his knowledge, so I could--"
+
+At that instant, to the intense indignation and bewilderment of good Butch
+Brewster, little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous Human Encyclopedia of
+old Bannister, exited from Bannister Hall. The Senior boner gave a correct
+imitation of the offending Hicks, in that he skulked out, gazing around
+him nervously; but he portaged no pigskin, and, unlike the sunny youth, on
+periscoping Butch, he seemed relieved.
+
+"Theophilus, _come here_!" thundered the wrathful football captain,
+shifting his tonnage on the Senior Fence. "What's the plot, anyhow? It's
+bad enough when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sneaks out, bearing a football,
+like an amateur cracksman making a getaway; but when you appear, imitating
+a Nihilist about to hurl a bomb--say, what's the answer to the puzzle, old
+man?"
+
+Little Theophilus, his pathetically frail body trembling with suppressed
+excitement, his big-rimmed spectacles tumbling off with ridiculous
+regularity, and his solemn eyes peering owlishly at his behemoth classmate,
+stood before the startled Butch. It was evident that the 1919 grind
+labored under great stress. He was waging a terrific battle with himself,
+struggling to make some vast and all-important decision. He strove to
+speak, hesitated, choked, coughed apologetically, and acted as fussed as
+Hicks had done, until Butch was wild; then, as if resolved to cast the die
+and cross the Rubicon, he decided, and plunged desperately ahead.
+
+"It's--it's Hicks, Butch!" he quavered, torn cruelly by conflicting
+emotions. "Oh, I don't want to be a traitor--he trusted me with his secret,
+and I--I can't betray him, I just can't! But he didn't make me promise not
+to tell. He just told me not to. Oh, it's his very last chance, Butch, and
+with Thor hurt, old Bannister might need him in the Ballard game."
+
+"What is it, Theophilus, old man?" Butch spoke kindly, for he saw the
+solemn little Senior was intensely excited. "Tell me--if our Alma Mater
+needs any fellow's services, you know, he should give them freely--since
+you did not promise not to tell about Hicks, if Bannister may be able
+to use Hicks against Ballard--though I can't, by any stretch of the
+imagination, figure how--then it is your duty to tell! I think I glimpse
+the dark secret--Hicks possesses some sort of football prowess, goodness
+knows what, and he lacks the confidence to tell Coach Corridan! Now, were
+it only drop-kicking--"
+
+_"It is drop-kicking!"_ Theophilus burst forth desperately. "Hicks is a
+drop-kicker, Butch, and a sure one--inside the thirty-yard line. He almost
+_never_ misses a goal, and he kicks them from every angle, too. He isn't
+strong enough to kick past the thirty-yard line, but inside that he is
+wonderfully accurate. With Thor out of the Ballard game, a drop-kick may
+win for Bannister, and Deke Radford is so erratic! Oh, Hicks will be angry
+with me for telling; but he just won't tell about himself, after all his
+practice, because he fears the fellows will jeer. He is afraid he will fail
+in the supreme test. Oh, I've betrayed him, but--"
+
+"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a drop-kicker!" exploded the dazed Butch, who
+could not have been more astounded had Theophilus announced that the sunny
+youth possessed powers of black magic. "Theophilus Opperdyke, Tantalus
+himself was never so tantalized as I have been of late. Tell me the whole
+story, old man--hurry. Spill it, old top!"
+
+Butch Brewster, by questioning the excited Human Encyclopedia, like a
+police official giving the third degree, slowly extracted from Theophilus
+the startling story. A year before, just as the Gold and Green practiced
+for the Ham game, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one afternoon, had arrayed his
+splinter-structure in a grotesque, nondescript athletic outfit, and had
+jogged out on Bannister Field. The gladsome youth's motive had been free
+from any torturesome purpose. He intended to round up the Phillyloo Bird,
+Shad Weatherby, and other non-athletic collegians, and with them boot the
+pigskin, for exercise. However, little Skeet Wigglesworth, beholding him
+as he donned the weird regalia of loud sweater, odd basket-ball stockings,
+tennis trousers, baseball shoes, and so on, misconstrued his plan, and
+believed Hicks intended to torment the squad. Hence, he hurried out,
+so that when Hicks appeared in the offing, the football squad and the
+spectators in the stands had jeered the happy-go-lucky Junior, and had
+good-natured sport at his expense.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., after Jack Merritt had drop-kicked a forty-yard
+goal, made the excessively rash statement that it was easy. Captain Butch
+Brewster had indignantly challenged the heedless youth to show him, and
+the results of Hicks' effort to propel the pigskin over the crossbar were
+hilarious, for he missed the oval by a foot, nearly dislocated his knee,
+and, slipping in the mud, he sat down violently with a thud. However, so
+the excited Theophilus now narrated, even as the convulsed students jeered
+Hicks, hurling whistles, shouts, cat-calls, songs and humorous remarks at
+the downfallen kicker, one of Hicks' celebrated inspirations had smitten
+the pestersome Junior, evidently jarred loose by his crashing to terra
+firma.
+
+"Hicks figured this way, Butch," explained little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+eloquent in his comrade's behalf, "nature had built him like a mosquito,
+and endowed him with enough power to lift a pillow; hence he could never
+hope to play football on the 'Varsity; but he knew that many games are
+won by drop-kicks and by fellows especially trained and coached for that
+purpose, and they don't need weight and strength, but they must have the
+art, that peculiar knack which few possess. His inspiration was this:
+Perhaps he had that knack, perhaps he could practice faithfully, and
+develop into a sure drop-kicker. If he trained for a year, in his Senior
+season, he might be able to serve old Bannister, maybe to win a big game.
+So he set to work."
+
+Theophilus hurriedly yet graphically narrated how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+had made the loyal, hero-worshiping little Human Encyclopedia his sole
+confidant. He told the thrilled Butch how the sunny youth, from that
+day on, had watched and listened as Head Coach Corridan trained the
+drop-kickers, learning all the points he could gain. Vividly he described
+the mosquito-like Hicks, as he with a football bought from the Athletic
+Association began in secret to practice the fine art of drop-kicking! For a
+year, at old Bannister and at his dad's country home near Pittsburgh, Hicks
+had faithfully, doggedly kept at it. With no one bat Theophilus knowing of
+his great ambition, he had gone out on Bannister Field, when he felt safe
+from observation; here, with his faithful comrade to keep watch, and to
+retrieve the pigskin, he had practiced the instructions and points gained
+from watching Coach Corridan train the booters of the squad. To his vast
+delight, and the joy of his little friend, Hicks had found that he did
+possess the knack, and from before the Ham game until Commencement he had
+kept his secret, practicing clandestinely at old Bannister; he had improved
+wonderfully, and when vacation started the cheery collegian had told his
+beloved dad, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., of his hopes.
+
+The ex-Yale football star, delighted at his son's ambition to serve old
+Bannister and joyous at discovering that Hicks actually possessed the
+peculiar knack of drop-kicking, coached the splinter-youth all summer at
+their country place near Pittsburgh. Under the instruction of Hicks, Sr.,
+the youth developed rapidly, and when he returned to the campus for his
+final year, he was a sure, dependable drop-kicker, inside the thirty-yard
+line. As Theophilus stated, beyond that he lacked the power, but in that
+zone he could boot 'em over the cross-bar from any angle.
+
+"He's been practicing all this season, in secret!" quavered the little
+Senior, "and he's a--a _fiend_, Butch, at drop-kicking. And yet, here it is
+time for the last game of his college years, and--he lacks confidence to
+tell you, or Coach Corridan. Oh, I'm afraid he will be angry with me for
+betraying him, and yet--I just _can't_ let him miss his splendid chance,
+now that Thor is out and old Bannister _needs_ a drop-kicker!"
+
+Big Butch was silent for a time. The football leader was deeply impressed
+and thrilled by Theophilus Opperdyke's story of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s
+ambition. As he roosted on the Senior Fence, the behemoth gridiron
+star visioned the mosquito-like youth, whom nature had endowed with a
+splinter-structure, sneaking out on Bannister Field, at every chance, to
+practice clandestinely his drop-kicking. He could see the faithful Human
+Encyclopedia, vastly excited at his blithesome colleague's improvement,
+retrieving the pigskin for Hicks. He thrilled again as he thought of the
+bean-pole Hicks, who could never gain weight and strength enough to make
+the eleven, loyally training and perfecting himself in the drop-kick,
+trying to develop into a sure kicker, within a certain zone, hoping
+sometime, before he left college forever, to serve old Bannister. With Thor
+in the line-up at fullback, he would not have been needed, but now, with
+the Prodigious Prodigy out, it was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s big chance!
+
+And Butch Brewster understood why the usually confident Hicks, even with
+the knowledge of his drop-kicking power, hesitated to announce it to old
+Bannister. Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team of Hicks'
+being in earnest in his ridiculous athletic attempts of the past three
+years, no one but himself and Hicks had dreamed that the sunny youth meant
+them, that he really strove to win his B and please his dad. The appearance
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., on Bannister Field was always the cause of
+a small-sized riot among the squad and spectators. Hicks was jeered
+good-naturedly, and "butchered to make a Bannister holiday," as he blithely
+phrased it. Hence, the splinter-Senior was reluctant to announce that he
+could drop-kick. He knew that when tested he would be so in earnest, that
+so much would hang in the balance and the youths, unknowing how important
+it was, would jeer. Then, too, knowing his long list of athletic fiascos,
+ridiculous and otherwise, Hicks trembled at the thought of being sent into
+the biggest game to kick a goal. He feared he might fail!
+
+"You are a _hero_, Theophilus!" said Butch, with deep feeling. "I can
+realize how hard it was for Hicks to tell us. He would have kept silent
+forever, even after his training in secret! And how you must have suffered,
+knowing he could drop-kick, and yet not desiring to betray him! But your
+love for old Bannister and for Hicks himself conquered. I'll take him out
+on the gridiron, before the fellows come from class, and see what he
+can do. Aha! There is the villain now. Hicks, ahoy! Come hither, you
+Kellar-Herman-Thurston. Your dark secret is out at last!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., peering cautiously from the Gym. basement doorway,
+in quest of the tardy Theophilus, who was to have accompanied him on a
+clandestine journey to Bannister Field, obeyed the summons. Bewildered,
+and gradually guessing the explanation from the shivering little boner's
+alarmed expression, the gladsome youth approached the stern Butch Brewster,
+who was about to condemn him for his silence. "Don't be angry with me,
+Hicks, _please_!" pled Theophilus, pathetically fearful that he had
+offended his comrade, "I--I just _had_ to tell, for it was positively your
+last chance, and--and old Bannister needs your sure drop-kicking! I never
+promised not to tell. You never made me give my word, so--"
+
+"It was Theophilus' duty to tell!" spoke Butch, hiding a grin, for the
+grind was so frightened, "and yours, Hicks, knowing as you do how we need
+you, with Thor hurt! You graceless wretch, you aren't usually so like ye
+modest violet! Why didn't you inform us, then swagger and say, 'Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks, he'll win the game with a drop-kick?' Now, you come with
+me, and I'll look over your samples. If you've got the goods, it's highly
+probable you'll get your chance, in the Ballard game; and I'm _glad_, old
+man, for your sake. I know what it would mean, if you win it! But--now that
+the '_mystery_' is solved, what's that about your being a 'Class Kid,' of
+Yale, '96?"
+
+"That's easy!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his arm across Theophilus'
+shoulders, "I was the first boy born to any member of Yale, '96; it is the
+custom of classes graduating at Yale to call such a baby the class kid!
+Naturally, the members of old Eli, Class of 1896, are vastly interested in
+me. Hence, my Dad wrote they'd be tickled if I won a big game for Bannister
+with a field-goal!"
+
+A moment of silence, Theophilus Opperdyke, gathering from Hicks' arm,
+across his shoulders, that the cheery youth was not so awfully wrathful at
+his base betrayal, adjusted his big-rimmed spectacles, and stared owlishly
+at Hicks.
+
+"Hicks, you--you are not angry?" he quavered. "You are not sorry. I--I
+told--"
+
+"_Sorry_?" quoth T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., "Class Kid," of Yale, '96, with a
+Cheshire cat grin, "_sorry_? I should say _not_--I wanted it to be known to
+Butch, and Coach Corridan, but I got all shivery when I tried to confess,
+and I--couldn't! Nay, Theophilus, you faithful friend, I'm so _glad_, old
+man, that beside yours truly, the celebrated Pollyanna resembles Niobe,
+weeping for her lost children."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+
+
+ "Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Whoop-up! Parabaloo! Yale! Yale! Yale!
+ _Hicks! Hicks! Hicks_!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a cumbersome Gold and Green football
+blanket, and crouching on the side-line, like some historic Indian, felt a
+thrill shake his splinter-structure, as the yell of "old Eli" rolled from
+the stand, across Bannister Field. In the midst of the Gold and Green flags
+and pennants, fluttering in the section assigned the Bannister cohorts, he
+gazed at a big banner of Blue, with white lettering:
+
+YALE UNIVERSITY--CLASS OF 1896
+
+"Oh, Butch," gasped Hicks, torn between fear and hope, "just listen to
+that. Think of all those Yale men in the stand with my Dad! Oh, suppose I
+do get sent in to try for a drop-kick!"
+
+It was almost time far the biggest game to start, the contest with Ballard,
+the supreme test of the Gold and Green, the final struggle for The State
+Intercollegiate Football Championship! In a few minutes the referee's
+shrill whistle blast would sound, the vast crowd in the stands, on the
+side-lines, and in the parked automobiles, would suddenly still their
+clamor and breathlessly await the kick-off--then, seventy minutes of grim
+battling on the turf, and victory, or defeat, would perch on the banners of
+old Bannister.
+
+It was a thrilling scene, a sight to stir the blood. Bannister Field, the
+arena where these gridiron gladiators would fly at each other's throats--or
+knees, spread out--barred with white chalk-marks, with the skeleton-like
+goal posts guarding at each end. On the turf the moleskin clad warriors,
+under the crisp commands of their Coaches, swiftly lined down, shifted to
+the formation called, and ran off plays. Nervous subs. stood in circles,
+passing the pigskin. Drop-kickers and punters, tuning up, sent spirals, or
+end-over-end drop-kicks, through the air. The referee, field-judge, and
+linesmen conferred. Team-attendants, equipped with buckets of water,
+sponges, and ominous black medicine-chests, with Red Cross bandages, ran
+hither and thither. On the substitutes' bench, or on the ground, crouched
+nervous second-string players; Ballard's on one side of the gridiron, and
+Bannister's directly across.
+
+A glorious, sunshiny day in late November, with scarcely a breath of
+wind, the air crisp and bracing; the radiant sunlight fell athwart the
+white-barred field, and glinted from the gay pennants and banners in the
+stands! Here was a riot of color, the gold and green of old Bannister; in
+the next section, the orange and black of Ballard. The bright hues and
+tints of varicolored dresses, and the luster of the official flowers
+all contributed to a bewilderingly beautiful spectacle! Flower-venders,
+peddlers of pennants, sellers of miniature footballs with the college
+colors of one team and the other, hawked their wares, loudly calling above
+the tumult, "Get yer Ballard colors yere!" "This way fer the Bannister
+flags!" Ten thousand spectators, packed into the cheering sections of the
+two colleges, or in the general stands, or standing on the side-lines,
+impatiently awaited the kick-off. At the appearance of each football star,
+a tremendous cheer went up from the mass. Across the field from each other,
+the two bands played stirring strains. The confident Ballard cohorts
+cheered, sang, and yelled and those of Bannister, not _quite_ so sure of
+victory, with Thor out, nevertheless, cheered, sang, and yelled as loudly,
+for the Gold and Green.
+
+The sight of that vast Yale banner, so conspicuous, with its big white
+letters on a field of blue, amidst the fluttering pennants of gold and
+green, excited comment among the Ballard followers. The Bannister students,
+however, knew what it meant; Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., and thirty
+members of Yale, '96, were in the stand, ready to cheer Captain Butch's
+eleven, and hoping for a chance to whoop it up for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+if he got his big chance.
+
+Two days before, when little Theophilus Opperdyke, after a terrible
+struggle with himself, divided between loyalty to Hicks and a love for
+his Alma Mater, had betrayed his toothpick class-mate to Captain. Butch
+Brewster, that behemoth Senior had rounded up Coach Corridan, and together
+they had dragged the shivering Hicks out to the football field. Here, while
+the rest of the student body, unsuspecting the important event in progress,
+made good use of the study-hour, or attended classes in Recitation Hall,
+the Gold and Green Coach, with the team-Captain, and the excited Human
+Encyclopedia, watched T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. show his samples of
+drop-kicks. And the success of that happy-go-lucky youth, after his nervous
+tension wore off, may be attested by the Slave-Driver's somewhat slangy
+remark, when the exhibition closed.
+
+"Butch," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, impressively, "what it
+takes to drop-kick field-goals, from anywhere inside the thirty-yard line,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is broke out with!"
+
+The proficiency attained by the heedless Hicks in the difficult art of
+drop-kicking, gained by faithful practice for a year, aided by his Dad's
+valuable coaching, was wonderful. Of course, Hicks possessed naturally the
+needed knack, but he deserved praise for his sticking at it so loyally. He
+had no surety that he would ever be of use to his college, and, indeed,
+with the advent of Thor, his hopes grew dim, yet he plugged on, in case old
+Bannister might sometime need him--and yet, but for Theophilus, he would
+not have summoned the courage to tell! To the surprise and delight of the
+Coach and Captain, Hicks, after missing a few at first, methodically booted
+goals over the crossbar from the ten, twenty, and thirty-yard lines, and
+from the most difficult angles. There was nothing showy or spectacular in
+his work, it was the result of dogged training, but he was almost sure,
+when he kicked!
+
+[Illustration D: He was almost sure, when he kicked!]
+
+"Good!" ejaculated Coach Corridan, his arm across Hicks' shoulders, as they
+walked to the Gym. "Hicks, the chances are big that I'll send you in to try
+for a goal tomorrow, if Bannister gets blocked inside the thirty-yard line!
+Just keep your nerve, boy, and boot it over! Now--I'll post a notice for
+a brief mass-meeting at the end of the last class period, and Butch and I
+will tell the fellows about you, and how you may serve Bannister."
+
+"That's the idea!" exulted Butch, joyous at his comrade's chance to get in
+the biggest game. "The fellows will understand, Hicks, old man, and they
+won't jeer when you come out this afternoon. They'll root for you! Oh, just
+wait until you hear them cheer you, and _mean_ it--you'll astonish the
+natives, Hicks!"
+
+Butch's prophecy was well fulfilled. In the scrimmage that same day, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., shivering with apprehensive dread, his heart in his
+shoes, sat on the side-line. In the stands, the entire student-body,
+informed in the mass-meeting of his ability, shrieked for "Hicks! Hicks!
+Hicks!" Near the end of the practice game, the hard-fighting scrubs fought
+their way to the 'Varsity's thirty-yard line, and another rush took it five
+yards more. Coach Corridan, halting the scrimmage, sent the right-half-back
+to the side-line, and a moment later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. hurried out
+on the field with the Bannister Band playing, the collegians yelling
+frenziedly, and excitement at fever height, the sunny youth took his
+position in the kick formation. Then a silence, a few seconds of suspense,
+as the pigskin whirled back to him, and then--a quick stepping forward,
+a rip of toe against the leather, and--above the heads of the 'Varsity
+players smashing through, the football shot over the cross-bar!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" was the shout, _"Hicks will beat Ballard!"_
+
+That night, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., having crossed the Rubicon, and
+committed himself to Coach Corridan and Captain Brewster, had dispatched a
+telegraphic night-letter to his beloved Dad. He informed his distinguished
+parent that his drop-kicking powers were now known to old Bannister, and
+that the chances were fifty-fifty that he would be sent in to try for a
+field-goal in the biggest game. On the day before the game, Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., in a night-letter, had wired back:
+
+
+Son Thomas:
+
+Am on my way to New Haven for Yale-Harvard game. Will stop off at old
+Bannister--bringing thirty members of Yale '96. We hope our Class Kid will
+get his chance against Ballard.
+
+Dad.
+
+
+On the morning of the Bannister-Ballard game, Mr. Hicks' private car the
+_Vulcan_, with the Pittsburgh "Steel King," and thirty other members of
+Yale, '96, had reached town. They had ridden in state to College Hill in
+good old Dan Flannagan's jitney, where T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., proudly
+introduced his beloved Dad to the admiring collegians. All morning, Mr.
+Hicks had made friends of the hero-worshiping youths, who listened to his
+tales of athletic triumphs at Bannister and at old Yale breathlessly. The
+ex-Yale star had made a stirring speech to the eleven, sending them out on
+Bannister Field resolved to do or die!
+
+"My Dad!" breathed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., crouched on the side line; as
+he gazed at the Yale banner, he could see his father, with his athletic
+figure, his strong face that could be appallingly stern or wonderfully
+tender and kind. Like the sunny Senior, Mr. Hicks, despite his wealth,
+was thoroughly democratic and already the Bannister collegians were his
+comrades.
+
+"Here we go, Hicks!" spoke Butch Brewster, as the referee raised his
+whistle to his lips. "Hold yourself ready, old man; a field-goal may win
+for us, and I'll send you in just as soon as I find all hope of a touchdown
+is gone. If they hold us back of the thirty-yard line, I'll try Deke
+Radford, but inside it, you are far more sure."
+
+The vast crowd, a moment before creating an almost inconceivable din,
+stilled with startling suddenness; a shrill blast from the referee's
+whistle cut the air. The gridiron cleared of substitutes, coaches,
+trainers, and rubbers-out, and in their places, the teams of Bannister and
+Ballard jogged out. Captain Brewster won the toss, and elected to receive
+the kick-off. The Gold and Green players, Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Biff,
+Pudge, Bunch, Tug, Hefty, Buster, and Ichabod, spread out, fan-like,
+while across the center of the field the Ballard eleven, a straight line,
+prepared to advance as the full-back kicked off. There was a breathless
+stillness, as the big athlete poised the pigskin, tilted on end, then
+strode back to his position.
+
+"All ready, Ballard?" The Referee's call brought an affirmative from the
+Orange and Black leader.
+
+"Ready, Bannister?"
+
+"Ready!" boomed big Butch Brewster, with a final shout of encouragement to
+his players.
+
+The biggest game was starting! Before ten thousand wildly excited and
+partisan spectators, the Gold and Green and the Orange and Black would
+battle for Championship honors; with Thor out of the struggle, Ballard,
+three-time Champion, was the favorite. The visitors had brought the
+strongest team in their history, and were supremely confident of victory.
+Bannister, however, could not help remembering, twice fate had snatched
+the greatest glory from their grasp, in Butch's Sophomore year, when Jack
+Merritt's drop-kick struck the cross-bar, and a year later, when Butch
+himself, charging for the winning touchdown, crashed blindly into the
+upright. Old Bannister had not won the Championship for five years, and
+now--when the chances had seemed roseate, with Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy--smashing Hamilton out of the way, Fate had dealt the annual blow
+in advance, by crippling him.
+
+"Oh, we've _got_ to win!" shivered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Oh, I hope I
+don't get sent in--I mean--I hope Bannister wins without me! But if I _do_
+have to kick--Oh, I hope I send it over that cross-bar--"
+
+A second later the Ballard line advanced, the fullback's toe ripped into
+the pigskin, sending it whirling, high in air, far into Bannister's
+territory; the yellow oval fell into the outstretched arms of Captain
+Butch Brewster, on the Gold and Green's five-yard line, and--"We're off!"
+shrieked Hicks, excitedly. "Come on, Butch--run it back! Oh, we're off."
+
+The biggest game had started!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE GREATER GOAL
+
+
+"Time out!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., enshrouded in a gold and green blanket, and
+standing on the side-line, like a majestic Sioux Chief, gazed out on
+Bannister Field. There, on the twenty-yard line, the two lines of scrimmage
+had crashed together and Bannister's backfield had smashed into Ballard's
+stonewall defense with terrific impact, to be hurled back for a five-yard
+loss. The mass of humanity slowly untangled, the moleskin clad players rose
+from the turf, all but one. He, wearing the gold and green, lay still,
+white-faced, and silent.
+
+"It's Biff Pemberton!" chattered Hicks, shivering as with a chill. "Oh, the
+game is lost, the Championship is gone. Biff is out, and the last quarter
+is nearly ended. Coach Corridan has got to send me in to kick. It's our
+very last chance to tie the score, and save old Bannister from defeat!"
+
+The time keeper, to whom the referee had megaphoned for time out, stopped
+the game, while Captain Butch Brewster, the campus Doctor, and several
+players worked over the senseless Biff. In the stands, the exultant Ballard
+cohorts, confident that victory was booked to perch on their banners, arose
+_en masse,_ and their thunderous chorus drifted across Bannister Field:
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+From the Bannister section, the Gold and Green undergraduates, alumni, and
+supporters, feeling a dread of approaching defeat grip their hearts, yet
+determined to the last, came the famous old slogan of encouragement to
+elevens battling on the gridiron:
+
+ "Smash 'em, boys, run the ends--hold, boys, _hold_--
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!
+ Touchdown! Touchdown! Hold, boys, _hold,
+ Don't_ let 'em win from the Green and the Gold!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with a groan of despair, sat down on the deserted
+subs. bench. With a feeling that all was lost, the splinter-like Senior
+gazed at the big score-board, announcing, in huge, white letters and
+figures:
+
+4TH QUARTER; TIME TO PLAY--2 MIN.; BANNISTER'S BALL ON BALLARD'S 22-YD.
+LINE; 4TH DOWN--8 YDS. TO GAIN; SCORE: BALLARD--6; BANNISTER--3.
+
+It had been a terrific contest, a biggest game never to be forgotten by
+the ten thousand thrilled spectators! Each eleven had been trained to the
+second for this decisive Championship fight, and with the coveted gonfalon
+of glory before them, the Bannister players battled desperately, while
+Ballard's fighters struggled as grimly for their Alma Mater. For six years,
+the Gold and Green had failed to annex the Championship, and for the past
+three, the invincible Ballard machine had rushed like a car of Juggernaut
+over all other State elevens; one team was determined to wrest the
+banner from its rival's grasp, and the other fully as resolved to retain
+possession, hence a memorable gridiron contest, to which even the alumni
+could find none in past history to compare, was the result.
+
+Weakened by the loss of Thor, whose colossal bulk and Gargantuan strength
+would have made victory a moral certainty, presenting practically the same
+eleven that had faced Ballard the past season and had been defeated by a
+scant margin, old Bannister had started the first quarter with a furious
+rush that swept the enemy to midfield without the loss of a first down.
+Then Ballard had rallied, stopping that triumphal march, on its own
+thirty-five yard line, but unable to check Quarterback Deacon Radford, who
+booted a forty-three-yard goal from a drop-kick, with the score 3-0 in
+Bannister's favor, and Deacon, a brilliant but erratic kicker, apparently
+in fine trim, the Gold Green rooters went wild.
+
+In the second half, however, came the break of the game, as sporting
+writers term it. The strong Ballard eleven found itself, and with a series
+of body-smashing, bone-crushing rushes, battering at the Bannister lines
+like the Germans before Verdun, they steadily fought their way, trench by
+trench, line by line, down the field. Without a fumble, or the loss of a
+single yard, the terrific, catapulting charges forced back old Bannister,
+until the enemy's fullback, who ran like the famous Johnny Maulbetsch,
+of Michigan, shot headlong over the goal line! The attempt for goal from
+touchdown failed, leaving the score, at the end of the third quarter,
+Ballard--6; Bannister--3.
+
+And Deacon Radford, whose first effort at drop-kicking had been so
+brilliant, failed utterly. Three times, taking a desperate chance, the
+Bannister quarter booted the pigskin, but the oval flew wide of the goal
+posts, even from the thirty-yard line. With his mighty toe not to be
+depended on, with the Gold and Green line worn to a frazzle by Ballard's
+battering rushes, unable to beat back the victorious enemy, the Bannister
+cohorts, dismayed, saw the start of the fourth and final quarter, their
+last hope. The forward pass had been futile, for the visitors were trained
+especially for this aerial attack, and with ease they broke up every
+attempt. And then, with the ball in Ballard's possession on Bannister's
+twenty-yard line, came a fumble--like a leaping tiger, Monty Merriweather
+had flung himself on the elusively bounding ball, rolled over to his feet,
+and was off down the field.
+
+"Touchdown! Touchdown! Touchdown!" shrieked old Bannister's madly excited
+students, as Monty sprinted. "Go it, Monty--_touchdown_! Sprint, old man,
+_sprint_!"
+
+But Cupid Colfax, Ballard's famous sprinter, playing quarterback, was off
+on Monty's trail almost instantly, and his phenomenal speed cut down the
+Ballard end's advantage; still, by dint of exerting every ounce of energy,
+it was on Ballard's forty-yard line that Monty Merriweather, hugging the
+pigskin grimly, finally crashed to earth.
+
+"Come on, Bannister!" shouted Captain Butch Brewster, as the two teams
+lined down. "Right across the goal-line, then kick the goal, and we win!
+Play the game--_fight_--Oh, we can win the Championship right now."
+
+Then ensued a session of football spectacular in the extreme, replete with
+thrilling plays, with sensational tackles, and blood-stirring scrimmage.
+The Bannister players, nerved by Captain Brewster's exhortation, by sheer
+will-power drove their battered bodies into the scrimmage. End runs,
+line-smashing tandem plays, forward passes, followed in bewildering
+succession, until the ball rested on Ballard's twenty-yard line, and a
+touchdown meant victory and the Championship for old Bannister, Another
+rush, and five yards gained, then, Ballard, fighting at the last ditch,
+made a stand every bit as heroic and thrilling as that sensational march
+in the first half. The Gold and Green's tigerish rushes were hurled
+back--three times Captain Butch threw his backfield against the line, and
+three times not an inch was gained. On the third down, Monty Merriweather
+was forced back for a loss, so now, with two minutes to play and the ball
+in Bannister's possession, with eight yards to gain, the play was on
+Ballard's twenty-two-yard line!
+
+And the biggest game had produced a new hero of the gridiron. Biff
+Pemberton, left half-back, imbued with savage energy, had borne the brunt
+of that spectacular advance; and now, he stretched on the turf, white and
+still.
+
+"Hicks, old man," T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. turned as a hand rested grippingly
+on his shoulder. Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, his face grim, had come
+to him, and in quick, terse sentences, he outlined his plan.
+
+"It's Bannister's last chance--" he said, tensely. "We _can't_ make the
+first down, the way Ballard is fighting, unless we take desperate odds.
+Now, Hicks, it's _up to you_. On _you_ depend old Bannister's hopes."
+
+A great, chilling fear swept over T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., leaving him weak
+and shaken. It had come at last-the moment for which he had trained and
+practiced drop-kicking, for a year, in secret, that moment he had hoped
+would come, sometime, and yet had dreaded, as in a nightmare. Before that
+vast, howling crowd of ten thousand madly partisan spectators, _he_ must
+go out on Bannister Field, to try and boot a drop-kick from the
+twenty-eight-yard-line, to save the Gold and Green from defeat. And he
+thought of the great glory that would be his, if he succeeded-he would be a
+campus hero, the idol of old Bannister, the youth who saved his Alma Mater
+from defeat, in the biggest game! Then he remembered his Dad, inspiring
+the eleven, between the halves, by a ringing speech; he heard again his
+sentences:
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal! Go back into the game, throw yourselves into
+the scrimmage, with no thought of personal glory, of the plaudits of the
+crowd--it is a fine thing, a splendid goal, to play the game and be a hero;
+it is a far more noble act to strive for the greater goal, one's Alma
+Mater!"
+
+"Now listen carefully," Coach Corridan rushed on, "Biff is knocked out.
+They'll start again soon, we are going to take a desperate chance; your Dad
+advises it! A tie score means the Championship stays with Ballard. To win
+it, we must _win_ this game--and on _you_ everything depends."
+
+"But--how--" stammered Hicks, dazed--the only way to _tie_ the score was by
+a drop-kick; the only way to win, by a touchdown--did the Coach mean he was
+_not_ to realize his great ambition to save old Bannister by a goal, the
+reward of his long training?
+
+"You jog out," whispered Coach Corridan, hurriedly, for a stretcher was
+being rushed to Biff Pemberton, "report to the Referee, and whisper to
+Butch to try Formation Z; 23-45-6-A! Now, here is the dope: our only chance
+is to fool Ballard completely. When you go out, the Bannister rooters, and
+your Yale friends, will believe it is to try a drop-kick and tie the score.
+I am sure that the Ballard team will think this, too, because of your
+slender build. You act as though you intend to try for a goal, and have
+Captain Butch make our fellows act that way. Then--it is a fake-kick; the
+backfield lines up in the kick formation, but the ball is passed to Butch,
+at your right. He either tries for a forward pass to the right end, or
+if the end Is blocked, rushes it himself! Hurry-the referee's whistle is
+blowing; remember, Hicks, my boy, it's the greater goal, it's for your Alma
+Mater."
+
+In a trance, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., flung off the gold and green blanket,
+and dashed out on Bannister Field. How often, in the past year, had he
+visioned this scene, only--he pictured himself saving the game by a
+drop-kick, and now Coach Corridan ordered him to sacrifice this glory! From
+the stands came the thunderous cheer of the excited Bannister cohorts,
+firmly believing that the slender youth, so ludicrously fragile, among
+those young Colossi, was to try for a goal.
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hicks! Kick the goal--Hicks!"
+
+And from the Yale grads., among them his Dad, came a shout, as he jogged
+across the turf:
+
+"Breka-kek-kek--co-ax--Yale! Hicks-Hicks-Hicks!"
+
+But the Bannister Senior did not thrill. Now, instead, a feeling of growing
+resentment filled his soul; even this intensely loyal youth, with all his
+love for old Bannister, was vastly human, and he felt cheated of his just
+rights. How the students were cheering him, how those Yale men called his
+name, and he was not to have his big chance! That for which he had trained
+and practiced; the opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, by kicking a goal
+at the crucial moment, and saving Bannister from defeat, was never to be
+his. Now, in his last game at college, he was to act as a decoy, as a foil.
+Like a dummy he must stand, while the other Gold and Green athletes ran off
+the play! Instead of everything, a tie game, or a defeat, depending on his
+kicking, defeat or victory hung on that fake play, on Butch Brewster
+and Monty Merriweather! So--the ear-splitting plaudits of the crowd for
+"Hicks!" meant nothing to him; they were dead sea fruit, tasteless as
+ashes--as the ashes of ambition. And then--
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal--no thought of personal glory--a splendid goal,
+to play the game and be a hero; It is a far more noble act to strive for
+the greater goal--one's Alma Mater--"
+
+"I was nearly a _traitor_" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his Dad's words
+echoing In his memory, and a vision of that staunch, manly Bannister
+ex-athlete before him. "Oh, I was betraying my Alma Mater. Instead of
+rejoicing to make _any_ sacrifice, however big, for Bannister, I thought
+only of myself, of my glory! I'll do it, Dad, I'll strive for the greater
+goal, and--we just can't fail."
+
+Reaching the scrimmage, Hicks, whose nervous dread had left him, when
+he fought down selfish ambition, and thirst for glory, reported to the
+Referee, and hurriedly transferred Coach Corridan's orders to Captain
+Butch Brewster; half a minute of precious time was spent in outlining the
+desperate play to the eleven, for "time!" had been called, and then--
+
+"Z-23-45-6-A!" shouted Quarterback Deacon Radford. "Come on, line--hold!
+Right over the cross-bar with it, Hicks--tie the score, and save Bannister
+from defeat--"
+
+The Gold and Green backfield shifted to the kick formation. Ten yards back
+of the center, on the thirty-two-yard line of Ballard, stood T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.; the vast crowd was hushed, all eyes stared at that slender
+figure, standing there, with Captain Butch Brewster at his right, and Beef
+McNaughton on his left hand-the spectators believed the frail-looking
+youth had been sent in to try a drop-kick. The Ballard rooters thought
+it, and--the Ballard eleven were _sure_ of their enemy's plan--Hicks'
+mosquito-like build, his nervous swinging of that right leg, deluded them,
+and helped Coach Corridan's plot.
+
+It was the only play, if Bannister wanted the Championship enough to try a
+desperate chance; better a fighting hope for that glory, with a try for
+a touchdown, than a field-goal, and a tie-score! The lines of scrimmage
+tensed. The linesmen dug their cleats in the sod, those of Ballard tigerish
+to break through and block; old Bannister's determined to _hold_. Back of
+Ballard's line, the backfield swayed on tip-toe, every muscle nerved, ready
+to crash through; the ends prepared to knock Roddy and Monty aside, the
+backs would charge madly ahead, in a berserk rush, to crash into that slim
+figure.
+
+"Boot it, Hicks!" shrieked Deke Radford, and as he shouted, the pigskin
+shot from the Bannister center's hands; the Gold and Green line held nobly,
+but not so the ends. Monty Merriweather, making a bluff at blocking the
+left end, let him crash past, while he sprinted ahead--Captain Butch
+Brewster, to whom the pass had been made, ran forward, until he saw he was
+blocked, and then, seeing Monty dear, he hurled a beautiful forward pass.
+
+Into the arms of the waiting Monty it fell, and that Gold and Green star,
+absolutely free of tacklers, sprinted twelve yards to the goal-line,
+falling on the pigskin behind it! Coach Corridan's "100 to 1" chance,
+suggested by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., had succeeded, and--the
+Biggest Game and the Championship had come to old Bannister at last!
+
+Followed a scene pauperizing description! For many long years old Bannister
+had waited for this glory; years of bitter disappointment, seasons when the
+Championship had been missed by a scant margin, a drop-kick striking the
+cross-bar, Butch Brewster blindly crashing into an upright. But now, all
+their pent-up joy flowed forth in a mighty torrent! Singing, yelling,
+dancing, howling, the Bannister Band leading them, the Gold and Green
+students, alumni, Faculty, and supporters, snake-danced around Bannister
+Field. A vast, writhing, sinuous line, it wound around the gridiron,
+everyone who possessed a hat flinging it over the cross-bars. The
+victorious eleven, were borne by the maddened youths--Captain Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Monty, Roddy, Ichabod, Tug, Hefty, Buster, Bunch, and--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. Ballard, firmly believing Hicks would try a field-goal, had
+been taken completely off guard. Surprised by the daring attempt, it had
+succeeded with ease, and the final score was Bannister--10; Ballard--6!
+
+"At last! At last!" boomed Butch Brewster, to whom this was the happiest
+day of his life. "The Championship at last. My great ambition is realized.
+Old Bannister has won the Championship, and I was the Team Captain!"
+
+After a time, when "the shouting and the tumult died," or at least quieted
+somewhat, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., felt a hand on his arm, and looking down
+from the shoulders on which he perched, he saw his Dad. Mr. Hicks' strong
+face was aglow with pride and a vast joy, and he shook his son's hand again
+and again.
+
+"I understand, Thomas!" he said, and his words were reward enough for the
+youth. "It was a _big_ sacrifice, but you made it gladly--I know! You
+gave up personal glory for the greater goal, and--old Bannister won the
+Championship! You helped win, for the winning play turned on _you_. It was
+splendid, my son, and I am proud of you! No matter if your sacrifice is
+never known to the fellows, _I_ understand."
+
+A moment of silence on Hicks' part; then the sunny youth grinned at his
+beloved Dad, as he responded blithesomely: "I'm Pollyanna, that old
+Bannister and _I_ won out, Dad!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, human beings,
+and--_Freshmen_! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the Olympic High-Jump
+Champion, holder of the World's record, and winner at the Panama-Pacific
+International Exposition National Championships, in his event, is about to
+high jump! The bar is at five feet, ten inches. Mr. Hicks is the Herculean
+athlete in the crazy-looking bathrobe."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his splinter-structure enshrouded in that
+flamboyant bathrobe of vast proportions and insane colors, that inevitably
+attended his athletic efforts, shaming Joseph's coat-of-many-colors, gazed
+despairingly at his good friend, Butch Brewster, and Track-Coach Brannigan,
+with a Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance.
+
+"It's no use, Butch, it's no use!" quoth he, with ludicrous indignation,
+as big Tug Cardiff, the behemoth shot-putter, through a huge megaphone
+imitated a Ballyhoo Bill, and roared his absurd announcement to the
+hilarious crowd of collegians in the stand. "Old Bannister will _never_
+take my athletic endeavors seriously. Here I have won two second places,
+and a third, in the high-jump this season, and have a splendid show to
+annex _first_ place and my track B in the Intercollegiates, but--hear
+them!"
+
+It was a balmy, sunshiny afternoon in late May. The sunny-souled,
+happy-go-lucky T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had trained indefatigably for
+the high jump, with the result that he had won several points for his
+team--however, he had not realized his great ambition of first place, and
+his track letter.
+
+As Hicks now exclaimed to his team-mate and Coach Brannigan, no matter,
+to the howling Bannister youths, if he _had_ won three places in the high
+jump, in regularly scheduled meets; his comrades had been jeering at
+his athletic fiascos for nearly four years, and even had Hicks suddenly
+blossomed out as a star athlete, they would not have abandoned their joyous
+habit. Still, those football 'Varsity players to whom good Butch had read
+Hicks, Sr.'s, letters, and explained the sunny youth's persistence, despite
+his ridiculous failures, though they kept on hailing his appearance on
+Bannister Field with exaggerated joy, understood the care-free collegian,
+and loved him for his ambition to please his Dad. Since Hicks had
+absolutely refused to accept his B, for any sport, unless he won it
+according to Athletic Association eligibility rules, the eleven had kept
+secret the contents of the letters Butch Brewster had read to them, for
+Hicks requested it.
+
+The Bannister College track squad, under Track Coach Brannigan and Captain
+Spike Robertson, had been training most strenuously for that annual
+cinder-path classic, the State Intercollegiate Track and Field
+Championships. The sprinters had been tearing down the two-twenty
+straightaway like suburban commuters catching the 7.20 A.M. for the city.
+Hammer-throwers and shot-putters--the weight men--heaved the sixteen-pound
+shot, or hurled the hammer, with reckless abandon, like the Strong Man of
+the circus. Pole-vaulters seemed ambitious to break the altitude records,
+and In so doing, threatened to break their necks; hurdlers skimmed over
+the standard as lightly as swallows, though no one ever beheld swallows
+hurdling. The distance runners plodded determinedly around the quarter-mile
+track, broad-jumpers tried to jump the length of the landing-pit. And T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., vainly essayed to clear five-ten In the high-jump!
+
+It was the last-named event that "broke up the show," as the Phillyloo Bird
+quaintly stated, somewhat wrongly, since the appearance of that blithesome
+youth in the offing, his flamboyant bathrobe concealing his shadow-like
+frame, had _started_ the show, causing the track squad, as well as a
+hundred spectator-students, to rush for seats in the stand. The arrival
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., to train for form and height in the high-jump,
+though a daily occurrence, was always the signal for a Saturnalia of sport
+at his expense, because--
+
+"You can't live down your athletic past, Hicks!" smiled good-hearted Butch
+Brewster. "Your making a touchdown for the other eleven, by running the
+wrong way with the pigskin, your hilarious fiascos in every sport, your
+home-run with the bases full, on a strike-out-are specters to haunt you.
+Even now that you have a chance to win your B, just listen to the fellows."
+
+The track squad's "heavy weight--white hope" section, composed of
+hammer-heavers and shot-putters--Tug Cardiff, Beef McNaughton, Pudge
+Langdon, Buster Brown, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and Bunch
+Bingham, equipped with megaphones, and with the _basso profundo_ voices
+nature gave them, lined up on both sides of the jumping-standards, and
+chanted loudly:
+
+ "All hail to T. Haviland Hicks!
+ He runs like a carload of bricks;
+ When to high jump he tries
+ From the ground he can't rise--
+ For he's built on a pair of toothpicks!"
+
+This saengerfest was greeted with vociferous cheers from the vastly amused
+youths in the stands, who hailed the grinning Hicks with jeers, cat-calls,
+whistles, and humorous (so they believed) remarks:
+
+"Say, Hicks, you won't _never_ be able to jump anything but your
+board-bill!"
+
+"You're built like a grass-hopper, Hicks, but you've done lost the hop!"
+
+"If you keep on improving as you've done lately, you'll make a high-jumper
+in a hundred more years, old top!"
+
+"You may rise in the world, Hicks, but never in the high jump!"
+
+"Don't mind them, Hicks!" spoke Coach Brannigan, his hands on the
+happy-go-lucky youth's shoulders. "Listen to me; the Intercollegiates will
+be the last track meet of your college years, and unless you take first
+place in your event, you won't win your track B. Second, McQuade, of
+Hamilton, will do five-eight, and likely an inch higher, so to take first
+place, you, must do five-ten. You have trained and practiced faithfully
+this season, but no matter what I do, I _can't_ give you that needed two
+inches, and--"
+
+"I know it, Coach!" responded the chastened Hicks, throwing aside his
+lurid bathrobe determinedly, and exposing to the jeering students his
+splinter-frame. "Leave it to Hicks, I'll clear it this time, or--"
+
+"Not!" fleered Butch, whom Hicks' easy self-confidence never failed to
+arouse. "Hicks, listen to me, _I_ can tell you why you can't get two inches
+higher. The whole trouble with you is this; for almost four years you have
+led an indolent, butterfly, care-free existence, and now, when you must
+call on yourself for a special effort, you are too lazy! You can dear
+five-ten; you ought to do it, but you can't summon up the energy. I've
+lectured you all this time, for your heedless, easy-going ways, and
+now--you pay for your idle years!"
+
+"You said an encyclopedia, Butch!" agreed the Coach, with vigor. "If only
+something would just _make_ Hicks jump that high, if only he could do it
+once, and know it is in his power, he could do it in the Intercollegiates,
+aided by excitement and competition! Let something _scare_ him so that he
+will sail over five-ten, and--he will win his B. He has the energy, the
+build, the spring, and the form, but as you say, he is so easy-going and
+lazy, that his natural grass-hopper frame avails him naught."
+
+"Here I go!" announced Hicks, who, to an accompaniment of loud cheers from
+the stand, had been jogging up and down in that warming-up process known to
+athletes as the in place run, consisting of trying to dislocate one's
+jaw by bringing the knees, alternately, up against the chin. "Up and
+over--that's my slogan. Just watch Hicks."
+
+Starting at a distance of twenty yards from the high-jump standards, on
+which the cross-bar rested at five feet, ten inches, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., who vastly resembled a grass-hopper, crept toward the jumping-pit,
+on his toe-spikes, as though hoping to catch the cross-bar off its guard.
+Advancing ten yards, he learned apparently that his design was discovered,
+so he started a loping gallop, turning to a quick, mad sprint, as though he
+attempted to jump over the bar before it had time to rise higher. With a
+beautiful take-off, a splendid spring--a quick, writhing twist in air, and
+two spasmodic kicks, the whole being known as the scissors form of high
+jump, the mosquito-like youth made a strenuous effort to clear the needed
+height, but--one foot kicked the cross-bar, and as Hicks fell flat on his
+back, in the soft landing-pit, the wooden rod, In derision, clattered down
+upon his anatomy.
+
+"Foiled again!" hissed Hicks, after the fashion of a "Ten-Twent'-Thirt'"
+melodrama-villain, while from the exuberant youths in the grandstand,
+who really wanted Hicks to clear the bar, but who jeered at his failure,
+nevertheless, sounded:
+
+"Hire a derrick, Hicks, and hoist yourself over the bar!"
+
+"Your _head_ is light enough--your feet weigh you down!"
+
+"'Crossing the Bar'--rendered by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+"Going up! Go play checkers, Hicks, you ain't no athlete!"
+
+While the grinning, albeit chagrined T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., reposed
+gracefully on his back, staring up at the cross-bar, which someone kindly
+replaced on the pegs, big Butch Brewster, who seemed suddenly to have
+gone crazy, tried to attract Coach Brannigan's attention. Succeeding,
+Butch--usually a grave, serious Senior, winked, contorted his visage
+hideously, pointed at Hicks, and sibilated, "_Now_, Coach--now is your
+chance! Tell Hicks--"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, Bunch Bingham, Buster
+Brown, Beef McNaughton, and Pudge Langdon, who had been attacked in a
+fashion similar to Butch's spasm, concealed grins of delight, and made
+strenuous efforts to appear guileless, as Track-Coach Brannigan approached
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. To that cheery youth, who was brushing the dirt from
+his immaculate track togs, and bowing to the cheering youths in the stand,
+the Coach spoke:
+
+"Hicks," he said sternly, "you need a cross-country jog, to get
+more strength and power in your limbs! Now, I am going to send the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade for a four-mile run, and you go with them.
+Oh, don't protest; they are all shot-putters and hammer-throwers, but
+Butch, and they can't run fast enough to give a tortoise a fast heat. Take
+'em out two miles and back, Butch, and jog all the way; don't let 'em loaf!
+Off with you."
+
+The unsuspecting Hicks might have detected the nigger in the woodpile, had
+he not been so anxious to make five-ten in the high-jump. However, willing
+to jog with these behemoths, with whom even he could keep pace, so as to
+develop more jumping power, the blithesome youth cast aside his garish
+bathrobe, pranced about in what he fatuously believed was Ted Meredith's
+style, and howled:
+
+"Follow Hicks! All out for the Marathon--we're off! One--two--three--_go_!"
+
+With the excited, track squad, non-athletes, and the baseball crowd, which
+had ceased the game to watch the start, yelling, cheering, howling, and
+whistling, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drawing his knees up in exaggerated
+style at every stride, started to lead the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+on its cross-country run. Without wondering why Coach Brannigan had
+suddenly elected to send _him_ along with the hammer-throwers and
+shot-putters, on the jog, and not having seen the insane facial contortions
+of the Brigade, before the Coach gave orders, the gladsome Senior
+started forth in good spirits, resembling a tugboat convoying a fleet of
+battleships.
+
+"'Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! And over the country we go!'" warbled Hicks, as the squad
+left Bannister Field, and jogged across a green meadow. "'--O'er hill and
+dale, through valley and vale, Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho!'"
+
+"Save your wind, you insect!" growled Butch Brewster, with sinister
+significance that escaped the heedless Hicks, as the behemoth Butch, a
+two-miler, swung into the lead. "You'll _need_ it, you fish, before we get
+back to the campus! Not _too_ fast, you flock of human tortoises. You'll be
+crawling on hands and knees, if you keep that pace up long!"
+
+A mile and a half passed. Butch, at an easy jog, had led his squad over
+green pastures, up gentle slopes, and across a plowed field, by way of
+variety. At length, he left the road on which the pachydermic aggregation
+had lumbered for some distance, and turned up a long lane, leading to a
+farm-house. Back of it they periscoped an orchard, with cherry-trees,
+laden with red and white fruit, predominating. Also, floating toward the
+collegians on the balmy May air came an ominous sound:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof! Bow-wow-wow! Woof!"
+
+"Come on, fellows!" urged Butch Brewster. "We'll jog across old Bildad's
+orchard and seize some cherries--the old pirate can't catch us, for we are
+attired for sprinting. Don't they look good?"
+
+"Nothing stirring!" declared Hicks, slangily, but vehemently, as he stopped
+short in his stride. "Old Bildad has got a bulldog what am as big as the
+New York City Hall. He had it on the campus last month, you know! Not for
+mine! I don't go near that house, or swipe no cherries from his trees. If
+you wish to shuffle off this mortal coil, drive right ahead, but _I_ will
+await your return here."
+
+T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, dread of dogs, of all sizes, shapes, pedigrees,
+and breeds, was well known to old Bannister; hence, the Heavy-weights now
+jeered him unmercifully. Old "Bildad," as the taciturn recluse was called,
+who lived like a hermit and owned a rich farm, did own a massive bulldog,
+and a sight of his cruel jaws was a "No Trespass" sign. With great
+forethought, when cherries began to ripen, the farmer had brought Caesar
+Napoleon to the campus, exhibited him to the awed youths, and said, "My
+cherries be for _sale_, not to be _stole_!" which object lesson, brief as
+it was, to date, had seemed to have the desired effect. Yet--here was Butch
+proposing that they literally thrust their heads, or other portions of
+their anatomies, into the jaws of death!
+
+"Well," said Bunch Bingham at last, "I tell you what; we'll jog up to the
+house and ask old Bildad to _sell_ us some cherries; we can pay him when he
+comes to the campus with eggs to sell, Come along. Hicks, I'll beard the
+bulldog in his kennel."
+
+So, dragged along by the bulky hammer-throwers and shot-putters, the
+protesting T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in mortal terror of Caesar Napoleon, and
+the other canine guardians of old Bildad's property, progressed up the lane
+toward the house.
+
+"I got a hunch," said the reluctant Hicks, sadly, "that things ain't
+a-comin' out right! In the words of the immortal Somebody-Or-Other, 'This
+'ere ain't none o' _my_ doin'; it's a-bein' thrust on me!' All right, my
+comrades, I'll be the innocent bystander, but heed me--look out for the
+bulldog!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+
+
+The Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, towing the mosquito-like T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., advanced on the stronghold of old Bildad, so named because he
+was a pessimistic Job's comforter, like Bildad, the Shuhite, of old--like
+a flock of German spies reconnoitering Allied trenches. Hearing the house,
+with Butch and Beef holding the helpless, but loudly protesting Hicks, who
+would fain have executed what may mildly be termed a strategic retreat, big
+Tug Cardiff boldly marched, in close formation, toward the door, when the
+portal suddenly flew open.
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Let go, Butch--there's the dog!"
+
+Amid ferocious howls from Caesar Napoleon, and alarmed protests from the
+paralyzed Hicks, who could not have run, with his wobbly knees, had he
+been set free by his captors, old Bildad, towed from the house by Caesar
+Napoleon, who strained savagely at the leash until his face bulged, burst
+upon the scene with impressive dramatic effect! It was difficult to decide,
+without due consideration, which was the more interesting. Bildad, a huge,
+gnarled old Viking, with matted gray hair, bushy eyebrows, a flowing beard,
+and leathery face, a fierce-looking giant, was appalling to behold, but so
+was Caesar Napoleon, an immense bulldog, cruel, bloodthirsty, his massive
+jaws working convulsively, his ugly fangs gleaming, as he set his great
+body against the leash, and gave evidence of a sincere desire to make free
+lunch of the Bannister youths. As Buster Brown afterward stated, "Neither
+one would take the booby prize at a beauty show, but at that, the bulldog
+had a better chance than Bildad!" T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., let it be
+recorded, could not have qualified as a judge, since his undivided
+attention was awarded to Caesar Napoleon!
+
+"What d'ye want round here, ye rapscallions?" demanded Bildad, courteously,
+holding the savage bulldog with one hand, and constructing a ponderous
+fist with the other, "_Hike_--git off'n my land, y'hear? _Git_, er Caesar
+Napoleon'll git holt o' them scanty duds ye got on!"
+
+"We want to--to buy some cherries, Mr.--Mr. Bildad!" explained Bunch
+Bingham, edging away nervously. "We won't steal any, honest, sir. Well pay
+you for them the very next time you come to the campus with milk and eggs."
+
+"Ho! Ho!" roared old Bildad, piratically, his colossal body shaking, "A
+likely tale, lads--an' when I come for my money, ye'll jeer me off the
+campus, an' tell me to whistle for it! Off my land--_git,_ an' don't let me
+cotch ye on it inside o' two minutes, or I'll let Caesar Napoleon make a
+meal off'n yer bones--_git_!"
+
+To express it briefly, they got. T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., not standing on
+the order of his going, set off at a sprint that, while it might have
+caused Ted Meredith to lose sleep, also aroused in Caesar Napoleon an
+overwhelming desire to take out after the fugitive youth, so that Mr.
+Bildad was forced to exert his vast strength to hold the massive bulldog.
+Butch, Beef, Hefty, Tug, Buster, Bunch, Pudge, and Biff, a pachydermic
+crew, awed by Caesar Napoleon's bloodthirsty actions, jogged off in the
+wake of Hicks, who confidently expected to hear the bulldog giving tongue,
+on his trail, at every second.
+
+Another lane, making in from a road making a cross-roads with the one
+from which they came to Bildad's house, ran alongside the orchard for two
+hundred yards, inside the fence; at its end was a high roadgate. At
+what they decided was a safe distance from the "war zone," the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the latter
+forcibly restrained from widening the margin between him and peril, held a
+council on preparedness.
+
+"The old pirate!" stormed Butch Brewster, gazing back to where the vast
+figure of old Bildad, striding toward the house, towered. "We can't let him
+get away with that, fellows. I'll have some of his cherries now, or--"
+
+"No, no--_don't_, Butch!" chattered Hicks, whose dread of dogs amounted to
+an obsession. "He can still see us, and if you leave the lane, he will send
+Caesar Napoleon after us! Oh, _don't_--"
+
+But Butch Brewster, evidently wrathful at being balked, strode from the
+path, or lane, of virtue, toward a cherry-tree, whose red fruit hung
+temptingly low, and his example was followed by every one of the Brigade,
+leaving the terrified Hicks to wait in the lane, where, because of his
+alarm, he had no time to wonder at the bravado of his behemoth comrades.
+However, finding that Bildad had disappeared, and believing he had taken
+Caesar Napoleon into the house, the sunny Hicks, who was far from a coward
+otherwise, but who had an unreasonable dread of dogs, little or big, was
+about to wax courageous, and join his team-mates, when a wild shout burst
+from Pudge Langdon:
+
+"Run, fellows--_run_! Bildad's put the bulldog on us! Here comes--Caesar
+Napoleon--!"
+
+With a blood-chilling _"Woof! Woof!"_ steadily sounding louder, nearer,
+a streak of color shot across the orchard, from the house, toward the
+affrighted Brigade, while old Bildad's hoarse growl shattered the echoes
+with "Take 'em out o' here, Nap--chaw 'em up, boy!" For a startled second,
+the youths stared at the on-rushing body, shooting toward them through the
+orchard-grass at terrific speed, and then:
+
+"Run!" howled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., terror providing him with wings, as
+per proverb. Down the lane, at a pace that would have done credit to Barney
+Oldfield in his Blitzen Benz, the mosquito-like youth sprinted madly, and
+ever, closer, closer on his trail, sounded that awful "Woof! Woof!" from
+Caesar Napoleon, who, as Hicks well knew, was acting with full authority
+from Bildad! He heard, as he fled frantically, the excited shouts of his
+comrades.
+
+"Beat it, Hicks--he's right after you--run! Run!"
+
+"Jump the fence--he can't get you then--jump!"
+
+"He's right on your trail, Hicks--_sprint_, old man!"
+
+"Make the fence, old man--_jump_ it--and you're _safe_!"
+
+The terrible truth dawned on the frightened youth, as he desperately
+sprinted: the innocent bystander always gets hurt. He had protested against
+the theft of Bildad's cherries, and naturally, the bulldog had kept after
+_him_! But it was too late to stop, for the old adage was extremely
+appropriate, "He who hesitates is lost." He must _make_ that road-gate, and
+tumble over it, in some fashion, or be torn to shreds by Caesar Napoleon,
+the savage dog that the cruel Bildad had sent after the youths.
+
+Nearer loomed the road-gate, appallingly high. Closer sounded the panting
+breath of the ferocious Caesar Napoleon, and his incessant "Woof-woof!"
+became louder. It seemed to the desperate Hicks that the bulldog was at his
+heels, and every instant he expected to feel those sharp teeth take hold of
+his anatomy! Once, the despairing youth imitated Lot's wife and turned his
+head. He saw a body streaking after him, gaining at every jump, also he
+lost speed; so thereafter, he conscientiously devoted his every energy to
+the task in hand, that of making the gate, and getting over it, before
+Caesar Napoleon caught his quarry!
+
+At last, the road-gate, at least ten feet high, to Hicks' fevered
+imagination, came so close that a quick decision was necessary, for Caesar
+Napoleon, also, was in the same zone, and in a few seconds he would
+overhaul the fugitive. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., realizing that a second
+lost, perhaps, might prove fatal to his peace of mind, desperately resolved
+to dash at the gate, and jump; if he succeeded even in striking somewhere
+near the top, and falling over, he would not care, for the bulldog would
+not follow him off Bildad's land. From his comrades, far in the rear, came
+the chorus:
+
+"Jump, Hicks! He's right on your heels!"
+
+Like the immortal Light Brigade, Hicks had no time to reason about
+anything. His but to jump or be bitten summed up the situation. So, with
+a last desperate sprint, a quick dash, he left the ground--luckily, the
+earth was hard, giving him a solid take-off, and he got a splendid spring.
+As he arose In air, al! the training and practicing for form stayed with
+him, and instinctively he turned, writhed, and kicked--
+
+For a fleeting second, he saw the top of the gate beneath his body, and
+he felt a thrill as he beheld twisted strands of barbed wire, cruel and
+jagged, across it; then, with a great sensation of joy, he knew that he
+had cleared the top, and a second later, he landed on the ground, in the
+country road, in a heap.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., that sunny-souled, happy-go-lucky, indolent youth,
+for once in his care-free campus career aroused to strenuous action,
+scrambled wildly to his feet, and forcibly realized the truth of
+Longfellow's, "And things are not-what they seem!" Instead of the
+ferocious, bloodthirsty bulldog, Caesar Napoleon, a huge, half-grown
+St. Bernard pup gamboled inside the gate, frisking about gleefully, and
+exhibiting, even so that Hicks, with all his innate dread of dogs, could
+understand it, a vast friendliness. In fact, he seemed trying to say,
+"That's fun. Come on and play with me some more!"
+
+"Hey, fellows," shrieked the relieved Hicks, "that ain't Caesar Napoleon!
+Why, he just wanted to play."
+
+Bewildered, the members of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade of the
+Bannister College track squad rushed on the scene. To their surprise, they
+found not a savage bulldog, but a clumsy, good-natured St. Bernard puppy,
+who frisked wildly about them, groveled at their feet, and put his huge
+paws on them, with the playfulness of a juvenile elephant.
+
+"Why, it _isn't_ Nappie, for a fact!" gasped Butch. "Oh, I am so glad
+that old Bildad wasn't mean enough to put the bulldog after us, for he is
+dangerous. He scared us, though, and put this pup on our trail. He wanted
+to play, and he thought it all a game, when Hicks fled. Oho! What a joke on
+Hicks."
+
+"I don't care!" grinned Hicks, thus siding with the famous Eva Tanguay.
+"You fellows were fooled, too! You were too _scared_ to run, and if it had
+been Caesar Napoleon, I'd have saved your worthless lives by getting him
+after me! I'll bet Bildad is snickering now, the old reprobate! Why, Tug,
+are you _crazy_?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, indeed, gave indications of lunacy. He marched up to the
+road-gate, and stood close to it, so that the barbed wire top was even with
+his hair; then he backed off, and gazed first at the gate, then at the
+bewildered Hicks, while he grinned at the dazed squad in a Cheshire cat
+style.
+
+"Measure it, someone!" he shouted. "I am nearly six feet tall, and it comes
+even with the top of my dome! Can't you see, you brainless imbeciles, Hicks
+cleared it."
+
+"Wait for me here!" howled big Butch Brewster, climbing the fence and
+starting down the road at a pace that did credit even to that fast
+two-miler. The Brigade, In the absence of their leader, tried to estimate
+the height of the gate, and Hicks, gazing at its barbed-wire top,
+shuddered. The St. Bernard pup, having caused T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for
+once in his indolent life to exert every possible ounce of energy in his
+splinter-frame, groveled at his feet, and strove to express his boundless
+joy at their presence.
+
+Butch Brewster, in fifteen minutes, returned, panting and perspiring,
+bearing a tape-measure, borrowed at the next farm-house. With all the
+solemnity of a sacred rite being performed, the youths waited, as Butch and
+Tug, holding the tape taut, carefully measured from the ground to the top
+of the barbed wire on the gate. Three times they did this, and then, with
+an expression of gladness on his honest countenance, Butch hugged the
+dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while Tug Cardiff howled, "Now for the
+Intercollegiates and your track B, Hicks! You _can_ do five-ten in the
+meet, for Coach Brannigan said you could dear it, if only you did it
+_once_."
+
+"Why--what do you mean, Tug?" quavered Hicks, not daring to allow himself
+to believe the truth. "You--you surely don't mean--"
+
+"I mean, that now you _know_ you can jump that high," boomed Tug, executing
+a weird dance of exultation, In which, the Brigade joined, until it
+resembled a herd of elephants gone insane, "for you have done it--allowing
+for the sag, and everything, that gate is just five feet, ten inches high,
+and--_you cleared it_!"
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen--Hicks, of Bannister, is about to high jump! Hicks
+and McQuade, of Hamilton, are tied for first place at five feet eight
+inches! McQuade has failed three times at five-ten! Hicks' third and last
+trial! Height of bar--five feet ten inches!"
+
+This time, however, it was not big Tug Cardiff, imitating a Ballyhoo
+Bill, and inciting the Bannister youths to hilarity at the expense of the
+sunny-souled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; it was the Official Announcer at the
+Annual State Intercollegiate Field and Track Championships, on Bannister
+Field, and his announcement aroused a tumult of excitement in the Bannister
+section of the stands, as well as among the Gold and Green cinder-path
+stars.
+
+"Come on, Hicks, old man!" urged Butch Brewster, who, with a dozen fully
+as excited comrades of the cheery Hicks, surrounded that splinter-athlete.
+"It's positively your last chance to win your track B, or your letter in
+any sport, and please your Dad! If they lower the bar, and you two jump off
+the tie, McQuade's endurance will bring him out the winner."
+
+"You _can_ clear five-ten!" encouraged Bunch Bingham. "You did it once,
+when you believed Caesar Napoleon was after you. Just summon up that much
+energy now, and clear that bar! Once over, the event and your letter are
+won! Oh, if we only had that bulldog here, to sick on you."
+
+Sad to chronicle, the score-board of the Intercollegiates recorded the
+results of the events, so far, thus:
+
+ HAMILTON ............35 BALLARD .............20 BANNISTER ...........28
+
+It was the last event, and even did Hicks win the high-jump, McQuade's
+second place would easily give old Ham. the Championship. Hence, knowing
+that victory was not booked for an appearance on the Gold and Green
+banners, the Bannister youths, wild for the lovable, popular Hicks to win
+his Bs vociferously pulled for him:
+
+"Come on, Hicks--up and over, old man--it's _easy_!"
+
+"Jump, you Human Grass-Hopper--you can do it!"
+
+"Now or never, Hicks! One big jump does the work!"
+
+"Sick Caesar Napoleon on him, Coach; he'll clear it then!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., casting aside that flamboyant bathrobe, for what he
+believed was the last athletic event of his campus career, stood gazing at
+the cross-bar. One superhuman effort, a great explosion of all his energy,
+such as he had executed when he cleared the gate, thinking Caesar Napoleon
+was after him, and the event was won! He _had_ cleared that height, it was
+within his power. If he failed, as Butch said, the bar would be lowered,
+and then raised until one or the other missed once. McQuade, with his
+superior strength and endurance, must inevitably win, but as he had just
+missed on his third trial at five-ten, if Hicks cleared that height on
+_his_ final chance, the first place was his.
+
+"And my B!" murmured Hicks, tensing his muscles. "Oh, won't my Dad be
+happy? It will help him to realize some of his ambition, when I show him my
+track letter! It is positively my last chance, and I _must_ clear it."
+
+With a vast wave of determined confidence inundating his very being, Hicks
+started for the bar; after those first, peculiar, creeping steps, he had
+just started his gallop, when he heard Tug Cardiff's _basso_, magnified by
+a megaphone, roared:
+
+"All together, fellows--_let 'er go_--"
+
+Then, just as Hicks dug his spikes into the earth, in that short, mad
+sprint that gives the jumper his spring, just as he reached the take-off,
+a perfect explosion of noise startled him, and he caught a sound that
+frightened him, tensed as he was:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Woof! Woof! Look out, Hicks, Caesar Napoleon
+is after you!"
+
+Psychology Is inexplicable. Ever afterward, Hicks' comrades of that
+cross-country run averred strenuously that their roaring through
+megaphones, in concert, imitating Caesar Napoleon's savage bark at the
+psychological moment, flung the mosquito-like youth clear of the cross-bar
+and won him the event and his B. Hicks, however, as fervidly denied this
+statement, declaring that he would have won, anyhow, because he had
+summoned up the determination to do it! So it can not be stated just what
+bearing on his jump the plot of Butch Brewster really had. In truth, that
+behemoth had entertained a wild idea of actually hiring old Bildad and
+Caesar Napoleon to appear at the moment Hicks started for his last trial,
+but this weird scheme was abandoned!
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had escaped from the
+riotous Bannister students, delirious with joy at the victory of the
+beloved youth, the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade, capturing the
+grass-hopper Senior, gave him a shock second only to that which he had
+experienced when first he believed Caesar Napoleon was on his trail.
+
+"Perhaps our barking didn't make you jump it!" said Beef McNaughton, when
+Hicks indignantly denied that he had been scared over the cross-bar, "but
+indirectly, old man, we helped you to win! If we had not put up a hoax on
+you--"
+
+"A _hoax_?" queried the surprised Hicks. "What do you mean--hoax?"
+
+"It was all a frame-up!" grinned Butch Brewster, triumphantly. "We paid old
+Bildad five dollars to play his part, and as an actor, he has Booth and
+Barrymore backed off the stage! We got Coach Brannigan to send you along
+with us on the cross-country jog, and your absurd dread of dogs, Hicks,
+made it easy! Bildad, per instructions, produced Caesar Napoleon, and
+scared you. Then, with a telescope, he watched us, and when I gave the
+signal, he let loose Bob, the harmless St. Bernard pup, on our trail.
+
+"The pup, as he always does, chased after strangers, ready to play. We
+yelled for you to run, and you were so _scared_, you insect, you didn't
+wait to see the dog. Even when you looked back, in your alarm, you didn't
+know it was not Caesar Napoleon, for his grim visage was seared on your
+brain--I mean, where your brain ought to be! And even had you seen it
+wasn't the bulldog, you would have been frightened, all the same. But I
+confess, Hicks, when you sailed over that high gate, it was one on _us_."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drew a deep breath, and then a Cheshire cat grin
+came to his cherubic countenance. So, after all, it had been a hoax; there
+had not been any peril. No wonder these behemoths had so courageously taken
+the cherries! But, beyond a doubt, the joke _had_ helped him to win his
+B. It had shown him he could clear five feet, ten inches, for he had done
+it--and, in the meet, when the crucial moment came, the knowledge that he
+_had_ jumped that high, and, therefore, could do it, helped--where the
+thought that he never had cleared it would have dragged him down. He had at
+last won his B, a part of his beloved Dad's great ambition was realized,
+and--
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth that sunny-souled, irrepressible
+youth, swaggering a trifle, "It was my mighty will-power, my terrific
+determination, that took me over the cross-bar, and not--_not_ your
+imitation of--"
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof!" roared the "Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade" in
+thunderous chorus. "Sick him--Caesar Napoleon--!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+
+
+"Come on, Butch! Atta boy--some fin, old top! Say, you Beef--you're asleep
+at the switch. What time do you want to be called? More pep there,
+Monty--bust that little old bulb, Roddy! Aw, rotten! _Say_, Ballard, your
+playing will bring the Board of Health down on you--why don't you bring
+your first team out? Umpire? What--do you call that an umpire? Why, he's
+a highway robber, a bandit. Put a 'Please Help the Blind' sign on that
+hold-up artist!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain of the Bannister College baseball squad,
+navigating down the third-floor corridor of Bannister Hall, the Senior
+dormitory, laden with suitcases, bat-bags, and other impedimenta, as Mr.
+Julius Caesar says, and vastly resembling a bell-hop in action, paused in
+sheer bewilderment on the threshold of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cozy room.
+
+"Hicks!" stormed the bewildered Butch, wrathfully, "what in the name of Sam
+Hill _are_ you doing? Are you crazy, you absolutely insane lunatic? This
+is a study-hour, and even if _you_ don't possess an intellect, some of the
+fellows want to exercise their brains an hour or so! Stop that ridiculous
+action."
+
+The spectacle Butch Brewster beheld was indeed one to paralyze that
+pachydermic collegian, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible Senior, danced madly about on the tiger-skin rug in midfloor,
+evidently laboring under the delusion that he was a lunatical Hottentot at
+a tribal dance; he waved his arms wildly, like a signaling brakeman, or
+howled through a big megaphone, and about his toothpick structure was
+strung his beloved banjo, on which the blithesome youth twanged at times an
+accompaniment to his jargon:
+
+"Come on, Skeet, take a lead (_plunkety-plunk_!) Say, d'ye wanta marry
+first base--divorce yourself from that sack! (_plunk-plunk_!) _Oh_, you
+bonehead--steal--you won't get arrested for it! Hi! Yi! _Ouch_, Butch! Oh,
+I'll be good--"
+
+At this moment, the indignant Butch abruptly terminated T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, noisy monologue by seizing that splinter-youth firmly by the scruff
+of the neck and forcibly hurling him on the davenport. Seeing his loyal
+class-mate's resemblance to a Grand Central Station baggage-smasher, the
+irrepressible Senior forthwith imitated a hotel-clerk:
+
+"Front!" howled the grinning Hicks, to an imaginary bellboy, "Show this
+gentleman to Number 2323! Are you alone, sir, or just by yourself? I think
+you will like the room-it faces on the coal-chute, and has hot and cold
+folding-doors, and running water when the roof leaks! The bed is made once
+a week, regularly, and--"
+
+"Hicks, you Infinitesimal Atom of Nothing!" growled big Butch, ominously.
+"What were you doing, creating all that riot, as I came down the corridor?
+What's the main idea, anyway, of--"
+
+"Heed, friend of my campus days," chortled the graceless Hicks, keeping
+a safe distance from his behemoth comrade, "tomorrow-your baseball
+aggregation plays Ballard College, at that knowledge-factory, for the
+Championship of the State. Because nature hath endowed me with the
+Herculean structure of a Jersey mosquito, I am developing a 56-lung-power
+voice, and I need practice, as _I_ am to be the only student-rooter at the
+game tomorrow! Q.E.D.! And as for any Bannister student, except perhaps
+Theophilus Opperdyke and Thor, desiring to investigate the interiors of
+their lexicons tonight, I prithee, just periscope the campus."
+
+"I guess you are right, Hicks!" grinned Butch Brewster, as he looked from
+the window, down on an indescribably noisy scene. "For once, your riotous
+tumult went unheard. Say, get your traveling-bag ready, and leave that
+pestersome banjo behind, if you want to go with the nine!"
+
+Several members of the Gold and Green nine, embryo American and National
+League stars, roosted on the Senior Fence between the Gymnasium and the
+Administration Building, with, suitcases and bat-bags on the grass. In a
+few minutes old Dan Flannagan's celebrated jitney-bus would appear in the
+offing, coming to transport the Bannister athletes downtown to the station,
+for the 9 P.M. express to Philadelphia. Incited by Cheer-Leaders Skeezicks
+McCracken and Snake Fisher, several hundred youths encouraged the nine,
+since, because of approaching final exams., they were barred by Faculty
+order from accompanying the team to Ballard. In thunderous chorus they
+chanted:
+
+ "One more Job for the undertaker!
+ More work for the tombstone maker!
+ In the local ceme_tery_, they are very--very--_very_
+ Busy on a brand-new grave for--Ballard!"
+
+As the lovable Hicks expressed it, "'Coming events cast their shadows
+before.' Commencement overshadows our joyous campus existence!" However, no
+Bannister acquaintance of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., could detect wherein the
+swiftly approaching final separation from his Alma Mater had affected in
+the least that happy-go-lucky, care-free, irrepressible youth. If anything,
+it seemed that Hicks strove to fight off thoughts of the end of his golden
+campus years, using as weapons his torturesome saengerfests, his Beefsteak
+Busts down at Jerry's, and various other pastimes, to the vast indignation
+of his good friend and class-mate, Butch Brewster, who tried futilely to
+lecture him into the proper serious mood with which Seniors must sail
+through Commencement!
+
+"You are a Senior, Hicks, a Senior!" Butch would explain wrathfully. "You
+are popularly supposed to be dignified, and here you persist in acting like
+a comedian in a vaudeville show! I suppose you intend to appear on the
+stage, and, when handed your sheepskin, respond by twanging your banjo and
+roaring a silly ballad."
+
+Yet, the cheery Hicks had been very busy, since that memorable day when,
+thanks to Caesar Napoleon and the hoax of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+of the track squad, he had cleared the cross-bar at five-ten,
+and won the event and his white B! Mr. T. Haviland Hicks, Sr., overjoyed
+at his son's achievement, had sent him a generous check, which the youth
+much needed, and had promised to be present at the annual Athletic
+Association Meeting, at Commencement, when the B's were awarded
+deserving athletes, which caused Hicks as much joy as the pink slip.
+With his final study sprint for the Senior Finals, his duties as
+team-manager of the baseball nine, his preparations for Commencement, his
+social duties at the Junior Prom., and multifarious other details
+coincident to graduation, the heedless Hicks had not found time to be
+sorrowful at the knowledge that it soon would end, forever, that he must
+say "Farewell, Alma Mater," and leave the campus and corridors of old
+Bannister; yet soon even Hicks' ebullient spirits must fail, for
+Commencement was a trifle over a week off.
+
+"Hicks, you lovable, heedless, irrepressible wretch," said Big Butch,
+affectionately, as the two class-mates thrilled at the scene. "Does it
+penetrate that shrapnel-proof concrete dome of yours that the Ballard game
+tomorrow is the final athletic contest of my, and likewise your, campus
+career at old Bannister?"
+
+"Similar thoughts has smote my colossal intellect, Butch!" responded the
+bean-pole Hicks, gladsomely. "But--why seek to overshadow this joyous scene
+with somber reflections? You-should-worry. You have annexed sufficient B's,
+were they different, to make up an alphabet. You've won your letter on
+gridiron, track, and baseball field, and you've been team-captain of
+everything twice! Why, therefore, sheddest thou them crocodile tears?"
+
+"Not for myself, thou sunny-souled idler!" announced Butch, generously,
+"But for _thee_! I prithee, since you pritheed me a few moments hence, let
+that so-called colossal intellect of yours stride back along the corridors
+of Time, until it reaches a certain day toward the close of our Freshman
+year. Remember, you had made a hilarious failure of every athletic event
+you tried-football, basketball, track, and baseball; you had just made a
+tremendous farce of the Freshman-Sophomore track meet, and to me, your
+loyal comrade, you uttered these rash words, 'Before I graduate from old
+Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!'
+
+"I reiterate and repeat, tomorrow's game with Ballard is the last chance
+you will have. There is no possibility that you, with your well-known lack
+of baseball ability, will get in the game, and--your track B, won in the
+high-jump, is the only B you have won! Now, do you still maintain that you
+will make good that rash vow?"
+
+"'Where there's a will, there's a way.' 'Never say die.' 'While there's
+life, there's hope.' 'Don't give up the ship.' 'Fight to the last ditch.'
+'In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as _fail_,'"
+quoth the irrepressible Hicks, all in a breath. "As long as there is an
+infinitesimal fraction of a chance left, I repeat, just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+"You haven't got a chance in the world!" Butch assured him, consolingly.
+"You did manage to get into one football game, for a minute, and you were a
+'Varsity player that long. By sticking to it, you have won your track B in
+the high-jump, thanks to your grass-hopper build, and we rejoice at your
+reward! Your Dad is happy that you've won a B, so why not be sensible, and
+cease this ridiculous talk of winning your B in _three_ sports, when you
+can see it is preposterously out of the question, absolutely impossible--"
+
+It was not that Butch. Brewster did not _want_ his sunny classmate to win
+his B in three sports, or that he would have failed to rejoice at Hicks'
+winning the triple honor. Had such a thing seemed within the bounds of
+possibility, Butch, big-hearted and loyal, would have been as happy as
+Hicks, or his Dad. But what the behemoth athlete became wrathful at was the
+obviously lunatical way in which the cheery Hicks, now that his college
+years were almost ended, parrot-like repeated, "Oh, just leave it to
+Hicks!" when he must know all hope was dead. In truth, T, Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., in pretending to maintain still that he would make good the rash
+vow of his Freshman year, had no purpose but to arouse his comrade's
+indignation; but Butch, serious of nature, believed there really lurked in
+Hicks' system some germs of hope.
+
+"We never know, old top!" chuckled Hicks, though he was _sure_ he could
+never fulfill that promise, as he had not played three-fourths of a season
+on both the football and the baseball teams, "Something may show up at the
+last minute, and--"
+
+At that moment, something evidently did show up, on the campus below, for
+the enthusiastic students howled in: thunderous chorus, as the "Honk!
+Honk!" of a Claxon was heard, "Here he comes! All together, fellows--the
+Bannister yell for the nine--then for good old Dan Flannagan!"
+
+As Hicks and Butch watched from the window, old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus,
+to the discordant blaring of a horn, progressed up the driveway, even as it
+had done on that night in September, when it transported to the campus
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. Amid salvos of
+applause from the Bannister youths, and blasts of the Claxon, old Dan
+brought "The Dove" to a stop before the Senior Fence, and bowed to the
+nine, grinning genially the while.
+
+"The car waits at the door, sir!" spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., touching
+his cap after the fashion of an English butler, before seizing a bat-bag,
+and his suit-case. "As team manager, I must attempt to force into Skeet
+Wigglesworth's dome how he and the five subs, are to travel on the C. N. &
+Q., to Eastminster, from Baltimore. Come on, Butch, we're off--"
+
+"You are always off!" commented Butch, good-humoredly, as he seized his
+baggage and followed the mosquito-like Hicks from the room, downstairs, and
+out on the campus. Here the assembled youths, with yells, cheers, and songs
+sandwiched between humorous remarks to Dan Flannagan, watched the thrilling
+spectacle of the Gold and Green nine, with the Team Manager and five
+substitutes, fifteen in all, squeeze into and atop of Dan Flannagan's
+jitney-Ford.
+
+"Let me check you fellows off," said Hicks, importantly, peering into the
+jitney, for he, as Team Manager, had to handle the traveling expenses.
+"Monty Merriweather, Roddy Perkins, Biff Pemberton. Butch Brewster, Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Beef McNaughton, Cherub Challoner, Ichabod Crane, Don
+Carterson; that is the regular nine, and are you five subs, present? O. K.
+Skeet, climb out here a second."
+
+Little Skeet Wigglesworth, the brilliant short-stop, climbed out with
+exceeding difficulty, and facing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., he saluted in
+military fashion. The team manager, consulting a timetable of the C. N.
+&.Q. railroad, fixed him with a stern look.
+
+"Skeet," he spoke distinctly, "now, _get this_--myself and eight regulars,
+_nine_ in all, will take the 9 P. M. express for Philadelphia, and stay
+there all night. Tomorrow, at 8 A. M., we leave Broad Street Station for
+Eastminster, arriving at 11 A. M. _Now_ I have a lot of unused mileage on
+the C. N. & Q., and I want to use it up before Commencement. So, heed: you
+want to go _via_ Baltimore, to see your parents. You take the 9.20 P. M.
+express tonight, to Baltimore, and go from that city in the morning, to
+Eastminster, on the C. N, & Q.--it's the only road. And take the five subs
+with you, to devour the mileage. Now, has that penetrated thy bomb-proof
+dome?"
+
+"_Sure;_ you don't have to deliver a Chautauqua lecture, Hicks!" grinned
+Skeet. "Say, what time does my train leave Baltimore, in the A.M., for
+Eastminster?"
+
+"Let's see." T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., handing the mileage-books to the
+shortstop, focused his intellect on the C. N. & Q. timetable. "Oh, yes--you
+leave Union Station, Baltimore, at 7:30 A.M., arriving at Eastminster at
+noon; _it is the only train, you can get,_ to make it in time for the game,
+so remember the hour--7.30 A.M.! Here, stuff the timetable in your pocket."
+
+In a few moments, the team and substitutes had been jammed into old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney, and the Bannister youths on the campus concentrated
+their interest on the sunny Hicks, who, grinning _à la_ Cheshire cat,
+climbed atop of "The Dove," which old Dan was having as much trouble to
+start as he had experienced for over twenty years with the late Lord
+Nelson, his defunct quadruped. Seeing Hicks abstract a Louisville
+Slugger from the bat-bag, the students roared facetious remarks at the
+irrepressible youth:
+
+"Home-run Hicks--he made a home-run--_on a strike-out_!"--"Put Hicks in
+the game, Captain Butch--he will win it."--"Watch Hicks--he'll pull
+some _bonehead_ play!"--"Bring home the Championship, but--lose Hicks
+somewhere!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the battered engine of the jit. yielded to
+old Dan's cranking, and kindly consented to start, surveyed the yelling
+students, seized a bat, and struck an attitude which he fatuously believed
+was that of Ty Cobb, about to make a hit; taking advantage of a lull in the
+tumult, the lovable youth howled at the hilarious crowd:
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks! I will win the game and the _Championship_, for my
+Alma Mater, and--I'll do it by my headwork!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR'S. HEADWORK
+
+
+"Play Ball! Say, Bannister, are you _afraid_ to play?"
+
+"Call the game, Mr. Ump.--make 'em play ball!"
+
+"Batter up! Forfeit the game to Ballard, Umpire!"
+
+"Lend 'em Ballard's bat-boy-to make a full nine!"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, his honest countenance, as a moving-picture
+director would express it, "registering wrathful dismay," lumbered toward
+the Ballard Field concrete dug-out, in which the Gold and Green players
+had entrenched themselves, while from the stands, the Ballard cohorts
+vociferated their intense impatience at the inexplicable delay.
+
+"We have _got_ to play," he raged, striding up and down before the bench.
+"The game is ten minutes late now, and the crowd is restless! And here we
+have only _eight_ 'Varsity players, and no one to make the ninth--not even
+a sub.! Oh, I could--"
+
+"That brainless Skeet Wigglesworth!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who, arrayed like a lily of the field, reposed his splinter-structure on
+the bench with his comrades. "In some way, he managed to _miss_ that train
+from Baltimore! They didn't come on the noon C, N. & Q. train, and there
+isn't another one until night. My directions were as plain as a German
+war-map, and it beats me how Skeet got befuddled!"
+
+Gloom, as thick and abysmal as a London fog, hovered over the Bannister
+dug-out. On the concrete bench, the seven Gold and Green athletes, Beef,
+Monty, Roddy, Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, with Team Manager T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., stared silently at Captain Butch Brewster, who seemed in
+imminent peril of exploding. Something probably never before heard of in
+the annals of athletic history had happened. Bannister College, about to
+play Ballard the big game for the State Championship, had lost a short-stop
+and five substitutes, in some unfathomable manner, and it was impossible
+to round up one other member of the Gold and Green baseball squad. True, a
+hundred loyal alumni were in the stands, but only _bona fide_ students, of
+course, were eligible to play the game, and--the Faculty ruling had kept
+them at old Bannister!
+
+"Here comes Ballard's Manager," spoke Beef McNaughton, as a brisk,
+clean-cut youth advanced, a yellow envelope in hand. "Why, he has a
+telegram. Do you suppose Skeet actually had _brains_ enough to wire an
+explanation?"
+
+"Telegram for Captain Brewster!" announced the Ballard collegian, giving
+the message to that surprised behemoth. "It was sent in my care--collect,
+and the sender, name of Wigglesworth, fired one to me personally, telling
+me to deliver this one to Captain Butch Brewster, and collect from Team
+Manager Hicks--he surely didn't bother to save money! I've been out of
+town, and just got back to the campus; of course, the telegrams could not
+be delivered to anyone but me, hence the delay."
+
+Big Butch, thanking the Ballard Team Manager, and assuring him that the
+charges he had paid would be advanced to him after the game, ripped open
+the yellow envelope, and drew out the message. Like a thunder-storm
+gathering on the horizon, a dark expression came to good Butch's
+countenance, and when he had perused the lengthy telegram, he transfixed
+the startled and bewildered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with an angry glare:
+
+"_Bonehead_!" he raged, apparently controlling himself with a superhuman
+effort. "Oh, you lunatic, you wretch, villain--you--_you_--"
+
+To the supreme amazement and dismay of the puzzled Hicks, Beef, next in
+line, after _he_ had scanned Skeet's telegram, followed Butch's example,
+for _he_ glowered at the perturbed youth, and heaped condemnations on his
+devoted head. And so on down the line on the bench, until Monty, Roddy,
+Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, reading the message, joined in gazing
+indignantly at their gladsome Team Manager, who, as the eight arose _en
+masse_ and advanced on him, sought to flee the wrath to come.
+
+"Safety first!" quoth T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. "'Mine not to reason why, mine
+but to haste and fly,' or--be crushed! Ouch! Beef, Monty--have a heart!"
+
+Captured by Beef and Monty Merriweather, as he frantically scrambled up
+the steps of the concrete dug-out, the grinning Hicks was held in the firm
+grasp of that behemoth, Butch Brewster, aided by the skyscraper Ichabod,
+while Cherub Challoner thrust the telegram before his eyes. In words of
+fire that burned themselves into his brain--something his colleagues
+denied he possessed--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., saw the explanation of Skeet
+Wigglesworth's missing the train from Baltimore that A. M. Dazed, the sunny
+youth read the message on which over-charges must be paid:
+
+
+"Hicks--you bonehead! The time-table of the C.N. & Q. you gave me was an
+old one--schedule revised two weeks ago! Train now leaves Balto. at 6.55
+A.M.! When we got to station at 7.05 A.M. she had went! No train to Ballard
+till night! I and subs, had to wire Bannister for money to get back on!
+You mis-manager--the _head-work_ you boasted of is boneheadwork! Pay the
+charges on this, you brainless insect! I'll send it to Butch, for you'd
+never show it to him if I sent it to you! Indignantly--
+
+"SKEET."
+
+
+"_Mis_-manager is _right_!" seethed Captain Butch, for once in his campus
+career really wrathy at the lovable Hicks. "We are in a fix--eight players,
+and the crowd howling for the game to start. Oh, I could jump overboard,
+and drag you with me!"
+
+"Bonehead! Bonehead!" chorused the Gold and Green players, indignantly.
+"Gave Skeet an out-of-date time-table--never looked at the date! Let's drag
+him out before the crowd, and announce to them his brilliant headwork!"
+
+Captain Butch, "up against it," to employ a slightly slang expression,
+gazed across Ballard Field. In the stands, the students responding
+thunderously to their cheer-leaders' megaphoned requests, roared, "Play
+ball! Play ball! Play ball!" Gay pennants and banners fluttered in the
+glorious sunshine of the June day. It was a bright scene, but its glory
+awakened no happiness in the heart of the Bannister leader, as his gaze
+wandered to the somewhat flabbergasted expression on the cheery Hicks'
+face. That inevitably sunny youth, however, managed to conjure up a faint
+resemblance of his Cheshire cat grin, and following his usual habit of
+letting nothing daunt his gladsome spirit, he croaked feebly: "Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks! I will--"
+
+"Play the game!" thundered Butch, inspired. "Beef, see the umpire and say
+we'll be ready as soon as we get Hicks into togs-show him the telegram, and
+explain our delay! I'll shift Monty from the outfield to Skeet's job at
+short, and put this diluted imitation of something human in the field, to
+do his worst. Come to the field-house, you poor fish--"
+
+"Oh, Butch, I can't--I just _can't_!" protested the alarmed Hicks,
+helpless, as the big athlete towed him from the trench, "I--I can't play
+ball, and I don't want to be shown up before all that mob! It's all right
+at Bannister, in class-games, but--Oh, can't you play the game with _eight_
+fellows?"
+
+"That is just what we intend to do!" said Butch, with grim humor.
+"But--we'll have a dummy in the ninth position, to make the people believe
+we have a full nine! Cheer up, Hicks--'In the bright lexicon of youth
+there ain't no such word as fail,' you say! As for your making a fool of
+yourself, you haven't brains enough to be classed as one! Now--you'll pay
+dearly for your bonehead play."
+
+Ten minutes later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as agitated as a _prima donna_
+making her début with the Metropolitan: Opera Company, decorated the
+Bannister bench, arrayed in one of the substitutes' baseball suits. It
+was too large for his splinter-structure, so that it flapped grotesquely,
+giving him a startling resemblance to a scarecrow escaped from a cornfield.
+With the thermometer of his spirits registering zero, the dismayed youth,
+whose punishment was surely fitting the crime, heard the Umpire bellow:
+
+"Play ball! Batter up! Bannister at bat--Ballard in the field!"
+
+Hicks, that sunny-souled youth, had often daydreamed of himself in a big
+game of baseball, for his college. He had vividly imagined a ninth inning
+crisis, three of the enemy on base, two out, and a long fly, good for a
+home-run, soaring over his head. How he had sprinted--back--back--and at
+the last second, reached high in the air, grabbing the soaring spheroid,
+and saving the game for his Alma Mater! Often, too, he had stepped up to
+bat in the final frame, with two out, one on base, and Bannister a run
+behind. With the vast crowd silent and breathless, he had walloped the
+ball, over the left-field fence, and jogged around the bases, thrilling to
+the thunderous cheers of his comrades. But now--
+
+_"Oooo!"_ shivered Hicks, as though he had just stepped beneath an icy
+shower-bath. "I wish I could run away. I just _know_ they'll knock every
+ball to me, and I couldn't catch one with a sheriff and posse!"
+
+However, since, despite the blithesome Hicks' lack of confidence, it was
+that sunny Senior, after all, whom fate--or fortune, accordingly as
+each nine viewed it--destined to be the hero of the Bannister-Ballard
+Championship baseball contest, the game itself is shoved into such
+insignificance that it can be briefly chronicled by recording the events
+that led up to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, self-prophesied "head-work."
+
+Without Skeet Wigglesworth at shortstop, with the futile Hicks in
+right-field, and the confidence of the nine shaken, Captain Butch Brewster
+and the Gold and Green players went into the big game, unable to shake off
+the feeling that they would be defeated. And when Pitcher Don Carterson,
+in his half of the frame, passed the first two Ballard batters, the belief
+deepened to conviction. However, a fast double play and a long fly ended
+the inning without damage, and Bannister, likewise, had failed to make an
+impression on the score-board. In the second, Don promptly showed that he
+was striving to rival the late Cy Morgan, of the Athletics, for he promptly
+hit two batters and passed the third, whereupon, as sporting-writers
+express it, he was "derricked" by Captain Butch.
+
+Placing the deposed twirler in left field, Captain Brewster, as a last
+resort, believing the game hopelessly lost, with his star pitcher having
+failed, and his relief slabmen, thanks to Hicks, mislaid _en route_, sent
+out to the box one Ichabod Crane, brought in from the position given to
+Don Carterson. This cadaverous, skyscraper Senior, who always announced,
+himself as originating, "Back at Bedwell Center, Pa., where I come from--"
+was well known to fame as the "Champion Horse-Shoe Pitcher of Bucks
+County," but his baseball pitching was rather uncertain; like the girl in
+the nursery jingle, Ichabod, as a twirler, "When he was good, he was very,
+very good, and when he was wild, he was _horrid_!" Like Christy Mathewson,
+after he had pitched a few balls, he knew whether or not he was in
+shape for the game, and so did the spectators. With terrific speed and
+bewildering curves, Ichabod would have made a star, but his wildness
+prevented, and only on very rare days could he control the ball.
+
+Luckily for old Bannister's chances of victory and the Championship, this
+was one of the elongated Ichabod's rare days. He ambled into the box, with
+the bases full, and promptly struck out a batter. The next rolled to first,
+forcing out the runner at home, while the third hitter under Ichabod's
+régime drove out a long fly to center-field. Thus the game settled to one
+of the most memorable contests that Ballard Field had ever witnessed, a
+pitchers' battle between the awkward, bean-pole youth from "Bedwell Center,
+Pa.," and Bob Forsythe, the crack Ballard twirler. It was a fight long
+to be remembered, with hits as scarce as auks' eggs, and runs out of the
+reckoning, for six innings.
+
+At the start of the seventh, with the Ballard rooters standing and
+thundering, "The lucky seventh! Ballard--win the game in the lucky
+seventh!" the score was 0-0. Only two hits had been made off Forsythe, of
+Ballard, whose change of pace had the Bannister nine at his mercy, and
+but three off Ichabod, who had superb control of his dazzling speed. T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cavorting in right field, had made the only error of
+the contest, dropping an easy fly that fell into his hands after he had run
+bewilderedly in circles, when any good fielder could have stood still and
+captured it; however, since he got the ball to second in time to hold the
+runner at third, no harm resulted.
+
+"Hold 'em, Bannister, _hold_ 'em!" entreated Butch Brewster, as they went
+to the field at their end of the lucky seventh, not having scored. "Do your
+best, Hicks, old man--never mind their Jokes. If you can't _catch_
+the ball, just get it to second, or first, without delay! Pitch ball,
+Ichabod--three innings to hold 'em!"
+
+But it was destined to be the lucky seventh for Ballard. An error on a hard
+chance, for Roddy Perkins, at third, placed a runner on first. Ichabod
+struck out a hitter, and the runner stole second, aided somewhat by the
+umpire. The next player flew out, sacrificing the runner to third; then--an
+easy fly traveled toward the paralyzed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one that
+anybody with the most infinitesimal baseball ability could have corralled,
+as Butch said, "with his eyes blindfolded, and his hands tied behind him!"
+But Hicks, who possessed absolutely _no_ baseball talent, though he made
+a desperate try, succeeded in doing an European juggling act for five
+heartbreaking seconds, after which he let the law of gravity act on the
+sphere, so that it descended to terra firma. Hence, the "Lucky Seventh"
+ended with the score: Ballard, 1; Bannister, 0; and the Ballard cohorts in
+a state bordering on lunacy!
+
+"Oh, I've done it now--I've lost the game and the Championship!" groaned
+the crushed Hicks, as he stumbled toward the Bannister bench. "First I made
+that bonehead play, giving Skeet an old time-table I had on hand, and not
+telling him to get one at the station. How was _I_ to know the old railroad
+would change the schedule, within two weeks of this game? And now--I've
+made the error that gives Ballard the Championship. If I hadn't pulled that
+boner, Skeet would be here, and the regular right-fielder would have had
+that fly. What a glorious climax to my athletic career at old Bannister!"
+
+Hicks' comrades were too generous, or heartbroken, to condemn the sorrowful
+youth, as he trailed to the dug-out, but the Ballard rooters had absolutely
+no mercy, and they panned him in regulation style. In fact, all through
+the game, Hicks expressed himself as being butchered by the fans to make a
+Ballard holiday, for he struck out with unfailing regularity at bat, and
+dropped everything in the field, so that the rooters jeered him, whenever
+he stepped to the plate, and--it was quite different from the good-natured
+ridicule of his comrades, back at old Bannister.
+
+"Never mind, Hicks," said good Butch Brewster, brokenly, seeing how
+sorrow-stricken his sunny classmate was, "We'll beat 'em--yet! We bat this
+inning, and in the ninth maybe someone will knock a home-run for us, and
+tie the score."
+
+The eighth Inning was the lucky one for the Gold and Green. Monty
+Merriweather opened with a clean two-base hit to left, and advanced to
+third on Biff Pemberton's sacrifice to short. Butch, trying to knock a
+home-run, struck out-_à la_ "Cactus" Cravath in the World's Series; but the
+lanky Ichabod, endeavoring to bunt, dropped a Texas-Leaguer over second,
+and the score was tied, though the sky-scraper twirler was caught off base
+a moment later. And, though Ballard fought hard in the last of the eighth,
+Ichabod displayed big-league speed, and retired two hitters by the
+strike-out route, while the third popped out to first.
+
+"The _ninth_ Inning!" breathed Beef McNaughton, picking up his Louisville
+Slugger, as he strode to the plate. "Come on, boys--we will win the
+Championship _right now_. Get one run, and Ichabod will hold Ballard one
+more time!"
+
+Perhaps the pachydermic Beef's grim attitude unnerved the wonderful Bob
+Forsythe, for he passed that elephantine youth. However, he regained his
+splendid control, and struck out Cherub Challoner on three pitched balls.
+After this, it was a shame to behold the Ballard first-baseman drop the
+ball, when Don Carterson grounded to third, and would have been thrown
+out with ease--with two on base, and one out, Roddy Perkins made a sharp
+single, on which the two runners advanced a base. Now, with the sacks
+filled, and with only one out--
+
+"It's all over!" mourned Captain Butch Brewster, rocking back and forth on
+the bench. "Hicks--is--at--bat!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his bat wobbling, and his knees acting in a similar
+fashion, refusing to support even that fragile frame, staggered toward the
+plate, like a martyr. A tremendous howl of unearthly joy went up from the
+stands, for Hicks had struck out every time yet.
+
+"Three pitched balls, Bob!" was the cry. "Strike him out! It's all over but
+the shouting! He's scared to death, Forsythe--he can't hit a barn-door
+with a scatter-gun! One--two--three--out! Here's where Ballard wins the
+Championship."
+
+Twice the grinning Bob Forsythe cut loose with blinding speed--twice the
+extremely alarmed Hicks dodged back, and waved a feeble Chautauqua salute
+at the ball he never even saw! Then--trying to "cut the inside corner" with
+a fast inshoot, Forsythe's control wavered a trifle, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., saw the ball streaking toward him! The paralyzed youth felt like a man
+about to be shot by a burglar. He could feel the bail thud against him,
+feel the terrific shock; and yet--a thought instinctively flashed on him,
+he remembered, in a flash, what a tortured Monty Merriweather had shouted,
+as he wobbled to bat:
+
+"Get a base on balls, or--if you can't _make_ a hit--_get hit_!"
+
+If he got hit--it meant a run forced in, as the bases were full! That, in
+all probability, would give old Bannister the Championship, for Ichabod was
+invincible. It is not likely that the dazed Hicks thought all this out, and
+weighed it against the agony of getting hit by Forsythe's speed. The truth
+is, the paralyzed youth was too petrified by fear to dodge, and that before
+he could avoid it, the speeding spheroid crashed against his noble brow
+with a sickening impact.
+
+All went black before him, T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., pale and limp, crumpled,
+and slid to the ground, senseless; therefore, he failed to hear the roar
+from the Bannister bench, from the loyal Gold and Green rooters in the
+stands, as big Beef lumbered across the plate with what proved later to be
+the winning run. He did not hear the Umpire shout: "Take your base!"
+
+ "What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ He was never a star in the baseball game,
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks-he's all right!"
+
+"Honk! Honk!" Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, rattling up the driveway,
+bearing back to the Bannister campus the victorious Gold and Green nine,
+and the State Intercollegiate Baseball Championship, though the hour was
+midnight, found every student on the grass before the Senior Fence! Over
+three hundred leather-lunged youths, aided by the Bannister Band, and every
+known noise-making device, hailed "The Dove," as that unseaworthy craft
+halted before them, with the baseball nine inside, and on top. However, the
+terrific tumult stilled, as the bewildered collegians caught the refrain
+from the exuberant players:
+
+ "He was never a star in the baseball game--
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!"
+
+"Hicks did what?" shrieked Skeezicks McCracken, voicing through a megaphone
+the sentiment of the crowd. Captain Butch had simply telegraphed the final
+score, so old Bannister was puzzled to hear the team lauding T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., who, still white and weak, with a bandage around his classic
+forehead, maintained a phenomenal quiet, atop of "The Dove," leaning
+against Butch Brewster.
+
+"Fellows," shouted Butch, despite Hicks' protest, rising to his feet on the
+roof of the "jit."--"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., today won the game and the
+Championship! Listen--"
+
+The vast crowd of erstwhile clamorous youths stood spellbound, as Captain
+Butch Brewster, in graphic sentences, described the game--Don Carterson's
+failure, Ichabod's sensational pitching, Hicks' errors, and--the wonderful
+manner in which the futile youth had won the Championship! As little Skeet
+Wigglesworth and the five substitutes, who had returned that afternoon, had
+spread the story of Hicks' bonehead play, old Bannister had turned out to
+ridicule and jeer good-naturedly the sunny youth, but now they learned that
+Hicks had been forced by his own mistake into the Big Game, and had won it!
+Of course, his comrades knew it had been through no ability of his, but the
+knowledge that he had been knocked senseless by Forsythe's great speed, and
+had suffered so that his college might score, thrilled them.
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" thundered Thor, he who at one time would
+have called this riot foolishness, and forgetting that the nine had just
+chanted the response to this query.
+
+"He's all right!" chorused the collegians, in ecstasy.
+
+"Who's all right?" demanded John Thorwald, his blond head towering over
+those of his comrades. To him, now, there was nothing silly about this
+performance!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" came the shout, and the band fanfared, while the
+exultant collegians shouted, sang, whistled, and created an indescribable
+tumult with their noise-making devices. For five minutes the ear-splitting
+din continued, a wonderful tribute to the lovable, popular youth, and then
+it stilled so suddenly that the result was startling, for--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., swaying on his feet arose, and stood on the roof of the "jit."
+
+With that heart-warming Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance, the
+irrepressible Hicks seized a Louisville Slugger, assumed a Home-Run Baker
+batting pose, and shouted to his breathlessly waiting comrades:
+
+"Fellows, I vowed I would win that baseball game and the Championship for
+my Alma Mater by my headwork! With the bases full, and the score a tie, the
+Ballard pitcher hit me in the head with the ball, forcing in the run that
+won for old Ballard--now, if that wasn't _headwork_--"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+
+
+ "We have come to the close of our college days.
+ Golden campus years soon must end;
+ From Bannister we shall go our ways--
+ And friend shall part from friend!
+ On our Alma Mater now we gaze,
+ And our eyes are filled with tears;
+ For we've come to the close of our college days,
+ And the end of our campus years!"
+
+Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., Bannister, '92; Yale, '96, and Pittsburgh
+millionaire "Steel King," stood at the window of Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, room, his arm across the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, his
+only son and heir. Father and son stood, gazing down at the campus. On the
+Gym steps was a group of Seniors, singing songs of old Bannister, songs
+tinged with sadness. Up to Hicks' windows, on the warm June: night, drifted
+the 1916 Class Ode, to the beautiful tune, "A Perfect Day." Over before the
+Science Hall, a crowd of joyous alumni laughed over narratives of their
+campus escapades. Happy undergraduates, skylarking on the campus,
+celebrated the end of study, and gazed with some awe at the Seniors, in cap
+and gown, suddenly transformed into strange beings, instead of old comrades
+and college-mates.
+
+"'The close of our college days, and the end of our campus years--!'"
+quoted Mr. Hicks, a mist before his eyes as he gazed at the scene. "In a
+few days, Thomas, comes the final parting from old Bannister--I know it
+will be hard, for _I_ had to leave the dear old college, and also Yale. But
+you have made a splendid record in your studies, you have been one of
+the most popular fellows here, and--you have vastly pleased your Dad, by
+winning your B in the high-jump."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, last study-sprint was at an end, the final Exams.
+of his Senior year had been passed with what is usually termed flying
+colors; and to the whole-souled delight of the lovable youth, he and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the Human Encyclopedia, had, as Hicks chastely
+phrased it, "run a dead heat for the Valedictory!" So close had their
+final averages been that the Faculty, after much consideration, decided to
+announce at the Commencement exercises that the two Seniors had tied for
+the highest collegiate honors, and everyone was satisfied with the verdict.
+So, now it was all ended; the four years of study, athletics, campus
+escapades, dormitory skylarking--the golden years of college life, were
+about to end for 1919. Commencement would officially start on the morrow,
+but tonight, in the Auditorium, would be held the annual Athletic
+Association meeting, when those happy athletes who had won their B during
+the year would have it presented, before the assembled collegians, by
+one-time gridiron, track, and diamond heroes of old Bannister.
+
+And--the ecstatic Hicks would have his track B, his white letter, won in
+the high-jump, thanks to Caesar Napoleon's assistance, awarded him by his
+beloved Dad, the greatest all-round athlete that ever wore the Gold and
+Green! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., _en route_ to New Haven and Yale in
+his private car, "Vulcan," had reached town that day, together with other
+members of Bannister College, Class of '92. They, as did all the old
+grads., promptly renewed past memories and associations by riding up to
+College Hill in Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus--a youthful, hilarious crowd of
+alumni. Former students, alumni, parents of graduating Seniors, friends,
+sweethearts--every train would bring its quota. The campus would again
+throb and pulsate with that perennial quickening--Commencement. Three days
+of reunions, Class Day exercises, banquets, and other events, then the
+final exercises, and--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., would be an alumnus!
+
+"It's like Theophilus told Thor, last fall, Dad," said the serious Hicks.
+"You know what Shakespeare said: 'This thou perceivest, which makes thy
+love more strong; To love that well which thou must leave ere long.' Now
+that I soon shall leave old Bannister, I--I wish I had studied more, had
+done bigger things for my Alma Mater! And for you, Dad, too; I've won a B,
+but perhaps, had I trained and exercised more, I might have annexed another
+letter--still; hello, what's Butch hollering--?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, his pachydermic frame draped in his gown, and his
+mortar-board cap on his head, for the Seniors were required to wear their
+regalia during Commencement week, was bellowing through a megaphone, as he
+stood on the steps of Bannister Hall, and Mr. Hicks, with his cheerful son,
+listened:
+
+"Everybody--Seniors, Undergrads., Alumni--in the Auditorium at eight sharp!
+We are going to give Mr. Hicks and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a surprise
+party--don't miss the fun!"
+
+"Now, just what does Butch mean, Dad?" queried the bewildered Senior.
+"Something is in the wind. For two days, the fellows have had a secret
+from me--they whisper and plot, and when _I_ approach, loudly talk of
+athletics, or Commencement! Say, Butch--_Butch_--I ain't a-comin' tonight,
+unless you explain the mystery."
+
+"Oh, yes, you be, old sport!" roared Butch, from the campus, employing the
+megaphone, "or you don't get your letter! Say, Hicks, one sweetly solemn
+thought attacks me--old Bannister is puzzling _you_ with a mystery, instead
+of vice versa, as is usually the case."
+
+"Well, Thomas," said Mr. Hicks, his face lighted by a humorous, kindly
+smile, as he heard the storm of good-natured jeers at Hicks, Jr., that
+greeted Butch Brewster's fling, "I'll stroll downtown, and see if any of
+my old comrades came on the night express. I'll see you at the Athletic
+Association meeting, for I believe I am to hand you the B. I can't imagine
+what this 'surprise party' is, but I don't suppose it will harm us. It will
+surely be a happy moment, son, when I present you with the athletic letter
+you worked so hard to win."
+
+When T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, beloved Dad had gone, his firm stride
+echoing down the corridor, that blithesome, irrepressible collegian, whom
+old Bannister had come to love as a generous, sunny-souled youth, stood
+again by the window, gazing out at the campus. Now, for the first time, he
+fully realized what a sad occasion a college Commencement really is--to
+those who must go forth from their Alma Mater forever. With almost the
+force of a staggering blow, Hicks suddenly saw how it would hurt to leave
+the well-loved campus and halls of old Bannister, to go from those comrades
+of his golden years. In a day or so, he must part from good Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Ichabod, Monty, Roddy, Cherub, loyal little Theophilus and all his
+classmates of '19, as well as from his firm friends of the undergraduates.
+It would be the parting from the youths of his class that would cost him
+the greatest regret. Four years they had lived together the care-free
+campus life. From Freshmen to Seniors they had grown and developed
+together, and had striven for 1919 and old Bannister, while a love for
+their Alma Mater had steadily possessed their hearts. And now soon they
+must sing, "Vale, Alma Mater!" and go from the campus and corridors, as
+Jack Merritt, Heavy Hughes, Biff McCabe, and many others had done before
+them.
+
+Of course, they would return to old Bannister. There would be alumni
+banquets at mid-year and Commencement, with glad class reunions each year.
+They would come back for the big games of the football or baseball season.
+But it would never be the same. The glad, care-free, golden years of
+college life come but once, and they could never live them, as of old.
+
+"Caesar's Ghost!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., making a dive for his
+beloved banjo, as he awakened to the startling fact that for some time he
+had been intensely serious. "This will never, never do. I must maintain my
+blithesome buoyancy to the end, and entertain old Bannister with my musical
+ability. Here goes."
+
+Assuming a striking pose, _à la_ troubadour, at the open window, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., a somewhat paradoxical figure, his splinter-structure
+enshrouded in the gown, the cap on his classic head, this regalia symbolic
+of dignity, and the torturesome banjo in his grasp, twanged a ragtime
+accompaniment, and to the bewilderment of the old Grads on the campus, as
+well as the wrath of 1919, he roared in his fog-horn voice:
+
+ "Oh, I love for to live in the country!
+ And I love for to live on the farm!
+ I love for to wander in the grass-green fields--
+ Oh, a country life has the charm!
+ I love for to wander in the garden--
+ Down by the old haystack;
+ Where the pretty little chickens go 'Kick-Kack-Kackle!'
+ And the little docks go 'Quack! Quack!'"
+
+From the Seniors on the Gym steps, their dignified song rudely shattered by
+this rollicking saenger-fest, came a storm of protests; to the unbounded
+delight of the alumni, watching the scene with interest, shouts, jeers,
+whistles, and cat-calls greeted Hicks' minstrelsy:
+
+"Tear off his cap and gown--he's a disgrace to '19!"
+
+"Shades of Schumann-Heink--give that calf more rope!"
+
+"Ye gods--how long must we endure--that?"
+
+"Hicks, a Senior--nobody home--can that noise!"
+
+"Shoot him at sunrise! Where's his Senior dignity?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, referring to his watch, bellowed through the megaphone
+that it was nearly eight o'clock, and loudly suggested that they forcibly
+terminate Hicks' saengerfest, and spare the town police force a riot call
+to the campus, by transporting the pestiferous youth to the Auditorium,
+for his "surprise party." His idea finding favor, he, with Beef and Pudge,
+somewhat hampered by their gowns, lumbered up the stairway of Bannister,
+and down the third-floor corridor to the offending Hicks' boudoir, followed
+by a yelling, surging crowd of Seniors and underclassmen. They invaded the
+graceless youth's room, much to the pretended alarm of that torturesome
+collegian, who believed that the entire student-body of old Bannister had
+foregathered to wreak vengeance on his devoted head.
+
+"_Mercy_! Have a heart, fellows!" plead T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., helpless in
+the clutches of Butch, Beef, and Pudge, "I won't never do it no more, no
+time! Say, this is too much--much too much--too much much too much--I,
+Oh--_help--aid--succor--relief--assistance--"_
+
+"To the Auditorium with the wretch!" boomed Butch; and the splinter-youth
+was borne aloft, on his broad shoulders, assisted by Beef McNaughton. They
+transported the grinning Hicks down the corridor, while fifty noisy youths,
+howling, "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow!" tramped after them. Downstairs
+and across the campus the hilarious procession marched, and into the
+Auditorium, where the students and alumni were gathering for the awarding
+of the athletic B. A thunderous shout went up, as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+was carried to the stage and deposited in a chair.
+
+"_Hicks! Hicks! Hicks_! We've got a surprise for--_Hicks_!"
+
+"Now, just what have I did to deserve all these?" grinned that
+happy-go-lucky youth, puzzled, nevertheless. "Well, time will tell, so all
+I can do is to possess my soul with impatience; old Bannister has a mystery
+for me, this trip!"
+
+In fifteen minutes, the Athletic Association meeting opened. On the stage,
+beside its officers, were those athletes, including T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who were to receive that coveted reward--their B, together with a number of
+one-time famous Bannister gridiron, track, basketball, and diamond stars.
+Each youth was to receive his monogram from some ex-athlete who once wore
+the Gold and Green, and Hicks' beloved Dad--Bannister's greatest hero--was
+to present his son with the letter.
+
+There were speeches; the Athletic Association's President explained the
+annual meeting, former Bannister students and athletic idols told of past
+triumphs on Bannister Field; the football Championship banner, and the
+baseball pennant were flaunted proudly, and each team-captain of the year
+was called upon to talk. Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., a great favorite
+on the campus, delivered a ringing speech, an appeal to the undergraduates
+for clean living, and honorable sportsmanship, and then:
+
+"We now come to the awarding of the athletic B," stated the President. "The
+Secretary will call first the name of the athlete, and then the alumnus who
+will present him with the letter. In the name of the Athletic Association
+of old Bannister, I congratulate those fellows who are now to be rewarded
+for their loyalty to their Alma Mater!"
+
+Thrilled, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., watched his comrades, as they responded
+to their names, and had the greatest glory, the B, placed in their hands by
+past Bannister athletic heroes. Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Ichabod, Biff,
+Hefty, Tug, Buster, Deacon Radford, Cherub, Don, Skeet, Thor, who had
+won the hammer-throw. These, and many others, having earned the award by
+playing in three-fourths of a season's games on the eleven or the nine, or
+by winning a first place in some track event, stepped forward, and were
+rewarded. Some, as good Butch, had gained their B many times, but the fact
+that this was their last letter, made the occasion a sad one. Every name
+was called but that of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and that perturbed youth
+wondered at the omission, when the President spoke:
+
+"The last name," he said, smiling, "is that of Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and we are glad to have his father present the letter to his son, as Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., is with us. However, we Bannister fellows have
+prepared a surprise party for our lovable comrade, and I beg your patience
+awhile, as I explain."
+
+Graphically, Dad Pendleton described the wonderful all-round athletic
+record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old Bannister, and
+sketched briefly but vividly his phenomenal record at Yale; he told of
+Mr. Hicks' great ambition, for his only son, Thomas, to follow in his
+footsteps--to be a star athlete, and shatter the marks made by his Dad.
+Then he reminded the Bannister students of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+athletic fiascos, hilarious and otherwise, of three years. He explained how
+that cheery youth, grinning good-humoredly at his comrades' jeers, had been
+in earnest, striving to realize his father's ambition. As the spellbound
+collegians and grads. listened, Dad chronicled Hicks' dogged persistence,
+and how he finally, in his Senior year, won his track B in the high-jump.
+Then he described the biggest game of the past football season, the contest
+that brought the Championship to old Bannister. The youths and alumni heard
+how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., made a great sacrifice, for the greater goal;
+how, after training faithfully in secret for a year, hoping sometime to win
+a game for his Alma Mater, he cheerfully sacrificed his chance to tie the
+score by a drop-kick, and became the pivotal part of a fake-kick play that
+won for the Gold and Green.
+
+"I have left Hicks' name until last," said Dad, with a smile, "because
+tonight we have a surprise party for our sunny comrade, and for his Dad. In
+the past, the eligibility rule, as regards the football and baseball B, has
+been--an athlete must play on the 'Varsity in three-fourths of the season's
+games. But, just before the Hamilton game, last fall, the Advisory Board of
+the Athletic Association amended this rule.
+
+"We decided to submit to the required two-thirds majority vote of the
+students this plan, inasmuch as many athletes, toiling and sacrificing all
+season for their college, never get to win their letter, yet deserve
+that reward for their loyalty, we suggested that Bannister imitate the
+universities. Anyone sent into the Yale-Harvard game, you know, wins his
+H or Y. If one team is safely ahead, a lot of scrubs are run into the
+scrimmage, to give them their letter. Therefore, we--the Advisory
+Board--made this rule: 'Any athlete taking part, for any period of time
+whatsoever, in the Ballard football or baseball game as a regular member of
+the first team shall be eligible for his Gold or Green B. This rule, upon
+approval of the students, to be effective from September 25!'
+
+"Now," continued the Athletic Association President, "we decided to keep
+this new ruling a secret until the present, for this reason: Many good
+football and baseball players, not making the first teams, lack the loyalty
+to stick on the scrubs, and others, not as brilliant, but with more
+college spirit, give their best until the season's end. We knew that if we
+announced this rule last fall, several slackers, who had quit the squad,
+would come out again, just on the hope of getting sent into the Ballard
+game, for their B. This would not be fair to those who loyally stuck to the
+scrubs. So we did not announce the rule until the year closed, and then a
+practically unanimous vote of the students made the rule effective from
+September 25. So--all athletes who took part in the Ballard football game,
+last fall, for any period of time whatsoever, are eligible for the gold B,
+and the same, as regards the green letter, applies to the Ballard baseball
+game this spring."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., gasped. Slowly, the glorious truth dawned on the
+happy-go-lucky Senior--he had been sent into the Bannister-Ballard football
+game; the crucial and deciding play had turned on him, hence he had won his
+gold letter! And thanks to his brilliant "mismanaging" of the nine, losing
+shortstop Skeet Wigglesworth and the substitutes, he had played the entire
+nine innings of the Ballard-Bannister baseball contest, and, therefore,
+was eligible for his green B. In a dazed condition, he heard Dad Pendleton
+saying:
+
+"You remember how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was sent into the Ballard
+game, and how the fake-play fooled Ballard, who believed he would try
+a drop-kick? Well, knowing Hicks to be eligible for his football B, we
+planned a surprise party. The Advisory Board kept the new rule a secret,
+and not until this week was it voted on. Then, the required two-thirds
+majority made it effective from last September--we managed to have Hicks
+absent from the voting, and the fellows helped us with our surprise! So
+instead of Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., presenting his son with one
+B, that for track work, we are glad to hand him _three_ letters, one for
+football, one for baseball, and one for track, to give our own T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. And, let me add, he can accept them with a clear conscience, for
+when the rule was made by the Advisory Board, we had no idea that Hicks
+would ever be eligible in football or baseball."
+
+A moment of silence, and then undergraduates and alumni, thrilled at Dad
+Pendleton's announcement, arose in a body, and howled for T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his beloved Dad. Mr. Hicks, unable to speak, silently
+placed the three monograms, gold, green, and white, in his son's hands, and
+placed his own on the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, who for once
+in his heedless career could not say a word!
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" Big Butch Brewster roared, and a terrific
+response sounded:
+
+"He's all right! Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"
+
+For ten minutes pandemonium reigned. Then, regardless of the fact that, in
+order to surprise Mr. Hicks and his son, other athletes, eligible under the
+new rule, had yet to be presented with their B, the howling youths swarmed
+on the stage, hoisted the grinning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his happy
+Dad to their shoulders, and started a wild parade around the campus and the
+Quadrangle, singing:
+
+"Here's to our own Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own
+Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own Hicks--When he
+starts a thing, he sticks--Drink it down--drink it down--down! Down!
+Down!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., aloft on the shoulders of his behemoth class-mate,
+Butch Brewster, was deliriously happy. The surprise party of his campus
+comrades was a wonderful one, and he could scarcely realize that he had
+actually, by the Athletic Association ruling, won his three B's! How glad
+his beloved Dad, was, too. He had not expected this bewildering happiness.
+He had been so joyous, when his sort earned the track letter, but to
+have him leave old Bannister, with a B for three sports--it was almost
+unbelievable! And, as Dad had said--there had been no thought of Hicks when
+the Advisory Board made the rule, so Hicks had no reason to suppose it was
+done just to award him his letter.
+
+Then, Hicks remembered that rash vow, made at the end of his Freshman year,
+a vow uttered with absolutely no other thought than a desire to torment
+Butch Brewster, "Before I graduate from old Bannister, I shall have won
+my B in three branches of sport!" Never, not even for a moment, had the
+happy-go-lucky youth believed that his wild prophecy would be fulfilled,
+though he had pretended to be confident to tease his loyal comrades; but
+now, at the very end of his campus days, just before he graduated, his
+prediction had come true! So the sunny Senior, who four years before had
+made his rash vow, saw its realization, and suddenly thrilled with the
+knowledge that he had a golden opportunity to make Butch indignant.
+
+"Oh, I say, Butch," he drawled, nonchalantly, leaning down to talk in
+Butch's ear, "do you recall that day, at the close of our Freshman year,
+when I vowed to win my B in three branches of sport, ere I bade farewell to
+old Bannister?"
+
+"No, you don't get away with that!" exploded Butch Brewster, indignantly,
+lowering his tantalizing classmate to terra firma. "Here, Beef, Pudge,
+catch this wretch; he intends to swagger and say--"
+
+But he was too late, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., dodging from his grasp,
+imitated the celebrated Charley Chaplin strut, and satiated his fun-loving
+soul. After waiting for three years, the irrepressible youth realized an
+ambition he had never imagined would be fulfilled.
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth he, gladsomely. "I told you I'd win
+my three B's, Butch, old top, and--_ow_!--unhand me, you villain, you
+_hurt_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+ "Oh, it was '_Ave_, Alma Mater--'
+ We sang as Freshmen gay;
+ But it's '_Vale_, Alma Mater' now
+ As our last farewells we say!"
+
+"_Honk-Honk! Br-r-rr-r-Bang! Honk-Monk! Br-rr-rr-r--"_
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., big Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Pudge Langdon,
+Scoop Sawyer, and little Theophilus Opperdyke--late Seniors of old
+Bannister--roosted atop of good old Dan Flannagan's famous jitney-bus
+before Bannister Hall. It was nearly time for the 9.30 A. M. express, but
+the "peace-ship" had inconsiderately stalled, and the choking, wheezing,
+and snorting of the engine, as old Dan frenziedly cranked, together with
+the Claxon, operated by Skeet Wigglesworth, rudely interrupted the Seniors'
+chant. A vociferous protest arose above the tumult:
+
+"Oh, the little old _Ford_--rambled right along--like heck!"
+
+"Can that noise-we want to sing a last song, boys!"
+
+"Chuck that engine, Dan, and put in an alarm clock spring!"
+
+"Christmas is coming, Dan-u-el--we've graduated you know!"
+
+"'The Dove' doesn't want us to leave old Bannister, fellows!"
+
+Commencement was ended. The night before, on the stage of Alumni Hall,
+before a vast audience of old Bannister grads, undergraduates, friends, and
+relatives of the Seniors, the Class of 1919 had received its sheepskins,
+and the "Go forth, my children, and live!" of its Alma Mater. T, Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and timorous little Theophilus had jointly delivered the
+Valedictory, eight other Seniors, including Butch, Scoop, and the lengthy
+Ichabod, had swayed the crowd with oratory. Kindly old Prexy, his voice
+tremulous, had talked to them, as students, for the last time. The Class
+Ode had been sung, the Class Shield unveiled, and then--Hicks and his
+comrades of '19 were alumni!
+
+It had been a busy, thrilling time, Commencement Week. There had been
+scarcely any spare moments to ponder on the parting so soon to come; after
+the memorable Athletic Association meeting, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and his beloved Dad had been given a wonderful "surprise party" by the
+collegians, and Hicks had corralled his three B's, time had "sprinted with
+spiked shoes," as the sunny Hicks stated. Event had followed event in
+bewildering fashion. The Seniors, dignified in cap and gown, had been fêted
+and banqueted, the cynosure of all eyes. Campus and town were filled with
+visitors. Old Bannister pulsated with renewed life, with the glad reunions
+of former students. There had been the Alumni Banquet, the annual baseball
+game between the 'Varsity and old-time Gold and Green diamond stars, Class
+Night exercises, the Literary Society Oratorical Contests, and the last
+Class Supper; and, Commencement had come.
+
+It was all ended now--the four happy, golden years of campus life, of glad
+fellowship with each other; like those who had gone before, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his comrades of 1919 had come to the final parting. The
+sunny-souled youth's Dad had gone to New Haven, to Yale's Commencement.
+Alumni and visitors had left town; the night before had witnessed farewells
+with Monty, Roddy, Biff, Hefty, and the underclassmen, with that awakened
+Colossus, John Thorwald. All the collegians had gone, except the few
+Seniors now leaving, and they had remained to enjoy Hicks' final Beefsteak
+Bust downtown at Jerry's.
+
+The campus was silent and deserted. No footsteps or voices echoed in the
+dormitories, and a shadow of sadness hovered over all. The youths who were
+leaving old Bannister forever felt an ache in their throats, and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke's big-rimmed spectacles were fogged with tears. Three
+times, in the past, they had left the campus, but this was forever, as
+collegians!
+
+"I don't care if we miss the old train!" declared Scoop Sawyer, as the
+jitney-Ford's engine wheezed, gasped, and was silent, for all of Dan's
+cranking. "Just think, fellows, it's all over now--'We have come to the end
+of our college days-golden campus years are at an end--!' Say, Hicks, old
+man, what's your Idea. What future have you blue-printed?"
+
+"Journalism!" announced T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sticking a fountain pen
+behind his ear, and fatuously supposing he resembled a City Editor, "In me
+you behold an embryo Richard Harding Davis, or Ty--no, I mean Irvin Cobb.
+I shall first serve my apprenticeship as a 'cub,' but ere many years, I
+shall sit at a desk, run a newspaper, and tell the world where to get off."
+
+"That is--If Dad says so!" chuckled Butch Brewster. "You know, Hicks, it's
+the same old story--your father wants you to learn how to own steel and
+iron mills, and when it comes to a showdown, you must convince Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., that you'd make a better journalist than Steel King!"
+
+"Nay, nay-say not so!" responded the happy-go-lucky alumnus of old
+Bannister, as the perspiring Dan Flannagan cranked away futilely. "My Dad
+has a broader vision, fellows, than most men. He and I talked it over last
+night, and he would never try to make me take up anything but a work that
+appeals to me. While, as Butch says, he'd like to train me to follow in his
+footsteps, he understands my ambition so thoroughly that he is trying to
+get me started--read this:"
+
+The lovable youth produced a letter, the envelope bearing the heading: "THE
+BALTIMORE CHRONICLE;" Butch Brewster, to whom he extended it, read aloud:
+
+
+"Baltimore, Maryland,
+
+"June 12, 1919.
+
+"DEAR OLD CLASSMATE:
+
+"I'd sure like to be with you, back at old Yale, next week, but I can't
+leave the wheel of this ship, the _Chronicle_, for even a day. Give my
+regards to all of old Eli, '96, old man.
+
+"As regards a berth for your son, Thomas. The _Chronicle_ usually takes
+on a few college men during the summer, when our staff is off on
+vacations. We always use undergraduates, and often, in two or three
+summers, we develop them into star reporters. However, for old time's
+sake, I'll be glad to give your son a chance, and if he means business,
+let him report for duty next Friday, at 1 P.M., to my office.
+Understand, Hicks, he must come here and fight his own way, without any
+favor or special help from me. Were he the son of our nation's
+President, I'd not treat him a whit better than the rest of the Staff,
+so let him know that in advance. On the other hand, I'll develop him all
+I can, and if he has the ability, the _Chronicle_ long-room is the place
+for him.
+
+"Yours for old Yale,
+
+"'Doc' Whalen, Yale, '96,
+
+"City Editor--_THE CHRONICLE_."
+
+
+"Here's my Dad's ultimatum," grinned Hicks, when. Butch finished the
+letter. "I am to take a summer as a cub on the _Baltimore Chronicle_,
+making my own way, and living on my weekly salary, without financial aid
+from anyone. If, at the end of the summer, City Editor Whalen reports that
+I've made good enough to be retained as a regular, then--Yours truly for
+the Fourth Estate. If I fail, then I follow a course charted out by Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.! So, it is up to me to make good--"
+
+"You--you will make good, Hicks," quavered Theophilus, whose faith in the
+shadow-like youth was prodigious. "Oh, that will be splendid, for I am
+going to take a course at a business college in Baltimore. I want to become
+an expert stenographer, and we'll be together."
+
+"It's work now, fellows!" sighed Beef McNaughton, shifting his huge bulk
+atop of the jit "College years are ended, we're chucked into the world, to
+make good, or fail! Butch and I have not decided on our work yet. We may
+accept jobs as bank or railroad presidents, or maybe run for President
+of the U.S.A., provided John McGraw or Connie Mack do not sign us up.
+However--"
+
+At that moment, the engine of old Dan Flannagan's battered "Dove" consented
+to hit on two cylinders, and the genial Irishman, who was to transport
+Hicks and his comrades, as collegians, for the last time, yelled, "_All
+aboard_!" loudly, to conceal his emotion at the sad scene.
+
+"We're off!" shrieked Skeet Wigglesworth, stowed away below, as the
+jitney-bus moved down the driveway. "Farewell, dear old Bannister! Run
+slow, Dan, we want to gaze on the campus as long as we can."
+
+The youths were silent, as the 'bus rolled slowly down the driveway and
+under the Memorial Arch, old Dan, sympathizing with them, and finding he
+could make the express by a safe margin, allowing the jitney to flutter
+along at reduced speed. From its top, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his vision
+blurred with tears, gazed back with his class-mates. He saw the campus, its
+grass green, with stately old elms bordering the walks, and the golden
+June sunshine bathing everything in a soft radiance. He beheld the college
+buildings--the Gym., the Science Hall, the Administration Building,
+Recitation Hall, the ivy-covered Library; the white Chapel, and the four
+dorms., Creighton, Smithson, Nordyke, Bannister. One year he had spent in
+each, and every year had been one of happiness, of glad comradeship.
+He could see Bannister Field, the scene of his many hilarious athletic
+fiascos.
+
+And now he was leaving it all--had come to the end of his college course,
+and before him lay Life, with its stern realities, its grim obstacles, and
+hard struggles; ended were the golden campus days, the gay skylarking
+in the dorms. Gone forever were the joyous nights of entertaining his
+comrades, of Beefsteak Busts down at Jerry's. Silenced was his beloved
+banjo, and no more would his saengerfests bother old Bannister.
+
+A turn in the street, and the campus could not be seen. As the last vision
+of their Alma Mater vanished, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., smiling sunnily
+through his tear-blurred eyes, gazed at his comrades of old '19--
+
+"Say, fellows--" he grinned, though his voice was shaky, "let's--let's
+start in next September, and--do it all over again!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+***** This file should be named 8550-8.txt or 8550-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/8/5/5/8550/
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
+specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
+eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
+for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
+performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
+away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
+not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
+trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country outside the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
+ restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
+ under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
+ eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
+ are located before using this ebook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
+Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
+mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
+volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
+locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
+Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
+date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
+official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/8550-8.zip b/8550-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..349ee09
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/8550-h.zip b/8550-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2b4945b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/8550-h/8550-h.htm b/8550-h/8550-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0a31528
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-h/8550-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11535 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>New File</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+<style type="text/css">
+<!--
+body {background:#faebd7; margin:15%; text-align:justify}
+h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {color:#A82C28}
+blockquote {font-size:14pt}
+P {font-size:14pt}
+-->
+</style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+Title: T. Haviland Hicks Senior
+
+Author: J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Posting Date: August 22, 2014 [EBook #8550]
+Release Date: July, 2005
+First Posted: July 22, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR</h1>
+
+<br>
+<h2>BY J. RAYMOND ELDERDICE</h2>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3><br>
+TO MASTER LLOYD ELDERDICE</h3>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h2><br>
+CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<pre>
+    I. <a href="#chap01">HICKS&mdash;WILD WEST BAD MAN</a><br>
+   II. <a href="#chap02">"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"</a><br>
+  III. <a href="#chap03">HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY</a><br>
+   IV. <a href="#chap04">QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER</a><br>
+    V. <a href="#chap05">HICKS MAKES A DECISION</a><br>
+   VI. <a href="#chap06">HICKS MAKES A SPEECH</a><br>
+  VII. <a href="#chap07">HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY</a><br>
+ VIII. <a href="#chap08">COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN</a><br>
+   IX. <a href="#chap09">THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK</a><br>
+    X. <a href="#chap10">THOR'S AWAKENING</a><br>
+   XI. <a href="#chap11">"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"</a><br>
+  XII. <a href="#chap12">THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS</a><br>
+ XIII. <a href="#chap13">HICKS&mdash;CLASS KID&mdash;YALE '96</a><br>
+  XIV. <a href="#chap14">THE GREATER GOAL</a><br>
+   XV. <a href="#chap15">HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"</a><br>
+  XVI. <a href="#chap16">THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON</a><br>
+ XVII. <a href="#chap17">HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY</a><br>
+XVIII. <a href="#chap18">T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.'S HEADWORK</a><br>
+  XIX. <a href="#chap19">BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY</a><br>
+   XX. <a href="#chap20">"VALE, ALMA MATER!"</a>
+</pre>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="chap01"></a>
+<h1><br>
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, SENIOR</h1>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>CHAPTER I</p>
+
+<p>HICKS&mdash;WILD WEST BAD MAN</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, a bold, bad man was Chuckwalla Bill&mdash;<br>
+  An' he lived in a shanty on Tom-cat Hill;<br>
+  Ten notches on the six-gun he toted on his hip&mdash;<br>
+  For he'd sent ten buckos on the One-way Trip!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister
+College football<br>
+squad, his behemoth bulk swathed in heavy blankets and crowded
+into a<br>
+narrow bunk, shifted his vast tonnage restlessly. He was dreaming
+of the<br>
+wild and woolly West, and like a six-reel Western drama thrown on
+the<br>
+screen in a moving-picture show, he visioned in his slumbers a
+vivid and<br>
+spectacular panorama.</p>
+
+<p>The first lurid scene was the Deserted Limited held up at a
+tank station in<br>
+the great Mojave Desert by a lone, masked bandit who winged the
+dreaming<br>
+Butch in the shoulder, the latter being an express guard who
+resisted.<br>
+After the desperado, Two-Gun Steve, had forced the engineer to
+run the<br>
+train back to a siding, he had ordered Butch to vamoose. Quite
+naturally,<br>
+then, the collegian next found himself staggering across the arid
+expanse,<br>
+until at last, half dead from a burning thirst, seeking vainly
+for a<br>
+water-hole, the vast stretch of sandy, sagebrush-studded wastes
+shimmered<br>
+into a gorgeous ocean of sparkling blue waters. Then, as he
+collapsed on<br>
+the scorching-hot sand, helpless, the cool water so near,
+suddenly the<br>
+scene shifted.</p>
+
+<p>In quick and vivid succession, Butch Brewster beheld a burning
+stockade<br>
+besieged by howling Indians, and a frontier town shot up by
+recklessly<br>
+riding cowboys on a jamboree. Then he became a tenderfoot,
+badgered by<br>
+yelling, shooting roisterers, and later a sheriff, bravely
+leading his<br>
+posse to a sensational battle with that same Two-Gun Steve and
+his gang,<br>
+entrenched in a rock-bound mountain defile.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, he stood with hands above his head in company with
+other<br>
+passengers of the Sagebrush Stagecoach, while a huge, red-shirted
+Westerner<br>
+with a fierce black mustache and a six-shooter in each hand
+belching<br>
+bullets at Butch's dancing feet, roared out huskily:
+"Oh&mdash;I'm a ring-tailed<br>
+roarer (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm a rip-snortin', high-falutin',
+loop-the-loopin'<br>
+<i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm wild an' woolly, an' full
+o' fleas, an' hard<br>
+to curry below the knees&mdash;I'm a roarin' wild-cat, an' it's
+my night to howl<br>
+(<i>bang-bang</i>)! Yip-yip-yip-<i>yeee</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch, opening his eyes and starting up, gazed about him
+in sheer<br>
+surprise; for an instant, in that state of bewilderment that
+comes with<br>
+sudden awakening, he almost believed himself in a Western ranch
+bunkhouse,<br>
+and that some happy cowboy outside roared a grotesque ballad. He
+gazed at<br>
+the interior of a rough shack built of pine boards, with bunks
+constructed<br>
+in tiers on both sides. There were figures in them&mdash;Western
+cowboys,<br>
+perhaps. Then it seemed, somehow, that the voice drifting from
+the outside<br>
+was strangely familiar. Back at Bannister College, where he
+remembered he<br>
+had gone in the dim and dusty past, he had often heard that same
+fog-horn<br>
+voice, roaring songs of a less blood-curdling character, and
+accompanied by<br>
+that same banjo twanging, which tortured the campus, and bothered
+would-be<br>
+studious youths!</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not in a moving-picture show," Butch informed himself, as
+he donned<br>
+khaki trousers, football sweater, and heavy shoes. "I'm not on a
+Western<br>
+ranch, either. I'm in the sleep-shack of Camp Bannister, the
+football<br>
+training-camp of the Bannister College squad! Those fellows in
+the bunks<br>
+are not cowboys, Indians, and bandits&mdash;they are my
+teammates! I did dream<br>
+stuff that would shame a Wild West scenario, but I understand it
+all<br>
+now&mdash;my dreams were influenced by T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.!"</p>
+
+<p>At that dramatic moment, to substantiate his statement, the
+raucous voice,<br>
+accompanied by resounding chords strummed on a banjo, sounded
+again. The<br>
+vocal and instrumental chaos was frequently punctured by revolver
+reports,<br>
+as the torturesome Caruso outside roared:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, Chuckwalla Bill thought life was sweet&mdash;<br>
+  Till he met up with Sure-shot Pete;<br>
+  A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw&mdash;<br>
+  But Sure-shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"</p>
+
+<p>The pachydermic Butch, fully dressed&mdash;and awake, raging
+in his wrath like<br>
+an active volcano, glanced at his watch, and discovered that it
+was exactly<br>
+five A.M.! Intensely pacified by this knowledge, he lumbered
+toward the<br>
+bunkhouse door and flung it open, determined to crush the
+pestersome youth<br>
+who thus unfeelingly disturbed the quietude of Camp Bannister at
+such an<br>
+unearthly hour! However, his grim purpose was temporarily
+thwarted&mdash;before<br>
+him spread a beautiful panorama, a vast canvas painted in rich
+hues and<br>
+colors, that indescribably charming masterpiece of nature,
+entitled dawn.</p>
+
+<p>Butch, gazing from the bunkhouse doorway toward the pebbly
+shore of the<br>
+placid lake stretching out for two miles before him, beheld Old
+Sol,<br>
+blood-red, peeping above the wooded hills on the far-off,
+opposite strand<br>
+of Lake Conowingo; the luminous orb laid a flaming pathway across
+the<br>
+shimmering waters, and golden bars of light, like gleaming
+fingers<br>
+outstretched, fell athwart the tall pines that towered on the
+high bluff<br>
+back of the camp. The glorious sunshine, succeeding a flood of
+rosy color,<br>
+inundated the scene; it bathed in a gorgeous radiance the early
+autumn<br>
+woods, it illumined the bunkhouse, and another rude shanty known
+to the<br>
+squad as the grub-shack, it poured down on old Hinky-Dink, the
+ancient<br>
+negro cookee, setting the breakfast tables just outside the
+canvas<br>
+cook-tent.</p>
+
+<p>"Deed, cross mah heart, Mistah Butch," grinned old Hinky-Dink,
+seeing, as<br>
+a motion picture director would express it, "Wrath registered on
+the<br>
+countenance" of Butch Brewster, "Ah done tole dat young Hicks dat
+a bird<br>
+what cain't sing an' will sing mus' be made <i>not</i> to sing!
+Ah done info'med<br>
+him dat yo'-all was layin' fo' him, cause he done bus' up yo'
+sleep!"</p>
+
+<p>A jay bird, a flashing bit of vivid blue, shot from a tall
+pine, jeering<br>
+shrilly at Butch; out on the lake, a trout leaped above the water
+for an<br>
+infinitesimal second, its shining scales gleaming in the
+sunshine. From the<br>
+cook-tent, where old Hinky-Dink grumbled at the frying pan, the
+appetizing<br>
+odor of frying fish assailed the football captain, softening his
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>High above the shanties, on a tall flagpole made from a
+straight young<br>
+pine, floated a big gold and green banner, its bright colors
+gleaming in<br>
+the sunshine; it bore the words:</p>
+
+<p>    CAMP BANNISTER<br>
+    TRAINING CAMP<br>
+    THE FOOTBALL SQUAD<br>
+    BANNISTER COLLEGE</p>
+
+<p>Head Coach Corridan, smashing the precedent that had made
+former Gold and<br>
+Green squads have their training camp at Bannister College, had
+brought<br>
+the Varsity and second-string stars to this camp on the shore of
+Lake<br>
+Conowingo, in the Pennsylvania mountains. For two weeks, one of
+which had<br>
+passed, they were to train at Camp Bannister, until college
+officially<br>
+opened; swimming, hunting, cross-country runs, and a healthful
+outdoor<br>
+existence would give the athletes superb condition, and daily
+scrimmages on<br>
+the level field back of the bluff rounded out an eleven that
+promised to be<br>
+the strongest in Bannister history.</p>
+
+<p>As big, good-natured Butch Brewster stood in the bunkhouse
+doorway, his<br>
+wrath at the pestiferous Hicks forgotten, in his rapture at the
+glorious<br>
+dawn, he saw something that showed why his dreams had been of the
+wild<br>
+West! The expression of indignation, however, yielded to one of
+humorous<br>
+affection, as he gazed toward the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't be angry with Hicks!" breathed Butch, beholding a
+spectacle more<br>
+impressive than dawn. "So, the irrepressible wretch has Coach
+Corridan's<br>
+revolvers, used in starting our training sprints, and a lot of
+blank<br>
+cartridges! He is giving an imitation of a Western bad man. No
+wonder<br>
+I dreamed of Indians, cowboys, and hold-ups; I'll have revenge on
+the<br>
+heartless villain, routing me out at five!"</p>
+
+<p>He saw a massive rock, rising thirty feet in air, its sheer
+walls scaled<br>
+only by a rope-ladder the collegians had rigged up on one side.
+Atop of<br>
+"Lookout There!" as the campers humorously designated the rock,
+roosted<br>
+a youth who possessed the colossal structure of a splinter, and
+whose<br>
+cherubic countenance was decorated with a Cheshire cat grin.
+Quite unaware<br>
+that his riotous efforts had brought out the wrathful Butch
+Brewster,<br>
+the youthful narrator of Chuckwalla Bill's stormy career
+continued his<br>
+excessively noisy s&eacute;ance.</p>
+
+<p>His costume was strictly in character with his song. He wore a
+sombrero,<br>
+picked up on his Exposition trip the past vacation, a lurid
+red<br>
+outing-shirt, and he had wrapped a blanket around each locomotive
+limb to<br>
+imitate a cowboy's chaps. Two revolvers suspended from a loosened
+belt, &agrave;<br>
+la wild West, and as Butch stared, the embryo Western bad man
+twanged a<br>
+banjo noisily, and roared the concluding stanza of his desperado
+hero's<br>
+history:</p>
+
+<p>  "Said Chuckwalla Bill, 'Oh, boys, plant me<br>
+  With my boots on&mdash;on the wide prair-eee'&mdash;<br>
+  Where the coyotes howl, they planted Bill&mdash;<br>
+  An' so far as I know, he's sleepin' there still!"</p>
+
+<p>"Here they come," grinned Butch, hearing a tumult in the
+bunkhouse, and<br>
+a confused Babel of voices. "Hicks has awakened the camp. Now
+watch the<br>
+fellows wreak summary vengeance on his toothpick frame!"</p>
+
+<p>From the sleep-shack, aroused at that weird hour by the clamor
+of the<br>
+irrepressible youth, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., tumbled others of
+the squad,<br>
+in varying stages of <i>d&eacute;shabille</i>; big Beef
+McNaughton, right half-back,<br>
+Roddy Perkins, the Titian-haired right-end, Pudge Langdon, a
+ponderous<br>
+tackle, and Monty Merriweather, a clean-cut, aggressive candidate
+for left<br>
+end. From within, other wrathy youths howled vociferous protests
+at their<br>
+tormentor:</p>
+
+<p>"Stop that noise; put your muzzle on again,
+Hicks!"&mdash;"Where's the fire?<br>
+Say, Hicks, muffle your exhaust!"&mdash;"Say, Coach, must we
+endure this day and<br>
+night?"</p>
+
+<p>The bunkhouse fairly erupted angry collegians, boiling out
+like bees<br>
+swarming from a disturbed hive; Hefty Hollingsworth, the
+Herculean<br>
+center-rush. Biff Pemberton, left half-back, Bunch Bingham, Tug
+Cardiff,<br>
+and Buster Brown, three huge last-year substitutes; second-string
+players,<br>
+Don Carterson, Cherub Challoner, Skeet Wigglesworth, and Scoop
+Sawyer. A<br>
+dozen others, from sheer laziness, hugged their bunks devotedly,
+despite<br>
+the terrific turmoil outside.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a disgrace, a <i>howling</i> shame!" exploded Beef, his
+elephantine frame<br>
+swathed in blankets to conceal a lack of vestiture, "Last night,
+until<br>
+midnight, that graceless wretch roosted on 'Lookout There' and
+because the<br>
+glorious moonlight made him sentimental and slushy, he twanged
+his banjo<br>
+and warbled such mushy stuff as 'My Love is young and fair. My
+Love has<br>
+golden hair!' When does he expect us to sleep?"</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't!" explained Monty Merriweather, with succinct
+lucidity,<br>
+grinning at his comrades. "Say, fellows, you know how Hicks
+dreads a cold<br>
+shower-bath; well, some of you rage at him from the other side of
+the rock,<br>
+while I climb up the rope-ladder and close with him! Then some of
+you<br>
+prehistoric pachyderms ascend, and we'll chuck that pestersome
+insect into<br>
+the cold, cold lake&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Done!" chuckled Butch Brewster, delightedly. So, while he,
+Beef<br>
+McNaughton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and others beguiled the jeering
+Hicks,<br>
+expressing in dynamic, red-hot sentences their exact opinions of
+his<br>
+perfidy, the athletic Monty imitated a mountain-scaling Italian
+soldier.<br>
+He climbed stealthily up the swaying rope-ladder; nearer and
+nearer to the<br>
+unsuspecting youth he crept, while the cherubic Hicks, to
+tantalize the<br>
+group below, again burst forth:</p>
+
+<p>"Whoop-eee! I'm a bold, <i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I
+got ten notches on my<br>
+ole six-gun&mdash;I'm a <i>killer</i>. I wings a man before
+breakfast every day! I<br>
+got a private burying-ground, where I plants my victims
+(<i>bang-bang</i>)!<br>
+Yip-yip-yip-<i>yee</i>! Oh, I'm a&mdash;Ouch, Monty&mdash;leggo
+me&mdash;Oh, I'll be<br>
+good&mdash;why didn't I pull that rope-ladder up here? Don't bust
+my banjo<br>
+&mdash;don't let Butch get me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Monty Merriweather, reaching the flat top of the rock, had
+courageously<br>
+flung himself, without regard for the Bad Man's desperate record,
+on the<br>
+startled Hicks, whose first thought was for his beloved banjo.
+While he<br>
+held the blithesome tormentor helpless, Butch, Beef, and Roddy
+Perkins<br>
+climbed the rope-ladder, and the grinning youth was soon in their
+clutches,<br>
+while the collegians below, like a Roman, mob aroused by the
+oratory of Mr.<br>
+Mark Antony, howled for revenge:</p>
+
+<p>"Bust the old banjo over his head, Butch!"&mdash;"Sing to him,
+Beef&mdash;that's<br>
+an <i>awful</i> revenge on Hicks!"&mdash;"Tie him to the
+rock&mdash;make him miss his<br>
+breakfast!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," growled Butch, eyeing his sunny comrade ominously,
+"you ought to<br>
+be tarred and feathered, and shot at sunrise! When Bannister
+opens, you<br>
+will be a Senior, and you'll disgrace '19's dignity! This is a
+sample of<br>
+what we have endured at college for three years, and the worst is
+yet to<br>
+come! You have committed the awful atrocity of awakening Camp
+Bannister<br>
+at five A. M. with your ridiculous imitation, of a Western
+desperado. To<br>
+dampen your ardor, we will chuck you into the cold
+lake&mdash;just as you are!"</p>
+
+<p>"Help! Assistance! Aid! Succor!" shouted the happy-go-lucky
+Hicks, as the<br>
+behemoth Butch and Beef seized him, swinging him aloft with
+ludicrous ease,<br>
+"Police! Fire! Murder! Take care of my banjo, Monty. Tell all the
+fellows<br>
+at old Bannister I died game, and plant Hair-Trigger Bill with
+his boots<br>
+on! Oooo, Beef, Butch, <i>have a heart</i>, that water is
+<i>cold</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., relieved of banjo and revolvers, but
+his<br>
+shadow-like structure still clad in shoes, trousers, with
+imitation "chaps"<br>
+and flamboyant red shirt, with his classic head still adorned
+by<br>
+the sombrero, was swung back and forth by the two bulky
+football<br>
+stars&mdash;once&mdash;twice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Three&mdash;Let him go!" shouted Butch Brewster, and like a
+falling meteor,<br>
+the splinter-like youth, who had already fallen from grace, shot
+from the<br>
+rock, head-first, disappearing with a spectacular splash in the
+icy waters<br>
+of Lake Conowingo. Knowing Hicks to be as much at home in the
+water as a<br>
+fish in an aquarium, the hilarious squad on shore prepared to
+jeer his<br>
+reappearance above the water; however, their program was
+interrupted by<br>
+old Hinky-Dink, who stood in the cook-tent doorway, belaboring a
+dishpan<br>
+lustily with a soup-ladle, and shouting:</p>
+
+<p>"Breakfus' am served; fus' an' las' call fo' breakfus; all dem
+what am late<br>
+don't git no breakfus!"</p>
+
+<p>"Breakfast!" exclaimed Monty Merriweather, who, with Roddy,
+Butch, and<br>
+Beef, remained on the rock, despite the summons of the Cookee.
+"Hurry up,<br>
+Hicks, I'm ravenous. Say, Butch, suppose all that Western regalia
+makes him<br>
+water-logged; he's a terribly long while down there! Didn't he
+look like<br>
+the hero in a moving-picture feature? We've given him the
+water-cure, but<br>
+he will do that same stunt over again. That sunny-souled Hicks is
+simply<br>
+Incorrigible!"</p>
+
+<p>A second later, the grinning, cheery countenance of T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., shot above the water, and simultaneously with his
+appearance, just as<br>
+though he had been chanting below the surface, for the
+entertainment of the<br>
+finny denizens of Lake Conowingo, the irrepressible youth
+roared:</p>
+
+<p>  "A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw&mdash;<br>
+  But Sure-Shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap02"></a>
+CHAPTER II</p>
+
+<p>"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"</p>
+
+<p>Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, known to toil-tortured Gold
+and Green<br>
+football squads from time immemorial as "the Slave-Driver,"
+Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster, and serious Deacon Radford, the star Bannister
+quarter-back,<br>
+foregathered around a table in the Camp Bannister grub-shack.</p>
+
+<p>It was ten-thirty of the morning whose dawn T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., had<br>
+blithesomely hailed with an impromptu musicale and saengerfest on
+"Lookout<br>
+There!" rock, and the football triumvirate were in togs. The
+squad, over in<br>
+the bunkhouse, noisily donned gridiron armor for the morning
+practice, and<br>
+the pestiferous Hicks was maintaining a mysterious silence,
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>This football trio, on whom rested the responsibility of
+rounding out a<br>
+winning Bannister eleven, vastly resembled a coterie of German
+generals,<br>
+back of the trenches, studying a war-map. Before them was spread
+what<br>
+seemed to be a large checker-board. It was a miniature gridiron,
+with the<br>
+chalk-marks painted in white; there were thumb-tacks stuck here
+and there,<br>
+some with flat tops painted green and gold, others, representing
+the enemy,<br>
+were solid red. The former had names printed on them, Butch,
+Roddy,<br>
+Beef, and so on. By sticking these on the board, the three
+directors of<br>
+Bannister's football destiny could work out new plays, and
+originate<br>
+possible winning lineups.</p>
+
+<p>"We've just got to win the State Championship this season,
+Coach!" declared<br>
+Butch, banging the table emphatically, as he stated a
+self-evident fact.<br>
+"It's my last year for Old Bannister, and so with Beef and Pudge.
+I'll give<br>
+every ounce of strength I possess In every game, to make that
+pennant float<br>
+over Bannister Field!"</p>
+
+<p>"Bannister <i>will</i> win it!" vowed the behemoth Beef, his
+good-natured<br>
+countenance grim, and his jaw set. "Not for five years has a Gold
+and Green<br>
+team won the Championship&mdash;not since the year before Butch
+and I were<br>
+Freshmen! We've got a splendid bunch of material to build a team
+with,<br>
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Our biggest problem is this," spoke Coach Corridan, as with a
+phenomenal<br>
+display of strength he took Beef McNaughton between thumb and
+forefinger<br>
+and placed him on the field. "We must strengthen both line and
+backfield,<br>
+for we lost by graduation Babe McCabe, Heavy Hughes, and Jack
+Merritt. Now,<br>
+to replace that lost power&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Just then, from directly beneath the open window by which they
+had<br>
+gathered, like the midnight serenade of a romantic lover,
+sounded<br>
+the well-known foghorn voice of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as to
+the<br>
+plunkety-plunk of a banjo accompaniment, he warbled
+melodiously:</p>
+
+<p>  "Gone are the days&mdash;I used to spend with
+Car-o-li-nah!<br>
+  She had the sunshine in her laughter
+(<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)<br>
+  Just like that state they named her after&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" announced Butch, stealthily approaching the window,
+and<br>
+beckoning his companions. "Easy&mdash;look at him, Deke, there he
+is, Hicks,<br>
+the irrepressible! We might as well attempt to stab a rhinocerous
+to death<br>
+with a humming-bird's feather, as to try and reform
+<i>him</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Arrayed like a lily of the field, a model of sartorial
+splendor, Hicks<br>
+occupied a chair beneath the window, tilted back gracefully
+against the<br>
+side of the grub-shack. He had decked his splinter-structure with
+a<br>
+dazzling Palm Beach suit, and a glorious pink silk shirt, off-set
+by a<br>
+lurid scarf. A Panama hat decorated his head, white Oxfords and
+flamboyant<br>
+hosiery adorned his feet, while the inevitable Cheshire cat grin
+beautified<br>
+his cherubic countenance. A latest "best seller" was propped on
+his knees,<br>
+and as he perused its thrilling pages, he carelessly strummed his
+beloved<br>
+banjo, and in stentorian tones chanted a sentimental ballad:</p>
+
+<p>  "Gone are the days&mdash;the golden days I'm dreaming
+of,<br>
+  I think I hear her softly calling (plunkety-plunk)<br>
+  'Will you be back? Will you be back? (plunk-plunk)<br>
+  Back to the Car-o-li-nah you love?'"(plunkety-plunk),</p>
+
+<p>For three golden campus years T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+gayly pursued the<br>
+even tenor (or <i>basso</i>, since he possessed a foghorn,
+subterranean voice)<br>
+of his Bannister career. He absolutely refused to take life
+seriously, and<br>
+he was forever arousing the wrath&mdash;mostly pretended, for no
+one could be<br>
+really angry with the genial youth&mdash;of his comrades, by
+twanging his banjo<br>
+and roaring out rollicking ballads at all hours. He was never so
+happy<br>
+as when entertaining a crowd of happy students in his cozy
+quarters,<br>
+or escorting a Hicks' Personally Conducted expedition downtown
+for a<br>
+Beef-Steak Bust, at his expense, at Jerry's, the rendezvous of
+hungry<br>
+collegians.</p>
+
+<p>However, despite his butterfly existence, Hicks, possessed of
+a<br>
+scintillating mind, always set the scholastic pace for 1919, by
+means of<br>
+occasional study-sprints, as he characteristically called them.
+But when it<br>
+came to helping his beloved Dad realize a long-cherished ambition
+to behold<br>
+his only son and heir shatter Hicks, Sr.'s, celebrated athletic
+records, it<br>
+was a different story. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., ever since he
+committed<br>
+the farcical <i>faux pas</i> of running the wrong way with the
+pigskin in<br>
+the Freshman-Sophomore football contest of his first year, had
+been a<br>
+super-colossal athletic joke at old Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>His record to date, beside that reverse touchdown that won for
+the<br>
+Sophomores, consisted of scoring a home-run with the bases
+congested, on a<br>
+strike-out; of smashing hurdles and cross-bars on the track;
+endangering<br>
+his heedless career with the shot and hammer; and making a
+ridiculous farce<br>
+of every event he entered, to the vast hilarity of the students,
+who, with<br>
+the exception of Butch Brewster, had no idea his ridiculous
+efforts were in<br>
+earnest. In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable
+promise,<br>
+which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.</p>
+
+<p>Hicks, the lovable, impulsive, and irrepressible, with his
+invariable sunny<br>
+disposition, his generous nature, and his democratic, loyal
+comradeship<br>
+for everybody, was loved by old Bannister. The students forgave
+him his<br>
+pestersome ways, his frequent torturing of them with
+banjo-twanging and<br>
+rollicking ballads. His classmates idolized him, Juniors and
+Sophomores<br>
+were his true friends, and entering Freshmen always regarded
+this<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth as a demigod of the campus.</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, who was forever futilely lecturing the
+heedless Hicks,<br>
+thrust his head from the grub-shack window, fought down a grin,
+and sternly<br>
+arraigned his graceless comrade:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you frivolous, campus-cluttering, infinitesimal atom
+of nothing,<br>
+you labor under the insane delusion that college life is a
+continuous<br>
+vaudeville show. You absolutely refuse to take your Bannister
+years<br>
+seriously, you banjo-thumping, pillow-punishing,
+campus-torturing<br>
+nonentity. You will never grasp the splendid opportunities within
+your<br>
+reach! You have no ambition but to strum that banjo, roar
+ridiculous songs,<br>
+fuss up like a tailor's dummy, and pester your comrades, or drag
+them down<br>
+to Jerry's for the eats! You won't be earnest, you Human Cipher,
+Before you<br>
+entered Bannister, you formed your ideas and ideals of campus
+life from<br>
+colored posters, moving-pictures, magazine stories, and stage
+dramas like<br>
+'Brown of Harvard'; you have surely lived up, or down, to those
+ideals,<br>
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Them's harsh words, Butch!" joyously responded the grinning
+Hicks,<br>
+unchastened, for he knew good Butch Brewster would not, for a
+fortune, have<br>
+him forsake his care-free nature. "Thou loyal comrade of my happy
+campus<br>
+years, what wouldst thou of me?&mdash;have me don sack-cloth and
+ashes, strike<br>
+'The Funeral March' on my golden lyre, and cry out in anguish,
+'ai! ai!<br>
+'Nay, nay, a couple of nays; college years are all too brief;
+hence I<br>
+shall, by my own original process, extract from them all the
+sunshine and<br>
+happiness possible, and by my wonderful musical and vocal powers,
+bring joy<br>
+to my colleagues, who&mdash;Ouch, Butch&mdash;look out for that
+nail, you inhuman<br>
+elephant&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch, at that juncture of Hicks' monologue, had
+effectively terminated<br>
+it by leaning from the window, grasping his unsuspecting comrade
+by the<br>
+scruff of the neck, and dragging him over the window-ledge, into
+the<br>
+grub-shack, and the presence of Coach Corridan and Deacon
+Radford.<br>
+Strenuous objection was registered, both by the futilely
+struggling Hicks,<br>
+and a nail projecting from the sill, which caught in the Palm
+Beach<br>
+trousers and ripped a long rent in them; fortunately, Hicks'
+anatomy<br>
+escaped a similar fate.</p>
+
+<p>"A ripping good move, eh-what?" chuckled Hicks, twisting like
+a<br>
+contortionist, to view the damage done his vestiture, "Hello,
+what have we<br>
+here?&mdash;the German field-map, by the Van Dyke beard of the
+Prophet! I<br>
+bring the Kaiser's order, ham and eggs, and a cup of coffee. No,
+that's a<br>
+mistake. General Hen Von Kluck, lead a brigade of submarines up
+yon hill to<br>
+thunder the Russian fort! Von Hindering-Bug, send a flock of
+aeroplanes and<br>
+Zeppelins to the Allied trenches, the enemy is shooting Russian
+caviare<br>
+at&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster's
+indignation,<br>
+"you are such a wonder at solving perplexing problems by your
+marvelous<br>
+'inspirations,' suppose you turn the scintillating searchlight of
+your<br>
+colossal intellect upon the question that Bannister must solve,
+to produce<br>
+a championship eleven!"</p>
+
+<p>It was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, inveterate habit, whenever a
+baffling<br>
+situation, or what the French call an "<i>impasse</i>" presented
+itself, to<br>
+state with the utmost confidence, "Oh, just leave it to Hicks!"
+On<br>
+most occasions, when he made this remark, accompanied by a
+swaggering<br>
+braggadocio that never failed to make good Butch Brewster
+wrathful, the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth possessed not the slightest idea of how the
+problem<br>
+was to be solved. He just uttered his rash promise, and then
+trusted to his<br>
+needed inspiration to illuminate a way out! And, as the Bannister
+campus<br>
+well knew, Hicks had solved more than one torturing question by
+an<br>
+inspiration that flashed on his intellect, when all hope of a
+satisfactory<br>
+solution seemed dead.</p>
+
+<p>For example, in his Sophomore year, when the Freshman leader,
+James<br>
+Roderick Perkins, that same Titian-haired Roddy who was now a
+bulwark at<br>
+right end, became charged with a Napoleonic ambition, and
+organized a<br>
+Freshman Equal Rights campaign, paralyzing Bannister football by
+refusing<br>
+to allow Freshmen to try for athletic teams, unless their demands
+were<br>
+granted. Hicks, when his inspiration finally smote him, smashed
+the<br>
+Votes-for-Freshmen crusade, and quelled Roddy, Futilely racking
+his brain<br>
+for a counter-attack, having blithely told the troubled campus,
+"Just leave<br>
+it to Hicks," he had ceased to worry, and then the inspiration
+had come, By<br>
+The Big Brotherhood of Bannister giving the upper-classmen full
+government<br>
+over Freshmen, a scheme successfully carried through, the peril
+had been<br>
+thwarted.</p>
+
+<p>"I got a letter from Dad yesterday," began Hicks, somewhat
+irrelevantly,<br>
+considering the Coach's remarks, "and he said&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'&mdash;Inclosed find the check you wrote for,'" quoth Deacon
+Radford,<br>
+humorously. "'If you keep up this pace, I shall have to turn my
+steel<br>
+mills to producing war munitions, to pay your college bills.'
+Say, Hicks,<br>
+seriously, listen to our problem, and suggest what Coach Corridan
+should<br>
+do."</p>
+
+<p>While Hicks' athletic powers were known to equal those of the
+paralyzed<br>
+oldest inhabitant of a Civil War Veterans' Home, the sunny youth
+knew<br>
+football thoroughly; often he originated plays that the team
+worked out<br>
+with success, and his suggestions were always weighed carefully
+by the<br>
+football directors. So, after he had adjusted his lurid scarf at
+the<br>
+correct angle, and gazed ruefully at his torn habiliments, the
+sunshiny<br>
+Senior seated himself at the table, before the "war-map," and
+gave heed to<br>
+the Coach.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="aw.jpg (100K)" src="images/aw.jpg" height="839" width="549">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Here's the problem, Hicks," said the Slave-Driver, indicating
+the<br>
+Bannister eleven, represented by the gold and green topped
+thumb-tacks.<br>
+"From the line we lost Babe, a tackle, Heavy, a guard, and Jack
+Merritt, a<br>
+star end. Now, Monty Merriweather will hold down Jack's place O.
+K.&mdash;I can<br>
+shift Beef from right half to guard, and put Butch at right-half,
+while<br>
+Bunch Bingham can take care of Babe's old berth at tackle. But I
+have no<br>
+one to shoot in at full-back, when I shift Butch; you see, Hicks,
+my plan<br>
+is to build an eleven that can execute old-time, line-smashing
+football,<br>
+and up-to-date open play as well; I want fast ends and halves,
+with a<br>
+snappy quarter, and I have them; also, the backfield is heavy
+enough for<br>
+line-bucking, if I get my beefy full-back. I must have a big,
+heavy, fast<br>
+player, a giant who simply can't be stopped when he hits the
+line. With<br>
+Butch and Biff at halves, Deke at quarter. Roddy and Monty ends,
+and my<br>
+heavy line&mdash;why, a ponderous, irresistible Hercules at
+full-back will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Say!" grinned the irrepressible Hicks, as Coach Corridan
+warmed up to<br>
+his vision, "you don't want <i>much</i>, Coach! Why don't you ask
+Ted Coy, the<br>
+famous ex-Yale full-back, to give up his business and play the
+position for<br>
+you? Maybe you can persuade Charlie Brickley, a <i>fair</i> sort
+of dropkicker,<br>
+to quit coaching Hopkins, and kick a few goals for old Bannister!
+I get<br>
+you, Coach&mdash;you want a fellow about the size of the
+Lusitania, made of<br>
+structural steel, a Brobdingnagian Colossus who will guarantee to
+advance<br>
+the ball fifteen yards per rush, or money refunded!</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Coach, while you are wanting things, just wish for a
+chap who will<br>
+play the entire game himself, taking the ball down the field,
+while the<br>
+rest of the team are pushed along in rolling-chairs, while
+imbibing pink<br>
+tea. Get a prodigy who will instill such terror into our rivals
+that<br>
+instead of playing the schedule, Bannister will simply arrange
+with other<br>
+teams to mark themselves down defeated, and then agree what the
+scores<br>
+shall be."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew it!" growled Butch Brewster, glowering at the jocular
+youth. "We<br>
+should never have consulted him on this problem, for it is not
+one within<br>
+his power to solve, even though he performed the miracle of
+talking<br>
+seriously about it Now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Now&mdash;" echoed Hicks, with pretended seriousness, "Coach,
+you just hand me<br>
+the blue-prints and specifications of said Gargantuan Hercules,
+and I'll<br>
+try to corrall just such a phenomenon as you desire. Never
+hesitate to<br>
+consult me on such important matters, for I am ever-ready to cast
+aside my<br>
+own multifarious duties, when my Alma Mater needs my mental
+assistance,<br>
+or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, are you <i>crazy</i>?" fleered Deacon Radford, moved
+to excitement,<br>
+despite his great faith in the versatile youth. "Full-backs like
+that do<br>
+not grow on trees; the only one I ever read of was Ole Skjarsen,
+in<br>
+George Fitch's 'Siwash College Stories,' and he was purely
+fictitious. We<br>
+know you have accomplished some great things by your
+'inspirations,' but as<br>
+for this&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Just leave it to Hicks" quoth the irrepressible youth,
+swaggering toward<br>
+the door with an affected nonchalant self-confidence that aroused
+Butch to<br>
+wrath, and vastly amused his companions. "I'll admit a human
+juggernaut<br>
+like Coach Corridan dreams of will be hard to round up, but, I'll
+have an<br>
+inspiration soon. Don't worry about your old eleven, your problem
+will be<br>
+solved, and you will have a team that can play fifty-seven
+varieties of<br>
+football. Raw revolver, my comrades."</p>
+
+<p>When the graceless T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had sauntered
+gracefully out of<br>
+the grub-shack, big Butch Brewster, almost exploding with
+suppressed wrath,<br>
+stared at Slave-Driver Corridan and staid Deacon Radford a full
+minute;<br>
+then he grinned,</p>
+
+<p>"That&mdash;Hicks!" he murmured, struggling against a desire
+to laugh. "What a<br>
+ridiculous prophecy! 'Just leave it to Hicks!' Well, that means
+the problem<br>
+goes unsolved, for though I confess he <i>is</i> brilliant, and
+his so-called<br>
+'inspirations' have helped old Bannister; when it comes to
+rushing out and<br>
+lassoing a smashing. Herculean full-back&mdash;<i>bah</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, when Coach Corridan and the Gold and Green
+squad climbed<br>
+the bluff to the field back of Camp Bannister, for morning signal
+drill,<br>
+their last memory was of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., arrayed in
+radiant<br>
+vestiture, his chair tilted against the bunkhouse&mdash;the
+chords of the banjo,<br>
+and his foghorn voice drifting to them on the warm September
+air:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, father and mother pay all the bills
+(<i>plunk-plunk</i>)<br>
+  And we have all the fun (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)<br>
+  With the money that we spend in college life!"</p>
+
+<p>Two hours afterward, as a tired, perspiring squad scrambled
+down the bluff,<br>
+and made for the cool waters of Lake Conowingo, a mysterious
+silence,<br>
+like a mighty wave, literally surged toward them. Camp Bannister
+seemed<br>
+deserted, the sun was still shining, the birds sang as cheerily
+as ever,<br>
+but instinctively the collegians felt an indescribable
+loneliness, a sense<br>
+of tremendous loss.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" shouted Butch Brewster, loudly, his voice shattering
+the<br>
+stillness. "Hicks&mdash;ahoy! I say, Hicks&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Old Hinky-Dink, a letter in his hand, hobbled from the
+cook-tent toward<br>
+them; like a sinister harbinger of evil he advanced, grinning
+deprecatingly<br>
+at the squad:</p>
+
+<p>"Mistah Hicks am gone!" he announced importantly. "He done gib
+me fo' bits<br>
+to row him ober to de village, to cotch de noon 'spress fo'
+Philadelphy!<br>
+Heah am a letter what he lef'&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, to whom the <i>billet-doux</i> was
+addressed in T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while
+the squad<br>
+listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled
+youth;</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR BUTCH:</p>
+
+<p>"Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on!
+I'm called<br>
+away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow
+it in the<br>
+room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next
+century.<br>
+Give my <i>adieux</i> to Coach Corridan and the squad.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours truthfully,</p>
+
+<p>"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S.: Tell Coach Corridan he should worry&mdash;<i>not</i>!
+I'm hot on the trail of<br>
+a fullback that will make Ted Coy at his coyest look like the
+paralyzed<br>
+inmate of an old man's home. Just leave it to Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap03"></a>
+CHAPTER III</p>
+
+<p>HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY</p>
+
+<p>  "Has anybody here seen our Hicks?<br>
+  H-i-c-k-s!<br>
+  Has anybody here seen our Hicks?<br>
+  If you've seen him, answer, 'Yes!'<br>
+  He's tall and slim, and he wears a grin,<br>
+  And his banjo-thumping is a sin.<br>
+  Has <i>anybody</i> here seen our Hicks&mdash;<br>
+  Hicks&mdash;and his old banjo?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Butch Brewster, big Beef McNaughton, the Phillyloo
+Bird&mdash;that<br>
+flamingo-like Senior&mdash;and little Theophilus Opperdyke, the
+timorous boner<br>
+whom Bannister College called the "Human Encyclopedia," roosted
+on the<br>
+sacred Senior Fence, between the Gymnasium and the Administration
+Building.<br>
+A gloomy silence, like a somber mantle, enshrouded the four
+members of '19,<br>
+as they listened to a rollicking parody on, "Has Anybody Here
+Seen Kelly?"<br>
+chanted by some Juniors in Nordyke, with T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+as the<br>
+object of solicitude. Nor did the melancholy youths respond to
+the queries<br>
+hurled down at them from the dormitories' windows:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Butch Brewster, where is that crazy Hicks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Beef, ain't our Hicks a-comin' back here no more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Phillyloo, any word from our Hicks yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ahoy there, Theophilus, where is Hicks, the Missing?"</p>
+
+<p>The seven-thirty study-hour bell was ringing, its mellow
+chimes sounding<br>
+from the Administration Building tower. From the windows of the
+dormitories<br>
+gleams of light shot athwart the darkness. Over in Creighton
+Hall, the<br>
+abode of Freshmen, a silence reigned, but in Smithson, where the
+Sophomores<br>
+roomed, Nordyke, home of the Juniors, and Bannister, haunt of the
+solemn<br>
+Seniors, pandemonium obtained. In these dorm. rooms and corridors
+that<br>
+night, just as in the class-rooms, or on the campus, and
+Bannister Field<br>
+that day, there was but one topic. Whenever two students met,
+came the<br>
+query inevitable:</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Hicks? Isn't Hicks coming back this year?"</p>
+
+<p>The Freshmen, bewildered, quite naturally, at the furore made
+over<br>
+one missing student, asked, "Who is Hicks?" Seeking information
+from<br>
+upper-classmen they received innumerable tales, in the nature of
+Iliad<br>
+and Odyssey, concerning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; they heard of his
+campus<br>
+exploits, such as his originating The Big Brotherhood of
+Bannister, and<br>
+they laughed, at recitals of his athletic fiascos. They were told
+of his<br>
+inevitably sunny nature, his loyal comradeship, his generous
+disposition,<br>
+and as a result, the Freshmen, too, became intensely interested
+in the<br>
+all-important campus problem: "Where is T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Theophilus Opperdyke, whose big-rimmed spectacles, high
+forehead,<br>
+and bushy hair gave him an intensely owlish appearance,
+sighed<br>
+tremendously, stared solemnly at his class-mates, and became the
+author of<br>
+a most astounding statement: "I&mdash;I can't study," quavered
+the "boner,"<br>
+he whose tender devotion to his books was a campus tradition, and
+whose<br>
+loyalty to his firm friend, the blithesome Hicks, was as that of
+Damon<br>
+to Pythias, "I just <i>can't</i> care about my studies, without
+Hicks here!<br>
+Somehow, it&mdash;it doesn't seem like old times, on the
+campus."</p>
+
+<p>"I should say not!" ejaculated the Phillyloo Bird,
+sepulchrally, his<br>
+string-bean length draped with extreme decorative effect on the
+Senior<br>
+Fence, "Life at old Bannister without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is
+about as<br>
+interesting as 'The Annual Report of the Department of
+Agriculture!'<br>
+Prexy thought he started the college on its Marathon three days
+ago, but<br>
+Bannister will not be officially opened until Hicks stands by his
+window<br>
+some study-hour, twangs that old banjo, and shatters the campus
+quietude<br>
+with a ballad roared in his fog-horn voice!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, enshrouded in melancholy, instinctively
+gazed up at the<br>
+windows of the room T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had reserved on the
+third floor<br>
+of Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., as if he fully expected to
+behold<br>
+the missing youth materialize. There, in lonely grandeur, waited
+the<br>
+sunny-souled Senior's vast aggregation of trunks, crates, and
+packing<br>
+boxes, together with Hicks' baggage brought down from Camp
+Bannister. The<br>
+bothersome banjo had disappeared at the same time the youthful
+Caruso<br>
+imitated the Arabs, folding his figurative tent, and stealing
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a strange paradox," boomed Butch Brewster, finding that
+no Hicks<br>
+appeared at the window, "but for three years Bannister has
+stormed at Hicks<br>
+for bothering us during study-hour, or at midnight, with his
+saengerfest,<br>
+and now I'd give anything to see him up there, and to hear that
+banjo, and<br>
+his songs! It is just as if the sun doesn't shine on the campus,
+when T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., is away!"</p>
+
+<p>Bannister College had been running for three days "on one
+cylinder," as<br>
+the Phillyloo Bird quaintly phrased it, on account of the
+gladsome Hicks'<br>
+mysterious absence. Not a word had the Head Coach, Captain
+Brewster, the<br>
+football squad, or any of the collegians received from the
+blithesome<br>
+youth, since the <i>billet-doux</i> he left with old Hinky-Dink
+at Camp<br>
+Bannister. Old students, returning to the campus for another
+golden year,<br>
+invaded Hicks' room in Bannister, ready to enjoy the cozy den of
+that<br>
+jolly Senior, but they encountered silence and desolation. No one
+had the<br>
+slightest knowledge of where the cheery Hicks could be; they
+missed his<br>
+singing and banjo strumming, his pestersome ways, his cheerful
+good nature,<br>
+his cozy quarters always open house to all, and his Hicks'
+Personally<br>
+Conducted tours downtown to Jerry's for those celebrated
+Beefsteak Busts.</p>
+
+<p>A telegram to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., in Pittsburgh,
+sent by the<br>
+worried Butch Brewster, had brought this concise response:</p>
+
+<p>No knowledge of Thomas' whereabouts. He should be at
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer," reflected Beef McNaughton, shifting his bulk on the
+protesting<br>
+fence. "We know Hicks will be back, for all his luggage is stowed
+away<br>
+in his room, and we are sure he is giving us all this mystery
+just for a<br>
+joke&mdash;he dearly loves to arrange a sensational and dramatic
+climax&mdash;but<br>
+we just can't get used to his not being on the campus. When
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke can't study, it's high time the S.O.S. signal was sent
+to T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not the worst of it," growled Captain Butch Brewster,
+his arm<br>
+across little Theophilus' shoulders. "The football squad misses
+Hicks,<br>
+Beef. For the past two seasons he has sat at the training-table,
+his<br>
+invariable good-humor, his Cheshire cat grin, and his sunny ways
+have kept<br>
+the fellows in fine mental trim so they haven't worried over the
+game. But<br>
+now, just as soon as he left Camp Bannister, the barometer of
+their spirits<br>
+went down to zero and every meal at training-table is a funeral.
+Coach<br>
+Corridan can't inject any pep into the scrimmages, and he says if
+Hicks<br>
+doesn't return soon, Bannister's chances of the Championship are
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>"As Theophilus says," responded the gloomy Beef, "we just
+can't get used<br>
+to his not being here. We miss his good-nature, his sunny smile,
+the jolly<br>
+crowds in his cozy quarters&mdash;why, the campus is talking of
+nothing but<br>
+Hicks&mdash;and I don't know what Bannister will do after Hicks
+graduates&mdash;shut<br>
+down, I suppose!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you know," grinned the Phillyloo Bird, his cadaverous
+structure<br>
+humped over like a turkey on the roost, "our Hicks hath sallied
+forth on<br>
+the trail of a full-back, a Hercules who will smash the other
+elevens to<br>
+infinitesimal smithereens! He told the squad to just leave it to
+Hicks,<br>
+so don't be surprised if he is making flying trips to Yale,
+Harvard, and<br>
+Princeton, striving to corral some embryo Ted Coy. Remember how
+Hicks often<br>
+fulfills his rash prophecies!"</p>
+
+<p>"A Herculean full-back&mdash;Bah!" fleered Butch, for all the
+campus knew of<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, extremely rash vow to unearth a
+"phenom." "The<br>
+truth of it is, fellows. Hicks has failed to locate such a wonder
+as Coach<br>
+Corridac outlined, for there ain't no such animal! He doesn't
+like to<br>
+come back to Bannister without having made good his promise,
+without that<br>
+Gargantuan giant he vowed to round up for the Gold and
+Green."</p>
+
+<p>Just then, as if to substantiate Butch's jeering statement, a
+youth wearing<br>
+the uniform and cap of The Western Union Telegraph Company
+and<br>
+advancing across the campus at that terrific speed always
+exhibited by<br>
+messenger-boys, appeared in the offing. Periscoping the four
+Seniors on the<br>
+fence, he navigated his course accordingly and pulling a yellow
+envelope<br>
+from his cap, he queried, in charmingly chaste English:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, kin youse tell me where to find a feller name o'
+Brewster, wot's<br>
+cap'n o' de football bunch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right here, Little Nemo," advised the Phillyloo Bird,
+solemnly. "Hast thou<br>
+any messages from New York for me? John D. Rockefeller promised
+to wire me<br>
+whether or not to purchase war-stocks."</p>
+
+<p>The Phillyloo Bird, at this stage of his monologue, was
+interrupted by a<br>
+yell that would have caused a full-blooded Choctaw Indian to turn
+pale.<br>
+This came from good Butch Brewster, who, having signed for the
+message,<br>
+and imagined all manner of catastrophes, from world-wars,
+earthquakes,<br>
+pestilence and loss of wealth, down to bad news from Hicks, after
+the<br>
+fashion of those receiving telegrams but seldom, had scanned the
+yellow<br>
+slip. Never before, or afterward, not even when the luckless
+Butch fell in<br>
+love, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., assisted Cupid, did the
+pachydermic Butch<br>
+act so insanely as on this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"Whoop-<i>eee! Yee-ow! Wow-wow-wow</i>!" howled the supposedly
+solemn Senior,<br>
+tumbling from the Senior fence and rolling on the campus like a
+decapitated<br>
+rooster. "Hip-hip-<i>hooray</i>! Ring the bell, Beef, get the
+fellows out, have<br>
+the Band ready, Oh, where is Coach Corridan? Read it, Beef,
+Theophilus,<br>
+Phillyloo. Oh, Hicks is <i>coming</i> and he's got&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It is possible that little Theophilus, who firmly believed
+that big Butch<br>
+Brewster had gone emotionally insane, would have fled for help,
+but at that<br>
+juncture members of the Gold and Green football squad, with Head
+Coach<br>
+Patrick Henry Corridan, appeared, marching funereally toward the
+Gym.,<br>
+where a signal quiz was booked for seven forty-five. Beholding
+the<br>
+paralyzing spectacle of their captain apparently in paroxysms on
+the grass,<br>
+Hefty Hollingsworth, Biff Pemberton, Monty Merriweather and Pudge
+Langdon<br>
+hurled themselves on his tonnage, while Roddy Perkins sat on his
+head, and<br>
+wrested the telegram from his grasp,</p>
+
+<p>"Call up Matteawan," shouted Roddy, unfolding the slip, "Butch
+is getting<br>
+barmy in the dome, he&mdash;Oh, Coach, fellows&mdash;<i>great
+joy</i>! Just heed."</p>
+
+<p>James Roderick Perkins, as excited as a Senator about to make
+his first<br>
+speech, read aloud the telegram, on which the heedless Hicks had
+triple<br>
+rates:</p>
+
+<p>"BUTCH:</p>
+
+<p>"Coming 8.30 P. M. express today. Discharge entire
+eleven&mdash;got whole team<br>
+in one. Knock out partitions between five rooms. Make space for
+Thor, the<br>
+Prodigious Prodigy! Leave it to Hicks!</p>
+
+<p>"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR."</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks is coming!" shrieked the Phillyloo Bird, soaring down
+from the<br>
+Senior Fence like a condor. "He will be here in less than an
+hour; he sent<br>
+this wire just before his train left Philadelphia. Money is no
+object, when<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>"'Discharge entire eleven,'" quoth Butch Brewster, having
+somewhat subdued<br>
+his frenzy. "'Got whole team in one&mdash;knock out partitions
+between <i>five</i><br>
+rooms&mdash;make space for Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy!' Now,
+what in the world<br>
+has that lunatical Hicks done? Who can Thor be?"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Cardiff, Buster Brown, Bunch Bingham, Scoop Sawyer, little
+Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth, Don Carterson, and Cherub Challoner, not having
+given their<br>
+brawn to the subduing of Butch, now kindly donated their brain,
+in all<br>
+manner of weird suggestions. According to their various surmises,
+T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., had lured the Strong Man away from Barnum
+and Bailey's<br>
+Circus, had in some way reincarnated the mythical Norse god,
+Thor, had<br>
+hired some Greco-Roman wrestler, or by other devices too numerous
+and<br>
+ridiculous to mention, had produced a full-back according to
+Coach<br>
+Corridan's blue-prints and specifications.</p>
+
+<p>Big Beef McNaughton, seized with an inspiration that
+supplied<br>
+locomotive-power to his huge frame, lumbered into the Gym., and
+soon<br>
+appeared with monster megaphones, used in "rooting" for Gold and
+Green<br>
+teams, which he handed out to his comrades. Then the riotous
+squad, at his<br>
+suggestion, sprinted for the Quad., that inner quadrangle or
+court around<br>
+which the four class dormitories, forming the sides of a square,
+were<br>
+built; anyone desiring an audience could be sure of it here,
+since the<br>
+collegians in all four dorms. could rush to the Quadrangle side
+and look<br>
+down from the windows. In the Quadrangle, under the brilliant
+arc-lights,<br>
+the exuberant youths paused,</p>
+
+<p>"One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;let 'er go!" boomed Beef, and
+the football squad, in<br>
+<i>basso profundo</i>, aided by the Phillyloo Bird's uncertain
+tenor, and<br>
+Theophilus' quavery treble, roared in a tremendous vocal
+explosion that<br>
+shook the dormitories:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks is coming! Hicks is coming! Everybody out on the
+campus! Get ready<br>
+to welcome our T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.! Hicks is bringing
+Bannister's<br>
+full-back&mdash;a Prodigious Prodigy!"</p>
+
+<p>Windows rattled up, heads were thrust out, a fusillade of
+questions<br>
+bombarded the squad in the Quadrangle below; from the three
+upper-class<br>
+dormitories erupted hordes of howling, shouting youths, and soon
+the Quad.<br>
+was filled with a singing, yelling, madly happy crowd. The
+Bannister Band,<br>
+that famous campus musical organization, following a time-honored
+habit of<br>
+playing on every possible occasion, gladsomely tuned up and soon
+the<br>
+noise was deafening, while study-hour, as prescribed by the
+Faculty, was<br>
+forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody on the campus, at once!" Butch Brewster,
+Master-of-Ceremonies,<br>
+boomed through his megaphone, having aroused excitement to the
+highest<br>
+pitch by reading Hicks' telegram. "Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus
+will soon<br>
+heave into sight. Let the Band blare, make a <i>big noise</i>.
+Let's show Hicks<br>
+how glad we are to have him back to old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>It is historically certain that Mr. Napoleon Bonaparte
+returning from Jena<br>
+and Austerlitz, Mr. Julius Caesar, home at Rome from his
+Conquests, or Mr.<br>
+Alexander the Great (Conqueror, not National League pitcher)
+never received<br>
+such a welcome as did T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., from his Bannister
+comrades<br>
+that night. To the excited students, massed on the campus before
+the Gym.<br>
+awaiting his arrival, every second seemed a century; everybody
+talked at<br>
+once until the hubbub rivaled that of a Woman's Suffrage
+Convention. Thomas<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and
+he was<br>
+bringing "The Prodigious Prodigy," whatever that was, with him.
+Knowing the<br>
+cheery Senior's intense love of doing the dramatic and his great
+ambition<br>
+to startle his Alma Mater with some sensational stunt, they could
+hardly<br>
+wait for old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus to roll up the
+driveway,</p>
+
+<p>"Here he comes!" shrieked, little Skeet Wigglesworth, an
+excitable Senior,<br>
+who had climbed a tree to keep watch. "Here comes our Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Honk&mdash;Honk!" To the incessant blaring of a raucous horn,
+old Dan<br>
+Flannagan's jitney-bus moved up the driveway. The genial Irish
+Jehu, who<br>
+for over twenty years had transported Bannister collegians and
+alumni<br>
+to and from College Hill in a ramshackle hack drawn by Lord
+Nelson, an<br>
+antiquated, somnambulistic horse, had yielded to modern invention
+at<br>
+last. Lord Nelson having become defunct during vacation, Old Dan,
+with<br>
+a collection taken up by several alumni at Commencement, had
+bought a<br>
+battered Ford, and constructed therewith a jitney-bus. This
+conveyance was<br>
+fully as rattle-trap in appearance as the traditional hack had
+been, but<br>
+the returning collegians hailed it with glee.</p>
+
+<p>"All hail Hicks!" howled Butch Brewster, beside himself with
+joy,<br>
+"Altogether&mdash;the Bannister yell for&mdash;Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>With half the collegians giving the yell, a number
+shouting<br>
+indiscriminately, the Bannister Band blaring furiously, "Behold,
+The<br>
+Conquering Hero Comes," with the youths a yelling, howling,
+shrieking,<br>
+dancing mass, old Dan Flannagan, adding his quota of noises with
+the<br>
+Claxon, brought his bus to a stop. This was a hilarious spectacle
+in<br>
+itself, for on its sides the Bannister students had painted:</p>
+
+<p>HENRY FORD'S "PIECE-OF-A-SHIP," THE DOVE!<br>
+ALL RIDING IN THIS JIT DO<br>
+SO AT THEIR OWN RISK! TEN CENTS<br>
+FOR A JOY-RIDE TO COLLEG HILL! YES,<br>
+IT'S A FORD! WHAT DO YOU CARE? GET ABOARD!</p>
+
+<p>On the roof of "The Dove," or "The Crab," as the collegians
+called it when<br>
+it skidded sideways, perched precariously that well-known,
+beloved youth,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. He clutched his pestersome banjo and was
+vigorously<br>
+strumming the strings and apparently howling a ballad, lost in
+the<br>
+unearthly turmoil. As the jitney-bus stopped, the grinning Hicks
+arose, and<br>
+from his lofty, position made a profound bow.</p>
+
+<p>"Speech! Speech! Speech!" A mighty shout arose, and Hicks
+raised his hand<br>
+for silence, which was immediately delivered to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows, one and all," he shouted, a mist before his eyes,
+for his<br>
+impulsive soul was touched by the ovation, "I&mdash;I am
+<i>glad</i> to be back!<br>
+Say&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;well, I'm glad to be back&mdash;that's
+all!"</p>
+
+<p>At this masterly oration, which, despite its brevity,
+contained volumes of<br>
+feeling, the Bannister students went wild&mdash;for a longer
+period than any<br>
+political convention ever cheered a nominated candidate, they
+cheered T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+"Roar&mdash;roar&mdash;roar&mdash;<i>roar</i>!" in deafening
+sound-waves,<br>
+the noise swept across the campus; never had football idol,
+baseball hero,<br>
+or any athletic demigod, in all Bannister's history, been
+accorded such a<br>
+tremendous ovation.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows," called T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., climbing down from
+his precarious<br>
+perch, "stand back; I have brought to Bannister the 'Prodigious
+Prodigy.'<br>
+I have rounded up a full-back who will beat Ballard all by
+himself. Behold<br>
+the new Gold and Green football eleven, 'Thor'!"</p>
+
+<p>From the grinning Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, like a Russian
+bear charging<br>
+from its den, lumbered a being whose enormous bulk fairly
+astounded the<br>
+speechless youths; Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Tug Cardiff,
+Bunch<br>
+Bingham, Buster Brown, and Pudge Langdon were popularly regarded
+as the<br>
+last word in behemoths, but this "Thor" dwarfed them, towered
+above them<br>
+like a Colossus over Lilliputians. He was a youth, and yet a
+veritable<br>
+Hercules. Over six feet he stood, with a massive head, covered
+with tousled<br>
+white hair, a powerful neck, broad shoulders, a vast chest. To a
+judge of<br>
+athletes, he would tip the scales at a hundred and ninety pounds,
+all solid<br>
+muscle, for that superb physique held not an ounce of superfluous
+flesh.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, gazing at the
+mountain of<br>
+muscle, "if <i>size</i> means anything, you have brought old
+Bannister an entire<br>
+football squad! What splendid material to train for the Big
+Games, why&mdash;he<br>
+will be irresistible!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap04"></a>
+CHAPTER IV</p>
+
+<p>QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER</p>
+
+<p>  "I didn't raise my Ford to be a <i>jitney</i>&mdash;<br>
+  To run the streets, and stay out late at night!<br>
+  Who dares to put a jitney sign, upon it&mdash;<br>
+  And send my <i>peace-ship</i> out for fares to fight?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., standing by his open window at 3 P. M.
+one<br>
+afternoon a week after his sensational return to Bannister
+College, with<br>
+the "Prodigious Prodigy" in tow, indulged in the soul-satisfying
+pastime of<br>
+twanging his banjo, and roaring, in his subterranean voice, a
+parody on "I<br>
+Didn't Raise My Boy to be a Soldier." It was actually the first
+Caruso-like<br>
+outburst of the pestersome youth that year, but his saengerfest
+brought<br>
+vociferous howls of protest from campus and dormitories:</p>
+
+<p>"Bow-wow-wow! The Grand Opery season is starting!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sing some records for a talking-machine company, Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Kill that tom-cat! Listen to the back-fence musicale!"</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Hicks&mdash;we'll take your word for that noise!"</p>
+
+<p>On the Gym. steps, loafing a few moments before jogging out to
+Bannister<br>
+Field for a strenuous scrimmage under the personal supervision
+of<br>
+Slave-Driver Corridan, the Gold and Green football squad had
+gathered. It<br>
+was from these stalwart gridiron gladiators that the caustic
+criticism of<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, vocal atrocities emanated, and the
+imitation of a<br>
+mournful hound by "Ichabod," the skyscraping Senior, was indeed
+phenomenal.<br>
+Added to the howls, whistles, jeers, and shouts of the squad,
+were like<br>
+condemnations from other collegians, sky-larking on the campus,
+or in the<br>
+dorms.</p>
+
+<p>"At that," grinned Captain Butch Brewster happily, "it surely
+makes me feel<br>
+jubilant to hear Hicks' foghorn voice shattering the echoes, with
+his<br>
+banjo strumming disturbing the peace&mdash;for which offense it
+shall soon be<br>
+arrested. We can truly say that old Bannister is now officially
+opened for<br>
+another year, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., has performed his
+annual rite&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Right&mdash;!" scoffed big Pudge Langdon, indignantly, as he
+gazed up at the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth, at the window of his room on the
+third-floor, campus<br>
+side, of Bannister Hall, "Hicks ought to be tarred and feathered;
+there is<br>
+<i>nothing right</i> in the way he has acted since his return to
+college! He<br>
+struts around like Herman, the Master-Magician, and all the
+fellows fully<br>
+expect to see him produce white rabbits from his cap, or make
+varicolored<br>
+flags out of his handkerchief."</p>
+
+<p>"We ought to toss him in a blanket," stormed Beef McNaughton,
+in ludicrous<br>
+rage. "Ever since he mystified Bannister by going out and
+corralling a<br>
+Hercules who is an entire eleven in himself, Hicks has maintained
+that<br>
+sphinx-like silence as to how he achieved the feat, and he
+swaggers around,<br>
+enshrouded in <i>mystery</i>! All we know is that 'Thor' is John
+Thorwald, of<br>
+Norwegian descent. If we ask <i>him</i> for information, that
+wretch Hicks has<br>
+him trained to say, 'Ask the little fellow, Hicks!'"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in truth, had acted in a most
+reprehensible manner<br>
+since that memorable night when he brought "Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy,"<br>
+to the campus. Not that he ceased to be the same sunny-souled,
+popular and<br>
+friendly youth. The collegians, happy at finding his room
+open-house again,<br>
+flocked to his cozy quarters, Freshmen <i>fell</i> under the
+spell of his<br>
+generous nature, his Beef-Steak Busts, down at Jerry's were
+nightly<br>
+occurrences, and he was the same Hicks as of old. But, after the
+dramatic<br>
+manner in which Hicks had mysteriously made good the rash vow
+uttered at<br>
+Camp Bannister and had brought to Coach Corridan a blond-haired
+giant who<br>
+seemed destined to perform prodigies at full-back, the sunny
+Senior had<br>
+evidently labored under the delusion that he was "Kellar, The
+Great<br>
+Magician."</p>
+
+<p>Instead of relieving the tortured curiosity of the students,
+wild to know<br>
+how and where Hicks had unearthed this physical Hercules, who in
+every way<br>
+filled the details of Head Coach Corridan's "blue-prints," T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., enjoying to the full this novel method of torturing
+his<br>
+comrades, made a baffling mystery of the affair, much to the
+indignation of<br>
+his friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Just leave it to Hicks," he would say, when the Bannister
+youths<br>
+cajoled, implored, threatened, or argued. "Thor is eligible to
+play four<br>
+years of football at old Bannister. I call him Thor, after the
+great Norse<br>
+god, Thor; he is of Norwegian descent. That is all of the
+Billion-Dollar<br>
+Mystery I can disclose; ten thousand dollars offered for the
+correct<br>
+solution."</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes Scoop Sawyer," said Monty Merriweather, as that
+Senior, waving<br>
+his arms in air, catapulted from Bannister Hall, and strode
+toward the<br>
+squad on the Gym. steps; his appearance registered wrath, in
+photo-play<br>
+parlance, and on reaching his comrades he immediately acquainted
+them with<br>
+its cause.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to that Hicks!" he exploded, gesticulating with a
+sheaf of papers.<br>
+"Hicks, the mocking-bird! He is mocking <i>us</i>&mdash;with his
+'Billion-Dollar<br>
+Mystery!' Say&mdash;here I am writing to Jack Merritt; he played
+football four<br>
+years for old Bannister; he was captain of the Gold and Green
+eleven; last<br>
+Commencement he graduated, and the last thing he said to me was,
+'Scoop,<br>
+old pal, write to me next fall, tell me everything about the
+football<br>
+season; keep me posted as to new material!' Everything&mdash;keep
+him posted<br>
+as to new material&mdash;Bah! If I write that Hicks has brought a
+fellow he<br>
+calls 'Thor,' who spreads the regulars over the field, Jack will
+want<br>
+to know the details, and&mdash;that villainous Hicks won't
+divulge his dread<br>
+secret!"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, Scoop Sawyer, so-called because he was
+ambitious to be a<br>
+newspaper reporter, after graduation, and for his humorous
+articles in the<br>
+Bannister Weekly, had his intense wrath soothed by that which
+has<br>
+"power to soothe the savage breast"; T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+displaying a<br>
+wonderful originality by composing, then chanting, his parody,
+concluded<br>
+the chorus roaring lustily, to a rollicking banjo
+accompaniment:</p>
+
+<p>  "If street car companies gave seats to all patrons<br>
+  The strap-hangers in jitneys would not ride.<br>
+  There'd be no jits. today<br>
+  If Ford owners would say,<br>
+  I didn't raise my Ford to be a&mdash;jitney!"</p>
+
+<p>"That is too much!" raged Captain Butch Brewster, facing his
+excited<br>
+colleagues. "Come on, fellows, we'll invade Hicks' room, read him
+Scoop's<br>
+letter to Jack Merritt, and <i>make</i> him solve the Mystery!
+We're done with<br>
+diplomacy; now, we'll deliver the ultimatum; when the squad
+returns from<br>
+scrimmage, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., will tell us all about Thor,
+or be<br>
+tossed in a blanket! Are you with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are <i>ahead</i> of you!" howled Roddy Perkins, leading a
+wild charge for<br>
+the entrance to Bannister Hall. Following him up the two flights
+of stairs<br>
+with thunderous tread came Butch, Beef, Monty, Biff, Hefty,
+Pudge, Tug,<br>
+Ichabod, Bunch, Buster, Bus Norton, and several second-team
+players,<br>
+Cherub, Chub Chalmers, Don, Skeet, and Scoop Sawyer with his
+letter. With<br>
+a terrific, blood-chilling clatter, and hideous howls, the
+Hicks-quelling<br>
+Expedition roared down the third corridor of Bannister, and
+surged into the<br>
+room of that tantalizing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!</p>
+
+<p>"Safety first!" shrieked that cheery collegian, stowing his
+banjo in the<br>
+closet and making a strenuous but futile effort to dive
+head-first beneath<br>
+the bed, being forcibly restrained by Beef, who clung to his left
+ankle.<br>
+"Say, to what am I indebted for the honor of this call? Why, when
+I got<br>
+back to Bannister, you fellows gushed, 'Oh, we're <i>so</i> glad
+you're back,<br>
+Hicks, old top; we missed even your saengerfests,' and when I
+start one&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," pronounced Butch Brewster grimly, holding the genial
+offender<br>
+by the scruff of the neck, "you tantalizing, aggravating,
+irritating,<br>
+lunatical, conscienceless degenerate! You assassin of Father
+Time, you<br>
+disturber of the peace, <i>heed</i>! Scoop Sawyer is writing to
+Jack Merritt, to<br>
+tell about the football team, and Bannister's chances of the
+Championship;<br>
+he wants to tell Jack all about this Thor! Now, you have acted
+like<br>
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston long enough, and hear our final word. Read
+Scoop's<br>
+letter, and if when you finish its perusal you fail to give us
+full<br>
+information, and answer all questions about Thor&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The football team will toss you in a blanket until you do!"
+finished Monty<br>
+Merriweather, "We intended to wait until after the scrimmage, but
+Butch<br>
+evidently believes we should end your bothersome mystery as once,
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'Curiosity killed the cat!'" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.;
+then seeing<br>
+the avenues and boulevards of escape were closed, but fighting
+for time,<br>
+"let me peruse said missive indited by our literarily
+overbalanced Scoop. I<br>
+am reluctant to dispel the clouds of mystery, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Scoop Sawyer thrust the typewritten pages of the
+letter&mdash;composed on<br>
+the battered old typewriter in the editorial sanctum of the
+Bannister<br>
+Weekly&mdash;into Hicks' grasp and with a grin, that blithesome
+youth read:</p>
+
+<p>Bannister College, Sept, 27.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR OLD JACK:</p>
+
+<p>There is so <i>much</i> to tell you, old pal, that I scarcely
+know where to<br>
+start, but you want to know about the football eleven, so I'll
+write about<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his 'Billion-Dollar Mystery,' as he
+calls it;<br>
+about Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. You well know what a
+scatter-brained<br>
+wretch Hicks is, and how he dearly loves to plot dramatic
+climaxes&mdash;to<br>
+mystify old Bannister. Just now Hicks has the campus as wrathful
+as it is<br>
+possible to be with that lovable youth; he has originated a great
+mystery,<br>
+and achieved a seemingly impossible feat, and instead of
+explaining it, he<br>
+swaggers around like a Hindoo mystic enshrouded in mystery and
+the fellows<br>
+are wild enough to tar and feather the incorrigible villain!</p>
+
+<p>To get off to a sprint-start, up in Camp Bannister, before
+college opened,<br>
+when the squad was in training camp, Butch Brewster says that
+Coach<br>
+Corridan one day, before Hicks, expressed a fervid ambition to
+find a huge,<br>
+irresistible fullback&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Here the chronicle must hang fire, while T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., grinning<br>
+at the wrath his mysterious behavior aroused, peruses those
+sections of<br>
+Scoop Sawyer's epistle telling of two scenes already described;
+first,<br>
+the one in the Camp Bannister grub-shack, where Head Coach
+Corridan<br>
+blue-printed the Gargantuan athlete he desired, and the
+blithesome Hicks<br>
+confidently requested that the Herculean task be left to him;
+second, the<br>
+scene of intense excitement on the campus the night that the
+missing Hicks<br>
+returned personally conducting that mountain of muscle, the
+blond-haired<br>
+Thor.</p>
+
+<p>Having grinned at these descriptions, the pestiferous Hicks
+scanned a<br>
+picturesque description by Scoop of the events that transpired
+between that<br>
+memorable night and the present invasion of the sunny Senior's
+room by the<br>
+indignant squad.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;Naturally, Jack, old Bannister was intensely curious to
+know who this<br>
+"Thor" could be, and how Hicks unearthed such a giant. But,
+instead of<br>
+swaggering a trifle, as he inevitably does, and saying, 'Oh, I
+told you<br>
+just to leave it to Hicks!' then telling all about it, after
+accomplishing<br>
+what everyone believed a ridiculously impossible quest, he
+maintains that<br>
+provokingly mysterious silence, and John Thorwald (we know his
+name,<br>
+anyway) stolidly refers us to Hicks. So where Thor originated or
+how under<br>
+the sun Hicks got on his trail, after making his rash vow to
+corral a<br>
+mighty fullback, is a deep, dark mystery.</p>
+
+<p>Now for Thor himself. Words cannot describe that Prodigious
+Prodigy; he<br>
+must be seen to be believed! We do know that he is John Thorwald,
+and of<br>
+distinctly Norwegian descent, so that calling him after the
+mythic Norse<br>
+god is extremely appropriate. And he is reminiscent of the great
+Thor, with<br>
+his vast strength and prowess. Thanks to T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, love of<br>
+mystery, and of tantalizing old Bannister, we know nothing of
+Thorwald's<br>
+past, but we are sure he has lived and toiled among <i>men</i>,
+to possess<br>
+that powerful build. I can't describe him, old man, without
+resorting to<br>
+exaggeration, for ordinary words and phrases are utterly
+inadequate with<br>
+Thor! Conjure up a vision of Gulliver among the Lilliputians and
+you can<br>
+picture him towering over us. He is a Viking of old, with his
+fair features<br>
+and blond hair. Probably twenty-five years old, he has a powerful
+frame and<br>
+prodigious strength, he dwarfs such behemoths as Butch and Beef,
+and makes<br>
+such insignificant mortals as little Theophilus and myself seem
+like<br>
+insects!</p>
+
+<p>Thor is so <i>big</i>, Jack, that when he gets in a room, he
+crowds everyone<br>
+into the corridor, and fills it alone. No wonder Hicks
+telegraphed to knock<br>
+out the partitions between five rooms to make space for Thor!
+When he<br>
+stands on the campus he blots out several sections of scenery,
+and the<br>
+college disappears, giving the impression he has swallowed it.
+Thor is a<br>
+slow-minded being, but possessed of a grim determination. To get
+an idea<br>
+into his mind requires a blackboard and Chautauqua lecturer, but
+once he<br>
+masters it, he never lets go; so it will be with football
+signals, once let<br>
+him grasp a play, he will never be confused. He is simply a huge,
+stolid<br>
+giant. He has a bulldog purpose to get an education, and nothing
+else<br>
+matters. As for college spirit, the glad comradeship of the
+campus, he has<br>
+no time for it; he pays no attention to the fellows at all, only
+to Hicks.</p>
+
+<p>His devotion to that wretch is pathetic! He follows Hicks
+around like a<br>
+huge mastiff after a terrier, or an ocean leviathan towed by a
+tug-boat; he<br>
+seems absolutely helpless without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and so
+we have<br>
+a daily Hicks' personally conducted tour of Thor to interest us.
+Briefly,<br>
+Jack, John Thorwald is a slow-moving, slow-minded, grimly bulldog
+giant,<br>
+who has come to Bannister to study, and as for any other phase of
+campus<br>
+existence, he has never awakened to it!</p>
+
+<p>Now for the football story: Well, the day after Hicks'
+sensational arrival,<br>
+which I described, Coach Corridan, Captain Butch Brewster, Beef,
+Buster,<br>
+Pudge, Monty, and Roddy with yours truly, went to Thor's room in
+Creighton<br>
+just before football practice. We found that Colossus, who had
+matriculated<br>
+as a Freshman, aided by Hicks, patiently masticating mental food
+as served<br>
+by Ovid. Coach Corridan said, 'Come on, Thorwald, over to the
+Gym.; we'll<br>
+fix you out with togs, if we can get two suits big enough to make
+one for<br>
+your bulk! Ever play the game?' 'I play some,' rumbled Thor
+stolidly, never<br>
+raising his eyes from his Latin. 'Don't bother me, I want to
+<i>study.</i><br>
+I have not time for such foolishness. I am here to study, to get
+an<br>
+education!' 'But,' urged the coach earnestly, 'you <i>must</i>
+play football for<br>
+your Alma Mater, for old Bannister. Why, you&mdash;you
+<i>must</i>, that's all!' Thor<br>
+gazed at Hicks questioningly&mdash;I forgot to add that insect's
+name&mdash;and<br>
+asked, 'Is it so, Hicks? I <i>got</i> to play for the college?'
+And when Hicks<br>
+grinned, 'Sure, Thor, it must be did. Bannister expects you to
+smear the<br>
+other teams over the landscape,' that blond Norwegian Viking
+said, 'Well,<br>
+then, I play.'</p>
+
+<p>All Bannister turned out to behold the "Prodigious Prodigy" on
+the football<br>
+field. Somewhere&mdash;Hicks won't divulge where&mdash;Thor has
+learned the rudiments<br>
+of the game. With that bulldog tenacity of his, he has learned
+them well.<br>
+Hence he was ready for the scrubs, and in the practice game it
+was a<br>
+veritable slaughter of the innocents. The 'Varsity could not stop
+Thor.<br>
+Remember 'Ole' Skjarsen, the big Swede of George Fitch's 'Siwash
+College'<br>
+tales? Thor, after the ten minutes required to teach him a play,
+would take<br>
+the ball and just wade through the regulars for big gains. The
+only way to<br>
+stop him was for the entire eleven to cling affectionately to his
+bulk,<br>
+and then he transported them several yards. He is a phenom, a
+veritable<br>
+Prodigious Prodigy, and maybe old Bannister isn't <i>wild</i>
+with enthusiasm.<br>
+His development will be slow but sure, and by the time the big
+games for<br>
+the championship come, he will be a whole team in himself. Right
+now he<br>
+goes through daily scrimmage as solemnly as if performing a
+sacred rite. He<br>
+doesn't thrill with college spirit, but as for
+football&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Hicks to read the rest of Scoop Sawyer's long missive,
+terminating<br>
+with indignant condemnation of the sunny youth's love of mystery,
+the<br>
+terrific enthusiasm roused at old Bannister by the daily
+appearance on<br>
+Bannister Field of Thor, and his irresistible marches through the
+'Varsity,<br>
+must be chronicled and explained.</p>
+
+<p>Not for five seasons, not since the year before Hicks, Pudge,
+Butch, Beef<br>
+and the others of 1919 were Freshmen, had the Gold and Green
+corraled that<br>
+greatest glory, The State Intercollegiate Football Championship!
+In Captain<br>
+Butch's Sophomore year, he had flung his bulk into the fray,
+training,<br>
+sacrificing, fighting like a Trojan, only to see the pennant lost
+by a<br>
+scant three inches, as Jack Merritt's forty-yard drop-kick for
+the goal<br>
+that would have won the Championship struck the cross-bar and
+bounded back<br>
+into the field. And the past season-old Bannister could still
+vision that<br>
+tragic scene of the biggest game.</p>
+
+<p>The students could picture Captain Brewster, with the
+Bannister eleven a<br>
+few yards from Ballard's goal-line, and the touchdown that would
+give the<br>
+Gold and Green that supreme glory. One minute to play; Deacon
+Radford had<br>
+given Butch the pigskin, and like a berserker, he fought entirely
+through<br>
+the scrimmage. But a kick on the head had blinded him, in the
+<i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>&mdash;free<br>
+of tacklers, with the goal-line, victory, and the Championship so
+near, he<br>
+staggered, reeled blindly, crashed into an upright, and toppled
+backward,<br>
+senseless on the field, while the Referee's whistle announced the
+end of<br>
+the game, and glory to Ballard. Even then, after the first
+terrible shock<br>
+of the loss, of the cruel blow fate dealt the Gold and Green
+two<br>
+successive seasons, the slogan was: "Next year&mdash;Bannister
+will win the<br>
+Championship&mdash;<i>next year</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>It was now "next year!" Losing only Jack Merritt, Babe McCabe
+and Heavy<br>
+Hughes from the line-up, and having Monty Merrlweather and Bunch
+Bingham,<br>
+fully as good, Coach Corridan's Gold and Green eleven, before the
+season<br>
+started, seemed a better fighting machine than even the one of
+the year<br>
+before. But when the irrepressible T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in
+some<br>
+mysterious fashion making good his rash vow to produce a smashing
+full-back<br>
+that can't be stopped, towed that stolid, blond Colossus, Thor,
+to old<br>
+Bannister, enthusiasm broke all limits!</p>
+
+<p>Mass-meetings were held every night. Speeches by Coaches,
+Captain, players,<br>
+Faculty, and students, aroused the campus to the highest pitch;
+every day,<br>
+the entire student-body, with The Bannister Band, turned out on
+Bannister<br>
+Field to cheer the eleven, and to watch the Prodigious Prodigy
+perform<br>
+valorous deeds, like the god Thor. "Bannister College&mdash;State
+Championship!"<br>
+was the cry, and with the giant Thor to present an irresistible
+catapulting<br>
+that could not be stopped, the Gold and Green exultantly awaited
+the big<br>
+games with Hamilton and Ballard.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, the stolid, unemotional, unawakened Thor, on whom
+every hope of<br>
+the Championship was based, whom all Bannister came out to watch
+every day,<br>
+practiced as he studied, doggedly, silently. It was evident to
+all that<br>
+he hated the grind, that he wanted to quit, that his heart was
+not in the<br>
+game, but for some cause, he drove his Herculean body ahead, and
+could not<br>
+be stopped!</p>
+
+<p>"Now, you abandoned wretch," said Butch Brewster grimly, as
+the<br>
+happy-go-lucky Hicks finished Scoop's letter, and glanced about
+him wildly<br>
+seeking a way of escape, "in one minute you will tell us all
+about John<br>
+Thorwald, alias 'Thor,' or be tossed sky-high in a blanket by the
+football<br>
+squad, and please believe me, you'll break all altitude
+records!"</p>
+
+<p>"Spare me, you banditti!" pleaded Hicks, reluctant to cease
+torturing<br>
+Bannister with his Billion-Dollar Mystery, yet equally unwilling
+to aviate<br>
+from a blanket heaved by the husky athletes. "Why seek ye to
+question the<br>
+ways of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.? You have your Prodigious
+Prodigy&mdash;your<br>
+smashing full-back is distributing the 'Varsity over the scenery
+with<br>
+charming nonchalance that promises dire catastrophe for other
+teams, once<br>
+he makes the regulars, so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that dramatic moment, just as Butch Brewster glanced at
+Hicks'<br>
+alarm-clock, to start the minute of grace, a startling
+interruption saved<br>
+the gladsome youth from having to make a decision. A heavy,
+creaking tread<br>
+shook the corridor, and the squad beheld, looming up in the
+doorway, Thor.<br>
+He was not in football togs, and as he started to speak his fair
+face as<br>
+stolid and expressionless as that of a sphinx, Captain Butch
+Brewster<br>
+stepped toward him.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor!" he exclaimed, seizing the blond Colossus by the arm,
+"You aren't<br>
+ready for the scrimmage; hustle over to the Gym. and get on your
+suit."</p>
+
+<p>But John Thorwald, as passive of feature as though he
+announced something<br>
+of the most infinitesimal importance, and were not hurling a
+bomb-shell<br>
+whose explosion, was to shake old Bannister terrifically, spoke
+in a<br>
+matter-of-fact manner: "I shall not play football&mdash;any
+more."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" Every collegian in Hicks' room, including that dazed
+producer<br>
+of the Prodigious Prodigy, chorused the exclamation; to them it
+was as<br>
+stunning a shock as the nation would suffer if its President
+calmly<br>
+announced, "I'm tired of being President of the United States. I
+shall not<br>
+report for work tomorrow." Bannister College, ever since the
+night that<br>
+Thor arrived on the campus, had talked or thought of nothing but
+how this<br>
+huge, blond-haired Hercules would bring the Championship to the
+Gold and<br>
+Green; his prodigies on the gridiron, his ever-increasing
+prowess, had<br>
+aroused enthusiasm to fever heat, and now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I was told wrong," said Thor, shifting his vast tonnage
+awkwardly from one<br>
+foot to the other, and evidently bewildered at the consternation
+caused by<br>
+what he believed a trifling announcement, "I understood that I
+<i>had</i> to<br>
+play football, that the Faculty required it of me, and the
+students let me<br>
+think so. I have just learned from Doctor Alford that such is not
+true,<br>
+that I do not have to play unless I choose, hence, I quit. I came
+to<br>
+college to study, to gain an education. I have toiled long and
+hard for<br>
+the opportunity, and now I have it, I shall not waste my time on
+such<br>
+foolishness."</p>
+
+<p>Then, utterly unconscious that he had spoken sentences which
+would create<br>
+a mighty sensation at old Bannister, that might doom the Gold and
+Green<br>
+to defeat, lose his Alma Mater the Championship, and bring on
+himself the<br>
+cruel ostracism and bitter censure of his fellows, John Thorwald
+lumbered<br>
+down the corridor. A moment of tense silence followed and then
+Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster groaned.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all over, it's all over, fellows!" he said brokenly,
+"Bannister loses<br>
+the Championship! We know it is impossible to move Thor on the
+football<br>
+field, and now that he has said 'No!' to playing football,
+dynamite can not<br>
+move him from his decision."</p>
+
+<p>Then, crushed and disconsolate, the football squad filed
+silently from the<br>
+room, to break the glad news to Coach Corridan, and to spread the
+joyous<br>
+tidings to old Bannister. When they had gone, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.,<br>
+staring at the figurative black cloud that lowered over his Alma
+Mater,<br>
+strove to find its silver lining, and at last he partially
+succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>"Anyway," said Hicks, with a lugubrious effort to grin,
+"Thor's<br>
+announcement shocked the squad so much that I was not forced to
+explain my<br>
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap05"></a>
+CHAPTER V</p>
+
+<p>HICKS MAKES A DECISION</p>
+
+<p>"In the famous words of Mr. Somebody-Or-Other," quoth T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., "something has <i>got</i> to be did, and immediately to
+once!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster nodded assent. So did Head Coach Patrick
+Henry Corridan,<br>
+Beef McNaughton, Team Manager Socks Fitzpatrick, Monty
+Merriweather, Dad<br>
+Pendleton, President of the Athletic Association, and Deacon
+Radford,<br>
+quarter-back, also Shad Fishpaw, who, being Freshman
+Class-Chairman,<br>
+maintained a discreet silence. Instead of the usual sky-larking,
+care-free<br>
+crowd that infested the cozy quarters of the happy-go-lucky
+Hicks, every<br>
+collegian present, except the ever-cheerful youth, seemed to have
+lost his<br>
+best friend and his last dollar at one fell swoop!</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, something has got to be did!" fleered Beef
+McNaughton, the<br>
+davenport creaking under the combined tonnage of himself and
+Butch<br>
+Brewster, "But who will do it? Where's all that
+Oh-just-leave-it-to-Hicks<br>
+stuff you have pulled for the past three years, you pestiferous
+insect?<br>
+Bah! You did a lot; you dragged a Prodigious Prodigy to old
+Bannister,<br>
+enshrouded him in darkest mystery, and now, when he pushed the
+'Varsity off<br>
+the field and promised to corral the Championship, single-handed,
+he puts<br>
+his foot down, and says, 'No&mdash;I will not play football!' Get
+busy, Little<br>
+Mr. Fix-It."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" accommodated that blithesome
+Senior, with a<br>
+cheeriness he was far from feeling. "You all do know why Thor
+won't<br>
+play football; it is not like last season, when Deke Radford, a
+star<br>
+quarter-back, refused either to play, or to explain his refusal.
+Let me<br>
+get an inspiration, and then Thor will once again gently but
+firmly thrust<br>
+entire football elevens down the field before him!"</p>
+
+<p>As evidence of how intensely serious was the situation, let it
+be<br>
+chronicled that, for the first time in his scatter-brained campus
+career,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., did not dare strum his banjo and roar out
+ballads<br>
+to torture his long-suffering colleagues. Popular and beloved as
+he was,<br>
+the gladsome youth hesitated to shatter the quietude of the
+campus with<br>
+his saengerfest, knowing as he did what a terrible blow Thor's
+utterly<br>
+astounding announcement had been to the college.</p>
+
+<p>It was nine o'clock, one night two weeks after the day when
+John Thorwald,<br>
+better known as Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, so mysteriously
+produced by<br>
+Hicks, had stolidly paralyzed old Bannister by unemotionally
+stating his<br>
+decision to play no more football. Since then, to quote the
+Phillyloo Bird,<br>
+"Bannister has staggered around the ring like a prizefighter with
+the<br>
+Referee counting off ten seconds and trying to fight again before
+he takes<br>
+the count." In truth, the students had made a fatal mistake in
+building<br>
+all their hopes of victory on that blond giant, Thor; seeing his
+wonderful<br>
+prowess, and beholding how, in the first week of the season, the
+Norwegian<br>
+Colossus had ripped to shreds the Varsity line which even the
+heavy Ballard<br>
+eleven of the year before could not batter, it was but natural
+that the<br>
+enthusiastic youths should think of the Championship chances in
+terms of<br>
+Thor. For one week, enthusiasm and excitement soared higher and
+higher,<br>
+and then, to use a phrase of fiction, everything fell with a
+dull,<br>
+sickening thud!</p>
+
+<p>In vain did Coach Corridan, the staff of Assistant Coaches,
+Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster, and others strive to resuscitate football spirit;
+nightly<br>
+mass-meetings were held, and enough perfervid oratory hurled to
+move a<br>
+Russian fortress, but to no avail. It was useless to argue that,
+without<br>
+Thor, Bannister had an eleven better than that of last year,
+which so<br>
+nearly missed the Championship. The campus had seen the massive
+Thor's<br>
+prodigies; they knew he could not be stopped, and to attempt to
+arouse the<br>
+college to concert pitch over the eleven, with that mountain of
+muscle<br>
+blotting out vast sections of scenery, but not in football togs,
+was not<br>
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>"One thing is sure," spoke Dad Pendleton seriously, gazing
+gloomily from<br>
+the window, "unless we get Thor in the line-up for the Big Games,
+our last<br>
+hope of the Championship is dead and interred! And I feel sorry
+for the big<br>
+fellow, for already the boys like him just about as much as a
+German<br>
+loves an Englishman; yet, arguments, threats, pleadings, and
+logic have<br>
+absolutely no effect on him. He has said 'No,' and that ends
+it!"</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't understand things, fellows," defended T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+with surprising earnestness. "Remember how bewildered he seemed
+at our<br>
+appeal to his college spirit, and his love for his Alma Mater. We
+might as<br>
+well have talked Choctaw to him!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster, Socks Fitzpatrick, Dad Pendleton, Beef
+McNaughton, Deacon<br>
+Radford, Monty Merriweather, and Shad Fishpaw well remembered
+that night<br>
+after Thor's tragic decision, when they&mdash;part of a Committee
+formed of the<br>
+best athletes from all teams, and the most representative
+collegians of old<br>
+Bannister, had invaded Thor's room in Creighton Hall, to wrestle
+with the<br>
+recalcitrant Hercules. Even as Hicks spoke, they visioned it
+again.</p>
+
+<p>A cold, cheerless room, bare of carpet or pictures, with just
+the<br>
+study-table, bed, and two chairs. At the study-table, his huge
+bulk<br>
+sprawling on, and overflowing, a frail chair, they had found the
+massive<br>
+John Thorwald laboriously reading aloud the Latin he had
+translated,<br>
+literally by the sweat of his brow. The blond Colossus, impatient
+at the<br>
+interruption, had shaken his powerful frame angrily, and with no
+regard for<br>
+campus tradition, had addressed the upperclassmen in a growl:
+"Well, what<br>
+do you want? Hurry up, I've got to study."</p>
+
+<p>And then, to state it briefly, they had worked with (and on)
+the stolid<br>
+Thorwald for two hours. They explained how his decision to play
+no more<br>
+football would practically kill old Bannister's hopes of the
+Championship,<br>
+would assassinate football spirit on the campus, and cause the
+youths to<br>
+condemn Thor, and to ostracise him. Waxing eloquent, Butch
+Brewster had<br>
+delivered a wonderful speech, pleading with John Thorwald to play
+the<br>
+game. He tried to show that obviously uninterested mammoth that,
+like the<br>
+Hercules he so resembled, he stood at the parting of the
+ways.</p>
+
+<p>"You are on the threshold of your college career, old man!" he
+thundered<br>
+impressively, though he might as well have tried to shoot holes
+in a<br>
+battleship with a pop-gun, "What you do now will make or break
+you. Do you<br>
+want the fellows as friends or as enemies; do you want
+comradeship, or<br>
+loneliness and ostracism? You have it in your power to do two
+<i>big</i> things,<br>
+to win the Championship for your Alma Mater, and to win to
+yourself the<br>
+entire student-body, as friends; will you do that, and build a
+firm<br>
+foundation for your college years, or betray your Alma Mater, and
+gain the<br>
+enmity of old Bannister!"</p>
+
+<p>Followed more fervid periods, with such phrases as, "For your
+Alma Mater,"<br>
+"Because of your college spirit," "For dear old Bannister," and
+"For<br>
+the Gold and Green!" predominating; all of which terms, to the
+stolid,<br>
+unimaginative Thorwald being fully as intelligible as Hindustani.
+They<br>
+appealed to him not to betray his Alma Mater; they implored him,
+for his<br>
+love of old Bannister; they besought him, because of his college
+spirit;<br>
+and all the time, for all that the Prodigious Prodigy understood,
+they<br>
+might as well have remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you something," spoke Thor, at last, with an air
+of impatient<br>
+resignation, "and don't bother me again, please! I have come to
+Bannister<br>
+College to get an education, and I have the right to do so,
+without being<br>
+pestered. I pay my bills, and I am entitled to all the knowledge
+I can<br>
+purchase. I look from my window, and I see boys, whose fathers
+are toiling,<br>
+sacrificing, to send them here. Instead of studying, to show
+their<br>
+gratitude, they loaf around the campus, or in their rooms,
+twanging banjos<br>
+and guitars, singing silly songs, and sky-larking. I don't know
+what all<br>
+this rot is you are talking of; 'college spirit,' 'my Alma
+Mater,' and so<br>
+on. I do not want to play football; I do not like the game; I
+need the time<br>
+for my study, so I will not play. Both my father and myself have
+labored<br>
+and sacrificed to send me to college. The past five years, with
+one great<br>
+ambition to go to college and learn, I have toiled like a
+galley-slave.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, when opportunity is mine, do you ask me to
+<i>play</i>? You want me to<br>
+loaf around, wasting precious time better spent in my studies.
+What do I<br>
+care whether the boys like me, or hate me? Bah! I can take any
+two of you,<br>
+and knock your heads together! Their friendship or enmity won't
+move me. I<br>
+shall study, learn. I will not waste time in senseless
+foolishness, and I<br>
+<i>won't</i> play football again."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. was silent as he stood by the window of
+his room,<br>
+gazing down at the campus where the collegians were gathering
+before<br>
+marching to the Auditorium for the nightly mass-meeting that
+would vainly<br>
+strive to arouse a fighting spirit in the football "rooters."
+That<br>
+blithesome, heedless, happy-go-lucky youth was capable of far
+more serious<br>
+thought than old Bannister knew; and more, he possessed the rare
+ability<br>
+to read character; in the case of Thor, he saw vastly deeper than
+his<br>
+indignant comrades, who beheld only the surface of the affair.
+They knew<br>
+only that John Thorwald, a veritable Colossus, had exhibited
+football<br>
+prowess that practically promised the State Championship to old
+Bannister,<br>
+and then&mdash;he had quit the game. They understood only that
+Thor refused to<br>
+play simply because he did not want to, and as to why their
+appeals to his<br>
+college spirit and his love for his Alma Mater were unheeded they
+were<br>
+puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>But the gladsome Hicks, always serious beneath his cheerful
+exterior, when<br>
+old Bannister's interests were at stake, or when a collegian's
+career<br>
+might be blighted, when the tragedy could be averted, fully
+understood. Of<br>
+course, as originator of the Billion-Dollar Mystery, and producer
+of the<br>
+Prodigious Prodigy, he knew more about the strange John Thorwald
+than did<br>
+his mystified comrades. He knew that Thor, as he named him, was
+just a vast<br>
+hulk of humanity, stolid, unimaginative of mind, slow-thinking, a
+dull,<br>
+unresponsive mass, as yet unstirred by that strange, subtle,
+mighty thing<br>
+called college spirit. He realized that Thor had never had a
+chance to<br>
+understand the real meaning of campus life, to grasp the glad
+fellowship of<br>
+the students, to thrill with a great love for his Alma Mater. All
+that must<br>
+come in time. The blond giant had toiled all his life, had
+labored among<br>
+men where everything was practical and grim. Small wonder, then,
+that he<br>
+failed utterly to see why the youths "loafed on the campus, or in
+their<br>
+rooms, twanging banjos and guitars, singing silly songs, and
+skylarking."</p>
+
+<p>"I must save him," murmured Hicks softly, for the others in
+his room were<br>
+talking of Thor. "Oh, imagine that powerful body, imbued with a
+vast love<br>
+for old Bannister, think of Thor, thrilling with college spirit.
+Why,<br>
+Yale's and Harvard's elevens combined could not stop his rushes,
+then. I<br>
+must save him from himself, from the condemnation of the fellows,
+who just<br>
+don't understand. I must, some way, awaken him to a complete
+understanding<br>
+of college life in its entirety, but how? He is so different from
+Roddy<br>
+Perkins, or Deke Radford."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every
+year of his<br>
+campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath,
+deserved or<br>
+otherwise, of the students. In his Freshman first term, T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., indignant at the way little Theophilus Opperdyke, the
+timorous,<br>
+nervous "grind," had been alarmed at the idea of being hazed, had
+by a<br>
+sensational escape from a room locked, guarded, and filled with
+Sophomores,<br>
+gained immunity for himself and the boner for all time, thus
+winning the<br>
+loyal, pathetic devotion of the Human Encyclopedia. As a
+Sophomore, by<br>
+crushing James Roderick Perkins' Napoleonic ambition to upset
+tradition,<br>
+and make Freshmen equal with upperclassmen, Hicks had turned
+that<br>
+aggressive youth's tremendous energy in the right channels, and
+made him a<br>
+power for good on the campus.</p>
+
+<p>And, a Junior, he had saved good Deacon Radford. When that
+serious youth, a<br>
+famous prep. quarter, entered old Bannister, the students were
+wild at the<br>
+thought of having him to run the Gold and Green team, but to
+their dismay,<br>
+he refused either to report for practice or to explain his
+decision. Hicks,<br>
+promising blithely, as usual, to solve the mystery and get Deke
+to play,<br>
+discovered that the youth's mother, called "Mother Peg" by the
+collegians,<br>
+was head-waitress downtown at Jerry's and that she made her son
+promise<br>
+not to own the relationship, and that while she worked to get him
+through<br>
+college, Deacon would not play football. The inspired Hicks had
+gotten<br>
+Mother Peg to start College Inn, and board Freshmen unable to get
+rooms<br>
+in the dormitories, and Deacon had played wonderful football. For
+this<br>
+achievement, the original youth failed to get glory, for he
+sacrificed it,<br>
+and swore all concerned to secrecy.</p>
+
+<p>"But Roddy and Deke were different," reflected Hicks,
+pondering seriously.<br>
+"Both had been to Prep. School, and they understood college life
+and campus<br>
+spirit. It was Roddy's tremendous ambition that had to be curbed,
+and Deke<br>
+was the victim of circumstances. But Thorwald&mdash;it is just a
+problem of how<br>
+to awaken in him an understanding of college spirit. The fellows
+don't<br>
+understand him, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A sudden thought, one of his inspirations, assailed the
+blithesome Hicks.<br>
+Why not make the fellows understand Thor? Surely, if he explained
+the<br>
+"Billion-Dollar Mystery," as he humorously called it, and told
+why<br>
+Thorwald, as yet, had no conception of college life, in its true
+meaning,<br>
+they would not feel bitter against him; perhaps, instead, though
+regretful<br>
+at his decision not to play the game, they would all strive to
+awaken the<br>
+stolid Colossus, to stir his soul to an understanding of
+campus<br>
+tradition and existence. But that would mean&mdash;"I surely hate
+to lose my<br>
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+remembering<br>
+the intense indignation of his comrades at his
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston<br>
+atmosphere of mystery, "It is more fun than, my 'Sheerluck
+Holmes'<br>
+detective pose or my saengerfests. Still, for old Bannister, and
+for Thor."</p>
+
+<p>It would seem only a trifle for the heedless Hicks to give up
+his mystery,<br>
+and tell Bannister all about Thor; yet, had the Hercules
+reconsidered, and<br>
+played football, the torturesome youth would have bewildered his
+colleagues<br>
+as long as possible, or until they made him divulge the truth. He
+dearly<br>
+loved to torment his comrades, and this had been such an
+opportunity for<br>
+him to promise nonchalantly to produce a Herculean full-back,
+then, to<br>
+return to the campus with the Prodigious Prodigy in tow, and for
+him to<br>
+perform wonders on Bannister Field, naturally aroused the
+interest of the<br>
+youths, and he had enjoyed hugely their puzzlement, but
+now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Say, fellows," he interrupted an excited conversation of a
+would-be<br>
+Committee of Ways and Means to make Thor play football, "I have
+an<br>
+announcement to make."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't pester us, Hicks!" warned Captain Butch Brewster,
+grimly. "We love<br>
+you like a brother, but we'll crush you if you start any
+foolishness,<br>
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with the study-table between himself
+and his<br>
+comrades, assumed the attitude of a Chautauqua lecturer, one hand
+resting<br>
+on the table and the other thrust into the breast of his coat,
+and<br>
+dramatically announced:</p>
+
+<p>"In the Auditorium&mdash;at the regular mass-meeting
+tonight&mdash;T. Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., will give the correct explanation of Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy, and<br>
+will solve the Billion-Dollar Mystery!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap06"></a>
+CHAPTER VI</p>
+
+<p>HICKS MAKES A SPEECH</p>
+
+<p>The announcement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had practically
+the same<br>
+effect on Head Coach Corridan and the cheery Senior's comrades as
+a German<br>
+gas-bomb would have on the inmates of an Allied trench. For
+several seconds<br>
+they stared at the blithesome youth, in a manner scarcely to be
+called<br>
+aimless, since their looks were aimed with deadly accuracy at
+him, but in<br>
+general, with the exception of Hicks, those in the room resembled
+vastly<br>
+some of the celebrated Madame Tussaud's wax-works in London.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," breathed Monty Merriweather, with the appearance of
+dawning<br>
+intelligence, "that's so, Coach, Hicks never has disclosed the
+details of<br>
+his achievement; we were about to extort a confession from him,
+when Thor<br>
+broke up the league with his announcement, and since then,
+Bannister has<br>
+been too worried over Thorwald to trifle with Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"That's a good idea!" exclaimed Coach Corridan, who had been
+remarkably<br>
+silent, for him, pondering the football crisis, "Hicks can make
+his<br>
+explanation at the regular mass-meeting tonight, in the
+Auditorium. I'll<br>
+post an announcement of his purpose, and you fellows spread the
+news among<br>
+the students, stating that Hicks will tell how he rounded up
+Thor. Some<br>
+have shirked these meetings since Thorwald quit the game, and
+this will<br>
+bring them out, so maybe we can arouse the fighting spirit
+again!"</p>
+
+<p>So well did Butch, Beef, Socks, Monty, Dad, Deacon, and Shad
+tell the news,<br>
+that when the bell in the Administration Hall tower rang at ten
+o'clock it<br>
+was ascertained by score-keepers that every youth at Bannister,
+Freshmen<br>
+included, except that Hercules, Thor, had assembled in the
+Auditorium. That<br>
+stolid behemoth, who regarded the football mass-meeting as
+foolishness, was<br>
+reported as boning in his cheerless room, fulfilling the mission
+for which<br>
+he came to college, namely, to get his money's worth of
+knowledge, which he<br>
+evidently regarded as some commodity for which Bannister served
+merely as a<br>
+market.</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, on the stage of the Auditorium, the big
+assembly-hall<br>
+of the college, along with Coach Corridan, several of the Gold
+and Green<br>
+eleven, two members of the Faculty, several Assistant Coaches,
+and T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., stepped forward and stilled the tumult of
+the excited<br>
+youths with upraised hand.</p>
+
+<p>"We have with us tonight," he spoke, after the fashion of
+introducing<br>
+after-dinner speakers, "Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the
+celebrated<br>
+Magician and Mystifier, who will present for your approval his
+world-famous<br>
+Billion-Dollar Mystery, and give the correct solution to Thor,
+the problem<br>
+no one has been able to solve. I take great pleasure in
+introducing to you<br>
+this evening, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr."</p>
+
+<p>The collegians, firmly believing it was another of the
+pestiferous Hicks'<br>
+jokes, and wholly unaware of the deep purpose of the
+sunny-souled,<br>
+irrepressible youth's speech, went into paroxysms of glee, as
+the<br>
+shadow-like Hicks stepped forward. For several minutes, the hall
+echoed<br>
+with jeers, shouts, groans, whistles, and sarcastic comments:</p>
+
+<p>"Hire a hall, Hicks; tell it to Sweeney!"&mdash;"Bryan better
+look out. Hicks,<br>
+the Chau-talker;"&mdash;"Spill the speech, old man; spread the
+oratory!"&mdash;"Oh,<br>
+where are my smelling-salts? I know I shall faint!"&mdash;"You'd
+better play a<br>
+banjo-accompaniment to it, Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for once in his campus career,
+fervidly wished he<br>
+had not been such a happy-go-lucky, care-free collegian, for now,
+when he<br>
+was serious, his comrades refused to believe him to be in such a
+state.<br>
+However, quiet was obtained at last, thanks to the fact that the
+youths<br>
+possessed all the curiosity of the proverbial cat who died
+thereby, and the<br>
+sunny Senior plunged earnestly into his famous speech, that was
+destined,<br>
+at old Bannister, to rank with that of Demosthenes "On The
+Crown," or any<br>
+of W. J, Bryan's masterpieces.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows," began Hicks, without preface, "I know I've built
+myself the<br>
+reputation of being a scatterbrained, heedless nonentity, and
+it's too late<br>
+to change now. But tonight, please believe me to be thoroughly in
+earnest.<br>
+Bannister faces more than one crisis, more than one tragedy. It
+is true<br>
+that the football eleven is crippled by the defection of Thor,
+that we<br>
+fellows have somewhat unreasonably allowed his quitting the game
+to shake<br>
+our spirit, but there is more at stake than football victories,
+than even<br>
+the State Intercollegiate Football Championship! The future of a
+student,<br>
+of a present Freshman, his hopes of becoming a loyal, solid,
+representative<br>
+college man, a tremendous power for good, at old Bannister, hang
+in the<br>
+balance at this moment! I speak of John Thorwald. You students
+have it in<br>
+your power to make or break him, to ruin his college years and
+make him a<br>
+recluse, a misanthrope, or to gradually bring him to a full
+realization of<br>
+what college life and campus tradition really mean."</p>
+
+<p>"I have made a great mystery of Thor, just for a lark, but the
+enmity and<br>
+condemnation of the campus for him because he quit football
+suddenly, shows<br>
+me that the time for skylarking is past. For his sake, I must
+plead. He is<br>
+not to blame, altogether, for quitting. Myself, and you fellows,
+gave him<br>
+the impression that it was a Faculty requirement for him to play
+football,<br>
+for we feared he would not play, otherwise; when he learned that
+it was not<br>
+a Faculty rule, he simply quit."</p>
+
+<p>Here T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., seeing that at last he had
+convinced the<br>
+collegians of his earnestness, though they seemed fairly
+paralyzed at the<br>
+phenomenon, paused, and produced a bundle of papers before
+resuming.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I'll try to explain the 'mystery' as briefly and as
+clearly as<br>
+possible. Up at Camp Bannister, before college opened, Coach
+Corridan, as<br>
+you know, outlined to Butch, Deke, and myself, his dream of a
+Herculean,<br>
+irresistible full-back; I said, 'Just leave It to Hicks!' and
+they believed<br>
+that I, as usual, just made that remark to torment them. But such
+was not<br>
+the case. When I joined them, I remarked that I had a letter from
+my Dad;<br>
+Deke made some humorous remarks, and I forgot to read it aloud,
+as I<br>
+intended. Then, after Coach Corridan blue-printed his giant
+full-back, I<br>
+kept silent as to Dad's letter, for reasons you'll understand.
+But, after<br>
+all, there was no mystery about my leaving Camp Bannister, after
+making a<br>
+seemingly rash vow, and returning to college with a 'Prodigious
+Prodigy'<br>
+who filled specifications, In fact, before I left Camp Bannister,
+at the<br>
+moment I made my rash promise&mdash;I had Thor already lined
+up!"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall now read a dipping or two, and a letter or two from
+my Dad. The<br>
+clippings came in Dad's letter to me at Camp Bannister, the
+letter I<br>
+intended to read to Coach Corridan, Deke, and Butch, but which I
+decided to<br>
+keep silent about, after the Coach told of the full-back he
+wanted, for<br>
+I knew I had him already! First, a clipping from the San
+Francisco<br>
+Examiner, of August 25:</p>
+
+<p>MAROONED SAILOR RESCUED&mdash;TEN YEARS<br>
+ON SOUTH SEA ISLAND!SOLE SURVIVOR OF<br>
+ILL-FATED CRUISE OF THE ZEPHYR</p>
+
+<p>"The trading-schooner Southern Cross, Captain Martin Bascomb,
+skipper,<br>
+put into San Francisco yesterday with a cargo of copra from the
+South Sea<br>
+Islands. On board was John Thorwald, Sr., who for the past ten
+years<br>
+has been marooned on an uninhabited coral isle of the Southern
+Pacific,<br>
+together with 'Long Tom' Watts, who, however, died several months
+ago.<br>
+Thorwald's story reads like a thrilling bit of fiction. He was
+first mate<br>
+of the ill-fated yacht Zephyr, which cleared from San Francisco
+ten years<br>
+ago with Henry B. Kingsley, the Oil-King, and a pleasure party,
+for a<br>
+cruise under the southern star. A terrific tornado wrecked the
+yacht, and<br>
+only Thorwald and 'Long Tom' escaped, being cast upon the coral
+island,<br>
+where for ten years they existed, unable to attract the attention
+of the<br>
+few craft that passed, as the isle was out of the regular lanes.
+Only when<br>
+Captain Martin Bascomb, in the trading-schooner Southern Cross,
+touched<br>
+at the island, hoping to find natives with whom to trade supplies
+for<br>
+copra, were they found, and 'Long Tom' had been dead some
+months."</p>
+
+<p>"Despite the harrowing experiences of his exile, Thorwald, a
+vast hulk of a<br>
+stolid, unimaginative Norwegian, who reminds one of the Norse
+god, 'Thor,'<br>
+intends to ship as first mate on the New York-Christiania
+Steamship Line.<br>
+It is said that Thorwald has a son, at this time about
+twenty-five years of<br>
+age, somewhere In this country, whom he will seek,
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., at this juncture, terminated the
+newspaper story,<br>
+and finding that his explanation held his comrades spellbound, he
+produced<br>
+a letter, and drew out the message, after stating the youths
+could read the<br>
+entire news-story of John Thorwald, Sr., later.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the letter I received from my Dad," he explained to
+the intensely<br>
+interested Bannister youths, who were giving a concentrated
+attention that<br>
+members of the Faculty would have rejoiced to receive from them.
+"Up at<br>
+Camp Bannister&mdash;I was just about to read it to Coach
+Corridan, Butch, and<br>
+Deke Radford, when Deke chaffed me, and then the Coach outlined
+the mammoth<br>
+full-back he desired, so I kept quiet. I'll now read it to
+you:</p>
+
+<p>"Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept, 17.</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR SON THOMAS:</p>
+
+<p>"Read the inclosed clipping from the San Francisco Examiner of
+August 25,<br>
+and then pay close attention to the following facts: At the time
+of this<br>
+news-story I was in 'Frisco on business, as you will recall, and
+for<br>
+reasons to be outlined, when I read of the Southern Cross finding
+the<br>
+marooned John Thorwald, and bringing him to that city, I was
+particularly<br>
+interested, so much so that I at once looked up the one-time
+first mate of<br>
+the ill-starred Zephyr and brought him to Pittsburgh in my
+private car.<br>
+My reason was this; in my employ, in the International Steel
+Combine's<br>
+mill, was John Thorwald's son, John Thorwald, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>"To state facts as briefly as possible, almost a year ago, as
+I took some<br>
+friends through the steel rolling mill, I chanced to step
+directly beneath<br>
+a traveling crane, lowering a steel beam; seeing my peril, I was
+about to<br>
+step aside when I caught my foot and fell. Just then a veritable
+giant,<br>
+black and grimy, leaped forward, and with a prodigious display of
+strength,<br>
+placed his powerful back under the descending weight, staving it
+off until<br>
+I rolled over to safety!</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of course, I had the fellow report to my office, and
+instinctively<br>
+feeling that I wanted to show my gratitude, without being
+patronizing, he<br>
+responded to my question as to what I could do to reward him, by
+asking<br>
+simply that I get him some job that would allow him to attend
+night school.<br>
+He stated that, owing to the fact that he worked alternate weeks
+at night<br>
+shift he was unable to do so. Questioning him further, I learned
+the<br>
+following facts:</p>
+
+<p>"He was John Thorwald, Jr., only son of John Thorwald, Sr., a
+Norwegian;<br>
+his mother was also a Norwegian, but he is a natural born
+American.<br>
+Realizing the opportunities for an educated young man in our
+land,<br>
+Thorwald's parents determined that he should gain knowledge, and
+until he<br>
+was fifteen years old, he attended school in San Francisco. When
+he was<br>
+fifteen, his father signed as first mate on the yacht Zephyr,
+going with<br>
+the oil-king, Henry B. Kingsley, on a pleasure cruise in the
+Southern<br>
+Pacific; Thorwald, Sr.'s, story you read in the paper. Soon after
+the news<br>
+of the Zephyr's wreck, with all on board lost, as was then
+supposed,<br>
+Thorwald's mother died. Her dying words (so young Thorwald told
+me, and I<br>
+was moved by his simple, straightforward tale) were an appeal to
+her<br>
+boy. She made him promise, for her sake, to study, study, study
+to gain<br>
+knowledge, and to rise in the world! Thorwald promised. Then,
+believing<br>
+both his parents dead, the young Norwegian, a youth of fifteen
+without<br>
+money, had to shift for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas, Jack London could weave his adventures into a
+gripping<br>
+masterpiece. Starting in as cabin-boy on a freighter to Alaska,
+young<br>
+Thorwald, in the past ten years, has simply crowded his life
+with<br>
+adventure, thrill, and experience, though thrills mean nothing to
+him. He<br>
+was in the Klondike gold-fields, in the salmon canneries, a
+prospector, a<br>
+lumber-jack in the Canadian Northwest, a cowboy, a sailor, a
+worker in the<br>
+Panama Canal Zone, on the Big Ditch, and too many other things to
+remember.<br>
+Finally, he drifted to Pittsburgh, where his prodigious strength
+served him<br>
+in the steel-mills, and, let me add, served <i>me</i>, as I
+stated.</p>
+
+<p>"And ever, no matter where he wandered, or what was his toil,
+whenever<br>
+possible, Thorwald studied. His promise to his mother was always
+his goal,<br>
+and in the cities he studied, or in the wilds he read all the
+books he<br>
+could find. The past year, finding he had a good-pay job in
+Pittsburgh, he<br>
+settled to determined effort, and by sheer resolution, by his
+wonderful<br>
+power to grasp facts and ideas for good once he gets them, he
+made great<br>
+progress in night school, until he was shifted, a week before he
+saved my<br>
+life, to work that required him to toil nightly, alternate weeks.
+So, for a<br>
+year, Thor has had every possible advantage, some, unknown to
+him, I paid<br>
+for myself; I got him clerical work, with shorter hours, he went
+to night<br>
+school, and I employed the very best tutor obtainable, letting
+Thorwald<br>
+pay him, as he thought, though his payments wouldn't keep the
+tutor in<br>
+neckties. The gratitude of the blond giant is pathetic, and
+suspecting that<br>
+I paid the tutor something, he insisted on paying all he could,
+which I<br>
+allowed, of course.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, in August, a year after Thorwald rescued me from
+serious injury,<br>
+perhaps death, I was in 'Frisco, and read of Thorwald, Sr.'s
+rescue and<br>
+return. Overjoyed, I took the father to Pittsburgh, to the son. I
+witnessed<br>
+their meeting, with the father practically risen from the dead,
+and all<br>
+those stolid, unimaginative Norwegians did was to shake hands
+gravely!<br>
+Young Thorwald told of his mother's last words, and of his
+promise, of his<br>
+having studied all the years, and of his late progress, so that
+he was<br>
+ready to enter college. His father, happy, insisted that he enter
+this<br>
+September, and he would pay for his son's college course, to make
+up for<br>
+the years the youth struggled for himself&mdash;Kingsley's heirs,
+I believe,<br>
+gave Thorwald, Sr., five thousand dollars on his return. So,
+though<br>
+grateful to me for the aid I offered, they would receive no
+financial<br>
+assistance, for they want to work it out themselves, and help the
+youth<br>
+make good his promise to his dying mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Much as I love old Bannister, my Alma Mater, I would not have
+tried to<br>
+send Thorwald there, had I not deemed it a good place for him.
+However,<br>
+since it is a liberal, not a technical, education he wants, it is
+all<br>
+right; and that prodigious strength will serve the Gold and Green
+on the<br>
+football field. Now, Thomas, I want you to meet him in
+Philadelphia, and<br>
+take him to Bannister, look out for him, get him started O. K.,
+and do all<br>
+you can for him. Get him to play football, if you can, but don't
+condemn<br>
+if he refuses. Remember, his life has been grim and
+unimaginative; he has<br>
+toiled and studied, it is probable he will not understand college
+life at<br>
+first."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all I need to read of Dad's letter, fellows,"
+concluded T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr. "After I got it, and Coach Corridan, Butch, and Beef
+heard my<br>
+seemingly rash vow to round up a giant full-back, I made a
+mystery of it; I<br>
+loafed in Philadelphia and Atlantic City until I met Thor, and
+brought him<br>
+here. You have all the data regarding Thor, 'The Billion-Dollar
+Mystery.'"</p>
+
+<p>The students, almost as one, drew a deep breath. They had been
+enthralled<br>
+by the story, and their feeling toward Thor had undergone a vast
+change.<br>
+Stirred by hearing of his promise to his dying mother, thrilled
+at the way<br>
+the stolid, determined Norwegian had ceaselessly studied to make
+something<br>
+of himself for the sake of his mother's sacred memory, the
+Bannister youths<br>
+now thought of football, of the Championship, as insignificant,
+beside the<br>
+goal of Thorwald, Jr. The blond Colossus, whom an hour ago all
+Bannister<br>
+reviled and condemned for not playing the game, who was a campus
+outcast,<br>
+was now a hero; thanks to the erstwhile heedless Hicks, whose
+intense<br>
+earnestness in itself was a revelation to the amazed collegians,
+Thor stood<br>
+before them in a different light, and the impulsive,
+whole-souled, generous<br>
+youths were now anxious to make amends.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! Thor!" was the thunderous cry, and the Bannister
+yell for<br>
+the Prodigious Prodigy shattered the echoes. Then T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+ecstatically joyous, again stilled the tumult, and spoke in
+behalf of John<br>
+Thorwald.</p>
+
+<p>"We all understand Thor now, fellows," he said, beaming on his
+comrades.<br>
+"We want him to play football, and we'll keep after him to play,
+but we<br>
+won't condemn him if he refuses. At present, Thor is simply a
+stolid,<br>
+unimaginative, dull mass of muscle. As you can realize, his
+nature, his<br>
+life so far have not tended to make him appreciate the gayer,
+lighter side<br>
+of college life, or to grasp the traditions of the campus. To
+him, college<br>
+is a market; he pays his money and he takes the knowledge handed
+out. We<br>
+can not blame him for not understanding college existence in its
+entirety,<br>
+or that the gaining of knowledge is a small part of the
+representative<br>
+collegian's purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, boys, here's our job, and let's tackle it together: To
+awaken in<br>
+Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to
+stir his<br>
+practical soul. Let every fellow be his friend, let no one speak
+against<br>
+him, because of football. We must work slowly, carefully,
+gradually making<br>
+him grasp college traditions, and once he awakens to the real
+meaning of<br>
+campus life, what a power he will be in the college and on the
+athletic<br>
+field! Maybe he will not play football this season, but let us
+help him to<br>
+awaken!"</p>
+
+<p>With wild shouts, the aroused collegians poured from the
+Auditorium, an<br>
+excited, turbulent mass of youthful humanity, a tide that swept
+T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., on the shoulders of several, out on the campus.
+Massed beneath<br>
+the window of John Thorwald's room, in Creighton Hall, the
+Bannister<br>
+students, now fully understanding that stolid Hercules, and
+stirred to<br>
+admiration of him by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, great speech,
+cheered the<br>
+somewhat mystified Thor again and again; in vast sound waves, the
+shouts<br>
+rolled up to his open window:</p>
+
+<p>"Rah! Rah! Rah-rah-rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!" Captain Brewster,
+through a<br>
+big megaphone, roared; "Fellows&mdash;What's the matter with
+Thor?"</p>
+
+<p>And in a terrific outburst which, as the Phillyloo Bird
+afterward said,<br>
+"Like to of busted Bannister's works!" the enthusiastic
+collegians<br>
+responded:</p>
+
+<p>"He's&mdash;all&mdash;right!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Butch, apparently in quest of information, persisted:</p>
+
+<p>"Who's all right?"</p>
+
+<p>To which the three hundred or more youths, all seemingly
+equipped with<br>
+lungs of leather, kindly answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>Still, though the Phillyloo Bird declared that this vocal
+explosion caused<br>
+the seismographs as Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and in
+Salt Lake<br>
+City, Utah, to register an earthquake somewhere, it had on the
+blond<br>
+Freshman a strange effect. The vast mountain of muscle lumbered
+heavily<br>
+across the room, gazed down at the howling crowd of collegians
+without<br>
+emotion, then slammed down the window, and returned to study.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night" called Hicks. "The show is over! Let him have
+another yell,<br>
+boys, to show we aren't insulted; then we'll disband!"</p>
+
+<p>Considering Thorwald's cool reception of their overtures,
+which some youth<br>
+remarked, "Were as noisy as that of a Grand Opera Orchestra," it
+was quite<br>
+surprising to the students, in the morning, when what occurred an
+hour<br>
+after their serenade was revealed to them. As the story was told
+by those<br>
+who witnessed the scene, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, Beef,
+Monty, Pudge,<br>
+Roddy, Biff, Hefty, Tug, Buster, and Coach Corridan after the
+commotion<br>
+subsided, retired to the sunny Hicks' quarters, where the
+football<br>
+situation was discussed, along with ways and means to awaken
+Thor, when<br>
+that colossal Freshman himself loomed up in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>As they afterward learned, several excited Freshmen had dared
+to invade<br>
+Thor's den, even while he studied, and give him a more or less
+correct<br>
+account of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s masterly oration in his
+defense. Out of<br>
+their garbled descriptions, big John Thorwald grasped one salient
+point,<br>
+and straightway he started for Hicks' room, leaving the indignant
+Freshmen<br>
+to tell their story to the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," said Thor, not bothering with the "Mr." required of
+all Freshmen,<br>
+as his vast bulk crowded the doorway, "is it true that Mr. Thomas
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Sr., wants me to play football? He has been very kind to
+me, and<br>
+has helped me, and so have you, here at college. After a year of
+study, I<br>
+should have had to stop night-school, but for him&mdash;instead,
+I got another<br>
+year, and prepared for Bannister. I did not know that <i>he</i>
+desired me to<br>
+play, but if he does, I feel under obligation to show my great
+gratitude,<br>
+both for myself and for my father."</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence, for the glorious news could not be
+grasped in a<br>
+second; those in the room, knowing Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.'s,
+brilliant<br>
+athletic record at old Bannister, and understanding his great
+love for<br>
+his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister
+to play<br>
+football for the Gold and Green, though, as he had written his
+son, he<br>
+would not have done so had he honestly believed that another
+college would<br>
+suit the ambitious Goliath better.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he?" stammered the dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while
+the others<br>
+echoed the words feebly, "Yes, I should say he <i>does</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>For a second, the ponderous young Colossus hesitated, and
+then, as calmly<br>
+as though announcing he would add Greek to his list of studies,
+and wholly<br>
+unaware that his words were to bring joy to old Bannister, he
+spoke<br>
+stolidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shall play football."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap07"></a>
+CHAPTER VII</p>
+
+<p>HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY.</p>
+
+<p>  "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!<br>
+  Drink and the Devil had done for the rest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"</p>
+
+<p>T HAVILAND HICKS, JR., his chair tilted at a perilous angle,
+and his feet<br>
+thrust gracefully atop of the study-table, in his cozy room, one
+Friday<br>
+afternoon two weeks after John Thorwald's return to the football
+squad, was<br>
+fathoms deep in Stevenson's "Treasure Island." As he perused the
+thrilling<br>
+pages, the irrepressible youth twanged a banjo accompaniment, and
+roared<br>
+with gusto the piratical chantey of Long John Silver's buccaneer
+crew;<br>
+Hicks, however, despite his saengerfest, was completely lost in
+the<br>
+enthralling narrative, so that he seemed to hear the parrot
+shrieking,<br>
+"Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!" and the wild refrain:</p>
+
+<p>  "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"</p>
+
+<p>He was reading that breathlessly exciting part where the
+cabin-boy of the<br>
+Hispaniola, and Israel Hands have their terrible fight to the
+death, with<br>
+the dodging over the dead man rolling in the scuppers, the
+climbing up the<br>
+mast, and the dirk pinning the boy's shoulder, before Hands is
+shot and<br>
+goes to join his mate on the bottom; just at the most absorbing
+page, as he<br>
+twanged his beloved banjo louder, and roared the chantey, there
+sounded,<br>
+"Tramp&mdash;tramp&mdash;tramp!" in the corridor, the heavy tread
+of many feet<br>
+sounded, coming nearer. Instinctively realizing that the
+pachydermic parade<br>
+was headed for <i>his</i> room, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., rushed to
+the closet,<br>
+murmuring, "Safety first!" as usual, and stowed away his banjo.
+He was just<br>
+in the nick of time, for a second later there crowded into his
+room Captain<br>
+Butch, Pudge, Beef, Hefty, Biff, Monty, Roddy, Bunch, Tug,
+Buster, Coach<br>
+Corridas, and Thor, the latter duo bringing up the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you unjailed public nuisance!" said Butch Brewster,
+affectionately.<br>
+"We, whom you behold, are going for to enter into that room
+across the<br>
+corridor from your boudoir, and hold a football signal quiz and
+confab. We<br>
+should request that you permit a thunderous silence to originate
+in your<br>
+cozy retreat, for the period of at least a hour! A word to the
+<i>wise</i> is<br>
+sufficient, so I have spoken several, that even you may
+comprehend my<br>
+meaning."</p>
+
+<p>"I gather you, fluently!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+taking up<br>
+"Treasure Island" and his graceful pose once more. "Leave me to
+peruse the<br>
+thrilling pages of this classic blood-and-thunder book, and I'll
+cause a<br>
+beautiful serenity to obtain hither."</p>
+
+<p>"See that you do, you pestiferous insect!" threatened Beef
+McNaughton,<br>
+ominously. "Come on, fellows, Hicks can't escape our vengeance,
+if<br>
+he bursts into what he fatuously believes is song. Just let him
+act<br>
+hippicanarious, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>When the Gold and Green eleven, half of which, to judge by
+size, was<br>
+Thor, had gone with Coach Corridan into the room across from that
+of the<br>
+blithesome Hicks, the sunny-souled Senior tried to resume his
+perusal of<br>
+"Treasure Island," but somehow the spell had been broken by the
+invasion of<br>
+his cozy quarters. So, after vainly essaying to take up the
+thread of the<br>
+story again, Hicks arose and stood by the window, gazing across
+the campus<br>
+to Bannister Field, deserted, since the football team rested for
+the game<br>
+of the morrow. As he stood there, the gladsome Hicks reflected
+seriously.<br>
+He thought of "Thor," and decided sorrowfully that the problem of
+awakening<br>
+that stolid Colossus to a full understanding of campus life was
+as unsolved<br>
+as ever.</p>
+
+<p>"But I <i>won't</i> give it up!" declared Hicks, determinedly.
+"I have always<br>
+been good at math, and I won't let this problem baffle me."</p>
+
+<p>Since the night, two weeks back, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+had made his<br>
+memorable speech, explaining to his fellow-students the
+"Billon-Dollar<br>
+Mystery," and arousing in them a vast admiration for the
+slow-minded,<br>
+plodding John Thorwald, every collegian had done his best to
+befriend the<br>
+big Freshman. Upperclassmen helped him with his studies. Despite
+his almost<br>
+rude refusal to meet any advances, the collegians always had a
+cheery<br>
+greeting for him, and his class-mates, in fear and trembling,
+invaded<br>
+his den at times, to show him they were his friends. Yet, despite
+these<br>
+whole-hearted efforts, only two of old Bannister did the silent
+Thor<br>
+seem to desire as comrades: the festive Hicks, for reasons
+known,<br>
+and&mdash;remarkable to chronicle&mdash;little Theophilus
+Opperdyke, the timorous,<br>
+studious "Human Encyclopedia."</p>
+
+<p>"Colossus and Lilliputian!" the Phillyloo Bird quaintly
+observed once when<br>
+this strangely assorted duo appeared on the campus. "Say,
+fellows&mdash;some<br>
+time Thor will accidentally sit on Theophilus, and we'll have
+another<br>
+mystery, the disappearance of our boner!"</p>
+
+<p>The generous Hicks, longing for Thor's awakening to come, was
+not in the<br>
+least jealous of his loyal little friend, Theophilus. In fact, he
+was<br>
+sincerely delighted that the unemotional Hercules desired the
+comradeship<br>
+of the grind, and he urged the Human Encyclopedia to strive
+constantly to<br>
+arouse in Thor a realization of college existence, and a true
+knowledge of<br>
+its meaning. At least one thing, Theophilus reported, had been
+achieved by<br>
+Hicks' defense of Thorwald, and the subsequent attitude of the
+collegians&mdash;<br>
+the colossal Freshman was puzzled, quite naturally. When over
+three hundred<br>
+youths criticized, condemned, and berated him one night, and the
+next, even<br>
+before he reconsidered his decision about football, came under
+his window<br>
+and cheered him, no wonder the young Norwegian was
+bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>On the football field, with his dogged determination, his
+bulldog way of<br>
+hanging on to things until he mastered them, big Thor progressed
+slowly,<br>
+and surely; the past Saturday, against the heavy Alton eleven,
+the blond<br>
+Freshman had been sent in for the second half, and, to quote an
+overjoyed<br>
+student, he had "busted things all up!" It seemed simply
+impossible to stop<br>
+that terrible rush of his huge body. Time after time he plowed
+through the<br>
+line for yards, and old Bannister, visioning Thor distributing
+Hamilton and<br>
+Ballard over the field, in the big games, literally hugged
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, despite Thorwald's invincible prowess, despite the
+vast joy of<br>
+old Bannister at the chances of the Championship, some
+intangible<br>
+shadow hovered over the campus. It brooded over the
+training-table, the<br>
+shower-rooms after scrimmage, on Bannister Field during practice;
+as yet,<br>
+no one had dared to give it form, by voicing his thought, but
+though no<br>
+youth dared admit it, something was wrong, there was a defective
+cog in the<br>
+machinery of that marvelous machine, the Gold and Green
+eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks," quoth that sunny youth, at
+length, turning<br>
+from the window; "I'll solve the problem, or what is more
+probable,<br>
+Theophilus may stir that sodden hulk of humanity, after awhile. I
+won't<br>
+worry about it, for that gets me nothing, and it will all come
+out O.K.,<br>
+I'm positive!"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., picked up
+"Treasure Island"<br>
+again, he heard drifting across the corridor from the room
+opposite, in<br>
+Butch Brewster's familiar voice:</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;Yes, I'll win three more Bs'&mdash;one each in
+football, baseball and track;<br>
+next spring, I'll annex my last B at old Bannister,
+fellows&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His <i>last</i> B&mdash;The words struck the blithesome Hicks
+with sledge-hammer<br>
+force. Big Butch Brewster was talking of his last B, when he, T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., had never won his first; with a feeling almost of
+alarm, the<br>
+sunny youth realized that this was his final year at old
+Bannister, his<br>
+last chance to win his athletic letter, and to make happy his
+beloved Dad,<br>
+by helping him to realize part of his life's ambition&mdash;to
+behold his son<br>
+shattering Hicks, Sr.'s, wonderful record. His final chance, and
+outside of<br>
+his hopes of winning the track award in the high-jump, Hicks saw
+no way to<br>
+win his B.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., as has been chronicled, the
+beloved Dad of the<br>
+cheery Senior, a Pittsburgh millionaire Steel King, was a
+graduate of old<br>
+Bannister, Class of '92. While wearing the Gold and Green, he had
+made<br>
+an all-round athletic record never before, or afterward, rivaled
+on<br>
+the campus. At football, basketball, track, and baseball, he was
+a<br>
+scintillating star, annexing enough letters to start an alphabet,
+had they<br>
+been different ones. Quite naturally, when the Doctor, speaking
+anent<br>
+the then infantile Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., said, "Mr. Hicks,
+it's a<br>
+boy!"&mdash;the one-time Bannister athlete straightway began to
+dream of the day<br>
+when his only son and heir should follow in his Dad's footsteps,
+shattering<br>
+the records made at Bannister, and at Yale, by Hicks,
+<i>p&egrave;re</i>.</p>
+
+<p>However, to quote a sporting phrase, the son of the Steel King
+"upset the<br>
+dope!" At the start of his Senior year, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+had not<br>
+annexed a single athletic honor, nor did the signs point to any
+records<br>
+being in peril of getting shattered by his prowess; as Hicks
+himself<br>
+phrased it, "Dame Nature was <i>some stingy</i> when she handed
+out the Hercules<br>
+stuff to me!" The happy-go-lucky youth, when he matriculated as a
+Freshman<br>
+at Bannister College, was builded on the general lines of a
+toothpick, and<br>
+had he elected to follow a pugilistic career, a division somewhat
+lighter<br>
+than the tissue paperweight class would have had to be devised
+to<br>
+accommodate the splinter-student. A generous, sunny-souled,
+intensely<br>
+democratic collegian, despite his father's wealth, the festive
+Hicks, with<br>
+his room always open-house to all; his firm friendship for star
+athlete<br>
+or humble boner, his never-failing sunny nature, together with
+his famous<br>
+Hicks Personally Conducted Expeditions downtown to the Beef-Steak
+Busts he<br>
+had originated, in his three years at old Bannister, had made
+himself the<br>
+most popular and beloved youth on the campus, but, he had not won
+his B!</p>
+
+<p>And he had tried. With a full realization, of his Dad's
+ambition, his<br>
+life-dream to behold his son a great athlete, the blithesome
+Hicks had<br>
+tried, but with hilariously futile results. Nature had endowed
+him, as he<br>
+told his loyal comrade, Butch Brewster, with "the Herculean build
+of a<br>
+Jersey mosquito," and his athletic powers neared zero infinity.
+In his<br>
+Freshman year, he inaugurated his athletic career by running the
+wrong way<br>
+in the Sophomore-Freshman football game, scoring a touchdown that
+won for<br>
+the enemy, and naturally, after that performance, every athletic
+effort was<br>
+greeted with jeers by the students.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>have</i> tried!" said Hicks, producing two letters from
+the study-table,<br>
+"But not like I should have tried. I could never have played on
+the eleven,<br>
+or on the nine, but I have a chance in the high-jump. I know I've
+been<br>
+indolent and care-free, and I ought to have trained harder. Well,
+I just<br>
+must win my track B this spring, but as to keeping the rash
+promise I made<br>
+to Butch as a Freshman&mdash;not a chance!"</p>
+
+<p>It had been at the close of his Freshman year, after Hicks, in
+the<br>
+Interclass Track Meet, had smashed hurdles, broken high-jumping
+cross-bars,<br>
+finished last in several events, and jeopardized his life with
+the shot and<br>
+hammer, that he made the rash vow to which he now had reference.
+Butch,<br>
+believing his sunny friend had entered all the events just to
+entertain the<br>
+crowd, in his fun-loving way, was teasing him about his
+ridiculous fiascos,<br>
+when Hicks had told him the story&mdash;how his Dad wanted him to
+try and be a<br>
+famous athlete; he showed Butch a letter, received before the
+meet, asking<br>
+his son to try every event, and to keep on training, so as to win
+his B<br>
+before he graduated. Butch, great-hearted, was surprised and
+moved by the<br>
+revelation that the gladsome youth, even as he was jeered by his
+friendly<br>
+comrades, who thought he performed for sport, was striving to
+have his<br>
+Dad's dream come true; he had sympathized with his classmate, and
+then his<br>
+scatter-brained colleague had aroused his indignation by vowing,
+with a<br>
+swaggering confidence:</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks!' Remember this, Butch, before I
+graduate from<br>
+old Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of
+sport!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch had snorted incredulously. To win the football or the
+baseball B,<br>
+the gold letter for the former, and the green one for the latter
+sport,<br>
+an athlete had to play in three-fourths of the season's games, on
+the<br>
+"'Varsity"; to gain the white track letter, one had to win a
+first place in<br>
+some event, in a regularly scheduled track meet with another
+team. And now,<br>
+Butch's skepticism seemed confirmed, for at the start of his last
+year at<br>
+college, Hicks had not annexed a single B, though he bade fair to
+corral<br>
+one in the spring in the high-jump.</p>
+
+<p>"Heigh-ho!" chuckled Hicks, at length. "Here I am threatening
+to get gloomy<br>
+again! Well I'll sure train hard to win my track letter, and that
+seems<br>
+all I can do! I'd like to win my three B's, and jeer at Butch,
+next June,<br>
+but&mdash;<i>it can't be did</i>! I shall now twang my trusty
+banjo, and drive dull<br>
+care away."</p>
+
+<p>Quite forgetful of the football conclave across the corridor,
+and of Butch<br>
+Brewster's request for quiet, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. dragged out
+his<br>
+beloved banjo, caressed its strings lovingly, and roared:</p>
+
+<p>  "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!<br>
+  Drink and the&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" Big Butch Brewster crashed across the corridor, both
+doors being<br>
+open. "Is this how you maintain a quiet? I'm going to call Thor
+over and<br>
+make him sit down on you! Why, you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Have mercy!" plead the grinning Hicks. "Honest, Butch, I
+didn't go to bust<br>
+up the league&mdash;I&mdash;I heard you talk about your B's, and
+I got to thinking<br>
+that I have but little time to make my Dad happy; see, here's
+proof&mdash;read<br>
+these letters I was perusing&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Puzzled, Butch scanned the first one, dated back in the May of
+their<br>
+Freshman year; Hicks had received it before the class track meet,
+and, as<br>
+chronicled, he had heard from his sunny comrade later, how it
+impelled the<br>
+splinter youth to try every event, while Bannister believed him
+to enter<br>
+them for fun. The letter was post-marked "Pittsburgh, Pa.," and
+it read:</p>
+
+<p>DEAR SON THOMAS:</p>
+
+<p>Your last term's report gratified me immensely, and I am proud
+of your<br>
+class record, and scholastic achievements. Pitch in, and lead
+your class,<br>
+and make your Dad happy.</p>
+
+<p>But there is something else of which I want to write, Thomas.
+As you must<br>
+know, it has always been a cause of keen regret to me that you
+have never<br>
+seemed to care for athletics of any sort; you appear to be too
+indolent and<br>
+ease-loving to sacrifice, or to endure the hardships of training.
+I suppose<br>
+it is because of my athletic record both at Bannister and at old
+Yale that<br>
+I am so eager to see you become a star; in fact, it is my life's
+most<br>
+cherished ambition to have you become as famous as your Dad.</p>
+
+<p>However, I realize that my fond dream can never come true.
+Nature has not<br>
+made you naturally strong and athletic, and what athletic success
+you may<br>
+gain, must come from long and hard training and practice. If you
+can only<br>
+win your college letter, your B, Thomas, while at Bannister, I
+shall be<br>
+fully content.</p>
+
+<p>I said nothing when you failed even to try for the teams at
+your<br>
+Preparatory School, but I did hope that at Bannister, under good
+coaches<br>
+and trainers, you would at least endeavor to win your letter. I
+must admit<br>
+that I am disappointed, for you have not even made an earnest
+effort to<br>
+find your event. Often, by trying everything, especially in a
+track meet, a<br>
+fellow finds his event, and later stars in it.</p>
+
+<p>I really believe that if you would start in now to develop
+yourself by<br>
+regular, systematic gymnasium work, and if you would only try, in
+a year<br>
+or so you could make a Bannister team. Theodore Roosevelt, you
+know, was a<br>
+puny, weakly boy, but he built himself up, and became an athlete.
+If you<br>
+want to please me, start now and find your event. Attempt all the
+sports,<br>
+all the various track and field events, and always build yourself
+up by<br>
+exercise in the Gym.</p>
+
+<p>And you owe it to your Alma Mater, my son! Even if, after
+conscientious<br>
+effort, you fail to win your B, to know that you have given your
+college<br>
+and teams what help you could, will please your Dad. Remember,
+the fellow<br>
+who toils on the scrubs is the true hero. If you become good
+enough to give<br>
+the first eleven, the first nine, the first five, or the first
+track squad<br>
+a hard rub and a fast practice, you are serving Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>I don't ask you to do this, Thomas, I only say that it will
+make me happy<br>
+just to know you are striving. If you never get beyond the
+scrubs, just to<br>
+hear you are serving the Gold and Green, giving your best, in
+that humble<br>
+unhonored way, will please me. And if, before you graduate, you
+<i>can</i> win<br>
+your B, I shall be so glad! Don't get discouraged, it may take
+until your<br>
+Senior year, but once you start, <i>stick</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Your loving</p>
+
+<p>DAD.</p>
+
+<p>"Read this one, too, Butch," requested Hicks, hurriedly, as a
+hail of, "Oh,<br>
+you Hicks, come here!" sounded down the corridor, from Skeet
+Wigglesworth's<br>
+abode. "I'll be back as soon as Skeet finishes his foolishness.
+Don't wait<br>
+for me, though, if I am delayed, for you want to be talking
+football."</p>
+
+<p>Left alone, big Butch Brewster, who of all the collegians that
+had known<br>
+and loved the sunny Hicks, some now graduated, understood that
+his athletic<br>
+efforts, jeered good-naturedly by the students, were made because
+of a<br>
+great desire to win his B and make happy his Dad, read the second
+letter,<br>
+dated a few days before:</p>
+
+<p>DEAR SON THOMAS:</p>
+
+<p>You are starting the last lap, son, your Senior year, and your
+final chance<br>
+to win your B! Don't forget how happy it will make your Dad if
+you win your<br>
+letter just once! Of course, you cannot gain it in football, for
+nature<br>
+gave you no chance, nor in baseball; but in track work it is up
+to you.<br>
+Train hard, Thomas, and try to win a first place; just win your
+track B,<br>
+and I'll rest content!</p>
+
+<p>Your college record gives me great pleasure. You stand at the
+top in your<br>
+studies, and you are vastly popular, while the Faculty speak
+highly of you.<br>
+Let your B come as a climax to your career, and I'll be so proud
+of you.<br>
+Don't forget, you are the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and those
+sons of old<br>
+Eli want you to win the letter. As to football, you cannot win
+your gold B<br>
+by playing three-fourths of a season's games, but you might get
+in a big<br>
+game, even win it, if you'll get confidence enough to tell Coach
+Corridan<br>
+about yourself. Don't mind the jeers of your comrades&mdash;they
+just don't<br>
+know how you've tried to please your Dad; you owe it to your Alma
+Mater<br>
+to tell, and, take my word as a football star, you have the
+goods! Your<br>
+peculiar prowess has won many a contest, and old Bannister needs
+it this<br>
+season, I hear&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>There was more, but big Butch scarcely saw it, bewildered as
+the behemoth<br>
+Senior was; what new mystery had Hicks set afoot? What did Hicks,
+Sr.,<br>
+mean by writing, "You might get in a big game, even win it, if
+you'll get<br>
+confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan about yourself? You owe
+it to your<br>
+Alma Mater to tell, and take my word, as a football star, you
+have the<br>
+goods&mdash;" Why, everyone knew that T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+possessed no more<br>
+football ability than a Jersey mosquito, and yet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Another Hicks mystery," groaned Butch, holding the two
+letters<br>
+thoughtfully. "And father and son are in it, But if Hicks don't
+get his B,<br>
+it will be a shame. Say, I know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A few moments later, good-hearted Butch Brewster, in the
+behalf of his<br>
+sunny comrade, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was making to the Gold and
+Green<br>
+eleven and Coach Corridan, as eloquent a speech as that
+blithesome youth,<br>
+two weeks before, had made in defense of the condemned and
+ostracized Thor!<br>
+He read them the two letters of Hicks' beloved Dad, and told how
+the cheery<br>
+collegian wanted to win his B for his father's sake; graphically,
+he<br>
+related Hicks, Sr.'s, great ambition, and how Hicks, Jr., for
+three years<br>
+had vainly tried to make good at some athletic sport, and to win
+his<br>
+letter. Big Butch, warming to his theme, spoke of how T. Haviland
+Hicks,<br>
+Jr., letting the students believe that he entered every event in
+the track<br>
+meet of his Freshman year just for fun, had been trying to find
+his event,<br>
+and train for it; he explained that the festive youth, ever
+sunny-natured,<br>
+under the good-humored jeers of his comrades, who did not know
+his real<br>
+purpose, really yearned to win his B.</p>
+
+<p>"You fellows, and you, Coach," he thundered, "all know how
+Hicks, unable<br>
+to make the 'Varsity, has always done humble service for old
+Bannister,<br>
+cheerfully, gladly; how he keeps the athletes in good spirits at
+the<br>
+training-table, and is always on hand after scrimmage to rub them
+out. He<br>
+is chock-full of college spirit, and is intensely loyal to his
+Alma Mater.<br>
+Why, look how he rounded up Thor&mdash;he ought to have his B for
+that!"</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to Butch's speech, the Gold and Green football stars,
+most of whom<br>
+were Hicks' closest friends, saw the scatter-brained,
+happy-go-lucky<br>
+youth in a new light; his eloquent defense of John Thorwald had
+shown old<br>
+Bannister that he could be serious, but the knowledge that T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., even as he made a ridiculous farce in athletics, was
+ambitious<br>
+to win his B, just to make his Dad happy, stunned them. For three
+years,<br>
+the sunny Hicks' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a
+team, had<br>
+meant a small-sized riot of jeers and good-natured ridicule at
+his expense;<br>
+but Hicks had always grinned &agrave; la Cheshire cat,&mdash;and
+no one but good<br>
+Butch Brewster, all the time, had known how in earnest the
+lovable<br>
+collegian was.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," concluded Butch, "Hicks <i>may</i> win a B in track
+work, if he gets a<br>
+first place in the high-jump, and if so, O.K., but if he does
+not&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean&mdash;" Monty Merriweather&mdash;understood, "if he
+fails, then the<br>
+Athletic Association ought to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Present him with a B!" said Butch, earnestly, "as a deserved
+reward for<br>
+his faithful loyalty and service to old Bannister's athletic
+teams. Don't<br>
+let him graduate without gaining his letter, and making his Dad
+realize a<br>
+part of his ambition&mdash;a two-thirds vote of the Athletic
+Association can<br>
+award him his letter, and when all the students know the truth
+about his<br>
+ridiculous fiasco on Bannister Field, and realize the serious
+purpose<br>
+beneath them all, they&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We'll give him his B!" shouted Beef, loudly, "If he fails in
+track work<br>
+next spring, we'll vote him his letter, anyway!"</p>
+
+<p>Out in the corridor, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., returning from
+Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth's room and entering his own cozy quarters, could not
+help<br>
+hearing the conversation, as the doors of both his den and the
+room across<br>
+the corridor were open. A great love for his comrades came to his
+impulsive<br>
+heart, and a mist before his eyes, as he heard how they wanted to
+vote him<br>
+his B in case he failed to win it in track work; he thrilled at
+Butch's<br>
+speech, but&mdash;</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="bw.jpg (92K)" src="images/bw.jpg" height="851" width="545">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Fellows," he startled them by appearing in the doorway,
+"I&mdash;I thank you<br>
+from the bottom of my heart. I couldn't help hearing, you
+know&mdash;I <i>do</i><br>
+appreciate your generous thoughts, but&mdash;I can't and won't
+accept my B<br>
+unless I win it according to the rule of the Athletic
+Association."</p>
+
+<p>A silence, and then Butch Brewster, gripping his comrade's
+hand<br>
+understandingly, held out to him the two letters.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, old man," he breathed, "for reading them aloud,
+but I wanted<br>
+the fellows to know, to appreciate you! And say, Hicks, what does
+your Dad<br>
+mean by saying that you are the 'Class Kid' of Yale, '96, and
+that those<br>
+sons of old Eli want you to win your letter? And what does he
+mean by<br>
+saying that you may get in a <i>big game</i>&mdash;may <i>win</i>
+it&mdash;that you have<br>
+the goods in football, but lack the confidence to announce it to
+Coach<br>
+Corridan? Also that old Bannister needs just the peculiar brand
+you<br>
+possess?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his sunny, Cheshire cat grin
+illuminating his<br>
+cherubic countenance, beamed on the eleven and Coach Corridan a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's a <i>mystery</i>," he said, cheerfully. "If I
+<i>do</i> gain the courage<br>
+and confidence, I'll explain, but unless I do&mdash;it remains
+a&mdash;<i>mystery</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap08"></a>
+CHAPTER VIII</p>
+
+<p>COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN</p>
+
+<p>"ALL MEMBERS OF THE FIRST ELEVEN ARE<br>
+URGENTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT IN<br>
+THE ROOM OF T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.&mdash;<br>
+AT EIGHT P. M. TONIGHT;<br>
+YOU WILL BE DETAINED ONLY A FEW MINUTES,<br>
+BUT LET EVERY PLAYER COME, AS A MATTER OF<br>
+EXTREME IMPORTANCE WILL BE PRESENTED.<br>
+PATRICK HENRY COERIDAN, HEAD-COACH."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, what do you suppose is up Coach Corridan's sleeve?"
+demanded T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cheerfully. "Has Ballard learned our
+signals, or some<br>
+Bannister student sold them to a rival team, as per the usual
+football<br>
+story? Though the notice doth not herald it, I am to be present,
+for my<br>
+room is to be used, and the Coach gave me a special invitation to
+cut the<br>
+Gordian knot with my keen intellect."</p>
+
+<p>The sunny Hicks, with Butch, Beef, Tug, and Monty, had just
+come from<br>
+"Delmonico's Annex," the college dining-hall, after supper; they
+had paused<br>
+before the Bulletin Board at the Gymnasium entrance, where all
+college<br>
+notices were posted, and the Coach's urgent request had caught
+their gaze.<br>
+The announcement had caused quite a stir on the campus. The
+Bannister<br>
+youths stood in excited groups talking of it, and in the
+dormitories it<br>
+superseded all thought of study; however, there seemed little
+chance that<br>
+any but the "'Varsity" and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., who was always
+consulted<br>
+in football problems, would know what took place in this
+meeting.</p>
+
+<p>"There is only one way to find out, Hicks," responded big
+Butch Brewster,<br>
+his arm across his blithesome comrade's shoulders, "and that is,
+attend<br>
+the meeting! You can wager that every member of the eleven will
+be there,<br>
+except Thor&mdash;he regards it as 'foolishness,' I suppose, and
+he won't spare<br>
+that precious time from his studies."</p>
+
+<p>At five minutes past eight, Butch's prophecy was fulfilled,
+for every<br>
+member of the eleven <i>was</i> in Hicks' cozy room, except Thor,
+the Prodigious<br>
+Prodigy, whose presence would have caused a mild sensation. It
+was an<br>
+extremely quiet and orderly gathering, for Coach Corridan, who
+had the<br>
+floor, was so grave that he impressed the would-be sky-larking
+youths.<br>
+Having their undivided attention, he proceeded to make a speech
+that, to<br>
+all intents and purposes, had much the same effect on the team
+and Hicks as<br>
+a Zeppelin's bombs on London:</p>
+
+<p>"Boys," he spoke, in forceful sentences, driving straight to
+the point,<br>
+"I am going to take the eleven, and Hicks, whose suggestions are
+always<br>
+timely, into my confidence, in the hope that we, working
+together, may<br>
+carry out an idea of mine for the awakening of Thor to a
+realization<br>
+of things! I ask you not to let what I shall tell you be known to
+the<br>
+student-body, but you fellows play with Thor every day, and you
+will<br>
+understand the crisis, and appreciate <i>why</i> it is done, if I
+decide it<br>
+necessary to drop John Thorwald from the football squad."</p>
+
+<p>"Drop Thor from the squad!" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+staggered, and<br>
+then pandemonium broke loose among the players. Drop the
+Prodigious Prodigy<br>
+from the squad, why, what <i>could</i> the Slave-Driver be
+thinking of? Why,<br>
+look how Thorwald, on the scrubs, tore through the heavy 'Varsity
+line for<br>
+big gains. He was simply unstoppable; and yet, almost on the eve
+of the big<br>
+game that old Bannister depended on Thor to win by his splendid
+prowess, he<br>
+might be dropped from the squad! Excited exclamations sounded
+from Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster, Beef, and the others of the Gold and Green
+eleven:</p>
+
+<p>"Why not give the big games to Ballard and Ham, Coach?"</p>
+
+<p>"Say, shoot Theophilus Opperdyke in at full-back!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by, championship! No hopes now, fellows!"</p>
+
+<p>"If Thor doesn't play in the Big Games&mdash;good night!"</p>
+
+<p>A greater sensation could not have been caused even had kindly
+white-haired<br>
+Prexy announced his intention of challenging Jess Willard for the
+World's<br>
+Heavy-Weight Championship. Dropping that human battering-ram,
+Thor, from<br>
+the football, squad was something utterly undreamed-of. Coach
+Corridan<br>
+raised his hand for silence, and the youths subsided.</p>
+
+<p>"Hear me carefully, boys," he urged, "I know that old
+Bannister has come to<br>
+regard John Thorwald as invincible, to use his vast bulk as a
+foundation<br>
+on which to build hopes of the Championship, which is a bad
+policy, for no<br>
+team can be a <i>one-man</i> team and win. I realize that as a
+football player,<br>
+Thor hasn't an equal in the State today, and if he had the right
+spirit, he<br>
+would have few in the country. It would be ridiculous to decry
+his prowess,<br>
+for he is a physical phenomenon. But you remember T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s,<br>
+splendid defense of Thor, a week or so ago? Hicks gave you a full
+and clear<br>
+explanation of the big fellow, and showed you <i>why</i> he does
+not know what<br>
+college spirit is, what loyalty and love for one's Alma Mater
+mean! His<br>
+masterly speech changed your attitude toward Thor, and even
+before he<br>
+decided to play football, for Mr. Hicks' sake, you admired him,
+because<br>
+of his indomitable purpose, his promise to his dying mother. Now
+I am<br>
+telling you why he may be dropped from the squad, because I want
+you<br>
+fellows to give Thor a square deal, to remember what Hicks told
+you of him,<br>
+and to keep on striving to awaken him to the true meaning of
+campus years,<br>
+to make him realize that college life is more than a mere buying
+of<br>
+knowledge. I want to keep him on the squad, if humanly possible,
+and I<br>
+shall outline my plot later.</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow we play Latham College. It is the last game before
+the big games<br>
+for The State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Saturday
+after this,<br>
+we play Hamilton, and the following week Ballard, the Champions!
+The eleven<br>
+I send in against those teams must be a solid unit, <i>one</i> in
+spirit and<br>
+purpose&mdash;every member of the Gold and Green team must be
+welded with his<br>
+team-mates, and they must forget everything but that their Alma
+Mater must<br>
+win the Championship! With no thought of self-glory, no other
+purpose in<br>
+playing than a love for old Bannister, every fellow must go into
+those<br>
+games to fight for his Alma Mater! Now, as for Thor, I need not
+tell you<br>
+that he is not in sympathy with our ambition; he simply does not
+understand<br>
+campus tradition and spirit. He is as yet not possessed of an
+Alma Mater;<br>
+he plays football only because of gratitude to Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Sr., and he hates to lose the time from his studies for the
+practice.<br>
+The football squad knows that his presence is a veritable wet
+blanket on<br>
+enthusiasm and the team's fighting spirit."</p>
+
+<p>It was true. That intangible shadow of something wrong,
+brooding over<br>
+training-table, shower-room, and Bannister Field, that
+self-evident<br>
+truth which almost every collegian had for days confessed to
+himself yet<br>
+hesitated to voice, had been given definite form by Coach
+Corridan talking<br>
+to the eleven. The good that Thorwald might do for the team by
+his superb<br>
+prowess and massive bulk was more than offset and nullified by
+his<br>
+attitude.</p>
+
+<p>To the blond Colossus, daily practice was unutterable mental
+torture. His<br>
+mind was on his studies, to which his bulldog purpose shackled
+him; he<br>
+begrudged the time spent on Bannister Field; he was stolid,
+silent, aloof.<br>
+He scarcely ever spoke, except when addressed. He reported for
+practice at<br>
+the last second, went through the scrimmage like a great, dumb,
+driven ox,<br>
+doing as he was ordered; and when the squad was dismissed he
+hurried to his<br>
+room. He was among the squad, but not of them; he neither
+understood nor<br>
+cared about their love for old Bannister, their vast desire to
+win for<br>
+their Alma Mater; he played football because he was grateful to
+Hicks, Sr.,<br>
+for helping him to get started toward his goal, but as Coach
+Corridan now<br>
+told the 'Varsity, he killed the squad's enthusiasm,</p>
+
+<p>"All of this cannot fail to damage the <i>esprit de corps</i>,
+the <i>morale</i>, of<br>
+the eleven," declared Coach Corridan, having outlined Thor's
+attitude. "I<br>
+know that every member of the squad, if Thor played the game
+because of<br>
+college spirit, for love of old Bannister, would rejoice at his
+prowess.<br>
+But as it is they are justly resentful that he is not in the
+spirit of the<br>
+game. What we may gain by his playing, we lose because the others
+cannot do<br>
+their best with his example to hurt their fighting spirit. I do
+not want,<br>
+nor will I have on my eleven, any player who plays for other
+reasons than a<br>
+love for his Alma Mater, be he a Hogan, Brickley, Thorpe, or
+Mahan. I have<br>
+waited, hoping Thorwald would be awakened, as Hicks explained,
+but now I<br>
+must act. Tomorrow's game with Latham must see Thor awakened, or
+I must,<br>
+for the sake of the eleven, drop him from the squad for the rest
+of the<br>
+season.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I beg of you, in case the plan I shall propose fails,
+remember Hicks'<br>
+appeal! Do not condemn or ostracize John Thorwald in any degree.
+He has<br>
+three more seasons of football, so let us keep on trying to make
+him<br>
+understand campus life, college tradition. Be his friends, help
+him all you<br>
+can, and sooner or later he will awaken. Something may suddenly
+shock him<br>
+to a true understanding of what old Bannister means to a fellow.
+Or perhaps<br>
+the awakening will be slow, but it must come. And Bannister can
+win without<br>
+Thor, don't forget that! We'll make one final effort to awaken
+Thor, and<br>
+if it fails, just forget him, boys, so far as football goes, and
+watch the<br>
+Gold and Green win that championship."</p>
+
+<p>"What is your scheme, Coach?" questioned Captain Butch
+Brewster, his honest<br>
+countenance showing how heavily the responsibility of team-leader
+weighed<br>
+upon him. "You are right; as Thor is now, he is a handicap to the
+eleven,<br>
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My idea is this," explained the Slave-Driver earnestly.
+"Select some<br>
+student to go to Thorwald and try to show him that unless he gets
+into the<br>
+game and plays for old Bannister, he will be dropped from the
+squad. If<br>
+possible, let the fellow make him understand that, in his case,
+it will be<br>
+a shame and a dishonor. Now, Butch, you and Hicks can probably
+approach<br>
+Thor, or perhaps you know of someone who&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cherubic countenance showed the
+light of dawning<br>
+inspiration, and Coach Corridan paused, as the sunny youth
+exhibited a<br>
+desire to say something, with him not by any means a
+phenomenal<br>
+happening; given the floor, the blithesome youth burst forth
+excitedly:<br>
+"Theophilus&mdash;Theophilus Opperdyke is the one! He has more
+influence over<br>
+Thor than any other student, and the big fellow likes the little
+boner.<br>
+Thor will at least listen to Theophilus, which Is more than any
+of us can<br>
+gain from him."</p>
+
+<p>After the meeting had adjourned, and the last inspection had
+been made in<br>
+the other dorms, the Seniors being exempt, several members of the
+Gold and<br>
+Green team&mdash;Captain Butch, Beef, Pudge, Monty, Roddy, and
+Bunch, together<br>
+with little Theophilus Opperdyke, dragged from his
+studies&mdash;foregathered in<br>
+the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; those who had heard
+the<br>
+coach's talk were still stunned at the ban likely to be placed on
+the<br>
+Brobdingnagian Thor. On the campus outside Creighton Hall, a
+horde of<br>
+Bannister youths, incited by Tug Cardiff, who gave them no reason
+for his<br>
+act, were making a strenuous effort to awaken the Prodigious
+Prodigy,<br>
+evidently depending on noise to achieve that end, for a vast
+sound-wave<br>
+rolled up to Hicks' windows&mdash;"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor!
+Thor!<br>
+He's&mdash;all&mdash;right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Listen!" exploded T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., indignantly. "You
+and I,<br>
+Theophilus, would give a Rajah's ransom just to hear the fellows
+whoop it<br>
+up for us like that, and it has no more effect on that sodden
+hulk of a<br>
+Thor than bombarding an English super-dreadnaught with Roman
+candles!<br>
+Howsomever, Coach Corridan exploded a shrapnel bomb on old
+Bannister's<br>
+eleven tonight."</p>
+
+<p>Then Hicks carefully outlined to the dazed little boner the
+substance of<br>
+the coach's talk to the team, and Theophilus was alarmed when he
+thought of<br>
+Thor's being dropped from the squad. When Captain Butch had
+outlined the<br>
+Slave-Driver's plot for striving to awaken the Colossus to a
+realization of<br>
+what a disgrace it would be to be sent from the gridiron, though
+he did not<br>
+announce that the Human Encyclopedia had been elected to carry
+out Coach<br>
+Corridan's last-hope idea, Theophilus sat on the edge of the
+chair,<br>
+blinking owlishly at them over his big-rimmed spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>"After all, fellows," quavered Theophilus nervously, "Coach
+Corridan, if he<br>
+drops Thor from the squad, won't create such a riot on the campus
+as you<br>
+might expect. You see, the students, even as they built and
+planned on<br>
+Thor, gradually came to know that there is vastly more to be
+considered<br>
+than physical power. That great bulk actually acts as a drag on
+the eleven,<br>
+because Thor isn't in sympathy with things! Still, if he could
+only be<br>
+aroused, awakened, wouldn't the team play football, with him
+striving for<br>
+old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for
+Hicks' dad?<br>
+Oh, I <i>do</i> hope the Coach's plan succeeds, and he awakens
+tomorrow; I<br>
+know the boys won't condemn him, if he doesn't,
+but&mdash;I&mdash;I want him to<br>
+understand!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's his last chance this season," reflected T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+enshrouded in a penumbra of gloom. "I made a big boast that I
+would round<br>
+up a smashing full-back. I returned to Bannister with the
+Prodigious<br>
+Prodigy. I made a big mystery of him, and
+then&mdash;biff!&mdash;Thor quit football.<br>
+Then I explained the mystery, and got the fellows to admire him,
+and when<br>
+Thor decided to play the game I thought 'All O.K.; I'll just wait
+until<br>
+he scatters Hamilton and Ballard over Bannister Field, then I'll
+swagger<br>
+before Butch and say, "Oh, I told you just to leave it to
+Hicks!"' But now<br>
+Thor has spilled the beans again."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I hope that the one you have chosen to appeal to
+Thor&mdash;" spoke<br>
+Theophilus timorously, "will succeed, for&mdash;Oh, I
+<i>don't</i> want him to be<br>
+dropped from the squad, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, who had been gazing at little Theophilus
+Opperdyke with<br>
+a basilisk glare that perturbed the bewildered Human
+Encyclopedia, suddenly<br>
+strode across the room and placed his hand on the grind's thin
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Theophilus, old man, it's up to you!" he said earnestly.
+"Thor has a<br>
+strong regard for you; in fact, outside of his good-natured
+tolerance<br>
+for Hicks, you alone have his friendship. Now I want you to go to
+him,<br>
+Theophilus, and make a last appeal to Thor. Try to awaken him, to
+make him<br>
+understand his peril of being dropped from the squad, unless he
+plays<br>
+the game for his college! It's for old Bannister, old man, for
+your Alma<br>
+Mater&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go to it, Theophilus!" urged Beef McNaughton. "Coach Corridan
+said Thor<br>
+might be suddenly awakened by a shock, but no electric battery
+can shock<br>
+that Colossus, and, besides, miracles don't happen nowadays. Yes,
+it's up<br>
+to you, old man."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment little Theophilus, his big-rimmed spectacles
+falling off<br>
+as fast as he replaced them, and his puny frame tense with
+excitement,<br>
+hesitated. Sitting on the extreme edge of the chair, he surveyed
+his<br>
+comrades solemnly and was convinced that they were in earnest.
+Then, "I&mdash;I<br>
+will <i>try</i>, sir!" exclaimed Theophilus, who would
+<i>never</i> forget his<br>
+Freshman training. "I'm <i>sure</i> Hicks, or somebody, could do
+It better than<br>
+I; but&mdash;I'll try!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap09"></a>
+CHAPTER IX</p>
+
+<p>THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK</p>
+
+<p>  "College ties can ne'er be broken&mdash;<br>
+  Loyal will remain each heart;<br>
+  Though the last farewell be spoken&mdash;<br>
+  And from Bannister we part!</p>
+
+<p>  "Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!<br>
+  Echoes softly from each heart;<br>
+  We'll be ever loyal to thee&mdash;<br>
+  Till we from life shall part!"</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous, intensely studious Human
+Encyclopedia,<br>
+stood at the window of John Thorwald's study room. That behemoth,
+desiring<br>
+quiet, had moved his study-table and chair to a vacant room
+across the<br>
+second-floor corridor of Creighton, the Freshman dormitory, when
+the<br>
+Bannister youths cheered him, and he was still there, so that
+Theophilus,<br>
+on his mission, had finally located him by his low rumblings, as
+he<br>
+laboriously read out his Latin. The little Senior was gazing
+across the<br>
+brightly lighted Quadrangle. He could see into the rooms of the
+other<br>
+class dormitories, where the students studied, skylarked,
+rough-housed,<br>
+or conversed on innumerable topics; from a room in Nordyke, the
+abode of<br>
+care-free Juniors, a splendidly blended sextette sang songs of
+their<br>
+Alma Mater, and their rich voices drifted across the Quad. to
+Thor and<br>
+Theophilus:</p>
+
+<p>  "Though thy halls we leave forever<br>
+  Sadly from the campus turn;<br>
+  Yet our love shall fail thee never<br>
+  For old Bannister we'll yearn!<br>
+    Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!"</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus turned from the window, and looked despairingly at
+that young<br>
+Colossus, Thor. The behemoth Norwegian, oblivious to everything
+except the<br>
+geometry problem now causing him to sweat, rested his massive
+head on his<br>
+palms, elbows on the study-table, and was lost in the intricate
+labyrinth<br>
+of "Let the line ABC equal the line BVD." The frail chair creaked
+under his<br>
+ponderous bulk. On the table lay an unopened letter that had come
+in the<br>
+night's mail, for, tackling one problem, the bulldog Hercules
+never let go<br>
+his grip until he solved it, and nothing else, not even
+Theophilus, could<br>
+secure his attention. Hence the Human Encyclopedia, trembling at
+the<br>
+terrific importance of the mission entrusted to him, waited,
+thrilled by<br>
+the Juniors' songs, which failed to penetrate Thor's mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what <i>can</i> I do?" breathed Theophilus, sitting down
+nervously on the<br>
+edge of a chair and peering owlishly over his big-rimmed
+spectacles at the<br>
+stolid John Thorwald. "I am sure that, in time, I can help Thor
+to&mdash;to know<br>
+campus life better; but&mdash;<i>tomorrow</i> is his last chance!
+He will be dropped<br>
+from the squad, unless&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As Thor at last leaned back and gazed at his little comrade,
+just then, to<br>
+the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," an augmented chorus drifted
+across the<br>
+Quadrangle:</p>
+
+<p>  "And we'll sing one song<br>
+  For the college that we love&mdash;<br>
+  For our dear old Bannister&mdash;good-by"</p>
+
+<p>To the Bannister students there was something tremendously
+queer in the<br>
+friendship of Theophilus and Thor. That the huge Freshman, of all
+the<br>
+collegians, should have chosen the timorous little boner was most
+puzzling.<br>
+Yet, to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a keen reader of human nature, it
+was<br>
+clear; Thorwald thought of nothing but study, Theophilus was a
+grind,<br>
+though he possessed intense college spirit, hence Thor was
+naturally drawn<br>
+to the little Senior by the mutual bond of their interest in
+books, and<br>
+Theophilus, with his hero-worshiping soul, intensely admired the
+splendid<br>
+purpose of John Thorwald, toiling to gain knowledge, because of
+the promise<br>
+of his dying mother. The grind, who thought that next to T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., Thor was the "greatest ever," as Hicks phrased it, had been,
+doing<br>
+what that care-free collegian termed "missionary work," with the
+stolid,<br>
+unimaginative Prodigious Prodigy for some weeks. Thrilled with
+the thought<br>
+that he worked for his Alma Mater, he quietly strove to make
+Thorwald<br>
+glimpse the true meaning and purpose of college life and its
+broadness of<br>
+development. The loyal Theophilus lost no opportunity of
+impressing his<br>
+behemoth friend with the sacred traditions of the campus, or of
+explaining<br>
+why Thor was wrong in characterizing all else than study as
+foolishness and<br>
+waste of time.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor," began Theophilus timidly yet determinedly, for he was
+serving old<br>
+Bannister now, "old man, do you feel that you are giving the
+fellows at<br>
+Bannister a square deal?"</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald, slowly tearing open the letter that had come
+that night,<br>
+and had lain, unnoticed, on the study-table while he wrestled
+with his<br>
+geometry, turned suddenly. The Human Encyclopedia's vast
+earnestness and<br>
+the strange query he had fired at Thor, surprised even that
+stolid mammoth.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what do you mean, Theophilus?" spoke Thor slowly. "A
+square deal?<br>
+Why, I owe them nothing! I sacrifice my time for them, leaving my
+studies<br>
+to go out and waste precious time foolishly on football.
+Why&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean this," Theophilus kept doggedly on, his earnest desire
+to stir Thor<br>
+conquering his natural timidity. "You were brought to old
+Bannister by<br>
+Hicks, who made a great mystery of you, so we knew nothing of
+you; but the<br>
+fellows all thought you were willing to play football. Then,
+after they<br>
+got enthused, and builded hopes of the championship on
+<i>you</i>, came<br>
+your quitting. Hicks defended you, Thor, and changed the boys'
+bitter<br>
+condemnation to vast admiration, by telling of your life, your
+father's<br>
+being a castaway, your mother's dying wish, your toil to get
+learning, and<br>
+your inability to grasp college life. Then from gratitude to Mr.
+Hicks you<br>
+started to play again&mdash;naturally, the students waxed
+enthusiastic, when you<br>
+ripped the 'Varsity to pieces, but now you may be dropped by the
+coach,<br>
+after tomorrow, because you don't play for old Bannister, and
+your<br>
+indifference kills the team's fighting spirit. You do not care if
+you are<br>
+dropped; it will give you more time to study, and relieve you of
+your<br>
+obligation, as you so quixotically view it, to play because Mr.
+Hicks will<br>
+be glad; but&mdash;think of the fellows.</p>
+
+<p>"They, Thor, disappointed in you, their hopes of your bringing
+by your<br>
+massive body and huge strength the Championship to old Bannister
+shattered,<br>
+are still your friends&mdash;they of the eleven, I mean
+especially, for, as yet,<br>
+the rest do not know you may be dropped. And the fellows came
+beneath your<br>
+window tonight to cheer you; they will do so, Thor, even if you
+are dropped<br>
+and they know that you will not use that prodigious power for
+their Alma<br>
+Mater in the big games; they will stand by you, for they
+understand! Just<br>
+think, old man; haven't the fellows, despite your rude rebuffs,
+<i>tried</i><br>
+to be your comrades? Haven't they helped you to get settled to
+work and<br>
+assisted you with your studies? Why, you have been a big boor,
+cold and<br>
+aloof, you have upset their hopes of you in football, and yet
+they have no<br>
+condemnation for you, naught but warm friendliness.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not giving them or yourself a square deal, Thor! You
+won't even<br>
+<i>try</i> to understand campus life, to grasp its real purpose,
+to realize what<br>
+tradition is! The time will come, Thor, when you will see your
+mistake; you<br>
+will yearn for their good fellowship, you will learn that getting
+knowledge<br>
+is not all of college life. You will know that this 'silly
+foolishness' of<br>
+singing songs and giving the yell, of rooting for the eleven, of
+loyalty<br>
+and love for one's Alma Mater, is something worth while. And you
+may find<br>
+it out too late. Oh, if you could only understand that it isn't
+what you<br>
+take from old Bannister that makes a man of you, it is what you
+give to<br>
+your college&mdash;in athletics, in your studies, in every phase
+of campus life;<br>
+that in toiling and sacrificing for your Alma Mater you grow and
+develop,<br>
+and reap a rich reward!"</p>
+
+<p>Could T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and
+Green eleven<br>
+have heard little Theophilus' fervent and eloquent appeal to John
+Thorwald,<br>
+they would have felt like giving three cheers for him. They loved
+this<br>
+pathetic little boner, who, because of his pitifully frail body,
+could<br>
+never fight for old Bannister on gridiron, diamond, or track, and
+they<br>
+tremendously admired him for working for his college and for the
+redemption<br>
+of Thor. Timorous and shrinking by nature, whenever his Alma
+Mater, or a<br>
+friend, needed him the Human Encyclopedia fought down his painful
+timidity<br>
+and came up to scratch nobly.</p>
+
+<p>It was Theophilus whose clear logic had vastly aided T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., to originate The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, in 1919's
+Sophomore<br>
+year, and quell Roddy Perkins' Freshman Equal Rights campaign. In
+fact, it<br>
+had been the boner's suggestion that gave Hicks his needed
+inspiration.<br>
+And, a Junior, Theophilus had been elected business manager of
+the<br>
+Bannister Weekly, with Hicks as editor-in-chief as a colossal
+joke. The<br>
+entire burden of that almost defunct periodical had been thrust
+on those<br>
+two, and, thanks to the grind's intensely humorous "copy," the
+Weekly had<br>
+been revived and rebuilt. And Theophilus, in writing the humorous
+articles,<br>
+had been moved by a great ambition to do something for old
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at me, Thor!" continued Theophilus Opperdyke, his puny
+body dwarfed<br>
+as he faced the colossal Prodigious Prodigy. "A poor, weak,
+helpless<br>
+nothing! I'd cheerfully sacrifice all the scholastic honor or
+glory I ever<br>
+won, or shall win, just to make a touchdown for the Gold and
+Green, just to<br>
+win a baseball game, or to break the tape in a race for old
+Bannister!<br>
+And you&mdash;<i>you</i>, with that tremendous body, that massive
+bulk, that vast<br>
+strength&mdash;you won't play the game for your Alma Mater, you
+won't throw<br>
+that big frame into the scrimmage, thrilled with a desire to win
+for your<br>
+college! Oh, what wonderful things you <i>could</i> do with your
+powerful build;<br>
+but it means nothing to you, while I&mdash; Oh, you don't care,
+you just won't<br>
+awaken; and, unless you do, in tomorrow's game you'll be dropped
+from the<br>
+squad, a disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald-Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, that Gargantuan
+Freshman of<br>
+whom Bannister said he possessed no soul&mdash;stirred uneasily,
+shifted his<br>
+vast tonnage from one foot to the other, and stared at little
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke. That solemn Senior, who had not seen the slightest
+effect his<br>
+"Missionary Work" was having on the stolid Thor, was in despair;
+but he did<br>
+not know the truth. As Hicks had once said, "You don't know
+nothing what<br>
+goes on in Thor's dome. There's a wall of solid concrete around
+the<br>
+machinery of his mind, and you can't see the wheels, belts, and
+cogs at<br>
+work!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with all his keen insight into human
+nature, had<br>
+failed utterly to diagnose Thor's case, had not even stumbled on
+the true<br>
+cause of that young giant's aloofness. The truth was unknown to
+anyone,<br>
+but there was one natural reason for John Thorwald's not mingling
+with his<br>
+fellows of the campus-the blond Colossus was inordinately
+bashful! From his<br>
+fifteenth year, Thor had seen the seamy side of life, had lived,
+grown and<br>
+developed among men. In his wanderings in the Klondike, the wild
+Northwest,<br>
+in Panama, his experiences as cabin-boy, miner, cowboy,
+lumber-jack, and<br>
+Canal Zone worker, he had existed where everything was roughness
+and<br>
+violence, where brawn, not brain, usually held sway, where
+supremacy was<br>
+won, kept, and lost by fists, spiked boots, or guns! In his
+adventurous<br>
+career, young Thorwald had but seldom encountered the finer
+things of life,<br>
+and his nature, while wholesome, was sturdy and virile, not
+likely to be<br>
+stirred by sentiment; so that now, among the good-natured,
+friendly boys of<br>
+old Bannister, he, accustomed to rude surroundings and rough
+acquaintances,<br>
+was bashful.</p>
+
+<p>And Theophilus, as well as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., shot far
+wide of the<br>
+mark in believing that the big Hercules had no power to feel; he
+possessed<br>
+that power, but, with it the ability to conceal his feelings.
+They thought<br>
+nothing appealed to him, had stirred his soul, at college, but
+they were<br>
+wrong; true, Thor was unable to understand this new, strange
+life; he was<br>
+puzzled when the collegians condemned and ostracized him at
+first, when<br>
+he quit football because it was not a Faculty rule to play, but
+he was<br>
+grateful when Hicks defended him, and the admiration of the
+student-body<br>
+was welcome to him. He had thought he was doing all they desired
+of him,<br>
+when he went back to the game, and now&mdash;when Theophilus told
+him that he<br>
+might be dropped from the squad, he was bewildered. He could not
+understand<br>
+just why this could be, when he was reporting for scrimmage every
+day!</p>
+
+<p>But the friendliness of the youths, their kind help with his
+studies,<br>
+the assistance of the genial Hicks, and, more than all, above
+even<br>
+the admiration of the Freshmen for his promise and purpose, the
+daily<br>
+missionary work of little Theophilus, for whom the massive Thor
+felt a real<br>
+love, had been slowly, insidiously undermining John Thorwald's
+reserve. No<br>
+longer did he condemn what he did not understand. At times he had
+a vague<br>
+feeling that all was not right, that, after all, he was missing
+something,<br>
+that study was not all; and yet, bashful as he was, fearing to
+appear<br>
+rough, crude, and uncouth among these skylarking youths, Thor
+kept on his<br>
+silent, lonely way, and they thought him untouched by their
+overtures. Of<br>
+late, when unobserved, the big Freshman had stood by the window,
+watching<br>
+the collegians on the campus, listening to their songs of old
+Bannister,<br>
+and yet because he felt embarrassed when with them, he gave no
+sign that he<br>
+cared.</p>
+
+<p>Now, however, the splendid appeal of loyal, timorous
+Theophilus stirred<br>
+Thor, and yet he could not break down the wall of reserve he had
+builded<br>
+around himself. He had deluded himself that this comradeship was
+not for<br>
+him, that he could never mingle with these happy-go-lucky youths,
+that<br>
+he must plod straight ahead, and live to himself, because his
+past had<br>
+roughened him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a Freshman!" spoke Theophilus, unaware that forces
+were at work on<br>
+Thor, and making a last effort. "You stand on the very threshold
+of your<br>
+campus years; everything is before you. I am at the journey's
+end&mdash;very<br>
+nearly, for in June I graduate from old Bannister. I never had
+the chance<br>
+to fight for my Alma Mater on the athletic field, and
+you&mdash;Oh, think of<br>
+what you can do! About to leave the campus, I, and my
+class-mates, realize<br>
+how dear our college has become to us. If <i>you</i> could just
+know that<br>
+Bannister means something to you, even now, if you only felt it,
+you<br>
+could make your years mean great things to you. Thor, could you
+leave old<br>
+Bannister tomorrow without regret, without one sigh for the dear
+old place?<br>
+We, who soon shall leave it forever, fully understand
+Shakespeare, when in<br>
+a sonnet he wrote:</p>
+
+<p>  "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
+strong&mdash;<br>
+  To love that well which thou must leave ere long!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence, and then Thor slowly drew out a letter
+from its<br>
+envelope, scanning the scrawl across its pages. A few moments,
+while its<br>
+meaning seemed to seep into his slow-acting mind, and then a look
+of<br>
+helpless bewilderment, as though the stolid Freshman just could
+not<br>
+understand at all, came to his face; a minute John Thorwald
+stood, as in a<br>
+trance, staring dully at the letter.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! What's the matter? What's wrong?" quavered the
+alarmed<br>
+Theophilus, "Have you gotten bad news?"</p>
+
+<p>"Read it, read it," said the big Freshman lifelessly,
+extending the letter<br>
+to the startled Senior. "It's all over, I suppose, and I've got
+to go to<br>
+work again. I've got to leave college, and toil once more, and
+save. My<br>
+promise to my mother can't be fulfilled&mdash;yet. And just as I
+was getting<br>
+fairly started."</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus Opperdyke hurriedly perused the message, which had
+come to Thor<br>
+in that night's mail but which the blond giant had let lie
+unnoticed while<br>
+he tackled his geometry. With difficulty Theophilus deciphered
+the scrawl<br>
+on an official letterhead:</p>
+
+<p>THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANA STEAMSHIP LINE</p>
+
+<p>(New York Offices)</p>
+
+<p>Nov. 4, 19&mdash;.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR SON:</p>
+
+<p>I am writing to tell you that I've run into a sort of
+hurricane, and you<br>
+and I have got a hard blow to weather. I started you at college
+on the<br>
+$5,000 received from the heirs of Henry B. Kingsley, on whose
+yacht, as<br>
+you know, I was wrecked in the South Seas, and marooned for ten
+years. I<br>
+figured on giving you an education with that sum, eked out by my
+wages, and<br>
+what you earn in vacations.</p>
+
+<p>I had the $5,000, untouched, in a New York bank, and I wanted
+to take it<br>
+over to Christiania; when I was about to sail on my last voyage,
+I drew out<br>
+the sum, and put it in care of the Purser of the Norwhal, on
+which I<br>
+was mate, intending, of course, to get it on docking, and deposit
+it in<br>
+Christiania. At the last hour I was transferred to the Valkyrie,
+to sail<br>
+a few days later, and I knew the Norwhal's purser would leave the
+$5,000<br>
+for me in the Company's Christiania offices, so I did not bother
+to<br>
+transfer it to the Valkyrie.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps you read in the newspapers that the Norwhal struck a
+floating<br>
+mine, and went down with a heavy loss of life. The Purser was
+among those<br>
+lost, and none of the ship's papers were saved; my $5,000, of
+course, went<br>
+down also.</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry, John, but there seems nothing to do but for you to
+leave<br>
+college and work. For your mother's sake, I wish we could avoid
+it; but we<br>
+must wait and work and tackle it again. Your first term expenses
+are paid,<br>
+so stay until the term is out. Perhaps Mr. Hicks can give you a
+job in one<br>
+of his steel mills again, but we must work our own way, son.
+Don't lose<br>
+courage, we'll fight this out together with the memory of your
+promise to<br>
+your dying mother to spur you on. The road may be long and rocky
+but we'll<br>
+make it. Just work and save, and in a year or two you can start
+at college<br>
+again. You can study at night, too, and keep on learning.</p>
+
+<p>I'll write later. Stay at college till the term is up, and in
+the meantime<br>
+try to land a job. However, you won't have any trouble to do
+that. Keep<br>
+your nerve, boy, for your mother's sake. It's a hard blow, but
+we'll<br>
+weather it, never fear, and reach port.</p>
+
+<p>Your father,</p>
+
+<p>JOHN THORWALD, SR.</p>
+
+<p>P.S. I am sailing on the Valkyrie today, will write you on my
+return to<br>
+New York, in a few weeks.</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus looked at the massive young Norwegian, who had
+taken this<br>
+solar-plexus blow with that same stolid apathy that characterized
+his every<br>
+action. He wanted to offer sympathy, but he knew not how to reach
+Thor. He<br>
+fully understood how terrific the blow was, how it must stagger
+the<br>
+big, earnest Freshman, just as he, after ten years of grinding
+toil, of<br>
+sacrifice, of grim, unrelenting determination, had conquered
+obstacles and<br>
+fought to where he had a clear track ahead. Just as it seemed
+that fate had<br>
+given him a fair chance, with his father rescued and five
+thousand dollars<br>
+to give him a college course, this terrible misfortune had
+befallen him.<br>
+Theophilus realized what it must mean to this huge, silent
+Hercules, just<br>
+making good his promise to his dying mother, to give up his
+studies, and go<br>
+back to work, toil, labor, to begin all over again, to put off
+his college<br>
+years.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me, please," said Thor dully, apparently as unmoved by
+the blow<br>
+as he had been by Theophilus' appeal. "I&mdash;I would like to be
+alone, for<br>
+awhile."</p>
+
+<p>Left alone, John Thorwald stood by the window, apparently not
+thinking of<br>
+anything in particular, as he gazed across the brightly lighted
+Quad. The<br>
+huge Freshman seemed in a daze&mdash;utterly unable to comprehend
+the disaster<br>
+that had befallen him; he was as stolid and impassive as ever,
+and<br>
+Theophilus might have thought that he did not care, even at
+having to give<br>
+up his college course, had not the Senior known better.</p>
+
+<p>Across the Quadrangle, from the room of the Caruso-like
+Juniors,<br>
+accompanied by a melodious banjo-twanging, drifted:</p>
+
+<p>  "Though thy halls we leave forever<br>
+  Sadly from the campus turn;<br>
+  Yet our love shall fail thee never<br>
+  For old Bannister we'll yearn!</p>
+
+<p>  "'Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!'<br>
+  Echoes softly from each heart;<br>
+  We'll be ever loyal to thee<br>
+  Till we from life shall part."</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, the behemoth Thorwald was not thinking so
+much of having<br>
+to give up his studies, of having to lay aside his books and take
+up again<br>
+the implements of toil. He was not pondering on the cruelty of
+fate in<br>
+making him abandon, at least temporarily, his goal; instead, his
+thoughts<br>
+turned, somehow, to his experiences at old Bannister, to the
+football<br>
+scrimmages, the noisy sessions in "Delmonico's Annex," the
+college<br>
+dining-hall, to the skylarking he had often watched in the
+dormitories. He<br>
+thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks,
+good Butch<br>
+Brewster, loyal little Theophilus; and as he reflected, he heard
+those<br>
+Juniors, over the way, singing. Just now they were chanting
+that<br>
+exquisitely beautiful Hawaiian melody, "Aloha Oe," or "Farewell
+to Thee,"<br>
+making the words tell of parting from their Alma Mater. There was
+something<br>
+in the refrain that seemed to break down Thor's wall of reserve,
+to melt<br>
+away his aloofness, and he caught himself listening eagerly as
+they sang.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow he felt no desire to condemn those care-free youths,
+to call their<br>
+singing silly foolishness, to say they were wasting their time
+and their<br>
+fathers' money. Queer, but he actually liked to hear them sing,
+he realized<br>
+he had come to listen for their saengerfests. Now that he had to
+leave<br>
+college, for the first time he began to ponder on what he must
+leave. Not<br>
+alone books and study, but&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>As he stood there, an ache in his throat, and an awful sorrow
+overwhelming<br>
+him, with the richly blended voices of the happy Juniors drifting
+across to<br>
+him, chanting a song of old Ballard, big Thor murmured
+softly:</p>
+
+<p>"What did little Theophilus say? What was it Shakespeare
+wrote? Oh, I have<br>
+it:</p>
+
+<p>  "'This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
+strong&mdash;<br>
+  To love that well, which thou must leave ere long.'"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap10"></a>
+CHAPTER X</p>
+
+<p>THOR'S AWAKENING</p>
+
+<p>  "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,<br>
+  And we'll put Bannister in that hole!<br>
+  In that hole&mdash;in&mdash;that&mdash;hole&mdash;<br>
+  Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"</p>
+
+<p>"In the famous words of the late Mike Murphy," said T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+"the celebrated Yale and Penn track trainer, 'you can beat a team
+that<br>
+can't be beat, but&mdash;you can't beat a team that won't be
+beat!' Latham must<br>
+be in the latter class."</p>
+
+<p>It was the Bannister-Latham game, and the first half had just
+ended.<br>
+Captain Butch Brewster's followers had trailed dejectedly from
+Bannister<br>
+Field to the Gym, where Head Coach Corridan was flaying them with
+a tongue<br>
+as keen as the two-edged sword that drove Adam and Eve from the
+Garden of<br>
+Eden. A cold, bleak November afternoon, a leaden sky lowered
+overhead, and<br>
+a chill wind swept athwart the field; in the concrete stands, the
+loyal<br>
+"rooters" of the Gold and Green, or of the Gold and Blue,
+shivered,<br>
+stamped, and swung their arms, waiting for the excitement of the
+scrimmage<br>
+again to warm them. Yet, the Bannister cohorts seemed silent
+and<br>
+discouraged, while the Latham supporters went wild, singing,
+cheering,<br>
+howling. A look at the score-board explained this:</p>
+
+<p>    END OF FIRST HALF: SCORE:<br>
+      Bannister ........ 0<br>
+      Latham ........... 3</p>
+
+<p>The statement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a gold and
+green<br>
+blanket and humped on the Bannister bench, to shivering little
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke, the Phillyloo Bird, Shad Weatherby, and several more
+collegians<br>
+who had joined him when the half ended, was singularly
+appropriate. In<br>
+Latham's light, fast eleven, trained to the minute, coached to a
+shifty,<br>
+tricky style of play with numberless deceptive fakes from which
+they worked<br>
+the forward pass successfully, Bannister seemed to have
+encountered, as<br>
+Mike Murphy phrased it, "A team that won't be beat!" According to
+the<br>
+advance dope of the sporting writers, who, in football, are
+usually as good<br>
+prophets as the Weather Bureau, Bannister was booked to come out
+the winner<br>
+by at least five touchdowns to none. But here a half was gone,
+and Latham<br>
+led by three points, scored on a rather lucky field-goal!</p>
+
+<p>The psychology of football is inexplicable. Yale, beaten by
+Virginia,<br>
+Brown, and Wash-Jeff, with the Blue's best gridiron star
+ineligible to<br>
+play, a team that seemed at odds with itself and the 'Varsity,
+mismanaged,<br>
+poorly coached, journeys to Princeton to battle with old Nassau;
+the Tiger,<br>
+Its tail as yet untwisted, presents its best eleven for several
+seasons, a<br>
+great favorite in the odds, and yet the final score is Yale, 14;
+Princeton,<br>
+7! A strange fear of the Bulldog, bred of many bitter defeats, of
+similar<br>
+occasions when a feeble Yale team aroused itself and trampled an
+invincible<br>
+Orange and Black eleven, when the Blue fought old Nassau with a
+team that<br>
+"wouldn't" be beat, gave victory to the poorer aggregation. So
+many things<br>
+unforeseen often enter into a football contest, shifting the
+balance of<br>
+power from the stronger to the weaker team. One eleven gets the
+jump on the<br>
+other, the favorite weirdly goes to pieces&mdash;team dissension
+may exist, a<br>
+dozen other causes&mdash;but, boiled down, Mike Murphy's
+statement was most<br>
+appropriate now.</p>
+
+<p>Latham simply <i>would not</i> be beat! The sporting pages had
+said: "Latham<br>
+simply can't beat Bannister!" Here the team, that could not be
+beaten was<br>
+being defeated, and the team that would not be defeated was, so
+far, the<br>
+victor. Perhaps the threatened dropping of Thor from the Gold and
+Green<br>
+squad shook somewhat Captain Butch's players; more likely, the
+Latham<br>
+aggregation got the jump on Bannister, opening up a bewildering
+attack of<br>
+criss-crosses, line plunges, cross-bucks, and tandems, from all
+of which<br>
+the forward pass frequently developed; they literally overwhelmed
+a<br>
+supposedly unbeatable team. And once they got the edge, it was
+hard for<br>
+Bannister to regain poise and to smother the fast plays that
+swept through<br>
+or around the bewildered eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"We have <i>got</i> to beat 'em!" growled Shad, "Mike Murphy
+or not. Why,<br>
+if little old Latham cleans us up, smash go our chances of the
+State<br>
+Championship! Oh, look at Thor&mdash;the big mountain of muscle.
+Why doesn't he<br>
+wake up, and go push that team off the field?"</p>
+
+<p>Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, his vast hulk unprotected from
+the cold wind<br>
+by a football blanket, squatted on the ground, on the side-line,
+apparently<br>
+in a trance. Ever since the night before, when his father's
+letter had<br>
+dealt such a knock-out blow to his hopes of fulfilling the
+promise to his<br>
+dying mother, had rudely side-tracked him from the climb to his
+goal, the<br>
+blond giant had maintained that dumb apathy. If anything, it
+seemed that<br>
+the cruel blow of fate had only served to make Thor more stolid
+and<br>
+impassive than ever, and Theophilus wondered if the Colossus had
+really<br>
+grasped the import of the tragic letter as yet. The news had
+spread over<br>
+the college and campus, and the students were sincerely sorry for
+Thor. But<br>
+to offer him sympathy was about as difficult as consoling a Polar
+bear with<br>
+the toothache.</p>
+
+<p>Coach Corridan, carrying out his plot, had decided not to
+start Thor in<br>
+the first half of the game. So the Norwegian Hercules, having
+received no<br>
+orders to the contrary, however, donned togs and appeared on the
+side-line,<br>
+where he had sat, paying not the slightest heed to the scrimmage
+and<br>
+seemingly unaware that the Gold and Green was facing defeat and
+the loss of<br>
+the Championship, for a game lost would put the team out of the
+running.<br>
+All big John Thorwald knew was, in a few weeks he must leave old
+Bannister,<br>
+must give up, for a time, his college course. Just when the grim
+battle was<br>
+won, he must leave, to work. Not that the Viking cared about
+toil. It was<br>
+the delay that chafed even his stolid self. He was stunned at
+having to<br>
+wait, maybe two years, before starting again.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, as he squatted on the side-line, oblivious to
+everything but his<br>
+bitter reflections, the Theophilus-quoted words of Shakespeare
+persisted in<br>
+intruding on his thoughts:</p>
+
+<p>  "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
+strong&mdash;<br>
+  To love that well, which thou must leave ere long."</p>
+
+<p>Try as he would, he could not fight away the keen realization
+that<br>
+books and study were not all he would regret to leave. He was
+forced to<br>
+acknowledge that his mind kept wandering to other things. He
+found himself<br>
+pondering on the parting with Theophilus Opperdyke, with that
+crazy Hicks;<br>
+he wondered if he, out in the world again, toiling his lonely
+way, would<br>
+miss the glad fellowship of these care-free youths that he had
+watched,<br>
+but never shared, if he would ever think of the weeks at old
+Bannister.<br>
+Somehow, he felt that he would often vision the Quad at night,
+brightly<br>
+lighted, dormitories' lights agleam, students crossing and
+recrossing,<br>
+shouting at studious comrades. He would hear again the
+melodious<br>
+banjo-twanging, the gleeful saengerfests, the happy skylarking of
+the boys.<br>
+He had never entered into all this, and yet he knew he would miss
+it all;<br>
+why, he would even miss the daily scrimmage on Bannister Field;
+the noisy<br>
+shower-room, with its clouds of steam, and white forms flitting
+ghostlike.<br>
+He would miss the classrooms; in brief, <i>everything</i>!</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald was awakening! Even had this blow not befallen
+him, the huge,<br>
+slow-minded Norwegian, in time, with Theophilus Opperdyke's
+missionary<br>
+work, would have gradually come to understand things
+better&mdash;at least, to<br>
+know he was wrong in his ideas, which is the beginning of wisdom.
+Already,<br>
+he had ceased to condemn all this as foolishness, to rail at the
+youths<br>
+for wasting time and money. Already something stirred within him,
+and yet,<br>
+stolid as he was, bashful among the collegians, he was apparently
+the same.<br>
+But the sudden shock Head Coach Corridan spoke of had come. His
+father's<br>
+letter telling of his loss and that Thor must leave Bannister had
+awakened<br>
+him to the startling knowledge that he did care for something
+more than<br>
+study, that all the things that had puzzled him, that he had
+sneered at,<br>
+meant something to his existence, that he dreaded leaving other
+things than<br>
+his books.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I don't understand things," thought Thorwald.
+"But&mdash;if I could only<br>
+stay, I'd want to learn. I'd try to get this 'college' spirit!
+Oh, I've<br>
+been all wrong, but if I could only stay&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As if in answer to his unspoken thought, the big Freshman
+beheld marching<br>
+toward him Theophilus Opperdyke, his spectacles off, and his face
+aglow,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., evidently in the throes of emotional
+insanity; a<br>
+Senior whom he knew as Parson Palmetter; Registrar Worthington,
+and Doctor<br>
+Alford, the kindly, beloved Prexy of old Bannister. The last
+named placed<br>
+his hand on the puzzled behemoth's ponderous shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Thorwald," he said kindly, "Hicks, Opperdyke and Brewster,
+last night,<br>
+came to my study and acquainted me with your misfortune. They
+told me of<br>
+your life-history, of your splendid purpose to gain knowledge, to
+make<br>
+something of yourself, for your dying mother's sake. Old
+Bannister needs<br>
+men like you, Thorwald. Perhaps you do not understand campus ways
+and<br>
+tradition yet, perhaps you are not in sympathy with everything
+here; but<br>
+once a love for your Alma Mater is awakened, you will be a power
+for good<br>
+for your college.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I at once took up the matter with Mr. Palmetter,
+President of The<br>
+Students' Aid Bureau. This year, for the first time in our
+history, we have<br>
+dispensed with janitors and sweeps in the dormitories, and with
+dining-hall<br>
+waiters, so that needy and deserving students may work their way
+through<br>
+Bannister. Owing to the fact that Mr. Deane, a Senior, has given
+up his<br>
+dormitory, Creighton Hall, as he has funds for the year and needs
+the time<br>
+to study, we can offer you board and tuition, in exchange for
+your work in<br>
+the dormitory, and waiting on tables in the dining-hall. Since
+your first<br>
+term bills, until January first, are paid, if you will start to
+work at<br>
+once, we will credit any work done this term on books and
+incidentals for<br>
+next term. By this means&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you don't&mdash;you <i>can't</i> mean&mdash;" rumbled
+Thor, who had just dimly<br>
+grasped the greatest point in Prexy's speech. "Why, then I won't
+have to<br>
+leave Bannister&mdash;I won't have to quit my studies! Oh, thank
+you, sir; thank<br>
+you! I will work <i>so</i> hard. I am not afraid of work; I love
+it&mdash;a chance to<br>
+toil and earn my education, that's what I want! Thank you!"</p>
+
+<p>"And in addition," said the Registrar, "Mr. Palmetter reports
+that he can<br>
+secure you, downtown, a number of furnaces to tend this winter,
+which you<br>
+can do early in the morning and at night; this will bring you an
+income for<br>
+living expenses, and in the spring something else will offer
+itself. It<br>
+means every moment of your time will be crowded, but Bannister
+needs<br>
+workers&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Something stirred in John Thorwald. His heart had been touched
+at last. He<br>
+thought of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, and little Theophilus
+worried<br>
+at his having to leave college, going to Doctor Alford; of Prexy,
+the<br>
+Registrar, and Parson Palmetter, working to keep Thor at old
+Bannister.<br>
+He recalled how sympathetic all the youths had been, how they
+admired his<br>
+purpose and determination; and he had rewarded their friendliness
+with<br>
+cold aloofness. He felt a thrill as he visioned himself working
+for his<br>
+education, rising in the cold dawn, tending furnaces, working in
+the dorm.,<br>
+waiting on tables&mdash;studying. With what fierce joy he would
+assail his<br>
+tasks, glad that he could stay! He knew the students would
+rejoice, that<br>
+they would not look down on him; instead, they would respect and
+admire<br>
+him, toiling to grow and develop, to attain his goal!</p>
+
+<p>"Go to it, Thor!" urged T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "We all want
+you to stay,<br>
+old man; we'll give you a lift with your studies. Old Bannister
+<i>wants</i><br>
+you, <i>needs</i> you, so <i>stick</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, please!" quavered little Theophilus. "You don't want to
+leave your<br>
+Alma Mater; stay, Thorwald, and&mdash;you'll understand things
+soon,"</p>
+
+<p>"Report at the Registrar's office at seven tonight, Thorwald,"
+said Prexy,<br>
+and then, because he understood boys and campus problems, "and to
+show your<br>
+gratitude, you might go out there and spank that team which is
+trying to<br>
+lick old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald, when Doctor Alford and the Registrar had gone,
+arose and<br>
+stood gazing across Bannister Field. He saw not the white-lined
+gridiron,<br>
+the gaunt goal-posts, the concrete stands filled with spectators,
+or the<br>
+gay banners and pennants. He saw the buildings and campus of old
+Bannister,<br>
+the stately old elms bordering the walks; he beheld the Gym., the
+four<br>
+dormitories&mdash;Bannister, Nordyke, Smithson, and
+Creighton&mdash;the white Chapel,<br>
+the ivy-covered Library, the Administration and Recitation Halls;
+he<br>
+glimpsed the Memorial Arch over the entrance driveway, and big
+Alumni Hall.<br>
+All at once, like an inundating wave, the great realization
+flashed on<br>
+Thor that he did not have to leave it all! Often again would he
+hear the<br>
+skylarking youths, the gay songs, the banjo-strumming; often
+would he see<br>
+the brightly lighted Quad., would gaze out on the campus! It was
+still<br>
+his&mdash;the work, the study, and, if he tried, even the glad
+comradeship of<br>
+the fellows, the bigger things of college life, which as yet he
+did not<br>
+understand.</p>
+
+<p>The big slow-minded youth could not awaken, at once, to a full
+knowledge<br>
+and understanding of campus life and tradition, to a knowledge of
+college<br>
+spirit; but, thanks to the belief that he had to leave it all, he
+had<br>
+awakened to the startling fact that already he loved old
+Bannister. And<br>
+now, joyous that he could stay, John Thorwald suddenly felt a
+strong desire<br>
+to do something, not for himself, but for these splendid fellows
+who had<br>
+worried for his sake, had worked to keep him at college. And just
+then he<br>
+remembered the somewhat unclassical, yet well meant, words of
+dear old<br>
+Doctor Alford, "And to show your gratitude, you might go out
+there and<br>
+spank that team, which is trying to lick old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald for the first time looked at the score-board; he
+saw, in big<br>
+white letters:</p>
+
+<p>    BANNISTER .......... 0<br>
+    LATHAM ............. 3</p>
+
+<p>From the Gym. the Gold and Green players&mdash;grim,
+determined, and yet worried<br>
+by the team that "won't be beat!"&mdash;were jogging, followed by
+Head Coach<br>
+Patrick Henry Corridan. The Latham eleven was on the field, the
+Gold and<br>
+Blue rooters rioted in the stands. From the Bannister cohorts
+came a<br>
+thunderous appeal:</p>
+
+<p>  "Hold 'em, boys&mdash;hold 'em,
+boys&mdash;hold&mdash;hold&mdash;<i>hold</i>!<br>
+  Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!"</p>
+
+<p>A sudden fury swayed the Prodigious Prodigy; it was his
+college, his<br>
+eleven, and those Blue and Gold youths were actually beating old
+Bannister!<br>
+The Bannister boys had admired him, some of them had helped him
+in his<br>
+studies, three had told Doctor Alford of him, had made it
+possible for him<br>
+to stay, to keep on toward his goal. They would be
+sorrow-stricken if<br>
+Latham won! A feeling of indignation came to Thor. How dare those
+fellows<br>
+think they could beat old Bannister! Why, <i>he</i> would go out
+there and show<br>
+them a few things!</p>
+
+<p>Head Coach Corridan, let it be chronicled, was paralyzed when
+he ducked<br>
+under the side-line rope&mdash;stretched to hold the spectators
+back&mdash;to collide<br>
+with an immovable body, John Thorwald, and to behold an eager
+light on that<br>
+behemoth's stolid face. Grasping the Slave-Driver in a grip that
+hurt, Thor<br>
+boomed:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Corridan, let me play, <i>please</i>! Send me out this
+half. We can win.<br>
+We've <i>got</i> to win! I want to do something for old
+Bannister. Why, if we<br>
+lose today, we lose the Championship! I don't understand things
+yet, but I<br>
+do love the college. I want to fight for Bannister. Please let me
+play!"</p>
+
+<p>The astonished coach and the equally dazed Gold and Green
+eleven, with the<br>
+bewildered collegians who heard Thor's earnest appeal, were
+silent a few<br>
+moments, unable to grasp the truth. Then Captain Brewster, his
+face aglow,<br>
+seized the big Freshman's arm excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure you'll play, Thor!" he shouted. "Fullback, old man! Come
+on, team.<br>
+Thor's awake! He wants to fight for his Alma Mater; he wants
+Bannister to<br>
+win! Oh, watch us shove Latham off the field&mdash;everybody
+together now&mdash;the<br>
+yell, for Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Right here," grinned an excitedly happy T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., when the<br>
+yell was given, "is where a team that won't be beat gets licked
+by a chap<br>
+what can lick 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>What took place when the blond Prodigious Prodigy lumbered on
+Bannister<br>
+Field at the start of the last half of the Bannister-Latham game
+can be<br>
+imagined by the final score-board figures:</p>
+
+<p>    BANNISTER ......... 27<br>
+    LATHAM ............. 3</p>
+
+<p>It can best be described with the aid of Scoop Sawyer's
+account in the next<br>
+Bannister Weekly:</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;At the start of the second half, however, the Latham
+cohorts were given<br>
+a shock when they beheld a colossal being almost as big as the
+entire Gold<br>
+and Blue eleven, go in at fullback for Bannister. And the Latham
+eleven<br>
+received a series of shocks when Thor began intruding that
+massive body<br>
+of his into their territory. Tennyson's saying, "The old order
+changeth,<br>
+yielding place to new" was aptly illustrated in the second half;
+for<br>
+Bannister's bugler quit sounding "Retreat!" and blew "Charge!"
+Four<br>
+touchdowns and three goals from touchdowns, in one half, is
+usually<br>
+considered a fair day's work for an entire team. Even Yale or
+Harvard; but<br>
+when one player corrals four touchdowns in a half&mdash;he is
+going some! Well,<br>
+Thor went some! Most of the half he furnished free transportation
+for<br>
+two-thirds of the Latham team, carrying them on his back, legs,
+and neck,<br>
+as he strode down the field; a writ of habeas corpus could not
+have stopped<br>
+the blond Colossus. Anyone would have stood more show to stop an
+Alpine<br>
+avalanche than to slow up Thor, and the stretcher was constantly
+in<br>
+evidence, for Latham knockouts.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="cw.jpg (97K)" src="images/cw.jpg" height="853" width="538">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>The game turned into a Thor's Personally Conducted Tour.
+Thorwald, escorted<br>
+by the Gold and Green team, made four quick tours to the Latham
+goal-line.<br>
+It was simply a matter of giving the ball to the Prodigious
+Prodigy, then<br>
+waving the linesmen to move down twenty yards or more toward
+Latham's line.<br>
+Thor was simply unstoppable, and more beneficial even than his
+phenomenal<br>
+playing was his encouragement to the team. He kept urging them to
+action,<br>
+his foghorn growl of, "Come on, boys!" was a slogan of victory!
+Judging by<br>
+Thor's awakening, and his work of the Latham game, Bannister's
+hopes of The<br>
+State Intercollegiate Football Championship are as roseate as the
+blush on<br>
+a maiden's cheek at her first kiss, and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>That night, in the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., John
+Thorwald,<br>
+supremely happy yet withal as uncomfortable as a whale on the
+Sahara<br>
+Desert, overflowed an easy-chair. The room was filled, or what
+space Thor<br>
+left, with the Bannister eleven, second-team players, Coach
+Corridan, and<br>
+several students; on the campus a riotous crowd of Bannister
+youths "raised<br>
+merry Heck," as Hicks phrased it, and their cheer floated up to
+the<br>
+windows:</p>
+
+<p>"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!
+He's&mdash;all&mdash;right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, fellows," spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's sing to the captain, good old Butch! Let 'er go!"</p>
+
+<p>  "Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink it down!<br>
+  Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink It down!<br>
+  Here's to good Butch Brewster&mdash;<br>
+  He plays football like he <i>uster&mdash;</i><br>
+  Drink it down! Drink it
+down&mdash;down&mdash;down&mdash;down!"</p>
+
+<p>A strange sound startled the joyous youths; it was a rumbling
+noise,<br>
+like distant thunder, and at first they could not place it. Then,
+as It<br>
+continued, they located the disturbance as coming from the
+prodigious body<br>
+of Thor, and at last the wonderful phenomenon dawned on them.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor is singing college songs!" quavered little Theophilus
+Opperdyke,<br>
+so happy that his big-rimmed spectacles rode the end of his nose.
+"Oh,<br>
+Hicks&mdash;Butch&mdash;Thor is awake at last! He is trying to
+get college spirit, to<br>
+understand campus life&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., suddenly realized that what he had so
+ardently<br>
+longed for had come to pass; aided by Theophilus' missionary work
+and by<br>
+the sudden shock of Thorwald, Sr.'s, letter. Thor was awakened,
+had come to<br>
+know that he loved old Bannister. His awakening, as shown in the
+football<br>
+game, had been splendid. How he had towered over the scrimmage,
+in every<br>
+play, urging his team to fight, himself doing prodigies for old
+Bannister.<br>
+Thor, who had been so silent and aloof! Then the sunny-souled
+youth<br>
+remembered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I told you I'd awaken Thor, Butch!" he began, but that
+behemoth<br>
+quelled him with an ominous look.</p>
+
+<p>"You!" he growled, with pretended wrath, "<i>you</i>! It was
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke who did the most of it, and Thorwald's father did the
+rest! Don't<br>
+you rob Theophilus of his glory, you
+feeble-imitation-of-some-thing-human!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinned &agrave; la Cheshire cat. The
+happy-go-lucky<br>
+Senior was vastly glad that Thor had awakened, that now he would
+try<br>
+to grasp the real meaning of college existence. He felt that the
+young<br>
+Hercules, from now on, would slowly and surely develop to a
+splendid<br>
+college man, that he would do big things for his Alma Mater. And
+the<br>
+generous Hicks gave Theophilus all the credit, and impressed on
+that<br>
+happy Human Encyclopedia the fact that he had done a great deed
+for old<br>
+Bannister. Just so, Thor was awakened.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I say, Deke Radford, Coach, and Butch," Hicks chortled,
+getting the<br>
+attention of that triumvirate as well as that of the others in
+the room,<br>
+"remember up in Camp Bannister, in the sleep-shack, when Coach
+Corridan<br>
+outlined a smashing full-back he wanted?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure!" smiled Deke. "What of it, Hicks?"</p>
+
+<p>Then T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., that care-free, lovable,
+irrepressible youth,<br>
+whose chance to swagger before this same trio had been postponed
+so long<br>
+and seemingly lost forever, satiated his fun-loving soul and
+reaped his<br>
+reward. Calling their attention to Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy,
+and asking<br>
+them to remember his playing against Latham that day, the sunny
+Senior<br>
+strutted before them vaingloriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!" he declared,
+grinning happily.<br>
+"I promised to round up an unstoppable fullback, a Gargantuan
+Hercules, and<br>
+I did! Just think of what he will do to Hamilton and Ballard in
+the big<br>
+games! As I have often told you, <i>always</i>&mdash;leave It to
+Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap11"></a>
+CHAPTER XI</p>
+
+<p>"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, what we'll do to Ballard<br>
+  Will surely be a shame!<br>
+  We'll push their team clear off the field<br>
+  And win the football game!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one night three days after the first
+big game, that<br>
+with Hamilton, a week following Thor's great awakening in the
+Latham game,<br>
+sat in his cozy room, having assumed his favorite
+position&mdash;chair tilted<br>
+back at a perilous angle and feet thrust atop of the radiator.
+The<br>
+versatile youth, having just composed a song with which to
+encourage<br>
+Bannister elevens in the future, was reading it aloud, when his
+mind was<br>
+torpedoed by a most startling thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Land o' Goshen!" reflected the sunny-souled Senior, aghast.
+"I haven't<br>
+twanged my ole banjo and held forth with a saengerfest for a
+coon's age! I<br>
+surely can do so now without arousing Butch to wrath. Thor has
+awakened,<br>
+Hamilton is walloped, and Bannister will surely win the
+Championship!<br>
+Everything is happy, an' de goose hangs high, so here goes!"</p>
+
+<p>Holding his banjo &agrave; la troubadour, the blithesome
+Hicks, who as a Senior<br>
+was harassed by no study-hours or inspections, strode from his
+room and out<br>
+into the corridor, up and down which he majestically paced, like
+a sentinel<br>
+on his beat, twanging his beloved banjo with abandon, and roaring
+in his<br>
+foghorn, subterranean voice:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, the way we walloped Hamilton<br>
+  Surely was a shame!<br>
+  And we're going to win the Championship&mdash;<br>
+  For we'll do Ballard the same!</p>
+
+<p>  "And Bannister shall flaunt the flag<br>
+  For at least three seasons more;<br>
+  Because&mdash;no team can win a game<br>
+  While the Gold and Green has Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>On Bannister Field, three days before, the Gold and Green had
+crushed the<br>
+strong team from "old Ham" to the tune of 20 to 0; Thor's
+magnificent<br>
+ground-gaining, in which he smashed through the supposedly
+impregnable<br>
+defense of the enemy, was a surprise to his comrades and a shock
+to<br>
+Hamilton. Time and again, on the fourth down, the ball was given
+to<br>
+Thorwald, and the blond Colossus, with several of old Ham's
+players<br>
+clinging to him, plunged ahead for big gains. So now with a
+monster<br>
+mass-meeting in half an hour, the exultant Bannister youths
+pretended to<br>
+study, but prepared to parade on the campus, cheer the eleven and
+Thor,<br>
+and arouse excitement for the winning of the biggest game, a
+victory over<br>
+Ballard, a week later.</p>
+
+<p>From the rooms of would-be studious Seniors on both sides of
+the corridor,<br>
+as Hicks patrolled it, came vociferous protests and classic
+criticisms,<br>
+gathering in force and volume as the breezy youth's foghorn voice
+roared<br>
+his song; that heedless collegian grinned as he heard:</p>
+
+<p>"R-r-rotten! Give that Jersey calf more rope!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks has had a relapse! Sing-Sing for yours, old man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrest Hicks, under the Public Nuisance Act!"</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Shoot it quick! Don't let it suffer!"</p>
+
+<p>Just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., strumming the banjo blithely
+and Carusoing<br>
+with glee, reached the end of the corridor and executed a brisk
+'bout-face,<br>
+he heard a terrific commotion on the stairway, and, a moment
+later, Butch<br>
+Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Deacon Radford and Monty Merriweather
+gained the<br>
+top of the stairs. As they were now between the offending Hicks
+and<br>
+his quarters, there seemed no chance for the sunny Senior to play
+his<br>
+safety-first policy; so he waited, panic-stricken, as Butch and
+Beef<br>
+lumbered heavily down the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>"Help! Aid! Succor! Relief! Assistance!" shrieked Hicks,
+leaning his<br>
+beloved banjo against the wall and throwing himself into what
+he<br>
+fatuously believed was an intensely pugilistic pose. "I am a
+believer in<br>
+preparedness. You have me cornered, so beware! I am a follower of
+Henry<br>
+Ford, but even I will fight&mdash;at bay!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you are at <i>sea</i> now!" growled Beef, tucking the
+splinter youth<br>
+under one arm and striding down the corridor, followed by Butch
+with the<br>
+banjo, and Monty with Deacon. "You desperado, you destroyer of
+peace and<br>
+quietude, you one-cylinder gadabout! You're off again! We'll
+instruct you<br>
+to annoy real students, you faint shadow of something human!"</p>
+
+<p>"Them's harsh sentences, Beef!" chuckled T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., as that<br>
+behemoth kicked open Hicks' door, bore the futilely squirming,
+kicking<br>
+youth into the room, and hurled him on the davenport. "Watch my
+banjo,<br>
+there, Butch; have a couple of cares! Say, what'smatter wid youse
+guys,<br>
+anyhow? This is my first saengerfest for eons. Old Bannister has
+a clear<br>
+track ahead at last, the Championship is won for <i>sure</i>, and
+Thor, that<br>
+mighty engine of destruction to Ham's and Ballard's hopes, after
+much<br>
+tinkering, is hitting on all twelve cylinders. Why, I prithee,
+deny me the<br>
+pleasure of a little joyous song?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., since the memorable Latham game, when
+Thor had<br>
+awakened between halves, and the Prodigious Prodigy had shown
+himself<br>
+worthy of his title by winning the game after defeat leered at
+old<br>
+Bannister, had suffered a relapse, and was again his old sunny,
+heedless,<br>
+happy-go-lucky self. Now that John Thorwald had been startled
+into<br>
+realizing that he loved his college and had been saved from
+having to<br>
+leave, now that he played football for his Alma Mater, and
+Bannister's<br>
+hopes of the Championship were roseate, the blithesome Hicks had
+abandoned<br>
+himself to a golden existence of Beefsteak Busts downtown at
+Jerry's,<br>
+entertaining jolly comrades in his cozy room, and pestering the
+campus with<br>
+his banjo and ridiculous imitations of Sheerluck Holmes, the
+Dachshund<br>
+Detective. Big Butch Brewster, lecturing him for his care-free
+ways, as<br>
+futilely as he had done for three years past, gave up in
+despair.</p>
+
+<p>"I might as well be showing moving-pictures to the inmates of
+a blind<br>
+asylum," he growled on one occasion, "as to persuade you to quit
+acting<br>
+like a lunatic! You, a Senior&mdash;acting like an escaped
+inhabitant of<br>
+Matteawan! Bah!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, drawing a chair up to the davenport,
+assumed the manner<br>
+of a physician toward a recalcitrant patient, while Beef
+carefully stowed<br>
+the banjo in the closet and Deacon Radford, an interested
+spectator, sat<br>
+on the bed. The happy-go-lucky Hicks, at a loss to account for
+the strange<br>
+expressions of his comrades, tried to arise, but the football
+captain<br>
+pinned him down with one hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Seriously, Hicks," spoke Butch, "your saengerfest came at a
+lamentably<br>
+inopportune time! I regret to Inform you that old Bannister faces
+another<br>
+problem, with regard to Thor, and unless it is solved, I
+fear&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thor has balked again?" gasped the dazed Hicks, whom Butch
+now allowed to<br>
+sit up, as he showed interest. "Has the engine of destruction
+stalled?<br>
+Why, as fast as we get him lined up, off he slides at an angle!
+Well, you<br>
+fellows did perfectly right to bring this baffling problem,
+whatever it is,<br>
+to me. What is the trouble&mdash;won't Thor play football?"</p>
+
+<p>The irrepressible Hicks was bewildered at hearing that a new
+problem<br>
+regarding Thor had arisen, and, naturally, he at once connected
+it with<br>
+football, since the big Freshman had twice balked in that
+respect. Since<br>
+his awakening, effected by Theophilus' missionary work, his last
+appeal,<br>
+and Thor's letter from his father, Thor had earnestly striven to
+grasp the<br>
+true meaning of college life, to understand campus tradition. No
+longer did<br>
+he hold aloof, boning always, in his lonely room. Instead, he
+mingled with<br>
+his fellows, lingering with the team for the skylarking in the
+shower-room<br>
+after scrimmage, turning out for the nightly mass-meeting. Often,
+as the<br>
+youths practiced songs and yells on the campus, Thor's terrific
+rumble was<br>
+heard&mdash;some had even dared to slap his massive back and say,
+"Hello, Thor,<br>
+old man!" and the big Freshman had responded. It was evident to
+all that<br>
+Thorwald was striving to become a collegian, and knowing his
+slow, bulldog<br>
+nature, there was no doubt as to his ultimate success; hence T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., was vastly puzzled now.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Thor hasn't backslid!" smiled Beef. "You see, Hicks, it's
+this way:<br>
+Owing to Mr. Thorwald's losing the five thousand dollars, Thor,
+as you<br>
+know, is working his way at Bannister. Well, with his hustling,
+his studies<br>
+and football scrimmage, he simply does not have a minute for the
+other<br>
+phases of college life, for the comradeship with his
+fellows&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Here is his day's schedule," chimed in Deacon, referring to a
+paper: "Rise<br>
+at four-thirty A. M. Hustle downtown to tend several furnaces
+until seven.<br>
+Breakfast at seven. Till nine, make beds and sweep dormitory
+rooms.<br>
+Nine till three-fifteen P. M., recitation periods and dormitory
+work,<br>
+sandwiched. Then until supper, football practice, and nights
+study. Add<br>
+to that waiting on tables for the three meals, and what time has
+Thor to<br>
+broaden and develop, to take in all the big things of campus
+existence, to<br>
+grow into an all-round college man?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wonderful to chronicle, was silent. He
+was<br>
+reflecting on the irony of fate; as Deacon said, now that Thor
+had<br>
+awakened, and earnestly wanted to be a collegian, he had no time
+to enter<br>
+into campus life. Glad at being able to stay at old Bannister, to
+keep on<br>
+with his studies, climbing steadily toward his goal, and finding
+a joy in<br>
+his new relationship with the students, the ponderous Thorwald
+had flung<br>
+himself into his hustling, as the youths called working one's way
+at<br>
+college, with zeal. To the huge Freshman, toil was nothing, and
+since it<br>
+meant that he could keep on with his study, he was content. The
+collegians<br>
+vastly admired his grim determination; they aided all they could
+with<br>
+his studies, and helped with his work, so he could have more time
+for<br>
+scrimmage, and yet another phase of the problem came to
+Hicks.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed unjust that John Thorwald, after his long years of
+hard physical<br>
+toil, and his mental struggles, often after hours of grinding
+work, at the<br>
+very time when the five thousand dollars from Henry B. Kingsley's
+heirs<br>
+promised him a chance to study without a body tortured and
+exhausted,<br>
+should be forced again to take up his stern fight for knowledge.
+And it<br>
+was cruel that Thor, just awakening to the true meaning of
+college life,<br>
+striving to grasp campus tradition, and eager to serve his Alma
+Mater in<br>
+every way, should have so little time to mingle with his fellows.
+He should<br>
+be with them on the campus, on the athletic field, in the dorms.,
+the<br>
+literary society halls, the Y. M. C. A. He should be realizing
+the golden<br>
+years of college life, the glad comradeship of the campus.
+Instead, he must<br>
+arise in the bitter cold, gray dawn, and from then until late
+night toil<br>
+and study unceasingly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a howling shame!" declared the serious Hicks, a heart
+full of<br>
+sympathy for Thor. "Just as he wakes up and is trying to
+understand things<br>
+at old Bannister, bang! the Norwhal is blown up by a stray mine,
+and<br>
+down goes his dad's money. Why didn't Mr. Thorwald get the five
+thousand<br>
+transferred to the Valkyrie? Oh, if that money hadn't gone down
+to Davy<br>
+Jones' locker, Thor would be awakened and have time for college
+life, too!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster started to speak when the thunderous tread of
+John Thorwald<br>
+sounded in the corridor. The Prodigious Prodigy seemed
+approaching at<br>
+double-quick time, and the youths stared at each other. However,
+when<br>
+Thor appeared in the doorway, a letter in hand, they gazed at him
+in<br>
+bewilderment, for his face fairly glowed.</p>
+
+<p>"Read it, fellows, read it!" he breathed, with what, for him,
+was almost<br>
+excitement. "It just came! Oh, isn't that good news? Read it out,
+Captain<br>
+Butch. Won't we wallop Ballard now!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, mystified by Thor's happiness, and urged
+on by his<br>
+equally puzzled comrades, drew out the letter, and a glad smile
+coming to<br>
+his honest countenance, he read aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA. STEAMSHIP LINE (New York
+Office)</p>
+
+<p>"Nov. 18, 19&mdash;.</p>
+
+<p>"MR. JOHN THORWALD, JR., Bannister College.</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR SIR:</p>
+
+<p>"We beg to state that your father, first mate on our liner,
+the Valkyrie,<br>
+three days outbound from New York to Christiania, sent a message,
+<i>via</i><br>
+wireless, to our New York offices by the inbound Dutch Line's
+Rotterdam.<br>
+The Rotterdam relayed the message to us, and we forward it
+herewith,<br>
+<i>verbatim:</i></p>
+
+<p>"'DEAR SON: Purser of my ship, the Valkyrie, informed me today
+that the<br>
+purser of the ill-fated Norwhal, learning of my transfer to this
+liner,<br>
+transferred my $5,000 to the Valkyrie before he sailed to his
+fate. I am<br>
+sending this <i>via</i> the Rotterdam, inbound, and our office
+will forward it<br>
+to you. Will write on arriving at Christiania. Father.'</p>
+
+<p>"We are sorry for the delay in forwarding this message, but
+through an<br>
+accident, it was mislaid in our office for a few days.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours truly,</p>
+
+<p>"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA STEAMSHIP LINE,</p>
+
+<p>"per J. L. G."</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence; outside on the campus the Bannister
+youths, preparing<br>
+for the mass-meeting in the Auditorium, started cheering. Someone
+caught<br>
+sight of Thor, standing now by the window of Hicks' room, on the
+third<br>
+floor of Bannister Hall, and a few seconds later there
+sounded:</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! Thor! Thor will bring the Championship to old
+Bannister! Rah!<br>
+Rah! Rah!&mdash;Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," shouted T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning happily, his
+arm across<br>
+Thor's massive shoulders, "'All's well that ends well,' as Bill
+Shakespeare<br>
+says. It's all right now, Thor. Fate dealt you a hard punch, but
+it served<br>
+its purpose; for it made you realize how you would regret to
+leave college.<br>
+Now you won't have to hustle and have all your time filled with
+toil and<br>
+study; you can go after every phase of campus life, and serve old
+Bannister<br>
+in so many ways."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald stood, a contented look on his placid, impassive
+face,<br>
+gazing down at the campus below and hearing the plaudits of the
+excited<br>
+collegians. The stately old elms, gaunt and bare, tossed their
+limbs<br>
+against a leaden sky; a cold, dreary wind sent clouds of dry
+leaves<br>
+scurrying down the concrete walks. In the faint moonlight that
+struggled<br>
+through the clouds, the towers and spires of old Bannister were
+limned<br>
+against the sky-line. Across the campus, on Bannister Field,
+the<br>
+goal-posts, skeleton-like, kept their lonely vigil. On that
+field, in<br>
+less than a week, the Gold and Green must face the crucial
+test&mdash;against<br>
+Ballard's championship eleven, in the Biggest Game; and now,
+almost on the<br>
+eve of battle, the shackles had been knocked from him; he was
+free of the<br>
+great burden, free to serve his Alma Mater, to fight for the Gold
+and<br>
+Green, to grow and develop into an all-round, representative
+college man.</p>
+
+<p>All of a sudden it dawned on the slow-thinking young Norwegian
+just how<br>
+much this freedom to grow and expand meant to him, and he turned
+from the<br>
+window. From below, the shouts of "Thor! Thor! Thor!" drifted,
+stirring his<br>
+blood, as he looked at Hicks, Butch, Beef, Monty and Deacon.</p>
+
+<p>"'All's well that ends well,' you say. Hicks," he spoke
+slowly, his face<br>
+joyous. "That's true; but I'm just starting, fellows. I'm just
+<i>beginning</i><br>
+to live my college years, not for myself, but for old Bannister,
+for my<br>
+Alma Mater, for I am awake, and <i>free</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap12"></a>
+CHAPTER XII</p>
+
+<p>THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, a life-sized picture of despair, roosted
+dejectedly on<br>
+the Senior Fence, between the Gym and the Administration
+Building. It was<br>
+quite cold, and also the beginning of the last study-period
+before Butch's<br>
+final and most difficult recitation of the day, Chemistry. Yet
+instead<br>
+of boning in his warm room, the behemoth Senior perched on the
+fence and<br>
+stared gloomily into space.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat, enveloped in a penumbra of gloom, the campus
+entrance door of<br>
+Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., opened suddenly, and T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., that happy-go-lucky youth, came out cautiously, after the
+fashion of a<br>
+second-story artist, emerging from his crib with a bundle of
+swag, the<br>
+last item being represented by a football tucked under Hicks'
+left arm.<br>
+Beholding Butch Brewster on the Senior Fence, the sunny-souled
+Senior<br>
+exhibited a perturbation of spirit seeming undecided whether to
+beat a<br>
+retreat or to advance.</p>
+
+<p>"Now what's ailin' <i>you</i>?" demanded Butch wrathily,
+believing the<br>
+pestersome Hicks to be acting in that burglarious manner for
+effect. "Why<br>
+should <i>you</i> sneak out of a dorm., bearing a football like
+it was an auk's<br>
+egg? Why, you resemble a nigger, making his get-away after
+robbing a<br>
+hen-roost! Don't torment me, you
+accident-somewhere-on-its-way-to-happen. I<br>
+feel about as joyous as a traveling salesman who has made a town
+and gotten<br>
+nary a order!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's <i>awful</i>!" soliloquized T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+perching beside the<br>
+despondent Butch on the Senior Fence. "I am not a fatalist, old
+man, but<br>
+it <i>does</i> seem that fate hasn't destined Thor to play
+football for old<br>
+Bannister this season! Here, after he won the Ham game, and we
+expected him<br>
+to waltz off with Ballard's scalp and the Championship, he has to
+tumble<br>
+downstairs! Oh, it's tough luck!"</p>
+
+<p>It was two days before the biggest game, with
+Ballard&mdash;the contest that<br>
+would decide the State Intercollegiate Football Championship.
+Ballard, the<br>
+present champions, discounting even Hamilton's stories of Thor's
+prowess,<br>
+were coming to Bannister with an eleven more mighty than the one
+that had<br>
+crushed the Gold and Green the year before, with a heavy,
+stonewall line,<br>
+fast ends, and a powerful, shifty backfield. The Ballard team was
+confident<br>
+of victory and the pennant. Bannister, building on the awakened
+Thorwald,<br>
+superbly sure of his phenomenal strength and power, of his
+unstoppable<br>
+rushes, serenely practiced the doctrine of preparedness, and
+awaited the<br>
+day.</p>
+
+<p>And then John Thorwald, the Prodigious Prodigy, whose gigantic
+frame seemed<br>
+unbattered by the terrific daily scrimmage, whom it was
+impossible to<br>
+hurt on the gridiron, the day before, going downstairs in
+Creighton Hall,<br>
+hurrying to a class, had caught his heel on the top step, and
+crashed to<br>
+the bottom! And now, with a broken ankle, the blond Colossus,
+heartbroken<br>
+at not being able to win the Championship for old Bannister,
+hobbled about<br>
+on crutches. Without Thor, the Gold and Green must meet the
+invincible<br>
+Ballard team! It was a solar-plexus blow, both to the Bannister
+youths,<br>
+confident in Thor's prowess, building on his Herculean bulk, and
+to the<br>
+big Freshman. Thorwald, awakened, striving to grasp campus
+tradition, to<br>
+understand college life, was eager to fling himself into the
+scrimmage, to<br>
+give every ounce of his mighty power, to offer that splendid
+body, for his<br>
+Alma Mater, and now he must hobble impotently on the side-line,
+watching<br>
+his team fight a desperate battle.</p>
+
+<p>"If Bannister only had a sure, accurate drop-kicker!"
+reflected Captain<br>
+Butch hopelessly. "One who could be depended on to average eight
+out of ten<br>
+trials, we'd have a fighting chance with Ballard. Deke Radford is
+a wonder.<br>
+He can kick a forty-five-yard goal, but he's erratic! He might
+boot the<br>
+pigskin over when a score is needed from the forty-yard line, and
+again he<br>
+might miss from the twenty-yard mark. Oh, for a kicker who isn't
+brilliant<br>
+and spectacular, but who can methodically drop 'em over from,
+say, the<br>
+thirty-five-yard line! Hello, what's the row, Hicks?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., started to speak, changed his mind,
+coughed, grew<br>
+red and embarrassed, and acted in a most puzzling manner. At any
+other<br>
+time, big Butch would have been bewildered; but with Thor's loss
+weighing<br>
+on his mind, the Gold and Green captain gave his comrade only a
+cursory<br>
+glance.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;Oh, nothing, Butch!" stammered Hicks, to
+whom, being "fussed," as<br>
+Bannister termed embarrassment, was almost unknown. "I&mdash;I
+guess I'll<br>
+take this football over to my locker in the Gym. I ought to
+glance at my<br>
+Chemistry, too. So-long, Butch; see you later, old top!"</p>
+
+<p>When the splinter-youth had drifted into the Gym., Butch
+Brewster,<br>
+remembering his strange actions, actually managed to transfer his
+thoughts<br>
+for a time from the eleven to the care-free T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr. The<br>
+behemoth Senior reflected that, to date, the pestiferous Hicks
+had not<br>
+explained his baffling mystery he recalled the day when he had
+told the<br>
+Gold and Green eleven of the loyal Hicks' ambition to please his
+dad by<br>
+winning his B, when he had described the youth's intense college
+spirit<br>
+and had suggested that if Hicks failed to corral his letter the
+Athletic<br>
+Association award him one for his loyalty to old Bannister. And
+Butch saw<br>
+again the bewildering sentences in the letter from Thomas
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Sr., to his son.</p>
+
+<p>"Evidently," meditated Butch, literally and figuratively "on
+the fence,"<br>
+"Hicks has failed to summon up enough self-confidence to explain
+his<br>
+mystery; queer, too, for he usually is bubbling with faith in
+himself. He<br>
+has acted like a bashful schoolgirl at frequent times&mdash;he
+starts to tell<br>
+me something, then he gets embarrassed, back-fires, and stalls.
+He and<br>
+Theophilus have been sneaking out in the early dawn, too. Wow!
+What did he<br>
+sneak out of the dorm. that way, with a football, for? He looked
+like a<br>
+yeggman working night shift. Why should <i>he</i> skulk out with
+a football? He<br>
+has never explained his dad's letter, or told just what Mr. Hicks
+meant by<br>
+calling him the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and saying those
+members of old<br>
+Eli wanted him to star! Oh, he's a tantalizing wretch, and I'd
+like to<br>
+solve his mystery, without his knowledge, so I could&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that instant, to the intense indignation and bewilderment
+of good Butch<br>
+Brewster, little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous Human
+Encyclopedia of<br>
+old Bannister, exited from Bannister Hall. The Senior boner gave
+a correct<br>
+imitation of the offending Hicks, in that he skulked out, gazing
+around<br>
+him nervously; but he portaged no pigskin, and, unlike the sunny
+youth, on<br>
+periscoping Butch, he seemed relieved.</p>
+
+<p>"Theophilus, <i>come here</i>!" thundered the wrathful
+football captain,<br>
+shifting his tonnage on the Senior Fence. "What's the plot,
+anyhow? It's<br>
+bad enough when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sneaks out, bearing a
+football,<br>
+like an amateur cracksman making a getaway; but when you appear,
+imitating<br>
+a Nihilist about to hurl a bomb&mdash;say, what's the answer to
+the puzzle, old<br>
+man?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Theophilus, his pathetically frail body trembling with
+suppressed<br>
+excitement, his big-rimmed spectacles tumbling off with
+ridiculous<br>
+regularity, and his solemn eyes peering owlishly at his behemoth
+classmate,<br>
+stood before the startled Butch. It was evident that the 1919
+grind<br>
+labored under great stress. He was waging a terrific battle with
+himself,<br>
+struggling to make some vast and all-important decision. He
+strove to<br>
+speak, hesitated, choked, coughed apologetically, and acted as
+fussed as<br>
+Hicks had done, until Butch was wild; then, as if resolved to
+cast the die<br>
+and cross the Rubicon, he decided, and plunged desperately
+ahead.</p>
+
+<p>"It's&mdash;it's Hicks, Butch!" he quavered, torn cruelly by
+conflicting<br>
+emotions. "Oh, I don't want to be a traitor&mdash;he trusted me
+with his secret,<br>
+and I&mdash;I can't betray him, I just can't! But he didn't make
+me promise not<br>
+to tell. He just told me not to. Oh, it's his very last chance,
+Butch, and<br>
+with Thor hurt, old Bannister might need him in the Ballard
+game."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Theophilus, old man?" Butch spoke kindly, for he
+saw the<br>
+solemn little Senior was intensely excited. "Tell me&mdash;if our
+Alma Mater<br>
+needs any fellow's services, you know, he should give them
+freely&mdash;since<br>
+you did not promise not to tell about Hicks, if Bannister may be
+able<br>
+to use Hicks against Ballard&mdash;though I can't, by any stretch
+of the<br>
+imagination, figure how&mdash;then it is your duty to tell! I
+think I glimpse<br>
+the dark secret&mdash;Hicks possesses some sort of football
+prowess, goodness<br>
+knows what, and he lacks the confidence to tell Coach Corridan!
+Now, were<br>
+it only drop-kicking&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is drop-kicking!" Theophilus burst forth desperately.
+"Hicks is a<br>
+drop-kicker, Butch, and a sure one&mdash;inside the thirty-yard
+line. He almost<br>
+<i>never</i> misses a goal, and he kicks them from every angle,
+too. He isn't<br>
+strong enough to kick past the thirty-yard line, but inside that
+he is<br>
+wonderfully accurate. With Thor out of the Ballard game, a
+drop-kick may<br>
+win for Bannister, and Deke Radford is so erratic! Oh, Hicks will
+be angry<br>
+with me for telling; but he just won't tell about himself, after
+all his<br>
+practice, because he fears the fellows will jeer. He is afraid he
+will fail<br>
+in the supreme test. Oh, I've betrayed him, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a drop-kicker!" exploded the dazed
+Butch, who<br>
+could not have been more astounded had Theophilus announced that
+the sunny<br>
+youth possessed powers of black magic. "Theophilus Opperdyke,
+Tantalus<br>
+himself was never so tantalized as I have been of late. Tell me
+the whole<br>
+story, old man&mdash;hurry. Spill it, old top!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster, by questioning the excited Human Encyclopedia,
+like a<br>
+police official giving the third degree, slowly extracted from
+Theophilus<br>
+the startling story. A year before, just as the Gold and Green
+practiced<br>
+for the Ham game, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one afternoon, had
+arrayed his<br>
+splinter-structure in a grotesque, nondescript athletic outfit,
+and had<br>
+jogged out on Bannister Field. The gladsome youth's motive had
+been free<br>
+from any torturesome purpose. He intended to round up the
+Phillyloo Bird,<br>
+Shad Weatherby, and other non-athletic collegians, and with them
+boot the<br>
+pigskin, for exercise. However, little Skeet Wigglesworth,
+beholding him<br>
+as he donned the weird regalia of loud sweater, odd basket-ball
+stockings,<br>
+tennis trousers, baseball shoes, and so on, misconstrued his
+plan, and<br>
+believed Hicks intended to torment the squad. Hence, he hurried
+out,<br>
+so that when Hicks appeared in the offing, the football squad and
+the<br>
+spectators in the stands had jeered the happy-go-lucky Junior,
+and had<br>
+good-natured sport at his expense.</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., after Jack Merritt had drop-kicked a
+forty-yard<br>
+goal, made the excessively rash statement that it was easy.
+Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster had indignantly challenged the heedless youth to show
+him, and<br>
+the results of Hicks' effort to propel the pigskin over the
+crossbar were<br>
+hilarious, for he missed the oval by a foot, nearly dislocated
+his knee,<br>
+and, slipping in the mud, he sat down violently with a thud.
+However, so<br>
+the excited Theophilus now narrated, even as the convulsed
+students jeered<br>
+Hicks, hurling whistles, shouts, cat-calls, songs and humorous
+remarks at<br>
+the downfallen kicker, one of Hicks' celebrated inspirations had
+smitten<br>
+the pestersome Junior, evidently jarred loose by his crashing to
+terra<br>
+firma.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks figured this way, Butch," explained little Theophilus
+Opperdyke,<br>
+eloquent in his comrade's behalf, "nature had built him like a
+mosquito,<br>
+and endowed him with enough power to lift a pillow; hence he
+could never<br>
+hope to play football on the 'Varsity; but he knew that many
+games are<br>
+won by drop-kicks and by fellows especially trained and coached
+for that<br>
+purpose, and they don't need weight and strength, but they must
+have the<br>
+art, that peculiar knack which few possess. His inspiration was
+this:<br>
+Perhaps he had that knack, perhaps he could practice faithfully,
+and<br>
+develop into a sure drop-kicker. If he trained for a year, in his
+Senior<br>
+season, he might be able to serve old Bannister, maybe to win a
+big game.<br>
+So he set to work."</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus hurriedly yet graphically narrated how T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+had made the loyal, hero-worshiping little Human Encyclopedia his
+sole<br>
+confidant. He told the thrilled Butch how the sunny youth, from
+that<br>
+day on, had watched and listened as Head Coach Corridan trained
+the<br>
+drop-kickers, learning all the points he could gain. Vividly he
+described<br>
+the mosquito-like Hicks, as he with a football bought from the
+Athletic<br>
+Association began in secret to practice the fine art of
+drop-kicking! For a<br>
+year, at old Bannister and at his dad's country home near
+Pittsburgh, Hicks<br>
+had faithfully, doggedly kept at it. With no one bat Theophilus
+knowing of<br>
+his great ambition, he had gone out on Bannister Field, when he
+felt safe<br>
+from observation; here, with his faithful comrade to keep watch,
+and to<br>
+retrieve the pigskin, he had practiced the instructions and
+points gained<br>
+from watching Coach Corridan train the booters of the squad. To
+his vast<br>
+delight, and the joy of his little friend, Hicks had found that
+he did<br>
+possess the knack, and from before the Ham game until
+Commencement he had<br>
+kept his secret, practicing clandestinely at old Bannister; he
+had improved<br>
+wonderfully, and when vacation started the cheery collegian had
+told his<br>
+beloved dad, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., of his hopes.</p>
+
+<p>The ex-Yale football star, delighted at his son's ambition to
+serve old<br>
+Bannister and joyous at discovering that Hicks actually possessed
+the<br>
+peculiar knack of drop-kicking, coached the splinter-youth all
+summer at<br>
+their country place near Pittsburgh. Under the instruction of
+Hicks, Sr.,<br>
+the youth developed rapidly, and when he returned to the campus
+for his<br>
+final year, he was a sure, dependable drop-kicker, inside the
+thirty-yard<br>
+line. As Theophilus stated, beyond that he lacked the power, but
+in that<br>
+zone he could boot 'em over the cross-bar from any angle.</p>
+
+<p>"He's been practicing all this season, in secret!" quavered
+the little<br>
+Senior, "and he's a&mdash;a <i>fiend</i>, Butch, at drop-kicking.
+And yet, here it is<br>
+time for the last game of his college years, and&mdash;he lacks
+confidence to<br>
+tell you, or Coach Corridan. Oh, I'm afraid he will be angry with
+me for<br>
+betraying him, and yet&mdash;I just <i>can't</i> let him miss his
+splendid chance,<br>
+now that Thor is out and old Bannister <i>needs</i> a
+drop-kicker!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch was silent for a time. The football leader was
+deeply impressed<br>
+and thrilled by Theophilus Opperdyke's story of T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s<br>
+ambition. As he roosted on the Senior Fence, the behemoth
+gridiron<br>
+star visioned the mosquito-like youth, whom nature had endowed
+with a<br>
+splinter-structure, sneaking out on Bannister Field, at every
+chance, to<br>
+practice clandestinely his drop-kicking. He could see the
+faithful Human<br>
+Encyclopedia, vastly excited at his blithesome colleague's
+improvement,<br>
+retrieving the pigskin for Hicks. He thrilled again as he thought
+of the<br>
+bean-pole Hicks, who could never gain weight and strength enough
+to make<br>
+the eleven, loyally training and perfecting himself in the
+drop-kick,<br>
+trying to develop into a sure kicker, within a certain zone,
+hoping<br>
+sometime, before he left college forever, to serve old Bannister.
+With Thor<br>
+in the line-up at fullback, he would not have been needed, but
+now, with<br>
+the Prodigious Prodigy out, it was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s big
+chance!</p>
+
+<p>And Butch Brewster understood why the usually confident Hicks,
+even with<br>
+the knowledge of his drop-kicking power, hesitated to announce it
+to old<br>
+Bannister. Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team
+of Hicks'<br>
+being in earnest in his ridiculous athletic attempts of the past
+three<br>
+years, no one but himself and Hicks had dreamed that the sunny
+youth meant<br>
+them, that he really strove to win his B and please his dad. The
+appearance<br>
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., on Bannister Field was always the
+cause of<br>
+a small-sized riot among the squad and spectators. Hicks was
+jeered<br>
+good-naturedly, and "butchered to make a Bannister holiday," as
+he blithely<br>
+phrased it. Hence, the splinter-Senior was reluctant to announce
+that he<br>
+could drop-kick. He knew that when tested he would be so in
+earnest, that<br>
+so much would hang in the balance and the youths, unknowing how
+important<br>
+it was, would jeer. Then, too, knowing his long list of athletic
+fiascos,<br>
+ridiculous and otherwise, Hicks trembled at the thought of being
+sent into<br>
+the biggest game to kick a goal. He feared he might fail!</p>
+
+<p>"You are a <i>hero</i>, Theophilus!" said Butch, with deep
+feeling. "I can<br>
+realize how hard it was for Hicks to tell us. He would have kept
+silent<br>
+forever, even after his training in secret! And how you must have
+suffered,<br>
+knowing he could drop-kick, and yet not desiring to betray him!
+But your<br>
+love for old Bannister and for Hicks himself conquered. I'll take
+him out<br>
+on the gridiron, before the fellows come from class, and see what
+he<br>
+can do. Aha! There is the villain now. Hicks, ahoy! Come hither,
+you<br>
+Kellar-Herman-Thurston. Your dark secret is out at last!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., peering cautiously from the Gym.
+basement doorway,<br>
+in quest of the tardy Theophilus, who was to have accompanied him
+on a<br>
+clandestine journey to Bannister Field, obeyed the summons.
+Bewildered,<br>
+and gradually guessing the explanation from the shivering little
+boner's<br>
+alarmed expression, the gladsome youth approached the stern Butch
+Brewster,<br>
+who was about to condemn him for his silence. "Don't be angry
+with me,<br>
+Hicks, <i>please</i>!" pled Theophilus, pathetically fearful that
+he had<br>
+offended his comrade, "I&mdash;I just <i>had</i> to tell, for it
+was positively your<br>
+last chance, and&mdash;and old Bannister needs your sure
+drop-kicking! I never<br>
+promised not to tell. You never made me give my word,
+so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It was Theophilus' duty to tell!" spoke Butch, hiding a grin,
+for the<br>
+grind was so frightened, "and yours, Hicks, knowing as you do how
+we need<br>
+you, with Thor hurt! You graceless wretch, you aren't usually so
+like ye<br>
+modest violet! Why didn't you inform us, then swagger and say,
+'Oh, just<br>
+leave it to Hicks, he'll win the game with a drop-kick?' Now, you
+come with<br>
+me, and I'll look over your samples. If you've got the goods,
+it's highly<br>
+probable you'll get your chance, in the Ballard game; and I'm
+<i>glad</i>, old<br>
+man, for your sake. I know what it would mean, if you win it!
+But&mdash;now that<br>
+the '<i>mystery</i>' is solved, what's that about your being a
+'Class Kid,' of<br>
+Yale, '96?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's easy!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his arm across
+Theophilus'<br>
+shoulders, "I was the first boy born to any member of Yale, '96;
+it is the<br>
+custom of classes graduating at Yale to call such a baby the
+class kid!<br>
+Naturally, the members of old Eli, Class of 1896, are vastly
+interested in<br>
+me. Hence, my Dad wrote they'd be tickled if I won a big game for
+Bannister<br>
+with a field-goal!"</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence, Theophilus Opperdyke, gathering from
+Hicks' arm,<br>
+across his shoulders, that the cheery youth was not so awfully
+wrathful at<br>
+his base betrayal, adjusted his big-rimmed spectacles, and stared
+owlishly<br>
+at Hicks.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you&mdash;you are not angry?" he quavered. "You are
+not sorry. I&mdash;I<br>
+told&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry?" quoth T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., "Class Kid," of Yale,
+'96, with a<br>
+Cheshire cat grin, "<i>sorry</i>? I should say <i>not</i>&mdash;I
+wanted it to be known to<br>
+Butch, and Coach Corridan, but I got all shivery when I tried to
+confess,<br>
+and I&mdash;couldn't! Nay, Theophilus, you faithful friend, I'm
+so <i>glad</i>, old<br>
+man, that beside yours truly, the celebrated Pollyanna resembles
+Niobe,<br>
+weeping for her lost children."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap13"></a>
+CHAPTER XIII</p>
+
+<p>HICKS&mdash;CLASS KID&mdash;YALE '96</p>
+
+<p>  "Brekka-kek-kek&mdash;Co-Ax&mdash;Co-Ax!<br>
+  Brekka-kek-kek&mdash;Co-Ax&mdash;Co-Ax!<br>
+  Whoop-up! Parabaloo! Yale! Yale! Yale!<br>
+  Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a cumbersome Gold and Green
+football<br>
+blanket, and crouching on the side-line, like some historic
+Indian, felt a<br>
+thrill shake his splinter-structure, as the yell of "old Eli"
+rolled from<br>
+the stand, across Bannister Field. In the midst of the Gold and
+Green flags<br>
+and pennants, fluttering in the section assigned the Bannister
+cohorts, he<br>
+gazed at a big banner of Blue, with white lettering:</p>
+
+<p>YALE UNIVERSITY&mdash;CLASS OF 1896</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Butch," gasped Hicks, torn between fear and hope, "just
+listen to<br>
+that. Think of all those Yale men in the stand with my Dad! Oh,
+suppose I<br>
+do get sent in to try for a drop-kick!"</p>
+
+<p>It was almost time far the biggest game to start, the contest
+with Ballard,<br>
+the supreme test of the Gold and Green, the final struggle for
+The State<br>
+Intercollegiate Football Championship! In a few minutes the
+referee's<br>
+shrill whistle blast would sound, the vast crowd in the stands,
+on the<br>
+side-lines, and in the parked automobiles, would suddenly still
+their<br>
+clamor and breathlessly await the kick-off&mdash;then, seventy
+minutes of grim<br>
+battling on the turf, and victory, or defeat, would perch on the
+banners of<br>
+old Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>It was a thrilling scene, a sight to stir the blood. Bannister
+Field, the<br>
+arena where these gridiron gladiators would fly at each other's
+throats&mdash;or<br>
+knees, spread out&mdash;barred with white chalk-marks, with the
+skeleton-like<br>
+goal posts guarding at each end. On the turf the moleskin clad
+warriors,<br>
+under the crisp commands of their Coaches, swiftly lined down,
+shifted to<br>
+the formation called, and ran off plays. Nervous subs. stood in
+circles,<br>
+passing the pigskin. Drop-kickers and punters, tuning up, sent
+spirals, or<br>
+end-over-end drop-kicks, through the air. The referee,
+field-judge, and<br>
+linesmen conferred. Team-attendants, equipped with buckets of
+water,<br>
+sponges, and ominous black medicine-chests, with Red Cross
+bandages, ran<br>
+hither and thither. On the substitutes' bench, or on the ground,
+crouched<br>
+nervous second-string players; Ballard's on one side of the
+gridiron, and<br>
+Bannister's directly across.</p>
+
+<p>A glorious, sunshiny day in late November, with scarcely a
+breath of<br>
+wind, the air crisp and bracing; the radiant sunlight fell
+athwart the<br>
+white-barred field, and glinted from the gay pennants and banners
+in the<br>
+stands! Here was a riot of color, the gold and green of old
+Bannister; in<br>
+the next section, the orange and black of Ballard. The bright
+hues and<br>
+tints of varicolored dresses, and the luster of the official
+flowers<br>
+all contributed to a bewilderingly beautiful spectacle!
+Flower-venders,<br>
+peddlers of pennants, sellers of miniature footballs with the
+college<br>
+colors of one team and the other, hawked their wares, loudly
+calling above<br>
+the tumult, "Get yer Ballard colors yere!" "This way fer the
+Bannister<br>
+flags!" Ten thousand spectators, packed into the cheering
+sections of the<br>
+two colleges, or in the general stands, or standing on the
+side-lines,<br>
+impatiently awaited the kick-off. At the appearance of each
+football star,<br>
+a tremendous cheer went up from the mass. Across the field from
+each other,<br>
+the two bands played stirring strains. The confident Ballard
+cohorts<br>
+cheered, sang, and yelled and those of Bannister, not
+<i>quite</i> so sure of<br>
+victory, with Thor out, nevertheless, cheered, sang, and yelled
+as loudly,<br>
+for the Gold and Green.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of that vast Yale banner, so conspicuous, with its
+big white<br>
+letters on a field of blue, amidst the fluttering pennants of
+gold and<br>
+green, excited comment among the Ballard followers. The Bannister
+students,<br>
+however, knew what it meant; Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., and
+thirty<br>
+members of Yale, '96, were in the stand, ready to cheer Captain
+Butch's<br>
+eleven, and hoping for a chance to whoop it up for T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+if he got his big chance.</p>
+
+<p>Two days before, when little Theophilus Opperdyke, after a
+terrible<br>
+struggle with himself, divided between loyalty to Hicks and a
+love for<br>
+his Alma Mater, had betrayed his toothpick class-mate to Captain.
+Butch<br>
+Brewster, that behemoth Senior had rounded up Coach Corridan, and
+together<br>
+they had dragged the shivering Hicks out to the football field.
+Here, while<br>
+the rest of the student body, unsuspecting the important event in
+progress,<br>
+made good use of the study-hour, or attended classes in
+Recitation Hall,<br>
+the Gold and Green Coach, with the team-Captain, and the excited
+Human<br>
+Encyclopedia, watched T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. show his samples
+of<br>
+drop-kicks. And the success of that happy-go-lucky youth, after
+his nervous<br>
+tension wore off, may be attested by the Slave-Driver's somewhat
+slangy<br>
+remark, when the exhibition closed.</p>
+
+<p>"Butch," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, impressively,
+"what it<br>
+takes to drop-kick field-goals, from anywhere inside the
+thirty-yard line,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is broke out with!"</p>
+
+<p>The proficiency attained by the heedless Hicks in the
+difficult art of<br>
+drop-kicking, gained by faithful practice for a year, aided by
+his Dad's<br>
+valuable coaching, was wonderful. Of course, Hicks possessed
+naturally the<br>
+needed knack, but he deserved praise for his sticking at it so
+loyally. He<br>
+had no surety that he would ever be of use to his college, and,
+indeed,<br>
+with the advent of Thor, his hopes grew dim, yet he plugged on,
+in case old<br>
+Bannister might sometime need him&mdash;and yet, but for
+Theophilus, he would<br>
+not have summoned the courage to tell! To the surprise and
+delight of the<br>
+Coach and Captain, Hicks, after missing a few at first,
+methodically booted<br>
+goals over the crossbar from the ten, twenty, and thirty-yard
+lines, and<br>
+from the most difficult angles. There was nothing showy or
+spectacular in<br>
+his work, it was the result of dogged training, but he was almost
+sure,<br>
+when he kicked!</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="dw.jpg (89K)" src="images/dw.jpg" height="840" width="544">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Good!" ejaculated Coach Corridan, his arm across Hicks'
+shoulders, as they<br>
+walked to the Gym. "Hicks, the chances are big that I'll send you
+in to try<br>
+for a goal tomorrow, if Bannister gets blocked inside the
+thirty-yard line!<br>
+Just keep your nerve, boy, and boot it over! Now&mdash;I'll post
+a notice for<br>
+a brief mass-meeting at the end of the last class period, and
+Butch and I<br>
+will tell the fellows about you, and how you may serve
+Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the idea!" exulted Butch, joyous at his comrade's
+chance to get in<br>
+the biggest game. "The fellows will understand, Hicks, old man,
+and they<br>
+won't jeer when you come out this afternoon. They'll root for
+you! Oh, just<br>
+wait until you hear them cheer you, and <i>mean</i>
+it&mdash;you'll astonish the<br>
+natives, Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch's prophecy was well fulfilled. In the scrimmage that
+same day, T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., shivering with apprehensive dread, his heart
+in his<br>
+shoes, sat on the side-line. In the stands, the entire
+student-body,<br>
+informed in the mass-meeting of his ability, shrieked for "Hicks!
+Hicks!<br>
+Hicks!" Near the end of the practice game, the hard-fighting
+scrubs fought<br>
+their way to the 'Varsity's thirty-yard line, and another rush
+took it five<br>
+yards more. Coach Corridan, halting the scrimmage, sent the
+right-half-back<br>
+to the side-line, and a moment later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+hurried out<br>
+on the field with the Bannister Band playing, the collegians
+yelling<br>
+frenziedly, and excitement at fever height, the sunny youth took
+his<br>
+position in the kick formation. Then a silence, a few seconds of
+suspense,<br>
+as the pigskin whirled back to him, and then&mdash;a quick
+stepping forward,<br>
+a rip of toe against the leather, and&mdash;above the heads of
+the 'Varsity<br>
+players smashing through, the football shot over the
+cross-bar!</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" was the shout, "Hicks will beat
+Ballard!"</p>
+
+<p>That night, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., having crossed the
+Rubicon, and<br>
+committed himself to Coach Corridan and Captain Brewster, had
+dispatched a<br>
+telegraphic night-letter to his beloved Dad. He informed his
+distinguished<br>
+parent that his drop-kicking powers were now known to old
+Bannister, and<br>
+that the chances were fifty-fifty that he would be sent in to try
+for a<br>
+field-goal in the biggest game. On the day before the game, Mr.
+Thomas<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., in a night-letter, had wired back:</p>
+
+<p>Son Thomas:</p>
+
+<p>Am on my way to New Haven for Yale-Harvard game. Will stop off
+at old<br>
+Bannister&mdash;bringing thirty members of Yale '96. We hope our
+Class Kid will<br>
+get his chance against Ballard.</p>
+
+<p>Dad.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the Bannister-Ballard game, Mr. Hicks'
+private car the<br>
+Vulcan, with the Pittsburgh "Steel King," and thirty other
+members of<br>
+Yale, '96, had reached town. They had ridden in state to College
+Hill in<br>
+good old Dan Flannagan's jitney, where T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+proudly<br>
+introduced his beloved Dad to the admiring collegians. All
+morning, Mr.<br>
+Hicks had made friends of the hero-worshiping youths, who
+listened to his<br>
+tales of athletic triumphs at Bannister and at old Yale
+breathlessly. The<br>
+ex-Yale star had made a stirring speech to the eleven, sending
+them out on<br>
+Bannister Field resolved to do or die!</p>
+
+<p>"My Dad!" breathed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., crouched on the
+side line; as<br>
+he gazed at the Yale banner, he could see his father, with his
+athletic<br>
+figure, his strong face that could be appallingly stern or
+wonderfully<br>
+tender and kind. Like the sunny Senior, Mr. Hicks, despite his
+wealth,<br>
+was thoroughly democratic and already the Bannister collegians
+were his<br>
+comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"Here we go, Hicks!" spoke Butch Brewster, as the referee
+raised his<br>
+whistle to his lips. "Hold yourself ready, old man; a field-goal
+may win<br>
+for us, and I'll send you in just as soon as I find all hope of a
+touchdown<br>
+is gone. If they hold us back of the thirty-yard line, I'll try
+Deke<br>
+Radford, but inside it, you are far more sure."</p>
+
+<p>The vast crowd, a moment before creating an almost
+inconceivable din,<br>
+stilled with startling suddenness; a shrill blast from the
+referee's<br>
+whistle cut the air. The gridiron cleared of substitutes,
+coaches,<br>
+trainers, and rubbers-out, and in their places, the teams of
+Bannister and<br>
+Ballard jogged out. Captain Brewster won the toss, and elected to
+receive<br>
+the kick-off. The Gold and Green players, Butch, Beef, Roddy,
+Monty, Biff,<br>
+Pudge, Bunch, Tug, Hefty, Buster, and Ichabod, spread out,
+fan-like,<br>
+while across the center of the field the Ballard eleven, a
+straight line,<br>
+prepared to advance as the full-back kicked off. There was a
+breathless<br>
+stillness, as the big athlete poised the pigskin, tilted on end,
+then<br>
+strode back to his position.</p>
+
+<p>"All ready, Ballard?" The Referee's call brought an
+affirmative from the<br>
+Orange and Black leader.</p>
+
+<p>"Ready, Bannister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ready!" boomed big Butch Brewster, with a final shout of
+encouragement to<br>
+his players.</p>
+
+<p>The biggest game was starting! Before ten thousand wildly
+excited and<br>
+partisan spectators, the Gold and Green and the Orange and Black
+would<br>
+battle for Championship honors; with Thor out of the struggle,
+Ballard,<br>
+three-time Champion, was the favorite. The visitors had brought
+the<br>
+strongest team in their history, and were supremely confident of
+victory.<br>
+Bannister, however, could not help remembering, twice fate had
+snatched<br>
+the greatest glory from their grasp, in Butch's Sophomore year,
+when Jack<br>
+Merritt's drop-kick struck the cross-bar, and a year later, when
+Butch<br>
+himself, charging for the winning touchdown, crashed blindly into
+the<br>
+upright. Old Bannister had not won the Championship for five
+years, and<br>
+now&mdash;when the chances had seemed roseate, with Thor, the
+Prodigious<br>
+Prodigy&mdash;smashing Hamilton out of the way, Fate had dealt
+the annual blow<br>
+in advance, by crippling him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we've <i>got</i> to win!" shivered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+"Oh, I hope I<br>
+don't get sent in&mdash;I mean&mdash;I hope Bannister wins
+without me! But if I <i>do</i><br>
+have to kick&mdash;Oh, I hope I send it over that
+cross-bar&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A second later the Ballard line advanced, the fullback's toe
+ripped into<br>
+the pigskin, sending it whirling, high in air, far into
+Bannister's<br>
+territory; the yellow oval fell into the outstretched arms of
+Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster, on the Gold and Green's five-yard line,
+and&mdash;"We're off!"<br>
+shrieked Hicks, excitedly. "Come on, Butch&mdash;run it back! Oh,
+we're off."</p>
+
+<p>The biggest game had started!</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap14"></a>
+CHAPTER XIV</p>
+
+<p>THE GREATER GOAL</p>
+
+<p>"Time out!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., enshrouded in a gold and green
+blanket, and<br>
+standing on the side-line, like a majestic Sioux Chief, gazed out
+on<br>
+Bannister Field. There, on the twenty-yard line, the two lines of
+scrimmage<br>
+had crashed together and Bannister's backfield had smashed into
+Ballard's<br>
+stonewall defense with terrific impact, to be hurled back for a
+five-yard<br>
+loss. The mass of humanity slowly untangled, the moleskin clad
+players rose<br>
+from the turf, all but one. He, wearing the gold and green, lay
+still,<br>
+white-faced, and silent.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Biff Pemberton!" chattered Hicks, shivering as with a
+chill. "Oh, the<br>
+game is lost, the Championship is gone. Biff is out, and the last
+quarter<br>
+is nearly ended. Coach Corridan has got to send me in to kick.
+It's our<br>
+very last chance to tie the score, and save old Bannister from
+defeat!"</p>
+
+<p>The time keeper, to whom the referee had megaphoned for time
+out, stopped<br>
+the game, while Captain Butch Brewster, the campus Doctor, and
+several<br>
+players worked over the senseless Biff. In the stands, the
+exultant Ballard<br>
+cohorts, confident that victory was booked to perch on their
+banners, arose<br>
+<i>en masse,</i> and their thunderous chorus drifted across
+Bannister Field:</p>
+
+<p>  "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,<br>
+  And we'll put Bannister in that hole!<br>
+  In that hole&mdash;in&mdash;that&mdash;hole&mdash;<br>
+  Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"</p>
+
+<p>From the Bannister section, the Gold and Green undergraduates,
+alumni, and<br>
+supporters, feeling a dread of approaching defeat grip their
+hearts, yet<br>
+determined to the last, came the famous old slogan of
+encouragement to<br>
+elevens battling on the gridiron:</p>
+
+<p>  "Smash 'em, boys, run the ends&mdash;hold, boys,
+<i>hold</i>&mdash;<br>
+  Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!<br>
+  Touchdown! Touchdown! Hold, boys, <i>hold,<br>
+  Don't</i> let 'em win from the Green and the Gold!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with a groan of despair, sat down on
+the deserted<br>
+subs. bench. With a feeling that all was lost, the splinter-like
+Senior<br>
+gazed at the big score-board, announcing, in huge, white letters
+and<br>
+figures:</p>
+
+<p>4TH QUARTER; TIME TO PLAY&mdash;2 MIN.; <br>
+BANNISTER'S BALL ON BALLARD'S 22-YD. LINE; <br>
+4TH DOWN&mdash;8 YDS. TO GAIN;<br>
+SCORE: BALLARD&mdash;6; BANNISTER&mdash;3.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a terrific contest, a biggest game never to be
+forgotten by<br>
+the ten thousand thrilled spectators! Each eleven had been
+trained to the<br>
+second for this decisive Championship fight, and with the coveted
+gonfalon<br>
+of glory before them, the Bannister players battled desperately,
+while<br>
+Ballard's fighters struggled as grimly for their Alma Mater. For
+six years,<br>
+the Gold and Green had failed to annex the Championship, and for
+the past<br>
+three, the invincible Ballard machine had rushed like a car of
+Juggernaut<br>
+over all other State elevens; one team was determined to wrest
+the<br>
+banner from its rival's grasp, and the other fully as resolved to
+retain<br>
+possession, hence a memorable gridiron contest, to which even the
+alumni<br>
+could find none in past history to compare, was the result.</p>
+
+<p>Weakened by the loss of Thor, whose colossal bulk and
+Gargantuan strength<br>
+would have made victory a moral certainty, presenting practically
+the same<br>
+eleven that had faced Ballard the past season and had been
+defeated by a<br>
+scant margin, old Bannister had started the first quarter with a
+furious<br>
+rush that swept the enemy to midfield without the loss of a first
+down.<br>
+Then Ballard had rallied, stopping that triumphal march, on its
+own<br>
+thirty-five yard line, but unable to check Quarterback Deacon
+Radford, who<br>
+booted a forty-three-yard goal from a drop-kick, with the score
+3-0 in<br>
+Bannister's favor, and Deacon, a brilliant but erratic kicker,
+apparently<br>
+in fine trim, the Gold Green rooters went wild.</p>
+
+<p>In the second half, however, came the break of the game, as
+sporting<br>
+writers term it. The strong Ballard eleven found itself, and with
+a series<br>
+of body-smashing, bone-crushing rushes, battering at the
+Bannister lines<br>
+like the Germans before Verdun, they steadily fought their way,
+trench by<br>
+trench, line by line, down the field. Without a fumble, or the
+loss of a<br>
+single yard, the terrific, catapulting charges forced back old
+Bannister,<br>
+until the enemy's fullback, who ran like the famous Johnny
+Maulbetsch,<br>
+of Michigan, shot headlong over the goal line! The attempt for
+goal from<br>
+touchdown failed, leaving the score, at the end of the third
+quarter,<br>
+Ballard&mdash;6; Bannister&mdash;3.</p>
+
+<p>And Deacon Radford, whose first effort at drop-kicking had
+been so<br>
+brilliant, failed utterly. Three times, taking a desperate
+chance, the<br>
+Bannister quarter booted the pigskin, but the oval flew wide of
+the goal<br>
+posts, even from the thirty-yard line. With his mighty toe not to
+be<br>
+depended on, with the Gold and Green line worn to a frazzle by
+Ballard's<br>
+battering rushes, unable to beat back the victorious enemy, the
+Bannister<br>
+cohorts, dismayed, saw the start of the fourth and final quarter,
+their<br>
+last hope. The forward pass had been futile, for the visitors
+were trained<br>
+especially for this aerial attack, and with ease they broke up
+every<br>
+attempt. And then, with the ball in Ballard's possession on
+Bannister's<br>
+twenty-yard line, came a fumble&mdash;like a leaping tiger, Monty
+Merriweather<br>
+had flung himself on the elusively bounding ball, rolled over to
+his feet,<br>
+and was off down the field.</p>
+
+<p>"Touchdown! Touchdown! Touchdown!" shrieked old Bannister's
+madly excited<br>
+students, as Monty sprinted. "Go it,
+Monty&mdash;<i>touchdown</i>! Sprint, old man,<br>
+<i>sprint</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>But Cupid Colfax, Ballard's famous sprinter, playing
+quarterback, was off<br>
+on Monty's trail almost instantly, and his phenomenal speed cut
+down the<br>
+Ballard end's advantage; still, by dint of exerting every ounce
+of energy,<br>
+it was on Ballard's forty-yard line that Monty Merriweather,
+hugging the<br>
+pigskin grimly, finally crashed to earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Bannister!" shouted Captain Butch Brewster, as the
+two teams<br>
+lined down. "Right across the goal-line, then kick the goal, and
+we win!<br>
+Play the game&mdash;<i>fight</i>&mdash;Oh, we can win the
+Championship right now."</p>
+
+<p>Then ensued a session of football spectacular in the extreme,
+replete with<br>
+thrilling plays, with sensational tackles, and blood-stirring
+scrimmage.<br>
+The Bannister players, nerved by Captain Brewster's exhortation,
+by sheer<br>
+will-power drove their battered bodies into the scrimmage. End
+runs,<br>
+line-smashing tandem plays, forward passes, followed in
+bewildering<br>
+succession, until the ball rested on Ballard's twenty-yard line,
+and a<br>
+touchdown meant victory and the Championship for old Bannister,
+Another<br>
+rush, and five yards gained, then, Ballard, fighting at the last
+ditch,<br>
+made a stand every bit as heroic and thrilling as that
+sensational march<br>
+in the first half. The Gold and Green's tigerish rushes were
+hurled<br>
+back&mdash;three times Captain Butch threw his backfield against
+the line, and<br>
+three times not an inch was gained. On the third down, Monty
+Merriweather<br>
+was forced back for a loss, so now, with two minutes to play and
+the ball<br>
+in Bannister's possession, with eight yards to gain, the play was
+on<br>
+Ballard's twenty-two-yard line!</p>
+
+<p>And the biggest game had produced a new hero of the gridiron.
+Biff<br>
+Pemberton, left half-back, imbued with savage energy, had borne
+the brunt<br>
+of that spectacular advance; and now, he stretched on the turf,
+white and<br>
+still.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, old man," T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. turned as a hand
+rested grippingly<br>
+on his shoulder. Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, his face
+grim, had come<br>
+to him, and in quick, terse sentences, he outlined his plan.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Bannister's last chance&mdash;" he said, tensely. "We
+<i>can't</i> make the<br>
+first down, the way Ballard is fighting, unless we take desperate
+odds.<br>
+Now, Hicks, it's <i>up to you</i>. On <i>you</i> depend old
+Bannister's hopes."</p>
+
+<p>A great, chilling fear swept over T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+leaving him weak<br>
+and shaken. It had come at last-the moment for which he had
+trained and<br>
+practiced drop-kicking, for a year, in secret, that moment he had
+hoped<br>
+would come, sometime, and yet had dreaded, as in a nightmare.
+Before that<br>
+vast, howling crowd of ten thousand madly partisan spectators,
+<i>he</i> must<br>
+go out on Bannister Field, to try and boot a drop-kick from
+the<br>
+twenty-eight-yard-line, to save the Gold and Green from defeat.
+And he<br>
+thought of the great glory that would be his, if he succeeded-he
+would be a<br>
+campus hero, the idol of old Bannister, the youth who saved his
+Alma Mater<br>
+from defeat, in the biggest game! Then he remembered his Dad,
+inspiring<br>
+the eleven, between the halves, by a ringing speech; he heard
+again his<br>
+sentences:</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor
+to our dear Alma<br>
+Mater, is our greater goal! Go back into the game, throw
+yourselves into<br>
+the scrimmage, with no thought of personal glory, of the plaudits
+of the<br>
+crowd&mdash;it is a fine thing, a splendid goal, to play the game
+and be a hero;<br>
+it is a far more noble act to strive for the greater goal, one's
+Alma<br>
+Mater!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now listen carefully," Coach Corridan rushed on, "Biff is
+knocked out.<br>
+They'll start again soon, we are going to take a desperate
+chance; your Dad<br>
+advises it! A tie score means the Championship stays with
+Ballard. To win<br>
+it, we must <i>win</i> this game&mdash;and on <i>you</i>
+everything depends."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;how&mdash;" stammered Hicks, dazed&mdash;the only
+way to <i>tie</i> the score was by<br>
+a drop-kick; the only way to win, by a touchdown&mdash;did the
+Coach mean he was<br>
+<i>not</i> to realize his great ambition to save old Bannister by
+a goal, the<br>
+reward of his long training?</p>
+
+<p>"You jog out," whispered Coach Corridan, hurriedly, for a
+stretcher was<br>
+being rushed to Biff Pemberton, "report to the Referee, and
+whisper to<br>
+Butch to try Formation Z; 23-45-6-A! Now, here is the dope: our
+only chance<br>
+is to fool Ballard completely. When you go out, the Bannister
+rooters, and<br>
+your Yale friends, will believe it is to try a drop-kick and tie
+the score.<br>
+I am sure that the Ballard team will think this, too, because of
+your<br>
+slender build. You act as though you intend to try for a goal,
+and have<br>
+Captain Butch make our fellows act that way. Then&mdash;it is a
+fake-kick; the<br>
+backfield lines up in the kick formation, but the ball is passed
+to Butch,<br>
+at your right. He either tries for a forward pass to the right
+end, or<br>
+if the end Is blocked, rushes it himself! Hurry-the referee's
+whistle is<br>
+blowing; remember, Hicks, my boy, it's the greater goal, it's for
+your Alma<br>
+Mater."</p>
+
+<p>In a trance, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., flung off the gold and
+green blanket,<br>
+and dashed out on Bannister Field. How often, in the past year,
+had he<br>
+visioned this scene, only&mdash;he pictured himself saving the
+game by a<br>
+drop-kick, and now Coach Corridan ordered him to sacrifice this
+glory! From<br>
+the stands came the thunderous cheer of the excited Bannister
+cohorts,<br>
+firmly believing that the slender youth, so ludicrously fragile,
+among<br>
+those young Colossi, was to try for a goal.</p>
+
+<p>"Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hicks! Kick the
+goal&mdash;Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>And from the Yale grads., among them his Dad, came a shout, as
+he jogged<br>
+across the turf:</p>
+
+<p>"Breka-kek-kek&mdash;co-ax&mdash;Yale! Hicks-Hicks-Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>But the Bannister Senior did not thrill. Now, instead, a
+feeling of growing<br>
+resentment filled his soul; even this intensely loyal youth, with
+all his<br>
+love for old Bannister, was vastly human, and he felt cheated of
+his just<br>
+rights. How the students were cheering him, how those Yale men
+called his<br>
+name, and he was not to have his big chance! That for which he
+had trained<br>
+and practiced; the opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, by
+kicking a goal<br>
+at the crucial moment, and saving Bannister from defeat, was
+never to be<br>
+his. Now, in his last game at college, he was to act as a decoy,
+as a foil.<br>
+Like a dummy he must stand, while the other Gold and Green
+athletes ran off<br>
+the play! Instead of everything, a tie game, or a defeat,
+depending on his<br>
+kicking, defeat or victory hung on that fake play, on Butch
+Brewster<br>
+and Monty Merriweather! So&mdash;the ear-splitting plaudits of
+the crowd for<br>
+"Hicks!" meant nothing to him; they were dead sea fruit,
+tasteless as<br>
+ashes&mdash;as the ashes of ambition. And then&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor
+to our dear Alma<br>
+Mater, is our greater goal&mdash;no thought of personal
+glory&mdash;a splendid goal,<br>
+to play the game and be a hero; It is a far more noble act to
+strive for<br>
+the greater goal&mdash;one's Alma Mater&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I was nearly a <i>traitor</i>" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+his Dad's words<br>
+echoing In his memory, and a vision of that staunch, manly
+Bannister<br>
+ex-athlete before him. "Oh, I was betraying my Alma Mater.
+Instead of<br>
+rejoicing to make <i>any</i> sacrifice, however big, for
+Bannister, I thought<br>
+only of myself, of my glory! I'll do it, Dad, I'll strive for the
+greater<br>
+goal, and&mdash;we just can't fail."</p>
+
+<p>Reaching the scrimmage, Hicks, whose nervous dread had left
+him, when<br>
+he fought down selfish ambition, and thirst for glory, reported
+to the<br>
+Referee, and hurriedly transferred Coach Corridan's orders to
+Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster; half a minute of precious time was spent in
+outlining the<br>
+desperate play to the eleven, for "time!" had been called, and
+then&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Z-23-45-6-A!" shouted Quarterback Deacon Radford. "Come on,
+line&mdash;hold!<br>
+Right over the cross-bar with it, Hicks&mdash;tie the score, and
+save Bannister<br>
+from defeat&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The Gold and Green backfield shifted to the kick formation.
+Ten yards back<br>
+of the center, on the thirty-two-yard line of Ballard, stood T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr.; the vast crowd was hushed, all eyes stared at that
+slender<br>
+figure, standing there, with Captain Butch Brewster at his right,
+and Beef<br>
+McNaughton on his left hand-the spectators believed the
+frail-looking<br>
+youth had been sent in to try a drop-kick. The Ballard rooters
+thought<br>
+it, and&mdash;the Ballard eleven were <i>sure</i> of their
+enemy's plan&mdash;Hicks'<br>
+mosquito-like build, his nervous swinging of that right leg,
+deluded them,<br>
+and helped Coach Corridan's plot.</p>
+
+<p>It was the only play, if Bannister wanted the Championship
+enough to try a<br>
+desperate chance; better a fighting hope for that glory, with a
+try for<br>
+a touchdown, than a field-goal, and a tie-score! The lines of
+scrimmage<br>
+tensed. The linesmen dug their cleats in the sod, those of
+Ballard tigerish<br>
+to break through and block; old Bannister's determined to
+<i>hold</i>. Back of<br>
+Ballard's line, the backfield swayed on tip-toe, every muscle
+nerved, ready<br>
+to crash through; the ends prepared to knock Roddy and Monty
+aside, the<br>
+backs would charge madly ahead, in a berserk rush, to crash into
+that slim<br>
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Boot it, Hicks!" shrieked Deke Radford, and as he shouted,
+the pigskin<br>
+shot from the Bannister center's hands; the Gold and Green line
+held nobly,<br>
+but not so the ends. Monty Merriweather, making a bluff at
+blocking the<br>
+left end, let him crash past, while he sprinted
+ahead&mdash;Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster, to whom the pass had been made, ran forward, until he
+saw he was<br>
+blocked, and then, seeing Monty dear, he hurled a beautiful
+forward pass.</p>
+
+<p>Into the arms of the waiting Monty it fell, and that Gold and
+Green star,<br>
+absolutely free of tacklers, sprinted twelve yards to the
+goal-line,<br>
+falling on the pigskin behind it! Coach Corridan's "100 to 1"
+chance,<br>
+suggested by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., had succeeded,
+and&mdash;the<br>
+Biggest Game and the Championship had come to old Bannister at
+last!</p>
+
+<p>Followed a scene pauperizing description! For many long years
+old Bannister<br>
+had waited for this glory; years of bitter disappointment,
+seasons when the<br>
+Championship had been missed by a scant margin, a drop-kick
+striking the<br>
+cross-bar, Butch Brewster blindly crashing into an upright. But
+now, all<br>
+their pent-up joy flowed forth in a mighty torrent! Singing,
+yelling,<br>
+dancing, howling, the Bannister Band leading them, the Gold and
+Green<br>
+students, alumni, Faculty, and supporters, snake-danced around
+Bannister<br>
+Field. A vast, writhing, sinuous line, it wound around the
+gridiron,<br>
+everyone who possessed a hat flinging it over the cross-bars.
+The<br>
+victorious eleven, were borne by the maddened
+youths&mdash;Captain Butch, Pudge,<br>
+Beef, Monty, Roddy, Ichabod, Tug, Hefty, Buster, Bunch,
+and&mdash;T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr. Ballard, firmly believing Hicks would try a
+field-goal, had<br>
+been taken completely off guard. Surprised by the daring attempt,
+it had<br>
+succeeded with ease, and the final score was Bannister&mdash;10;
+Ballard&mdash;6!</p>
+
+<p>"At last! At last!" boomed Butch Brewster, to whom this was
+the happiest<br>
+day of his life. "The Championship at last. My great ambition is
+realized.<br>
+Old Bannister has won the Championship, and I was the Team
+Captain!"</p>
+
+<p>After a time, when "the shouting and the tumult died," or at
+least quieted<br>
+somewhat, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., felt a hand on his arm, and
+looking down<br>
+from the shoulders on which he perched, he saw his Dad. Mr.
+Hicks' strong<br>
+face was aglow with pride and a vast joy, and he shook his son's
+hand again<br>
+and again.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand, Thomas!" he said, and his words were reward
+enough for the<br>
+youth. "It was a <i>big</i> sacrifice, but you made it
+gladly&mdash;I know! You<br>
+gave up personal glory for the greater goal, and&mdash;old
+Bannister won the<br>
+Championship! You helped win, for the winning play turned on
+<i>you</i>. It was<br>
+splendid, my son, and I am proud of you! No matter if your
+sacrifice is<br>
+never known to the fellows, I understand."</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence on Hicks' part; then the sunny youth
+grinned at his<br>
+beloved Dad, as he responded blithesomely: "I'm Pollyanna, that
+old<br>
+Bannister and I won out, Dad!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap15"></a>
+CHAPTER XV</p>
+
+<p>HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies and gentlemen, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, human
+beings,<br>
+and&mdash;Freshmen! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the Olympic
+High-Jump<br>
+Champion, holder of the World's record, and winner at the
+Panama-Pacific<br>
+International Exposition National Championships, in his event, is
+about to<br>
+high jump! The bar is at five feet, ten inches. Mr. Hicks is the
+Herculean<br>
+athlete in the crazy-looking bathrobe."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his splinter-structure enshrouded in
+that<br>
+flamboyant bathrobe of vast proportions and insane colors, that
+inevitably<br>
+attended his athletic efforts, shaming Joseph's
+coat-of-many-colors, gazed<br>
+despairingly at his good friend, Butch Brewster, and Track-Coach
+Brannigan,<br>
+with a Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no use, Butch, it's no use!" quoth he, with ludicrous
+indignation,<br>
+as big Tug Cardiff, the behemoth shot-putter, through a huge
+megaphone<br>
+imitated a Ballyhoo Bill, and roared his absurd announcement to
+the<br>
+hilarious crowd of collegians in the stand. "Old Bannister will
+<i>never</i><br>
+take my athletic endeavors seriously. Here I have won two second
+places,<br>
+and a third, in the high-jump this season, and have a splendid
+show to<br>
+annex <i>first</i> place and my track B in the Intercollegiates,
+but&mdash;hear<br>
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a balmy, sunshiny afternoon in late May. The
+sunny-souled,<br>
+happy-go-lucky T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had trained indefatigably
+for<br>
+the high jump, with the result that he had won several points for
+his<br>
+team&mdash;however, he had not realized his great ambition of
+first place, and<br>
+his track letter.</p>
+
+<p>As Hicks now exclaimed to his team-mate and Coach Brannigan,
+no matter,<br>
+to the howling Bannister youths, if he <i>had</i> won three
+places in the high<br>
+jump, in regularly scheduled meets; his comrades had been jeering
+at<br>
+his athletic fiascos for nearly four years, and even had Hicks
+suddenly<br>
+blossomed out as a star athlete, they would not have abandoned
+their joyous<br>
+habit. Still, those football 'Varsity players to whom good Butch
+had read<br>
+Hicks, Sr.'s, letters, and explained the sunny youth's
+persistence, despite<br>
+his ridiculous failures, though they kept on hailing his
+appearance on<br>
+Bannister Field with exaggerated joy, understood the care-free
+collegian,<br>
+and loved him for his ambition to please his Dad. Since Hicks
+had<br>
+absolutely refused to accept his B, for any sport, unless he won
+it<br>
+according to Athletic Association eligibility rules, the eleven
+had kept<br>
+secret the contents of the letters Butch Brewster had read to
+them, for<br>
+Hicks requested it.</p>
+
+<p>The Bannister College track squad, under Track Coach Brannigan
+and Captain<br>
+Spike Robertson, had been training most strenuously for that
+annual<br>
+cinder-path classic, the State Intercollegiate Track and
+Field<br>
+Championships. The sprinters had been tearing down the
+two-twenty<br>
+straightaway like suburban commuters catching the 7.20 A.M. for
+the city.<br>
+Hammer-throwers and shot-putters&mdash;the weight
+men&mdash;heaved the sixteen-pound<br>
+shot, or hurled the hammer, with reckless abandon, like the
+Strong Man of<br>
+the circus. Pole-vaulters seemed ambitious to break the altitude
+records,<br>
+and In so doing, threatened to break their necks; hurdlers
+skimmed over<br>
+the standard as lightly as swallows, though no one ever beheld
+swallows<br>
+hurdling. The distance runners plodded determinedly around the
+quarter-mile<br>
+track, broad-jumpers tried to jump the length of the landing-pit.
+And T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., vainly essayed to clear five-ten In the
+high-jump!</p>
+
+<p>It was the last-named event that "broke up the show," as the
+Phillyloo Bird<br>
+quaintly stated, somewhat wrongly, since the appearance of that
+blithesome<br>
+youth in the offing, his flamboyant bathrobe concealing his
+shadow-like<br>
+frame, had <i>started</i> the show, causing the track squad, as
+well as a<br>
+hundred spectator-students, to rush for seats in the stand. The
+arrival<br>
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., to train for form and height in the
+high-jump,<br>
+though a daily occurrence, was always the signal for a Saturnalia
+of sport<br>
+at his expense, because&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You can't live down your athletic past, Hicks!" smiled
+good-hearted Butch<br>
+Brewster. "Your making a touchdown for the other eleven, by
+running the<br>
+wrong way with the pigskin, your hilarious fiascos in every
+sport, your<br>
+home-run with the bases full, on a strike-out-are specters to
+haunt you.<br>
+Even now that you have a chance to win your B, just listen to the
+fellows."</p>
+
+<p>The track squad's "heavy weight&mdash;white hope" section,
+composed of<br>
+hammer-heavers and shot-putters&mdash;Tug Cardiff, Beef
+McNaughton, Pudge<br>
+Langdon, Buster Brown, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and
+Bunch<br>
+Bingham, equipped with megaphones, and with the <i>basso
+profundo</i> voices<br>
+nature gave them, lined up on both sides of the
+jumping-standards, and<br>
+chanted loudly:</p>
+
+<p>  "All hail to T. Haviland Hicks!<br>
+  He runs like a carload of bricks;<br>
+    When to high jump he tries<br>
+    From the ground he can't rise&mdash;<br>
+  For he's built on a pair of toothpicks!"</p>
+
+<p>This saengerfest was greeted with vociferous cheers from the
+vastly amused<br>
+youths in the stands, who hailed the grinning Hicks with jeers,
+cat-calls,<br>
+whistles, and humorous (so they believed) remarks:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Hicks, you won't <i>never</i> be able to jump anything
+but your<br>
+board-bill!"</p>
+
+<p>"You're built like a grass-hopper, Hicks, but you've done lost
+the hop!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you keep on improving as you've done lately, you'll make a
+high-jumper<br>
+in a hundred more years, old top!"</p>
+
+<p>"You may rise in the world, Hicks, but never in the high
+jump!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't mind them, Hicks!" spoke Coach Brannigan, his hands on
+the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth's shoulders. "Listen to me; the
+Intercollegiates will<br>
+be the last track meet of your college years, and unless you take
+first<br>
+place in your event, you won't win your track B. Second, McQuade,
+of<br>
+Hamilton, will do five-eight, and likely an inch higher, so to
+take first<br>
+place, you, must do five-ten. You have trained and practiced
+faithfully<br>
+this season, but no matter what I do, I <i>can't</i> give you
+that needed two<br>
+inches, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it, Coach!" responded the chastened Hicks, throwing
+aside his<br>
+lurid bathrobe determinedly, and exposing to the jeering students
+his<br>
+splinter-frame. "Leave it to Hicks, I'll clear it this time,
+or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not!" fleered Butch, whom Hicks' easy self-confidence never
+failed to<br>
+arouse. "Hicks, listen to me, I can tell you why you can't get
+two inches<br>
+higher. The whole trouble with you is this; for almost four years
+you have<br>
+led an indolent, butterfly, care-free existence, and now, when
+you must<br>
+call on yourself for a special effort, you are too lazy! You can
+dear<br>
+five-ten; you ought to do it, but you can't summon up the energy.
+I've<br>
+lectured you all this time, for your heedless, easy-going ways,
+and<br>
+now&mdash;you pay for your idle years!"</p>
+
+<p>"You said an encyclopedia, Butch!" agreed the Coach, with
+vigor. "If only<br>
+something would just <i>make</i> Hicks jump that high, if only he
+could do it<br>
+once, and know it is in his power, he could do it in the
+Intercollegiates,<br>
+aided by excitement and competition! Let something <i>scare</i>
+him so that he<br>
+will sail over five-ten, and&mdash;he will win his B. He has the
+energy, the<br>
+build, the spring, and the form, but as you say, he is so
+easy-going and<br>
+lazy, that his natural grass-hopper frame avails him naught."</p>
+
+<p>"Here I go!" announced Hicks, who, to an accompaniment of loud
+cheers from<br>
+the stand, had been jogging up and down in that warming-up
+process known to<br>
+athletes as the in place run, consisting of trying to dislocate
+one's<br>
+jaw by bringing the knees, alternately, up against the chin. "Up
+and<br>
+over&mdash;that's my slogan. Just watch Hicks."</p>
+
+<p>Starting at a distance of twenty yards from the high-jump
+standards, on<br>
+which the cross-bar rested at five feet, ten inches, T. Haviland
+Hicks,<br>
+Jr., who vastly resembled a grass-hopper, crept toward the
+jumping-pit,<br>
+on his toe-spikes, as though hoping to catch the cross-bar off
+its guard.<br>
+Advancing ten yards, he learned apparently that his design was
+discovered,<br>
+so he started a loping gallop, turning to a quick, mad sprint, as
+though he<br>
+attempted to jump over the bar before it had time to rise higher.
+With a<br>
+beautiful take-off, a splendid spring&mdash;a quick, writhing
+twist in air, and<br>
+two spasmodic kicks, the whole being known as the scissors form
+of high<br>
+jump, the mosquito-like youth made a strenuous effort to clear
+the needed<br>
+height, but&mdash;one foot kicked the cross-bar, and as Hicks
+fell flat on his<br>
+back, in the soft landing-pit, the wooden rod, In derision,
+clattered down<br>
+upon his anatomy.</p>
+
+<p>"Foiled again!" hissed Hicks, after the fashion of a
+"Ten-Twent'-Thirt'"<br>
+melodrama-villain, while from the exuberant youths in the
+grandstand,<br>
+who really wanted Hicks to clear the bar, but who jeered at his
+failure,<br>
+nevertheless, sounded:</p>
+
+<p>"Hire a derrick, Hicks, and hoist yourself over the bar!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your <i>head</i> is light enough&mdash;your feet weigh you
+down!"</p>
+
+<p>"'Crossing the Bar'&mdash;rendered by T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.!"</p>
+
+<p>"Going up! Go play checkers, Hicks, you ain't no athlete!"</p>
+
+<p>While the grinning, albeit chagrined T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+reposed<br>
+gracefully on his back, staring up at the cross-bar, which
+someone kindly<br>
+replaced on the pegs, big Butch Brewster, who seemed suddenly to
+have<br>
+gone crazy, tried to attract Coach Brannigan's attention.
+Succeeding,<br>
+Butch&mdash;usually a grave, serious Senior, winked, contorted
+his visage<br>
+hideously, pointed at Hicks, and sibilated, "Now, Coach&mdash;now
+is your<br>
+chance! Tell Hicks&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Cardiff, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, Bunch
+Bingham, Buster<br>
+Brown, Beef McNaughton, and Pudge Langdon, who had been attacked
+in a<br>
+fashion similar to Butch's spasm, concealed grins of delight, and
+made<br>
+strenuous efforts to appear guileless, as Track-Coach Brannigan
+approached<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. To that cheery youth, who was brushing the
+dirt from<br>
+his immaculate track togs, and bowing to the cheering youths in
+the stand,<br>
+the Coach spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," he said sternly, "you need a cross-country jog, to
+get<br>
+more strength and power in your limbs! Now, I am going to send
+the<br>
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade for a four-mile run, and you go
+with them.<br>
+Oh, don't protest; they are all shot-putters and hammer-throwers,
+but<br>
+Butch, and they can't run fast enough to give a tortoise a fast
+heat. Take<br>
+'em out two miles and back, Butch, and jog all the way; don't let
+'em loaf!<br>
+Off with you."</p>
+
+<p>The unsuspecting Hicks might have detected the nigger in the
+woodpile, had<br>
+he not been so anxious to make five-ten in the high-jump.
+However, willing<br>
+to jog with these behemoths, with whom even he could keep pace,
+so as to<br>
+develop more jumping power, the blithesome youth cast aside his
+garish<br>
+bathrobe, pranced about in what he fatuously believed was Ted
+Meredith's<br>
+style, and howled:</p>
+
+<p>"Follow Hicks! All out for the Marathon&mdash;we're off!
+One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;<i>go</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>With the excited, track squad, non-athletes, and the baseball
+crowd, which<br>
+had ceased the game to watch the start, yelling, cheering,
+howling, and<br>
+whistling, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drawing his knees up in
+exaggerated<br>
+style at every stride, started to lead the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade<br>
+on its cross-country run. Without wondering why Coach Brannigan
+had<br>
+suddenly elected to send <i>him</i> along with the
+hammer-throwers and<br>
+shot-putters, on the jog, and not having seen the insane facial
+contortions<br>
+of the Brigade, before the Coach gave orders, the gladsome
+Senior<br>
+started forth in good spirits, resembling a tugboat convoying a
+fleet of<br>
+battleships.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! And over the country we go!'" warbled Hicks,
+as the squad<br>
+left Bannister Field, and jogged across a green meadow.
+"'&mdash;O'er hill and<br>
+dale, through valley and vale, Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho!'"</p>
+
+<p>"Save your wind, you insect!" growled Butch Brewster, with
+sinister<br>
+significance that escaped the heedless Hicks, as the behemoth
+Butch, a<br>
+two-miler, swung into the lead. "You'll <i>need</i> it, you fish,
+before we get<br>
+back to the campus! Not <i>too</i> fast, you flock of human
+tortoises. You'll be<br>
+crawling on hands and knees, if you keep that pace up long!"</p>
+
+<p>A mile and a half passed. Butch, at an easy jog, had led his
+squad over<br>
+green pastures, up gentle slopes, and across a plowed field, by
+way of<br>
+variety. At length, he left the road on which the pachydermic
+aggregation<br>
+had lumbered for some distance, and turned up a long lane,
+leading to a<br>
+farm-house. Back of it they periscoped an orchard, with
+cherry-trees,<br>
+laden with red and white fruit, predominating. Also, floating
+toward the<br>
+collegians on the balmy May air came an ominous sound:</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Woof! Bow-wow-wow! Woof!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, fellows!" urged Butch Brewster. "We'll jog across
+old Bildad's<br>
+orchard and seize some cherries&mdash;the old pirate can't catch
+us, for we are<br>
+attired for sprinting. Don't they look good?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing stirring!" declared Hicks, slangily, but vehemently,
+as he stopped<br>
+short in his stride. "Old Bildad has got a bulldog what am as big
+as the<br>
+New York City Hall. He had it on the campus last month, you know!
+Not for<br>
+mine! I don't go near that house, or swipe no cherries from his
+trees. If<br>
+you wish to shuffle off this mortal coil, drive right ahead, but
+I will<br>
+await your return here."</p>
+
+<p>T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, dread of dogs, of all sizes, shapes,
+pedigrees,<br>
+and breeds, was well known to old Bannister; hence, the
+Heavy-weights now<br>
+jeered him unmercifully. Old "Bildad," as the taciturn recluse
+was called,<br>
+who lived like a hermit and owned a rich farm, did own a massive
+bulldog,<br>
+and a sight of his cruel jaws was a "No Trespass" sign. With
+great<br>
+forethought, when cherries began to ripen, the farmer had brought
+Caesar<br>
+Napoleon to the campus, exhibited him to the awed youths, and
+said, "My<br>
+cherries be for <i>sale</i>, not to be <i>stole</i>!" which
+object lesson, brief as<br>
+it was, to date, had seemed to have the desired effect.
+Yet&mdash;here was Butch<br>
+proposing that they literally thrust their heads, or other
+portions of<br>
+their anatomies, into the jaws of death!</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Bunch Bingham at last, "I tell you what; we'll
+jog up to the<br>
+house and ask old Bildad to <i>sell</i> us some cherries; we can
+pay him when he<br>
+comes to the campus with eggs to sell, Come along. Hicks, I'll
+beard the<br>
+bulldog in his kennel."</p>
+
+<p>So, dragged along by the bulky hammer-throwers and
+shot-putters, the<br>
+protesting T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in mortal terror of Caesar
+Napoleon, and<br>
+the other canine guardians of old Bildad's property, progressed
+up the lane<br>
+toward the house.</p>
+
+<p>"I got a hunch," said the reluctant Hicks, sadly, "that things
+ain't<br>
+a-comin' out right! In the words of the immortal
+Somebody-Or-Other, 'This<br>
+'ere ain't none o' <i>my</i> doin'; it's a-bein' thrust on me!'
+All right, my<br>
+comrades, I'll be the innocent bystander, but heed me&mdash;look
+out for the<br>
+bulldog!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap16"></a>
+CHAPTER XVI</p>
+
+<p>THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON</p>
+
+<p>The Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, towing the mosquito-like
+T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., advanced on the stronghold of old Bildad, so named
+because he<br>
+was a pessimistic Job's comforter, like Bildad, the Shuhite, of
+old&mdash;like<br>
+a flock of German spies reconnoitering Allied trenches. Hearing
+the house,<br>
+with Butch and Beef holding the helpless, but loudly protesting
+Hicks, who<br>
+would fain have executed what may mildly be termed a strategic
+retreat, big<br>
+Tug Cardiff boldly marched, in close formation, toward the door,
+when the<br>
+portal suddenly flew open.</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Let go, Butch&mdash;there's the
+dog!"</p>
+
+<p>Amid ferocious howls from Caesar Napoleon, and alarmed
+protests from the<br>
+paralyzed Hicks, who could not have run, with his wobbly knees,
+had he<br>
+been set free by his captors, old Bildad, towed from the house by
+Caesar<br>
+Napoleon, who strained savagely at the leash until his face
+bulged, burst<br>
+upon the scene with impressive dramatic effect! It was difficult
+to decide,<br>
+without due consideration, which was the more interesting.
+Bildad, a huge,<br>
+gnarled old Viking, with matted gray hair, bushy eyebrows, a
+flowing beard,<br>
+and leathery face, a fierce-looking giant, was appalling to
+behold, but so<br>
+was Caesar Napoleon, an immense bulldog, cruel, bloodthirsty, his
+massive<br>
+jaws working convulsively, his ugly fangs gleaming, as he set his
+great<br>
+body against the leash, and gave evidence of a sincere desire to
+make free<br>
+lunch of the Bannister youths. As Buster Brown afterward stated,
+"Neither<br>
+one would take the booby prize at a beauty show, but at that, the
+bulldog<br>
+had a better chance than Bildad!" T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., let it
+be<br>
+recorded, could not have qualified as a judge, since his
+undivided<br>
+attention was awarded to Caesar Napoleon!</p>
+
+<p>"What d'ye want round here, ye rapscallions?" demanded Bildad,
+courteously,<br>
+holding the savage bulldog with one hand, and constructing a
+ponderous<br>
+fist with the other, "Hike&mdash;git off'n my land, y'hear? Git,
+er Caesar<br>
+Napoleon'll git holt o' them scanty duds ye got on!"</p>
+
+<p>"We want to&mdash;to buy some cherries, Mr.&mdash;Mr. Bildad!"
+explained Bunch<br>
+Bingham, edging away nervously. "We won't steal any, honest, sir.
+Well pay<br>
+you for them the very next time you come to the campus with milk
+and eggs."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho! Ho!" roared old Bildad, piratically, his colossal body
+shaking, "A<br>
+likely tale, lads&mdash;an' when I come for my money, ye'll jeer
+me off the<br>
+campus, an' tell me to whistle for it! Off my
+land&mdash;<i>git,</i> an' don't let me<br>
+cotch ye on it inside o' two minutes, or I'll let Caesar Napoleon
+make a<br>
+meal off'n yer bones&mdash;<i>git</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>To express it briefly, they got. T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., not
+standing on<br>
+the order of his going, set off at a sprint that, while it might
+have<br>
+caused Ted Meredith to lose sleep, also aroused in Caesar
+Napoleon an<br>
+overwhelming desire to take out after the fugitive youth, so that
+Mr.<br>
+Bildad was forced to exert his vast strength to hold the massive
+bulldog.<br>
+Butch, Beef, Hefty, Tug, Buster, Bunch, Pudge, and Biff, a
+pachydermic<br>
+crew, awed by Caesar Napoleon's bloodthirsty actions, jogged off
+in the<br>
+wake of Hicks, who confidently expected to hear the bulldog
+giving tongue,<br>
+on his trail, at every second.</p>
+
+<p>Another lane, making in from a road making a cross-roads with
+the one<br>
+from which they came to Bildad's house, ran alongside the orchard
+for two<br>
+hundred yards, inside the fence; at its end was a high roadgate.
+At<br>
+what they decided was a safe distance from the "war zone,"
+the<br>
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the
+latter<br>
+forcibly restrained from widening the margin between him and
+peril, held a<br>
+council on preparedness.</p>
+
+<p>"The old pirate!" stormed Butch Brewster, gazing back to where
+the vast<br>
+figure of old Bildad, striding toward the house, towered. "We
+can't let him<br>
+get away with that, fellows. I'll have some of his cherries now,
+or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no&mdash;<i>don't</i>, Butch!" chattered Hicks, whose
+dread of dogs amounted to<br>
+an obsession. "He can still see us, and if you leave the lane, he
+will send<br>
+Caesar Napoleon after us! Oh, <i>don't</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Butch Brewster, evidently wrathful at being balked, strode
+from the<br>
+path, or lane, of virtue, toward a cherry-tree, whose red fruit
+hung<br>
+temptingly low, and his example was followed by every one of the
+Brigade,<br>
+leaving the terrified Hicks to wait in the lane, where, because
+of his<br>
+alarm, he had no time to wonder at the bravado of his behemoth
+comrades.<br>
+However, finding that Bildad had disappeared, and believing he
+had taken<br>
+Caesar Napoleon into the house, the sunny Hicks, who was far from
+a coward<br>
+otherwise, but who had an unreasonable dread of dogs, little or
+big, was<br>
+about to wax courageous, and join his team-mates, when a wild
+shout burst<br>
+from Pudge Langdon:</p>
+
+<p>"Run, fellows&mdash;<i>run</i>! Bildad's put the bulldog on
+us! Here comes&mdash;Caesar<br>
+Napoleon&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>With a blood-chilling "Woof! Woof!" steadily sounding louder,
+nearer,<br>
+a streak of color shot across the orchard, from the house, toward
+the<br>
+affrighted Brigade, while old Bildad's hoarse growl shattered the
+echoes<br>
+with "Take 'em out o' here, Nap&mdash;chaw 'em up, boy!" For a
+startled second,<br>
+the youths stared at the on-rushing body, shooting toward them
+through the<br>
+orchard-grass at terrific speed, and then:</p>
+
+<p>"Run!" howled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., terror providing him
+with wings, as<br>
+per proverb. Down the lane, at a pace that would have done credit
+to Barney<br>
+Oldfield in his Blitzen Benz, the mosquito-like youth sprinted
+madly, and<br>
+ever, closer, closer on his trail, sounded that awful "Woof!
+Woof!" from<br>
+Caesar Napoleon, who, as Hicks well knew, was acting with full
+authority<br>
+from Bildad! He heard, as he fled frantically, the excited shouts
+of his<br>
+comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"Beat it, Hicks&mdash;he's right after you&mdash;run!
+Run!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jump the fence&mdash;he can't get you then&mdash;jump!"</p>
+
+<p>"He's right on your trail, Hicks&mdash;<i>sprint</i>, old
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Make the fence, old man&mdash;<i>jump</i> it&mdash;and you're
+<i>safe</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>The terrible truth dawned on the frightened youth, as he
+desperately<br>
+sprinted: the innocent bystander always gets hurt. He had
+protested against<br>
+the theft of Bildad's cherries, and naturally, the bulldog had
+kept after<br>
+<i>him</i>! But it was too late to stop, for the old adage was
+extremely<br>
+appropriate, "He who hesitates is lost." He must <i>make</i> that
+road-gate, and<br>
+tumble over it, in some fashion, or be torn to shreds by Caesar
+Napoleon,<br>
+the savage dog that the cruel Bildad had sent after the
+youths.</p>
+
+<p>Nearer loomed the road-gate, appallingly high. Closer sounded
+the panting<br>
+breath of the ferocious Caesar Napoleon, and his incessant
+"Woof-woof!"<br>
+became louder. It seemed to the desperate Hicks that the bulldog
+was at his<br>
+heels, and every instant he expected to feel those sharp teeth
+take hold of<br>
+his anatomy! Once, the despairing youth imitated Lot's wife and
+turned his<br>
+head. He saw a body streaking after him, gaining at every jump,
+also he<br>
+lost speed; so thereafter, he conscientiously devoted his every
+energy to<br>
+the task in hand, that of making the gate, and getting over it,
+before<br>
+Caesar Napoleon caught his quarry!</p>
+
+<p>At last, the road-gate, at least ten feet high, to Hicks'
+fevered<br>
+imagination, came so close that a quick decision was necessary,
+for Caesar<br>
+Napoleon, also, was in the same zone, and in a few seconds he
+would<br>
+overhaul the fugitive. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., realizing that a
+second<br>
+lost, perhaps, might prove fatal to his peace of mind,
+desperately resolved<br>
+to dash at the gate, and jump; if he succeeded even in striking
+somewhere<br>
+near the top, and falling over, he would not care, for the
+bulldog would<br>
+not follow him off Bildad's land. From his comrades, far in the
+rear, came<br>
+the chorus:</p>
+
+<p>"Jump, Hicks! He's right on your heels!"</p>
+
+<p>Like the immortal Light Brigade, Hicks had no time to reason
+about<br>
+anything. His but to jump or be bitten summed up the situation.
+So, with<br>
+a last desperate sprint, a quick dash, he left the
+ground&mdash;luckily, the<br>
+earth was hard, giving him a solid take-off, and he got a
+splendid spring.<br>
+As he arose In air, al! the training and practicing for form
+stayed with<br>
+him, and instinctively he turned, writhed, and kicked&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>For a fleeting second, he saw the top of the gate beneath his
+body, and<br>
+he felt a thrill as he beheld twisted strands of barbed wire,
+cruel and<br>
+jagged, across it; then, with a great sensation of joy, he knew
+that he<br>
+had cleared the top, and a second later, he landed on the ground,
+in the<br>
+country road, in a heap.</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., that sunny-souled, happy-go-lucky,
+indolent youth,<br>
+for once in his care-free campus career aroused to strenuous
+action,<br>
+scrambled wildly to his feet, and forcibly realized the truth
+of<br>
+Longfellow's, "And things are not-what they seem!" Instead of
+the<br>
+ferocious, bloodthirsty bulldog, Caesar Napoleon, a huge,
+half-grown<br>
+St. Bernard pup gamboled inside the gate, frisking about
+gleefully, and<br>
+exhibiting, even so that Hicks, with all his innate dread of
+dogs, could<br>
+understand it, a vast friendliness. In fact, he seemed trying to
+say,<br>
+"That's fun. Come on and play with me some more!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hey, fellows," shrieked the relieved Hicks, "that ain't
+Caesar Napoleon!<br>
+Why, he just wanted to play."</p>
+
+<p>Bewildered, the members of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+of the<br>
+Bannister College track squad rushed on the scene. To their
+surprise, they<br>
+found not a savage bulldog, but a clumsy, good-natured St.
+Bernard puppy,<br>
+who frisked wildly about them, groveled at their feet, and put
+his huge<br>
+paws on them, with the playfulness of a juvenile elephant.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it <i>isn't</i> Nappie, for a fact!" gasped Butch. "Oh,
+I am so glad<br>
+that old Bildad wasn't mean enough to put the bulldog after us,
+for he is<br>
+dangerous. He scared us, though, and put this pup on our trail.
+He wanted<br>
+to play, and he thought it all a game, when Hicks fled. Oho! What
+a joke on<br>
+Hicks."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care!" grinned Hicks, thus siding with the famous Eva
+Tanguay.<br>
+"You fellows were fooled, too! You were too <i>scared</i> to run,
+and if it had<br>
+been Caesar Napoleon, I'd have saved your worthless lives by
+getting him<br>
+after me! I'll bet Bildad is snickering now, the old reprobate!
+Why, Tug,<br>
+are you <i>crazy</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Cardiff, indeed, gave indications of lunacy. He marched up
+to the<br>
+road-gate, and stood close to it, so that the barbed wire top was
+even with<br>
+his hair; then he backed off, and gazed first at the gate, then
+at the<br>
+bewildered Hicks, while he grinned at the dazed squad in a
+Cheshire cat<br>
+style.</p>
+
+<p>"Measure it, someone!" he shouted. "I am nearly six feet tall,
+and it comes<br>
+even with the top of my dome! Can't you see, you brainless
+imbeciles, Hicks<br>
+cleared it."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait for me here!" howled big Butch Brewster, climbing the
+fence and<br>
+starting down the road at a pace that did credit even to that
+fast<br>
+two-miler. The Brigade, In the absence of their leader, tried to
+estimate<br>
+the height of the gate, and Hicks, gazing at its barbed-wire
+top,<br>
+shuddered. The St. Bernard pup, having caused T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., for<br>
+once in his indolent life to exert every possible ounce of energy
+in his<br>
+splinter-frame, groveled at his feet, and strove to express his
+boundless<br>
+joy at their presence.</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster, in fifteen minutes, returned, panting and
+perspiring,<br>
+bearing a tape-measure, borrowed at the next farm-house. With all
+the<br>
+solemnity of a sacred rite being performed, the youths waited, as
+Butch and<br>
+Tug, holding the tape taut, carefully measured from the ground to
+the top<br>
+of the barbed wire on the gate. Three times they did this, and
+then, with<br>
+an expression of gladness on his honest countenance, Butch hugged
+the<br>
+dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while Tug Cardiff howled, "Now for
+the<br>
+Intercollegiates and your track B, Hicks! You <i>can</i> do
+five-ten in the<br>
+meet, for Coach Brannigan said you could dear it, if only you did
+it<br>
+<i>once</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;what do you mean, Tug?" quavered Hicks, not daring
+to allow himself<br>
+to believe the truth. "You&mdash;you surely don't
+mean&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean, that now you <i>know</i> you can jump that high,"
+boomed Tug, executing<br>
+a weird dance of exultation, In which, the Brigade joined, until
+it<br>
+resembled a herd of elephants gone insane, "for you have done
+it&mdash;allowing<br>
+for the sag, and everything, that gate is just five feet, ten
+inches high,<br>
+and&mdash;<i>you cleared it</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies and gentlemen&mdash;Hicks, of Bannister, is about to
+high jump! Hicks<br>
+and McQuade, of Hamilton, are tied for first place at five feet
+eight<br>
+inches! McQuade has failed three times at five-ten! Hicks' third
+and last<br>
+trial! Height of bar&mdash;five feet ten inches!"</p>
+
+<p>This time, however, it was not big Tug Cardiff, imitating a
+Ballyhoo<br>
+Bill, and inciting the Bannister youths to hilarity at the
+expense of the<br>
+sunny-souled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; it was the Official
+Announcer at the<br>
+Annual State Intercollegiate Field and Track Championships, on
+Bannister<br>
+Field, and his announcement aroused a tumult of excitement in the
+Bannister<br>
+section of the stands, as well as among the Gold and Green
+cinder-path<br>
+stars.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Hicks, old man!" urged Butch Brewster, who, with a
+dozen fully<br>
+as excited comrades of the cheery Hicks, surrounded that
+splinter-athlete.<br>
+"It's positively your last chance to win your track B, or your
+letter in<br>
+any sport, and please your Dad! If they lower the bar, and you
+two jump off<br>
+the tie, McQuade's endurance will bring him out the winner."</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>can</i> clear five-ten!" encouraged Bunch Bingham.
+"You did it once,<br>
+when you believed Caesar Napoleon was after you. Just summon up
+that much<br>
+energy now, and clear that bar! Once over, the event and your
+letter are<br>
+won! Oh, if we only had that bulldog here, to sick on you."</p>
+
+<p>Sad to chronicle, the score-board of the Intercollegiates
+recorded the<br>
+results of the events, so far, thus:</p>
+
+<p>    HAMILTON ............35 BALLARD .............20 BANNISTER
+...........28</p>
+
+<p>It was the last event, and even did Hicks win the high-jump,
+McQuade's<br>
+second place would easily give old Ham. the Championship. Hence,
+knowing<br>
+that victory was not booked for an appearance on the Gold and
+Green<br>
+banners, the Bannister youths, wild for the lovable, popular
+Hicks to win<br>
+his Bs vociferously pulled for him:</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Hicks&mdash;up and over, old man&mdash;it's
+<i>easy</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jump, you Human Grass-Hopper&mdash;you can do it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now or never, Hicks! One big jump does the work!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sick Caesar Napoleon on him, Coach; he'll clear it then!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., casting aside that flamboyant
+bathrobe, for what he<br>
+believed was the last athletic event of his campus career, stood
+gazing at<br>
+the cross-bar. One superhuman effort, a great explosion of all
+his energy,<br>
+such as he had executed when he cleared the gate, thinking Caesar
+Napoleon<br>
+was after him, and the event was won! He <i>had</i> cleared that
+height, it was<br>
+within his power. If he failed, as Butch said, the bar would be
+lowered,<br>
+and then raised until one or the other missed once. McQuade, with
+his<br>
+superior strength and endurance, must inevitably win, but as he
+had just<br>
+missed on his third trial at five-ten, if Hicks cleared that
+height on<br>
+<i>his</i> final chance, the first place was his.</p>
+
+<p>"And my B!" murmured Hicks, tensing his muscles. "Oh, won't my
+Dad be<br>
+happy? It will help him to realize some of his ambition, when I
+show him my<br>
+track letter! It is positively my last chance, and I <i>must</i>
+clear it."</p>
+
+<p>With a vast wave of determined confidence inundating his very
+being, Hicks<br>
+started for the bar; after those first, peculiar, creeping steps,
+he had<br>
+just started his gallop, when he heard Tug Cardiff's
+<i>basso</i>, magnified by<br>
+a megaphone, roared:</p>
+
+<p>"All together, fellows&mdash;<i>let 'er go</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Then, just as Hicks dug his spikes into the earth, in that
+short, mad<br>
+sprint that gives the jumper his spring, just as he reached the
+take-off,<br>
+a perfect explosion of noise startled him, and he caught a sound
+that<br>
+frightened him, tensed as he was:</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Woof! Woof! Look out, Hicks,
+Caesar Napoleon<br>
+is after you!"</p>
+
+<p>Psychology Is inexplicable. Ever afterward, Hicks' comrades of
+that<br>
+cross-country run averred strenuously that their roaring
+through<br>
+megaphones, in concert, imitating Caesar Napoleon's savage bark
+at the<br>
+psychological moment, flung the mosquito-like youth clear of the
+cross-bar<br>
+and won him the event and his B. Hicks, however, as fervidly
+denied this<br>
+statement, declaring that he would have won, anyhow, because he
+had<br>
+summoned up the determination to do it! So it can not be stated
+just what<br>
+bearing on his jump the plot of Butch Brewster really had. In
+truth, that<br>
+behemoth had entertained a wild idea of actually hiring old
+Bildad and<br>
+Caesar Napoleon to appear at the moment Hicks started for his
+last trial,<br>
+but this weird scheme was abandoned!</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes later, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+escaped from the<br>
+riotous Bannister students, delirious with joy at the victory of
+the<br>
+beloved youth, the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade, capturing
+the<br>
+grass-hopper Senior, gave him a shock second only to that which
+he had<br>
+experienced when first he believed Caesar Napoleon was on his
+trail.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps our barking didn't make you jump it!" said Beef
+McNaughton, when<br>
+Hicks indignantly denied that he had been scared over the
+cross-bar, "but<br>
+indirectly, old man, we helped you to win! If we had not put up a
+hoax on<br>
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A <i>hoax</i>?" queried the surprised Hicks. "What do you
+mean&mdash;hoax?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was all a frame-up!" grinned Butch Brewster, triumphantly.
+"We paid old<br>
+Bildad five dollars to play his part, and as an actor, he has
+Booth and<br>
+Barrymore backed off the stage! We got Coach Brannigan to send
+you along<br>
+with us on the cross-country jog, and your absurd dread of dogs,
+Hicks,<br>
+made it easy! Bildad, per instructions, produced Caesar Napoleon,
+and<br>
+scared you. Then, with a telescope, he watched us, and when I
+gave the<br>
+signal, he let loose Bob, the harmless St. Bernard pup, on our
+trail.</p>
+
+<p>"The pup, as he always does, chased after strangers, ready to
+play. We<br>
+yelled for you to run, and you were so <i>scared</i>, you insect,
+you didn't<br>
+wait to see the dog. Even when you looked back, in your alarm,
+you didn't<br>
+know it was not Caesar Napoleon, for his grim visage was seared
+on your<br>
+brain&mdash;I mean, where your brain ought to be! And even had
+you seen it<br>
+wasn't the bulldog, you would have been frightened, all the same.
+But I<br>
+confess, Hicks, when you sailed over that high gate, it was one
+on <i>us</i>."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drew a deep breath, and then a
+Cheshire cat grin<br>
+came to his cherubic countenance. So, after all, it had been a
+hoax; there<br>
+had not been any peril. No wonder these behemoths had so
+courageously taken<br>
+the cherries! But, beyond a doubt, the joke <i>had</i> helped him
+to win his<br>
+B. It had shown him he could clear five feet, ten inches, for he
+had done<br>
+it&mdash;and, in the meet, when the crucial moment came, the
+knowledge that he<br>
+<i>had</i> jumped that high, and, therefore, could do it,
+helped&mdash;where the<br>
+thought that he never had cleared it would have dragged him down.
+He had at<br>
+last won his B, a part of his beloved Dad's great ambition was
+realized,<br>
+and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth that sunny-souled,
+irrepressible<br>
+youth, swaggering a trifle, "It was my mighty will-power, my
+terrific<br>
+determination, that took me over the cross-bar, and
+not&mdash;<i>not</i> your<br>
+imitation of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Woof!" roared the
+"Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade" in<br>
+thunderous chorus. "Sick him&mdash;Caesar Napoleon&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap17"></a>
+CHAPTER XVII</p>
+
+<p>HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Butch! Atta boy&mdash;some fin, old top! Say, you
+Beef&mdash;you're asleep<br>
+at the switch. What time do you want to be called? More pep
+there,<br>
+Monty&mdash;bust that little old bulb, Roddy! Aw, rotten! Say,
+Ballard, your<br>
+playing will bring the Board of Health down on you&mdash;why
+don't you bring<br>
+your first team out? Umpire? What&mdash;do you call that an
+umpire? Why, he's<br>
+a highway robber, a bandit. Put a 'Please Help the Blind' sign on
+that<br>
+hold-up artist!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, captain of the Bannister College baseball
+squad,<br>
+navigating down the third-floor corridor of Bannister Hall, the
+Senior<br>
+dormitory, laden with suitcases, bat-bags, and other impedimenta,
+as Mr.<br>
+Julius Caesar says, and vastly resembling a bell-hop in action,
+paused in<br>
+sheer bewilderment on the threshold of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+cozy room.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" stormed the bewildered Butch, wrathfully, "what in
+the name of Sam<br>
+Hill <i>are</i> you doing? Are you crazy, you absolutely insane
+lunatic? This<br>
+is a study-hour, and even if <i>you</i> don't possess an
+intellect, some of the<br>
+fellows want to exercise their brains an hour or so! Stop that
+ridiculous<br>
+action."</p>
+
+<p>The spectacle Butch Brewster beheld was indeed one to paralyze
+that<br>
+pachydermic collegian, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the
+sunny-souled,<br>
+irrepressible Senior, danced madly about on the tiger-skin rug in
+midfloor,<br>
+evidently laboring under the delusion that he was a lunatical
+Hottentot at<br>
+a tribal dance; he waved his arms wildly, like a signaling
+brakeman, or<br>
+howled through a big megaphone, and about his toothpick structure
+was<br>
+strung his beloved banjo, on which the blithesome youth twanged
+at times an<br>
+accompaniment to his jargon:</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Skeet, take a lead (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>!) Say,
+d'ye wanta marry<br>
+first base&mdash;divorce yourself from that sack!
+(<i>plunk-plunk</i>!) Oh, you<br>
+bonehead&mdash;steal&mdash;you won't get arrested for it! Hi! Yi!
+Ouch, Butch! Oh,<br>
+I'll be good&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, the indignant Butch abruptly terminated T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr.'s, noisy monologue by seizing that splinter-youth firmly by
+the scruff<br>
+of the neck and forcibly hurling him on the davenport. Seeing his
+loyal<br>
+class-mate's resemblance to a Grand Central Station
+baggage-smasher, the<br>
+irrepressible Senior forthwith imitated a hotel-clerk:</p>
+
+<p>"Front!" howled the grinning Hicks, to an imaginary bellboy,
+"Show this<br>
+gentleman to Number 2323! Are you alone, sir, or just by
+yourself? I think<br>
+you will like the room-it faces on the coal-chute, and has hot
+and cold<br>
+folding-doors, and running water when the roof leaks! The bed is
+made once<br>
+a week, regularly, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you Infinitesimal Atom of Nothing!" growled big Butch,
+ominously.<br>
+"What were you doing, creating all that riot, as I came down the
+corridor?<br>
+What's the main idea, anyway, of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Heed, friend of my campus days," chortled the graceless
+Hicks, keeping<br>
+a safe distance from his behemoth comrade, "tomorrow-your
+baseball<br>
+aggregation plays Ballard College, at that knowledge-factory, for
+the<br>
+Championship of the State. Because nature hath endowed me with
+the<br>
+Herculean structure of a Jersey mosquito, I am developing a
+56-lung-power<br>
+voice, and I need practice, as I am to be the only student-rooter
+at the<br>
+game tomorrow! Q.E.D.! And as for any Bannister student, except
+perhaps<br>
+Theophilus Opperdyke and Thor, desiring to investigate the
+interiors of<br>
+their lexicons tonight, I prithee, just periscope the
+campus."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you are right, Hicks!" grinned Butch Brewster, as he
+looked from<br>
+the window, down on an indescribably noisy scene. "For once, your
+riotous<br>
+tumult went unheard. Say, get your traveling-bag ready, and leave
+that<br>
+pestersome banjo behind, if you want to go with the nine!"</p>
+
+<p>Several members of the Gold and Green nine, embryo American
+and National<br>
+League stars, roosted on the Senior Fence between the Gymnasium
+and the<br>
+Administration Building, with, suitcases and bat-bags on the
+grass. In a<br>
+few minutes old Dan Flannagan's celebrated jitney-bus would
+appear in the<br>
+offing, coming to transport the Bannister athletes downtown to
+the station,<br>
+for the 9 P.M. express to Philadelphia. Incited by Cheer-Leaders
+Skeezicks<br>
+McCracken and Snake Fisher, several hundred youths encouraged the
+nine,<br>
+since, because of approaching final exams., they were barred by
+Faculty<br>
+order from accompanying the team to Ballard. In thunderous chorus
+they<br>
+chanted:</p>
+
+<p>  "One more Job for the undertaker!<br>
+  More work for the tombstone maker!<br>
+  In the local ceme<i>tery</i>, they are
+very&mdash;very&mdash;<i>very</i><br>
+  Busy on a brand-new grave for&mdash;Ballard!"</p>
+
+<p>As the lovable Hicks expressed it, "'Coming events cast their
+shadows<br>
+before.' Commencement overshadows our joyous campus existence!"
+However, no<br>
+Bannister acquaintance of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., could detect
+wherein the<br>
+swiftly approaching final separation from his Alma Mater had
+affected in<br>
+the least that happy-go-lucky, care-free, irrepressible youth. If
+anything,<br>
+it seemed that Hicks strove to fight off thoughts of the end of
+his golden<br>
+campus years, using as weapons his torturesome saengerfests, his
+Beefsteak<br>
+Busts down at Jerry's, and various other pastimes, to the vast
+indignation<br>
+of his good friend and class-mate, Butch Brewster, who tried
+futilely to<br>
+lecture him into the proper serious mood with which Seniors must
+sail<br>
+through Commencement!</p>
+
+<p>"You are a Senior, Hicks, a Senior!" Butch would explain
+wrathfully. "You<br>
+are popularly supposed to be dignified, and here you persist in
+acting like<br>
+a comedian in a vaudeville show! I suppose you intend to appear
+on the<br>
+stage, and, when handed your sheepskin, respond by twanging your
+banjo and<br>
+roaring a silly ballad."</p>
+
+<p>Yet, the cheery Hicks had been very busy, since that memorable
+day when,<br>
+thanks to Caesar Napoleon and the hoax of the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade of the track squad, he had cleared the cross-bar at
+five-ten,<br>
+and won the event and his white B! Mr. T. Haviland Hicks, Sr.,
+overjoyed<br>
+at his son's achievement, had sent him a generous check, which
+the youth<br>
+much needed, and had promised to be present at the annual
+Athletic<br>
+Association Meeting, at Commencement, when the B's were
+awarded<br>
+deserving athletes, which caused Hicks as much joy as the pink
+slip.<br>
+With his final study sprint for the Senior Finals, his duties as
+team-manager of the baseball nine, his preparations for Commencement,
+his<br>
+social duties at the Junior Prom., and multifarious other
+details<br>
+coincident to graduation, the heedless Hicks had not found time
+to be<br>
+sorrowful at the knowledge that it soon would end, forever, that
+he must<br>
+say "Farewell, Alma Mater," and leave the campus and corridors of
+old<br>
+Bannister; yet soon even Hicks' ebullient spirits must fail,
+for<br>
+Commencement was a trifle over a week off.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you lovable, heedless, irrepressible wretch," said Big
+Butch,<br>
+affectionately, as the two class-mates thrilled at the scene.
+"Does it<br>
+penetrate that shrapnel-proof concrete dome of yours that the
+Ballard game<br>
+tomorrow is the final athletic contest of my, and likewise your,
+campus<br>
+career at old Bannister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Similar thoughts has smote my colossal intellect, Butch!"
+responded the<br>
+bean-pole Hicks, gladsomely. "But&mdash;why seek to overshadow
+this joyous scene<br>
+with somber reflections? You-should-worry. You have annexed
+sufficient B's,<br>
+were they different, to make up an alphabet. You've won your
+letter on<br>
+gridiron, track, and baseball field, and you've been team-captain
+of<br>
+everything twice! Why, therefore, sheddest thou them crocodile
+tears?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not for myself, thou sunny-souled idler!" announced Butch,
+generously,<br>
+"But for <i>thee</i>! I prithee, since you pritheed me a few
+moments hence, let<br>
+that so-called colossal intellect of yours stride back along the
+corridors<br>
+of Time, until it reaches a certain day toward the close of our
+Freshman<br>
+year. Remember, you had made a hilarious failure of every
+athletic event<br>
+you tried-football, basketball, track, and baseball; you had just
+made a<br>
+tremendous farce of the Freshman-Sophomore track meet, and to me,
+your<br>
+loyal comrade, you uttered these rash words, 'Before I graduate
+from old<br>
+Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!'</p>
+
+<p>"I reiterate and repeat, tomorrow's game with Ballard is the
+last chance<br>
+you will have. There is no possibility that you, with your
+well-known lack<br>
+of baseball ability, will get in the game, and&mdash;your track
+B, won in the<br>
+high-jump, is the only B you have won! Now, do you still maintain
+that you<br>
+will make good that rash vow?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Where there's a will, there's a way.' 'Never say die.'
+'While there's<br>
+life, there's hope.' 'Don't give up the ship.' 'Fight to the last
+ditch.'<br>
+'In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as
+<i>fail</i>,'"<br>
+quoth the irrepressible Hicks, all in a breath. "As long as there
+is an<br>
+infinitesimal fraction of a chance left, I repeat, just leave it
+to Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't got a chance in the world!" Butch assured him,
+consolingly.<br>
+"You did manage to get into one football game, for a minute, and
+you were a<br>
+'Varsity player that long. By sticking to it, you have won your
+track B in<br>
+the high-jump, thanks to your grass-hopper build, and we rejoice
+at your<br>
+reward! Your Dad is happy that you've won a B, so why not be
+sensible, and<br>
+cease this ridiculous talk of winning your B in <i>three</i>
+sports, when you<br>
+can see it is preposterously out of the question, absolutely
+impossible&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It was not that Butch. Brewster did not <i>want</i> his sunny
+classmate to win<br>
+his B in three sports, or that he would have failed to rejoice at
+Hicks'<br>
+winning the triple honor. Had such a thing seemed within the
+bounds of<br>
+possibility, Butch, big-hearted and loyal, would have been as
+happy as<br>
+Hicks, or his Dad. But what the behemoth athlete became wrathful
+at was the<br>
+obviously lunatical way in which the cheery Hicks, now that his
+college<br>
+years were almost ended, parrot-like repeated, "Oh, just leave it
+to<br>
+Hicks!" when he must know all hope was dead. In truth, T,
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., in pretending to maintain still that he would make good the
+rash<br>
+vow of his Freshman year, had no purpose but to arouse his
+comrade's<br>
+indignation; but Butch, serious of nature, believed there really
+lurked in<br>
+Hicks' system some germs of hope.</p>
+
+<p>"We never know, old top!" chuckled Hicks, though he was
+<i>sure</i> he could<br>
+never fulfill that promise, as he had not played three-fourths of
+a season<br>
+on both the football and the baseball teams, "Something may show
+up at the<br>
+last minute, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that moment, something evidently did show up, on the campus
+below, for<br>
+the enthusiastic students howled in: thunderous chorus, as the
+"Honk!<br>
+Honk!" of a Claxon was heard, "Here he comes! All together,
+fellows&mdash;the<br>
+Bannister yell for the nine&mdash;then for good old Dan
+Flannagan!"</p>
+
+<p>As Hicks and Butch watched from the window, old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney-bus,<br>
+to the discordant blaring of a horn, progressed up the driveway,
+even as it<br>
+had done on that night in September, when it transported to the
+campus<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. Amid
+salvos of<br>
+applause from the Bannister youths, and blasts of the Claxon, old
+Dan<br>
+brought "The Dove" to a stop before the Senior Fence, and bowed
+to the<br>
+nine, grinning genially the while.</p>
+
+<p>"The car waits at the door, sir!" spoke T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., touching<br>
+his cap after the fashion of an English butler, before seizing a
+bat-bag,<br>
+and his suit-case. "As team manager, I must attempt to force into
+Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth's dome how he and the five subs, are to travel on
+the C. N. &amp;<br>
+Q., to Eastminster, from Baltimore. Come on, Butch, we're
+off&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You are always off!" commented Butch, good-humoredly, as he
+seized his<br>
+baggage and followed the mosquito-like Hicks from the room,
+downstairs, and<br>
+out on the campus. Here the assembled youths, with yells, cheers,
+and songs<br>
+sandwiched between humorous remarks to Dan Flannagan, watched the
+thrilling<br>
+spectacle of the Gold and Green nine, with the Team Manager and
+five<br>
+substitutes, fifteen in all, squeeze into and atop of Dan
+Flannagan's<br>
+jitney-Ford.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me check you fellows off," said Hicks, importantly,
+peering into the<br>
+jitney, for he, as Team Manager, had to handle the traveling
+expenses.<br>
+"Monty Merriweather, Roddy Perkins, Biff Pemberton. Butch
+Brewster, Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth, Beef McNaughton, Cherub Challoner, Ichabod Crane,
+Don<br>
+Carterson; that is the regular nine, and are you five subs,
+present? O. K.<br>
+Skeet, climb out here a second."</p>
+
+<p>Little Skeet Wigglesworth, the brilliant short-stop, climbed
+out with<br>
+exceeding difficulty, and facing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., he
+saluted in<br>
+military fashion. The team manager, consulting a timetable of the
+C. N.<br>
+&amp;.Q. railroad, fixed him with a stern look.</p>
+
+<p>"Skeet," he spoke distinctly, "now, <i>get
+this</i>&mdash;myself and eight regulars,<br>
+<i>nine</i> in all, will take the 9 P. M. express for
+Philadelphia, and stay<br>
+there all night. Tomorrow, at 8 A. M., we leave Broad Street
+Station for<br>
+Eastminster, arriving at 11 A. M. Now I have a lot of unused
+mileage on<br>
+the C. N. &amp; Q., and I want to use it up before Commencement.
+So, heed: you<br>
+want to go <i>via</i> Baltimore, to see your parents. You take
+the 9.20 P. M.<br>
+express tonight, to Baltimore, and go from that city in the
+morning, to<br>
+Eastminster, on the C. N, &amp; Q.&mdash;it's the only road. And
+take the five subs<br>
+with you, to devour the mileage. Now, has that penetrated thy
+bomb-proof<br>
+dome?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure; you don't have to deliver a Chautauqua lecture, Hicks!"
+grinned<br>
+Skeet. "Say, what time does my train leave Baltimore, in the
+A.M., for<br>
+Eastminster?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see." T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., handing the mileage-books
+to the<br>
+shortstop, focused his intellect on the C. N. &amp; Q. timetable.
+"Oh, yes&mdash;you<br>
+leave Union Station, Baltimore, at 7:30 A.M., arriving at
+Eastminster at<br>
+noon; <i>it is the only train, you can get,</i> to make it in
+time for the game,<br>
+so remember the hour&mdash;7.30 A.M.! Here, stuff the timetable
+in your pocket."</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments, the team and substitutes had been jammed
+into old Dan<br>
+Flannagan's jitney, and the Bannister youths on the campus
+concentrated<br>
+their interest on the sunny Hicks, who, grinning &agrave; la
+Cheshire cat,<br>
+climbed atop of "The Dove," which old Dan was having as much
+trouble to<br>
+start as he had experienced for over twenty years with the late
+Lord<br>
+Nelson, his defunct quadruped. Seeing Hicks abstract a
+Louisville<br>
+Slugger from the bat-bag, the students roared facetious remarks
+at the<br>
+irrepressible youth:</p>
+
+<p>"Home-run Hicks&mdash;he made a home-run&mdash;<i>on a
+strike-out</i>!"&mdash;"Put Hicks in<br>
+the game, Captain Butch&mdash;he will win it."&mdash;"Watch
+Hicks&mdash;he'll pull<br>
+some <i>bonehead</i> play!"&mdash;"Bring home the Championship,
+but&mdash;lose Hicks<br>
+somewhere!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the battered engine of the jit.
+yielded to<br>
+old Dan's cranking, and kindly consented to start, surveyed the
+yelling<br>
+students, seized a bat, and struck an attitude which he fatuously
+believed<br>
+was that of Ty Cobb, about to make a hit; taking advantage of a
+lull in the<br>
+tumult, the lovable youth howled at the hilarious crowd:</p>
+
+<p>"Just leave it to Hicks! I will win the game and the
+Championship, for my<br>
+Alma Mater, and&mdash;I'll do it by my headwork!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap18"></a>
+CHAPTER XVIII</p>
+
+<p>T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR'S. HEADWORK</p>
+
+<p>"Play Ball! Say, Bannister, are you <i>afraid</i> to
+play?"</p>
+
+<p>"Call the game, Mr. Ump.&mdash;make 'em play ball!"</p>
+
+<p>"Batter up! Forfeit the game to Ballard, Umpire!"</p>
+
+<p>"Lend 'em Ballard's bat-boy-to make a full nine!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Butch Brewster, his honest countenance, as a
+moving-picture<br>
+director would express it, "registering wrathful dismay,"
+lumbered toward<br>
+the Ballard Field concrete dug-out, in which the Gold and Green
+players<br>
+had entrenched themselves, while from the stands, the Ballard
+cohorts<br>
+vociferated their intense impatience at the inexplicable
+delay.</p>
+
+<p>"We have <i>got</i> to play," he raged, striding up and down
+before the bench.<br>
+"The game is ten minutes late now, and the crowd is restless! And
+here we<br>
+have only <i>eight</i> 'Varsity players, and no one to make the
+ninth&mdash;not even<br>
+a sub.! Oh, I could&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That brainless Skeet Wigglesworth!" ejaculated T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+who, arrayed like a lily of the field, reposed his
+splinter-structure on<br>
+the bench with his comrades. "In some way, he managed to
+<i>miss</i> that train<br>
+from Baltimore! They didn't come on the noon C, N. &amp; Q.
+train, and there<br>
+isn't another one until night. My directions were as plain as a
+German<br>
+war-map, and it beats me how Skeet got befuddled!"</p>
+
+<p>Gloom, as thick and abysmal as a London fog, hovered over the
+Bannister<br>
+dug-out. On the concrete bench, the seven Gold and Green
+athletes, Beef,<br>
+Monty, Roddy, Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, with Team Manager
+T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., stared silently at Captain Butch Brewster, who seemed
+in<br>
+imminent peril of exploding. Something probably never before
+heard of in<br>
+the annals of athletic history had happened. Bannister College,
+about to<br>
+play Ballard the big game for the State Championship, had lost a
+short-stop<br>
+and five substitutes, in some unfathomable manner, and it was
+impossible<br>
+to round up one other member of the Gold and Green baseball
+squad. True, a<br>
+hundred loyal alumni were in the stands, but only <i>bona
+fide</i> students, of<br>
+course, were eligible to play the game, and&mdash;the Faculty
+ruling had kept<br>
+them at old Bannister!</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes Ballard's Manager," spoke Beef McNaughton, as a
+brisk,<br>
+clean-cut youth advanced, a yellow envelope in hand. "Why, he has
+a<br>
+telegram. Do you suppose Skeet actually had <i>brains</i> enough
+to wire an<br>
+explanation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Telegram for Captain Brewster!" announced the Ballard
+collegian, giving<br>
+the message to that surprised behemoth. "It was sent in my
+care&mdash;collect,<br>
+and the sender, name of Wigglesworth, fired one to me personally,
+telling<br>
+me to deliver this one to Captain Butch Brewster, and collect
+from Team<br>
+Manager Hicks&mdash;he surely didn't bother to save money! I've
+been out of<br>
+town, and just got back to the campus; of course, the telegrams
+could not<br>
+be delivered to anyone but me, hence the delay."</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch, thanking the Ballard Team Manager, and assuring him
+that the<br>
+charges he had paid would be advanced to him after the game,
+ripped open<br>
+the yellow envelope, and drew out the message. Like a
+thunder-storm<br>
+gathering on the horizon, a dark expression came to good
+Butch's<br>
+countenance, and when he had perused the lengthy telegram, he
+transfixed<br>
+the startled and bewildered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with an angry
+glare:</p>
+
+<p>"Bonehead!" he raged, apparently controlling himself with a
+superhuman<br>
+effort. "Oh, you lunatic, you wretch,
+villain&mdash;you&mdash;<i>you</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>To the supreme amazement and dismay of the puzzled Hicks,
+Beef, next in<br>
+line, after <i>he</i> had scanned Skeet's telegram, followed
+Butch's example,<br>
+for <i>he</i> glowered at the perturbed youth, and heaped
+condemnations on his<br>
+devoted head. And so on down the line on the bench, until Monty,
+Roddy,<br>
+Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, reading the message, joined in
+gazing<br>
+indignantly at their gladsome Team Manager, who, as the eight
+arose <i>en<br>
+masse</i> and advanced on him, sought to flee the wrath to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"Safety first!" quoth T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. "'Mine not to
+reason why, mine<br>
+but to haste and fly,' or&mdash;be crushed! Ouch! Beef,
+Monty&mdash;have a heart!"</p>
+
+<p>Captured by Beef and Monty Merriweather, as he frantically
+scrambled up<br>
+the steps of the concrete dug-out, the grinning Hicks was held in
+the firm<br>
+grasp of that behemoth, Butch Brewster, aided by the skyscraper
+Ichabod,<br>
+while Cherub Challoner thrust the telegram before his eyes. In
+words of<br>
+fire that burned themselves into his brain&mdash;something his
+colleagues<br>
+denied he possessed&mdash;T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., saw the
+explanation of Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth's missing the train from Baltimore that A. M. Dazed,
+the sunny<br>
+youth read the message on which over-charges must be paid:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks&mdash;you bonehead! The time-table of the C.N. &amp; Q.
+you gave me was an<br>
+old one&mdash;schedule revised two weeks ago! Train now leaves
+Balto. at 6.55<br>
+A.M.! When we got to station at 7.05 A.M. she had went! No train
+to Ballard<br>
+till night! I and subs, had to wire Bannister for money to get
+back on!<br>
+You mis-manager&mdash;the <i>head-work</i> you boasted of is
+boneheadwork! Pay the<br>
+charges on this, you brainless insect! I'll send it to Butch, for
+you'd<br>
+never show it to him if I sent it to you! Indignantly&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"SKEET."</p>
+
+<p>"Mis-manager is <i>right</i>!" seethed Captain Butch, for once
+in his campus<br>
+career really wrathy at the lovable Hicks. "We are in a
+fix&mdash;eight players,<br>
+and the crowd howling for the game to start. Oh, I could jump
+overboard,<br>
+and drag you with me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Bonehead! Bonehead!" chorused the Gold and Green players,
+indignantly.<br>
+"Gave Skeet an out-of-date time-table&mdash;never looked at the
+date! Let's drag<br>
+him out before the crowd, and announce to them his brilliant
+headwork!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Butch, "up against it," to employ a slightly slang
+expression,<br>
+gazed across Ballard Field. In the stands, the students
+responding<br>
+thunderously to their cheer-leaders' megaphoned requests, roared,
+"Play<br>
+ball! Play ball! Play ball!" Gay pennants and banners fluttered
+in the<br>
+glorious sunshine of the June day. It was a bright scene, but its
+glory<br>
+awakened no happiness in the heart of the Bannister leader, as
+his gaze<br>
+wandered to the somewhat flabbergasted expression on the cheery
+Hicks'<br>
+face. That inevitably sunny youth, however, managed to conjure up
+a faint<br>
+resemblance of his Cheshire cat grin, and following his usual
+habit of<br>
+letting nothing daunt his gladsome spirit, he croaked feebly:
+"Oh, just<br>
+leave it to Hicks! I will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Play the game!" thundered Butch, inspired. "Beef, see the
+umpire and say<br>
+we'll be ready as soon as we get Hicks into togs-show him the
+telegram, and<br>
+explain our delay! I'll shift Monty from the outfield to Skeet's
+job at<br>
+short, and put this diluted imitation of something human in the
+field, to<br>
+do his worst. Come to the field-house, you poor fish&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Butch, I can't&mdash;I just <i>can't</i>!" protested the
+alarmed Hicks,<br>
+helpless, as the big athlete towed him from the trench,
+"I&mdash;I can't play<br>
+ball, and I don't want to be shown up before all that mob! It's
+all right<br>
+at Bannister, in class-games, but&mdash;Oh, can't you play the
+game with <i>eight</i><br>
+fellows?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is just what we intend to do!" said Butch, with grim
+humor.<br>
+"But&mdash;we'll have a dummy in the ninth position, to make the
+people believe<br>
+we have a full nine! Cheer up, Hicks&mdash;'In the bright lexicon
+of youth<br>
+there ain't no such word as fail,' you say! As for your making a
+fool of<br>
+yourself, you haven't brains enough to be classed as one!
+Now&mdash;you'll pay<br>
+dearly for your bonehead play."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as agitated as a
+<i>prima donna</i><br>
+making her d&eacute;but with the Metropolitan: Opera Company,
+decorated the<br>
+Bannister bench, arrayed in one of the substitutes' baseball
+suits. It<br>
+was too large for his splinter-structure, so that it flapped
+grotesquely,<br>
+giving him a startling resemblance to a scarecrow escaped from a
+cornfield.<br>
+With the thermometer of his spirits registering zero, the
+dismayed youth,<br>
+whose punishment was surely fitting the crime, heard the Umpire
+bellow:</p>
+
+<p>"Play ball! Batter up! Bannister at bat&mdash;Ballard in the
+field!"</p>
+
+<p>Hicks, that sunny-souled youth, had often daydreamed of
+himself in a big<br>
+game of baseball, for his college. He had vividly imagined a
+ninth inning<br>
+crisis, three of the enemy on base, two out, and a long fly, good
+for a<br>
+home-run, soaring over his head. How he had
+sprinted&mdash;back&mdash;back&mdash;and at<br>
+the last second, reached high in the air, grabbing the soaring
+spheroid,<br>
+and saving the game for his Alma Mater! Often, too, he had
+stepped up to<br>
+bat in the final frame, with two out, one on base, and Bannister
+a run<br>
+behind. With the vast crowd silent and breathless, he had
+walloped the<br>
+ball, over the left-field fence, and jogged around the bases,
+thrilling to<br>
+the thunderous cheers of his comrades. But now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oooo!" shivered Hicks, as though he had just stepped beneath
+an icy<br>
+shower-bath. "I wish I could run away. I just <i>know</i> they'll
+knock every<br>
+ball to me, and I couldn't catch one with a sheriff and
+posse!"</p>
+
+<p>However, since, despite the blithesome Hicks' lack of
+confidence, it was<br>
+that sunny Senior, after all, whom fate&mdash;or fortune,
+accordingly as<br>
+each nine viewed it&mdash;destined to be the hero of the
+Bannister-Ballard<br>
+Championship baseball contest, the game itself is shoved into
+such<br>
+insignificance that it can be briefly chronicled by recording the
+events<br>
+that led up to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, self-prophesied
+"head-work."</p>
+
+<p>Without Skeet Wigglesworth at shortstop, with the futile Hicks
+in<br>
+right-field, and the confidence of the nine shaken, Captain Butch
+Brewster<br>
+and the Gold and Green players went into the big game, unable to
+shake off<br>
+the feeling that they would be defeated. And when Pitcher Don
+Carterson,<br>
+in his half of the frame, passed the first two Ballard batters,
+the belief<br>
+deepened to conviction. However, a fast double play and a long
+fly ended<br>
+the inning without damage, and Bannister, likewise, had failed to
+make an<br>
+impression on the score-board. In the second, Don promptly showed
+that he<br>
+was striving to rival the late Cy Morgan, of the Athletics, for
+he promptly<br>
+hit two batters and passed the third, whereupon, as
+sporting-writers<br>
+express it, he was "derricked" by Captain Butch.</p>
+
+<p>Placing the deposed twirler in left field, Captain Brewster,
+as a last<br>
+resort, believing the game hopelessly lost, with his star pitcher
+having<br>
+failed, and his relief slabmen, thanks to Hicks, mislaid <i>en
+route</i>, sent<br>
+out to the box one Ichabod Crane, brought in from the position
+given to<br>
+Don Carterson. This cadaverous, skyscraper Senior, who always
+announced,<br>
+himself as originating, "Back at Bedwell Center, Pa., where I
+come from&mdash;"<br>
+was well known to fame as the "Champion Horse-Shoe Pitcher of
+Bucks<br>
+County," but his baseball pitching was rather uncertain; like the
+girl in<br>
+the nursery jingle, Ichabod, as a twirler, "When he was good, he
+was very,<br>
+very good, and when he was wild, he was <i>horrid</i>!" Like
+Christy Mathewson,<br>
+after he had pitched a few balls, he knew whether or not he was
+in<br>
+shape for the game, and so did the spectators. With terrific
+speed and<br>
+bewildering curves, Ichabod would have made a star, but his
+wildness<br>
+prevented, and only on very rare days could he control the
+ball.</p>
+
+<p>Luckily for old Bannister's chances of victory and the
+Championship, this<br>
+was one of the elongated Ichabod's rare days. He ambled into the
+box, with<br>
+the bases full, and promptly struck out a batter. The next rolled
+to first,<br>
+forcing out the runner at home, while the third hitter under
+Ichabod's<br>
+r&eacute;gime drove out a long fly to center-field. Thus the game
+settled to one<br>
+of the most memorable contests that Ballard Field had ever
+witnessed, a<br>
+pitchers' battle between the awkward, bean-pole youth from
+"Bedwell Center,<br>
+Pa.," and Bob Forsythe, the crack Ballard twirler. It was a fight
+long<br>
+to be remembered, with hits as scarce as auks' eggs, and runs out
+of the<br>
+reckoning, for six innings.</p>
+
+<p>At the start of the seventh, with the Ballard rooters standing
+and<br>
+thundering, "The lucky seventh! Ballard&mdash;win the game in the
+lucky<br>
+seventh!" the score was 0-0. Only two hits had been made off
+Forsythe, of<br>
+Ballard, whose change of pace had the Bannister nine at his
+mercy, and<br>
+but three off Ichabod, who had superb control of his dazzling
+speed. T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cavorting in right field, had made the only
+error of<br>
+the contest, dropping an easy fly that fell into his hands after
+he had run<br>
+bewilderedly in circles, when any good fielder could have stood
+still and<br>
+captured it; however, since he got the ball to second in time to
+hold the<br>
+runner at third, no harm resulted.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold 'em, Bannister, <i>hold</i> 'em!" entreated Butch
+Brewster, as they went<br>
+to the field at their end of the lucky seventh, not having
+scored. "Do your<br>
+best, Hicks, old man&mdash;never mind their Jokes. If you can't
+<i>catch</i><br>
+the ball, just get it to second, or first, without delay! Pitch
+ball,<br>
+Ichabod&mdash;three innings to hold 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>But it was destined to be the lucky seventh for Ballard. An
+error on a hard<br>
+chance, for Roddy Perkins, at third, placed a runner on first.
+Ichabod<br>
+struck out a hitter, and the runner stole second, aided somewhat
+by the<br>
+umpire. The next player flew out, sacrificing the runner to
+third; then&mdash;an<br>
+easy fly traveled toward the paralyzed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+one that<br>
+anybody with the most infinitesimal baseball ability could have
+corralled,<br>
+as Butch said, "with his eyes blindfolded, and his hands tied
+behind him!"<br>
+But Hicks, who possessed absolutely <i>no</i> baseball talent,
+though he made<br>
+a desperate try, succeeded in doing an European juggling act for
+five<br>
+heartbreaking seconds, after which he let the law of gravity act
+on the<br>
+sphere, so that it descended to terra firma. Hence, the "Lucky
+Seventh"<br>
+ended with the score: Ballard, 1; Bannister, 0; and the Ballard
+cohorts in<br>
+a state bordering on lunacy!</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I've done it now&mdash;I've lost the game and the
+Championship!" groaned<br>
+the crushed Hicks, as he stumbled toward the Bannister bench.
+"First I made<br>
+that bonehead play, giving Skeet an old time-table I had on hand,
+and not<br>
+telling him to get one at the station. How was I to know the old
+railroad<br>
+would change the schedule, within two weeks of this game? And
+now&mdash;I've<br>
+made the error that gives Ballard the Championship. If I hadn't
+pulled that<br>
+boner, Skeet would be here, and the regular right-fielder would
+have had<br>
+that fly. What a glorious climax to my athletic career at old
+Bannister!"</p>
+
+<p>Hicks' comrades were too generous, or heartbroken, to condemn
+the sorrowful<br>
+youth, as he trailed to the dug-out, but the Ballard rooters had
+absolutely<br>
+no mercy, and they panned him in regulation style. In fact, all
+through<br>
+the game, Hicks expressed himself as being butchered by the fans
+to make a<br>
+Ballard holiday, for he struck out with unfailing regularity at
+bat, and<br>
+dropped everything in the field, so that the rooters jeered him,
+whenever<br>
+he stepped to the plate, and&mdash;it was quite different from
+the good-natured<br>
+ridicule of his comrades, back at old Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Hicks," said good Butch Brewster, brokenly,
+seeing how<br>
+sorrow-stricken his sunny classmate was, "We'll beat
+'em&mdash;yet! We bat this<br>
+inning, and in the ninth maybe someone will knock a home-run for
+us, and<br>
+tie the score."</p>
+
+<p>The eighth Inning was the lucky one for the Gold and Green.
+Monty<br>
+Merriweather opened with a clean two-base hit to left, and
+advanced to<br>
+third on Biff Pemberton's sacrifice to short. Butch, trying to
+knock a<br>
+home-run, struck out-&agrave; la "Cactus" Cravath in the World's
+Series; but the<br>
+lanky Ichabod, endeavoring to bunt, dropped a Texas-Leaguer over
+second,<br>
+and the score was tied, though the sky-scraper twirler was caught
+off base<br>
+a moment later. And, though Ballard fought hard in the last of
+the eighth,<br>
+Ichabod displayed big-league speed, and retired two hitters by
+the<br>
+strike-out route, while the third popped out to first.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>ninth</i> Inning!" breathed Beef McNaughton, picking
+up his Louisville<br>
+Slugger, as he strode to the plate. "Come on, boys&mdash;we will
+win the<br>
+Championship <i>right now</i>. Get one run, and Ichabod will hold
+Ballard one<br>
+more time!"</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the pachydermic Beef's grim attitude unnerved the
+wonderful Bob<br>
+Forsythe, for he passed that elephantine youth. However, he
+regained his<br>
+splendid control, and struck out Cherub Challoner on three
+pitched balls.<br>
+After this, it was a shame to behold the Ballard first-baseman
+drop the<br>
+ball, when Don Carterson grounded to third, and would have been
+thrown<br>
+out with ease&mdash;with two on base, and one out, Roddy Perkins
+made a sharp<br>
+single, on which the two runners advanced a base. Now, with the
+sacks<br>
+filled, and with only one out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It's all over!" mourned Captain Butch Brewster, rocking back
+and forth on<br>
+the bench. "Hicks&mdash;is&mdash;at&mdash;bat!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his bat wobbling, and his knees acting
+in a similar<br>
+fashion, refusing to support even that fragile frame, staggered
+toward the<br>
+plate, like a martyr. A tremendous howl of unearthly joy went up
+from the<br>
+stands, for Hicks had struck out every time yet.</p>
+
+<p>"Three pitched balls, Bob!" was the cry. "Strike him out! It's
+all over but<br>
+the shouting! He's scared to death, Forsythe&mdash;he can't hit a
+barn-door<br>
+with a scatter-gun! One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;out! Here's
+where Ballard wins the<br>
+Championship."</p>
+
+<p>Twice the grinning Bob Forsythe cut loose with blinding
+speed&mdash;twice the<br>
+extremely alarmed Hicks dodged back, and waved a feeble
+Chautauqua salute<br>
+at the ball he never even saw! Then&mdash;trying to "cut the
+inside corner" with<br>
+a fast inshoot, Forsythe's control wavered a trifle, and T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., saw the ball streaking toward him! The paralyzed youth felt
+like a man<br>
+about to be shot by a burglar. He could feel the bail thud
+against him,<br>
+feel the terrific shock; and yet&mdash;a thought instinctively
+flashed on him,<br>
+he remembered, in a flash, what a tortured Monty Merriweather had
+shouted,<br>
+as he wobbled to bat:</p>
+
+<p>"Get a base on balls, or&mdash;if you can't <i>make</i> a
+hit&mdash;<i>get hit</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>If he got hit&mdash;it meant a run forced in, as the bases
+were full! That, in<br>
+all probability, would give old Bannister the Championship, for
+Ichabod was<br>
+invincible. It is not likely that the dazed Hicks thought all
+this out, and<br>
+weighed it against the agony of getting hit by Forsythe's speed.
+The truth<br>
+is, the paralyzed youth was too petrified by fear to dodge, and
+that before<br>
+he could avoid it, the speeding spheroid crashed against his
+noble brow<br>
+with a sickening impact.</p>
+
+<p>All went black before him, T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., pale and
+limp, crumpled,<br>
+and slid to the ground, senseless; therefore, he failed to hear
+the roar<br>
+from the Bannister bench, from the loyal Gold and Green rooters
+in the<br>
+stands, as big Beef lumbered across the plate with what proved
+later to be<br>
+the winning run. He did not hear the Umpire shout: "Take your
+base!"</p>
+
+<p>  "What's the matter with our Hicks&mdash;he's all right!<br>
+  What's the matter with our Hicks&mdash;he's all right!<br>
+  He was never a star in the baseball game,<br>
+  But he won the Championship just the same&mdash;<br>
+  What's the matter with our Hicks-he's all right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Honk! Honk!" Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, rattling up the
+driveway,<br>
+bearing back to the Bannister campus the victorious Gold and
+Green nine,<br>
+and the State Intercollegiate Baseball Championship, though the
+hour was<br>
+midnight, found every student on the grass before the Senior
+Fence! Over<br>
+three hundred leather-lunged youths, aided by the Bannister Band,
+and every<br>
+known noise-making device, hailed "The Dove," as that unseaworthy
+craft<br>
+halted before them, with the baseball nine inside, and on top.
+However, the<br>
+terrific tumult stilled, as the bewildered collegians caught the
+refrain<br>
+from the exuberant players:</p>
+
+<p>  "He was never a star in the baseball game&mdash;<br>
+  But he won the Championship just the same&mdash;<br>
+  What's the matter with our Hicks&mdash;he's all right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks did what?" shrieked Skeezicks McCracken, voicing
+through a megaphone<br>
+the sentiment of the crowd. Captain Butch had simply telegraphed
+the final<br>
+score, so old Bannister was puzzled to hear the team lauding T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., who, still white and weak, with a bandage around his
+classic<br>
+forehead, maintained a phenomenal quiet, atop of "The Dove,"
+leaning<br>
+against Butch Brewster.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows," shouted Butch, despite Hicks' protest, rising to
+his feet on the<br>
+roof of the "jit."&mdash;"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., today won the
+game and the<br>
+Championship! Listen&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The vast crowd of erstwhile clamorous youths stood spellbound,
+as Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster, in graphic sentences, described the
+game&mdash;Don Carterson's<br>
+failure, Ichabod's sensational pitching, Hicks' errors,
+and&mdash;the wonderful<br>
+manner in which the futile youth had won the Championship! As
+little Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth and the five substitutes, who had returned that
+afternoon, had<br>
+spread the story of Hicks' bonehead play, old Bannister had
+turned out to<br>
+ridicule and jeer good-naturedly the sunny youth, but now they
+learned that<br>
+Hicks had been forced by his own mistake into the Big Game, and
+had won it!<br>
+Of course, his comrades knew it had been through no ability of
+his, but the<br>
+knowledge that he had been knocked senseless by Forsythe's great
+speed, and<br>
+had suffered so that his college might score, thrilled them.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with Hicks?" thundered Thor, he who at one
+time would<br>
+have called this riot foolishness, and forgetting that the nine
+had just<br>
+chanted the response to this query.</p>
+
+<p>"He's all right!" chorused the collegians, in ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's all right?" demanded John Thorwald, his blond head
+towering over<br>
+those of his comrades. To him, now, there was nothing silly about
+this<br>
+performance!</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" came the shout, and the band fanfared,
+while the<br>
+exultant collegians shouted, sang, whistled, and created an
+indescribable<br>
+tumult with their noise-making devices. For five minutes the
+ear-splitting<br>
+din continued, a wonderful tribute to the lovable, popular youth,
+and then<br>
+it stilled so suddenly that the result was startling,
+for&mdash;T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., swaying on his feet arose, and stood on the roof of
+the "jit."</p>
+
+<p>With that heart-warming Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic
+countenance, the<br>
+irrepressible Hicks seized a Louisville Slugger, assumed a
+Home-Run Baker<br>
+batting pose, and shouted to his breathlessly waiting
+comrades:</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows, I vowed I would win that baseball game and the
+Championship for<br>
+my Alma Mater by my headwork! With the bases full, and the score
+a tie, the<br>
+Ballard pitcher hit me in the head with the ball, forcing in the
+run that<br>
+won for old Ballard&mdash;now, if that wasn't
+<i>headwork</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap19"></a>
+CHAPTER XIX</p>
+
+<p>BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY</p>
+
+<p>  "We have come to the close of our college days.<br>
+  Golden campus years soon must end;<br>
+  From Bannister we shall go our ways&mdash;<br>
+  And friend shall part from friend!<br>
+  On our Alma Mater now we gaze,<br>
+  And our eyes are filled with tears;<br>
+  For we've come to the close of our college days,<br>
+  And the end of our campus years!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., Bannister, '92; Yale, '96, and
+Pittsburgh<br>
+millionaire "Steel King," stood at the window of Thomas Haviland
+Hicks,<br>
+Jr.'s, room, his arm across the shoulders of that sunny-souled
+Senior, his<br>
+only son and heir. Father and son stood, gazing down at the
+campus. On the<br>
+Gym steps was a group of Seniors, singing songs of old Bannister,
+songs<br>
+tinged with sadness. Up to Hicks' windows, on the warm June:
+night, drifted<br>
+the 1916 Class Ode, to the beautiful tune, "A Perfect Day." Over
+before the<br>
+Science Hall, a crowd of joyous alumni laughed over narratives of
+their<br>
+campus escapades. Happy undergraduates, skylarking on the
+campus,<br>
+celebrated the end of study, and gazed with some awe at the
+Seniors, in cap<br>
+and gown, suddenly transformed into strange beings, instead of
+old comrades<br>
+and college-mates.</p>
+
+<p>"'The close of our college days, and the end of our campus
+years&mdash;!'"<br>
+quoted Mr. Hicks, a mist before his eyes as he gazed at the
+scene. "In a<br>
+few days, Thomas, comes the final parting from old
+Bannister&mdash;I know it<br>
+will be hard, for I had to leave the dear old college, and also
+Yale. But<br>
+you have made a splendid record in your studies, you have been
+one of<br>
+the most popular fellows here, and&mdash;you have vastly pleased
+your Dad, by<br>
+winning your B in the high-jump."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, last study-sprint was at an end, the
+final Exams.<br>
+of his Senior year had been passed with what is usually termed
+flying<br>
+colors; and to the whole-souled delight of the lovable youth, he
+and little<br>
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the Human Encyclopedia, had, as Hicks
+chastely<br>
+phrased it, "run a dead heat for the Valedictory!" So close had
+their<br>
+final averages been that the Faculty, after much consideration,
+decided to<br>
+announce at the Commencement exercises that the two Seniors had
+tied for<br>
+the highest collegiate honors, and everyone was satisfied with
+the verdict.<br>
+So, now it was all ended; the four years of study, athletics,
+campus<br>
+escapades, dormitory skylarking&mdash;the golden years of college
+life, were<br>
+about to end for 1919. Commencement would officially start on the
+morrow,<br>
+but tonight, in the Auditorium, would be held the annual
+Athletic<br>
+Association meeting, when those happy athletes who had won their
+B during<br>
+the year would have it presented, before the assembled
+collegians, by<br>
+one-time gridiron, track, and diamond heroes of old
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>And&mdash;the ecstatic Hicks would have his track B, his white
+letter, won in<br>
+the high-jump, thanks to Caesar Napoleon's assistance, awarded
+him by his<br>
+beloved Dad, the greatest all-round athlete that ever wore the
+Gold and<br>
+Green! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., <i>en route</i> to New
+Haven and Yale in<br>
+his private car, "Vulcan," had reached town that day, together
+with other<br>
+members of Bannister College, Class of '92. They, as did all the
+old<br>
+grads., promptly renewed past memories and associations by riding
+up to<br>
+College Hill in Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus&mdash;a youthful,
+hilarious crowd of<br>
+alumni. Former students, alumni, parents of graduating Seniors,
+friends,<br>
+sweethearts&mdash;every train would bring its quota. The campus
+would again<br>
+throb and pulsate with that perennial
+quickening&mdash;Commencement. Three days<br>
+of reunions, Class Day exercises, banquets, and other events,
+then the<br>
+final exercises, and&mdash;T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., would be an
+alumnus!</p>
+
+<p>"It's like Theophilus told Thor, last fall, Dad," said the
+serious Hicks.<br>
+"You know what Shakespeare said: 'This thou perceivest, which
+makes thy<br>
+love more strong; To love that well which thou must leave ere
+long.' Now<br>
+that I soon shall leave old Bannister, I&mdash;I wish I had
+studied more, had<br>
+done bigger things for my Alma Mater! And for you, Dad, too; I've
+won a B,<br>
+but perhaps, had I trained and exercised more, I might have
+annexed another<br>
+letter&mdash;still; hello, what's Butch hollering&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, his pachydermic frame draped in his gown,
+and his<br>
+mortar-board cap on his head, for the Seniors were required to
+wear their<br>
+regalia during Commencement week, was bellowing through a
+megaphone, as he<br>
+stood on the steps of Bannister Hall, and Mr. Hicks, with his
+cheerful son,<br>
+listened:</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody&mdash;Seniors, Undergrads., Alumni&mdash;in the
+Auditorium at eight sharp!<br>
+We are going to give Mr. Hicks and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a
+surprise<br>
+party&mdash;don't miss the fun!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, just what does Butch mean, Dad?" queried the bewildered
+Senior.<br>
+"Something is in the wind. For two days, the fellows have had a
+secret<br>
+from me&mdash;they whisper and plot, and when I approach, loudly
+talk of<br>
+athletics, or Commencement! Say, Butch&mdash;Butch&mdash;I ain't
+a-comin' tonight,<br>
+unless you explain the mystery."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, you be, old sport!" roared Butch, from the campus,
+employing the<br>
+megaphone, "or you don't get your letter! Say, Hicks, one sweetly
+solemn<br>
+thought attacks me&mdash;old Bannister is puzzling <i>you</i>
+with a mystery, instead<br>
+of vice versa, as is usually the case."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Thomas," said Mr. Hicks, his face lighted by a
+humorous, kindly<br>
+smile, as he heard the storm of good-natured jeers at Hicks, Jr.,
+that<br>
+greeted Butch Brewster's fling, "I'll stroll downtown, and see if
+any of<br>
+my old comrades came on the night express. I'll see you at the
+Athletic<br>
+Association meeting, for I believe I am to hand you the B. I
+can't imagine<br>
+what this 'surprise party' is, but I don't suppose it will harm
+us. It will<br>
+surely be a happy moment, son, when I present you with the
+athletic letter<br>
+you worked so hard to win."</p>
+
+<p>When T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, beloved Dad had gone, his firm
+stride<br>
+echoing down the corridor, that blithesome, irrepressible
+collegian, whom<br>
+old Bannister had come to love as a generous, sunny-souled youth,
+stood<br>
+again by the window, gazing out at the campus. Now, for the first
+time, he<br>
+fully realized what a sad occasion a college Commencement really
+is&mdash;to<br>
+those who must go forth from their Alma Mater forever. With
+almost the<br>
+force of a staggering blow, Hicks suddenly saw how it would hurt
+to leave<br>
+the well-loved campus and halls of old Bannister, to go from
+those comrades<br>
+of his golden years. In a day or so, he must part from good
+Butch, Pudge,<br>
+Beef, Ichabod, Monty, Roddy, Cherub, loyal little Theophilus and
+all his<br>
+classmates of '19, as well as from his firm friends of the
+undergraduates.<br>
+It would be the parting from the youths of his class that would
+cost him<br>
+the greatest regret. Four years they had lived together the
+care-free<br>
+campus life. From Freshmen to Seniors they had grown and
+developed<br>
+together, and had striven for 1919 and old Bannister, while a
+love for<br>
+their Alma Mater had steadily possessed their hearts. And now
+soon they<br>
+must sing, "Vale, Alma Mater!" and go from the campus and
+corridors, as<br>
+Jack Merritt, Heavy Hughes, Biff McCabe, and many others had done
+before<br>
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, they would return to old Bannister. There would be
+alumni<br>
+banquets at mid-year and Commencement, with glad class reunions
+each year.<br>
+They would come back for the big games of the football or
+baseball season.<br>
+But it would never be the same. The glad, care-free, golden years
+of<br>
+college life come but once, and they could never live them, as of
+old.</p>
+
+<p>"Caesar's Ghost!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., making a
+dive for his<br>
+beloved banjo, as he awakened to the startling fact that for some
+time he<br>
+had been intensely serious. "This will never, never do. I must
+maintain my<br>
+blithesome buoyancy to the end, and entertain old Bannister with
+my musical<br>
+ability. Here goes."</p>
+
+<p>Assuming a striking pose, &agrave; la troubadour, at the open
+window, T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., a somewhat paradoxical figure, his
+splinter-structure<br>
+enshrouded in the gown, the cap on his classic head, this regalia
+symbolic<br>
+of dignity, and the torturesome banjo in his grasp, twanged a
+ragtime<br>
+accompaniment, and to the bewilderment of the old Grads on the
+campus, as<br>
+well as the wrath of 1919, he roared in his fog-horn voice:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, I love for to live in the country!<br>
+  And I love for to live on the farm!<br>
+  I love for to wander in the grass-green fields&mdash;<br>
+  Oh, a country life has the charm!<br>
+  I love for to wander in the garden&mdash;<br>
+  Down by the old haystack;<br>
+  Where the pretty little chickens go 'Kick-Kack-Kackle!'<br>
+  And the little docks go 'Quack! Quack!'"</p>
+
+<p>From the Seniors on the Gym steps, their dignified song rudely
+shattered by<br>
+this rollicking saenger-fest, came a storm of protests; to the
+unbounded<br>
+delight of the alumni, watching the scene with interest, shouts,
+jeers,<br>
+whistles, and cat-calls greeted Hicks' minstrelsy:</p>
+
+<p>"Tear off his cap and gown&mdash;he's a disgrace to '19!"</p>
+
+<p>"Shades of Schumann-Heink&mdash;give that calf more rope!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye gods&mdash;how long must we endure&mdash;that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, a Senior&mdash;nobody home&mdash;can that noise!"</p>
+
+<p>"Shoot him at sunrise! Where's his Senior dignity?"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, referring to his watch, bellowed through
+the megaphone<br>
+that it was nearly eight o'clock, and loudly suggested that they
+forcibly<br>
+terminate Hicks' saengerfest, and spare the town police force a
+riot call<br>
+to the campus, by transporting the pestiferous youth to the
+Auditorium,<br>
+for his "surprise party." His idea finding favor, he, with Beef
+and Pudge,<br>
+somewhat hampered by their gowns, lumbered up the stairway of
+Bannister,<br>
+and down the third-floor corridor to the offending Hicks'
+boudoir, followed<br>
+by a yelling, surging crowd of Seniors and underclassmen. They
+invaded the<br>
+graceless youth's room, much to the pretended alarm of that
+torturesome<br>
+collegian, who believed that the entire student-body of old
+Bannister had<br>
+foregathered to wreak vengeance on his devoted head.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy! Have a heart, fellows!" plead T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+helpless in<br>
+the clutches of Butch, Beef, and Pudge, "I won't never do it no
+more, no<br>
+time! Say, this is too much&mdash;much too much&mdash;too much
+much too much&mdash;I,<br>
+Oh&mdash;<i>help&mdash;aid&mdash;succor&mdash;relief&mdash;assistance&mdash;"</i></p>
+
+<p>"To the Auditorium with the wretch!" boomed Butch; and the
+splinter-youth<br>
+was borne aloft, on his broad shoulders, assisted by Beef
+McNaughton. They<br>
+transported the grinning Hicks down the corridor, while fifty
+noisy youths,<br>
+howling, "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow!" tramped after them.
+Downstairs<br>
+and across the campus the hilarious procession marched, and into
+the<br>
+Auditorium, where the students and alumni were gathering for the
+awarding<br>
+of the athletic B. A thunderous shout went up, as T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+was carried to the stage and deposited in a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks! We've got a surprise
+for&mdash;Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, just what have I did to deserve all these?" grinned
+that<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth, puzzled, nevertheless. "Well, time will
+tell, so all<br>
+I can do is to possess my soul with impatience; old Bannister has
+a mystery<br>
+for me, this trip!"</p>
+
+<p>In fifteen minutes, the Athletic Association meeting opened.
+On the stage,<br>
+beside its officers, were those athletes, including T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+who were to receive that coveted reward&mdash;their B, together
+with a number of<br>
+one-time famous Bannister gridiron, track, basketball, and
+diamond stars.<br>
+Each youth was to receive his monogram from some ex-athlete who
+once wore<br>
+the Gold and Green, and Hicks' beloved Dad&mdash;Bannister's
+greatest hero&mdash;was<br>
+to present his son with the letter.</p>
+
+<p>There were speeches; the Athletic Association's President
+explained the<br>
+annual meeting, former Bannister students and athletic idols told
+of past<br>
+triumphs on Bannister Field; the football Championship banner,
+and the<br>
+baseball pennant were flaunted proudly, and each team-captain of
+the year<br>
+was called upon to talk. Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., a great
+favorite<br>
+on the campus, delivered a ringing speech, an appeal to the
+undergraduates<br>
+for clean living, and honorable sportsmanship, and then:</p>
+
+<p>"We now come to the awarding of the athletic B," stated the
+President. "The<br>
+Secretary will call first the name of the athlete, and then the
+alumnus who<br>
+will present him with the letter. In the name of the Athletic
+Association<br>
+of old Bannister, I congratulate those fellows who are now to be
+rewarded<br>
+for their loyalty to their Alma Mater!"</p>
+
+<p>Thrilled, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., watched his comrades, as
+they responded<br>
+to their names, and had the greatest glory, the B, placed in
+their hands by<br>
+past Bannister athletic heroes. Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty,
+Ichabod, Biff,<br>
+Hefty, Tug, Buster, Deacon Radford, Cherub, Don, Skeet, Thor, who
+had<br>
+won the hammer-throw. These, and many others, having earned the
+award by<br>
+playing in three-fourths of a season's games on the eleven or the
+nine, or<br>
+by winning a first place in some track event, stepped forward,
+and were<br>
+rewarded. Some, as good Butch, had gained their B many times, but
+the fact<br>
+that this was their last letter, made the occasion a sad one.
+Every name<br>
+was called but that of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and that perturbed
+youth<br>
+wondered at the omission, when the President spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"The last name," he said, smiling, "is that of Thomas Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+and we are glad to have his father present the letter to his son,
+as Mr.<br>
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., is with us. However, we Bannister
+fellows have<br>
+prepared a surprise party for our lovable comrade, and I beg your
+patience<br>
+awhile, as I explain."</p>
+
+<p>Graphically, Dad Pendleton described the wonderful all-round
+athletic<br>
+record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old
+Bannister, and<br>
+sketched briefly but vividly his phenomenal record at Yale; he
+told of<br>
+Mr. Hicks' great ambition, for his only son, Thomas, to follow in
+his<br>
+footsteps&mdash;to be a star athlete, and shatter the marks made
+by his Dad.<br>
+Then he reminded the Bannister students of T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s,<br>
+athletic fiascos, hilarious and otherwise, of three years. He
+explained how<br>
+that cheery youth, grinning good-humoredly at his comrades'
+jeers, had been<br>
+in earnest, striving to realize his father's ambition. As the
+spellbound<br>
+collegians and grads. listened, Dad chronicled Hicks' dogged
+persistence,<br>
+and how he finally, in his Senior year, won his track B in the
+high-jump.<br>
+Then he described the biggest game of the past football season,
+the contest<br>
+that brought the Championship to old Bannister. The youths and
+alumni heard<br>
+how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., made a great sacrifice, for the
+greater goal;<br>
+how, after training faithfully in secret for a year, hoping
+sometime to win<br>
+a game for his Alma Mater, he cheerfully sacrificed his chance to
+tie the<br>
+score by a drop-kick, and became the pivotal part of a fake-kick
+play that<br>
+won for the Gold and Green.</p>
+
+<p>"I have left Hicks' name until last," said Dad, with a smile,
+"because<br>
+tonight we have a surprise party for our sunny comrade, and for
+his Dad. In<br>
+the past, the eligibility rule, as regards the football and
+baseball B, has<br>
+been&mdash;an athlete must play on the 'Varsity in three-fourths
+of the season's<br>
+games. But, just before the Hamilton game, last fall, the
+Advisory Board of<br>
+the Athletic Association amended this rule.</p>
+
+<p>"We decided to submit to the required two-thirds majority vote
+of the<br>
+students this plan, inasmuch as many athletes, toiling and
+sacrificing all<br>
+season for their college, never get to win their letter, yet
+deserve<br>
+that reward for their loyalty, we suggested that Bannister
+imitate the<br>
+universities. Anyone sent into the Yale-Harvard game, you know,
+wins his<br>
+H or Y. If one team is safely ahead, a lot of scrubs are run into
+the<br>
+scrimmage, to give them their letter. Therefore, we&mdash;the
+Advisory<br>
+Board&mdash;made this rule: 'Any athlete taking part, for any
+period of time<br>
+whatsoever, in the Ballard football or baseball game as a regular
+member of<br>
+the first team shall be eligible for his Gold or Green B. This
+rule, upon<br>
+approval of the students, to be effective from September 25!'</p>
+
+<p>"Now," continued the Athletic Association President, "we
+decided to keep<br>
+this new ruling a secret until the present, for this reason: Many
+good<br>
+football and baseball players, not making the first teams, lack
+the loyalty<br>
+to stick on the scrubs, and others, not as brilliant, but with
+more<br>
+college spirit, give their best until the season's end. We knew
+that if we<br>
+announced this rule last fall, several slackers, who had quit the
+squad,<br>
+would come out again, just on the hope of getting sent into the
+Ballard<br>
+game, for their B. This would not be fair to those who loyally
+stuck to the<br>
+scrubs. So we did not announce the rule until the year closed,
+and then a<br>
+practically unanimous vote of the students made the rule
+effective from<br>
+September 25. So&mdash;all athletes who took part in the Ballard
+football game,<br>
+last fall, for any period of time whatsoever, are eligible for
+the gold B,<br>
+and the same, as regards the green letter, applies to the Ballard
+baseball<br>
+game this spring."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., gasped. Slowly, the glorious truth
+dawned on the<br>
+happy-go-lucky Senior&mdash;he had been sent into the
+Bannister-Ballard football<br>
+game; the crucial and deciding play had turned on him, hence he
+had won his<br>
+gold letter! And thanks to his brilliant "mismanaging" of the
+nine, losing<br>
+shortstop Skeet Wigglesworth and the substitutes, he had played
+the entire<br>
+nine innings of the Ballard-Bannister baseball contest, and,
+therefore,<br>
+was eligible for his green B. In a dazed condition, he heard Dad
+Pendleton<br>
+saying:</p>
+
+<p>"You remember how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was sent into the
+Ballard<br>
+game, and how the fake-play fooled Ballard, who believed he would
+try<br>
+a drop-kick? Well, knowing Hicks to be eligible for his football
+B, we<br>
+planned a surprise party. The Advisory Board kept the new rule a
+secret,<br>
+and not until this week was it voted on. Then, the required
+two-thirds<br>
+majority made it effective from last September&mdash;we managed
+to have Hicks<br>
+absent from the voting, and the fellows helped us with our
+surprise! So<br>
+instead of Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., presenting his son
+with one<br>
+B, that for track work, we are glad to hand him <i>three</i>
+letters, one for<br>
+football, one for baseball, and one for track, to give our own T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr. And, let me add, he can accept them with a clear
+conscience, for<br>
+when the rule was made by the Advisory Board, we had no idea that
+Hicks<br>
+would ever be eligible in football or baseball."</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence, and then undergraduates and alumni,
+thrilled at Dad<br>
+Pendleton's announcement, arose in a body, and howled for T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., and his beloved Dad. Mr. Hicks, unable to speak,
+silently<br>
+placed the three monograms, gold, green, and white, in his son's
+hands, and<br>
+placed his own on the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, who
+for once<br>
+in his heedless career could not say a word!</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with Hicks?" Big Butch Brewster roared, and
+a terrific<br>
+response sounded:</p>
+
+<p>"He's all right! Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>For ten minutes pandemonium reigned. Then, regardless of the
+fact that, in<br>
+order to surprise Mr. Hicks and his son, other athletes, eligible
+under the<br>
+new rule, had yet to be presented with their B, the howling
+youths swarmed<br>
+on the stage, hoisted the grinning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and
+his happy<br>
+Dad to their shoulders, and started a wild parade around the
+campus and the<br>
+Quadrangle, singing:</p>
+
+<p>"Here's to our own Hicks&mdash;drink it down! Drink it down!
+Here's to our own<br>
+Hicks&mdash;drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own
+Hicks&mdash;When he<br>
+starts a thing, he sticks&mdash;Drink it down&mdash;drink it
+down&mdash;down! Down!<br>
+Down!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., aloft on the shoulders of his behemoth
+class-mate,<br>
+Butch Brewster, was deliriously happy. The surprise party of his
+campus<br>
+comrades was a wonderful one, and he could scarcely realize that
+he had<br>
+actually, by the Athletic Association ruling, won his three B's!
+How glad<br>
+his beloved Dad, was, too. He had not expected this bewildering
+happiness.<br>
+He had been so joyous, when his sort earned the track letter, but
+to<br>
+have him leave old Bannister, with a B for three sports&mdash;it
+was almost<br>
+unbelievable! And, as Dad had said&mdash;there had been no
+thought of Hicks when<br>
+the Advisory Board made the rule, so Hicks had no reason to
+suppose it was<br>
+done just to award him his letter.</p>
+
+<p>Then, Hicks remembered that rash vow, made at the end of his
+Freshman year,<br>
+a vow uttered with absolutely no other thought than a desire to
+torment<br>
+Butch Brewster, "Before I graduate from old Bannister, I shall
+have won<br>
+my B in three branches of sport!" Never, not even for a moment,
+had the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth believed that his wild prophecy would be
+fulfilled,<br>
+though he had pretended to be confident to tease his loyal
+comrades; but<br>
+now, at the very end of his campus days, just before he
+graduated, his<br>
+prediction had come true! So the sunny Senior, who four years
+before had<br>
+made his rash vow, saw its realization, and suddenly thrilled
+with the<br>
+knowledge that he had a golden opportunity to make Butch
+indignant.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I say, Butch," he drawled, nonchalantly, leaning down to
+talk in<br>
+Butch's ear, "do you recall that day, at the close of our
+Freshman year,<br>
+when I vowed to win my B in three branches of sport, ere I bade
+farewell to<br>
+old Bannister?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you don't get away with that!" exploded Butch Brewster,
+indignantly,<br>
+lowering his tantalizing classmate to terra firma. "Here, Beef,
+Pudge,<br>
+catch this wretch; he intends to swagger and say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But he was too late, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., dodging from
+his grasp,<br>
+imitated the celebrated Charley Chaplin strut, and satiated his
+fun-loving<br>
+soul. After waiting for three years, the irrepressible youth
+realized an<br>
+ambition he had never imagined would be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth he, gladsomely. "I told
+you I'd win<br>
+my three B's, Butch, old top, and&mdash;<i>ow</i>!&mdash;unhand
+me, you villain, you<br>
+<i>hurt</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+<a name="chap20"></a>
+CHAPTER XX</p>
+
+<p>"VALE, ALMA MATER!"</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, it was 'Ave, Alma Mater&mdash;'<br>
+  We sang as Freshmen gay;<br>
+  But it's 'Vale, Alma Mater' now<br>
+  As our last farewells we say!"</p>
+
+<p>"Honk-Honk! Br-r-rr-r-Bang! Honk-Monk! Br-rr-rr-r&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., big Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton,
+Pudge Langdon,<br>
+Scoop Sawyer, and little Theophilus Opperdyke&mdash;late Seniors
+of old<br>
+Bannister&mdash;roosted atop of good old Dan Flannagan's famous
+jitney-bus<br>
+before Bannister Hall. It was nearly time for the 9.30 A. M.
+express, but<br>
+the "peace-ship" had inconsiderately stalled, and the choking,
+wheezing,<br>
+and snorting of the engine, as old Dan frenziedly cranked,
+together with<br>
+the Claxon, operated by Skeet Wigglesworth, rudely interrupted
+the Seniors'<br>
+chant. A vociferous protest arose above the tumult:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the little old Ford&mdash;rambled right along&mdash;like
+heck!"</p>
+
+<p>"Can that noise-we want to sing a last song, boys!"</p>
+
+<p>"Chuck that engine, Dan, and put in an alarm clock
+spring!"</p>
+
+<p>"Christmas is coming, Dan-u-el&mdash;we've graduated you
+know!"</p>
+
+<p>"'The Dove' doesn't want us to leave old Bannister,
+fellows!"</p>
+
+<p>Commencement was ended. The night before, on the stage of
+Alumni Hall,<br>
+before a vast audience of old Bannister grads, undergraduates,
+friends, and<br>
+relatives of the Seniors, the Class of 1919 had received its
+sheepskins,<br>
+and the "Go forth, my children, and live!" of its Alma Mater. T,
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., and timorous little Theophilus had jointly delivered
+the<br>
+Valedictory, eight other Seniors, including Butch, Scoop, and the
+lengthy<br>
+Ichabod, had swayed the crowd with oratory. Kindly old Prexy, his
+voice<br>
+tremulous, had talked to them, as students, for the last time.
+The Class<br>
+Ode had been sung, the Class Shield unveiled, and
+then&mdash;Hicks and his<br>
+comrades of '19 were alumni!</p>
+
+<p>It had been a busy, thrilling time, Commencement Week. There
+had been<br>
+scarcely any spare moments to ponder on the parting so soon to
+come; after<br>
+the memorable Athletic Association meeting, when T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+and his beloved Dad had been given a wonderful "surprise party"
+by the<br>
+collegians, and Hicks had corralled his three B's, time had
+"sprinted with<br>
+spiked shoes," as the sunny Hicks stated. Event had followed
+event in<br>
+bewildering fashion. The Seniors, dignified in cap and gown, had
+been f&ecirc;ted<br>
+and banqueted, the cynosure of all eyes. Campus and town were
+filled with<br>
+visitors. Old Bannister pulsated with renewed life, with the glad
+reunions<br>
+of former students. There had been the Alumni Banquet, the annual
+baseball<br>
+game between the 'Varsity and old-time Gold and Green diamond
+stars, Class<br>
+Night exercises, the Literary Society Oratorical Contests, and
+the last<br>
+Class Supper; and, Commencement had come.</p>
+
+<p>It was all ended now&mdash;the four happy, golden years of
+campus life, of glad<br>
+fellowship with each other; like those who had gone before, T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., and his comrades of 1919 had come to the final
+parting. The<br>
+sunny-souled youth's Dad had gone to New Haven, to Yale's
+Commencement.<br>
+Alumni and visitors had left town; the night before had witnessed
+farewells<br>
+with Monty, Roddy, Biff, Hefty, and the underclassmen, with that
+awakened<br>
+Colossus, John Thorwald. All the collegians had gone, except the
+few<br>
+Seniors now leaving, and they had remained to enjoy Hicks' final
+Beefsteak<br>
+Bust downtown at Jerry's.</p>
+
+<p>The campus was silent and deserted. No footsteps or voices
+echoed in the<br>
+dormitories, and a shadow of sadness hovered over all. The youths
+who were<br>
+leaving old Bannister forever felt an ache in their throats, and
+little<br>
+Theophilus Opperdyke's big-rimmed spectacles were fogged with
+tears. Three<br>
+times, in the past, they had left the campus, but this was
+forever, as<br>
+collegians!</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care if we miss the old train!" declared Scoop
+Sawyer, as the<br>
+jitney-Ford's engine wheezed, gasped, and was silent, for all of
+Dan's<br>
+cranking. "Just think, fellows, it's all over now&mdash;'We have
+come to the end<br>
+of our college days-golden campus years are at an end&mdash;!'
+Say, Hicks, old<br>
+man, what's your Idea. What future have you blue-printed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Journalism!" announced T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sticking a
+fountain pen<br>
+behind his ear, and fatuously supposing he resembled a City
+Editor, "In me<br>
+you behold an embryo Richard Harding Davis, or Ty&mdash;no, I
+mean Irvin Cobb.<br>
+I shall first serve my apprenticeship as a 'cub,' but ere many
+years, I<br>
+shall sit at a desk, run a newspaper, and tell the world where to
+get off."</p>
+
+<p>"That is&mdash;If Dad says so!" chuckled Butch Brewster. "You
+know, Hicks, it's<br>
+the same old story&mdash;your father wants you to learn how to
+own steel and<br>
+iron mills, and when it comes to a showdown, you must convince
+Mr. Thomas<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., that you'd make a better journalist than
+Steel King!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, nay-say not so!" responded the happy-go-lucky alumnus of
+old<br>
+Bannister, as the perspiring Dan Flannagan cranked away
+futilely. "My Dad<br>
+has a broader vision, fellows, than most men. He and I talked it
+over last<br>
+night, and he would never try to make me take up anything but a
+work that<br>
+appeals to me. While, as Butch says, he'd like to train me to
+follow in his<br>
+footsteps, he understands my ambition so thoroughly that he is
+trying to<br>
+get me started&mdash;read this:"</p>
+
+<p>The lovable youth produced a letter, the envelope bearing the
+heading: "THE<br>
+BALTIMORE CHRONICLE;" Butch Brewster, to whom he extended it,
+read aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Baltimore, Maryland,</p>
+
+<p>"June 12, 1919.</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR OLD CLASSMATE:</p>
+
+<p>"I'd sure like to be with you, back at old Yale, next week,
+but I can't<br>
+leave the wheel of this ship, the Chronicle, for even a day. Give
+my<br>
+regards to all of old Eli, '96, old man.</p>
+
+<p>"As regards a berth for your son, Thomas. The Chronicle
+usually takes<br>
+on a few college men during the summer, when our staff is off
+on<br>
+vacations. We always use undergraduates, and often, in two or
+three<br>
+summers, we develop them into star reporters. However, for old
+time's<br>
+sake, I'll be glad to give your son a chance, and if he means
+business,<br>
+let him report for duty next Friday, at 1 P.M., to my office.<br>
+Understand, Hicks, he must come here and fight his own way,
+without any<br>
+favor or special help from me. Were he the son of our
+nation's<br>
+President, I'd not treat him a whit better than the rest of the
+Staff,<br>
+so let him know that in advance. On the other hand, I'll develop
+him all<br>
+I can, and if he has the ability, the Chronicle long-room is the
+place<br>
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours for old Yale,</p>
+
+<p>"'Doc' Whalen, Yale, '96,</p>
+
+<p>"City Editor&mdash;THE CHRONICLE."</p>
+
+<p>"Here's my Dad's ultimatum," grinned Hicks, when. Butch
+finished the<br>
+letter. "I am to take a summer as a cub on the Baltimore
+Chronicle,<br>
+making my own way, and living on my weekly salary, without
+financial aid<br>
+from anyone. If, at the end of the summer, City Editor Whalen
+reports that<br>
+I've made good enough to be retained as a regular,
+then&mdash;Yours truly for<br>
+the Fourth Estate. If I fail, then I follow a course charted out
+by Mr.<br>
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.! So, it is up to me to make
+good&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you will make good, Hicks," quavered Theophilus,
+whose faith in the<br>
+shadow-like youth was prodigious. "Oh, that will be splendid, for
+I am<br>
+going to take a course at a business college in Baltimore. I want
+to become<br>
+an expert stenographer, and we'll be together."</p>
+
+<p>"It's work now, fellows!" sighed Beef McNaughton, shifting his
+huge bulk<br>
+atop of the jit "College years are ended, we're chucked into the
+world, to<br>
+make good, or fail! Butch and I have not decided on our work yet.
+We may<br>
+accept jobs as bank or railroad presidents, or maybe run for
+President<br>
+of the U.S.A., provided John McGraw or Connie Mack do not sign us
+up.<br>
+However&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that moment, the engine of old Dan Flannagan's battered
+"Dove" consented<br>
+to hit on two cylinders, and the genial Irishman, who was to
+transport<br>
+Hicks and his comrades, as collegians, for the last time, yelled,
+"All<br>
+aboard!" loudly, to conceal his emotion at the sad scene.</p>
+
+<p>"We're off!" shrieked Skeet Wigglesworth, stowed away below,
+as the<br>
+jitney-bus moved down the driveway. "Farewell, dear old
+Bannister! Run<br>
+slow, Dan, we want to gaze on the campus as long as we can."</p>
+
+<p>The youths were silent, as the 'bus rolled slowly down the
+driveway and<br>
+under the Memorial Arch, old Dan, sympathizing with them, and
+finding he<br>
+could make the express by a safe margin, allowing the jitney to
+flutter<br>
+along at reduced speed. From its top, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his
+vision<br>
+blurred with tears, gazed back with his class-mates. He saw the
+campus, its<br>
+grass green, with stately old elms bordering the walks, and the
+golden<br>
+June sunshine bathing everything in a soft radiance. He beheld
+the college<br>
+buildings&mdash;the Gym., the Science Hall, the Administration
+Building,<br>
+Recitation Hall, the ivy-covered Library; the white Chapel, and
+the four<br>
+dorms., Creighton, Smithson, Nordyke, Bannister. One year he had
+spent in<br>
+each, and every year had been one of happiness, of glad
+comradeship.<br>
+He could see Bannister Field, the scene of his many hilarious
+athletic<br>
+fiascos.</p>
+
+<p>And now he was leaving it all&mdash;had come to the end of his
+college course,<br>
+and before him lay Life, with its stern realities, its grim
+obstacles, and<br>
+hard struggles; ended were the golden campus days, the gay
+skylarking<br>
+in the dorms. Gone forever were the joyous nights of entertaining
+his<br>
+comrades, of Beefsteak Busts down at Jerry's. Silenced was his
+beloved<br>
+banjo, and no more would his saengerfests bother old
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>A turn in the street, and the campus could not be seen. As the
+last vision<br>
+of their Alma Mater vanished, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., smiling
+sunnily<br>
+through his tear-blurred eyes, gazed at his comrades of old
+'19&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Say, fellows&mdash;" he grinned, though his voice was shaky,
+"let's&mdash;let's<br>
+start in next September, and&mdash;do it all over again!"</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+***** This file should be named 8550-h.htm or 8550-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/8/5/5/8550/
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
+specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
+eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
+for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
+performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
+away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
+not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
+trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country outside the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
+ restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
+ under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
+ eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
+ are located before using this ebook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
+Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
+mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
+volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
+locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
+Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
+date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
+official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/8550-h/images/aw.jpg b/8550-h/images/aw.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fe36290
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-h/images/aw.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/8550-h/images/bw.jpg b/8550-h/images/bw.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b9f11c5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-h/images/bw.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/8550-h/images/cw.jpg b/8550-h/images/cw.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b4a0404
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-h/images/cw.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/8550-h/images/dw.jpg b/8550-h/images/dw.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ab58384
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550-h/images/dw.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/8550.txt b/8550.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a9a07fc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7004 @@
+Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+Title: T. Haviland Hicks Senior
+
+Author: J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Posting Date: August 22, 2014 [EBook #8550]
+Release Date: July, 2005
+First Posted: July 22, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR
+
+BY J. RAYMOND ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+TO MASTER LLOYD ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+ II. "LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+ III. HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+ IV. QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+ V. HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+ VI. HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+ VII. HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY
+ VIII. COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+ IX. THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+ X. THOR'S AWAKENING
+ XI. "ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+ XII. THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+ XIII. HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+ XIV. THE GREATER GOAL
+ XV. HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+ XVI. THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+ XVII. HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+ XVIII. T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.'S HEADWORK
+ XIX. BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+ XX. "VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, SENIOR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+
+
+ "Oh, a bold, bad man was Chuckwalla Bill--
+ An' he lived in a shanty on Tom-cat Hill;
+ Ten notches on the six-gun he toted on his hip--
+ For he'd sent ten buckos on the One-way Trip!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister College football
+squad, his behemoth bulk swathed in heavy blankets and crowded into a
+narrow bunk, shifted his vast tonnage restlessly. He was dreaming of the
+wild and woolly West, and like a six-reel Western drama thrown on the
+screen in a moving-picture show, he visioned in his slumbers a vivid and
+spectacular panorama.
+
+The first lurid scene was the Deserted Limited held up at a tank station in
+the great Mojave Desert by a lone, masked bandit who winged the dreaming
+Butch in the shoulder, the latter being an express guard who resisted.
+After the desperado, Two-Gun Steve, had forced the engineer to run the
+train back to a siding, he had ordered Butch to vamoose. Quite naturally,
+then, the collegian next found himself staggering across the arid expanse,
+until at last, half dead from a burning thirst, seeking vainly for a
+water-hole, the vast stretch of sandy, sagebrush-studded wastes shimmered
+into a gorgeous ocean of sparkling blue waters. Then, as he collapsed on
+the scorching-hot sand, helpless, the cool water so near, suddenly the
+scene shifted.
+
+In quick and vivid succession, Butch Brewster beheld a burning stockade
+besieged by howling Indians, and a frontier town shot up by recklessly
+riding cowboys on a jamboree. Then he became a tenderfoot, badgered by
+yelling, shooting roisterers, and later a sheriff, bravely leading his
+posse to a sensational battle with that same Two-Gun Steve and his gang,
+entrenched in a rock-bound mountain defile.
+
+Finally, he stood with hands above his head in company with other
+passengers of the Sagebrush Stagecoach, while a huge, red-shirted Westerner
+with a fierce black mustache and a six-shooter in each hand belching
+bullets at Butch's dancing feet, roared out huskily: "Oh--I'm a ring-tailed
+roarer (_bang-bang_)! I'm a rip-snortin', high-falutin', loop-the-loopin'
+_bad_ man (_bang-bang_)! I'm wild an' woolly, an' full o' fleas, an' hard
+to curry below the knees--I'm a roarin' wild-cat, an' it's my night to howl
+(_bang-bang_)! Yip-yip-yip-_yeee_!"
+
+Big Butch, opening his eyes and starting up, gazed about him in sheer
+surprise; for an instant, in that state of bewilderment that comes with
+sudden awakening, he almost believed himself in a Western ranch bunkhouse,
+and that some happy cowboy outside roared a grotesque ballad. He gazed at
+the interior of a rough shack built of pine boards, with bunks constructed
+in tiers on both sides. There were figures in them--Western cowboys,
+perhaps. Then it seemed, somehow, that the voice drifting from the outside
+was strangely familiar. Back at Bannister College, where he remembered he
+had gone in the dim and dusty past, he had often heard that same fog-horn
+voice, roaring songs of a less blood-curdling character, and accompanied by
+that same banjo twanging, which tortured the campus, and bothered would-be
+studious youths!
+
+"I'm not in a moving-picture show," Butch informed himself, as he donned
+khaki trousers, football sweater, and heavy shoes. "I'm not on a Western
+ranch, either. I'm in the sleep-shack of Camp Bannister, the football
+training-camp of the Bannister College squad! Those fellows in the bunks
+are not cowboys, Indians, and bandits--they are my teammates! I did dream
+stuff that would shame a Wild West scenario, but I understand it all
+now--my dreams were influenced by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+At that dramatic moment, to substantiate his statement, the raucous voice,
+accompanied by resounding chords strummed on a banjo, sounded again. The
+vocal and instrumental chaos was frequently punctured by revolver reports,
+as the torturesome Caruso outside roared:
+
+ "Oh, Chuckwalla Bill thought life was sweet--
+ Till he met up with Sure-shot Pete;
+ A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+The pachydermic Butch, fully dressed--and awake, raging in his wrath like
+an active volcano, glanced at his watch, and discovered that it was exactly
+five A.M.! Intensely pacified by this knowledge, he lumbered toward the
+bunkhouse door and flung it open, determined to crush the pestersome youth
+who thus unfeelingly disturbed the quietude of Camp Bannister at such an
+unearthly hour! However, his grim purpose was temporarily thwarted--before
+him spread a beautiful panorama, a vast canvas painted in rich hues and
+colors, that indescribably charming masterpiece of nature, entitled dawn.
+
+Butch, gazing from the bunkhouse doorway toward the pebbly shore of the
+placid lake stretching out for two miles before him, beheld Old Sol,
+blood-red, peeping above the wooded hills on the far-off, opposite strand
+of Lake Conowingo; the luminous orb laid a flaming pathway across the
+shimmering waters, and golden bars of light, like gleaming fingers
+outstretched, fell athwart the tall pines that towered on the high bluff
+back of the camp. The glorious sunshine, succeeding a flood of rosy color,
+inundated the scene; it bathed in a gorgeous radiance the early autumn
+woods, it illumined the bunkhouse, and another rude shanty known to the
+squad as the grub-shack, it poured down on old Hinky-Dink, the ancient
+negro cookee, setting the breakfast tables just outside the canvas
+cook-tent.
+
+"Deed, cross mah heart, Mistah Butch," grinned old Hinky-Dink, seeing, as
+a motion picture director would express it, "Wrath registered on the
+countenance" of Butch Brewster, "Ah done tole dat young Hicks dat a bird
+what cain't sing an' will sing mus' be made _not_ to sing! Ah done info'med
+him dat yo'-all was layin' fo' him, cause he done bus' up yo' sleep!"
+
+A jay bird, a flashing bit of vivid blue, shot from a tall pine, jeering
+shrilly at Butch; out on the lake, a trout leaped above the water for an
+infinitesimal second, its shining scales gleaming in the sunshine. From the
+cook-tent, where old Hinky-Dink grumbled at the frying pan, the appetizing
+odor of frying fish assailed the football captain, softening his wrath.
+
+High above the shanties, on a tall flagpole made from a straight young
+pine, floated a big gold and green banner, its bright colors gleaming in
+the sunshine; it bore the words:
+
+ CAMP BANNISTER
+ TRAINING CAMP
+ THE FOOTBALL SQUAD
+ BANNISTER COLLEGE
+
+Head Coach Corridan, smashing the precedent that had made former Gold and
+Green squads have their training camp at Bannister College, had brought
+the Varsity and second-string stars to this camp on the shore of Lake
+Conowingo, in the Pennsylvania mountains. For two weeks, one of which had
+passed, they were to train at Camp Bannister, until college officially
+opened; swimming, hunting, cross-country runs, and a healthful outdoor
+existence would give the athletes superb condition, and daily scrimmages on
+the level field back of the bluff rounded out an eleven that promised to be
+the strongest in Bannister history.
+
+As big, good-natured Butch Brewster stood in the bunkhouse doorway, his
+wrath at the pestiferous Hicks forgotten, in his rapture at the glorious
+dawn, he saw something that showed why his dreams had been of the wild
+West! The expression of indignation, however, yielded to one of humorous
+affection, as he gazed toward the shore.
+
+"I can't be angry with Hicks!" breathed Butch, beholding a spectacle more
+impressive than dawn. "So, the irrepressible wretch has Coach Corridan's
+revolvers, used in starting our training sprints, and a lot of blank
+cartridges! He is giving an imitation of a Western bad man. No wonder
+I dreamed of Indians, cowboys, and hold-ups; I'll have revenge on the
+heartless villain, routing me out at five!"
+
+He saw a massive rock, rising thirty feet in air, its sheer walls scaled
+only by a rope-ladder the collegians had rigged up on one side. Atop of
+"Lookout There!" as the campers humorously designated the rock, roosted
+a youth who possessed the colossal structure of a splinter, and whose
+cherubic countenance was decorated with a Cheshire cat grin. Quite unaware
+that his riotous efforts had brought out the wrathful Butch Brewster,
+the youthful narrator of Chuckwalla Bill's stormy career continued his
+excessively noisy seance.
+
+His costume was strictly in character with his song. He wore a sombrero,
+picked up on his Exposition trip the past vacation, a lurid red
+outing-shirt, and he had wrapped a blanket around each locomotive limb to
+imitate a cowboy's chaps. Two revolvers suspended from a loosened belt, _a
+la_ wild West, and as Butch stared, the embryo Western bad man twanged a
+banjo noisily, and roared the concluding stanza of his desperado hero's
+history:
+
+ "Said Chuckwalla Bill, 'Oh, boys, plant me
+ With my boots on--on the wide prair-eee'--
+ Where the coyotes howl, they planted Bill--
+ An' so far as _I_ know, he's sleepin' there still!"
+
+"Here they come," grinned Butch, hearing a tumult in the bunkhouse, and
+a confused Babel of voices. "Hicks has awakened the camp. Now watch the
+fellows wreak summary vengeance on his toothpick frame!"
+
+From the sleep-shack, aroused at that weird hour by the clamor of the
+irrepressible youth, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., tumbled others of the squad,
+in varying stages of _deshabille_; big Beef McNaughton, right half-back,
+Roddy Perkins, the Titian-haired right-end, Pudge Langdon, a ponderous
+tackle, and Monty Merriweather, a clean-cut, aggressive candidate for left
+end. From within, other wrathy youths howled vociferous protests at their
+tormentor:
+
+"Stop that noise; put your muzzle on again, Hicks!"--"Where's the fire?
+Say, Hicks, muffle your exhaust!"--"Say, Coach, must we endure this day and
+night?"
+
+The bunkhouse fairly erupted angry collegians, boiling out like bees
+swarming from a disturbed hive; Hefty Hollingsworth, the Herculean
+center-rush. Biff Pemberton, left half-back, Bunch Bingham, Tug Cardiff,
+and Buster Brown, three huge last-year substitutes; second-string players,
+Don Carterson, Cherub Challoner, Skeet Wigglesworth, and Scoop Sawyer. A
+dozen others, from sheer laziness, hugged their bunks devotedly, despite
+the terrific turmoil outside.
+
+"It's a disgrace, a _howling_ shame!" exploded Beef, his elephantine frame
+swathed in blankets to conceal a lack of vestiture, "Last night, until
+midnight, that graceless wretch roosted on 'Lookout There' and because the
+glorious moonlight made him sentimental and slushy, he twanged his banjo
+and warbled such mushy stuff as 'My Love is young and fair. My Love has
+golden hair!' When does he expect us to sleep?"
+
+"He doesn't!" explained Monty Merriweather, with succinct lucidity,
+grinning at his comrades. "Say, fellows, you know how Hicks dreads a cold
+shower-bath; well, some of you rage at him from the other side of the rock,
+while _I_ climb up the rope-ladder and close with him! Then some of you
+prehistoric pachyderms ascend, and we'll chuck that pestersome insect into
+the cold, cold lake--"
+
+"Done!" chuckled Butch Brewster, delightedly. So, while he, Beef
+McNaughton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and others beguiled the jeering Hicks,
+expressing in dynamic, red-hot sentences their exact opinions of his
+perfidy, the athletic Monty imitated a mountain-scaling Italian soldier.
+He climbed stealthily up the swaying rope-ladder; nearer and nearer to the
+unsuspecting youth he crept, while the cherubic Hicks, to tantalize the
+group below, again burst forth:
+
+"_Whoop-eee_! I'm a bold, _bad_ man (_bang-bang_)! I got ten notches on my
+ole six-gun--I'm a _killer_. I wings a man before breakfast every day! I
+got a private burying-ground, where I plants my victims (_bang-bang_)!
+Yip-yip-yip-_yee_! Oh, I'm a--_Ouch_, Monty--leggo me--Oh, I'll be
+good--why didn't I pull that rope-ladder up here? Don't bust my
+banjo--don't let Butch get me--"
+
+Monty Merriweather, reaching the flat top of the rock, had courageously
+flung himself, without regard for the Bad Man's desperate record, on the
+startled Hicks, whose first thought was for his beloved banjo. While he
+held the blithesome tormentor helpless, Butch, Beef, and Roddy Perkins
+climbed the rope-ladder, and the grinning youth was soon in their clutches,
+while the collegians below, like a Roman, mob aroused by the oratory of Mr.
+Mark Antony, howled for revenge:
+
+"Bust the old banjo over his head, Butch!"--"Sing to him, Beef--that's
+an _awful_ revenge on Hicks!"--"Tie him to the rock--make him miss his
+breakfast!"
+
+"Hicks," growled Butch, eyeing his sunny comrade ominously, "you ought to
+be tarred and feathered, and shot at sunrise! When Bannister opens, you
+will be a Senior, and you'll disgrace '19's dignity! This is a sample of
+what we have endured at college for three years, and the worst is yet to
+come! You have committed the awful atrocity of awakening Camp Bannister
+at five A. M. with your ridiculous imitation, of a Western desperado. To
+dampen your ardor, we will chuck you into the cold lake--just as you are!"
+
+"Help! Assistance! Aid! Succor!" shouted the happy-go-lucky Hicks, as the
+behemoth Butch and Beef seized him, swinging him aloft with ludicrous ease,
+"Police! Fire! Murder! Take care of my banjo, Monty. Tell all the fellows
+at old Bannister I died game, and plant Hair-Trigger Bill with his boots
+on! _Oooo_, Beef, Butch, _have a heart_, that water is _cold_!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., relieved of banjo and revolvers, but his
+shadow-like structure still clad in shoes, trousers, with imitation "chaps"
+and flamboyant red shirt, with his classic head still adorned by
+the sombrero, was swung back and forth by the two bulky football
+stars--once--twice--
+
+"_Three_--Let him go!" shouted Butch Brewster, and like a falling meteor,
+the splinter-like youth, who had already fallen from grace, shot from the
+rock, head-first, disappearing with a spectacular splash in the icy waters
+of Lake Conowingo. Knowing Hicks to be as much at home in the water as a
+fish in an aquarium, the hilarious squad on shore prepared to jeer his
+reappearance above the water; however, their program was interrupted by
+old Hinky-Dink, who stood in the cook-tent doorway, belaboring a dishpan
+lustily with a soup-ladle, and shouting:
+
+"Breakfus' am served; fus' an' las' call fo' breakfus; all dem what am late
+don't git no breakfus!"
+
+"Breakfast!" exclaimed Monty Merriweather, who, with Roddy, Butch, and
+Beef, remained on the rock, despite the summons of the Cookee. "Hurry up,
+Hicks, I'm ravenous. Say, Butch, suppose all that Western regalia makes him
+water-logged; he's a terribly long while down there! Didn't he look like
+the hero in a moving-picture feature? We've given him the water-cure, but
+he will do that same stunt over again. That sunny-souled Hicks is simply
+Incorrigible!"
+
+A second later, the grinning, cheery countenance of T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., shot above the water, and simultaneously with his appearance, just as
+though he had been chanting below the surface, for the entertainment of the
+finny denizens of Lake Conowingo, the irrepressible youth roared:
+
+ "A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-Shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+
+
+Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, known to toil-tortured Gold and Green
+football squads from time immemorial as "the Slave-Driver," Captain Butch
+Brewster, and serious Deacon Radford, the star Bannister quarter-back,
+foregathered around a table in the Camp Bannister grub-shack.
+
+It was ten-thirty of the morning whose dawn T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+blithesomely hailed with an impromptu musicale and saengerfest on "Lookout
+There!" rock, and the football triumvirate were in togs. The squad, over in
+the bunkhouse, noisily donned gridiron armor for the morning practice, and
+the pestiferous Hicks was maintaining a mysterious silence, somewhere.
+
+This football trio, on whom rested the responsibility of rounding out a
+winning Bannister eleven, vastly resembled a coterie of German generals,
+back of the trenches, studying a war-map. Before them was spread what
+seemed to be a large checker-board. It was a miniature gridiron, with the
+chalk-marks painted in white; there were thumb-tacks stuck here and there,
+some with flat tops painted green and gold, others, representing the enemy,
+were solid red. The former had names printed on them, Butch, Roddy,
+Beef, and so on. By sticking these on the board, the three directors of
+Bannister's football destiny could work out new plays, and originate
+possible winning lineups.
+
+"We've just got to win the State Championship this season, Coach!" declared
+Butch, banging the table emphatically, as he stated a self-evident fact.
+"It's my last year for Old Bannister, and so with Beef and Pudge. I'll give
+every ounce of strength I possess In every game, to make that pennant float
+over Bannister Field!"
+
+"Bannister _will_ win it!" vowed the behemoth Beef, his good-natured
+countenance grim, and his jaw set. "Not for five years has a Gold and Green
+team won the Championship--not since the year before Butch and I were
+Freshmen! We've got a splendid bunch of material to build a team with,
+and--"
+
+"Our biggest problem is this," spoke Coach Corridan, as with a phenomenal
+display of strength he took Beef McNaughton between thumb and forefinger
+and placed him on the field. "We must strengthen both line and backfield,
+for we lost by graduation Babe McCabe, Heavy Hughes, and Jack Merritt. Now,
+to replace that lost power--"
+
+Just then, from directly beneath the open window by which they had
+gathered, like the midnight serenade of a romantic lover, sounded
+the well-known foghorn voice of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as to the
+plunkety-plunk of a banjo accompaniment, he warbled melodiously:
+
+ "Gone are the days--I used to spend with Car-o-li-nah!
+ She had the sunshine in her laughter (_plunkety-plunk_)
+ Just like that state they named her after--"
+
+"_Hicks_!" announced Butch, stealthily approaching the window, and
+beckoning his companions. "Easy--look at him, Deke, there he is, Hicks,
+the irrepressible! We might as well attempt to stab a rhinocerous to death
+with a humming-bird's feather, as to try and reform _him_!"
+
+Arrayed like a lily of the field, a model of sartorial splendor, Hicks
+occupied a chair beneath the window, tilted back gracefully against the
+side of the grub-shack. He had decked his splinter-structure with a
+dazzling Palm Beach suit, and a glorious pink silk shirt, off-set by a
+lurid scarf. A Panama hat decorated his head, white Oxfords and flamboyant
+hosiery adorned his feet, while the inevitable Cheshire cat grin beautified
+his cherubic countenance. A latest "best seller" was propped on his knees,
+and as he perused its thrilling pages, he carelessly strummed his beloved
+banjo, and in stentorian tones chanted a sentimental ballad:
+
+ "Gone are the days--the golden days I'm dreaming of,
+ I think I hear her softly calling (plunkety-plunk)
+ 'Will you be back? Will you be back? (plunk-plunk)
+ Back to the Car-o-li-nah you love?'"(plunkety-plunk),
+
+For three golden campus years T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had gayly pursued the
+even tenor (or _basso_, since he possessed a foghorn, subterranean voice)
+of his Bannister career. He absolutely refused to take life seriously, and
+he was forever arousing the wrath--mostly pretended, for no one could be
+really angry with the genial youth--of his comrades, by twanging his banjo
+and roaring out rollicking ballads at all hours. He was never so happy
+as when entertaining a crowd of happy students in his cozy quarters,
+or escorting a Hicks' Personally Conducted expedition downtown for a
+Beef-Steak Bust, at his expense, at Jerry's, the rendezvous of hungry
+collegians.
+
+However, despite his butterfly existence, Hicks, possessed of a
+scintillating mind, always set the scholastic pace for 1919, by means of
+occasional study-sprints, as he characteristically called them. But when it
+came to helping his beloved Dad realize a long-cherished ambition to behold
+his only son and heir shatter Hicks, Sr.'s, celebrated athletic records, it
+was a different story. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., ever since he committed
+the farcical _faux pas_ of running the wrong way with the pigskin in
+the Freshman-Sophomore football contest of his first year, had been a
+super-colossal athletic joke at old Bannister.
+
+His record to date, beside that reverse touchdown that won for the
+Sophomores, consisted of scoring a home-run with the bases congested, on a
+strike-out; of smashing hurdles and cross-bars on the track; endangering
+his heedless career with the shot and hammer; and making a ridiculous farce
+of every event he entered, to the vast hilarity of the students, who, with
+the exception of Butch Brewster, had no idea his ridiculous efforts were in
+earnest. In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable promise,
+which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.
+
+Hicks, the lovable, impulsive, and irrepressible, with his invariable sunny
+disposition, his generous nature, and his democratic, loyal comradeship
+for everybody, was loved by old Bannister. The students forgave him his
+pestersome ways, his frequent torturing of them with banjo-twanging and
+rollicking ballads. His classmates idolized him, Juniors and Sophomores
+were his true friends, and entering Freshmen always regarded this
+happy-go-lucky youth as a demigod of the campus.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who was forever futilely lecturing the heedless Hicks,
+thrust his head from the grub-shack window, fought down a grin, and sternly
+arraigned his graceless comrade:
+
+"Hicks, you frivolous, campus-cluttering, infinitesimal atom of nothing,
+you labor under the insane delusion that college life is a continuous
+vaudeville show. You absolutely refuse to take your Bannister years
+seriously, you banjo-thumping, pillow-punishing, campus-torturing
+nonentity. You will never grasp the splendid opportunities within your
+reach! You have no ambition but to strum that banjo, roar ridiculous songs,
+fuss up like a tailor's dummy, and pester your comrades, or drag them down
+to Jerry's for the eats! You won't be earnest, you Human Cipher, Before you
+entered Bannister, you formed your ideas and ideals of campus life from
+colored posters, moving-pictures, magazine stories, and stage dramas like
+'Brown of Harvard'; you have surely lived up, or down, to those ideals,
+you--"
+
+"Them's harsh words, Butch!" joyously responded the grinning Hicks,
+unchastened, for he knew good Butch Brewster would not, for a fortune, have
+him forsake his care-free nature. "Thou loyal comrade of my happy campus
+years, what wouldst thou of me?--have me don sack-cloth and ashes, strike
+'The Funeral March' on my golden lyre, and cry out in anguish, _'ai! ai_!
+'Nay, nay, a couple of nays; college years are all too brief; hence I
+shall, by my own original process, extract from them all the sunshine and
+happiness possible, and by my wonderful musical and vocal powers, bring joy
+to my colleagues, who--_Ouch_, Butch--look out for that nail, you inhuman
+elephant--"
+
+Big Butch, at that juncture of Hicks' monologue, had effectively terminated
+it by leaning from the window, grasping his unsuspecting comrade by the
+scruff of the neck, and dragging him over the window-ledge, into the
+grub-shack, and the presence of Coach Corridan and Deacon Radford.
+Strenuous objection was registered, both by the futilely struggling Hicks,
+and a nail projecting from the sill, which caught in the Palm Beach
+trousers and ripped a long rent in them; fortunately, Hicks' anatomy
+escaped a similar fate.
+
+"A ripping good move, eh-what?" chuckled Hicks, twisting like a
+contortionist, to view the damage done his vestiture, "Hello, what have we
+here?--the German field-map, by the Van Dyke beard of the Prophet! I
+bring the Kaiser's order, ham and eggs, and a cup of coffee. No, that's a
+mistake. General Hen Von Kluck, lead a brigade of submarines up yon hill to
+thunder the Russian fort! Von Hindering-Bug, send a flock of aeroplanes and
+Zeppelins to the Allied trenches, the enemy is shooting Russian caviare
+at--"
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster's indignation,
+"you are such a wonder at solving perplexing problems by your marvelous
+'inspirations,' suppose you turn the scintillating searchlight of your
+colossal intellect upon the question that Bannister must solve, to produce
+a championship eleven!"
+
+It was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, inveterate habit, whenever a baffling
+situation, or what the French call an "_impasse_" presented itself, to
+state with the utmost confidence, "Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" On
+most occasions, when he made this remark, accompanied by a swaggering
+braggadocio that never failed to make good Butch Brewster wrathful, the
+happy-go-lucky youth possessed not the slightest idea of how the problem
+was to be solved. He just uttered his rash promise, and then trusted to his
+needed inspiration to illuminate a way out! And, as the Bannister campus
+well knew, Hicks had solved more than one torturing question by an
+inspiration that flashed on his intellect, when all hope of a satisfactory
+solution seemed dead.
+
+For example, in his Sophomore year, when the Freshman leader, James
+Roderick Perkins, that same Titian-haired Roddy who was now a bulwark at
+right end, became charged with a Napoleonic ambition, and organized a
+Freshman Equal Rights campaign, paralyzing Bannister football by refusing
+to allow Freshmen to try for athletic teams, unless their demands were
+granted. Hicks, when his inspiration finally smote him, smashed the
+Votes-for-Freshmen crusade, and quelled Roddy, Futilely racking his brain
+for a counter-attack, having blithely told the troubled campus, "Just leave
+it to Hicks," he had ceased to worry, and then the inspiration had come, By
+The Big Brotherhood of Bannister giving the upper-classmen full government
+over Freshmen, a scheme successfully carried through, the peril had been
+thwarted.
+
+"I got a letter from Dad yesterday," began Hicks, somewhat irrelevantly,
+considering the Coach's remarks, "and he said--"
+
+"'--Inclosed find the check you wrote for,'" quoth Deacon Radford,
+humorously. "'If you keep up this pace, I shall have to turn my steel
+mills to producing war munitions, to pay your college bills.' Say, Hicks,
+seriously, listen to our problem, and suggest what Coach Corridan should
+do."
+
+While Hicks' athletic powers were known to equal those of the paralyzed
+oldest inhabitant of a Civil War Veterans' Home, the sunny youth knew
+football thoroughly; often he originated plays that the team worked out
+with success, and his suggestions were always weighed carefully by the
+football directors. So, after he had adjusted his lurid scarf at the
+correct angle, and gazed ruefully at his torn habiliments, the sunshiny
+Senior seated himself at the table, before the "war-map," and gave heed to
+the Coach.
+
+[Illustration A: 'Here's the problem, Hicks']
+
+"Here's the problem, Hicks," said the Slave-Driver, indicating the
+Bannister eleven, represented by the gold and green topped thumb-tacks.
+"From the line we lost Babe, a tackle, Heavy, a guard, and Jack Merritt, a
+star end. Now, Monty Merriweather will hold down Jack's place O. K.--I can
+shift Beef from right half to guard, and put Butch at right-half, while
+Bunch Bingham can take care of Babe's old berth at tackle. But I have no
+one to shoot in at full-back, when I shift Butch; you see, Hicks, my plan
+is to build an eleven that can execute old-time, line-smashing football,
+and up-to-date open play as well; I want fast ends and halves, with a
+snappy quarter, and I have them; also, the backfield is heavy enough for
+line-bucking, if I get my beefy full-back. I must have a big, heavy, fast
+player, a giant who simply can't be stopped when he hits the line. With
+Butch and Biff at halves, Deke at quarter. Roddy and Monty ends, and my
+heavy line--why, a ponderous, irresistible Hercules at full-back will--"
+
+"Say!" grinned the irrepressible Hicks, as Coach Corridan warmed up to
+his vision, "you don't want _much_, Coach! Why don't you ask Ted Coy, the
+famous ex-Yale full-back, to give up his business and play the position for
+you? Maybe you can persuade Charlie Brickley, a _fair_ sort of dropkicker,
+to quit coaching Hopkins, and kick a few goals for old Bannister! I get
+you, Coach--you want a fellow about the size of the _Lusitania,_ made of
+structural steel, a Brobdingnagian Colossus who will guarantee to advance
+the ball fifteen yards per rush, or money refunded!
+
+"Why, Coach, while you are wanting things, just wish for a chap who will
+play the entire game himself, taking the ball down the field, while the
+rest of the team are pushed along in rolling-chairs, while imbibing pink
+tea. Get a prodigy who will instill such terror into our rivals that
+instead of playing the schedule, Bannister will simply arrange with other
+teams to mark themselves down defeated, and then agree what the scores
+shall be."
+
+"I knew it!" growled Butch Brewster, glowering at the jocular youth. "We
+should never have consulted him on this problem, for it is not one within
+his power to solve, even though he performed the miracle of talking
+seriously about it Now--"
+
+"Now--" echoed Hicks, with pretended seriousness, "Coach, you just hand me
+the blue-prints and specifications of said Gargantuan Hercules, and I'll
+try to corrall just such a phenomenon as you desire. Never hesitate to
+consult me on such important matters, for I am ever-ready to cast aside my
+own multifarious duties, when my Alma Mater needs my mental assistance,
+or--"
+
+"Hicks, are you _crazy_?" fleered Deacon Radford, moved to excitement,
+despite his great faith in the versatile youth. "Full-backs like that do
+not grow on trees; the only one I ever read of was _Ole Skjarsen_, in
+George Fitch's 'Siwash College Stories,' and he was purely fictitious. We
+know you have accomplished some great things by your 'inspirations,' but as
+for this--"
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks" quoth the irrepressible youth, swaggering toward
+the door with an affected nonchalant self-confidence that aroused Butch to
+wrath, and vastly amused his companions. "I'll admit a human juggernaut
+like Coach Corridan dreams of will be hard to round up, but, I'll have an
+inspiration soon. Don't worry about your old eleven, your problem will be
+solved, and you will have a team that can play fifty-seven varieties of
+football. _Raw revolver_, my comrades."
+
+When the graceless T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had sauntered gracefully out of
+the grub-shack, big Butch Brewster, almost exploding with suppressed wrath,
+stared at Slave-Driver Corridan and staid Deacon Radford a full minute;
+then he grinned,
+
+"That--Hicks!" he murmured, struggling against a desire to laugh. "What a
+ridiculous prophecy! 'Just leave it to Hicks!' Well, that means the problem
+goes unsolved, for though I confess he _is_ brilliant, and his so-called
+'inspirations' have helped old Bannister; when it comes to rushing out and
+lassoing a smashing. Herculean full-back--_bah_!"
+
+Ten minutes later, when Coach Corridan and the Gold and Green squad climbed
+the bluff to the field back of Camp Bannister, for morning signal drill,
+their last memory was of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., arrayed in radiant
+vestiture, his chair tilted against the bunkhouse--the chords of the banjo,
+and his foghorn voice drifting to them on the warm September air:
+
+ "Oh, father and mother pay all the bills (_plunk-plunk_)
+ And we have all the fun (_plunkety-plunk_)
+ With the money that we spend in college life!"
+
+Two hours afterward, as a tired, perspiring squad scrambled down the bluff,
+and made for the cool waters of Lake Conowingo, a mysterious silence,
+like a mighty wave, literally surged toward them. Camp Bannister seemed
+deserted, the sun was still shining, the birds sang as cheerily as ever,
+but instinctively the collegians felt an indescribable loneliness, a sense
+of tremendous loss.
+
+"_Hicks_!" shouted Butch Brewster, loudly, his voice shattering the
+stillness. "Hicks--ahoy! I say, Hicks--"
+
+Old Hinky-Dink, a letter in his hand, hobbled from the cook-tent toward
+them; like a sinister harbinger of evil he advanced, grinning deprecatingly
+at the squad:
+
+"Mistah Hicks am gone!" he announced importantly. "He done gib me fo' bits
+to row him ober to de village, to cotch de noon 'spress fo' Philadelphy!
+Heah am a letter what he lef'--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, to whom the _billet-doux_ was addressed in T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while the squad
+listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled youth;
+
+
+"DEAR BUTCH:
+
+"Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on! I'm called
+away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow it in the
+room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next century.
+Give my _adieux_ to Coach Corridan and the squad.
+
+"Yours truthfully,
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.
+
+"P.S.: Tell Coach Corridan he should worry--_not_! I'm hot on the trail of
+a fullback that will make Ted Coy at his coyest look like the paralyzed
+inmate of an old man's home. Just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+
+
+ "Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ _H-i-c-k-s_!
+ Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ If you've seen him, answer, 'Yes!'
+ He's tall and slim, and he wears a grin,
+ And his banjo-thumping is a sin.
+ Has _anybody_ here seen our Hicks--
+ Hicks--and his old banjo?"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, big Beef McNaughton, the Phillyloo Bird--that
+flamingo-like Senior--and little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous boner
+whom Bannister College called the "Human Encyclopedia," roosted on the
+sacred Senior Fence, between the Gymnasium and the Administration Building.
+A gloomy silence, like a somber mantle, enshrouded the four members of '19,
+as they listened to a rollicking parody on, "Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?"
+chanted by some Juniors in Nordyke, with T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the
+object of solicitude. Nor did the melancholy youths respond to the queries
+hurled down at them from the dormitories' windows:
+
+"Say, Butch Brewster, where is that crazy Hicks?"
+
+"Beef, ain't our Hicks a-comin' back here no more?"
+
+"Hello, Phillyloo, any word from our Hicks yet?"
+
+"Ahoy there, Theophilus, where is Hicks, the Missing?"
+
+The seven-thirty study-hour bell was ringing, its mellow chimes sounding
+from the Administration Building tower. From the windows of the dormitories
+gleams of light shot athwart the darkness. Over in Creighton Hall, the
+abode of Freshmen, a silence reigned, but in Smithson, where the Sophomores
+roomed, Nordyke, home of the Juniors, and Bannister, haunt of the solemn
+Seniors, pandemonium obtained. In these dorm. rooms and corridors that
+night, just as in the class-rooms, or on the campus, and Bannister Field
+that day, there was but one topic. Whenever two students met, came the
+query inevitable:
+
+"Where is Hicks? Isn't Hicks coming back this year?"
+
+The Freshmen, bewildered, quite naturally, at the furore made over
+one missing student, asked, "Who is Hicks?" Seeking information from
+upper-classmen they received innumerable tales, in the nature of Iliad
+and Odyssey, concerning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; they heard of his campus
+exploits, such as his originating The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, and
+they laughed, at recitals of his athletic fiascos. They were told of his
+inevitably sunny nature, his loyal comradeship, his generous disposition,
+and as a result, the Freshmen, too, became intensely interested in the
+all-important campus problem: "Where is T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.?"
+
+Little Theophilus Opperdyke, whose big-rimmed spectacles, high forehead,
+and bushy hair gave him an intensely owlish appearance, sighed
+tremendously, stared solemnly at his class-mates, and became the author of
+a most astounding statement: "I--I can't study," quavered the "boner,"
+he whose tender devotion to his books was a campus tradition, and whose
+loyalty to his firm friend, the blithesome Hicks, was as that of Damon
+to Pythias, "I just _can't_ care about my studies, without Hicks here!
+Somehow, it--it doesn't seem like old times, on the campus."
+
+"I should say not!" ejaculated the Phillyloo Bird, sepulchrally, his
+string-bean length draped with extreme decorative effect on the Senior
+Fence, "Life at old Bannister without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is about as
+interesting as 'The Annual Report of the Department of Agriculture!'
+Prexy thought he started the college on its Marathon three days ago, but
+Bannister will not be officially opened until Hicks stands by his window
+some study-hour, twangs that old banjo, and shatters the campus quietude
+with a ballad roared in his fog-horn voice!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, enshrouded in melancholy, instinctively gazed up at the
+windows of the room T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had reserved on the third floor
+of Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., as if he fully expected to behold
+the missing youth materialize. There, in lonely grandeur, waited the
+sunny-souled Senior's vast aggregation of trunks, crates, and packing
+boxes, together with Hicks' baggage brought down from Camp Bannister. The
+bothersome banjo had disappeared at the same time the youthful Caruso
+imitated the Arabs, folding his figurative tent, and stealing away.
+
+"It's a strange paradox," boomed Butch Brewster, finding that no Hicks
+appeared at the window, "but for three years Bannister has stormed at Hicks
+for bothering us during study-hour, or at midnight, with his saengerfest,
+and now I'd give anything to see him up there, and to hear that banjo, and
+his songs! It is just as if the sun doesn't shine on the campus, when T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., is away!"
+
+Bannister College had been running for three days "on one cylinder," as
+the Phillyloo Bird quaintly phrased it, on account of the gladsome Hicks'
+mysterious absence. Not a word had the Head Coach, Captain Brewster, the
+football squad, or any of the collegians received from the blithesome
+youth, since the _billet-doux_ he left with old Hinky-Dink at Camp
+Bannister. Old students, returning to the campus for another golden year,
+invaded Hicks' room in Bannister, ready to enjoy the cozy den of that
+jolly Senior, but they encountered silence and desolation. No one had the
+slightest knowledge of where the cheery Hicks could be; they missed his
+singing and banjo strumming, his pestersome ways, his cheerful good nature,
+his cozy quarters always open house to all, and his Hicks' Personally
+Conducted tours downtown to Jerry's for those celebrated Beefsteak Busts.
+
+A telegram to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., in Pittsburgh, sent by the
+worried Butch Brewster, had brought this concise response:
+
+No knowledge of Thomas' whereabouts. He should be at Bannister.
+
+"Queer," reflected Beef McNaughton, shifting his bulk on the protesting
+fence. "We know Hicks will be back, for all his luggage is stowed away
+in his room, and we are sure he is giving us all this mystery just for a
+joke--he dearly loves to arrange a sensational and dramatic climax--but
+we just can't get used to his not being on the campus. When Theophilus
+Opperdyke can't study, it's high time the S.O.S. signal was sent to T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+"That is not the worst of it," growled Captain Butch Brewster, his arm
+across little Theophilus' shoulders. "The football squad misses Hicks,
+Beef. For the past two seasons he has sat at the training-table, his
+invariable good-humor, his Cheshire cat grin, and his sunny ways have kept
+the fellows in fine mental trim so they haven't worried over the game. But
+now, just as soon as he left Camp Bannister, the barometer of their spirits
+went down to zero and every meal at training-table is a funeral. Coach
+Corridan can't inject any pep into the scrimmages, and he says if Hicks
+doesn't return soon, Bannister's chances of the Championship are gone."
+
+"As Theophilus says," responded the gloomy Beef, "we just can't get used
+to his not being here. We miss his good-nature, his sunny smile, the jolly
+crowds in his cozy quarters--why, the campus is talking of nothing but
+Hicks--and I don't know what Bannister will do after Hicks graduates--shut
+down, I suppose!"
+
+"Well, you know," grinned the Phillyloo Bird, his cadaverous structure
+humped over like a turkey on the roost, "our Hicks hath sallied forth on
+the trail of a full-back, a Hercules who will smash the other elevens to
+infinitesimal smithereens! He told the squad to just leave it to Hicks,
+so don't be surprised if he is making flying trips to Yale, Harvard, and
+Princeton, striving to corral some embryo Ted Coy. Remember how Hicks often
+fulfills his rash prophecies!"
+
+"A Herculean full-back--_Bah_!" fleered Butch, for all the campus knew of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, extremely rash vow to unearth a "phenom." "The
+truth of it is, fellows. Hicks has failed to locate such a wonder as Coach
+Corridac outlined, for there ain't no such animal! He doesn't like to
+come back to Bannister without having made good his promise, without that
+Gargantuan giant he vowed to round up for the Gold and Green."
+
+Just then, as if to substantiate Butch's jeering statement, a youth wearing
+the uniform and cap of The Western Union Telegraph Company and
+advancing across the campus at that terrific speed always exhibited by
+messenger-boys, appeared in the offing. Periscoping the four Seniors on the
+fence, he navigated his course accordingly and pulling a yellow envelope
+from his cap, he queried, in charmingly chaste English:
+
+"Say, kin youse tell me where to find a feller name o' Brewster, wot's
+cap'n o' de football bunch?"
+
+"Right here, Little Nemo," advised the Phillyloo Bird, solemnly. "Hast thou
+any messages from New York for me? John D. Rockefeller promised to wire me
+whether or not to purchase war-stocks."
+
+The Phillyloo Bird, at this stage of his monologue, was interrupted by a
+yell that would have caused a full-blooded Choctaw Indian to turn pale.
+This came from good Butch Brewster, who, having signed for the message,
+and imagined all manner of catastrophes, from world-wars, earthquakes,
+pestilence and loss of wealth, down to bad news from Hicks, after the
+fashion of those receiving telegrams but seldom, had scanned the yellow
+slip. Never before, or afterward, not even when the luckless Butch fell in
+love, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., assisted Cupid, did the pachydermic Butch
+act so insanely as on this occasion.
+
+"Whoop-_eee! Yee-ow! Wow-wow-wow_!" howled the supposedly solemn Senior,
+tumbling from the Senior fence and rolling on the campus like a decapitated
+rooster. "Hip-hip-_hooray_! Ring the bell, Beef, get the fellows out, have
+the Band ready, Oh, where is Coach Corridan? Read it, Beef, Theophilus,
+Phillyloo. Oh, Hicks is _coming_ and he's got--"
+
+It is possible that little Theophilus, who firmly believed that big Butch
+Brewster had gone emotionally insane, would have fled for help, but at that
+juncture members of the Gold and Green football squad, with Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan, appeared, marching funereally toward the Gym.,
+where a signal quiz was booked for seven forty-five. Beholding the
+paralyzing spectacle of their captain apparently in paroxysms on the grass,
+Hefty Hollingsworth, Biff Pemberton, Monty Merriweather and Pudge Langdon
+hurled themselves on his tonnage, while Roddy Perkins sat on his head, and
+wrested the telegram from his grasp,
+
+"Call up Matteawan," shouted Roddy, unfolding the slip, "Butch is getting
+barmy in the dome, he--Oh, Coach, fellows--_great joy_! Just heed."
+
+James Roderick Perkins, as excited as a Senator about to make his first
+speech, read aloud the telegram, on which the heedless Hicks had triple
+rates:
+
+
+"BUTCH:
+
+"Coming 8.30 P. M. express today. Discharge entire eleven--got whole team
+in one. Knock out partitions between five rooms. Make space for Thor, the
+Prodigious Prodigy! Leave it to Hicks!
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR."
+
+
+"_Hicks is coming_!" shrieked the Phillyloo Bird, soaring down from the
+Senior Fence like a condor. "He will be here in less than an hour; he sent
+this wire just before his train left Philadelphia. Money is no object, when
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister."
+
+"'Discharge entire eleven,'" quoth Butch Brewster, having somewhat subdued
+his frenzy. "'Got whole team in one--knock out partitions between _five_
+rooms--make space for Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy!' Now, what in the world
+has that lunatical Hicks done? Who can Thor be?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Buster Brown, Bunch Bingham, Scoop Sawyer, little Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Don Carterson, and Cherub Challoner, not having given their
+brawn to the subduing of Butch, now kindly donated their brain, in all
+manner of weird suggestions. According to their various surmises, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., had lured the Strong Man away from Barnum and Bailey's
+Circus, had in some way reincarnated the mythical Norse god, Thor, had
+hired some Greco-Roman wrestler, or by other devices too numerous and
+ridiculous to mention, had produced a full-back according to Coach
+Corridan's blue-prints and specifications.
+
+Big Beef McNaughton, seized with an inspiration that supplied
+locomotive-power to his huge frame, lumbered into the Gym., and soon
+appeared with monster megaphones, used in "rooting" for Gold and Green
+teams, which he handed out to his comrades. Then the riotous squad, at his
+suggestion, sprinted for the Quad., that inner quadrangle or court around
+which the four class dormitories, forming the sides of a square, were
+built; anyone desiring an audience could be sure of it here, since the
+collegians in all four dorms. could rush to the Quadrangle side and look
+down from the windows. In the Quadrangle, under the brilliant arc-lights,
+the exuberant youths paused,
+
+"One--two--three--let 'er go!" boomed Beef, and the football squad, in
+_basso profundo_, aided by the Phillyloo Bird's uncertain tenor, and
+Theophilus' quavery treble, roared in a tremendous vocal explosion that
+shook the dormitories:
+
+"Hicks is coming! Hicks is coming! Everybody out on the campus! Get ready
+to welcome our T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.! Hicks is bringing Bannister's
+full-back--a _Prodigious Prodigy_!"
+
+Windows rattled up, heads were thrust out, a fusillade of questions
+bombarded the squad in the Quadrangle below; from the three upper-class
+dormitories erupted hordes of howling, shouting youths, and soon the Quad.
+was filled with a singing, yelling, madly happy crowd. The Bannister Band,
+that famous campus musical organization, following a time-honored habit of
+playing on every possible occasion, gladsomely tuned up and soon the
+noise was deafening, while study-hour, as prescribed by the Faculty, was
+forgotten.
+
+"Everybody on the campus, at once!" Butch Brewster, Master-of-Ceremonies,
+boomed through his megaphone, having aroused excitement to the highest
+pitch by reading Hicks' telegram. "Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus will soon
+heave into sight. Let the Band blare, make a _big noise_. Let's show Hicks
+how glad we are to have him back to old Bannister."
+
+It is historically certain that Mr. Napoleon Bonaparte returning from Jena
+and Austerlitz, Mr. Julius Caesar, home at Rome from his Conquests, or Mr.
+Alexander the Great (Conqueror, not National League pitcher) never received
+such a welcome as did T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., from his Bannister comrades
+that night. To the excited students, massed on the campus before the Gym.
+awaiting his arrival, every second seemed a century; everybody talked at
+once until the hubbub rivaled that of a Woman's Suffrage Convention. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and he was
+bringing "The Prodigious Prodigy," whatever that was, with him. Knowing the
+cheery Senior's intense love of doing the dramatic and his great ambition
+to startle his Alma Mater with some sensational stunt, they could hardly
+wait for old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus to roll up the driveway,
+
+"Here he comes!" shrieked, little Skeet Wigglesworth, an excitable Senior,
+who had climbed a tree to keep watch. "Here comes our Hicks!"
+
+"Honk--Honk!" To the incessant blaring of a raucous horn, old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney-bus moved up the driveway. The genial Irish Jehu, who
+for over twenty years had transported Bannister collegians and alumni
+to and from College Hill in a ramshackle hack drawn by Lord Nelson, an
+antiquated, somnambulistic horse, had yielded to modern invention at
+last. Lord Nelson having become defunct during vacation, Old Dan, with
+a collection taken up by several alumni at Commencement, had bought a
+battered Ford, and constructed therewith a jitney-bus. This conveyance was
+fully as rattle-trap in appearance as the traditional hack had been, but
+the returning collegians hailed it with glee.
+
+"All hail Hicks!" howled Butch Brewster, beside himself with joy,
+"Altogether--the Bannister yell for--_Hicks_!"
+
+With half the collegians giving the yell, a number shouting
+indiscriminately, the Bannister Band blaring furiously, "Behold, The
+Conquering Hero Comes," with the youths a yelling, howling, shrieking,
+dancing mass, old Dan Flannagan, adding his quota of noises with the
+Claxon, brought his bus to a stop. This was a hilarious spectacle in
+itself, for on its sides the Bannister students had painted:
+
+ HENRY FORD'S "PIECE-OF-A-SHIP," _THE DOVE_! ALL RIDING IN THIS JIT DO
+ SO AT THEIR OWN RISK! TEN CENTS FOR A JOY-RIDE TO COLLEGE HILL! YES,
+ IT'S A _FORD_! WHAT DO YOU CARE? GET ABOARD!
+
+On the roof of "The Dove," or "The Crab," as the collegians called it when
+it skidded sideways, perched precariously that well-known, beloved youth,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. He clutched his pestersome banjo and was vigorously
+strumming the strings and apparently howling a ballad, lost in the
+unearthly turmoil. As the jitney-bus stopped, the grinning Hicks arose, and
+from his lofty, position made a profound bow.
+
+"Speech! Speech! Speech!" A mighty shout arose, and Hicks raised his hand
+for silence, which was immediately delivered to him.
+
+"Fellows, one and all," he shouted, a mist before his eyes, for his
+impulsive soul was touched by the ovation, "I--I am _glad_ to be back!
+Say--I--I--well, I'm glad to be back--that's all!"
+
+At this masterly oration, which, despite its brevity, contained volumes of
+feeling, the Bannister students went wild--for a longer period than any
+political convention ever cheered a nominated candidate, they cheered T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Roar--roar--roar--_roar_!" in deafening sound-waves,
+the noise swept across the campus; never had football idol, baseball hero,
+or any athletic demigod, in all Bannister's history, been accorded such a
+tremendous ovation.
+
+"Fellows," called T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., climbing down from his precarious
+perch, "stand back; I have brought to Bannister the 'Prodigious Prodigy.'
+I have rounded up a full-back who will beat Ballard all by himself. Behold
+the new Gold and Green football eleven, 'Thor'!"
+
+From the grinning Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, like a Russian bear charging
+from its den, lumbered a being whose enormous bulk fairly astounded the
+speechless youths; Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Tug Cardiff, Bunch
+Bingham, Buster Brown, and Pudge Langdon were popularly regarded as the
+last word in behemoths, but this "Thor" dwarfed them, towered above them
+like a Colossus over Lilliputians. He was a youth, and yet a veritable
+Hercules. Over six feet he stood, with a massive head, covered with tousled
+white hair, a powerful neck, broad shoulders, a vast chest. To a judge of
+athletes, he would tip the scales at a hundred and ninety pounds, all solid
+muscle, for that superb physique held not an ounce of superfluous flesh.
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, gazing at the mountain of
+muscle, "if _size_ means anything, you have brought old Bannister an entire
+football squad! What splendid material to train for the Big Games, why--he
+will be irresistible!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+
+
+ "I didn't raise my _Ford_ to be a _jitney_--
+ To run the streets, and stay out late at night!
+ Who dares to put a jitney sign, upon it--
+ And send my _peace-ship_ out for fares to fight?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., standing by his open window at 3 P. M. one
+afternoon a week after his sensational return to Bannister College, with
+the "Prodigious Prodigy" in tow, indulged in the soul-satisfying pastime of
+twanging his banjo, and roaring, in his subterranean voice, a parody on "I
+Didn't Raise My Boy to be a Soldier." It was actually the first Caruso-like
+outburst of the pestersome youth that year, but his saengerfest brought
+vociferous howls of protest from campus and dormitories:
+
+"_Bow-wow-wow_! The Grand Opery season is starting!"
+
+"Sing some records for a talking-machine company, Hicks!"
+
+"Kill that tom-cat! Listen to the back-fence musicale!"
+
+"Say, Hicks--we'll take your word for that noise!"
+
+On the Gym. steps, loafing a few moments before jogging out to Bannister
+Field for a strenuous scrimmage under the personal supervision of
+Slave-Driver Corridan, the Gold and Green football squad had gathered. It
+was from these stalwart gridiron gladiators that the caustic criticism of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, vocal atrocities emanated, and the imitation of a
+mournful hound by "Ichabod," the skyscraping Senior, was indeed phenomenal.
+Added to the howls, whistles, jeers, and shouts of the squad, were like
+condemnations from other collegians, sky-larking on the campus, or in the
+dorms.
+
+"At that," grinned Captain Butch Brewster happily, "it surely makes me feel
+jubilant to hear Hicks' foghorn voice shattering the echoes, with his
+banjo strumming disturbing the peace--for which offense it shall soon be
+arrested. We can truly say that old Bannister is now officially opened for
+another year, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., has performed his annual rite--"
+
+"Right--!" scoffed big Pudge Langdon, indignantly, as he gazed up at the
+happy-go-lucky youth, at the window of his room on the third-floor, campus
+side, of Bannister Hall, "Hicks ought to be tarred and feathered; there is
+_nothing right_ in the way he has acted since his return to college! He
+struts around like Herman, the Master-Magician, and all the fellows fully
+expect to see him produce white rabbits from his cap, or make varicolored
+flags out of his handkerchief."
+
+"We ought to toss him in a blanket," stormed Beef McNaughton, in ludicrous
+rage. "Ever since he mystified Bannister by going out and corralling a
+Hercules who is an entire eleven in himself, Hicks has maintained that
+sphinx-like silence as to how he achieved the feat, and he swaggers around,
+enshrouded in _mystery_! All we know is that 'Thor' is John Thorwald, of
+Norwegian descent. If we ask _him_ for information, that wretch Hicks has
+him trained to say, 'Ask the little fellow, Hicks!'"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in truth, had acted in a most reprehensible manner
+since that memorable night when he brought "Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy,"
+to the campus. Not that he ceased to be the same sunny-souled, popular and
+friendly youth. The collegians, happy at finding his room open-house again,
+flocked to his cozy quarters, Freshmen _fell_ under the spell of his
+generous nature, his Beef-Steak Busts, down at Jerry's were nightly
+occurrences, and he was the same Hicks as of old. But, after the dramatic
+manner in which Hicks had mysteriously made good the rash vow uttered at
+Camp Bannister and had brought to Coach Corridan a blond-haired giant who
+seemed destined to perform prodigies at full-back, the sunny Senior had
+evidently labored under the delusion that he was "Kellar, The Great
+Magician."
+
+Instead of relieving the tortured curiosity of the students, wild to know
+how and where Hicks had unearthed this physical Hercules, who in every way
+filled the details of Head Coach Corridan's "blue-prints," T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., enjoying to the full this novel method of torturing his
+comrades, made a baffling mystery of the affair, much to the indignation of
+his friends.
+
+_"Just leave it to Hicks,"_ he would say, when the Bannister youths
+cajoled, implored, threatened, or argued. "Thor is eligible to play four
+years of football at old Bannister. I call him Thor, after the great Norse
+god, Thor; he is of Norwegian descent. That is all of the Billion-Dollar
+Mystery I can disclose; ten thousand dollars offered for the correct
+solution."
+
+"Here comes Scoop Sawyer," said Monty Merriweather, as that Senior, waving
+his arms in air, catapulted from Bannister Hall, and strode toward the
+squad on the Gym. steps; his appearance registered wrath, in photo-play
+parlance, and on reaching his comrades he immediately acquainted them with
+its cause.
+
+"Listen to that Hicks!" he exploded, gesticulating with a sheaf of papers.
+"Hicks, the mocking-bird! He is mocking _us_--with his 'Billion-Dollar
+Mystery!' Say--here I am writing to Jack Merritt; he played football four
+years for old Bannister; he was captain of the Gold and Green eleven; last
+Commencement he graduated, and the last thing he said to me was, 'Scoop,
+old pal, write to me next fall, tell me everything about the football
+season; keep me posted as to new material!' _Everything_--keep him posted
+as to new material--_Bah_! If I write that Hicks has brought a fellow he
+calls 'Thor,' who spreads the regulars over the field, Jack will want
+to know the details, and--that villainous Hicks won't divulge his dread
+secret!"
+
+At this moment, Scoop Sawyer, so-called because he was ambitious to be a
+newspaper reporter, after graduation, and for his humorous articles in the
+_Bannister Weekly_, had his intense wrath soothed by that which has
+"power to soothe the savage breast"; T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., displaying a
+wonderful originality by composing, then chanting, his parody, concluded
+the chorus roaring lustily, to a rollicking banjo accompaniment:
+
+ "If street car companies gave seats to all patrons
+ The strap-hangers in jitneys would not ride.
+ There'd be no jits. today
+ If Ford owners would say,
+ I didn't raise my Ford to be a--jitney!"
+
+"That is too much!" raged Captain Butch Brewster, facing his excited
+colleagues. "Come on, fellows, we'll invade Hicks' room, read him Scoop's
+letter to Jack Merritt, and _make_ him solve the Mystery! We're done with
+diplomacy; now, we'll deliver the ultimatum; when the squad returns from
+scrimmage, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., will tell us all about Thor, or be
+tossed in a blanket! Are you with me?"
+
+"We are _ahead_ of you!" howled Roddy Perkins, leading a wild charge for
+the entrance to Bannister Hall. Following him up the two flights of stairs
+with thunderous tread came Butch, Beef, Monty, Biff, Hefty, Pudge, Tug,
+Ichabod, Bunch, Buster, Bus Norton, and several second-team players,
+Cherub, Chub Chalmers, Don, Skeet, and Scoop Sawyer with his letter. With
+a terrific, blood-chilling clatter, and hideous howls, the Hicks-quelling
+Expedition roared down the third corridor of Bannister, and surged into the
+room of that tantalizing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!
+
+"Safety first!" shrieked that cheery collegian, stowing his banjo in the
+closet and making a strenuous but futile effort to dive head-first beneath
+the bed, being forcibly restrained by Beef, who clung to his left ankle.
+"Say, to what am I indebted for the honor of this call? Why, when I got
+back to Bannister, you fellows gushed, 'Oh, we're _so_ glad you're back,
+Hicks, old top; we missed even your saengerfests,' and when I start one--"
+
+"Hicks," pronounced Butch Brewster grimly, holding the genial offender
+by the scruff of the neck, "you tantalizing, aggravating, irritating,
+lunatical, conscienceless degenerate! You assassin of Father Time, you
+disturber of the peace, _heed_! Scoop Sawyer is writing to Jack Merritt, to
+tell about the football team, and Bannister's chances of the Championship;
+he wants to tell Jack all about this Thor! Now, you have acted like
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston long enough, and hear our final word. Read Scoop's
+letter, and if when you finish its perusal you fail to give us full
+information, and answer all questions about Thor--"
+
+"The football team will toss you in a blanket until you do!" finished Monty
+Merriweather, "We intended to wait until after the scrimmage, but Butch
+evidently believes we should end your bothersome mystery as once, and--"
+
+"'Curiosity killed the cat!'" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; then seeing
+the avenues and boulevards of escape were closed, but fighting for time,
+"let me peruse said missive indited by our literarily overbalanced Scoop. I
+am reluctant to dispel the clouds of mystery, but--"
+
+Scoop Sawyer thrust the typewritten pages of the letter--composed on
+the battered old typewriter in the editorial sanctum of the _Bannister
+Weekly_--into Hicks' grasp and with a grin, that blithesome youth read:
+
+
+Bannister College, Sept, 27.
+
+DEAR OLD JACK:
+
+There is so _much_ to tell you, old pal, that I scarcely know where to
+start, but you want to know about the football eleven, so I'll write about
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his 'Billion-Dollar Mystery,' as he calls it;
+about Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. You well know what a scatter-brained
+wretch Hicks is, and how he dearly loves to plot dramatic climaxes--to
+mystify old Bannister. Just now Hicks has the campus as wrathful as it is
+possible to be with that lovable youth; he has originated a great mystery,
+and achieved a seemingly impossible feat, and instead of explaining it, he
+swaggers around like a Hindoo mystic enshrouded in mystery and the fellows
+are wild enough to tar and feather the incorrigible villain!
+
+To get off to a sprint-start, up in Camp Bannister, before college opened,
+when the squad was in training camp, Butch Brewster says that Coach
+Corridan one day, before Hicks, expressed a fervid ambition to find a huge,
+irresistible fullback--
+
+
+Here the chronicle must hang fire, while T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning
+at the wrath his mysterious behavior aroused, peruses those sections of
+Scoop Sawyer's epistle telling of two scenes already described; first,
+the one in the Camp Bannister grub-shack, where Head Coach Corridan
+blue-printed the Gargantuan athlete he desired, and the blithesome Hicks
+confidently requested that the Herculean task be left to him; second, the
+scene of intense excitement on the campus the night that the missing Hicks
+returned personally conducting that mountain of muscle, the blond-haired
+Thor.
+
+Having grinned at these descriptions, the pestiferous Hicks scanned a
+picturesque description by Scoop of the events that transpired between that
+memorable night and the present invasion of the sunny Senior's room by the
+indignant squad.
+
+--Naturally, Jack, old Bannister was intensely curious to know who this
+"Thor" could be, and how Hicks unearthed such a giant. But, instead of
+swaggering a trifle, as he inevitably does, and saying, 'Oh, I told you
+just to leave it to Hicks!' then telling all about it, after accomplishing
+what everyone believed a ridiculously impossible quest, he maintains that
+provokingly mysterious silence, and John Thorwald (we know his name,
+anyway) stolidly refers us to Hicks. So where Thor originated or how under
+the sun Hicks got on his trail, after making his rash vow to corral a
+mighty fullback, is a deep, dark mystery.
+
+Now for Thor himself. Words cannot describe that Prodigious Prodigy; he
+must be seen to be believed! We do know that he is John Thorwald, and of
+distinctly Norwegian descent, so that calling him after the mythic Norse
+god is extremely appropriate. And he is reminiscent of the great Thor, with
+his vast strength and prowess. Thanks to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, love of
+mystery, and of tantalizing old Bannister, we know nothing of Thorwald's
+past, but we are sure he has lived and toiled among _men_, to possess
+that powerful build. I can't describe him, old man, without resorting to
+exaggeration, for ordinary words and phrases are utterly inadequate with
+Thor! Conjure up a vision of Gulliver among the Lilliputians and you can
+picture him towering over us. He is a Viking of old, with his fair features
+and blond hair. Probably twenty-five years old, he has a powerful frame and
+prodigious strength, he dwarfs such behemoths as Butch and Beef, and makes
+such insignificant mortals as little Theophilus and myself seem like
+insects!
+
+Thor is so _big_, Jack, that when he gets in a room, he crowds everyone
+into the corridor, and fills it alone. No wonder Hicks telegraphed to knock
+out the partitions between five rooms to make space for Thor! When he
+stands on the campus he blots out several sections of scenery, and the
+college disappears, giving the impression he has swallowed it. Thor is a
+slow-minded being, but possessed of a grim determination. To get an idea
+into his mind requires a blackboard and Chautauqua lecturer, but once he
+masters it, he never lets go; so it will be with football signals, once let
+him grasp a play, he will never be confused. He is simply a huge, stolid
+giant. He has a bulldog purpose to get an education, and nothing else
+matters. As for college spirit, the glad comradeship of the campus, he has
+no time for it; he pays no attention to the fellows at all, only to Hicks.
+
+His devotion to that wretch is pathetic! He follows Hicks around like a
+huge mastiff after a terrier, or an ocean leviathan towed by a tug-boat; he
+seems absolutely helpless without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and so we have
+a daily Hicks' personally conducted tour of Thor to interest us. Briefly,
+Jack, John Thorwald is a slow-moving, slow-minded, grimly bulldog giant,
+who has come to Bannister to study, and as for any other phase of campus
+existence, he has never awakened to it!
+
+Now for the football story: Well, the day after Hicks' sensational arrival,
+which I described, Coach Corridan, Captain Butch Brewster, Beef, Buster,
+Pudge, Monty, and Roddy with yours truly, went to Thor's room in Creighton
+just before football practice. We found that Colossus, who had matriculated
+as a Freshman, aided by Hicks, patiently masticating mental food as served
+by Ovid. Coach Corridan said, 'Come on, Thorwald, over to the Gym.; we'll
+fix you out with togs, if we can get two suits big enough to make one for
+your bulk! Ever play the game?' 'I play some,' rumbled Thor stolidly, never
+raising his eyes from his Latin. 'Don't bother me, I want to _study._
+I have not time for such foolishness. I am here to study, to get an
+education!' 'But,' urged the coach earnestly, 'you _must_ play football for
+your Alma Mater, for old Bannister. Why, you--you _must_, that's all!' Thor
+gazed at Hicks questioningly--I forgot to add that insect's name--and
+asked, 'Is it so, Hicks? I _got_ to play for the college?' And when Hicks
+grinned, '_Sure_, Thor, it must be did. Bannister expects you to smear the
+other teams over the landscape,' that blond Norwegian Viking said, 'Well,
+then, I play.'
+
+All Bannister turned out to behold the "Prodigious Prodigy" on the football
+field. Somewhere--Hicks won't divulge where--Thor has learned the rudiments
+of the game. With that bulldog tenacity of his, he has learned them well.
+Hence he was ready for the scrubs, and in the practice game it was a
+veritable slaughter of the innocents. The 'Varsity could not stop Thor.
+Remember 'Ole' Skjarsen, the big Swede of George Fitch's 'Siwash College'
+tales? Thor, after the ten minutes required to teach him a play, would take
+the ball and just wade through the regulars for big gains. The only way to
+stop him was for the entire eleven to cling affectionately to his bulk,
+and then he transported them several yards. He is a phenom, a veritable
+Prodigious Prodigy, and maybe old Bannister isn't _wild_ with enthusiasm.
+His development will be slow but sure, and by the time the big games for
+the championship come, he will be a whole team in himself. Right now he
+goes through daily scrimmage as solemnly as if performing a sacred rite. He
+doesn't thrill with college spirit, but as for football--
+
+Leaving Hicks to read the rest of Scoop Sawyer's long missive, terminating
+with indignant condemnation of the sunny youth's love of mystery, the
+terrific enthusiasm roused at old Bannister by the daily appearance on
+Bannister Field of Thor, and his irresistible marches through the 'Varsity,
+must be chronicled and explained.
+
+Not for five seasons, not since the year before Hicks, Pudge, Butch, Beef
+and the others of 1919 were Freshmen, had the Gold and Green corraled that
+greatest glory, The State Intercollegiate Football Championship! In Captain
+Butch's Sophomore year, he had flung his bulk into the fray, training,
+sacrificing, fighting like a Trojan, only to see the pennant lost by a
+scant three inches, as Jack Merritt's forty-yard drop-kick for the goal
+that would have won the Championship struck the cross-bar and bounded back
+into the field. And the past season-old Bannister could still vision that
+tragic scene of the biggest game.
+
+The students could picture Captain Brewster, with the Bannister eleven a
+few yards from Ballard's goal-line, and the touchdown that would give the
+Gold and Green that supreme glory. One minute to play; Deacon Radford had
+given Butch the pigskin, and like a berserker, he fought entirely through
+the scrimmage. But a kick on the head had blinded him, in the _melee_--free
+of tacklers, with the goal-line, victory, and the Championship so near, he
+staggered, reeled blindly, crashed into an upright, and toppled backward,
+senseless on the field, while the Referee's whistle announced the end of
+the game, and glory to Ballard. Even then, after the first terrible shock
+of the loss, of the cruel blow fate dealt the Gold and Green two
+successive seasons, the slogan was: "_Next year_--Bannister will win the
+Championship--_next year_!"
+
+It was now "next year!" Losing only Jack Merritt, Babe McCabe and Heavy
+Hughes from the line-up, and having Monty Merrlweather and Bunch Bingham,
+fully as good, Coach Corridan's Gold and Green eleven, before the season
+started, seemed a better fighting machine than even the one of the year
+before. But when the irrepressible T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in some
+mysterious fashion making good his rash vow to produce a smashing full-back
+that can't be stopped, towed that stolid, blond Colossus, Thor, to old
+Bannister, enthusiasm broke all limits!
+
+Mass-meetings were held every night. Speeches by Coaches, Captain, players,
+Faculty, and students, aroused the campus to the highest pitch; every day,
+the entire student-body, with The Bannister Band, turned out on Bannister
+Field to cheer the eleven, and to watch the Prodigious Prodigy perform
+valorous deeds, like the god Thor. "Bannister College--State Championship!"
+was the cry, and with the giant Thor to present an irresistible catapulting
+that could not be stopped, the Gold and Green exultantly awaited the big
+games with Hamilton and Ballard.
+
+And yet, the stolid, unemotional, unawakened Thor, on whom every hope of
+the Championship was based, whom all Bannister came out to watch every day,
+practiced as he studied, doggedly, silently. It was evident to all that
+he hated the grind, that he wanted to quit, that his heart was not in the
+game, but for some cause, he drove his Herculean body ahead, and could not
+be stopped!
+
+"Now, you abandoned wretch," said Butch Brewster grimly, as the
+happy-go-lucky Hicks finished Scoop's letter, and glanced about him wildly
+seeking a way of escape, "in one minute you will tell us all about John
+Thorwald, alias 'Thor,' or be tossed sky-high in a blanket by the football
+squad, and please believe me, you'll break all altitude records!"
+
+"Spare me, you banditti!" pleaded Hicks, reluctant to cease torturing
+Bannister with his Billion-Dollar Mystery, yet equally unwilling to aviate
+from a blanket heaved by the husky athletes. "Why seek ye to question the
+ways of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.? You have your Prodigious Prodigy--your
+smashing full-back is distributing the 'Varsity over the scenery with
+charming nonchalance that promises dire catastrophe for other teams, once
+he makes the regulars, so--"
+
+At that dramatic moment, just as Butch Brewster glanced at Hicks'
+alarm-clock, to start the minute of grace, a startling interruption saved
+the gladsome youth from having to make a decision. A heavy, creaking tread
+shook the corridor, and the squad beheld, looming up in the doorway, Thor.
+He was not in football togs, and as he started to speak his fair face as
+stolid and expressionless as that of a sphinx, Captain Butch Brewster
+stepped toward him.
+
+"Thor!" he exclaimed, seizing the blond Colossus by the arm, "You aren't
+ready for the scrimmage; hustle over to the Gym. and get on your suit."
+
+But John Thorwald, as passive of feature as though he announced something
+of the most infinitesimal importance, and were not hurling a bomb-shell
+whose explosion, was to shake old Bannister terrifically, spoke in a
+matter-of-fact manner: "I shall not play football--any more."
+
+"_What_!" Every collegian in Hicks' room, including that dazed producer
+of the Prodigious Prodigy, chorused the exclamation; to them it was as
+stunning a shock as the nation would suffer if its President calmly
+announced, "I'm tired of being President of the United States. I shall not
+report for work tomorrow." Bannister College, ever since the night that
+Thor arrived on the campus, had talked or thought of nothing but how this
+huge, blond-haired Hercules would bring the Championship to the Gold and
+Green; his prodigies on the gridiron, his ever-increasing prowess, had
+aroused enthusiasm to fever heat, and now--
+
+"I was told wrong," said Thor, shifting his vast tonnage awkwardly from one
+foot to the other, and evidently bewildered at the consternation caused by
+what he believed a trifling announcement, "I understood that I _had_ to
+play football, that the Faculty required it of me, and the students let me
+think so. I have just learned from Doctor Alford that such is not true,
+that I do not have to play unless I choose, hence, I quit. I came to
+college to study, to gain an education. I have toiled long and hard for
+the opportunity, and now I have it, I shall not waste my time on such
+foolishness."
+
+Then, utterly unconscious that he had spoken sentences which would create
+a mighty sensation at old Bannister, that might doom the Gold and Green
+to defeat, lose his Alma Mater the Championship, and bring on himself the
+cruel ostracism and bitter censure of his fellows, John Thorwald lumbered
+down the corridor. A moment of tense silence followed and then Captain
+Butch Brewster groaned.
+
+"It's all over, it's all over, fellows!" he said brokenly, "Bannister loses
+the Championship! We know it is impossible to move Thor on the football
+field, and now that he has said 'No!' to playing football, dynamite can not
+move him from his decision."
+
+Then, crushed and disconsolate, the football squad filed silently from the
+room, to break the glad news to Coach Corridan, and to spread the joyous
+tidings to old Bannister. When they had gone, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+staring at the figurative black cloud that lowered over his Alma Mater,
+strove to find its silver lining, and at last he partially succeeded.
+
+"Anyway," said Hicks, with a lugubrious effort to grin, "Thor's
+announcement shocked the squad so much that I was not forced to explain my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+
+
+"In the famous words of Mr. Somebody-Or-Other," quoth T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., "something has _got_ to be did, and immediately to once!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster nodded assent. So did Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan,
+Beef McNaughton, Team Manager Socks Fitzpatrick, Monty Merriweather, Dad
+Pendleton, President of the Athletic Association, and Deacon Radford,
+quarter-back, also Shad Fishpaw, who, being Freshman Class-Chairman,
+maintained a discreet silence. Instead of the usual sky-larking, care-free
+crowd that infested the cozy quarters of the happy-go-lucky Hicks, every
+collegian present, except the ever-cheerful youth, seemed to have lost his
+best friend and his last dollar at one fell swoop!
+
+"Oh, yes, something has got to be did!" fleered Beef McNaughton, the
+davenport creaking under the combined tonnage of himself and Butch
+Brewster, "But who will do it? Where's all that Oh-just-leave-it-to-Hicks
+stuff you have pulled for the past three years, you pestiferous insect?
+_Bah_! You did a lot; you dragged a Prodigious Prodigy to old Bannister,
+enshrouded him in darkest mystery, and now, when he pushed the 'Varsity off
+the field and promised to corral the Championship, single-handed, he puts
+his foot down, and says, '_No_--I will not play football!' Get busy, Little
+Mr. Fix-It."
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" accommodated that blithesome Senior, with a
+cheeriness he was far from feeling. "You all do know why Thor won't
+play football; it is not like last season, when Deke Radford, a star
+quarter-back, refused either to play, or to explain his refusal. Let me
+get an inspiration, and then Thor will once again gently but firmly thrust
+entire football elevens down the field before him!"
+
+As evidence of how intensely serious was the situation, let it be
+chronicled that, for the first time in his scatter-brained campus career,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., did not dare strum his banjo and roar out ballads
+to torture his long-suffering colleagues. Popular and beloved as he was,
+the gladsome youth hesitated to shatter the quietude of the campus with
+his saengerfest, knowing as he did what a terrible blow Thor's utterly
+astounding announcement had been to the college.
+
+It was nine o'clock, one night two weeks after the day when John Thorwald,
+better known as Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, so mysteriously produced by
+Hicks, had stolidly paralyzed old Bannister by unemotionally stating his
+decision to play no more football. Since then, to quote the Phillyloo Bird,
+"Bannister has staggered around the ring like a prizefighter with the
+Referee counting off ten seconds and trying to fight again before he takes
+the count." In truth, the students had made a fatal mistake in building
+all their hopes of victory on that blond giant, Thor; seeing his wonderful
+prowess, and beholding how, in the first week of the season, the Norwegian
+Colossus had ripped to shreds the Varsity line which even the heavy Ballard
+eleven of the year before could not batter, it was but natural that the
+enthusiastic youths should think of the Championship chances in terms of
+_Thor_. For one week, enthusiasm and excitement soared higher and higher,
+and then, to use a phrase of fiction, everything fell with a dull,
+sickening thud!
+
+In vain did Coach Corridan, the staff of Assistant Coaches, Captain Butch
+Brewster, and others strive to resuscitate football spirit; nightly
+mass-meetings were held, and enough perfervid oratory hurled to move a
+Russian fortress, but to no avail. It was useless to argue that, without
+Thor, Bannister had an eleven better than that of last year, which so
+nearly missed the Championship. The campus had seen the massive Thor's
+prodigies; they knew he could not be stopped, and to attempt to arouse the
+college to concert pitch over the eleven, with that mountain of muscle
+blotting out vast sections of scenery, but not in football togs, was not
+possible.
+
+"One thing is sure," spoke Dad Pendleton seriously, gazing gloomily from
+the window, "unless we get Thor in the line-up for the Big Games, our last
+hope of the Championship is dead and interred! And I feel sorry for the big
+fellow, for already the boys like him just about as much as a German
+loves an Englishman; yet, arguments, threats, pleadings, and logic have
+absolutely no effect on him. He has said 'No,' and that ends it!"
+
+"He doesn't understand things, fellows," defended T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+with surprising earnestness. "Remember how bewildered he seemed at our
+appeal to his college spirit, and his love for his Alma Mater. We might as
+well have talked Choctaw to him!"
+
+Butch Brewster, Socks Fitzpatrick, Dad Pendleton, Beef McNaughton, Deacon
+Radford, Monty Merriweather, and Shad Fishpaw well remembered that night
+after Thor's tragic decision, when they--part of a Committee formed of the
+best athletes from all teams, and the most representative collegians of old
+Bannister, had invaded Thor's room in Creighton Hall, to wrestle with the
+recalcitrant Hercules. Even as Hicks spoke, they visioned it again.
+
+A cold, cheerless room, bare of carpet or pictures, with just the
+study-table, bed, and two chairs. At the study-table, his huge bulk
+sprawling on, and overflowing, a frail chair, they had found the massive
+John Thorwald laboriously reading aloud the Latin he had translated,
+literally by the sweat of his brow. The blond Colossus, impatient at the
+interruption, had shaken his powerful frame angrily, and with no regard for
+campus tradition, had addressed the upperclassmen in a growl: "Well, what
+do you want? Hurry up, I've got to study."
+
+And then, to state it briefly, they had worked with (and on) the stolid
+Thorwald for two hours. They explained how his decision to play no more
+football would practically kill old Bannister's hopes of the Championship,
+would assassinate football spirit on the campus, and cause the youths to
+condemn Thor, and to ostracise him. Waxing eloquent, Butch Brewster had
+delivered a wonderful speech, pleading with John Thorwald to play the
+game. He tried to show that obviously uninterested mammoth that, like the
+Hercules he so resembled, he stood at the parting of the ways.
+
+"You are on the threshold of your college career, old man!" he thundered
+impressively, though he might as well have tried to shoot holes in a
+battleship with a pop-gun, "What you do now will make or break you. Do you
+want the fellows as friends or as enemies; do you want comradeship, or
+loneliness and ostracism? You have it in your power to do two _big_ things,
+to win the Championship for your Alma Mater, and to win to yourself the
+entire student-body, as friends; will you do that, and build a firm
+foundation for your college years, or betray your Alma Mater, and gain the
+enmity of old Bannister!"
+
+Followed more fervid periods, with such phrases as, "For your Alma Mater,"
+"Because of your college spirit," "For dear old Bannister," and "For
+the Gold and Green!" predominating; all of which terms, to the stolid,
+unimaginative Thorwald being fully as intelligible as Hindustani. They
+appealed to him not to betray his Alma Mater; they implored him, for his
+love of old Bannister; they besought him, because of his college spirit;
+and all the time, for all that the Prodigious Prodigy understood, they
+might as well have remained silent.
+
+"I will tell you something," spoke Thor, at last, with an air of impatient
+resignation, "and don't bother me again, please! I have come to Bannister
+College to get an education, and I have the right to do so, without being
+pestered. I pay my bills, and I am entitled to all the knowledge I can
+purchase. I look from my window, and I see boys, whose fathers are toiling,
+sacrificing, to send them here. Instead of studying, to show their
+gratitude, they loaf around the campus, or in their rooms, twanging banjos
+and guitars, singing silly songs, and sky-larking. I don't know what all
+this rot is you are talking of; 'college spirit,' 'my Alma Mater,' and so
+on. I do not want to play football; I do not like the game; I need the time
+for my study, so I will not play. Both my father and myself have labored
+and sacrificed to send me to college. The past five years, with one great
+ambition to go to college and learn, I have toiled like a galley-slave.
+
+"And now, when opportunity is mine, do you ask me to _play_? You want me to
+loaf around, wasting precious time better spent in my studies. What do I
+care whether the boys like me, or hate me? Bah! I can take any two of you,
+and knock your heads together! Their friendship or enmity won't move me. I
+shall study, learn. I will not waste time in senseless foolishness, and I
+_won't_ play football again."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. was silent as he stood by the window of his room,
+gazing down at the campus where the collegians were gathering before
+marching to the Auditorium for the nightly mass-meeting that would vainly
+strive to arouse a fighting spirit in the football "rooters." That
+blithesome, heedless, happy-go-lucky youth was capable of far more serious
+thought than old Bannister knew; and more, he possessed the rare ability
+to read character; in the case of Thor, he saw vastly deeper than his
+indignant comrades, who beheld only the surface of the affair. They knew
+only that John Thorwald, a veritable Colossus, had exhibited football
+prowess that practically promised the State Championship to old Bannister,
+and then--he had quit the game. They understood only that Thor refused to
+play simply because he did not want to, and as to why their appeals to his
+college spirit and his love for his Alma Mater were unheeded they were
+puzzled.
+
+But the gladsome Hicks, always serious beneath his cheerful exterior, when
+old Bannister's interests were at stake, or when a collegian's career
+might be blighted, when the tragedy could be averted, fully understood. Of
+course, as originator of the Billion-Dollar Mystery, and producer of the
+Prodigious Prodigy, he knew more about the strange John Thorwald than did
+his mystified comrades. He knew that Thor, as he named him, was just a vast
+hulk of humanity, stolid, unimaginative of mind, slow-thinking, a dull,
+unresponsive mass, as yet unstirred by that strange, subtle, mighty thing
+called college spirit. He realized that Thor had never had a chance to
+understand the real meaning of campus life, to grasp the glad fellowship of
+the students, to thrill with a great love for his Alma Mater. All that must
+come in time. The blond giant had toiled all his life, had labored among
+men where everything was practical and grim. Small wonder, then, that he
+failed utterly to see why the youths "loafed on the campus, or in their
+rooms, twanging banjos and guitars, singing silly songs, and skylarking."
+
+"I must save him," murmured Hicks softly, for the others in his room were
+talking of Thor. "Oh, imagine that powerful body, imbued with a vast love
+for old Bannister, think of Thor, thrilling with college spirit. Why,
+Yale's and Harvard's elevens combined could not stop his rushes, then. I
+must save him from himself, from the condemnation of the fellows, who just
+don't understand. I must, some way, awaken him to a complete understanding
+of college life in its entirety, but how? He is so different from Roddy
+Perkins, or Deke Radford."
+
+It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every year of his
+campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath, deserved or
+otherwise, of the students. In his Freshman first term, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., indignant at the way little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+nervous "grind," had been alarmed at the idea of being hazed, had by a
+sensational escape from a room locked, guarded, and filled with Sophomores,
+gained immunity for himself and the boner for all time, thus winning the
+loyal, pathetic devotion of the Human Encyclopedia. As a Sophomore, by
+crushing James Roderick Perkins' Napoleonic ambition to upset tradition,
+and make Freshmen equal with upperclassmen, Hicks had turned that
+aggressive youth's tremendous energy in the right channels, and made him a
+power for good on the campus.
+
+And, a Junior, he had saved good Deacon Radford. When that serious youth, a
+famous prep. quarter, entered old Bannister, the students were wild at the
+thought of having him to run the Gold and Green team, but to their dismay,
+he refused either to report for practice or to explain his decision. Hicks,
+promising blithely, as usual, to solve the mystery and get Deke to play,
+discovered that the youth's mother, called "Mother Peg" by the collegians,
+was head-waitress downtown at Jerry's and that she made her son promise
+not to own the relationship, and that while she worked to get him through
+college, Deacon would not play football. The inspired Hicks had gotten
+Mother Peg to start College Inn, and board Freshmen unable to get rooms
+in the dormitories, and Deacon had played wonderful football. For this
+achievement, the original youth failed to get glory, for he sacrificed it,
+and swore all concerned to secrecy.
+
+"But Roddy and Deke were different," reflected Hicks, pondering seriously.
+"Both had been to Prep. School, and they understood college life and campus
+spirit. It was Roddy's tremendous ambition that had to be curbed, and Deke
+was the victim of circumstances. But Thorwald--it is just a problem of how
+to awaken in him an understanding of college spirit. The fellows don't
+understand him, and--"
+
+A sudden thought, one of his inspirations, assailed the blithesome Hicks.
+Why not make the fellows understand Thor? Surely, if he explained the
+"Billion-Dollar Mystery," as he humorously called it, and told why
+Thorwald, as yet, had no conception of college life, in its true meaning,
+they would not feel bitter against him; perhaps, instead, though regretful
+at his decision not to play the game, they would all strive to awaken the
+stolid Colossus, to stir his soul to an understanding of campus
+tradition and existence. But that would mean--"I surely hate to lose my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., remembering
+the intense indignation of his comrades at his Herman-Kellar-Thurston
+atmosphere of mystery, "It is more fun than, my 'Sheerluck Holmes'
+detective pose or my saengerfests. Still, for old Bannister, and for Thor."
+
+It would seem only a trifle for the heedless Hicks to give up his mystery,
+and tell Bannister all about Thor; yet, had the Hercules reconsidered, and
+played football, the torturesome youth would have bewildered his colleagues
+as long as possible, or until they made him divulge the truth. He dearly
+loved to torment his comrades, and this had been such an opportunity for
+him to promise nonchalantly to produce a Herculean full-back, then, to
+return to the campus with the Prodigious Prodigy in tow, and for him to
+perform wonders on Bannister Field, naturally aroused the interest of the
+youths, and he had enjoyed hugely their puzzlement, but now--
+
+"Say, fellows," he interrupted an excited conversation of a would-be
+Committee of Ways and Means to make Thor play football, "I have an
+announcement to make."
+
+"Don't pester us, Hicks!" warned Captain Butch Brewster, grimly. "We love
+you like a brother, but we'll crush you if you start any foolishness,
+and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with the study-table between himself and his
+comrades, assumed the attitude of a Chautauqua lecturer, one hand resting
+on the table and the other thrust into the breast of his coat, and
+dramatically announced:
+
+"In the Auditorium--at the regular mass-meeting tonight--T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., will give the correct explanation of Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and
+will solve the Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+
+
+The announcement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had practically the same
+effect on Head Coach Corridan and the cheery Senior's comrades as a German
+gas-bomb would have on the inmates of an Allied trench. For several seconds
+they stared at the blithesome youth, in a manner scarcely to be called
+aimless, since their looks were aimed with deadly accuracy at him, but in
+general, with the exception of Hicks, those in the room resembled vastly
+some of the celebrated Madame Tussaud's wax-works in London.
+
+"Oh," breathed Monty Merriweather, with the appearance of dawning
+intelligence, "that's so, Coach, Hicks never has disclosed the details of
+his achievement; we were about to extort a confession from him, when Thor
+broke up the league with his announcement, and since then, Bannister has
+been too worried over Thorwald to trifle with Hicks!"
+
+"That's a good idea!" exclaimed Coach Corridan, who had been remarkably
+silent, for him, pondering the football crisis, "Hicks can make his
+explanation at the regular mass-meeting tonight, in the Auditorium. I'll
+post an announcement of his purpose, and you fellows spread the news among
+the students, stating that Hicks will tell how he rounded up Thor. Some
+have shirked these meetings since Thorwald quit the game, and this will
+bring them out, so maybe we can arouse the fighting spirit again!"
+
+So well did Butch, Beef, Socks, Monty, Dad, Deacon, and Shad tell the news,
+that when the bell in the Administration Hall tower rang at ten o'clock it
+was ascertained by score-keepers that every youth at Bannister, Freshmen
+included, except that Hercules, Thor, had assembled in the Auditorium. That
+stolid behemoth, who regarded the football mass-meeting as foolishness, was
+reported as boning in his cheerless room, fulfilling the mission for which
+he came to college, namely, to get his money's worth of knowledge, which he
+evidently regarded as some commodity for which Bannister served merely as a
+market.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, on the stage of the Auditorium, the big assembly-hall
+of the college, along with Coach Corridan, several of the Gold and Green
+eleven, two members of the Faculty, several Assistant Coaches, and T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., stepped forward and stilled the tumult of the excited
+youths with upraised hand.
+
+"We have with us tonight," he spoke, after the fashion of introducing
+after-dinner speakers, "Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the celebrated
+Magician and Mystifier, who will present for your approval his world-famous
+Billion-Dollar Mystery, and give the correct solution to Thor, the problem
+no one has been able to solve. I take great pleasure in introducing to you
+this evening, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+The collegians, firmly believing it was another of the pestiferous Hicks'
+jokes, and wholly unaware of the deep purpose of the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible youth's speech, went into paroxysms of glee, as the
+shadow-like Hicks stepped forward. For several minutes, the hall echoed
+with jeers, shouts, groans, whistles, and sarcastic comments:
+
+"Hire a hall, Hicks; tell it to Sweeney!"--"Bryan better look out. Hicks,
+the _Chau-talker;_"--"Spill the speech, old man; spread the oratory!"--"Oh,
+where are my smelling-salts? I know I shall faint!"--"You'd better play a
+banjo-accompaniment to it, Hicks!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for once in his campus career, fervidly wished he
+had not been such a happy-go-lucky, care-free collegian, for now, when he
+was serious, his comrades refused to believe him to be in such a state.
+However, quiet was obtained at last, thanks to the fact that the youths
+possessed all the curiosity of the proverbial cat who died thereby, and the
+sunny Senior plunged earnestly into his famous speech, that was destined,
+at old Bannister, to rank with that of Demosthenes "On The Crown," or any
+of W. J, Bryan's masterpieces.
+
+"Fellows," began Hicks, without preface, "I know I've built myself the
+reputation of being a scatterbrained, heedless nonentity, and it's too late
+to change now. But tonight, please believe me to be thoroughly in earnest.
+Bannister faces more than one crisis, more than one tragedy. It is true
+that the football eleven is crippled by the defection of Thor, that we
+fellows have somewhat unreasonably allowed his quitting the game to shake
+our spirit, but there is more at stake than football victories, than even
+the State Intercollegiate Football Championship! The future of a student,
+of a present Freshman, his hopes of becoming a loyal, solid, representative
+college man, a tremendous power for good, at old Bannister, hang in the
+balance at this moment! I speak of John Thorwald. You students have it in
+your power to make or break him, to ruin his college years and make him a
+recluse, a misanthrope, or to gradually bring him to a full realization of
+what college life and campus tradition really mean."
+
+"I have made a great mystery of Thor, just for a lark, but the enmity and
+condemnation of the campus for him because he quit football suddenly, shows
+me that the time for skylarking is past. For his sake, I must plead. He is
+not to blame, altogether, for quitting. Myself, and you fellows, gave him
+the impression that it was a Faculty requirement for him to play football,
+for we feared he would not play, otherwise; when he learned that it was not
+a Faculty rule, he simply quit."
+
+Here T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., seeing that at last he had convinced the
+collegians of his earnestness, though they seemed fairly paralyzed at the
+phenomenon, paused, and produced a bundle of papers before resuming.
+
+"Now, I'll try to explain the 'mystery' as briefly and as clearly as
+possible. Up at Camp Bannister, before college opened, Coach Corridan, as
+you know, outlined to Butch, Deke, and myself, his dream of a Herculean,
+irresistible full-back; I said, 'Just leave It to Hicks!' and they believed
+that I, as usual, just made that remark to torment them. But such was not
+the case. When I joined them, I remarked that I had a letter from my Dad;
+Deke made some humorous remarks, and I forgot to read it aloud, as I
+intended. Then, after Coach Corridan blue-printed his giant full-back, I
+kept silent as to Dad's letter, for reasons you'll understand. But, after
+all, there was no mystery about my leaving Camp Bannister, after making a
+seemingly rash vow, and returning to college with a 'Prodigious Prodigy'
+who filled specifications, In fact, before I left Camp Bannister, at the
+moment I made my rash promise--I had Thor already lined up!"
+
+"I shall now read a dipping or two, and a letter or two from my Dad. The
+clippings came in Dad's letter to me at Camp Bannister, the letter I
+intended to read to Coach Corridan, Deke, and Butch, but which I decided to
+keep silent about, after the Coach told of the full-back he wanted, for
+I knew I had him already! First, a clipping from the _San Francisco
+Examiner_, of August 25:
+
+MAROONED SAILOR RESCUED--TEN YEARS ON SOUTH SEA ISLAND! SOLE SURVIVOR OF
+ILL-FATED CRUISE OF THE ZEPHYR
+
+"The trading-schooner _Southern Cross_, Captain Martin Bascomb, skipper,
+put into San Francisco yesterday with a cargo of copra from the South Sea
+Islands. On board was John Thorwald, Sr., who for the past ten years
+has been marooned on an uninhabited coral isle of the Southern Pacific,
+together with 'Long Tom' Watts, who, however, died several months ago.
+Thorwald's story reads like a thrilling bit of fiction. He was first mate
+of the ill-fated yacht _Zephyr_, which cleared from San Francisco ten years
+ago with Henry B. Kingsley, the Oil-King, and a pleasure party, for a
+cruise under the southern star. A terrific tornado wrecked the yacht, and
+only Thorwald and 'Long Tom' escaped, being cast upon the coral island,
+where for ten years they existed, unable to attract the attention of the
+few craft that passed, as the isle was out of the regular lanes. Only when
+Captain Martin Bascomb, in the trading-schooner _Southern Cross_, touched
+at the island, hoping to find natives with whom to trade supplies for
+copra, were they found, and 'Long Tom' had been dead some months."
+
+"Despite the harrowing experiences of his exile, Thorwald, a vast hulk of a
+stolid, unimaginative Norwegian, who reminds one of the Norse god, 'Thor,'
+intends to ship as first mate on the New York-Christiania Steamship Line.
+It is said that Thorwald has a son, at this time about twenty-five years of
+age, somewhere In this country, whom he will seek, and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., at this juncture, terminated the newspaper story,
+and finding that his explanation held his comrades spellbound, he produced
+a letter, and drew out the message, after stating the youths could read the
+entire news-story of John Thorwald, Sr., later.
+
+"This is the letter I received from my Dad," he explained to the intensely
+interested Bannister youths, who were giving a concentrated attention that
+members of the Faculty would have rejoiced to receive from them. "Up at
+Camp Bannister--I was just about to read it to Coach Corridan, Butch, and
+Deke Radford, when Deke chaffed me, and then the Coach outlined the mammoth
+full-back he desired, so I kept quiet. I'll now read it to you:
+
+
+"Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept, 17.
+
+"DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+"Read the inclosed clipping from the _San Francisco Examiner_ of August 25,
+and then pay close attention to the following facts: At the time of this
+news-story I was in 'Frisco on business, as you will recall, and for
+reasons to be outlined, when I read of the _Southern Cross_ finding the
+marooned John Thorwald, and bringing him to that city, I was particularly
+interested, so much so that I at once looked up the one-time first mate of
+the ill-starred _Zephyr_ and brought him to Pittsburgh in my private car.
+My reason was this; in my employ, in the International Steel Combine's
+mill, was John Thorwald's son, John Thorwald, Jr.
+
+"To state facts as briefly as possible, almost a year ago, as I took some
+friends through the steel rolling mill, I chanced to step directly beneath
+a traveling crane, lowering a steel beam; seeing my peril, I was about to
+step aside when I caught my foot and fell. Just then a veritable giant,
+black and grimy, leaped forward, and with a prodigious display of strength,
+placed his powerful back under the descending weight, staving it off until
+I rolled over to safety!
+
+"Well, of course, I had the fellow report to my office, and instinctively
+feeling that I wanted to show my gratitude, without being patronizing, he
+responded to my question as to what I could do to reward him, by asking
+simply that I get him some job that would allow him to attend night school.
+He stated that, owing to the fact that he worked alternate weeks at night
+shift he was unable to do so. Questioning him further, I learned the
+following facts:
+
+"He was John Thorwald, Jr., only son of John Thorwald, Sr., a Norwegian;
+his mother was also a Norwegian, but he is a natural born American.
+Realizing the opportunities for an educated young man in our land,
+Thorwald's parents determined that he should gain knowledge, and until he
+was fifteen years old, he attended school in San Francisco. When he was
+fifteen, his father signed as first mate on the yacht _Zephyr_, going with
+the oil-king, Henry B. Kingsley, on a pleasure cruise in the Southern
+Pacific; Thorwald, Sr.'s, story you read in the paper. Soon after the news
+of the _Zephyr's_ wreck, with all on board lost, as was then supposed,
+Thorwald's mother died. Her dying words (so young Thorwald told me, and I
+was moved by his simple, straightforward tale) were an appeal to her
+boy. She made him promise, for her sake, to study, study, study to gain
+knowledge, and to rise in the world! Thorwald promised. Then, believing
+both his parents dead, the young Norwegian, a youth of fifteen without
+money, had to shift for himself.
+
+"Thomas, Jack London could weave his adventures into a gripping
+masterpiece. Starting in as cabin-boy on a freighter to Alaska, young
+Thorwald, in the past ten years, has simply crowded his life with
+adventure, thrill, and experience, though thrills mean nothing to him. He
+was in the Klondike gold-fields, in the salmon canneries, a prospector, a
+lumber-jack in the Canadian Northwest, a cowboy, a sailor, a worker in the
+Panama Canal Zone, on the Big Ditch, and too many other things to remember.
+Finally, he drifted to Pittsburgh, where his prodigious strength served him
+in the steel-mills, and, let me add, served _me_, as I stated.
+
+"And ever, no matter where he wandered, or what was his toil, whenever
+possible, Thorwald studied. His promise to his mother was always his goal,
+and in the cities he studied, or in the wilds he read all the books he
+could find. The past year, finding he had a good-pay job in Pittsburgh, he
+settled to determined effort, and by sheer resolution, by his wonderful
+power to grasp facts and ideas for good once he gets them, he made great
+progress in night school, until he was shifted, a week before he saved my
+life, to work that required him to toil nightly, alternate weeks. So, for a
+year, Thor has had every possible advantage, some, unknown to him, I paid
+for myself; I got him clerical work, with shorter hours, he went to night
+school, and I employed the very best tutor obtainable, letting Thorwald
+pay him, as he thought, though his payments wouldn't keep the tutor in
+neckties. The gratitude of the blond giant is pathetic, and suspecting that
+I paid the tutor something, he insisted on paying all he could, which I
+allowed, of course.
+
+"Well, in August, a year after Thorwald rescued me from serious injury,
+perhaps death, I was in 'Frisco, and read of Thorwald, Sr.'s rescue and
+return. Overjoyed, I took the father to Pittsburgh, to the son. I witnessed
+their meeting, with the father practically risen from the dead, and all
+those stolid, unimaginative Norwegians did was to shake hands gravely!
+Young Thorwald told of his mother's last words, and of his promise, of his
+having studied all the years, and of his late progress, so that he was
+ready to enter college. His father, happy, insisted that he enter this
+September, and he would pay for his son's college course, to make up for
+the years the youth struggled for himself--Kingsley's heirs, I believe,
+gave Thorwald, Sr., five thousand dollars on his return. So, though
+grateful to me for the aid I offered, they would receive no financial
+assistance, for they want to work it out themselves, and help the youth
+make good his promise to his dying mother.
+
+"Much as I love old Bannister, my Alma Mater, I would not have tried to
+send Thorwald there, had I not deemed it a good place for him. However,
+since it is a liberal, not a technical, education he wants, it is all
+right; and that prodigious strength will serve the Gold and Green on the
+football field. Now, Thomas, I want you to meet him in Philadelphia, and
+take him to Bannister, look out for him, get him started O. K., and do all
+you can for him. Get him to play football, if you can, but don't condemn
+if he refuses. Remember, his life has been grim and unimaginative; he has
+toiled and studied, it is probable he will not understand college life at
+first."
+
+
+"That's all I need to read of Dad's letter, fellows," concluded T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. "After I got it, and Coach Corridan, Butch, and Beef heard my
+seemingly rash vow to round up a giant full-back, I made a mystery of it; I
+loafed in Philadelphia and Atlantic City until I met Thor, and brought him
+here. You have all the data regarding Thor, 'The Billion-Dollar Mystery.'"
+
+The students, almost as one, drew a deep breath. They had been enthralled
+by the story, and their feeling toward Thor had undergone a vast change.
+Stirred by hearing of his promise to his dying mother, thrilled at the way
+the stolid, determined Norwegian had ceaselessly studied to make something
+of himself for the sake of his mother's sacred memory, the Bannister youths
+now thought of football, of the Championship, as insignificant, beside the
+goal of Thorwald, Jr. The blond Colossus, whom an hour ago all Bannister
+reviled and condemned for not playing the game, who was a campus outcast,
+was now a hero; thanks to the erstwhile heedless Hicks, whose intense
+earnestness in itself was a revelation to the amazed collegians, Thor stood
+before them in a different light, and the impulsive, whole-souled, generous
+youths were now anxious to make amends.
+
+_"Thor! Thor! Thor!"_ was the thunderous cry, and the Bannister yell for
+the Prodigious Prodigy shattered the echoes. Then T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+ecstatically joyous, again stilled the tumult, and spoke in behalf of John
+Thorwald.
+
+"We all understand Thor now, fellows," he said, beaming on his comrades.
+"We want him to play football, and we'll keep after him to play, but we
+won't condemn him if he refuses. At present, Thor is simply a stolid,
+unimaginative, dull mass of muscle. As you can realize, his nature, his
+life so far have not tended to make him appreciate the gayer, lighter side
+of college life, or to grasp the traditions of the campus. To him, college
+is a market; he pays his money and he takes the knowledge handed out. We
+can not blame him for not understanding college existence in its entirety,
+or that the gaining of knowledge is a small part of the representative
+collegian's purpose.
+
+"Now, boys, here's our job, and let's tackle it together: To awaken in
+Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to stir his
+practical soul. Let every fellow be his friend, let no one speak against
+him, because of football. We must work slowly, carefully, gradually making
+him grasp college traditions, and once he awakens to the real meaning of
+campus life, what a power he will be in the college and on the athletic
+field! Maybe he will not play football this season, but let us help him to
+awaken!"
+
+With wild shouts, the aroused collegians poured from the Auditorium, an
+excited, turbulent mass of youthful humanity, a tide that swept T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., on the shoulders of several, out on the campus. Massed beneath
+the window of John Thorwald's room, in Creighton Hall, the Bannister
+students, now fully understanding that stolid Hercules, and stirred to
+admiration of him by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, great speech, cheered the
+somewhat mystified Thor again and again; in vast sound waves, the shouts
+rolled up to his open window:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah-rah-rah! _Thor! Thor! Thor_!" Captain Brewster, through a
+big megaphone, roared; "Fellows--What's the matter with _Thor_?"
+
+And in a terrific outburst which, as the Phillyloo Bird afterward said,
+"Like to of busted Bannister's works!" the enthusiastic collegians
+responded:
+
+"_He's_--all--right!"
+
+Then Butch, apparently in quest of information, persisted:
+
+"_Who's_ all right?"
+
+To which the three hundred or more youths, all seemingly equipped with
+lungs of leather, kindly answered:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor!"
+
+Still, though the Phillyloo Bird declared that this vocal explosion caused
+the seismographs as Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and in Salt Lake
+City, Utah, to register an earthquake somewhere, it had on the blond
+Freshman a strange effect. The vast mountain of muscle lumbered heavily
+across the room, gazed down at the howling crowd of collegians without
+emotion, then slammed down the window, and returned to study.
+
+"_Good night_" called Hicks. "The show is over! Let him have another yell,
+boys, to show we aren't insulted; then we'll disband!"
+
+Considering Thorwald's cool reception of their overtures, which some youth
+remarked, "Were as noisy as that of a Grand Opera Orchestra," it was quite
+surprising to the students, in the morning, when what occurred an hour
+after their serenade was revealed to them. As the story was told by those
+who witnessed the scene, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, Beef, Monty, Pudge,
+Roddy, Biff, Hefty, Tug, Buster, and Coach Corridan after the commotion
+subsided, retired to the sunny Hicks' quarters, where the football
+situation was discussed, along with ways and means to awaken Thor, when
+that colossal Freshman himself loomed up in the doorway.
+
+As they afterward learned, several excited Freshmen had dared to invade
+Thor's den, even while he studied, and give him a more or less correct
+account of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s masterly oration in his defense. Out of
+their garbled descriptions, big John Thorwald grasped one salient point,
+and straightway he started for Hicks' room, leaving the indignant Freshmen
+to tell their story to the atmosphere.
+
+"Hicks," said Thor, not bothering with the "Mr." required of all Freshmen,
+as his vast bulk crowded the doorway, "is it true that Mr. Thomas Haviland
+Hicks, Sr., wants me to play football? He has been very kind to me, and
+has helped me, and so have you, here at college. After a year of study, I
+should have had to stop night-school, but for him--instead, I got another
+year, and prepared for Bannister. I did not know that _he_ desired me to
+play, but if he does, I feel under obligation to show my great gratitude,
+both for myself and for my father."
+
+A moment of silence, for the glorious news could not be grasped in a
+second; those in the room, knowing Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.'s, brilliant
+athletic record at old Bannister, and understanding his great love for
+his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister to play
+football for the Gold and Green, though, as he had written his son, he
+would not have done so had he honestly believed that another college would
+suit the ambitious Goliath better.
+
+"Does he?" stammered the dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while the others
+echoed the words feebly, "Yes, I should say he _does_!"
+
+For a second, the ponderous young Colossus hesitated, and then, as calmly
+as though announcing he would add Greek to his list of studies, and wholly
+unaware that his words were to bring joy to old Bannister, he spoke
+stolidly.
+
+"Then I shall play football."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY.
+
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the Devil had done for the rest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+T HAVILAND HICKS, JR., his chair tilted at a perilous angle, and his feet
+thrust gracefully atop of the study-table, in his cozy room, one Friday
+afternoon two weeks after John Thorwald's return to the football squad, was
+fathoms deep in Stevenson's "Treasure Island." As he perused the thrilling
+pages, the irrepressible youth twanged a banjo accompaniment, and roared
+with gusto the piratical chantey of Long John Silver's buccaneer crew;
+Hicks, however, despite his saengerfest, was completely lost in the
+enthralling narrative, so that he seemed to hear the parrot shrieking,
+"Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!" and the wild refrain:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+He was reading that breathlessly exciting part where the cabin-boy of the
+_Hispaniola_, and Israel Hands have their terrible fight to the death, with
+the dodging over the dead man rolling in the scuppers, the climbing up the
+mast, and the dirk pinning the boy's shoulder, before Hands is shot and
+goes to join his mate on the bottom; just at the most absorbing page, as he
+twanged his beloved banjo louder, and roared the chantey, there sounded,
+"Tramp--tramp--tramp!" in the corridor, the heavy tread of many feet
+sounded, coming nearer. Instinctively realizing that the pachydermic parade
+was headed for _his_ room, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., rushed to the closet,
+murmuring, "Safety first!" as usual, and stowed away his banjo. He was just
+in the nick of time, for a second later there crowded into his room Captain
+Butch, Pudge, Beef, Hefty, Biff, Monty, Roddy, Bunch, Tug, Buster, Coach
+Corridas, and Thor, the latter duo bringing up the rear.
+
+"Hicks, you unjailed public nuisance!" said Butch Brewster, affectionately.
+"We, whom you behold, are going for to enter into that room across the
+corridor from your boudoir, and hold a football signal quiz and confab. We
+should request that you permit a thunderous silence to originate in your
+cozy retreat, for the period of at least a hour! A word to the _wise_ is
+sufficient, so I have spoken several, that even you may comprehend my
+meaning."
+
+"I gather you, fluently!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., taking up
+"Treasure Island" and his graceful pose once more. "Leave me to peruse the
+thrilling pages of this classic blood-and-thunder book, and I'll cause a
+beautiful serenity to obtain hither."
+
+"See that you do, you pestiferous insect!" threatened Beef McNaughton,
+ominously. "Come on, fellows, Hicks can't escape our vengeance, if
+he bursts into what he fatuously believes is song. Just let him act
+hippicanarious, and--"
+
+When the Gold and Green eleven, half of which, to judge by size, was
+Thor, had gone with Coach Corridan into the room across from that of the
+blithesome Hicks, the sunny-souled Senior tried to resume his perusal of
+"Treasure Island," but somehow the spell had been broken by the invasion of
+his cozy quarters. So, after vainly essaying to take up the thread of the
+story again, Hicks arose and stood by the window, gazing across the campus
+to Bannister Field, deserted, since the football team rested for the game
+of the morrow. As he stood there, the gladsome Hicks reflected seriously.
+He thought of "Thor," and decided sorrowfully that the problem of awakening
+that stolid Colossus to a full understanding of campus life was as unsolved
+as ever.
+
+"But I _won't_ give it up!" declared Hicks, determinedly. "I have always
+been good at math, and I won't let this problem baffle me."
+
+Since the night, two weeks back, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had made his
+memorable speech, explaining to his fellow-students the "Billon-Dollar
+Mystery," and arousing in them a vast admiration for the slow-minded,
+plodding John Thorwald, every collegian had done his best to befriend the
+big Freshman. Upperclassmen helped him with his studies. Despite his almost
+rude refusal to meet any advances, the collegians always had a cheery
+greeting for him, and his class-mates, in fear and trembling, invaded
+his den at times, to show him they were his friends. Yet, despite these
+whole-hearted efforts, only two of old Bannister did the silent Thor
+seem to desire as comrades: the festive Hicks, for reasons known,
+and--remarkable to chronicle--little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+studious "Human Encyclopedia."
+
+"Colossus and Lilliputian!" the Phillyloo Bird quaintly observed once when
+this strangely assorted duo appeared on the campus. "Say, fellows--some
+time Thor will accidentally sit on Theophilus, and we'll have another
+mystery, the disappearance of our boner!"
+
+The generous Hicks, longing for Thor's awakening to come, was not in the
+least jealous of his loyal little friend, Theophilus. In fact, he was
+sincerely delighted that the unemotional Hercules desired the comradeship
+of the grind, and he urged the Human Encyclopedia to strive constantly to
+arouse in Thor a realization of college existence, and a true knowledge of
+its meaning. At least one thing, Theophilus reported, had been achieved by
+Hicks' defense of Thorwald, and the subsequent attitude of the collegians--
+the colossal Freshman was puzzled, quite naturally. When over three hundred
+youths criticized, condemned, and berated him one night, and the next, even
+before he reconsidered his decision about football, came under his window
+and cheered him, no wonder the young Norwegian was bewildered.
+
+On the football field, with his dogged determination, his bulldog way of
+hanging on to things until he mastered them, big Thor progressed slowly,
+and surely; the past Saturday, against the heavy Alton eleven, the blond
+Freshman had been sent in for the second half, and, to quote an overjoyed
+student, he had "busted things all up!" It seemed simply impossible to stop
+that terrible rush of his huge body. Time after time he plowed through the
+line for yards, and old Bannister, visioning Thor distributing Hamilton and
+Ballard over the field, in the big games, literally hugged itself.
+
+And yet, despite Thorwald's invincible prowess, despite the vast joy of
+old Bannister at the chances of the Championship, some intangible
+shadow hovered over the campus. It brooded over the training-table, the
+shower-rooms after scrimmage, on Bannister Field during practice; as yet,
+no one had dared to give it form, by voicing his thought, but though no
+youth dared admit it, something was wrong, there was a defective cog in the
+machinery of that marvelous machine, the Gold and Green eleven.
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks," quoth that sunny youth, at length, turning
+from the window; "I'll solve the problem, or what is more probable,
+Theophilus may stir that sodden hulk of humanity, after awhile. I won't
+worry about it, for that gets me nothing, and it will all come out O.K.,
+I'm positive!"
+
+At this moment, just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., picked up "Treasure Island"
+again, he heard drifting across the corridor from the room opposite, in
+Butch Brewster's familiar voice:
+
+"--Yes, I'll win three more Bs'--one each in football, baseball and track;
+next spring, I'll annex my last B at old Bannister, fellows--"
+
+His _last_ B--The words struck the blithesome Hicks with sledge-hammer
+force. Big Butch Brewster was talking of his last B, when he, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., had never won his first; with a feeling almost of alarm, the
+sunny youth realized that this was his final year at old Bannister, his
+last chance to win his athletic letter, and to make happy his beloved Dad,
+by helping him to realize part of his life's ambition--to behold his son
+shattering Hicks, Sr.'s, wonderful record. His final chance, and outside of
+his hopes of winning the track award in the high-jump, Hicks saw no way to
+win his B.
+
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., as has been chronicled, the beloved Dad of the
+cheery Senior, a Pittsburgh millionaire Steel King, was a graduate of old
+Bannister, Class of '92. While wearing the Gold and Green, he had made
+an all-round athletic record never before, or afterward, rivaled on
+the campus. At football, basketball, track, and baseball, he was a
+scintillating star, annexing enough letters to start an alphabet, had they
+been different ones. Quite naturally, when the Doctor, speaking anent
+the then infantile Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., said, "Mr. Hicks, it's a
+boy!"--the one-time Bannister athlete straightway began to dream of the day
+when his only son and heir should follow in his Dad's footsteps, shattering
+the records made at Bannister, and at Yale, by Hicks, _pere_.
+
+However, to quote a sporting phrase, the son of the Steel King "upset the
+dope!" At the start of his Senior year, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had not
+annexed a single athletic honor, nor did the signs point to any records
+being in peril of getting shattered by his prowess; as Hicks himself
+phrased it, "Dame Nature was _some stingy_ when she handed out the Hercules
+stuff to me!" The happy-go-lucky youth, when he matriculated as a Freshman
+at Bannister College, was builded on the general lines of a toothpick, and
+had he elected to follow a pugilistic career, a division somewhat lighter
+than the tissue paperweight class would have had to be devised to
+accommodate the splinter-student. A generous, sunny-souled, intensely
+democratic collegian, despite his father's wealth, the festive Hicks, with
+his room always open-house to all; his firm friendship for star athlete
+or humble boner, his never-failing sunny nature, together with his famous
+Hicks Personally Conducted Expeditions downtown to the Beef-Steak Busts he
+had originated, in his three years at old Bannister, had made himself the
+most popular and beloved youth on the campus, but, he had not won his B!
+
+And he had tried. With a full realization, of his Dad's ambition, his
+life-dream to behold his son a great athlete, the blithesome Hicks had
+tried, but with hilariously futile results. Nature had endowed him, as he
+told his loyal comrade, Butch Brewster, with "the Herculean build of a
+Jersey mosquito," and his athletic powers neared zero infinity. In his
+Freshman year, he inaugurated his athletic career by running the wrong way
+in the Sophomore-Freshman football game, scoring a touchdown that won for
+the enemy, and naturally, after that performance, every athletic effort was
+greeted with jeers by the students.
+
+"I _have_ tried!" said Hicks, producing two letters from the study-table,
+"But not like I should have tried. I could never have played on the eleven,
+or on the nine, but I have a chance in the high-jump. I know I've been
+indolent and care-free, and I ought to have trained harder. Well, I just
+must win my track B this spring, but as to keeping the rash promise I made
+to Butch as a Freshman--not a chance!"
+
+It had been at the close of his Freshman year, after Hicks, in the
+Interclass Track Meet, had smashed hurdles, broken high-jumping cross-bars,
+finished last in several events, and jeopardized his life with the shot and
+hammer, that he made the rash vow to which he now had reference. Butch,
+believing his sunny friend had entered all the events just to entertain the
+crowd, in his fun-loving way, was teasing him about his ridiculous fiascos,
+when Hicks had told him the story--how his Dad wanted him to try and be a
+famous athlete; he showed Butch a letter, received before the meet, asking
+his son to try every event, and to keep on training, so as to win his B
+before he graduated. Butch, great-hearted, was surprised and moved by the
+revelation that the gladsome youth, even as he was jeered by his friendly
+comrades, who thought he performed for sport, was striving to have his
+Dad's dream come true; he had sympathized with his classmate, and then his
+scatter-brained colleague had aroused his indignation by vowing, with a
+swaggering confidence:
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks!' Remember this, Butch, before I graduate from
+old Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!"
+
+Butch had snorted incredulously. To win the football or the baseball B,
+the gold letter for the former, and the green one for the latter sport,
+an athlete had to play in three-fourths of the season's games, on the
+"'Varsity"; to gain the white track letter, one had to win a first place in
+some event, in a regularly scheduled track meet with another team. And now,
+Butch's skepticism seemed confirmed, for at the start of his last year at
+college, Hicks had not annexed a single B, though he bade fair to corral
+one in the spring in the high-jump.
+
+"Heigh-ho!" chuckled Hicks, at length. "Here I am threatening to get gloomy
+again! Well I'll sure train hard to win my track letter, and that seems
+all I can do! I'd like to win my three B's, and jeer at Butch, next June,
+but--_it can't be did_! I shall now twang my trusty banjo, and drive dull
+care away."
+
+Quite forgetful of the football conclave across the corridor, and of Butch
+Brewster's request for quiet, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. dragged out his
+beloved banjo, caressed its strings lovingly, and roared:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the--"
+
+"_Hicks_!" Big Butch Brewster crashed across the corridor, both doors being
+open. "Is this how you maintain a quiet? I'm going to call Thor over and
+make him sit down on you! Why, you--"
+
+"Have mercy!" plead the grinning Hicks. "Honest, Butch, I didn't go to bust
+up the league--I--I heard you talk about your B's, and I got to thinking
+that _I_ have but little time to make my Dad happy; see, here's proof--read
+these letters I was perusing--"
+
+Puzzled, Butch scanned the first one, dated back in the May of their
+Freshman year; Hicks had received it before the class track meet, and, as
+chronicled, he had heard from his sunny comrade later, how it impelled the
+splinter youth to try every event, while Bannister believed him to enter
+them for fun. The letter was post-marked "Pittsburgh, Pa.," and it read:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+Your last term's report gratified me immensely, and I am proud of your
+class record, and scholastic achievements. Pitch in, and lead your class,
+and make your Dad happy.
+
+But there is something else of which I want to write, Thomas. As you must
+know, it has always been a cause of keen regret to me that you have never
+seemed to care for athletics of any sort; you appear to be too indolent and
+ease-loving to sacrifice, or to endure the hardships of training. I suppose
+it is because of my athletic record both at Bannister and at old Yale that
+I am so eager to see you become a star; in fact, it is my life's most
+cherished ambition to have you become as famous as your Dad.
+
+However, I realize that my fond dream can never come true. Nature has not
+made you naturally strong and athletic, and what athletic success you may
+gain, must come from long and hard training and practice. If you can only
+win your college letter, your B, Thomas, while at Bannister, I shall be
+fully content.
+
+I said nothing when you failed even to try for the teams at your
+Preparatory School, but I did hope that at Bannister, under good coaches
+and trainers, you would at least endeavor to win your letter. I must admit
+that I am disappointed, for you have not even made an earnest effort to
+find your event. Often, by trying everything, especially in a track meet, a
+fellow finds his event, and later stars in it.
+
+I really believe that if you would start in now to develop yourself by
+regular, systematic gymnasium work, and if you would only try, in a year
+or so you could make a Bannister team. Theodore Roosevelt, you know, was a
+puny, weakly boy, but he built himself up, and became an athlete. If you
+want to please me, start now and find your event. Attempt all the sports,
+all the various track and field events, and always build yourself up by
+exercise in the Gym.
+
+And you owe it to your Alma Mater, my son! Even if, after conscientious
+effort, you fail to win your B, to know that you have given your college
+and teams what help you could, will please your Dad. Remember, the fellow
+who toils on the scrubs is the true hero. If you become good enough to give
+the first eleven, the first nine, the first five, or the first track squad
+a hard rub and a fast practice, you are serving Bannister.
+
+I don't ask you to do this, Thomas, I only say that it will make me happy
+just to know you are striving. If you never get beyond the scrubs, just to
+hear you are serving the Gold and Green, giving your best, in that humble
+unhonored way, will please me. And if, before you graduate, you _can_ win
+your B, I shall be so glad! Don't get discouraged, it may take until your
+Senior year, but once you start, _stick_.
+
+Your loving
+
+DAD.
+
+
+"Read this one, too, Butch," requested Hicks, hurriedly, as a hail of, "Oh,
+you Hicks, come here!" sounded down the corridor, from Skeet Wigglesworth's
+abode. "I'll be back as soon as Skeet finishes his foolishness. Don't wait
+for me, though, if I am delayed, for you want to be talking football."
+
+Left alone, big Butch Brewster, who of all the collegians that had known
+and loved the sunny Hicks, some now graduated, understood that his athletic
+efforts, jeered good-naturedly by the students, were made because of a
+great desire to win his B and make happy his Dad, read the second letter,
+dated a few days before:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+You are starting the last lap, son, your Senior year, and your final chance
+to win your B! Don't forget how happy it will make your Dad if you win your
+letter just once! Of course, you cannot gain it in football, for nature
+gave you no chance, nor in baseball; but in track work it is up to you.
+Train hard, Thomas, and try to win a first place; just win your track B,
+and I'll rest content!
+
+Your college record gives me great pleasure. You stand at the top in your
+studies, and you are vastly popular, while the Faculty speak highly of you.
+Let your B come as a climax to your career, and I'll be so proud of you.
+Don't forget, you are the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and those sons of old
+Eli want you to win the letter. As to football, you cannot win your gold B
+by playing three-fourths of a season's games, but you might get in a big
+game, even win it, if you'll get confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan
+about yourself. Don't mind the jeers of your comrades--they just don't
+know how you've tried to please your Dad; you owe it to your Alma Mater
+to tell, and, take my word as a football star, you have the goods! Your
+peculiar prowess has won many a contest, and old Bannister needs it this
+season, I hear--
+
+
+There was more, but big Butch scarcely saw it, bewildered as the behemoth
+Senior was; what new mystery had Hicks set afoot? What did Hicks, Sr.,
+mean by writing, "You might get in a big game, even win it, if you'll get
+confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan about yourself? You owe it to your
+Alma Mater to tell, and take my word, as a football star, you have the
+goods--" Why, everyone knew that T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., possessed no more
+football ability than a Jersey mosquito, and yet--
+
+"Another Hicks mystery," groaned Butch, holding the two letters
+thoughtfully. "And father and son are in it, But if Hicks don't get his B,
+it will be a shame. _Say, I know--_"
+
+A few moments later, good-hearted Butch Brewster, in the behalf of his
+sunny comrade, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was making to the Gold and Green
+eleven and Coach Corridan, as eloquent a speech as that blithesome youth,
+two weeks before, had made in defense of the condemned and ostracized Thor!
+He read them the two letters of Hicks' beloved Dad, and told how the cheery
+collegian wanted to win his B for his father's sake; graphically, he
+related Hicks, Sr.'s, great ambition, and how Hicks, Jr., for three years
+had vainly tried to make good at some athletic sport, and to win his
+letter. Big Butch, warming to his theme, spoke of how T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., letting the students believe that he entered every event in the track
+meet of his Freshman year just for fun, had been trying to find his event,
+and train for it; he explained that the festive youth, ever sunny-natured,
+under the good-humored jeers of his comrades, who did not know his real
+purpose, really yearned to win his B.
+
+"You fellows, and you, Coach," he thundered, "all know how Hicks, unable
+to make the 'Varsity, has always done humble service for old Bannister,
+cheerfully, gladly; how he keeps the athletes in good spirits at the
+training-table, and is always on hand after scrimmage to rub them out. He
+is chock-full of college spirit, and is intensely loyal to his Alma Mater.
+Why, look how he rounded up Thor--he ought to have his B for that!"
+
+Thanks to Butch's speech, the Gold and Green football stars, most of whom
+were Hicks' closest friends, saw the scatter-brained, happy-go-lucky
+youth in a new light; his eloquent defense of John Thorwald had shown old
+Bannister that he could be serious, but the knowledge that T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., even as he made a ridiculous farce in athletics, was ambitious
+to win his B, just to make his Dad happy, stunned them. For three years,
+the sunny Hicks' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a team, had
+meant a small-sized riot of jeers and good-natured ridicule at his expense;
+but Hicks had always grinned _a la_ Cheshire cat,--and no one but good
+Butch Brewster, all the time, had known how in earnest the lovable
+collegian was.
+
+"Now," concluded Butch, "Hicks _may_ win a B in track work, if he gets a
+first place in the high-jump, and if so, O.K., but if he does not--"
+
+"You mean--" Monty Merriweather--understood, "if he fails, then the
+Athletic Association ought to--"
+
+"Present him with a B!" said Butch, earnestly, "as a deserved reward for
+his faithful loyalty and service to old Bannister's athletic teams. Don't
+let him graduate without gaining his letter, and making his Dad realize a
+part of his ambition--a two-thirds vote of the Athletic Association can
+award him his letter, and when all the students know the truth about his
+ridiculous fiasco on Bannister Field, and realize the serious purpose
+beneath them all, they--"
+
+"_We'll give him his B_!" shouted Beef, loudly, "If he fails in track work
+next spring, we'll vote him his letter, anyway!"
+
+Out in the corridor, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., returning from Skeet
+Wigglesworth's room and entering his own cozy quarters, could not help
+hearing the conversation, as the doors of both his den and the room across
+the corridor were open. A great love for his comrades came to his impulsive
+heart, and a mist before his eyes, as he heard how they wanted to vote him
+his B in case he failed to win it in track work; he thrilled at Butch's
+speech, but--
+
+[Illustration B: 'Fellows,...I--I thank you from the bottom of my heart']
+
+"Fellows," he startled them by appearing in the doorway, "I--I thank you
+from the bottom of my heart. I couldn't help hearing, you know--I _do_
+appreciate your generous thoughts, but--I can't and won't accept my B
+unless I win it according to the rule of the Athletic Association."
+
+A silence, and then Butch Brewster, gripping his comrade's hand
+understandingly, held out to him the two letters.
+
+"Forgive me, old man," he breathed, "for reading them aloud, but I wanted
+the fellows to know, to appreciate you! And say, Hicks, what does your Dad
+mean by saying that you are the _'Class Kid'_ of Yale, '96, and that those
+sons of old Eli want you to win your letter? And what does he mean by
+saying that you may get in a _big game_--may _win_ it--that you have
+the goods in football, but lack the confidence to announce it to Coach
+Corridan? Also that old Bannister needs just the peculiar brand you
+possess?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his sunny, Cheshire cat grin illuminating his
+cherubic countenance, beamed on the eleven and Coach Corridan a moment.
+
+"Oh, that's a _mystery_," he said, cheerfully. "If I _do_ gain the courage
+and confidence, I'll explain, but unless I do--it remains a--_mystery_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+
+
+"ALL MEMBERS OF THE FIRST ELEVEN ARE URGENTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT IN
+THE ROOM OF T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.--AT EIGHT P. M. TONIGHT; YOU WILL BE
+DETAINED ONLY A FEW MINUTES, BUT LET EVERY PLAYER COME, AS A MATTER OF
+EXTREME IMPORTANCE WILL BE PRESENTED. PATRICK HENRY COERIDAN, HEAD-COACH."
+
+"Now, what do you suppose is up Coach Corridan's sleeve?" demanded T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cheerfully. "Has Ballard learned our signals, or some
+Bannister student sold them to a rival team, as per the usual football
+story? Though the notice doth not herald it, I am to be present, for my
+room is to be used, and the Coach gave me a special invitation to cut the
+Gordian knot with my keen intellect."
+
+The sunny Hicks, with Butch, Beef, Tug, and Monty, had just come from
+"Delmonico's Annex," the college dining-hall, after supper; they had paused
+before the Bulletin Board at the Gymnasium entrance, where all college
+notices were posted, and the Coach's urgent request had caught their gaze.
+The announcement had caused quite a stir on the campus. The Bannister
+youths stood in excited groups talking of it, and in the dormitories it
+superseded all thought of study; however, there seemed little chance that
+any but the "'Varsity" and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., who was always consulted
+in football problems, would know what took place in this meeting.
+
+"There is only one way to find out, Hicks," responded big Butch Brewster,
+his arm across his blithesome comrade's shoulders, "and that is, attend
+the meeting! You can wager that every member of the eleven will be there,
+except Thor--he regards it as 'foolishness,' I suppose, and he won't spare
+that precious time from his studies."
+
+At five minutes past eight, Butch's prophecy was fulfilled, for every
+member of the eleven _was_ in Hicks' cozy room, except Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy, whose presence would have caused a mild sensation. It was an
+extremely quiet and orderly gathering, for Coach Corridan, who had the
+floor, was so grave that he impressed the would-be sky-larking youths.
+Having their undivided attention, he proceeded to make a speech that, to
+all intents and purposes, had much the same effect on the team and Hicks as
+a Zeppelin's bombs on London:
+
+"Boys," he spoke, in forceful sentences, driving straight to the point,
+"I am going to take the eleven, and Hicks, whose suggestions are always
+timely, into my confidence, in the hope that we, working together, may
+carry out an idea of mine for the awakening of Thor to a realization
+of things! I ask you not to let what I shall tell you be known to the
+student-body, but you fellows play with Thor every day, and you will
+understand the crisis, and appreciate _why_ it is done, if I decide it
+necessary to drop John Thorwald from the football squad."
+
+"Drop Thor from the squad!" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., staggered, and
+then pandemonium broke loose among the players. Drop the Prodigious Prodigy
+from the squad, why, what _could_ the Slave-Driver be thinking of? Why,
+look how Thorwald, on the scrubs, tore through the heavy 'Varsity line for
+big gains. He was simply unstoppable; and yet, almost on the eve of the big
+game that old Bannister depended on Thor to win by his splendid prowess, he
+might be dropped from the squad! Excited exclamations sounded from Captain
+Butch Brewster, Beef, and the others of the Gold and Green eleven:
+
+"Why not give the big games to Ballard and Ham, Coach?"
+
+"Say, shoot Theophilus Opperdyke in at full-back!"
+
+"Good-by, championship! No hopes now, fellows!"
+
+"If Thor doesn't play in the Big Games--good night!"
+
+A greater sensation could not have been caused even had kindly white-haired
+Prexy announced his intention of challenging Jess Willard for the World's
+Heavy-Weight Championship. Dropping that human battering-ram, Thor, from
+the football, squad was something utterly undreamed-of. Coach Corridan
+raised his hand for silence, and the youths subsided.
+
+"Hear me carefully, boys," he urged, "I know that old Bannister has come to
+regard John Thorwald as invincible, to use his vast bulk as a foundation
+on which to build hopes of the Championship, which is a bad policy, for no
+team can be a _one-man_ team and win. I realize that as a football player,
+Thor hasn't an equal in the State today, and if he had the right spirit, he
+would have few in the country. It would be ridiculous to decry his prowess,
+for he is a physical phenomenon. But you remember T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+splendid defense of Thor, a week or so ago? Hicks gave you a full and clear
+explanation of the big fellow, and showed you _why_ he does not know what
+college spirit is, what loyalty and love for one's Alma Mater mean! His
+masterly speech changed your attitude toward Thor, and even before he
+decided to play football, for Mr. Hicks' sake, you admired him, because
+of his indomitable purpose, his promise to his dying mother. Now _I_ am
+telling you why he may be dropped from the squad, because I want you
+fellows to give Thor a square deal, to remember what Hicks told you of him,
+and to keep on striving to awaken him to the true meaning of campus years,
+to make him realize that college life is more than a mere buying of
+knowledge. I want to keep him on the squad, if humanly possible, and I
+shall outline my plot later.
+
+"Tomorrow we play Latham College. It is the last game before the big games
+for The State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Saturday after this,
+we play Hamilton, and the following week Ballard, the Champions! The eleven
+I send in against those teams must be a solid unit, _one_ in spirit and
+purpose--every member of the Gold and Green team must be welded with his
+team-mates, and they must forget everything but that their Alma Mater must
+win the Championship! With no thought of self-glory, no other purpose in
+playing than a love for old Bannister, every fellow must go into those
+games to fight for his Alma Mater! Now, as for Thor, I need not tell you
+that he is not in sympathy with our ambition; he simply does not understand
+campus tradition and spirit. He is as yet not possessed of an Alma Mater;
+he plays football only because of gratitude to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., and he hates to lose the time from his studies for the practice.
+The football squad knows that his presence is a veritable wet blanket on
+enthusiasm and the team's fighting spirit."
+
+It was true. That intangible shadow of something wrong, brooding over
+training-table, shower-room, and Bannister Field, that self-evident
+truth which almost every collegian had for days confessed to himself yet
+hesitated to voice, had been given definite form by Coach Corridan talking
+to the eleven. The good that Thorwald might do for the team by his superb
+prowess and massive bulk was more than offset and nullified by his
+attitude.
+
+To the blond Colossus, daily practice was unutterable mental torture. His
+mind was on his studies, to which his bulldog purpose shackled him; he
+begrudged the time spent on Bannister Field; he was stolid, silent, aloof.
+He scarcely ever spoke, except when addressed. He reported for practice at
+the last second, went through the scrimmage like a great, dumb, driven ox,
+doing as he was ordered; and when the squad was dismissed he hurried to his
+room. He was among the squad, but not of them; he neither understood nor
+cared about their love for old Bannister, their vast desire to win for
+their Alma Mater; he played football because he was grateful to Hicks, Sr.,
+for helping him to get started toward his goal, but as Coach Corridan now
+told the 'Varsity, he killed the squad's enthusiasm,
+
+"All of this cannot fail to damage the _esprit de corps_, the _morale_, of
+the eleven," declared Coach Corridan, having outlined Thor's attitude. "I
+know that every member of the squad, if Thor played the game because of
+college spirit, for love of old Bannister, would rejoice at his prowess.
+But as it is they are justly resentful that he is not in the spirit of the
+game. What we may gain by his playing, we lose because the others cannot do
+their best with his example to hurt their fighting spirit. I do not want,
+nor will I have on my eleven, any player who plays for other reasons than a
+love for his Alma Mater, be he a Hogan, Brickley, Thorpe, or Mahan. I have
+waited, hoping Thorwald would be awakened, as Hicks explained, but now I
+must act. Tomorrow's game with Latham must see Thor awakened, or I must,
+for the sake of the eleven, drop him from the squad for the rest of the
+season.
+
+"Yet I beg of you, in case the plan I shall propose fails, remember Hicks'
+appeal! Do not condemn or ostracize John Thorwald in any degree. He has
+three more seasons of football, so let us keep on trying to make him
+understand campus life, college tradition. Be his friends, help him all you
+can, and sooner or later he will awaken. Something may suddenly shock him
+to a true understanding of what old Bannister means to a fellow. Or perhaps
+the awakening will be slow, but it must come. And Bannister can win without
+Thor, don't forget that! We'll make one final effort to awaken Thor, and
+if it fails, just forget him, boys, so far as football goes, and watch the
+Gold and Green win that championship."
+
+"What is your scheme, Coach?" questioned Captain Butch Brewster, his honest
+countenance showing how heavily the responsibility of team-leader weighed
+upon him. "You are right; as Thor is now, he is a handicap to the eleven,
+but--"
+
+"My idea is this," explained the Slave-Driver earnestly. "Select some
+student to go to Thorwald and try to show him that unless he gets into the
+game and plays for old Bannister, he will be dropped from the squad. If
+possible, let the fellow make him understand that, in his case, it will be
+a shame and a dishonor. Now, Butch, you and Hicks can probably approach
+Thor, or perhaps you know of someone who--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cherubic countenance showed the light of dawning
+inspiration, and Coach Corridan paused, as the sunny youth exhibited a
+desire to say something, with him not by any means a phenomenal
+happening; given the floor, the blithesome youth burst forth excitedly:
+"Theophilus--Theophilus Opperdyke is the one! He has more influence over
+Thor than any other student, and the big fellow likes the little boner.
+Thor will at least listen to Theophilus, which Is more than any of us can
+gain from him."
+
+After the meeting had adjourned, and the last inspection had been made in
+the other dorms, the Seniors being exempt, several members of the Gold and
+Green team--Captain Butch, Beef, Pudge, Monty, Roddy, and Bunch, together
+with little Theophilus Opperdyke, dragged from his studies--foregathered in
+the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; those who had heard the
+coach's talk were still stunned at the ban likely to be placed on the
+Brobdingnagian Thor. On the campus outside Creighton Hall, a horde of
+Bannister youths, incited by Tug Cardiff, who gave them no reason for his
+act, were making a strenuous effort to awaken the Prodigious Prodigy,
+evidently depending on noise to achieve that end, for a vast sound-wave
+rolled up to Hicks' windows--"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!
+He's--all--right!"
+
+"Listen!" exploded T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., indignantly. "You and I,
+Theophilus, would give a Rajah's ransom just to hear the fellows whoop it
+up for us like that, and it has no more effect on that sodden hulk of a
+Thor than bombarding an English super-dreadnaught with Roman candles!
+Howsomever, Coach Corridan exploded a shrapnel bomb on old Bannister's
+eleven tonight."
+
+Then Hicks carefully outlined to the dazed little boner the substance of
+the coach's talk to the team, and Theophilus was alarmed when he thought of
+Thor's being dropped from the squad. When Captain Butch had outlined the
+Slave-Driver's plot for striving to awaken the Colossus to a realization of
+what a disgrace it would be to be sent from the gridiron, though he did not
+announce that the Human Encyclopedia had been elected to carry out Coach
+Corridan's last-hope idea, Theophilus sat on the edge of the chair,
+blinking owlishly at them over his big-rimmed spectacles.
+
+"After all, fellows," quavered Theophilus nervously, "Coach Corridan, if he
+drops Thor from the squad, won't create such a riot on the campus as you
+might expect. You see, the students, even as they built and planned on
+Thor, gradually came to know that there is vastly more to be considered
+than physical power. That great bulk actually acts as a drag on the eleven,
+because Thor isn't in sympathy with things! Still, if he could only be
+aroused, awakened, wouldn't the team play football, with him striving for
+old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for Hicks' dad?
+Oh, I _do_ hope the Coach's plan succeeds, and he awakens tomorrow; I
+know the boys won't condemn him, if he doesn't, but--I--I want him to
+understand!"
+
+"It's his last chance this season," reflected T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+enshrouded in a penumbra of gloom. "I made a big boast that I would round
+up a smashing full-back. I returned to Bannister with the Prodigious
+Prodigy. I made a big mystery of him, and then--biff!--Thor quit football.
+Then I explained the mystery, and got the fellows to admire him, and when
+Thor decided to play the game I thought 'All O.K.; I'll just wait until
+he scatters Hamilton and Ballard over Bannister Field, then I'll swagger
+before Butch and say, "Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!"' But now
+Thor has spilled the beans again."
+
+"I--I hope that the one you have chosen to appeal to Thor--" spoke
+Theophilus timorously, "will succeed, for--Oh, I _don't_ want him to be
+dropped from the squad, and--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who had been gazing at little Theophilus Opperdyke with
+a basilisk glare that perturbed the bewildered Human Encyclopedia, suddenly
+strode across the room and placed his hand on the grind's thin shoulders.
+
+"Theophilus, old man, it's up to you!" he said earnestly. "Thor has a
+strong regard for you; in fact, outside of his good-natured tolerance
+for Hicks, you alone have his friendship. Now I want you to go to him,
+Theophilus, and make a last appeal to Thor. Try to awaken him, to make him
+understand his peril of being dropped from the squad, unless he plays
+the game for his college! It's for old Bannister, old man, for your Alma
+Mater--"
+
+"Go to it, Theophilus!" urged Beef McNaughton. "Coach Corridan said Thor
+might be suddenly awakened by a shock, but no electric battery can shock
+that Colossus, and, besides, miracles don't happen nowadays. Yes, it's up
+to you, old man."
+
+For a moment little Theophilus, his big-rimmed spectacles falling off
+as fast as he replaced them, and his puny frame tense with excitement,
+hesitated. Sitting on the extreme edge of the chair, he surveyed his
+comrades solemnly and was convinced that they were in earnest. Then, "I--I
+will _try_, sir!" exclaimed Theophilus, who would _never_ forget his
+Freshman training. "I'm _sure_ Hicks, or somebody, could do It better than
+I; but--I'll try!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+
+
+ "College ties can ne'er be broken--
+ Loyal will remain each heart;
+ Though the last farewell be spoken--
+ And from Bannister we part!
+
+ "Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee--
+ Till we from life shall part!"
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous, intensely studious Human Encyclopedia,
+stood at the window of John Thorwald's study room. That behemoth, desiring
+quiet, had moved his study-table and chair to a vacant room across the
+second-floor corridor of Creighton, the Freshman dormitory, when the
+Bannister youths cheered him, and he was still there, so that Theophilus,
+on his mission, had finally located him by his low rumblings, as he
+laboriously read out his Latin. The little Senior was gazing across the
+brightly lighted Quadrangle. He could see into the rooms of the other
+class dormitories, where the students studied, skylarked, rough-housed,
+or conversed on innumerable topics; from a room in Nordyke, the abode of
+care-free Juniors, a splendidly blended sextette sang songs of their
+Alma Mater, and their rich voices drifted across the Quad. to Thor and
+Theophilus:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+ Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!"
+
+Theophilus turned from the window, and looked despairingly at that young
+Colossus, Thor. The behemoth Norwegian, oblivious to everything except the
+geometry problem now causing him to sweat, rested his massive head on his
+palms, elbows on the study-table, and was lost in the intricate labyrinth
+of "Let the line ABC equal the line BVD." The frail chair creaked under his
+ponderous bulk. On the table lay an unopened letter that had come in the
+night's mail, for, tackling one problem, the bulldog Hercules never let go
+his grip until he solved it, and nothing else, not even Theophilus, could
+secure his attention. Hence the Human Encyclopedia, trembling at the
+terrific importance of the mission entrusted to him, waited, thrilled by
+the Juniors' songs, which failed to penetrate Thor's mind.
+
+"Oh, what _can_ I do?" breathed Theophilus, sitting down nervously on the
+edge of a chair and peering owlishly over his big-rimmed spectacles at the
+stolid John Thorwald. "I am sure that, in time, I can help Thor to--to know
+campus life better; but--_tomorrow_ is his last chance! He will be dropped
+from the squad, unless--"
+
+As Thor at last leaned back and gazed at his little comrade, just then, to
+the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," an augmented chorus drifted across the
+Quadrangle:
+
+ "And we'll sing one song
+ For the college that we love--
+ For our dear old Bannister--good-by"
+
+To the Bannister students there was something tremendously queer in the
+friendship of Theophilus and Thor. That the huge Freshman, of all the
+collegians, should have chosen the timorous little boner was most puzzling.
+Yet, to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a keen reader of human nature, it was
+clear; Thorwald thought of nothing but study, Theophilus was a grind,
+though he possessed intense college spirit, hence Thor was naturally drawn
+to the little Senior by the mutual bond of their interest in books, and
+Theophilus, with his hero-worshiping soul, intensely admired the splendid
+purpose of John Thorwald, toiling to gain knowledge, because of the promise
+of his dying mother. The grind, who thought that next to T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., Thor was the "greatest ever," as Hicks phrased it, had been, doing
+what that care-free collegian termed "missionary work," with the stolid,
+unimaginative Prodigious Prodigy for some weeks. Thrilled with the thought
+that he worked for his Alma Mater, he quietly strove to make Thorwald
+glimpse the true meaning and purpose of college life and its broadness of
+development. The loyal Theophilus lost no opportunity of impressing his
+behemoth friend with the sacred traditions of the campus, or of explaining
+why Thor was wrong in characterizing all else than study as foolishness and
+waste of time.
+
+"Thor," began Theophilus timidly yet determinedly, for he was serving old
+Bannister now, "old man, do you feel that you are giving the fellows at
+Bannister a square deal?"
+
+John Thorwald, slowly tearing open the letter that had come that night,
+and had lain, unnoticed, on the study-table while he wrestled with his
+geometry, turned suddenly. The Human Encyclopedia's vast earnestness and
+the strange query he had fired at Thor, surprised even that stolid mammoth.
+
+"Why, what do you mean, Theophilus?" spoke Thor slowly. "A square deal?
+Why, I owe them nothing! I sacrifice my time for them, leaving my studies
+to go out and waste precious time foolishly on football. Why--"
+
+"I mean this," Theophilus kept doggedly on, his earnest desire to stir Thor
+conquering his natural timidity. "You were brought to old Bannister by
+Hicks, who made a great mystery of you, so we knew nothing of you; but the
+fellows all thought you were willing to play football. Then, after they
+got enthused, and builded hopes of the championship on _you_, came
+your quitting. Hicks defended you, Thor, and changed the boys' bitter
+condemnation to vast admiration, by telling of your life, your father's
+being a castaway, your mother's dying wish, your toil to get learning, and
+your inability to grasp college life. Then from gratitude to Mr. Hicks you
+started to play again--naturally, the students waxed enthusiastic, when you
+ripped the 'Varsity to pieces, but now you may be dropped by the coach,
+after tomorrow, because you don't play for old Bannister, and your
+indifference kills the team's fighting spirit. You do not care if you are
+dropped; it will give you more time to study, and relieve you of your
+obligation, as you so quixotically view it, to play because Mr. Hicks will
+be glad; but--think of the fellows.
+
+"They, Thor, disappointed in you, their hopes of your bringing by your
+massive body and huge strength the Championship to old Bannister shattered,
+are still your friends--they of the eleven, I mean especially, for, as yet,
+the rest do not know you may be dropped. And the fellows came beneath your
+window tonight to cheer you; they will do so, Thor, even if you are dropped
+and they know that you will not use that prodigious power for their Alma
+Mater in the big games; they will stand by you, for they understand! Just
+think, old man; haven't the fellows, despite your rude rebuffs, _tried_
+to be your comrades? Haven't they helped you to get settled to work and
+assisted you with your studies? Why, you have been a big boor, cold and
+aloof, you have upset their hopes of you in football, and yet they have no
+condemnation for you, naught but warm friendliness.
+
+"You are not giving them or yourself a square deal, Thor! You won't even
+_try_ to understand campus life, to grasp its real purpose, to realize what
+tradition is! The time will come, Thor, when you will see your mistake; you
+will yearn for their good fellowship, you will learn that getting knowledge
+is not all of college life. You will know that this 'silly foolishness' of
+singing songs and giving the yell, of rooting for the eleven, of loyalty
+and love for one's Alma Mater, is something worth while. And you may find
+it out too late. Oh, if you could only understand that it isn't what you
+take from old Bannister that makes a man of you, it is what you give to
+your college--in athletics, in your studies, in every phase of campus life;
+that in toiling and sacrificing for your Alma Mater you grow and develop,
+and reap a rich reward!"
+
+Could T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and Green eleven
+have heard little Theophilus' fervent and eloquent appeal to John Thorwald,
+they would have felt like giving three cheers for him. They loved this
+pathetic little boner, who, because of his pitifully frail body, could
+never fight for old Bannister on gridiron, diamond, or track, and they
+tremendously admired him for working for his college and for the redemption
+of Thor. Timorous and shrinking by nature, whenever his Alma Mater, or a
+friend, needed him the Human Encyclopedia fought down his painful timidity
+and came up to scratch nobly.
+
+It was Theophilus whose clear logic had vastly aided T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., to originate The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, in 1919's Sophomore
+year, and quell Roddy Perkins' Freshman Equal Rights campaign. In fact, it
+had been the boner's suggestion that gave Hicks his needed inspiration.
+And, a Junior, Theophilus had been elected business manager of the
+_Bannister Weekly_, with Hicks as editor-in-chief as a colossal joke. The
+entire burden of that almost defunct periodical had been thrust on those
+two, and, thanks to the grind's intensely humorous "copy," the _Weekly_ had
+been revived and rebuilt. And Theophilus, in writing the humorous articles,
+had been moved by a great ambition to do something for old Bannister.
+
+"Look at me, Thor!" continued Theophilus Opperdyke, his puny body dwarfed
+as he faced the colossal Prodigious Prodigy. "A poor, weak, helpless
+nothing! I'd cheerfully sacrifice all the scholastic honor or glory I ever
+won, or shall win, just to make a touchdown for the Gold and Green, just to
+win a baseball game, or to break the tape in a race for old Bannister!
+And you--_you_, with that tremendous body, that massive bulk, that vast
+strength--you won't play the game for your Alma Mater, you won't throw
+that big frame into the scrimmage, thrilled with a desire to win for your
+college! Oh, what wonderful things you _could_ do with your powerful build;
+but it means nothing to you, while _I--_ Oh, you don't care, you just won't
+awaken; and, unless you do, in tomorrow's game you'll be dropped from the
+squad, a disgrace."
+
+John Thorwald-Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, that Gargantuan Freshman of
+whom Bannister said he possessed no soul--stirred uneasily, shifted his
+vast tonnage from one foot to the other, and stared at little Theophilus
+Opperdyke. That solemn Senior, who had not seen the slightest effect his
+"Missionary Work" was having on the stolid Thor, was in despair; but he did
+not know the truth. As Hicks had once said, "You don't know nothing what
+goes on in Thor's dome. There's a wall of solid concrete around the
+machinery of his mind, and you can't see the wheels, belts, and cogs at
+work!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with all his keen insight into human nature, had
+failed utterly to diagnose Thor's case, had not even stumbled on the true
+cause of that young giant's aloofness. The truth was unknown to anyone,
+but there was one natural reason for John Thorwald's not mingling with his
+fellows of the campus-the blond Colossus was inordinately bashful! From his
+fifteenth year, Thor had seen the seamy side of life, had lived, grown and
+developed among men. In his wanderings in the Klondike, the wild Northwest,
+in Panama, his experiences as cabin-boy, miner, cowboy, lumber-jack, and
+Canal Zone worker, he had existed where everything was roughness and
+violence, where brawn, not brain, usually held sway, where supremacy was
+won, kept, and lost by fists, spiked boots, or guns! In his adventurous
+career, young Thorwald had but seldom encountered the finer things of life,
+and his nature, while wholesome, was sturdy and virile, not likely to be
+stirred by sentiment; so that now, among the good-natured, friendly boys of
+old Bannister, he, accustomed to rude surroundings and rough acquaintances,
+was bashful.
+
+And Theophilus, as well as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., shot far wide of the
+mark in believing that the big Hercules had no power to feel; he possessed
+that power, but, with it the ability to conceal his feelings. They thought
+nothing appealed to him, had stirred his soul, at college, but they were
+wrong; true, Thor was unable to understand this new, strange life; he was
+puzzled when the collegians condemned and ostracized him at first, when
+he quit football because it was not a Faculty rule to play, but he was
+grateful when Hicks defended him, and the admiration of the student-body
+was welcome to him. He had thought he was doing all they desired of him,
+when he went back to the game, and now--when Theophilus told him that he
+might be dropped from the squad, he was bewildered. He could not understand
+just why this could be, when he was reporting for scrimmage every day!
+
+But the friendliness of the youths, their kind help with his studies,
+the assistance of the genial Hicks, and, more than all, above even
+the admiration of the Freshmen for his promise and purpose, the daily
+missionary work of little Theophilus, for whom the massive Thor felt a real
+love, had been slowly, insidiously undermining John Thorwald's reserve. No
+longer did he condemn what he did not understand. At times he had a vague
+feeling that all was not right, that, after all, he was missing something,
+that study was not all; and yet, bashful as he was, fearing to appear
+rough, crude, and uncouth among these skylarking youths, Thor kept on his
+silent, lonely way, and they thought him untouched by their overtures. Of
+late, when unobserved, the big Freshman had stood by the window, watching
+the collegians on the campus, listening to their songs of old Bannister,
+and yet because he felt embarrassed when with them, he gave no sign that he
+cared.
+
+Now, however, the splendid appeal of loyal, timorous Theophilus stirred
+Thor, and yet he could not break down the wall of reserve he had builded
+around himself. He had deluded himself that this comradeship was not for
+him, that he could never mingle with these happy-go-lucky youths, that
+he must plod straight ahead, and live to himself, because his past had
+roughened him.
+
+"You are a Freshman!" spoke Theophilus, unaware that forces were at work on
+Thor, and making a last effort. "You stand on the very threshold of your
+campus years; everything is before you. I am at the journey's end--very
+nearly, for in June I graduate from old Bannister. I never had the chance
+to fight for my Alma Mater on the athletic field, and you--Oh, think of
+what you can do! About to leave the campus, I, and my class-mates, realize
+how dear our college has become to us. If _you_ could just know that
+Bannister means something to you, even now, if you only felt it, you
+could make your years mean great things to you. Thor, could you leave old
+Bannister tomorrow without regret, without one sigh for the dear old place?
+We, who soon shall leave it forever, fully understand Shakespeare, when in
+a sonnet he wrote:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well which thou must leave ere long!"
+
+There was a silence, and then Thor slowly drew out a letter from its
+envelope, scanning the scrawl across its pages. A few moments, while its
+meaning seemed to seep into his slow-acting mind, and then a look of
+helpless bewilderment, as though the stolid Freshman just could not
+understand at all, came to his face; a minute John Thorwald stood, as in a
+trance, staring dully at the letter.
+
+"Thor! Thor! What's the matter? What's wrong?" quavered the alarmed
+Theophilus, "Have you gotten bad news?"
+
+"Read it, read it," said the big Freshman lifelessly, extending the letter
+to the startled Senior. "It's all over, I suppose, and I've got to go to
+work again. I've got to leave college, and toil once more, and save. My
+promise to my mother can't be fulfilled--yet. And just as I was getting
+fairly started."
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke hurriedly perused the message, which had come to Thor
+in that night's mail but which the blond giant had let lie unnoticed while
+he tackled his geometry. With difficulty Theophilus deciphered the scrawl
+on an official letterhead:
+
+
+THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANA STEAMSHIP LINE
+
+(New York Offices)
+
+Nov. 4, 19--.
+
+DEAR SON:
+
+I am writing to tell you that I've run into a sort of hurricane, and you
+and I have got a hard blow to weather. I started you at college on the
+$5,000 received from the heirs of Henry B. Kingsley, on whose yacht, as
+you know, I was wrecked in the South Seas, and marooned for ten years. I
+figured on giving you an education with that sum, eked out by my wages, and
+what you earn in vacations.
+
+I had the $5,000, untouched, in a New York bank, and I wanted to take it
+over to Christiania; when I was about to sail on my last voyage, I drew out
+the sum, and put it in care of the Purser of the _Norwhal_, on which I
+was mate, intending, of course, to get it on docking, and deposit it in
+Christiania. At the last hour I was transferred to the _Valkyrie_, to sail
+a few days later, and I knew the _Norwhal's_ purser would leave the $5,000
+for me in the Company's Christiania offices, so I did not bother to
+transfer it to the _Valkyrie_.
+
+Perhaps you read in the newspapers that the _Norwhal_ struck a floating
+mine, and went down with a heavy loss of life. The Purser was among those
+lost, and none of the ship's papers were saved; my $5,000, of course, went
+down also.
+
+I am sorry, John, but there seems nothing to do but for you to leave
+college and work. For your mother's sake, I wish we could avoid it; but we
+must wait and work and tackle it again. Your first term expenses are paid,
+so stay until the term is out. Perhaps Mr. Hicks can give you a job in one
+of his steel mills again, but we must work our own way, son. Don't lose
+courage, we'll fight this out together with the memory of your promise to
+your dying mother to spur you on. The road may be long and rocky but we'll
+make it. Just work and save, and in a year or two you can start at college
+again. You can study at night, too, and keep on learning.
+
+I'll write later. Stay at college till the term is up, and in the meantime
+try to land a job. However, you won't have any trouble to do that. Keep
+your nerve, boy, for your mother's sake. It's a hard blow, but we'll
+weather it, never fear, and reach port.
+
+Your father,
+
+JOHN THORWALD, SR.
+
+P.S. I am sailing on the _Valkyrie_ today, will write you on my return to
+New York, in a few weeks.
+
+
+Theophilus looked at the massive young Norwegian, who had taken this
+solar-plexus blow with that same stolid apathy that characterized his every
+action. He wanted to offer sympathy, but he knew not how to reach Thor. He
+fully understood how terrific the blow was, how it must stagger the
+big, earnest Freshman, just as he, after ten years of grinding toil, of
+sacrifice, of grim, unrelenting determination, had conquered obstacles and
+fought to where he had a clear track ahead. Just as it seemed that fate had
+given him a fair chance, with his father rescued and five thousand dollars
+to give him a college course, this terrible misfortune had befallen him.
+Theophilus realized what it must mean to this huge, silent Hercules, just
+making good his promise to his dying mother, to give up his studies, and go
+back to work, toil, labor, to begin all over again, to put off his college
+years.
+
+"Leave me, please," said Thor dully, apparently as unmoved by the blow
+as he had been by Theophilus' appeal. "I--I would like to be alone, for
+awhile."
+
+Left alone, John Thorwald stood by the window, apparently not thinking of
+anything in particular, as he gazed across the brightly lighted Quad. The
+huge Freshman seemed in a daze--utterly unable to comprehend the disaster
+that had befallen him; he was as stolid and impassive as ever, and
+Theophilus might have thought that he did not care, even at having to give
+up his college course, had not the Senior known better.
+
+Across the Quadrangle, from the room of the Caruso-like Juniors,
+accompanied by a melodious banjo-twanging, drifted:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+
+ "'Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!'
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee
+ Till we from life shall part."
+
+Strangely enough, the behemoth Thorwald was not thinking so much of having
+to give up his studies, of having to lay aside his books and take up again
+the implements of toil. He was not pondering on the cruelty of fate in
+making him abandon, at least temporarily, his goal; instead, his thoughts
+turned, somehow, to his experiences at old Bannister, to the football
+scrimmages, the noisy sessions in "Delmonico's Annex," the college
+dining-hall, to the skylarking he had often watched in the dormitories. He
+thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks, good Butch
+Brewster, loyal little Theophilus; and as he reflected, he heard those
+Juniors, over the way, singing. Just now they were chanting that
+exquisitely beautiful Hawaiian melody, "Aloha Oe," or "Farewell to Thee,"
+making the words tell of parting from their Alma Mater. There was something
+in the refrain that seemed to break down Thor's wall of reserve, to melt
+away his aloofness, and he caught himself listening eagerly as they sang.
+
+Somehow he felt no desire to condemn those care-free youths, to call their
+singing silly foolishness, to say they were wasting their time and their
+fathers' money. Queer, but he actually liked to hear them sing, he realized
+he had come to listen for their saengerfests. Now that he had to leave
+college, for the first time he began to ponder on what he must leave. Not
+alone books and study, but--
+
+As he stood there, an ache in his throat, and an awful sorrow overwhelming
+him, with the richly blended voices of the happy Juniors drifting across to
+him, chanting a song of old Ballard, big Thor murmured softly:
+
+"What did little Theophilus say? What was it Shakespeare wrote? Oh, I have
+it:
+
+ "'This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THOR'S AWAKENING
+
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+"In the famous words of the late Mike Murphy," said T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+"the celebrated Yale and Penn track trainer, 'you can beat a team that
+can't be beat, but--you can't beat a team that won't be beat!' Latham must
+be in the latter class."
+
+It was the Bannister-Latham game, and the first half had just ended.
+Captain Butch Brewster's followers had trailed dejectedly from Bannister
+Field to the Gym, where Head Coach Corridan was flaying them with a tongue
+as keen as the two-edged sword that drove Adam and Eve from the Garden of
+Eden. A cold, bleak November afternoon, a leaden sky lowered overhead, and
+a chill wind swept athwart the field; in the concrete stands, the loyal
+"rooters" of the Gold and Green, or of the Gold and Blue, shivered,
+stamped, and swung their arms, waiting for the excitement of the scrimmage
+again to warm them. Yet, the Bannister cohorts seemed silent and
+discouraged, while the Latham supporters went wild, singing, cheering,
+howling. A look at the score-board explained this:
+
+ END OF FIRST HALF: SCORE:
+ Bannister ........ 0
+ Latham ........... 3
+
+The statement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a gold and green
+blanket and humped on the Bannister bench, to shivering little Theophilus
+Opperdyke, the Phillyloo Bird, Shad Weatherby, and several more collegians
+who had joined him when the half ended, was singularly appropriate. In
+Latham's light, fast eleven, trained to the minute, coached to a shifty,
+tricky style of play with numberless deceptive fakes from which they worked
+the forward pass successfully, Bannister seemed to have encountered, as
+Mike Murphy phrased it, "A team that won't be beat!" According to the
+advance dope of the sporting writers, who, in football, are usually as good
+prophets as the Weather Bureau, Bannister was booked to come out the winner
+by at least five touchdowns to none. But here a half was gone, and Latham
+led by three points, scored on a rather lucky field-goal!
+
+The psychology of football is inexplicable. Yale, beaten by Virginia,
+Brown, and Wash-Jeff, with the Blue's best gridiron star ineligible to
+play, a team that seemed at odds with itself and the 'Varsity, mismanaged,
+poorly coached, journeys to Princeton to battle with old Nassau; the Tiger,
+Its tail as yet untwisted, presents its best eleven for several seasons, a
+great favorite in the odds, and yet the final score is Yale, 14; Princeton,
+7! A strange fear of the Bulldog, bred of many bitter defeats, of similar
+occasions when a feeble Yale team aroused itself and trampled an invincible
+Orange and Black eleven, when the Blue fought old Nassau with a team that
+"wouldn't" be beat, gave victory to the poorer aggregation. So many things
+unforeseen often enter into a football contest, shifting the balance of
+power from the stronger to the weaker team. One eleven gets the jump on the
+other, the favorite weirdly goes to pieces--team dissension may exist, a
+dozen other causes--but, boiled down, Mike Murphy's statement was most
+appropriate now.
+
+Latham simply _would not_ be beat! The sporting pages had said: "Latham
+simply can't beat Bannister!" Here the team, that could not be beaten was
+being defeated, and the team that would not be defeated was, so far, the
+victor. Perhaps the threatened dropping of Thor from the Gold and Green
+squad shook somewhat Captain Butch's players; more likely, the Latham
+aggregation got the jump on Bannister, opening up a bewildering attack of
+criss-crosses, line plunges, cross-bucks, and tandems, from all of which
+the forward pass frequently developed; they literally overwhelmed a
+supposedly unbeatable team. And once they got the edge, it was hard for
+Bannister to regain poise and to smother the fast plays that swept through
+or around the bewildered eleven.
+
+"We have _got_ to beat 'em!" growled Shad, "Mike Murphy or not. Why,
+if little old Latham cleans us up, smash go our chances of the State
+Championship! Oh, look at Thor--the big mountain of muscle. Why doesn't he
+wake up, and go push that team off the field?"
+
+Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, his vast hulk unprotected from the cold wind
+by a football blanket, squatted on the ground, on the side-line, apparently
+in a trance. Ever since the night before, when his father's letter had
+dealt such a knock-out blow to his hopes of fulfilling the promise to his
+dying mother, had rudely side-tracked him from the climb to his goal, the
+blond giant had maintained that dumb apathy. If anything, it seemed that
+the cruel blow of fate had only served to make Thor more stolid and
+impassive than ever, and Theophilus wondered if the Colossus had really
+grasped the import of the tragic letter as yet. The news had spread over
+the college and campus, and the students were sincerely sorry for Thor. But
+to offer him sympathy was about as difficult as consoling a Polar bear with
+the toothache.
+
+Coach Corridan, carrying out his plot, had decided not to start Thor in
+the first half of the game. So the Norwegian Hercules, having received no
+orders to the contrary, however, donned togs and appeared on the side-line,
+where he had sat, paying not the slightest heed to the scrimmage and
+seemingly unaware that the Gold and Green was facing defeat and the loss of
+the Championship, for a game lost would put the team out of the running.
+All big John Thorwald knew was, in a few weeks he must leave old Bannister,
+must give up, for a time, his college course. Just when the grim battle was
+won, he must leave, to work. Not that the Viking cared about toil. It was
+the delay that chafed even his stolid self. He was stunned at having to
+wait, maybe two years, before starting again.
+
+And yet, as he squatted on the side-line, oblivious to everything but his
+bitter reflections, the Theophilus-quoted words of Shakespeare persisted in
+intruding on his thoughts:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long."
+
+Try as he would, he could not fight away the keen realization that
+books and study were not all he would regret to leave. He was forced to
+acknowledge that his mind kept wandering to other things. He found himself
+pondering on the parting with Theophilus Opperdyke, with that crazy Hicks;
+he wondered if he, out in the world again, toiling his lonely way, would
+miss the glad fellowship of these care-free youths that he had watched,
+but never shared, if he would ever think of the weeks at old Bannister.
+Somehow, he felt that he would often vision the Quad at night, brightly
+lighted, dormitories' lights agleam, students crossing and recrossing,
+shouting at studious comrades. He would hear again the melodious
+banjo-twanging, the gleeful saengerfests, the happy skylarking of the boys.
+He had never entered into all this, and yet he knew he would miss it all;
+why, he would even miss the daily scrimmage on Bannister Field; the noisy
+shower-room, with its clouds of steam, and white forms flitting ghostlike.
+He would miss the classrooms; in brief, _everything_!
+
+John Thorwald was awakening! Even had this blow not befallen him, the huge,
+slow-minded Norwegian, in time, with Theophilus Opperdyke's missionary
+work, would have gradually come to understand things better--at least, to
+know he was wrong in his ideas, which is the beginning of wisdom. Already,
+he had ceased to condemn all this as foolishness, to rail at the youths
+for wasting time and money. Already something stirred within him, and yet,
+stolid as he was, bashful among the collegians, he was apparently the same.
+But the sudden shock Head Coach Corridan spoke of had come. His father's
+letter telling of his loss and that Thor must leave Bannister had awakened
+him to the startling knowledge that he did care for something more than
+study, that all the things that had puzzled him, that he had sneered at,
+meant something to his existence, that he dreaded leaving other things than
+his books.
+
+"I--I don't understand things," thought Thorwald. "But--if I could only
+stay, I'd want to learn. I'd try to get this 'college' spirit! Oh, I've
+been all wrong, but if I could only stay--"
+
+As if in answer to his unspoken thought, the big Freshman beheld marching
+toward him Theophilus Opperdyke, his spectacles off, and his face aglow,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., evidently in the throes of emotional insanity; a
+Senior whom he knew as Parson Palmetter; Registrar Worthington, and Doctor
+Alford, the kindly, beloved Prexy of old Bannister. The last named placed
+his hand on the puzzled behemoth's ponderous shoulder.
+
+"Thorwald," he said kindly, "Hicks, Opperdyke and Brewster, last night,
+came to my study and acquainted me with your misfortune. They told me of
+your life-history, of your splendid purpose to gain knowledge, to make
+something of yourself, for your dying mother's sake. Old Bannister needs
+men like you, Thorwald. Perhaps you do not understand campus ways and
+tradition yet, perhaps you are not in sympathy with everything here; but
+once a love for your Alma Mater is awakened, you will be a power for good
+for your college.
+
+"Now I at once took up the matter with Mr. Palmetter, President of The
+Students' Aid Bureau. This year, for the first time in our history, we have
+dispensed with janitors and sweeps in the dormitories, and with dining-hall
+waiters, so that needy and deserving students may work their way through
+Bannister. Owing to the fact that Mr. Deane, a Senior, has given up his
+dormitory, Creighton Hall, as he has funds for the year and needs the time
+to study, we can offer you board and tuition, in exchange for your work in
+the dormitory, and waiting on tables in the dining-hall. Since your first
+term bills, until January first, are paid, if you will start to work at
+once, we will credit any work done this term on books and incidentals for
+next term. By this means--"
+
+"Why, you don't--you _can't_ mean--" rumbled Thor, who had just dimly
+grasped the greatest point in Prexy's speech. "Why, then I won't have to
+leave Bannister--I won't have to quit my studies! Oh, thank you, sir; thank
+you! I will work _so_ hard. I am not afraid of work; I love it--a chance to
+toil and earn my education, that's what I want! Thank you!"
+
+"And in addition," said the Registrar, "Mr. Palmetter reports that he can
+secure you, downtown, a number of furnaces to tend this winter, which you
+can do early in the morning and at night; this will bring you an income for
+living expenses, and in the spring something else will offer itself. It
+means every moment of your time will be crowded, but Bannister needs
+workers--"
+
+Something stirred in John Thorwald. His heart had been touched at last. He
+thought of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, and little Theophilus worried
+at his having to leave college, going to Doctor Alford; of Prexy, the
+Registrar, and Parson Palmetter, working to keep Thor at old Bannister.
+He recalled how sympathetic all the youths had been, how they admired his
+purpose and determination; and he had rewarded their friendliness with
+cold aloofness. He felt a thrill as he visioned himself working for his
+education, rising in the cold dawn, tending furnaces, working in the dorm.,
+waiting on tables--studying. With what fierce joy he would assail his
+tasks, glad that he could stay! He knew the students would rejoice, that
+they would not look down on him; instead, they would respect and admire
+him, toiling to grow and develop, to attain his goal!
+
+"Go to it, Thor!" urged T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "We all want you to stay,
+old man; we'll give you a lift with your studies. Old Bannister _wants_
+you, _needs_ you, so _stick_!"
+
+"Stay, please!" quavered little Theophilus. "You don't want to leave your
+Alma Mater; stay, Thorwald, and--you'll understand things soon,"
+
+"Report at the Registrar's office at seven tonight, Thorwald," said Prexy,
+and then, because he understood boys and campus problems, "and to show your
+gratitude, you might go out there and spank that team which is trying to
+lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald, when Doctor Alford and the Registrar had gone, arose and
+stood gazing across Bannister Field. He saw not the white-lined gridiron,
+the gaunt goal-posts, the concrete stands filled with spectators, or the
+gay banners and pennants. He saw the buildings and campus of old Bannister,
+the stately old elms bordering the walks; he beheld the Gym., the four
+dormitories--Bannister, Nordyke, Smithson, and Creighton--the white Chapel,
+the ivy-covered Library, the Administration and Recitation Halls; he
+glimpsed the Memorial Arch over the entrance driveway, and big Alumni Hall.
+All at once, like an inundating wave, the great realization flashed on
+Thor that he did not have to leave it all! Often again would he hear the
+skylarking youths, the gay songs, the banjo-strumming; often would he see
+the brightly lighted Quad., would gaze out on the campus! It was still
+his--the work, the study, and, if he tried, even the glad comradeship of
+the fellows, the bigger things of college life, which as yet he did not
+understand.
+
+The big slow-minded youth could not awaken, at once, to a full knowledge
+and understanding of campus life and tradition, to a knowledge of college
+spirit; but, thanks to the belief that he had to leave it all, he had
+awakened to the startling fact that already he loved old Bannister. And
+now, joyous that he could stay, John Thorwald suddenly felt a strong desire
+to do something, not for himself, but for these splendid fellows who had
+worried for his sake, had worked to keep him at college. And just then he
+remembered the somewhat unclassical, yet well meant, words of dear old
+Doctor Alford, "And to show your gratitude, you might go out there and
+spank that team, which is trying to lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald for the first time looked at the score-board; he saw, in big
+white letters:
+
+ BANNISTER .......... 0
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+From the Gym. the Gold and Green players--grim, determined, and yet worried
+by the team that "won't be beat!"--were jogging, followed by Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan. The Latham eleven was on the field, the Gold and
+Blue rooters rioted in the stands. From the Bannister cohorts came a
+thunderous appeal:
+
+ "Hold 'em, boys--hold 'em, boys--hold--hold--_hold_!
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!"
+
+A sudden fury swayed the Prodigious Prodigy; it was his college, his
+eleven, and those Blue and Gold youths were actually beating old Bannister!
+The Bannister boys had admired him, some of them had helped him in his
+studies, three had told Doctor Alford of him, had made it possible for him
+to stay, to keep on toward his goal. _They_ would be sorrow-stricken if
+Latham won! A feeling of indignation came to Thor. How dare those fellows
+think they could beat old Bannister! Why, _he_ would go out there and show
+them a few things!
+
+Head Coach Corridan, let it be chronicled, was paralyzed when he ducked
+under the side-line rope--stretched to hold the spectators back--to collide
+with an immovable body, John Thorwald, and to behold an eager light on that
+behemoth's stolid face. Grasping the Slave-Driver in a grip that hurt, Thor
+boomed:
+
+"Mr. Corridan, let me play, _please_! Send me out this half. We can win.
+We've _got_ to win! I want to do something for old Bannister. Why, if we
+lose today, we lose the Championship! I don't understand things yet, but I
+do love the college. I want to fight for Bannister. _Please_ let me play!"
+
+The astonished coach and the equally dazed Gold and Green eleven, with the
+bewildered collegians who heard Thor's earnest appeal, were silent a few
+moments, unable to grasp the truth. Then Captain Brewster, his face aglow,
+seized the big Freshman's arm excitedly.
+
+"_Sure_ you'll play, Thor!" he shouted. "Fullback, old man! Come on, team.
+Thor's awake! He wants to fight for his Alma Mater; he wants Bannister to
+win! Oh, watch us shove Latham off the field--everybody together now--the
+yell, for Thor!"
+
+"Right here," grinned an excitedly happy T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., when the
+yell was given, "is where a team that won't be beat gets licked by a chap
+what can lick 'em!"
+
+What took place when the blond Prodigious Prodigy lumbered on Bannister
+Field at the start of the last half of the Bannister-Latham game can be
+imagined by the final score-board figures:
+
+ BANNISTER ......... 27
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+It can best be described with the aid of Scoop Sawyer's account in the next
+_Bannister Weekly:_
+
+--At the start of the second half, however, the Latham cohorts were given
+a shock when they beheld a colossal being almost as big as the entire Gold
+and Blue eleven, go in at fullback for Bannister. And the Latham eleven
+received a series of shocks when Thor began intruding that massive body
+of his into their territory. Tennyson's saying, "The old order changeth,
+yielding place to new" was aptly illustrated in the second half; for
+Bannister's bugler quit sounding "Retreat!" and blew "Charge!" Four
+touchdowns and three goals from touchdowns, in one half, is usually
+considered a fair day's work for an entire team. Even Yale or Harvard; but
+when one player corrals four touchdowns in a half--he is going some! Well,
+Thor went some! Most of the half he furnished free transportation for
+two-thirds of the Latham team, carrying them on his back, legs, and neck,
+as he strode down the field; a writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped
+the blond Colossus. Anyone would have stood more show to stop an Alpine
+avalanche than to slow up Thor, and the stretcher was constantly in
+evidence, for Latham knockouts.
+
+[Illustration C: 'A writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped the blond
+Colossus']
+
+The game turned into a Thor's Personally Conducted Tour. Thorwald, escorted
+by the Gold and Green team, made four quick tours to the Latham goal-line.
+It was simply a matter of giving the ball to the Prodigious Prodigy, then
+waving the linesmen to move down twenty yards or more toward Latham's line.
+Thor was simply unstoppable, and more beneficial even than his phenomenal
+playing was his encouragement to the team. He kept urging them to action,
+his foghorn growl of, "Come on, boys!" was a slogan of victory! Judging by
+Thor's awakening, and his work of the Latham game, Bannister's hopes of The
+State Intercollegiate Football Championship are as roseate as the blush on
+a maiden's cheek at her first kiss, and--
+
+That night, in the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., John Thorwald,
+supremely happy yet withal as uncomfortable as a whale on the Sahara
+Desert, overflowed an easy-chair. The room was filled, or what space Thor
+left, with the Bannister eleven, second-team players, Coach Corridan, and
+several students; on the campus a riotous crowd of Bannister youths "raised
+merry Heck," as Hicks phrased it, and their cheer floated up to the
+windows:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor! He's--all--right!"
+
+"Come, fellows," spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+
+"Let's sing to the captain, good old Butch! Let 'er go!"
+
+ "Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink it down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink It down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster--
+ He plays football like he _uster--_
+ Drink it down! Drink it down--down--down--down!"
+
+A strange sound startled the joyous youths; it was a rumbling noise,
+like distant thunder, and at first they could not place it. Then, as It
+continued, they located the disturbance as coming from the prodigious body
+of Thor, and at last the wonderful phenomenon dawned on them.
+
+"Thor is singing college songs!" quavered little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+so happy that his big-rimmed spectacles rode the end of his nose. "Oh,
+Hicks--Butch--Thor is awake at last! He is trying to get college spirit, to
+understand campus life--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., suddenly realized that what he had so ardently
+longed for had come to pass; aided by Theophilus' missionary work and by
+the sudden shock of Thorwald, Sr.'s, letter. Thor was awakened, had come to
+know that he loved old Bannister. His awakening, as shown in the football
+game, had been splendid. How he had towered over the scrimmage, in every
+play, urging his team to fight, himself doing prodigies for old Bannister.
+Thor, who had been so silent and aloof! Then the sunny-souled youth
+remembered.
+
+"Oh, I told you I'd awaken Thor, Butch!" he began, but that behemoth
+quelled him with an ominous look.
+
+"_You_!" he growled, with pretended wrath, "_you_! It was Theophilus
+Opperdyke who did the most of it, and Thorwald's father did the rest! Don't
+you rob Theophilus of his glory, you feeble-imitation-of-some-thing-human!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinned _a la_ Cheshire cat. The happy-go-lucky
+Senior was vastly glad that Thor had awakened, that now he would try
+to grasp the real meaning of college existence. He felt that the young
+Hercules, from now on, would slowly and surely develop to a splendid
+college man, that he would do big things for his Alma Mater. And the
+generous Hicks gave Theophilus all the credit, and impressed on that
+happy Human Encyclopedia the fact that he had done a great deed for old
+Bannister. Just so, Thor was awakened.
+
+"Oh, I say, Deke Radford, Coach, and Butch," Hicks chortled, getting the
+attention of that triumvirate as well as that of the others in the room,
+"remember up in Camp Bannister, in the sleep-shack, when Coach Corridan
+outlined a smashing full-back he wanted?"
+
+"Sure!" smiled Deke. "What of it, Hicks?"
+
+Then T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., that care-free, lovable, irrepressible youth,
+whose chance to swagger before this same trio had been postponed so long
+and seemingly lost forever, satiated his fun-loving soul and reaped his
+reward. Calling their attention to Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and asking
+them to remember his playing against Latham that day, the sunny Senior
+strutted before them vaingloriously.
+
+"Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!" he declared, grinning happily.
+"I promised to round up an unstoppable fullback, a Gargantuan Hercules, and
+I did! Just think of what he will do to Hamilton and Ballard in the big
+games! As I have often told you, _always_--leave It to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+
+
+ "Oh, what we'll do to Ballard
+ Will surely be a shame!
+ We'll push their team clear off the field
+ And win the football game!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one night three days after the first big game, that
+with Hamilton, a week following Thor's great awakening in the Latham game,
+sat in his cozy room, having assumed his favorite position--chair tilted
+back at a perilous angle and feet thrust atop of the radiator. The
+versatile youth, having just composed a song with which to encourage
+Bannister elevens in the future, was reading it aloud, when his mind was
+torpedoed by a most startling thought.
+
+"Land o' Goshen!" reflected the sunny-souled Senior, aghast. "I haven't
+twanged my ole banjo and held forth with a saengerfest for a coon's age! I
+surely can do so now without arousing Butch to wrath. Thor has awakened,
+Hamilton is walloped, and Bannister will surely win the Championship!
+Everything is happy, an' de goose hangs high, so here goes!"
+
+Holding his banjo _a la_ troubadour, the blithesome Hicks, who as a Senior
+was harassed by no study-hours or inspections, strode from his room and out
+into the corridor, up and down which he majestically paced, like a sentinel
+on his beat, twanging his beloved banjo with abandon, and roaring in his
+foghorn, subterranean voice:
+
+ "Oh, the way we walloped Hamilton
+ Surely was a shame!
+ And we're going to win the Championship--
+ For we'll do Ballard the same!
+
+ "And Bannister shall flaunt the flag
+ For at least three seasons more;
+ Because--no team can win a game
+ While the Gold and Green has Thor!"
+
+On Bannister Field, three days before, the Gold and Green had crushed the
+strong team from "old Ham" to the tune of 20 to 0; Thor's magnificent
+ground-gaining, in which he smashed through the supposedly impregnable
+defense of the enemy, was a surprise to his comrades and a shock to
+Hamilton. Time and again, on the fourth down, the ball was given to
+Thorwald, and the blond Colossus, with several of old Ham's players
+clinging to him, plunged ahead for big gains. So now with a monster
+mass-meeting in half an hour, the exultant Bannister youths pretended to
+study, but prepared to parade on the campus, cheer the eleven and Thor,
+and arouse excitement for the winning of the biggest game, a victory over
+Ballard, a week later.
+
+From the rooms of would-be studious Seniors on both sides of the corridor,
+as Hicks patrolled it, came vociferous protests and classic criticisms,
+gathering in force and volume as the breezy youth's foghorn voice roared
+his song; that heedless collegian grinned as he heard:
+
+"R-r-rotten! Give that Jersey calf more rope!"
+
+"Hicks has had a relapse! _Sing-Sing_ for yours, old man!"
+
+"Arrest Hicks, under the Public Nuisance Act!"
+
+"_Woof! Woof_! Shoot it quick! Don't let it suffer!"
+
+Just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., strumming the banjo blithely and Carusoing
+with glee, reached the end of the corridor and executed a brisk 'bout-face,
+he heard a terrific commotion on the stairway, and, a moment later, Butch
+Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Deacon Radford and Monty Merriweather gained the
+top of the stairs. As they were now between the offending Hicks and
+his quarters, there seemed no chance for the sunny Senior to play his
+safety-first policy; so he waited, panic-stricken, as Butch and Beef
+lumbered heavily down the corridor.
+
+"Help! Aid! Succor! Relief! Assistance!" shrieked Hicks, leaning his
+beloved banjo against the wall and throwing himself into what he
+fatuously believed was an intensely pugilistic pose. "I am a believer in
+preparedness. You have me cornered, so beware! I am a follower of Henry
+Ford, but even _I_ will fight--at bay!"
+
+"Well, you are at _sea_ now!" growled Beef, tucking the splinter youth
+under one arm and striding down the corridor, followed by Butch with the
+banjo, and Monty with Deacon. "You desperado, you destroyer of peace and
+quietude, you one-cylinder gadabout! You're off again! We'll instruct you
+to annoy real students, you faint shadow of something human!"
+
+"Them's harsh sentences, Beef!" chuckled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as that
+behemoth kicked open Hicks' door, bore the futilely squirming, kicking
+youth into the room, and hurled him on the davenport. "Watch my banjo,
+there, Butch; have a couple of cares! Say, what'smatter wid youse guys,
+anyhow? This is my first saengerfest for eons. Old Bannister has a clear
+track ahead at last, the Championship is won for _sure_, and Thor, that
+mighty engine of destruction to Ham's and Ballard's hopes, after much
+tinkering, is hitting on all twelve cylinders. Why, I prithee, deny me the
+pleasure of a little joyous song?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., since the memorable Latham game, when Thor had
+awakened between halves, and the Prodigious Prodigy had shown himself
+worthy of his title by winning the game after defeat leered at old
+Bannister, had suffered a relapse, and was again his old sunny, heedless,
+happy-go-lucky self. Now that John Thorwald had been startled into
+realizing that he loved his college and had been saved from having to
+leave, now that he played football for his Alma Mater, and Bannister's
+hopes of the Championship were roseate, the blithesome Hicks had abandoned
+himself to a golden existence of Beefsteak Busts downtown at Jerry's,
+entertaining jolly comrades in his cozy room, and pestering the campus with
+his banjo and ridiculous imitations of Sheerluck Holmes, the Dachshund
+Detective. Big Butch Brewster, lecturing him for his care-free ways, as
+futilely as he had done for three years past, gave up in despair.
+
+"I might as well be showing moving-pictures to the inmates of a blind
+asylum," he growled on one occasion, "as to persuade you to quit acting
+like a lunatic! You, a Senior--acting like an escaped inhabitant of
+Matteawan! Bah!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, drawing a chair up to the davenport, assumed the manner
+of a physician toward a recalcitrant patient, while Beef carefully stowed
+the banjo in the closet and Deacon Radford, an interested spectator, sat
+on the bed. The happy-go-lucky Hicks, at a loss to account for the strange
+expressions of his comrades, tried to arise, but the football captain
+pinned him down with one hand.
+
+"Seriously, Hicks," spoke Butch, "your saengerfest came at a lamentably
+inopportune time! I regret to Inform you that old Bannister faces another
+problem, with regard to Thor, and unless it is solved, I fear--"
+
+"Thor has balked again?" gasped the dazed Hicks, whom Butch now allowed to
+sit up, as he showed interest. "Has the engine of destruction stalled?
+Why, as fast as we get him lined up, off he slides at an angle! Well, you
+fellows did perfectly right to bring this baffling problem, whatever it is,
+to me. What is the trouble--won't Thor play football?"
+
+The irrepressible Hicks was bewildered at hearing that a new problem
+regarding Thor had arisen, and, naturally, he at once connected it with
+football, since the big Freshman had twice balked in that respect. Since
+his awakening, effected by Theophilus' missionary work, his last appeal,
+and Thor's letter from his father, Thor had earnestly striven to grasp the
+true meaning of college life, to understand campus tradition. No longer did
+he hold aloof, boning always, in his lonely room. Instead, he mingled with
+his fellows, lingering with the team for the skylarking in the shower-room
+after scrimmage, turning out for the nightly mass-meeting. Often, as the
+youths practiced songs and yells on the campus, Thor's terrific rumble was
+heard--some had even dared to slap his massive back and say, "Hello, Thor,
+old man!" and the big Freshman had responded. It was evident to all that
+Thorwald was striving to become a collegian, and knowing his slow, bulldog
+nature, there was no doubt as to his ultimate success; hence T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., was vastly puzzled now.
+
+"Oh, Thor hasn't backslid!" smiled Beef. "You see, Hicks, it's this way:
+Owing to Mr. Thorwald's losing the five thousand dollars, Thor, as you
+know, is working his way at Bannister. Well, with his hustling, his studies
+and football scrimmage, he simply does not have a minute for the other
+phases of college life, for the comradeship with his fellows--"
+
+"Here is his day's schedule," chimed in Deacon, referring to a paper: "Rise
+at four-thirty A. M. Hustle downtown to tend several furnaces until seven.
+Breakfast at seven. Till nine, make beds and sweep dormitory rooms.
+Nine till three-fifteen P. M., recitation periods and dormitory work,
+sandwiched. Then until supper, football practice, and nights study. Add
+to that waiting on tables for the three meals, and what time has Thor to
+broaden and develop, to take in all the big things of campus existence, to
+grow into an all-round college man?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wonderful to chronicle, was silent. He was
+reflecting on the irony of fate; as Deacon said, now that Thor had
+awakened, and earnestly wanted to be a collegian, he had no time to enter
+into campus life. Glad at being able to stay at old Bannister, to keep on
+with his studies, climbing steadily toward his goal, and finding a joy in
+his new relationship with the students, the ponderous Thorwald had flung
+himself into his hustling, as the youths called working one's way at
+college, with zeal. To the huge Freshman, toil was nothing, and since it
+meant that he could keep on with his study, he was content. The collegians
+vastly admired his grim determination; they aided all they could with
+his studies, and helped with his work, so he could have more time for
+scrimmage, and yet another phase of the problem came to Hicks.
+
+It seemed unjust that John Thorwald, after his long years of hard physical
+toil, and his mental struggles, often after hours of grinding work, at the
+very time when the five thousand dollars from Henry B. Kingsley's heirs
+promised him a chance to study without a body tortured and exhausted,
+should be forced again to take up his stern fight for knowledge. And it
+was cruel that Thor, just awakening to the true meaning of college life,
+striving to grasp campus tradition, and eager to serve his Alma Mater in
+every way, should have so little time to mingle with his fellows. He should
+be with them on the campus, on the athletic field, in the dorms., the
+literary society halls, the Y. M. C. A. He should be realizing the golden
+years of college life, the glad comradeship of the campus. Instead, he must
+arise in the bitter cold, gray dawn, and from then until late night toil
+and study unceasingly.
+
+"It's a howling shame!" declared the serious Hicks, a heart full of
+sympathy for Thor. "Just as he wakes up and is trying to understand things
+at old Bannister, bang! the _Norwhal_ is blown up by a stray mine, and
+down goes his dad's money. Why didn't Mr. Thorwald get the five thousand
+transferred to the _Valkyrie_? Oh, if that money hadn't gone down to Davy
+Jones' locker, Thor would be awakened and have time for college life, too!"
+
+Butch Brewster started to speak when the thunderous tread of John Thorwald
+sounded in the corridor. The Prodigious Prodigy seemed approaching at
+double-quick time, and the youths stared at each other. However, when
+Thor appeared in the doorway, a letter in hand, they gazed at him in
+bewilderment, for his face fairly glowed.
+
+"Read it, fellows, read it!" he breathed, with what, for him, was almost
+excitement. "It just came! Oh, isn't that good news? Read it out, Captain
+Butch. Won't we wallop Ballard now!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, mystified by Thor's happiness, and urged on by his
+equally puzzled comrades, drew out the letter, and a glad smile coming to
+his honest countenance, he read aloud:
+
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA. STEAMSHIP LINE (New York Office)
+
+"Nov. 18, 19--.
+
+"MR. JOHN THORWALD, JR., Bannister College.
+
+"DEAR SIR:
+
+"We beg to state that your father, first mate on our liner, the _Valkyrie_,
+three days outbound from New York to Christiania, sent a message, _via_
+wireless, to our New York offices by the inbound Dutch Line's _Rotterdam_.
+The _Rotterdam_ relayed the message to us, and we forward it herewith,
+_verbatim:_
+
+"'DEAR SON: Purser of my ship, the _Valkyrie_, informed me today that the
+purser of the ill-fated _Norwhal_, learning of my transfer to this liner,
+transferred my $5,000 to the _Valkyrie_ before he sailed to his fate. I am
+sending this _via_ the _Rotterdam_, inbound, and our office will forward it
+to you. Will write on arriving at Christiania. Father.'
+
+"We are sorry for the delay in forwarding this message, but through an
+accident, it was mislaid in our office for a few days.
+
+"Yours truly,
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA STEAMSHIP LINE,
+
+"per J. L. G."
+
+
+A moment of silence; outside on the campus the Bannister youths, preparing
+for the mass-meeting in the Auditorium, started cheering. Someone caught
+sight of Thor, standing now by the window of Hicks' room, on the third
+floor of Bannister Hall, and a few seconds later there sounded:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor! Thor will bring the Championship to old Bannister! Rah!
+Rah! Rah!--Thor!"
+
+"Oh," shouted T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning happily, his arm across
+Thor's massive shoulders, "'All's well that ends well,' as Bill Shakespeare
+says. It's all right now, Thor. Fate dealt you a hard punch, but it served
+its purpose; for it made you realize how you would regret to leave college.
+Now you won't have to hustle and have all your time filled with toil and
+study; you can go after every phase of campus life, and serve old Bannister
+in so many ways."
+
+John Thorwald stood, a contented look on his placid, impassive face,
+gazing down at the campus below and hearing the plaudits of the excited
+collegians. The stately old elms, gaunt and bare, tossed their limbs
+against a leaden sky; a cold, dreary wind sent clouds of dry leaves
+scurrying down the concrete walks. In the faint moonlight that struggled
+through the clouds, the towers and spires of old Bannister were limned
+against the sky-line. Across the campus, on Bannister Field, the
+goal-posts, skeleton-like, kept their lonely vigil. On that field, in
+less than a week, the Gold and Green must face the crucial test--against
+Ballard's championship eleven, in the Biggest Game; and now, almost on the
+eve of battle, the shackles had been knocked from him; he was free of the
+great burden, free to serve his Alma Mater, to fight for the Gold and
+Green, to grow and develop into an all-round, representative college man.
+
+All of a sudden it dawned on the slow-thinking young Norwegian just how
+much this freedom to grow and expand meant to him, and he turned from the
+window. From below, the shouts of "Thor! Thor! Thor!" drifted, stirring his
+blood, as he looked at Hicks, Butch, Beef, Monty and Deacon.
+
+"'All's well that ends well,' you say. Hicks," he spoke slowly, his face
+joyous. "That's true; but I'm just starting, fellows. I'm just _beginning_
+to live my college years, not for myself, but for old Bannister, for my
+Alma Mater, for I am awake, and _free_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+
+
+Big Butch Brewster, a life-sized picture of despair, roosted dejectedly on
+the Senior Fence, between the Gym and the Administration Building. It was
+quite cold, and also the beginning of the last study-period before Butch's
+final and most difficult recitation of the day, Chemistry. Yet instead
+of boning in his warm room, the behemoth Senior perched on the fence and
+stared gloomily into space.
+
+As he sat, enveloped in a penumbra of gloom, the campus entrance door of
+Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., opened suddenly, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., that happy-go-lucky youth, came out cautiously, after the fashion of a
+second-story artist, emerging from his crib with a bundle of swag, the
+last item being represented by a football tucked under Hicks' left arm.
+Beholding Butch Brewster on the Senior Fence, the sunny-souled Senior
+exhibited a perturbation of spirit seeming undecided whether to beat a
+retreat or to advance.
+
+"Now what's ailin' _you_?" demanded Butch wrathily, believing the
+pestersome Hicks to be acting in that burglarious manner for effect. "Why
+should _you_ sneak out of a dorm., bearing a football like it was an auk's
+egg? Why, you resemble a nigger, making his get-away after robbing a
+hen-roost! Don't torment me, you accident-somewhere-on-its-way-to-happen. I
+feel about as joyous as a traveling salesman who has made a town and gotten
+nary a order!"
+
+"It's _awful_!" soliloquized T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., perching beside the
+despondent Butch on the Senior Fence. "I am not a fatalist, old man, but
+it _does_ seem that fate hasn't destined Thor to play football for old
+Bannister this season! Here, after he won the Ham game, and we expected him
+to waltz off with Ballard's scalp and the Championship, he has to tumble
+downstairs! Oh, it's tough luck!"
+
+It was two days before the biggest game, with Ballard--the contest that
+would decide the State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Ballard, the
+present champions, discounting even Hamilton's stories of Thor's prowess,
+were coming to Bannister with an eleven more mighty than the one that had
+crushed the Gold and Green the year before, with a heavy, stonewall line,
+fast ends, and a powerful, shifty backfield. The Ballard team was confident
+of victory and the pennant. Bannister, building on the awakened Thorwald,
+superbly sure of his phenomenal strength and power, of his unstoppable
+rushes, serenely practiced the doctrine of preparedness, and awaited the
+day.
+
+And then John Thorwald, the Prodigious Prodigy, whose gigantic frame seemed
+unbattered by the terrific daily scrimmage, whom it was impossible to
+hurt on the gridiron, the day before, going downstairs in Creighton Hall,
+hurrying to a class, had caught his heel on the top step, and crashed to
+the bottom! And now, with a broken ankle, the blond Colossus, heartbroken
+at not being able to win the Championship for old Bannister, hobbled about
+on crutches. Without Thor, the Gold and Green must meet the invincible
+Ballard team! It was a solar-plexus blow, both to the Bannister youths,
+confident in Thor's prowess, building on his Herculean bulk, and to the
+big Freshman. Thorwald, awakened, striving to grasp campus tradition, to
+understand college life, was eager to fling himself into the scrimmage, to
+give every ounce of his mighty power, to offer that splendid body, for his
+Alma Mater, and now he must hobble impotently on the side-line, watching
+his team fight a desperate battle.
+
+"If Bannister only had a sure, accurate drop-kicker!" reflected Captain
+Butch hopelessly. "One who could be depended on to average eight out of ten
+trials, we'd have a fighting chance with Ballard. Deke Radford is a wonder.
+He can kick a forty-five-yard goal, but he's erratic! He might boot the
+pigskin over when a score is needed from the forty-yard line, and again he
+might miss from the twenty-yard mark. Oh, for a kicker who isn't brilliant
+and spectacular, but who can methodically drop 'em over from, say, the
+thirty-five-yard line! Hello, what's the row, Hicks?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., started to speak, changed his mind, coughed, grew
+red and embarrassed, and acted in a most puzzling manner. At any other
+time, big Butch would have been bewildered; but with Thor's loss weighing
+on his mind, the Gold and Green captain gave his comrade only a cursory
+glance.
+
+"I--I--Oh, nothing, Butch!" stammered Hicks, to whom, being "fussed," as
+Bannister termed embarrassment, was almost unknown. "I--I guess I'll
+take this football over to my locker in the Gym. I ought to glance at my
+Chemistry, too. So-long, Butch; see you later, old top!"
+
+When the splinter-youth had drifted into the Gym., Butch Brewster,
+remembering his strange actions, actually managed to transfer his thoughts
+for a time from the eleven to the care-free T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. The
+behemoth Senior reflected that, to date, the pestiferous Hicks had not
+explained his baffling mystery he recalled the day when he had told the
+Gold and Green eleven of the loyal Hicks' ambition to please his dad by
+winning his B, when he had described the youth's intense college spirit
+and had suggested that if Hicks failed to corral his letter the Athletic
+Association award him one for his loyalty to old Bannister. And Butch saw
+again the bewildering sentences in the letter from Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., to his son.
+
+"Evidently," meditated Butch, literally and figuratively "on the fence,"
+"Hicks has failed to summon up enough self-confidence to explain his
+mystery; queer, too, for he usually is bubbling with faith in himself. He
+has acted like a bashful schoolgirl at frequent times--he starts to tell
+me something, then he gets embarrassed, back-fires, and stalls. He and
+Theophilus have been sneaking out in the early dawn, too. Wow! What did he
+sneak out of the dorm. that way, with a football, for? He looked like a
+yeggman working night shift. Why should _he_ skulk out with a football? He
+has never explained his dad's letter, or told just what Mr. Hicks meant by
+calling him the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and saying those members of old
+Eli wanted him to star! Oh, he's a tantalizing wretch, and I'd like to
+solve his mystery, without his knowledge, so I could--"
+
+At that instant, to the intense indignation and bewilderment of good Butch
+Brewster, little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous Human Encyclopedia of
+old Bannister, exited from Bannister Hall. The Senior boner gave a correct
+imitation of the offending Hicks, in that he skulked out, gazing around
+him nervously; but he portaged no pigskin, and, unlike the sunny youth, on
+periscoping Butch, he seemed relieved.
+
+"Theophilus, _come here_!" thundered the wrathful football captain,
+shifting his tonnage on the Senior Fence. "What's the plot, anyhow? It's
+bad enough when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sneaks out, bearing a football,
+like an amateur cracksman making a getaway; but when you appear, imitating
+a Nihilist about to hurl a bomb--say, what's the answer to the puzzle, old
+man?"
+
+Little Theophilus, his pathetically frail body trembling with suppressed
+excitement, his big-rimmed spectacles tumbling off with ridiculous
+regularity, and his solemn eyes peering owlishly at his behemoth classmate,
+stood before the startled Butch. It was evident that the 1919 grind
+labored under great stress. He was waging a terrific battle with himself,
+struggling to make some vast and all-important decision. He strove to
+speak, hesitated, choked, coughed apologetically, and acted as fussed as
+Hicks had done, until Butch was wild; then, as if resolved to cast the die
+and cross the Rubicon, he decided, and plunged desperately ahead.
+
+"It's--it's Hicks, Butch!" he quavered, torn cruelly by conflicting
+emotions. "Oh, I don't want to be a traitor--he trusted me with his secret,
+and I--I can't betray him, I just can't! But he didn't make me promise not
+to tell. He just told me not to. Oh, it's his very last chance, Butch, and
+with Thor hurt, old Bannister might need him in the Ballard game."
+
+"What is it, Theophilus, old man?" Butch spoke kindly, for he saw the
+solemn little Senior was intensely excited. "Tell me--if our Alma Mater
+needs any fellow's services, you know, he should give them freely--since
+you did not promise not to tell about Hicks, if Bannister may be able
+to use Hicks against Ballard--though I can't, by any stretch of the
+imagination, figure how--then it is your duty to tell! I think I glimpse
+the dark secret--Hicks possesses some sort of football prowess, goodness
+knows what, and he lacks the confidence to tell Coach Corridan! Now, were
+it only drop-kicking--"
+
+_"It is drop-kicking!"_ Theophilus burst forth desperately. "Hicks is a
+drop-kicker, Butch, and a sure one--inside the thirty-yard line. He almost
+_never_ misses a goal, and he kicks them from every angle, too. He isn't
+strong enough to kick past the thirty-yard line, but inside that he is
+wonderfully accurate. With Thor out of the Ballard game, a drop-kick may
+win for Bannister, and Deke Radford is so erratic! Oh, Hicks will be angry
+with me for telling; but he just won't tell about himself, after all his
+practice, because he fears the fellows will jeer. He is afraid he will fail
+in the supreme test. Oh, I've betrayed him, but--"
+
+"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a drop-kicker!" exploded the dazed Butch, who
+could not have been more astounded had Theophilus announced that the sunny
+youth possessed powers of black magic. "Theophilus Opperdyke, Tantalus
+himself was never so tantalized as I have been of late. Tell me the whole
+story, old man--hurry. Spill it, old top!"
+
+Butch Brewster, by questioning the excited Human Encyclopedia, like a
+police official giving the third degree, slowly extracted from Theophilus
+the startling story. A year before, just as the Gold and Green practiced
+for the Ham game, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one afternoon, had arrayed his
+splinter-structure in a grotesque, nondescript athletic outfit, and had
+jogged out on Bannister Field. The gladsome youth's motive had been free
+from any torturesome purpose. He intended to round up the Phillyloo Bird,
+Shad Weatherby, and other non-athletic collegians, and with them boot the
+pigskin, for exercise. However, little Skeet Wigglesworth, beholding him
+as he donned the weird regalia of loud sweater, odd basket-ball stockings,
+tennis trousers, baseball shoes, and so on, misconstrued his plan, and
+believed Hicks intended to torment the squad. Hence, he hurried out,
+so that when Hicks appeared in the offing, the football squad and the
+spectators in the stands had jeered the happy-go-lucky Junior, and had
+good-natured sport at his expense.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., after Jack Merritt had drop-kicked a forty-yard
+goal, made the excessively rash statement that it was easy. Captain Butch
+Brewster had indignantly challenged the heedless youth to show him, and
+the results of Hicks' effort to propel the pigskin over the crossbar were
+hilarious, for he missed the oval by a foot, nearly dislocated his knee,
+and, slipping in the mud, he sat down violently with a thud. However, so
+the excited Theophilus now narrated, even as the convulsed students jeered
+Hicks, hurling whistles, shouts, cat-calls, songs and humorous remarks at
+the downfallen kicker, one of Hicks' celebrated inspirations had smitten
+the pestersome Junior, evidently jarred loose by his crashing to terra
+firma.
+
+"Hicks figured this way, Butch," explained little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+eloquent in his comrade's behalf, "nature had built him like a mosquito,
+and endowed him with enough power to lift a pillow; hence he could never
+hope to play football on the 'Varsity; but he knew that many games are
+won by drop-kicks and by fellows especially trained and coached for that
+purpose, and they don't need weight and strength, but they must have the
+art, that peculiar knack which few possess. His inspiration was this:
+Perhaps he had that knack, perhaps he could practice faithfully, and
+develop into a sure drop-kicker. If he trained for a year, in his Senior
+season, he might be able to serve old Bannister, maybe to win a big game.
+So he set to work."
+
+Theophilus hurriedly yet graphically narrated how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+had made the loyal, hero-worshiping little Human Encyclopedia his sole
+confidant. He told the thrilled Butch how the sunny youth, from that
+day on, had watched and listened as Head Coach Corridan trained the
+drop-kickers, learning all the points he could gain. Vividly he described
+the mosquito-like Hicks, as he with a football bought from the Athletic
+Association began in secret to practice the fine art of drop-kicking! For a
+year, at old Bannister and at his dad's country home near Pittsburgh, Hicks
+had faithfully, doggedly kept at it. With no one bat Theophilus knowing of
+his great ambition, he had gone out on Bannister Field, when he felt safe
+from observation; here, with his faithful comrade to keep watch, and to
+retrieve the pigskin, he had practiced the instructions and points gained
+from watching Coach Corridan train the booters of the squad. To his vast
+delight, and the joy of his little friend, Hicks had found that he did
+possess the knack, and from before the Ham game until Commencement he had
+kept his secret, practicing clandestinely at old Bannister; he had improved
+wonderfully, and when vacation started the cheery collegian had told his
+beloved dad, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., of his hopes.
+
+The ex-Yale football star, delighted at his son's ambition to serve old
+Bannister and joyous at discovering that Hicks actually possessed the
+peculiar knack of drop-kicking, coached the splinter-youth all summer at
+their country place near Pittsburgh. Under the instruction of Hicks, Sr.,
+the youth developed rapidly, and when he returned to the campus for his
+final year, he was a sure, dependable drop-kicker, inside the thirty-yard
+line. As Theophilus stated, beyond that he lacked the power, but in that
+zone he could boot 'em over the cross-bar from any angle.
+
+"He's been practicing all this season, in secret!" quavered the little
+Senior, "and he's a--a _fiend_, Butch, at drop-kicking. And yet, here it is
+time for the last game of his college years, and--he lacks confidence to
+tell you, or Coach Corridan. Oh, I'm afraid he will be angry with me for
+betraying him, and yet--I just _can't_ let him miss his splendid chance,
+now that Thor is out and old Bannister _needs_ a drop-kicker!"
+
+Big Butch was silent for a time. The football leader was deeply impressed
+and thrilled by Theophilus Opperdyke's story of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s
+ambition. As he roosted on the Senior Fence, the behemoth gridiron
+star visioned the mosquito-like youth, whom nature had endowed with a
+splinter-structure, sneaking out on Bannister Field, at every chance, to
+practice clandestinely his drop-kicking. He could see the faithful Human
+Encyclopedia, vastly excited at his blithesome colleague's improvement,
+retrieving the pigskin for Hicks. He thrilled again as he thought of the
+bean-pole Hicks, who could never gain weight and strength enough to make
+the eleven, loyally training and perfecting himself in the drop-kick,
+trying to develop into a sure kicker, within a certain zone, hoping
+sometime, before he left college forever, to serve old Bannister. With Thor
+in the line-up at fullback, he would not have been needed, but now, with
+the Prodigious Prodigy out, it was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s big chance!
+
+And Butch Brewster understood why the usually confident Hicks, even with
+the knowledge of his drop-kicking power, hesitated to announce it to old
+Bannister. Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team of Hicks'
+being in earnest in his ridiculous athletic attempts of the past three
+years, no one but himself and Hicks had dreamed that the sunny youth meant
+them, that he really strove to win his B and please his dad. The appearance
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., on Bannister Field was always the cause of
+a small-sized riot among the squad and spectators. Hicks was jeered
+good-naturedly, and "butchered to make a Bannister holiday," as he blithely
+phrased it. Hence, the splinter-Senior was reluctant to announce that he
+could drop-kick. He knew that when tested he would be so in earnest, that
+so much would hang in the balance and the youths, unknowing how important
+it was, would jeer. Then, too, knowing his long list of athletic fiascos,
+ridiculous and otherwise, Hicks trembled at the thought of being sent into
+the biggest game to kick a goal. He feared he might fail!
+
+"You are a _hero_, Theophilus!" said Butch, with deep feeling. "I can
+realize how hard it was for Hicks to tell us. He would have kept silent
+forever, even after his training in secret! And how you must have suffered,
+knowing he could drop-kick, and yet not desiring to betray him! But your
+love for old Bannister and for Hicks himself conquered. I'll take him out
+on the gridiron, before the fellows come from class, and see what he
+can do. Aha! There is the villain now. Hicks, ahoy! Come hither, you
+Kellar-Herman-Thurston. Your dark secret is out at last!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., peering cautiously from the Gym. basement doorway,
+in quest of the tardy Theophilus, who was to have accompanied him on a
+clandestine journey to Bannister Field, obeyed the summons. Bewildered,
+and gradually guessing the explanation from the shivering little boner's
+alarmed expression, the gladsome youth approached the stern Butch Brewster,
+who was about to condemn him for his silence. "Don't be angry with me,
+Hicks, _please_!" pled Theophilus, pathetically fearful that he had
+offended his comrade, "I--I just _had_ to tell, for it was positively your
+last chance, and--and old Bannister needs your sure drop-kicking! I never
+promised not to tell. You never made me give my word, so--"
+
+"It was Theophilus' duty to tell!" spoke Butch, hiding a grin, for the
+grind was so frightened, "and yours, Hicks, knowing as you do how we need
+you, with Thor hurt! You graceless wretch, you aren't usually so like ye
+modest violet! Why didn't you inform us, then swagger and say, 'Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks, he'll win the game with a drop-kick?' Now, you come with
+me, and I'll look over your samples. If you've got the goods, it's highly
+probable you'll get your chance, in the Ballard game; and I'm _glad_, old
+man, for your sake. I know what it would mean, if you win it! But--now that
+the '_mystery_' is solved, what's that about your being a 'Class Kid,' of
+Yale, '96?"
+
+"That's easy!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his arm across Theophilus'
+shoulders, "I was the first boy born to any member of Yale, '96; it is the
+custom of classes graduating at Yale to call such a baby the class kid!
+Naturally, the members of old Eli, Class of 1896, are vastly interested in
+me. Hence, my Dad wrote they'd be tickled if I won a big game for Bannister
+with a field-goal!"
+
+A moment of silence, Theophilus Opperdyke, gathering from Hicks' arm,
+across his shoulders, that the cheery youth was not so awfully wrathful at
+his base betrayal, adjusted his big-rimmed spectacles, and stared owlishly
+at Hicks.
+
+"Hicks, you--you are not angry?" he quavered. "You are not sorry. I--I
+told--"
+
+"_Sorry_?" quoth T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., "Class Kid," of Yale, '96, with a
+Cheshire cat grin, "_sorry_? I should say _not_--I wanted it to be known to
+Butch, and Coach Corridan, but I got all shivery when I tried to confess,
+and I--couldn't! Nay, Theophilus, you faithful friend, I'm so _glad_, old
+man, that beside yours truly, the celebrated Pollyanna resembles Niobe,
+weeping for her lost children."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+
+
+ "Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Whoop-up! Parabaloo! Yale! Yale! Yale!
+ _Hicks! Hicks! Hicks_!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a cumbersome Gold and Green football
+blanket, and crouching on the side-line, like some historic Indian, felt a
+thrill shake his splinter-structure, as the yell of "old Eli" rolled from
+the stand, across Bannister Field. In the midst of the Gold and Green flags
+and pennants, fluttering in the section assigned the Bannister cohorts, he
+gazed at a big banner of Blue, with white lettering:
+
+YALE UNIVERSITY--CLASS OF 1896
+
+"Oh, Butch," gasped Hicks, torn between fear and hope, "just listen to
+that. Think of all those Yale men in the stand with my Dad! Oh, suppose I
+do get sent in to try for a drop-kick!"
+
+It was almost time far the biggest game to start, the contest with Ballard,
+the supreme test of the Gold and Green, the final struggle for The State
+Intercollegiate Football Championship! In a few minutes the referee's
+shrill whistle blast would sound, the vast crowd in the stands, on the
+side-lines, and in the parked automobiles, would suddenly still their
+clamor and breathlessly await the kick-off--then, seventy minutes of grim
+battling on the turf, and victory, or defeat, would perch on the banners of
+old Bannister.
+
+It was a thrilling scene, a sight to stir the blood. Bannister Field, the
+arena where these gridiron gladiators would fly at each other's throats--or
+knees, spread out--barred with white chalk-marks, with the skeleton-like
+goal posts guarding at each end. On the turf the moleskin clad warriors,
+under the crisp commands of their Coaches, swiftly lined down, shifted to
+the formation called, and ran off plays. Nervous subs. stood in circles,
+passing the pigskin. Drop-kickers and punters, tuning up, sent spirals, or
+end-over-end drop-kicks, through the air. The referee, field-judge, and
+linesmen conferred. Team-attendants, equipped with buckets of water,
+sponges, and ominous black medicine-chests, with Red Cross bandages, ran
+hither and thither. On the substitutes' bench, or on the ground, crouched
+nervous second-string players; Ballard's on one side of the gridiron, and
+Bannister's directly across.
+
+A glorious, sunshiny day in late November, with scarcely a breath of
+wind, the air crisp and bracing; the radiant sunlight fell athwart the
+white-barred field, and glinted from the gay pennants and banners in the
+stands! Here was a riot of color, the gold and green of old Bannister; in
+the next section, the orange and black of Ballard. The bright hues and
+tints of varicolored dresses, and the luster of the official flowers
+all contributed to a bewilderingly beautiful spectacle! Flower-venders,
+peddlers of pennants, sellers of miniature footballs with the college
+colors of one team and the other, hawked their wares, loudly calling above
+the tumult, "Get yer Ballard colors yere!" "This way fer the Bannister
+flags!" Ten thousand spectators, packed into the cheering sections of the
+two colleges, or in the general stands, or standing on the side-lines,
+impatiently awaited the kick-off. At the appearance of each football star,
+a tremendous cheer went up from the mass. Across the field from each other,
+the two bands played stirring strains. The confident Ballard cohorts
+cheered, sang, and yelled and those of Bannister, not _quite_ so sure of
+victory, with Thor out, nevertheless, cheered, sang, and yelled as loudly,
+for the Gold and Green.
+
+The sight of that vast Yale banner, so conspicuous, with its big white
+letters on a field of blue, amidst the fluttering pennants of gold and
+green, excited comment among the Ballard followers. The Bannister students,
+however, knew what it meant; Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., and thirty
+members of Yale, '96, were in the stand, ready to cheer Captain Butch's
+eleven, and hoping for a chance to whoop it up for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+if he got his big chance.
+
+Two days before, when little Theophilus Opperdyke, after a terrible
+struggle with himself, divided between loyalty to Hicks and a love for
+his Alma Mater, had betrayed his toothpick class-mate to Captain. Butch
+Brewster, that behemoth Senior had rounded up Coach Corridan, and together
+they had dragged the shivering Hicks out to the football field. Here, while
+the rest of the student body, unsuspecting the important event in progress,
+made good use of the study-hour, or attended classes in Recitation Hall,
+the Gold and Green Coach, with the team-Captain, and the excited Human
+Encyclopedia, watched T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. show his samples of
+drop-kicks. And the success of that happy-go-lucky youth, after his nervous
+tension wore off, may be attested by the Slave-Driver's somewhat slangy
+remark, when the exhibition closed.
+
+"Butch," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, impressively, "what it
+takes to drop-kick field-goals, from anywhere inside the thirty-yard line,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is broke out with!"
+
+The proficiency attained by the heedless Hicks in the difficult art of
+drop-kicking, gained by faithful practice for a year, aided by his Dad's
+valuable coaching, was wonderful. Of course, Hicks possessed naturally the
+needed knack, but he deserved praise for his sticking at it so loyally. He
+had no surety that he would ever be of use to his college, and, indeed,
+with the advent of Thor, his hopes grew dim, yet he plugged on, in case old
+Bannister might sometime need him--and yet, but for Theophilus, he would
+not have summoned the courage to tell! To the surprise and delight of the
+Coach and Captain, Hicks, after missing a few at first, methodically booted
+goals over the crossbar from the ten, twenty, and thirty-yard lines, and
+from the most difficult angles. There was nothing showy or spectacular in
+his work, it was the result of dogged training, but he was almost sure,
+when he kicked!
+
+[Illustration D: He was almost sure, when he kicked!]
+
+"Good!" ejaculated Coach Corridan, his arm across Hicks' shoulders, as they
+walked to the Gym. "Hicks, the chances are big that I'll send you in to try
+for a goal tomorrow, if Bannister gets blocked inside the thirty-yard line!
+Just keep your nerve, boy, and boot it over! Now--I'll post a notice for
+a brief mass-meeting at the end of the last class period, and Butch and I
+will tell the fellows about you, and how you may serve Bannister."
+
+"That's the idea!" exulted Butch, joyous at his comrade's chance to get in
+the biggest game. "The fellows will understand, Hicks, old man, and they
+won't jeer when you come out this afternoon. They'll root for you! Oh, just
+wait until you hear them cheer you, and _mean_ it--you'll astonish the
+natives, Hicks!"
+
+Butch's prophecy was well fulfilled. In the scrimmage that same day, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., shivering with apprehensive dread, his heart in his
+shoes, sat on the side-line. In the stands, the entire student-body,
+informed in the mass-meeting of his ability, shrieked for "Hicks! Hicks!
+Hicks!" Near the end of the practice game, the hard-fighting scrubs fought
+their way to the 'Varsity's thirty-yard line, and another rush took it five
+yards more. Coach Corridan, halting the scrimmage, sent the right-half-back
+to the side-line, and a moment later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. hurried out
+on the field with the Bannister Band playing, the collegians yelling
+frenziedly, and excitement at fever height, the sunny youth took his
+position in the kick formation. Then a silence, a few seconds of suspense,
+as the pigskin whirled back to him, and then--a quick stepping forward,
+a rip of toe against the leather, and--above the heads of the 'Varsity
+players smashing through, the football shot over the cross-bar!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" was the shout, _"Hicks will beat Ballard!"_
+
+That night, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., having crossed the Rubicon, and
+committed himself to Coach Corridan and Captain Brewster, had dispatched a
+telegraphic night-letter to his beloved Dad. He informed his distinguished
+parent that his drop-kicking powers were now known to old Bannister, and
+that the chances were fifty-fifty that he would be sent in to try for a
+field-goal in the biggest game. On the day before the game, Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., in a night-letter, had wired back:
+
+
+Son Thomas:
+
+Am on my way to New Haven for Yale-Harvard game. Will stop off at old
+Bannister--bringing thirty members of Yale '96. We hope our Class Kid will
+get his chance against Ballard.
+
+Dad.
+
+
+On the morning of the Bannister-Ballard game, Mr. Hicks' private car the
+_Vulcan_, with the Pittsburgh "Steel King," and thirty other members of
+Yale, '96, had reached town. They had ridden in state to College Hill in
+good old Dan Flannagan's jitney, where T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., proudly
+introduced his beloved Dad to the admiring collegians. All morning, Mr.
+Hicks had made friends of the hero-worshiping youths, who listened to his
+tales of athletic triumphs at Bannister and at old Yale breathlessly. The
+ex-Yale star had made a stirring speech to the eleven, sending them out on
+Bannister Field resolved to do or die!
+
+"My Dad!" breathed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., crouched on the side line; as
+he gazed at the Yale banner, he could see his father, with his athletic
+figure, his strong face that could be appallingly stern or wonderfully
+tender and kind. Like the sunny Senior, Mr. Hicks, despite his wealth,
+was thoroughly democratic and already the Bannister collegians were his
+comrades.
+
+"Here we go, Hicks!" spoke Butch Brewster, as the referee raised his
+whistle to his lips. "Hold yourself ready, old man; a field-goal may win
+for us, and I'll send you in just as soon as I find all hope of a touchdown
+is gone. If they hold us back of the thirty-yard line, I'll try Deke
+Radford, but inside it, you are far more sure."
+
+The vast crowd, a moment before creating an almost inconceivable din,
+stilled with startling suddenness; a shrill blast from the referee's
+whistle cut the air. The gridiron cleared of substitutes, coaches,
+trainers, and rubbers-out, and in their places, the teams of Bannister and
+Ballard jogged out. Captain Brewster won the toss, and elected to receive
+the kick-off. The Gold and Green players, Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Biff,
+Pudge, Bunch, Tug, Hefty, Buster, and Ichabod, spread out, fan-like,
+while across the center of the field the Ballard eleven, a straight line,
+prepared to advance as the full-back kicked off. There was a breathless
+stillness, as the big athlete poised the pigskin, tilted on end, then
+strode back to his position.
+
+"All ready, Ballard?" The Referee's call brought an affirmative from the
+Orange and Black leader.
+
+"Ready, Bannister?"
+
+"Ready!" boomed big Butch Brewster, with a final shout of encouragement to
+his players.
+
+The biggest game was starting! Before ten thousand wildly excited and
+partisan spectators, the Gold and Green and the Orange and Black would
+battle for Championship honors; with Thor out of the struggle, Ballard,
+three-time Champion, was the favorite. The visitors had brought the
+strongest team in their history, and were supremely confident of victory.
+Bannister, however, could not help remembering, twice fate had snatched
+the greatest glory from their grasp, in Butch's Sophomore year, when Jack
+Merritt's drop-kick struck the cross-bar, and a year later, when Butch
+himself, charging for the winning touchdown, crashed blindly into the
+upright. Old Bannister had not won the Championship for five years, and
+now--when the chances had seemed roseate, with Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy--smashing Hamilton out of the way, Fate had dealt the annual blow
+in advance, by crippling him.
+
+"Oh, we've _got_ to win!" shivered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Oh, I hope I
+don't get sent in--I mean--I hope Bannister wins without me! But if I _do_
+have to kick--Oh, I hope I send it over that cross-bar--"
+
+A second later the Ballard line advanced, the fullback's toe ripped into
+the pigskin, sending it whirling, high in air, far into Bannister's
+territory; the yellow oval fell into the outstretched arms of Captain
+Butch Brewster, on the Gold and Green's five-yard line, and--"We're off!"
+shrieked Hicks, excitedly. "Come on, Butch--run it back! Oh, we're off."
+
+The biggest game had started!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE GREATER GOAL
+
+
+"Time out!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., enshrouded in a gold and green blanket, and
+standing on the side-line, like a majestic Sioux Chief, gazed out on
+Bannister Field. There, on the twenty-yard line, the two lines of scrimmage
+had crashed together and Bannister's backfield had smashed into Ballard's
+stonewall defense with terrific impact, to be hurled back for a five-yard
+loss. The mass of humanity slowly untangled, the moleskin clad players rose
+from the turf, all but one. He, wearing the gold and green, lay still,
+white-faced, and silent.
+
+"It's Biff Pemberton!" chattered Hicks, shivering as with a chill. "Oh, the
+game is lost, the Championship is gone. Biff is out, and the last quarter
+is nearly ended. Coach Corridan has got to send me in to kick. It's our
+very last chance to tie the score, and save old Bannister from defeat!"
+
+The time keeper, to whom the referee had megaphoned for time out, stopped
+the game, while Captain Butch Brewster, the campus Doctor, and several
+players worked over the senseless Biff. In the stands, the exultant Ballard
+cohorts, confident that victory was booked to perch on their banners, arose
+_en masse,_ and their thunderous chorus drifted across Bannister Field:
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+From the Bannister section, the Gold and Green undergraduates, alumni, and
+supporters, feeling a dread of approaching defeat grip their hearts, yet
+determined to the last, came the famous old slogan of encouragement to
+elevens battling on the gridiron:
+
+ "Smash 'em, boys, run the ends--hold, boys, _hold_--
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!
+ Touchdown! Touchdown! Hold, boys, _hold,
+ Don't_ let 'em win from the Green and the Gold!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with a groan of despair, sat down on the deserted
+subs. bench. With a feeling that all was lost, the splinter-like Senior
+gazed at the big score-board, announcing, in huge, white letters and
+figures:
+
+4TH QUARTER; TIME TO PLAY--2 MIN.; BANNISTER'S BALL ON BALLARD'S 22-YD.
+LINE; 4TH DOWN--8 YDS. TO GAIN; SCORE: BALLARD--6; BANNISTER--3.
+
+It had been a terrific contest, a biggest game never to be forgotten by
+the ten thousand thrilled spectators! Each eleven had been trained to the
+second for this decisive Championship fight, and with the coveted gonfalon
+of glory before them, the Bannister players battled desperately, while
+Ballard's fighters struggled as grimly for their Alma Mater. For six years,
+the Gold and Green had failed to annex the Championship, and for the past
+three, the invincible Ballard machine had rushed like a car of Juggernaut
+over all other State elevens; one team was determined to wrest the
+banner from its rival's grasp, and the other fully as resolved to retain
+possession, hence a memorable gridiron contest, to which even the alumni
+could find none in past history to compare, was the result.
+
+Weakened by the loss of Thor, whose colossal bulk and Gargantuan strength
+would have made victory a moral certainty, presenting practically the same
+eleven that had faced Ballard the past season and had been defeated by a
+scant margin, old Bannister had started the first quarter with a furious
+rush that swept the enemy to midfield without the loss of a first down.
+Then Ballard had rallied, stopping that triumphal march, on its own
+thirty-five yard line, but unable to check Quarterback Deacon Radford, who
+booted a forty-three-yard goal from a drop-kick, with the score 3-0 in
+Bannister's favor, and Deacon, a brilliant but erratic kicker, apparently
+in fine trim, the Gold Green rooters went wild.
+
+In the second half, however, came the break of the game, as sporting
+writers term it. The strong Ballard eleven found itself, and with a series
+of body-smashing, bone-crushing rushes, battering at the Bannister lines
+like the Germans before Verdun, they steadily fought their way, trench by
+trench, line by line, down the field. Without a fumble, or the loss of a
+single yard, the terrific, catapulting charges forced back old Bannister,
+until the enemy's fullback, who ran like the famous Johnny Maulbetsch,
+of Michigan, shot headlong over the goal line! The attempt for goal from
+touchdown failed, leaving the score, at the end of the third quarter,
+Ballard--6; Bannister--3.
+
+And Deacon Radford, whose first effort at drop-kicking had been so
+brilliant, failed utterly. Three times, taking a desperate chance, the
+Bannister quarter booted the pigskin, but the oval flew wide of the goal
+posts, even from the thirty-yard line. With his mighty toe not to be
+depended on, with the Gold and Green line worn to a frazzle by Ballard's
+battering rushes, unable to beat back the victorious enemy, the Bannister
+cohorts, dismayed, saw the start of the fourth and final quarter, their
+last hope. The forward pass had been futile, for the visitors were trained
+especially for this aerial attack, and with ease they broke up every
+attempt. And then, with the ball in Ballard's possession on Bannister's
+twenty-yard line, came a fumble--like a leaping tiger, Monty Merriweather
+had flung himself on the elusively bounding ball, rolled over to his feet,
+and was off down the field.
+
+"Touchdown! Touchdown! Touchdown!" shrieked old Bannister's madly excited
+students, as Monty sprinted. "Go it, Monty--_touchdown_! Sprint, old man,
+_sprint_!"
+
+But Cupid Colfax, Ballard's famous sprinter, playing quarterback, was off
+on Monty's trail almost instantly, and his phenomenal speed cut down the
+Ballard end's advantage; still, by dint of exerting every ounce of energy,
+it was on Ballard's forty-yard line that Monty Merriweather, hugging the
+pigskin grimly, finally crashed to earth.
+
+"Come on, Bannister!" shouted Captain Butch Brewster, as the two teams
+lined down. "Right across the goal-line, then kick the goal, and we win!
+Play the game--_fight_--Oh, we can win the Championship right now."
+
+Then ensued a session of football spectacular in the extreme, replete with
+thrilling plays, with sensational tackles, and blood-stirring scrimmage.
+The Bannister players, nerved by Captain Brewster's exhortation, by sheer
+will-power drove their battered bodies into the scrimmage. End runs,
+line-smashing tandem plays, forward passes, followed in bewildering
+succession, until the ball rested on Ballard's twenty-yard line, and a
+touchdown meant victory and the Championship for old Bannister, Another
+rush, and five yards gained, then, Ballard, fighting at the last ditch,
+made a stand every bit as heroic and thrilling as that sensational march
+in the first half. The Gold and Green's tigerish rushes were hurled
+back--three times Captain Butch threw his backfield against the line, and
+three times not an inch was gained. On the third down, Monty Merriweather
+was forced back for a loss, so now, with two minutes to play and the ball
+in Bannister's possession, with eight yards to gain, the play was on
+Ballard's twenty-two-yard line!
+
+And the biggest game had produced a new hero of the gridiron. Biff
+Pemberton, left half-back, imbued with savage energy, had borne the brunt
+of that spectacular advance; and now, he stretched on the turf, white and
+still.
+
+"Hicks, old man," T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. turned as a hand rested grippingly
+on his shoulder. Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, his face grim, had come
+to him, and in quick, terse sentences, he outlined his plan.
+
+"It's Bannister's last chance--" he said, tensely. "We _can't_ make the
+first down, the way Ballard is fighting, unless we take desperate odds.
+Now, Hicks, it's _up to you_. On _you_ depend old Bannister's hopes."
+
+A great, chilling fear swept over T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., leaving him weak
+and shaken. It had come at last-the moment for which he had trained and
+practiced drop-kicking, for a year, in secret, that moment he had hoped
+would come, sometime, and yet had dreaded, as in a nightmare. Before that
+vast, howling crowd of ten thousand madly partisan spectators, _he_ must
+go out on Bannister Field, to try and boot a drop-kick from the
+twenty-eight-yard-line, to save the Gold and Green from defeat. And he
+thought of the great glory that would be his, if he succeeded-he would be a
+campus hero, the idol of old Bannister, the youth who saved his Alma Mater
+from defeat, in the biggest game! Then he remembered his Dad, inspiring
+the eleven, between the halves, by a ringing speech; he heard again his
+sentences:
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal! Go back into the game, throw yourselves into
+the scrimmage, with no thought of personal glory, of the plaudits of the
+crowd--it is a fine thing, a splendid goal, to play the game and be a hero;
+it is a far more noble act to strive for the greater goal, one's Alma
+Mater!"
+
+"Now listen carefully," Coach Corridan rushed on, "Biff is knocked out.
+They'll start again soon, we are going to take a desperate chance; your Dad
+advises it! A tie score means the Championship stays with Ballard. To win
+it, we must _win_ this game--and on _you_ everything depends."
+
+"But--how--" stammered Hicks, dazed--the only way to _tie_ the score was by
+a drop-kick; the only way to win, by a touchdown--did the Coach mean he was
+_not_ to realize his great ambition to save old Bannister by a goal, the
+reward of his long training?
+
+"You jog out," whispered Coach Corridan, hurriedly, for a stretcher was
+being rushed to Biff Pemberton, "report to the Referee, and whisper to
+Butch to try Formation Z; 23-45-6-A! Now, here is the dope: our only chance
+is to fool Ballard completely. When you go out, the Bannister rooters, and
+your Yale friends, will believe it is to try a drop-kick and tie the score.
+I am sure that the Ballard team will think this, too, because of your
+slender build. You act as though you intend to try for a goal, and have
+Captain Butch make our fellows act that way. Then--it is a fake-kick; the
+backfield lines up in the kick formation, but the ball is passed to Butch,
+at your right. He either tries for a forward pass to the right end, or
+if the end Is blocked, rushes it himself! Hurry-the referee's whistle is
+blowing; remember, Hicks, my boy, it's the greater goal, it's for your Alma
+Mater."
+
+In a trance, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., flung off the gold and green blanket,
+and dashed out on Bannister Field. How often, in the past year, had he
+visioned this scene, only--he pictured himself saving the game by a
+drop-kick, and now Coach Corridan ordered him to sacrifice this glory! From
+the stands came the thunderous cheer of the excited Bannister cohorts,
+firmly believing that the slender youth, so ludicrously fragile, among
+those young Colossi, was to try for a goal.
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hicks! Kick the goal--Hicks!"
+
+And from the Yale grads., among them his Dad, came a shout, as he jogged
+across the turf:
+
+"Breka-kek-kek--co-ax--Yale! Hicks-Hicks-Hicks!"
+
+But the Bannister Senior did not thrill. Now, instead, a feeling of growing
+resentment filled his soul; even this intensely loyal youth, with all his
+love for old Bannister, was vastly human, and he felt cheated of his just
+rights. How the students were cheering him, how those Yale men called his
+name, and he was not to have his big chance! That for which he had trained
+and practiced; the opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, by kicking a goal
+at the crucial moment, and saving Bannister from defeat, was never to be
+his. Now, in his last game at college, he was to act as a decoy, as a foil.
+Like a dummy he must stand, while the other Gold and Green athletes ran off
+the play! Instead of everything, a tie game, or a defeat, depending on his
+kicking, defeat or victory hung on that fake play, on Butch Brewster
+and Monty Merriweather! So--the ear-splitting plaudits of the crowd for
+"Hicks!" meant nothing to him; they were dead sea fruit, tasteless as
+ashes--as the ashes of ambition. And then--
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal--no thought of personal glory--a splendid goal,
+to play the game and be a hero; It is a far more noble act to strive for
+the greater goal--one's Alma Mater--"
+
+"I was nearly a _traitor_" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his Dad's words
+echoing In his memory, and a vision of that staunch, manly Bannister
+ex-athlete before him. "Oh, I was betraying my Alma Mater. Instead of
+rejoicing to make _any_ sacrifice, however big, for Bannister, I thought
+only of myself, of my glory! I'll do it, Dad, I'll strive for the greater
+goal, and--we just can't fail."
+
+Reaching the scrimmage, Hicks, whose nervous dread had left him, when
+he fought down selfish ambition, and thirst for glory, reported to the
+Referee, and hurriedly transferred Coach Corridan's orders to Captain
+Butch Brewster; half a minute of precious time was spent in outlining the
+desperate play to the eleven, for "time!" had been called, and then--
+
+"Z-23-45-6-A!" shouted Quarterback Deacon Radford. "Come on, line--hold!
+Right over the cross-bar with it, Hicks--tie the score, and save Bannister
+from defeat--"
+
+The Gold and Green backfield shifted to the kick formation. Ten yards back
+of the center, on the thirty-two-yard line of Ballard, stood T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.; the vast crowd was hushed, all eyes stared at that slender
+figure, standing there, with Captain Butch Brewster at his right, and Beef
+McNaughton on his left hand-the spectators believed the frail-looking
+youth had been sent in to try a drop-kick. The Ballard rooters thought
+it, and--the Ballard eleven were _sure_ of their enemy's plan--Hicks'
+mosquito-like build, his nervous swinging of that right leg, deluded them,
+and helped Coach Corridan's plot.
+
+It was the only play, if Bannister wanted the Championship enough to try a
+desperate chance; better a fighting hope for that glory, with a try for
+a touchdown, than a field-goal, and a tie-score! The lines of scrimmage
+tensed. The linesmen dug their cleats in the sod, those of Ballard tigerish
+to break through and block; old Bannister's determined to _hold_. Back of
+Ballard's line, the backfield swayed on tip-toe, every muscle nerved, ready
+to crash through; the ends prepared to knock Roddy and Monty aside, the
+backs would charge madly ahead, in a berserk rush, to crash into that slim
+figure.
+
+"Boot it, Hicks!" shrieked Deke Radford, and as he shouted, the pigskin
+shot from the Bannister center's hands; the Gold and Green line held nobly,
+but not so the ends. Monty Merriweather, making a bluff at blocking the
+left end, let him crash past, while he sprinted ahead--Captain Butch
+Brewster, to whom the pass had been made, ran forward, until he saw he was
+blocked, and then, seeing Monty dear, he hurled a beautiful forward pass.
+
+Into the arms of the waiting Monty it fell, and that Gold and Green star,
+absolutely free of tacklers, sprinted twelve yards to the goal-line,
+falling on the pigskin behind it! Coach Corridan's "100 to 1" chance,
+suggested by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., had succeeded, and--the
+Biggest Game and the Championship had come to old Bannister at last!
+
+Followed a scene pauperizing description! For many long years old Bannister
+had waited for this glory; years of bitter disappointment, seasons when the
+Championship had been missed by a scant margin, a drop-kick striking the
+cross-bar, Butch Brewster blindly crashing into an upright. But now, all
+their pent-up joy flowed forth in a mighty torrent! Singing, yelling,
+dancing, howling, the Bannister Band leading them, the Gold and Green
+students, alumni, Faculty, and supporters, snake-danced around Bannister
+Field. A vast, writhing, sinuous line, it wound around the gridiron,
+everyone who possessed a hat flinging it over the cross-bars. The
+victorious eleven, were borne by the maddened youths--Captain Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Monty, Roddy, Ichabod, Tug, Hefty, Buster, Bunch, and--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. Ballard, firmly believing Hicks would try a field-goal, had
+been taken completely off guard. Surprised by the daring attempt, it had
+succeeded with ease, and the final score was Bannister--10; Ballard--6!
+
+"At last! At last!" boomed Butch Brewster, to whom this was the happiest
+day of his life. "The Championship at last. My great ambition is realized.
+Old Bannister has won the Championship, and I was the Team Captain!"
+
+After a time, when "the shouting and the tumult died," or at least quieted
+somewhat, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., felt a hand on his arm, and looking down
+from the shoulders on which he perched, he saw his Dad. Mr. Hicks' strong
+face was aglow with pride and a vast joy, and he shook his son's hand again
+and again.
+
+"I understand, Thomas!" he said, and his words were reward enough for the
+youth. "It was a _big_ sacrifice, but you made it gladly--I know! You
+gave up personal glory for the greater goal, and--old Bannister won the
+Championship! You helped win, for the winning play turned on _you_. It was
+splendid, my son, and I am proud of you! No matter if your sacrifice is
+never known to the fellows, _I_ understand."
+
+A moment of silence on Hicks' part; then the sunny youth grinned at his
+beloved Dad, as he responded blithesomely: "I'm Pollyanna, that old
+Bannister and _I_ won out, Dad!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, human beings,
+and--_Freshmen_! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the Olympic High-Jump
+Champion, holder of the World's record, and winner at the Panama-Pacific
+International Exposition National Championships, in his event, is about to
+high jump! The bar is at five feet, ten inches. Mr. Hicks is the Herculean
+athlete in the crazy-looking bathrobe."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his splinter-structure enshrouded in that
+flamboyant bathrobe of vast proportions and insane colors, that inevitably
+attended his athletic efforts, shaming Joseph's coat-of-many-colors, gazed
+despairingly at his good friend, Butch Brewster, and Track-Coach Brannigan,
+with a Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance.
+
+"It's no use, Butch, it's no use!" quoth he, with ludicrous indignation,
+as big Tug Cardiff, the behemoth shot-putter, through a huge megaphone
+imitated a Ballyhoo Bill, and roared his absurd announcement to the
+hilarious crowd of collegians in the stand. "Old Bannister will _never_
+take my athletic endeavors seriously. Here I have won two second places,
+and a third, in the high-jump this season, and have a splendid show to
+annex _first_ place and my track B in the Intercollegiates, but--hear
+them!"
+
+It was a balmy, sunshiny afternoon in late May. The sunny-souled,
+happy-go-lucky T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had trained indefatigably for
+the high jump, with the result that he had won several points for his
+team--however, he had not realized his great ambition of first place, and
+his track letter.
+
+As Hicks now exclaimed to his team-mate and Coach Brannigan, no matter,
+to the howling Bannister youths, if he _had_ won three places in the high
+jump, in regularly scheduled meets; his comrades had been jeering at
+his athletic fiascos for nearly four years, and even had Hicks suddenly
+blossomed out as a star athlete, they would not have abandoned their joyous
+habit. Still, those football 'Varsity players to whom good Butch had read
+Hicks, Sr.'s, letters, and explained the sunny youth's persistence, despite
+his ridiculous failures, though they kept on hailing his appearance on
+Bannister Field with exaggerated joy, understood the care-free collegian,
+and loved him for his ambition to please his Dad. Since Hicks had
+absolutely refused to accept his B, for any sport, unless he won it
+according to Athletic Association eligibility rules, the eleven had kept
+secret the contents of the letters Butch Brewster had read to them, for
+Hicks requested it.
+
+The Bannister College track squad, under Track Coach Brannigan and Captain
+Spike Robertson, had been training most strenuously for that annual
+cinder-path classic, the State Intercollegiate Track and Field
+Championships. The sprinters had been tearing down the two-twenty
+straightaway like suburban commuters catching the 7.20 A.M. for the city.
+Hammer-throwers and shot-putters--the weight men--heaved the sixteen-pound
+shot, or hurled the hammer, with reckless abandon, like the Strong Man of
+the circus. Pole-vaulters seemed ambitious to break the altitude records,
+and In so doing, threatened to break their necks; hurdlers skimmed over
+the standard as lightly as swallows, though no one ever beheld swallows
+hurdling. The distance runners plodded determinedly around the quarter-mile
+track, broad-jumpers tried to jump the length of the landing-pit. And T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., vainly essayed to clear five-ten In the high-jump!
+
+It was the last-named event that "broke up the show," as the Phillyloo Bird
+quaintly stated, somewhat wrongly, since the appearance of that blithesome
+youth in the offing, his flamboyant bathrobe concealing his shadow-like
+frame, had _started_ the show, causing the track squad, as well as a
+hundred spectator-students, to rush for seats in the stand. The arrival
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., to train for form and height in the high-jump,
+though a daily occurrence, was always the signal for a Saturnalia of sport
+at his expense, because--
+
+"You can't live down your athletic past, Hicks!" smiled good-hearted Butch
+Brewster. "Your making a touchdown for the other eleven, by running the
+wrong way with the pigskin, your hilarious fiascos in every sport, your
+home-run with the bases full, on a strike-out-are specters to haunt you.
+Even now that you have a chance to win your B, just listen to the fellows."
+
+The track squad's "heavy weight--white hope" section, composed of
+hammer-heavers and shot-putters--Tug Cardiff, Beef McNaughton, Pudge
+Langdon, Buster Brown, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and Bunch
+Bingham, equipped with megaphones, and with the _basso profundo_ voices
+nature gave them, lined up on both sides of the jumping-standards, and
+chanted loudly:
+
+ "All hail to T. Haviland Hicks!
+ He runs like a carload of bricks;
+ When to high jump he tries
+ From the ground he can't rise--
+ For he's built on a pair of toothpicks!"
+
+This saengerfest was greeted with vociferous cheers from the vastly amused
+youths in the stands, who hailed the grinning Hicks with jeers, cat-calls,
+whistles, and humorous (so they believed) remarks:
+
+"Say, Hicks, you won't _never_ be able to jump anything but your
+board-bill!"
+
+"You're built like a grass-hopper, Hicks, but you've done lost the hop!"
+
+"If you keep on improving as you've done lately, you'll make a high-jumper
+in a hundred more years, old top!"
+
+"You may rise in the world, Hicks, but never in the high jump!"
+
+"Don't mind them, Hicks!" spoke Coach Brannigan, his hands on the
+happy-go-lucky youth's shoulders. "Listen to me; the Intercollegiates will
+be the last track meet of your college years, and unless you take first
+place in your event, you won't win your track B. Second, McQuade, of
+Hamilton, will do five-eight, and likely an inch higher, so to take first
+place, you, must do five-ten. You have trained and practiced faithfully
+this season, but no matter what I do, I _can't_ give you that needed two
+inches, and--"
+
+"I know it, Coach!" responded the chastened Hicks, throwing aside his
+lurid bathrobe determinedly, and exposing to the jeering students his
+splinter-frame. "Leave it to Hicks, I'll clear it this time, or--"
+
+"Not!" fleered Butch, whom Hicks' easy self-confidence never failed to
+arouse. "Hicks, listen to me, _I_ can tell you why you can't get two inches
+higher. The whole trouble with you is this; for almost four years you have
+led an indolent, butterfly, care-free existence, and now, when you must
+call on yourself for a special effort, you are too lazy! You can dear
+five-ten; you ought to do it, but you can't summon up the energy. I've
+lectured you all this time, for your heedless, easy-going ways, and
+now--you pay for your idle years!"
+
+"You said an encyclopedia, Butch!" agreed the Coach, with vigor. "If only
+something would just _make_ Hicks jump that high, if only he could do it
+once, and know it is in his power, he could do it in the Intercollegiates,
+aided by excitement and competition! Let something _scare_ him so that he
+will sail over five-ten, and--he will win his B. He has the energy, the
+build, the spring, and the form, but as you say, he is so easy-going and
+lazy, that his natural grass-hopper frame avails him naught."
+
+"Here I go!" announced Hicks, who, to an accompaniment of loud cheers from
+the stand, had been jogging up and down in that warming-up process known to
+athletes as the in place run, consisting of trying to dislocate one's
+jaw by bringing the knees, alternately, up against the chin. "Up and
+over--that's my slogan. Just watch Hicks."
+
+Starting at a distance of twenty yards from the high-jump standards, on
+which the cross-bar rested at five feet, ten inches, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., who vastly resembled a grass-hopper, crept toward the jumping-pit,
+on his toe-spikes, as though hoping to catch the cross-bar off its guard.
+Advancing ten yards, he learned apparently that his design was discovered,
+so he started a loping gallop, turning to a quick, mad sprint, as though he
+attempted to jump over the bar before it had time to rise higher. With a
+beautiful take-off, a splendid spring--a quick, writhing twist in air, and
+two spasmodic kicks, the whole being known as the scissors form of high
+jump, the mosquito-like youth made a strenuous effort to clear the needed
+height, but--one foot kicked the cross-bar, and as Hicks fell flat on his
+back, in the soft landing-pit, the wooden rod, In derision, clattered down
+upon his anatomy.
+
+"Foiled again!" hissed Hicks, after the fashion of a "Ten-Twent'-Thirt'"
+melodrama-villain, while from the exuberant youths in the grandstand,
+who really wanted Hicks to clear the bar, but who jeered at his failure,
+nevertheless, sounded:
+
+"Hire a derrick, Hicks, and hoist yourself over the bar!"
+
+"Your _head_ is light enough--your feet weigh you down!"
+
+"'Crossing the Bar'--rendered by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+"Going up! Go play checkers, Hicks, you ain't no athlete!"
+
+While the grinning, albeit chagrined T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., reposed
+gracefully on his back, staring up at the cross-bar, which someone kindly
+replaced on the pegs, big Butch Brewster, who seemed suddenly to have
+gone crazy, tried to attract Coach Brannigan's attention. Succeeding,
+Butch--usually a grave, serious Senior, winked, contorted his visage
+hideously, pointed at Hicks, and sibilated, "_Now_, Coach--now is your
+chance! Tell Hicks--"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, Bunch Bingham, Buster
+Brown, Beef McNaughton, and Pudge Langdon, who had been attacked in a
+fashion similar to Butch's spasm, concealed grins of delight, and made
+strenuous efforts to appear guileless, as Track-Coach Brannigan approached
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. To that cheery youth, who was brushing the dirt from
+his immaculate track togs, and bowing to the cheering youths in the stand,
+the Coach spoke:
+
+"Hicks," he said sternly, "you need a cross-country jog, to get
+more strength and power in your limbs! Now, I am going to send the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade for a four-mile run, and you go with them.
+Oh, don't protest; they are all shot-putters and hammer-throwers, but
+Butch, and they can't run fast enough to give a tortoise a fast heat. Take
+'em out two miles and back, Butch, and jog all the way; don't let 'em loaf!
+Off with you."
+
+The unsuspecting Hicks might have detected the nigger in the woodpile, had
+he not been so anxious to make five-ten in the high-jump. However, willing
+to jog with these behemoths, with whom even he could keep pace, so as to
+develop more jumping power, the blithesome youth cast aside his garish
+bathrobe, pranced about in what he fatuously believed was Ted Meredith's
+style, and howled:
+
+"Follow Hicks! All out for the Marathon--we're off! One--two--three--_go_!"
+
+With the excited, track squad, non-athletes, and the baseball crowd, which
+had ceased the game to watch the start, yelling, cheering, howling, and
+whistling, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drawing his knees up in exaggerated
+style at every stride, started to lead the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+on its cross-country run. Without wondering why Coach Brannigan had
+suddenly elected to send _him_ along with the hammer-throwers and
+shot-putters, on the jog, and not having seen the insane facial contortions
+of the Brigade, before the Coach gave orders, the gladsome Senior
+started forth in good spirits, resembling a tugboat convoying a fleet of
+battleships.
+
+"'Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! And over the country we go!'" warbled Hicks, as the squad
+left Bannister Field, and jogged across a green meadow. "'--O'er hill and
+dale, through valley and vale, Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho!'"
+
+"Save your wind, you insect!" growled Butch Brewster, with sinister
+significance that escaped the heedless Hicks, as the behemoth Butch, a
+two-miler, swung into the lead. "You'll _need_ it, you fish, before we get
+back to the campus! Not _too_ fast, you flock of human tortoises. You'll be
+crawling on hands and knees, if you keep that pace up long!"
+
+A mile and a half passed. Butch, at an easy jog, had led his squad over
+green pastures, up gentle slopes, and across a plowed field, by way of
+variety. At length, he left the road on which the pachydermic aggregation
+had lumbered for some distance, and turned up a long lane, leading to a
+farm-house. Back of it they periscoped an orchard, with cherry-trees,
+laden with red and white fruit, predominating. Also, floating toward the
+collegians on the balmy May air came an ominous sound:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof! Bow-wow-wow! Woof!"
+
+"Come on, fellows!" urged Butch Brewster. "We'll jog across old Bildad's
+orchard and seize some cherries--the old pirate can't catch us, for we are
+attired for sprinting. Don't they look good?"
+
+"Nothing stirring!" declared Hicks, slangily, but vehemently, as he stopped
+short in his stride. "Old Bildad has got a bulldog what am as big as the
+New York City Hall. He had it on the campus last month, you know! Not for
+mine! I don't go near that house, or swipe no cherries from his trees. If
+you wish to shuffle off this mortal coil, drive right ahead, but _I_ will
+await your return here."
+
+T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, dread of dogs, of all sizes, shapes, pedigrees,
+and breeds, was well known to old Bannister; hence, the Heavy-weights now
+jeered him unmercifully. Old "Bildad," as the taciturn recluse was called,
+who lived like a hermit and owned a rich farm, did own a massive bulldog,
+and a sight of his cruel jaws was a "No Trespass" sign. With great
+forethought, when cherries began to ripen, the farmer had brought Caesar
+Napoleon to the campus, exhibited him to the awed youths, and said, "My
+cherries be for _sale_, not to be _stole_!" which object lesson, brief as
+it was, to date, had seemed to have the desired effect. Yet--here was Butch
+proposing that they literally thrust their heads, or other portions of
+their anatomies, into the jaws of death!
+
+"Well," said Bunch Bingham at last, "I tell you what; we'll jog up to the
+house and ask old Bildad to _sell_ us some cherries; we can pay him when he
+comes to the campus with eggs to sell, Come along. Hicks, I'll beard the
+bulldog in his kennel."
+
+So, dragged along by the bulky hammer-throwers and shot-putters, the
+protesting T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in mortal terror of Caesar Napoleon, and
+the other canine guardians of old Bildad's property, progressed up the lane
+toward the house.
+
+"I got a hunch," said the reluctant Hicks, sadly, "that things ain't
+a-comin' out right! In the words of the immortal Somebody-Or-Other, 'This
+'ere ain't none o' _my_ doin'; it's a-bein' thrust on me!' All right, my
+comrades, I'll be the innocent bystander, but heed me--look out for the
+bulldog!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+
+
+The Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, towing the mosquito-like T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., advanced on the stronghold of old Bildad, so named because he
+was a pessimistic Job's comforter, like Bildad, the Shuhite, of old--like
+a flock of German spies reconnoitering Allied trenches. Hearing the house,
+with Butch and Beef holding the helpless, but loudly protesting Hicks, who
+would fain have executed what may mildly be termed a strategic retreat, big
+Tug Cardiff boldly marched, in close formation, toward the door, when the
+portal suddenly flew open.
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Let go, Butch--there's the dog!"
+
+Amid ferocious howls from Caesar Napoleon, and alarmed protests from the
+paralyzed Hicks, who could not have run, with his wobbly knees, had he
+been set free by his captors, old Bildad, towed from the house by Caesar
+Napoleon, who strained savagely at the leash until his face bulged, burst
+upon the scene with impressive dramatic effect! It was difficult to decide,
+without due consideration, which was the more interesting. Bildad, a huge,
+gnarled old Viking, with matted gray hair, bushy eyebrows, a flowing beard,
+and leathery face, a fierce-looking giant, was appalling to behold, but so
+was Caesar Napoleon, an immense bulldog, cruel, bloodthirsty, his massive
+jaws working convulsively, his ugly fangs gleaming, as he set his great
+body against the leash, and gave evidence of a sincere desire to make free
+lunch of the Bannister youths. As Buster Brown afterward stated, "Neither
+one would take the booby prize at a beauty show, but at that, the bulldog
+had a better chance than Bildad!" T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., let it be
+recorded, could not have qualified as a judge, since his undivided
+attention was awarded to Caesar Napoleon!
+
+"What d'ye want round here, ye rapscallions?" demanded Bildad, courteously,
+holding the savage bulldog with one hand, and constructing a ponderous
+fist with the other, "_Hike_--git off'n my land, y'hear? _Git_, er Caesar
+Napoleon'll git holt o' them scanty duds ye got on!"
+
+"We want to--to buy some cherries, Mr.--Mr. Bildad!" explained Bunch
+Bingham, edging away nervously. "We won't steal any, honest, sir. Well pay
+you for them the very next time you come to the campus with milk and eggs."
+
+"Ho! Ho!" roared old Bildad, piratically, his colossal body shaking, "A
+likely tale, lads--an' when I come for my money, ye'll jeer me off the
+campus, an' tell me to whistle for it! Off my land--_git,_ an' don't let me
+cotch ye on it inside o' two minutes, or I'll let Caesar Napoleon make a
+meal off'n yer bones--_git_!"
+
+To express it briefly, they got. T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., not standing on
+the order of his going, set off at a sprint that, while it might have
+caused Ted Meredith to lose sleep, also aroused in Caesar Napoleon an
+overwhelming desire to take out after the fugitive youth, so that Mr.
+Bildad was forced to exert his vast strength to hold the massive bulldog.
+Butch, Beef, Hefty, Tug, Buster, Bunch, Pudge, and Biff, a pachydermic
+crew, awed by Caesar Napoleon's bloodthirsty actions, jogged off in the
+wake of Hicks, who confidently expected to hear the bulldog giving tongue,
+on his trail, at every second.
+
+Another lane, making in from a road making a cross-roads with the one
+from which they came to Bildad's house, ran alongside the orchard for two
+hundred yards, inside the fence; at its end was a high roadgate. At
+what they decided was a safe distance from the "war zone," the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the latter
+forcibly restrained from widening the margin between him and peril, held a
+council on preparedness.
+
+"The old pirate!" stormed Butch Brewster, gazing back to where the vast
+figure of old Bildad, striding toward the house, towered. "We can't let him
+get away with that, fellows. I'll have some of his cherries now, or--"
+
+"No, no--_don't_, Butch!" chattered Hicks, whose dread of dogs amounted to
+an obsession. "He can still see us, and if you leave the lane, he will send
+Caesar Napoleon after us! Oh, _don't_--"
+
+But Butch Brewster, evidently wrathful at being balked, strode from the
+path, or lane, of virtue, toward a cherry-tree, whose red fruit hung
+temptingly low, and his example was followed by every one of the Brigade,
+leaving the terrified Hicks to wait in the lane, where, because of his
+alarm, he had no time to wonder at the bravado of his behemoth comrades.
+However, finding that Bildad had disappeared, and believing he had taken
+Caesar Napoleon into the house, the sunny Hicks, who was far from a coward
+otherwise, but who had an unreasonable dread of dogs, little or big, was
+about to wax courageous, and join his team-mates, when a wild shout burst
+from Pudge Langdon:
+
+"Run, fellows--_run_! Bildad's put the bulldog on us! Here comes--Caesar
+Napoleon--!"
+
+With a blood-chilling _"Woof! Woof!"_ steadily sounding louder, nearer,
+a streak of color shot across the orchard, from the house, toward the
+affrighted Brigade, while old Bildad's hoarse growl shattered the echoes
+with "Take 'em out o' here, Nap--chaw 'em up, boy!" For a startled second,
+the youths stared at the on-rushing body, shooting toward them through the
+orchard-grass at terrific speed, and then:
+
+"Run!" howled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., terror providing him with wings, as
+per proverb. Down the lane, at a pace that would have done credit to Barney
+Oldfield in his Blitzen Benz, the mosquito-like youth sprinted madly, and
+ever, closer, closer on his trail, sounded that awful "Woof! Woof!" from
+Caesar Napoleon, who, as Hicks well knew, was acting with full authority
+from Bildad! He heard, as he fled frantically, the excited shouts of his
+comrades.
+
+"Beat it, Hicks--he's right after you--run! Run!"
+
+"Jump the fence--he can't get you then--jump!"
+
+"He's right on your trail, Hicks--_sprint_, old man!"
+
+"Make the fence, old man--_jump_ it--and you're _safe_!"
+
+The terrible truth dawned on the frightened youth, as he desperately
+sprinted: the innocent bystander always gets hurt. He had protested against
+the theft of Bildad's cherries, and naturally, the bulldog had kept after
+_him_! But it was too late to stop, for the old adage was extremely
+appropriate, "He who hesitates is lost." He must _make_ that road-gate, and
+tumble over it, in some fashion, or be torn to shreds by Caesar Napoleon,
+the savage dog that the cruel Bildad had sent after the youths.
+
+Nearer loomed the road-gate, appallingly high. Closer sounded the panting
+breath of the ferocious Caesar Napoleon, and his incessant "Woof-woof!"
+became louder. It seemed to the desperate Hicks that the bulldog was at his
+heels, and every instant he expected to feel those sharp teeth take hold of
+his anatomy! Once, the despairing youth imitated Lot's wife and turned his
+head. He saw a body streaking after him, gaining at every jump, also he
+lost speed; so thereafter, he conscientiously devoted his every energy to
+the task in hand, that of making the gate, and getting over it, before
+Caesar Napoleon caught his quarry!
+
+At last, the road-gate, at least ten feet high, to Hicks' fevered
+imagination, came so close that a quick decision was necessary, for Caesar
+Napoleon, also, was in the same zone, and in a few seconds he would
+overhaul the fugitive. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., realizing that a second
+lost, perhaps, might prove fatal to his peace of mind, desperately resolved
+to dash at the gate, and jump; if he succeeded even in striking somewhere
+near the top, and falling over, he would not care, for the bulldog would
+not follow him off Bildad's land. From his comrades, far in the rear, came
+the chorus:
+
+"Jump, Hicks! He's right on your heels!"
+
+Like the immortal Light Brigade, Hicks had no time to reason about
+anything. His but to jump or be bitten summed up the situation. So, with
+a last desperate sprint, a quick dash, he left the ground--luckily, the
+earth was hard, giving him a solid take-off, and he got a splendid spring.
+As he arose In air, al! the training and practicing for form stayed with
+him, and instinctively he turned, writhed, and kicked--
+
+For a fleeting second, he saw the top of the gate beneath his body, and
+he felt a thrill as he beheld twisted strands of barbed wire, cruel and
+jagged, across it; then, with a great sensation of joy, he knew that he
+had cleared the top, and a second later, he landed on the ground, in the
+country road, in a heap.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., that sunny-souled, happy-go-lucky, indolent youth,
+for once in his care-free campus career aroused to strenuous action,
+scrambled wildly to his feet, and forcibly realized the truth of
+Longfellow's, "And things are not-what they seem!" Instead of the
+ferocious, bloodthirsty bulldog, Caesar Napoleon, a huge, half-grown
+St. Bernard pup gamboled inside the gate, frisking about gleefully, and
+exhibiting, even so that Hicks, with all his innate dread of dogs, could
+understand it, a vast friendliness. In fact, he seemed trying to say,
+"That's fun. Come on and play with me some more!"
+
+"Hey, fellows," shrieked the relieved Hicks, "that ain't Caesar Napoleon!
+Why, he just wanted to play."
+
+Bewildered, the members of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade of the
+Bannister College track squad rushed on the scene. To their surprise, they
+found not a savage bulldog, but a clumsy, good-natured St. Bernard puppy,
+who frisked wildly about them, groveled at their feet, and put his huge
+paws on them, with the playfulness of a juvenile elephant.
+
+"Why, it _isn't_ Nappie, for a fact!" gasped Butch. "Oh, I am so glad
+that old Bildad wasn't mean enough to put the bulldog after us, for he is
+dangerous. He scared us, though, and put this pup on our trail. He wanted
+to play, and he thought it all a game, when Hicks fled. Oho! What a joke on
+Hicks."
+
+"I don't care!" grinned Hicks, thus siding with the famous Eva Tanguay.
+"You fellows were fooled, too! You were too _scared_ to run, and if it had
+been Caesar Napoleon, I'd have saved your worthless lives by getting him
+after me! I'll bet Bildad is snickering now, the old reprobate! Why, Tug,
+are you _crazy_?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, indeed, gave indications of lunacy. He marched up to the
+road-gate, and stood close to it, so that the barbed wire top was even with
+his hair; then he backed off, and gazed first at the gate, then at the
+bewildered Hicks, while he grinned at the dazed squad in a Cheshire cat
+style.
+
+"Measure it, someone!" he shouted. "I am nearly six feet tall, and it comes
+even with the top of my dome! Can't you see, you brainless imbeciles, Hicks
+cleared it."
+
+"Wait for me here!" howled big Butch Brewster, climbing the fence and
+starting down the road at a pace that did credit even to that fast
+two-miler. The Brigade, In the absence of their leader, tried to estimate
+the height of the gate, and Hicks, gazing at its barbed-wire top,
+shuddered. The St. Bernard pup, having caused T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for
+once in his indolent life to exert every possible ounce of energy in his
+splinter-frame, groveled at his feet, and strove to express his boundless
+joy at their presence.
+
+Butch Brewster, in fifteen minutes, returned, panting and perspiring,
+bearing a tape-measure, borrowed at the next farm-house. With all the
+solemnity of a sacred rite being performed, the youths waited, as Butch and
+Tug, holding the tape taut, carefully measured from the ground to the top
+of the barbed wire on the gate. Three times they did this, and then, with
+an expression of gladness on his honest countenance, Butch hugged the
+dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while Tug Cardiff howled, "Now for the
+Intercollegiates and your track B, Hicks! You _can_ do five-ten in the
+meet, for Coach Brannigan said you could dear it, if only you did it
+_once_."
+
+"Why--what do you mean, Tug?" quavered Hicks, not daring to allow himself
+to believe the truth. "You--you surely don't mean--"
+
+"I mean, that now you _know_ you can jump that high," boomed Tug, executing
+a weird dance of exultation, In which, the Brigade joined, until it
+resembled a herd of elephants gone insane, "for you have done it--allowing
+for the sag, and everything, that gate is just five feet, ten inches high,
+and--_you cleared it_!"
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen--Hicks, of Bannister, is about to high jump! Hicks
+and McQuade, of Hamilton, are tied for first place at five feet eight
+inches! McQuade has failed three times at five-ten! Hicks' third and last
+trial! Height of bar--five feet ten inches!"
+
+This time, however, it was not big Tug Cardiff, imitating a Ballyhoo
+Bill, and inciting the Bannister youths to hilarity at the expense of the
+sunny-souled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; it was the Official Announcer at the
+Annual State Intercollegiate Field and Track Championships, on Bannister
+Field, and his announcement aroused a tumult of excitement in the Bannister
+section of the stands, as well as among the Gold and Green cinder-path
+stars.
+
+"Come on, Hicks, old man!" urged Butch Brewster, who, with a dozen fully
+as excited comrades of the cheery Hicks, surrounded that splinter-athlete.
+"It's positively your last chance to win your track B, or your letter in
+any sport, and please your Dad! If they lower the bar, and you two jump off
+the tie, McQuade's endurance will bring him out the winner."
+
+"You _can_ clear five-ten!" encouraged Bunch Bingham. "You did it once,
+when you believed Caesar Napoleon was after you. Just summon up that much
+energy now, and clear that bar! Once over, the event and your letter are
+won! Oh, if we only had that bulldog here, to sick on you."
+
+Sad to chronicle, the score-board of the Intercollegiates recorded the
+results of the events, so far, thus:
+
+ HAMILTON ............35 BALLARD .............20 BANNISTER ...........28
+
+It was the last event, and even did Hicks win the high-jump, McQuade's
+second place would easily give old Ham. the Championship. Hence, knowing
+that victory was not booked for an appearance on the Gold and Green
+banners, the Bannister youths, wild for the lovable, popular Hicks to win
+his Bs vociferously pulled for him:
+
+"Come on, Hicks--up and over, old man--it's _easy_!"
+
+"Jump, you Human Grass-Hopper--you can do it!"
+
+"Now or never, Hicks! One big jump does the work!"
+
+"Sick Caesar Napoleon on him, Coach; he'll clear it then!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., casting aside that flamboyant bathrobe, for what he
+believed was the last athletic event of his campus career, stood gazing at
+the cross-bar. One superhuman effort, a great explosion of all his energy,
+such as he had executed when he cleared the gate, thinking Caesar Napoleon
+was after him, and the event was won! He _had_ cleared that height, it was
+within his power. If he failed, as Butch said, the bar would be lowered,
+and then raised until one or the other missed once. McQuade, with his
+superior strength and endurance, must inevitably win, but as he had just
+missed on his third trial at five-ten, if Hicks cleared that height on
+_his_ final chance, the first place was his.
+
+"And my B!" murmured Hicks, tensing his muscles. "Oh, won't my Dad be
+happy? It will help him to realize some of his ambition, when I show him my
+track letter! It is positively my last chance, and I _must_ clear it."
+
+With a vast wave of determined confidence inundating his very being, Hicks
+started for the bar; after those first, peculiar, creeping steps, he had
+just started his gallop, when he heard Tug Cardiff's _basso_, magnified by
+a megaphone, roared:
+
+"All together, fellows--_let 'er go_--"
+
+Then, just as Hicks dug his spikes into the earth, in that short, mad
+sprint that gives the jumper his spring, just as he reached the take-off,
+a perfect explosion of noise startled him, and he caught a sound that
+frightened him, tensed as he was:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Woof! Woof! Look out, Hicks, Caesar Napoleon
+is after you!"
+
+Psychology Is inexplicable. Ever afterward, Hicks' comrades of that
+cross-country run averred strenuously that their roaring through
+megaphones, in concert, imitating Caesar Napoleon's savage bark at the
+psychological moment, flung the mosquito-like youth clear of the cross-bar
+and won him the event and his B. Hicks, however, as fervidly denied this
+statement, declaring that he would have won, anyhow, because he had
+summoned up the determination to do it! So it can not be stated just what
+bearing on his jump the plot of Butch Brewster really had. In truth, that
+behemoth had entertained a wild idea of actually hiring old Bildad and
+Caesar Napoleon to appear at the moment Hicks started for his last trial,
+but this weird scheme was abandoned!
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had escaped from the
+riotous Bannister students, delirious with joy at the victory of the
+beloved youth, the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade, capturing the
+grass-hopper Senior, gave him a shock second only to that which he had
+experienced when first he believed Caesar Napoleon was on his trail.
+
+"Perhaps our barking didn't make you jump it!" said Beef McNaughton, when
+Hicks indignantly denied that he had been scared over the cross-bar, "but
+indirectly, old man, we helped you to win! If we had not put up a hoax on
+you--"
+
+"A _hoax_?" queried the surprised Hicks. "What do you mean--hoax?"
+
+"It was all a frame-up!" grinned Butch Brewster, triumphantly. "We paid old
+Bildad five dollars to play his part, and as an actor, he has Booth and
+Barrymore backed off the stage! We got Coach Brannigan to send you along
+with us on the cross-country jog, and your absurd dread of dogs, Hicks,
+made it easy! Bildad, per instructions, produced Caesar Napoleon, and
+scared you. Then, with a telescope, he watched us, and when I gave the
+signal, he let loose Bob, the harmless St. Bernard pup, on our trail.
+
+"The pup, as he always does, chased after strangers, ready to play. We
+yelled for you to run, and you were so _scared_, you insect, you didn't
+wait to see the dog. Even when you looked back, in your alarm, you didn't
+know it was not Caesar Napoleon, for his grim visage was seared on your
+brain--I mean, where your brain ought to be! And even had you seen it
+wasn't the bulldog, you would have been frightened, all the same. But I
+confess, Hicks, when you sailed over that high gate, it was one on _us_."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drew a deep breath, and then a Cheshire cat grin
+came to his cherubic countenance. So, after all, it had been a hoax; there
+had not been any peril. No wonder these behemoths had so courageously taken
+the cherries! But, beyond a doubt, the joke _had_ helped him to win his
+B. It had shown him he could clear five feet, ten inches, for he had done
+it--and, in the meet, when the crucial moment came, the knowledge that he
+_had_ jumped that high, and, therefore, could do it, helped--where the
+thought that he never had cleared it would have dragged him down. He had at
+last won his B, a part of his beloved Dad's great ambition was realized,
+and--
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth that sunny-souled, irrepressible
+youth, swaggering a trifle, "It was my mighty will-power, my terrific
+determination, that took me over the cross-bar, and not--_not_ your
+imitation of--"
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof!" roared the "Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade" in
+thunderous chorus. "Sick him--Caesar Napoleon--!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+
+
+"Come on, Butch! Atta boy--some fin, old top! Say, you Beef--you're asleep
+at the switch. What time do you want to be called? More pep there,
+Monty--bust that little old bulb, Roddy! Aw, rotten! _Say_, Ballard, your
+playing will bring the Board of Health down on you--why don't you bring
+your first team out? Umpire? What--do you call that an umpire? Why, he's
+a highway robber, a bandit. Put a 'Please Help the Blind' sign on that
+hold-up artist!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain of the Bannister College baseball squad,
+navigating down the third-floor corridor of Bannister Hall, the Senior
+dormitory, laden with suitcases, bat-bags, and other impedimenta, as Mr.
+Julius Caesar says, and vastly resembling a bell-hop in action, paused in
+sheer bewilderment on the threshold of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cozy room.
+
+"Hicks!" stormed the bewildered Butch, wrathfully, "what in the name of Sam
+Hill _are_ you doing? Are you crazy, you absolutely insane lunatic? This
+is a study-hour, and even if _you_ don't possess an intellect, some of the
+fellows want to exercise their brains an hour or so! Stop that ridiculous
+action."
+
+The spectacle Butch Brewster beheld was indeed one to paralyze that
+pachydermic collegian, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible Senior, danced madly about on the tiger-skin rug in midfloor,
+evidently laboring under the delusion that he was a lunatical Hottentot at
+a tribal dance; he waved his arms wildly, like a signaling brakeman, or
+howled through a big megaphone, and about his toothpick structure was
+strung his beloved banjo, on which the blithesome youth twanged at times an
+accompaniment to his jargon:
+
+"Come on, Skeet, take a lead (_plunkety-plunk_!) Say, d'ye wanta marry
+first base--divorce yourself from that sack! (_plunk-plunk_!) _Oh_, you
+bonehead--steal--you won't get arrested for it! Hi! Yi! _Ouch_, Butch! Oh,
+I'll be good--"
+
+At this moment, the indignant Butch abruptly terminated T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, noisy monologue by seizing that splinter-youth firmly by the scruff
+of the neck and forcibly hurling him on the davenport. Seeing his loyal
+class-mate's resemblance to a Grand Central Station baggage-smasher, the
+irrepressible Senior forthwith imitated a hotel-clerk:
+
+"Front!" howled the grinning Hicks, to an imaginary bellboy, "Show this
+gentleman to Number 2323! Are you alone, sir, or just by yourself? I think
+you will like the room-it faces on the coal-chute, and has hot and cold
+folding-doors, and running water when the roof leaks! The bed is made once
+a week, regularly, and--"
+
+"Hicks, you Infinitesimal Atom of Nothing!" growled big Butch, ominously.
+"What were you doing, creating all that riot, as I came down the corridor?
+What's the main idea, anyway, of--"
+
+"Heed, friend of my campus days," chortled the graceless Hicks, keeping
+a safe distance from his behemoth comrade, "tomorrow-your baseball
+aggregation plays Ballard College, at that knowledge-factory, for the
+Championship of the State. Because nature hath endowed me with the
+Herculean structure of a Jersey mosquito, I am developing a 56-lung-power
+voice, and I need practice, as _I_ am to be the only student-rooter at the
+game tomorrow! Q.E.D.! And as for any Bannister student, except perhaps
+Theophilus Opperdyke and Thor, desiring to investigate the interiors of
+their lexicons tonight, I prithee, just periscope the campus."
+
+"I guess you are right, Hicks!" grinned Butch Brewster, as he looked from
+the window, down on an indescribably noisy scene. "For once, your riotous
+tumult went unheard. Say, get your traveling-bag ready, and leave that
+pestersome banjo behind, if you want to go with the nine!"
+
+Several members of the Gold and Green nine, embryo American and National
+League stars, roosted on the Senior Fence between the Gymnasium and the
+Administration Building, with, suitcases and bat-bags on the grass. In a
+few minutes old Dan Flannagan's celebrated jitney-bus would appear in the
+offing, coming to transport the Bannister athletes downtown to the station,
+for the 9 P.M. express to Philadelphia. Incited by Cheer-Leaders Skeezicks
+McCracken and Snake Fisher, several hundred youths encouraged the nine,
+since, because of approaching final exams., they were barred by Faculty
+order from accompanying the team to Ballard. In thunderous chorus they
+chanted:
+
+ "One more Job for the undertaker!
+ More work for the tombstone maker!
+ In the local ceme_tery_, they are very--very--_very_
+ Busy on a brand-new grave for--Ballard!"
+
+As the lovable Hicks expressed it, "'Coming events cast their shadows
+before.' Commencement overshadows our joyous campus existence!" However, no
+Bannister acquaintance of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., could detect wherein the
+swiftly approaching final separation from his Alma Mater had affected in
+the least that happy-go-lucky, care-free, irrepressible youth. If anything,
+it seemed that Hicks strove to fight off thoughts of the end of his golden
+campus years, using as weapons his torturesome saengerfests, his Beefsteak
+Busts down at Jerry's, and various other pastimes, to the vast indignation
+of his good friend and class-mate, Butch Brewster, who tried futilely to
+lecture him into the proper serious mood with which Seniors must sail
+through Commencement!
+
+"You are a Senior, Hicks, a Senior!" Butch would explain wrathfully. "You
+are popularly supposed to be dignified, and here you persist in acting like
+a comedian in a vaudeville show! I suppose you intend to appear on the
+stage, and, when handed your sheepskin, respond by twanging your banjo and
+roaring a silly ballad."
+
+Yet, the cheery Hicks had been very busy, since that memorable day when,
+thanks to Caesar Napoleon and the hoax of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+of the track squad, he had cleared the cross-bar at five-ten,
+and won the event and his white B! Mr. T. Haviland Hicks, Sr., overjoyed
+at his son's achievement, had sent him a generous check, which the youth
+much needed, and had promised to be present at the annual Athletic
+Association Meeting, at Commencement, when the B's were awarded
+deserving athletes, which caused Hicks as much joy as the pink slip.
+With his final study sprint for the Senior Finals, his duties as
+team-manager of the baseball nine, his preparations for Commencement, his
+social duties at the Junior Prom., and multifarious other details
+coincident to graduation, the heedless Hicks had not found time to be
+sorrowful at the knowledge that it soon would end, forever, that he must
+say "Farewell, Alma Mater," and leave the campus and corridors of old
+Bannister; yet soon even Hicks' ebullient spirits must fail, for
+Commencement was a trifle over a week off.
+
+"Hicks, you lovable, heedless, irrepressible wretch," said Big Butch,
+affectionately, as the two class-mates thrilled at the scene. "Does it
+penetrate that shrapnel-proof concrete dome of yours that the Ballard game
+tomorrow is the final athletic contest of my, and likewise your, campus
+career at old Bannister?"
+
+"Similar thoughts has smote my colossal intellect, Butch!" responded the
+bean-pole Hicks, gladsomely. "But--why seek to overshadow this joyous scene
+with somber reflections? You-should-worry. You have annexed sufficient B's,
+were they different, to make up an alphabet. You've won your letter on
+gridiron, track, and baseball field, and you've been team-captain of
+everything twice! Why, therefore, sheddest thou them crocodile tears?"
+
+"Not for myself, thou sunny-souled idler!" announced Butch, generously,
+"But for _thee_! I prithee, since you pritheed me a few moments hence, let
+that so-called colossal intellect of yours stride back along the corridors
+of Time, until it reaches a certain day toward the close of our Freshman
+year. Remember, you had made a hilarious failure of every athletic event
+you tried-football, basketball, track, and baseball; you had just made a
+tremendous farce of the Freshman-Sophomore track meet, and to me, your
+loyal comrade, you uttered these rash words, 'Before I graduate from old
+Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!'
+
+"I reiterate and repeat, tomorrow's game with Ballard is the last chance
+you will have. There is no possibility that you, with your well-known lack
+of baseball ability, will get in the game, and--your track B, won in the
+high-jump, is the only B you have won! Now, do you still maintain that you
+will make good that rash vow?"
+
+"'Where there's a will, there's a way.' 'Never say die.' 'While there's
+life, there's hope.' 'Don't give up the ship.' 'Fight to the last ditch.'
+'In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as _fail_,'"
+quoth the irrepressible Hicks, all in a breath. "As long as there is an
+infinitesimal fraction of a chance left, I repeat, just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+"You haven't got a chance in the world!" Butch assured him, consolingly.
+"You did manage to get into one football game, for a minute, and you were a
+'Varsity player that long. By sticking to it, you have won your track B in
+the high-jump, thanks to your grass-hopper build, and we rejoice at your
+reward! Your Dad is happy that you've won a B, so why not be sensible, and
+cease this ridiculous talk of winning your B in _three_ sports, when you
+can see it is preposterously out of the question, absolutely impossible--"
+
+It was not that Butch. Brewster did not _want_ his sunny classmate to win
+his B in three sports, or that he would have failed to rejoice at Hicks'
+winning the triple honor. Had such a thing seemed within the bounds of
+possibility, Butch, big-hearted and loyal, would have been as happy as
+Hicks, or his Dad. But what the behemoth athlete became wrathful at was the
+obviously lunatical way in which the cheery Hicks, now that his college
+years were almost ended, parrot-like repeated, "Oh, just leave it to
+Hicks!" when he must know all hope was dead. In truth, T, Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., in pretending to maintain still that he would make good the rash
+vow of his Freshman year, had no purpose but to arouse his comrade's
+indignation; but Butch, serious of nature, believed there really lurked in
+Hicks' system some germs of hope.
+
+"We never know, old top!" chuckled Hicks, though he was _sure_ he could
+never fulfill that promise, as he had not played three-fourths of a season
+on both the football and the baseball teams, "Something may show up at the
+last minute, and--"
+
+At that moment, something evidently did show up, on the campus below, for
+the enthusiastic students howled in: thunderous chorus, as the "Honk!
+Honk!" of a Claxon was heard, "Here he comes! All together, fellows--the
+Bannister yell for the nine--then for good old Dan Flannagan!"
+
+As Hicks and Butch watched from the window, old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus,
+to the discordant blaring of a horn, progressed up the driveway, even as it
+had done on that night in September, when it transported to the campus
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. Amid salvos of
+applause from the Bannister youths, and blasts of the Claxon, old Dan
+brought "The Dove" to a stop before the Senior Fence, and bowed to the
+nine, grinning genially the while.
+
+"The car waits at the door, sir!" spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., touching
+his cap after the fashion of an English butler, before seizing a bat-bag,
+and his suit-case. "As team manager, I must attempt to force into Skeet
+Wigglesworth's dome how he and the five subs, are to travel on the C. N. &
+Q., to Eastminster, from Baltimore. Come on, Butch, we're off--"
+
+"You are always off!" commented Butch, good-humoredly, as he seized his
+baggage and followed the mosquito-like Hicks from the room, downstairs, and
+out on the campus. Here the assembled youths, with yells, cheers, and songs
+sandwiched between humorous remarks to Dan Flannagan, watched the thrilling
+spectacle of the Gold and Green nine, with the Team Manager and five
+substitutes, fifteen in all, squeeze into and atop of Dan Flannagan's
+jitney-Ford.
+
+"Let me check you fellows off," said Hicks, importantly, peering into the
+jitney, for he, as Team Manager, had to handle the traveling expenses.
+"Monty Merriweather, Roddy Perkins, Biff Pemberton. Butch Brewster, Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Beef McNaughton, Cherub Challoner, Ichabod Crane, Don
+Carterson; that is the regular nine, and are you five subs, present? O. K.
+Skeet, climb out here a second."
+
+Little Skeet Wigglesworth, the brilliant short-stop, climbed out with
+exceeding difficulty, and facing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., he saluted in
+military fashion. The team manager, consulting a timetable of the C. N.
+&.Q. railroad, fixed him with a stern look.
+
+"Skeet," he spoke distinctly, "now, _get this_--myself and eight regulars,
+_nine_ in all, will take the 9 P. M. express for Philadelphia, and stay
+there all night. Tomorrow, at 8 A. M., we leave Broad Street Station for
+Eastminster, arriving at 11 A. M. _Now_ I have a lot of unused mileage on
+the C. N. & Q., and I want to use it up before Commencement. So, heed: you
+want to go _via_ Baltimore, to see your parents. You take the 9.20 P. M.
+express tonight, to Baltimore, and go from that city in the morning, to
+Eastminster, on the C. N, & Q.--it's the only road. And take the five subs
+with you, to devour the mileage. Now, has that penetrated thy bomb-proof
+dome?"
+
+"_Sure;_ you don't have to deliver a Chautauqua lecture, Hicks!" grinned
+Skeet. "Say, what time does my train leave Baltimore, in the A.M., for
+Eastminster?"
+
+"Let's see." T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., handing the mileage-books to the
+shortstop, focused his intellect on the C. N. & Q. timetable. "Oh, yes--you
+leave Union Station, Baltimore, at 7:30 A.M., arriving at Eastminster at
+noon; _it is the only train, you can get,_ to make it in time for the game,
+so remember the hour--7.30 A.M.! Here, stuff the timetable in your pocket."
+
+In a few moments, the team and substitutes had been jammed into old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney, and the Bannister youths on the campus concentrated
+their interest on the sunny Hicks, who, grinning _a la_ Cheshire cat,
+climbed atop of "The Dove," which old Dan was having as much trouble to
+start as he had experienced for over twenty years with the late Lord
+Nelson, his defunct quadruped. Seeing Hicks abstract a Louisville
+Slugger from the bat-bag, the students roared facetious remarks at the
+irrepressible youth:
+
+"Home-run Hicks--he made a home-run--_on a strike-out_!"--"Put Hicks in
+the game, Captain Butch--he will win it."--"Watch Hicks--he'll pull
+some _bonehead_ play!"--"Bring home the Championship, but--lose Hicks
+somewhere!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the battered engine of the jit. yielded to
+old Dan's cranking, and kindly consented to start, surveyed the yelling
+students, seized a bat, and struck an attitude which he fatuously believed
+was that of Ty Cobb, about to make a hit; taking advantage of a lull in the
+tumult, the lovable youth howled at the hilarious crowd:
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks! I will win the game and the _Championship_, for my
+Alma Mater, and--I'll do it by my headwork!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR'S. HEADWORK
+
+
+"Play Ball! Say, Bannister, are you _afraid_ to play?"
+
+"Call the game, Mr. Ump.--make 'em play ball!"
+
+"Batter up! Forfeit the game to Ballard, Umpire!"
+
+"Lend 'em Ballard's bat-boy-to make a full nine!"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, his honest countenance, as a moving-picture
+director would express it, "registering wrathful dismay," lumbered toward
+the Ballard Field concrete dug-out, in which the Gold and Green players
+had entrenched themselves, while from the stands, the Ballard cohorts
+vociferated their intense impatience at the inexplicable delay.
+
+"We have _got_ to play," he raged, striding up and down before the bench.
+"The game is ten minutes late now, and the crowd is restless! And here we
+have only _eight_ 'Varsity players, and no one to make the ninth--not even
+a sub.! Oh, I could--"
+
+"That brainless Skeet Wigglesworth!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who, arrayed like a lily of the field, reposed his splinter-structure on
+the bench with his comrades. "In some way, he managed to _miss_ that train
+from Baltimore! They didn't come on the noon C, N. & Q. train, and there
+isn't another one until night. My directions were as plain as a German
+war-map, and it beats me how Skeet got befuddled!"
+
+Gloom, as thick and abysmal as a London fog, hovered over the Bannister
+dug-out. On the concrete bench, the seven Gold and Green athletes, Beef,
+Monty, Roddy, Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, with Team Manager T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., stared silently at Captain Butch Brewster, who seemed in
+imminent peril of exploding. Something probably never before heard of in
+the annals of athletic history had happened. Bannister College, about to
+play Ballard the big game for the State Championship, had lost a short-stop
+and five substitutes, in some unfathomable manner, and it was impossible
+to round up one other member of the Gold and Green baseball squad. True, a
+hundred loyal alumni were in the stands, but only _bona fide_ students, of
+course, were eligible to play the game, and--the Faculty ruling had kept
+them at old Bannister!
+
+"Here comes Ballard's Manager," spoke Beef McNaughton, as a brisk,
+clean-cut youth advanced, a yellow envelope in hand. "Why, he has a
+telegram. Do you suppose Skeet actually had _brains_ enough to wire an
+explanation?"
+
+"Telegram for Captain Brewster!" announced the Ballard collegian, giving
+the message to that surprised behemoth. "It was sent in my care--collect,
+and the sender, name of Wigglesworth, fired one to me personally, telling
+me to deliver this one to Captain Butch Brewster, and collect from Team
+Manager Hicks--he surely didn't bother to save money! I've been out of
+town, and just got back to the campus; of course, the telegrams could not
+be delivered to anyone but me, hence the delay."
+
+Big Butch, thanking the Ballard Team Manager, and assuring him that the
+charges he had paid would be advanced to him after the game, ripped open
+the yellow envelope, and drew out the message. Like a thunder-storm
+gathering on the horizon, a dark expression came to good Butch's
+countenance, and when he had perused the lengthy telegram, he transfixed
+the startled and bewildered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with an angry glare:
+
+"_Bonehead_!" he raged, apparently controlling himself with a superhuman
+effort. "Oh, you lunatic, you wretch, villain--you--_you_--"
+
+To the supreme amazement and dismay of the puzzled Hicks, Beef, next in
+line, after _he_ had scanned Skeet's telegram, followed Butch's example,
+for _he_ glowered at the perturbed youth, and heaped condemnations on his
+devoted head. And so on down the line on the bench, until Monty, Roddy,
+Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, reading the message, joined in gazing
+indignantly at their gladsome Team Manager, who, as the eight arose _en
+masse_ and advanced on him, sought to flee the wrath to come.
+
+"Safety first!" quoth T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. "'Mine not to reason why, mine
+but to haste and fly,' or--be crushed! Ouch! Beef, Monty--have a heart!"
+
+Captured by Beef and Monty Merriweather, as he frantically scrambled up
+the steps of the concrete dug-out, the grinning Hicks was held in the firm
+grasp of that behemoth, Butch Brewster, aided by the skyscraper Ichabod,
+while Cherub Challoner thrust the telegram before his eyes. In words of
+fire that burned themselves into his brain--something his colleagues
+denied he possessed--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., saw the explanation of Skeet
+Wigglesworth's missing the train from Baltimore that A. M. Dazed, the sunny
+youth read the message on which over-charges must be paid:
+
+
+"Hicks--you bonehead! The time-table of the C.N. & Q. you gave me was an
+old one--schedule revised two weeks ago! Train now leaves Balto. at 6.55
+A.M.! When we got to station at 7.05 A.M. she had went! No train to Ballard
+till night! I and subs, had to wire Bannister for money to get back on!
+You mis-manager--the _head-work_ you boasted of is boneheadwork! Pay the
+charges on this, you brainless insect! I'll send it to Butch, for you'd
+never show it to him if I sent it to you! Indignantly--
+
+"SKEET."
+
+
+"_Mis_-manager is _right_!" seethed Captain Butch, for once in his campus
+career really wrathy at the lovable Hicks. "We are in a fix--eight players,
+and the crowd howling for the game to start. Oh, I could jump overboard,
+and drag you with me!"
+
+"Bonehead! Bonehead!" chorused the Gold and Green players, indignantly.
+"Gave Skeet an out-of-date time-table--never looked at the date! Let's drag
+him out before the crowd, and announce to them his brilliant headwork!"
+
+Captain Butch, "up against it," to employ a slightly slang expression,
+gazed across Ballard Field. In the stands, the students responding
+thunderously to their cheer-leaders' megaphoned requests, roared, "Play
+ball! Play ball! Play ball!" Gay pennants and banners fluttered in the
+glorious sunshine of the June day. It was a bright scene, but its glory
+awakened no happiness in the heart of the Bannister leader, as his gaze
+wandered to the somewhat flabbergasted expression on the cheery Hicks'
+face. That inevitably sunny youth, however, managed to conjure up a faint
+resemblance of his Cheshire cat grin, and following his usual habit of
+letting nothing daunt his gladsome spirit, he croaked feebly: "Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks! I will--"
+
+"Play the game!" thundered Butch, inspired. "Beef, see the umpire and say
+we'll be ready as soon as we get Hicks into togs-show him the telegram, and
+explain our delay! I'll shift Monty from the outfield to Skeet's job at
+short, and put this diluted imitation of something human in the field, to
+do his worst. Come to the field-house, you poor fish--"
+
+"Oh, Butch, I can't--I just _can't_!" protested the alarmed Hicks,
+helpless, as the big athlete towed him from the trench, "I--I can't play
+ball, and I don't want to be shown up before all that mob! It's all right
+at Bannister, in class-games, but--Oh, can't you play the game with _eight_
+fellows?"
+
+"That is just what we intend to do!" said Butch, with grim humor.
+"But--we'll have a dummy in the ninth position, to make the people believe
+we have a full nine! Cheer up, Hicks--'In the bright lexicon of youth
+there ain't no such word as fail,' you say! As for your making a fool of
+yourself, you haven't brains enough to be classed as one! Now--you'll pay
+dearly for your bonehead play."
+
+Ten minutes later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as agitated as a _prima donna_
+making her debut with the Metropolitan: Opera Company, decorated the
+Bannister bench, arrayed in one of the substitutes' baseball suits. It
+was too large for his splinter-structure, so that it flapped grotesquely,
+giving him a startling resemblance to a scarecrow escaped from a cornfield.
+With the thermometer of his spirits registering zero, the dismayed youth,
+whose punishment was surely fitting the crime, heard the Umpire bellow:
+
+"Play ball! Batter up! Bannister at bat--Ballard in the field!"
+
+Hicks, that sunny-souled youth, had often daydreamed of himself in a big
+game of baseball, for his college. He had vividly imagined a ninth inning
+crisis, three of the enemy on base, two out, and a long fly, good for a
+home-run, soaring over his head. How he had sprinted--back--back--and at
+the last second, reached high in the air, grabbing the soaring spheroid,
+and saving the game for his Alma Mater! Often, too, he had stepped up to
+bat in the final frame, with two out, one on base, and Bannister a run
+behind. With the vast crowd silent and breathless, he had walloped the
+ball, over the left-field fence, and jogged around the bases, thrilling to
+the thunderous cheers of his comrades. But now--
+
+_"Oooo!"_ shivered Hicks, as though he had just stepped beneath an icy
+shower-bath. "I wish I could run away. I just _know_ they'll knock every
+ball to me, and I couldn't catch one with a sheriff and posse!"
+
+However, since, despite the blithesome Hicks' lack of confidence, it was
+that sunny Senior, after all, whom fate--or fortune, accordingly as
+each nine viewed it--destined to be the hero of the Bannister-Ballard
+Championship baseball contest, the game itself is shoved into such
+insignificance that it can be briefly chronicled by recording the events
+that led up to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, self-prophesied "head-work."
+
+Without Skeet Wigglesworth at shortstop, with the futile Hicks in
+right-field, and the confidence of the nine shaken, Captain Butch Brewster
+and the Gold and Green players went into the big game, unable to shake off
+the feeling that they would be defeated. And when Pitcher Don Carterson,
+in his half of the frame, passed the first two Ballard batters, the belief
+deepened to conviction. However, a fast double play and a long fly ended
+the inning without damage, and Bannister, likewise, had failed to make an
+impression on the score-board. In the second, Don promptly showed that he
+was striving to rival the late Cy Morgan, of the Athletics, for he promptly
+hit two batters and passed the third, whereupon, as sporting-writers
+express it, he was "derricked" by Captain Butch.
+
+Placing the deposed twirler in left field, Captain Brewster, as a last
+resort, believing the game hopelessly lost, with his star pitcher having
+failed, and his relief slabmen, thanks to Hicks, mislaid _en route_, sent
+out to the box one Ichabod Crane, brought in from the position given to
+Don Carterson. This cadaverous, skyscraper Senior, who always announced,
+himself as originating, "Back at Bedwell Center, Pa., where I come from--"
+was well known to fame as the "Champion Horse-Shoe Pitcher of Bucks
+County," but his baseball pitching was rather uncertain; like the girl in
+the nursery jingle, Ichabod, as a twirler, "When he was good, he was very,
+very good, and when he was wild, he was _horrid_!" Like Christy Mathewson,
+after he had pitched a few balls, he knew whether or not he was in
+shape for the game, and so did the spectators. With terrific speed and
+bewildering curves, Ichabod would have made a star, but his wildness
+prevented, and only on very rare days could he control the ball.
+
+Luckily for old Bannister's chances of victory and the Championship, this
+was one of the elongated Ichabod's rare days. He ambled into the box, with
+the bases full, and promptly struck out a batter. The next rolled to first,
+forcing out the runner at home, while the third hitter under Ichabod's
+regime drove out a long fly to center-field. Thus the game settled to one
+of the most memorable contests that Ballard Field had ever witnessed, a
+pitchers' battle between the awkward, bean-pole youth from "Bedwell Center,
+Pa.," and Bob Forsythe, the crack Ballard twirler. It was a fight long
+to be remembered, with hits as scarce as auks' eggs, and runs out of the
+reckoning, for six innings.
+
+At the start of the seventh, with the Ballard rooters standing and
+thundering, "The lucky seventh! Ballard--win the game in the lucky
+seventh!" the score was 0-0. Only two hits had been made off Forsythe, of
+Ballard, whose change of pace had the Bannister nine at his mercy, and
+but three off Ichabod, who had superb control of his dazzling speed. T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cavorting in right field, had made the only error of
+the contest, dropping an easy fly that fell into his hands after he had run
+bewilderedly in circles, when any good fielder could have stood still and
+captured it; however, since he got the ball to second in time to hold the
+runner at third, no harm resulted.
+
+"Hold 'em, Bannister, _hold_ 'em!" entreated Butch Brewster, as they went
+to the field at their end of the lucky seventh, not having scored. "Do your
+best, Hicks, old man--never mind their Jokes. If you can't _catch_
+the ball, just get it to second, or first, without delay! Pitch ball,
+Ichabod--three innings to hold 'em!"
+
+But it was destined to be the lucky seventh for Ballard. An error on a hard
+chance, for Roddy Perkins, at third, placed a runner on first. Ichabod
+struck out a hitter, and the runner stole second, aided somewhat by the
+umpire. The next player flew out, sacrificing the runner to third; then--an
+easy fly traveled toward the paralyzed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one that
+anybody with the most infinitesimal baseball ability could have corralled,
+as Butch said, "with his eyes blindfolded, and his hands tied behind him!"
+But Hicks, who possessed absolutely _no_ baseball talent, though he made
+a desperate try, succeeded in doing an European juggling act for five
+heartbreaking seconds, after which he let the law of gravity act on the
+sphere, so that it descended to terra firma. Hence, the "Lucky Seventh"
+ended with the score: Ballard, 1; Bannister, 0; and the Ballard cohorts in
+a state bordering on lunacy!
+
+"Oh, I've done it now--I've lost the game and the Championship!" groaned
+the crushed Hicks, as he stumbled toward the Bannister bench. "First I made
+that bonehead play, giving Skeet an old time-table I had on hand, and not
+telling him to get one at the station. How was _I_ to know the old railroad
+would change the schedule, within two weeks of this game? And now--I've
+made the error that gives Ballard the Championship. If I hadn't pulled that
+boner, Skeet would be here, and the regular right-fielder would have had
+that fly. What a glorious climax to my athletic career at old Bannister!"
+
+Hicks' comrades were too generous, or heartbroken, to condemn the sorrowful
+youth, as he trailed to the dug-out, but the Ballard rooters had absolutely
+no mercy, and they panned him in regulation style. In fact, all through
+the game, Hicks expressed himself as being butchered by the fans to make a
+Ballard holiday, for he struck out with unfailing regularity at bat, and
+dropped everything in the field, so that the rooters jeered him, whenever
+he stepped to the plate, and--it was quite different from the good-natured
+ridicule of his comrades, back at old Bannister.
+
+"Never mind, Hicks," said good Butch Brewster, brokenly, seeing how
+sorrow-stricken his sunny classmate was, "We'll beat 'em--yet! We bat this
+inning, and in the ninth maybe someone will knock a home-run for us, and
+tie the score."
+
+The eighth Inning was the lucky one for the Gold and Green. Monty
+Merriweather opened with a clean two-base hit to left, and advanced to
+third on Biff Pemberton's sacrifice to short. Butch, trying to knock a
+home-run, struck out-_a la_ "Cactus" Cravath in the World's Series; but the
+lanky Ichabod, endeavoring to bunt, dropped a Texas-Leaguer over second,
+and the score was tied, though the sky-scraper twirler was caught off base
+a moment later. And, though Ballard fought hard in the last of the eighth,
+Ichabod displayed big-league speed, and retired two hitters by the
+strike-out route, while the third popped out to first.
+
+"The _ninth_ Inning!" breathed Beef McNaughton, picking up his Louisville
+Slugger, as he strode to the plate. "Come on, boys--we will win the
+Championship _right now_. Get one run, and Ichabod will hold Ballard one
+more time!"
+
+Perhaps the pachydermic Beef's grim attitude unnerved the wonderful Bob
+Forsythe, for he passed that elephantine youth. However, he regained his
+splendid control, and struck out Cherub Challoner on three pitched balls.
+After this, it was a shame to behold the Ballard first-baseman drop the
+ball, when Don Carterson grounded to third, and would have been thrown
+out with ease--with two on base, and one out, Roddy Perkins made a sharp
+single, on which the two runners advanced a base. Now, with the sacks
+filled, and with only one out--
+
+"It's all over!" mourned Captain Butch Brewster, rocking back and forth on
+the bench. "Hicks--is--at--bat!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his bat wobbling, and his knees acting in a similar
+fashion, refusing to support even that fragile frame, staggered toward the
+plate, like a martyr. A tremendous howl of unearthly joy went up from the
+stands, for Hicks had struck out every time yet.
+
+"Three pitched balls, Bob!" was the cry. "Strike him out! It's all over but
+the shouting! He's scared to death, Forsythe--he can't hit a barn-door
+with a scatter-gun! One--two--three--out! Here's where Ballard wins the
+Championship."
+
+Twice the grinning Bob Forsythe cut loose with blinding speed--twice the
+extremely alarmed Hicks dodged back, and waved a feeble Chautauqua salute
+at the ball he never even saw! Then--trying to "cut the inside corner" with
+a fast inshoot, Forsythe's control wavered a trifle, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., saw the ball streaking toward him! The paralyzed youth felt like a man
+about to be shot by a burglar. He could feel the bail thud against him,
+feel the terrific shock; and yet--a thought instinctively flashed on him,
+he remembered, in a flash, what a tortured Monty Merriweather had shouted,
+as he wobbled to bat:
+
+"Get a base on balls, or--if you can't _make_ a hit--_get hit_!"
+
+If he got hit--it meant a run forced in, as the bases were full! That, in
+all probability, would give old Bannister the Championship, for Ichabod was
+invincible. It is not likely that the dazed Hicks thought all this out, and
+weighed it against the agony of getting hit by Forsythe's speed. The truth
+is, the paralyzed youth was too petrified by fear to dodge, and that before
+he could avoid it, the speeding spheroid crashed against his noble brow
+with a sickening impact.
+
+All went black before him, T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., pale and limp, crumpled,
+and slid to the ground, senseless; therefore, he failed to hear the roar
+from the Bannister bench, from the loyal Gold and Green rooters in the
+stands, as big Beef lumbered across the plate with what proved later to be
+the winning run. He did not hear the Umpire shout: "Take your base!"
+
+ "What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ He was never a star in the baseball game,
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks-he's all right!"
+
+"Honk! Honk!" Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, rattling up the driveway,
+bearing back to the Bannister campus the victorious Gold and Green nine,
+and the State Intercollegiate Baseball Championship, though the hour was
+midnight, found every student on the grass before the Senior Fence! Over
+three hundred leather-lunged youths, aided by the Bannister Band, and every
+known noise-making device, hailed "The Dove," as that unseaworthy craft
+halted before them, with the baseball nine inside, and on top. However, the
+terrific tumult stilled, as the bewildered collegians caught the refrain
+from the exuberant players:
+
+ "He was never a star in the baseball game--
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!"
+
+"Hicks did what?" shrieked Skeezicks McCracken, voicing through a megaphone
+the sentiment of the crowd. Captain Butch had simply telegraphed the final
+score, so old Bannister was puzzled to hear the team lauding T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., who, still white and weak, with a bandage around his classic
+forehead, maintained a phenomenal quiet, atop of "The Dove," leaning
+against Butch Brewster.
+
+"Fellows," shouted Butch, despite Hicks' protest, rising to his feet on the
+roof of the "jit."--"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., today won the game and the
+Championship! Listen--"
+
+The vast crowd of erstwhile clamorous youths stood spellbound, as Captain
+Butch Brewster, in graphic sentences, described the game--Don Carterson's
+failure, Ichabod's sensational pitching, Hicks' errors, and--the wonderful
+manner in which the futile youth had won the Championship! As little Skeet
+Wigglesworth and the five substitutes, who had returned that afternoon, had
+spread the story of Hicks' bonehead play, old Bannister had turned out to
+ridicule and jeer good-naturedly the sunny youth, but now they learned that
+Hicks had been forced by his own mistake into the Big Game, and had won it!
+Of course, his comrades knew it had been through no ability of his, but the
+knowledge that he had been knocked senseless by Forsythe's great speed, and
+had suffered so that his college might score, thrilled them.
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" thundered Thor, he who at one time would
+have called this riot foolishness, and forgetting that the nine had just
+chanted the response to this query.
+
+"He's all right!" chorused the collegians, in ecstasy.
+
+"Who's all right?" demanded John Thorwald, his blond head towering over
+those of his comrades. To him, now, there was nothing silly about this
+performance!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" came the shout, and the band fanfared, while the
+exultant collegians shouted, sang, whistled, and created an indescribable
+tumult with their noise-making devices. For five minutes the ear-splitting
+din continued, a wonderful tribute to the lovable, popular youth, and then
+it stilled so suddenly that the result was startling, for--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., swaying on his feet arose, and stood on the roof of the "jit."
+
+With that heart-warming Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance, the
+irrepressible Hicks seized a Louisville Slugger, assumed a Home-Run Baker
+batting pose, and shouted to his breathlessly waiting comrades:
+
+"Fellows, I vowed I would win that baseball game and the Championship for
+my Alma Mater by my headwork! With the bases full, and the score a tie, the
+Ballard pitcher hit me in the head with the ball, forcing in the run that
+won for old Ballard--now, if that wasn't _headwork_--"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+
+
+ "We have come to the close of our college days.
+ Golden campus years soon must end;
+ From Bannister we shall go our ways--
+ And friend shall part from friend!
+ On our Alma Mater now we gaze,
+ And our eyes are filled with tears;
+ For we've come to the close of our college days,
+ And the end of our campus years!"
+
+Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., Bannister, '92; Yale, '96, and Pittsburgh
+millionaire "Steel King," stood at the window of Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, room, his arm across the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, his
+only son and heir. Father and son stood, gazing down at the campus. On the
+Gym steps was a group of Seniors, singing songs of old Bannister, songs
+tinged with sadness. Up to Hicks' windows, on the warm June: night, drifted
+the 1916 Class Ode, to the beautiful tune, "A Perfect Day." Over before the
+Science Hall, a crowd of joyous alumni laughed over narratives of their
+campus escapades. Happy undergraduates, skylarking on the campus,
+celebrated the end of study, and gazed with some awe at the Seniors, in cap
+and gown, suddenly transformed into strange beings, instead of old comrades
+and college-mates.
+
+"'The close of our college days, and the end of our campus years--!'"
+quoted Mr. Hicks, a mist before his eyes as he gazed at the scene. "In a
+few days, Thomas, comes the final parting from old Bannister--I know it
+will be hard, for _I_ had to leave the dear old college, and also Yale. But
+you have made a splendid record in your studies, you have been one of
+the most popular fellows here, and--you have vastly pleased your Dad, by
+winning your B in the high-jump."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, last study-sprint was at an end, the final Exams.
+of his Senior year had been passed with what is usually termed flying
+colors; and to the whole-souled delight of the lovable youth, he and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the Human Encyclopedia, had, as Hicks chastely
+phrased it, "run a dead heat for the Valedictory!" So close had their
+final averages been that the Faculty, after much consideration, decided to
+announce at the Commencement exercises that the two Seniors had tied for
+the highest collegiate honors, and everyone was satisfied with the verdict.
+So, now it was all ended; the four years of study, athletics, campus
+escapades, dormitory skylarking--the golden years of college life, were
+about to end for 1919. Commencement would officially start on the morrow,
+but tonight, in the Auditorium, would be held the annual Athletic
+Association meeting, when those happy athletes who had won their B during
+the year would have it presented, before the assembled collegians, by
+one-time gridiron, track, and diamond heroes of old Bannister.
+
+And--the ecstatic Hicks would have his track B, his white letter, won in
+the high-jump, thanks to Caesar Napoleon's assistance, awarded him by his
+beloved Dad, the greatest all-round athlete that ever wore the Gold and
+Green! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., _en route_ to New Haven and Yale in
+his private car, "Vulcan," had reached town that day, together with other
+members of Bannister College, Class of '92. They, as did all the old
+grads., promptly renewed past memories and associations by riding up to
+College Hill in Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus--a youthful, hilarious crowd of
+alumni. Former students, alumni, parents of graduating Seniors, friends,
+sweethearts--every train would bring its quota. The campus would again
+throb and pulsate with that perennial quickening--Commencement. Three days
+of reunions, Class Day exercises, banquets, and other events, then the
+final exercises, and--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., would be an alumnus!
+
+"It's like Theophilus told Thor, last fall, Dad," said the serious Hicks.
+"You know what Shakespeare said: 'This thou perceivest, which makes thy
+love more strong; To love that well which thou must leave ere long.' Now
+that I soon shall leave old Bannister, I--I wish I had studied more, had
+done bigger things for my Alma Mater! And for you, Dad, too; I've won a B,
+but perhaps, had I trained and exercised more, I might have annexed another
+letter--still; hello, what's Butch hollering--?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, his pachydermic frame draped in his gown, and his
+mortar-board cap on his head, for the Seniors were required to wear their
+regalia during Commencement week, was bellowing through a megaphone, as he
+stood on the steps of Bannister Hall, and Mr. Hicks, with his cheerful son,
+listened:
+
+"Everybody--Seniors, Undergrads., Alumni--in the Auditorium at eight sharp!
+We are going to give Mr. Hicks and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a surprise
+party--don't miss the fun!"
+
+"Now, just what does Butch mean, Dad?" queried the bewildered Senior.
+"Something is in the wind. For two days, the fellows have had a secret
+from me--they whisper and plot, and when _I_ approach, loudly talk of
+athletics, or Commencement! Say, Butch--_Butch_--I ain't a-comin' tonight,
+unless you explain the mystery."
+
+"Oh, yes, you be, old sport!" roared Butch, from the campus, employing the
+megaphone, "or you don't get your letter! Say, Hicks, one sweetly solemn
+thought attacks me--old Bannister is puzzling _you_ with a mystery, instead
+of vice versa, as is usually the case."
+
+"Well, Thomas," said Mr. Hicks, his face lighted by a humorous, kindly
+smile, as he heard the storm of good-natured jeers at Hicks, Jr., that
+greeted Butch Brewster's fling, "I'll stroll downtown, and see if any of
+my old comrades came on the night express. I'll see you at the Athletic
+Association meeting, for I believe I am to hand you the B. I can't imagine
+what this 'surprise party' is, but I don't suppose it will harm us. It will
+surely be a happy moment, son, when I present you with the athletic letter
+you worked so hard to win."
+
+When T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, beloved Dad had gone, his firm stride
+echoing down the corridor, that blithesome, irrepressible collegian, whom
+old Bannister had come to love as a generous, sunny-souled youth, stood
+again by the window, gazing out at the campus. Now, for the first time, he
+fully realized what a sad occasion a college Commencement really is--to
+those who must go forth from their Alma Mater forever. With almost the
+force of a staggering blow, Hicks suddenly saw how it would hurt to leave
+the well-loved campus and halls of old Bannister, to go from those comrades
+of his golden years. In a day or so, he must part from good Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Ichabod, Monty, Roddy, Cherub, loyal little Theophilus and all his
+classmates of '19, as well as from his firm friends of the undergraduates.
+It would be the parting from the youths of his class that would cost him
+the greatest regret. Four years they had lived together the care-free
+campus life. From Freshmen to Seniors they had grown and developed
+together, and had striven for 1919 and old Bannister, while a love for
+their Alma Mater had steadily possessed their hearts. And now soon they
+must sing, "Vale, Alma Mater!" and go from the campus and corridors, as
+Jack Merritt, Heavy Hughes, Biff McCabe, and many others had done before
+them.
+
+Of course, they would return to old Bannister. There would be alumni
+banquets at mid-year and Commencement, with glad class reunions each year.
+They would come back for the big games of the football or baseball season.
+But it would never be the same. The glad, care-free, golden years of
+college life come but once, and they could never live them, as of old.
+
+"Caesar's Ghost!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., making a dive for his
+beloved banjo, as he awakened to the startling fact that for some time he
+had been intensely serious. "This will never, never do. I must maintain my
+blithesome buoyancy to the end, and entertain old Bannister with my musical
+ability. Here goes."
+
+Assuming a striking pose, _a la_ troubadour, at the open window, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., a somewhat paradoxical figure, his splinter-structure
+enshrouded in the gown, the cap on his classic head, this regalia symbolic
+of dignity, and the torturesome banjo in his grasp, twanged a ragtime
+accompaniment, and to the bewilderment of the old Grads on the campus, as
+well as the wrath of 1919, he roared in his fog-horn voice:
+
+ "Oh, I love for to live in the country!
+ And I love for to live on the farm!
+ I love for to wander in the grass-green fields--
+ Oh, a country life has the charm!
+ I love for to wander in the garden--
+ Down by the old haystack;
+ Where the pretty little chickens go 'Kick-Kack-Kackle!'
+ And the little docks go 'Quack! Quack!'"
+
+From the Seniors on the Gym steps, their dignified song rudely shattered by
+this rollicking saenger-fest, came a storm of protests; to the unbounded
+delight of the alumni, watching the scene with interest, shouts, jeers,
+whistles, and cat-calls greeted Hicks' minstrelsy:
+
+"Tear off his cap and gown--he's a disgrace to '19!"
+
+"Shades of Schumann-Heink--give that calf more rope!"
+
+"Ye gods--how long must we endure--that?"
+
+"Hicks, a Senior--nobody home--can that noise!"
+
+"Shoot him at sunrise! Where's his Senior dignity?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, referring to his watch, bellowed through the megaphone
+that it was nearly eight o'clock, and loudly suggested that they forcibly
+terminate Hicks' saengerfest, and spare the town police force a riot call
+to the campus, by transporting the pestiferous youth to the Auditorium,
+for his "surprise party." His idea finding favor, he, with Beef and Pudge,
+somewhat hampered by their gowns, lumbered up the stairway of Bannister,
+and down the third-floor corridor to the offending Hicks' boudoir, followed
+by a yelling, surging crowd of Seniors and underclassmen. They invaded the
+graceless youth's room, much to the pretended alarm of that torturesome
+collegian, who believed that the entire student-body of old Bannister had
+foregathered to wreak vengeance on his devoted head.
+
+"_Mercy_! Have a heart, fellows!" plead T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., helpless in
+the clutches of Butch, Beef, and Pudge, "I won't never do it no more, no
+time! Say, this is too much--much too much--too much much too much--I,
+Oh--_help--aid--succor--relief--assistance--"_
+
+"To the Auditorium with the wretch!" boomed Butch; and the splinter-youth
+was borne aloft, on his broad shoulders, assisted by Beef McNaughton. They
+transported the grinning Hicks down the corridor, while fifty noisy youths,
+howling, "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow!" tramped after them. Downstairs
+and across the campus the hilarious procession marched, and into the
+Auditorium, where the students and alumni were gathering for the awarding
+of the athletic B. A thunderous shout went up, as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+was carried to the stage and deposited in a chair.
+
+"_Hicks! Hicks! Hicks_! We've got a surprise for--_Hicks_!"
+
+"Now, just what have I did to deserve all these?" grinned that
+happy-go-lucky youth, puzzled, nevertheless. "Well, time will tell, so all
+I can do is to possess my soul with impatience; old Bannister has a mystery
+for me, this trip!"
+
+In fifteen minutes, the Athletic Association meeting opened. On the stage,
+beside its officers, were those athletes, including T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who were to receive that coveted reward--their B, together with a number of
+one-time famous Bannister gridiron, track, basketball, and diamond stars.
+Each youth was to receive his monogram from some ex-athlete who once wore
+the Gold and Green, and Hicks' beloved Dad--Bannister's greatest hero--was
+to present his son with the letter.
+
+There were speeches; the Athletic Association's President explained the
+annual meeting, former Bannister students and athletic idols told of past
+triumphs on Bannister Field; the football Championship banner, and the
+baseball pennant were flaunted proudly, and each team-captain of the year
+was called upon to talk. Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., a great favorite
+on the campus, delivered a ringing speech, an appeal to the undergraduates
+for clean living, and honorable sportsmanship, and then:
+
+"We now come to the awarding of the athletic B," stated the President. "The
+Secretary will call first the name of the athlete, and then the alumnus who
+will present him with the letter. In the name of the Athletic Association
+of old Bannister, I congratulate those fellows who are now to be rewarded
+for their loyalty to their Alma Mater!"
+
+Thrilled, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., watched his comrades, as they responded
+to their names, and had the greatest glory, the B, placed in their hands by
+past Bannister athletic heroes. Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Ichabod, Biff,
+Hefty, Tug, Buster, Deacon Radford, Cherub, Don, Skeet, Thor, who had
+won the hammer-throw. These, and many others, having earned the award by
+playing in three-fourths of a season's games on the eleven or the nine, or
+by winning a first place in some track event, stepped forward, and were
+rewarded. Some, as good Butch, had gained their B many times, but the fact
+that this was their last letter, made the occasion a sad one. Every name
+was called but that of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and that perturbed youth
+wondered at the omission, when the President spoke:
+
+"The last name," he said, smiling, "is that of Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and we are glad to have his father present the letter to his son, as Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., is with us. However, we Bannister fellows have
+prepared a surprise party for our lovable comrade, and I beg your patience
+awhile, as I explain."
+
+Graphically, Dad Pendleton described the wonderful all-round athletic
+record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old Bannister, and
+sketched briefly but vividly his phenomenal record at Yale; he told of
+Mr. Hicks' great ambition, for his only son, Thomas, to follow in his
+footsteps--to be a star athlete, and shatter the marks made by his Dad.
+Then he reminded the Bannister students of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+athletic fiascos, hilarious and otherwise, of three years. He explained how
+that cheery youth, grinning good-humoredly at his comrades' jeers, had been
+in earnest, striving to realize his father's ambition. As the spellbound
+collegians and grads. listened, Dad chronicled Hicks' dogged persistence,
+and how he finally, in his Senior year, won his track B in the high-jump.
+Then he described the biggest game of the past football season, the contest
+that brought the Championship to old Bannister. The youths and alumni heard
+how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., made a great sacrifice, for the greater goal;
+how, after training faithfully in secret for a year, hoping sometime to win
+a game for his Alma Mater, he cheerfully sacrificed his chance to tie the
+score by a drop-kick, and became the pivotal part of a fake-kick play that
+won for the Gold and Green.
+
+"I have left Hicks' name until last," said Dad, with a smile, "because
+tonight we have a surprise party for our sunny comrade, and for his Dad. In
+the past, the eligibility rule, as regards the football and baseball B, has
+been--an athlete must play on the 'Varsity in three-fourths of the season's
+games. But, just before the Hamilton game, last fall, the Advisory Board of
+the Athletic Association amended this rule.
+
+"We decided to submit to the required two-thirds majority vote of the
+students this plan, inasmuch as many athletes, toiling and sacrificing all
+season for their college, never get to win their letter, yet deserve
+that reward for their loyalty, we suggested that Bannister imitate the
+universities. Anyone sent into the Yale-Harvard game, you know, wins his
+H or Y. If one team is safely ahead, a lot of scrubs are run into the
+scrimmage, to give them their letter. Therefore, we--the Advisory
+Board--made this rule: 'Any athlete taking part, for any period of time
+whatsoever, in the Ballard football or baseball game as a regular member of
+the first team shall be eligible for his Gold or Green B. This rule, upon
+approval of the students, to be effective from September 25!'
+
+"Now," continued the Athletic Association President, "we decided to keep
+this new ruling a secret until the present, for this reason: Many good
+football and baseball players, not making the first teams, lack the loyalty
+to stick on the scrubs, and others, not as brilliant, but with more
+college spirit, give their best until the season's end. We knew that if we
+announced this rule last fall, several slackers, who had quit the squad,
+would come out again, just on the hope of getting sent into the Ballard
+game, for their B. This would not be fair to those who loyally stuck to the
+scrubs. So we did not announce the rule until the year closed, and then a
+practically unanimous vote of the students made the rule effective from
+September 25. So--all athletes who took part in the Ballard football game,
+last fall, for any period of time whatsoever, are eligible for the gold B,
+and the same, as regards the green letter, applies to the Ballard baseball
+game this spring."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., gasped. Slowly, the glorious truth dawned on the
+happy-go-lucky Senior--he had been sent into the Bannister-Ballard football
+game; the crucial and deciding play had turned on him, hence he had won his
+gold letter! And thanks to his brilliant "mismanaging" of the nine, losing
+shortstop Skeet Wigglesworth and the substitutes, he had played the entire
+nine innings of the Ballard-Bannister baseball contest, and, therefore,
+was eligible for his green B. In a dazed condition, he heard Dad Pendleton
+saying:
+
+"You remember how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was sent into the Ballard
+game, and how the fake-play fooled Ballard, who believed he would try
+a drop-kick? Well, knowing Hicks to be eligible for his football B, we
+planned a surprise party. The Advisory Board kept the new rule a secret,
+and not until this week was it voted on. Then, the required two-thirds
+majority made it effective from last September--we managed to have Hicks
+absent from the voting, and the fellows helped us with our surprise! So
+instead of Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., presenting his son with one
+B, that for track work, we are glad to hand him _three_ letters, one for
+football, one for baseball, and one for track, to give our own T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. And, let me add, he can accept them with a clear conscience, for
+when the rule was made by the Advisory Board, we had no idea that Hicks
+would ever be eligible in football or baseball."
+
+A moment of silence, and then undergraduates and alumni, thrilled at Dad
+Pendleton's announcement, arose in a body, and howled for T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his beloved Dad. Mr. Hicks, unable to speak, silently
+placed the three monograms, gold, green, and white, in his son's hands, and
+placed his own on the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, who for once
+in his heedless career could not say a word!
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" Big Butch Brewster roared, and a terrific
+response sounded:
+
+"He's all right! Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"
+
+For ten minutes pandemonium reigned. Then, regardless of the fact that, in
+order to surprise Mr. Hicks and his son, other athletes, eligible under the
+new rule, had yet to be presented with their B, the howling youths swarmed
+on the stage, hoisted the grinning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his happy
+Dad to their shoulders, and started a wild parade around the campus and the
+Quadrangle, singing:
+
+"Here's to our own Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own
+Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own Hicks--When he
+starts a thing, he sticks--Drink it down--drink it down--down! Down!
+Down!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., aloft on the shoulders of his behemoth class-mate,
+Butch Brewster, was deliriously happy. The surprise party of his campus
+comrades was a wonderful one, and he could scarcely realize that he had
+actually, by the Athletic Association ruling, won his three B's! How glad
+his beloved Dad, was, too. He had not expected this bewildering happiness.
+He had been so joyous, when his sort earned the track letter, but to
+have him leave old Bannister, with a B for three sports--it was almost
+unbelievable! And, as Dad had said--there had been no thought of Hicks when
+the Advisory Board made the rule, so Hicks had no reason to suppose it was
+done just to award him his letter.
+
+Then, Hicks remembered that rash vow, made at the end of his Freshman year,
+a vow uttered with absolutely no other thought than a desire to torment
+Butch Brewster, "Before I graduate from old Bannister, I shall have won
+my B in three branches of sport!" Never, not even for a moment, had the
+happy-go-lucky youth believed that his wild prophecy would be fulfilled,
+though he had pretended to be confident to tease his loyal comrades; but
+now, at the very end of his campus days, just before he graduated, his
+prediction had come true! So the sunny Senior, who four years before had
+made his rash vow, saw its realization, and suddenly thrilled with the
+knowledge that he had a golden opportunity to make Butch indignant.
+
+"Oh, I say, Butch," he drawled, nonchalantly, leaning down to talk in
+Butch's ear, "do you recall that day, at the close of our Freshman year,
+when I vowed to win my B in three branches of sport, ere I bade farewell to
+old Bannister?"
+
+"No, you don't get away with that!" exploded Butch Brewster, indignantly,
+lowering his tantalizing classmate to terra firma. "Here, Beef, Pudge,
+catch this wretch; he intends to swagger and say--"
+
+But he was too late, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., dodging from his grasp,
+imitated the celebrated Charley Chaplin strut, and satiated his fun-loving
+soul. After waiting for three years, the irrepressible youth realized an
+ambition he had never imagined would be fulfilled.
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth he, gladsomely. "I told you I'd win
+my three B's, Butch, old top, and--_ow_!--unhand me, you villain, you
+_hurt_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+ "Oh, it was '_Ave_, Alma Mater--'
+ We sang as Freshmen gay;
+ But it's '_Vale_, Alma Mater' now
+ As our last farewells we say!"
+
+"_Honk-Honk! Br-r-rr-r-Bang! Honk-Monk! Br-rr-rr-r--"_
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., big Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Pudge Langdon,
+Scoop Sawyer, and little Theophilus Opperdyke--late Seniors of old
+Bannister--roosted atop of good old Dan Flannagan's famous jitney-bus
+before Bannister Hall. It was nearly time for the 9.30 A. M. express, but
+the "peace-ship" had inconsiderately stalled, and the choking, wheezing,
+and snorting of the engine, as old Dan frenziedly cranked, together with
+the Claxon, operated by Skeet Wigglesworth, rudely interrupted the Seniors'
+chant. A vociferous protest arose above the tumult:
+
+"Oh, the little old _Ford_--rambled right along--like heck!"
+
+"Can that noise-we want to sing a last song, boys!"
+
+"Chuck that engine, Dan, and put in an alarm clock spring!"
+
+"Christmas is coming, Dan-u-el--we've graduated you know!"
+
+"'The Dove' doesn't want us to leave old Bannister, fellows!"
+
+Commencement was ended. The night before, on the stage of Alumni Hall,
+before a vast audience of old Bannister grads, undergraduates, friends, and
+relatives of the Seniors, the Class of 1919 had received its sheepskins,
+and the "Go forth, my children, and live!" of its Alma Mater. T, Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and timorous little Theophilus had jointly delivered the
+Valedictory, eight other Seniors, including Butch, Scoop, and the lengthy
+Ichabod, had swayed the crowd with oratory. Kindly old Prexy, his voice
+tremulous, had talked to them, as students, for the last time. The Class
+Ode had been sung, the Class Shield unveiled, and then--Hicks and his
+comrades of '19 were alumni!
+
+It had been a busy, thrilling time, Commencement Week. There had been
+scarcely any spare moments to ponder on the parting so soon to come; after
+the memorable Athletic Association meeting, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and his beloved Dad had been given a wonderful "surprise party" by the
+collegians, and Hicks had corralled his three B's, time had "sprinted with
+spiked shoes," as the sunny Hicks stated. Event had followed event in
+bewildering fashion. The Seniors, dignified in cap and gown, had been feted
+and banqueted, the cynosure of all eyes. Campus and town were filled with
+visitors. Old Bannister pulsated with renewed life, with the glad reunions
+of former students. There had been the Alumni Banquet, the annual baseball
+game between the 'Varsity and old-time Gold and Green diamond stars, Class
+Night exercises, the Literary Society Oratorical Contests, and the last
+Class Supper; and, Commencement had come.
+
+It was all ended now--the four happy, golden years of campus life, of glad
+fellowship with each other; like those who had gone before, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his comrades of 1919 had come to the final parting. The
+sunny-souled youth's Dad had gone to New Haven, to Yale's Commencement.
+Alumni and visitors had left town; the night before had witnessed farewells
+with Monty, Roddy, Biff, Hefty, and the underclassmen, with that awakened
+Colossus, John Thorwald. All the collegians had gone, except the few
+Seniors now leaving, and they had remained to enjoy Hicks' final Beefsteak
+Bust downtown at Jerry's.
+
+The campus was silent and deserted. No footsteps or voices echoed in the
+dormitories, and a shadow of sadness hovered over all. The youths who were
+leaving old Bannister forever felt an ache in their throats, and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke's big-rimmed spectacles were fogged with tears. Three
+times, in the past, they had left the campus, but this was forever, as
+collegians!
+
+"I don't care if we miss the old train!" declared Scoop Sawyer, as the
+jitney-Ford's engine wheezed, gasped, and was silent, for all of Dan's
+cranking. "Just think, fellows, it's all over now--'We have come to the end
+of our college days-golden campus years are at an end--!' Say, Hicks, old
+man, what's your Idea. What future have you blue-printed?"
+
+"Journalism!" announced T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sticking a fountain pen
+behind his ear, and fatuously supposing he resembled a City Editor, "In me
+you behold an embryo Richard Harding Davis, or Ty--no, I mean Irvin Cobb.
+I shall first serve my apprenticeship as a 'cub,' but ere many years, I
+shall sit at a desk, run a newspaper, and tell the world where to get off."
+
+"That is--If Dad says so!" chuckled Butch Brewster. "You know, Hicks, it's
+the same old story--your father wants you to learn how to own steel and
+iron mills, and when it comes to a showdown, you must convince Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., that you'd make a better journalist than Steel King!"
+
+"Nay, nay-say not so!" responded the happy-go-lucky alumnus of old
+Bannister, as the perspiring Dan Flannagan cranked away futilely. "My Dad
+has a broader vision, fellows, than most men. He and I talked it over last
+night, and he would never try to make me take up anything but a work that
+appeals to me. While, as Butch says, he'd like to train me to follow in his
+footsteps, he understands my ambition so thoroughly that he is trying to
+get me started--read this:"
+
+The lovable youth produced a letter, the envelope bearing the heading: "THE
+BALTIMORE CHRONICLE;" Butch Brewster, to whom he extended it, read aloud:
+
+
+"Baltimore, Maryland,
+
+"June 12, 1919.
+
+"DEAR OLD CLASSMATE:
+
+"I'd sure like to be with you, back at old Yale, next week, but I can't
+leave the wheel of this ship, the _Chronicle_, for even a day. Give my
+regards to all of old Eli, '96, old man.
+
+"As regards a berth for your son, Thomas. The _Chronicle_ usually takes
+on a few college men during the summer, when our staff is off on
+vacations. We always use undergraduates, and often, in two or three
+summers, we develop them into star reporters. However, for old time's
+sake, I'll be glad to give your son a chance, and if he means business,
+let him report for duty next Friday, at 1 P.M., to my office.
+Understand, Hicks, he must come here and fight his own way, without any
+favor or special help from me. Were he the son of our nation's
+President, I'd not treat him a whit better than the rest of the Staff,
+so let him know that in advance. On the other hand, I'll develop him all
+I can, and if he has the ability, the _Chronicle_ long-room is the place
+for him.
+
+"Yours for old Yale,
+
+"'Doc' Whalen, Yale, '96,
+
+"City Editor--_THE CHRONICLE_."
+
+
+"Here's my Dad's ultimatum," grinned Hicks, when. Butch finished the
+letter. "I am to take a summer as a cub on the _Baltimore Chronicle_,
+making my own way, and living on my weekly salary, without financial aid
+from anyone. If, at the end of the summer, City Editor Whalen reports that
+I've made good enough to be retained as a regular, then--Yours truly for
+the Fourth Estate. If I fail, then I follow a course charted out by Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.! So, it is up to me to make good--"
+
+"You--you will make good, Hicks," quavered Theophilus, whose faith in the
+shadow-like youth was prodigious. "Oh, that will be splendid, for I am
+going to take a course at a business college in Baltimore. I want to become
+an expert stenographer, and we'll be together."
+
+"It's work now, fellows!" sighed Beef McNaughton, shifting his huge bulk
+atop of the jit "College years are ended, we're chucked into the world, to
+make good, or fail! Butch and I have not decided on our work yet. We may
+accept jobs as bank or railroad presidents, or maybe run for President
+of the U.S.A., provided John McGraw or Connie Mack do not sign us up.
+However--"
+
+At that moment, the engine of old Dan Flannagan's battered "Dove" consented
+to hit on two cylinders, and the genial Irishman, who was to transport
+Hicks and his comrades, as collegians, for the last time, yelled, "_All
+aboard_!" loudly, to conceal his emotion at the sad scene.
+
+"We're off!" shrieked Skeet Wigglesworth, stowed away below, as the
+jitney-bus moved down the driveway. "Farewell, dear old Bannister! Run
+slow, Dan, we want to gaze on the campus as long as we can."
+
+The youths were silent, as the 'bus rolled slowly down the driveway and
+under the Memorial Arch, old Dan, sympathizing with them, and finding he
+could make the express by a safe margin, allowing the jitney to flutter
+along at reduced speed. From its top, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his vision
+blurred with tears, gazed back with his class-mates. He saw the campus, its
+grass green, with stately old elms bordering the walks, and the golden
+June sunshine bathing everything in a soft radiance. He beheld the college
+buildings--the Gym., the Science Hall, the Administration Building,
+Recitation Hall, the ivy-covered Library; the white Chapel, and the four
+dorms., Creighton, Smithson, Nordyke, Bannister. One year he had spent in
+each, and every year had been one of happiness, of glad comradeship.
+He could see Bannister Field, the scene of his many hilarious athletic
+fiascos.
+
+And now he was leaving it all--had come to the end of his college course,
+and before him lay Life, with its stern realities, its grim obstacles, and
+hard struggles; ended were the golden campus days, the gay skylarking
+in the dorms. Gone forever were the joyous nights of entertaining his
+comrades, of Beefsteak Busts down at Jerry's. Silenced was his beloved
+banjo, and no more would his saengerfests bother old Bannister.
+
+A turn in the street, and the campus could not be seen. As the last vision
+of their Alma Mater vanished, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., smiling sunnily
+through his tear-blurred eyes, gazed at his comrades of old '19--
+
+"Say, fellows--" he grinned, though his voice was shaky, "let's--let's
+start in next September, and--do it all over again!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+***** This file should be named 8550.txt or 8550.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/8/5/5/8550/
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
+specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
+eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
+for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
+performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
+away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
+not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
+trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country outside the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
+ restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
+ under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
+ eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
+ are located before using this ebook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
+Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
+mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
+volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
+locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
+Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
+date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
+official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/8550.zip b/8550.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7b66f4a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8550.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..de6aa66
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #8550 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8550)
diff --git a/old/7hick10.txt b/old/7hick10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8c594e9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/7hick10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6971 @@
+Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: T. Haviland Hicks Senior
+
+Author: J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Release Date: July, 2005 [EBook #8550]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on July 22, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR
+
+BY J. RAYMOND ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+TO MASTER LLOYD ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+ II. "LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+ III. HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+ IV. QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+ V. HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+ VI. HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+ VII. HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY
+ VIII. COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+ IX. THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+ X. THOR'S AWAKENING
+ XI. "ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+ XII. THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+ XIII. HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+ XIV. THE GREATER GOAL
+ XV. HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+ XVI. THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+ XVII. HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+XVIII. T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.'S HEADWORK
+ XIX. BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+ XX. "VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, SENIOR
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+
+
+
+
+
+ "Oh, a bold, bad man was Chuckwalla Bill--
+ An' he lived in a shanty on Tom-cat Hill;
+ Ten notches on the six-gun he toted on his hip--
+ For he'd sent ten buckos on the One-way Trip!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister College football
+squad, his behemoth bulk swathed in heavy blankets and crowded into a
+narrow bunk, shifted his vast tonnage restlessly. He was dreaming of the
+wild and woolly West, and like a six-reel Western drama thrown on the
+screen in a moving-picture show, he visioned in his slumbers a vivid and
+spectacular panorama.
+
+The first lurid scene was the Deserted Limited held up at a tank station in
+the great Mojave Desert by a lone, masked bandit who winged the dreaming
+Butch in the shoulder, the latter being an express guard who resisted.
+After the desperado, Two-Gun Steve, had forced the engineer to run the
+train back to a siding, he had ordered Butch to vamoose. Quite naturally,
+then, the collegian next found himself staggering across the arid expanse,
+until at last, half dead from a burning thirst, seeking vainly for a
+water-hole, the vast stretch of sandy, sagebrush-studded wastes shimmered
+into a gorgeous ocean of sparkling blue waters. Then, as he collapsed on
+the scorching-hot sand, helpless, the cool water so near, suddenly the
+scene shifted.
+
+In quick and vivid succession, Butch Brewster beheld a burning stockade
+besieged by howling Indians, and a frontier town shot up by recklessly
+riding cowboys on a jamboree. Then he became a tenderfoot, badgered by
+yelling, shooting roisterers, and later a sheriff, bravely leading his
+posse to a sensational battle with that same Two-Gun Steve and his gang,
+entrenched in a rock-bound mountain defile.
+
+Finally, he stood with hands above his head in company with other
+passengers of the Sagebrush Stagecoach, while a huge, red-shirted Westerner
+with a fierce black mustache and a six-shooter in each hand belching
+bullets at Butch's dancing feet, roared out huskily: "Oh--I'm a ring-tailed
+roarer (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm a rip-snortin', high-falutin', loop-the-loopin'
+<i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm wild an' woolly, an' full o' fleas, an' hard
+to curry below the knees--I'm a roarin' wild-cat, an' it's my night to howl
+(<i>bang-bang</i>)! Yip-yip-yip-<i>yeee</i>!"
+
+Big Butch, opening his eyes and starting up, gazed about him in sheer
+surprise; for an instant, in that state of bewilderment that comes with
+sudden awakening, he almost believed himself in a Western ranch bunkhouse,
+and that some happy cowboy outside roared a grotesque ballad. He gazed at
+the interior of a rough shack built of pine boards, with bunks constructed
+in tiers on both sides. There were figures in them--Western cowboys,
+perhaps. Then it seemed, somehow, that the voice drifting from the outside
+was strangely familiar. Back at Bannister College, where he remembered he
+had gone in the dim and dusty past, he had often heard that same fog-horn
+voice, roaring songs of a less blood-curdling character, and accompanied by
+that same banjo twanging, which tortured the campus, and bothered would-be
+studious youths!
+
+"I'm not in a moving-picture show," Butch informed himself, as he donned
+khaki trousers, football sweater, and heavy shoes. "I'm not on a Western
+ranch, either. I'm in the sleep-shack of Camp Bannister, the football
+training-camp of the Bannister College squad! Those fellows in the bunks
+are not cowboys, Indians, and bandits--they are my teammates! I did dream
+stuff that would shame a Wild West scenario, but I understand it all
+now--my dreams were influenced by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+At that dramatic moment, to substantiate his statement, the raucous voice,
+accompanied by resounding chords strummed on a banjo, sounded again. The
+vocal and instrumental chaos was frequently punctured by revolver reports,
+as the torturesome Caruso outside roared:
+
+ "Oh, Chuckwalla Bill thought life was sweet--
+ Till he met up with Sure-shot Pete;
+ A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+The pachydermic Butch, fully dressed--and awake, raging in his wrath like
+an active volcano, glanced at his watch, and discovered that it was exactly
+five A.M.! Intensely pacified by this knowledge, he lumbered toward the
+bunkhouse door and flung it open, determined to crush the pestersome youth
+who thus unfeelingly disturbed the quietude of Camp Bannister at such an
+unearthly hour! However, his grim purpose was temporarily thwarted--before
+him spread a beautiful panorama, a vast canvas painted in rich hues and
+colors, that indescribably charming masterpiece of nature, entitled dawn.
+
+Butch, gazing from the bunkhouse doorway toward the pebbly shore of the
+placid lake stretching out for two miles before him, beheld Old Sol,
+blood-red, peeping above the wooded hills on the far-off, opposite strand
+of Lake Conowingo; the luminous orb laid a flaming pathway across the
+shimmering waters, and golden bars of light, like gleaming fingers
+outstretched, fell athwart the tall pines that towered on the high bluff
+back of the camp. The glorious sunshine, succeeding a flood of rosy color,
+inundated the scene; it bathed in a gorgeous radiance the early autumn
+woods, it illumined the bunkhouse, and another rude shanty known to the
+squad as the grub-shack, it poured down on old Hinky-Dink, the ancient
+negro cookee, setting the breakfast tables just outside the canvas
+cook-tent.
+
+"Deed, cross mah heart, Mistah Butch," grinned old Hinky-Dink, seeing, as
+a motion picture director would express it, "Wrath registered on the
+countenance" of Butch Brewster, "Ah done tole dat young Hicks dat a bird
+what cain't sing an' will sing mus' be made <i>not</i> to sing! Ah done info'med
+him dat yo'-all was layin' fo' him, cause he done bus' up yo' sleep!"
+
+A jay bird, a flashing bit of vivid blue, shot from a tall pine, jeering
+shrilly at Butch; out on the lake, a trout leaped above the water for an
+infinitesimal second, its shining scales gleaming in the sunshine. From the
+cook-tent, where old Hinky-Dink grumbled at the frying pan, the appetizing
+odor of frying fish assailed the football captain, softening his wrath.
+
+High above the shanties, on a tall flagpole made from a straight young
+pine, floated a big gold and green banner, its bright colors gleaming in
+the sunshine; it bore the words:
+
+ CAMP BANNISTER
+ TRAINING CAMP
+ THE FOOTBALL SQUAD
+ BANNISTER COLLEGE
+
+Head Coach Corridan, smashing the precedent that had made former Gold and
+Green squads have their training camp at Bannister College, had brought
+the Varsity and second-string stars to this camp on the shore of Lake
+Conowingo, in the Pennsylvania mountains. For two weeks, one of which had
+passed, they were to train at Camp Bannister, until college officially
+opened; swimming, hunting, cross-country runs, and a healthful outdoor
+existence would give the athletes superb condition, and daily scrimmages on
+the level field back of the bluff rounded out an eleven that promised to be
+the strongest in Bannister history.
+
+As big, good-natured Butch Brewster stood in the bunkhouse doorway, his
+wrath at the pestiferous Hicks forgotten, in his rapture at the glorious
+dawn, he saw something that showed why his dreams had been of the wild
+West! The expression of indignation, however, yielded to one of humorous
+affection, as he gazed toward the shore.
+
+"I can't be angry with Hicks!" breathed Butch, beholding a spectacle more
+impressive than dawn. "So, the irrepressible wretch has Coach Corridan's
+revolvers, used in starting our training sprints, and a lot of blank
+cartridges! He is giving an imitation of a Western bad man. No wonder
+I dreamed of Indians, cowboys, and hold-ups; I'll have revenge on the
+heartless villain, routing me out at five!"
+
+He saw a massive rock, rising thirty feet in air, its sheer walls scaled
+only by a rope-ladder the collegians had rigged up on one side. Atop of
+"Lookout There!" as the campers humorously designated the rock, roosted
+a youth who possessed the colossal structure of a splinter, and whose
+cherubic countenance was decorated with a Cheshire cat grin. Quite unaware
+that his riotous efforts had brought out the wrathful Butch Brewster,
+the youthful narrator of Chuckwalla Bill's stormy career continued his
+excessively noisy seance.
+
+His costume was strictly in character with his song. He wore a sombrero,
+picked up on his Exposition trip the past vacation, a lurid red
+outing-shirt, and he had wrapped a blanket around each locomotive limb to
+imitate a cowboy's chaps. Two revolvers suspended from a loosened belt, </i>a
+la</i> wild West, and as Butch stared, the embryo Western bad man twanged a
+banjo noisily, and roared the concluding stanza of his desperado hero's
+history:
+
+ "Said Chuckwalla Bill, 'Oh, boys, plant me
+ With my boots on--on the wide prair-eee'--
+ Where the coyotes howl, they planted Bill--
+ An' so far as </i>I</i> know, he's sleepin' there still!"
+
+"Here they come," grinned Butch, hearing a tumult in the bunkhouse, and
+a confused Babel of voices. "Hicks has awakened the camp. Now watch the
+fellows wreak summary vengeance on his toothpick frame!"
+
+From the sleep-shack, aroused at that weird hour by the clamor of the
+irrepressible youth, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., tumbled others of the squad,
+in varying stages of <i>deshabille</i>; big Beef McNaughton, right half-back,
+Roddy Perkins, the Titian-haired right-end, Pudge Langdon, a ponderous
+tackle, and Monty Merriweather, a clean-cut, aggressive candidate for left
+end. From within, other wrathy youths howled vociferous protests at their
+tormentor:
+
+"Stop that noise; put your muzzle on again, Hicks!"--"Where's the fire?
+Say, Hicks, muffle your exhaust!"--"Say, Coach, must we endure this day and
+night?"
+
+The bunkhouse fairly erupted angry collegians, boiling out like bees
+swarming from a disturbed hive; Hefty Hollingsworth, the Herculean
+center-rush. Biff Pemberton, left half-back, Bunch Bingham, Tug Cardiff,
+and Buster Brown, three huge last-year substitutes; second-string players,
+Don Carterson, Cherub Challoner, Skeet Wigglesworth, and Scoop Sawyer. A
+dozen others, from sheer laziness, hugged their bunks devotedly, despite
+the terrific turmoil outside.
+
+"It's a disgrace, a <i>howling</i> shame!" exploded Beef, his elephantine frame
+swathed in blankets to conceal a lack of vestiture, "Last night, until
+midnight, that graceless wretch roosted on 'Lookout There' and because the
+glorious moonlight made him sentimental and slushy, he twanged his banjo
+and warbled such mushy stuff as 'My Love is young and fair. My Love has
+golden hair!' When does he expect us to sleep?"
+
+"He doesn't!" explained Monty Merriweather, with succinct lucidity,
+grinning at his comrades. "Say, fellows, you know how Hicks dreads a cold
+shower-bath; well, some of you rage at him from the other side of the rock,
+while </i>I</i> climb up the rope-ladder and close with him! Then some of you
+prehistoric pachyderms ascend, and we'll chuck that pestersome insect into
+the cold, cold lake--"
+
+"Done!" chuckled Butch Brewster, delightedly. So, while he, Beef
+McNaughton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and others beguiled the jeering Hicks,
+expressing in dynamic, red-hot sentences their exact opinions of his
+perfidy, the athletic Monty imitated a mountain-scaling Italian soldier.
+He climbed stealthily up the swaying rope-ladder; nearer and nearer to the
+unsuspecting youth he crept, while the cherubic Hicks, to tantalize the
+group below, again burst forth:
+
+"</i>Whoop-eee</i>! I'm a bold, <i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I got ten notches on my
+ole six-gun--I'm a <i>killer</i>. I wings a man before breakfast every day! I
+got a private burying-ground, where I plants my victims (<i>bang-bang</i>)!
+Yip-yip-yip-<i>yee</i>! Oh, I'm a--</i>Ouch</i>, Monty--leggo me--Oh, I'll be
+good--why didn't I pull that rope-ladder up here? Don't bust my banjo
+--don't let Butch get me--"
+
+Monty Merriweather, reaching the flat top of the rock, had courageously
+flung himself, without regard for the Bad Man's desperate record, on the
+startled Hicks, whose first thought was for his beloved banjo. While he
+held the blithesome tormentor helpless, Butch, Beef, and Roddy Perkins
+climbed the rope-ladder, and the grinning youth was soon in their clutches,
+while the collegians below, like a Roman, mob aroused by the oratory of Mr.
+Mark Antony, howled for revenge:
+
+"Bust the old banjo over his head, Butch!"--"Sing to him, Beef--that's
+an <i>awful</i> revenge on Hicks!"--"Tie him to the rock--make him miss his
+breakfast!"
+
+"Hicks," growled Butch, eyeing his sunny comrade ominously, "you ought to
+be tarred and feathered, and shot at sunrise! When Bannister opens, you
+will be a Senior, and you'll disgrace '19's dignity! This is a sample of
+what we have endured at college for three years, and the worst is yet to
+come! You have committed the awful atrocity of awakening Camp Bannister
+at five A. M. with your ridiculous imitation, of a Western desperado. To
+dampen your ardor, we will chuck you into the cold lake--just as you are!"
+
+"Help! Assistance! Aid! Succor!" shouted the happy-go-lucky Hicks, as the
+behemoth Butch and Beef seized him, swinging him aloft with ludicrous ease,
+"Police! Fire! Murder! Take care of my banjo, Monty. Tell all the fellows
+at old Bannister I died game, and plant Hair-Trigger Bill with his boots
+on! </i>Oooo</i>, Beef, Butch, <i>have a heart</i>, that water is <i>cold</i>!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., relieved of banjo and revolvers, but his
+shadow-like structure still clad in shoes, trousers, with imitation "chaps"
+and flamboyant red shirt, with his classic head still adorned by
+the sombrero, was swung back and forth by the two bulky football
+stars--once--twice--
+
+"</i>Three</i>--Let him go!" shouted Butch Brewster, and like a falling meteor,
+the splinter-like youth, who had already fallen from grace, shot from the
+rock, head-first, disappearing with a spectacular splash in the icy waters
+of Lake Conowingo. Knowing Hicks to be as much at home in the water as a
+fish in an aquarium, the hilarious squad on shore prepared to jeer his
+reappearance above the water; however, their program was interrupted by
+old Hinky-Dink, who stood in the cook-tent doorway, belaboring a dishpan
+lustily with a soup-ladle, and shouting:
+
+"Breakfus' am served; fus' an' las' call fo' breakfus; all dem what am late
+don't git no breakfus!"
+
+"Breakfast!" exclaimed Monty Merriweather, who, with Roddy, Butch, and
+Beef, remained on the rock, despite the summons of the Cookee. "Hurry up,
+Hicks, I'm ravenous. Say, Butch, suppose all that Western regalia makes him
+water-logged; he's a terribly long while down there! Didn't he look like
+the hero in a moving-picture feature? We've given him the water-cure, but
+he will do that same stunt over again. That sunny-souled Hicks is simply
+Incorrigible!"
+
+A second later, the grinning, cheery countenance of T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., shot above the water, and simultaneously with his appearance, just as
+though he had been chanting below the surface, for the entertainment of the
+finny denizens of Lake Conowingo, the irrepressible youth roared:
+
+ "A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-Shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+
+
+Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, known to toil-tortured Gold and Green
+football squads from time immemorial as "the Slave-Driver," Captain Butch
+Brewster, and serious Deacon Radford, the star Bannister quarter-back,
+foregathered around a table in the Camp Bannister grub-shack.
+
+It was ten-thirty of the morning whose dawn T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+blithesomely hailed with an impromptu musicale and saengerfest on "Lookout
+There!" rock, and the football triumvirate were in togs. The squad, over in
+the bunkhouse, noisily donned gridiron armor for the morning practice, and
+the pestiferous Hicks was maintaining a mysterious silence, somewhere.
+
+This football trio, on whom rested the responsibility of rounding out a
+winning Bannister eleven, vastly resembled a coterie of German generals,
+back of the trenches, studying a war-map. Before them was spread what
+seemed to be a large checker-board. It was a miniature gridiron, with the
+chalk-marks painted in white; there were thumb-tacks stuck here and there,
+some with flat tops painted green and gold, others, representing the enemy,
+were solid red. The former had names printed on them, Butch, Roddy,
+Beef, and so on. By sticking these on the board, the three directors of
+Bannister's football destiny could work out new plays, and originate
+possible winning lineups.
+
+"We've just got to win the State Championship this season, Coach!" declared
+Butch, banging the table emphatically, as he stated a self-evident fact.
+"It's my last year for Old Bannister, and so with Beef and Pudge. I'll give
+every ounce of strength I possess In every game, to make that pennant float
+over Bannister Field!"
+
+"Bannister <i>will</i> win it!" vowed the behemoth Beef, his good-natured
+countenance grim, and his jaw set. "Not for five years has a Gold and Green
+team won the Championship--not since the year before Butch and I were
+Freshmen! We've got a splendid bunch of material to build a team with,
+and--"
+
+"Our biggest problem is this," spoke Coach Corridan, as with a phenomenal
+display of strength he took Beef McNaughton between thumb and forefinger
+and placed him on the field. "We must strengthen both line and backfield,
+for we lost by graduation Babe McCabe, Heavy Hughes, and Jack Merritt. Now,
+to replace that lost power--"
+
+Just then, from directly beneath the open window by which they had
+gathered, like the midnight serenade of a romantic lover, sounded
+the well-known foghorn voice of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as to the
+plunkety-plunk of a banjo accompaniment, he warbled melodiously:
+
+ "Gone are the days--I used to spend with Car-o-li-nah!
+ She had the sunshine in her laughter (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)
+ Just like that state they named her after--"
+
+"</i>Hicks</i>!" announced Butch, stealthily approaching the window, and
+beckoning his companions. "Easy--look at him, Deke, there he is, Hicks,
+the irrepressible! We might as well attempt to stab a rhinocerous to death
+with a humming-bird's feather, as to try and reform <i>him</i>!"
+
+Arrayed like a lily of the field, a model of sartorial splendor, Hicks
+occupied a chair beneath the window, tilted back gracefully against the
+side of the grub-shack. He had decked his splinter-structure with a
+dazzling Palm Beach suit, and a glorious pink silk shirt, off-set by a
+lurid scarf. A Panama hat decorated his head, white Oxfords and flamboyant
+hosiery adorned his feet, while the inevitable Cheshire cat grin beautified
+his cherubic countenance. A latest "best seller" was propped on his knees,
+and as he perused its thrilling pages, he carelessly strummed his beloved
+banjo, and in stentorian tones chanted a sentimental ballad:
+
+ "Gone are the days--the golden days I'm dreaming of,
+ I think I hear her softly calling (plunkety-plunk)
+ 'Will you be back? Will you be back? (plunk-plunk)
+ Back to the Car-o-li-nah you love?'"(plunkety-plunk),
+
+For three golden campus years T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had gayly pursued the
+even tenor (or <i>basso</i>, since he possessed a foghorn, subterranean voice)
+of his Bannister career. He absolutely refused to take life seriously, and
+he was forever arousing the wrath--mostly pretended, for no one could be
+really angry with the genial youth--of his comrades, by twanging his banjo
+and roaring out rollicking ballads at all hours. He was never so happy
+as when entertaining a crowd of happy students in his cozy quarters,
+or escorting a Hicks' Personally Conducted expedition downtown for a
+Beef-Steak Bust, at his expense, at Jerry's, the rendezvous of hungry
+collegians.
+
+However, despite his butterfly existence, Hicks, possessed of a
+scintillating mind, always set the scholastic pace for 1919, by means of
+occasional study-sprints, as he characteristically called them. But when it
+came to helping his beloved Dad realize a long-cherished ambition to behold
+his only son and heir shatter Hicks, Sr.'s, celebrated athletic records, it
+was a different story. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., ever since he committed
+the farcical <i>faux pas</i> of running the wrong way with the pigskin in
+the Freshman-Sophomore football contest of his first year, had been a
+super-colossal athletic joke at old Bannister.
+
+His record to date, beside that reverse touchdown that won for the
+Sophomores, consisted of scoring a home-run with the bases congested, on a
+strike-out; of smashing hurdles and cross-bars on the track; endangering
+his heedless career with the shot and hammer; and making a ridiculous farce
+of every event he entered, to the vast hilarity of the students, who, with
+the exception of Butch Brewster, had no idea his ridiculous efforts were in
+earnest. In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable promise,
+which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.
+
+Hicks, the lovable, impulsive, and irrepressible, with his invariable sunny
+disposition, his generous nature, and his democratic, loyal comradeship
+for everybody, was loved by old Bannister. The students forgave him his
+pestersome ways, his frequent torturing of them with banjo-twanging and
+rollicking ballads. His classmates idolized him, Juniors and Sophomores
+were his true friends, and entering Freshmen always regarded this
+happy-go-lucky youth as a demigod of the campus.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who was forever futilely lecturing the heedless Hicks,
+thrust his head from the grub-shack window, fought down a grin, and sternly
+arraigned his graceless comrade:
+
+"Hicks, you frivolous, campus-cluttering, infinitesimal atom of nothing,
+you labor under the insane delusion that college life is a continuous
+vaudeville show. You absolutely refuse to take your Bannister years
+seriously, you banjo-thumping, pillow-punishing, campus-torturing
+nonentity. You will never grasp the splendid opportunities within your
+reach! You have no ambition but to strum that banjo, roar ridiculous songs,
+fuss up like a tailor's dummy, and pester your comrades, or drag them down
+to Jerry's for the eats! You won't be earnest, you Human Cipher, Before you
+entered Bannister, you formed your ideas and ideals of campus life from
+colored posters, moving-pictures, magazine stories, and stage dramas like
+'Brown of Harvard"; you have surely lived up, or down, to those ideals,
+you--"
+
+"Them's harsh words, Butch!" joyously responded the grinning Hicks,
+unchastened, for he knew good Butch Brewster would not, for a fortune, have
+him forsake his care-free nature. "Thou loyal comrade of my happy campus
+years, what wouldst thou of me?--have me don sack-cloth and ashes, strike
+'The Funeral March' on my golden lyre, and cry out in anguish, </i>'ai! ai</i>!
+'Nay, nay, a couple of nays; college years are all too brief; hence I
+shall, by my own original process, extract from them all the sunshine and
+happiness possible, and by my wonderful musical and vocal powers, bring joy
+to my colleagues, who--</i>Ouch</i>, Butch--look out for that nail, you inhuman
+elephant--"
+
+Big Butch, at that juncture of Hicks' monologue, had effectively terminated
+it by leaning from the window, grasping his unsuspecting comrade by the
+scruff of the neck, and dragging him over the window-ledge, into the
+grub-shack, and the presence of Coach Corridan and Deacon Radford.
+Strenuous objection was registered, both by the futilely struggling Hicks,
+and a nail projecting from the sill, which caught in the Palm Beach
+trousers and ripped a long rent in them; fortunately, Hicks' anatomy
+escaped a similar fate.
+
+"A ripping good move, eh-what?" chuckled Hicks, twisting like a
+contortionist, to view the damage done his vestiture, "Hello, what have we
+here?--the German field-map, by the Van Dyke beard of the Prophet! I
+bring the Kaiser's order, ham and eggs, and a cup of coffee. No, that's a
+mistake. General Hen Von Kluck, lead a brigade of submarines up yon hill to
+thunder the Russian fort! Von Hindering-Bug, send a flock of aeroplanes and
+Zeppelins to the Allied trenches, the enemy is shooting Russian caviare
+at--"
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster's indignation,
+"you are such a wonder at solving perplexing problems by your marvelous
+'inspirations,' suppose you turn the scintillating searchlight of your
+colossal intellect upon the question that Bannister must solve, to produce
+a championship eleven!"
+
+It was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, inveterate habit, whenever a baffling
+situation, or what the French call an "<i>impasse</i>" presented itself, to
+state with the utmost confidence, "Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" On
+most occasions, when he made this remark, accompanied by a swaggering
+braggadocio that never failed to make good Butch Brewster wrathful, the
+happy-go-lucky youth possessed not the slightest idea of how the problem
+was to be solved. He just uttered his rash promise, and then trusted to his
+needed inspiration to illuminate a way out! And, as the Bannister campus
+well knew, Hicks had solved more than one torturing question by an
+inspiration that flashed on his intellect, when all hope of a satisfactory
+solution seemed dead.
+
+For example, in his Sophomore year, when the Freshman leader, James
+Roderick Perkins, that same Titian-haired Roddy who was now a bulwark at
+right end, became charged with a Napoleonic ambition, and organized a
+Freshman Equal Rights campaign, paralyzing Bannister football by refusing
+to allow Freshmen to try for athletic teams, unless their demands were
+granted. Hicks, when his inspiration finally smote him, smashed the
+Votes-for-Freshmen crusade, and quelled Roddy, Futilely racking his brain
+for a counter-attack, having blithely told the troubled campus, "Just leave
+it to Hicks," he had ceased to worry, and then the inspiration had come, By
+The Big Brotherhood of Bannister giving the upper-classmen full government
+over Freshmen, a scheme successfully carried through, the peril had been
+thwarted.
+
+"I got a letter from Dad yesterday," began Hicks, somewhat irrelevantly,
+considering the Coach's remarks, "and he said--"
+
+"'--Inclosed find the check you wrote for,'" quoth Deacon Radford,
+humorously. "'If you keep up this pace, I shall have to turn my steel
+mills to producing war munitions, to pay your college bills.' Say, Hicks,
+seriously, listen to our problem, and suggest what Coach Corridan should
+do."
+
+While Hicks' athletic powers were known to equal those of the paralyzed
+oldest inhabitant of a Civil War Veterans' Home, the sunny youth knew
+football thoroughly; often he originated plays that the team worked out
+with success, and his suggestions were always weighed carefully by the
+football directors. So, after he had adjusted his lurid scarf at the
+correct angle, and gazed ruefully at his torn habiliments, the sunshiny
+Senior seated himself at the table, before the "war-map," and gave heed to
+the Coach.
+
+[Illustration A: 'Here's the problem, Hicks']
+
+"Here's the problem, Hicks," said the Slave-Driver, indicating the
+Bannister eleven, represented by the gold and green topped thumb-tacks.
+"From the line we lost Babe, a tackle, Heavy, a guard, and Jack Merritt, a
+star end. Now, Monty Merriweather will hold down Jack's place O. K.--l can
+shift Beef from right half to guard, and put Butch at right-half, while
+Bunch Bingham can take care of Babe's old berth at tackle. But I have no
+one to shoot in at full-back, when I shift Butch; you see, Hicks, my plan
+is to build an eleven that can execute old-time, line-smashing football,
+and up-to-date open play as well; I want fast ends and halves, with a
+snappy quarter, and I have them; also, the backfield is heavy enough for
+line-bucking, if I get my beefy full-back. I must have a big, heavy, fast
+player, a giant who simply can't be stopped when he hits the line. With
+Butch and Biff at halves, Deke at quarter. Roddy and Monty ends, and my
+heavy line--why, a ponderous, irresistible Hercules at full-back will--"
+
+"Say!" grinned the irrepressible Hicks, as Coach Corridan warmed up to
+his vision, "you don't want <i>much</i>, Coach! Why don't you ask Ted Coy, the
+famous ex-Yale full-back, to give up his business and play the position for
+you? Maybe you can persuade Charlie Brickley, a <i>fair</i> sort of dropkicker,
+to quit coaching Hopkins, and kick a few goals for old Bannister! I get
+you, Coach--you want a fellow about the size of the </i>Lusitania,</i> made of
+structural steel, a Brobdingnagian Colossus who will guarantee to advance
+the ball fifteen yards per rush, or money refunded!
+
+"Why, Coach, while you are wanting things, just wish for a chap who will
+play the entire game himself, taking the ball down the field, while the
+rest of the team are pushed along in rolling-chairs, while imbibing pink
+tea. Get a prodigy who will instill such terror into our rivals that
+instead of playing the schedule, Bannister will simply arrange with other
+teams to mark themselves down defeated, and then agree what the scores
+shall be."
+
+"I knew it!" growled Butch Brewster, glowering at the jocular youth. "We
+should never have consulted him on this problem, for it is not one within
+his power to solve, even though he performed the miracle of talking
+seriously about it Now--"
+
+"Now--" echoed Hicks, with pretended seriousness, "Coach, you just hand me
+the blue-prints and specifications of said Gargantuan Hercules, and I'll
+try to corrall just such a phenomenon as you desire. Never hesitate to
+consult me on such important matters, for I am ever-ready to cast aside my
+own multifarious duties, when my Alma Mater needs my mental assistance,
+or--"
+
+"Hicks, are you <i>crazy</i>?" fleered Deacon Radford, moved to excitement,
+despite his great faith in the versatile youth. "Full-backs like that do
+not grow on trees; the only one I ever read of was </i>Ole Skjarsen</i>, in
+George Fitch's 'Siwash College Stories,' and he was purely fictitious. We
+know you have accomplished some great things by your 'inspirations,' but as
+for this--"
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks" quoth the irrepressible youth, swaggering toward
+the door with an affected nonchalant self-confidence that aroused Butch to
+wrath, and vastly amused his companions. "I'll admit a human juggernaut
+like Coach Corridan dreams of will be hard to round up, but, I'll have an
+inspiration soon. Don't worry about your old eleven, your problem will be
+solved, and you will have a team that can play fifty-seven varieties of
+football. </i>Raw revolver</i>, my comrades."
+
+When the graceless T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had sauntered gracefully out of
+the grub-shack, big Butch Brewster, almost exploding with suppressed wrath,
+stared at Slave-Driver Corridan and staid Deacon Radford a full minute;
+then he grinned,
+
+"That--Hicks!" he murmured, struggling against a desire to laugh. "What a
+ridiculous prophecy! 'Just leave it to Hicks!' Well, that means the problem
+goes unsolved, for though I confess he <i>is</i> brilliant, and his so-called
+'inspirations' have helped old Bannister; when it comes to rushing out and
+lassoing a smashing. Herculean full-back--<i>bah</i>!"
+
+Ten minutes later, when Coach Corridan and the Gold and Green squad climbed
+the bluff to the field back of Camp Bannister, for morning signal drill,
+their last memory was of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., arrayed in radiant
+vestiture, his chair tilted against the bunkhouse--the chords of the banjo,
+and his foghorn voice drifting to them on the warm September air:
+
+ "Oh, father and mother pay all the bills (<i>plunk-plunk</i>)
+ And we have all the fun (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)
+ With the money that we spend in college life!"
+
+Two hours afterward, as a tired, perspiring squad scrambled down the bluff,
+and made for the cool waters of Lake Conowingo, a mysterious silence,
+like a mighty wave, literally surged toward them. Camp Bannister seemed
+deserted, the sun was still shining, the birds sang as cheerily as ever,
+but instinctively the collegians felt an indescribable loneliness, a sense
+of tremendous loss.
+
+"</i>Hicks</i>!" shouted Butch Brewster, loudly, his voice shattering the
+stillness. "Hicks--ahoy! I say, Hicks--"
+
+Old Hinky-Dink, a letter in his hand, hobbled from the cook-tent toward
+them; like a sinister harbinger of evil he advanced, grinning deprecatingly
+at the squad:
+
+"Mistah Hicks am gone!" he announced importantly. "He done gib me fo' bits
+to row him ober to de village, to cotch de noon 'spress fo' Philadelphy!
+Heah am a letter what he lef'--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, to whom the <i>billet-doux</i> was addressed in T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while the squad
+listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled youth;
+
+
+"DEAR BUTCH:
+
+"Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on! I'm called
+away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow it in the
+room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next century.
+Give my <i>adieux</i> to Coach Corridan and the squad.
+
+"Yours truthfully,
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.
+
+"P.S.: Tell Coach Corridan he should worry--<i>not</i>! I'm hot on the trail of
+a fullback that will make Ted Coy at his coyest look like the paralyzed
+inmate of an old man's home. Just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+
+
+ "Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ </i>H-i-c-k-s</i>!
+ Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ If you've seen him, answer, 'Yes!'
+ He's tall and slim, and he wears a grin,
+ And his banjo-thumping is a sin.
+ Has <i>anybody</i> here seen our Hicks--
+ Hicks--and his old banjo?"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, big Beef McNaughton, the Phillyloo Bird--that
+flamingo-like Senior--and little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous boner
+whom Bannister College called the "Human Encyclopedia," roosted on the
+sacred Senior Fence, between the Gymnasium and the Administration Building.
+A gloomy silence, like a somber mantle, enshrouded the four members of '19,
+as they listened to a rollicking parody on, "Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?"
+chanted by some Juniors in Nordyke, with T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the
+object of solicitude. Nor did the melancholy youths respond to the queries
+hurled down at them from the dormitories' windows:
+
+"Say, Butch Brewster, where is that crazy Hicks?"
+
+"Beef, ain't our Hicks a-comin' back here no more?"
+
+"Hello, Phillyloo, any word from our Hicks yet?"
+
+"Ahoy there, Theophilus, where is Hicks, the Missing?"
+
+The seven-thirty study-hour bell was ringing, its mellow chimes sounding
+from the Administration Building tower. From the windows of the dormitories
+gleams of light shot athwart the darkness. Over in Creighton Hall, the
+abode of Freshmen, a silence reigned, but in Smithson, where the Sophomores
+roomed, Nordyke, home of the Juniors, and Bannister, haunt of the solemn
+Seniors, pandemonium obtained. In these dorm. rooms and corridors that
+night, just as in the class-rooms, or on the campus, and Bannister Field
+that day, there was but one topic. Whenever two students met, came the
+query inevitable:
+
+"Where is Hicks? Isn't Hicks coming back this year?"
+
+The Freshmen, bewildered, quite naturally, at the furore made over
+one missing student, asked, "Who is Hicks?" Seeking information from
+upper-classmen they received innumerable tales, in the nature of Iliad
+and Odyssey, concerning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; they heard of his campus
+exploits, such as his originating The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, and
+they laughed, at recitals of his athletic fiascos. They were told of his
+inevitably sunny nature, his loyal comradeship, his generous disposition,
+and as a result, the Freshmen, too, became intensely interested in the
+all-important campus problem: "Where is T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.?"
+
+Little Theophilus Opperdyke, whose big-rimmed spectacles, high forehead,
+and bushy hair gave him an intensely owlish appearance, sighed
+tremendously, stared solemnly at his class-mates, and became the author of
+a most astounding statement: "I--I can't study," quavered the "boner,"
+he whose tender devotion to his books was a campus tradition, and whose
+loyalty to his firm friend, the blithesome Hicks, was as that of Damon
+to Pythias, "I just <i>can't</i> care about my studies, without Hicks here!
+Somehow, it--it doesn't seem like old times, on the campus."
+
+"I should say not!" ejaculated the Phillyloo Bird, sepulchrally, his
+string-bean length draped with extreme decorative effect on the Senior
+Fence, "Life at old Bannister without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is about as
+interesting as 'The Annual Report of the Department of Agriculture!'
+Prexy thought he started the college on its Marathon three days ago, but
+Bannister will not be officially opened until Hicks stands by his window
+some study-hour, twangs that old banjo, and shatters the campus quietude
+with a ballad roared in his fog-horn voice!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, enshrouded in melancholy, instinctively gazed up at the
+windows of the room T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had reserved on the third floor
+of Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., as if he fully expected to behold
+the missing youth materialize. There, in lonely grandeur, waited the
+sunny-souled Senior's vast aggregation of trunks, crates, and packing
+boxes, together with Hicks' baggage brought down from Camp Bannister. The
+bothersome banjo had disappeared at the same time the youthful Caruso
+imitated the Arabs, folding his figurative tent, and stealing away.
+
+"It's a strange paradox," boomed Butch Brewster, finding that no Hicks
+appeared at the window, "but for three years Bannister has stormed at Hicks
+for bothering us during study-hour, or at midnight, with his saengerfest,
+and now I'd give anything to see him up there, and to hear that banjo, and
+his songs! It is just as if the sun doesn't shine on the campus, when T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., is away!"
+
+Bannister College had been running for three days "on one cylinder," as
+the Phillyloo Bird quaintly phrased it, on account of the gladsome Hicks'
+mysterious absence. Not a word had the Head Coach, Captain Brewster, the
+football squad, or any of the collegians received from the blithesome
+youth, since the <i>billet-doux</i> he left with old Hinky-Dink at Camp
+Bannister. Old students, returning to the campus for another golden year,
+invaded Hicks' room in Bannister, ready to enjoy the cozy den of that
+jolly Senior, but they encountered silence and desolation. No one had the
+slightest knowledge of where the cheery Hicks could be; they missed his
+singing and banjo strumming, his pestersome ways, his cheerful good nature,
+his cozy quarters always open house to all, and his Hicks' Personally
+Conducted tours downtown to Jerry's for those celebrated Beefsteak Busts.
+
+A telegram to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., in Pittsburgh, sent by the
+worried Butch Brewster, had brought this concise response:
+
+No knowledge of Thomas' whereabouts. He should be at Bannister.
+
+"Queer," reflected Beef McNaughton, shifting his bulk on the protesting
+fence. "We know Hicks will be back, for all his luggage is stowed away
+in his room, and we are sure he is giving us all this mystery just for a
+joke--he dearly loves to arrange a sensational and dramatic climax--but
+we just can't get used to his not being on the campus. When Theophilus
+Opperdyke can't study, it's high time the S.O.S. signal was sent to T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+"That is not the worst of it," growled Captain Butch Brewster, his arm
+across little Theophilus' shoulders. "The football squad misses Hicks,
+Beef. For the past two seasons he has sat at the training-table, his
+invariable good-humor, his Cheshire cat grin, and his sunny ways have kept
+the fellows in fine mental trim so they haven't worried over the game. But
+now, just as soon as he left Camp Bannister, the barometer of their spirits
+went down to zero and every meal at training-table is a funeral. Coach
+Corridan can't inject any pep into the scrimmages, and he says if Hicks
+doesn't return soon, Bannister's chances of the Championship are gone."
+
+"As Theophilus says," responded the gloomy Beef, "we just can't get used
+to his not being here. We miss his good-nature, his sunny smile, the jolly
+crowds in his cozy quarters--why, the campus is talking of nothing but
+Hicks--and I don't know what Bannister will do after Hicks graduates--shut
+down, I suppose!"
+
+"Well, you know," grinned the Phillyloo Bird, his cadaverous structure
+humped over like a turkey on the roost, "our Hicks hath sallied forth on
+the trail of a full-back, a Hercules who will smash the other elevens to
+infinitesimal smithereens! He told the squad to just leave it to Hicks,
+so don't be surprised if he is making flying trips to Yale, Harvard, and
+Princeton, striving to corral some embryo Ted Coy. Remember how Hicks often
+fulfills his rash prophecies!"
+
+"A Herculean full-back--</i>Bah</i>!" fleered Butch, for all the campus knew of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, extremely rash vow to unearth a "phenom." "The
+truth of it is, fellows. Hicks has failed to locate such a wonder as Coach
+Corridac outlined, for there ain't no such animal! He doesn't like to
+come back to Bannister without having made good his promise, without that
+Gargantuan giant he vowed to round up for the Gold and Green."
+
+Just then, as if to substantiate Butch's jeering statement, a youth wearing
+the uniform and cap of The Western Union Telegraph Company and
+advancing across the campus at that terrific speed always exhibited by
+messenger-boys, appeared in the offing. Periscoping the four Seniors on the
+fence, he navigated his course accordingly and pulling a yellow envelope
+from his cap, he queried, in charmingly chaste English:
+
+"Say, kin youse tell me where to find a feller name o' Brewster, wot's
+cap'n o' de football bunch?"
+
+"Right here, Little Nemo," advised the Phillyloo Bird, solemnly. "Hast thou
+any messages from New York for me? John D. Rockefeller promised to wire me
+whether or not to purchase war-stocks."
+
+The Phillyloo Bird, at this stage of his monologue, was interrupted by a
+yell that would have caused a full-blooded Choctaw Indian to turn pale.
+This came from good Butch Brewster, who, having signed for the message,
+and imagined all manner of catastrophes, from world-wars, earthquakes,
+pestilence and loss of wealth, down to bad news from Hicks, after the
+fashion of those receiving telegrams but seldom, had scanned the yellow
+slip. Never before, or afterward, not even when the luckless Butch fell in
+love, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., assisted Cupid, did the pachydermic Butch
+act so insanely as on this occasion.
+
+"Whoop-<i>eee! Yee-ow! Wow-wow-wow</i>!" howled the supposedly solemn Senior,
+tumbling from the Senior fence and rolling on the campus like a decapitated
+rooster. "Hip-hip-<i>hooray</i>! Ring the bell, Beef, get the fellows out, have
+the Band ready, Oh, where is Coach Corridan? Read it, Beef, Theophilus,
+Phillyloo. Oh, Hicks is <i>coming</i> and he's got--"
+
+It is possible that little Theophilus, who firmly believed that big Butch
+Brewster had gone emotionally insane, would have fled for help, but at that
+juncture members of the Gold and Green football squad, with Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan, appeared, marching funereally toward the Gym.,
+where a signal quiz was booked for seven forty-five. Beholding the
+paralyzing spectacle of their captain apparently in paroxysms on the grass,
+Hefty Hollingsworth, Biff Pemberton, Monty Merriweather and Pudge Langdon
+hurled themselves on his tonnage, while Roddy Perkins sat on his head, and
+wrested the telegram from his grasp,
+
+"Call up Matteawan," shouted Roddy, unfolding the slip, "Butch is getting
+barmy in the dome, he--Oh, Coach, fellows--<i>great joy</i>! Just heed."
+
+James Roderick Perkins, as excited as a Senator about to make his first
+speech, read aloud the telegram, on which the heedless Hicks had triple
+rates:
+
+
+"BUTCH:
+
+"Coming 8.30 P. M. express today. Discharge entire eleven--got whole team
+in one. Knock out partitions between five rooms. Make space for Thor, the
+Prodigious Prodigy! Leave it to Hicks!
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR."
+
+
+"</i>Hicks is coming</i>!" shrieked the Phillyloo Bird, soaring down from the
+Senior Fence like a condor. "He will be here in less than an hour; he sent
+this wire just before his train left Philadelphia. Money is no object, when
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister."
+
+"'Discharge entire eleven,'" quoth Butch Brewster, having somewhat subdued
+his frenzy. "'Got whole team in one--knock out partitions between <i>five</i>
+rooms--make space for Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy!' Now, what in the world
+has that lunatical Hicks done? Who can Thor be?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Buster Brown, Bunch Bingham, Scoop Sawyer, little Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Don Carterson, and Cherub Challoner, not having given their
+brawn to the subduing of Butch, now kindly donated their brain, in all
+manner of weird suggestions. According to their various surmises, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., had lured the Strong Man away from Barnum and Bailey's
+Circus, had in some way reincarnated the mythical Norse god, Thor, had
+hired some Greco-Roman wrestler, or by other devices too numerous and
+ridiculous to mention, had produced a full-back according to Coach
+Corridan's blue-prints and specifications.
+
+Big Beef McNaughton, seized with an inspiration that supplied
+locomotive-power to his huge frame, lumbered into the Gym., and soon
+appeared with monster megaphones, used in "rooting" for Gold and Green
+teams, which he handed out to his comrades. Then the riotous squad, at his
+suggestion, sprinted for the Quad., that inner quadrangle or court around
+which the four class dormitories, forming the sides of a square, were
+built; anyone desiring an audience could be sure of it here, since the
+collegians in all four dorms. could rush to the Quadrangle side and look
+down from the windows. In the Quadrangle, under the brilliant arc-lights,
+the exuberant youths paused,
+
+"One--two--three--let 'er go!" boomed Beef, and the football squad, in
+<i>basso profundo</i>, aided by the Phillyloo Bird's uncertain tenor, and
+Theophilus' quavery treble, roared in a tremendous vocal explosion that
+shook the dormitories:
+
+"Hicks is coming! Hicks is coming! Everybody out on the campus! Get ready
+to welcome our T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.! Hicks is bringing Bannister's
+full-back--a </i>Prodigious Prodigy</i>!"
+
+Windows rattled up, heads were thrust out, a fusillade of questions
+bombarded the squad in the Quadrangle below; from the three upper-class
+dormitories erupted hordes of howling, shouting youths, and soon the Quad.
+was filled with a singing, yelling, madly happy crowd. The Bannister Band,
+that famous campus musical organization, following a time-honored habit of
+playing on every possible occasion, gladsomely tuned up and soon the
+noise was deafening, while study-hour, as prescribed by the Faculty, was
+forgotten.
+
+"Everybody on the campus, at once!" Butch Brewster, Master-of-Ceremonies,
+boomed through his megaphone, having aroused excitement to the highest
+pitch by reading Hicks' telegram. "Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus will soon
+heave into sight. Let the Band blare, make a <i>big noise</i>. Let's show Hicks
+how glad we are to have him back to old Bannister."
+
+It is historically certain that Mr. Napoleon Bonaparte returning from Jena
+and Austerlitz, Mr. Julius Caesar, home at Rome from his Conquests, or Mr.
+Alexander the Great (Conqueror, not National League pitcher) never received
+such a welcome as did T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., from his Bannister comrades
+that night. To the excited students, massed on the campus before the Gym.
+awaiting his arrival, every second seemed a century; everybody talked at
+once until the hubbub rivaled that of a Woman's Suffrage Convention. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and he was
+bringing "The Prodigious Prodigy," whatever that was, with him. Knowing the
+cheery Senior's intense love of doing the dramatic and his great ambition
+to startle his Alma Mater with some sensational stunt, they could hardly
+wait for old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus to roll up the driveway,
+
+"Here he comes!" shrieked, little Skeet Wigglesworth, an excitable Senior,
+who had climbed a tree to keep watch. "Here comes our Hicks!"
+
+"Honk--Honk!" To the incessant blaring of a raucous horn, old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney-bus moved up the driveway. The genial Irish Jehu, who
+for over twenty years had transported Bannister collegians and alumni
+to and from College Hill in a ramshackle hack drawn by Lord Nelson, an
+antiquated, somnambulistic horse, had yielded to modern invention at
+last. Lord Nelson having become defunct during vacation, Old Dan, with
+a collection taken up by several alumni at Commencement, had bought a
+battered Ford, and constructed therewith a jitney-bus. This conveyance was
+fully as rattle-trap in appearance as the traditional hack had been, but
+the returning collegians hailed it with glee.
+
+"All hail Hicks!" howled Butch Brewster, beside himself with joy,
+"Altogether--the Bannister yell for--</i>Hicks</i>!"
+
+With half the collegians giving the yell, a number shouting
+indiscriminately, the Bannister Band blaring furiously, "Behold, The
+Conquering Hero Comes," with the youths a yelling, howling, shrieking,
+dancing mass, old Dan Flannagan, adding his quota of noises with the
+Claxon, brought his bus to a stop. This was a hilarious spectacle in
+itself, for on its sides the Bannister students had painted:
+
+ HENRY FORD'S "PIECE-OF-A-SHIP," </i>THE DOVE</i>! ALL RIDING IN THIS JIT DO
+ SO AT THEIR OWN RISK! TEN CENTS FOR A JOY-RIDE TO COLLEGE HILL! YES,
+ IT'S A </i>FORD</i>! WHAT DO YOU CARE? GET ABOARD!
+
+On the roof of "The Dove," or "The Crab," as the collegians called it when
+it skidded sideways, perched precariously that well-known, beloved youth,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. He clutched his pestersome banjo and was vigorously
+strumming the strings and apparently howling a ballad, lost in the
+unearthly turmoil. As the jitney-bus stopped, the grinning Hicks arose, and
+from his lofty, position made a profound bow.
+
+"Speech! Speech! Speech!" A mighty shout arose, and Hicks raised his hand
+for silence, which was immediately delivered to him.
+
+"Fellows, one and all," he shouted, a mist before his eyes, for his
+impulsive soul was touched by the ovation, "I--I am <i>glad</i> to be back!
+Say--I--I--well, I'm glad to be back--that's all!"
+
+At this masterly oration, which, despite its brevity, contained volumes of
+feeling, the Bannister students went wild--for a longer period than any
+political convention ever cheered a nominated candidate, they cheered T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Roar--roar--roar--<i>roar</i>!" in deafening sound-waves,
+the noise swept across the campus; never had football idol, baseball hero,
+or any athletic demigod, in all Bannister's history, been accorded such a
+tremendous ovation.
+
+"Fellows," called T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., climbing down from his precarious
+perch, "stand back; I have brought to Bannister the 'Prodigious Prodigy.'
+I have rounded up a full-back who will beat Ballard all by himself. Behold
+the new Gold and Green football eleven, 'Thor'!"
+
+From the grinning Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, like a Russian bear charging
+from its den, lumbered a being whose enormous bulk fairly astounded the
+speechless youths; Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Tug Cardiff, Bunch
+Bingham, Buster Brown, and Pudge Langdon were popularly regarded as the
+last word in behemoths, but this "Thor" dwarfed them, towered above them
+like a Colossus over Lilliputians. He was a youth, and yet a veritable
+Hercules. Over six feet he stood, with a massive head, covered with tousled
+white hair, a powerful neck, broad shoulders, a vast chest. To a judge of
+athletes, he would tip the scales at a hundred and ninety pounds, all solid
+muscle, for that superb physique held not an ounce of superfluous flesh.
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, gazing at the mountain of
+muscle, "if <i>size</i> means anything, you have brought old Bannister an entire
+football squad! What splendid material to train for the Big Games, why--he
+will be irresistible!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+
+
+ "I didn't raise my </i>Ford</i> to be a <i>jitney</i>--
+ To run the streets, and stay out late at night!
+ Who dares to put a jitney sign, upon it--
+ And send my <i>peace-ship</i> out for fares to fight?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., standing by his open window at 3 P. M. one
+afternoon a week after his sensational return to Bannister College, with
+the "Prodigious Prodigy" in tow, indulged in the soul-satisfying pastime of
+twanging his banjo, and roaring, in his subterranean voice, a parody on "I
+Didn't Raise My Boy to be a Soldier." It was actually the first Caruso-like
+outburst of the pestersome youth that year, but his saengerfest brought
+vociferous howls of protest from campus and dormitories:
+
+"</i>Bow-wow-wow</i>! The Grand Opery season is starting!"
+
+"Sing some records for a talking-machine company, Hicks!"
+
+"Kill that tom-cat! Listen to the back-fence musicale!"
+
+"Say, Hicks--we'll take your word for that noise!"
+
+On the Gym. steps, loafing a few moments before jogging out to Bannister
+Field for a strenuous scrimmage under the personal supervision of
+Slave-Driver Corridan, the Gold and Green football squad had gathered. It
+was from these stalwart gridiron gladiators that the caustic criticism of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, vocal atrocities emanated, and the imitation of a
+mournful hound by "Ichabod," the skyscraping Senior, was indeed phenomenal.
+Added to the howls, whistles, jeers, and shouts of the squad, were like
+condemnations from other collegians, sky-larking on the campus, or in the
+dorms.
+
+"At that," grinned Captain Butch Brewster happily, "it surely makes me feel
+jubilant to hear Hicks' foghorn voice shattering the echoes, with his
+banjo strumming disturbing the peace--for which offense it shall soon be
+arrested. We can truly say that old Bannister is now officially opened for
+another year, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., has performed his annual rite--"
+
+"Right--!" scoffed big Pudge Langdon, indignantly, as he gazed up at the
+happy-go-lucky youth, at the window of his room on the third-floor, campus
+side, of Bannister Hall, "Hicks ought to be tarred and feathered; there is
+<i>nothing right</i> in the way he has acted since his return to college! He
+struts around like Herman, the Master-Magician, and all the fellows fully
+expect to see him produce white rabbits from his cap, or make varicolored
+flags out of his handkerchief."
+
+"We ought to toss him in a blanket," stormed Beef McNaughton, in ludicrous
+rage. "Ever since he mystified Bannister by going out and corralling a
+Hercules who is an entire eleven in himself, Hicks has maintained that
+sphinx-like silence as to how he achieved the feat, and he swaggers around,
+enshrouded in <i>mystery</i>! All we know is that 'Thor' is John Thorwald, of
+Norwegian descent. If we ask <i>him</i> for information, that wretch Hicks has
+him trained to say, 'Ask the little fellow, Hicks!'"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in truth, had acted in a most reprehensible manner
+since that memorable night when he brought "Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy,"
+to the campus. Not that he ceased to be the same sunny-souled, popular and
+friendly youth. The collegians, happy at finding his room open-house again,
+flocked to his cozy quarters, Freshmen <i>fell</i> under the spell of his
+generous nature, his Beef-Steak Busts, down at Jerry's were nightly
+occurrences, and he was the same Hicks as of old. But, after the dramatic
+manner in which Hicks had mysteriously made good the rash vow uttered at
+Camp Bannister and had brought to Coach Corridan a blond-haired giant who
+seemed destined to perform prodigies at full-back, the sunny Senior had
+evidently labored under the delusion that he was "Kellar, The Great
+Magician."
+
+Instead of relieving the tortured curiosity of the students, wild to know
+how and where Hicks had unearthed this physical Hercules, who in every way
+filled the details of Head Coach Corridan's "blue-prints," T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., enjoying to the full this novel method of torturing his
+comrades, made a baffling mystery of the affair, much to the indignation of
+his friends.
+
+</i>"Just leave it to Hicks,"</i> he would say, when the Bannister youths
+cajoled, implored, threatened, or argued. "Thor is eligible to play four
+years of football at old Bannister. I call him Thor, after the great Norse
+god, Thor; he is of Norwegian descent. That is all of the Billion-Dollar
+Mystery I can disclose; ten thousand dollars offered for the correct
+solution."
+
+"Here comes Scoop Sawyer," said Monty Merriweather, as that Senior, waving
+his arms in air, catapulted from Bannister Hall, and strode toward the
+squad on the Gym. steps; his appearance registered wrath, in photo-play
+parlance, and on reaching his comrades he immediately acquainted them with
+its cause.
+
+"Listen to that Hicks!" he exploded, gesticulating with a sheaf of papers.
+"Hicks, the mocking-bird! He is mocking <i>us</i>--with his 'Billion-Dollar
+Mystery!' Say--here I am writing to Jack Merritt; he played football four
+years for old Bannister; he was captain of the Gold and Green eleven; last
+Commencement he graduated, and the last thing he said to me was, 'Scoop,
+old pal, write to me next fall, tell me everything about the football
+season; keep me posted as to new material!' </i>Everything</i>--keep him posted
+as to new material--</i>Bah</i>! If I write that Hicks has brought a fellow he
+calls 'Thor,' who spreads the regulars over the field, Jack will want
+to know the details, and--that villainous Hicks won't divulge his dread
+secret!"
+
+At this moment, Scoop Sawyer, so-called because he was ambitious to be a
+newspaper reporter, after graduation, and for his humorous articles in the
+</i>Bannister Weekly</i>, had his intense wrath soothed by that which has
+"power to soothe the savage breast"; T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., displaying a
+wonderful originality by composing, then chanting, his parody, concluded
+the chorus roaring lustily, to a rollicking banjo accompaniment:
+
+ "If street car companies gave seats to all patrons
+ The strap-hangers in jitneys would not ride.
+ There'd be no jits. today
+ If Ford owners would say,
+ I didn't raise my Ford to be a--jitney!"
+
+"That is too much!" raged Captain Butch Brewster, facing his excited
+colleagues. "Come on, fellows, we'll invade Hicks' room, read him Scoop's
+letter to Jack Merritt, and <i>make</i> him solve the Mystery! We're done with
+diplomacy; now, we'll deliver the ultimatum; when the squad returns from
+scrimmage, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., will tell us all about Thor, or be
+tossed in a blanket! Are you with me?"
+
+"We are <i>ahead</i> of you!" howled Roddy Perkins, leading a wild charge for
+the entrance to Bannister Hall. Following him up the two flights of stairs
+with thunderous tread came Butch, Beef, Monty, Biff, Hefty, Pudge, Tug,
+Ichabod, Bunch, Buster, Bus Norton, and several second-team players,
+Cherub, Chub Chalmers, Don, Skeet, and Scoop Sawyer with his letter. With
+a terrific, blood-chilling clatter, and hideous howls, the Hicks-quelling
+Expedition roared down the third corridor of Bannister, and surged into the
+room of that tantalizing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!
+
+"Safety first!" shrieked that cheery collegian, stowing his banjo in the
+closet and making a strenuous but futile effort to dive head-first beneath
+the bed, being forcibly restrained by Beef, who clung to his left ankle.
+"Say, to what am I indebted for the honor of this call? Why, when I got
+back to Bannister, you fellows gushed, 'Oh, we're <i>so</i> glad you're back,
+Hicks, old top; we missed even your saengerfests,' and when I start one--"
+
+"Hicks," pronounced Butch Brewster grimly, holding the genial offender
+by the scruff of the neck, "you tantalizing, aggravating, irritating,
+lunatical, conscienceless degenerate! You assassin of Father Time, you
+disturber of the peace, <i>heed</i>! Scoop Sawyer is writing to Jack Merritt, to
+tell about the football team, and Bannister's chances of the Championship;
+he wants to tell Jack all about this Thor! Now, you have acted like
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston long enough, and hear our final word. Read Scoop's
+letter, and if when you finish its perusal you fail to give us full
+information, and answer all questions about Thor--"
+
+"The football team will toss you in a blanket until you do!" finished Monty
+Merriweather, "We intended to wait until after the scrimmage, but Butch
+evidently believes we should end your bothersome mystery as once, and--"
+
+"'Curiosity killed the cat!'" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; then seeing
+the avenues and boulevards of escape were closed, but fighting for time,
+"let me peruse said missive indited by our literarily overbalanced Scoop. I
+am reluctant to dispel the clouds of mystery, but--"
+
+Scoop Sawyer thrust the typewritten pages of the letter--composed on
+the battered old typewriter in the editorial sanctum of the </i>Bannister
+Weekly</i>--into Hicks' grasp and with a grin, that blithesome youth read:
+
+
+Bannister College, Sept, 27.
+
+DEAR OLD JACK:
+
+There is so <i>much</i> to tell you, old pal, that I scarcely know where to
+start, but you want to know about the football eleven, so I'll write about
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his 'Billion-Dollar Mystery,' as he calls it;
+about Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. You well know what a scatter-brained
+wretch Hicks is, and how he dearly loves to plot dramatic climaxes--to
+mystify old Bannister. Just now Hicks has the campus as wrathful as it is
+possible to be with that lovable youth; he has originated a great mystery,
+and achieved a seemingly impossible feat, and instead of explaining it, he
+swaggers around like a Hindoo mystic enshrouded in mystery and the fellows
+are wild enough to tar and feather the incorrigible villain!
+
+To get off to a sprint-start, up in Camp Bannister, before college opened,
+when the squad was in training camp, Butch Brewster says that Coach
+Corridan one day, before Hicks, expressed a fervid ambition to find a huge,
+irresistible fullback--
+
+
+Here the chronicle must hang fire, while T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning
+at the wrath his mysterious behavior aroused, peruses those sections of
+Scoop Sawyer's epistle telling of two scenes already described; first,
+the one in the Camp Bannister grub-shack, where Head Coach Corridan
+blue-printed the Gargantuan athlete he desired, and the blithesome Hicks
+confidently requested that the Herculean task be left to him; second, the
+scene of intense excitement on the campus the night that the missing Hicks
+returned personally conducting that mountain of muscle, the blond-haired
+Thor.
+
+Having grinned at these descriptions, the pestiferous Hicks scanned a
+picturesque description by Scoop of the events that transpired between that
+memorable night and the present invasion of the sunny Senior's room by the
+indignant squad.
+
+--Naturally, Jack, old Bannister was intensely curious to know who this
+"Thor" could be, and how Hicks unearthed such a giant. But, instead of
+swaggering a trifle, as he inevitably does, and saying, 'Oh, I told you
+just to leave it to Hicks!' then telling all about it, after accomplishing
+what everyone believed a ridiculously impossible quest, he maintains that
+provokingly mysterious silence, and John Thorwald (we know his name,
+anyway) stolidly refers us to Hicks. So where Thor originated or how under
+the sun Hicks got on his trail, after making his rash vow to corral a
+mighty fullback, is a deep, dark mystery.
+
+Now for Thor himself. Words cannot describe that Prodigious Prodigy; he
+must be seen to be believed! We do know that he is John Thorwald, and of
+distinctly Norwegian descent, so that calling him after the mythic Norse
+god is extremely appropriate. And he is reminiscent of the great Thor, with
+his vast strength and prowess. Thanks to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, love of
+mystery, and of tantalizing old Bannister, we know nothing of Thorwald's
+past, but we are sure he has lived and toiled among <i>men</i>, to possess
+that powerful build. I can't describe him, old man, without resorting to
+exaggeration, for ordinary words and phrases are utterly inadequate with
+Thor! Conjure up a vision of Gulliver among the Lilliputians and you can
+picture him towering over us. He is a Viking of old, with his fair features
+and blond hair. Probably twenty-five years old, he has a powerful frame and
+prodigious strength, he dwarfs such behemoths as Butch and Beef, and makes
+such insignificant mortals as little Theophilus and myself seem like
+insects!
+
+Thor is so <i>big</i>, Jack, that when he gets in a room, he crowds everyone
+into the corridor, and fills it alone. No wonder Hicks telegraphed to knock
+out the partitions between five rooms to make space for Thor! When he
+stands on the campus he blots out several sections of scenery, and the
+college disappears, giving the impression he has swallowed it. Thor is a
+slow-minded being, but possessed of a grim determination. To get an idea
+into his mind requires a blackboard and Chautauqua lecturer, but once he
+masters it, he never lets go; so it will be with football signals, once let
+him grasp a play, he will never be confused. He is simply a huge, stolid
+giant. He has a bulldog purpose to get an education, and nothing else
+matters. As for college spirit, the glad comradeship of the campus, he has
+no time for it; he pays no attention to the fellows at all, only to Hicks.
+
+His devotion to that wretch is pathetic! He follows Hicks around like a
+huge mastiff after a terrier, or an ocean leviathan towed by a tug-boat; he
+seems absolutely helpless without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and so we have
+a daily Hicks' personally conducted tour of Thor to interest us. Briefly,
+Jack, John Thorwald is a slow-moving, slow-minded, grimly bulldog giant,
+who has come to Bannister to study, and as for any other phase of campus
+existence, he has never awakened to it!
+
+Now for the football story: Well, the day after Hicks' sensational arrival,
+which I described, Coach Corridan, Captain Butch Brewster, Beef, Buster,
+Pudge, Monty, and Roddy with yours truly, went to Thor's room in Creighton
+just before football practice. We found that Colossus, who had matriculated
+as a Freshman, aided by Hicks, patiently masticating mental food as served
+by Ovid. Coach Corridan said, 'Come on, Thorwald, over to the Gym.; we'll
+fix you out with togs, if we can get two suits big enough to make one for
+your bulk! Ever play the game?' 'I play some,' rumbled Thor stolidly, never
+raising his eyes from his Latin. 'Don't bother me, I want to <i>study.</i>
+I have not time for such foolishness. I am here to study, to get an
+education!' 'But,' urged the coach earnestly, 'you <i>must</i> play football for
+your Alma Mater, for old Bannister. Why, you--you <i>must</i>, that's all!' Thor
+gazed at Hicks questioningly--I forgot to add that insect's name--and
+asked, 'Is it so, Hicks? I <i>got</i> to play for the college?' And when Hicks
+grinned, '</i>Sure</i>, Thor, it must be did. Bannister expects you to smear the
+other teams over the landscape,' that blond Norwegian Viking said, 'Well,
+then, I play.'
+
+All Bannister turned out to behold the "Prodigious Prodigy" on the football
+field. Somewhere--Hicks won't divulge where--Thor has learned the rudiments
+of the game. With that bulldog tenacity of his, he has learned them well.
+Hence he was ready for the scrubs, and in the practice game it was a
+veritable slaughter of the innocents. The 'Varsity could not stop Thor.
+Remember 'Ole' Skjarsen, the big Swede of George Fitch's 'Siwash College'
+tales? Thor, after the ten minutes required to teach him a play, would take
+the ball and just wade through the regulars for big gains. The only way to
+stop him was for the entire eleven to cling affectionately to his bulk,
+and then he transported them several yards. He is a phenom, a veritable
+Prodigious Prodigy, and maybe old Bannister isn't <i>wild</i> with enthusiasm.
+His development will be slow but sure, and by the time the big games for
+the championship come, he will be a whole team in himself. Right now he
+goes through daily scrimmage as solemnly as if performing a sacred rite. He
+doesn't thrill with college spirit, but as for football--
+
+Leaving Hicks to read the rest of Scoop Sawyer's long missive, terminating
+with indignant condemnation of the sunny youth's love of mystery, the
+terrific enthusiasm roused at old Bannister by the daily appearance on
+Bannister Field of Thor, and his irresistible marches through the 'Varsity,
+must be chronicled and explained.
+
+Not for five seasons, not since the year before Hicks, Pudge, Butch, Beef
+and the others of 1919 were Freshmen, had the Gold and Green corraled that
+greatest glory, The State Intercollegiate Football Championship! In Captain
+Butch's Sophomore year, he had flung his bulk into the fray, training,
+sacrificing, fighting like a Trojan, only to see the pennant lost by a
+scant three inches, as Jack Merritt's forty-yard drop-kick for the goal
+that would have won the Championship struck the cross-bar and bounded back
+into the field. And the past season-old Bannister could still vision that
+tragic scene of the biggest game.
+
+The students could picture Captain Brewster, with the Bannister eleven a
+few yards from Ballard's goal-line, and the touchdown that would give the
+Gold and Green that supreme glory. One minute to play; Deacon Radford had
+given Butch the pigskin, and like a berserker, he fought entirely through
+the scrimmage. But a kick on the head had blinded him, in the <i>melee</i>--free
+of tacklers, with the goal-line, victory, and the Championship so near, he
+staggered, reeled blindly, crashed into an upright, and toppled backward,
+senseless on the field, while the Referee's whistle announced the end of
+the game, and glory to Ballard. Even then, after the first terrible shock
+of the loss, of the cruel blow fate dealt the Gold and Green two
+successive seasons, the slogan was: "</i>Next year</i>--Bannister will win the
+Championship--<i>next year</i>!"
+
+It was now "next year!" Losing only Jack Merritt, Babe McCabe and Heavy
+Hughes from the line-up, and having Monty Merrlweather and Bunch Bingham,
+fully as good, Coach Corridan's Gold and Green eleven, before the season
+started, seemed a better fighting machine than even the one of the year
+before. But when the irrepressible T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in some
+mysterious fashion making good his rash vow to produce a smashing full-back
+that can't be stopped, towed that stolid, blond Colossus, Thor, to old
+Bannister, enthusiasm broke all limits!
+
+Mass-meetings were held every night. Speeches by Coaches, Captain, players,
+Faculty, and students, aroused the campus to the highest pitch; every day,
+the entire student-body, with The Bannister Band, turned out on Bannister
+Field to cheer the eleven, and to watch the Prodigious Prodigy perform
+valorous deeds, like the god Thor. "Bannister College--State Championship!"
+was the cry, and with the giant Thor to present an irresistible catapulting
+that could not be stopped, the Gold and Green exultantly awaited the big
+games with Hamilton and Ballard.
+
+And yet, the stolid, unemotional, unawakened Thor, on whom every hope of
+the Championship was based, whom all Bannister came out to watch every day,
+practiced as he studied, doggedly, silently. It was evident to all that
+he hated the grind, that he wanted to quit, that his heart was not in the
+game, but for some cause, he drove his Herculean body ahead, and could not
+be stopped!
+
+"Now, you abandoned wretch," said Butch Brewster grimly, as the
+happy-go-lucky Hicks finished Scoop's letter, and glanced about him wildly
+seeking a way of escape, "in one minute you will tell us all about John
+Thorwald, alias 'Thor,' or be tossed sky-high in a blanket by the football
+squad, and please believe me, you'll break all altitude records!"
+
+"Spare me, you banditti!" pleaded Hicks, reluctant to cease torturing
+Bannister with his Billion-Dollar Mystery, yet equally unwilling to aviate
+from a blanket heaved by the husky athletes. "Why seek ye to question the
+ways of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.? You have your Prodigious Prodigy--your
+smashing full-back is distributing the 'Varsity over the scenery with
+charming nonchalance that promises dire catastrophe for other teams, once
+he makes the regulars, so--"
+
+At that dramatic moment, just as Butch Brewster glanced at Hicks'
+alarm-clock, to start the minute of grace, a startling interruption saved
+the gladsome youth from having to make a decision. A heavy, creaking tread
+shook the corridor, and the squad beheld, looming up in the doorway, Thor.
+He was not in football togs, and as he started to speak his fair face as
+stolid and expressionless as that of a sphinx, Captain Butch Brewster
+stepped toward him.
+
+"Thor!" he exclaimed, seizing the blond Colossus by the arm, "You aren't
+ready for the scrimmage; hustle over to the Gym. and get on your suit."
+
+But John Thorwald, as passive of feature as though he announced something
+of the most infinitesimal importance, and were not hurling a bomb-shell
+whose explosion, was to shake old Bannister terrifically, spoke in a
+matter-of-fact manner: "I shall not play football--any more,"
+
+"</i>What</i>!" Every collegian in Hicks' room, including that dazed producer
+of the Prodigious Prodigy, chorused the exclamation; to them it was as
+stunning a shock as the nation would suffer if its President calmly
+announced, "I'm tired of being President of the United States. I shall not
+report for work tomorrow." Bannister College, ever since the night that
+Thor arrived on the campus, had talked or thought of nothing but how this
+huge, blond-haired Hercules would bring the Championship to the Gold and
+Green; his prodigies on the gridiron, his ever-increasing prowess, had
+aroused enthusiasm to fever heat, and now--
+
+"I was told wrong," said Thor, shifting his vast tonnage awkwardly from one
+foot to the other, and evidently bewildered at the consternation caused by
+what he believed a trifling announcement, "I understood that I <i>had</i> to
+play football, that the Faculty required it of me, and the students let me
+think so. I have just learned from Doctor Alford that such is not true,
+that I do not have to play unless I choose, hence, I quit. I came to
+college to study, to gain an education. I have toiled long and hard for
+the opportunity, and now I have it, I shall not waste my time on such
+foolishness."
+
+Then, utterly unconscious that he had spoken sentences which would create
+a mighty sensation at old Bannister, that might doom the Gold and Green
+to defeat, lose his Alma Mater the Championship, and bring on himself the
+cruel ostracism and bitter censure of his fellows, John Thorwald lumbered
+down the corridor. A moment of tense silence followed and then Captain
+Butch Brewster groaned.
+
+"It's all over, it's all over, fellows!" he said brokenly, "Bannister loses
+the Championship! We know it is impossible to move Thor on the football
+field, and now that he has said 'No!' to playing football, dynamite can not
+move him from his decision."
+
+Then, crushed and disconsolate, the football squad filed silently from the
+room, to break the glad news to Coach Corridan, and to spread the joyous
+tidings to old Bannister. When they had gone, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+staring at the figurative black cloud that lowered over his Alma Mater,
+strove to find its silver lining, and at last he partially succeeded.
+
+"Anyway," said Hicks, with a lugubrious effort to grin, "Thor's
+announcement shocked the squad so much that I was not forced to explain my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+
+
+"In the famous words of Mr. Somebody-Or-Other," quoth T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., "something has <i>got</i> to be did, and immediately to once!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster nodded assent. So did Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan,
+Beef McNaughton, Team Manager Socks Fitzpatrick, Monty Merriweather, Dad
+Pendleton, President of the Athletic Association, and Deacon Radford,
+quarter-back, also Shad Fishpaw, who, being Freshman Class-Chairman,
+maintained a discreet silence. Instead of the usual sky-larking, care-free
+crowd that infested the cozy quarters of the happy-go-lucky Hicks, every
+collegian present, except the ever-cheerful youth, seemed to have lost his
+best friend and his last dollar at one fell swoop!
+
+"Oh, yes, something has got to be did!" fleered Beef McNaughton, the
+davenport creaking under the combined tonnage of himself and Butch
+Brewster, "But who will do it? Where's all that Oh-just-leave-it-to-Hicks
+stuff you have pulled for the past three years, you pestiferous insect?
+</i>Bah</i>! You did a lot; you dragged a Prodigious Prodigy to old Bannister,
+enshrouded him in darkest mystery, and now, when he pushed the 'Varsity off
+the field and promised to corral the Championship, single-handed, he puts
+his foot down, and says, '</i>No</i>--I will not play football!' Get busy, Little
+Mr. Fix-It."
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" accommodated that blithesome Senior, with a
+cheeriness he was far from feeling. "You all do know why Thor won't
+play football; it is not like last season, when Deke Radford, a star
+quarter-back, refused either to play, or to explain his refusal. Let me
+get an inspiration, and then Thor will once again gently but firmly thrust
+entire football elevens down the field before him!"
+
+As evidence of how intensely serious was the situation, let it be
+chronicled that, for the first time in his scatter-brained campus career,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., did not dare strum his banjo and roar out ballads
+to torture his long-suffering colleagues. Popular and beloved as he was,
+the gladsome youth hesitated to shatter the quietude of the campus with
+his saengerfest, knowing as he did what a terrible blow Thor's utterly
+astounding announcement had been to the college.
+
+It was nine o'clock, one night two weeks after the day when John Thorwald,
+better known as Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, so mysteriously produced by
+Hicks, had stolidly paralyzed old Bannister by unemotionally stating his
+decision to play no more football. Since then, to quote the Phillyloo Bird,
+"Bannister has staggered around the ring like a prizefighter with the
+Referee counting off ten seconds and trying to fight again before he takes
+the count." In truth, the students had made a fatal mistake in building
+all their hopes of victory on that blond giant, Thor; seeing his wonderful
+prowess, and beholding how, in the first week of the season, the Norwegian
+Colossus had ripped to shreds the Varsity line which even the heavy Ballard
+eleven of the year before could not batter, it was but natural that the
+enthusiastic youths should think of the Championship chances in terms of
+</i>Thor</i>. For one week, enthusiasm and excitement soared higher and higher,
+and then, to use a phrase of fiction, everything fell with a dull,
+sickening thud!
+
+In vain did Coach Corridan, the staff of Assistant Coaches, Captain Butch
+Brewster, and others strive to resuscitate football spirit; nightly
+mass-meetings were held, and enough perfervid oratory hurled to move a
+Russian fortress, but to no avail. It was useless to argue that, without
+Thor, Bannister had an eleven better than that of last year, which so
+nearly missed the Championship. The campus had seen the massive Thor's
+prodigies; they knew he could not be stopped, and to attempt to arouse the
+college to concert pitch over the eleven, with that mountain of muscle
+blotting out vast sections of scenery, but not in football togs, was not
+possible.
+
+"One thing is sure," spoke Dad Pendleton seriously, gazing gloomily from
+the window, "unless we get Thor in the line-up for the Big Games, our last
+hope of the Championship is dead and interred! And I feel sorry for the big
+fellow, for already the boys like him just about as much as a German
+loves an Englishman; yet, arguments, threats, pleadings, and logic have
+absolutely no effect on him. He has said 'No,' and that ends it!"
+
+"He doesn't understand things, fellows," defended T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+with surprising earnestness. "Remember how bewildered he seemed at our
+appeal to his college spirit, and his love for his Alma Mater. We might as
+well have talked Choctaw to him!"
+
+Butch Brewster, Socks Fitzpatrick, Dad Pendleton, Beef McNaughton, Deacon
+Radford, Monty Merriweather, and Shad Fishpaw well remembered that night
+after Thor's tragic decision, when they--part of a Committee formed of the
+best athletes from all teams, and the most representative collegians of old
+Bannister, had invaded Thor's room in Creighton Hall, to wrestle with the
+recalcitrant Hercules. Even as Hicks spoke, they visioned it again.
+
+A cold, cheerless room, bare of carpet or pictures, with just the
+study-table, bed, and two chairs. At the study-table, his huge bulk
+sprawling on, and overflowing, a frail chair, they had found the massive
+John Thorwald laboriously reading aloud the Latin he had translated,
+literally by the sweat of his brow. The blond Colossus, impatient at the
+interruption, had shaken his powerful frame angrily, and with no regard for
+campus tradition, had addressed the upperclassmen in a growl: "Well, what
+do you want? Hurry up, I've got to study."
+
+And then, to state it briefly, they had worked with (and on) the stolid
+Thorwald for two hours. They explained how his decision to play no more
+football would practically kill old Bannister's hopes of the Championship,
+would assassinate football spirit on the campus, and cause the youths to
+condemn Thor, and to ostracise him. Waxing eloquent, Butch Brewster had
+delivered a wonderful speech, pleading with John Thorwald to play the
+game. He tried to show that obviously uninterested mammoth that, like the
+Hercules he so resembled, he stood at the parting of the ways.
+
+"You are on the threshold of your college career, old man!" he thundered
+impressively, though he might as well have tried to shoot holes in a
+battleship with a pop-gun, "What you do now will make or break you. Do you
+want the fellows as friends or as enemies; do you want comradeship, or
+loneliness and ostracism? You have it in your power to do two <i>big</i> things,
+to win the Championship for your Alma Mater, and to win to yourself the
+entire student-body, as friends; will you do that, and build a firm
+foundation for your college years, or betray your Alma Mater, and gain the
+enmity of old Bannister!"
+
+Followed more fervid periods, with such phrases as, "For your Alma Mater,"
+"Because of your college spirit," "For dear old Bannister," and "For
+the Gold and Green!" predominating; all of which terms, to the stolid,
+unimaginative Thorwald being fully as intelligible as Hindustani. They
+appealed to him not to betray his Alma Mater; they implored him, for his
+love of old Bannister; they besought him, because of his college spirit;
+and all the time, for all that the Prodigious Prodigy understood, they
+might as well have remained silent.
+
+"I will tell you something," spoke Thor, at last, with an air of impatient
+resignation, "and don't bother me again, please! I have come to Bannister
+College to get an education, and I have the right to do so, without being
+pestered. I pay my bills, and I am entitled to all the knowledge I can
+purchase. I look from my window, and I see boys, whose fathers are toiling,
+sacrificing, to send them here. Instead of studying, to show their
+gratitude, they loaf around the campus, or in their rooms, twanging banjos
+and guitars, singing silly songs, and sky-larking. I don't know what all
+this rot is you are talking of; 'college spirit,' 'my Alma Mater,' and so
+on. I do not want to play football; I do not like the game; I need the time
+for my study, so I will not play. Both my father and myself have labored
+and sacrificed to send me to college. The past five years, with one great
+ambition to go to college and learn, I have toiled like a galley-slave.
+
+"And now, when opportunity is mine, do you ask me to <i>play</i>? You want me to
+loaf around, wasting precious time better spent in my studies. What do I
+care whether the boys like me, or hate me? Bah! I can take any two of you,
+and knock your heads together! Their friendship or enmity won't move me. I
+shall study, learn. I will not waste time in senseless foolishness, and I
+<i>won't</i> play football again."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. was silent as he stood by the window of his room,
+gazing down at the campus where the collegians were gathering before
+marching to the Auditorium for the nightly mass-meeting that would vainly
+strive to arouse a fighting spirit in the football "rooters." That
+blithesome, heedless, happy-go-lucky youth was capable of far more serious
+thought than old Bannister knew; and more, he possessed the rare ability
+to read character; in the case of Thor, he saw vastly deeper than his
+indignant comrades, who beheld only the surface of the affair. They knew
+only that John Thorwald, a veritable Colossus, had exhibited football
+prowess that practically promised the State Championship to old Bannister,
+and then--he had quit the game. They understood only that Thor refused to
+play simply because he did not want to, and as to why their appeals to his
+college spirit and his love for his Alma Mater were unheeded they were
+puzzled.
+
+But the gladsome Hicks, always serious beneath his cheerful exterior, when
+old Bannister's interests were at stake, or when a collegian's career
+might be blighted, when the tragedy could be averted, fully understood. Of
+course, as originator of the Billion-Dollar Mystery, and producer of the
+Prodigious Prodigy, he knew more about the strange John Thorwald than did
+his mystified comrades. He knew that Thor, as he named him, was just a vast
+hulk of humanity, stolid, unimaginative of mind, slow-thinking, a dull,
+unresponsive mass, as yet unstirred by that strange, subtle, mighty thing
+called college spirit. He realized that Thor had never had a chance to
+understand the real meaning of campus life, to grasp the glad fellowship of
+the students, to thrill with a great love for his Alma Mater. All that must
+come in time. The blond giant had toiled all his life, had labored among
+men where everything was practical and grim. Small wonder, then, that he
+failed utterly to see why the youths "loafed on the campus, or in their
+rooms, twanging banjos and guitars, singing silly songs, and skylarking."
+
+"I must save him," murmured Hicks softly, for the others in his room were
+talking of Thor. "Oh, imagine that powerful body, imbued with a vast love
+for old Bannister, think of Thor, thrilling with college spirit. Why,
+Yale's and Harvard's elevens combined could not stop his rushes, then. I
+must save him from himself, from the condemnation of the fellows, who just
+don't understand. I must, some way, awaken him to a complete understanding
+of college life in its entirety, but how? He is so different from Roddy
+Perkins, or Deke Radford."
+
+It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every year of his
+campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath, deserved or
+otherwise, of the students. In his Freshman first term, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., indignant at the way little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+nervous "grind," had been alarmed at the idea of being hazed, had by a
+sensational escape from a room locked, guarded, and filled with Sophomores,
+gained immunity for himself and the boner for all time, thus winning the
+loyal, pathetic devotion of the Human Encyclopedia. As a Sophomore, by
+crushing James Roderick Perkins' Napoleonic ambition to upset tradition,
+and make Freshmen equal with upperclassmen, Hicks had turned that
+aggressive youth's tremendous energy in the right channels, and made him a
+power for good on the campus.
+
+And, a Junior, he had saved good Deacon Radford. When that serious youth, a
+famous prep. quarter, entered old Bannister, the students were wild at the
+thought of having him to run the Gold and Green team, but to their dismay,
+he refused either to report for practice or to explain his decision. Hicks,
+promising blithely, as usual, to solve the mystery and get Deke to play,
+discovered that the youth's mother, called "Mother Peg" by the collegians,
+was head-waitress downtown at Jerry's and that she made her son promise
+not to own the relationship, and that while she worked to get him through
+college, Deacon would not play football. The inspired Hicks had gotten
+Mother Peg to start College Inn, and board Freshmen unable to get rooms
+in the dormitories, and Deacon had played wonderful football. For this
+achievement, the original youth failed to get glory, for he sacrificed it,
+and swore all concerned to secrecy.
+
+"But Roddy and Deke were different," reflected Hicks, pondering seriously.
+"Both had been to Prep. School, and they understood college life and campus
+spirit. It was Roddy's tremendous ambition that had to be curbed, and Deke
+was the victim of circumstances. But Thorwald--it is just a problem of how
+to awaken in him an understanding of college spirit. The fellows don't
+understand him, and--"
+
+A sudden thought, one of his inspirations, assailed the blithesome Hicks.
+Why not make the fellows understand Thor? Surely, if he explained the
+"Billion-Dollar Mystery," as he humorously called it, and told why
+Thorwald, as yet, had no conception of college life, in its true meaning,
+they would not feel bitter against him; perhaps, instead, though regretful
+at his decision not to play the game, they would all strive to awaken the
+stolid Colossus, to stir his soul to an understanding of campus
+tradition and existence. But that would mean--"I surely hate to lose my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., remembering
+the intense indignation of his comrades at his Herman-Kellar-Thurston
+atmosphere of mystery, "It is more fun than, my 'Sheerluck Holmes'
+detective pose or my saengerfests. Still, for old Bannister, and for Thor."
+
+It would seem only a trifle for the heedless Hicks to give up his mystery,
+and tell Bannister all about Thor; yet, had the Hercules reconsidered, and
+played football, the torturesome youth would have bewildered his colleagues
+as long as possible, or until they made him divulge the truth. He dearly
+loved to torment his comrades, and this had been such an opportunity for
+him to promise nonchalantly to produce a Herculean full-back, then, to
+return to the campus with the Prodigious Prodigy in tow, and for him to
+perform wonders on Bannister Field, naturally aroused the interest of the
+youths, and he had enjoyed hugely their puzzlement, but now--
+
+"Say, fellows," he interrupted an excited conversation of a would-be
+Committee of Ways and Means to make Thor play football, "I have an
+announcement to make."
+
+"Don't pester us, Hicks!" warned Captain Butch Brewster, grimly. "We love
+you like a brother, but we'll crush you if you start any foolishness,
+and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with the study-table between himself and his
+comrades, assumed the attitude of a Chautauqua lecturer, one hand resting
+on the table and the other thrust into the breast of his coat, and
+dramatically announced:
+
+"In the Auditorium--at the regular mass-meeting tonight--T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., will give the correct explanation of Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and
+will solve the Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+
+
+The announcement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had practically the same
+effect on Head Coach Corridan and the cheery Senior's comrades as a German
+gas-bomb would have on the inmates of an Allied trench. For several seconds
+they stared at the blithesome youth, in a manner scarcely to be called
+aimless, since their looks were aimed with deadly accuracy at him, but in
+general, with the exception of Hicks, those in the room resembled vastly
+some of the celebrated Madame Tussaud's wax-works in London.
+
+"Oh," breathed Monty Merriweather, with the appearance of dawning
+intelligence, "that's so, Coach, Hicks never has disclosed the details of
+his achievement; we were about to extort a confession from him, when Thor
+broke up the league with his announcement, and since then, Bannister has
+been too worried over Thorwald to trifle with Hicks!"
+
+"That's a good idea!" exclaimed Coach Corridan, who had been remarkably
+silent, for him, pondering the football crisis, "Hicks can make his
+explanation at the regular mass-meeting tonight, in the Auditorium. I'll
+post an announcement of his purpose, and you fellows spread the news among
+the students, stating that Hicks will tell how he rounded up Thor. Some
+have shirked these meetings since Thorwald quit the game, and this will
+bring them out, so maybe we can arouse the fighting spirit again!"
+
+So well did Butch, Beef, Socks, Monty, Dad, Deacon, and Shad tell the news,
+that when the bell in the Administration Hall tower rang at ten o'clock it
+was ascertained by score-keepers that every youth at Bannister, Freshmen
+included, except that Hercules, Thor, had assembled in the Auditorium. That
+stolid behemoth, who regarded the football mass-meeting as foolishness, was
+reported as boning in his cheerless room, fulfilling the mission for which
+he came to college, namely, to get his money's worth of knowledge, which he
+evidently regarded as some commodity for which Bannister served merely as a
+market.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, on the stage of the Auditorium, the big assembly-hall
+of the college, along with Coach Corridan, several of the Gold and Green
+eleven, two members of the Faculty, several Assistant Coaches, and T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., stepped forward and stilled the tumult of the excited
+youths with upraised hand.
+
+"We have with us tonight," he spoke, after the fashion of introducing
+after-dinner speakers, "Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the celebrated
+Magician and Mystifier, who will present for your approval his world-famous
+Billion-Dollar Mystery, and give the correct solution to Thor, the problem
+no one has been able to solve. I take great pleasure in introducing to you
+this evening, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+The collegians, firmly believing it was another of the pestiferous Hicks'
+jokes, and wholly unaware of the deep purpose of the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible youth's speech, went into paroxysms of glee, as the
+shadow-like Hicks stepped forward. For several minutes, the hall echoed
+with jeers, shouts, groans, whistles, and sarcastic comments:
+
+"Hire a hall, Hicks; tell it to Sweeney!"--"Bryan better look out. Hicks,
+the </i>Chau-talker;</i>"--"Spill the speech, old man; spread the oratory!"--"Oh,
+where are my smelling-salts? I know I shall faint!"--"You'd better play a
+banjo-accompaniment to it, Hicks!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for once in his campus career, fervidly wished he
+had not been such a happy-go-lucky, care-free collegian, for now, when he
+was serious, his comrades refused to believe him to be in such a state.
+However, quiet was obtained at last, thanks to the fact that the youths
+possessed all the curiosity of the proverbial cat who died thereby, and the
+sunny Senior plunged earnestly into his famous speech, that was destined,
+at old Bannister, to rank with that of Demosthenes "On The Crown," or any
+of W. J, Bryan's masterpieces.
+
+"Fellows," began Hicks, without preface, "I know I've built myself the
+reputation of being a scatterbrained, heedless nonentity, and it's too late
+to change now. But tonight, please believe me to be thoroughly in earnest.
+Bannister faces more than one crisis, more than one tragedy. It is true
+that the football eleven is crippled by the defection of Thor, that we
+fellows have somewhat unreasonably allowed his quitting the game to shake
+our spirit, but there is more at stake than football victories, than even
+the State Intercollegiate Football Championship! The future of a student,
+of a present Freshman, his hopes of becoming a loyal, solid, representative
+college man, a tremendous power for good, at old Bannister, hang in the
+balance at this moment! I speak of John Thorwald. You students have it in
+your power to make or break him, to ruin his college years and make him a
+recluse, a misanthrope, or to gradually bring him to a full realization of
+what college life and campus tradition really mean."
+
+"I have made a great mystery of Thor, just for a lark, but the enmity and
+condemnation of the campus for him because he quit football suddenly, shows
+me that the time for skylarking is past. For his sake, I must plead. He is
+not to blame, altogether, for quitting. Myself, and you fellows, gave him
+the impression that it was a Faculty requirement for him to play football,
+for we feared he would not play, otherwise; when he learned that it was not
+a Faculty rule, he simply quit."
+
+Here T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., seeing that at last he had convinced the
+collegians of his earnestness, though they seemed fairly paralyzed at the
+phenomenon, paused, and produced a bundle of papers before resuming.
+
+"Now, I'll try to explain the 'mystery' as briefly and as clearly as
+possible. Up at Camp Bannister, before college opened, Coach Corridan, as
+you know, outlined to Butch, Deke, and myself, his dream of a Herculean,
+irresistible full-back; I said, 'Just leave It to Hicks!' and they believed
+that I, as usual, just made that remark to torment them. But such was not
+the case. When I joined them, I remarked that I had a letter from my Dad;
+Deke made some humorous remarks, and I forgot to read it aloud, as I
+intended. Then, after Coach Corridan blue-printed his giant full-back, I
+kept silent as to Dad's letter, for reasons you'll understand. But, after
+all, there was no mystery about my leaving Camp Bannister, after making a
+seemingly rash vow, and returning to college with a 'Prodigious Prodigy'
+who filled specifications, In fact, before I left Camp Bannister, at the
+moment I made my rash promise--I had Thor already lined up!"
+
+"I shall now read a dipping or two, and a letter or two from my Dad. The
+clippings came in Dad's letter to me at Camp Bannister, the letter I
+intended to read to Coach Corridan, Deke, and Butch, but which I decided to
+keep silent about, after the Coach told of the full-back he wanted, for
+I knew I had him already! First, a clipping from the </i>San Francisco
+Examiner</i>, of August 25:
+
+MAROONED SAILOR RESCUED--TEN YEARS ON SOUTH SEA ISLAND! SOLE SURVIVOR OF
+ILL-FATED CRUISE OF THE ZEPHYR
+
+"The trading-schooner </i>Southern Cross</i>, Captain Martin Bascomb, skipper,
+put into San Francisco yesterday with a cargo of copra from the South Sea
+Islands. On board was John Thorwald, Sr., who for the past ten years
+has been marooned on an uninhabited coral isle of the Southern Pacific,
+together with 'Long Tom' Watts, who, however, died several months ago.
+Thorwald's story reads like a thrilling bit of fiction. He was first mate
+of the ill-fated yacht </i>Zephyr</i>, which cleared from San Francisco ten years
+ago with Henry B. Kingsley, the Oil-King, and a pleasure party, for a
+cruise under the southern star. A terrific tornado wrecked the yacht, and
+only Thorwald and 'Long Tom' escaped, being cast upon the coral island,
+where for ten years they existed, unable to attract the attention of the
+few craft that passed, as the isle was out of the regular lanes. Only when
+Captain Martin Bascomb, in the trading-schooner </i>Southern Cross</i>, touched
+at the island, hoping to find natives with whom to trade supplies for
+copra, were they found, and 'Long Tom' had been dead some months."
+
+"Despite the harrowing experiences of his exile, Thorwald, a vast hulk of a
+stolid, unimaginative Norwegian, who reminds one of the Norse god, 'Thor,'
+intends to ship as first mate on the New York-Christiania Steamship Line.
+It is said that Thorwald has a son, at this time about twenty-five years of
+age, somewhere In this country, whom he will seek, and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., at this juncture, terminated the newspaper story,
+and finding that his explanation held his comrades spellbound, he produced
+a letter, and drew out the message, after stating the youths could read the
+entire news-story of John Thorwald, Sr., later.
+
+"This is the letter I received from my Dad," he explained to the intensely
+interested Bannister youths, who were giving a concentrated attention that
+members of the Faculty would have rejoiced to receive from them. "Up at
+Camp Bannister--I was just about to read it to Coach Corridan, Butch, and
+Deke Radford, when Deke chaffed me, and then the Coach outlined the mammoth
+full-back he desired, so I kept quiet. I'll now read it to you:
+
+
+"Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept, 17.
+
+"DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+"Read the inclosed clipping from the </i>San Francisco Examiner</i> of August 25,
+and then pay close attention to the following facts: At the time of this
+news-story I was in 'Frisco on business, as you will recall, and for
+reasons to be outlined, when I read of the </i>Southern Cross</i> finding the
+marooned John Thorwald, and bringing him to that city, I was particularly
+interested, so much so that I at once looked up the one-time first mate of
+the ill-starred </i>Zephyr</i> and brought him to Pittsburgh in my private car.
+My reason was this; in my employ, in the International Steel Combine's
+mill, was John Thorwald's son, John Thorwald, Jr.
+
+"To state facts as briefly as possible, almost a year ago, as I took some
+friends through the steel rolling mill, I chanced to step directly beneath
+a traveling crane, lowering a steel beam; seeing my peril, I was about to
+step aside when I caught my foot and fell. Just then a veritable giant,
+black and grimy, leaped forward, and with a prodigious display of strength,
+placed his powerful back under the descending weight, staving it off until
+I rolled over to safety!
+
+"Well, of course, I had the fellow report to my office, and instinctively
+feeling that I wanted to show my gratitude, without being patronizing, he
+responded to my question as to what I could do to reward him, by asking
+simply that I get him some job that would allow him to attend night school.
+He stated that, owing to the fact that he worked alternate weeks at night
+shift he was unable to do so. Questioning him further, I learned the
+following facts:
+
+"He was John Thorwald, Jr., only son of John Thorwald, Sr., a Norwegian;
+his mother was also a Norwegian, but he is a natural born American.
+Realizing the opportunities for an educated young man in our land,
+Thorwald's parents determined that he should gain knowledge, and until he
+was fifteen years old, he attended school in San Francisco. When he was
+fifteen, his father signed as first mate on the yacht </i>Zephyr</i>, going with
+the oil-king, Henry B. Kingsley, on a pleasure cruise in the Southern
+Pacific; Thorwald, Sr.'s, story you read in the paper. Soon after the news
+of the </i>Zephyr's</i> wreck, with all on board lost, as was then supposed,
+Thorwald's mother died. Her dying words (so young Thorwald told me, and I
+was moved by his simple, straightforward tale) were an appeal to her
+boy. She made him promise, for her sake, to study, study, study to gain
+knowledge, and to rise in the world! Thorwald promised. Then, believing
+both his parents dead, the young Norwegian, a youth of fifteen without
+money, had to shift for himself.
+
+"Thomas, Jack London could weave his adventures into a gripping
+masterpiece. Starting in as cabin-boy on a freighter to Alaska, young
+Thorwald, in the past ten years, has simply crowded his life with
+adventure, thrill, and experience, though thrills mean nothing to him. He
+was in the Klondike gold-fields, in the salmon canneries, a prospector, a
+lumber-jack in the Canadian Northwest, a cowboy, a sailor, a worker in the
+Panama Canal Zone, on the Big Ditch, and too many other things to remember.
+Finally, he drifted to Pittsburgh, where his prodigious strength served him
+in the steel-mills, and, let me add, served <i>me</i>, as I stated.
+
+"And ever, no matter where he wandered, or what was his toil, whenever
+possible, Thorwald studied. His promise to his mother was always his goal,
+and in the cities he studied, or in the wilds he read all the books he
+could find. The past year, finding he had a good-pay job in Pittsburgh, he
+settled to determined effort, and by sheer resolution, by his wonderful
+power to grasp facts and ideas for good once he gets them, he made great
+progress in night school, until he was shifted, a week before he saved my
+life, to work that required him to toil nightly, alternate weeks. So, for a
+year, Thor has had every possible advantage, some, unknown to him, I paid
+for myself; I got him clerical work, with shorter hours, he went to night
+school, and I employed the very best tutor obtainable, letting Thorwald
+pay him, as he thought, though his payments wouldn't keep the tutor in
+neckties. The gratitude of the blond giant is pathetic, and suspecting that
+I paid the tutor something, he insisted on paying all he could, which I
+allowed, of course.
+
+"Well, in August, a year after Thorwald rescued me from serious injury,
+perhaps death, I was in 'Frisco, and read of Thorwald, Sr.'s rescue and
+return. Overjoyed, I took the father to Pittsburgh, to the son. I witnessed
+their meeting, with the father practically risen from the dead, and all
+those stolid, unimaginative Norwegians did was to shake hands gravely!
+Young Thorwald told of his mother's last words, and of his promise, of his
+having studied all the years, and of his late progress, so that he was
+ready to enter college. His father, happy, insisted that he enter this
+September, and he would pay for his son's college course, to make up for
+the years the youth struggled for himself--Kingsley's heirs, I believe,
+gave Thorwald, Sr., five thousand dollars on his return. So, though
+grateful to me for the aid I offered, they would receive no financial
+assistance, for they want to work it out themselves, and help the youth
+make good his promise to his dying mother.
+
+"Much as I love old Bannister, my Alma Mater, I would not have tried to
+send Thorwald there, had I not deemed it a good place for him. However,
+since it is a liberal, not a technical, education he wants, it is all
+right; and that prodigious strength will serve the Gold and Green on the
+football field. Now, Thomas, I want you to meet him in Philadelphia, and
+take him to Bannister, look out for him, get him started O. K., and do all
+you can for him. Get him to play football, if you can, but don't condemn
+if he refuses. Remember, his life has been grim and unimaginative; he has
+toiled and studied, it is probable he will not understand college life at
+first."
+
+
+"That's all I need to read of Dad's letter, fellows," concluded T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. "After I got it, and Coach Corridan, Butch, and Beef heard my
+seemingly rash vow to round up a giant full-back, I made a mystery of it; I
+loafed in Philadelphia and Atlantic City until I met Thor, and brought him
+here. You have all the data regarding Thor, 'The Billion-Dollar Mystery.'"
+
+The students, almost as one, drew a deep breath. They had been enthralled
+by the story, and their feeling toward Thor had undergone a vast change.
+Stirred by hearing of his promise to his dying mother, thrilled at the way
+the stolid, determined Norwegian had ceaselessly studied to make something
+of himself for the sake of his mother's sacred memory, the Bannister youths
+now thought of football, of the Championship, as insignificant, beside the
+goal of Thorwald, Jr. The blond Colossus, whom an hour ago all Bannister
+reviled and condemned for not playing the game, who was a campus outcast,
+was now a hero; thanks to the erstwhile heedless Hicks, whose intense
+earnestness in itself was a revelation to the amazed collegians, Thor stood
+before them in a different light, and the impulsive, whole-souled, generous
+youths were now anxious to make amends.
+
+</i>"Thor! Thor! Thor!"</i> was the thunderous cry, and the Bannister yell for
+the Prodigious Prodigy shattered the echoes. Then T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+ecstatically joyous, again stilled the tumult, and spoke in behalf of John
+Thorwald.
+
+"We all understand Thor now, fellows," he said, beaming on his comrades.
+"We want him to play football, and we'll keep after him to play, but we
+won't condemn him if he refuses. At present, Thor is simply a stolid,
+unimaginative, dull mass of muscle. As you can realize, his nature, his
+life so far have not tended to make him appreciate the gayer, lighter side
+of college life, or to grasp the traditions of the campus. To him, college
+is a market; he pays his money and he takes the knowledge handed out. We
+can not blame him for not understanding college existence in its entirety,
+or that the gaining of knowledge is a small part of the representative
+collegian's purpose.
+
+"Now, boys, here's our job, and let's tackle it together: To awaken in
+Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to stir his
+practical soul. Let every fellow be his friend, let no one speak against
+him, because of football. We must work slowly, carefully, gradually making
+him grasp college traditions, and once he awakens to the real meaning of
+campus life, what a power he will be in the college and on the athletic
+field! Maybe he will not play football this season, but let us help him to
+awaken!"
+
+With wild shouts, the aroused collegians poured from the Auditorium, an
+excited, turbulent mass of youthful humanity, a tide that swept T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., on the shoulders of several, out on the campus. Massed beneath
+the window of John Thorwald's room, in Creighton Hall, the Bannister
+students, now fully understanding that stolid Hercules, and stirred to
+admiration of him by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, great speech, cheered the
+somewhat mystified Thor again and again; in vast sound waves, the shouts
+rolled up to his open window:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah-rah-rah! </i>Thor! Thor! Thor</i>!" Captain Brewster, through a
+big megaphone, roared; "Fellows--What's the matter with </i>Thor</i>?"
+
+And in a terrific outburst which, as the Phillyloo Bird afterward said,
+"Like to of busted Bannister's works!" the enthusiastic collegians
+responded:
+
+"</i>He's</i>--all--right!"
+
+Then Butch, apparently in quest of information, persisted:
+
+"</i>Who's</i> all right?"
+
+To which the three hundred or more youths, all seemingly equipped with
+lungs of leather, kindly answered:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor!"
+
+Still, though the Phillyloo Bird declared that this vocal explosion caused
+the seismographs as Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and in Salt Lake
+City, Utah, to register an earthquake somewhere, it had on the blond
+Freshman a strange effect. The vast mountain of muscle lumbered heavily
+across the room, gazed down at the howling crowd of collegians without
+emotion, then slammed down the window, and returned to study.
+
+"</i>Good night</i>" called Hicks. "The show is over! Let him have another yell,
+boys, to show we aren't insulted; then we'll disband!"
+
+Considering Thorwald's cool reception of their overtures, which some youth
+remarked, "Were as noisy as that of a Grand Opera Orchestra," it was quite
+surprising to the students, in the morning, when what occurred an hour
+after their serenade was revealed to them. As the story was told by those
+who witnessed the scene, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, Beef, Monty, Pudge,
+Roddy, Biff, Hefty, Tug, Buster, and Coach Corridan after the commotion
+subsided, retired to the sunny Hicks' quarters, where the football
+situation was discussed, along with ways and means to awaken Thor, when
+that colossal Freshman himself loomed up in the doorway.
+
+As they afterward learned, several excited Freshmen had dared to invade
+Thor's den, even while he studied, and give him a more or less correct
+account of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s masterly oration in his defense. Out of
+their garbled descriptions, big John Thorwald grasped one salient point,
+and straightway he started for Hicks' room, leaving the indignant Freshmen
+to tell their story to the atmosphere.
+
+"Hicks," said Thor, not bothering with the "Mr." required of all Freshmen,
+as his vast bulk crowded the doorway, "is it true that Mr. Thomas Haviland
+Hicks, Sr., wants me to play football? He has been very kind to me, and
+has helped me, and so have you, here at college. After a year of study, I
+should have had to stop night-school, but for him--instead, I got another
+year, and prepared for Bannister. I did not know that <i>he</i> desired me to
+play, but if he does, I feel under obligation to show my great gratitude,
+both for myself and for my father,"
+
+A moment of silence, for the glorious news could not be grasped in a
+second; those in the room, knowing Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.'s, brilliant
+athletic record at old Bannister, and understanding his great love for
+his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister to play
+football for the Gold and Green, though, as he had written his son, he
+would not have done so had he honestly believed that another college would
+suit the ambitious Goliath better.
+
+"Does he?" stammered the dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while the others
+echoed the words feebly, "Yes, I should say he <i>does</i>!"
+
+For a second, the ponderous young Colossus hesitated, and then, as calmly
+as though announcing he would add Greek to his list of studies, and wholly
+unaware that his words were to bring joy to old Bannister, he spoke
+stolidly.
+
+"Then I shall play football."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY.
+
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the Devil had done for the rest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+T HAVILAND HICKS, JR., his chair tilted at a perilous angle, and his feet
+thrust gracefully atop of the study-table, in his cozy room, one Friday
+afternoon two weeks after John Thorwald's return to the football squad, was
+fathoms deep in Stevenson's "Treasure Island." As he perused the thrilling
+pages, the irrepressible youth twanged a banjo accompaniment, and roared
+with gusto the piratical chantey of Long John Silver's buccaneer crew;
+Hicks, however, despite his saengerfest, was completely lost in the
+enthralling narrative, so that he seemed to hear the parrot shrieking,
+"Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!" and the wild refrain:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+He was reading that breathlessly exciting part where the cabin-boy of the
+</i>Hispaniola</i>, and Israel Hands have their terrible fight to the death, with
+the dodging over the dead man rolling in the scuppers, the climbing up the
+mast, and the dirk pinning the boy's shoulder, before Hands is shot and
+goes to join his mate on the bottom; just at the most absorbing page, as he
+twanged his beloved banjo louder, and roared the chantey, there sounded,
+"Tramp--tramp--tramp!" in the corridor, the heavy tread of many feet
+sounded, coming nearer. Instinctively realizing that the pachydermic parade
+was headed for <i>his</i> room, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., rushed to the closet,
+murmuring, "Safety first!" as usual, and stowed away his banjo. He was just
+in the nick of time, for a second later there crowded into his room Captain
+Butch, Pudge, Beef, Hefty, Biff, Monty, Roddy, Bunch, Tug, Buster, Coach
+Corridas, and Thor, the latter duo bringing up the rear.
+
+"Hicks, you unjailed public nuisance!" said Butch Brewster, affectionately.
+"We, whom you behold, are going for to enter into that room across the
+corridor from your boudoir, and hold a football signal quiz and confab. We
+should request that you permit a thunderous silence to originate in your
+cozy retreat, for the period of at least a hour! A word to the <i>wise</i> is
+sufficient, so I have spoken several, that even you may comprehend my
+meaning,"
+
+"I gather you, fluently!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., taking up
+"Treasure Island" and his graceful pose once more. "Leave me to peruse the
+thrilling pages of this classic blood-and-thunder book, and I'll cause a
+beautiful serenity to obtain hither."
+
+"See that you do, you pestiferous insect!" threatened Beef McNaughton,
+ominously. "Come on, fellows, Hicks can't escape our vengeance, if
+he bursts into what he fatuously believes is song. Just let him act
+hippicanarious, and--"
+
+When the Gold and Green eleven, half of which, to judge by size, was
+Thor, had gone with Coach Corridan into the room across from that of the
+blithesome Hicks, the sunny-souled Senior tried to resume his perusal of
+"Treasure Island," but somehow the spell had been broken by the invasion of
+his cozy quarters. So, after vainly essaying to take up the thread of the
+story again, Hicks arose and stood by the window, gazing across the campus
+to Bannister Field, deserted, since the football team rested for the game
+of the morrow. As he stood there, the gladsome Hicks reflected seriously.
+He thought of "Thor," and decided sorrowfully that the problem of awakening
+that stolid Colossus to a full understanding of campus life was as unsolved
+as ever.
+
+"But I <i>won't</i> give it up!" declared Hicks, determinedly. "I have always
+been good at math, and I won't let this problem baffle me."
+
+Since the night, two weeks back, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had made his
+memorable speech, explaining to his fellow-students the "Billon-Dollar
+Mystery," and arousing in them a vast admiration for the slow-minded,
+plodding John Thorwald, every collegian had done his best to befriend the
+big Freshman. Upperclassmen helped him with his studies. Despite his almost
+rude refusal to meet any advances, the collegians always had a cheery
+greeting for him, and his class-mates, in fear and trembling, invaded
+his den at times, to show him they were his friends. Yet, despite these
+whole-hearted efforts, only two of old Bannister did the silent Thor
+seem to desire as comrades: the festive Hicks, for reasons known,
+and--remarkable to chronicle--little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+studious "Human Encyclopedia."
+
+"Colossus and Lilliputian!" the Phillyloo Bird quaintly observed once when
+this strangely assorted duo appeared on the campus. "Say, fellows--some
+time Thor will accidentally sit on Theophilus, and we'll have another
+mystery, the disappearance of our boner!"
+
+The generous Hicks, longing for Thor's awakening to come, was not in the
+least jealous of his loyal little friend, Theophilus. In fact, he was
+sincerely delighted that the unemotional Hercules desired the comradeship
+of the grind, and he urged the Human Encyclopedia to strive constantly to
+arouse in Thor a realization of college existence, and a true knowledge of
+its meaning. At least one thing, Theophilus reported, had been achieved by
+Hicks' defense of Thorwald, and the subsequent attitude of the collegians--
+the colossal Freshman was puzzled, quite naturally. When over three hundred
+youths criticized, condemned, and berated him one night, and the next, even
+before he reconsidered his decision about football, came under his window
+and cheered him, no wonder the young Norwegian was bewildered.
+
+On the football field, with his dogged determination, his bulldog way of
+hanging on to things until he mastered them, big Thor progressed slowly,
+and surely; the past Saturday, against the heavy Alton eleven, the blond
+Freshman had been sent in for the second half, and, to quote an overjoyed
+student, he had "busted things all up!" It seemed simply impossible to stop
+that terrible rush of his huge body. Time after time he plowed through the
+line for yards, and old Bannister, visioning Thor distributing Hamilton and
+Ballard over the field, in the big games, literally hugged itself.
+
+And yet, despite Thorwald's invincible prowess, despite the vast joy of
+old Bannister at the chances of the Championship, some intangible
+shadow hovered over the campus. It brooded over the training-table, the
+shower-rooms after scrimmage, on Bannister Field during practice; as yet,
+no one had dared to give it form, by voicing his thought, but though no
+youth dared admit it, something was wrong, there was a defective cog in the
+machinery of that marvelous machine, the Gold and Green eleven.
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks," quoth that sunny youth, at length, turning
+from the window; "I'll solve the problem, or what is more probable,
+Theophilus may stir that sodden hulk of humanity, after awhile. I won't
+worry about it, for that gets me nothing, and it will all come out O.K.,
+I'm positive!"
+
+At this moment, just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., picked up "Treasure Island"
+again, he heard drifting across the corridor from the room opposite, in
+Butch Brewster's familiar voice:
+
+"--Yes, I'll win three more Bs'--one each in football, baseball and track;
+next spring, I'll annex my last B at old Bannister, fellows--"
+
+His <i>last</i> B--The words struck the blithesome Hicks with sledge-hammer
+force. Big Butch Brewster was talking of his last B, when he, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., had never won his first; with a feeling almost of alarm, the
+sunny youth realized that this was his final year at old Bannister, his
+last chance to win his athletic letter, and to make happy his beloved Dad,
+by helping him to realize part of his life's ambition--to behold his son
+shattering Hicks, Sr.'s, wonderful record. His final chance, and outside of
+his hopes of winning the track award in the high-jump, Hicks saw no way to
+win his B.
+
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., as has been chronicled, the beloved Dad of the
+cheery Senior, a Pittsburgh millionaire Steel King, was a graduate of old
+Bannister, Class of '92. While wearing the Gold and Green, he had made
+an all-round athletic record never before, or afterward, rivaled on
+the campus. At football, basketball, track, and baseball, he was a
+scintillating star, annexing enough letters to start an alphabet, had they
+been different ones. Quite naturally, when the Doctor, speaking anent
+the then infantile Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., said, "Mr. Hicks, it's a
+boy!"--the one-time Bannister athlete straightway began to dream of the day
+when his only son and heir should follow in his Dad's footsteps, shattering
+the records made at Bannister, and at Yale, by Hicks, <i>pere</i>.
+
+However, to quote a sporting phrase, the son of the Steel King "upset the
+dope!" At the start of his Senior year, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had not
+annexed a single athletic honor, nor did the signs point to any records
+being in peril of getting shattered by his prowess; as Hicks himself
+phrased it, "Dame Nature was <i>some stingy</i> when she handed out the Hercules
+stuff to me!" The happy-go-lucky youth, when he matriculated as a Freshman
+at Bannister College, was builded on the general lines of a toothpick, and
+had he elected to follow a pugilistic career, a division somewhat lighter
+than the tissue paperweight class would have had to be devised to
+accommodate the splinter-student. A generous, sunny-souled, intensely
+democratic collegian, despite his father's wealth, the festive Hicks, with
+his room always open-house to all; his firm friendship for star athlete
+or humble boner, his never-failing sunny nature, together with his famous
+Hicks Personally Conducted Expeditions downtown to the Beef-Steak Busts he
+had originated, in his three years at old Bannister, had made himself the
+most popular and beloved youth on the campus, but, he had not won his B!
+
+And he had tried. With a full realization, of his Dad's ambition, his
+life-dream to behold his son a great athlete, the blithesome Hicks had
+tried, but with hilariously futile results. Nature had endowed him, as he
+told his loyal comrade, Butch Brewster, with "the Herculean build of a
+Jersey mosquito," and his athletic powers neared zero infinity. In his
+Freshman year, he inaugurated his athletic career by running the wrong way
+in the Sophomore-Freshman football game, scoring a touchdown that won for
+the enemy, and naturally, after that performance, every athletic effort was
+greeted with jeers by the students,
+
+"I <i>have</i> tried!" said Hicks, producing two letters from the study-table,
+"But not like I should have tried. I could never have played on the eleven,
+or on the nine, but I have a chance in the high-jump. I know I've been
+indolent and care-free, and I ought to have trained harder. Well, I just
+must win my track B this spring, but as to keeping the rash promise I made
+to Butch as a Freshman--not a chance!"
+
+It had been at the close of his Freshman year, after Hicks, in the
+Interclass Track Meet, had smashed hurdles, broken high-jumping cross-bars,
+finished last in several events, and jeopardized his life with the shot and
+hammer, that he made the rash vow to which he now had reference. Butch,
+believing his sunny friend had entered all the events just to entertain the
+crowd, in his fun-loving way, was teasing him about his ridiculous fiascos,
+when Hicks had told him the story--how his Dad wanted him to try and be a
+famous athlete; he showed Butch a letter, received before the meet, asking
+his son to try every event, and to keep on training, so as to win his B
+before he graduated. Butch, great-hearted, was surprised and moved by the
+revelation that the gladsome youth, even as he was jeered by his friendly
+comrades, who thought he performed for sport, was striving to have his
+Dad's dream come true; he had sympathized with his classmate, and then his
+scatter-brained colleague had aroused his indignation by vowing, with a
+swaggering confidence:
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks!' Remember this, Butch, before I graduate from
+old Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!"
+
+Butch had snorted incredulously. To win the football or the baseball B,
+the gold letter for the former, and the green one for the latter sport,
+an athlete had to play in three-fourths of the season's games, on the
+"'Varsity"; to gain the white track letter, one had to win a first place in
+some event, in a regularly scheduled track meet with another team. And now,
+Butch's skepticism seemed confirmed, for at the start of his last year at
+college, Hicks had not annexed a single B, though he bade fair to corral
+one in the spring in the high-jump.
+
+"Heigh-ho!" chuckled Hicks, at length. "Here I am threatening to get gloomy
+again! Well I'll sure train hard to win my track letter, and that seems
+all I can do! I'd like to win my three B's, and jeer at Butch, next June,
+but--<i>it can't be did</i>! I shall now twang my trusty banjo, and drive dull
+care away."
+
+Quite forgetful of the football conclave across the corridor, and of Butch
+Brewster's request for quiet, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. dragged out his
+beloved banjo, caressed its strings lovingly, and roared:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the--"
+
+"</i>Hicks</i>!" Big Butch Brewster crashed across the corridor, both doors being
+open. "Is this how you maintain a quiet? I'm going to call Thor over and
+make him sit down on you! Why, you--"
+
+"Have mercy!" plead the grinning Hicks. "Honest, Butch, I didn't go to bust
+up the league--I--I heard you talk about your B's, and I got to thinking
+that </i>I</i> have but little time to make my Dad happy; see, here's proof--read
+these letters I was perusing--"
+
+Puzzled, Butch scanned the first one, dated back in the May of their
+Freshman year; Hicks had received it before the class track meet, and, as
+chronicled, he had heard from his sunny comrade later, how it impelled the
+splinter youth to try every event, while Bannister believed him to enter
+them for fun. The letter was post-marked "Pittsburgh, Pa.," and it read:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+Your last term's report gratified me immensely, and I am proud of your
+class record, and scholastic achievements. Pitch in, and lead your class,
+and make your Dad happy.
+
+But there is something else of which I want to write, Thomas. As you must
+know, it has always been a cause of keen regret to me that you have never
+seemed to care for athletics of any sort; you appear to be too indolent and
+ease-loving to sacrifice, or to endure the hardships of training. I suppose
+it is because of my athletic record both at Bannister and at old Yale that
+I am so eager to see you become a star; in fact, it is my life's most
+cherished ambition to have you become as famous as your Dad.
+
+However, I realize that my fond dream can never come true. Nature has not
+made you naturally strong and athletic, and what athletic success you may
+gain, must come from long and hard training and practice. If you can only
+win your college letter, your B, Thomas, while at Bannister, I shall be
+fully content.
+
+I said nothing when you failed even to try for the teams at your
+Preparatory School, but I did hope that at Bannister, under good coaches
+and trainers, you would at least endeavor to win your letter. I must admit
+that I am disappointed, for you have not even made an earnest effort to
+find your event. Often, by trying everything, especially in a track meet, a
+fellow finds his event, and later stars in it.
+
+I really believe that if you would start in now to develop yourself by
+regular, systematic gymnasium work, and if you would only try, in a year
+or so you could make a Bannister team. Theodore Roosevelt, you know, was a
+puny, weakly boy, but he built himself up, and became an athlete. If you
+want to please me, start now and find your event. Attempt all the sports,
+all the various track and field events, and always build yourself up by
+exercise in the Gym.
+
+And you owe it to your Alma Mater, my son! Even if, after conscientious
+effort, you fail to win your B, to know that you have given your college
+and teams what help you could, will please your Dad. Remember, the fellow
+who toils on the scrubs is the true hero. If you become good enough to give
+the first eleven, the first nine, the first five, or the first track squad
+a hard rub and a fast practice, you are serving Bannister.
+
+I don't ask you to do this, Thomas, I only say that it will make me happy
+just to know you are striving. If you never get beyond the scrubs, just to
+hear you are serving the Gold and Green, giving your best, in that humble
+unhonored way, will please me. And if, before you graduate, you <i>can</i> win
+your B, I shall be so glad! Don't get discouraged, it may take until your
+Senior year, but once you start, <i>stick</i>.
+
+Your loving
+
+DAD.
+
+
+"Read this one, too, Butch," requested Hicks, hurriedly, as a hail of, "Oh,
+you Hicks, come here!" sounded down the corridor, from Skeet Wigglesworth's
+abode. "I'll be back as soon as Skeet finishes his foolishness. Don't wait
+for me, though, if I am delayed, for you want to be talking football."
+
+Left alone, big Butch Brewster, who of all the collegians that had known
+and loved the sunny Hicks, some now graduated, understood that his athletic
+efforts, jeered good-naturedly by the students, were made because of a
+great desire to win his B and make happy his Dad, read the second letter,
+dated a few days before:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+You are starting the last lap, son, your Senior year, and your final chance
+to win your B! Don't forget how happy it will make your Dad if you win your
+letter just once! Of course, you cannot gain it in football, for nature
+gave you no chance, nor in baseball; but in track work it is up to you.
+Train hard, Thomas, and try to win a first place; just win your track B,
+and I'll rest content!
+
+Your college record gives me great pleasure. You stand at the top in your
+studies, and you are vastly popular, while the Faculty speak highly of you.
+Let your B come as a climax to your career, and I'll be so proud of you.
+Don't forget, you are the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and those sons of old
+Eli want you to win the letter. As to football, you cannot win your gold B
+by playing three-fourths of a season's games, but you might get in a big
+game, even win it, if you'll get confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan
+about yourself. Don't mind the jeers of your comrades--they just don't
+know how you've tried to please your Dad; you owe it to your Alma Mater
+to tell, and, take my word as a football star, you have the goods! Your
+peculiar prowess has won many a contest, and old Bannister needs it this
+season, I hear--
+
+
+There was more, but big Butch scarcely saw it, bewildered as the behemoth
+Senior was; what new mystery had Hicks set afoot? What did Hicks, Sr.,
+mean by writing, "You might get in a big game, even win it, if you'll get
+confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan about yourself? You owe it to your
+Alma Mater to tell, and take my word, as a football star, you have the
+goods--" Why, everyone knew that T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., possessed no more
+football ability than a Jersey mosquito, and yet--
+
+"Another Hicks mystery," groaned Butch, holding the two letters
+thoughtfully. "And father and son are in it, But if Hicks don't get his B,
+it will be a shame. </i>Say, I know--</i>"
+
+A few moments later, good-hearted Butch Brewster, in the behalf of his
+sunny comrade, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was making to the Gold and Green
+eleven and Coach Corridan, as eloquent a speech as that blithesome youth,
+two weeks before, had made in defense of the condemned and ostracized Thor!
+He read them the two letters of Hicks' beloved Dad, and told how the cheery
+collegian wanted to win his B for his father's sake; graphically, he
+related Hicks, Sr.'s, great ambition, and how Hicks, Jr., for three years
+had vainly tried to make good at some athletic sport, and to win his
+letter. Big Butch, warming to his theme, spoke of how T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., letting the students believe that he entered every event in the track
+meet of his Freshman year just for fun, had been trying to find his event,
+and train for it; he explained that the festive youth, ever sunny-natured,
+under the good-humored jeers of his comrades, who did not know his real
+purpose, really yearned to win his B.
+
+"You fellows, and you, Coach," he thundered, "all know how Hicks, unable
+to make the 'Varsity, has always done humble service for old Bannister,
+cheerfully, gladly; how he keeps the athletes in good spirits at the
+training-table, and is always on hand after scrimmage to rub them out. He
+is chock-full of college spirit, and is intensely loyal to his Alma Mater.
+Why, look how he rounded up Thor--he ought to have his B for that!"
+
+Thanks to Butch's speech, the Gold and Green football stars, most of whom
+were Hicks' closest friends, saw the scatter-brained, happy-go-lucky
+youth in a new light; his eloquent defense of John Thorwald had shown old
+Bannister that he could be serious, but the knowledge that T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., even as he made a ridiculous farce in athletics, was ambitious
+to win his B, just to make his Dad happy, stunned them. For three years,
+the sunny Hicks' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a team, had
+meant a small-sized riot of jeers and good-natured ridicule at his expense;
+but Hicks had always grinned </i>a la</i> Cheshire cat,--and no one but good
+Butch Brewster, all the time, had known how in earnest the lovable
+collegian was.
+
+"Now," concluded Butch, "Hicks <i>may</i> win a B in track work, if he gets a
+first place in the high-jump, and if so, O.K., but if he does not--"
+
+"You mean--" Monty Merriweather--understood, "if he fails, then the
+Athletic Association ought to--"
+
+"Present him with a B!" said Butch, earnestly, "as a deserved reward for
+his faithful loyalty and service to old Bannister's athletic teams. Don't
+let him graduate without gaining his letter, and making his Dad realize a
+part of his ambition--a two-thirds vote of the Athletic Association can
+award him his letter, and when all the students know the truth about his
+ridiculous fiasco on Bannister Field, and realize the serious purpose
+beneath them all, they--"
+
+"</i>We'll give him his B</i>!" shouted Beef, loudly, "If he fails in track work
+next spring, we'll vote him his letter, anyway!"
+
+Out in the corridor, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., returning from Skeet
+Wigglesworth's room and entering his own cozy quarters, could not help
+hearing the conversation, as the doors of both his den and the room across
+the corridor were open. A great love for his comrades came to his impulsive
+heart, and a mist before his eyes, as he heard how they wanted to vote him
+his B in case he failed to win it in track work; he thrilled at Butch's
+speech, but--
+
+[Illustration B: 'Fellows,...I--I thank you from the bottom of my heart']
+
+"Fellows," he startled them by appearing in the doorway, "I--I thank you
+from the bottom of my heart. I couldn't help hearing, you know--I <i>do</i>
+appreciate your generous thoughts, but--I can't and won't accept my B
+unless I win it according to the rule of the Athletic Association."
+
+A silence, and then Butch Brewster, gripping his comrade's hand
+understandingly, held out to him the two letters.
+
+"Forgive me, old man," he breathed, "for reading them aloud, but I wanted
+the fellows to know, to appreciate you! And say, Hicks, what does your Dad
+mean by saying that you are the </i>'Class Kid'</i> of Yale, '96, and that those
+sons of old Eli want you to win your letter? And what does he mean by
+saying that you may get in a <i>big game</i>--may <i>win</i> it--that you have
+the goods in football, but lack the confidence to announce it to Coach
+Corridan? Also that old Bannister needs just the peculiar brand you
+possess?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his sunny, Cheshire cat grin illuminating his
+cherubic countenance, beamed on the eleven and Coach Corridan a moment.
+
+"Oh, that's a <i>mystery</i>," he said, cheerfully. "If I <i>do</i> gain the courage
+and confidence, I'll explain, but unless I do--it remains a--<i>mystery</i>!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+
+
+"ALL MEMBERS OF THE FIRST ELEVEN ARE URGENTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT IN
+THE ROOM OF T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.--AT EIGHT P. M. TONIGHT; YOU WILL BE
+DETAINED ONLY A FEW MINUTES, BUT LET EVERY PLAYER COME, AS A MATTER OF
+EXTREME IMPORTANCE WILL BE PRESENTED. PATRICK HENRY COERIDAN, HEAD-COACH."
+
+"Now, what do you suppose is up Coach Corridan's sleeve?" demanded T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cheerfully. "Has Ballard learned our signals, or some
+Bannister student sold them to a rival team, as per the usual football
+story? Though the notice doth not herald it, I am to be present, for my
+room is to be used, and the Coach gave me a special invitation to cut the
+Gordian knot with my keen intellect."
+
+The sunny Hicks, with Butch, Beef, Tug, and Monty, had just come from
+"Delmonico's Annex," the college dining-hall, after supper; they had paused
+before the Bulletin Board at the Gymnasium entrance, where all college
+notices were posted, and the Coach's urgent request had caught their gaze.
+The announcement had caused quite a stir on the campus. The Bannister
+youths stood in excited groups talking of it, and in the dormitories it
+superseded all thought of study; however, there seemed little chance that
+any but the "'Varsity" and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., who was always consulted
+in football problems, would know what took place in this meeting.
+
+"There is only one way to find out, Hicks," responded big Butch Brewster,
+his arm across his blithesome comrade's shoulders, "and that is, attend
+the meeting! You can wager that every member of the eleven will be there,
+except Thor--he regards it as 'foolishness,' I suppose, and he won't spare
+that precious time from his studies."
+
+At five minutes past eight, Butch's prophecy was fulfilled, for every
+member of the eleven <i>was</i> in Hicks' cozy room, except Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy, whose presence would have caused a mild sensation. It was an
+extremely quiet and orderly gathering, for Coach Corridan, who had the
+floor, was so grave that he impressed the would-be sky-larking youths.
+Having their undivided attention, he proceeded to make a speech that, to
+all intents and purposes, had much the same effect on the team and Hicks as
+a Zeppelin's bombs on London:
+
+"Boys," he spoke, in forceful sentences, driving straight to the point,
+"I am going to take the eleven, and Hicks, whose suggestions are always
+timely, into my confidence, in the hope that we, working together, may
+carry out an idea of mine for the awakening of Thor to a realization
+of things! I ask you not to let what I shall tell you be known to the
+student-body, but you fellows play with Thor every day, and you will
+understand the crisis, and appreciate <i>why</i> it is done, if I decide it
+necessary to drop John Thorwald from the football squad."
+
+"Drop Thor from the squad!" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., staggered, and
+then pandemonium broke loose among the players. Drop the Prodigious Prodigy
+from the squad, why, what <i>could</i> the Slave-Driver be thinking of? Why,
+look how Thorwald, on the scrubs, tore through the heavy 'Varsity line for
+big gains. He was simply unstoppable; and yet, almost on the eve of the big
+game that old Bannister depended on Thor to win by his splendid prowess, he
+might be dropped from the squad! Excited exclamations sounded from Captain
+Butch Brewster, Beef, and the others of the Gold and Green eleven:
+
+"Why not give the big games to Ballard and Ham, Coach?"
+
+"Say, shoot Theophilus Opperdyke in at full-back!"
+
+"Good-by, championship! No hopes now, fellows!"
+
+"If Thor doesn't play in the Big Games--good night!"
+
+A greater sensation could not have been caused even had kindly white-haired
+Prexy announced his intention of challenging Jess Willard for the World's
+Heavy-Weight Championship. Dropping that human battering-ram, Thor, from
+the football, squad was something utterly undreamed-of. Coach Corridan
+raised his hand for silence, and the youths subsided.
+
+"Hear me carefully, boys," he urged, "I know that old Bannister has come to
+regard John Thorwald as invincible, to use his vast bulk as a foundation
+on which to build hopes of the Championship, which is a bad policy, for no
+team can be a <i>one-man</i> team and win. I realize that as a football player,
+Thor hasn't an equal in the State today, and if he had the right spirit, he
+would have few in the country. It would be ridiculous to decry his prowess,
+for he is a physical phenomenon. But you remember T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+splendid defense of Thor, a week or so ago? Hicks gave you a full and clear
+explanation of the big fellow, and showed you <i>why</i> he does not know what
+college spirit is, what loyalty and love for one's Alma Mater mean! His
+masterly speech changed your attitude toward Thor, and even before he
+decided to play football, for Mr. Hicks' sake, you admired him, because
+of his indomitable purpose, his promise to his dying mother. Now </i>I</i> am
+telling you why he may be dropped from the squad, because I want you
+fellows to give Thor a square deal, to remember what Hicks told you of him,
+and to keep on striving to awaken him to the true meaning of campus years,
+to make him realize that college life is more than a mere buying of
+knowledge. I want to keep him on the squad, if humanly possible, and I
+shall outline my plot later.
+
+"Tomorrow we play Latham College. It is the last game before the big games
+for The State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Saturday after this,
+we play Hamilton, and the following week Ballard, the Champions! The eleven
+I send in against those teams must be a solid unit, <i>one</i> in spirit and
+purpose--every member of the Gold and Green team must be welded with his
+team-mates, and they must forget everything but that their Alma Mater must
+win the Championship! With no thought of self-glory, no other purpose in
+playing than a love for old Bannister, every fellow must go into those
+games to fight for his Alma Mater! Now, as for Thor, I need not tell you
+that he is not in sympathy with our ambition; he simply does not understand
+campus tradition and spirit. He is as yet not possessed of an Alma Mater;
+he plays football only because of gratitude to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., and he hates to lose the time from his studies for the practice.
+The football squad knows that his presence is a veritable wet blanket on
+enthusiasm and the team's fighting spirit."
+
+It was true. That intangible shadow of something wrong, brooding over
+training-table, shower-room, and Bannister Field, that self-evident
+truth which almost every collegian had for days confessed to himself yet
+hesitated to voice, had been given definite form by Coach Corridan talking
+to the eleven. The good that Thorwald might do for the team by his superb
+prowess and massive bulk was more than offset and nullified by his
+attitude.
+
+To the blond Colossus, daily practice was unutterable mental torture. His
+mind was on his studies, to which his bulldog purpose shackled him; he
+begrudged the time spent on Bannister Field; he was stolid, silent, aloof.
+He scarcely ever spoke, except when addressed. He reported for practice at
+the last second, went through the scrimmage like a great, dumb, driven ox,
+doing as he was ordered; and when the squad was dismissed he hurried to his
+room. He was among the squad, but not of them; he neither understood nor
+cared about their love for old Bannister, their vast desire to win for
+their Alma Mater; he played football because he was grateful to Hicks, Sr.,
+for helping him to get started toward his goal, but as Coach Corridan now
+told the 'Varsity, he killed the squad's enthusiasm,
+
+"All of this cannot fail to damage the <i>esprit de corps</i>, the <i>morale</i>, of
+the eleven," declared Coach Corridan, having outlined Thor's attitude. "I
+know that every member of the squad, if Thor played the game because of
+college spirit, for love of old Bannister, would rejoice at his prowess.
+But as it is they are justly resentful that he is not in the spirit of the
+game. What we may gain by his playing, we lose because the others cannot do
+their best with his example to hurt their fighting spirit. I do not want,
+nor will I have on my eleven, any player who plays for other reasons than a
+love for his Alma Mater, be he a Hogan, Brickley, Thorpe, or Mahan. I have
+waited, hoping Thorwald would be awakened, as Hicks explained, but now I
+must act. Tomorrow's game with Latham must see Thor awakened, or I must,
+for the sake of the eleven, drop him from the squad for the rest of the
+season.
+
+"Yet I beg of you, in case the plan I shall propose fails, remember Hicks'
+appeal! Do not condemn or ostracize John Thorwald in any degree. He has
+three more seasons of football, so let us keep on trying to make him
+understand campus life, college tradition. Be his friends, help him all you
+can, and sooner or later he will awaken. Something may suddenly shock him
+to a true understanding of what old Bannister means to a fellow. Or perhaps
+the awakening will be slow, but it must come. And Bannister can win without
+Thor, don't forget that! We'll make one final effort to awaken Thor, and
+if it fails, just forget him, boys, so far as football goes, and watch the
+Gold and Green win that championship."
+
+"What is your scheme, Coach?" questioned Captain Butch Brewster, his honest
+countenance showing how heavily the responsibility of team-leader weighed
+upon him. "You are right; as Thor is now, he is a handicap to the eleven,
+but--"
+
+"My idea is this," explained the Slave-Driver earnestly. "Select some
+student to go to Thorwald and try to show him that unless he gets into the
+game and plays for old Bannister, he will be dropped from the squad. If
+possible, let the fellow make him understand that, in his case, it will be
+a shame and a dishonor. Now, Butch, you and Hicks can probably approach
+Thor, or perhaps you know of someone who--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cherubic countenance showed the light of dawning
+inspiration, and Coach Corridan paused, as the sunny youth exhibited a
+desire to say something, with him not by any means a phenomenal
+happening; given the floor, the blithesome youth burst forth excitedly:
+"Theophilus--Theophilus Opperdyke is the one! He has more influence over
+Thor than any other student, and the big fellow likes the little boner.
+Thor will at least listen to Theophilus, which Is more than any of us can
+gain from him."
+
+After the meeting had adjourned, and the last inspection had been made in
+the other dorms, the Seniors being exempt, several members of the Gold and
+Green team--Captain Butch, Beef, Pudge, Monty, Roddy, and Bunch, together
+with little Theophilus Opperdyke, dragged from his studies--foregathered in
+the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; those who had heard the
+coach's talk were still stunned at the ban likely to be placed on the
+Brobdingnagian Thor. On the campus outside Creighton Hall, a horde of
+Bannister youths, incited by Tug Cardiff, who gave them no reason for his
+act, were making a strenuous effort to awaken the Prodigious Prodigy,
+evidently depending on noise to achieve that end, for a vast sound-wave
+rolled up to Hicks' windows--"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!
+He's--all--right!"
+
+"Listen!" exploded T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., indignantly. "You and I,
+Theophilus, would give a Rajah's ransom just to hear the fellows whoop it
+up for us like that, and it has no more effect on that sodden hulk of a
+Thor than bombarding an English super-dreadnaught with Roman candles!
+Howsomever, Coach Corridan exploded a shrapnel bomb on old Bannister's
+eleven tonight."
+
+Then Hicks carefully outlined to the dazed little boner the substance of
+the coach's talk to the team, and Theophilus was alarmed when he thought of
+Thor's being dropped from the squad. When Captain Butch had outlined the
+Slave-Driver's plot for striving to awaken the Colossus to a realization of
+what a disgrace it would be to be sent from the gridiron, though he did not
+announce that the Human Encyclopedia had been elected to carry out Coach
+Corridan's last-hope idea, Theophilus sat on the edge of the chair,
+blinking owlishly at them over his big-rimmed spectacles.
+
+"After all, fellows," quavered Theophilus nervously, "Coach Corridan, if he
+drops Thor from the squad, won't create such a riot on the campus as you
+might expect. You see, the students, even as they built and planned on
+Thor, gradually came to know that there is vastly more to be considered
+than physical power. That great bulk actually acts as a drag on the eleven,
+because Thor isn't in sympathy with things! Still, if he could only be
+aroused, awakened, wouldn't the team play football, with him striving for
+old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for Hicks' dad?
+Oh, I <i>do</i> hope the Coach's plan succeeds, and he awakens tomorrow; I
+know the boys won't condemn him, if he doesn't, but--I--I want him to
+understand!"
+
+"It's his last chance this season," reflected T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+enshrouded in a penumbra of gloom. "I made a big boast that I would round
+up a smashing full-back. I returned to Bannister with the Prodigious
+Prodigy. I made a big mystery of him, and then--biff!--Thor quit football.
+Then I explained the mystery, and got the fellows to admire him, and when
+Thor decided to play the game I thought 'All O.K.; I'll just wait until
+he scatters Hamilton and Ballard over Bannister Field, then I'll swagger
+before Butch and say, "Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!"' But now
+Thor has spilled the beans again."
+
+"I--I hope that the one you have chosen to appeal to Thor--" spoke
+Theophilus timorously, "will succeed, for--Oh, I <i>don't</i> want him to be
+dropped from the squad, and--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who had been gazing at little Theophilus Opperdyke with
+a basilisk glare that perturbed the bewildered Human Encyclopedia, suddenly
+strode across the room and placed his hand on the grind's thin shoulders.
+
+"Theophilus, old man, it's up to you!" he said earnestly. "Thor has a
+strong regard for you; in fact, outside of his good-natured tolerance
+for Hicks, you alone have his friendship. Now I want you to go to him,
+Theophilus, and make a last appeal to Thor. Try to awaken him, to make him
+understand his peril of being dropped from the squad, unless he plays
+the game for his college! It's for old Bannister, old man, for your Alma
+Mater--"
+
+"Go to it, Theophilus!" urged Beef McNaughton. "Coach Corridan said Thor
+might be suddenly awakened by a shock, but no electric battery can shock
+that Colossus, and, besides, miracles don't happen nowadays. Yes, it's up
+to you, old man."
+
+For a moment little Theophilus, his big-rimmed spectacles falling off
+as fast as he replaced them, and his puny frame tense with excitement,
+hesitated. Sitting on the extreme edge of the chair, he surveyed his
+comrades solemnly and was convinced that they were in earnest. Then, "I--I
+will <i>try</i>, sir!" exclaimed Theophilus, who would <i>never</i> forget his
+Freshman training. "I'm <i>sure</i> Hicks, or somebody, could do It better than
+I; but--I'll try!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+
+
+ "College ties can ne'er be broken--
+ Loyal will remain each heart;
+ Though the last farewell be spoken--
+ And from Bannister we part!
+
+ "Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee--
+ Till we from life shall part!"
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous, intensely studious Human Encyclopedia,
+stood at the window of John Thorwald's study room. That behemoth, desiring
+quiet, had moved his study-table and chair to a vacant room across the
+second-floor corridor of Creighton, the Freshman dormitory, when the
+Bannister youths cheered him, and he was still there, so that Theophilus,
+on his mission, had finally located him by his low rumblings, as he
+laboriously read out his Latin. The little Senior was gazing across the
+brightly lighted Quadrangle. He could see into the rooms of the other
+class dormitories, where the students studied, skylarked, rough-housed,
+or conversed on innumerable topics; from a room in Nordyke, the abode of
+care-free Juniors, a splendidly blended sextette sang songs of their
+Alma Mater, and their rich voices drifted across the Quad. to Thor and
+Theophilus:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+ Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!"
+
+Theophilus turned from the window, and looked despairingly at that young
+Colossus, Thor. The behemoth Norwegian, oblivious to everything except the
+geometry problem now causing him to sweat, rested his massive head on his
+palms, elbows on the study-table, and was lost in the intricate labyrinth
+of "Let the line ABC equal the line BVD." The frail chair creaked under his
+ponderous bulk. On the table lay an unopened letter that had come in the
+night's mail, for, tackling one problem, the bulldog Hercules never let go
+his grip until he solved it, and nothing else, not even Theophilus, could
+secure his attention. Hence the Human Encyclopedia, trembling at the
+terrific importance of the mission entrusted to him, waited, thrilled by
+the Juniors' songs, which failed to penetrate Thor's mind.
+
+"Oh, what <i>can</i> I do?" breathed Theophilus, sitting down nervously on the
+edge of a chair and peering owlishly over his big-rimmed spectacles at the
+stolid John Thorwald. "I am sure that, in time, I can help Thor to--to know
+campus life better; but--<i>tomorrow</i> is his last chance! He will be dropped
+from the squad, unless--"
+
+As Thor at last leaned back and gazed at his little comrade, just then, to
+the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," an augmented chorus drifted across the
+Quadrangle:
+
+ "And we'll sing one song
+ For the college that we love--
+ For our dear old Bannister--good-by"
+
+To the Bannister students there was something tremendously queer in the
+friendship of Theophilus and Thor. That the huge Freshman, of all the
+collegians, should have chosen the timorous little boner was most puzzling.
+Yet, to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a keen reader of human nature, it was
+clear; Thorwald thought of nothing but study, Theophilus was a grind,
+though he possessed intense college spirit, hence Thor was naturally drawn
+to the little Senior by the mutual bond of their interest in books, and
+Theophilus, with his hero-worshiping soul, intensely admired the splendid
+purpose of John Thorwald, toiling to gain knowledge, because of the promise
+of his dying mother. The grind, who thought that next to T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., Thor was the "greatest ever," as Hicks phrased it, had been, doing
+what that care-free collegian termed "missionary work," with the stolid,
+unimaginative Prodigious Prodigy for some weeks. Thrilled with the thought
+that he worked for his Alma Mater, he quietly strove to make Thorwald
+glimpse the true meaning and purpose of college life and its broadness of
+development. The loyal Theophilus lost no opportunity of impressing his
+behemoth friend with the sacred traditions of the campus, or of explaining
+why Thor was wrong in characterizing all else than study as foolishness and
+waste of time.
+
+"Thor," began Theophilus timidly yet determinedly, for he was serving old
+Bannister now, "old man, do you feel that you are giving the fellows at
+Bannister a square deal?"
+
+John Thorwald, slowly tearing open the letter that had come that night,
+and had lain, unnoticed, on the study-table while he wrestled with his
+geometry, turned suddenly. The Human Encyclopedia's vast earnestness and
+the strange query he had fired at Thor, surprised even that stolid mammoth.
+
+"Why, what do you mean, Theophilus?" spoke Thor slowly. "A square deal?
+Why, I owe them nothing! I sacrifice my time for them, leaving my studies
+to go out and waste precious time foolishly on football. Why--"
+
+"I mean this," Theophilus kept doggedly on, his earnest desire to stir Thor
+conquering his natural timidity. "You were brought to old Bannister by
+Hicks, who made a great mystery of you, so we knew nothing of you; but the
+fellows all thought you were willing to play football. Then, after they
+got enthused, and builded hopes of the championship on <i>you</i>, came
+your quitting. Hicks defended you, Thor, and changed the boys' bitter
+condemnation to vast admiration, by telling of your life, your father's
+being a castaway, your mother's dying wish, your toil to get learning, and
+your inability to grasp college life. Then from gratitude to Mr. Hicks you
+started to play again--naturally, the students waxed enthusiastic, when you
+ripped the 'Varsity to pieces, but now you may be dropped by the coach,
+after tomorrow, because you don't play for old Bannister, and your
+indifference kills the team's fighting spirit. You do not care if you are
+dropped; it will give you more time to study, and relieve you of your
+obligation, as you so quixotically view it, to play because Mr. Hicks will
+be glad; but--think of the fellows.
+
+"They, Thor, disappointed in you, their hopes of your bringing by your
+massive body and huge strength the Championship to old Bannister shattered,
+are still your friends--they of the eleven, I mean especially, for, as yet,
+the rest do not know you may be dropped. And the fellows came beneath your
+window tonight to cheer you; they will do so, Thor, even if you are dropped
+and they know that you will not use that prodigious power for their Alma
+Mater in the big games; they will stand by you, for they understand! Just
+think, old man; haven't the fellows, despite your rude rebuffs, <i>tried</i>
+to be your comrades? Haven't they helped you to get settled to work and
+assisted you with your studies? Why, you have been a big boor, cold and
+aloof, you have upset their hopes of you in football, and yet they have no
+condemnation for you, naught but warm friendliness.
+
+"You are not giving them or yourself a square deal, Thor! You won't even
+<i>try</i> to understand campus life, to grasp its real purpose, to realize what
+tradition is! The time will come, Thor, when you will see your mistake; you
+will yearn for their good fellowship, you will learn that getting knowledge
+is not all of college life. You will know that this 'silly foolishness' of
+singing songs and giving the yell, of rooting for the eleven, of loyalty
+and love for one's Alma Mater, is something worth while. And you may find
+it out too late. Oh, if you could only understand that it isn't what you
+take from old Bannister that makes a man of you, it is what you give to
+your college--in athletics, in your studies, in every phase of campus life;
+that in toiling and sacrificing for your Alma Mater you grow and develop,
+and reap a rich reward!"
+
+Could T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and Green eleven
+have heard little Theophilus' fervent and eloquent appeal to John Thorwald,
+they would have felt like giving three cheers for him. They loved this
+pathetic little boner, who, because of his pitifully frail body, could
+never fight for old Bannister on gridiron, diamond, or track, and they
+tremendously admired him for working for his college and for the redemption
+of Thor. Timorous and shrinking by nature, whenever his Alma Mater, or a
+friend, needed him the Human Encyclopedia fought down his painful timidity
+and came up to scratch nobly.
+
+It was Theophilus whose clear logic had vastly aided T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., to originate The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, in 1919's Sophomore
+year, and quell Roddy Perkins' Freshman Equal Rights campaign. In fact, it
+had been the boner's suggestion that gave Hicks his needed inspiration.
+And, a Junior, Theophilus had been elected business manager of the
+</i>Bannister Weekly</i>, with Hicks as editor-in-chief as a colossal joke. The
+entire burden of that almost defunct periodical had been thrust on those
+two, and, thanks to the grind's intensely humorous "copy," the </i>Weekly</i> had
+been revived and rebuilt. And Theophilus, in writing the humorous articles,
+had been moved by a great ambition to do something for old Bannister.
+
+"Look at me, Thor!" continued Theophilus Opperdyke, his puny body dwarfed
+as he faced the colossal Prodigious Prodigy. "A poor, weak, helpless
+nothing! I'd cheerfully sacrifice all the scholastic honor or glory I ever
+won, or shall win, just to make a touchdown for the Gold and Green, just to
+win a baseball game, or to break the tape in a race for old Bannister!
+And you--<i>you</i>, with that tremendous body, that massive bulk, that vast
+strength--you won't play the game for your Alma Mater, you won't throw
+that big frame into the scrimmage, thrilled with a desire to win for your
+college! Oh, what wonderful things you <i>could</i> do with your powerful build;
+but it means nothing to you, while </i>I--</i> Oh, you don't care, you just won't
+awaken; and, unless you do, in tomorrow's game you'll be dropped from the
+squad, a disgrace."
+
+John Thorwald-Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, that Gargantuan Freshman of
+whom Bannister said he possessed no soul--stirred uneasily, shifted his
+vast tonnage from one foot to the other, and stared at little Theophilus
+Opperdyke. That solemn Senior, who had not seen the slightest effect his
+"Missionary Work" was having on the stolid Thor, was in despair; but he did
+not know the truth. As Hicks had once said, "You don't know nothing what
+goes on in Thor's dome. There's a wall of solid concrete around the
+machinery of his mind, and you can't see the wheels, belts, and cogs at
+work!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with all his keen insight into human nature, had
+failed utterly to diagnose Thor's case, had not even stumbled on the true
+cause of that young giant's aloofness. The truth was unknown to anyone,
+but there was one natural reason for John Thorwald's not mingling with his
+fellows of the campus-the blond Colossus was inordinately bashful! From his
+fifteenth year, Thor had seen the seamy side of life, had lived, grown and
+developed among men. In his wanderings in the Klondike, the wild Northwest,
+in Panama, his experiences as cabin-boy, miner, cowboy, lumber-jack, and
+Canal Zone worker, he had existed where everything was roughness and
+violence, where brawn, not brain, usually held sway, where supremacy was
+won, kept, and lost by fists, spiked boots, or guns! In his adventurous
+career, young Thorwald had but seldom encountered the finer things of life,
+and his nature, while wholesome, was sturdy and virile, not likely to be
+stirred by sentiment; so that now, among the good-natured, friendly boys of
+old Bannister, he, accustomed to rude surroundings and rough acquaintances,
+was bashful.
+
+And Theophilus, as well as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., shot far wide of the
+mark in believing that the big Hercules had no power to feel; he possessed
+that power, but, with it the ability to conceal his feelings. They thought
+nothing appealed to him, had stirred his soul, at college, but they were
+wrong; true, Thor was unable to understand this new, strange life; he was
+puzzled when the collegians condemned and ostracized him at first, when
+he quit football because it was not a Faculty rule to play, but he was
+grateful when Hicks defended him, and the admiration of the student-body
+was welcome to him. He had thought he was doing all they desired of him,
+when he went back to the game, and now--when Theophilus told him that he
+might be dropped from the squad, he was bewildered. He could not understand
+just why this could be, when he was reporting for scrimmage every day!
+
+But the friendliness of the youths, their kind help with his studies,
+the assistance of the genial Hicks, and, more than all, above even
+the admiration of the Freshmen for his promise and purpose, the daily
+missionary work of little Theophilus, for whom the massive Thor felt a real
+love, had been slowly, insidiously undermining John Thorwald's reserve. No
+longer did he condemn what he did not understand. At times he had a vague
+feeling that all was not right, that, after all, he was missing something,
+that study was not all; and yet, bashful as he was, fearing to appear
+rough, crude, and uncouth among these skylarking youths, Thor kept on his
+silent, lonely way, and they thought him untouched by their overtures. Of
+late, when unobserved, the big Freshman had stood by the window, watching
+the collegians on the campus, listening to their songs of old Bannister,
+and yet because he felt embarrassed when with them, he gave no sign that he
+cared.
+
+Now, however, the splendid appeal of loyal, timorous Theophilus stirred
+Thor, and yet he could not break down the wall of reserve he had builded
+around himself. He had deluded himself that this comradeship was not for
+him, that he could never mingle with these happy-go-lucky youths, that
+he must plod straight ahead, and live to himself, because his past had
+roughened him.
+
+"You are a Freshman!" spoke Theophilus, unaware that forces were at work on
+Thor, and making a last effort. "You stand on the very threshold of your
+campus years; everything is before you. I am at the journey's end--very
+nearly, for in June I graduate from old Bannister. I never had the chance
+to fight for my Alma Mater on the athletic field, and you--Oh, think of
+what you can do! About to leave the campus, I, and my class-mates, realize
+how dear our college has become to us. If <i>you</i> could just know that
+Bannister means something to you, even now, if you only felt it, you
+could make your years mean great things to you. Thor, could you leave old
+Bannister tomorrow without regret, without one sigh for the dear old place?
+We, who soon shall leave it forever, fully understand Shakespeare, when in
+a sonnet he wrote:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well which thou must leave ere long!"
+
+There was a silence, and then Thor slowly drew out a letter from its
+envelope, scanning the scrawl across its pages. A few moments, while its
+meaning seemed to seep into his slow-acting mind, and then a look of
+helpless bewilderment, as though the stolid Freshman just could not
+understand at all, came to his face; a minute John Thorwald stood, as in a
+trance, staring dully at the letter.
+
+"Thor! Thor! What's the matter? What's wrong?" quavered the alarmed
+Theophilus, "Have you gotten bad news?"
+
+"Read it, read it," said the big Freshman lifelessly, extending the letter
+to the startled Senior. "It's all over, I suppose, and I've got to go to
+work again. I've got to leave college, and toil once more, and save. My
+promise to my mother can't be fulfilled--yet. And just as I was getting
+fairly started."
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke hurriedly perused the message, which had come to Thor
+in that night's mail but which the blond giant had let lie unnoticed while
+he tackled his geometry. With difficulty Theophilus deciphered the scrawl
+on an official letterhead:
+
+
+THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANA STEAMSHIP LINE
+
+(New York Offices)
+
+Nov. 4, 19--.
+
+DEAR SON:
+
+I am writing to tell you that I've run into a sort of hurricane, and you
+and I have got a hard blow to weather. I started you at college on the
+$5,000 received from the heirs of Henry B. Kingsley, on whose yacht, as
+you know, I was wrecked in the South Seas, and marooned for ten years. I
+figured on giving you an education with that sum, eked out by my wages, and
+what you earn in vacations.
+
+I had the $5,000, untouched, in a New York bank, and I wanted to take it
+over to Christiania; when I was about to sail on my last voyage, I drew out
+the sum, and put it in care of the Purser of the </i>Norwhal</i>, on which I
+was mate, intending, of course, to get it on docking, and deposit it in
+Christiania. At the last hour I was transferred to the </i>Valkyrie</i>, to sail
+a few days later, and I knew the </i>Norwhal's</i> purser would leave the $5,000
+for me in the Company's Christiania offices, so I did not bother to
+transfer it to the </i>Valkyrie</i>.
+
+Perhaps you read in the newspapers that the </i>Norwhal</i> struck a floating
+mine, and went down with a heavy loss of life. The Purser was among those
+lost, and none of the ship's papers were saved; my $5,000, of course, went
+down also.
+
+I am sorry, John, but there seems nothing to do but for you to leave
+college and work. For your mother's sake, I wish we could avoid it; but we
+must wait and work and tackle it again. Your first term expenses are paid,
+so stay until the term is out. Perhaps Mr. Hicks can give you a job in one
+of his steel mills again, but we must work our own way, son. Don't lose
+courage, we'll fight this out together with the memory of your promise to
+your dying mother to spur you on. The road may be long and rocky but we'll
+make it. Just work and save, and in a year or two you can start at college
+again. You can study at night, too, and keep on learning.
+
+I'll write later. Stay at college till the term is up, and in the meantime
+try to land a job. However, you won't have any trouble to do that. Keep
+your nerve, boy, for your mother's sake. It's a hard blow, but we'll
+weather it, never fear, and reach port.
+
+Your father,
+
+JOHN THORWALD, SR.
+
+P.S. I am sailing on the </i>Valkyrie</i> today, will write you on my return to
+New York, in a few weeks.
+
+
+Theophilus looked at the massive young Norwegian, who had taken this
+solar-plexus blow with that same stolid apathy that characterized his every
+action. He wanted to offer sympathy, but he knew not how to reach Thor. He
+fully understood how terrific the blow was, how it must stagger the
+big, earnest Freshman, just as he, after ten years of grinding toil, of
+sacrifice, of grim, unrelenting determination, had conquered obstacles and
+fought to where he had a clear track ahead. Just as it seemed that fate had
+given him a fair chance, with his father rescued and five thousand dollars
+to give him a college course, this terrible misfortune had befallen him.
+Theophilus realized what it must mean to this huge, silent Hercules, just
+making good his promise to his dying mother, to give up his studies, and go
+back to work, toil, labor, to begin all over again, to put off his college
+years.
+
+"Leave me, please," said Thor dully, apparently as unmoved by the blow
+as he had been by Theophilus' appeal. "I--I would like to be alone, for
+awhile."
+
+Left alone, John Thorwald stood by the window, apparently not thinking of
+anything in particular, as he gazed across the brightly lighted Quad. The
+huge Freshman seemed in a daze--utterly unable to comprehend the disaster
+that had befallen him; he was as stolid and impassive as ever, and
+Theophilus might have thought that he did not care, even at having to give
+up his college course, had not the Senior known better.
+
+Across the Quadrangle, from the room of the Caruso-like Juniors,
+accompanied by a melodious banjo-twanging, drifted:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+
+ "'Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!'
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee
+ Till we from life shall part."
+
+Strangely enough, the behemoth Thorwald was not thinking so much of having
+to give up his studies, of having to lay aside his books and take up again
+the implements of toil. He was not pondering on the cruelty of fate in
+making him abandon, at least temporarily, his goal; instead, his thoughts
+turned, somehow, to his experiences at old Bannister, to the football
+scrimmages, the noisy sessions in "Delmonico's Annex," the college
+dining-hall, to the skylarking he had often watched in the dormitories. He
+thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks, good Butch
+Brewster, loyal little Theophilus; and as he reflected, he heard those
+Juniors, over the way, singing. Just now they were chanting that
+exquisitely beautiful Hawaiian melody, "Aloha Oe," or "Farewell to Thee,"
+making the words tell of parting from their Alma Mater. There was something
+in the refrain that seemed to break down Thor's wall of reserve, to melt
+away his aloofness, and he caught himself listening eagerly as they sang.
+
+Somehow he felt no desire to condemn those care-free youths, to call their
+singing silly foolishness, to say they were wasting their time and their
+fathers' money. Queer, but he actually liked to hear them sing, he realized
+he had come to listen for their saengerfests. Now that he had to leave
+college, for the first time he began to ponder on what he must leave. Not
+alone books and study, but--
+
+As he stood there, an ache in his throat, and an awful sorrow overwhelming
+him, with the richly blended voices of the happy Juniors drifting across to
+him, chanting a song of old Ballard, big Thor murmured softly:
+
+"What did little Theophilus say? What was it Shakespeare wrote? Oh, I have
+it:
+
+ "'This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THOR'S AWAKENING
+
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+"In the famous words of the late Mike Murphy," said T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+"the celebrated Yale and Penn track trainer, 'you can beat a team that
+can't be beat, but--you can't beat a team that won't be beat!' Latham must
+be in the latter class."
+
+It was the Bannister-Latham game, and the first half had just ended.
+Captain Butch Brewster's followers had trailed dejectedly from Bannister
+Field to the Gym, where Head Coach Corridan was flaying them with a tongue
+as keen as the two-edged sword that drove Adam and Eve from the Garden of
+Eden. A cold, bleak November afternoon, a leaden sky lowered overhead, and
+a chill wind swept athwart the field; in the concrete stands, the loyal
+"rooters" of the Gold and Green, or of the Gold and Blue, shivered,
+stamped, and swung their arms, waiting for the excitement of the scrimmage
+again to warm them. Yet, the Bannister cohorts seemed silent and
+discouraged, while the Latham supporters went wild, singing, cheering,
+howling. A look at the score-board explained this:
+
+ END OF FIRST HALF: SCORE:
+ Bannister ........ 0
+ Latham ........... 3
+
+The statement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a gold and green
+blanket and humped on the Bannister bench, to shivering little Theophilus
+Opperdyke, the Phillyloo Bird, Shad Weatherby, and several more collegians
+who had joined him when the half ended, was singularly appropriate. In
+Latham's light, fast eleven, trained to the minute, coached to a shifty,
+tricky style of play with numberless deceptive fakes from which they worked
+the forward pass successfully, Bannister seemed to have encountered, as
+Mike Murphy phrased it, "A team that won't be beat!" According to the
+advance dope of the sporting writers, who, in football, are usually as good
+prophets as the Weather Bureau, Bannister was booked to come out the winner
+by at least five touchdowns to none. But here a half was gone, and Latham
+led by three points, scored on a rather lucky field-goal!
+
+The psychology of football is inexplicable. Yale, beaten by Virginia,
+Brown, and Wash-Jeff, with the Blue's best gridiron star ineligible to
+play, a team that seemed at odds with itself and the 'Varsity, mismanaged,
+poorly coached, journeys to Princeton to battle with old Nassau; the Tiger,
+Its tail as yet untwisted, presents its best eleven for several seasons, a
+great favorite in the odds, and yet the final score is Yale, 14; Princeton,
+7! A strange fear of the Bulldog, bred of many bitter defeats, of similar
+occasions when a feeble Yale team aroused itself and trampled an invincible
+Orange and Black eleven, when the Blue fought old Nassau with a team that
+"wouldn't" be beat, gave victory to the poorer aggregation. So many things
+unforeseen often enter into a football contest, shifting the balance of
+power from the stronger to the weaker team. One eleven gets the jump on the
+other, the favorite weirdly goes to pieces--team dissension may exist, a
+dozen other causes--but, boiled down, Mike Murphy's statement was most
+appropriate now.
+
+Latham simply <i>would not</i> be beat! The sporting pages had said: "Latham
+simply can't beat Bannister!" Here the team, that could not be beaten was
+being defeated, and the team that would not be defeated was, so far, the
+victor. Perhaps the threatened dropping of Thor from the Gold and Green
+squad shook somewhat Captain Butch's players; more likely, the Latham
+aggregation got the jump on Bannister, opening up a bewildering attack of
+criss-crosses, line plunges, cross-bucks, and tandems, from all of which
+the forward pass frequently developed; they literally overwhelmed a
+supposedly unbeatable team. And once they got the edge, it was hard for
+Bannister to regain poise and to smother the fast plays that swept through
+or around the bewildered eleven.
+
+"We have <i>got</i> to beat 'em!" growled Shad, "Mike Murphy or not. Why,
+if little old Latham cleans us up, smash go our chances of the State
+Championship! Oh, look at Thor--the big mountain of muscle. Why doesn't he
+wake up, and go push that team off the field?"
+
+Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, his vast hulk unprotected from the cold wind
+by a football blanket, squatted on the ground, on the side-line, apparently
+in a trance. Ever since the night before, when his father's letter had
+dealt such a knock-out blow to his hopes of fulfilling the promise to his
+dying mother, had rudely side-tracked him from the climb to his goal, the
+blond giant had maintained that dumb apathy. If anything, it seemed that
+the cruel blow of fate had only served to make Thor more stolid and
+impassive than ever, and Theophilus wondered if the Colossus had really
+grasped the import of the tragic letter as yet. The news had spread over
+the college and campus, and the students were sincerely sorry for Thor. But
+to offer him sympathy was about as difficult as consoling a Polar bear with
+the toothache.
+
+Coach Corridan, carrying out his plot, had decided not to start Thor in
+the first half of the game. So the Norwegian Hercules, having received no
+orders to the contrary, however, donned togs and appeared on the side-line,
+where he had sat, paying not the slightest heed to the scrimmage and
+seemingly unaware that the Gold and Green was facing defeat and the loss of
+the Championship, for a game lost would put the team out of the running.
+All big John Thorwald knew was, in a few weeks he must leave old Bannister,
+must give up, for a time, his college course. Just when the grim battle was
+won, he must leave, to work. Not that the Viking cared about toil. It was
+the delay that chafed even his stolid self. He was stunned at having to
+wait, maybe two years, before starting again.
+
+And yet, as he squatted on the side-line, oblivious to everything but his
+bitter reflections, the Theophilus-quoted words of Shakespeare persisted in
+intruding on his thoughts:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long."
+
+Try as he would, he could not fight away the keen realization that
+books and study were not all he would regret to leave. He was forced to
+acknowledge that his mind kept wandering to other things. He found himself
+pondering on the parting with Theophilus Opperdyke, with that crazy Hicks;
+he wondered if he, out in the world again, toiling his lonely way, would
+miss the glad fellowship of these care-free youths that he had watched,
+but never shared, if he would ever think of the weeks at old Bannister.
+Somehow, he felt that he would often vision the Quad at night, brightly
+lighted, dormitories' lights agleam, students crossing and recrossing,
+shouting at studious comrades. He would hear again the melodious
+banjo-twanging, the gleeful saengerfests, the happy skylarking of the boys.
+He had never entered into all this, and yet he knew he would miss it all;
+why, he would even miss the daily scrimmage on Bannister Field; the noisy
+shower-room, with its clouds of steam, and white forms flitting ghostlike.
+He would miss the classrooms; in brief, <i>everything</i>!
+
+John Thorwald was awakening! Even had this blow not befallen him, the huge,
+slow-minded Norwegian, in time, with Theophilus Opperdyke's missionary
+work, would have gradually come to understand things better--at least, to
+know he was wrong in his ideas, which is the beginning of wisdom. Already,
+he had ceased to condemn all this as foolishness, to rail at the youths
+for wasting time and money. Already something stirred within him, and yet,
+stolid as he was, bashful among the collegians, he was apparently the same.
+But the sudden shock Head Coach Corridan spoke of had come. His father's
+letter telling of his loss and that Thor must leave Bannister had awakened
+him to the startling knowledge that he did care for something more than
+study, that all the things that had puzzled him, that he had sneered at,
+meant something to his existence, that he dreaded leaving other things than
+his books.
+
+"I--I don't understand things," thought Thorwald. "But--if I could only
+stay, I'd want to learn. I'd try to get this 'college' spirit! Oh, I've
+been all wrong, but if I could only stay--"
+
+As if in answer to his unspoken thought, the big Freshman beheld marching
+toward him Theophilus Opperdyke, his spectacles off, and his face aglow,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., evidently in the throes of emotional insanity; a
+Senior whom he knew as Parson Palmetter; Registrar Worthington, and Doctor
+Alford, the kindly, beloved Prexy of old Bannister. The last named placed
+his hand on the puzzled behemoth's ponderous shoulder.
+
+"Thorwald," he said kindly, "Hicks, Opperdyke and Brewster, last night,
+came to my study and acquainted me with your misfortune. They told me of
+your life-history, of your splendid purpose to gain knowledge, to make
+something of yourself, for your dying mother's sake. Old Bannister needs
+men like you, Thorwald. Perhaps you do not understand campus ways and
+tradition yet, perhaps you are not in sympathy with everything here; but
+once a love for your Alma Mater is awakened, you will be a power for good
+for your college.
+
+"Now I at once took up the matter with Mr. Palmetter, President of The
+Students' Aid Bureau. This year, for the first time in our history, we have
+dispensed with janitors and sweeps in the dormitories, and with dining-hall
+waiters, so that needy and deserving students may work their way through
+Bannister. Owing to the fact that Mr. Deane, a Senior, has given up his
+dormitory, Creighton Hall, as he has funds for the year and needs the time
+to study, we can offer you board and tuition, in exchange for your work in
+the dormitory, and waiting on tables in the dining-hall. Since your first
+term bills, until January first, are paid, if you will start to work at
+once, we will credit any work done this term on books and incidentals for
+next term. By this means--"
+
+"Why, you don't--you <i>can't</i> mean--" rumbled Thor, who had just dimly
+grasped the greatest point in Prexy's speech. "Why, then I won't have to
+leave Bannister--I won't have to quit my studies! Oh, thank you, sir; thank
+you! I will work <i>so</i> hard. I am not afraid of work; I love it--a chance to
+toil and earn my education, that's what I want! Thank you!"
+
+"And in addition," said the Registrar, "Mr. Palmetter reports that he can
+secure you, downtown, a number of furnaces to tend this winter, which you
+can do early in the morning and at night; this will bring you an income for
+living expenses, and in the spring something else will offer itself. It
+means every moment of your time will be crowded, but Bannister needs
+workers--"
+
+Something stirred in John Thorwald. His heart had been touched at last. He
+thought of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, and little Theophilus worried
+at his having to leave college, going to Doctor Alford; of Prexy, the
+Registrar, and Parson Palmetter, working to keep Thor at old Bannister.
+He recalled how sympathetic all the youths had been, how they admired his
+purpose and determination; and he had rewarded their friendliness with
+cold aloofness. He felt a thrill as he visioned himself working for his
+education, rising in the cold dawn, tending furnaces, working in the dorm.,
+waiting on tables--studying. With what fierce joy he would assail his
+tasks, glad that he could stay! He knew the students would rejoice, that
+they would not look down on him; instead, they would respect and admire
+him, toiling to grow and develop, to attain his goal!
+
+"Go to it, Thor!" urged T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "We all want you to stay,
+old man; we'll give you a lift with your studies. Old Bannister <i>wants</i>
+you, <i>needs</i> you, so <i>stick</i>!"
+
+"Stay, please!" quavered little Theophilus. "You don't want to leave your
+Alma Mater; stay, Thorwald, and--you'll understand things soon,"
+
+"Report at the Registrar's office at seven tonight, Thorwald," said Prexy,
+and then, because he understood boys and campus problems, "and to show your
+gratitude, you might go out there and spank that team which is trying to
+lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald, when Doctor Alford and the Registrar had gone, arose and
+stood gazing across Bannister Field. He saw not the white-lined gridiron,
+the gaunt goal-posts, the concrete stands filled with spectators, or the
+gay banners and pennants. He saw the buildings and campus of old Bannister,
+the stately old elms bordering the walks; he beheld the Gym., the four
+dormitories--Bannister, Nordyke, Smithson, and Creighton--the white Chapel,
+the ivy-covered Library, the Administration and Recitation Halls; he
+glimpsed the Memorial Arch over the entrance driveway, and big Alumni Hall.
+All at once, like an inundating wave, the great realization flashed on
+Thor that he did not have to leave it all! Often again would he hear the
+skylarking youths, the gay songs, the banjo-strumming; often would he see
+the brightly lighted Quad., would gaze out on the campus! It was still
+his--the work, the study, and, if he tried, even the glad comradeship of
+the fellows, the bigger things of college life, which as yet he did not
+understand.
+
+The big slow-minded youth could not awaken, at once, to a full knowledge
+and understanding of campus life and tradition, to a knowledge of college
+spirit; but, thanks to the belief that he had to leave it all, he had
+awakened to the startling fact that already he loved old Bannister. And
+now, joyous that he could stay, John Thorwald suddenly felt a strong desire
+to do something, not for himself, but for these splendid fellows who had
+worried for his sake, had worked to keep him at college. And just then he
+remembered the somewhat unclassical, yet well meant, words of dear old
+Doctor Alford, "And to show your gratitude, you might go out there and
+spank that team, which is trying to lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald for the first time looked at the score-board; he saw, in big
+white letters:
+
+ BANNISTER .......... 0
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+From the Gym. the Gold and Green players--grim, determined, and yet worried
+by the team that "won't be beat!"--were jogging, followed by Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan. The Latham eleven was on the field, the Gold and
+Blue rooters rioted in the stands. From the Bannister cohorts came a
+thunderous appeal:
+
+ "Hold 'em, boys--hold 'em, boys--hold--hold--<i>hold</i>!
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!"
+
+A sudden fury swayed the Prodigious Prodigy; it was his college, his
+eleven, and those Blue and Gold youths were actually beating old Bannister!
+The Bannister boys had admired him, some of them had helped him in his
+studies, three had told Doctor Alford of him, had made it possible for him
+to stay, to keep on toward his goal. </i>They</i> would be sorrow-stricken if
+Latham won! A feeling of indignation came to Thor. How dare those fellows
+think they could beat old Bannister! Why, <i>he</i> would go out there and show
+them a few things!
+
+Head Coach Corridan, let it be chronicled, was paralyzed when he ducked
+under the side-line rope--stretched to hold the spectators back--to collide
+with an immovable body, John Thorwald, and to behold an eager light on that
+behemoth's stolid face. Grasping the Slave-Driver in a grip that hurt, Thor
+boomed:
+
+"Mr. Corridan, let me play, <i>please</i>! Send me out this half. We can win.
+We've <i>got</i> to win! I want to do something for old Bannister. Why, if we
+lose today, we lose the Championship! I don't understand things yet, but I
+do love the college. I want to fight for Bannister. </i>Please</i> let me play!"
+
+The astonished coach and the equally dazed Gold and Green eleven, with the
+bewildered collegians who heard Thor's earnest appeal, were silent a few
+moments, unable to grasp the truth. Then Captain Brewster, his face aglow,
+seized the big Freshman's arm excitedly.
+
+"</i>Sure</i> you'll play, Thor!" he shouted. "Fullback, old man! Come on, team.
+Thor's awake! He wants to fight for his Alma Mater; he wants Bannister to
+win! Oh, watch us shove Latham off the field--everybody together now--the
+yell, for Thor!"
+
+"Right here," grinned an excitedly happy T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., when the
+yell was given, "is where a team that won't be beat gets licked by a chap
+what can lick 'em!"
+
+What took place when the blond Prodigious Prodigy lumbered on Bannister
+Field at the start of the last half of the Bannister-Latham game can be
+imagined by the final score-board figures:
+
+ BANNISTER ......... 27
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+It can best be described with the aid of Scoop Sawyer's account in the next
+</i>Bannister Weekly:</i>
+
+--At the start of the second half, however, the Latham cohorts were given
+a shock when they beheld a colossal being almost as big as the entire Gold
+and Blue eleven, go in at fullback for Bannister. And the Latham eleven
+received a series of shocks when Thor began intruding that massive body
+of his into their territory. Tennyson's saying, "The old order changeth,
+yielding place to new" was aptly illustrated in the second half; for
+Bannister's bugler quit sounding "Retreat!" and blew "Charge!" Four
+touchdowns and three goals from touchdowns, in one half, is usually
+considered a fair day's work for an entire team. Even Yale or Harvard; but
+when one player corrals four touchdowns in a half--he is going some! Well,
+Thor went some! Most of the half he furnished free transportation for
+two-thirds of the Latham team, carrying them on his back, legs, and neck,
+as he strode down the field; a writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped
+the blond Colossus. Anyone would have stood more show to stop an Alpine
+avalanche than to slow up Thor, and the stretcher was constantly in
+evidence, for Latham knockouts.
+
+[Illustration C: 'A writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped the blond
+Colossus']
+
+The game turned into a Thor's Personally Conducted Tour. Thorwald, escorted
+by the Gold and Green team, made four quick tours to the Latham goal-line.
+It was simply a matter of giving the ball to the Prodigious Prodigy, then
+waving the linesmen to move down twenty yards or more toward Latham's line.
+Thor was simply unstoppable, and more beneficial even than his phenomenal
+playing was his encouragement to the team. He kept urging them to action,
+his foghorn growl of, "Come on, boys!" was a slogan of victory! Judging by
+Thor's awakening, and his work of the Latham game, Bannister's hopes of The
+State Intercollegiate Football Championship are as roseate as the blush on
+a maiden's cheek at her first kiss, and--
+
+That night, in the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., John Thorwald,
+supremely happy yet withal as uncomfortable as a whale on the Sahara
+Desert, overflowed an easy-chair. The room was filled, or what space Thor
+left, with the Bannister eleven, second-team players, Coach Corridan, and
+several students; on the campus a riotous crowd of Bannister youths "raised
+merry Heck," as Hicks phrased it, and their cheer floated up to the
+windows:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor! He's--all--right!"
+
+"Come, fellows," spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+
+"Let's sing to the captain, good old Butch! Let 'er go!"
+
+ "Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink it down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink It down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster--
+ He plays football like he <i>uster--</i>
+ Drink it down! Drink it down--down--down--down!"
+
+A strange sound startled the joyous youths; it was a rumbling noise,
+like distant thunder, and at first they could not place it. Then, as It
+continued, they located the disturbance as coming from the prodigious body
+of Thor, and at last the wonderful phenomenon dawned on them.
+
+"Thor is singing college songs!" quavered little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+so happy that his big-rimmed spectacles rode the end of his nose. "Oh,
+Hicks--Butch--Thor is awake at last! He is trying to get college spirit, to
+understand campus life--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., suddenly realized that what he had so ardently
+longed for had come to pass; aided by Theophilus' missionary work and by
+the sudden shock of Thorwald, Sr.'s, letter. Thor was awakened, had come to
+know that he loved old Bannister. His awakening, as shown in the football
+game, had been splendid. How he had towered over the scrimmage, in every
+play, urging his team to fight, himself doing prodigies for old Bannister.
+Thor, who had been so silent and aloof! Then the sunny-souled youth
+remembered.
+
+"Oh, I told you I'd awaken Thor, Butch!" he began, but that behemoth
+quelled him with an ominous look.
+
+"</i>You</i>!" he growled, with pretended wrath, "<i>you</i>! It was Theophilus
+Opperdyke who did the most of it, and Thorwald's father did the rest! Don't
+you rob Theophilus of his glory, you feeble-imitation-of-some-thing-human!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinned </i>a la</i> Cheshire cat. The happy-go-lucky
+Senior was vastly glad that Thor had awakened, that now he would try
+to grasp the real meaning of college existence. He felt that the young
+Hercules, from now on, would slowly and surely develop to a splendid
+college man, that he would do big things for his Alma Mater. And the
+generous Hicks gave Theophilus all the credit, and impressed on that
+happy Human Encyclopedia the fact that he had done a great deed for old
+Bannister. Just so, Thor was awakened.
+
+"Oh, I say, Deke Radford, Coach, and Butch," Hicks chortled, getting the
+attention of that triumvirate as well as that of the others in the room,
+"remember up in Camp Bannister, in the sleep-shack, when Coach Corridan
+outlined a smashing full-back he wanted?"
+
+"Sure!" smiled Deke. "What of it, Hicks?"
+
+Then T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., that care-free, lovable, irrepressible youth,
+whose chance to swagger before this same trio had been postponed so long
+and seemingly lost forever, satiated his fun-loving soul and reaped his
+reward. Calling their attention to Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and asking
+them to remember his playing against Latham that day, the sunny Senior
+strutted before them vaingloriously.
+
+"Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!" he declared, grinning happily.
+"I promised to round up an unstoppable fullback, a Gargantuan Hercules, and
+I did! Just think of what he will do to Hamilton and Ballard in the big
+games! As I have often told you, <i>always</i>--leave It to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+
+
+ "Oh, what we'll do to Ballard
+ Will surely be a shame!
+ We'll push their team clear off the field
+ And win the football game!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one night three days after the first big game, that
+with Hamilton, a week following Thor's great awakening in the Latham game,
+sat in his cozy room, having assumed his favorite position--chair tilted
+back at a perilous angle and feet thrust atop of the radiator. The
+versatile youth, having just composed a song with which to encourage
+Bannister elevens in the future, was reading it aloud, when his mind was
+torpedoed by a most startling thought.
+
+"Land o' Goshen!" reflected the sunny-souled Senior, aghast. "I haven't
+twanged my ole banjo and held forth with a saengerfest for a coon's age! I
+surely can do so now without arousing Butch to wrath. Thor has awakened,
+Hamilton is walloped, and Bannister will surely win the Championship!
+Everything is happy, an' de goose hangs high, so here goes!"
+
+Holding his banjo </i>a la</i> troubadour, the blithesome Hicks, who as a Senior
+was harassed by no study-hours or inspections, strode from his room and out
+into the corridor, up and down which he majestically paced, like a sentinel
+on his beat, twanging his beloved banjo with abandon, and roaring in his
+foghorn, subterranean voice:
+
+ "Oh, the way we walloped Hamilton
+ Surely was a shame!
+ And we're going to win the Championship--
+ For we'll do Ballard the same!
+
+ "And Bannister shall flaunt the flag
+ For at least three seasons more;
+ Because--no team can win a game
+ While the Gold and Green has Thor!"
+
+On Bannister Field, three days before, the Gold and Green had crushed the
+strong team from "old Ham" to the tune of 20 to 0; Thor's magnificent
+ground-gaining, in which he smashed through the supposedly impregnable
+defense of the enemy, was a surprise to his comrades and a shock to
+Hamilton. Time and again, on the fourth down, the ball was given to
+Thorwald, and the blond Colossus, with several of old Ham's players
+clinging to him, plunged ahead for big gains. So now with a monster
+mass-meeting in half an hour, the exultant Bannister youths pretended to
+study, but prepared to parade on the campus, cheer the eleven and Thor,
+and arouse excitement for the winning of the biggest game, a victory over
+Ballard, a week later.
+
+From the rooms of would-be studious Seniors on both sides of the corridor,
+as Hicks patrolled it, came vociferous protests and classic criticisms,
+gathering in force and volume as the breezy youth's foghorn voice roared
+his song; that heedless collegian grinned as he heard:
+
+"R-r-rotten! Give that Jersey calf more rope!"
+
+"Hicks has had a relapse! </i>Sing-Sing</i> for yours, old man!"
+
+"Arrest Hicks, under the Public Nuisance Act!"
+
+"</i>Woof! Woof</i>! Shoot it quick! Don't let it suffer!"
+
+Just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., strumming the banjo blithely and Carusoing
+with glee, reached the end of the corridor and executed a brisk 'bout-face,
+he heard a terrific commotion on the stairway, and, a moment later, Butch
+Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Deacon Radford and Monty Merriweather gained the
+top of the stairs. As they were now between the offending Hicks and
+his quarters, there seemed no chance for the sunny Senior to play his
+safety-first policy; so he waited, panic-stricken, as Butch and Beef
+lumbered heavily down the corridor.
+
+"Help! Aid! Succor! Relief! Assistance!" shrieked Hicks, leaning his
+beloved banjo against the wall and throwing himself into what he
+fatuously believed was an intensely pugilistic pose. "I am a believer in
+preparedness. You have me cornered, so beware! I am a follower of Henry
+Ford, but even </i>I</i> will fight--at bay!"
+
+"Well, you are at <i>sea</i> now!" growled Beef, tucking the splinter youth
+under one arm and striding down the corridor, followed by Butch with the
+banjo, and Monty with Deacon. "You desperado, you destroyer of peace and
+quietude, you one-cylinder gadabout! You're off again! We'll instruct you
+to annoy real students, you faint shadow of something human!"
+
+"Them's harsh sentences, Beef!" chuckled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as that
+behemoth kicked open Hicks' door, bore the futilely squirming, kicking
+youth into the room, and hurled him on the davenport. "Watch my banjo,
+there, Butch; have a couple of cares! Say, what'smatter wid youse guys,
+anyhow? This is my first saengerfest for eons. Old Bannister has a clear
+track ahead at last, the Championship is won for <i>sure</i>, and Thor, that
+mighty engine of destruction to Ham's and Ballard's hopes, after much
+tinkering, is hitting on all twelve cylinders. Why, I prithee, deny me the
+pleasure of a little joyous song?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., since the memorable Latham game, when Thor had
+awakened between halves, and the Prodigious Prodigy had shown himself
+worthy of his title by winning the game after defeat leered at old
+Bannister, had suffered a relapse, and was again his old sunny, heedless,
+happy-go-lucky self. Now that John Thorwald had been startled into
+realizing that he loved his college and had been saved from having to
+leave, now that he played football for his Alma Mater, and Bannister's
+hopes of the Championship were roseate, the blithesome Hicks had abandoned
+himself to a golden existence of Beefsteak Busts downtown at Jerry's,
+entertaining jolly comrades in his cozy room, and pestering the campus with
+his banjo and ridiculous imitations of Sheerluck Holmes, the Dachshund
+Detective. Big Butch Brewster, lecturing him for his care-free ways, as
+futilely as he had done for three years past, gave up in despair.
+
+"I might as well be showing moving-pictures to the inmates of a blind
+asylum," he growled on one occasion, "as to persuade you to quit acting
+like a lunatic! You, a Senior--acting like an escaped inhabitant of
+Matteawan! Bah!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, drawing a chair up to the davenport, assumed the manner
+of a physician toward a recalcitrant patient, while Beef carefully stowed
+the banjo in the closet and Deacon Radford, an interested spectator, sat
+on the bed. The happy-go-lucky Hicks, at a loss to account for the strange
+expressions of his comrades, tried to arise, but the football captain
+pinned him down with one hand.
+
+"Seriously, Hicks," spoke Butch, "your saengerfest came at a lamentably
+inopportune time! I regret to Inform you that old Bannister faces another
+problem, with regard to Thor, and unless it is solved, I fear--"
+
+"Thor has balked again?" gasped the dazed Hicks, whom Butch now allowed to
+sit up, as he showed interest. "Has the engine of destruction stalled?
+Why, as fast as we get him lined up, off he slides at an angle! Well, you
+fellows did perfectly right to bring this baffling problem, whatever it is,
+to me. What is the trouble--won't Thor play football?"
+
+The irrepressible Hicks was bewildered at hearing that a new problem
+regarding Thor had arisen, and, naturally, he at once connected it with
+football, since the big Freshman had twice balked in that respect. Since
+his awakening, effected by Theophilus' missionary work, his last appeal,
+and Thor's letter from his father, Thor had earnestly striven to grasp the
+true meaning of college life, to understand campus tradition. No longer did
+he hold aloof, boning always, in his lonely room. Instead, he mingled with
+his fellows, lingering with the team for the skylarking in the shower-room
+after scrimmage, turning out for the nightly mass-meeting. Often, as the
+youths practiced songs and yells on the campus, Thor's terrific rumble was
+heard--some had even dared to slap his massive back and say, "Hello, Thor,
+old man!" and the big Freshman had responded. It was evident to all that
+Thorwald was striving to become a collegian, and knowing his slow, bulldog
+nature, there was no doubt as to his ultimate success; hence T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., was vastly puzzled now.
+
+"Oh, Thor hasn't backslid!" smiled Beef. "You see, Hicks, it's this way:
+Owing to Mr. Thorwald's losing the five thousand dollars, Thor, as you
+know, is working his way at Bannister. Well, with his hustling, his studies
+and football scrimmage, he simply does not have a minute for the other
+phases of college life, for the comradeship with his fellows--"
+
+"Here is his day's schedule," chimed in Deacon, referring to a paper: "Rise
+at four-thirty A. M. Hustle downtown to tend several furnaces until seven.
+Breakfast at seven. Till nine, make beds and sweep dormitory rooms.
+Nine till three-fifteen P. M., recitation periods and dormitory work,
+sandwiched. Then until supper, football practice, and nights study. Add
+to that waiting on tables for the three meals, and what time has Thor to
+broaden and develop, to take in all the big things of campus existence, to
+grow into an all-round college man?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wonderful to chronicle, was silent. He was
+reflecting on the irony of fate; as Deacon said, now that Thor had
+awakened, and earnestly wanted to be a collegian, he had no time to enter
+into campus life. Glad at being able to stay at old Bannister, to keep on
+with his studies, climbing steadily toward his goal, and finding a joy in
+his new relationship with the students, the ponderous Thorwald had flung
+himself into his hustling, as the youths called working one's way at
+college, with zeal. To the huge Freshman, toil was nothing, and since it
+meant that he could keep on with his study, he was content. The collegians
+vastly admired his grim determination; they aided all they could with
+his studies, and helped with his work, so he could have more time for
+scrimmage, and yet another phase of the problem came to Hicks.
+
+It seemed unjust that John Thorwald, after his long years of hard physical
+toil, and his mental struggles, often after hours of grinding work, at the
+very time when the five thousand dollars from Henry B. Kingsley's heirs
+promised him a chance to study without a body tortured and exhausted,
+should be forced again to take up his stern fight for knowledge. And it
+was cruel that Thor, just awakening to the true meaning of college life,
+striving to grasp campus tradition, and eager to serve his Alma Mater in
+every way, should have so little time to mingle with his fellows. He should
+be with them on the campus, on the athletic field, in the dorms., the
+literary society halls, the Y. M. C. A. He should be realizing the golden
+years of college life, the glad comradeship of the campus. Instead, he must
+arise in the bitter cold, gray dawn, and from then until late night toil
+and study unceasingly.
+
+"It's a howling shame!" declared the serious Hicks, a heart full of
+sympathy for Thor. "Just as he wakes up and is trying to understand things
+at old Bannister, bang! the </i>Norwhal</i> is blown up by a stray mine, and
+down goes his dad's money. Why didn't Mr. Thorwald get the five thousand
+transferred to the </i>Valkyrie</i>? Oh, if that money hadn't gone down to Davy
+Jones' locker, Thor would be awakened and have time for college life, too!"
+
+Butch Brewster started to speak when the thunderous tread of John Thorwald
+sounded in the corridor. The Prodigious Prodigy seemed approaching at
+double-quick time, and the youths stared at each other. However, when
+Thor appeared in the doorway, a letter in hand, they gazed at him in
+bewilderment, for his face fairly glowed.
+
+"Read it, fellows, read it!" he breathed, with what, for him, was almost
+excitement. "It just came! Oh, isn't that good news? Read it out, Captain
+Butch. Won't we wallop Ballard now!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, mystified by Thor's happiness, and urged on by his
+equally puzzled comrades, drew out the letter, and a glad smile coming to
+his honest countenance, he read aloud:
+
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA. STEAMSHIP LINE (New York Office)
+
+"Nov. 18, 19--.
+
+"MR. JOHN THORWALD, JR., Bannister College.
+
+"DEAR SIR:
+
+"We beg to state that your father, first mate on our liner, the </i>Valkyrie</i>,
+three days outbound from New York to Christiania, sent a message, <i>via</i>
+wireless, to our New York offices by the inbound Dutch Line's </i>Rotterdam</i>.
+The </i>Rotterdam</i> relayed the message to us, and we forward it herewith,
+<i>verbatim:</i>
+
+"'DEAR SON: Purser of my ship, the </i>Valkyrie</i>, informed me today that the
+purser of the ill-fated </i>Norwhal</i>, learning of my transfer to this liner,
+transferred my $5,000 to the </i>Valkyrie</i> before he sailed to his fate. I am
+sending this <i>via</i> the </i>Rotterdam</i>, inbound, and our office will forward it
+to you. Will write on arriving at Christiania. Father.'
+
+"We are sorry for the delay in forwarding this message, but through an
+accident, it was mislaid in our office for a few days.
+
+"Yours truly,
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA STEAMSHIP LINE,
+
+"per J. L. G."
+
+
+A moment of silence; outside on the campus the Bannister youths, preparing
+for the mass-meeting in the Auditorium, started cheering. Someone caught
+sight of Thor, standing now by the window of Hicks' room, on the third
+floor of Bannister Hall, and a few seconds later there sounded:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor! Thor will bring the Championship to old Bannister! Rah!
+Rah! Rah!--Thor!"
+
+"Oh," shouted T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning happily, his arm across
+Thor's massive shoulders, "'All's well that ends well,' as Bill Shakespeare
+says. It's all right now, Thor. Fate dealt you a hard punch, but it served
+its purpose; for it made you realize how you would regret to leave college.
+Now you won't have to hustle and have all your time filled with toil and
+study; you can go after every phase of campus life, and serve old Bannister
+in so many ways."
+
+John Thorwald stood, a contented look on his placid, impassive face,
+gazing down at the campus below and hearing the plaudits of the excited
+collegians. The stately old elms, gaunt and bare, tossed their limbs
+against a leaden sky; a cold, dreary wind sent clouds of dry leaves
+scurrying down the concrete walks. In the faint moonlight that struggled
+through the clouds, the towers and spires of old Bannister were limned
+against the sky-line. Across the campus, on Bannister Field, the
+goal-posts, skeleton-like, kept their lonely vigil. On that field, in
+less than a week, the Gold and Green must face the crucial test--against
+Ballard's championship eleven, in the Biggest Game; and now, almost on the
+eve of battle, the shackles had been knocked from him; he was free of the
+great burden, free to serve his Alma Mater, to fight for the Gold and
+Green, to grow and develop into an all-round, representative college man.
+
+All of a sudden it dawned on the slow-thinking young Norwegian just how
+much this freedom to grow and expand meant to him, and he turned from the
+window. From below, the shouts of "Thor! Thor! Thor!" drifted, stirring his
+blood, as he looked at Hicks, Butch, Beef, Monty and Deacon.
+
+"'All's well that ends well,' you say. Hicks," he spoke slowly, his face
+joyous. "That's true; but I'm just starting, fellows. I'm just <i>beginning</i>
+to live my college years, not for myself, but for old Bannister, for my
+Alma Mater, for I am awake, and <i>free</i>!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+
+
+Big Butch Brewster, a life-sized picture of despair, roosted dejectedly on
+the Senior Fence, between the Gym and the Administration Building. It was
+quite cold, and also the beginning of the last study-period before Butch's
+final and most difficult recitation of the day, Chemistry. Yet instead
+of boning in his warm room, the behemoth Senior perched on the fence and
+stared gloomily into space.
+
+As he sat, enveloped in a penumbra of gloom, the campus entrance door of
+Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., opened suddenly, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., that happy-go-lucky youth, came out cautiously, after the fashion of a
+second-story artist, emerging from his crib with a bundle of swag, the
+last item being represented by a football tucked under Hicks' left arm.
+Beholding Butch Brewster on the Senior Fence, the sunny-souled Senior
+exhibited a perturbation of spirit seeming undecided whether to beat a
+retreat or to advance.
+
+"Now what's ailin' <i>you</i>?" demanded Butch wrathily, believing the
+pestersome Hicks to be acting in that burglarious manner for effect. "Why
+should <i>you</i> sneak out of a dorm., bearing a football like it was an auk's
+egg? Why, you resemble a nigger, making his get-away after robbing a
+hen-roost! Don't torment me, you accident-somewhere-on-its-way-to-happen. I
+feel about as joyous as a traveling salesman who has made a town and gotten
+nary a order!"
+
+"It's <i>awful</i>!" soliloquized T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., perching beside the
+despondent Butch on the Senior Fence. "I am not a fatalist, old man, but
+it <i>does</i> seem that fate hasn't destined Thor to play football for old
+Bannister this season! Here, after he won the Ham game, and we expected him
+to waltz off with Ballard's scalp and the Championship, he has to tumble
+downstairs! Oh, it's tough luck!"
+
+It was two days before the biggest game, with Ballard--the contest that
+would decide the State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Ballard, the
+present champions, discounting even Hamilton's stories of Thor's prowess,
+were coming to Bannister with an eleven more mighty than the one that had
+crushed the Gold and Green the year before, with a heavy, stonewall line,
+fast ends, and a powerful, shifty backfield. The Ballard team was confident
+of victory and the pennant. Bannister, building on the awakened Thorwald,
+superbly sure of his phenomenal strength and power, of his unstoppable
+rushes, serenely practiced the doctrine of preparedness, and awaited the
+day.
+
+And then John Thorwald, the Prodigious Prodigy, whose gigantic frame seemed
+unbattered by the terrific daily scrimmage, whom it was impossible to
+hurt on the gridiron, the day before, going downstairs in Creighton Hall,
+hurrying to a class, had caught his heel on the top step, and crashed to
+the bottom! And now, with a broken ankle, the blond Colossus, heartbroken
+at not being able to win the Championship for old Bannister, hobbled about
+on crutches. Without Thor, the Gold and Green must meet the invincible
+Ballard team! It was a solar-plexus blow, both to the Bannister youths,
+confident in Thor's prowess, building on his Herculean bulk, and to the
+big Freshman. Thorwald, awakened, striving to grasp campus tradition, to
+understand college life, was eager to fling himself into the scrimmage, to
+give every ounce of his mighty power, to offer that splendid body, for his
+Alma Mater, and now he must hobble impotently on the side-line, watching
+his team fight a desperate battle.
+
+"If Bannister only had a sure, accurate drop-kicker!" reflected Captain
+Butch hopelessly. "One who could be depended on to average eight out of ten
+trials, we'd have a fighting chance with Ballard. Deke Radford is a wonder.
+He can kick a forty-five-yard goal, but he's erratic! He might boot the
+pigskin over when a score is needed from the forty-yard line, and again he
+might miss from the twenty-yard mark. Oh, for a kicker who isn't brilliant
+and spectacular, but who can methodically drop 'em over from, say, the
+thirty-five-yard line! Hello, what's the row, Hicks?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., started to speak, changed his mind, coughed, grew
+red and embarrassed, and acted in a most puzzling manner. At any other
+time, big Butch would have been bewildered; but with Thor's loss weighing
+on his mind, the Gold and Green captain gave his comrade only a cursory
+glance.
+
+"I--I--Oh, nothing, Butch!" stammered Hicks, to whom, being "fussed," as
+Bannister termed embarrassment, was almost unknown. "I--I guess I'll
+take this football over to my locker in the Gym. I ought to glance at my
+Chemistry, too. So-long, Butch; see you later, old top!"
+
+When the splinter-youth had drifted into the Gym., Butch Brewster,
+remembering his strange actions, actually managed to transfer his thoughts
+for a time from the eleven to the care-free T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. The
+behemoth Senior reflected that, to date, the pestiferous Hicks had not
+explained his baffling mystery he recalled the day when he had told the
+Gold and Green eleven of the loyal Hicks' ambition to please his dad by
+winning his B, when he had described the youth's intense college spirit
+and had suggested that if Hicks failed to corral his letter the Athletic
+Association award him one for his loyalty to old Bannister. And Butch saw
+again the bewildering sentences in the letter from Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., to his son.
+
+"Evidently," meditated Butch, literally and figuratively "on the fence,"
+"Hicks has failed to summon up enough self-confidence to explain his
+mystery; queer, too, for he usually is bubbling with faith in himself. He
+has acted like a bashful schoolgirl at frequent times--he starts to tell
+me something, then he gets embarrassed, back-fires, and stalls. He and
+Theophilus have been sneaking out in the early dawn, too. Wow! What did he
+sneak out of the dorm. that way, with a football, for? He looked like a
+yeggman working night shift. Why should <i>he</i> skulk out with a football? He
+has never explained his dad's letter, or told just what Mr. Hicks meant by
+calling him the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and saying those members of old
+Eli wanted him to star! Oh, he's a tantalizing wretch, and I'd like to
+solve his mystery, without his knowledge, so I could--"
+
+At that instant, to the intense indignation and bewilderment of good Butch
+Brewster, little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous Human Encyclopedia of
+old Bannister, exited from Bannister Hall. The Senior boner gave a correct
+imitation of the offending Hicks, in that he skulked out, gazing around
+him nervously; but he portaged no pigskin, and, unlike the sunny youth, on
+periscoping Butch, he seemed relieved.
+
+"Theophilus, <i>come here</i>!" thundered the wrathful football captain,
+shifting his tonnage on the Senior Fence. "What's the plot, anyhow? It's
+bad enough when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sneaks out, bearing a football,
+like an amateur cracksman making a getaway; but when you appear, imitating
+a Nihilist about to hurl a bomb--say, what's the answer to the puzzle, old
+man?"
+
+Little Theophilus, his pathetically frail body trembling with suppressed
+excitement, his big-rimmed spectacles tumbling off with ridiculous
+regularity, and his solemn eyes peering owlishly at his behemoth classmate,
+stood before the startled Butch. It was evident that the 1919 grind
+labored under great stress. He was waging a terrific battle with himself,
+struggling to make some vast and all-important decision. He strove to
+speak, hesitated, choked, coughed apologetically, and acted as fussed as
+Hicks had done, until Butch was wild; then, as if resolved to cast the die
+and cross the Rubicon, he decided, and plunged desperately ahead.
+
+"It's--it's Hicks, Butch!" he quavered, torn cruelly by conflicting
+emotions. "Oh, I don't want to be a traitor--he trusted me with his secret,
+and I--I can't betray him, I just can't! But he didn't make me promise not
+to tell. He just told me not to. Oh, it's his very last chance, Butch, and
+with Thor hurt, old Bannister might need him in the Ballard game."
+
+"What is it, Theophilus, old man?" Butch spoke kindly, for he saw the
+solemn little Senior was intensely excited. "Tell me--if our Alma Mater
+needs any fellow's services, you know, he should give them freely--since
+you did not promise not to tell about Hicks, if Bannister may be able
+to use Hicks against Ballard--though I can't, by any stretch of the
+imagination, figure how--then it is your duty to tell! I think I glimpse
+the dark secret--Hicks possesses some sort of football prowess, goodness
+knows what, and he lacks the confidence to tell Coach Corridan! Now, were
+it only drop-kicking--"
+
+</i>"It is drop-kicking!"</i> Theophilus burst forth desperately. "Hicks is a
+drop-kicker, Butch, and a sure one--inside the thirty-yard line. He almost
+<i>never</i> misses a goal, and he kicks them from every angle, too. He isn't
+strong enough to kick past the thirty-yard line, but inside that he is
+wonderfully accurate. With Thor out of the Ballard game, a drop-kick may
+win for Bannister, and Deke Radford is so erratic! Oh, Hicks will be angry
+with me for telling; but he just won't tell about himself, after all his
+practice, because he fears the fellows will jeer. He is afraid he will fail
+in the supreme test. Oh, I've betrayed him, but--"
+
+"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a drop-kicker!" exploded the dazed Butch, who
+could not have been more astounded had Theophilus announced that the sunny
+youth possessed powers of black magic. "Theophilus Opperdyke, Tantalus
+himself was never so tantalized as I have been of late. Tell me the whole
+story, old man--hurry. Spill it, old top!"
+
+Butch Brewster, by questioning the excited Human Encyclopedia, like a
+police official giving the third degree, slowly extracted from Theophilus
+the startling story. A year before, just as the Gold and Green practiced
+for the Ham game, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one afternoon, had arrayed his
+splinter-structure in a grotesque, nondescript athletic outfit, and had
+jogged out on Bannister Field. The gladsome youth's motive had been free
+from any torturesome purpose. He intended to round up the Phillyloo Bird,
+Shad Weatherby, and other non-athletic collegians, and with them boot the
+pigskin, for exercise. However, little Skeet Wigglesworth, beholding him
+as he donned the weird regalia of loud sweater, odd basket-ball stockings,
+tennis trousers, baseball shoes, and so on, misconstrued his plan, and
+believed Hicks intended to torment the squad. Hence, he hurried out,
+so that when Hicks appeared in the offing, the football squad and the
+spectators in the stands had jeered the happy-go-lucky Junior, and had
+good-natured sport at his expense.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., after Jack Merritt had drop-kicked a forty-yard
+goal, made the excessively rash statement that it was easy. Captain Butch
+Brewster had indignantly challenged the heedless youth to show him, and
+the results of Hicks' effort to propel the pigskin over the crossbar were
+hilarious, for he missed the oval by a foot, nearly dislocated his knee,
+and, slipping in the mud, he sat down violently with a thud. However, so
+the excited Theophilus now narrated, even as the convulsed students jeered
+Hicks, hurling whistles, shouts, cat-calls, songs and humorous remarks at
+the downfallen kicker, one of Hicks' celebrated inspirations had smitten
+the pestersome Junior, evidently jarred loose by his crashing to terra
+firma.
+
+"Hicks figured this way, Butch," explained little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+eloquent in his comrade's behalf, "nature had built him like a mosquito,
+and endowed him with enough power to lift a pillow; hence he could never
+hope to play football on the 'Varsity; but he knew that many games are
+won by drop-kicks and by fellows especially trained and coached for that
+purpose, and they don't need weight and strength, but they must have the
+art, that peculiar knack which few possess. His inspiration was this:
+Perhaps he had that knack, perhaps he could practice faithfully, and
+develop into a sure drop-kicker. If he trained for a year, in his Senior
+season, he might be able to serve old Bannister, maybe to win a big game.
+So he set to work."
+
+Theophilus hurriedly yet graphically narrated how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+had made the loyal, hero-worshiping little Human Encyclopedia his sole
+confidant. He told the thrilled Butch how the sunny youth, from that
+day on, had watched and listened as Head Coach Corridan trained the
+drop-kickers, learning all the points he could gain. Vividly he described
+the mosquito-like Hicks, as he with a football bought from the Athletic
+Association began in secret to practice the fine art of drop-kicking! For a
+year, at old Bannister and at his dad's country home near Pittsburgh, Hicks
+had faithfully, doggedly kept at it. With no one bat Theophilus knowing of
+his great ambition, he had gone out on Bannister Field, when he felt safe
+from observation; here, with his faithful comrade to keep watch, and to
+retrieve the pigskin, he had practiced the instructions and points gained
+from watching Coach Corridan train the booters of the squad. To his vast
+delight, and the joy of his little friend, Hicks had found that he did
+possess the knack, and from before the Ham game until Commencement he had
+kept his secret, practicing clandestinely at old Bannister; he had improved
+wonderfully, and when vacation started the cheery collegian had told his
+beloved dad, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., of his hopes.
+
+The ex-Yale football star, delighted at his son's ambition to serve old
+Bannister and joyous at discovering that Hicks actually possessed the
+peculiar knack of drop-kicking, coached the splinter-youth all summer at
+their country place near Pittsburgh. Under the instruction of Hicks, Sr.,
+the youth developed rapidly, and when he returned to the campus for his
+final year, he was a sure, dependable drop-kicker, inside the thirty-yard
+line. As Theophilus stated, beyond that he lacked the power, but in that
+zone he could boot 'em over the cross-bar from any angle.
+
+"He's been practicing all this season, in secret!" quavered the little
+Senior, "and he's a--a <i>fiend</i>, Butch, at drop-kicking. And yet, here it is
+time for the last game of his college years, and--he lacks confidence to
+tell you, or Coach Corridan. Oh, I'm afraid he will be angry with me for
+betraying him, and yet--I just <i>can't</i> let him miss his splendid chance,
+now that Thor is out and old Bannister <i>needs</i> a drop-kicker!"
+
+Big Butch was silent for a time. The football leader was deeply impressed
+and thrilled by Theophilus Opperdyke's story of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s
+ambition. As he roosted on the Senior Fence, the behemoth gridiron
+star visioned the mosquito-like youth, whom nature had endowed with a
+splinter-structure, sneaking out on Bannister Field, at every chance, to
+practice clandestinely his drop-kicking. He could see the faithful Human
+Encyclopedia, vastly excited at his blithesome colleague's improvement,
+retrieving the pigskin for Hicks. He thrilled again as he thought of the
+bean-pole Hicks, who could never gain weight and strength enough to make
+the eleven, loyally training and perfecting himself in the drop-kick,
+trying to develop into a sure kicker, within a certain zone, hoping
+sometime, before he left college forever, to serve old Bannister. With Thor
+in the line-up at fullback, he would not have been needed, but now, with
+the Prodigious Prodigy out, it was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s big chance!
+
+And Butch Brewster understood why the usually confident Hicks, even with
+the knowledge of his drop-kicking power, hesitated to announce it to old
+Bannister. Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team of Hicks'
+being in earnest in his ridiculous athletic attempts of the past three
+years, no one but himself and Hicks had dreamed that the sunny youth meant
+them, that he really strove to win his B and please his dad. The appearance
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., on Bannister Field was always the cause of
+a small-sized riot among the squad and spectators. Hicks was jeered
+good-naturedly, and "butchered to make a Bannister holiday," as he blithely
+phrased it. Hence, the splinter-Senior was reluctant to announce that he
+could drop-kick. He knew that when tested he would be so in earnest, that
+so much would hang in the balance and the youths, unknowing how important
+it was, would jeer. Then, too, knowing his long list of athletic fiascos,
+ridiculous and otherwise, Hicks trembled at the thought of being sent into
+the biggest game to kick a goal. He feared he might fail!
+
+"You are a <i>hero</i>, Theophilus!" said Butch, with deep feeling. "I can
+realize how hard it was for Hicks to tell us. He would have kept silent
+forever, even after his training in secret! And how you must have suffered,
+knowing he could drop-kick, and yet not desiring to betray him! But your
+love for old Bannister and for Hicks himself conquered. I'll take him out
+on the gridiron, before the fellows come from class, and see what he
+can do. Aha! There is the villain now. Hicks, ahoy! Come hither, you
+Kellar-Herman-Thurston. Your dark secret is out at last!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., peering cautiously from the Gym. basement doorway,
+in quest of the tardy Theophilus, who was to have accompanied him on a
+clandestine journey to Bannister Field, obeyed the summons. Bewildered,
+and gradually guessing the explanation from the shivering little boner's
+alarmed expression, the gladsome youth approached the stern Butch Brewster,
+who was about to condemn him for his silence. "Don't be angry with me,
+Hicks, <i>please</i>!" pled Theophilus, pathetically fearful that he had
+offended his comrade, "I--I just <i>had</i> to tell, for it was positively your
+last chance, and--and old Bannister needs your sure drop-kicking! I never
+promised not to tell. You never made me give my word, so--"
+
+"It was Theophilus' duty to tell!" spoke Butch, hiding a grin, for the
+grind was so frightened, "and yours, Hicks, knowing as you do how we need
+you, with Thor hurt! You graceless wretch, you aren't usually so like ye
+modest violet! Why didn't you inform us, then swagger and say, 'Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks, he'll win the game with a drop-kick?' Now, you come with
+me, and I'll look over your samples. If you've got the goods, it's highly
+probable you'll get your chance, in the Ballard game; and I'm <i>glad</i>, old
+man, for your sake. I know what it would mean, if you win it! But--now that
+the '<i>mystery</i>' is solved, what's that about your being a 'Class Kid,' of
+Yale, '96?"
+
+"That's easy!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his arm across Theophilus'
+shoulders, "I was the first boy born to any member of Yale, '96; it is the
+custom of classes graduating at Yale to call such a baby the class kid!
+Naturally, the members of old Eli, Class of 1896, are vastly interested in
+me. Hence, my Dad wrote they'd be tickled if I won a big game for Bannister
+with a field-goal!"
+
+A moment of silence, Theophilus Opperdyke, gathering from Hicks' arm,
+across his shoulders, that the cheery youth was not so awfully wrathful at
+his base betrayal, adjusted his big-rimmed spectacles, and stared owlishly
+at Hicks.
+
+"Hicks, you--you are not angry?" he quavered. "You are not sorry. I--I
+told--"
+
+"</i>Sorry</i>?" quoth T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., "Class Kid," of Yale, '96, with a
+Cheshire cat grin, "<i>sorry</i>? I should say <i>not</i>--I wanted it to be known to
+Butch, and Coach Corridan, but I got all shivery when I tried to confess,
+and I--couldn't! Nay, Theophilus, you faithful friend, I'm so <i>glad</i>, old
+man, that beside yours truly, the celebrated Pollyanna resembles Niobe,
+weeping for her lost children."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+
+
+ "Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Whoop-up! Parabaloo! Yale! Yale! Yale!
+ </i>Hicks! Hicks! Hicks</i>!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a cumbersome Gold and Green football
+blanket, and crouching on the side-line, like some historic Indian, felt a
+thrill shake his splinter-structure, as the yell of "old Eli" rolled from
+the stand, across Bannister Field. In the midst of the Gold and Green flags
+and pennants, fluttering in the section assigned the Bannister cohorts, he
+gazed at a big banner of Blue, with white lettering:
+
+YALE UNIVERSITY--CLASS OF 1896
+
+"Oh, Butch," gasped Hicks, torn between fear and hope, "just listen to
+that. Think of all those Yale men in the stand with my Dad! Oh, suppose I
+do get sent in to try for a drop-kick!"
+
+It was almost time far the biggest game to start, the contest with Ballard,
+the supreme test of the Gold and Green, the final struggle for The State
+Intercollegiate Football Championship! In a few minutes the referee's
+shrill whistle blast would sound, the vast crowd in the stands, on the
+side-lines, and in the parked automobiles, would suddenly still their
+clamor and breathlessly await the kick-off--then, seventy minutes of grim
+battling on the turf, and victory, or defeat, would perch on the banners of
+old Bannister.
+
+It was a thrilling scene, a sight to stir the blood. Bannister Field, the
+arena where these gridiron gladiators would fly at each other's throats--or
+knees, spread out--barred with white chalk-marks, with the skeleton-like
+goal posts guarding at each end. On the turf the moleskin clad warriors,
+under the crisp commands of their Coaches, swiftly lined down, shifted to
+the formation called, and ran off plays. Nervous subs. stood in circles,
+passing the pigskin. Drop-kickers and punters, tuning up, sent spirals, or
+end-over-end drop-kicks, through the air. The referee, field-judge, and
+linesmen conferred. Team-attendants, equipped with buckets of water,
+sponges, and ominous black medicine-chests, with Red Cross bandages, ran
+hither and thither. On the substitutes' bench, or on the ground, crouched
+nervous second-string players; Ballard's on one side of the gridiron, and
+Bannister's directly across.
+
+A glorious, sunshiny day in late November, with scarcely a breath of
+wind, the air crisp and bracing; the radiant sunlight fell athwart the
+white-barred field, and glinted from the gay pennants and banners in the
+stands! Here was a riot of color, the gold and green of old Bannister; in
+the next section, the orange and black of Ballard. The bright hues and
+tints of varicolored dresses, and the luster of the official flowers
+all contributed to a bewilderingly beautiful spectacle! Flower-venders,
+peddlers of pennants, sellers of miniature footballs with the college
+colors of one team and the other, hawked their wares, loudly calling above
+the tumult, "Get yer Ballard colors yere!" "This way fer the Bannister
+flags!" Ten thousand spectators, packed into the cheering sections of the
+two colleges, or in the general stands, or standing on the side-lines,
+impatiently awaited the kick-off. At the appearance of each football star,
+a tremendous cheer went up from the mass. Across the field from each other,
+the two bands played stirring strains. The confident Ballard cohorts
+cheered, sang, and yelled and those of Bannister, not <i>quite</i> so sure of
+victory, with Thor out, nevertheless, cheered, sang, and yelled as loudly,
+for the Gold and Green.
+
+The sight of that vast Yale banner, so conspicuous, with its big white
+letters on a field of blue, amidst the fluttering pennants of gold and
+green, excited comment among the Ballard followers. The Bannister students,
+however, knew what it meant; Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., and thirty
+members of Yale, '96, were in the stand, ready to cheer Captain Butch's
+eleven, and hoping for a chance to whoop it up for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+if he got his big chance.
+
+Two days before, when little Theophilus Opperdyke, after a terrible
+struggle with himself, divided between loyalty to Hicks and a love for
+his Alma Mater, had betrayed his toothpick class-mate to Captain. Butch
+Brewster, that behemoth Senior had rounded up Coach Corridan, and together
+they had dragged the shivering Hicks out to the football field. Here, while
+the rest of the student body, unsuspecting the important event in progress,
+made good use of the study-hour, or attended classes in Recitation Hall,
+the Gold and Green Coach, with the team-Captain, and the excited Human
+Encyclopedia, watched T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. show his samples of
+drop-kicks. And the success of that happy-go-lucky youth, after his nervous
+tension wore off, may be attested by the Slave-Driver's somewhat slangy
+remark, when the exhibition closed.
+
+"Butch," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, impressively, "what it
+takes to drop-kick field-goals, from anywhere inside the thirty-yard line,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is broke out with!"
+
+The proficiency attained by the heedless Hicks in the difficult art of
+drop-kicking, gained by faithful practice for a year, aided by his Dad's
+valuable coaching, was wonderful. Of course, Hicks possessed naturally the
+needed knack, but he deserved praise for his sticking at it so loyally. He
+had no surety that he would ever be of use to his college, and, indeed,
+with the advent of Thor, his hopes grew dim, yet he plugged on, in case old
+Bannister might sometime need him--and yet, but for Theophilus, he would
+not have summoned the courage to tell! To the surprise and delight of the
+Coach and Captain, Hicks, after missing a few at first, methodically booted
+goals over the crossbar from the ten, twenty, and thirty-yard lines, and
+from the most difficult angles. There was nothing showy or spectacular in
+his work, it was the result of dogged training, but he was almost sure,
+when he kicked!
+
+[Illustration D: He was almost sure, when he kicked!]
+
+"Good!" ejaculated Coach Corridan, his arm across Hicks' shoulders, as they
+walked to the Gym. "Hicks, the chances are big that I'll send you in to try
+for a goal tomorrow, if Bannister gets blocked inside the thirty-yard line!
+Just keep your nerve, boy, and boot it over! Now--I'll post a notice for
+a brief mass-meeting at the end of the last class period, and Butch and I
+will tell the fellows about you, and how you may serve Bannister."
+
+"That's the idea!" exulted Butch, joyous at his comrade's chance to get in
+the biggest game. "The fellows will understand, Hicks, old man, and they
+won't jeer when you come out this afternoon. They'll root for you! Oh, just
+wait until you hear them cheer you, and <i>mean</i> it--you'll astonish the
+natives, Hicks!"
+
+Butch's prophecy was well fulfilled. In the scrimmage that same day, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., shivering with apprehensive dread, his heart in his
+shoes, sat on the side-line. In the stands, the entire student-body,
+informed in the mass-meeting of his ability, shrieked for "Hicks! Hicks!
+Hicks!" Near the end of the practice game, the hard-fighting scrubs fought
+their way to the 'Varsity's thirty-yard line, and another rush took it five
+yards more. Coach Corridan, halting the scrimmage, sent the right-half-back
+to the side-line, and a moment later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. hurried out
+on the field with the Bannister Band playing, the collegians yelling
+frenziedly, and excitement at fever height, the sunny youth took his
+position in the kick formation. Then a silence, a few seconds of suspense,
+as the pigskin whirled back to him, and then--a quick stepping forward,
+a rip of toe against the leather, and--above the heads of the 'Varsity
+players smashing through, the football shot over the cross-bar!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" was the shout, </i>"Hicks will beat Ballard!"</i>
+
+That night, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., having crossed the Rubicon, and
+committed himself to Coach Corridan and Captain Brewster, had dispatched a
+telegraphic night-letter to his beloved Dad. He informed his distinguished
+parent that his drop-kicking powers were now known to old Bannister, and
+that the chances were fifty-fifty that he would be sent in to try for a
+field-goal in the biggest game. On the day before the game, Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., in a night-letter, had wired back:
+
+
+Son Thomas:
+
+Am on my way to New Haven for Yale-Harvard game. Will stop off at old
+Bannister--bringing thirty members of Yale '96. We hope our Class Kid will
+get his chance against Ballard.
+
+Dad.
+
+
+On the morning of the Bannister-Ballard game, Mr. Hicks' private car the
+</i>Vulcan</i>, with the Pittsburgh "Steel King," and thirty other members of
+Yale, '96, had reached town. They had ridden in state to College Hill in
+good old Dan Flannagan's jitney, where T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., proudly
+introduced his beloved Dad to the admiring collegians. All morning, Mr.
+Hicks had made friends of the hero-worshiping youths, who listened to his
+tales of athletic triumphs at Bannister and at old Yale breathlessly. The
+ex-Yale star had made a stirring speech to the eleven, sending them out on
+Bannister Field resolved to do or die!
+
+"My Dad!" breathed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., crouched on the side line; as
+he gazed at the Yale banner, he could see his father, with his athletic
+figure, his strong face that could be appallingly stern or wonderfully
+tender and kind. Like the sunny Senior, Mr. Hicks, despite his wealth,
+was thoroughly democratic and already the Bannister collegians were his
+comrades.
+
+"Here we go, Hicks!" spoke Butch Brewster, as the referee raised his
+whistle to his lips. "Hold yourself ready, old man; a field-goal may win
+for us, and I'll send you in just as soon as I find all hope of a touchdown
+is gone. If they hold us back of the thirty-yard line, I'll try Deke
+Radford, but inside it, you are far more sure."
+
+The vast crowd, a moment before creating an almost inconceivable din,
+stilled with startling suddenness; a shrill blast from the referee's
+whistle cut the air. The gridiron cleared of substitutes, coaches,
+trainers, and rubbers-out, and in their places, the teams of Bannister and
+Ballard jogged out. Captain Brewster won the toss, and elected to receive
+the kick-off. The Gold and Green players, Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Biff,
+Pudge, Bunch, Tug, Hefty, Buster, and Ichabod, spread out, fan-like,
+while across the center of the field the Ballard eleven, a straight line,
+prepared to advance as the full-back kicked off. There was a breathless
+stillness, as the big athlete poised the pigskin, tilted on end, then
+strode back to his position.
+
+"All ready, Ballard?" The Referee's call brought an affirmative from the
+Orange and Black leader.
+
+"Ready, Bannister?"
+
+"Ready!" boomed big Butch Brewster, with a final shout of encouragement to
+his players.
+
+The biggest game was starting! Before ten thousand wildly excited and
+partisan spectators, the Gold and Green and the Orange and Black would
+battle for Championship honors; with Thor out of the struggle, Ballard,
+three-time Champion, was the favorite. The visitors had brought the
+strongest team in their history, and were supremely confident of victory.
+Bannister, however, could not help remembering, twice fate had snatched
+the greatest glory from their grasp, in Butch's Sophomore year, when Jack
+Merritt's drop-kick struck the cross-bar, and a year later, when Butch
+himself, charging for the winning touchdown, crashed blindly into the
+upright. Old Bannister had not won the Championship for five years, and
+now--when the chances had seemed roseate, with Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy--smashing Hamilton out of the way, Fate had dealt the annual blow
+in advance, by crippling him.
+
+"Oh, we've <i>got</i> to win!" shivered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Oh, I hope I
+don't get sent in--I mean--I hope Bannister wins without me! But if I <i>do</i>
+have to kick--Oh, I hope I send it over that cross-bar--"
+
+A second later the Ballard line advanced, the fullback's toe ripped into
+the pigskin, sending it whirling, high in air, far into Bannister's
+territory; the yellow oval fell into the outstretched arms of Captain
+Butch Brewster, on the Gold and Green's five-yard line, and--"We're off!"
+shrieked Hicks, excitedly. "Come on, Butch--run it back! Oh, we're off."
+
+The biggest game had started!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE GREATER GOAL
+
+
+"Time out!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., enshrouded in a gold and green blanket, and
+standing on the side-line, like a majestic Sioux Chief, gazed out on
+Bannister Field. There, on the twenty-yard line, the two lines of scrimmage
+had crashed together and Bannister's backfield had smashed into Ballard's
+stonewall defense with terrific impact, to be hurled back for a five-yard
+loss. The mass of humanity slowly untangled, the moleskin clad players rose
+from the turf, all but one. He, wearing the gold and green, lay still,
+white-faced, and silent.
+
+"It's Biff Pemberton!" chattered Hicks, shivering as with a chill. "Oh, the
+game is lost, the Championship is gone. Biff is out, and the last quarter
+is nearly ended. Coach Corridan has got to send me in to kick. It's our
+very last chance to tie the score, and save old Bannister from defeat!"
+
+The time keeper, to whom the referee had megaphoned for time out, stopped
+the game, while Captain Butch Brewster, the campus Doctor, and several
+players worked over the senseless Biff. In the stands, the exultant Ballard
+cohorts, confident that victory was booked to perch on their banners, arose
+<i>en masse,</i> and their thunderous chorus drifted across Bannister Field:
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+From the Bannister section, the Gold and Green undergraduates, alumni, and
+supporters, feeling a dread of approaching defeat grip their hearts, yet
+determined to the last, came the famous old slogan of encouragement to
+elevens battling on the gridiron:
+
+ "Smash 'em, boys, run the ends--hold, boys, <i>hold</i>--
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!
+ Touchdown! Touchdown! Hold, boys, <i>hold,
+ Don't</i> let 'em win from the Green and the Gold!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with a groan of despair, sat down on the deserted
+subs. bench. With a feeling that all was lost, the splinter-like Senior
+gazed at the big score-board, announcing, in huge, white letters and
+figures:
+
+4TH QUARTER; TIME TO PLAY--2 MIN.; BANNISTER'S BALL ON BALLARD'S 22-YD.
+LINE; 4TH DOWN--8 YDS. TO GAIN; SCORE: BALLARD--6; BANNISTER--3.
+
+It had been a terrific contest, a biggest game never to be forgotten by
+the ten thousand thrilled spectators! Each eleven had been trained to the
+second for this decisive Championship fight, and with the coveted gonfalon
+of glory before them, the Bannister players battled desperately, while
+Ballard's fighters struggled as grimly for their Alma Mater. For six years,
+the Gold and Green had failed to annex the Championship, and for the past
+three, the invincible Ballard machine had rushed like a car of Juggernaut
+over all other State elevens; one team was determined to wrest the
+banner from its rival's grasp, and the other fully as resolved to retain
+possession, hence a memorable gridiron contest, to which even the alumni
+could find none in past history to compare, was the result.
+
+Weakened by the loss of Thor, whose colossal bulk and Gargantuan strength
+would have made victory a moral certainty, presenting practically the same
+eleven that had faced Ballard the past season and had been defeated by a
+scant margin, old Bannister had started the first quarter with a furious
+rush that swept the enemy to midfield without the loss of a first down.
+Then Ballard had rallied, stopping that triumphal march, on its own
+thirty-five yard line, but unable to check Quarterback Deacon Radford, who
+booted a forty-three-yard goal from a drop-kick, with the score 3-0 in
+Bannister's favor, and Deacon, a brilliant but erratic kicker, apparently
+in fine trim, the Gold Green rooters went wild.
+
+In the second half, however, came the break of the game, as sporting
+writers term it. The strong Ballard eleven found itself, and with a series
+of body-smashing, bone-crushing rushes, battering at the Bannister lines
+like the Germans before Verdun, they steadily fought their way, trench by
+trench, line by line, down the field. Without a fumble, or the loss of a
+single yard, the terrific, catapulting charges forced back old Bannister,
+until the enemy's fullback, who ran like the famous Johnny Maulbetsch,
+of Michigan, shot headlong over the goal line! The attempt for goal from
+touchdown failed, leaving the score, at the end of the third quarter,
+Ballard--6; Bannister--3.
+
+And Deacon Radford, whose first effort at drop-kicking had been so
+brilliant, failed utterly. Three times, taking a desperate chance, the
+Bannister quarter booted the pigskin, but the oval flew wide of the goal
+posts, even from the thirty-yard line. With his mighty toe not to be
+depended on, with the Gold and Green line worn to a frazzle by Ballard's
+battering rushes, unable to beat back the victorious enemy, the Bannister
+cohorts, dismayed, saw the start of the fourth and final quarter, their
+last hope. The forward pass had been futile, for the visitors were trained
+especially for this aerial attack, and with ease they broke up every
+attempt. And then, with the ball in Ballard's possession on Bannister's
+twenty-yard line, came a fumble--like a leaping tiger, Monty Merriweather
+had flung himself on the elusively bounding ball, rolled over to his feet,
+and was off down the field.
+
+"Touchdown! Touchdown! Touchdown!" shrieked old Bannister's madly excited
+students, as Monty sprinted. "Go it, Monty--<i>touchdown</i>! Sprint, old man,
+<i>sprint</i>!"
+
+But Cupid Colfax, Ballard's famous sprinter, playing quarterback, was off
+on Monty's trail almost instantly, and his phenomenal speed cut down the
+Ballard end's advantage; still, by dint of exerting every ounce of energy,
+it was on Ballard's forty-yard line that Monty Merriweather, hugging the
+pigskin grimly, finally crashed to earth.
+
+"Come on, Bannister!" shouted Captain Butch Brewster, as the two teams
+lined down. "Right across the goal-line, then kick the goal, and we win!
+Play the game--<i>fight</i>--Oh, we can win the Championship right now."
+
+Then ensued a session of football spectacular in the extreme, replete with
+thrilling plays, with sensational tackles, and blood-stirring scrimmage.
+The Bannister players, nerved by Captain Brewster's exhortation, by sheer
+will-power drove their battered bodies into the scrimmage. End runs,
+line-smashing tandem plays, forward passes, followed in bewildering
+succession, until the ball rested on Ballard's twenty-yard line, and a
+touchdown meant victory and the Championship for old Bannister, Another
+rush, and five yards gained, then, Ballard, fighting at the last ditch,
+made a stand every bit as heroic and thrilling as that sensational march
+in the first half. The Gold and Green's tigerish rushes were hurled
+back--three times Captain Butch threw his backfield against the line, and
+three times not an inch was gained. On the third down, Monty Merriweather
+was forced back for a loss, so now, with two minutes to play and the ball
+in Bannister's possession, with eight yards to gain, the play was on
+Ballard's twenty-two-yard line!
+
+And the biggest game had produced a new hero of the gridiron. Biff
+Pemberton, left half-back, imbued with savage energy, had borne the brunt
+of that spectacular advance; and now, he stretched on the turf, white and
+still.
+
+"Hicks, old man," T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. turned as a hand rested grippingly
+on his shoulder. Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, his face grim, had come
+to him, and in quick, terse sentences, he outlined his plan.
+
+"It's Bannister's last chance--" he said, tensely. "We <i>can't</i> make the
+first down, the way Ballard is fighting, unless we take desperate odds.
+Now, Hicks, it's <i>up to you</i>. On <i>you</i> depend old Bannister's hopes."
+
+A great, chilling fear swept over T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., leaving him weak
+and shaken. It had come at last-the moment for which he had trained and
+practiced drop-kicking, for a year, in secret, that moment he had hoped
+would come, sometime, and yet had dreaded, as in a nightmare. Before that
+vast, howling crowd of ten thousand madly partisan spectators, <i>he</i> must
+go out on Bannister Field, to try and boot a drop-kick from the
+twenty-eight-yard-line, to save the Gold and Green from defeat. And he
+thought of the great glory that would be his, if he succeeded-he would be a
+campus hero, the idol of old Bannister, the youth who saved his Alma Mater
+from defeat, in the biggest game! Then he remembered his Dad, inspiring
+the eleven, between the halves, by a ringing speech; he heard again his
+sentences:
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal! Go back into the game, throw yourselves into
+the scrimmage, with no thought of personal glory, of the plaudits of the
+crowd--it is a fine thing, a splendid goal, to play the game and be a hero;
+it is a far more noble act to strive for the greater goal, one's Alma
+Mater!"
+
+"Now listen carefully," Coach Corridan rushed on, "Biff is knocked out.
+They'll start again soon, we are going to take a desperate chance; your Dad
+advises it! A tie score means the Championship stays with Ballard. To win
+it, we must <i>win</i> this game--and on <i>you</i> everything depends."
+
+"But--how--" stammered Hicks, dazed--the only way to <i>tie</i> the score was by
+a drop-kick; the only way to win, by a touchdown--did the Coach mean he was
+<i>not</i> to realize his great ambition to save old Bannister by a goal, the
+reward of his long training?
+
+"You jog out," whispered Coach Corridan, hurriedly, for a stretcher was
+being rushed to Biff Pemberton, "report to the Referee, and whisper to
+Butch to try Formation Z; 23-45-6-A! Now, here is the dope: our only chance
+is to fool Ballard completely. When you go out, the Bannister rooters, and
+your Yale friends, will believe it is to try a drop-kick and tie the score.
+I am sure that the Ballard team will think this, too, because of your
+slender build. You act as though you intend to try for a goal, and have
+Captain Butch make our fellows act that way. Then--it is a fake-kick; the
+backfield lines up in the kick formation, but the ball is passed to Butch,
+at your right. He either tries for a forward pass to the right end, or
+if the end Is blocked, rushes it himself! Hurry-the referee's whistle is
+blowing; remember, Hicks, my boy, it's the greater goal, it's for your Alma
+Mater."
+
+In a trance, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., flung off the gold and green blanket,
+and dashed out on Bannister Field. How often, in the past year, had he
+visioned this scene, only--he pictured himself saving the game by a
+drop-kick, and now Coach Corridan ordered him to sacrifice this glory! From
+the stands came the thunderous cheer of the excited Bannister cohorts,
+firmly believing that the slender youth, so ludicrously fragile, among
+those young Colossi, was to try for a goal.
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hicks! Kick the goal--Hicks!"
+
+And from the Yale grads., among them his Dad, came a shout, as he jogged
+across the turf:
+
+"Breka-kek-kek--co-ax--Yale! Hicks-Hicks-Hicks!"
+
+But the Bannister Senior did not thrill. Now, instead, a feeling of growing
+resentment filled his soul; even this intensely loyal youth, with all his
+love for old Bannister, was vastly human, and he felt cheated of his just
+rights. How the students were cheering him, how those Yale men called his
+name, and he was not to have his big chance! That for which he had trained
+and practiced; the opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, by kicking a goal
+at the crucial moment, and saving Bannister from defeat, was never to be
+his. Now, in his last game at college, he was to act as a decoy, as a foil.
+Like a dummy he must stand, while the other Gold and Green athletes ran off
+the play! Instead of everything, a tie game, or a defeat, depending on his
+kicking, defeat or victory hung on that fake play, on Butch Brewster
+and Monty Merriweather! So--the ear-splitting plaudits of the crowd for
+"Hicks!" meant nothing to him; they were dead sea fruit, tasteless as
+ashes--as the ashes of ambition. And then--
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal--no thought of personal glory--a splendid goal,
+to play the game and be a hero; It is a far more noble act to strive for
+the greater goal--one's Alma Mater--"
+
+"I was nearly a <i>traitor</i>" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his Dad's words
+echoing In his memory, and a vision of that staunch, manly Bannister
+ex-athlete before him. "Oh, I was betraying my Alma Mater. Instead of
+rejoicing to make <i>any</i> sacrifice, however big, for Bannister, I thought
+only of myself, of my glory! I'll do it, Dad, I'll strive for the greater
+goal, and--we just can't fail."
+
+Reaching the scrimmage, Hicks, whose nervous dread had left him, when
+he fought down selfish ambition, and thirst for glory, reported to the
+Referee, and hurriedly transferred Coach Corridan's orders to Captain
+Butch Brewster; half a minute of precious time was spent in outlining the
+desperate play to the eleven, for "time!" had been called, and then--
+
+"Z-23-45-6-A!" shouted Quarterback Deacon Radford. "Come on, line--hold!
+Right over the cross-bar with it, Hicks--tie the score, and save Bannister
+from defeat--"
+
+The Gold and Green backfield shifted to the kick formation. Ten yards back
+of the center, on the thirty-two-yard line of Ballard, stood T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.; the vast crowd was hushed, all eyes stared at that slender
+figure, standing there, with Captain Butch Brewster at his right, and Beef
+McNaughton on his left hand-the spectators believed the frail-looking
+youth had been sent in to try a drop-kick. The Ballard rooters thought
+it, and--the Ballard eleven were <i>sure</i> of their enemy's plan--Hicks'
+mosquito-like build, his nervous swinging of that right leg, deluded them,
+and helped Coach Corridan's plot.
+
+It was the only play, if Bannister wanted the Championship enough to try a
+desperate chance; better a fighting hope for that glory, with a try for
+a touchdown, than a field-goal, and a tie-score! The lines of scrimmage
+tensed. The linesmen dug their cleats in the sod, those of Ballard tigerish
+to break through and block; old Bannister's determined to <i>hold</i>. Back of
+Ballard's line, the backfield swayed on tip-toe, every muscle nerved, ready
+to crash through; the ends prepared to knock Roddy and Monty aside, the
+backs would charge madly ahead, in a berserk rush, to crash into that slim
+figure.
+
+"Boot it, Hicks!" shrieked Deke Radford, and as he shouted, the pigskin
+shot from the Bannister center's hands; the Gold and Green line held nobly,
+but not so the ends. Monty Merriweather, making a bluff at blocking the
+left end, let him crash past, while he sprinted ahead--Captain Butch
+Brewster, to whom the pass had been made, ran forward, until he saw he was
+blocked, and then, seeing Monty dear, he hurled a beautiful forward pass.
+
+Into the arms of the waiting Monty it fell, and that Gold and Green star,
+absolutely free of tacklers, sprinted twelve yards to the goal-line,
+falling on the pigskin behind it! Coach Corridan's "100 to 1" chance,
+suggested by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., had succeeded, and--the
+Biggest Game and the Championship had come to old Bannister at last!
+
+Followed a scene pauperizing description! For many long years old Bannister
+had waited for this glory; years of bitter disappointment, seasons when the
+Championship had been missed by a scant margin, a drop-kick striking the
+cross-bar, Butch Brewster blindly crashing into an upright. But now, all
+their pent-up joy flowed forth in a mighty torrent! Singing, yelling,
+dancing, howling, the Bannister Band leading them, the Gold and Green
+students, alumni, Faculty, and supporters, snake-danced around Bannister
+Field. A vast, writhing, sinuous line, it wound around the gridiron,
+everyone who possessed a hat flinging it over the cross-bars. The
+victorious eleven, were borne by the maddened youths--Captain Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Monty, Roddy, Ichabod, Tug, Hefty, Buster, Bunch, and--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. Ballard, firmly believing Hicks would try a field-goal, had
+been taken completely off guard. Surprised by the daring attempt, it had
+succeeded with ease, and the final score was Bannister--10; Ballard--6!
+
+"At last! At last!" boomed Butch Brewster, to whom this was the happiest
+day of his life. "The Championship at last. My great ambition is realized.
+Old Bannister has won the Championship, and I was the Team Captain!"
+
+After a time, when "the shouting and the tumult died," or at least quieted
+somewhat, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., felt a hand on his arm, and looking down
+from the shoulders on which he perched, he saw his Dad. Mr. Hicks' strong
+face was aglow with pride and a vast joy, and he shook his son's hand again
+and again.
+
+"I understand, Thomas!" he said, and his words were reward enough for the
+youth. "It was a <i>big</i> sacrifice, but you made it gladly--I know! You
+gave up personal glory for the greater goal, and--old Bannister won the
+Championship! You helped win, for the winning play turned on <i>you</i>. It was
+splendid, my son, and I am proud of you! No matter if your sacrifice is
+never known to the fellows, </i>I</i> understand."
+
+A moment of silence on Hicks' part; then the sunny youth grinned at his
+beloved Dad, as he responded blithesomely: "I'm Pollyanna, that old
+Bannister and </i>I</i> won out, Dad!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, human beings,
+and--</i>Freshmen</i>! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the Olympic High-Jump
+Champion, holder of the World's record, and winner at the Panama-Pacific
+International Exposition National Championships, in his event, is about to
+high jump! The bar is at five feet, ten inches. Mr. Hicks is the Herculean
+athlete in the crazy-looking bathrobe."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his splinter-structure enshrouded in that
+flamboyant bathrobe of vast proportions and insane colors, that inevitably
+attended his athletic efforts, shaming Joseph's coat-of-many-colors, gazed
+despairingly at his good friend, Butch Brewster, and Track-Coach Brannigan,
+with a Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance.
+
+"It's no use, Butch, it's no use!" quoth he, with ludicrous indignation,
+as big Tug Cardiff, the behemoth shot-putter, through a huge megaphone
+imitated a Ballyhoo Bill, and roared his absurd announcement to the
+hilarious crowd of collegians in the stand. "Old Bannister will <i>never</i>
+take my athletic endeavors seriously. Here I have won two second places,
+and a third, in the high-jump this season, and have a splendid show to
+annex <i>first</i> place and my track B in the Intercollegiates, but--hear
+them!"
+
+It was a balmy, sunshiny afternoon in late May. The sunny-souled,
+happy-go-lucky T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had trained indefatigably for
+the high jump, with the result that he had won several points for his
+team--however, he had not realized his great ambition of first place, and
+his track letter.
+
+As Hicks now exclaimed to his team-mate and Coach Brannigan, no matter,
+to the howling Bannister youths, if he <i>had</i> won three places in the high
+jump, in regularly scheduled meets; his comrades had been jeering at
+his athletic fiascos for nearly four years, and even had Hicks suddenly
+blossomed out as a star athlete, they would not have abandoned their joyous
+habit. Still, those football 'Varsity players to whom good Butch had read
+Hicks, Sr.'s, letters, and explained the sunny youth's persistence, despite
+his ridiculous failures, though they kept on hailing his appearance on
+Bannister Field with exaggerated joy, understood the care-free collegian,
+and loved him for his ambition to please his Dad. Since Hicks had
+absolutely refused to accept his B, for any sport, unless he won it
+according to Athletic Association eligibility rules, the eleven had kept
+secret the contents of the letters Butch Brewster had read to them, for
+Hicks requested it.
+
+The Bannister College track squad, under Track Coach Brannigan and Captain
+Spike Robertson, had been training most strenuously for that annual
+cinder-path classic, the State Intercollegiate Track and Field
+Championships. The sprinters had been tearing down the two-twenty
+straightaway like suburban commuters catching the 7.20 A.M. for the city.
+Hammer-throwers and shot-putters--the weight men--heaved the sixteen-pound
+shot, or hurled the hammer, with reckless abandon, like the Strong Man of
+the circus. Pole-vaulters seemed ambitious to break the altitude records,
+and In so doing, threatened to break their necks; hurdlers skimmed over
+the standard as lightly as swallows, though no one ever beheld swallows
+hurdling. The distance runners plodded determinedly around the quarter-mile
+track, broad-jumpers tried to jump the length of the landing-pit. And T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., vainly essayed to clear five-ten In the high-jump!
+
+It was the last-named event that "broke up the show," as the Phillyloo Bird
+quaintly stated, somewhat wrongly, since the appearance of that blithesome
+youth in the offing, his flamboyant bathrobe concealing his shadow-like
+frame, had <i>started</i> the show, causing the track squad, as well as a
+hundred spectator-students, to rush for seats in the stand. The arrival
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., to train for form and height in the high-jump,
+though a daily occurrence, was always the signal for a Saturnalia of sport
+at his expense, because--
+
+"You can't live down your athletic past, Hicks!" smiled good-hearted Butch
+Brewster. "Your making a touchdown for the other eleven, by running the
+wrong way with the pigskin, your hilarious fiascos in every sport, your
+home-run with the bases full, on a strike-out-are specters to haunt you.
+Even now that you have a chance to win your B, just listen to the fellows."
+
+The track squad's "heavy weight--white hope" section, composed of
+hammer-heavers and shot-putters--Tug Cardiff, Beef McNaughton, Pudge
+Langdon, Buster Brown, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and Bunch
+Bingham, equipped with megaphones, and with the <i>basso profundo</i> voices
+nature gave them, lined up on both sides of the jumping-standards, and
+chanted loudly:
+
+ "All hail to T. Haviland Hicks!
+ He runs like a carload of bricks;
+ When to high jump he tries
+ From the ground he can't rise--
+ For he's built on a pair of toothpicks!"
+
+This saengerfest was greeted with vociferous cheers from the vastly amused
+youths in the stands, who hailed the grinning Hicks with jeers, cat-calls,
+whistles, and humorous (so they believed) remarks:
+
+"Say, Hicks, you won't <i>never</i> be able to jump anything but your
+board-bill!"
+
+"You're built like a grass-hopper, Hicks, but you've done lost the hop!"
+
+"If you keep on improving as you've done lately, you'll make a high-jumper
+in a hundred more years, old top!"
+
+"You may rise in the world, Hicks, but never in the high jump!"
+
+"Don't mind them, Hicks!" spoke Coach Brannigan, his hands on the
+happy-go-lucky youth's shoulders. "Listen to me; the Intercollegiates will
+be the last track meet of your college years, and unless you take first
+place in your event, you won't win your track B. Second, McQuade, of
+Hamilton, will do five-eight, and likely an inch higher, so to take first
+place, you, must do five-ten. You have trained and practiced faithfully
+this season, but no matter what I do, I <i>can't</i> give you that needed two
+inches, and--"
+
+"I know it, Coach!" responded the chastened Hicks, throwing aside his
+lurid bathrobe determinedly, and exposing to the jeering students his
+splinter-frame. "Leave it to Hicks, I'll clear it this time, or--"
+
+"Not!" fleered Butch, whom Hicks' easy self-confidence never failed to
+arouse. "Hicks, listen to me, </i>I</i> can tell you why you can't get two inches
+higher. The whole trouble with you is this; for almost four years you have
+led an indolent, butterfly, care-free existence, and now, when you must
+call on yourself for a special effort, you are too lazy! You can dear
+five-ten; you ought to do it, but you can't summon up the energy. I've
+lectured you all this time, for your heedless, easy-going ways, and
+now--you pay for your idle years!"
+
+"You said an encyclopedia, Butch!" agreed the Coach, with vigor. "If only
+something would just <i>make</i> Hicks jump that high, if only he could do it
+once, and know it is in his power, he could do it in the Intercollegiates,
+aided by excitement and competition! Let something <i>scare</i> him so that he
+will sail over five-ten, and--he will win his B. He has the energy, the
+build, the spring, and the form, but as you say, he is so easy-going and
+lazy, that his natural grass-hopper frame avails him naught."
+
+"Here I go!" announced Hicks, who, to an accompaniment of loud cheers from
+the stand, had been jogging up and down in that warming-up process known to
+athletes as the in place run, consisting of trying to dislocate one's
+jaw by bringing the knees, alternately, up against the chin. "Up and
+over--that's my slogan. Just watch Hicks."
+
+Starting at a distance of twenty yards from the high-jump standards, on
+which the cross-bar rested at five feet, ten inches, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., who vastly resembled a grass-hopper, crept toward the jumping-pit,
+on his toe-spikes, as though hoping to catch the cross-bar off its guard.
+Advancing ten yards, he learned apparently that his design was discovered,
+so he started a loping gallop, turning to a quick, mad sprint, as though he
+attempted to jump over the bar before it had time to rise higher. With a
+beautiful take-off, a splendid spring--a quick, writhing twist in air, and
+two spasmodic kicks, the whole being known as the scissors form of high
+jump, the mosquito-like youth made a strenuous effort to clear the needed
+height, but--one foot kicked the cross-bar, and as Hicks fell flat on his
+back, in the soft landing-pit, the wooden rod, In derision, clattered down
+upon his anatomy.
+
+"Foiled again!" hissed Hicks, after the fashion of a "Ten-Twent'-Thirt'"
+melodrama-villain, while from the exuberant youths in the grandstand,
+who really wanted Hicks to clear the bar, but who jeered at his failure,
+nevertheless, sounded:
+
+"Hire a derrick, Hicks, and hoist yourself over the bar!"
+
+"Your <i>head</i> is light enough--your feet weigh you down!"
+
+"'Crossing the Bar'--rendered by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+"Going up! Go play checkers, Hicks, you ain't no athlete!"
+
+While the grinning, albeit chagrined T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., reposed
+gracefully on his back, staring up at the cross-bar, which someone kindly
+replaced on the pegs, big Butch Brewster, who seemed suddenly to have
+gone crazy, tried to attract Coach Brannigan's attention. Succeeding,
+Butch--usually a grave, serious Senior, winked, contorted his visage
+hideously, pointed at Hicks, and sibilated, "</i>Now</i>, Coach--now is your
+chance! Tell Hicks--"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, Bunch Bingham, Buster
+Brown, Beef McNaughton, and Pudge Langdon, who had been attacked in a
+fashion similar to Butch's spasm, concealed grins of delight, and made
+strenuous efforts to appear guileless, as Track-Coach Brannigan approached
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. To that cheery youth, who was brushing the dirt from
+his immaculate track togs, and bowing to the cheering youths in the stand,
+the Coach spoke:
+
+"Hicks," he said sternly, "you need a cross-country jog, to get
+more strength and power in your limbs! Now, I am going to send the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade for a four-mile run, and you go with them.
+Oh, don't protest; they are all shot-putters and hammer-throwers, but
+Butch, and they can't run fast enough to give a tortoise a fast heat. Take
+'em out two miles and back, Butch, and jog all the way; don't let 'em loaf!
+Off with you,"
+
+The unsuspecting Hicks might have detected the nigger in the woodpile, had
+he not been so anxious to make five-ten in the high-jump. However, willing
+to jog with these behemoths, with whom even he could keep pace, so as to
+develop more jumping power, the blithesome youth cast aside his garish
+bathrobe, pranced about in what he fatuously believed was Ted Meredith's
+style, and howled:
+
+"Follow Hicks! All out for the Marathon--we're off! One--two--three--<i>go</i>!"
+
+With the excited, track squad, non-athletes, and the baseball crowd, which
+had ceased the game to watch the start, yelling, cheering, howling, and
+whistling, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drawing his knees up in exaggerated
+style at every stride, started to lead the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+on its cross-country run. Without wondering why Coach Brannigan had
+suddenly elected to send <i>him</i> along with the hammer-throwers and
+shot-putters, on the jog, and not having seen the insane facial contortions
+of the Brigade, before the Coach gave orders, the gladsome Senior
+started forth in good spirits, resembling a tugboat convoying a fleet of
+battleships.
+
+"'Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! And over the country we go!'" warbled Hicks, as the squad
+left Bannister Field, and jogged across a green meadow. "'--O'er hill and
+dale, through valley and vale, Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho!'"
+
+"Save your wind, you insect!" growled Butch Brewster, with sinister
+significance that escaped the heedless Hicks, as the behemoth Butch, a
+two-miler, swung into the lead. "You'll <i>need</i> it, you fish, before we get
+back to the campus! Not <i>too</i> fast, you flock of human tortoises. You'll be
+crawling on hands and knees, if you keep that pace up long!"
+
+A mile and a half passed. Butch, at an easy jog, had led his squad over
+green pastures, up gentle slopes, and across a plowed field, by way of
+variety. At length, he left the road on which the pachydermic aggregation
+had lumbered for some distance, and turned up a long lane, leading to a
+farm-house. Back of it they periscoped an orchard, with cherry-trees,
+laden with red and white fruit, predominating. Also, floating toward the
+collegians on the balmy May air came an ominous sound:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof! Bow-wow-wow! Woof!"
+
+"Come on, fellows!" urged Butch Brewster. "We'll jog across old Bildad's
+orchard and seize some cherries--the old pirate can't catch us, for we are
+attired for sprinting. Don't they look good?"
+
+"Nothing stirring!" declared Hicks, slangily, but vehemently, as he stopped
+short in his stride. "Old Bildad has got a bulldog what am as big as the
+New York City Hall. He had it on the campus last month, you know! Not for
+mine! I don't go near that house, or swipe no cherries from his trees. If
+you wish to shuffle off this mortal coil, drive right ahead, but </i>I</i> will
+await your return here."
+
+T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, dread of dogs, of all sizes, shapes, pedigrees,
+and breeds, was well known to old Bannister; hence, the Heavy-weights now
+jeered him unmercifully. Old "Bildad," as the taciturn recluse was called,
+who lived like a hermit and owned a rich farm, did own a massive bulldog,
+and a sight of his cruel jaws was a "No Trespass" sign. With great
+forethought, when cherries began to ripen, the farmer had brought Caesar
+Napoleon to the campus, exhibited him to the awed youths, and said, "My
+cherries be for <i>sale</i>, not to be <i>stole</i>!" which object lesson, brief as
+it was, to date, had seemed to have the desired effect. Yet--here was Butch
+proposing that they literally thrust their heads, or other portions of
+their anatomies, into the jaws of death!
+
+"Well," said Bunch Bingham at last, "I tell you what; we'll jog up to the
+house and ask old Bildad to <i>sell</i> us some cherries; we can pay him when he
+comes to the campus with eggs to sell, Come along. Hicks, I'll beard the
+bulldog in his kennel."
+
+So, dragged along by the bulky hammer-throwers and shot-putters, the
+protesting T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in mortal terror of Caesar Napoleon, and
+the other canine guardians of old Bildad's property, progressed up the lane
+toward the house.
+
+"I got a hunch," said the reluctant Hicks, sadly, "that things ain't
+a-comin' out right! In the words of the immortal Somebody-Or-Other, 'This
+'ere ain't none o' <i>my</i> doin'; it's a-bein' thrust on me!' All right, my
+comrades, I'll be the innocent bystander, but heed me--look out for the
+bulldog!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+
+
+The Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, towing the mosquito-like T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., advanced on the stronghold of old Bildad, so named because he
+was a pessimistic Job's comforter, like Bildad, the Shuhite, of old--like
+a flock of German spies reconnoitering Allied trenches. Hearing the house,
+with Butch and Beef holding the helpless, but loudly protesting Hicks, who
+would fain have executed what may mildly be termed a strategic retreat, big
+Tug Cardiff boldly marched, in close formation, toward the door, when the
+portal suddenly flew open.
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Let go, Butch--there's the dog!"
+
+Amid ferocious howls from Caesar Napoleon, and alarmed protests from the
+paralyzed Hicks, who could not have run, with his wobbly knees, had he
+been set free by his captors, old Bildad, towed from the house by Caesar
+Napoleon, who strained savagely at the leash until his face bulged, burst
+upon the scene with impressive dramatic effect! It was difficult to decide,
+without due consideration, which was the more interesting. Bildad, a huge,
+gnarled old Viking, with matted gray hair, bushy eyebrows, a flowing beard,
+and leathery face, a fierce-looking giant, was appalling to behold, but so
+was Caesar Napoleon, an immense bulldog, cruel, bloodthirsty, his massive
+jaws working convulsively, his ugly fangs gleaming, as he set his great
+body against the leash, and gave evidence of a sincere desire to make free
+lunch of the Bannister youths. As Buster Brown afterward stated, "Neither
+one would take the booby prize at a beauty show, but at that, the bulldog
+had a better chance than Bildad!" T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., let it be
+recorded, could not have qualified as a judge, since his undivided
+attention was awarded to Caesar Napoleon!
+
+"What d'ye want round here, ye rapscallions?" demanded Bildad, courteously,
+holding the savage bulldog with one hand, and constructing a ponderous
+fist with the other, "</i>Hike</i>--git off'n my land, y'hear? </i>Git</i>, er Caesar
+Napoleon'll git holt o' them scanty duds ye got on!"
+
+"We want to--to buy some cherries, Mr.--Mr. Bildad!" explained Bunch
+Bingham, edging away nervously. "We won't steal any, honest, sir. Well pay
+you for them the very next time you come to the campus with milk and eggs."
+
+"Ho! Ho!" roared old Bildad, piratically, his colossal body shaking, "A
+likely tale, lads--an' when I come for my money, ye'll jeer me off the
+campus, an' tell me to whistle for it! Off my land--<i>git,</i> an' don't let me
+cotch ye on it inside o' two minutes, or I'll let Caesar Napoleon make a
+meal off'n yer bones--<i>git</i>!"
+
+To express it briefly, they got. T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., not standing on
+the order of his going, set off at a sprint that, while it might have
+caused Ted Meredith to lose sleep, also aroused in Caesar Napoleon an
+overwhelming desire to take out after the fugitive youth, so that Mr.
+Bildad was forced to exert his vast strength to hold the massive bulldog.
+Butch, Beef, Hefty, Tug, Buster, Bunch, Pudge, and Biff, a pachydermic
+crew, awed by Caesar Napoleon's bloodthirsty actions, jogged off in the
+wake of Hicks, who confidently expected to hear the bulldog giving tongue,
+on his trail, at every second.
+
+Another lane, making in from a road making a cross-roads with the one
+from which they came to Bildad's house, ran alongside the orchard for two
+hundred yards, inside the fence; at its end was a high roadgate. At
+what they decided was a safe distance from the "war zone," the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the latter
+forcibly restrained from widening the margin between him and peril, held a
+council on preparedness.
+
+"The old pirate!" stormed Butch Brewster, gazing back to where the vast
+figure of old Bildad, striding toward the house, towered. "We can't let him
+get away with that, fellows. I'll have some of his cherries now, or--"
+
+"No, no--<i>don't</i>, Butch!" chattered Hicks, whose dread of dogs amounted to
+an obsession. "He can still see us, and if you leave the lane, he will send
+Caesar Napoleon after us! Oh, <i>don't</i>--"
+
+But Butch Brewster, evidently wrathful at being balked, strode from the
+path, or lane, of virtue, toward a cherry-tree, whose red fruit hung
+temptingly low, and his example was followed by every one of the Brigade,
+leaving the terrified Hicks to wait in the lane, where, because of his
+alarm, he had no time to wonder at the bravado of his behemoth comrades.
+However, finding that Bildad had disappeared, and believing he had taken
+Caesar Napoleon into the house, the sunny Hicks, who was far from a coward
+otherwise, but who had an unreasonable dread of dogs, little or big, was
+about to wax courageous, and join his team-mates, when a wild shout burst
+from Pudge Langdon:
+
+"Run, fellows--<i>run</i>! Bildad's put the bulldog on us! Here comes--Caesar
+Napoleon--!"
+
+With a blood-chilling </i>"Woof! Woof!"</i> steadily sounding louder, nearer,
+a streak of color shot across the orchard, from the house, toward the
+affrighted Brigade, while old Bildad's hoarse growl shattered the echoes
+with "Take 'em out o' here, Nap--chaw 'em up, boy!" For a startled second,
+the youths stared at the on-rushing body, shooting toward them through the
+orchard-grass at terrific speed, and then:
+
+"Run!" howled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., terror providing him with wings, as
+per proverb. Down the lane, at a pace that would have done credit to Barney
+Oldfield in his Blitzen Benz, the mosquito-like youth sprinted madly, and
+ever, closer, closer on his trail, sounded that awful "Woof! Woof!" from
+Caesar Napoleon, who, as Hicks well knew, was acting with full authority
+from Bildad! He heard, as he fled frantically, the excited shouts of his
+comrades.
+
+"Beat it, Hicks--he's right after you--run! Run!"
+
+"Jump the fence--he can't get you then--jump!"
+
+"He's right on your trail, Hicks--<i>sprint</i>, old man!"
+
+"Make the fence, old man--<i>jump</i> it--and you're <i>safe</i>!"
+
+The terrible truth dawned on the frightened youth, as he desperately
+sprinted: the innocent bystander always gets hurt. He had protested against
+the theft of Bildad's cherries, and naturally, the bulldog had kept after
+<i>him</i>! But it was too late to stop, for the old adage was extremely
+appropriate, "He who hesitates is lost." He must <i>make</i> that road-gate, and
+tumble over it, in some fashion, or be torn to shreds by Caesar Napoleon,
+the savage dog that the cruel Bildad had sent after the youths.
+
+Nearer loomed the road-gate, appallingly high. Closer sounded the panting
+breath of the ferocious Caesar Napoleon, and his incessant "Woof-woof!"
+became louder. It seemed to the desperate Hicks that the bulldog was at his
+heels, and every instant he expected to feel those sharp teeth take hold of
+his anatomy! Once, the despairing youth imitated Lot's wife and turned his
+head. He saw a body streaking after him, gaining at every jump, also he
+lost speed; so thereafter, he conscientiously devoted his every energy to
+the task in hand, that of making the gate, and getting over it, before
+Caesar Napoleon caught his quarry!
+
+At last, the road-gate, at least ten feet high, to Hicks' fevered
+imagination, came so close that a quick decision was necessary, for Caesar
+Napoleon, also, was in the same zone, and in a few seconds he would
+overhaul the fugitive. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., realizing that a second
+lost, perhaps, might prove fatal to his peace of mind, desperately resolved
+to dash at the gate, and jump; if he succeeded even in striking somewhere
+near the top, and falling over, he would not care, for the bulldog would
+not follow him off Bildad's land. From his comrades, far in the rear, came
+the chorus:
+
+"Jump, Hicks! He's right on your heels!"
+
+Like the immortal Light Brigade, Hicks had no time to reason about
+anything. His but to jump or be bitten summed up the situation. So, with
+a last desperate sprint, a quick dash, he left the ground--luckily, the
+earth was hard, giving him a solid take-off, and he got a splendid spring.
+As he arose In air, al! the training and practicing for form stayed with
+him, and instinctively he turned, writhed, and kicked--
+
+For a fleeting second, he saw the top of the gate beneath his body, and
+he felt a thrill as he beheld twisted strands of barbed wire, cruel and
+jagged, across it; then, with a great sensation of joy, he knew that he
+had cleared the top, and a second later, he landed on the ground, in the
+country road, in a heap.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., that sunny-souled, happy-go-lucky, indolent youth,
+for once in his care-free campus career aroused to strenuous action,
+scrambled wildly to his feet, and forcibly realized the truth of
+Longfellow's, "And things are not-what they seem!" Instead of the
+ferocious, bloodthirsty bulldog, Caesar Napoleon, a huge, half-grown
+St. Bernard pup gamboled inside the gate, frisking about gleefully, and
+exhibiting, even so that Hicks, with all his innate dread of dogs, could
+understand it, a vast friendliness. In fact, he seemed trying to say,
+"That's fun. Come on and play with me some more!"
+
+"Hey, fellows," shrieked the relieved Hicks, "that ain't Caesar Napoleon!
+Why, he just wanted to play."
+
+Bewildered, the members of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade of the
+Bannister College track squad rushed on the scene. To their surprise, they
+found not a savage bulldog, but a clumsy, good-natured St. Bernard puppy,
+who frisked wildly about them, groveled at their feet, and put his huge
+paws on them, with the playfulness of a juvenile elephant.
+
+"Why, it <i>isn't</i> Nappie, for a fact!" gasped Butch. "Oh, I am so glad
+that old Bildad wasn't mean enough to put the bulldog after us, for he is
+dangerous. He scared us, though, and put this pup on our trail. He wanted
+to play, and he thought it all a game, when Hicks fled. Oho! What a joke on
+Hicks."
+
+"I don't care!" grinned Hicks, thus siding with the famous Eva Tanguay.
+"You fellows were fooled, too! You were too <i>scared</i> to run, and if it had
+been Caesar Napoleon, I'd have saved your worthless lives by getting him
+after me! I'll bet Bildad is snickering now, the old reprobate! Why, Tug,
+are you <i>crazy</i>?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, indeed, gave indications of lunacy. He marched up to the
+road-gate, and stood close to it, so that the barbed wire top was even with
+his hair; then he backed off, and gazed first at the gate, then at the
+bewildered Hicks, while he grinned at the dazed squad in a Cheshire cat
+style.
+
+"Measure it, someone!" he shouted. "I am nearly six feet tall, and it comes
+even with the top of my dome! Can't you see, you brainless imbeciles, Hicks
+cleared it."
+
+"Wait for me here!" howled big Butch Brewster, climbing the fence and
+starting down the road at a pace that did credit even to that fast
+two-miler. The Brigade, In the absence of their leader, tried to estimate
+the height of the gate, and Hicks, gazing at its barbed-wire top,
+shuddered. The St. Bernard pup, having caused T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for
+once in his indolent life to exert every possible ounce of energy in his
+splinter-frame, groveled at his feet, and strove to express his boundless
+joy at their presence.
+
+Butch Brewster, in fifteen minutes, returned, panting and perspiring,
+bearing a tape-measure, borrowed at the next farm-house. With all the
+solemnity of a sacred rite being performed, the youths waited, as Butch and
+Tug, holding the tape taut, carefully measured from the ground to the top
+of the barbed wire on the gate. Three times they did this, and then, with
+an expression of gladness on his honest countenance, Butch hugged the
+dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while Tug Cardiff howled, "Now for the
+Intercollegiates and your track B, Hicks! You <i>can</i> do five-ten in the
+meet, for Coach Brannigan said you could dear it, if only you did it
+<i>once</i>."
+
+"Why--what do you mean, Tug?" quavered Hicks, not daring to allow himself
+to believe the truth. "You--you surely don't mean--"
+
+"I mean, that now you <i>know</i> you can jump that high," boomed Tug, executing
+a weird dance of exultation, In which, the Brigade joined, until it
+resembled a herd of elephants gone insane, "for you have done it--allowing
+for the sag, and everything, that gate is just five feet, ten inches high,
+and--<i>you cleared it</i>!"
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen--Hicks, of Bannister, is about to high jump! Hicks
+and McQuade, of Hamilton, are tied for first place at five feet eight
+inches! McQuade has failed three times at five-ten! Hicks' third and last
+trial! Height of bar--five feet ten inches!"
+
+This time, however, it was not big Tug Cardiff, imitating a Ballyhoo
+Bill, and inciting the Bannister youths to hilarity at the expense of the
+sunny-souled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; it was the Official Announcer at the
+Annual State Intercollegiate Field and Track Championships, on Bannister
+Field, and his announcement aroused a tumult of excitement in the Bannister
+section of the stands, as well as among the Gold and Green cinder-path
+stars.
+
+"Come on, Hicks, old man!" urged Butch Brewster, who, with a dozen fully
+as excited comrades of the cheery Hicks, surrounded that splinter-athlete.
+"It's positively your last chance to win your track B, or your letter in
+any sport, and please your Dad! If they lower the bar, and you two jump off
+the tie, McQuade's endurance will bring him out the winner."
+
+"You <i>can</i> clear five-ten!" encouraged Bunch Bingham. "You did it once,
+when you believed Caesar Napoleon was after you. Just summon up that much
+energy now, and clear that bar! Once over, the event and your letter are
+won! Oh, if we only had that bulldog here, to sick on you."
+
+Sad to chronicle, the score-board of the Intercollegiates recorded the
+results of the events, so far, thus:
+
+ HAMILTON ............35 BALLARD .............20 BANNISTER ...........28
+
+It was the last event, and even did Hicks win the high-jump, McQuade's
+second place would easily give old Ham. the Championship. Hence, knowing
+that victory was not booked for an appearance on the Gold and Green
+banners, the Bannister youths, wild for the lovable, popular Hicks to win
+his Bs vociferously pulled for him:
+
+"Come on, Hicks--up and over, old man--it's <i>easy</i>!"
+
+"Jump, you Human Grass-Hopper--you can do it!"
+
+"Now or never, Hicks! One big jump does the work!"
+
+"Sick Caesar Napoleon on him, Coach; he'll clear it then!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., casting aside that flamboyant bathrobe, for what he
+believed was the last athletic event of his campus career, stood gazing at
+the cross-bar. One superhuman effort, a great explosion of all his energy,
+such as he had executed when he cleared the gate, thinking Caesar Napoleon
+was after him, and the event was won! He <i>had</i> cleared that height, it was
+within his power. If he failed, as Butch said, the bar would be lowered,
+and then raised until one or the other missed once. McQuade, with his
+superior strength and endurance, must inevitably win, but as he had just
+missed on his third trial at five-ten, if Hicks cleared that height on
+<i>his</i> final chance, the first place was his.
+
+"And my B!" murmured Hicks, tensing his muscles. "Oh, won't my Dad be
+happy? It will help him to realize some of his ambition, when I show him my
+track letter! It is positively my last chance, and I <i>must</i> clear it."
+
+With a vast wave of determined confidence inundating his very being, Hicks
+started for the bar; after those first, peculiar, creeping steps, he had
+just started his gallop, when he heard Tug Cardiff's <i>basso</i>, magnified by
+a megaphone, roared:
+
+"All together, fellows--<i>let 'er go</i>--"
+
+Then, just as Hicks dug his spikes into the earth, in that short, mad
+sprint that gives the jumper his spring, just as he reached the take-off,
+a perfect explosion of noise startled him, and he caught a sound that
+frightened him, tensed as he was:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Woof! Woof! Look out, Hicks, Caesar Napoleon
+is after you!"
+
+Psychology Is inexplicable. Ever afterward, Hicks' comrades of that
+cross-country run averred strenuously that their roaring through
+megaphones, in concert, imitating Caesar Napoleon's savage bark at the
+psychological moment, flung the mosquito-like youth clear of the cross-bar
+and won him the event and his B. Hicks, however, as fervidly denied this
+statement, declaring that he would have won, anyhow, because he had
+summoned up the determination to do it! So it can not be stated just what
+bearing on his jump the plot of Butch Brewster really had. In truth, that
+behemoth had entertained a wild idea of actually hiring old Bildad and
+Caesar Napoleon to appear at the moment Hicks started for his last trial,
+but this weird scheme was abandoned!
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had escaped from the
+riotous Bannister students, delirious with joy at the victory of the
+beloved youth, the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade, capturing the
+grass-hopper Senior, gave him a shock second only to that which he had
+experienced when first he believed Caesar Napoleon was on his trail.
+
+"Perhaps our barking didn't make you jump it!" said Beef McNaughton, when
+Hicks indignantly denied that he had been scared over the cross-bar, "but
+indirectly, old man, we helped you to win! If we had not put up a hoax on
+you--"
+
+"A <i>hoax</i>?" queried the surprised Hicks. "What do you mean--hoax?"
+
+"It was all a frame-up!" grinned Butch Brewster, triumphantly. "We paid old
+Bildad five dollars to play his part, and as an actor, he has Booth and
+Barrymore backed off the stage! We got Coach Brannigan to send you along
+with us on the cross-country jog, and your absurd dread of dogs, Hicks,
+made it easy! Bildad, per instructions, produced Caesar Napoleon, and
+scared you. Then, with a telescope, he watched us, and when I gave the
+signal, he let loose Bob, the harmless St. Bernard pup, on our trail.
+
+"The pup, as he always does, chased after strangers, ready to play. We
+yelled for you to run, and you were so <i>scared</i>, you insect, you didn't
+wait to see the dog. Even when you looked back, in your alarm, you didn't
+know it was not Caesar Napoleon, for his grim visage was seared on your
+brain--I mean, where your brain ought to be! And even had you seen it
+wasn't the bulldog, you would have been frightened, all the same. But I
+confess, Hicks, when you sailed over that high gate, it was one on <i>us</i>."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drew a deep breath, and then a Cheshire cat grin
+came to his cherubic countenance. So, after all, it had been a hoax; there
+had not been any peril. No wonder these behemoths had so courageously taken
+the cherries! But, beyond a doubt, the joke <i>had</i> helped him to win his
+B. It had shown him he could clear five feet, ten inches, for he had done
+it--and, in the meet, when the crucial moment came, the knowledge that he
+<i>had</i> jumped that high, and, therefore, could do it, helped--where the
+thought that he never had cleared it would have dragged him down. He had at
+last won his B, a part of his beloved Dad's great ambition was realized,
+and--
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth that sunny-souled, irrepressible
+youth, swaggering a trifle, "It was my mighty will-power, my terrific
+determination, that took me over the cross-bar, and not--<i>not</i> your
+imitation of--"
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof!" roared the "Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade" in
+thunderous chorus. "Sick him--Caesar Napoleon--!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+
+
+"Come on, Butch! Atta boy--some fin, old top! Say, you Beef--you're asleep
+at the switch. What time do you want to be called? More pep there,
+Monty--bust that little old bulb, Roddy! Aw, rotten! </i>Say</i>, Ballard, your
+playing will bring the Board of Health down on you--why don't you bring
+your first team out? Umpire? What--do you call that an umpire? Why, he's
+a highway robber, a bandit. Put a 'Please Help the Blind' sign on that
+hold-up artist!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain of the Bannister College baseball squad,
+navigating down the third-floor corridor of Bannister Hall, the Senior
+dormitory, laden with suitcases, bat-bags, and other impedimenta, as Mr.
+Julius Caesar says, and vastly resembling a bell-hop in action, paused in
+sheer bewilderment on the threshold of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cozy room.
+
+"Hicks!" stormed the bewildered Butch, wrathfully, "what in the name of Sam
+Hill <i>are</i> you doing? Are you crazy, you absolutely insane lunatic? This
+is a study-hour, and even if <i>you</i> don't possess an intellect, some of the
+fellows want to exercise their brains an hour or so! Stop that ridiculous
+action."
+
+The spectacle Butch Brewster beheld was indeed one to paralyze that
+pachydermic collegian, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible Senior, danced madly about on the tiger-skin rug in midfloor,
+evidently laboring under the delusion that he was a lunatical Hottentot at
+a tribal dance; he waved his arms wildly, like a signaling brakeman, or
+howled through a big megaphone, and about his toothpick structure was
+strung his beloved banjo, on which the blithesome youth twanged at times an
+accompaniment to his jargon:
+
+"Come on, Skeet, take a lead (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>!) Say, d'ye wanta marry
+first base--divorce yourself from that sack! (<i>plunk-plunk</i>!) </i>Oh</i>, you
+bonehead--steal--you won't get arrested for it! Hi! Yi! </i>Ouch</i>, Butch! Oh,
+I'll be good--"
+
+At this moment, the indignant Butch abruptly terminated T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, noisy monologue by seizing that splinter-youth firmly by the scruff
+of the neck and forcibly hurling him on the davenport. Seeing his loyal
+class-mate's resemblance to a Grand Central Station baggage-smasher, the
+irrepressible Senior forthwith imitated a hotel-clerk:
+
+"Front!" howled the grinning Hicks, to an imaginary bellboy, "Show this
+gentleman to Number 2323! Are you alone, sir, or just by yourself? I think
+you will like the room-it faces on the coal-chute, and has hot and cold
+folding-doors, and running water when the roof leaks! The bed is made once
+a week, regularly, and--"
+
+"Hicks, you Infinitesimal Atom of Nothing!" growled big Butch, ominously.
+"What were you doing, creating all that riot, as I came down the corridor?
+What's the main idea, anyway, of--"
+
+"Heed, friend of my campus days," chortled the graceless Hicks, keeping
+a safe distance from his behemoth comrade, "tomorrow-your baseball
+aggregation plays Ballard College, at that knowledge-factory, for the
+Championship of the State. Because nature hath endowed me with the
+Herculean structure of a Jersey mosquito, I am developing a 56-lung-power
+voice, and I need practice, as </i>I</i> am to be the only student-rooter at the
+game tomorrow! Q.E.D.! And as for any Bannister student, except perhaps
+Theophilus Opperdyke and Thor, desiring to investigate the interiors of
+their lexicons tonight, I prithee, just periscope the campus."
+
+"I guess you are right, Hicks!" grinned Butch Brewster, as he looked from
+the window, down on an indescribably noisy scene. "For once, your riotous
+tumult went unheard. Say, get your traveling-bag ready, and leave that
+pestersome banjo behind, if you want to go with the nine!"
+
+Several members of the Gold and Green nine, embryo American and National
+League stars, roosted on the Senior Fence between the Gymnasium and the
+Administration Building, with, suitcases and bat-bags on the grass. In a
+few minutes old Dan Flannagan's celebrated jitney-bus would appear in the
+offing, coming to transport the Bannister athletes downtown to the station,
+for the 9 P.M. express to Philadelphia. Incited by Cheer-Leaders Skeezicks
+McCracken and Snake Fisher, several hundred youths encouraged the nine,
+since, because of approaching final exams., they were barred by Faculty
+order from accompanying the team to Ballard. In thunderous chorus they
+chanted:
+
+ "One more Job for the undertaker!
+ More work for the tombstone maker!
+ la the local ceme<i>tery</i>, they are very--very--<i>very</i>
+ Busy on a brand-new grave for--Ballard!"
+
+As the lovable Hicks expressed it, "'Coming events cast their shadows
+before.' Commencement overshadows our joyous campus existence!" However, no
+Bannister acquaintance of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., could detect wherein the
+swiftly approaching final separation from his Alma Mater had affected in
+the least that happy-go-lucky, care-free, irrepressible youth. If anything,
+it seemed that Hicks strove to fight off thoughts of the end of his golden
+campus years, using as weapons his torturesome saengerfests, his Beefsteak
+Busts down at Jerry's, and various other pastimes, to the vast indignation
+of his good friend and class-mate, Butch Brewster, who tried futilely to
+lecture him into the proper serious mood with which Seniors must sail
+through Commencement!
+
+"You are a Senior, Hicks, a Senior!" Butch would explain wrathfully. "You
+are popularly supposed to be dignified, and here you persist in acting like
+a comedian in a vaudeville show! I suppose you intend to appear on the
+stage, and, when handed your sheepskin, respond by twanging your banjo and
+roaring a silly ballad."
+
+Yet, the cheery Hicks had been very busy, since that memorable day when,
+thanks to Caesar Napoleon and the hoax of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-
+Brigade of the track squad, he had cleared the cross-bar at five-ten,
+and won the event and his white B! Mr. T. Haviland Hicks, Sr., overjoyed
+at his son's achievement, had sent him a generous check, which the youth
+much needed, and had promised to be present at the annual Athletic
+Association Meeting, at Commencement, when the B's were awarded
+deserving athletes, which caused Hicks as much joy as the pink slip.
+With his final study sprint for the Senior Finals, his duties as team-
+manager of the baseball nine, his preparations for Commencement, his
+social duties at the Junior Prom., and multifarious other details
+coincident to graduation, the heedless Hicks had not found time to be
+sorrowful at the knowledge that it soon would end, forever, that he must
+say "Farewell, Alma Mater," and leave the campus and corridors of old
+Bannister; yet soon even Hicks' ebullient spirits must fail, for
+Commencement was a trifle over a week off.
+
+"Hicks, you lovable, heedless, irrepressible wretch," said Big Butch,
+affectionately, as the two class-mates thrilled at the scene. "Does it
+penetrate that shrapnel-proof concrete dome of yours that the Ballard game
+tomorrow is the final athletic contest of my, and likewise your, campus
+career at old Bannister?"
+
+"Similar thoughts has smote my colossal intellect, Butch!" responded the
+bean-pole Hicks, gladsomely. "But--why seek to overshadow this joyous scene
+with somber reflections? You-should-worry. You have annexed sufficient B's,
+were they different, to make up an alphabet. You've won your letter on
+gridiron, track, and baseball field, and you've been team-captain of
+everything twice! Why, therefore, sheddest thou them crocodile tears?"
+
+"Not for myself, thou sunny-souled idler!" announced Butch, generously,
+"But for <i>thee</i>! I prithee, since you pritheed me a few moments hence, let
+that so-called colossal intellect of yours stride back along the corridors
+of Time, until it reaches a certain day toward the close of our Freshman
+year. Remember, you had made a hilarious failure of every athletic event
+you tried-football, basketball, track, and baseball; you had just made a
+tremendous farce of the Freshman-Sophomore track meet, and to me, your
+loyal comrade, you uttered these rash words, 'Before I graduate from old
+Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!'
+
+"I reiterate and repeat, tomorrow's game with Ballard is the last chance
+you will have. There is no possibility that you, with your well-known lack
+of baseball ability, will get in the game, and--your track B, won in the
+high-jump, is the only B you have won! Now, do you still maintain that you
+will make good that rash vow?"
+
+"'Where there's a will, there's a way.' 'Never say die.' 'While there's
+life, there's hope.' 'Don't give up the ship.' 'Fight to the last ditch.'
+'In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as <i>fail</i>,'"
+quoth the irrepressible Hicks, all in a breath. "As long as there is an
+infinitesimal fraction of a chance left, I repeat, just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+"You haven't got a chance in the world!" Butch assured him, consolingly.
+"You did manage to get into one football game, for a minute, and you were a
+'Varsity player that long. By sticking to it, you have won your track B in
+the high-jump, thanks to your grass-hopper build, and we rejoice at your
+reward! Your Dad is happy that you've won a B, so why not be sensible, and
+cease this ridiculous talk of winning your B in <i>three</i> sports, when you
+can see it is preposterously out of the question, absolutely impossible--"
+
+It was not that Butch. Brewster did not <i>want</i> his sunny classmate to win
+his B in three sports, or that he would have failed to rejoice at Hicks'
+winning the triple honor. Had such a thing seemed within the bounds of
+possibility, Butch, big-hearted and loyal, would have been as happy as
+Hicks, or his Dad. But what the behemoth athlete became wrathful at was the
+obviously lunatical way in which the cheery Hicks, now that his college
+years were almost ended, parrot-like repeated, "Oh, just leave it to
+Hicks!" when he must know all hope was dead. In truth, T, Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., in pretending to maintain still that he would make good the rash
+vow of his Freshman year, had no purpose but to arouse his comrade's
+indignation; but Butch, serious of nature, believed there really lurked in
+Hicks' system some germs of hope.
+
+"We never know, old top!" chuckled Hicks, though he was <i>sure</i> he could
+never fulfill that promise, as he had not played three-fourths of a season
+on both the football and the baseball teams, "Something may show up at the
+last minute, and--"
+
+At that moment, something evidently did show up, on the campus below, for
+the enthusiastic students howled in: thunderous chorus, as the "Honk!
+Honk!" of a Claxon was heard, "Here he comes! All together, fellows--the
+Bannister yell for the nine--then for good old Dan Flannagan!"
+
+As Hicks and Butch watched from the window, old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus,
+to the discordant blaring of a horn, progressed up the driveway, even as it
+had done on that night in September, when it transported to the campus
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. Amid salvos of
+applause from the Bannister youths, and blasts of the Claxon, old Dan
+brought "The Dove" to a stop before the Senior Fence, and bowed to the
+nine, grinning genially the while.
+
+"The car waits at the door, sir!" spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., touching
+his cap after the fashion of an English butler, before seizing a bat-bag,
+and his suit-case. "As team manager, I must attempt to force into Skeet
+Wigglesworth's dome how he and the five subs, are to travel on the C. N. &
+Q., to Eastminster, from Baltimore. Come on, Butch, we're off--"
+
+"You are always off!" commented Butch, good-humoredly, as he seized his
+baggage and followed the mosquito-like Hicks from the room, downstairs, and
+out on the campus. Here the assembled youths, with yells, cheers, and songs
+sandwiched between humorous remarks to Dan Flannagan, watched the thrilling
+spectacle of the Gold and Green nine, with the Team Manager and five
+substitutes, fifteen in all, squeeze into and atop of Dan Flannagan's
+jitney-Ford.
+
+"Let me check you fellows off," said Hicks, importantly, peering into the
+jitney, for he, as Team Manager, had to handle the traveling expenses.
+"Monty Merriweather, Roddy Perkins, Biff Pemberton. Butch Brewster, Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Beef McNaughton, Cherub Challoner, Ichabod Crane, Don
+Carterson; that is the regular nine, and are you five subs, present? O. K.
+Skeet, climb out here a second."
+
+Little Skeet Wigglesworth, the brilliant short-stop, climbed out with
+exceeding difficulty, and facing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., he saluted in
+military fashion. The team manager, consulting a timetable of the C. N.
+&.Q. railroad, fixed him with a stern look.
+
+"Skeet," he spoke distinctly, "now, <i>get this</i>--myself and eight regulars,
+<i>nine</i> in all, will take the 9 P. M. express for Philadelphia, and stay
+there all night. Tomorrow, at 8 A. M., we leave Broad Street Station for
+Eastminster, arriving at 11 A. M. </i>Now</i> I have a lot of unused mileage on
+the C. N. & Q., and I want to use it up before Commencement. So, heed: you
+want to go <i>via</i> Baltimore, to see your parents. You take the 9.20 P. M.
+express tonight, to Baltimore, and go from that city in the morning, to
+Eastminster, on the C. N, & Q.--it's the only road. And take the five subs
+with you, to devour the mileage. Now, has that penetrated thy bomb-proof
+dome?"
+
+"</i>Sure;</i> you don't have to deliver a Chautauqua lecture, Hicks!" grinned
+Skeet. "Say, what time does my train leave Baltimore, in the A.M., for
+Eastminster?"
+
+"Let's see." T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., handing the mileage-books to the
+shortstop, focused his intellect on the C. N. & Q. timetable. "Oh, yes--you
+leave Union Station, Baltimore, at 7:30 A.M., arriving at Eastminster at
+noon; <i>it is the only train, you can get,</i> to make it in time for the game,
+so remember the hour--7.30 A.M.! Here, stuff the timetable in your pocket."
+
+In a few moments, the team and substitutes had been jammed into old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney, and the Bannister youths on the campus concentrated
+their interest on the sunny Hicks, who, grinning </i>a la</i> Cheshire cat,
+climbed atop of "The Dove," which old Dan was having as much trouble to
+start as he had experienced for over twenty years with the late Lord
+Nelson, his defunct quadruped. Seeing Hicks abstract a Louisville
+Slugger from the bat-bag, the students roared facetious remarks at the
+irrepressible youth:
+
+"Home-run Hicks--he made a home-run--<i>on a strike-out</i>!"--"Put Hicks in
+the game, Captain Butch--he will win it."--"Watch Hicks--he'll pull
+some <i>bonehead</i> play!"--"Bring home the Championship, but--lose Hicks
+somewhere!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the battered engine of the jit. yielded to
+old Dan's cranking, and kindly consented to start, surveyed the yelling
+students, seized a bat, and struck an attitude which he fatuously believed
+was that of Ty Cobb, about to make a hit; taking advantage of a lull in the
+tumult, the lovable youth howled at the hilarious crowd:
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks! I will win the game and the </i>Championship</i>, for my
+Alma Mater, and--I'll do it by my headwork!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR'S. HEADWORK
+
+
+"Play Ball! Say, Bannister, are you <i>afraid</i> to play?"
+
+"Call the game, Mr. Ump.--make 'em play ball!"
+
+"Batter up! Forfeit the game to Ballard, Umpire!"
+
+"Lend 'em Ballard's bat-boy-to make a full nine!"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, his honest countenance, as a moving-picture
+director would express it, "registering wrathful dismay," lumbered toward
+the Ballard Field concrete dug-out, in which the Gold and Green players
+had entrenched themselves, while from the stands, the Ballard cohorts
+vociferated their intense impatience at the inexplicable delay.
+
+"We have <i>got</i> to play," he raged, striding up and down before the bench.
+"The game is ten minutes late now, and the crowd is restless! And here we
+have only <i>eight</i> 'Varsity players, and no one to make the ninth--not even
+a sub.! Oh, I could--"
+
+"That brainless Skeet Wigglesworth!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who, arrayed like a lily of the field, reposed his splinter-structure on
+the bench with his comrades. "In some way, he managed to <i>miss</i> that train
+from Baltimore! They didn't come on the noon C, N. & Q. train, and there
+isn't another one until night. My directions were as plain as a German
+war-map, and it beats me how Skeet got befuddled!"
+
+Gloom, as thick and abysmal as a London fog, hovered over the Bannister
+dug-out. On the concrete bench, the seven Gold and Green athletes, Beef,
+Monty, Roddy, Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, with Team Manager T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., stared silently at Captain Butch Brewster, who seemed in
+imminent peril of exploding. Something probably never before heard of in
+the annals of athletic history had happened. Bannister College, about to
+play Ballard the big game for the State Championship, had lost a short-stop
+and five substitutes, in some unfathomable manner, and it was impossible
+to round up one other member of the Gold and Green baseball squad. True, a
+hundred loyal alumni were in the stands, but only <i>bona fide</i> students, of
+course, were eligible to play the game, and--the Faculty ruling had kept
+them at old Bannister!
+
+"Here comes Ballard's Manager," spoke Beef McNaughton, as a brisk,
+clean-cut youth advanced, a yellow envelope in hand. "Why, he has a
+telegram. Do you suppose Skeet actually had <i>brains</i> enough to wire an
+explanation?"
+
+"Telegram for Captain Brewster!" announced the Ballard collegian, giving
+the message to that surprised behemoth. "It was sent in my care--collect,
+and the sender, name of Wigglesworth, fired one to me personally, telling
+me to deliver this one to Captain Butch Brewster, and collect from Team
+Manager Hicks--he surely didn't bother to save money! I've been out of
+town, and just got back to the campus; of course, the telegrams could not
+be delivered to anyone but me, hence the delay."
+
+Big Butch, thanking the Ballard Team Manager, and assuring him that the
+charges he had paid would be advanced to him after the game, ripped open
+the yellow envelope, and drew out the message. Like a thunder-storm
+gathering on the horizon, a dark expression came to good Butch's
+countenance, and when he had perused the lengthy telegram, he transfixed
+the startled and bewildered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with an angry glare:
+
+"</i>Bonehead</i>!" he raged, apparently controlling himself with a superhuman
+effort. "Oh, you lunatic, you wretch, villain--you--<i>you</i>--"
+
+To the supreme amazement and dismay of the puzzled Hicks, Beef, next in
+line, after <i>he</i> had scanned Skeet's telegram, followed Butch's example,
+for <i>he</i> glowered at the perturbed youth, and heaped condemnations on his
+devoted head. And so on down the line on the bench, until Monty, Roddy,
+Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, reading the message, joined in gazing
+indignantly at their gladsome Team Manager, who, as the eight arose <i>en
+masse</i> and advanced on him, sought to flee the wrath to come.
+
+"Safety first!" quoth T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. "'Mine not to reason why, mine
+but to haste and fly,' or--be crushed! Ouch! Beef, Monty--have a heart!"
+
+Captured by Beef and Monty Merriweather, as he frantically scrambled up
+the steps of the concrete dug-out, the grinning Hicks was held in the firm
+grasp of that behemoth, Butch Brewster, aided by the skyscraper Ichabod,
+while Cherub Challoner thrust the telegram before his eyes. In words of
+fire that burned themselves into his brain--something his colleagues
+denied he possessed--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., saw the explanation of Skeet
+Wigglesworth's missing the train from Baltimore that A. M. Dazed, the sunny
+youth read the message on which over-charges must be paid:
+
+
+"Hicks--you bonehead! The time-table of the C.N. & Q. you gave me was an
+old one--schedule revised two weeks ago! Train now leaves Balto. at 6.55
+A.M.! When we got to station at 7.05 A.M. she had went! No train to Ballard
+till night! I and subs, had to wire Bannister for money to get back on!
+You mis-manager--the <i>head-work</i> you boasted of is boneheadwork! Pay the
+charges on this, you brainless insect! I'll send it to Butch, for you'd
+never show it to him if I sent it to you! Indignantly--
+
+"SKEET."
+
+
+"</i>Mis</i>-manager is <i>right</i>!" seethed Captain Butch, for once in his campus
+career really wrathy at the lovable Hicks. "We are in a fix--eight players,
+and the crowd howling for the game to start. Oh, I could jump overboard,
+and drag you with me!"
+
+"Bonehead! Bonehead!" chorused the Gold and Green players, indignantly.
+"Gave Skeet an out-of-date time-table--never looked at the date! Let's drag
+him out before the crowd, and announce to them his brilliant headwork!"
+
+Captain Butch, "up against it," to employ a slightly slang expression,
+gazed across Ballard Field. In the stands, the students responding
+thunderously to their cheer-leaders' megaphoned requests, roared, "Play
+ball! Play ball! Play ball!" Gay pennants and banners fluttered in the
+glorious sunshine of the June day. It was a bright scene, but its glory
+awakened no happiness in the heart of the Bannister leader, as his gaze
+wandered to the somewhat flabbergasted expression on the cheery Hicks'
+face. That inevitably sunny youth, however, managed to conjure up a faint
+resemblance of his Cheshire cat grin, and following his usual habit of
+letting nothing daunt his gladsome spirit, he croaked feebly: "Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks! I will--"
+
+"Play the game!" thundered Butch, inspired. "Beef, see the umpire and say
+we'll be ready as soon as we get Hicks into togs-show him the telegram, and
+explain our delay! I'll shift Monty from the outfield to Skeet's job at
+short, and put this diluted imitation of something human in the field, to
+do his worst. Come to the field-house, you poor fish--"
+
+"Oh, Butch, I can't--I just <i>can't</i>!" protested the alarmed Hicks,
+helpless, as the big athlete towed him from the trench, "I--I can't play
+ball, and I don't want to be shown up before all that mob! It's all right
+at Bannister, in class-games, but--Oh, can't you play the game with <i>eight</i>
+fellows?"
+
+"That is just what we intend to do!" said Butch, with grim humor.
+"But--we'll have a dummy in the ninth position, to make the people believe
+we have a full nine! Cheer up, Hicks--'In the bright lexicon of youth
+there ain't no such word as fail,' you say! As for your making a fool of
+yourself, you haven't brains enough to be classed as one! Now--you'll pay
+dearly for your bonehead play."
+
+Ten minutes later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as agitated as a <i>prima donna</i>
+making her debut with the Metropolitan: Opera Company, decorated the
+Bannister bench, arrayed in one of the substitutes' baseball suits. It
+was too large for his splinter-structure, so that it flapped grotesquely,
+giving him a startling resemblance to a scarecrow escaped from a cornfield.
+With the thermometer of his spirits registering zero, the dismayed youth,
+whose punishment was surely fitting the crime, heard the Umpire bellow:
+
+"Play ball! Batter up! Bannister at bat--Ballard in the field!"
+
+Hicks, that sunny-souled youth, had often daydreamed of himself in a big
+game of baseball, for his college. He had vividly imagined a ninth inning
+crisis, three of the enemy on base, two out, and a long fly, good for a
+home-run, soaring over his head. How he had sprinted--back--back--and at
+the last second, reached high in the air, grabbing the soaring spheroid,
+and saving the game for his Alma Mater! Often, too, he had stepped up to
+bat in the final frame, with two out, one on base, and Bannister a run
+behind. With the vast crowd silent and breathless, he had walloped the
+ball, over the left-field fence, and jogged around the bases, thrilling to
+the thunderous cheers of his comrades. But now--
+
+</i>"Oooo!"</i> shivered Hicks, as though he had just stepped beneath an icy
+shower-bath. "I wish I could run away. I just <i>know</i> they'll knock every
+ball to me, and I couldn't catch one with a sheriff and posse!"
+
+However, since, despite the blithesome Hicks' lack of confidence, it was
+that sunny Senior, after all, whom fate--or fortune, accordingly as
+each nine viewed it--destined to be the hero of the Bannister-Ballard
+Championship baseball contest, the game itself is shoved into such
+insignificance that it can be briefly chronicled by recording the events
+that led up to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, self-prophesied "head-work."
+
+Without Skeet Wigglesworth at shortstop, with the futile Hicks in
+right-field, and the confidence of the nine shaken, Captain Butch Brewster
+and the Gold and Green players went into the big game, unable to shake off
+the feeling that they would be defeated. And when Pitcher Don Carterson,
+in his half of the frame, passed the first two Ballard batters, the belief
+deepened to conviction. However, a fast double play and a long fly ended
+the inning without damage, and Bannister, likewise, had failed to make an
+impression on the score-board. In the second, Don promptly showed that he
+was striving to rival the late Cy Morgan, of the Athletics, for he promptly
+hit two batters and passed the third, whereupon, as sporting-writers
+express it, he was "derricked" by Captain Butch.
+
+Placing the deposed twirler in left field, Captain Brewster, as a last
+resort, believing the game hopelessly lost, with his star pitcher having
+failed, and his relief slabmen, thanks to Hicks, mislaid <i>en route</i>, sent
+out to the box one Ichabod Crane, brought in from the position given to
+Don Carterson. This cadaverous, skyscraper Senior, who always announced,
+himself as originating, "Back at Bedwell Center, Pa., where I come from--"
+was well known to fame as the "Champion Horse-Shoe Pitcher of Bucks
+County," but his baseball pitching was rather uncertain; like the girl in
+the nursery jingle, Ichabod, as a twirler, "When he was good, he was very,
+very good, and when he was wild, he was <i>horrid</i>!" Like Christy Mathewson,
+after he had pitched a few balls, he knew whether or not he was in
+shape for the game, and so did the spectators. With terrific speed and
+bewildering curves, Ichabod would have made a star, but his wildness
+prevented, and only on very rare days could he control the ball.
+
+Luckily for old Bannister's chances of victory and the Championship, this
+was one of the elongated Ichabod's rare days. He ambled into the box, with
+the bases full, and promptly struck out a batter. The next rolled to first,
+forcing out the runner at home, while the third hitter under Ichabod's
+regime drove out a long fly to center-field. Thus the game settled to one
+of the most memorable contests that Ballard Field had ever witnessed, a
+pitchers' battle between the awkward, bean-pole youth from "Bedwell Center,
+Pa.," and Bob Forsythe, the crack Ballard twirler. It was a fight long
+to be remembered, with hits as scarce as auks' eggs, and runs out of the
+reckoning, for six innings.
+
+At the start of the seventh, with the Ballard rooters standing and
+thundering, "The lucky seventh! Ballard--win the game in the lucky
+seventh!" the score was 0-0. Only two hits had been made off Forsythe, of
+Ballard, whose change of pace had the Bannister nine at his mercy, and
+but three off Ichabod, who had superb control of his dazzling speed. T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cavorting in right field, had made the only error of
+the contest, dropping an easy fly that fell into his hands after he had run
+bewilderedly in circles, when any good fielder could have stood still and
+captured it; however, since he got the ball to second in time to hold the
+runner at third, no harm resulted.
+
+"Hold 'em, Bannister, <i>hold</i> 'em!" entreated Butch Brewster, as they went
+to the field at their end of the lucky seventh, not having scored. "Do your
+best, Hicks, old man--never mind their Jokes. If you can't <i>catch</i>
+the ball, just get it to second, or first, without delay! Pitch ball,
+Ichabod--three innings to hold 'em!"
+
+But it was destined to be the lucky seventh for Ballard. An error on a hard
+chance, for Roddy Perkins, at third, placed a runner on first. Ichabod
+struck out a hitter, and the runner stole second, aided somewhat by the
+umpire. The next player flew out, sacrificing the runner to third; then--an
+easy fly traveled toward the paralyzed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one that
+anybody with the most infinitesimal baseball ability could have corralled,
+as Butch said, "with his eyes blindfolded, and his hands tied behind him!"
+But Hicks, who possessed absolutely <i>no</i> baseball talent, though he made
+a desperate try, succeeded in doing an European juggling act for five
+heartbreaking seconds, after which he let the law of gravity act on the
+sphere, so that it descended to terra firma. Hence, the "Lucky Seventh"
+ended with the score: Ballard, 1; Bannister, 0; and the Ballard cohorts in
+a state bordering on lunacy!
+
+"Oh, I've done it now--I've lost the game and the Championship!" groaned
+the crushed Hicks, as he stumbled toward the Bannister bench. "First I made
+that bonehead play, giving Skeet an old time-table I had on hand, and not
+telling him to get one at the station. How was </i>I</i> to know the old railroad
+would change the schedule, within two weeks of this game? And now--I've
+made the error that gives Ballard the Championship. If I hadn't pulled that
+boner, Skeet would be here, and the regular right-fielder would have had
+that fly. What a glorious climax to my athletic career at old Bannister!"
+
+Hicks' comrades were too generous, or heartbroken, to condemn the sorrowful
+youth, as he trailed to the dug-out, but the Ballard rooters had absolutely
+no mercy, and they panned him in regulation style. In fact, all through
+the game, Hicks expressed himself as being butchered by the fans to make a
+Ballard holiday, for he struck out with unfailing regularity at bat, and
+dropped everything in the field, so that the rooters jeered him, whenever
+he stepped to the plate, and--it was quite different from the good-natured
+ridicule of his comrades, back at old Bannister.
+
+"Never mind, Hicks," said good Butch Brewster, brokenly, seeing how
+sorrow-stricken his sunny classmate was, "We'll beat 'em--yet! We bat this
+inning, and in the ninth maybe someone will knock a home-run for us, and
+tie the score."
+
+The eighth Inning was the lucky one for the Gold and Green. Monty
+Merriweather opened with a clean two-base hit to left, and advanced to
+third on Biff Pemberton's sacrifice to short. Butch, trying to knock a
+home-run, struck out-</i>a la</i> "Cactus" Cravath in the World's Series; but the
+lanky Ichabod, endeavoring to bunt, dropped a Texas-Leaguer over second,
+and the score was tied, though the sky-scraper twirler was caught off base
+a moment later. And, though Ballard fought hard in the last of the eighth,
+Ichabod displayed big-league speed, and retired two hitters by the
+strike-out route, while the third popped out to first.
+
+"The <i>ninth</i> Inning!" breathed Beef McNaughton, picking up his Louisville
+Slugger, as he strode to the plate. "Come on, boys--we will win the
+Championship <i>right now</i>. Get one run, and Ichabod will hold Ballard one
+more time!"
+
+Perhaps the pachydermic Beef's grim attitude unnerved the wonderful Bob
+Forsythe, for he passed that elephantine youth. However, he regained his
+splendid control, and struck out Cherub Challoner on three pitched balls.
+After this, it was a shame to behold the Ballard first-baseman drop the
+ball, when Don Carterson grounded to third, and would have been thrown
+out with ease--with two on base, and one out, Roddy Perkins made a sharp
+single, on which the two runners advanced a base. Now, with the sacks
+filled, and with only one out--
+
+"It's all over!" mourned Captain Butch Brewster, rocking back and forth on
+the bench. "Hicks--is--at--bat!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his bat wobbling, and his knees acting in a similar
+fashion, refusing to support even that fragile frame, staggered toward the
+plate, like a martyr. A tremendous howl of unearthly joy went up from the
+stands, for Hicks had struck out every time yet.
+
+"Three pitched balls, Bob!" was the cry. "Strike him out! It's all over but
+the shouting! He's scared to death, Forsythe--he can't hit a barn-door
+with a scatter-gun! One--two--three--out! Here's where Ballard wins the
+Championship."
+
+Twice the grinning Bob Forsythe cut loose with blinding speed--twice the
+extremely alarmed Hicks dodged back, and waved a feeble Chautauqua salute
+at the ball he never even saw! Then--trying to "cut the inside corner" with
+a fast inshoot, Forsythe's control wavered a trifle, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., saw the ball streaking toward him! The paralyzed youth felt like a man
+about to be shot by a burglar. He could feel the bail thud against him,
+feel the terrific shock; and yet--a thought instinctively flashed on him,
+he remembered, in a flash, what a tortured Monty Merriweather had shouted,
+as he wobbled to bat:
+
+"Get a base on balls, or--if you can't <i>make</i> a hit--<i>get hit</i>!"
+
+If he got hit--it meant a run forced in, as the bases were full! That, in
+all probability, would give old Bannister the Championship, for Ichabod was
+invincible. It is not likely that the dazed Hicks thought all this out, and
+weighed it against the agony of getting hit by Forsythe's speed. The truth
+is, the paralyzed youth was too petrified by fear to dodge, and that before
+he could avoid it, the speeding spheroid crashed against his noble brow
+with a sickening impact.
+
+All went black before him, T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., pale and limp, crumpled,
+and slid to the ground, senseless; therefore, he failed to hear the roar
+from the Bannister bench, from the loyal Gold and Green rooters in the
+stands, as big Beef lumbered across the plate with what proved later to be
+the winning run. He did not hear the Umpire shout: "Take your base!"
+
+ "What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ He was never a star in the baseball game,
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks-he's all right!"
+
+"Honk! Honk!" Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, rattling up the driveway,
+bearing back to the Bannister campus the victorious Gold and Green nine,
+and the State Intercollegiate Baseball Championship, though the hour was
+midnight, found every student on the grass before the Senior Fence! Over
+three hundred leather-lunged youths, aided by the Bannister Band, and every
+known noise-making device, hailed "The Dove," as that unseaworthy craft
+halted before them, with the baseball nine inside, and on top. However, the
+terrific tumult stilled, as the bewildered collegians caught the refrain
+from the exuberant players:
+
+ "He was never a star in the baseball game--
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!"
+
+"Hicks did what?" shrieked Skeezicks McCracken, voicing through a megaphone
+the sentiment of the crowd. Captain Butch had simply telegraphed the final
+score, so old Bannister was puzzled to hear the team lauding T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., who, still white and weak, with a bandage around his classic
+forehead, maintained a phenomenal quiet, atop of "The Dove," leaning
+against Butch Brewster.
+
+"Fellows," shouted Butch, despite Hicks' protest, rising to his feet on the
+roof of the "jit."--"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., today won the game and the
+Championship! Listen--"
+
+The vast crowd of erstwhile clamorous youths stood spellbound, as Captain
+Butch Brewster, in graphic sentences, described the game--Don Carterson's
+failure, Ichabod's sensational pitching, Hicks' errors, and--the wonderful
+manner in which the futile youth had won the Championship! As little Skeet
+Wigglesworth and the five substitutes, who had returned that afternoon, had
+spread the story of Hicks' bonehead play, old Bannister had turned out to
+ridicule and jeer good-naturedly the sunny youth, but now they learned that
+Hicks had been forced by his own mistake into the Big Game, and had won it!
+Of course, his comrades knew it had been through no ability of his, but the
+knowledge that he had been knocked senseless by Forsythe's great speed, and
+had suffered so that his college might score, thrilled them.
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" thundered Thor, he who at one time would
+have called this riot foolishness, and forgetting that the nine had just
+chanted the response to this query.
+
+"He's all right!" chorused the collegians, in ecstasy.
+
+"Who's all right?" demanded John Thorwald, his blond head towering over
+those of his comrades. To him, now, there was nothing silly about this
+performance!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" came the shout, and the band fanfared, while the
+exultant collegians shouted, sang, whistled, and created an indescribable
+tumult with their noise-making devices. For five minutes the ear-splitting
+din continued, a wonderful tribute to the lovable, popular youth, and then
+it stilled so suddenly that the result was startling, for--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., swaying on his feet arose, and stood on the roof of the "jit."
+
+With that heart-warming Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance, the
+irrepressible Hicks seized a Louisville Slugger, assumed a Home-Run Baker
+batting pose, and shouted to his breathlessly waiting comrades:
+
+"Fellows, I vowed I would win that baseball game and the Championship for
+my Alma Mater by my headwork! With the bases full, and the score a tie, the
+Ballard pitcher hit me in the head with the ball, forcing in the run that
+won for old Ballard--now, if that wasn't <i>headwork</i>--"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+
+
+ "We have come to the close of our college days.
+ Golden campus years soon must end;
+ From Bannister we shall go our ways--
+ And friend shall part from friend!
+ On our Alma Mater now we gaze,
+ And our eyes are filled with tears;
+ For we've come to the close of our college days,
+ And the end of our campus years!"
+
+Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., Bannister, '92; Yale, '96, and Pittsburgh
+millionaire "Steel King," stood at the window of Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, room, his arm across the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, his
+only son and heir. Father and son stood, gazing down at the campus. On the
+Gym steps was a group of Seniors, singing songs of old Bannister, songs
+tinged with sadness. Up to Hicks' windows, on the warm June: night, drifted
+the 1916 Class Ode, to the beautiful tune, "A Perfect Day." Over before the
+Science Hall, a crowd of joyous alumni laughed over narratives of their
+campus escapades. Happy undergraduates, skylarking on the campus,
+celebrated the end of study, and gazed with some awe at the Seniors, in cap
+and gown, suddenly transformed into strange beings, instead of old comrades
+and college-mates.
+
+"'The close of our college days, and the end of our campus years--!'"
+quoted Mr. Hicks, a mist before his eyes as he gazed at the scene. "In a
+few days, Thomas, comes the final parting from old Bannister--I know it
+will be hard, for </i>I</i> had to leave the dear old college, and also Yale. But
+you have made a splendid record in your studies, you have been one of
+the most popular fellows here, and--you have vastly pleased your Dad, by
+winning your B in the high-jump."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, last study-sprint was at an end, the final Exams.
+of his Senior year had been passed with what is usually termed flying
+colors; and to the whole-souled delight of the lovable youth, he and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the Human Encyclopedia, had, as Hicks chastely
+phrased it, "run a dead heat for the Valedictory!" So close had their
+final averages been that the Faculty, after much consideration, decided to
+announce at the Commencement exercises that the two Seniors had tied for
+the highest collegiate honors, and everyone was satisfied with the verdict.
+So, now it was all ended; the four years of study, athletics, campus
+escapades, dormitory skylarking--the golden years of college life, were
+about to end for 1919. Commencement would officially start on the morrow,
+but tonight, in the Auditorium, would be held the annual Athletic
+Association meeting, when those happy athletes who had won their B during
+the year would have it presented, before the assembled collegians, by
+one-time gridiron, track, and diamond heroes of old Bannister.
+
+And--the ecstatic Hicks would have his track B, his white letter, won in
+the high-jump, thanks to Caesar Napoleon's assistance, awarded him by his
+beloved Dad, the greatest all-round athlete that ever wore the Gold and
+Green! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., <i>en route</i> to New Haven and Yale in
+his private car, "Vulcan," had reached town that day, together with other
+members of Bannister College, Class of '92. They, as did all the old
+grads., promptly renewed past memories and associations by riding up to
+College Hill in Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus--a youthful, hilarious crowd of
+alumni. Former students, alumni, parents of graduating Seniors, friends,
+sweethearts--every train would bring its quota. The campus would again
+throb and pulsate with that perennial quickening--Commencement. Three days
+of reunions, Class Day exercises, banquets, and other events, then the
+final exercises, and--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., would be an alumnus!
+
+"It's like Theophilus told Thor, last fall, Dad," said the serious Hicks.
+"You know what Shakespeare said: 'This thou perceivest, which makes thy
+love more strong; To love that well which thou must leave ere long.' Now
+that I soon shall leave old Bannister, I--I wish I had studied more, had
+done bigger things for my Alma Mater! And for you, Dad, too; I've won a B,
+but perhaps, had I trained and exercised more, I might have annexed another
+letter--still; hello, what's Butch hollering--?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, his pachydermic frame draped in his gown, and his
+mortar-board cap on his head, for the Seniors were required to wear their
+regalia during Commencement week, was bellowing through a megaphone, as he
+stood on the steps of Bannister Hall, and Mr. Hicks, with his cheerful son,
+listened:
+
+"Everybody--Seniors, Undergrads., Alumni--in the Auditorium at eight sharp!
+We are going to give Mr. Hicks and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a surprise
+party--don't miss the fun!"
+
+"Now, just what does Butch mean, Dad?" queried the bewildered Senior.
+"Something is in the wind. For two days, the fellows have had a secret
+from me--they whisper and plot, and when </i>I</i> approach, loudly talk of
+athletics, or Commencement! Say, Butch--</i>Butch</i>--I ain't a-comin' tonight,
+unless you explain the mystery."
+
+"Oh, yes, you be, old sport!" roared Butch, from the campus, employing the
+megaphone, "or you don't get your letter! Say, Hicks, one sweetly solemn
+thought attacks me--old Bannister is puzzling <i>you</i> with a mystery, instead
+of vice versa, as is usually the case."
+
+"Well, Thomas," said Mr. Hicks, his face lighted by a humorous, kindly
+smile, as he heard the storm of good-natured jeers at Hicks, Jr., that
+greeted Butch Brewster's fling, "I'll stroll downtown, and see if any of
+my old comrades came on the night express. I'll see you at the Athletic
+Association meeting, for I believe I am to hand you the B. I can't imagine
+what this 'surprise party' is, but I don't suppose it will harm us. It will
+surely be a happy moment, son, when I present you with the athletic letter
+you worked so hard to win."
+
+When T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, beloved Dad had gone, his firm stride
+echoing down the corridor, that blithesome, irrepressible collegian, whom
+old Bannister had come to love as a generous, sunny-souled youth, stood
+again by the window, gazing out at the campus. Now, for the first time, he
+fully realized what a sad occasion a college Commencement really is--to
+those who must go forth from their Alma Mater forever. With almost the
+force of a staggering blow, Hicks suddenly saw how it would hurt to leave
+the well-loved campus and halls of old Bannister, to go from those comrades
+of his golden years. In a day or so, he must part from good Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Ichabod, Monty, Roddy, Cherub, loyal little Theophilus and all his
+classmates of '19, as well as from his firm friends of the undergraduates.
+It would be the parting from the youths of his class that would cost him
+the greatest regret. Four years they had lived together the care-free
+campus life. From Freshmen to Seniors they had grown and developed
+together, and had striven for 1919 and old Bannister, while a love for
+their Alma Mater had steadily possessed their hearts. And now soon they
+must sing, "Vale, Alma Mater!" and go from the campus and corridors, as
+Jack Merritt, Heavy Hughes, Biff McCabe, and many others had done before
+them.
+
+Of course, they would return to old Bannister. There would be alumni
+banquets at mid-year and Commencement, with glad class reunions each year.
+They would come back for the big games of the football or baseball season.
+But it would never be the same. The glad, care-free, golden years of
+college life come but once, and they could never live them, as of old.
+
+"Caesar's Ghost!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., making a dive for his
+beloved banjo, as he awakened to the startling fact that for some time he
+had been intensely serious. "This will never, never do. I must maintain my
+blithesome buoyancy to the end, and entertain old Bannister with my musical
+ability. Here goes."
+
+Assuming a striking pose, </i>a la</i> troubadour, at the open window, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., a somewhat paradoxical figure, his splinter-structure
+enshrouded in the gown, the cap on his classic head, this regalia symbolic
+of dignity, and the torturesome banjo in his grasp, twanged a ragtime
+accompaniment, and to the bewilderment of the old Grads on the campus, as
+well as the wrath of 1919, he roared in his fog-horn voice:
+
+ "Oh, I love for to live in the country!
+ And I love for to live on the farm!
+ I love for to wander in the grass-green fields--
+ Oh, a country life has the charm!
+ I love for to wander in the garden--
+ Down by the old haystack;
+ Where the pretty little chickens go 'Kick-Kack-Kackle!'
+ And the little docks go 'Quack! Quack!'"
+
+From the Seniors on the Gym steps, their dignified song rudely shattered by
+this rollicking saenger-fest, came a storm of protests; to the unbounded
+delight of the alumni, watching the scene with interest, shouts, jeers,
+whistles, and cat-calls greeted Hicks' minstrelsy:
+
+"Tear off his cap and gown--he's a disgrace to '19!"
+
+"Shades of Schumann-Heink--give that calf more rope!"
+
+"Ye gods--how long must we endure--that?"
+
+"Hicks, a Senior--nobody home--can that noise!"
+
+"Shoot him at sunrise! Where's his Senior dignity?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, referring to his watch, bellowed through the megaphone
+that it was nearly eight o'clock, and loudly suggested that they forcibly
+terminate Hicks' saengerfest, and spare the town police force a riot call
+to the campus, by transporting the pestiferous youth to the Auditorium,
+for his "surprise party." His idea finding favor, he, with Beef and Pudge,
+somewhat hampered by their gowns, lumbered up the stairway of Bannister,
+and down the third-floor corridor to the offending Hicks' boudoir, followed
+by a yelling, surging crowd of Seniors and underclassmen. They invaded the
+graceless youth's room, much to the pretended alarm of that torturesome
+collegian, who believed that the entire student-body of old Bannister had
+foregathered to wreak vengeance on his devoted head.
+
+"</i>Mercy</i>! Have a heart, fellows!" plead T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., helpless in
+the clutches of Butch, Beef, and Pudge, "I won't never do it no more, no
+time! Say, this is too much--much too much--too much much too much--I,
+Oh--<i>help--aid--succor--relief--assistance--"</i>
+
+"To the Auditorium with the wretch!" boomed Butch; and the splinter-youth
+was borne aloft, on his broad shoulders, assisted by Beef McNaughton. They
+transported the grinning Hicks down the corridor, while fifty noisy youths,
+howling, "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow!" tramped after them. Downstairs
+and across the campus the hilarious procession marched, and into the
+Auditorium, where the students and alumni were gathering for the awarding
+of the athletic B. A thunderous shout went up, as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+was carried to the stage and deposited in a chair.
+
+"</i>Hicks! Hicks! Hicks</i>! We've got a surprise for--</i>Hicks</i>!"
+
+"Now, just what have I did to deserve all these?" grinned that
+happy-go-lucky youth, puzzled, nevertheless. "Well, time will tell, so all
+I can do is to possess my soul with impatience; old Bannister has a mystery
+for me, this trip!"
+
+In fifteen minutes, the Athletic Association meeting opened. On the stage,
+beside its officers, were those athletes, including T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who were to receive that coveted reward--their B, together with a number of
+one-time famous Bannister gridiron, track, basketball, and diamond stars.
+Each youth was to receive his monogram from some ex-athlete who once wore
+the Gold and Green, and Hicks' beloved Dad--Bannister's greatest hero--was
+to present his son with the letter.
+
+There were speeches; the Athletic Association's President explained the
+annual meeting, former Bannister students and athletic idols told of past
+triumphs on Bannister Field; the football Championship banner, and the
+baseball pennant were flaunted proudly, and each team-captain of the year
+was called upon to talk. Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., a great favorite
+on the campus, delivered a ringing speech, an appeal to the undergraduates
+for clean living, and honorable sportsmanship, and then:
+
+"We now come to the awarding of the athletic B," stated the President. "The
+Secretary will call first the name of the athlete, and then the alumnus who
+will present him with the letter. In the name of the Athletic Association
+of old Bannister, I congratulate those fellows who are now to be rewarded
+for their loyalty to their Alma Mater!"
+
+Thrilled, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., watched his comrades, as they responded
+to their names, and had the greatest glory, the B, placed in their hands by
+past Bannister athletic heroes. Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Ichabod, Biff,
+Hefty, Tug, Buster, Deacon Radford, Cherub, Don, Skeet, Thor, who had
+won the hammer-throw. These, and many others, having earned the award by
+playing in three-fourths of a season's games on the eleven or the nine, or
+by winning a first place in some track event, stepped forward, and were
+rewarded. Some, as good Butch, had gained their B many times, but the fact
+that this was their last letter, made the occasion a sad one. Every name
+was called but that of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and that perturbed youth
+wondered at the omission, when the President spoke:
+
+"The last name," he said, smiling, "is that of Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and we are glad to have his father present the letter to his son, as Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., is with us. However, we Bannister fellows have
+prepared a surprise party for our lovable comrade, and I beg your patience
+awhile, as I explain."
+
+Graphically, Dad Pendleton described the wonderful all-round athletic
+record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old Bannister, and
+sketched briefly but vividly his phenomenal record at Yale; he told of
+Mr. Hicks' great ambition, for his only son, Thomas, to follow in his
+footsteps--to be a star athlete, and shatter the marks made by his Dad.
+Then he reminded the Bannister students of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+athletic fiascos, hilarious and otherwise, of three years. He explained how
+that cheery youth, grinning good-humoredly at his comrades' jeers, had been
+in earnest, striving to realize his father's ambition. As the spellbound
+collegians and grads. listened, Dad chronicled Hicks' dogged persistence,
+and how he finally, in his Senior year, won his track B in the high-jump.
+Then he described the biggest game of the past football season, the contest
+that brought the Championship to old Bannister. The youths and alumni heard
+how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., made a great sacrifice, for the greater goal;
+how, after training faithfully in secret for a year, hoping sometime to win
+a game for his Alma Mater, he cheerfully sacrificed his chance to tie the
+score by a drop-kick, and became the pivotal part of a fake-kick play that
+won for the Gold and Green.
+
+"I have left Hicks' name until last," said Dad, with a smile, "because
+tonight we have a surprise party for our sunny comrade, and for his Dad. In
+the past, the eligibility rule, as regards the football and baseball B, has
+been--an athlete must play on the 'Varsity in three-fourths of the season's
+games. But, just before the Hamilton game, last fall, the Advisory Board of
+the Athletic Association amended this rule.
+
+"We decided to submit to the required two-thirds majority vote of the
+students this plan, inasmuch as many athletes, toiling and sacrificing all
+season for their college, never get to win their letter, yet deserve
+that reward for their loyalty, we suggested that Bannister imitate the
+universities. Anyone sent into the Yale-Harvard game, you know, wins his
+H or Y. If one team is safely ahead, a lot of scrubs are run into the
+scrimmage, to give them their letter. Therefore, we--the Advisory
+Board--made this rule: 'Any athlete taking part, for any period of time
+whatsoever, in the Ballard football or baseball game as a regular member of
+the first team shall be eligible for his Gold or Green B. This rule, upon
+approval of the students, to be effective from September 25!'
+
+"Now," continued the Athletic Association President, "we decided to keep
+this new ruling a secret until the present, for this reason: Many good
+football and baseball players, not making the first teams, lack the loyalty
+to stick on the scrubs, and others, not as brilliant, but with more
+college spirit, give their best until the season's end. We knew that if we
+announced this rule last fall, several slackers, who had quit the squad,
+would come out again, just on the hope of getting sent into the Ballard
+game, for their B. This would not be fair to those who loyally stuck to the
+scrubs. So we did not announce the rule until the year closed, and then a
+practically unanimous vote of the students made the rule effective from
+September 25. So--all athletes who took part in the Ballard football game,
+last fall, for any period of time whatsoever, are eligible for the gold B,
+and the same, as regards the green letter, applies to the Ballard baseball
+game this spring."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., gasped. Slowly, the glorious truth dawned on the
+happy-go-lucky Senior--he had been sent into the Bannister-Ballard football
+game; the crucial and deciding play had turned on him, hence he had won his
+gold letter! And thanks to his brilliant "mismanaging" of the nine, losing
+shortstop Skeet Wigglesworth and the substitutes, he had played the entire
+nine innings of the Ballard-Bannister baseball contest, and, therefore,
+was eligible for his green B. In a dazed condition, he heard Dad Pendleton
+saying:
+
+"You remember how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was sent into the Ballard
+game, and how the fake-play fooled Ballard, who believed he would try
+a drop-kick? Well, knowing Hicks to be eligible for his football B, we
+planned a surprise party. The Advisory Board kept the new rule a secret,
+and not until this week was it voted on. Then, the required two-thirds
+majority made it effective from last September--we managed to have Hicks
+absent from the voting, and the fellows helped us with our surprise! So
+instead of Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., presenting his son with one
+B, that for track work, we are glad to hand him <i>three</i> letters, one for
+football, one for baseball, and one for track, to give our own T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. And, let me add, he can accept them with a clear conscience, for
+when the rule was made by the Advisory Board, we had no idea that Hicks
+would ever be eligible in football or baseball,"
+
+A moment of silence, and then undergraduates and alumni, thrilled at Dad
+Pendleton's announcement, arose in a body, and howled for T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his beloved Dad. Mr. Hicks, unable to speak, silently
+placed the three monograms, gold, green, and white, in his son's hands, and
+placed his own on the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, who for once
+in his heedless career could not say a word!
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" Big Butch Brewster roared, and a terrific
+response sounded:
+
+"He's all right! Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"
+
+For ten minutes pandemonium reigned. Then, regardless of the fact that, in
+order to surprise Mr. Hicks and his son, other athletes, eligible under the
+new rule, had yet to be presented with their B, the howling youths swarmed
+on the stage, hoisted the grinning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his happy
+Dad to their shoulders, and started a wild parade around the campus and the
+Quadrangle, singing:
+
+"Here's to our own Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own
+Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own Hicks--When he
+starts a thing, he sticks--Drink it down--drink it down--down! Down!
+Down!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., aloft on the shoulders of his behemoth class-mate,
+Butch Brewster, was deliriously happy. The surprise party of his campus
+comrades was a wonderful one, and he could scarcely realize that he had
+actually, by the Athletic Association ruling, won his three B's! How glad
+his beloved Dad, was, too. He had not expected this bewildering happiness.
+He had been so joyous, when his sort earned the track letter, but to
+have him leave old Bannister, with a B for three sports--it was almost
+unbelievable! And, as Dad had said--there had been no thought of Hicks when
+the Advisory Board made the rule, so Hicks had no reason to suppose it was
+done just to award him his letter.
+
+Then, Hicks remembered that rash vow, made at the end of his Freshman year,
+a vow uttered with absolutely no other thought than a desire to torment
+Butch Brewster, "Before I graduate from old Bannister, I shall have won
+my B in three branches of sport!" Never, not even for a moment, had the
+happy-go-lucky youth believed that his wild prophecy would be fulfilled,
+though he had pretended to be confident to tease his loyal comrades; but
+now, at the very end of his campus days, just before he graduated, his
+prediction had come true! So the sunny Senior, who four years before had
+made his rash vow, saw its realization, and suddenly thrilled with the
+knowledge that he had a golden opportunity to make Butch indignant.
+
+"Oh, I say, Butch," he drawled, nonchalantly, leaning down to talk in
+Butch's ear, "do you recall that day, at the close of our Freshman year,
+when I vowed to win my B in three branches of sport, ere I bade farewell to
+old Bannister?"
+
+"No, you don't get away with that!" exploded Butch Brewster, indignantly,
+lowering his tantalizing classmate to terra firma. "Here, Beef, Pudge,
+catch this wretch; he intends to swagger and say--"
+
+But he was too late, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., dodging from his grasp,
+imitated the celebrated Charley Chaplin strut, and satiated his fun-loving
+soul. After waiting for three years, the irrepressible youth realized an
+ambition he had never imagined would be fulfilled.
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth he, gladsomely. "I told you I'd win
+my three B's, Butch, old top, and--<i>ow</i>!--unhand me, you villain, you
+<i>hurt</i>!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+ "Oh, it was '</i>Ave</i>, Alma Mater--'
+ We sang as Freshmen gay;
+ But it's '</i>Vale</i>, Alma Mater' now
+ As our last farewells we say!"
+
+"</i>Honk-Honk! Br-r-rr-r-Bang! Honk-Monk! Br-rr-rr-r--"</i>
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., big Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Pudge Langdon,
+Scoop Sawyer, and little Theophilus Opperdyke--late Seniors of old
+Bannister--roosted atop of good old Dan Flannagan's famous jitney-bus
+before Bannister Hall. It was nearly time for the 9.30 A. M. express, but
+the "peace-ship" had inconsiderately stalled, and the choking, wheezing,
+and snorting of the engine, as old Dan frenziedly cranked, together with
+the Claxon, operated by Skeet Wigglesworth, rudely interrupted the Seniors'
+chant. A vociferous protest arose above the tumult:
+
+"Oh, the little old </i>Ford</i>--rambled right along--like heck!"
+
+"Can that noise-we want to sing a last song, boys!"
+
+"Chuck that engine, Dan, and put in an alarm clock spring!"
+
+"Christmas is coming, Dan-u-el--we've graduated you know!"
+
+"'The Dove' doesn't want us to leave old Bannister, fellows!"
+
+Commencement was ended. The night before, on the stage of Alumni Hall,
+before a vast audience of old Bannister grads, undergraduates, friends, and
+relatives of the Seniors, the Class of 1919 had received its sheepskins,
+and the "Go forth, my children, and live!" of its Alma Mater. T, Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and timorous little Theophilus had jointly delivered the
+Valedictory, eight other Seniors, including Butch, Scoop, and the lengthy
+Ichabod, had swayed the crowd with oratory. Kindly old Prexy, his voice
+tremulous, had talked to them, as students, for the last time. The Class
+Ode had been sung, the Class Shield unveiled, and then--Hicks and his
+comrades of '19 were alumni!
+
+It had been a busy, thrilling time, Commencement Week. There had been
+scarcely any spare moments to ponder on the parting so soon to come; after
+the memorable Athletic Association meeting, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and his beloved Dad had been given a wonderful "surprise party" by the
+collegians, and Hicks had corralled his three B's, time had "sprinted with
+spiked shoes," as the sunny Hicks stated. Event had followed event in
+bewildering fashion. The Seniors, dignified in cap and gown, had been feted
+and banqueted, the cynosure of all eyes. Campus and town were filled with
+visitors. Old Bannister pulsated with renewed life, with the glad reunions
+of former students. There had been the Alumni Banquet, the annual baseball
+game between the 'Varsity and old-time Gold and Green diamond stars, Class
+Night exercises, the Literary Society Oratorical Contests, and the last
+Class Supper; and, Commencement had come.
+
+It was all ended now--the four happy, golden years of campus life, of glad
+fellowship with each other; like those who had gone before, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his comrades of 1919 had come to the final parting. The
+sunny-souled youth's Dad had gone to New Haven, to Yale's Commencement.
+Alumni and visitors had left town; the night before had witnessed farewells
+with Monty, Roddy, Biff, Hefty, and the underclassmen, with that awakened
+Colossus, John Thorwald. All the collegians had gone, except the few
+Seniors now leaving, and they had remained to enjoy Hicks' final Beefsteak
+Bust downtown at Jerry's.
+
+The campus was silent and deserted. No footsteps or voices echoed in the
+dormitories, and a shadow of sadness hovered over all. The youths who were
+leaving old Bannister forever felt an ache in their throats, and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke's big-rimmed spectacles were fogged with tears. Three
+times, in the past, they had left the campus, but this was forever, as
+collegians!
+
+"I don't care if we miss the old train!" declared Scoop Sawyer, as the
+jitney-Ford's engine wheezed, gasped, and was silent, for all of Dan's
+cranking. "Just think, fellows, it's all over now--'We have come to the end
+of our college days-golden campus years are at an end--!' Say, Hicks, old
+man, what's your Idea. What future have you blue-printed?"
+
+"Journalism!" announced T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sticking a fountain pen
+behind his ear, and fatuously supposing he resembled a City Editor, "In me
+you behold an embryo Richard Harding Davis, or Ty--no, I mean Irvin Cobb.
+I shall first serve my apprenticeship as a 'cub,' but ere many years, I
+shall sit at a desk, run a newspaper, and tell the world where to get off."
+
+"That is--If Dad says so!" chuckled Butch Brewster. "You know, Hicks, it's
+the same old story--your father wants you to learn how to own steel and
+iron mills, and when it comes to a showdown, you must convince Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., that you'd make a better journalist than Steel King!"
+
+"Nay, nay-say not so!" responded the happy-go-lucky alumnus of old
+Bannister, as the perspiring" Dan Flannagan cranked away futilely. "My Dad
+has a broader vision, fellows, than most men. He and I talked it over last
+night, and he would never try to make me take up anything but a work that
+appeals to me. While, as Butch says, he'd like to train me to follow in his
+footsteps, he understands my ambition so thoroughly that he is trying to
+get me started--read this:"
+
+The lovable youth produced a letter, the envelope bearing the heading: "THE
+BALTIMORE CHRONICLE;" Butch Brewster, to whom he extended it, read aloud:
+
+
+"Baltimore, Maryland,
+
+"June 12, 1919.
+
+"DEAR OLD CLASSMATE:
+
+"I'd sure like to be with you, back at old Yale, next week, but I can't
+leave the wheel of this ship, the </i>Chronicle</i>, for even a day. Give my
+regards to all of old Eli, '96, old man.
+
+"As regards a berth for your son, Thomas. The </i>Chronicle</i> usually takes
+on a few college men during the summer, when our staff is off on
+vacations. We always use undergraduates, and often, in two or three
+summers, we develop them into star reporters. However, for old time's
+sake, I'll be glad to give your son a chance, and if he means business,
+let him report for duty next Friday, at 1 P.M., to my office.
+Understand, Hicks, he must come here and fight his own way, without any
+favor or special help from me. Were he the son of our nation's
+President, I'd not treat him a whit better than the rest of the Staff,
+so let him know that in advance. On the other hand, I'll develop him all
+I can, and if he has the ability, the </i>Chronicle</i> long-room is the place
+for him.
+
+"Yours for old Yale,
+
+"'Doc' Whalen, Yale, '96,
+
+"City Editor--</i>THE CHRONICLE</i>."
+
+
+"Here's my Dad's ultimatum," grinned Hicks, when. Butch finished the
+letter. "I am to take a summer as a cub on the </i>Baltimore Chronicle</i>,
+making my own way, and living on my weekly salary, without financial aid
+from anyone. If, at the end of the summer, City Editor Whalen reports that
+I've made good enough to be retained as a regular, then--Yours truly for
+the Fourth Estate. If I fail, then I follow a course charted out by Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.! So, it is up to me to make good--"
+
+"You--you will make good, Hicks," quavered Theophilus, whose faith in the
+shadow-like youth was prodigious. "Oh, that will be splendid, for I am
+going to take a course at a business college in Baltimore. I want to become
+an expert stenographer, and we'll be together,"
+
+"It's work now, fellows!" sighed Beef McNaughton, shifting his huge bulk
+atop of the jit "College years are ended, we're chucked into the world, to
+make good, or fail! Butch and I have not decided on our work yet. We may
+accept jobs as bank or railroad presidents, or maybe run for President
+of the U.S.A., provided John McGraw or Connie Mack do not sign us up.
+However--"
+
+At that moment, the engine of old Dan Flannagan's battered "Dove" consented
+to hit on two cylinders, and the genial Irishman, who was to transport
+Hicks and his comrades, as collegians, for the last time, yelled, "</i>All
+aboard</i>!" loudly, to conceal his emotion at the sad scene.
+
+"We're off!" shrieked Skeet Wigglesworth, stowed away below, as the
+jitney-bus moved down the driveway. "Farewell, dear old Bannister! Run
+slow, Dan, we want to gaze on the campus as long as we can."
+
+The youths were silent, as the 'bus rolled slowly down the driveway and
+under the Memorial Arch, old Dan, sympathizing with them, and finding he
+could make the express by a safe margin, allowing the jitney to flutter
+along at reduced speed. From its top, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his vision
+blurred with tears, gazed back with his class-mates. He saw the campus, its
+grass green, with stately old elms bordering the walks, and the golden
+June sunshine bathing everything in a soft radiance. He beheld the college
+buildings--the Gym., the Science Hall, the Administration Building,
+Recitation Hall, the ivy-covered Library; the white Chapel, and the four
+dorms., Creighton, Smithson, Nordyke, Bannister. One year he had spent in
+each, and every year had been one of happiness, of glad comradeship.
+He could see Bannister Field, the scene of his many hilarious athletic
+fiascos.
+
+And now he was leaving it all--had come to the end of his college course,
+and before him lay Life, with its stern realities, its grim obstacles, and
+hard struggles; ended were the golden campus days, the gay skylarking
+in the dorms. Gone forever were the joyous nights of entertaining his
+comrades, of Beefsteak Busts down at Jerry's. Silenced was his beloved
+banjo, and no more would his saengerfests bother old Bannister.
+
+A turn in the street, and the campus could not be seen. As the last vision
+of their Alma Mater vanished, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., smiling sunnily
+through his tear-blurred eyes, gazed at his comrades of old '19--
+
+"Say, fellows--" he grinned, though his voice was shaky, "let's--let's
+start in next September, and--do it all over again!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+This file should be named 7hick10.txt or 7hick10.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 7hick11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 7hick10a.txt
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/old/7hick10.zip b/old/7hick10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c029608
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/7hick10.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/8hick10.txt b/old/8hick10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..12f59ae
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/8hick10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6971 @@
+Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: T. Haviland Hicks Senior
+
+Author: J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Release Date: July, 2005 [EBook #8550]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on July 22, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR
+
+BY J. RAYMOND ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+TO MASTER LLOYD ELDERDICE
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+ II. "LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+ III. HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+ IV. QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+ V. HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+ VI. HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+ VII. HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY
+ VIII. COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+ IX. THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+ X. THOR'S AWAKENING
+ XI. "ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+ XII. THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+ XIII. HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+ XIV. THE GREATER GOAL
+ XV. HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+ XVI. THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+ XVII. HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+XVIII. T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.'S HEADWORK
+ XIX. BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+ XX. "VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, SENIOR
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HICKS--WILD WEST BAD MAN
+
+
+
+
+
+ "Oh, a bold, bad man was Chuckwalla Bill--
+ An' he lived in a shanty on Tom-cat Hill;
+ Ten notches on the six-gun he toted on his hip--
+ For he'd sent ten buckos on the One-way Trip!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister College football
+squad, his behemoth bulk swathed in heavy blankets and crowded into a
+narrow bunk, shifted his vast tonnage restlessly. He was dreaming of the
+wild and woolly West, and like a six-reel Western drama thrown on the
+screen in a moving-picture show, he visioned in his slumbers a vivid and
+spectacular panorama.
+
+The first lurid scene was the Deserted Limited held up at a tank station in
+the great Mojave Desert by a lone, masked bandit who winged the dreaming
+Butch in the shoulder, the latter being an express guard who resisted.
+After the desperado, Two-Gun Steve, had forced the engineer to run the
+train back to a siding, he had ordered Butch to vamoose. Quite naturally,
+then, the collegian next found himself staggering across the arid expanse,
+until at last, half dead from a burning thirst, seeking vainly for a
+water-hole, the vast stretch of sandy, sagebrush-studded wastes shimmered
+into a gorgeous ocean of sparkling blue waters. Then, as he collapsed on
+the scorching-hot sand, helpless, the cool water so near, suddenly the
+scene shifted.
+
+In quick and vivid succession, Butch Brewster beheld a burning stockade
+besieged by howling Indians, and a frontier town shot up by recklessly
+riding cowboys on a jamboree. Then he became a tenderfoot, badgered by
+yelling, shooting roisterers, and later a sheriff, bravely leading his
+posse to a sensational battle with that same Two-Gun Steve and his gang,
+entrenched in a rock-bound mountain defile.
+
+Finally, he stood with hands above his head in company with other
+passengers of the Sagebrush Stagecoach, while a huge, red-shirted Westerner
+with a fierce black mustache and a six-shooter in each hand belching
+bullets at Butch's dancing feet, roared out huskily: "Oh--I'm a ring-tailed
+roarer (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm a rip-snortin', high-falutin', loop-the-loopin'
+<i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm wild an' woolly, an' full o' fleas, an' hard
+to curry below the knees--I'm a roarin' wild-cat, an' it's my night to howl
+(<i>bang-bang</i>)! Yip-yip-yip-<i>yeee</i>!"
+
+Big Butch, opening his eyes and starting up, gazed about him in sheer
+surprise; for an instant, in that state of bewilderment that comes with
+sudden awakening, he almost believed himself in a Western ranch bunkhouse,
+and that some happy cowboy outside roared a grotesque ballad. He gazed at
+the interior of a rough shack built of pine boards, with bunks constructed
+in tiers on both sides. There were figures in them--Western cowboys,
+perhaps. Then it seemed, somehow, that the voice drifting from the outside
+was strangely familiar. Back at Bannister College, where he remembered he
+had gone in the dim and dusty past, he had often heard that same fog-horn
+voice, roaring songs of a less blood-curdling character, and accompanied by
+that same banjo twanging, which tortured the campus, and bothered would-be
+studious youths!
+
+"I'm not in a moving-picture show," Butch informed himself, as he donned
+khaki trousers, football sweater, and heavy shoes. "I'm not on a Western
+ranch, either. I'm in the sleep-shack of Camp Bannister, the football
+training-camp of the Bannister College squad! Those fellows in the bunks
+are not cowboys, Indians, and bandits--they are my teammates! I did dream
+stuff that would shame a Wild West scenario, but I understand it all
+now--my dreams were influenced by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+At that dramatic moment, to substantiate his statement, the raucous voice,
+accompanied by resounding chords strummed on a banjo, sounded again. The
+vocal and instrumental chaos was frequently punctured by revolver reports,
+as the torturesome Caruso outside roared:
+
+ "Oh, Chuckwalla Bill thought life was sweet--
+ Till he met up with Sure-shot Pete;
+ A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+The pachydermic Butch, fully dressed--and awake, raging in his wrath like
+an active volcano, glanced at his watch, and discovered that it was exactly
+five A.M.! Intensely pacified by this knowledge, he lumbered toward the
+bunkhouse door and flung it open, determined to crush the pestersome youth
+who thus unfeelingly disturbed the quietude of Camp Bannister at such an
+unearthly hour! However, his grim purpose was temporarily thwarted--before
+him spread a beautiful panorama, a vast canvas painted in rich hues and
+colors, that indescribably charming masterpiece of nature, entitled dawn.
+
+Butch, gazing from the bunkhouse doorway toward the pebbly shore of the
+placid lake stretching out for two miles before him, beheld Old Sol,
+blood-red, peeping above the wooded hills on the far-off, opposite strand
+of Lake Conowingo; the luminous orb laid a flaming pathway across the
+shimmering waters, and golden bars of light, like gleaming fingers
+outstretched, fell athwart the tall pines that towered on the high bluff
+back of the camp. The glorious sunshine, succeeding a flood of rosy color,
+inundated the scene; it bathed in a gorgeous radiance the early autumn
+woods, it illumined the bunkhouse, and another rude shanty known to the
+squad as the grub-shack, it poured down on old Hinky-Dink, the ancient
+negro cookee, setting the breakfast tables just outside the canvas
+cook-tent.
+
+"Deed, cross mah heart, Mistah Butch," grinned old Hinky-Dink, seeing, as
+a motion picture director would express it, "Wrath registered on the
+countenance" of Butch Brewster, "Ah done tole dat young Hicks dat a bird
+what cain't sing an' will sing mus' be made <i>not</i> to sing! Ah done info'med
+him dat yo'-all was layin' fo' him, cause he done bus' up yo' sleep!"
+
+A jay bird, a flashing bit of vivid blue, shot from a tall pine, jeering
+shrilly at Butch; out on the lake, a trout leaped above the water for an
+infinitesimal second, its shining scales gleaming in the sunshine. From the
+cook-tent, where old Hinky-Dink grumbled at the frying pan, the appetizing
+odor of frying fish assailed the football captain, softening his wrath.
+
+High above the shanties, on a tall flagpole made from a straight young
+pine, floated a big gold and green banner, its bright colors gleaming in
+the sunshine; it bore the words:
+
+ CAMP BANNISTER
+ TRAINING CAMP
+ THE FOOTBALL SQUAD
+ BANNISTER COLLEGE
+
+Head Coach Corridan, smashing the precedent that had made former Gold and
+Green squads have their training camp at Bannister College, had brought
+the Varsity and second-string stars to this camp on the shore of Lake
+Conowingo, in the Pennsylvania mountains. For two weeks, one of which had
+passed, they were to train at Camp Bannister, until college officially
+opened; swimming, hunting, cross-country runs, and a healthful outdoor
+existence would give the athletes superb condition, and daily scrimmages on
+the level field back of the bluff rounded out an eleven that promised to be
+the strongest in Bannister history.
+
+As big, good-natured Butch Brewster stood in the bunkhouse doorway, his
+wrath at the pestiferous Hicks forgotten, in his rapture at the glorious
+dawn, he saw something that showed why his dreams had been of the wild
+West! The expression of indignation, however, yielded to one of humorous
+affection, as he gazed toward the shore.
+
+"I can't be angry with Hicks!" breathed Butch, beholding a spectacle more
+impressive than dawn. "So, the irrepressible wretch has Coach Corridan's
+revolvers, used in starting our training sprints, and a lot of blank
+cartridges! He is giving an imitation of a Western bad man. No wonder
+I dreamed of Indians, cowboys, and hold-ups; I'll have revenge on the
+heartless villain, routing me out at five!"
+
+He saw a massive rock, rising thirty feet in air, its sheer walls scaled
+only by a rope-ladder the collegians had rigged up on one side. Atop of
+"Lookout There!" as the campers humorously designated the rock, roosted
+a youth who possessed the colossal structure of a splinter, and whose
+cherubic countenance was decorated with a Cheshire cat grin. Quite unaware
+that his riotous efforts had brought out the wrathful Butch Brewster,
+the youthful narrator of Chuckwalla Bill's stormy career continued his
+excessively noisy séance.
+
+His costume was strictly in character with his song. He wore a sombrero,
+picked up on his Exposition trip the past vacation, a lurid red
+outing-shirt, and he had wrapped a blanket around each locomotive limb to
+imitate a cowboy's chaps. Two revolvers suspended from a loosened belt, </i>à
+la</i> wild West, and as Butch stared, the embryo Western bad man twanged a
+banjo noisily, and roared the concluding stanza of his desperado hero's
+history:
+
+ "Said Chuckwalla Bill, 'Oh, boys, plant me
+ With my boots on--on the wide prair-eee'--
+ Where the coyotes howl, they planted Bill--
+ An' so far as </i>I</i> know, he's sleepin' there still!"
+
+"Here they come," grinned Butch, hearing a tumult in the bunkhouse, and
+a confused Babel of voices. "Hicks has awakened the camp. Now watch the
+fellows wreak summary vengeance on his toothpick frame!"
+
+From the sleep-shack, aroused at that weird hour by the clamor of the
+irrepressible youth, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., tumbled others of the squad,
+in varying stages of <i>déshabille</i>; big Beef McNaughton, right half-back,
+Roddy Perkins, the Titian-haired right-end, Pudge Langdon, a ponderous
+tackle, and Monty Merriweather, a clean-cut, aggressive candidate for left
+end. From within, other wrathy youths howled vociferous protests at their
+tormentor:
+
+"Stop that noise; put your muzzle on again, Hicks!"--"Where's the fire?
+Say, Hicks, muffle your exhaust!"--"Say, Coach, must we endure this day and
+night?"
+
+The bunkhouse fairly erupted angry collegians, boiling out like bees
+swarming from a disturbed hive; Hefty Hollingsworth, the Herculean
+center-rush. Biff Pemberton, left half-back, Bunch Bingham, Tug Cardiff,
+and Buster Brown, three huge last-year substitutes; second-string players,
+Don Carterson, Cherub Challoner, Skeet Wigglesworth, and Scoop Sawyer. A
+dozen others, from sheer laziness, hugged their bunks devotedly, despite
+the terrific turmoil outside.
+
+"It's a disgrace, a <i>howling</i> shame!" exploded Beef, his elephantine frame
+swathed in blankets to conceal a lack of vestiture, "Last night, until
+midnight, that graceless wretch roosted on 'Lookout There' and because the
+glorious moonlight made him sentimental and slushy, he twanged his banjo
+and warbled such mushy stuff as 'My Love is young and fair. My Love has
+golden hair!' When does he expect us to sleep?"
+
+"He doesn't!" explained Monty Merriweather, with succinct lucidity,
+grinning at his comrades. "Say, fellows, you know how Hicks dreads a cold
+shower-bath; well, some of you rage at him from the other side of the rock,
+while </i>I</i> climb up the rope-ladder and close with him! Then some of you
+prehistoric pachyderms ascend, and we'll chuck that pestersome insect into
+the cold, cold lake--"
+
+"Done!" chuckled Butch Brewster, delightedly. So, while he, Beef
+McNaughton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and others beguiled the jeering Hicks,
+expressing in dynamic, red-hot sentences their exact opinions of his
+perfidy, the athletic Monty imitated a mountain-scaling Italian soldier.
+He climbed stealthily up the swaying rope-ladder; nearer and nearer to the
+unsuspecting youth he crept, while the cherubic Hicks, to tantalize the
+group below, again burst forth:
+
+"</i>Whoop-eee</i>! I'm a bold, <i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I got ten notches on my
+ole six-gun--I'm a <i>killer</i>. I wings a man before breakfast every day! I
+got a private burying-ground, where I plants my victims (<i>bang-bang</i>)!
+Yip-yip-yip-<i>yee</i>! Oh, I'm a--</i>Ouch</i>, Monty--leggo me--Oh, I'll be
+good--why didn't I pull that rope-ladder up here? Don't bust my banjo
+--don't let Butch get me--"
+
+Monty Merriweather, reaching the flat top of the rock, had courageously
+flung himself, without regard for the Bad Man's desperate record, on the
+startled Hicks, whose first thought was for his beloved banjo. While he
+held the blithesome tormentor helpless, Butch, Beef, and Roddy Perkins
+climbed the rope-ladder, and the grinning youth was soon in their clutches,
+while the collegians below, like a Roman, mob aroused by the oratory of Mr.
+Mark Antony, howled for revenge:
+
+"Bust the old banjo over his head, Butch!"--"Sing to him, Beef--that's
+an <i>awful</i> revenge on Hicks!"--"Tie him to the rock--make him miss his
+breakfast!"
+
+"Hicks," growled Butch, eyeing his sunny comrade ominously, "you ought to
+be tarred and feathered, and shot at sunrise! When Bannister opens, you
+will be a Senior, and you'll disgrace '19's dignity! This is a sample of
+what we have endured at college for three years, and the worst is yet to
+come! You have committed the awful atrocity of awakening Camp Bannister
+at five A. M. with your ridiculous imitation, of a Western desperado. To
+dampen your ardor, we will chuck you into the cold lake--just as you are!"
+
+"Help! Assistance! Aid! Succor!" shouted the happy-go-lucky Hicks, as the
+behemoth Butch and Beef seized him, swinging him aloft with ludicrous ease,
+"Police! Fire! Murder! Take care of my banjo, Monty. Tell all the fellows
+at old Bannister I died game, and plant Hair-Trigger Bill with his boots
+on! </i>Oooo</i>, Beef, Butch, <i>have a heart</i>, that water is <i>cold</i>!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., relieved of banjo and revolvers, but his
+shadow-like structure still clad in shoes, trousers, with imitation "chaps"
+and flamboyant red shirt, with his classic head still adorned by
+the sombrero, was swung back and forth by the two bulky football
+stars--once--twice--
+
+"</i>Three</i>--Let him go!" shouted Butch Brewster, and like a falling meteor,
+the splinter-like youth, who had already fallen from grace, shot from the
+rock, head-first, disappearing with a spectacular splash in the icy waters
+of Lake Conowingo. Knowing Hicks to be as much at home in the water as a
+fish in an aquarium, the hilarious squad on shore prepared to jeer his
+reappearance above the water; however, their program was interrupted by
+old Hinky-Dink, who stood in the cook-tent doorway, belaboring a dishpan
+lustily with a soup-ladle, and shouting:
+
+"Breakfus' am served; fus' an' las' call fo' breakfus; all dem what am late
+don't git no breakfus!"
+
+"Breakfast!" exclaimed Monty Merriweather, who, with Roddy, Butch, and
+Beef, remained on the rock, despite the summons of the Cookee. "Hurry up,
+Hicks, I'm ravenous. Say, Butch, suppose all that Western regalia makes him
+water-logged; he's a terribly long while down there! Didn't he look like
+the hero in a moving-picture feature? We've given him the water-cure, but
+he will do that same stunt over again. That sunny-souled Hicks is simply
+Incorrigible!"
+
+A second later, the grinning, cheery countenance of T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., shot above the water, and simultaneously with his appearance, just as
+though he had been chanting below the surface, for the entertainment of the
+finny denizens of Lake Conowingo, the irrepressible youth roared:
+
+ "A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw--
+ But Sure-Shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"
+
+
+Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, known to toil-tortured Gold and Green
+football squads from time immemorial as "the Slave-Driver," Captain Butch
+Brewster, and serious Deacon Radford, the star Bannister quarter-back,
+foregathered around a table in the Camp Bannister grub-shack.
+
+It was ten-thirty of the morning whose dawn T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+blithesomely hailed with an impromptu musicale and saengerfest on "Lookout
+There!" rock, and the football triumvirate were in togs. The squad, over in
+the bunkhouse, noisily donned gridiron armor for the morning practice, and
+the pestiferous Hicks was maintaining a mysterious silence, somewhere.
+
+This football trio, on whom rested the responsibility of rounding out a
+winning Bannister eleven, vastly resembled a coterie of German generals,
+back of the trenches, studying a war-map. Before them was spread what
+seemed to be a large checker-board. It was a miniature gridiron, with the
+chalk-marks painted in white; there were thumb-tacks stuck here and there,
+some with flat tops painted green and gold, others, representing the enemy,
+were solid red. The former had names printed on them, Butch, Roddy,
+Beef, and so on. By sticking these on the board, the three directors of
+Bannister's football destiny could work out new plays, and originate
+possible winning lineups.
+
+"We've just got to win the State Championship this season, Coach!" declared
+Butch, banging the table emphatically, as he stated a self-evident fact.
+"It's my last year for Old Bannister, and so with Beef and Pudge. I'll give
+every ounce of strength I possess In every game, to make that pennant float
+over Bannister Field!"
+
+"Bannister <i>will</i> win it!" vowed the behemoth Beef, his good-natured
+countenance grim, and his jaw set. "Not for five years has a Gold and Green
+team won the Championship--not since the year before Butch and I were
+Freshmen! We've got a splendid bunch of material to build a team with,
+and--"
+
+"Our biggest problem is this," spoke Coach Corridan, as with a phenomenal
+display of strength he took Beef McNaughton between thumb and forefinger
+and placed him on the field. "We must strengthen both line and backfield,
+for we lost by graduation Babe McCabe, Heavy Hughes, and Jack Merritt. Now,
+to replace that lost power--"
+
+Just then, from directly beneath the open window by which they had
+gathered, like the midnight serenade of a romantic lover, sounded
+the well-known foghorn voice of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as to the
+plunkety-plunk of a banjo accompaniment, he warbled melodiously:
+
+ "Gone are the days--I used to spend with Car-o-li-nah!
+ She had the sunshine in her laughter (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)
+ Just like that state they named her after--"
+
+"</i>Hicks</i>!" announced Butch, stealthily approaching the window, and
+beckoning his companions. "Easy--look at him, Deke, there he is, Hicks,
+the irrepressible! We might as well attempt to stab a rhinocerous to death
+with a humming-bird's feather, as to try and reform <i>him</i>!"
+
+Arrayed like a lily of the field, a model of sartorial splendor, Hicks
+occupied a chair beneath the window, tilted back gracefully against the
+side of the grub-shack. He had decked his splinter-structure with a
+dazzling Palm Beach suit, and a glorious pink silk shirt, off-set by a
+lurid scarf. A Panama hat decorated his head, white Oxfords and flamboyant
+hosiery adorned his feet, while the inevitable Cheshire cat grin beautified
+his cherubic countenance. A latest "best seller" was propped on his knees,
+and as he perused its thrilling pages, he carelessly strummed his beloved
+banjo, and in stentorian tones chanted a sentimental ballad:
+
+ "Gone are the days--the golden days I'm dreaming of,
+ I think I hear her softly calling (plunkety-plunk)
+ 'Will you be back? Will you be back? (plunk-plunk)
+ Back to the Car-o-li-nah you love?'"(plunkety-plunk),
+
+For three golden campus years T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had gayly pursued the
+even tenor (or <i>basso</i>, since he possessed a foghorn, subterranean voice)
+of his Bannister career. He absolutely refused to take life seriously, and
+he was forever arousing the wrath--mostly pretended, for no one could be
+really angry with the genial youth--of his comrades, by twanging his banjo
+and roaring out rollicking ballads at all hours. He was never so happy
+as when entertaining a crowd of happy students in his cozy quarters,
+or escorting a Hicks' Personally Conducted expedition downtown for a
+Beef-Steak Bust, at his expense, at Jerry's, the rendezvous of hungry
+collegians.
+
+However, despite his butterfly existence, Hicks, possessed of a
+scintillating mind, always set the scholastic pace for 1919, by means of
+occasional study-sprints, as he characteristically called them. But when it
+came to helping his beloved Dad realize a long-cherished ambition to behold
+his only son and heir shatter Hicks, Sr.'s, celebrated athletic records, it
+was a different story. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., ever since he committed
+the farcical <i>faux pas</i> of running the wrong way with the pigskin in
+the Freshman-Sophomore football contest of his first year, had been a
+super-colossal athletic joke at old Bannister.
+
+His record to date, beside that reverse touchdown that won for the
+Sophomores, consisted of scoring a home-run with the bases congested, on a
+strike-out; of smashing hurdles and cross-bars on the track; endangering
+his heedless career with the shot and hammer; and making a ridiculous farce
+of every event he entered, to the vast hilarity of the students, who, with
+the exception of Butch Brewster, had no idea his ridiculous efforts were in
+earnest. In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable promise,
+which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.
+
+Hicks, the lovable, impulsive, and irrepressible, with his invariable sunny
+disposition, his generous nature, and his democratic, loyal comradeship
+for everybody, was loved by old Bannister. The students forgave him his
+pestersome ways, his frequent torturing of them with banjo-twanging and
+rollicking ballads. His classmates idolized him, Juniors and Sophomores
+were his true friends, and entering Freshmen always regarded this
+happy-go-lucky youth as a demigod of the campus.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who was forever futilely lecturing the heedless Hicks,
+thrust his head from the grub-shack window, fought down a grin, and sternly
+arraigned his graceless comrade:
+
+"Hicks, you frivolous, campus-cluttering, infinitesimal atom of nothing,
+you labor under the insane delusion that college life is a continuous
+vaudeville show. You absolutely refuse to take your Bannister years
+seriously, you banjo-thumping, pillow-punishing, campus-torturing
+nonentity. You will never grasp the splendid opportunities within your
+reach! You have no ambition but to strum that banjo, roar ridiculous songs,
+fuss up like a tailor's dummy, and pester your comrades, or drag them down
+to Jerry's for the eats! You won't be earnest, you Human Cipher, Before you
+entered Bannister, you formed your ideas and ideals of campus life from
+colored posters, moving-pictures, magazine stories, and stage dramas like
+'Brown of Harvard"; you have surely lived up, or down, to those ideals,
+you--"
+
+"Them's harsh words, Butch!" joyously responded the grinning Hicks,
+unchastened, for he knew good Butch Brewster would not, for a fortune, have
+him forsake his care-free nature. "Thou loyal comrade of my happy campus
+years, what wouldst thou of me?--have me don sack-cloth and ashes, strike
+'The Funeral March' on my golden lyre, and cry out in anguish, </i>'ai! ai</i>!
+'Nay, nay, a couple of nays; college years are all too brief; hence I
+shall, by my own original process, extract from them all the sunshine and
+happiness possible, and by my wonderful musical and vocal powers, bring joy
+to my colleagues, who--</i>Ouch</i>, Butch--look out for that nail, you inhuman
+elephant--"
+
+Big Butch, at that juncture of Hicks' monologue, had effectively terminated
+it by leaning from the window, grasping his unsuspecting comrade by the
+scruff of the neck, and dragging him over the window-ledge, into the
+grub-shack, and the presence of Coach Corridan and Deacon Radford.
+Strenuous objection was registered, both by the futilely struggling Hicks,
+and a nail projecting from the sill, which caught in the Palm Beach
+trousers and ripped a long rent in them; fortunately, Hicks' anatomy
+escaped a similar fate.
+
+"A ripping good move, eh-what?" chuckled Hicks, twisting like a
+contortionist, to view the damage done his vestiture, "Hello, what have we
+here?--the German field-map, by the Van Dyke beard of the Prophet! I
+bring the Kaiser's order, ham and eggs, and a cup of coffee. No, that's a
+mistake. General Hen Von Kluck, lead a brigade of submarines up yon hill to
+thunder the Russian fort! Von Hindering-Bug, send a flock of aeroplanes and
+Zeppelins to the Allied trenches, the enemy is shooting Russian caviare
+at--"
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster's indignation,
+"you are such a wonder at solving perplexing problems by your marvelous
+'inspirations,' suppose you turn the scintillating searchlight of your
+colossal intellect upon the question that Bannister must solve, to produce
+a championship eleven!"
+
+It was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, inveterate habit, whenever a baffling
+situation, or what the French call an "<i>impasse</i>" presented itself, to
+state with the utmost confidence, "Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" On
+most occasions, when he made this remark, accompanied by a swaggering
+braggadocio that never failed to make good Butch Brewster wrathful, the
+happy-go-lucky youth possessed not the slightest idea of how the problem
+was to be solved. He just uttered his rash promise, and then trusted to his
+needed inspiration to illuminate a way out! And, as the Bannister campus
+well knew, Hicks had solved more than one torturing question by an
+inspiration that flashed on his intellect, when all hope of a satisfactory
+solution seemed dead.
+
+For example, in his Sophomore year, when the Freshman leader, James
+Roderick Perkins, that same Titian-haired Roddy who was now a bulwark at
+right end, became charged with a Napoleonic ambition, and organized a
+Freshman Equal Rights campaign, paralyzing Bannister football by refusing
+to allow Freshmen to try for athletic teams, unless their demands were
+granted. Hicks, when his inspiration finally smote him, smashed the
+Votes-for-Freshmen crusade, and quelled Roddy, Futilely racking his brain
+for a counter-attack, having blithely told the troubled campus, "Just leave
+it to Hicks," he had ceased to worry, and then the inspiration had come, By
+The Big Brotherhood of Bannister giving the upper-classmen full government
+over Freshmen, a scheme successfully carried through, the peril had been
+thwarted.
+
+"I got a letter from Dad yesterday," began Hicks, somewhat irrelevantly,
+considering the Coach's remarks, "and he said--"
+
+"'--Inclosed find the check you wrote for,'" quoth Deacon Radford,
+humorously. "'If you keep up this pace, I shall have to turn my steel
+mills to producing war munitions, to pay your college bills.' Say, Hicks,
+seriously, listen to our problem, and suggest what Coach Corridan should
+do."
+
+While Hicks' athletic powers were known to equal those of the paralyzed
+oldest inhabitant of a Civil War Veterans' Home, the sunny youth knew
+football thoroughly; often he originated plays that the team worked out
+with success, and his suggestions were always weighed carefully by the
+football directors. So, after he had adjusted his lurid scarf at the
+correct angle, and gazed ruefully at his torn habiliments, the sunshiny
+Senior seated himself at the table, before the "war-map," and gave heed to
+the Coach.
+
+[Illustration A: 'Here's the problem, Hicks']
+
+"Here's the problem, Hicks," said the Slave-Driver, indicating the
+Bannister eleven, represented by the gold and green topped thumb-tacks.
+"From the line we lost Babe, a tackle, Heavy, a guard, and Jack Merritt, a
+star end. Now, Monty Merriweather will hold down Jack's place O. K.--l can
+shift Beef from right half to guard, and put Butch at right-half, while
+Bunch Bingham can take care of Babe's old berth at tackle. But I have no
+one to shoot in at full-back, when I shift Butch; you see, Hicks, my plan
+is to build an eleven that can execute old-time, line-smashing football,
+and up-to-date open play as well; I want fast ends and halves, with a
+snappy quarter, and I have them; also, the backfield is heavy enough for
+line-bucking, if I get my beefy full-back. I must have a big, heavy, fast
+player, a giant who simply can't be stopped when he hits the line. With
+Butch and Biff at halves, Deke at quarter. Roddy and Monty ends, and my
+heavy line--why, a ponderous, irresistible Hercules at full-back will--"
+
+"Say!" grinned the irrepressible Hicks, as Coach Corridan warmed up to
+his vision, "you don't want <i>much</i>, Coach! Why don't you ask Ted Coy, the
+famous ex-Yale full-back, to give up his business and play the position for
+you? Maybe you can persuade Charlie Brickley, a <i>fair</i> sort of dropkicker,
+to quit coaching Hopkins, and kick a few goals for old Bannister! I get
+you, Coach--you want a fellow about the size of the </i>Lusitania,</i> made of
+structural steel, a Brobdingnagian Colossus who will guarantee to advance
+the ball fifteen yards per rush, or money refunded!
+
+"Why, Coach, while you are wanting things, just wish for a chap who will
+play the entire game himself, taking the ball down the field, while the
+rest of the team are pushed along in rolling-chairs, while imbibing pink
+tea. Get a prodigy who will instill such terror into our rivals that
+instead of playing the schedule, Bannister will simply arrange with other
+teams to mark themselves down defeated, and then agree what the scores
+shall be."
+
+"I knew it!" growled Butch Brewster, glowering at the jocular youth. "We
+should never have consulted him on this problem, for it is not one within
+his power to solve, even though he performed the miracle of talking
+seriously about it Now--"
+
+"Now--" echoed Hicks, with pretended seriousness, "Coach, you just hand me
+the blue-prints and specifications of said Gargantuan Hercules, and I'll
+try to corrall just such a phenomenon as you desire. Never hesitate to
+consult me on such important matters, for I am ever-ready to cast aside my
+own multifarious duties, when my Alma Mater needs my mental assistance,
+or--"
+
+"Hicks, are you <i>crazy</i>?" fleered Deacon Radford, moved to excitement,
+despite his great faith in the versatile youth. "Full-backs like that do
+not grow on trees; the only one I ever read of was </i>Ole Skjarsen</i>, in
+George Fitch's 'Siwash College Stories,' and he was purely fictitious. We
+know you have accomplished some great things by your 'inspirations,' but as
+for this--"
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks" quoth the irrepressible youth, swaggering toward
+the door with an affected nonchalant self-confidence that aroused Butch to
+wrath, and vastly amused his companions. "I'll admit a human juggernaut
+like Coach Corridan dreams of will be hard to round up, but, I'll have an
+inspiration soon. Don't worry about your old eleven, your problem will be
+solved, and you will have a team that can play fifty-seven varieties of
+football. </i>Raw revolver</i>, my comrades."
+
+When the graceless T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had sauntered gracefully out of
+the grub-shack, big Butch Brewster, almost exploding with suppressed wrath,
+stared at Slave-Driver Corridan and staid Deacon Radford a full minute;
+then he grinned,
+
+"That--Hicks!" he murmured, struggling against a desire to laugh. "What a
+ridiculous prophecy! 'Just leave it to Hicks!' Well, that means the problem
+goes unsolved, for though I confess he <i>is</i> brilliant, and his so-called
+'inspirations' have helped old Bannister; when it comes to rushing out and
+lassoing a smashing. Herculean full-back--<i>bah</i>!"
+
+Ten minutes later, when Coach Corridan and the Gold and Green squad climbed
+the bluff to the field back of Camp Bannister, for morning signal drill,
+their last memory was of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., arrayed in radiant
+vestiture, his chair tilted against the bunkhouse--the chords of the banjo,
+and his foghorn voice drifting to them on the warm September air:
+
+ "Oh, father and mother pay all the bills (<i>plunk-plunk</i>)
+ And we have all the fun (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)
+ With the money that we spend in college life!"
+
+Two hours afterward, as a tired, perspiring squad scrambled down the bluff,
+and made for the cool waters of Lake Conowingo, a mysterious silence,
+like a mighty wave, literally surged toward them. Camp Bannister seemed
+deserted, the sun was still shining, the birds sang as cheerily as ever,
+but instinctively the collegians felt an indescribable loneliness, a sense
+of tremendous loss.
+
+"</i>Hicks</i>!" shouted Butch Brewster, loudly, his voice shattering the
+stillness. "Hicks--ahoy! I say, Hicks--"
+
+Old Hinky-Dink, a letter in his hand, hobbled from the cook-tent toward
+them; like a sinister harbinger of evil he advanced, grinning deprecatingly
+at the squad:
+
+"Mistah Hicks am gone!" he announced importantly. "He done gib me fo' bits
+to row him ober to de village, to cotch de noon 'spress fo' Philadelphy!
+Heah am a letter what he lef'--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, to whom the <i>billet-doux</i> was addressed in T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while the squad
+listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled youth;
+
+
+"DEAR BUTCH:
+
+"Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on! I'm called
+away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow it in the
+room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next century.
+Give my <i>adieux</i> to Coach Corridan and the squad.
+
+"Yours truthfully,
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.
+
+"P.S.: Tell Coach Corridan he should worry--<i>not</i>! I'm hot on the trail of
+a fullback that will make Ted Coy at his coyest look like the paralyzed
+inmate of an old man's home. Just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY
+
+
+ "Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ </i>H-i-c-k-s</i>!
+ Has anybody here seen our Hicks?
+ If you've seen him, answer, 'Yes!'
+ He's tall and slim, and he wears a grin,
+ And his banjo-thumping is a sin.
+ Has <i>anybody</i> here seen our Hicks--
+ Hicks--and his old banjo?"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, big Beef McNaughton, the Phillyloo Bird--that
+flamingo-like Senior--and little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous boner
+whom Bannister College called the "Human Encyclopedia," roosted on the
+sacred Senior Fence, between the Gymnasium and the Administration Building.
+A gloomy silence, like a somber mantle, enshrouded the four members of '19,
+as they listened to a rollicking parody on, "Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?"
+chanted by some Juniors in Nordyke, with T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the
+object of solicitude. Nor did the melancholy youths respond to the queries
+hurled down at them from the dormitories' windows:
+
+"Say, Butch Brewster, where is that crazy Hicks?"
+
+"Beef, ain't our Hicks a-comin' back here no more?"
+
+"Hello, Phillyloo, any word from our Hicks yet?"
+
+"Ahoy there, Theophilus, where is Hicks, the Missing?"
+
+The seven-thirty study-hour bell was ringing, its mellow chimes sounding
+from the Administration Building tower. From the windows of the dormitories
+gleams of light shot athwart the darkness. Over in Creighton Hall, the
+abode of Freshmen, a silence reigned, but in Smithson, where the Sophomores
+roomed, Nordyke, home of the Juniors, and Bannister, haunt of the solemn
+Seniors, pandemonium obtained. In these dorm. rooms and corridors that
+night, just as in the class-rooms, or on the campus, and Bannister Field
+that day, there was but one topic. Whenever two students met, came the
+query inevitable:
+
+"Where is Hicks? Isn't Hicks coming back this year?"
+
+The Freshmen, bewildered, quite naturally, at the furore made over
+one missing student, asked, "Who is Hicks?" Seeking information from
+upper-classmen they received innumerable tales, in the nature of Iliad
+and Odyssey, concerning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; they heard of his campus
+exploits, such as his originating The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, and
+they laughed, at recitals of his athletic fiascos. They were told of his
+inevitably sunny nature, his loyal comradeship, his generous disposition,
+and as a result, the Freshmen, too, became intensely interested in the
+all-important campus problem: "Where is T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.?"
+
+Little Theophilus Opperdyke, whose big-rimmed spectacles, high forehead,
+and bushy hair gave him an intensely owlish appearance, sighed
+tremendously, stared solemnly at his class-mates, and became the author of
+a most astounding statement: "I--I can't study," quavered the "boner,"
+he whose tender devotion to his books was a campus tradition, and whose
+loyalty to his firm friend, the blithesome Hicks, was as that of Damon
+to Pythias, "I just <i>can't</i> care about my studies, without Hicks here!
+Somehow, it--it doesn't seem like old times, on the campus."
+
+"I should say not!" ejaculated the Phillyloo Bird, sepulchrally, his
+string-bean length draped with extreme decorative effect on the Senior
+Fence, "Life at old Bannister without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is about as
+interesting as 'The Annual Report of the Department of Agriculture!'
+Prexy thought he started the college on its Marathon three days ago, but
+Bannister will not be officially opened until Hicks stands by his window
+some study-hour, twangs that old banjo, and shatters the campus quietude
+with a ballad roared in his fog-horn voice!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, enshrouded in melancholy, instinctively gazed up at the
+windows of the room T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had reserved on the third floor
+of Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., as if he fully expected to behold
+the missing youth materialize. There, in lonely grandeur, waited the
+sunny-souled Senior's vast aggregation of trunks, crates, and packing
+boxes, together with Hicks' baggage brought down from Camp Bannister. The
+bothersome banjo had disappeared at the same time the youthful Caruso
+imitated the Arabs, folding his figurative tent, and stealing away.
+
+"It's a strange paradox," boomed Butch Brewster, finding that no Hicks
+appeared at the window, "but for three years Bannister has stormed at Hicks
+for bothering us during study-hour, or at midnight, with his saengerfest,
+and now I'd give anything to see him up there, and to hear that banjo, and
+his songs! It is just as if the sun doesn't shine on the campus, when T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., is away!"
+
+Bannister College had been running for three days "on one cylinder," as
+the Phillyloo Bird quaintly phrased it, on account of the gladsome Hicks'
+mysterious absence. Not a word had the Head Coach, Captain Brewster, the
+football squad, or any of the collegians received from the blithesome
+youth, since the <i>billet-doux</i> he left with old Hinky-Dink at Camp
+Bannister. Old students, returning to the campus for another golden year,
+invaded Hicks' room in Bannister, ready to enjoy the cozy den of that
+jolly Senior, but they encountered silence and desolation. No one had the
+slightest knowledge of where the cheery Hicks could be; they missed his
+singing and banjo strumming, his pestersome ways, his cheerful good nature,
+his cozy quarters always open house to all, and his Hicks' Personally
+Conducted tours downtown to Jerry's for those celebrated Beefsteak Busts.
+
+A telegram to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., in Pittsburgh, sent by the
+worried Butch Brewster, had brought this concise response:
+
+No knowledge of Thomas' whereabouts. He should be at Bannister.
+
+"Queer," reflected Beef McNaughton, shifting his bulk on the protesting
+fence. "We know Hicks will be back, for all his luggage is stowed away
+in his room, and we are sure he is giving us all this mystery just for a
+joke--he dearly loves to arrange a sensational and dramatic climax--but
+we just can't get used to his not being on the campus. When Theophilus
+Opperdyke can't study, it's high time the S.O.S. signal was sent to T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+"That is not the worst of it," growled Captain Butch Brewster, his arm
+across little Theophilus' shoulders. "The football squad misses Hicks,
+Beef. For the past two seasons he has sat at the training-table, his
+invariable good-humor, his Cheshire cat grin, and his sunny ways have kept
+the fellows in fine mental trim so they haven't worried over the game. But
+now, just as soon as he left Camp Bannister, the barometer of their spirits
+went down to zero and every meal at training-table is a funeral. Coach
+Corridan can't inject any pep into the scrimmages, and he says if Hicks
+doesn't return soon, Bannister's chances of the Championship are gone."
+
+"As Theophilus says," responded the gloomy Beef, "we just can't get used
+to his not being here. We miss his good-nature, his sunny smile, the jolly
+crowds in his cozy quarters--why, the campus is talking of nothing but
+Hicks--and I don't know what Bannister will do after Hicks graduates--shut
+down, I suppose!"
+
+"Well, you know," grinned the Phillyloo Bird, his cadaverous structure
+humped over like a turkey on the roost, "our Hicks hath sallied forth on
+the trail of a full-back, a Hercules who will smash the other elevens to
+infinitesimal smithereens! He told the squad to just leave it to Hicks,
+so don't be surprised if he is making flying trips to Yale, Harvard, and
+Princeton, striving to corral some embryo Ted Coy. Remember how Hicks often
+fulfills his rash prophecies!"
+
+"A Herculean full-back--</i>Bah</i>!" fleered Butch, for all the campus knew of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, extremely rash vow to unearth a "phenom." "The
+truth of it is, fellows. Hicks has failed to locate such a wonder as Coach
+Corridac outlined, for there ain't no such animal! He doesn't like to
+come back to Bannister without having made good his promise, without that
+Gargantuan giant he vowed to round up for the Gold and Green."
+
+Just then, as if to substantiate Butch's jeering statement, a youth wearing
+the uniform and cap of The Western Union Telegraph Company and
+advancing across the campus at that terrific speed always exhibited by
+messenger-boys, appeared in the offing. Periscoping the four Seniors on the
+fence, he navigated his course accordingly and pulling a yellow envelope
+from his cap, he queried, in charmingly chaste English:
+
+"Say, kin youse tell me where to find a feller name o' Brewster, wot's
+cap'n o' de football bunch?"
+
+"Right here, Little Nemo," advised the Phillyloo Bird, solemnly. "Hast thou
+any messages from New York for me? John D. Rockefeller promised to wire me
+whether or not to purchase war-stocks."
+
+The Phillyloo Bird, at this stage of his monologue, was interrupted by a
+yell that would have caused a full-blooded Choctaw Indian to turn pale.
+This came from good Butch Brewster, who, having signed for the message,
+and imagined all manner of catastrophes, from world-wars, earthquakes,
+pestilence and loss of wealth, down to bad news from Hicks, after the
+fashion of those receiving telegrams but seldom, had scanned the yellow
+slip. Never before, or afterward, not even when the luckless Butch fell in
+love, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., assisted Cupid, did the pachydermic Butch
+act so insanely as on this occasion.
+
+"Whoop-<i>eee! Yee-ow! Wow-wow-wow</i>!" howled the supposedly solemn Senior,
+tumbling from the Senior fence and rolling on the campus like a decapitated
+rooster. "Hip-hip-<i>hooray</i>! Ring the bell, Beef, get the fellows out, have
+the Band ready, Oh, where is Coach Corridan? Read it, Beef, Theophilus,
+Phillyloo. Oh, Hicks is <i>coming</i> and he's got--"
+
+It is possible that little Theophilus, who firmly believed that big Butch
+Brewster had gone emotionally insane, would have fled for help, but at that
+juncture members of the Gold and Green football squad, with Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan, appeared, marching funereally toward the Gym.,
+where a signal quiz was booked for seven forty-five. Beholding the
+paralyzing spectacle of their captain apparently in paroxysms on the grass,
+Hefty Hollingsworth, Biff Pemberton, Monty Merriweather and Pudge Langdon
+hurled themselves on his tonnage, while Roddy Perkins sat on his head, and
+wrested the telegram from his grasp,
+
+"Call up Matteawan," shouted Roddy, unfolding the slip, "Butch is getting
+barmy in the dome, he--Oh, Coach, fellows--<i>great joy</i>! Just heed."
+
+James Roderick Perkins, as excited as a Senator about to make his first
+speech, read aloud the telegram, on which the heedless Hicks had triple
+rates:
+
+
+"BUTCH:
+
+"Coming 8.30 P. M. express today. Discharge entire eleven--got whole team
+in one. Knock out partitions between five rooms. Make space for Thor, the
+Prodigious Prodigy! Leave it to Hicks!
+
+"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR."
+
+
+"</i>Hicks is coming</i>!" shrieked the Phillyloo Bird, soaring down from the
+Senior Fence like a condor. "He will be here in less than an hour; he sent
+this wire just before his train left Philadelphia. Money is no object, when
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister."
+
+"'Discharge entire eleven,'" quoth Butch Brewster, having somewhat subdued
+his frenzy. "'Got whole team in one--knock out partitions between <i>five</i>
+rooms--make space for Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy!' Now, what in the world
+has that lunatical Hicks done? Who can Thor be?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Buster Brown, Bunch Bingham, Scoop Sawyer, little Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Don Carterson, and Cherub Challoner, not having given their
+brawn to the subduing of Butch, now kindly donated their brain, in all
+manner of weird suggestions. According to their various surmises, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., had lured the Strong Man away from Barnum and Bailey's
+Circus, had in some way reincarnated the mythical Norse god, Thor, had
+hired some Greco-Roman wrestler, or by other devices too numerous and
+ridiculous to mention, had produced a full-back according to Coach
+Corridan's blue-prints and specifications.
+
+Big Beef McNaughton, seized with an inspiration that supplied
+locomotive-power to his huge frame, lumbered into the Gym., and soon
+appeared with monster megaphones, used in "rooting" for Gold and Green
+teams, which he handed out to his comrades. Then the riotous squad, at his
+suggestion, sprinted for the Quad., that inner quadrangle or court around
+which the four class dormitories, forming the sides of a square, were
+built; anyone desiring an audience could be sure of it here, since the
+collegians in all four dorms. could rush to the Quadrangle side and look
+down from the windows. In the Quadrangle, under the brilliant arc-lights,
+the exuberant youths paused,
+
+"One--two--three--let 'er go!" boomed Beef, and the football squad, in
+<i>basso profundo</i>, aided by the Phillyloo Bird's uncertain tenor, and
+Theophilus' quavery treble, roared in a tremendous vocal explosion that
+shook the dormitories:
+
+"Hicks is coming! Hicks is coming! Everybody out on the campus! Get ready
+to welcome our T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.! Hicks is bringing Bannister's
+full-back--a </i>Prodigious Prodigy</i>!"
+
+Windows rattled up, heads were thrust out, a fusillade of questions
+bombarded the squad in the Quadrangle below; from the three upper-class
+dormitories erupted hordes of howling, shouting youths, and soon the Quad.
+was filled with a singing, yelling, madly happy crowd. The Bannister Band,
+that famous campus musical organization, following a time-honored habit of
+playing on every possible occasion, gladsomely tuned up and soon the
+noise was deafening, while study-hour, as prescribed by the Faculty, was
+forgotten.
+
+"Everybody on the campus, at once!" Butch Brewster, Master-of-Ceremonies,
+boomed through his megaphone, having aroused excitement to the highest
+pitch by reading Hicks' telegram. "Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus will soon
+heave into sight. Let the Band blare, make a <i>big noise</i>. Let's show Hicks
+how glad we are to have him back to old Bannister."
+
+It is historically certain that Mr. Napoleon Bonaparte returning from Jena
+and Austerlitz, Mr. Julius Caesar, home at Rome from his Conquests, or Mr.
+Alexander the Great (Conqueror, not National League pitcher) never received
+such a welcome as did T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., from his Bannister comrades
+that night. To the excited students, massed on the campus before the Gym.
+awaiting his arrival, every second seemed a century; everybody talked at
+once until the hubbub rivaled that of a Woman's Suffrage Convention. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and he was
+bringing "The Prodigious Prodigy," whatever that was, with him. Knowing the
+cheery Senior's intense love of doing the dramatic and his great ambition
+to startle his Alma Mater with some sensational stunt, they could hardly
+wait for old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus to roll up the driveway,
+
+"Here he comes!" shrieked, little Skeet Wigglesworth, an excitable Senior,
+who had climbed a tree to keep watch. "Here comes our Hicks!"
+
+"Honk--Honk!" To the incessant blaring of a raucous horn, old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney-bus moved up the driveway. The genial Irish Jehu, who
+for over twenty years had transported Bannister collegians and alumni
+to and from College Hill in a ramshackle hack drawn by Lord Nelson, an
+antiquated, somnambulistic horse, had yielded to modern invention at
+last. Lord Nelson having become defunct during vacation, Old Dan, with
+a collection taken up by several alumni at Commencement, had bought a
+battered Ford, and constructed therewith a jitney-bus. This conveyance was
+fully as rattle-trap in appearance as the traditional hack had been, but
+the returning collegians hailed it with glee.
+
+"All hail Hicks!" howled Butch Brewster, beside himself with joy,
+"Altogether--the Bannister yell for--</i>Hicks</i>!"
+
+With half the collegians giving the yell, a number shouting
+indiscriminately, the Bannister Band blaring furiously, "Behold, The
+Conquering Hero Comes," with the youths a yelling, howling, shrieking,
+dancing mass, old Dan Flannagan, adding his quota of noises with the
+Claxon, brought his bus to a stop. This was a hilarious spectacle in
+itself, for on its sides the Bannister students had painted:
+
+ HENRY FORD'S "PIECE-OF-A-SHIP," </i>THE DOVE</i>! ALL RIDING IN THIS JIT DO
+ SO AT THEIR OWN RISK! TEN CENTS FOR A JOY-RIDE TO COLLEGE HILL! YES,
+ IT'S A </i>FORD</i>! WHAT DO YOU CARE? GET ABOARD!
+
+On the roof of "The Dove," or "The Crab," as the collegians called it when
+it skidded sideways, perched precariously that well-known, beloved youth,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. He clutched his pestersome banjo and was vigorously
+strumming the strings and apparently howling a ballad, lost in the
+unearthly turmoil. As the jitney-bus stopped, the grinning Hicks arose, and
+from his lofty, position made a profound bow.
+
+"Speech! Speech! Speech!" A mighty shout arose, and Hicks raised his hand
+for silence, which was immediately delivered to him.
+
+"Fellows, one and all," he shouted, a mist before his eyes, for his
+impulsive soul was touched by the ovation, "I--I am <i>glad</i> to be back!
+Say--I--I--well, I'm glad to be back--that's all!"
+
+At this masterly oration, which, despite its brevity, contained volumes of
+feeling, the Bannister students went wild--for a longer period than any
+political convention ever cheered a nominated candidate, they cheered T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Roar--roar--roar--<i>roar</i>!" in deafening sound-waves,
+the noise swept across the campus; never had football idol, baseball hero,
+or any athletic demigod, in all Bannister's history, been accorded such a
+tremendous ovation.
+
+"Fellows," called T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., climbing down from his precarious
+perch, "stand back; I have brought to Bannister the 'Prodigious Prodigy.'
+I have rounded up a full-back who will beat Ballard all by himself. Behold
+the new Gold and Green football eleven, 'Thor'!"
+
+From the grinning Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, like a Russian bear charging
+from its den, lumbered a being whose enormous bulk fairly astounded the
+speechless youths; Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Tug Cardiff, Bunch
+Bingham, Buster Brown, and Pudge Langdon were popularly regarded as the
+last word in behemoths, but this "Thor" dwarfed them, towered above them
+like a Colossus over Lilliputians. He was a youth, and yet a veritable
+Hercules. Over six feet he stood, with a massive head, covered with tousled
+white hair, a powerful neck, broad shoulders, a vast chest. To a judge of
+athletes, he would tip the scales at a hundred and ninety pounds, all solid
+muscle, for that superb physique held not an ounce of superfluous flesh.
+
+"Hicks," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, gazing at the mountain of
+muscle, "if <i>size</i> means anything, you have brought old Bannister an entire
+football squad! What splendid material to train for the Big Games, why--he
+will be irresistible!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER
+
+
+ "I didn't raise my </i>Ford</i> to be a <i>jitney</i>--
+ To run the streets, and stay out late at night!
+ Who dares to put a jitney sign, upon it--
+ And send my <i>peace-ship</i> out for fares to fight?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., standing by his open window at 3 P. M. one
+afternoon a week after his sensational return to Bannister College, with
+the "Prodigious Prodigy" in tow, indulged in the soul-satisfying pastime of
+twanging his banjo, and roaring, in his subterranean voice, a parody on "I
+Didn't Raise My Boy to be a Soldier." It was actually the first Caruso-like
+outburst of the pestersome youth that year, but his saengerfest brought
+vociferous howls of protest from campus and dormitories:
+
+"</i>Bow-wow-wow</i>! The Grand Opery season is starting!"
+
+"Sing some records for a talking-machine company, Hicks!"
+
+"Kill that tom-cat! Listen to the back-fence musicale!"
+
+"Say, Hicks--we'll take your word for that noise!"
+
+On the Gym. steps, loafing a few moments before jogging out to Bannister
+Field for a strenuous scrimmage under the personal supervision of
+Slave-Driver Corridan, the Gold and Green football squad had gathered. It
+was from these stalwart gridiron gladiators that the caustic criticism of
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, vocal atrocities emanated, and the imitation of a
+mournful hound by "Ichabod," the skyscraping Senior, was indeed phenomenal.
+Added to the howls, whistles, jeers, and shouts of the squad, were like
+condemnations from other collegians, sky-larking on the campus, or in the
+dorms.
+
+"At that," grinned Captain Butch Brewster happily, "it surely makes me feel
+jubilant to hear Hicks' foghorn voice shattering the echoes, with his
+banjo strumming disturbing the peace--for which offense it shall soon be
+arrested. We can truly say that old Bannister is now officially opened for
+another year, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., has performed his annual rite--"
+
+"Right--!" scoffed big Pudge Langdon, indignantly, as he gazed up at the
+happy-go-lucky youth, at the window of his room on the third-floor, campus
+side, of Bannister Hall, "Hicks ought to be tarred and feathered; there is
+<i>nothing right</i> in the way he has acted since his return to college! He
+struts around like Herman, the Master-Magician, and all the fellows fully
+expect to see him produce white rabbits from his cap, or make varicolored
+flags out of his handkerchief."
+
+"We ought to toss him in a blanket," stormed Beef McNaughton, in ludicrous
+rage. "Ever since he mystified Bannister by going out and corralling a
+Hercules who is an entire eleven in himself, Hicks has maintained that
+sphinx-like silence as to how he achieved the feat, and he swaggers around,
+enshrouded in <i>mystery</i>! All we know is that 'Thor' is John Thorwald, of
+Norwegian descent. If we ask <i>him</i> for information, that wretch Hicks has
+him trained to say, 'Ask the little fellow, Hicks!'"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in truth, had acted in a most reprehensible manner
+since that memorable night when he brought "Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy,"
+to the campus. Not that he ceased to be the same sunny-souled, popular and
+friendly youth. The collegians, happy at finding his room open-house again,
+flocked to his cozy quarters, Freshmen <i>fell</i> under the spell of his
+generous nature, his Beef-Steak Busts, down at Jerry's were nightly
+occurrences, and he was the same Hicks as of old. But, after the dramatic
+manner in which Hicks had mysteriously made good the rash vow uttered at
+Camp Bannister and had brought to Coach Corridan a blond-haired giant who
+seemed destined to perform prodigies at full-back, the sunny Senior had
+evidently labored under the delusion that he was "Kellar, The Great
+Magician."
+
+Instead of relieving the tortured curiosity of the students, wild to know
+how and where Hicks had unearthed this physical Hercules, who in every way
+filled the details of Head Coach Corridan's "blue-prints," T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., enjoying to the full this novel method of torturing his
+comrades, made a baffling mystery of the affair, much to the indignation of
+his friends.
+
+</i>"Just leave it to Hicks,"</i> he would say, when the Bannister youths
+cajoled, implored, threatened, or argued. "Thor is eligible to play four
+years of football at old Bannister. I call him Thor, after the great Norse
+god, Thor; he is of Norwegian descent. That is all of the Billion-Dollar
+Mystery I can disclose; ten thousand dollars offered for the correct
+solution."
+
+"Here comes Scoop Sawyer," said Monty Merriweather, as that Senior, waving
+his arms in air, catapulted from Bannister Hall, and strode toward the
+squad on the Gym. steps; his appearance registered wrath, in photo-play
+parlance, and on reaching his comrades he immediately acquainted them with
+its cause.
+
+"Listen to that Hicks!" he exploded, gesticulating with a sheaf of papers.
+"Hicks, the mocking-bird! He is mocking <i>us</i>--with his 'Billion-Dollar
+Mystery!' Say--here I am writing to Jack Merritt; he played football four
+years for old Bannister; he was captain of the Gold and Green eleven; last
+Commencement he graduated, and the last thing he said to me was, 'Scoop,
+old pal, write to me next fall, tell me everything about the football
+season; keep me posted as to new material!' </i>Everything</i>--keep him posted
+as to new material--</i>Bah</i>! If I write that Hicks has brought a fellow he
+calls 'Thor,' who spreads the regulars over the field, Jack will want
+to know the details, and--that villainous Hicks won't divulge his dread
+secret!"
+
+At this moment, Scoop Sawyer, so-called because he was ambitious to be a
+newspaper reporter, after graduation, and for his humorous articles in the
+</i>Bannister Weekly</i>, had his intense wrath soothed by that which has
+"power to soothe the savage breast"; T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., displaying a
+wonderful originality by composing, then chanting, his parody, concluded
+the chorus roaring lustily, to a rollicking banjo accompaniment:
+
+ "If street car companies gave seats to all patrons
+ The strap-hangers in jitneys would not ride.
+ There'd be no jits. today
+ If Ford owners would say,
+ I didn't raise my Ford to be a--jitney!"
+
+"That is too much!" raged Captain Butch Brewster, facing his excited
+colleagues. "Come on, fellows, we'll invade Hicks' room, read him Scoop's
+letter to Jack Merritt, and <i>make</i> him solve the Mystery! We're done with
+diplomacy; now, we'll deliver the ultimatum; when the squad returns from
+scrimmage, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., will tell us all about Thor, or be
+tossed in a blanket! Are you with me?"
+
+"We are <i>ahead</i> of you!" howled Roddy Perkins, leading a wild charge for
+the entrance to Bannister Hall. Following him up the two flights of stairs
+with thunderous tread came Butch, Beef, Monty, Biff, Hefty, Pudge, Tug,
+Ichabod, Bunch, Buster, Bus Norton, and several second-team players,
+Cherub, Chub Chalmers, Don, Skeet, and Scoop Sawyer with his letter. With
+a terrific, blood-chilling clatter, and hideous howls, the Hicks-quelling
+Expedition roared down the third corridor of Bannister, and surged into the
+room of that tantalizing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!
+
+"Safety first!" shrieked that cheery collegian, stowing his banjo in the
+closet and making a strenuous but futile effort to dive head-first beneath
+the bed, being forcibly restrained by Beef, who clung to his left ankle.
+"Say, to what am I indebted for the honor of this call? Why, when I got
+back to Bannister, you fellows gushed, 'Oh, we're <i>so</i> glad you're back,
+Hicks, old top; we missed even your saengerfests,' and when I start one--"
+
+"Hicks," pronounced Butch Brewster grimly, holding the genial offender
+by the scruff of the neck, "you tantalizing, aggravating, irritating,
+lunatical, conscienceless degenerate! You assassin of Father Time, you
+disturber of the peace, <i>heed</i>! Scoop Sawyer is writing to Jack Merritt, to
+tell about the football team, and Bannister's chances of the Championship;
+he wants to tell Jack all about this Thor! Now, you have acted like
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston long enough, and hear our final word. Read Scoop's
+letter, and if when you finish its perusal you fail to give us full
+information, and answer all questions about Thor--"
+
+"The football team will toss you in a blanket until you do!" finished Monty
+Merriweather, "We intended to wait until after the scrimmage, but Butch
+evidently believes we should end your bothersome mystery as once, and--"
+
+"'Curiosity killed the cat!'" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; then seeing
+the avenues and boulevards of escape were closed, but fighting for time,
+"let me peruse said missive indited by our literarily overbalanced Scoop. I
+am reluctant to dispel the clouds of mystery, but--"
+
+Scoop Sawyer thrust the typewritten pages of the letter--composed on
+the battered old typewriter in the editorial sanctum of the </i>Bannister
+Weekly</i>--into Hicks' grasp and with a grin, that blithesome youth read:
+
+
+Bannister College, Sept, 27.
+
+DEAR OLD JACK:
+
+There is so <i>much</i> to tell you, old pal, that I scarcely know where to
+start, but you want to know about the football eleven, so I'll write about
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his 'Billion-Dollar Mystery,' as he calls it;
+about Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. You well know what a scatter-brained
+wretch Hicks is, and how he dearly loves to plot dramatic climaxes--to
+mystify old Bannister. Just now Hicks has the campus as wrathful as it is
+possible to be with that lovable youth; he has originated a great mystery,
+and achieved a seemingly impossible feat, and instead of explaining it, he
+swaggers around like a Hindoo mystic enshrouded in mystery and the fellows
+are wild enough to tar and feather the incorrigible villain!
+
+To get off to a sprint-start, up in Camp Bannister, before college opened,
+when the squad was in training camp, Butch Brewster says that Coach
+Corridan one day, before Hicks, expressed a fervid ambition to find a huge,
+irresistible fullback--
+
+
+Here the chronicle must hang fire, while T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning
+at the wrath his mysterious behavior aroused, peruses those sections of
+Scoop Sawyer's epistle telling of two scenes already described; first,
+the one in the Camp Bannister grub-shack, where Head Coach Corridan
+blue-printed the Gargantuan athlete he desired, and the blithesome Hicks
+confidently requested that the Herculean task be left to him; second, the
+scene of intense excitement on the campus the night that the missing Hicks
+returned personally conducting that mountain of muscle, the blond-haired
+Thor.
+
+Having grinned at these descriptions, the pestiferous Hicks scanned a
+picturesque description by Scoop of the events that transpired between that
+memorable night and the present invasion of the sunny Senior's room by the
+indignant squad.
+
+--Naturally, Jack, old Bannister was intensely curious to know who this
+"Thor" could be, and how Hicks unearthed such a giant. But, instead of
+swaggering a trifle, as he inevitably does, and saying, 'Oh, I told you
+just to leave it to Hicks!' then telling all about it, after accomplishing
+what everyone believed a ridiculously impossible quest, he maintains that
+provokingly mysterious silence, and John Thorwald (we know his name,
+anyway) stolidly refers us to Hicks. So where Thor originated or how under
+the sun Hicks got on his trail, after making his rash vow to corral a
+mighty fullback, is a deep, dark mystery.
+
+Now for Thor himself. Words cannot describe that Prodigious Prodigy; he
+must be seen to be believed! We do know that he is John Thorwald, and of
+distinctly Norwegian descent, so that calling him after the mythic Norse
+god is extremely appropriate. And he is reminiscent of the great Thor, with
+his vast strength and prowess. Thanks to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, love of
+mystery, and of tantalizing old Bannister, we know nothing of Thorwald's
+past, but we are sure he has lived and toiled among <i>men</i>, to possess
+that powerful build. I can't describe him, old man, without resorting to
+exaggeration, for ordinary words and phrases are utterly inadequate with
+Thor! Conjure up a vision of Gulliver among the Lilliputians and you can
+picture him towering over us. He is a Viking of old, with his fair features
+and blond hair. Probably twenty-five years old, he has a powerful frame and
+prodigious strength, he dwarfs such behemoths as Butch and Beef, and makes
+such insignificant mortals as little Theophilus and myself seem like
+insects!
+
+Thor is so <i>big</i>, Jack, that when he gets in a room, he crowds everyone
+into the corridor, and fills it alone. No wonder Hicks telegraphed to knock
+out the partitions between five rooms to make space for Thor! When he
+stands on the campus he blots out several sections of scenery, and the
+college disappears, giving the impression he has swallowed it. Thor is a
+slow-minded being, but possessed of a grim determination. To get an idea
+into his mind requires a blackboard and Chautauqua lecturer, but once he
+masters it, he never lets go; so it will be with football signals, once let
+him grasp a play, he will never be confused. He is simply a huge, stolid
+giant. He has a bulldog purpose to get an education, and nothing else
+matters. As for college spirit, the glad comradeship of the campus, he has
+no time for it; he pays no attention to the fellows at all, only to Hicks.
+
+His devotion to that wretch is pathetic! He follows Hicks around like a
+huge mastiff after a terrier, or an ocean leviathan towed by a tug-boat; he
+seems absolutely helpless without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and so we have
+a daily Hicks' personally conducted tour of Thor to interest us. Briefly,
+Jack, John Thorwald is a slow-moving, slow-minded, grimly bulldog giant,
+who has come to Bannister to study, and as for any other phase of campus
+existence, he has never awakened to it!
+
+Now for the football story: Well, the day after Hicks' sensational arrival,
+which I described, Coach Corridan, Captain Butch Brewster, Beef, Buster,
+Pudge, Monty, and Roddy with yours truly, went to Thor's room in Creighton
+just before football practice. We found that Colossus, who had matriculated
+as a Freshman, aided by Hicks, patiently masticating mental food as served
+by Ovid. Coach Corridan said, 'Come on, Thorwald, over to the Gym.; we'll
+fix you out with togs, if we can get two suits big enough to make one for
+your bulk! Ever play the game?' 'I play some,' rumbled Thor stolidly, never
+raising his eyes from his Latin. 'Don't bother me, I want to <i>study.</i>
+I have not time for such foolishness. I am here to study, to get an
+education!' 'But,' urged the coach earnestly, 'you <i>must</i> play football for
+your Alma Mater, for old Bannister. Why, you--you <i>must</i>, that's all!' Thor
+gazed at Hicks questioningly--I forgot to add that insect's name--and
+asked, 'Is it so, Hicks? I <i>got</i> to play for the college?' And when Hicks
+grinned, '</i>Sure</i>, Thor, it must be did. Bannister expects you to smear the
+other teams over the landscape,' that blond Norwegian Viking said, 'Well,
+then, I play.'
+
+All Bannister turned out to behold the "Prodigious Prodigy" on the football
+field. Somewhere--Hicks won't divulge where--Thor has learned the rudiments
+of the game. With that bulldog tenacity of his, he has learned them well.
+Hence he was ready for the scrubs, and in the practice game it was a
+veritable slaughter of the innocents. The 'Varsity could not stop Thor.
+Remember 'Ole' Skjarsen, the big Swede of George Fitch's 'Siwash College'
+tales? Thor, after the ten minutes required to teach him a play, would take
+the ball and just wade through the regulars for big gains. The only way to
+stop him was for the entire eleven to cling affectionately to his bulk,
+and then he transported them several yards. He is a phenom, a veritable
+Prodigious Prodigy, and maybe old Bannister isn't <i>wild</i> with enthusiasm.
+His development will be slow but sure, and by the time the big games for
+the championship come, he will be a whole team in himself. Right now he
+goes through daily scrimmage as solemnly as if performing a sacred rite. He
+doesn't thrill with college spirit, but as for football--
+
+Leaving Hicks to read the rest of Scoop Sawyer's long missive, terminating
+with indignant condemnation of the sunny youth's love of mystery, the
+terrific enthusiasm roused at old Bannister by the daily appearance on
+Bannister Field of Thor, and his irresistible marches through the 'Varsity,
+must be chronicled and explained.
+
+Not for five seasons, not since the year before Hicks, Pudge, Butch, Beef
+and the others of 1919 were Freshmen, had the Gold and Green corraled that
+greatest glory, The State Intercollegiate Football Championship! In Captain
+Butch's Sophomore year, he had flung his bulk into the fray, training,
+sacrificing, fighting like a Trojan, only to see the pennant lost by a
+scant three inches, as Jack Merritt's forty-yard drop-kick for the goal
+that would have won the Championship struck the cross-bar and bounded back
+into the field. And the past season-old Bannister could still vision that
+tragic scene of the biggest game.
+
+The students could picture Captain Brewster, with the Bannister eleven a
+few yards from Ballard's goal-line, and the touchdown that would give the
+Gold and Green that supreme glory. One minute to play; Deacon Radford had
+given Butch the pigskin, and like a berserker, he fought entirely through
+the scrimmage. But a kick on the head had blinded him, in the <i>mêlée</i>--free
+of tacklers, with the goal-line, victory, and the Championship so near, he
+staggered, reeled blindly, crashed into an upright, and toppled backward,
+senseless on the field, while the Referee's whistle announced the end of
+the game, and glory to Ballard. Even then, after the first terrible shock
+of the loss, of the cruel blow fate dealt the Gold and Green two
+successive seasons, the slogan was: "</i>Next year</i>--Bannister will win the
+Championship--<i>next year</i>!"
+
+It was now "next year!" Losing only Jack Merritt, Babe McCabe and Heavy
+Hughes from the line-up, and having Monty Merrlweather and Bunch Bingham,
+fully as good, Coach Corridan's Gold and Green eleven, before the season
+started, seemed a better fighting machine than even the one of the year
+before. But when the irrepressible T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in some
+mysterious fashion making good his rash vow to produce a smashing full-back
+that can't be stopped, towed that stolid, blond Colossus, Thor, to old
+Bannister, enthusiasm broke all limits!
+
+Mass-meetings were held every night. Speeches by Coaches, Captain, players,
+Faculty, and students, aroused the campus to the highest pitch; every day,
+the entire student-body, with The Bannister Band, turned out on Bannister
+Field to cheer the eleven, and to watch the Prodigious Prodigy perform
+valorous deeds, like the god Thor. "Bannister College--State Championship!"
+was the cry, and with the giant Thor to present an irresistible catapulting
+that could not be stopped, the Gold and Green exultantly awaited the big
+games with Hamilton and Ballard.
+
+And yet, the stolid, unemotional, unawakened Thor, on whom every hope of
+the Championship was based, whom all Bannister came out to watch every day,
+practiced as he studied, doggedly, silently. It was evident to all that
+he hated the grind, that he wanted to quit, that his heart was not in the
+game, but for some cause, he drove his Herculean body ahead, and could not
+be stopped!
+
+"Now, you abandoned wretch," said Butch Brewster grimly, as the
+happy-go-lucky Hicks finished Scoop's letter, and glanced about him wildly
+seeking a way of escape, "in one minute you will tell us all about John
+Thorwald, alias 'Thor,' or be tossed sky-high in a blanket by the football
+squad, and please believe me, you'll break all altitude records!"
+
+"Spare me, you banditti!" pleaded Hicks, reluctant to cease torturing
+Bannister with his Billion-Dollar Mystery, yet equally unwilling to aviate
+from a blanket heaved by the husky athletes. "Why seek ye to question the
+ways of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.? You have your Prodigious Prodigy--your
+smashing full-back is distributing the 'Varsity over the scenery with
+charming nonchalance that promises dire catastrophe for other teams, once
+he makes the regulars, so--"
+
+At that dramatic moment, just as Butch Brewster glanced at Hicks'
+alarm-clock, to start the minute of grace, a startling interruption saved
+the gladsome youth from having to make a decision. A heavy, creaking tread
+shook the corridor, and the squad beheld, looming up in the doorway, Thor.
+He was not in football togs, and as he started to speak his fair face as
+stolid and expressionless as that of a sphinx, Captain Butch Brewster
+stepped toward him.
+
+"Thor!" he exclaimed, seizing the blond Colossus by the arm, "You aren't
+ready for the scrimmage; hustle over to the Gym. and get on your suit."
+
+But John Thorwald, as passive of feature as though he announced something
+of the most infinitesimal importance, and were not hurling a bomb-shell
+whose explosion, was to shake old Bannister terrifically, spoke in a
+matter-of-fact manner: "I shall not play football--any more,"
+
+"</i>What</i>!" Every collegian in Hicks' room, including that dazed producer
+of the Prodigious Prodigy, chorused the exclamation; to them it was as
+stunning a shock as the nation would suffer if its President calmly
+announced, "I'm tired of being President of the United States. I shall not
+report for work tomorrow." Bannister College, ever since the night that
+Thor arrived on the campus, had talked or thought of nothing but how this
+huge, blond-haired Hercules would bring the Championship to the Gold and
+Green; his prodigies on the gridiron, his ever-increasing prowess, had
+aroused enthusiasm to fever heat, and now--
+
+"I was told wrong," said Thor, shifting his vast tonnage awkwardly from one
+foot to the other, and evidently bewildered at the consternation caused by
+what he believed a trifling announcement, "I understood that I <i>had</i> to
+play football, that the Faculty required it of me, and the students let me
+think so. I have just learned from Doctor Alford that such is not true,
+that I do not have to play unless I choose, hence, I quit. I came to
+college to study, to gain an education. I have toiled long and hard for
+the opportunity, and now I have it, I shall not waste my time on such
+foolishness."
+
+Then, utterly unconscious that he had spoken sentences which would create
+a mighty sensation at old Bannister, that might doom the Gold and Green
+to defeat, lose his Alma Mater the Championship, and bring on himself the
+cruel ostracism and bitter censure of his fellows, John Thorwald lumbered
+down the corridor. A moment of tense silence followed and then Captain
+Butch Brewster groaned.
+
+"It's all over, it's all over, fellows!" he said brokenly, "Bannister loses
+the Championship! We know it is impossible to move Thor on the football
+field, and now that he has said 'No!' to playing football, dynamite can not
+move him from his decision."
+
+Then, crushed and disconsolate, the football squad filed silently from the
+room, to break the glad news to Coach Corridan, and to spread the joyous
+tidings to old Bannister. When they had gone, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+staring at the figurative black cloud that lowered over his Alma Mater,
+strove to find its silver lining, and at last he partially succeeded.
+
+"Anyway," said Hicks, with a lugubrious effort to grin, "Thor's
+announcement shocked the squad so much that I was not forced to explain my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HICKS MAKES A DECISION
+
+
+"In the famous words of Mr. Somebody-Or-Other," quoth T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., "something has <i>got</i> to be did, and immediately to once!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster nodded assent. So did Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan,
+Beef McNaughton, Team Manager Socks Fitzpatrick, Monty Merriweather, Dad
+Pendleton, President of the Athletic Association, and Deacon Radford,
+quarter-back, also Shad Fishpaw, who, being Freshman Class-Chairman,
+maintained a discreet silence. Instead of the usual sky-larking, care-free
+crowd that infested the cozy quarters of the happy-go-lucky Hicks, every
+collegian present, except the ever-cheerful youth, seemed to have lost his
+best friend and his last dollar at one fell swoop!
+
+"Oh, yes, something has got to be did!" fleered Beef McNaughton, the
+davenport creaking under the combined tonnage of himself and Butch
+Brewster, "But who will do it? Where's all that Oh-just-leave-it-to-Hicks
+stuff you have pulled for the past three years, you pestiferous insect?
+</i>Bah</i>! You did a lot; you dragged a Prodigious Prodigy to old Bannister,
+enshrouded him in darkest mystery, and now, when he pushed the 'Varsity off
+the field and promised to corral the Championship, single-handed, he puts
+his foot down, and says, '</i>No</i>--I will not play football!' Get busy, Little
+Mr. Fix-It."
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" accommodated that blithesome Senior, with a
+cheeriness he was far from feeling. "You all do know why Thor won't
+play football; it is not like last season, when Deke Radford, a star
+quarter-back, refused either to play, or to explain his refusal. Let me
+get an inspiration, and then Thor will once again gently but firmly thrust
+entire football elevens down the field before him!"
+
+As evidence of how intensely serious was the situation, let it be
+chronicled that, for the first time in his scatter-brained campus career,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., did not dare strum his banjo and roar out ballads
+to torture his long-suffering colleagues. Popular and beloved as he was,
+the gladsome youth hesitated to shatter the quietude of the campus with
+his saengerfest, knowing as he did what a terrible blow Thor's utterly
+astounding announcement had been to the college.
+
+It was nine o'clock, one night two weeks after the day when John Thorwald,
+better known as Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, so mysteriously produced by
+Hicks, had stolidly paralyzed old Bannister by unemotionally stating his
+decision to play no more football. Since then, to quote the Phillyloo Bird,
+"Bannister has staggered around the ring like a prizefighter with the
+Referee counting off ten seconds and trying to fight again before he takes
+the count." In truth, the students had made a fatal mistake in building
+all their hopes of victory on that blond giant, Thor; seeing his wonderful
+prowess, and beholding how, in the first week of the season, the Norwegian
+Colossus had ripped to shreds the Varsity line which even the heavy Ballard
+eleven of the year before could not batter, it was but natural that the
+enthusiastic youths should think of the Championship chances in terms of
+</i>Thor</i>. For one week, enthusiasm and excitement soared higher and higher,
+and then, to use a phrase of fiction, everything fell with a dull,
+sickening thud!
+
+In vain did Coach Corridan, the staff of Assistant Coaches, Captain Butch
+Brewster, and others strive to resuscitate football spirit; nightly
+mass-meetings were held, and enough perfervid oratory hurled to move a
+Russian fortress, but to no avail. It was useless to argue that, without
+Thor, Bannister had an eleven better than that of last year, which so
+nearly missed the Championship. The campus had seen the massive Thor's
+prodigies; they knew he could not be stopped, and to attempt to arouse the
+college to concert pitch over the eleven, with that mountain of muscle
+blotting out vast sections of scenery, but not in football togs, was not
+possible.
+
+"One thing is sure," spoke Dad Pendleton seriously, gazing gloomily from
+the window, "unless we get Thor in the line-up for the Big Games, our last
+hope of the Championship is dead and interred! And I feel sorry for the big
+fellow, for already the boys like him just about as much as a German
+loves an Englishman; yet, arguments, threats, pleadings, and logic have
+absolutely no effect on him. He has said 'No,' and that ends it!"
+
+"He doesn't understand things, fellows," defended T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+with surprising earnestness. "Remember how bewildered he seemed at our
+appeal to his college spirit, and his love for his Alma Mater. We might as
+well have talked Choctaw to him!"
+
+Butch Brewster, Socks Fitzpatrick, Dad Pendleton, Beef McNaughton, Deacon
+Radford, Monty Merriweather, and Shad Fishpaw well remembered that night
+after Thor's tragic decision, when they--part of a Committee formed of the
+best athletes from all teams, and the most representative collegians of old
+Bannister, had invaded Thor's room in Creighton Hall, to wrestle with the
+recalcitrant Hercules. Even as Hicks spoke, they visioned it again.
+
+A cold, cheerless room, bare of carpet or pictures, with just the
+study-table, bed, and two chairs. At the study-table, his huge bulk
+sprawling on, and overflowing, a frail chair, they had found the massive
+John Thorwald laboriously reading aloud the Latin he had translated,
+literally by the sweat of his brow. The blond Colossus, impatient at the
+interruption, had shaken his powerful frame angrily, and with no regard for
+campus tradition, had addressed the upperclassmen in a growl: "Well, what
+do you want? Hurry up, I've got to study."
+
+And then, to state it briefly, they had worked with (and on) the stolid
+Thorwald for two hours. They explained how his decision to play no more
+football would practically kill old Bannister's hopes of the Championship,
+would assassinate football spirit on the campus, and cause the youths to
+condemn Thor, and to ostracise him. Waxing eloquent, Butch Brewster had
+delivered a wonderful speech, pleading with John Thorwald to play the
+game. He tried to show that obviously uninterested mammoth that, like the
+Hercules he so resembled, he stood at the parting of the ways.
+
+"You are on the threshold of your college career, old man!" he thundered
+impressively, though he might as well have tried to shoot holes in a
+battleship with a pop-gun, "What you do now will make or break you. Do you
+want the fellows as friends or as enemies; do you want comradeship, or
+loneliness and ostracism? You have it in your power to do two <i>big</i> things,
+to win the Championship for your Alma Mater, and to win to yourself the
+entire student-body, as friends; will you do that, and build a firm
+foundation for your college years, or betray your Alma Mater, and gain the
+enmity of old Bannister!"
+
+Followed more fervid periods, with such phrases as, "For your Alma Mater,"
+"Because of your college spirit," "For dear old Bannister," and "For
+the Gold and Green!" predominating; all of which terms, to the stolid,
+unimaginative Thorwald being fully as intelligible as Hindustani. They
+appealed to him not to betray his Alma Mater; they implored him, for his
+love of old Bannister; they besought him, because of his college spirit;
+and all the time, for all that the Prodigious Prodigy understood, they
+might as well have remained silent.
+
+"I will tell you something," spoke Thor, at last, with an air of impatient
+resignation, "and don't bother me again, please! I have come to Bannister
+College to get an education, and I have the right to do so, without being
+pestered. I pay my bills, and I am entitled to all the knowledge I can
+purchase. I look from my window, and I see boys, whose fathers are toiling,
+sacrificing, to send them here. Instead of studying, to show their
+gratitude, they loaf around the campus, or in their rooms, twanging banjos
+and guitars, singing silly songs, and sky-larking. I don't know what all
+this rot is you are talking of; 'college spirit,' 'my Alma Mater,' and so
+on. I do not want to play football; I do not like the game; I need the time
+for my study, so I will not play. Both my father and myself have labored
+and sacrificed to send me to college. The past five years, with one great
+ambition to go to college and learn, I have toiled like a galley-slave.
+
+"And now, when opportunity is mine, do you ask me to <i>play</i>? You want me to
+loaf around, wasting precious time better spent in my studies. What do I
+care whether the boys like me, or hate me? Bah! I can take any two of you,
+and knock your heads together! Their friendship or enmity won't move me. I
+shall study, learn. I will not waste time in senseless foolishness, and I
+<i>won't</i> play football again."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. was silent as he stood by the window of his room,
+gazing down at the campus where the collegians were gathering before
+marching to the Auditorium for the nightly mass-meeting that would vainly
+strive to arouse a fighting spirit in the football "rooters." That
+blithesome, heedless, happy-go-lucky youth was capable of far more serious
+thought than old Bannister knew; and more, he possessed the rare ability
+to read character; in the case of Thor, he saw vastly deeper than his
+indignant comrades, who beheld only the surface of the affair. They knew
+only that John Thorwald, a veritable Colossus, had exhibited football
+prowess that practically promised the State Championship to old Bannister,
+and then--he had quit the game. They understood only that Thor refused to
+play simply because he did not want to, and as to why their appeals to his
+college spirit and his love for his Alma Mater were unheeded they were
+puzzled.
+
+But the gladsome Hicks, always serious beneath his cheerful exterior, when
+old Bannister's interests were at stake, or when a collegian's career
+might be blighted, when the tragedy could be averted, fully understood. Of
+course, as originator of the Billion-Dollar Mystery, and producer of the
+Prodigious Prodigy, he knew more about the strange John Thorwald than did
+his mystified comrades. He knew that Thor, as he named him, was just a vast
+hulk of humanity, stolid, unimaginative of mind, slow-thinking, a dull,
+unresponsive mass, as yet unstirred by that strange, subtle, mighty thing
+called college spirit. He realized that Thor had never had a chance to
+understand the real meaning of campus life, to grasp the glad fellowship of
+the students, to thrill with a great love for his Alma Mater. All that must
+come in time. The blond giant had toiled all his life, had labored among
+men where everything was practical and grim. Small wonder, then, that he
+failed utterly to see why the youths "loafed on the campus, or in their
+rooms, twanging banjos and guitars, singing silly songs, and skylarking."
+
+"I must save him," murmured Hicks softly, for the others in his room were
+talking of Thor. "Oh, imagine that powerful body, imbued with a vast love
+for old Bannister, think of Thor, thrilling with college spirit. Why,
+Yale's and Harvard's elevens combined could not stop his rushes, then. I
+must save him from himself, from the condemnation of the fellows, who just
+don't understand. I must, some way, awaken him to a complete understanding
+of college life in its entirety, but how? He is so different from Roddy
+Perkins, or Deke Radford."
+
+It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every year of his
+campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath, deserved or
+otherwise, of the students. In his Freshman first term, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., indignant at the way little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+nervous "grind," had been alarmed at the idea of being hazed, had by a
+sensational escape from a room locked, guarded, and filled with Sophomores,
+gained immunity for himself and the boner for all time, thus winning the
+loyal, pathetic devotion of the Human Encyclopedia. As a Sophomore, by
+crushing James Roderick Perkins' Napoleonic ambition to upset tradition,
+and make Freshmen equal with upperclassmen, Hicks had turned that
+aggressive youth's tremendous energy in the right channels, and made him a
+power for good on the campus.
+
+And, a Junior, he had saved good Deacon Radford. When that serious youth, a
+famous prep. quarter, entered old Bannister, the students were wild at the
+thought of having him to run the Gold and Green team, but to their dismay,
+he refused either to report for practice or to explain his decision. Hicks,
+promising blithely, as usual, to solve the mystery and get Deke to play,
+discovered that the youth's mother, called "Mother Peg" by the collegians,
+was head-waitress downtown at Jerry's and that she made her son promise
+not to own the relationship, and that while she worked to get him through
+college, Deacon would not play football. The inspired Hicks had gotten
+Mother Peg to start College Inn, and board Freshmen unable to get rooms
+in the dormitories, and Deacon had played wonderful football. For this
+achievement, the original youth failed to get glory, for he sacrificed it,
+and swore all concerned to secrecy.
+
+"But Roddy and Deke were different," reflected Hicks, pondering seriously.
+"Both had been to Prep. School, and they understood college life and campus
+spirit. It was Roddy's tremendous ambition that had to be curbed, and Deke
+was the victim of circumstances. But Thorwald--it is just a problem of how
+to awaken in him an understanding of college spirit. The fellows don't
+understand him, and--"
+
+A sudden thought, one of his inspirations, assailed the blithesome Hicks.
+Why not make the fellows understand Thor? Surely, if he explained the
+"Billion-Dollar Mystery," as he humorously called it, and told why
+Thorwald, as yet, had no conception of college life, in its true meaning,
+they would not feel bitter against him; perhaps, instead, though regretful
+at his decision not to play the game, they would all strive to awaken the
+stolid Colossus, to stir his soul to an understanding of campus
+tradition and existence. But that would mean--"I surely hate to lose my
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., remembering
+the intense indignation of his comrades at his Herman-Kellar-Thurston
+atmosphere of mystery, "It is more fun than, my 'Sheerluck Holmes'
+detective pose or my saengerfests. Still, for old Bannister, and for Thor."
+
+It would seem only a trifle for the heedless Hicks to give up his mystery,
+and tell Bannister all about Thor; yet, had the Hercules reconsidered, and
+played football, the torturesome youth would have bewildered his colleagues
+as long as possible, or until they made him divulge the truth. He dearly
+loved to torment his comrades, and this had been such an opportunity for
+him to promise nonchalantly to produce a Herculean full-back, then, to
+return to the campus with the Prodigious Prodigy in tow, and for him to
+perform wonders on Bannister Field, naturally aroused the interest of the
+youths, and he had enjoyed hugely their puzzlement, but now--
+
+"Say, fellows," he interrupted an excited conversation of a would-be
+Committee of Ways and Means to make Thor play football, "I have an
+announcement to make."
+
+"Don't pester us, Hicks!" warned Captain Butch Brewster, grimly. "We love
+you like a brother, but we'll crush you if you start any foolishness,
+and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with the study-table between himself and his
+comrades, assumed the attitude of a Chautauqua lecturer, one hand resting
+on the table and the other thrust into the breast of his coat, and
+dramatically announced:
+
+"In the Auditorium--at the regular mass-meeting tonight--T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., will give the correct explanation of Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and
+will solve the Billion-Dollar Mystery!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HICKS MAKES A SPEECH
+
+
+The announcement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had practically the same
+effect on Head Coach Corridan and the cheery Senior's comrades as a German
+gas-bomb would have on the inmates of an Allied trench. For several seconds
+they stared at the blithesome youth, in a manner scarcely to be called
+aimless, since their looks were aimed with deadly accuracy at him, but in
+general, with the exception of Hicks, those in the room resembled vastly
+some of the celebrated Madame Tussaud's wax-works in London.
+
+"Oh," breathed Monty Merriweather, with the appearance of dawning
+intelligence, "that's so, Coach, Hicks never has disclosed the details of
+his achievement; we were about to extort a confession from him, when Thor
+broke up the league with his announcement, and since then, Bannister has
+been too worried over Thorwald to trifle with Hicks!"
+
+"That's a good idea!" exclaimed Coach Corridan, who had been remarkably
+silent, for him, pondering the football crisis, "Hicks can make his
+explanation at the regular mass-meeting tonight, in the Auditorium. I'll
+post an announcement of his purpose, and you fellows spread the news among
+the students, stating that Hicks will tell how he rounded up Thor. Some
+have shirked these meetings since Thorwald quit the game, and this will
+bring them out, so maybe we can arouse the fighting spirit again!"
+
+So well did Butch, Beef, Socks, Monty, Dad, Deacon, and Shad tell the news,
+that when the bell in the Administration Hall tower rang at ten o'clock it
+was ascertained by score-keepers that every youth at Bannister, Freshmen
+included, except that Hercules, Thor, had assembled in the Auditorium. That
+stolid behemoth, who regarded the football mass-meeting as foolishness, was
+reported as boning in his cheerless room, fulfilling the mission for which
+he came to college, namely, to get his money's worth of knowledge, which he
+evidently regarded as some commodity for which Bannister served merely as a
+market.
+
+Big Butch Brewster, on the stage of the Auditorium, the big assembly-hall
+of the college, along with Coach Corridan, several of the Gold and Green
+eleven, two members of the Faculty, several Assistant Coaches, and T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., stepped forward and stilled the tumult of the excited
+youths with upraised hand.
+
+"We have with us tonight," he spoke, after the fashion of introducing
+after-dinner speakers, "Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the celebrated
+Magician and Mystifier, who will present for your approval his world-famous
+Billion-Dollar Mystery, and give the correct solution to Thor, the problem
+no one has been able to solve. I take great pleasure in introducing to you
+this evening, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr."
+
+The collegians, firmly believing it was another of the pestiferous Hicks'
+jokes, and wholly unaware of the deep purpose of the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible youth's speech, went into paroxysms of glee, as the
+shadow-like Hicks stepped forward. For several minutes, the hall echoed
+with jeers, shouts, groans, whistles, and sarcastic comments:
+
+"Hire a hall, Hicks; tell it to Sweeney!"--"Bryan better look out. Hicks,
+the </i>Chau-talker;</i>"--"Spill the speech, old man; spread the oratory!"--"Oh,
+where are my smelling-salts? I know I shall faint!"--"You'd better play a
+banjo-accompaniment to it, Hicks!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for once in his campus career, fervidly wished he
+had not been such a happy-go-lucky, care-free collegian, for now, when he
+was serious, his comrades refused to believe him to be in such a state.
+However, quiet was obtained at last, thanks to the fact that the youths
+possessed all the curiosity of the proverbial cat who died thereby, and the
+sunny Senior plunged earnestly into his famous speech, that was destined,
+at old Bannister, to rank with that of Demosthenes "On The Crown," or any
+of W. J, Bryan's masterpieces.
+
+"Fellows," began Hicks, without preface, "I know I've built myself the
+reputation of being a scatterbrained, heedless nonentity, and it's too late
+to change now. But tonight, please believe me to be thoroughly in earnest.
+Bannister faces more than one crisis, more than one tragedy. It is true
+that the football eleven is crippled by the defection of Thor, that we
+fellows have somewhat unreasonably allowed his quitting the game to shake
+our spirit, but there is more at stake than football victories, than even
+the State Intercollegiate Football Championship! The future of a student,
+of a present Freshman, his hopes of becoming a loyal, solid, representative
+college man, a tremendous power for good, at old Bannister, hang in the
+balance at this moment! I speak of John Thorwald. You students have it in
+your power to make or break him, to ruin his college years and make him a
+recluse, a misanthrope, or to gradually bring him to a full realization of
+what college life and campus tradition really mean."
+
+"I have made a great mystery of Thor, just for a lark, but the enmity and
+condemnation of the campus for him because he quit football suddenly, shows
+me that the time for skylarking is past. For his sake, I must plead. He is
+not to blame, altogether, for quitting. Myself, and you fellows, gave him
+the impression that it was a Faculty requirement for him to play football,
+for we feared he would not play, otherwise; when he learned that it was not
+a Faculty rule, he simply quit."
+
+Here T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., seeing that at last he had convinced the
+collegians of his earnestness, though they seemed fairly paralyzed at the
+phenomenon, paused, and produced a bundle of papers before resuming.
+
+"Now, I'll try to explain the 'mystery' as briefly and as clearly as
+possible. Up at Camp Bannister, before college opened, Coach Corridan, as
+you know, outlined to Butch, Deke, and myself, his dream of a Herculean,
+irresistible full-back; I said, 'Just leave It to Hicks!' and they believed
+that I, as usual, just made that remark to torment them. But such was not
+the case. When I joined them, I remarked that I had a letter from my Dad;
+Deke made some humorous remarks, and I forgot to read it aloud, as I
+intended. Then, after Coach Corridan blue-printed his giant full-back, I
+kept silent as to Dad's letter, for reasons you'll understand. But, after
+all, there was no mystery about my leaving Camp Bannister, after making a
+seemingly rash vow, and returning to college with a 'Prodigious Prodigy'
+who filled specifications, In fact, before I left Camp Bannister, at the
+moment I made my rash promise--I had Thor already lined up!"
+
+"I shall now read a dipping or two, and a letter or two from my Dad. The
+clippings came in Dad's letter to me at Camp Bannister, the letter I
+intended to read to Coach Corridan, Deke, and Butch, but which I decided to
+keep silent about, after the Coach told of the full-back he wanted, for
+I knew I had him already! First, a clipping from the </i>San Francisco
+Examiner</i>, of August 25:
+
+MAROONED SAILOR RESCUED--TEN YEARS ON SOUTH SEA ISLAND! SOLE SURVIVOR OF
+ILL-FATED CRUISE OF THE ZEPHYR
+
+"The trading-schooner </i>Southern Cross</i>, Captain Martin Bascomb, skipper,
+put into San Francisco yesterday with a cargo of copra from the South Sea
+Islands. On board was John Thorwald, Sr., who for the past ten years
+has been marooned on an uninhabited coral isle of the Southern Pacific,
+together with 'Long Tom' Watts, who, however, died several months ago.
+Thorwald's story reads like a thrilling bit of fiction. He was first mate
+of the ill-fated yacht </i>Zephyr</i>, which cleared from San Francisco ten years
+ago with Henry B. Kingsley, the Oil-King, and a pleasure party, for a
+cruise under the southern star. A terrific tornado wrecked the yacht, and
+only Thorwald and 'Long Tom' escaped, being cast upon the coral island,
+where for ten years they existed, unable to attract the attention of the
+few craft that passed, as the isle was out of the regular lanes. Only when
+Captain Martin Bascomb, in the trading-schooner </i>Southern Cross</i>, touched
+at the island, hoping to find natives with whom to trade supplies for
+copra, were they found, and 'Long Tom' had been dead some months."
+
+"Despite the harrowing experiences of his exile, Thorwald, a vast hulk of a
+stolid, unimaginative Norwegian, who reminds one of the Norse god, 'Thor,'
+intends to ship as first mate on the New York-Christiania Steamship Line.
+It is said that Thorwald has a son, at this time about twenty-five years of
+age, somewhere In this country, whom he will seek, and--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., at this juncture, terminated the newspaper story,
+and finding that his explanation held his comrades spellbound, he produced
+a letter, and drew out the message, after stating the youths could read the
+entire news-story of John Thorwald, Sr., later.
+
+"This is the letter I received from my Dad," he explained to the intensely
+interested Bannister youths, who were giving a concentrated attention that
+members of the Faculty would have rejoiced to receive from them. "Up at
+Camp Bannister--I was just about to read it to Coach Corridan, Butch, and
+Deke Radford, when Deke chaffed me, and then the Coach outlined the mammoth
+full-back he desired, so I kept quiet. I'll now read it to you:
+
+
+"Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept, 17.
+
+"DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+"Read the inclosed clipping from the </i>San Francisco Examiner</i> of August 25,
+and then pay close attention to the following facts: At the time of this
+news-story I was in 'Frisco on business, as you will recall, and for
+reasons to be outlined, when I read of the </i>Southern Cross</i> finding the
+marooned John Thorwald, and bringing him to that city, I was particularly
+interested, so much so that I at once looked up the one-time first mate of
+the ill-starred </i>Zephyr</i> and brought him to Pittsburgh in my private car.
+My reason was this; in my employ, in the International Steel Combine's
+mill, was John Thorwald's son, John Thorwald, Jr.
+
+"To state facts as briefly as possible, almost a year ago, as I took some
+friends through the steel rolling mill, I chanced to step directly beneath
+a traveling crane, lowering a steel beam; seeing my peril, I was about to
+step aside when I caught my foot and fell. Just then a veritable giant,
+black and grimy, leaped forward, and with a prodigious display of strength,
+placed his powerful back under the descending weight, staving it off until
+I rolled over to safety!
+
+"Well, of course, I had the fellow report to my office, and instinctively
+feeling that I wanted to show my gratitude, without being patronizing, he
+responded to my question as to what I could do to reward him, by asking
+simply that I get him some job that would allow him to attend night school.
+He stated that, owing to the fact that he worked alternate weeks at night
+shift he was unable to do so. Questioning him further, I learned the
+following facts:
+
+"He was John Thorwald, Jr., only son of John Thorwald, Sr., a Norwegian;
+his mother was also a Norwegian, but he is a natural born American.
+Realizing the opportunities for an educated young man in our land,
+Thorwald's parents determined that he should gain knowledge, and until he
+was fifteen years old, he attended school in San Francisco. When he was
+fifteen, his father signed as first mate on the yacht </i>Zephyr</i>, going with
+the oil-king, Henry B. Kingsley, on a pleasure cruise in the Southern
+Pacific; Thorwald, Sr.'s, story you read in the paper. Soon after the news
+of the </i>Zephyr's</i> wreck, with all on board lost, as was then supposed,
+Thorwald's mother died. Her dying words (so young Thorwald told me, and I
+was moved by his simple, straightforward tale) were an appeal to her
+boy. She made him promise, for her sake, to study, study, study to gain
+knowledge, and to rise in the world! Thorwald promised. Then, believing
+both his parents dead, the young Norwegian, a youth of fifteen without
+money, had to shift for himself.
+
+"Thomas, Jack London could weave his adventures into a gripping
+masterpiece. Starting in as cabin-boy on a freighter to Alaska, young
+Thorwald, in the past ten years, has simply crowded his life with
+adventure, thrill, and experience, though thrills mean nothing to him. He
+was in the Klondike gold-fields, in the salmon canneries, a prospector, a
+lumber-jack in the Canadian Northwest, a cowboy, a sailor, a worker in the
+Panama Canal Zone, on the Big Ditch, and too many other things to remember.
+Finally, he drifted to Pittsburgh, where his prodigious strength served him
+in the steel-mills, and, let me add, served <i>me</i>, as I stated.
+
+"And ever, no matter where he wandered, or what was his toil, whenever
+possible, Thorwald studied. His promise to his mother was always his goal,
+and in the cities he studied, or in the wilds he read all the books he
+could find. The past year, finding he had a good-pay job in Pittsburgh, he
+settled to determined effort, and by sheer resolution, by his wonderful
+power to grasp facts and ideas for good once he gets them, he made great
+progress in night school, until he was shifted, a week before he saved my
+life, to work that required him to toil nightly, alternate weeks. So, for a
+year, Thor has had every possible advantage, some, unknown to him, I paid
+for myself; I got him clerical work, with shorter hours, he went to night
+school, and I employed the very best tutor obtainable, letting Thorwald
+pay him, as he thought, though his payments wouldn't keep the tutor in
+neckties. The gratitude of the blond giant is pathetic, and suspecting that
+I paid the tutor something, he insisted on paying all he could, which I
+allowed, of course.
+
+"Well, in August, a year after Thorwald rescued me from serious injury,
+perhaps death, I was in 'Frisco, and read of Thorwald, Sr.'s rescue and
+return. Overjoyed, I took the father to Pittsburgh, to the son. I witnessed
+their meeting, with the father practically risen from the dead, and all
+those stolid, unimaginative Norwegians did was to shake hands gravely!
+Young Thorwald told of his mother's last words, and of his promise, of his
+having studied all the years, and of his late progress, so that he was
+ready to enter college. His father, happy, insisted that he enter this
+September, and he would pay for his son's college course, to make up for
+the years the youth struggled for himself--Kingsley's heirs, I believe,
+gave Thorwald, Sr., five thousand dollars on his return. So, though
+grateful to me for the aid I offered, they would receive no financial
+assistance, for they want to work it out themselves, and help the youth
+make good his promise to his dying mother.
+
+"Much as I love old Bannister, my Alma Mater, I would not have tried to
+send Thorwald there, had I not deemed it a good place for him. However,
+since it is a liberal, not a technical, education he wants, it is all
+right; and that prodigious strength will serve the Gold and Green on the
+football field. Now, Thomas, I want you to meet him in Philadelphia, and
+take him to Bannister, look out for him, get him started O. K., and do all
+you can for him. Get him to play football, if you can, but don't condemn
+if he refuses. Remember, his life has been grim and unimaginative; he has
+toiled and studied, it is probable he will not understand college life at
+first."
+
+
+"That's all I need to read of Dad's letter, fellows," concluded T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. "After I got it, and Coach Corridan, Butch, and Beef heard my
+seemingly rash vow to round up a giant full-back, I made a mystery of it; I
+loafed in Philadelphia and Atlantic City until I met Thor, and brought him
+here. You have all the data regarding Thor, 'The Billion-Dollar Mystery.'"
+
+The students, almost as one, drew a deep breath. They had been enthralled
+by the story, and their feeling toward Thor had undergone a vast change.
+Stirred by hearing of his promise to his dying mother, thrilled at the way
+the stolid, determined Norwegian had ceaselessly studied to make something
+of himself for the sake of his mother's sacred memory, the Bannister youths
+now thought of football, of the Championship, as insignificant, beside the
+goal of Thorwald, Jr. The blond Colossus, whom an hour ago all Bannister
+reviled and condemned for not playing the game, who was a campus outcast,
+was now a hero; thanks to the erstwhile heedless Hicks, whose intense
+earnestness in itself was a revelation to the amazed collegians, Thor stood
+before them in a different light, and the impulsive, whole-souled, generous
+youths were now anxious to make amends.
+
+</i>"Thor! Thor! Thor!"</i> was the thunderous cry, and the Bannister yell for
+the Prodigious Prodigy shattered the echoes. Then T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+ecstatically joyous, again stilled the tumult, and spoke in behalf of John
+Thorwald.
+
+"We all understand Thor now, fellows," he said, beaming on his comrades.
+"We want him to play football, and we'll keep after him to play, but we
+won't condemn him if he refuses. At present, Thor is simply a stolid,
+unimaginative, dull mass of muscle. As you can realize, his nature, his
+life so far have not tended to make him appreciate the gayer, lighter side
+of college life, or to grasp the traditions of the campus. To him, college
+is a market; he pays his money and he takes the knowledge handed out. We
+can not blame him for not understanding college existence in its entirety,
+or that the gaining of knowledge is a small part of the representative
+collegian's purpose.
+
+"Now, boys, here's our job, and let's tackle it together: To awaken in
+Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to stir his
+practical soul. Let every fellow be his friend, let no one speak against
+him, because of football. We must work slowly, carefully, gradually making
+him grasp college traditions, and once he awakens to the real meaning of
+campus life, what a power he will be in the college and on the athletic
+field! Maybe he will not play football this season, but let us help him to
+awaken!"
+
+With wild shouts, the aroused collegians poured from the Auditorium, an
+excited, turbulent mass of youthful humanity, a tide that swept T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., on the shoulders of several, out on the campus. Massed beneath
+the window of John Thorwald's room, in Creighton Hall, the Bannister
+students, now fully understanding that stolid Hercules, and stirred to
+admiration of him by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, great speech, cheered the
+somewhat mystified Thor again and again; in vast sound waves, the shouts
+rolled up to his open window:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah-rah-rah! </i>Thor! Thor! Thor</i>!" Captain Brewster, through a
+big megaphone, roared; "Fellows--What's the matter with </i>Thor</i>?"
+
+And in a terrific outburst which, as the Phillyloo Bird afterward said,
+"Like to of busted Bannister's works!" the enthusiastic collegians
+responded:
+
+"</i>He's</i>--all--right!"
+
+Then Butch, apparently in quest of information, persisted:
+
+"</i>Who's</i> all right?"
+
+To which the three hundred or more youths, all seemingly equipped with
+lungs of leather, kindly answered:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor!"
+
+Still, though the Phillyloo Bird declared that this vocal explosion caused
+the seismographs as Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and in Salt Lake
+City, Utah, to register an earthquake somewhere, it had on the blond
+Freshman a strange effect. The vast mountain of muscle lumbered heavily
+across the room, gazed down at the howling crowd of collegians without
+emotion, then slammed down the window, and returned to study.
+
+"</i>Good night</i>" called Hicks. "The show is over! Let him have another yell,
+boys, to show we aren't insulted; then we'll disband!"
+
+Considering Thorwald's cool reception of their overtures, which some youth
+remarked, "Were as noisy as that of a Grand Opera Orchestra," it was quite
+surprising to the students, in the morning, when what occurred an hour
+after their serenade was revealed to them. As the story was told by those
+who witnessed the scene, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, Beef, Monty, Pudge,
+Roddy, Biff, Hefty, Tug, Buster, and Coach Corridan after the commotion
+subsided, retired to the sunny Hicks' quarters, where the football
+situation was discussed, along with ways and means to awaken Thor, when
+that colossal Freshman himself loomed up in the doorway.
+
+As they afterward learned, several excited Freshmen had dared to invade
+Thor's den, even while he studied, and give him a more or less correct
+account of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s masterly oration in his defense. Out of
+their garbled descriptions, big John Thorwald grasped one salient point,
+and straightway he started for Hicks' room, leaving the indignant Freshmen
+to tell their story to the atmosphere.
+
+"Hicks," said Thor, not bothering with the "Mr." required of all Freshmen,
+as his vast bulk crowded the doorway, "is it true that Mr. Thomas Haviland
+Hicks, Sr., wants me to play football? He has been very kind to me, and
+has helped me, and so have you, here at college. After a year of study, I
+should have had to stop night-school, but for him--instead, I got another
+year, and prepared for Bannister. I did not know that <i>he</i> desired me to
+play, but if he does, I feel under obligation to show my great gratitude,
+both for myself and for my father,"
+
+A moment of silence, for the glorious news could not be grasped in a
+second; those in the room, knowing Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.'s, brilliant
+athletic record at old Bannister, and understanding his great love for
+his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister to play
+football for the Gold and Green, though, as he had written his son, he
+would not have done so had he honestly believed that another college would
+suit the ambitious Goliath better.
+
+"Does he?" stammered the dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while the others
+echoed the words feebly, "Yes, I should say he <i>does</i>!"
+
+For a second, the ponderous young Colossus hesitated, and then, as calmly
+as though announcing he would add Greek to his list of studies, and wholly
+unaware that his words were to bring joy to old Bannister, he spoke
+stolidly.
+
+"Then I shall play football."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY.
+
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the Devil had done for the rest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+T HAVILAND HICKS, JR., his chair tilted at a perilous angle, and his feet
+thrust gracefully atop of the study-table, in his cozy room, one Friday
+afternoon two weeks after John Thorwald's return to the football squad, was
+fathoms deep in Stevenson's "Treasure Island." As he perused the thrilling
+pages, the irrepressible youth twanged a banjo accompaniment, and roared
+with gusto the piratical chantey of Long John Silver's buccaneer crew;
+Hicks, however, despite his saengerfest, was completely lost in the
+enthralling narrative, so that he seemed to hear the parrot shrieking,
+"Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!" and the wild refrain:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"
+
+He was reading that breathlessly exciting part where the cabin-boy of the
+</i>Hispaniola</i>, and Israel Hands have their terrible fight to the death, with
+the dodging over the dead man rolling in the scuppers, the climbing up the
+mast, and the dirk pinning the boy's shoulder, before Hands is shot and
+goes to join his mate on the bottom; just at the most absorbing page, as he
+twanged his beloved banjo louder, and roared the chantey, there sounded,
+"Tramp--tramp--tramp!" in the corridor, the heavy tread of many feet
+sounded, coming nearer. Instinctively realizing that the pachydermic parade
+was headed for <i>his</i> room, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., rushed to the closet,
+murmuring, "Safety first!" as usual, and stowed away his banjo. He was just
+in the nick of time, for a second later there crowded into his room Captain
+Butch, Pudge, Beef, Hefty, Biff, Monty, Roddy, Bunch, Tug, Buster, Coach
+Corridas, and Thor, the latter duo bringing up the rear.
+
+"Hicks, you unjailed public nuisance!" said Butch Brewster, affectionately.
+"We, whom you behold, are going for to enter into that room across the
+corridor from your boudoir, and hold a football signal quiz and confab. We
+should request that you permit a thunderous silence to originate in your
+cozy retreat, for the period of at least a hour! A word to the <i>wise</i> is
+sufficient, so I have spoken several, that even you may comprehend my
+meaning,"
+
+"I gather you, fluently!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., taking up
+"Treasure Island" and his graceful pose once more. "Leave me to peruse the
+thrilling pages of this classic blood-and-thunder book, and I'll cause a
+beautiful serenity to obtain hither."
+
+"See that you do, you pestiferous insect!" threatened Beef McNaughton,
+ominously. "Come on, fellows, Hicks can't escape our vengeance, if
+he bursts into what he fatuously believes is song. Just let him act
+hippicanarious, and--"
+
+When the Gold and Green eleven, half of which, to judge by size, was
+Thor, had gone with Coach Corridan into the room across from that of the
+blithesome Hicks, the sunny-souled Senior tried to resume his perusal of
+"Treasure Island," but somehow the spell had been broken by the invasion of
+his cozy quarters. So, after vainly essaying to take up the thread of the
+story again, Hicks arose and stood by the window, gazing across the campus
+to Bannister Field, deserted, since the football team rested for the game
+of the morrow. As he stood there, the gladsome Hicks reflected seriously.
+He thought of "Thor," and decided sorrowfully that the problem of awakening
+that stolid Colossus to a full understanding of campus life was as unsolved
+as ever.
+
+"But I <i>won't</i> give it up!" declared Hicks, determinedly. "I have always
+been good at math, and I won't let this problem baffle me."
+
+Since the night, two weeks back, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had made his
+memorable speech, explaining to his fellow-students the "Billon-Dollar
+Mystery," and arousing in them a vast admiration for the slow-minded,
+plodding John Thorwald, every collegian had done his best to befriend the
+big Freshman. Upperclassmen helped him with his studies. Despite his almost
+rude refusal to meet any advances, the collegians always had a cheery
+greeting for him, and his class-mates, in fear and trembling, invaded
+his den at times, to show him they were his friends. Yet, despite these
+whole-hearted efforts, only two of old Bannister did the silent Thor
+seem to desire as comrades: the festive Hicks, for reasons known,
+and--remarkable to chronicle--little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous,
+studious "Human Encyclopedia."
+
+"Colossus and Lilliputian!" the Phillyloo Bird quaintly observed once when
+this strangely assorted duo appeared on the campus. "Say, fellows--some
+time Thor will accidentally sit on Theophilus, and we'll have another
+mystery, the disappearance of our boner!"
+
+The generous Hicks, longing for Thor's awakening to come, was not in the
+least jealous of his loyal little friend, Theophilus. In fact, he was
+sincerely delighted that the unemotional Hercules desired the comradeship
+of the grind, and he urged the Human Encyclopedia to strive constantly to
+arouse in Thor a realization of college existence, and a true knowledge of
+its meaning. At least one thing, Theophilus reported, had been achieved by
+Hicks' defense of Thorwald, and the subsequent attitude of the collegians--
+the colossal Freshman was puzzled, quite naturally. When over three hundred
+youths criticized, condemned, and berated him one night, and the next, even
+before he reconsidered his decision about football, came under his window
+and cheered him, no wonder the young Norwegian was bewildered.
+
+On the football field, with his dogged determination, his bulldog way of
+hanging on to things until he mastered them, big Thor progressed slowly,
+and surely; the past Saturday, against the heavy Alton eleven, the blond
+Freshman had been sent in for the second half, and, to quote an overjoyed
+student, he had "busted things all up!" It seemed simply impossible to stop
+that terrible rush of his huge body. Time after time he plowed through the
+line for yards, and old Bannister, visioning Thor distributing Hamilton and
+Ballard over the field, in the big games, literally hugged itself.
+
+And yet, despite Thorwald's invincible prowess, despite the vast joy of
+old Bannister at the chances of the Championship, some intangible
+shadow hovered over the campus. It brooded over the training-table, the
+shower-rooms after scrimmage, on Bannister Field during practice; as yet,
+no one had dared to give it form, by voicing his thought, but though no
+youth dared admit it, something was wrong, there was a defective cog in the
+machinery of that marvelous machine, the Gold and Green eleven.
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks," quoth that sunny youth, at length, turning
+from the window; "I'll solve the problem, or what is more probable,
+Theophilus may stir that sodden hulk of humanity, after awhile. I won't
+worry about it, for that gets me nothing, and it will all come out O.K.,
+I'm positive!"
+
+At this moment, just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., picked up "Treasure Island"
+again, he heard drifting across the corridor from the room opposite, in
+Butch Brewster's familiar voice:
+
+"--Yes, I'll win three more Bs'--one each in football, baseball and track;
+next spring, I'll annex my last B at old Bannister, fellows--"
+
+His <i>last</i> B--The words struck the blithesome Hicks with sledge-hammer
+force. Big Butch Brewster was talking of his last B, when he, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., had never won his first; with a feeling almost of alarm, the
+sunny youth realized that this was his final year at old Bannister, his
+last chance to win his athletic letter, and to make happy his beloved Dad,
+by helping him to realize part of his life's ambition--to behold his son
+shattering Hicks, Sr.'s, wonderful record. His final chance, and outside of
+his hopes of winning the track award in the high-jump, Hicks saw no way to
+win his B.
+
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., as has been chronicled, the beloved Dad of the
+cheery Senior, a Pittsburgh millionaire Steel King, was a graduate of old
+Bannister, Class of '92. While wearing the Gold and Green, he had made
+an all-round athletic record never before, or afterward, rivaled on
+the campus. At football, basketball, track, and baseball, he was a
+scintillating star, annexing enough letters to start an alphabet, had they
+been different ones. Quite naturally, when the Doctor, speaking anent
+the then infantile Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., said, "Mr. Hicks, it's a
+boy!"--the one-time Bannister athlete straightway began to dream of the day
+when his only son and heir should follow in his Dad's footsteps, shattering
+the records made at Bannister, and at Yale, by Hicks, <i>père</i>.
+
+However, to quote a sporting phrase, the son of the Steel King "upset the
+dope!" At the start of his Senior year, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had not
+annexed a single athletic honor, nor did the signs point to any records
+being in peril of getting shattered by his prowess; as Hicks himself
+phrased it, "Dame Nature was <i>some stingy</i> when she handed out the Hercules
+stuff to me!" The happy-go-lucky youth, when he matriculated as a Freshman
+at Bannister College, was builded on the general lines of a toothpick, and
+had he elected to follow a pugilistic career, a division somewhat lighter
+than the tissue paperweight class would have had to be devised to
+accommodate the splinter-student. A generous, sunny-souled, intensely
+democratic collegian, despite his father's wealth, the festive Hicks, with
+his room always open-house to all; his firm friendship for star athlete
+or humble boner, his never-failing sunny nature, together with his famous
+Hicks Personally Conducted Expeditions downtown to the Beef-Steak Busts he
+had originated, in his three years at old Bannister, had made himself the
+most popular and beloved youth on the campus, but, he had not won his B!
+
+And he had tried. With a full realization, of his Dad's ambition, his
+life-dream to behold his son a great athlete, the blithesome Hicks had
+tried, but with hilariously futile results. Nature had endowed him, as he
+told his loyal comrade, Butch Brewster, with "the Herculean build of a
+Jersey mosquito," and his athletic powers neared zero infinity. In his
+Freshman year, he inaugurated his athletic career by running the wrong way
+in the Sophomore-Freshman football game, scoring a touchdown that won for
+the enemy, and naturally, after that performance, every athletic effort was
+greeted with jeers by the students,
+
+"I <i>have</i> tried!" said Hicks, producing two letters from the study-table,
+"But not like I should have tried. I could never have played on the eleven,
+or on the nine, but I have a chance in the high-jump. I know I've been
+indolent and care-free, and I ought to have trained harder. Well, I just
+must win my track B this spring, but as to keeping the rash promise I made
+to Butch as a Freshman--not a chance!"
+
+It had been at the close of his Freshman year, after Hicks, in the
+Interclass Track Meet, had smashed hurdles, broken high-jumping cross-bars,
+finished last in several events, and jeopardized his life with the shot and
+hammer, that he made the rash vow to which he now had reference. Butch,
+believing his sunny friend had entered all the events just to entertain the
+crowd, in his fun-loving way, was teasing him about his ridiculous fiascos,
+when Hicks had told him the story--how his Dad wanted him to try and be a
+famous athlete; he showed Butch a letter, received before the meet, asking
+his son to try every event, and to keep on training, so as to win his B
+before he graduated. Butch, great-hearted, was surprised and moved by the
+revelation that the gladsome youth, even as he was jeered by his friendly
+comrades, who thought he performed for sport, was striving to have his
+Dad's dream come true; he had sympathized with his classmate, and then his
+scatter-brained colleague had aroused his indignation by vowing, with a
+swaggering confidence:
+
+"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks!' Remember this, Butch, before I graduate from
+old Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!"
+
+Butch had snorted incredulously. To win the football or the baseball B,
+the gold letter for the former, and the green one for the latter sport,
+an athlete had to play in three-fourths of the season's games, on the
+"'Varsity"; to gain the white track letter, one had to win a first place in
+some event, in a regularly scheduled track meet with another team. And now,
+Butch's skepticism seemed confirmed, for at the start of his last year at
+college, Hicks had not annexed a single B, though he bade fair to corral
+one in the spring in the high-jump.
+
+"Heigh-ho!" chuckled Hicks, at length. "Here I am threatening to get gloomy
+again! Well I'll sure train hard to win my track letter, and that seems
+all I can do! I'd like to win my three B's, and jeer at Butch, next June,
+but--<i>it can't be did</i>! I shall now twang my trusty banjo, and drive dull
+care away."
+
+Quite forgetful of the football conclave across the corridor, and of Butch
+Brewster's request for quiet, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. dragged out his
+beloved banjo, caressed its strings lovingly, and roared:
+
+ "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest--
+ Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!
+ Drink and the--"
+
+"</i>Hicks</i>!" Big Butch Brewster crashed across the corridor, both doors being
+open. "Is this how you maintain a quiet? I'm going to call Thor over and
+make him sit down on you! Why, you--"
+
+"Have mercy!" plead the grinning Hicks. "Honest, Butch, I didn't go to bust
+up the league--I--I heard you talk about your B's, and I got to thinking
+that </i>I</i> have but little time to make my Dad happy; see, here's proof--read
+these letters I was perusing--"
+
+Puzzled, Butch scanned the first one, dated back in the May of their
+Freshman year; Hicks had received it before the class track meet, and, as
+chronicled, he had heard from his sunny comrade later, how it impelled the
+splinter youth to try every event, while Bannister believed him to enter
+them for fun. The letter was post-marked "Pittsburgh, Pa.," and it read:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+Your last term's report gratified me immensely, and I am proud of your
+class record, and scholastic achievements. Pitch in, and lead your class,
+and make your Dad happy.
+
+But there is something else of which I want to write, Thomas. As you must
+know, it has always been a cause of keen regret to me that you have never
+seemed to care for athletics of any sort; you appear to be too indolent and
+ease-loving to sacrifice, or to endure the hardships of training. I suppose
+it is because of my athletic record both at Bannister and at old Yale that
+I am so eager to see you become a star; in fact, it is my life's most
+cherished ambition to have you become as famous as your Dad.
+
+However, I realize that my fond dream can never come true. Nature has not
+made you naturally strong and athletic, and what athletic success you may
+gain, must come from long and hard training and practice. If you can only
+win your college letter, your B, Thomas, while at Bannister, I shall be
+fully content.
+
+I said nothing when you failed even to try for the teams at your
+Preparatory School, but I did hope that at Bannister, under good coaches
+and trainers, you would at least endeavor to win your letter. I must admit
+that I am disappointed, for you have not even made an earnest effort to
+find your event. Often, by trying everything, especially in a track meet, a
+fellow finds his event, and later stars in it.
+
+I really believe that if you would start in now to develop yourself by
+regular, systematic gymnasium work, and if you would only try, in a year
+or so you could make a Bannister team. Theodore Roosevelt, you know, was a
+puny, weakly boy, but he built himself up, and became an athlete. If you
+want to please me, start now and find your event. Attempt all the sports,
+all the various track and field events, and always build yourself up by
+exercise in the Gym.
+
+And you owe it to your Alma Mater, my son! Even if, after conscientious
+effort, you fail to win your B, to know that you have given your college
+and teams what help you could, will please your Dad. Remember, the fellow
+who toils on the scrubs is the true hero. If you become good enough to give
+the first eleven, the first nine, the first five, or the first track squad
+a hard rub and a fast practice, you are serving Bannister.
+
+I don't ask you to do this, Thomas, I only say that it will make me happy
+just to know you are striving. If you never get beyond the scrubs, just to
+hear you are serving the Gold and Green, giving your best, in that humble
+unhonored way, will please me. And if, before you graduate, you <i>can</i> win
+your B, I shall be so glad! Don't get discouraged, it may take until your
+Senior year, but once you start, <i>stick</i>.
+
+Your loving
+
+DAD.
+
+
+"Read this one, too, Butch," requested Hicks, hurriedly, as a hail of, "Oh,
+you Hicks, come here!" sounded down the corridor, from Skeet Wigglesworth's
+abode. "I'll be back as soon as Skeet finishes his foolishness. Don't wait
+for me, though, if I am delayed, for you want to be talking football."
+
+Left alone, big Butch Brewster, who of all the collegians that had known
+and loved the sunny Hicks, some now graduated, understood that his athletic
+efforts, jeered good-naturedly by the students, were made because of a
+great desire to win his B and make happy his Dad, read the second letter,
+dated a few days before:
+
+
+DEAR SON THOMAS:
+
+You are starting the last lap, son, your Senior year, and your final chance
+to win your B! Don't forget how happy it will make your Dad if you win your
+letter just once! Of course, you cannot gain it in football, for nature
+gave you no chance, nor in baseball; but in track work it is up to you.
+Train hard, Thomas, and try to win a first place; just win your track B,
+and I'll rest content!
+
+Your college record gives me great pleasure. You stand at the top in your
+studies, and you are vastly popular, while the Faculty speak highly of you.
+Let your B come as a climax to your career, and I'll be so proud of you.
+Don't forget, you are the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and those sons of old
+Eli want you to win the letter. As to football, you cannot win your gold B
+by playing three-fourths of a season's games, but you might get in a big
+game, even win it, if you'll get confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan
+about yourself. Don't mind the jeers of your comrades--they just don't
+know how you've tried to please your Dad; you owe it to your Alma Mater
+to tell, and, take my word as a football star, you have the goods! Your
+peculiar prowess has won many a contest, and old Bannister needs it this
+season, I hear--
+
+
+There was more, but big Butch scarcely saw it, bewildered as the behemoth
+Senior was; what new mystery had Hicks set afoot? What did Hicks, Sr.,
+mean by writing, "You might get in a big game, even win it, if you'll get
+confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan about yourself? You owe it to your
+Alma Mater to tell, and take my word, as a football star, you have the
+goods--" Why, everyone knew that T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., possessed no more
+football ability than a Jersey mosquito, and yet--
+
+"Another Hicks mystery," groaned Butch, holding the two letters
+thoughtfully. "And father and son are in it, But if Hicks don't get his B,
+it will be a shame. </i>Say, I know--</i>"
+
+A few moments later, good-hearted Butch Brewster, in the behalf of his
+sunny comrade, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was making to the Gold and Green
+eleven and Coach Corridan, as eloquent a speech as that blithesome youth,
+two weeks before, had made in defense of the condemned and ostracized Thor!
+He read them the two letters of Hicks' beloved Dad, and told how the cheery
+collegian wanted to win his B for his father's sake; graphically, he
+related Hicks, Sr.'s, great ambition, and how Hicks, Jr., for three years
+had vainly tried to make good at some athletic sport, and to win his
+letter. Big Butch, warming to his theme, spoke of how T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., letting the students believe that he entered every event in the track
+meet of his Freshman year just for fun, had been trying to find his event,
+and train for it; he explained that the festive youth, ever sunny-natured,
+under the good-humored jeers of his comrades, who did not know his real
+purpose, really yearned to win his B.
+
+"You fellows, and you, Coach," he thundered, "all know how Hicks, unable
+to make the 'Varsity, has always done humble service for old Bannister,
+cheerfully, gladly; how he keeps the athletes in good spirits at the
+training-table, and is always on hand after scrimmage to rub them out. He
+is chock-full of college spirit, and is intensely loyal to his Alma Mater.
+Why, look how he rounded up Thor--he ought to have his B for that!"
+
+Thanks to Butch's speech, the Gold and Green football stars, most of whom
+were Hicks' closest friends, saw the scatter-brained, happy-go-lucky
+youth in a new light; his eloquent defense of John Thorwald had shown old
+Bannister that he could be serious, but the knowledge that T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., even as he made a ridiculous farce in athletics, was ambitious
+to win his B, just to make his Dad happy, stunned them. For three years,
+the sunny Hicks' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a team, had
+meant a small-sized riot of jeers and good-natured ridicule at his expense;
+but Hicks had always grinned </i>à la</i> Cheshire cat,--and no one but good
+Butch Brewster, all the time, had known how in earnest the lovable
+collegian was.
+
+"Now," concluded Butch, "Hicks <i>may</i> win a B in track work, if he gets a
+first place in the high-jump, and if so, O.K., but if he does not--"
+
+"You mean--" Monty Merriweather--understood, "if he fails, then the
+Athletic Association ought to--"
+
+"Present him with a B!" said Butch, earnestly, "as a deserved reward for
+his faithful loyalty and service to old Bannister's athletic teams. Don't
+let him graduate without gaining his letter, and making his Dad realize a
+part of his ambition--a two-thirds vote of the Athletic Association can
+award him his letter, and when all the students know the truth about his
+ridiculous fiasco on Bannister Field, and realize the serious purpose
+beneath them all, they--"
+
+"</i>We'll give him his B</i>!" shouted Beef, loudly, "If he fails in track work
+next spring, we'll vote him his letter, anyway!"
+
+Out in the corridor, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., returning from Skeet
+Wigglesworth's room and entering his own cozy quarters, could not help
+hearing the conversation, as the doors of both his den and the room across
+the corridor were open. A great love for his comrades came to his impulsive
+heart, and a mist before his eyes, as he heard how they wanted to vote him
+his B in case he failed to win it in track work; he thrilled at Butch's
+speech, but--
+
+[Illustration B: 'Fellows,...I--I thank you from the bottom of my heart']
+
+"Fellows," he startled them by appearing in the doorway, "I--I thank you
+from the bottom of my heart. I couldn't help hearing, you know--I <i>do</i>
+appreciate your generous thoughts, but--I can't and won't accept my B
+unless I win it according to the rule of the Athletic Association."
+
+A silence, and then Butch Brewster, gripping his comrade's hand
+understandingly, held out to him the two letters.
+
+"Forgive me, old man," he breathed, "for reading them aloud, but I wanted
+the fellows to know, to appreciate you! And say, Hicks, what does your Dad
+mean by saying that you are the </i>'Class Kid'</i> of Yale, '96, and that those
+sons of old Eli want you to win your letter? And what does he mean by
+saying that you may get in a <i>big game</i>--may <i>win</i> it--that you have
+the goods in football, but lack the confidence to announce it to Coach
+Corridan? Also that old Bannister needs just the peculiar brand you
+possess?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his sunny, Cheshire cat grin illuminating his
+cherubic countenance, beamed on the eleven and Coach Corridan a moment.
+
+"Oh, that's a <i>mystery</i>," he said, cheerfully. "If I <i>do</i> gain the courage
+and confidence, I'll explain, but unless I do--it remains a--<i>mystery</i>!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN
+
+
+"ALL MEMBERS OF THE FIRST ELEVEN ARE URGENTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT IN
+THE ROOM OF T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.--AT EIGHT P. M. TONIGHT; YOU WILL BE
+DETAINED ONLY A FEW MINUTES, BUT LET EVERY PLAYER COME, AS A MATTER OF
+EXTREME IMPORTANCE WILL BE PRESENTED. PATRICK HENRY COERIDAN, HEAD-COACH."
+
+"Now, what do you suppose is up Coach Corridan's sleeve?" demanded T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cheerfully. "Has Ballard learned our signals, or some
+Bannister student sold them to a rival team, as per the usual football
+story? Though the notice doth not herald it, I am to be present, for my
+room is to be used, and the Coach gave me a special invitation to cut the
+Gordian knot with my keen intellect."
+
+The sunny Hicks, with Butch, Beef, Tug, and Monty, had just come from
+"Delmonico's Annex," the college dining-hall, after supper; they had paused
+before the Bulletin Board at the Gymnasium entrance, where all college
+notices were posted, and the Coach's urgent request had caught their gaze.
+The announcement had caused quite a stir on the campus. The Bannister
+youths stood in excited groups talking of it, and in the dormitories it
+superseded all thought of study; however, there seemed little chance that
+any but the "'Varsity" and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., who was always consulted
+in football problems, would know what took place in this meeting.
+
+"There is only one way to find out, Hicks," responded big Butch Brewster,
+his arm across his blithesome comrade's shoulders, "and that is, attend
+the meeting! You can wager that every member of the eleven will be there,
+except Thor--he regards it as 'foolishness,' I suppose, and he won't spare
+that precious time from his studies."
+
+At five minutes past eight, Butch's prophecy was fulfilled, for every
+member of the eleven <i>was</i> in Hicks' cozy room, except Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy, whose presence would have caused a mild sensation. It was an
+extremely quiet and orderly gathering, for Coach Corridan, who had the
+floor, was so grave that he impressed the would-be sky-larking youths.
+Having their undivided attention, he proceeded to make a speech that, to
+all intents and purposes, had much the same effect on the team and Hicks as
+a Zeppelin's bombs on London:
+
+"Boys," he spoke, in forceful sentences, driving straight to the point,
+"I am going to take the eleven, and Hicks, whose suggestions are always
+timely, into my confidence, in the hope that we, working together, may
+carry out an idea of mine for the awakening of Thor to a realization
+of things! I ask you not to let what I shall tell you be known to the
+student-body, but you fellows play with Thor every day, and you will
+understand the crisis, and appreciate <i>why</i> it is done, if I decide it
+necessary to drop John Thorwald from the football squad."
+
+"Drop Thor from the squad!" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., staggered, and
+then pandemonium broke loose among the players. Drop the Prodigious Prodigy
+from the squad, why, what <i>could</i> the Slave-Driver be thinking of? Why,
+look how Thorwald, on the scrubs, tore through the heavy 'Varsity line for
+big gains. He was simply unstoppable; and yet, almost on the eve of the big
+game that old Bannister depended on Thor to win by his splendid prowess, he
+might be dropped from the squad! Excited exclamations sounded from Captain
+Butch Brewster, Beef, and the others of the Gold and Green eleven:
+
+"Why not give the big games to Ballard and Ham, Coach?"
+
+"Say, shoot Theophilus Opperdyke in at full-back!"
+
+"Good-by, championship! No hopes now, fellows!"
+
+"If Thor doesn't play in the Big Games--good night!"
+
+A greater sensation could not have been caused even had kindly white-haired
+Prexy announced his intention of challenging Jess Willard for the World's
+Heavy-Weight Championship. Dropping that human battering-ram, Thor, from
+the football, squad was something utterly undreamed-of. Coach Corridan
+raised his hand for silence, and the youths subsided.
+
+"Hear me carefully, boys," he urged, "I know that old Bannister has come to
+regard John Thorwald as invincible, to use his vast bulk as a foundation
+on which to build hopes of the Championship, which is a bad policy, for no
+team can be a <i>one-man</i> team and win. I realize that as a football player,
+Thor hasn't an equal in the State today, and if he had the right spirit, he
+would have few in the country. It would be ridiculous to decry his prowess,
+for he is a physical phenomenon. But you remember T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+splendid defense of Thor, a week or so ago? Hicks gave you a full and clear
+explanation of the big fellow, and showed you <i>why</i> he does not know what
+college spirit is, what loyalty and love for one's Alma Mater mean! His
+masterly speech changed your attitude toward Thor, and even before he
+decided to play football, for Mr. Hicks' sake, you admired him, because
+of his indomitable purpose, his promise to his dying mother. Now </i>I</i> am
+telling you why he may be dropped from the squad, because I want you
+fellows to give Thor a square deal, to remember what Hicks told you of him,
+and to keep on striving to awaken him to the true meaning of campus years,
+to make him realize that college life is more than a mere buying of
+knowledge. I want to keep him on the squad, if humanly possible, and I
+shall outline my plot later.
+
+"Tomorrow we play Latham College. It is the last game before the big games
+for The State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Saturday after this,
+we play Hamilton, and the following week Ballard, the Champions! The eleven
+I send in against those teams must be a solid unit, <i>one</i> in spirit and
+purpose--every member of the Gold and Green team must be welded with his
+team-mates, and they must forget everything but that their Alma Mater must
+win the Championship! With no thought of self-glory, no other purpose in
+playing than a love for old Bannister, every fellow must go into those
+games to fight for his Alma Mater! Now, as for Thor, I need not tell you
+that he is not in sympathy with our ambition; he simply does not understand
+campus tradition and spirit. He is as yet not possessed of an Alma Mater;
+he plays football only because of gratitude to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., and he hates to lose the time from his studies for the practice.
+The football squad knows that his presence is a veritable wet blanket on
+enthusiasm and the team's fighting spirit."
+
+It was true. That intangible shadow of something wrong, brooding over
+training-table, shower-room, and Bannister Field, that self-evident
+truth which almost every collegian had for days confessed to himself yet
+hesitated to voice, had been given definite form by Coach Corridan talking
+to the eleven. The good that Thorwald might do for the team by his superb
+prowess and massive bulk was more than offset and nullified by his
+attitude.
+
+To the blond Colossus, daily practice was unutterable mental torture. His
+mind was on his studies, to which his bulldog purpose shackled him; he
+begrudged the time spent on Bannister Field; he was stolid, silent, aloof.
+He scarcely ever spoke, except when addressed. He reported for practice at
+the last second, went through the scrimmage like a great, dumb, driven ox,
+doing as he was ordered; and when the squad was dismissed he hurried to his
+room. He was among the squad, but not of them; he neither understood nor
+cared about their love for old Bannister, their vast desire to win for
+their Alma Mater; he played football because he was grateful to Hicks, Sr.,
+for helping him to get started toward his goal, but as Coach Corridan now
+told the 'Varsity, he killed the squad's enthusiasm,
+
+"All of this cannot fail to damage the <i>esprit de corps</i>, the <i>morale</i>, of
+the eleven," declared Coach Corridan, having outlined Thor's attitude. "I
+know that every member of the squad, if Thor played the game because of
+college spirit, for love of old Bannister, would rejoice at his prowess.
+But as it is they are justly resentful that he is not in the spirit of the
+game. What we may gain by his playing, we lose because the others cannot do
+their best with his example to hurt their fighting spirit. I do not want,
+nor will I have on my eleven, any player who plays for other reasons than a
+love for his Alma Mater, be he a Hogan, Brickley, Thorpe, or Mahan. I have
+waited, hoping Thorwald would be awakened, as Hicks explained, but now I
+must act. Tomorrow's game with Latham must see Thor awakened, or I must,
+for the sake of the eleven, drop him from the squad for the rest of the
+season.
+
+"Yet I beg of you, in case the plan I shall propose fails, remember Hicks'
+appeal! Do not condemn or ostracize John Thorwald in any degree. He has
+three more seasons of football, so let us keep on trying to make him
+understand campus life, college tradition. Be his friends, help him all you
+can, and sooner or later he will awaken. Something may suddenly shock him
+to a true understanding of what old Bannister means to a fellow. Or perhaps
+the awakening will be slow, but it must come. And Bannister can win without
+Thor, don't forget that! We'll make one final effort to awaken Thor, and
+if it fails, just forget him, boys, so far as football goes, and watch the
+Gold and Green win that championship."
+
+"What is your scheme, Coach?" questioned Captain Butch Brewster, his honest
+countenance showing how heavily the responsibility of team-leader weighed
+upon him. "You are right; as Thor is now, he is a handicap to the eleven,
+but--"
+
+"My idea is this," explained the Slave-Driver earnestly. "Select some
+student to go to Thorwald and try to show him that unless he gets into the
+game and plays for old Bannister, he will be dropped from the squad. If
+possible, let the fellow make him understand that, in his case, it will be
+a shame and a dishonor. Now, Butch, you and Hicks can probably approach
+Thor, or perhaps you know of someone who--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cherubic countenance showed the light of dawning
+inspiration, and Coach Corridan paused, as the sunny youth exhibited a
+desire to say something, with him not by any means a phenomenal
+happening; given the floor, the blithesome youth burst forth excitedly:
+"Theophilus--Theophilus Opperdyke is the one! He has more influence over
+Thor than any other student, and the big fellow likes the little boner.
+Thor will at least listen to Theophilus, which Is more than any of us can
+gain from him."
+
+After the meeting had adjourned, and the last inspection had been made in
+the other dorms, the Seniors being exempt, several members of the Gold and
+Green team--Captain Butch, Beef, Pudge, Monty, Roddy, and Bunch, together
+with little Theophilus Opperdyke, dragged from his studies--foregathered in
+the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; those who had heard the
+coach's talk were still stunned at the ban likely to be placed on the
+Brobdingnagian Thor. On the campus outside Creighton Hall, a horde of
+Bannister youths, incited by Tug Cardiff, who gave them no reason for his
+act, were making a strenuous effort to awaken the Prodigious Prodigy,
+evidently depending on noise to achieve that end, for a vast sound-wave
+rolled up to Hicks' windows--"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!
+He's--all--right!"
+
+"Listen!" exploded T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., indignantly. "You and I,
+Theophilus, would give a Rajah's ransom just to hear the fellows whoop it
+up for us like that, and it has no more effect on that sodden hulk of a
+Thor than bombarding an English super-dreadnaught with Roman candles!
+Howsomever, Coach Corridan exploded a shrapnel bomb on old Bannister's
+eleven tonight."
+
+Then Hicks carefully outlined to the dazed little boner the substance of
+the coach's talk to the team, and Theophilus was alarmed when he thought of
+Thor's being dropped from the squad. When Captain Butch had outlined the
+Slave-Driver's plot for striving to awaken the Colossus to a realization of
+what a disgrace it would be to be sent from the gridiron, though he did not
+announce that the Human Encyclopedia had been elected to carry out Coach
+Corridan's last-hope idea, Theophilus sat on the edge of the chair,
+blinking owlishly at them over his big-rimmed spectacles.
+
+"After all, fellows," quavered Theophilus nervously, "Coach Corridan, if he
+drops Thor from the squad, won't create such a riot on the campus as you
+might expect. You see, the students, even as they built and planned on
+Thor, gradually came to know that there is vastly more to be considered
+than physical power. That great bulk actually acts as a drag on the eleven,
+because Thor isn't in sympathy with things! Still, if he could only be
+aroused, awakened, wouldn't the team play football, with him striving for
+old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for Hicks' dad?
+Oh, I <i>do</i> hope the Coach's plan succeeds, and he awakens tomorrow; I
+know the boys won't condemn him, if he doesn't, but--I--I want him to
+understand!"
+
+"It's his last chance this season," reflected T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+enshrouded in a penumbra of gloom. "I made a big boast that I would round
+up a smashing full-back. I returned to Bannister with the Prodigious
+Prodigy. I made a big mystery of him, and then--biff!--Thor quit football.
+Then I explained the mystery, and got the fellows to admire him, and when
+Thor decided to play the game I thought 'All O.K.; I'll just wait until
+he scatters Hamilton and Ballard over Bannister Field, then I'll swagger
+before Butch and say, "Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!"' But now
+Thor has spilled the beans again."
+
+"I--I hope that the one you have chosen to appeal to Thor--" spoke
+Theophilus timorously, "will succeed, for--Oh, I <i>don't</i> want him to be
+dropped from the squad, and--"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, who had been gazing at little Theophilus Opperdyke with
+a basilisk glare that perturbed the bewildered Human Encyclopedia, suddenly
+strode across the room and placed his hand on the grind's thin shoulders.
+
+"Theophilus, old man, it's up to you!" he said earnestly. "Thor has a
+strong regard for you; in fact, outside of his good-natured tolerance
+for Hicks, you alone have his friendship. Now I want you to go to him,
+Theophilus, and make a last appeal to Thor. Try to awaken him, to make him
+understand his peril of being dropped from the squad, unless he plays
+the game for his college! It's for old Bannister, old man, for your Alma
+Mater--"
+
+"Go to it, Theophilus!" urged Beef McNaughton. "Coach Corridan said Thor
+might be suddenly awakened by a shock, but no electric battery can shock
+that Colossus, and, besides, miracles don't happen nowadays. Yes, it's up
+to you, old man."
+
+For a moment little Theophilus, his big-rimmed spectacles falling off
+as fast as he replaced them, and his puny frame tense with excitement,
+hesitated. Sitting on the extreme edge of the chair, he surveyed his
+comrades solemnly and was convinced that they were in earnest. Then, "I--I
+will <i>try</i>, sir!" exclaimed Theophilus, who would <i>never</i> forget his
+Freshman training. "I'm <i>sure</i> Hicks, or somebody, could do It better than
+I; but--I'll try!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK
+
+
+ "College ties can ne'er be broken--
+ Loyal will remain each heart;
+ Though the last farewell be spoken--
+ And from Bannister we part!
+
+ "Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee--
+ Till we from life shall part!"
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous, intensely studious Human Encyclopedia,
+stood at the window of John Thorwald's study room. That behemoth, desiring
+quiet, had moved his study-table and chair to a vacant room across the
+second-floor corridor of Creighton, the Freshman dormitory, when the
+Bannister youths cheered him, and he was still there, so that Theophilus,
+on his mission, had finally located him by his low rumblings, as he
+laboriously read out his Latin. The little Senior was gazing across the
+brightly lighted Quadrangle. He could see into the rooms of the other
+class dormitories, where the students studied, skylarked, rough-housed,
+or conversed on innumerable topics; from a room in Nordyke, the abode of
+care-free Juniors, a splendidly blended sextette sang songs of their
+Alma Mater, and their rich voices drifted across the Quad. to Thor and
+Theophilus:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+ Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!"
+
+Theophilus turned from the window, and looked despairingly at that young
+Colossus, Thor. The behemoth Norwegian, oblivious to everything except the
+geometry problem now causing him to sweat, rested his massive head on his
+palms, elbows on the study-table, and was lost in the intricate labyrinth
+of "Let the line ABC equal the line BVD." The frail chair creaked under his
+ponderous bulk. On the table lay an unopened letter that had come in the
+night's mail, for, tackling one problem, the bulldog Hercules never let go
+his grip until he solved it, and nothing else, not even Theophilus, could
+secure his attention. Hence the Human Encyclopedia, trembling at the
+terrific importance of the mission entrusted to him, waited, thrilled by
+the Juniors' songs, which failed to penetrate Thor's mind.
+
+"Oh, what <i>can</i> I do?" breathed Theophilus, sitting down nervously on the
+edge of a chair and peering owlishly over his big-rimmed spectacles at the
+stolid John Thorwald. "I am sure that, in time, I can help Thor to--to know
+campus life better; but--<i>tomorrow</i> is his last chance! He will be dropped
+from the squad, unless--"
+
+As Thor at last leaned back and gazed at his little comrade, just then, to
+the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," an augmented chorus drifted across the
+Quadrangle:
+
+ "And we'll sing one song
+ For the college that we love--
+ For our dear old Bannister--good-by"
+
+To the Bannister students there was something tremendously queer in the
+friendship of Theophilus and Thor. That the huge Freshman, of all the
+collegians, should have chosen the timorous little boner was most puzzling.
+Yet, to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a keen reader of human nature, it was
+clear; Thorwald thought of nothing but study, Theophilus was a grind,
+though he possessed intense college spirit, hence Thor was naturally drawn
+to the little Senior by the mutual bond of their interest in books, and
+Theophilus, with his hero-worshiping soul, intensely admired the splendid
+purpose of John Thorwald, toiling to gain knowledge, because of the promise
+of his dying mother. The grind, who thought that next to T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., Thor was the "greatest ever," as Hicks phrased it, had been, doing
+what that care-free collegian termed "missionary work," with the stolid,
+unimaginative Prodigious Prodigy for some weeks. Thrilled with the thought
+that he worked for his Alma Mater, he quietly strove to make Thorwald
+glimpse the true meaning and purpose of college life and its broadness of
+development. The loyal Theophilus lost no opportunity of impressing his
+behemoth friend with the sacred traditions of the campus, or of explaining
+why Thor was wrong in characterizing all else than study as foolishness and
+waste of time.
+
+"Thor," began Theophilus timidly yet determinedly, for he was serving old
+Bannister now, "old man, do you feel that you are giving the fellows at
+Bannister a square deal?"
+
+John Thorwald, slowly tearing open the letter that had come that night,
+and had lain, unnoticed, on the study-table while he wrestled with his
+geometry, turned suddenly. The Human Encyclopedia's vast earnestness and
+the strange query he had fired at Thor, surprised even that stolid mammoth.
+
+"Why, what do you mean, Theophilus?" spoke Thor slowly. "A square deal?
+Why, I owe them nothing! I sacrifice my time for them, leaving my studies
+to go out and waste precious time foolishly on football. Why--"
+
+"I mean this," Theophilus kept doggedly on, his earnest desire to stir Thor
+conquering his natural timidity. "You were brought to old Bannister by
+Hicks, who made a great mystery of you, so we knew nothing of you; but the
+fellows all thought you were willing to play football. Then, after they
+got enthused, and builded hopes of the championship on <i>you</i>, came
+your quitting. Hicks defended you, Thor, and changed the boys' bitter
+condemnation to vast admiration, by telling of your life, your father's
+being a castaway, your mother's dying wish, your toil to get learning, and
+your inability to grasp college life. Then from gratitude to Mr. Hicks you
+started to play again--naturally, the students waxed enthusiastic, when you
+ripped the 'Varsity to pieces, but now you may be dropped by the coach,
+after tomorrow, because you don't play for old Bannister, and your
+indifference kills the team's fighting spirit. You do not care if you are
+dropped; it will give you more time to study, and relieve you of your
+obligation, as you so quixotically view it, to play because Mr. Hicks will
+be glad; but--think of the fellows.
+
+"They, Thor, disappointed in you, their hopes of your bringing by your
+massive body and huge strength the Championship to old Bannister shattered,
+are still your friends--they of the eleven, I mean especially, for, as yet,
+the rest do not know you may be dropped. And the fellows came beneath your
+window tonight to cheer you; they will do so, Thor, even if you are dropped
+and they know that you will not use that prodigious power for their Alma
+Mater in the big games; they will stand by you, for they understand! Just
+think, old man; haven't the fellows, despite your rude rebuffs, <i>tried</i>
+to be your comrades? Haven't they helped you to get settled to work and
+assisted you with your studies? Why, you have been a big boor, cold and
+aloof, you have upset their hopes of you in football, and yet they have no
+condemnation for you, naught but warm friendliness.
+
+"You are not giving them or yourself a square deal, Thor! You won't even
+<i>try</i> to understand campus life, to grasp its real purpose, to realize what
+tradition is! The time will come, Thor, when you will see your mistake; you
+will yearn for their good fellowship, you will learn that getting knowledge
+is not all of college life. You will know that this 'silly foolishness' of
+singing songs and giving the yell, of rooting for the eleven, of loyalty
+and love for one's Alma Mater, is something worth while. And you may find
+it out too late. Oh, if you could only understand that it isn't what you
+take from old Bannister that makes a man of you, it is what you give to
+your college--in athletics, in your studies, in every phase of campus life;
+that in toiling and sacrificing for your Alma Mater you grow and develop,
+and reap a rich reward!"
+
+Could T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and Green eleven
+have heard little Theophilus' fervent and eloquent appeal to John Thorwald,
+they would have felt like giving three cheers for him. They loved this
+pathetic little boner, who, because of his pitifully frail body, could
+never fight for old Bannister on gridiron, diamond, or track, and they
+tremendously admired him for working for his college and for the redemption
+of Thor. Timorous and shrinking by nature, whenever his Alma Mater, or a
+friend, needed him the Human Encyclopedia fought down his painful timidity
+and came up to scratch nobly.
+
+It was Theophilus whose clear logic had vastly aided T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., to originate The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, in 1919's Sophomore
+year, and quell Roddy Perkins' Freshman Equal Rights campaign. In fact, it
+had been the boner's suggestion that gave Hicks his needed inspiration.
+And, a Junior, Theophilus had been elected business manager of the
+</i>Bannister Weekly</i>, with Hicks as editor-in-chief as a colossal joke. The
+entire burden of that almost defunct periodical had been thrust on those
+two, and, thanks to the grind's intensely humorous "copy," the </i>Weekly</i> had
+been revived and rebuilt. And Theophilus, in writing the humorous articles,
+had been moved by a great ambition to do something for old Bannister.
+
+"Look at me, Thor!" continued Theophilus Opperdyke, his puny body dwarfed
+as he faced the colossal Prodigious Prodigy. "A poor, weak, helpless
+nothing! I'd cheerfully sacrifice all the scholastic honor or glory I ever
+won, or shall win, just to make a touchdown for the Gold and Green, just to
+win a baseball game, or to break the tape in a race for old Bannister!
+And you--<i>you</i>, with that tremendous body, that massive bulk, that vast
+strength--you won't play the game for your Alma Mater, you won't throw
+that big frame into the scrimmage, thrilled with a desire to win for your
+college! Oh, what wonderful things you <i>could</i> do with your powerful build;
+but it means nothing to you, while </i>I--</i> Oh, you don't care, you just won't
+awaken; and, unless you do, in tomorrow's game you'll be dropped from the
+squad, a disgrace."
+
+John Thorwald-Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, that Gargantuan Freshman of
+whom Bannister said he possessed no soul--stirred uneasily, shifted his
+vast tonnage from one foot to the other, and stared at little Theophilus
+Opperdyke. That solemn Senior, who had not seen the slightest effect his
+"Missionary Work" was having on the stolid Thor, was in despair; but he did
+not know the truth. As Hicks had once said, "You don't know nothing what
+goes on in Thor's dome. There's a wall of solid concrete around the
+machinery of his mind, and you can't see the wheels, belts, and cogs at
+work!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with all his keen insight into human nature, had
+failed utterly to diagnose Thor's case, had not even stumbled on the true
+cause of that young giant's aloofness. The truth was unknown to anyone,
+but there was one natural reason for John Thorwald's not mingling with his
+fellows of the campus-the blond Colossus was inordinately bashful! From his
+fifteenth year, Thor had seen the seamy side of life, had lived, grown and
+developed among men. In his wanderings in the Klondike, the wild Northwest,
+in Panama, his experiences as cabin-boy, miner, cowboy, lumber-jack, and
+Canal Zone worker, he had existed where everything was roughness and
+violence, where brawn, not brain, usually held sway, where supremacy was
+won, kept, and lost by fists, spiked boots, or guns! In his adventurous
+career, young Thorwald had but seldom encountered the finer things of life,
+and his nature, while wholesome, was sturdy and virile, not likely to be
+stirred by sentiment; so that now, among the good-natured, friendly boys of
+old Bannister, he, accustomed to rude surroundings and rough acquaintances,
+was bashful.
+
+And Theophilus, as well as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., shot far wide of the
+mark in believing that the big Hercules had no power to feel; he possessed
+that power, but, with it the ability to conceal his feelings. They thought
+nothing appealed to him, had stirred his soul, at college, but they were
+wrong; true, Thor was unable to understand this new, strange life; he was
+puzzled when the collegians condemned and ostracized him at first, when
+he quit football because it was not a Faculty rule to play, but he was
+grateful when Hicks defended him, and the admiration of the student-body
+was welcome to him. He had thought he was doing all they desired of him,
+when he went back to the game, and now--when Theophilus told him that he
+might be dropped from the squad, he was bewildered. He could not understand
+just why this could be, when he was reporting for scrimmage every day!
+
+But the friendliness of the youths, their kind help with his studies,
+the assistance of the genial Hicks, and, more than all, above even
+the admiration of the Freshmen for his promise and purpose, the daily
+missionary work of little Theophilus, for whom the massive Thor felt a real
+love, had been slowly, insidiously undermining John Thorwald's reserve. No
+longer did he condemn what he did not understand. At times he had a vague
+feeling that all was not right, that, after all, he was missing something,
+that study was not all; and yet, bashful as he was, fearing to appear
+rough, crude, and uncouth among these skylarking youths, Thor kept on his
+silent, lonely way, and they thought him untouched by their overtures. Of
+late, when unobserved, the big Freshman had stood by the window, watching
+the collegians on the campus, listening to their songs of old Bannister,
+and yet because he felt embarrassed when with them, he gave no sign that he
+cared.
+
+Now, however, the splendid appeal of loyal, timorous Theophilus stirred
+Thor, and yet he could not break down the wall of reserve he had builded
+around himself. He had deluded himself that this comradeship was not for
+him, that he could never mingle with these happy-go-lucky youths, that
+he must plod straight ahead, and live to himself, because his past had
+roughened him.
+
+"You are a Freshman!" spoke Theophilus, unaware that forces were at work on
+Thor, and making a last effort. "You stand on the very threshold of your
+campus years; everything is before you. I am at the journey's end--very
+nearly, for in June I graduate from old Bannister. I never had the chance
+to fight for my Alma Mater on the athletic field, and you--Oh, think of
+what you can do! About to leave the campus, I, and my class-mates, realize
+how dear our college has become to us. If <i>you</i> could just know that
+Bannister means something to you, even now, if you only felt it, you
+could make your years mean great things to you. Thor, could you leave old
+Bannister tomorrow without regret, without one sigh for the dear old place?
+We, who soon shall leave it forever, fully understand Shakespeare, when in
+a sonnet he wrote:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well which thou must leave ere long!"
+
+There was a silence, and then Thor slowly drew out a letter from its
+envelope, scanning the scrawl across its pages. A few moments, while its
+meaning seemed to seep into his slow-acting mind, and then a look of
+helpless bewilderment, as though the stolid Freshman just could not
+understand at all, came to his face; a minute John Thorwald stood, as in a
+trance, staring dully at the letter.
+
+"Thor! Thor! What's the matter? What's wrong?" quavered the alarmed
+Theophilus, "Have you gotten bad news?"
+
+"Read it, read it," said the big Freshman lifelessly, extending the letter
+to the startled Senior. "It's all over, I suppose, and I've got to go to
+work again. I've got to leave college, and toil once more, and save. My
+promise to my mother can't be fulfilled--yet. And just as I was getting
+fairly started."
+
+Theophilus Opperdyke hurriedly perused the message, which had come to Thor
+in that night's mail but which the blond giant had let lie unnoticed while
+he tackled his geometry. With difficulty Theophilus deciphered the scrawl
+on an official letterhead:
+
+
+THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANA STEAMSHIP LINE
+
+(New York Offices)
+
+Nov. 4, 19--.
+
+DEAR SON:
+
+I am writing to tell you that I've run into a sort of hurricane, and you
+and I have got a hard blow to weather. I started you at college on the
+$5,000 received from the heirs of Henry B. Kingsley, on whose yacht, as
+you know, I was wrecked in the South Seas, and marooned for ten years. I
+figured on giving you an education with that sum, eked out by my wages, and
+what you earn in vacations.
+
+I had the $5,000, untouched, in a New York bank, and I wanted to take it
+over to Christiania; when I was about to sail on my last voyage, I drew out
+the sum, and put it in care of the Purser of the </i>Norwhal</i>, on which I
+was mate, intending, of course, to get it on docking, and deposit it in
+Christiania. At the last hour I was transferred to the </i>Valkyrie</i>, to sail
+a few days later, and I knew the </i>Norwhal's</i> purser would leave the $5,000
+for me in the Company's Christiania offices, so I did not bother to
+transfer it to the </i>Valkyrie</i>.
+
+Perhaps you read in the newspapers that the </i>Norwhal</i> struck a floating
+mine, and went down with a heavy loss of life. The Purser was among those
+lost, and none of the ship's papers were saved; my $5,000, of course, went
+down also.
+
+I am sorry, John, but there seems nothing to do but for you to leave
+college and work. For your mother's sake, I wish we could avoid it; but we
+must wait and work and tackle it again. Your first term expenses are paid,
+so stay until the term is out. Perhaps Mr. Hicks can give you a job in one
+of his steel mills again, but we must work our own way, son. Don't lose
+courage, we'll fight this out together with the memory of your promise to
+your dying mother to spur you on. The road may be long and rocky but we'll
+make it. Just work and save, and in a year or two you can start at college
+again. You can study at night, too, and keep on learning.
+
+I'll write later. Stay at college till the term is up, and in the meantime
+try to land a job. However, you won't have any trouble to do that. Keep
+your nerve, boy, for your mother's sake. It's a hard blow, but we'll
+weather it, never fear, and reach port.
+
+Your father,
+
+JOHN THORWALD, SR.
+
+P.S. I am sailing on the </i>Valkyrie</i> today, will write you on my return to
+New York, in a few weeks.
+
+
+Theophilus looked at the massive young Norwegian, who had taken this
+solar-plexus blow with that same stolid apathy that characterized his every
+action. He wanted to offer sympathy, but he knew not how to reach Thor. He
+fully understood how terrific the blow was, how it must stagger the
+big, earnest Freshman, just as he, after ten years of grinding toil, of
+sacrifice, of grim, unrelenting determination, had conquered obstacles and
+fought to where he had a clear track ahead. Just as it seemed that fate had
+given him a fair chance, with his father rescued and five thousand dollars
+to give him a college course, this terrible misfortune had befallen him.
+Theophilus realized what it must mean to this huge, silent Hercules, just
+making good his promise to his dying mother, to give up his studies, and go
+back to work, toil, labor, to begin all over again, to put off his college
+years.
+
+"Leave me, please," said Thor dully, apparently as unmoved by the blow
+as he had been by Theophilus' appeal. "I--I would like to be alone, for
+awhile."
+
+Left alone, John Thorwald stood by the window, apparently not thinking of
+anything in particular, as he gazed across the brightly lighted Quad. The
+huge Freshman seemed in a daze--utterly unable to comprehend the disaster
+that had befallen him; he was as stolid and impassive as ever, and
+Theophilus might have thought that he did not care, even at having to give
+up his college course, had not the Senior known better.
+
+Across the Quadrangle, from the room of the Caruso-like Juniors,
+accompanied by a melodious banjo-twanging, drifted:
+
+ "Though thy halls we leave forever
+ Sadly from the campus turn;
+ Yet our love shall fail thee never
+ For old Bannister we'll yearn!
+
+ "'Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!'
+ Echoes softly from each heart;
+ We'll be ever loyal to thee
+ Till we from life shall part."
+
+Strangely enough, the behemoth Thorwald was not thinking so much of having
+to give up his studies, of having to lay aside his books and take up again
+the implements of toil. He was not pondering on the cruelty of fate in
+making him abandon, at least temporarily, his goal; instead, his thoughts
+turned, somehow, to his experiences at old Bannister, to the football
+scrimmages, the noisy sessions in "Delmonico's Annex," the college
+dining-hall, to the skylarking he had often watched in the dormitories. He
+thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks, good Butch
+Brewster, loyal little Theophilus; and as he reflected, he heard those
+Juniors, over the way, singing. Just now they were chanting that
+exquisitely beautiful Hawaiian melody, "Aloha Oe," or "Farewell to Thee,"
+making the words tell of parting from their Alma Mater. There was something
+in the refrain that seemed to break down Thor's wall of reserve, to melt
+away his aloofness, and he caught himself listening eagerly as they sang.
+
+Somehow he felt no desire to condemn those care-free youths, to call their
+singing silly foolishness, to say they were wasting their time and their
+fathers' money. Queer, but he actually liked to hear them sing, he realized
+he had come to listen for their saengerfests. Now that he had to leave
+college, for the first time he began to ponder on what he must leave. Not
+alone books and study, but--
+
+As he stood there, an ache in his throat, and an awful sorrow overwhelming
+him, with the richly blended voices of the happy Juniors drifting across to
+him, chanting a song of old Ballard, big Thor murmured softly:
+
+"What did little Theophilus say? What was it Shakespeare wrote? Oh, I have
+it:
+
+ "'This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THOR'S AWAKENING
+
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+"In the famous words of the late Mike Murphy," said T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+"the celebrated Yale and Penn track trainer, 'you can beat a team that
+can't be beat, but--you can't beat a team that won't be beat!' Latham must
+be in the latter class."
+
+It was the Bannister-Latham game, and the first half had just ended.
+Captain Butch Brewster's followers had trailed dejectedly from Bannister
+Field to the Gym, where Head Coach Corridan was flaying them with a tongue
+as keen as the two-edged sword that drove Adam and Eve from the Garden of
+Eden. A cold, bleak November afternoon, a leaden sky lowered overhead, and
+a chill wind swept athwart the field; in the concrete stands, the loyal
+"rooters" of the Gold and Green, or of the Gold and Blue, shivered,
+stamped, and swung their arms, waiting for the excitement of the scrimmage
+again to warm them. Yet, the Bannister cohorts seemed silent and
+discouraged, while the Latham supporters went wild, singing, cheering,
+howling. A look at the score-board explained this:
+
+ END OF FIRST HALF: SCORE:
+ Bannister ........ 0
+ Latham ........... 3
+
+The statement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a gold and green
+blanket and humped on the Bannister bench, to shivering little Theophilus
+Opperdyke, the Phillyloo Bird, Shad Weatherby, and several more collegians
+who had joined him when the half ended, was singularly appropriate. In
+Latham's light, fast eleven, trained to the minute, coached to a shifty,
+tricky style of play with numberless deceptive fakes from which they worked
+the forward pass successfully, Bannister seemed to have encountered, as
+Mike Murphy phrased it, "A team that won't be beat!" According to the
+advance dope of the sporting writers, who, in football, are usually as good
+prophets as the Weather Bureau, Bannister was booked to come out the winner
+by at least five touchdowns to none. But here a half was gone, and Latham
+led by three points, scored on a rather lucky field-goal!
+
+The psychology of football is inexplicable. Yale, beaten by Virginia,
+Brown, and Wash-Jeff, with the Blue's best gridiron star ineligible to
+play, a team that seemed at odds with itself and the 'Varsity, mismanaged,
+poorly coached, journeys to Princeton to battle with old Nassau; the Tiger,
+Its tail as yet untwisted, presents its best eleven for several seasons, a
+great favorite in the odds, and yet the final score is Yale, 14; Princeton,
+7! A strange fear of the Bulldog, bred of many bitter defeats, of similar
+occasions when a feeble Yale team aroused itself and trampled an invincible
+Orange and Black eleven, when the Blue fought old Nassau with a team that
+"wouldn't" be beat, gave victory to the poorer aggregation. So many things
+unforeseen often enter into a football contest, shifting the balance of
+power from the stronger to the weaker team. One eleven gets the jump on the
+other, the favorite weirdly goes to pieces--team dissension may exist, a
+dozen other causes--but, boiled down, Mike Murphy's statement was most
+appropriate now.
+
+Latham simply <i>would not</i> be beat! The sporting pages had said: "Latham
+simply can't beat Bannister!" Here the team, that could not be beaten was
+being defeated, and the team that would not be defeated was, so far, the
+victor. Perhaps the threatened dropping of Thor from the Gold and Green
+squad shook somewhat Captain Butch's players; more likely, the Latham
+aggregation got the jump on Bannister, opening up a bewildering attack of
+criss-crosses, line plunges, cross-bucks, and tandems, from all of which
+the forward pass frequently developed; they literally overwhelmed a
+supposedly unbeatable team. And once they got the edge, it was hard for
+Bannister to regain poise and to smother the fast plays that swept through
+or around the bewildered eleven.
+
+"We have <i>got</i> to beat 'em!" growled Shad, "Mike Murphy or not. Why,
+if little old Latham cleans us up, smash go our chances of the State
+Championship! Oh, look at Thor--the big mountain of muscle. Why doesn't he
+wake up, and go push that team off the field?"
+
+Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, his vast hulk unprotected from the cold wind
+by a football blanket, squatted on the ground, on the side-line, apparently
+in a trance. Ever since the night before, when his father's letter had
+dealt such a knock-out blow to his hopes of fulfilling the promise to his
+dying mother, had rudely side-tracked him from the climb to his goal, the
+blond giant had maintained that dumb apathy. If anything, it seemed that
+the cruel blow of fate had only served to make Thor more stolid and
+impassive than ever, and Theophilus wondered if the Colossus had really
+grasped the import of the tragic letter as yet. The news had spread over
+the college and campus, and the students were sincerely sorry for Thor. But
+to offer him sympathy was about as difficult as consoling a Polar bear with
+the toothache.
+
+Coach Corridan, carrying out his plot, had decided not to start Thor in
+the first half of the game. So the Norwegian Hercules, having received no
+orders to the contrary, however, donned togs and appeared on the side-line,
+where he had sat, paying not the slightest heed to the scrimmage and
+seemingly unaware that the Gold and Green was facing defeat and the loss of
+the Championship, for a game lost would put the team out of the running.
+All big John Thorwald knew was, in a few weeks he must leave old Bannister,
+must give up, for a time, his college course. Just when the grim battle was
+won, he must leave, to work. Not that the Viking cared about toil. It was
+the delay that chafed even his stolid self. He was stunned at having to
+wait, maybe two years, before starting again.
+
+And yet, as he squatted on the side-line, oblivious to everything but his
+bitter reflections, the Theophilus-quoted words of Shakespeare persisted in
+intruding on his thoughts:
+
+ "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong--
+ To love that well, which thou must leave ere long."
+
+Try as he would, he could not fight away the keen realization that
+books and study were not all he would regret to leave. He was forced to
+acknowledge that his mind kept wandering to other things. He found himself
+pondering on the parting with Theophilus Opperdyke, with that crazy Hicks;
+he wondered if he, out in the world again, toiling his lonely way, would
+miss the glad fellowship of these care-free youths that he had watched,
+but never shared, if he would ever think of the weeks at old Bannister.
+Somehow, he felt that he would often vision the Quad at night, brightly
+lighted, dormitories' lights agleam, students crossing and recrossing,
+shouting at studious comrades. He would hear again the melodious
+banjo-twanging, the gleeful saengerfests, the happy skylarking of the boys.
+He had never entered into all this, and yet he knew he would miss it all;
+why, he would even miss the daily scrimmage on Bannister Field; the noisy
+shower-room, with its clouds of steam, and white forms flitting ghostlike.
+He would miss the classrooms; in brief, <i>everything</i>!
+
+John Thorwald was awakening! Even had this blow not befallen him, the huge,
+slow-minded Norwegian, in time, with Theophilus Opperdyke's missionary
+work, would have gradually come to understand things better--at least, to
+know he was wrong in his ideas, which is the beginning of wisdom. Already,
+he had ceased to condemn all this as foolishness, to rail at the youths
+for wasting time and money. Already something stirred within him, and yet,
+stolid as he was, bashful among the collegians, he was apparently the same.
+But the sudden shock Head Coach Corridan spoke of had come. His father's
+letter telling of his loss and that Thor must leave Bannister had awakened
+him to the startling knowledge that he did care for something more than
+study, that all the things that had puzzled him, that he had sneered at,
+meant something to his existence, that he dreaded leaving other things than
+his books.
+
+"I--I don't understand things," thought Thorwald. "But--if I could only
+stay, I'd want to learn. I'd try to get this 'college' spirit! Oh, I've
+been all wrong, but if I could only stay--"
+
+As if in answer to his unspoken thought, the big Freshman beheld marching
+toward him Theophilus Opperdyke, his spectacles off, and his face aglow,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., evidently in the throes of emotional insanity; a
+Senior whom he knew as Parson Palmetter; Registrar Worthington, and Doctor
+Alford, the kindly, beloved Prexy of old Bannister. The last named placed
+his hand on the puzzled behemoth's ponderous shoulder.
+
+"Thorwald," he said kindly, "Hicks, Opperdyke and Brewster, last night,
+came to my study and acquainted me with your misfortune. They told me of
+your life-history, of your splendid purpose to gain knowledge, to make
+something of yourself, for your dying mother's sake. Old Bannister needs
+men like you, Thorwald. Perhaps you do not understand campus ways and
+tradition yet, perhaps you are not in sympathy with everything here; but
+once a love for your Alma Mater is awakened, you will be a power for good
+for your college.
+
+"Now I at once took up the matter with Mr. Palmetter, President of The
+Students' Aid Bureau. This year, for the first time in our history, we have
+dispensed with janitors and sweeps in the dormitories, and with dining-hall
+waiters, so that needy and deserving students may work their way through
+Bannister. Owing to the fact that Mr. Deane, a Senior, has given up his
+dormitory, Creighton Hall, as he has funds for the year and needs the time
+to study, we can offer you board and tuition, in exchange for your work in
+the dormitory, and waiting on tables in the dining-hall. Since your first
+term bills, until January first, are paid, if you will start to work at
+once, we will credit any work done this term on books and incidentals for
+next term. By this means--"
+
+"Why, you don't--you <i>can't</i> mean--" rumbled Thor, who had just dimly
+grasped the greatest point in Prexy's speech. "Why, then I won't have to
+leave Bannister--I won't have to quit my studies! Oh, thank you, sir; thank
+you! I will work <i>so</i> hard. I am not afraid of work; I love it--a chance to
+toil and earn my education, that's what I want! Thank you!"
+
+"And in addition," said the Registrar, "Mr. Palmetter reports that he can
+secure you, downtown, a number of furnaces to tend this winter, which you
+can do early in the morning and at night; this will bring you an income for
+living expenses, and in the spring something else will offer itself. It
+means every moment of your time will be crowded, but Bannister needs
+workers--"
+
+Something stirred in John Thorwald. His heart had been touched at last. He
+thought of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, and little Theophilus worried
+at his having to leave college, going to Doctor Alford; of Prexy, the
+Registrar, and Parson Palmetter, working to keep Thor at old Bannister.
+He recalled how sympathetic all the youths had been, how they admired his
+purpose and determination; and he had rewarded their friendliness with
+cold aloofness. He felt a thrill as he visioned himself working for his
+education, rising in the cold dawn, tending furnaces, working in the dorm.,
+waiting on tables--studying. With what fierce joy he would assail his
+tasks, glad that he could stay! He knew the students would rejoice, that
+they would not look down on him; instead, they would respect and admire
+him, toiling to grow and develop, to attain his goal!
+
+"Go to it, Thor!" urged T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "We all want you to stay,
+old man; we'll give you a lift with your studies. Old Bannister <i>wants</i>
+you, <i>needs</i> you, so <i>stick</i>!"
+
+"Stay, please!" quavered little Theophilus. "You don't want to leave your
+Alma Mater; stay, Thorwald, and--you'll understand things soon,"
+
+"Report at the Registrar's office at seven tonight, Thorwald," said Prexy,
+and then, because he understood boys and campus problems, "and to show your
+gratitude, you might go out there and spank that team which is trying to
+lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald, when Doctor Alford and the Registrar had gone, arose and
+stood gazing across Bannister Field. He saw not the white-lined gridiron,
+the gaunt goal-posts, the concrete stands filled with spectators, or the
+gay banners and pennants. He saw the buildings and campus of old Bannister,
+the stately old elms bordering the walks; he beheld the Gym., the four
+dormitories--Bannister, Nordyke, Smithson, and Creighton--the white Chapel,
+the ivy-covered Library, the Administration and Recitation Halls; he
+glimpsed the Memorial Arch over the entrance driveway, and big Alumni Hall.
+All at once, like an inundating wave, the great realization flashed on
+Thor that he did not have to leave it all! Often again would he hear the
+skylarking youths, the gay songs, the banjo-strumming; often would he see
+the brightly lighted Quad., would gaze out on the campus! It was still
+his--the work, the study, and, if he tried, even the glad comradeship of
+the fellows, the bigger things of college life, which as yet he did not
+understand.
+
+The big slow-minded youth could not awaken, at once, to a full knowledge
+and understanding of campus life and tradition, to a knowledge of college
+spirit; but, thanks to the belief that he had to leave it all, he had
+awakened to the startling fact that already he loved old Bannister. And
+now, joyous that he could stay, John Thorwald suddenly felt a strong desire
+to do something, not for himself, but for these splendid fellows who had
+worried for his sake, had worked to keep him at college. And just then he
+remembered the somewhat unclassical, yet well meant, words of dear old
+Doctor Alford, "And to show your gratitude, you might go out there and
+spank that team, which is trying to lick old Bannister."
+
+John Thorwald for the first time looked at the score-board; he saw, in big
+white letters:
+
+ BANNISTER .......... 0
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+From the Gym. the Gold and Green players--grim, determined, and yet worried
+by the team that "won't be beat!"--were jogging, followed by Head Coach
+Patrick Henry Corridan. The Latham eleven was on the field, the Gold and
+Blue rooters rioted in the stands. From the Bannister cohorts came a
+thunderous appeal:
+
+ "Hold 'em, boys--hold 'em, boys--hold--hold--<i>hold</i>!
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!"
+
+A sudden fury swayed the Prodigious Prodigy; it was his college, his
+eleven, and those Blue and Gold youths were actually beating old Bannister!
+The Bannister boys had admired him, some of them had helped him in his
+studies, three had told Doctor Alford of him, had made it possible for him
+to stay, to keep on toward his goal. </i>They</i> would be sorrow-stricken if
+Latham won! A feeling of indignation came to Thor. How dare those fellows
+think they could beat old Bannister! Why, <i>he</i> would go out there and show
+them a few things!
+
+Head Coach Corridan, let it be chronicled, was paralyzed when he ducked
+under the side-line rope--stretched to hold the spectators back--to collide
+with an immovable body, John Thorwald, and to behold an eager light on that
+behemoth's stolid face. Grasping the Slave-Driver in a grip that hurt, Thor
+boomed:
+
+"Mr. Corridan, let me play, <i>please</i>! Send me out this half. We can win.
+We've <i>got</i> to win! I want to do something for old Bannister. Why, if we
+lose today, we lose the Championship! I don't understand things yet, but I
+do love the college. I want to fight for Bannister. </i>Please</i> let me play!"
+
+The astonished coach and the equally dazed Gold and Green eleven, with the
+bewildered collegians who heard Thor's earnest appeal, were silent a few
+moments, unable to grasp the truth. Then Captain Brewster, his face aglow,
+seized the big Freshman's arm excitedly.
+
+"</i>Sure</i> you'll play, Thor!" he shouted. "Fullback, old man! Come on, team.
+Thor's awake! He wants to fight for his Alma Mater; he wants Bannister to
+win! Oh, watch us shove Latham off the field--everybody together now--the
+yell, for Thor!"
+
+"Right here," grinned an excitedly happy T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., when the
+yell was given, "is where a team that won't be beat gets licked by a chap
+what can lick 'em!"
+
+What took place when the blond Prodigious Prodigy lumbered on Bannister
+Field at the start of the last half of the Bannister-Latham game can be
+imagined by the final score-board figures:
+
+ BANNISTER ......... 27
+ LATHAM ............. 3
+
+It can best be described with the aid of Scoop Sawyer's account in the next
+</i>Bannister Weekly:</i>
+
+--At the start of the second half, however, the Latham cohorts were given
+a shock when they beheld a colossal being almost as big as the entire Gold
+and Blue eleven, go in at fullback for Bannister. And the Latham eleven
+received a series of shocks when Thor began intruding that massive body
+of his into their territory. Tennyson's saying, "The old order changeth,
+yielding place to new" was aptly illustrated in the second half; for
+Bannister's bugler quit sounding "Retreat!" and blew "Charge!" Four
+touchdowns and three goals from touchdowns, in one half, is usually
+considered a fair day's work for an entire team. Even Yale or Harvard; but
+when one player corrals four touchdowns in a half--he is going some! Well,
+Thor went some! Most of the half he furnished free transportation for
+two-thirds of the Latham team, carrying them on his back, legs, and neck,
+as he strode down the field; a writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped
+the blond Colossus. Anyone would have stood more show to stop an Alpine
+avalanche than to slow up Thor, and the stretcher was constantly in
+evidence, for Latham knockouts.
+
+[Illustration C: 'A writ of habeas corpus could not have stopped the blond
+Colossus']
+
+The game turned into a Thor's Personally Conducted Tour. Thorwald, escorted
+by the Gold and Green team, made four quick tours to the Latham goal-line.
+It was simply a matter of giving the ball to the Prodigious Prodigy, then
+waving the linesmen to move down twenty yards or more toward Latham's line.
+Thor was simply unstoppable, and more beneficial even than his phenomenal
+playing was his encouragement to the team. He kept urging them to action,
+his foghorn growl of, "Come on, boys!" was a slogan of victory! Judging by
+Thor's awakening, and his work of the Latham game, Bannister's hopes of The
+State Intercollegiate Football Championship are as roseate as the blush on
+a maiden's cheek at her first kiss, and--
+
+That night, in the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., John Thorwald,
+supremely happy yet withal as uncomfortable as a whale on the Sahara
+Desert, overflowed an easy-chair. The room was filled, or what space Thor
+left, with the Bannister eleven, second-team players, Coach Corridan, and
+several students; on the campus a riotous crowd of Bannister youths "raised
+merry Heck," as Hicks phrased it, and their cheer floated up to the
+windows:
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor! He's--all--right!"
+
+"Come, fellows," spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+
+"Let's sing to the captain, good old Butch! Let 'er go!"
+
+ "Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink it down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink It down!
+ Here's to good Butch Brewster--
+ He plays football like he <i>uster--</i>
+ Drink it down! Drink it down--down--down--down!"
+
+A strange sound startled the joyous youths; it was a rumbling noise,
+like distant thunder, and at first they could not place it. Then, as It
+continued, they located the disturbance as coming from the prodigious body
+of Thor, and at last the wonderful phenomenon dawned on them.
+
+"Thor is singing college songs!" quavered little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+so happy that his big-rimmed spectacles rode the end of his nose. "Oh,
+Hicks--Butch--Thor is awake at last! He is trying to get college spirit, to
+understand campus life--"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., suddenly realized that what he had so ardently
+longed for had come to pass; aided by Theophilus' missionary work and by
+the sudden shock of Thorwald, Sr.'s, letter. Thor was awakened, had come to
+know that he loved old Bannister. His awakening, as shown in the football
+game, had been splendid. How he had towered over the scrimmage, in every
+play, urging his team to fight, himself doing prodigies for old Bannister.
+Thor, who had been so silent and aloof! Then the sunny-souled youth
+remembered.
+
+"Oh, I told you I'd awaken Thor, Butch!" he began, but that behemoth
+quelled him with an ominous look.
+
+"</i>You</i>!" he growled, with pretended wrath, "<i>you</i>! It was Theophilus
+Opperdyke who did the most of it, and Thorwald's father did the rest! Don't
+you rob Theophilus of his glory, you feeble-imitation-of-some-thing-human!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinned </i>à la</i> Cheshire cat. The happy-go-lucky
+Senior was vastly glad that Thor had awakened, that now he would try
+to grasp the real meaning of college existence. He felt that the young
+Hercules, from now on, would slowly and surely develop to a splendid
+college man, that he would do big things for his Alma Mater. And the
+generous Hicks gave Theophilus all the credit, and impressed on that
+happy Human Encyclopedia the fact that he had done a great deed for old
+Bannister. Just so, Thor was awakened.
+
+"Oh, I say, Deke Radford, Coach, and Butch," Hicks chortled, getting the
+attention of that triumvirate as well as that of the others in the room,
+"remember up in Camp Bannister, in the sleep-shack, when Coach Corridan
+outlined a smashing full-back he wanted?"
+
+"Sure!" smiled Deke. "What of it, Hicks?"
+
+Then T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., that care-free, lovable, irrepressible youth,
+whose chance to swagger before this same trio had been postponed so long
+and seemingly lost forever, satiated his fun-loving soul and reaped his
+reward. Calling their attention to Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, and asking
+them to remember his playing against Latham that day, the sunny Senior
+strutted before them vaingloriously.
+
+"Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!" he declared, grinning happily.
+"I promised to round up an unstoppable fullback, a Gargantuan Hercules, and
+I did! Just think of what he will do to Hamilton and Ballard in the big
+games! As I have often told you, <i>always</i>--leave It to Hicks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"
+
+
+ "Oh, what we'll do to Ballard
+ Will surely be a shame!
+ We'll push their team clear off the field
+ And win the football game!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one night three days after the first big game, that
+with Hamilton, a week following Thor's great awakening in the Latham game,
+sat in his cozy room, having assumed his favorite position--chair tilted
+back at a perilous angle and feet thrust atop of the radiator. The
+versatile youth, having just composed a song with which to encourage
+Bannister elevens in the future, was reading it aloud, when his mind was
+torpedoed by a most startling thought.
+
+"Land o' Goshen!" reflected the sunny-souled Senior, aghast. "I haven't
+twanged my ole banjo and held forth with a saengerfest for a coon's age! I
+surely can do so now without arousing Butch to wrath. Thor has awakened,
+Hamilton is walloped, and Bannister will surely win the Championship!
+Everything is happy, an' de goose hangs high, so here goes!"
+
+Holding his banjo </i>à la</i> troubadour, the blithesome Hicks, who as a Senior
+was harassed by no study-hours or inspections, strode from his room and out
+into the corridor, up and down which he majestically paced, like a sentinel
+on his beat, twanging his beloved banjo with abandon, and roaring in his
+foghorn, subterranean voice:
+
+ "Oh, the way we walloped Hamilton
+ Surely was a shame!
+ And we're going to win the Championship--
+ For we'll do Ballard the same!
+
+ "And Bannister shall flaunt the flag
+ For at least three seasons more;
+ Because--no team can win a game
+ While the Gold and Green has Thor!"
+
+On Bannister Field, three days before, the Gold and Green had crushed the
+strong team from "old Ham" to the tune of 20 to 0; Thor's magnificent
+ground-gaining, in which he smashed through the supposedly impregnable
+defense of the enemy, was a surprise to his comrades and a shock to
+Hamilton. Time and again, on the fourth down, the ball was given to
+Thorwald, and the blond Colossus, with several of old Ham's players
+clinging to him, plunged ahead for big gains. So now with a monster
+mass-meeting in half an hour, the exultant Bannister youths pretended to
+study, but prepared to parade on the campus, cheer the eleven and Thor,
+and arouse excitement for the winning of the biggest game, a victory over
+Ballard, a week later.
+
+From the rooms of would-be studious Seniors on both sides of the corridor,
+as Hicks patrolled it, came vociferous protests and classic criticisms,
+gathering in force and volume as the breezy youth's foghorn voice roared
+his song; that heedless collegian grinned as he heard:
+
+"R-r-rotten! Give that Jersey calf more rope!"
+
+"Hicks has had a relapse! </i>Sing-Sing</i> for yours, old man!"
+
+"Arrest Hicks, under the Public Nuisance Act!"
+
+"</i>Woof! Woof</i>! Shoot it quick! Don't let it suffer!"
+
+Just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., strumming the banjo blithely and Carusoing
+with glee, reached the end of the corridor and executed a brisk 'bout-face,
+he heard a terrific commotion on the stairway, and, a moment later, Butch
+Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Deacon Radford and Monty Merriweather gained the
+top of the stairs. As they were now between the offending Hicks and
+his quarters, there seemed no chance for the sunny Senior to play his
+safety-first policy; so he waited, panic-stricken, as Butch and Beef
+lumbered heavily down the corridor.
+
+"Help! Aid! Succor! Relief! Assistance!" shrieked Hicks, leaning his
+beloved banjo against the wall and throwing himself into what he
+fatuously believed was an intensely pugilistic pose. "I am a believer in
+preparedness. You have me cornered, so beware! I am a follower of Henry
+Ford, but even </i>I</i> will fight--at bay!"
+
+"Well, you are at <i>sea</i> now!" growled Beef, tucking the splinter youth
+under one arm and striding down the corridor, followed by Butch with the
+banjo, and Monty with Deacon. "You desperado, you destroyer of peace and
+quietude, you one-cylinder gadabout! You're off again! We'll instruct you
+to annoy real students, you faint shadow of something human!"
+
+"Them's harsh sentences, Beef!" chuckled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as that
+behemoth kicked open Hicks' door, bore the futilely squirming, kicking
+youth into the room, and hurled him on the davenport. "Watch my banjo,
+there, Butch; have a couple of cares! Say, what'smatter wid youse guys,
+anyhow? This is my first saengerfest for eons. Old Bannister has a clear
+track ahead at last, the Championship is won for <i>sure</i>, and Thor, that
+mighty engine of destruction to Ham's and Ballard's hopes, after much
+tinkering, is hitting on all twelve cylinders. Why, I prithee, deny me the
+pleasure of a little joyous song?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., since the memorable Latham game, when Thor had
+awakened between halves, and the Prodigious Prodigy had shown himself
+worthy of his title by winning the game after defeat leered at old
+Bannister, had suffered a relapse, and was again his old sunny, heedless,
+happy-go-lucky self. Now that John Thorwald had been startled into
+realizing that he loved his college and had been saved from having to
+leave, now that he played football for his Alma Mater, and Bannister's
+hopes of the Championship were roseate, the blithesome Hicks had abandoned
+himself to a golden existence of Beefsteak Busts downtown at Jerry's,
+entertaining jolly comrades in his cozy room, and pestering the campus with
+his banjo and ridiculous imitations of Sheerluck Holmes, the Dachshund
+Detective. Big Butch Brewster, lecturing him for his care-free ways, as
+futilely as he had done for three years past, gave up in despair.
+
+"I might as well be showing moving-pictures to the inmates of a blind
+asylum," he growled on one occasion, "as to persuade you to quit acting
+like a lunatic! You, a Senior--acting like an escaped inhabitant of
+Matteawan! Bah!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, drawing a chair up to the davenport, assumed the manner
+of a physician toward a recalcitrant patient, while Beef carefully stowed
+the banjo in the closet and Deacon Radford, an interested spectator, sat
+on the bed. The happy-go-lucky Hicks, at a loss to account for the strange
+expressions of his comrades, tried to arise, but the football captain
+pinned him down with one hand.
+
+"Seriously, Hicks," spoke Butch, "your saengerfest came at a lamentably
+inopportune time! I regret to Inform you that old Bannister faces another
+problem, with regard to Thor, and unless it is solved, I fear--"
+
+"Thor has balked again?" gasped the dazed Hicks, whom Butch now allowed to
+sit up, as he showed interest. "Has the engine of destruction stalled?
+Why, as fast as we get him lined up, off he slides at an angle! Well, you
+fellows did perfectly right to bring this baffling problem, whatever it is,
+to me. What is the trouble--won't Thor play football?"
+
+The irrepressible Hicks was bewildered at hearing that a new problem
+regarding Thor had arisen, and, naturally, he at once connected it with
+football, since the big Freshman had twice balked in that respect. Since
+his awakening, effected by Theophilus' missionary work, his last appeal,
+and Thor's letter from his father, Thor had earnestly striven to grasp the
+true meaning of college life, to understand campus tradition. No longer did
+he hold aloof, boning always, in his lonely room. Instead, he mingled with
+his fellows, lingering with the team for the skylarking in the shower-room
+after scrimmage, turning out for the nightly mass-meeting. Often, as the
+youths practiced songs and yells on the campus, Thor's terrific rumble was
+heard--some had even dared to slap his massive back and say, "Hello, Thor,
+old man!" and the big Freshman had responded. It was evident to all that
+Thorwald was striving to become a collegian, and knowing his slow, bulldog
+nature, there was no doubt as to his ultimate success; hence T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., was vastly puzzled now.
+
+"Oh, Thor hasn't backslid!" smiled Beef. "You see, Hicks, it's this way:
+Owing to Mr. Thorwald's losing the five thousand dollars, Thor, as you
+know, is working his way at Bannister. Well, with his hustling, his studies
+and football scrimmage, he simply does not have a minute for the other
+phases of college life, for the comradeship with his fellows--"
+
+"Here is his day's schedule," chimed in Deacon, referring to a paper: "Rise
+at four-thirty A. M. Hustle downtown to tend several furnaces until seven.
+Breakfast at seven. Till nine, make beds and sweep dormitory rooms.
+Nine till three-fifteen P. M., recitation periods and dormitory work,
+sandwiched. Then until supper, football practice, and nights study. Add
+to that waiting on tables for the three meals, and what time has Thor to
+broaden and develop, to take in all the big things of campus existence, to
+grow into an all-round college man?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wonderful to chronicle, was silent. He was
+reflecting on the irony of fate; as Deacon said, now that Thor had
+awakened, and earnestly wanted to be a collegian, he had no time to enter
+into campus life. Glad at being able to stay at old Bannister, to keep on
+with his studies, climbing steadily toward his goal, and finding a joy in
+his new relationship with the students, the ponderous Thorwald had flung
+himself into his hustling, as the youths called working one's way at
+college, with zeal. To the huge Freshman, toil was nothing, and since it
+meant that he could keep on with his study, he was content. The collegians
+vastly admired his grim determination; they aided all they could with
+his studies, and helped with his work, so he could have more time for
+scrimmage, and yet another phase of the problem came to Hicks.
+
+It seemed unjust that John Thorwald, after his long years of hard physical
+toil, and his mental struggles, often after hours of grinding work, at the
+very time when the five thousand dollars from Henry B. Kingsley's heirs
+promised him a chance to study without a body tortured and exhausted,
+should be forced again to take up his stern fight for knowledge. And it
+was cruel that Thor, just awakening to the true meaning of college life,
+striving to grasp campus tradition, and eager to serve his Alma Mater in
+every way, should have so little time to mingle with his fellows. He should
+be with them on the campus, on the athletic field, in the dorms., the
+literary society halls, the Y. M. C. A. He should be realizing the golden
+years of college life, the glad comradeship of the campus. Instead, he must
+arise in the bitter cold, gray dawn, and from then until late night toil
+and study unceasingly.
+
+"It's a howling shame!" declared the serious Hicks, a heart full of
+sympathy for Thor. "Just as he wakes up and is trying to understand things
+at old Bannister, bang! the </i>Norwhal</i> is blown up by a stray mine, and
+down goes his dad's money. Why didn't Mr. Thorwald get the five thousand
+transferred to the </i>Valkyrie</i>? Oh, if that money hadn't gone down to Davy
+Jones' locker, Thor would be awakened and have time for college life, too!"
+
+Butch Brewster started to speak when the thunderous tread of John Thorwald
+sounded in the corridor. The Prodigious Prodigy seemed approaching at
+double-quick time, and the youths stared at each other. However, when
+Thor appeared in the doorway, a letter in hand, they gazed at him in
+bewilderment, for his face fairly glowed.
+
+"Read it, fellows, read it!" he breathed, with what, for him, was almost
+excitement. "It just came! Oh, isn't that good news? Read it out, Captain
+Butch. Won't we wallop Ballard now!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, mystified by Thor's happiness, and urged on by his
+equally puzzled comrades, drew out the letter, and a glad smile coming to
+his honest countenance, he read aloud:
+
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA. STEAMSHIP LINE (New York Office)
+
+"Nov. 18, 19--.
+
+"MR. JOHN THORWALD, JR., Bannister College.
+
+"DEAR SIR:
+
+"We beg to state that your father, first mate on our liner, the </i>Valkyrie</i>,
+three days outbound from New York to Christiania, sent a message, <i>via</i>
+wireless, to our New York offices by the inbound Dutch Line's </i>Rotterdam</i>.
+The </i>Rotterdam</i> relayed the message to us, and we forward it herewith,
+<i>verbatim:</i>
+
+"'DEAR SON: Purser of my ship, the </i>Valkyrie</i>, informed me today that the
+purser of the ill-fated </i>Norwhal</i>, learning of my transfer to this liner,
+transferred my $5,000 to the </i>Valkyrie</i> before he sailed to his fate. I am
+sending this <i>via</i> the </i>Rotterdam</i>, inbound, and our office will forward it
+to you. Will write on arriving at Christiania. Father.'
+
+"We are sorry for the delay in forwarding this message, but through an
+accident, it was mislaid in our office for a few days.
+
+"Yours truly,
+
+"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA STEAMSHIP LINE,
+
+"per J. L. G."
+
+
+A moment of silence; outside on the campus the Bannister youths, preparing
+for the mass-meeting in the Auditorium, started cheering. Someone caught
+sight of Thor, standing now by the window of Hicks' room, on the third
+floor of Bannister Hall, and a few seconds later there sounded:
+
+"Thor! Thor! Thor! Thor will bring the Championship to old Bannister! Rah!
+Rah! Rah!--Thor!"
+
+"Oh," shouted T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning happily, his arm across
+Thor's massive shoulders, "'All's well that ends well,' as Bill Shakespeare
+says. It's all right now, Thor. Fate dealt you a hard punch, but it served
+its purpose; for it made you realize how you would regret to leave college.
+Now you won't have to hustle and have all your time filled with toil and
+study; you can go after every phase of campus life, and serve old Bannister
+in so many ways."
+
+John Thorwald stood, a contented look on his placid, impassive face,
+gazing down at the campus below and hearing the plaudits of the excited
+collegians. The stately old elms, gaunt and bare, tossed their limbs
+against a leaden sky; a cold, dreary wind sent clouds of dry leaves
+scurrying down the concrete walks. In the faint moonlight that struggled
+through the clouds, the towers and spires of old Bannister were limned
+against the sky-line. Across the campus, on Bannister Field, the
+goal-posts, skeleton-like, kept their lonely vigil. On that field, in
+less than a week, the Gold and Green must face the crucial test--against
+Ballard's championship eleven, in the Biggest Game; and now, almost on the
+eve of battle, the shackles had been knocked from him; he was free of the
+great burden, free to serve his Alma Mater, to fight for the Gold and
+Green, to grow and develop into an all-round, representative college man.
+
+All of a sudden it dawned on the slow-thinking young Norwegian just how
+much this freedom to grow and expand meant to him, and he turned from the
+window. From below, the shouts of "Thor! Thor! Thor!" drifted, stirring his
+blood, as he looked at Hicks, Butch, Beef, Monty and Deacon.
+
+"'All's well that ends well,' you say. Hicks," he spoke slowly, his face
+joyous. "That's true; but I'm just starting, fellows. I'm just <i>beginning</i>
+to live my college years, not for myself, but for old Bannister, for my
+Alma Mater, for I am awake, and <i>free</i>!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS
+
+
+Big Butch Brewster, a life-sized picture of despair, roosted dejectedly on
+the Senior Fence, between the Gym and the Administration Building. It was
+quite cold, and also the beginning of the last study-period before Butch's
+final and most difficult recitation of the day, Chemistry. Yet instead
+of boning in his warm room, the behemoth Senior perched on the fence and
+stared gloomily into space.
+
+As he sat, enveloped in a penumbra of gloom, the campus entrance door of
+Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., opened suddenly, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., that happy-go-lucky youth, came out cautiously, after the fashion of a
+second-story artist, emerging from his crib with a bundle of swag, the
+last item being represented by a football tucked under Hicks' left arm.
+Beholding Butch Brewster on the Senior Fence, the sunny-souled Senior
+exhibited a perturbation of spirit seeming undecided whether to beat a
+retreat or to advance.
+
+"Now what's ailin' <i>you</i>?" demanded Butch wrathily, believing the
+pestersome Hicks to be acting in that burglarious manner for effect. "Why
+should <i>you</i> sneak out of a dorm., bearing a football like it was an auk's
+egg? Why, you resemble a nigger, making his get-away after robbing a
+hen-roost! Don't torment me, you accident-somewhere-on-its-way-to-happen. I
+feel about as joyous as a traveling salesman who has made a town and gotten
+nary a order!"
+
+"It's <i>awful</i>!" soliloquized T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., perching beside the
+despondent Butch on the Senior Fence. "I am not a fatalist, old man, but
+it <i>does</i> seem that fate hasn't destined Thor to play football for old
+Bannister this season! Here, after he won the Ham game, and we expected him
+to waltz off with Ballard's scalp and the Championship, he has to tumble
+downstairs! Oh, it's tough luck!"
+
+It was two days before the biggest game, with Ballard--the contest that
+would decide the State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Ballard, the
+present champions, discounting even Hamilton's stories of Thor's prowess,
+were coming to Bannister with an eleven more mighty than the one that had
+crushed the Gold and Green the year before, with a heavy, stonewall line,
+fast ends, and a powerful, shifty backfield. The Ballard team was confident
+of victory and the pennant. Bannister, building on the awakened Thorwald,
+superbly sure of his phenomenal strength and power, of his unstoppable
+rushes, serenely practiced the doctrine of preparedness, and awaited the
+day.
+
+And then John Thorwald, the Prodigious Prodigy, whose gigantic frame seemed
+unbattered by the terrific daily scrimmage, whom it was impossible to
+hurt on the gridiron, the day before, going downstairs in Creighton Hall,
+hurrying to a class, had caught his heel on the top step, and crashed to
+the bottom! And now, with a broken ankle, the blond Colossus, heartbroken
+at not being able to win the Championship for old Bannister, hobbled about
+on crutches. Without Thor, the Gold and Green must meet the invincible
+Ballard team! It was a solar-plexus blow, both to the Bannister youths,
+confident in Thor's prowess, building on his Herculean bulk, and to the
+big Freshman. Thorwald, awakened, striving to grasp campus tradition, to
+understand college life, was eager to fling himself into the scrimmage, to
+give every ounce of his mighty power, to offer that splendid body, for his
+Alma Mater, and now he must hobble impotently on the side-line, watching
+his team fight a desperate battle.
+
+"If Bannister only had a sure, accurate drop-kicker!" reflected Captain
+Butch hopelessly. "One who could be depended on to average eight out of ten
+trials, we'd have a fighting chance with Ballard. Deke Radford is a wonder.
+He can kick a forty-five-yard goal, but he's erratic! He might boot the
+pigskin over when a score is needed from the forty-yard line, and again he
+might miss from the twenty-yard mark. Oh, for a kicker who isn't brilliant
+and spectacular, but who can methodically drop 'em over from, say, the
+thirty-five-yard line! Hello, what's the row, Hicks?"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., started to speak, changed his mind, coughed, grew
+red and embarrassed, and acted in a most puzzling manner. At any other
+time, big Butch would have been bewildered; but with Thor's loss weighing
+on his mind, the Gold and Green captain gave his comrade only a cursory
+glance.
+
+"I--I--Oh, nothing, Butch!" stammered Hicks, to whom, being "fussed," as
+Bannister termed embarrassment, was almost unknown. "I--I guess I'll
+take this football over to my locker in the Gym. I ought to glance at my
+Chemistry, too. So-long, Butch; see you later, old top!"
+
+When the splinter-youth had drifted into the Gym., Butch Brewster,
+remembering his strange actions, actually managed to transfer his thoughts
+for a time from the eleven to the care-free T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. The
+behemoth Senior reflected that, to date, the pestiferous Hicks had not
+explained his baffling mystery he recalled the day when he had told the
+Gold and Green eleven of the loyal Hicks' ambition to please his dad by
+winning his B, when he had described the youth's intense college spirit
+and had suggested that if Hicks failed to corral his letter the Athletic
+Association award him one for his loyalty to old Bannister. And Butch saw
+again the bewildering sentences in the letter from Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Sr., to his son.
+
+"Evidently," meditated Butch, literally and figuratively "on the fence,"
+"Hicks has failed to summon up enough self-confidence to explain his
+mystery; queer, too, for he usually is bubbling with faith in himself. He
+has acted like a bashful schoolgirl at frequent times--he starts to tell
+me something, then he gets embarrassed, back-fires, and stalls. He and
+Theophilus have been sneaking out in the early dawn, too. Wow! What did he
+sneak out of the dorm. that way, with a football, for? He looked like a
+yeggman working night shift. Why should <i>he</i> skulk out with a football? He
+has never explained his dad's letter, or told just what Mr. Hicks meant by
+calling him the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and saying those members of old
+Eli wanted him to star! Oh, he's a tantalizing wretch, and I'd like to
+solve his mystery, without his knowledge, so I could--"
+
+At that instant, to the intense indignation and bewilderment of good Butch
+Brewster, little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous Human Encyclopedia of
+old Bannister, exited from Bannister Hall. The Senior boner gave a correct
+imitation of the offending Hicks, in that he skulked out, gazing around
+him nervously; but he portaged no pigskin, and, unlike the sunny youth, on
+periscoping Butch, he seemed relieved.
+
+"Theophilus, <i>come here</i>!" thundered the wrathful football captain,
+shifting his tonnage on the Senior Fence. "What's the plot, anyhow? It's
+bad enough when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sneaks out, bearing a football,
+like an amateur cracksman making a getaway; but when you appear, imitating
+a Nihilist about to hurl a bomb--say, what's the answer to the puzzle, old
+man?"
+
+Little Theophilus, his pathetically frail body trembling with suppressed
+excitement, his big-rimmed spectacles tumbling off with ridiculous
+regularity, and his solemn eyes peering owlishly at his behemoth classmate,
+stood before the startled Butch. It was evident that the 1919 grind
+labored under great stress. He was waging a terrific battle with himself,
+struggling to make some vast and all-important decision. He strove to
+speak, hesitated, choked, coughed apologetically, and acted as fussed as
+Hicks had done, until Butch was wild; then, as if resolved to cast the die
+and cross the Rubicon, he decided, and plunged desperately ahead.
+
+"It's--it's Hicks, Butch!" he quavered, torn cruelly by conflicting
+emotions. "Oh, I don't want to be a traitor--he trusted me with his secret,
+and I--I can't betray him, I just can't! But he didn't make me promise not
+to tell. He just told me not to. Oh, it's his very last chance, Butch, and
+with Thor hurt, old Bannister might need him in the Ballard game."
+
+"What is it, Theophilus, old man?" Butch spoke kindly, for he saw the
+solemn little Senior was intensely excited. "Tell me--if our Alma Mater
+needs any fellow's services, you know, he should give them freely--since
+you did not promise not to tell about Hicks, if Bannister may be able
+to use Hicks against Ballard--though I can't, by any stretch of the
+imagination, figure how--then it is your duty to tell! I think I glimpse
+the dark secret--Hicks possesses some sort of football prowess, goodness
+knows what, and he lacks the confidence to tell Coach Corridan! Now, were
+it only drop-kicking--"
+
+</i>"It is drop-kicking!"</i> Theophilus burst forth desperately. "Hicks is a
+drop-kicker, Butch, and a sure one--inside the thirty-yard line. He almost
+<i>never</i> misses a goal, and he kicks them from every angle, too. He isn't
+strong enough to kick past the thirty-yard line, but inside that he is
+wonderfully accurate. With Thor out of the Ballard game, a drop-kick may
+win for Bannister, and Deke Radford is so erratic! Oh, Hicks will be angry
+with me for telling; but he just won't tell about himself, after all his
+practice, because he fears the fellows will jeer. He is afraid he will fail
+in the supreme test. Oh, I've betrayed him, but--"
+
+"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a drop-kicker!" exploded the dazed Butch, who
+could not have been more astounded had Theophilus announced that the sunny
+youth possessed powers of black magic. "Theophilus Opperdyke, Tantalus
+himself was never so tantalized as I have been of late. Tell me the whole
+story, old man--hurry. Spill it, old top!"
+
+Butch Brewster, by questioning the excited Human Encyclopedia, like a
+police official giving the third degree, slowly extracted from Theophilus
+the startling story. A year before, just as the Gold and Green practiced
+for the Ham game, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one afternoon, had arrayed his
+splinter-structure in a grotesque, nondescript athletic outfit, and had
+jogged out on Bannister Field. The gladsome youth's motive had been free
+from any torturesome purpose. He intended to round up the Phillyloo Bird,
+Shad Weatherby, and other non-athletic collegians, and with them boot the
+pigskin, for exercise. However, little Skeet Wigglesworth, beholding him
+as he donned the weird regalia of loud sweater, odd basket-ball stockings,
+tennis trousers, baseball shoes, and so on, misconstrued his plan, and
+believed Hicks intended to torment the squad. Hence, he hurried out,
+so that when Hicks appeared in the offing, the football squad and the
+spectators in the stands had jeered the happy-go-lucky Junior, and had
+good-natured sport at his expense.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., after Jack Merritt had drop-kicked a forty-yard
+goal, made the excessively rash statement that it was easy. Captain Butch
+Brewster had indignantly challenged the heedless youth to show him, and
+the results of Hicks' effort to propel the pigskin over the crossbar were
+hilarious, for he missed the oval by a foot, nearly dislocated his knee,
+and, slipping in the mud, he sat down violently with a thud. However, so
+the excited Theophilus now narrated, even as the convulsed students jeered
+Hicks, hurling whistles, shouts, cat-calls, songs and humorous remarks at
+the downfallen kicker, one of Hicks' celebrated inspirations had smitten
+the pestersome Junior, evidently jarred loose by his crashing to terra
+firma.
+
+"Hicks figured this way, Butch," explained little Theophilus Opperdyke,
+eloquent in his comrade's behalf, "nature had built him like a mosquito,
+and endowed him with enough power to lift a pillow; hence he could never
+hope to play football on the 'Varsity; but he knew that many games are
+won by drop-kicks and by fellows especially trained and coached for that
+purpose, and they don't need weight and strength, but they must have the
+art, that peculiar knack which few possess. His inspiration was this:
+Perhaps he had that knack, perhaps he could practice faithfully, and
+develop into a sure drop-kicker. If he trained for a year, in his Senior
+season, he might be able to serve old Bannister, maybe to win a big game.
+So he set to work."
+
+Theophilus hurriedly yet graphically narrated how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+had made the loyal, hero-worshiping little Human Encyclopedia his sole
+confidant. He told the thrilled Butch how the sunny youth, from that
+day on, had watched and listened as Head Coach Corridan trained the
+drop-kickers, learning all the points he could gain. Vividly he described
+the mosquito-like Hicks, as he with a football bought from the Athletic
+Association began in secret to practice the fine art of drop-kicking! For a
+year, at old Bannister and at his dad's country home near Pittsburgh, Hicks
+had faithfully, doggedly kept at it. With no one bat Theophilus knowing of
+his great ambition, he had gone out on Bannister Field, when he felt safe
+from observation; here, with his faithful comrade to keep watch, and to
+retrieve the pigskin, he had practiced the instructions and points gained
+from watching Coach Corridan train the booters of the squad. To his vast
+delight, and the joy of his little friend, Hicks had found that he did
+possess the knack, and from before the Ham game until Commencement he had
+kept his secret, practicing clandestinely at old Bannister; he had improved
+wonderfully, and when vacation started the cheery collegian had told his
+beloved dad, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., of his hopes.
+
+The ex-Yale football star, delighted at his son's ambition to serve old
+Bannister and joyous at discovering that Hicks actually possessed the
+peculiar knack of drop-kicking, coached the splinter-youth all summer at
+their country place near Pittsburgh. Under the instruction of Hicks, Sr.,
+the youth developed rapidly, and when he returned to the campus for his
+final year, he was a sure, dependable drop-kicker, inside the thirty-yard
+line. As Theophilus stated, beyond that he lacked the power, but in that
+zone he could boot 'em over the cross-bar from any angle.
+
+"He's been practicing all this season, in secret!" quavered the little
+Senior, "and he's a--a <i>fiend</i>, Butch, at drop-kicking. And yet, here it is
+time for the last game of his college years, and--he lacks confidence to
+tell you, or Coach Corridan. Oh, I'm afraid he will be angry with me for
+betraying him, and yet--I just <i>can't</i> let him miss his splendid chance,
+now that Thor is out and old Bannister <i>needs</i> a drop-kicker!"
+
+Big Butch was silent for a time. The football leader was deeply impressed
+and thrilled by Theophilus Opperdyke's story of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s
+ambition. As he roosted on the Senior Fence, the behemoth gridiron
+star visioned the mosquito-like youth, whom nature had endowed with a
+splinter-structure, sneaking out on Bannister Field, at every chance, to
+practice clandestinely his drop-kicking. He could see the faithful Human
+Encyclopedia, vastly excited at his blithesome colleague's improvement,
+retrieving the pigskin for Hicks. He thrilled again as he thought of the
+bean-pole Hicks, who could never gain weight and strength enough to make
+the eleven, loyally training and perfecting himself in the drop-kick,
+trying to develop into a sure kicker, within a certain zone, hoping
+sometime, before he left college forever, to serve old Bannister. With Thor
+in the line-up at fullback, he would not have been needed, but now, with
+the Prodigious Prodigy out, it was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s big chance!
+
+And Butch Brewster understood why the usually confident Hicks, even with
+the knowledge of his drop-kicking power, hesitated to announce it to old
+Bannister. Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team of Hicks'
+being in earnest in his ridiculous athletic attempts of the past three
+years, no one but himself and Hicks had dreamed that the sunny youth meant
+them, that he really strove to win his B and please his dad. The appearance
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., on Bannister Field was always the cause of
+a small-sized riot among the squad and spectators. Hicks was jeered
+good-naturedly, and "butchered to make a Bannister holiday," as he blithely
+phrased it. Hence, the splinter-Senior was reluctant to announce that he
+could drop-kick. He knew that when tested he would be so in earnest, that
+so much would hang in the balance and the youths, unknowing how important
+it was, would jeer. Then, too, knowing his long list of athletic fiascos,
+ridiculous and otherwise, Hicks trembled at the thought of being sent into
+the biggest game to kick a goal. He feared he might fail!
+
+"You are a <i>hero</i>, Theophilus!" said Butch, with deep feeling. "I can
+realize how hard it was for Hicks to tell us. He would have kept silent
+forever, even after his training in secret! And how you must have suffered,
+knowing he could drop-kick, and yet not desiring to betray him! But your
+love for old Bannister and for Hicks himself conquered. I'll take him out
+on the gridiron, before the fellows come from class, and see what he
+can do. Aha! There is the villain now. Hicks, ahoy! Come hither, you
+Kellar-Herman-Thurston. Your dark secret is out at last!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., peering cautiously from the Gym. basement doorway,
+in quest of the tardy Theophilus, who was to have accompanied him on a
+clandestine journey to Bannister Field, obeyed the summons. Bewildered,
+and gradually guessing the explanation from the shivering little boner's
+alarmed expression, the gladsome youth approached the stern Butch Brewster,
+who was about to condemn him for his silence. "Don't be angry with me,
+Hicks, <i>please</i>!" pled Theophilus, pathetically fearful that he had
+offended his comrade, "I--I just <i>had</i> to tell, for it was positively your
+last chance, and--and old Bannister needs your sure drop-kicking! I never
+promised not to tell. You never made me give my word, so--"
+
+"It was Theophilus' duty to tell!" spoke Butch, hiding a grin, for the
+grind was so frightened, "and yours, Hicks, knowing as you do how we need
+you, with Thor hurt! You graceless wretch, you aren't usually so like ye
+modest violet! Why didn't you inform us, then swagger and say, 'Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks, he'll win the game with a drop-kick?' Now, you come with
+me, and I'll look over your samples. If you've got the goods, it's highly
+probable you'll get your chance, in the Ballard game; and I'm <i>glad</i>, old
+man, for your sake. I know what it would mean, if you win it! But--now that
+the '<i>mystery</i>' is solved, what's that about your being a 'Class Kid,' of
+Yale, '96?"
+
+"That's easy!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his arm across Theophilus'
+shoulders, "I was the first boy born to any member of Yale, '96; it is the
+custom of classes graduating at Yale to call such a baby the class kid!
+Naturally, the members of old Eli, Class of 1896, are vastly interested in
+me. Hence, my Dad wrote they'd be tickled if I won a big game for Bannister
+with a field-goal!"
+
+A moment of silence, Theophilus Opperdyke, gathering from Hicks' arm,
+across his shoulders, that the cheery youth was not so awfully wrathful at
+his base betrayal, adjusted his big-rimmed spectacles, and stared owlishly
+at Hicks.
+
+"Hicks, you--you are not angry?" he quavered. "You are not sorry. I--I
+told--"
+
+"</i>Sorry</i>?" quoth T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., "Class Kid," of Yale, '96, with a
+Cheshire cat grin, "<i>sorry</i>? I should say <i>not</i>--I wanted it to be known to
+Butch, and Coach Corridan, but I got all shivery when I tried to confess,
+and I--couldn't! Nay, Theophilus, you faithful friend, I'm so <i>glad</i>, old
+man, that beside yours truly, the celebrated Pollyanna resembles Niobe,
+weeping for her lost children."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HICKS--CLASS KID--YALE '96
+
+
+ "Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Brekka-kek-kek--Co-Ax--Co-Ax!
+ Whoop-up! Parabaloo! Yale! Yale! Yale!
+ </i>Hicks! Hicks! Hicks</i>!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a cumbersome Gold and Green football
+blanket, and crouching on the side-line, like some historic Indian, felt a
+thrill shake his splinter-structure, as the yell of "old Eli" rolled from
+the stand, across Bannister Field. In the midst of the Gold and Green flags
+and pennants, fluttering in the section assigned the Bannister cohorts, he
+gazed at a big banner of Blue, with white lettering:
+
+YALE UNIVERSITY--CLASS OF 1896
+
+"Oh, Butch," gasped Hicks, torn between fear and hope, "just listen to
+that. Think of all those Yale men in the stand with my Dad! Oh, suppose I
+do get sent in to try for a drop-kick!"
+
+It was almost time far the biggest game to start, the contest with Ballard,
+the supreme test of the Gold and Green, the final struggle for The State
+Intercollegiate Football Championship! In a few minutes the referee's
+shrill whistle blast would sound, the vast crowd in the stands, on the
+side-lines, and in the parked automobiles, would suddenly still their
+clamor and breathlessly await the kick-off--then, seventy minutes of grim
+battling on the turf, and victory, or defeat, would perch on the banners of
+old Bannister.
+
+It was a thrilling scene, a sight to stir the blood. Bannister Field, the
+arena where these gridiron gladiators would fly at each other's throats--or
+knees, spread out--barred with white chalk-marks, with the skeleton-like
+goal posts guarding at each end. On the turf the moleskin clad warriors,
+under the crisp commands of their Coaches, swiftly lined down, shifted to
+the formation called, and ran off plays. Nervous subs. stood in circles,
+passing the pigskin. Drop-kickers and punters, tuning up, sent spirals, or
+end-over-end drop-kicks, through the air. The referee, field-judge, and
+linesmen conferred. Team-attendants, equipped with buckets of water,
+sponges, and ominous black medicine-chests, with Red Cross bandages, ran
+hither and thither. On the substitutes' bench, or on the ground, crouched
+nervous second-string players; Ballard's on one side of the gridiron, and
+Bannister's directly across.
+
+A glorious, sunshiny day in late November, with scarcely a breath of
+wind, the air crisp and bracing; the radiant sunlight fell athwart the
+white-barred field, and glinted from the gay pennants and banners in the
+stands! Here was a riot of color, the gold and green of old Bannister; in
+the next section, the orange and black of Ballard. The bright hues and
+tints of varicolored dresses, and the luster of the official flowers
+all contributed to a bewilderingly beautiful spectacle! Flower-venders,
+peddlers of pennants, sellers of miniature footballs with the college
+colors of one team and the other, hawked their wares, loudly calling above
+the tumult, "Get yer Ballard colors yere!" "This way fer the Bannister
+flags!" Ten thousand spectators, packed into the cheering sections of the
+two colleges, or in the general stands, or standing on the side-lines,
+impatiently awaited the kick-off. At the appearance of each football star,
+a tremendous cheer went up from the mass. Across the field from each other,
+the two bands played stirring strains. The confident Ballard cohorts
+cheered, sang, and yelled and those of Bannister, not <i>quite</i> so sure of
+victory, with Thor out, nevertheless, cheered, sang, and yelled as loudly,
+for the Gold and Green.
+
+The sight of that vast Yale banner, so conspicuous, with its big white
+letters on a field of blue, amidst the fluttering pennants of gold and
+green, excited comment among the Ballard followers. The Bannister students,
+however, knew what it meant; Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., and thirty
+members of Yale, '96, were in the stand, ready to cheer Captain Butch's
+eleven, and hoping for a chance to whoop it up for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+if he got his big chance.
+
+Two days before, when little Theophilus Opperdyke, after a terrible
+struggle with himself, divided between loyalty to Hicks and a love for
+his Alma Mater, had betrayed his toothpick class-mate to Captain. Butch
+Brewster, that behemoth Senior had rounded up Coach Corridan, and together
+they had dragged the shivering Hicks out to the football field. Here, while
+the rest of the student body, unsuspecting the important event in progress,
+made good use of the study-hour, or attended classes in Recitation Hall,
+the Gold and Green Coach, with the team-Captain, and the excited Human
+Encyclopedia, watched T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. show his samples of
+drop-kicks. And the success of that happy-go-lucky youth, after his nervous
+tension wore off, may be attested by the Slave-Driver's somewhat slangy
+remark, when the exhibition closed.
+
+"Butch," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, impressively, "what it
+takes to drop-kick field-goals, from anywhere inside the thirty-yard line,
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is broke out with!"
+
+The proficiency attained by the heedless Hicks in the difficult art of
+drop-kicking, gained by faithful practice for a year, aided by his Dad's
+valuable coaching, was wonderful. Of course, Hicks possessed naturally the
+needed knack, but he deserved praise for his sticking at it so loyally. He
+had no surety that he would ever be of use to his college, and, indeed,
+with the advent of Thor, his hopes grew dim, yet he plugged on, in case old
+Bannister might sometime need him--and yet, but for Theophilus, he would
+not have summoned the courage to tell! To the surprise and delight of the
+Coach and Captain, Hicks, after missing a few at first, methodically booted
+goals over the crossbar from the ten, twenty, and thirty-yard lines, and
+from the most difficult angles. There was nothing showy or spectacular in
+his work, it was the result of dogged training, but he was almost sure,
+when he kicked!
+
+[Illustration D: He was almost sure, when he kicked!]
+
+"Good!" ejaculated Coach Corridan, his arm across Hicks' shoulders, as they
+walked to the Gym. "Hicks, the chances are big that I'll send you in to try
+for a goal tomorrow, if Bannister gets blocked inside the thirty-yard line!
+Just keep your nerve, boy, and boot it over! Now--I'll post a notice for
+a brief mass-meeting at the end of the last class period, and Butch and I
+will tell the fellows about you, and how you may serve Bannister."
+
+"That's the idea!" exulted Butch, joyous at his comrade's chance to get in
+the biggest game. "The fellows will understand, Hicks, old man, and they
+won't jeer when you come out this afternoon. They'll root for you! Oh, just
+wait until you hear them cheer you, and <i>mean</i> it--you'll astonish the
+natives, Hicks!"
+
+Butch's prophecy was well fulfilled. In the scrimmage that same day, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., shivering with apprehensive dread, his heart in his
+shoes, sat on the side-line. In the stands, the entire student-body,
+informed in the mass-meeting of his ability, shrieked for "Hicks! Hicks!
+Hicks!" Near the end of the practice game, the hard-fighting scrubs fought
+their way to the 'Varsity's thirty-yard line, and another rush took it five
+yards more. Coach Corridan, halting the scrimmage, sent the right-half-back
+to the side-line, and a moment later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. hurried out
+on the field with the Bannister Band playing, the collegians yelling
+frenziedly, and excitement at fever height, the sunny youth took his
+position in the kick formation. Then a silence, a few seconds of suspense,
+as the pigskin whirled back to him, and then--a quick stepping forward,
+a rip of toe against the leather, and--above the heads of the 'Varsity
+players smashing through, the football shot over the cross-bar!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" was the shout, </i>"Hicks will beat Ballard!"</i>
+
+That night, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., having crossed the Rubicon, and
+committed himself to Coach Corridan and Captain Brewster, had dispatched a
+telegraphic night-letter to his beloved Dad. He informed his distinguished
+parent that his drop-kicking powers were now known to old Bannister, and
+that the chances were fifty-fifty that he would be sent in to try for a
+field-goal in the biggest game. On the day before the game, Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., in a night-letter, had wired back:
+
+
+Son Thomas:
+
+Am on my way to New Haven for Yale-Harvard game. Will stop off at old
+Bannister--bringing thirty members of Yale '96. We hope our Class Kid will
+get his chance against Ballard.
+
+Dad.
+
+
+On the morning of the Bannister-Ballard game, Mr. Hicks' private car the
+</i>Vulcan</i>, with the Pittsburgh "Steel King," and thirty other members of
+Yale, '96, had reached town. They had ridden in state to College Hill in
+good old Dan Flannagan's jitney, where T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., proudly
+introduced his beloved Dad to the admiring collegians. All morning, Mr.
+Hicks had made friends of the hero-worshiping youths, who listened to his
+tales of athletic triumphs at Bannister and at old Yale breathlessly. The
+ex-Yale star had made a stirring speech to the eleven, sending them out on
+Bannister Field resolved to do or die!
+
+"My Dad!" breathed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., crouched on the side line; as
+he gazed at the Yale banner, he could see his father, with his athletic
+figure, his strong face that could be appallingly stern or wonderfully
+tender and kind. Like the sunny Senior, Mr. Hicks, despite his wealth,
+was thoroughly democratic and already the Bannister collegians were his
+comrades.
+
+"Here we go, Hicks!" spoke Butch Brewster, as the referee raised his
+whistle to his lips. "Hold yourself ready, old man; a field-goal may win
+for us, and I'll send you in just as soon as I find all hope of a touchdown
+is gone. If they hold us back of the thirty-yard line, I'll try Deke
+Radford, but inside it, you are far more sure."
+
+The vast crowd, a moment before creating an almost inconceivable din,
+stilled with startling suddenness; a shrill blast from the referee's
+whistle cut the air. The gridiron cleared of substitutes, coaches,
+trainers, and rubbers-out, and in their places, the teams of Bannister and
+Ballard jogged out. Captain Brewster won the toss, and elected to receive
+the kick-off. The Gold and Green players, Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Biff,
+Pudge, Bunch, Tug, Hefty, Buster, and Ichabod, spread out, fan-like,
+while across the center of the field the Ballard eleven, a straight line,
+prepared to advance as the full-back kicked off. There was a breathless
+stillness, as the big athlete poised the pigskin, tilted on end, then
+strode back to his position.
+
+"All ready, Ballard?" The Referee's call brought an affirmative from the
+Orange and Black leader.
+
+"Ready, Bannister?"
+
+"Ready!" boomed big Butch Brewster, with a final shout of encouragement to
+his players.
+
+The biggest game was starting! Before ten thousand wildly excited and
+partisan spectators, the Gold and Green and the Orange and Black would
+battle for Championship honors; with Thor out of the struggle, Ballard,
+three-time Champion, was the favorite. The visitors had brought the
+strongest team in their history, and were supremely confident of victory.
+Bannister, however, could not help remembering, twice fate had snatched
+the greatest glory from their grasp, in Butch's Sophomore year, when Jack
+Merritt's drop-kick struck the cross-bar, and a year later, when Butch
+himself, charging for the winning touchdown, crashed blindly into the
+upright. Old Bannister had not won the Championship for five years, and
+now--when the chances had seemed roseate, with Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy--smashing Hamilton out of the way, Fate had dealt the annual blow
+in advance, by crippling him.
+
+"Oh, we've <i>got</i> to win!" shivered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "Oh, I hope I
+don't get sent in--I mean--I hope Bannister wins without me! But if I <i>do</i>
+have to kick--Oh, I hope I send it over that cross-bar--"
+
+A second later the Ballard line advanced, the fullback's toe ripped into
+the pigskin, sending it whirling, high in air, far into Bannister's
+territory; the yellow oval fell into the outstretched arms of Captain
+Butch Brewster, on the Gold and Green's five-yard line, and--"We're off!"
+shrieked Hicks, excitedly. "Come on, Butch--run it back! Oh, we're off."
+
+The biggest game had started!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE GREATER GOAL
+
+
+"Time out!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., enshrouded in a gold and green blanket, and
+standing on the side-line, like a majestic Sioux Chief, gazed out on
+Bannister Field. There, on the twenty-yard line, the two lines of scrimmage
+had crashed together and Bannister's backfield had smashed into Ballard's
+stonewall defense with terrific impact, to be hurled back for a five-yard
+loss. The mass of humanity slowly untangled, the moleskin clad players rose
+from the turf, all but one. He, wearing the gold and green, lay still,
+white-faced, and silent.
+
+"It's Biff Pemberton!" chattered Hicks, shivering as with a chill. "Oh, the
+game is lost, the Championship is gone. Biff is out, and the last quarter
+is nearly ended. Coach Corridan has got to send me in to kick. It's our
+very last chance to tie the score, and save old Bannister from defeat!"
+
+The time keeper, to whom the referee had megaphoned for time out, stopped
+the game, while Captain Butch Brewster, the campus Doctor, and several
+players worked over the senseless Biff. In the stands, the exultant Ballard
+cohorts, confident that victory was booked to perch on their banners, arose
+<i>en masse,</i> and their thunderous chorus drifted across Bannister Field:
+
+ "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,
+ And we'll put Bannister in that hole!
+ In that hole--in--that--hole--
+ Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"
+
+From the Bannister section, the Gold and Green undergraduates, alumni, and
+supporters, feeling a dread of approaching defeat grip their hearts, yet
+determined to the last, came the famous old slogan of encouragement to
+elevens battling on the gridiron:
+
+ "Smash 'em, boys, run the ends--hold, boys, <i>hold</i>--
+ Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!
+ Touchdown! Touchdown! Hold, boys, <i>hold,
+ Don't</i> let 'em win from the Green and the Gold!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with a groan of despair, sat down on the deserted
+subs. bench. With a feeling that all was lost, the splinter-like Senior
+gazed at the big score-board, announcing, in huge, white letters and
+figures:
+
+4TH QUARTER; TIME TO PLAY--2 MIN.; BANNISTER'S BALL ON BALLARD'S 22-YD.
+LINE; 4TH DOWN--8 YDS. TO GAIN; SCORE: BALLARD--6; BANNISTER--3.
+
+It had been a terrific contest, a biggest game never to be forgotten by
+the ten thousand thrilled spectators! Each eleven had been trained to the
+second for this decisive Championship fight, and with the coveted gonfalon
+of glory before them, the Bannister players battled desperately, while
+Ballard's fighters struggled as grimly for their Alma Mater. For six years,
+the Gold and Green had failed to annex the Championship, and for the past
+three, the invincible Ballard machine had rushed like a car of Juggernaut
+over all other State elevens; one team was determined to wrest the
+banner from its rival's grasp, and the other fully as resolved to retain
+possession, hence a memorable gridiron contest, to which even the alumni
+could find none in past history to compare, was the result.
+
+Weakened by the loss of Thor, whose colossal bulk and Gargantuan strength
+would have made victory a moral certainty, presenting practically the same
+eleven that had faced Ballard the past season and had been defeated by a
+scant margin, old Bannister had started the first quarter with a furious
+rush that swept the enemy to midfield without the loss of a first down.
+Then Ballard had rallied, stopping that triumphal march, on its own
+thirty-five yard line, but unable to check Quarterback Deacon Radford, who
+booted a forty-three-yard goal from a drop-kick, with the score 3-0 in
+Bannister's favor, and Deacon, a brilliant but erratic kicker, apparently
+in fine trim, the Gold Green rooters went wild.
+
+In the second half, however, came the break of the game, as sporting
+writers term it. The strong Ballard eleven found itself, and with a series
+of body-smashing, bone-crushing rushes, battering at the Bannister lines
+like the Germans before Verdun, they steadily fought their way, trench by
+trench, line by line, down the field. Without a fumble, or the loss of a
+single yard, the terrific, catapulting charges forced back old Bannister,
+until the enemy's fullback, who ran like the famous Johnny Maulbetsch,
+of Michigan, shot headlong over the goal line! The attempt for goal from
+touchdown failed, leaving the score, at the end of the third quarter,
+Ballard--6; Bannister--3.
+
+And Deacon Radford, whose first effort at drop-kicking had been so
+brilliant, failed utterly. Three times, taking a desperate chance, the
+Bannister quarter booted the pigskin, but the oval flew wide of the goal
+posts, even from the thirty-yard line. With his mighty toe not to be
+depended on, with the Gold and Green line worn to a frazzle by Ballard's
+battering rushes, unable to beat back the victorious enemy, the Bannister
+cohorts, dismayed, saw the start of the fourth and final quarter, their
+last hope. The forward pass had been futile, for the visitors were trained
+especially for this aerial attack, and with ease they broke up every
+attempt. And then, with the ball in Ballard's possession on Bannister's
+twenty-yard line, came a fumble--like a leaping tiger, Monty Merriweather
+had flung himself on the elusively bounding ball, rolled over to his feet,
+and was off down the field.
+
+"Touchdown! Touchdown! Touchdown!" shrieked old Bannister's madly excited
+students, as Monty sprinted. "Go it, Monty--<i>touchdown</i>! Sprint, old man,
+<i>sprint</i>!"
+
+But Cupid Colfax, Ballard's famous sprinter, playing quarterback, was off
+on Monty's trail almost instantly, and his phenomenal speed cut down the
+Ballard end's advantage; still, by dint of exerting every ounce of energy,
+it was on Ballard's forty-yard line that Monty Merriweather, hugging the
+pigskin grimly, finally crashed to earth.
+
+"Come on, Bannister!" shouted Captain Butch Brewster, as the two teams
+lined down. "Right across the goal-line, then kick the goal, and we win!
+Play the game--<i>fight</i>--Oh, we can win the Championship right now."
+
+Then ensued a session of football spectacular in the extreme, replete with
+thrilling plays, with sensational tackles, and blood-stirring scrimmage.
+The Bannister players, nerved by Captain Brewster's exhortation, by sheer
+will-power drove their battered bodies into the scrimmage. End runs,
+line-smashing tandem plays, forward passes, followed in bewildering
+succession, until the ball rested on Ballard's twenty-yard line, and a
+touchdown meant victory and the Championship for old Bannister, Another
+rush, and five yards gained, then, Ballard, fighting at the last ditch,
+made a stand every bit as heroic and thrilling as that sensational march
+in the first half. The Gold and Green's tigerish rushes were hurled
+back--three times Captain Butch threw his backfield against the line, and
+three times not an inch was gained. On the third down, Monty Merriweather
+was forced back for a loss, so now, with two minutes to play and the ball
+in Bannister's possession, with eight yards to gain, the play was on
+Ballard's twenty-two-yard line!
+
+And the biggest game had produced a new hero of the gridiron. Biff
+Pemberton, left half-back, imbued with savage energy, had borne the brunt
+of that spectacular advance; and now, he stretched on the turf, white and
+still.
+
+"Hicks, old man," T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. turned as a hand rested grippingly
+on his shoulder. Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, his face grim, had come
+to him, and in quick, terse sentences, he outlined his plan.
+
+"It's Bannister's last chance--" he said, tensely. "We <i>can't</i> make the
+first down, the way Ballard is fighting, unless we take desperate odds.
+Now, Hicks, it's <i>up to you</i>. On <i>you</i> depend old Bannister's hopes."
+
+A great, chilling fear swept over T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., leaving him weak
+and shaken. It had come at last-the moment for which he had trained and
+practiced drop-kicking, for a year, in secret, that moment he had hoped
+would come, sometime, and yet had dreaded, as in a nightmare. Before that
+vast, howling crowd of ten thousand madly partisan spectators, <i>he</i> must
+go out on Bannister Field, to try and boot a drop-kick from the
+twenty-eight-yard-line, to save the Gold and Green from defeat. And he
+thought of the great glory that would be his, if he succeeded-he would be a
+campus hero, the idol of old Bannister, the youth who saved his Alma Mater
+from defeat, in the biggest game! Then he remembered his Dad, inspiring
+the eleven, between the halves, by a ringing speech; he heard again his
+sentences:
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal! Go back into the game, throw yourselves into
+the scrimmage, with no thought of personal glory, of the plaudits of the
+crowd--it is a fine thing, a splendid goal, to play the game and be a hero;
+it is a far more noble act to strive for the greater goal, one's Alma
+Mater!"
+
+"Now listen carefully," Coach Corridan rushed on, "Biff is knocked out.
+They'll start again soon, we are going to take a desperate chance; your Dad
+advises it! A tie score means the Championship stays with Ballard. To win
+it, we must <i>win</i> this game--and on <i>you</i> everything depends."
+
+"But--how--" stammered Hicks, dazed--the only way to <i>tie</i> the score was by
+a drop-kick; the only way to win, by a touchdown--did the Coach mean he was
+<i>not</i> to realize his great ambition to save old Bannister by a goal, the
+reward of his long training?
+
+"You jog out," whispered Coach Corridan, hurriedly, for a stretcher was
+being rushed to Biff Pemberton, "report to the Referee, and whisper to
+Butch to try Formation Z; 23-45-6-A! Now, here is the dope: our only chance
+is to fool Ballard completely. When you go out, the Bannister rooters, and
+your Yale friends, will believe it is to try a drop-kick and tie the score.
+I am sure that the Ballard team will think this, too, because of your
+slender build. You act as though you intend to try for a goal, and have
+Captain Butch make our fellows act that way. Then--it is a fake-kick; the
+backfield lines up in the kick formation, but the ball is passed to Butch,
+at your right. He either tries for a forward pass to the right end, or
+if the end Is blocked, rushes it himself! Hurry-the referee's whistle is
+blowing; remember, Hicks, my boy, it's the greater goal, it's for your Alma
+Mater."
+
+In a trance, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., flung off the gold and green blanket,
+and dashed out on Bannister Field. How often, in the past year, had he
+visioned this scene, only--he pictured himself saving the game by a
+drop-kick, and now Coach Corridan ordered him to sacrifice this glory! From
+the stands came the thunderous cheer of the excited Bannister cohorts,
+firmly believing that the slender youth, so ludicrously fragile, among
+those young Colossi, was to try for a goal.
+
+"Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hicks! Kick the goal--Hicks!"
+
+And from the Yale grads., among them his Dad, came a shout, as he jogged
+across the turf:
+
+"Breka-kek-kek--co-ax--Yale! Hicks-Hicks-Hicks!"
+
+But the Bannister Senior did not thrill. Now, instead, a feeling of growing
+resentment filled his soul; even this intensely loyal youth, with all his
+love for old Bannister, was vastly human, and he felt cheated of his just
+rights. How the students were cheering him, how those Yale men called his
+name, and he was not to have his big chance! That for which he had trained
+and practiced; the opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, by kicking a goal
+at the crucial moment, and saving Bannister from defeat, was never to be
+his. Now, in his last game at college, he was to act as a decoy, as a foil.
+Like a dummy he must stand, while the other Gold and Green athletes ran off
+the play! Instead of everything, a tie game, or a defeat, depending on his
+kicking, defeat or victory hung on that fake play, on Butch Brewster
+and Monty Merriweather! So--the ear-splitting plaudits of the crowd for
+"Hicks!" meant nothing to him; they were dead sea fruit, tasteless as
+ashes--as the ashes of ambition. And then--
+
+"--And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor to our dear Alma
+Mater, is our greater goal--no thought of personal glory--a splendid goal,
+to play the game and be a hero; It is a far more noble act to strive for
+the greater goal--one's Alma Mater--"
+
+"I was nearly a <i>traitor</i>" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his Dad's words
+echoing In his memory, and a vision of that staunch, manly Bannister
+ex-athlete before him. "Oh, I was betraying my Alma Mater. Instead of
+rejoicing to make <i>any</i> sacrifice, however big, for Bannister, I thought
+only of myself, of my glory! I'll do it, Dad, I'll strive for the greater
+goal, and--we just can't fail."
+
+Reaching the scrimmage, Hicks, whose nervous dread had left him, when
+he fought down selfish ambition, and thirst for glory, reported to the
+Referee, and hurriedly transferred Coach Corridan's orders to Captain
+Butch Brewster; half a minute of precious time was spent in outlining the
+desperate play to the eleven, for "time!" had been called, and then--
+
+"Z-23-45-6-A!" shouted Quarterback Deacon Radford. "Come on, line--hold!
+Right over the cross-bar with it, Hicks--tie the score, and save Bannister
+from defeat--"
+
+The Gold and Green backfield shifted to the kick formation. Ten yards back
+of the center, on the thirty-two-yard line of Ballard, stood T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.; the vast crowd was hushed, all eyes stared at that slender
+figure, standing there, with Captain Butch Brewster at his right, and Beef
+McNaughton on his left hand-the spectators believed the frail-looking
+youth had been sent in to try a drop-kick. The Ballard rooters thought
+it, and--the Ballard eleven were <i>sure</i> of their enemy's plan--Hicks'
+mosquito-like build, his nervous swinging of that right leg, deluded them,
+and helped Coach Corridan's plot.
+
+It was the only play, if Bannister wanted the Championship enough to try a
+desperate chance; better a fighting hope for that glory, with a try for
+a touchdown, than a field-goal, and a tie-score! The lines of scrimmage
+tensed. The linesmen dug their cleats in the sod, those of Ballard tigerish
+to break through and block; old Bannister's determined to <i>hold</i>. Back of
+Ballard's line, the backfield swayed on tip-toe, every muscle nerved, ready
+to crash through; the ends prepared to knock Roddy and Monty aside, the
+backs would charge madly ahead, in a berserk rush, to crash into that slim
+figure.
+
+"Boot it, Hicks!" shrieked Deke Radford, and as he shouted, the pigskin
+shot from the Bannister center's hands; the Gold and Green line held nobly,
+but not so the ends. Monty Merriweather, making a bluff at blocking the
+left end, let him crash past, while he sprinted ahead--Captain Butch
+Brewster, to whom the pass had been made, ran forward, until he saw he was
+blocked, and then, seeing Monty dear, he hurled a beautiful forward pass.
+
+Into the arms of the waiting Monty it fell, and that Gold and Green star,
+absolutely free of tacklers, sprinted twelve yards to the goal-line,
+falling on the pigskin behind it! Coach Corridan's "100 to 1" chance,
+suggested by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., had succeeded, and--the
+Biggest Game and the Championship had come to old Bannister at last!
+
+Followed a scene pauperizing description! For many long years old Bannister
+had waited for this glory; years of bitter disappointment, seasons when the
+Championship had been missed by a scant margin, a drop-kick striking the
+cross-bar, Butch Brewster blindly crashing into an upright. But now, all
+their pent-up joy flowed forth in a mighty torrent! Singing, yelling,
+dancing, howling, the Bannister Band leading them, the Gold and Green
+students, alumni, Faculty, and supporters, snake-danced around Bannister
+Field. A vast, writhing, sinuous line, it wound around the gridiron,
+everyone who possessed a hat flinging it over the cross-bars. The
+victorious eleven, were borne by the maddened youths--Captain Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Monty, Roddy, Ichabod, Tug, Hefty, Buster, Bunch, and--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. Ballard, firmly believing Hicks would try a field-goal, had
+been taken completely off guard. Surprised by the daring attempt, it had
+succeeded with ease, and the final score was Bannister--10; Ballard--6!
+
+"At last! At last!" boomed Butch Brewster, to whom this was the happiest
+day of his life. "The Championship at last. My great ambition is realized.
+Old Bannister has won the Championship, and I was the Team Captain!"
+
+After a time, when "the shouting and the tumult died," or at least quieted
+somewhat, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., felt a hand on his arm, and looking down
+from the shoulders on which he perched, he saw his Dad. Mr. Hicks' strong
+face was aglow with pride and a vast joy, and he shook his son's hand again
+and again.
+
+"I understand, Thomas!" he said, and his words were reward enough for the
+youth. "It was a <i>big</i> sacrifice, but you made it gladly--I know! You
+gave up personal glory for the greater goal, and--old Bannister won the
+Championship! You helped win, for the winning play turned on <i>you</i>. It was
+splendid, my son, and I am proud of you! No matter if your sacrifice is
+never known to the fellows, </i>I</i> understand."
+
+A moment of silence on Hicks' part; then the sunny youth grinned at his
+beloved Dad, as he responded blithesomely: "I'm Pollyanna, that old
+Bannister and </i>I</i> won out, Dad!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"
+
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, human beings,
+and--</i>Freshmen</i>! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the Olympic High-Jump
+Champion, holder of the World's record, and winner at the Panama-Pacific
+International Exposition National Championships, in his event, is about to
+high jump! The bar is at five feet, ten inches. Mr. Hicks is the Herculean
+athlete in the crazy-looking bathrobe."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his splinter-structure enshrouded in that
+flamboyant bathrobe of vast proportions and insane colors, that inevitably
+attended his athletic efforts, shaming Joseph's coat-of-many-colors, gazed
+despairingly at his good friend, Butch Brewster, and Track-Coach Brannigan,
+with a Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance.
+
+"It's no use, Butch, it's no use!" quoth he, with ludicrous indignation,
+as big Tug Cardiff, the behemoth shot-putter, through a huge megaphone
+imitated a Ballyhoo Bill, and roared his absurd announcement to the
+hilarious crowd of collegians in the stand. "Old Bannister will <i>never</i>
+take my athletic endeavors seriously. Here I have won two second places,
+and a third, in the high-jump this season, and have a splendid show to
+annex <i>first</i> place and my track B in the Intercollegiates, but--hear
+them!"
+
+It was a balmy, sunshiny afternoon in late May. The sunny-souled,
+happy-go-lucky T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had trained indefatigably for
+the high jump, with the result that he had won several points for his
+team--however, he had not realized his great ambition of first place, and
+his track letter.
+
+As Hicks now exclaimed to his team-mate and Coach Brannigan, no matter,
+to the howling Bannister youths, if he <i>had</i> won three places in the high
+jump, in regularly scheduled meets; his comrades had been jeering at
+his athletic fiascos for nearly four years, and even had Hicks suddenly
+blossomed out as a star athlete, they would not have abandoned their joyous
+habit. Still, those football 'Varsity players to whom good Butch had read
+Hicks, Sr.'s, letters, and explained the sunny youth's persistence, despite
+his ridiculous failures, though they kept on hailing his appearance on
+Bannister Field with exaggerated joy, understood the care-free collegian,
+and loved him for his ambition to please his Dad. Since Hicks had
+absolutely refused to accept his B, for any sport, unless he won it
+according to Athletic Association eligibility rules, the eleven had kept
+secret the contents of the letters Butch Brewster had read to them, for
+Hicks requested it.
+
+The Bannister College track squad, under Track Coach Brannigan and Captain
+Spike Robertson, had been training most strenuously for that annual
+cinder-path classic, the State Intercollegiate Track and Field
+Championships. The sprinters had been tearing down the two-twenty
+straightaway like suburban commuters catching the 7.20 A.M. for the city.
+Hammer-throwers and shot-putters--the weight men--heaved the sixteen-pound
+shot, or hurled the hammer, with reckless abandon, like the Strong Man of
+the circus. Pole-vaulters seemed ambitious to break the altitude records,
+and In so doing, threatened to break their necks; hurdlers skimmed over
+the standard as lightly as swallows, though no one ever beheld swallows
+hurdling. The distance runners plodded determinedly around the quarter-mile
+track, broad-jumpers tried to jump the length of the landing-pit. And T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., vainly essayed to clear five-ten In the high-jump!
+
+It was the last-named event that "broke up the show," as the Phillyloo Bird
+quaintly stated, somewhat wrongly, since the appearance of that blithesome
+youth in the offing, his flamboyant bathrobe concealing his shadow-like
+frame, had <i>started</i> the show, causing the track squad, as well as a
+hundred spectator-students, to rush for seats in the stand. The arrival
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., to train for form and height in the high-jump,
+though a daily occurrence, was always the signal for a Saturnalia of sport
+at his expense, because--
+
+"You can't live down your athletic past, Hicks!" smiled good-hearted Butch
+Brewster. "Your making a touchdown for the other eleven, by running the
+wrong way with the pigskin, your hilarious fiascos in every sport, your
+home-run with the bases full, on a strike-out-are specters to haunt you.
+Even now that you have a chance to win your B, just listen to the fellows."
+
+The track squad's "heavy weight--white hope" section, composed of
+hammer-heavers and shot-putters--Tug Cardiff, Beef McNaughton, Pudge
+Langdon, Buster Brown, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and Bunch
+Bingham, equipped with megaphones, and with the <i>basso profundo</i> voices
+nature gave them, lined up on both sides of the jumping-standards, and
+chanted loudly:
+
+ "All hail to T. Haviland Hicks!
+ He runs like a carload of bricks;
+ When to high jump he tries
+ From the ground he can't rise--
+ For he's built on a pair of toothpicks!"
+
+This saengerfest was greeted with vociferous cheers from the vastly amused
+youths in the stands, who hailed the grinning Hicks with jeers, cat-calls,
+whistles, and humorous (so they believed) remarks:
+
+"Say, Hicks, you won't <i>never</i> be able to jump anything but your
+board-bill!"
+
+"You're built like a grass-hopper, Hicks, but you've done lost the hop!"
+
+"If you keep on improving as you've done lately, you'll make a high-jumper
+in a hundred more years, old top!"
+
+"You may rise in the world, Hicks, but never in the high jump!"
+
+"Don't mind them, Hicks!" spoke Coach Brannigan, his hands on the
+happy-go-lucky youth's shoulders. "Listen to me; the Intercollegiates will
+be the last track meet of your college years, and unless you take first
+place in your event, you won't win your track B. Second, McQuade, of
+Hamilton, will do five-eight, and likely an inch higher, so to take first
+place, you, must do five-ten. You have trained and practiced faithfully
+this season, but no matter what I do, I <i>can't</i> give you that needed two
+inches, and--"
+
+"I know it, Coach!" responded the chastened Hicks, throwing aside his
+lurid bathrobe determinedly, and exposing to the jeering students his
+splinter-frame. "Leave it to Hicks, I'll clear it this time, or--"
+
+"Not!" fleered Butch, whom Hicks' easy self-confidence never failed to
+arouse. "Hicks, listen to me, </i>I</i> can tell you why you can't get two inches
+higher. The whole trouble with you is this; for almost four years you have
+led an indolent, butterfly, care-free existence, and now, when you must
+call on yourself for a special effort, you are too lazy! You can dear
+five-ten; you ought to do it, but you can't summon up the energy. I've
+lectured you all this time, for your heedless, easy-going ways, and
+now--you pay for your idle years!"
+
+"You said an encyclopedia, Butch!" agreed the Coach, with vigor. "If only
+something would just <i>make</i> Hicks jump that high, if only he could do it
+once, and know it is in his power, he could do it in the Intercollegiates,
+aided by excitement and competition! Let something <i>scare</i> him so that he
+will sail over five-ten, and--he will win his B. He has the energy, the
+build, the spring, and the form, but as you say, he is so easy-going and
+lazy, that his natural grass-hopper frame avails him naught."
+
+"Here I go!" announced Hicks, who, to an accompaniment of loud cheers from
+the stand, had been jogging up and down in that warming-up process known to
+athletes as the in place run, consisting of trying to dislocate one's
+jaw by bringing the knees, alternately, up against the chin. "Up and
+over--that's my slogan. Just watch Hicks."
+
+Starting at a distance of twenty yards from the high-jump standards, on
+which the cross-bar rested at five feet, ten inches, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., who vastly resembled a grass-hopper, crept toward the jumping-pit,
+on his toe-spikes, as though hoping to catch the cross-bar off its guard.
+Advancing ten yards, he learned apparently that his design was discovered,
+so he started a loping gallop, turning to a quick, mad sprint, as though he
+attempted to jump over the bar before it had time to rise higher. With a
+beautiful take-off, a splendid spring--a quick, writhing twist in air, and
+two spasmodic kicks, the whole being known as the scissors form of high
+jump, the mosquito-like youth made a strenuous effort to clear the needed
+height, but--one foot kicked the cross-bar, and as Hicks fell flat on his
+back, in the soft landing-pit, the wooden rod, In derision, clattered down
+upon his anatomy.
+
+"Foiled again!" hissed Hicks, after the fashion of a "Ten-Twent'-Thirt'"
+melodrama-villain, while from the exuberant youths in the grandstand,
+who really wanted Hicks to clear the bar, but who jeered at his failure,
+nevertheless, sounded:
+
+"Hire a derrick, Hicks, and hoist yourself over the bar!"
+
+"Your <i>head</i> is light enough--your feet weigh you down!"
+
+"'Crossing the Bar'--rendered by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!"
+
+"Going up! Go play checkers, Hicks, you ain't no athlete!"
+
+While the grinning, albeit chagrined T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., reposed
+gracefully on his back, staring up at the cross-bar, which someone kindly
+replaced on the pegs, big Butch Brewster, who seemed suddenly to have
+gone crazy, tried to attract Coach Brannigan's attention. Succeeding,
+Butch--usually a grave, serious Senior, winked, contorted his visage
+hideously, pointed at Hicks, and sibilated, "</i>Now</i>, Coach--now is your
+chance! Tell Hicks--"
+
+Tug Cardiff, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, Bunch Bingham, Buster
+Brown, Beef McNaughton, and Pudge Langdon, who had been attacked in a
+fashion similar to Butch's spasm, concealed grins of delight, and made
+strenuous efforts to appear guileless, as Track-Coach Brannigan approached
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. To that cheery youth, who was brushing the dirt from
+his immaculate track togs, and bowing to the cheering youths in the stand,
+the Coach spoke:
+
+"Hicks," he said sternly, "you need a cross-country jog, to get
+more strength and power in your limbs! Now, I am going to send the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade for a four-mile run, and you go with them.
+Oh, don't protest; they are all shot-putters and hammer-throwers, but
+Butch, and they can't run fast enough to give a tortoise a fast heat. Take
+'em out two miles and back, Butch, and jog all the way; don't let 'em loaf!
+Off with you,"
+
+The unsuspecting Hicks might have detected the nigger in the woodpile, had
+he not been so anxious to make five-ten in the high-jump. However, willing
+to jog with these behemoths, with whom even he could keep pace, so as to
+develop more jumping power, the blithesome youth cast aside his garish
+bathrobe, pranced about in what he fatuously believed was Ted Meredith's
+style, and howled:
+
+"Follow Hicks! All out for the Marathon--we're off! One--two--three--<i>go</i>!"
+
+With the excited, track squad, non-athletes, and the baseball crowd, which
+had ceased the game to watch the start, yelling, cheering, howling, and
+whistling, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drawing his knees up in exaggerated
+style at every stride, started to lead the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+on its cross-country run. Without wondering why Coach Brannigan had
+suddenly elected to send <i>him</i> along with the hammer-throwers and
+shot-putters, on the jog, and not having seen the insane facial contortions
+of the Brigade, before the Coach gave orders, the gladsome Senior
+started forth in good spirits, resembling a tugboat convoying a fleet of
+battleships.
+
+"'Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! And over the country we go!'" warbled Hicks, as the squad
+left Bannister Field, and jogged across a green meadow. "'--O'er hill and
+dale, through valley and vale, Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho!'"
+
+"Save your wind, you insect!" growled Butch Brewster, with sinister
+significance that escaped the heedless Hicks, as the behemoth Butch, a
+two-miler, swung into the lead. "You'll <i>need</i> it, you fish, before we get
+back to the campus! Not <i>too</i> fast, you flock of human tortoises. You'll be
+crawling on hands and knees, if you keep that pace up long!"
+
+A mile and a half passed. Butch, at an easy jog, had led his squad over
+green pastures, up gentle slopes, and across a plowed field, by way of
+variety. At length, he left the road on which the pachydermic aggregation
+had lumbered for some distance, and turned up a long lane, leading to a
+farm-house. Back of it they periscoped an orchard, with cherry-trees,
+laden with red and white fruit, predominating. Also, floating toward the
+collegians on the balmy May air came an ominous sound:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof! Bow-wow-wow! Woof!"
+
+"Come on, fellows!" urged Butch Brewster. "We'll jog across old Bildad's
+orchard and seize some cherries--the old pirate can't catch us, for we are
+attired for sprinting. Don't they look good?"
+
+"Nothing stirring!" declared Hicks, slangily, but vehemently, as he stopped
+short in his stride. "Old Bildad has got a bulldog what am as big as the
+New York City Hall. He had it on the campus last month, you know! Not for
+mine! I don't go near that house, or swipe no cherries from his trees. If
+you wish to shuffle off this mortal coil, drive right ahead, but </i>I</i> will
+await your return here."
+
+T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, dread of dogs, of all sizes, shapes, pedigrees,
+and breeds, was well known to old Bannister; hence, the Heavy-weights now
+jeered him unmercifully. Old "Bildad," as the taciturn recluse was called,
+who lived like a hermit and owned a rich farm, did own a massive bulldog,
+and a sight of his cruel jaws was a "No Trespass" sign. With great
+forethought, when cherries began to ripen, the farmer had brought Caesar
+Napoleon to the campus, exhibited him to the awed youths, and said, "My
+cherries be for <i>sale</i>, not to be <i>stole</i>!" which object lesson, brief as
+it was, to date, had seemed to have the desired effect. Yet--here was Butch
+proposing that they literally thrust their heads, or other portions of
+their anatomies, into the jaws of death!
+
+"Well," said Bunch Bingham at last, "I tell you what; we'll jog up to the
+house and ask old Bildad to <i>sell</i> us some cherries; we can pay him when he
+comes to the campus with eggs to sell, Come along. Hicks, I'll beard the
+bulldog in his kennel."
+
+So, dragged along by the bulky hammer-throwers and shot-putters, the
+protesting T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in mortal terror of Caesar Napoleon, and
+the other canine guardians of old Bildad's property, progressed up the lane
+toward the house.
+
+"I got a hunch," said the reluctant Hicks, sadly, "that things ain't
+a-comin' out right! In the words of the immortal Somebody-Or-Other, 'This
+'ere ain't none o' <i>my</i> doin'; it's a-bein' thrust on me!' All right, my
+comrades, I'll be the innocent bystander, but heed me--look out for the
+bulldog!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON
+
+
+The Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, towing the mosquito-like T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., advanced on the stronghold of old Bildad, so named because he
+was a pessimistic Job's comforter, like Bildad, the Shuhite, of old--like
+a flock of German spies reconnoitering Allied trenches. Hearing the house,
+with Butch and Beef holding the helpless, but loudly protesting Hicks, who
+would fain have executed what may mildly be termed a strategic retreat, big
+Tug Cardiff boldly marched, in close formation, toward the door, when the
+portal suddenly flew open.
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Let go, Butch--there's the dog!"
+
+Amid ferocious howls from Caesar Napoleon, and alarmed protests from the
+paralyzed Hicks, who could not have run, with his wobbly knees, had he
+been set free by his captors, old Bildad, towed from the house by Caesar
+Napoleon, who strained savagely at the leash until his face bulged, burst
+upon the scene with impressive dramatic effect! It was difficult to decide,
+without due consideration, which was the more interesting. Bildad, a huge,
+gnarled old Viking, with matted gray hair, bushy eyebrows, a flowing beard,
+and leathery face, a fierce-looking giant, was appalling to behold, but so
+was Caesar Napoleon, an immense bulldog, cruel, bloodthirsty, his massive
+jaws working convulsively, his ugly fangs gleaming, as he set his great
+body against the leash, and gave evidence of a sincere desire to make free
+lunch of the Bannister youths. As Buster Brown afterward stated, "Neither
+one would take the booby prize at a beauty show, but at that, the bulldog
+had a better chance than Bildad!" T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., let it be
+recorded, could not have qualified as a judge, since his undivided
+attention was awarded to Caesar Napoleon!
+
+"What d'ye want round here, ye rapscallions?" demanded Bildad, courteously,
+holding the savage bulldog with one hand, and constructing a ponderous
+fist with the other, "</i>Hike</i>--git off'n my land, y'hear? </i>Git</i>, er Caesar
+Napoleon'll git holt o' them scanty duds ye got on!"
+
+"We want to--to buy some cherries, Mr.--Mr. Bildad!" explained Bunch
+Bingham, edging away nervously. "We won't steal any, honest, sir. Well pay
+you for them the very next time you come to the campus with milk and eggs."
+
+"Ho! Ho!" roared old Bildad, piratically, his colossal body shaking, "A
+likely tale, lads--an' when I come for my money, ye'll jeer me off the
+campus, an' tell me to whistle for it! Off my land--<i>git,</i> an' don't let me
+cotch ye on it inside o' two minutes, or I'll let Caesar Napoleon make a
+meal off'n yer bones--<i>git</i>!"
+
+To express it briefly, they got. T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., not standing on
+the order of his going, set off at a sprint that, while it might have
+caused Ted Meredith to lose sleep, also aroused in Caesar Napoleon an
+overwhelming desire to take out after the fugitive youth, so that Mr.
+Bildad was forced to exert his vast strength to hold the massive bulldog.
+Butch, Beef, Hefty, Tug, Buster, Bunch, Pudge, and Biff, a pachydermic
+crew, awed by Caesar Napoleon's bloodthirsty actions, jogged off in the
+wake of Hicks, who confidently expected to hear the bulldog giving tongue,
+on his trail, at every second.
+
+Another lane, making in from a road making a cross-roads with the one
+from which they came to Bildad's house, ran alongside the orchard for two
+hundred yards, inside the fence; at its end was a high roadgate. At
+what they decided was a safe distance from the "war zone," the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the latter
+forcibly restrained from widening the margin between him and peril, held a
+council on preparedness.
+
+"The old pirate!" stormed Butch Brewster, gazing back to where the vast
+figure of old Bildad, striding toward the house, towered. "We can't let him
+get away with that, fellows. I'll have some of his cherries now, or--"
+
+"No, no--<i>don't</i>, Butch!" chattered Hicks, whose dread of dogs amounted to
+an obsession. "He can still see us, and if you leave the lane, he will send
+Caesar Napoleon after us! Oh, <i>don't</i>--"
+
+But Butch Brewster, evidently wrathful at being balked, strode from the
+path, or lane, of virtue, toward a cherry-tree, whose red fruit hung
+temptingly low, and his example was followed by every one of the Brigade,
+leaving the terrified Hicks to wait in the lane, where, because of his
+alarm, he had no time to wonder at the bravado of his behemoth comrades.
+However, finding that Bildad had disappeared, and believing he had taken
+Caesar Napoleon into the house, the sunny Hicks, who was far from a coward
+otherwise, but who had an unreasonable dread of dogs, little or big, was
+about to wax courageous, and join his team-mates, when a wild shout burst
+from Pudge Langdon:
+
+"Run, fellows--<i>run</i>! Bildad's put the bulldog on us! Here comes--Caesar
+Napoleon--!"
+
+With a blood-chilling </i>"Woof! Woof!"</i> steadily sounding louder, nearer,
+a streak of color shot across the orchard, from the house, toward the
+affrighted Brigade, while old Bildad's hoarse growl shattered the echoes
+with "Take 'em out o' here, Nap--chaw 'em up, boy!" For a startled second,
+the youths stared at the on-rushing body, shooting toward them through the
+orchard-grass at terrific speed, and then:
+
+"Run!" howled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., terror providing him with wings, as
+per proverb. Down the lane, at a pace that would have done credit to Barney
+Oldfield in his Blitzen Benz, the mosquito-like youth sprinted madly, and
+ever, closer, closer on his trail, sounded that awful "Woof! Woof!" from
+Caesar Napoleon, who, as Hicks well knew, was acting with full authority
+from Bildad! He heard, as he fled frantically, the excited shouts of his
+comrades.
+
+"Beat it, Hicks--he's right after you--run! Run!"
+
+"Jump the fence--he can't get you then--jump!"
+
+"He's right on your trail, Hicks--<i>sprint</i>, old man!"
+
+"Make the fence, old man--<i>jump</i> it--and you're <i>safe</i>!"
+
+The terrible truth dawned on the frightened youth, as he desperately
+sprinted: the innocent bystander always gets hurt. He had protested against
+the theft of Bildad's cherries, and naturally, the bulldog had kept after
+<i>him</i>! But it was too late to stop, for the old adage was extremely
+appropriate, "He who hesitates is lost." He must <i>make</i> that road-gate, and
+tumble over it, in some fashion, or be torn to shreds by Caesar Napoleon,
+the savage dog that the cruel Bildad had sent after the youths.
+
+Nearer loomed the road-gate, appallingly high. Closer sounded the panting
+breath of the ferocious Caesar Napoleon, and his incessant "Woof-woof!"
+became louder. It seemed to the desperate Hicks that the bulldog was at his
+heels, and every instant he expected to feel those sharp teeth take hold of
+his anatomy! Once, the despairing youth imitated Lot's wife and turned his
+head. He saw a body streaking after him, gaining at every jump, also he
+lost speed; so thereafter, he conscientiously devoted his every energy to
+the task in hand, that of making the gate, and getting over it, before
+Caesar Napoleon caught his quarry!
+
+At last, the road-gate, at least ten feet high, to Hicks' fevered
+imagination, came so close that a quick decision was necessary, for Caesar
+Napoleon, also, was in the same zone, and in a few seconds he would
+overhaul the fugitive. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., realizing that a second
+lost, perhaps, might prove fatal to his peace of mind, desperately resolved
+to dash at the gate, and jump; if he succeeded even in striking somewhere
+near the top, and falling over, he would not care, for the bulldog would
+not follow him off Bildad's land. From his comrades, far in the rear, came
+the chorus:
+
+"Jump, Hicks! He's right on your heels!"
+
+Like the immortal Light Brigade, Hicks had no time to reason about
+anything. His but to jump or be bitten summed up the situation. So, with
+a last desperate sprint, a quick dash, he left the ground--luckily, the
+earth was hard, giving him a solid take-off, and he got a splendid spring.
+As he arose In air, al! the training and practicing for form stayed with
+him, and instinctively he turned, writhed, and kicked--
+
+For a fleeting second, he saw the top of the gate beneath his body, and
+he felt a thrill as he beheld twisted strands of barbed wire, cruel and
+jagged, across it; then, with a great sensation of joy, he knew that he
+had cleared the top, and a second later, he landed on the ground, in the
+country road, in a heap.
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., that sunny-souled, happy-go-lucky, indolent youth,
+for once in his care-free campus career aroused to strenuous action,
+scrambled wildly to his feet, and forcibly realized the truth of
+Longfellow's, "And things are not-what they seem!" Instead of the
+ferocious, bloodthirsty bulldog, Caesar Napoleon, a huge, half-grown
+St. Bernard pup gamboled inside the gate, frisking about gleefully, and
+exhibiting, even so that Hicks, with all his innate dread of dogs, could
+understand it, a vast friendliness. In fact, he seemed trying to say,
+"That's fun. Come on and play with me some more!"
+
+"Hey, fellows," shrieked the relieved Hicks, "that ain't Caesar Napoleon!
+Why, he just wanted to play."
+
+Bewildered, the members of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade of the
+Bannister College track squad rushed on the scene. To their surprise, they
+found not a savage bulldog, but a clumsy, good-natured St. Bernard puppy,
+who frisked wildly about them, groveled at their feet, and put his huge
+paws on them, with the playfulness of a juvenile elephant.
+
+"Why, it <i>isn't</i> Nappie, for a fact!" gasped Butch. "Oh, I am so glad
+that old Bildad wasn't mean enough to put the bulldog after us, for he is
+dangerous. He scared us, though, and put this pup on our trail. He wanted
+to play, and he thought it all a game, when Hicks fled. Oho! What a joke on
+Hicks."
+
+"I don't care!" grinned Hicks, thus siding with the famous Eva Tanguay.
+"You fellows were fooled, too! You were too <i>scared</i> to run, and if it had
+been Caesar Napoleon, I'd have saved your worthless lives by getting him
+after me! I'll bet Bildad is snickering now, the old reprobate! Why, Tug,
+are you <i>crazy</i>?"
+
+Tug Cardiff, indeed, gave indications of lunacy. He marched up to the
+road-gate, and stood close to it, so that the barbed wire top was even with
+his hair; then he backed off, and gazed first at the gate, then at the
+bewildered Hicks, while he grinned at the dazed squad in a Cheshire cat
+style.
+
+"Measure it, someone!" he shouted. "I am nearly six feet tall, and it comes
+even with the top of my dome! Can't you see, you brainless imbeciles, Hicks
+cleared it."
+
+"Wait for me here!" howled big Butch Brewster, climbing the fence and
+starting down the road at a pace that did credit even to that fast
+two-miler. The Brigade, In the absence of their leader, tried to estimate
+the height of the gate, and Hicks, gazing at its barbed-wire top,
+shuddered. The St. Bernard pup, having caused T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for
+once in his indolent life to exert every possible ounce of energy in his
+splinter-frame, groveled at his feet, and strove to express his boundless
+joy at their presence.
+
+Butch Brewster, in fifteen minutes, returned, panting and perspiring,
+bearing a tape-measure, borrowed at the next farm-house. With all the
+solemnity of a sacred rite being performed, the youths waited, as Butch and
+Tug, holding the tape taut, carefully measured from the ground to the top
+of the barbed wire on the gate. Three times they did this, and then, with
+an expression of gladness on his honest countenance, Butch hugged the
+dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while Tug Cardiff howled, "Now for the
+Intercollegiates and your track B, Hicks! You <i>can</i> do five-ten in the
+meet, for Coach Brannigan said you could dear it, if only you did it
+<i>once</i>."
+
+"Why--what do you mean, Tug?" quavered Hicks, not daring to allow himself
+to believe the truth. "You--you surely don't mean--"
+
+"I mean, that now you <i>know</i> you can jump that high," boomed Tug, executing
+a weird dance of exultation, In which, the Brigade joined, until it
+resembled a herd of elephants gone insane, "for you have done it--allowing
+for the sag, and everything, that gate is just five feet, ten inches high,
+and--<i>you cleared it</i>!"
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen--Hicks, of Bannister, is about to high jump! Hicks
+and McQuade, of Hamilton, are tied for first place at five feet eight
+inches! McQuade has failed three times at five-ten! Hicks' third and last
+trial! Height of bar--five feet ten inches!"
+
+This time, however, it was not big Tug Cardiff, imitating a Ballyhoo
+Bill, and inciting the Bannister youths to hilarity at the expense of the
+sunny-souled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; it was the Official Announcer at the
+Annual State Intercollegiate Field and Track Championships, on Bannister
+Field, and his announcement aroused a tumult of excitement in the Bannister
+section of the stands, as well as among the Gold and Green cinder-path
+stars.
+
+"Come on, Hicks, old man!" urged Butch Brewster, who, with a dozen fully
+as excited comrades of the cheery Hicks, surrounded that splinter-athlete.
+"It's positively your last chance to win your track B, or your letter in
+any sport, and please your Dad! If they lower the bar, and you two jump off
+the tie, McQuade's endurance will bring him out the winner."
+
+"You <i>can</i> clear five-ten!" encouraged Bunch Bingham. "You did it once,
+when you believed Caesar Napoleon was after you. Just summon up that much
+energy now, and clear that bar! Once over, the event and your letter are
+won! Oh, if we only had that bulldog here, to sick on you."
+
+Sad to chronicle, the score-board of the Intercollegiates recorded the
+results of the events, so far, thus:
+
+ HAMILTON ............35 BALLARD .............20 BANNISTER ...........28
+
+It was the last event, and even did Hicks win the high-jump, McQuade's
+second place would easily give old Ham. the Championship. Hence, knowing
+that victory was not booked for an appearance on the Gold and Green
+banners, the Bannister youths, wild for the lovable, popular Hicks to win
+his Bs vociferously pulled for him:
+
+"Come on, Hicks--up and over, old man--it's <i>easy</i>!"
+
+"Jump, you Human Grass-Hopper--you can do it!"
+
+"Now or never, Hicks! One big jump does the work!"
+
+"Sick Caesar Napoleon on him, Coach; he'll clear it then!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., casting aside that flamboyant bathrobe, for what he
+believed was the last athletic event of his campus career, stood gazing at
+the cross-bar. One superhuman effort, a great explosion of all his energy,
+such as he had executed when he cleared the gate, thinking Caesar Napoleon
+was after him, and the event was won! He <i>had</i> cleared that height, it was
+within his power. If he failed, as Butch said, the bar would be lowered,
+and then raised until one or the other missed once. McQuade, with his
+superior strength and endurance, must inevitably win, but as he had just
+missed on his third trial at five-ten, if Hicks cleared that height on
+<i>his</i> final chance, the first place was his.
+
+"And my B!" murmured Hicks, tensing his muscles. "Oh, won't my Dad be
+happy? It will help him to realize some of his ambition, when I show him my
+track letter! It is positively my last chance, and I <i>must</i> clear it."
+
+With a vast wave of determined confidence inundating his very being, Hicks
+started for the bar; after those first, peculiar, creeping steps, he had
+just started his gallop, when he heard Tug Cardiff's <i>basso</i>, magnified by
+a megaphone, roared:
+
+"All together, fellows--<i>let 'er go</i>--"
+
+Then, just as Hicks dug his spikes into the earth, in that short, mad
+sprint that gives the jumper his spring, just as he reached the take-off,
+a perfect explosion of noise startled him, and he caught a sound that
+frightened him, tensed as he was:
+
+"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Woof! Woof! Look out, Hicks, Caesar Napoleon
+is after you!"
+
+Psychology Is inexplicable. Ever afterward, Hicks' comrades of that
+cross-country run averred strenuously that their roaring through
+megaphones, in concert, imitating Caesar Napoleon's savage bark at the
+psychological moment, flung the mosquito-like youth clear of the cross-bar
+and won him the event and his B. Hicks, however, as fervidly denied this
+statement, declaring that he would have won, anyhow, because he had
+summoned up the determination to do it! So it can not be stated just what
+bearing on his jump the plot of Butch Brewster really had. In truth, that
+behemoth had entertained a wild idea of actually hiring old Bildad and
+Caesar Napoleon to appear at the moment Hicks started for his last trial,
+but this weird scheme was abandoned!
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had escaped from the
+riotous Bannister students, delirious with joy at the victory of the
+beloved youth, the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade, capturing the
+grass-hopper Senior, gave him a shock second only to that which he had
+experienced when first he believed Caesar Napoleon was on his trail.
+
+"Perhaps our barking didn't make you jump it!" said Beef McNaughton, when
+Hicks indignantly denied that he had been scared over the cross-bar, "but
+indirectly, old man, we helped you to win! If we had not put up a hoax on
+you--"
+
+"A <i>hoax</i>?" queried the surprised Hicks. "What do you mean--hoax?"
+
+"It was all a frame-up!" grinned Butch Brewster, triumphantly. "We paid old
+Bildad five dollars to play his part, and as an actor, he has Booth and
+Barrymore backed off the stage! We got Coach Brannigan to send you along
+with us on the cross-country jog, and your absurd dread of dogs, Hicks,
+made it easy! Bildad, per instructions, produced Caesar Napoleon, and
+scared you. Then, with a telescope, he watched us, and when I gave the
+signal, he let loose Bob, the harmless St. Bernard pup, on our trail.
+
+"The pup, as he always does, chased after strangers, ready to play. We
+yelled for you to run, and you were so <i>scared</i>, you insect, you didn't
+wait to see the dog. Even when you looked back, in your alarm, you didn't
+know it was not Caesar Napoleon, for his grim visage was seared on your
+brain--I mean, where your brain ought to be! And even had you seen it
+wasn't the bulldog, you would have been frightened, all the same. But I
+confess, Hicks, when you sailed over that high gate, it was one on <i>us</i>."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drew a deep breath, and then a Cheshire cat grin
+came to his cherubic countenance. So, after all, it had been a hoax; there
+had not been any peril. No wonder these behemoths had so courageously taken
+the cherries! But, beyond a doubt, the joke <i>had</i> helped him to win his
+B. It had shown him he could clear five feet, ten inches, for he had done
+it--and, in the meet, when the crucial moment came, the knowledge that he
+<i>had</i> jumped that high, and, therefore, could do it, helped--where the
+thought that he never had cleared it would have dragged him down. He had at
+last won his B, a part of his beloved Dad's great ambition was realized,
+and--
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth that sunny-souled, irrepressible
+youth, swaggering a trifle, "It was my mighty will-power, my terrific
+determination, that took me over the cross-bar, and not--<i>not</i> your
+imitation of--"
+
+"Woof! Woof! Woof!" roared the "Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade" in
+thunderous chorus. "Sick him--Caesar Napoleon--!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY
+
+
+"Come on, Butch! Atta boy--some fin, old top! Say, you Beef--you're asleep
+at the switch. What time do you want to be called? More pep there,
+Monty--bust that little old bulb, Roddy! Aw, rotten! </i>Say</i>, Ballard, your
+playing will bring the Board of Health down on you--why don't you bring
+your first team out? Umpire? What--do you call that an umpire? Why, he's
+a highway robber, a bandit. Put a 'Please Help the Blind' sign on that
+hold-up artist!"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, captain of the Bannister College baseball squad,
+navigating down the third-floor corridor of Bannister Hall, the Senior
+dormitory, laden with suitcases, bat-bags, and other impedimenta, as Mr.
+Julius Caesar says, and vastly resembling a bell-hop in action, paused in
+sheer bewilderment on the threshold of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cozy room.
+
+"Hicks!" stormed the bewildered Butch, wrathfully, "what in the name of Sam
+Hill <i>are</i> you doing? Are you crazy, you absolutely insane lunatic? This
+is a study-hour, and even if <i>you</i> don't possess an intellect, some of the
+fellows want to exercise their brains an hour or so! Stop that ridiculous
+action."
+
+The spectacle Butch Brewster beheld was indeed one to paralyze that
+pachydermic collegian, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the sunny-souled,
+irrepressible Senior, danced madly about on the tiger-skin rug in midfloor,
+evidently laboring under the delusion that he was a lunatical Hottentot at
+a tribal dance; he waved his arms wildly, like a signaling brakeman, or
+howled through a big megaphone, and about his toothpick structure was
+strung his beloved banjo, on which the blithesome youth twanged at times an
+accompaniment to his jargon:
+
+"Come on, Skeet, take a lead (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>!) Say, d'ye wanta marry
+first base--divorce yourself from that sack! (<i>plunk-plunk</i>!) </i>Oh</i>, you
+bonehead--steal--you won't get arrested for it! Hi! Yi! </i>Ouch</i>, Butch! Oh,
+I'll be good--"
+
+At this moment, the indignant Butch abruptly terminated T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, noisy monologue by seizing that splinter-youth firmly by the scruff
+of the neck and forcibly hurling him on the davenport. Seeing his loyal
+class-mate's resemblance to a Grand Central Station baggage-smasher, the
+irrepressible Senior forthwith imitated a hotel-clerk:
+
+"Front!" howled the grinning Hicks, to an imaginary bellboy, "Show this
+gentleman to Number 2323! Are you alone, sir, or just by yourself? I think
+you will like the room-it faces on the coal-chute, and has hot and cold
+folding-doors, and running water when the roof leaks! The bed is made once
+a week, regularly, and--"
+
+"Hicks, you Infinitesimal Atom of Nothing!" growled big Butch, ominously.
+"What were you doing, creating all that riot, as I came down the corridor?
+What's the main idea, anyway, of--"
+
+"Heed, friend of my campus days," chortled the graceless Hicks, keeping
+a safe distance from his behemoth comrade, "tomorrow-your baseball
+aggregation plays Ballard College, at that knowledge-factory, for the
+Championship of the State. Because nature hath endowed me with the
+Herculean structure of a Jersey mosquito, I am developing a 56-lung-power
+voice, and I need practice, as </i>I</i> am to be the only student-rooter at the
+game tomorrow! Q.E.D.! And as for any Bannister student, except perhaps
+Theophilus Opperdyke and Thor, desiring to investigate the interiors of
+their lexicons tonight, I prithee, just periscope the campus."
+
+"I guess you are right, Hicks!" grinned Butch Brewster, as he looked from
+the window, down on an indescribably noisy scene. "For once, your riotous
+tumult went unheard. Say, get your traveling-bag ready, and leave that
+pestersome banjo behind, if you want to go with the nine!"
+
+Several members of the Gold and Green nine, embryo American and National
+League stars, roosted on the Senior Fence between the Gymnasium and the
+Administration Building, with, suitcases and bat-bags on the grass. In a
+few minutes old Dan Flannagan's celebrated jitney-bus would appear in the
+offing, coming to transport the Bannister athletes downtown to the station,
+for the 9 P.M. express to Philadelphia. Incited by Cheer-Leaders Skeezicks
+McCracken and Snake Fisher, several hundred youths encouraged the nine,
+since, because of approaching final exams., they were barred by Faculty
+order from accompanying the team to Ballard. In thunderous chorus they
+chanted:
+
+ "One more Job for the undertaker!
+ More work for the tombstone maker!
+ la the local ceme<i>tery</i>, they are very--very--<i>very</i>
+ Busy on a brand-new grave for--Ballard!"
+
+As the lovable Hicks expressed it, "'Coming events cast their shadows
+before.' Commencement overshadows our joyous campus existence!" However, no
+Bannister acquaintance of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., could detect wherein the
+swiftly approaching final separation from his Alma Mater had affected in
+the least that happy-go-lucky, care-free, irrepressible youth. If anything,
+it seemed that Hicks strove to fight off thoughts of the end of his golden
+campus years, using as weapons his torturesome saengerfests, his Beefsteak
+Busts down at Jerry's, and various other pastimes, to the vast indignation
+of his good friend and class-mate, Butch Brewster, who tried futilely to
+lecture him into the proper serious mood with which Seniors must sail
+through Commencement!
+
+"You are a Senior, Hicks, a Senior!" Butch would explain wrathfully. "You
+are popularly supposed to be dignified, and here you persist in acting like
+a comedian in a vaudeville show! I suppose you intend to appear on the
+stage, and, when handed your sheepskin, respond by twanging your banjo and
+roaring a silly ballad."
+
+Yet, the cheery Hicks had been very busy, since that memorable day when,
+thanks to Caesar Napoleon and the hoax of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-
+Brigade of the track squad, he had cleared the cross-bar at five-ten,
+and won the event and his white B! Mr. T. Haviland Hicks, Sr., overjoyed
+at his son's achievement, had sent him a generous check, which the youth
+much needed, and had promised to be present at the annual Athletic
+Association Meeting, at Commencement, when the B's were awarded
+deserving athletes, which caused Hicks as much joy as the pink slip.
+With his final study sprint for the Senior Finals, his duties as team-
+manager of the baseball nine, his preparations for Commencement, his
+social duties at the Junior Prom., and multifarious other details
+coincident to graduation, the heedless Hicks had not found time to be
+sorrowful at the knowledge that it soon would end, forever, that he must
+say "Farewell, Alma Mater," and leave the campus and corridors of old
+Bannister; yet soon even Hicks' ebullient spirits must fail, for
+Commencement was a trifle over a week off.
+
+"Hicks, you lovable, heedless, irrepressible wretch," said Big Butch,
+affectionately, as the two class-mates thrilled at the scene. "Does it
+penetrate that shrapnel-proof concrete dome of yours that the Ballard game
+tomorrow is the final athletic contest of my, and likewise your, campus
+career at old Bannister?"
+
+"Similar thoughts has smote my colossal intellect, Butch!" responded the
+bean-pole Hicks, gladsomely. "But--why seek to overshadow this joyous scene
+with somber reflections? You-should-worry. You have annexed sufficient B's,
+were they different, to make up an alphabet. You've won your letter on
+gridiron, track, and baseball field, and you've been team-captain of
+everything twice! Why, therefore, sheddest thou them crocodile tears?"
+
+"Not for myself, thou sunny-souled idler!" announced Butch, generously,
+"But for <i>thee</i>! I prithee, since you pritheed me a few moments hence, let
+that so-called colossal intellect of yours stride back along the corridors
+of Time, until it reaches a certain day toward the close of our Freshman
+year. Remember, you had made a hilarious failure of every athletic event
+you tried-football, basketball, track, and baseball; you had just made a
+tremendous farce of the Freshman-Sophomore track meet, and to me, your
+loyal comrade, you uttered these rash words, 'Before I graduate from old
+Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!'
+
+"I reiterate and repeat, tomorrow's game with Ballard is the last chance
+you will have. There is no possibility that you, with your well-known lack
+of baseball ability, will get in the game, and--your track B, won in the
+high-jump, is the only B you have won! Now, do you still maintain that you
+will make good that rash vow?"
+
+"'Where there's a will, there's a way.' 'Never say die.' 'While there's
+life, there's hope.' 'Don't give up the ship.' 'Fight to the last ditch.'
+'In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as <i>fail</i>,'"
+quoth the irrepressible Hicks, all in a breath. "As long as there is an
+infinitesimal fraction of a chance left, I repeat, just leave it to Hicks!"
+
+"You haven't got a chance in the world!" Butch assured him, consolingly.
+"You did manage to get into one football game, for a minute, and you were a
+'Varsity player that long. By sticking to it, you have won your track B in
+the high-jump, thanks to your grass-hopper build, and we rejoice at your
+reward! Your Dad is happy that you've won a B, so why not be sensible, and
+cease this ridiculous talk of winning your B in <i>three</i> sports, when you
+can see it is preposterously out of the question, absolutely impossible--"
+
+It was not that Butch. Brewster did not <i>want</i> his sunny classmate to win
+his B in three sports, or that he would have failed to rejoice at Hicks'
+winning the triple honor. Had such a thing seemed within the bounds of
+possibility, Butch, big-hearted and loyal, would have been as happy as
+Hicks, or his Dad. But what the behemoth athlete became wrathful at was the
+obviously lunatical way in which the cheery Hicks, now that his college
+years were almost ended, parrot-like repeated, "Oh, just leave it to
+Hicks!" when he must know all hope was dead. In truth, T, Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., in pretending to maintain still that he would make good the rash
+vow of his Freshman year, had no purpose but to arouse his comrade's
+indignation; but Butch, serious of nature, believed there really lurked in
+Hicks' system some germs of hope.
+
+"We never know, old top!" chuckled Hicks, though he was <i>sure</i> he could
+never fulfill that promise, as he had not played three-fourths of a season
+on both the football and the baseball teams, "Something may show up at the
+last minute, and--"
+
+At that moment, something evidently did show up, on the campus below, for
+the enthusiastic students howled in: thunderous chorus, as the "Honk!
+Honk!" of a Claxon was heard, "Here he comes! All together, fellows--the
+Bannister yell for the nine--then for good old Dan Flannagan!"
+
+As Hicks and Butch watched from the window, old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus,
+to the discordant blaring of a horn, progressed up the driveway, even as it
+had done on that night in September, when it transported to the campus
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. Amid salvos of
+applause from the Bannister youths, and blasts of the Claxon, old Dan
+brought "The Dove" to a stop before the Senior Fence, and bowed to the
+nine, grinning genially the while.
+
+"The car waits at the door, sir!" spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., touching
+his cap after the fashion of an English butler, before seizing a bat-bag,
+and his suit-case. "As team manager, I must attempt to force into Skeet
+Wigglesworth's dome how he and the five subs, are to travel on the C. N. &
+Q., to Eastminster, from Baltimore. Come on, Butch, we're off--"
+
+"You are always off!" commented Butch, good-humoredly, as he seized his
+baggage and followed the mosquito-like Hicks from the room, downstairs, and
+out on the campus. Here the assembled youths, with yells, cheers, and songs
+sandwiched between humorous remarks to Dan Flannagan, watched the thrilling
+spectacle of the Gold and Green nine, with the Team Manager and five
+substitutes, fifteen in all, squeeze into and atop of Dan Flannagan's
+jitney-Ford.
+
+"Let me check you fellows off," said Hicks, importantly, peering into the
+jitney, for he, as Team Manager, had to handle the traveling expenses.
+"Monty Merriweather, Roddy Perkins, Biff Pemberton. Butch Brewster, Skeet
+Wigglesworth, Beef McNaughton, Cherub Challoner, Ichabod Crane, Don
+Carterson; that is the regular nine, and are you five subs, present? O. K.
+Skeet, climb out here a second."
+
+Little Skeet Wigglesworth, the brilliant short-stop, climbed out with
+exceeding difficulty, and facing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., he saluted in
+military fashion. The team manager, consulting a timetable of the C. N.
+&.Q. railroad, fixed him with a stern look.
+
+"Skeet," he spoke distinctly, "now, <i>get this</i>--myself and eight regulars,
+<i>nine</i> in all, will take the 9 P. M. express for Philadelphia, and stay
+there all night. Tomorrow, at 8 A. M., we leave Broad Street Station for
+Eastminster, arriving at 11 A. M. </i>Now</i> I have a lot of unused mileage on
+the C. N. & Q., and I want to use it up before Commencement. So, heed: you
+want to go <i>via</i> Baltimore, to see your parents. You take the 9.20 P. M.
+express tonight, to Baltimore, and go from that city in the morning, to
+Eastminster, on the C. N, & Q.--it's the only road. And take the five subs
+with you, to devour the mileage. Now, has that penetrated thy bomb-proof
+dome?"
+
+"</i>Sure;</i> you don't have to deliver a Chautauqua lecture, Hicks!" grinned
+Skeet. "Say, what time does my train leave Baltimore, in the A.M., for
+Eastminster?"
+
+"Let's see." T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., handing the mileage-books to the
+shortstop, focused his intellect on the C. N. & Q. timetable. "Oh, yes--you
+leave Union Station, Baltimore, at 7:30 A.M., arriving at Eastminster at
+noon; <i>it is the only train, you can get,</i> to make it in time for the game,
+so remember the hour--7.30 A.M.! Here, stuff the timetable in your pocket."
+
+In a few moments, the team and substitutes had been jammed into old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney, and the Bannister youths on the campus concentrated
+their interest on the sunny Hicks, who, grinning </i>à la</i> Cheshire cat,
+climbed atop of "The Dove," which old Dan was having as much trouble to
+start as he had experienced for over twenty years with the late Lord
+Nelson, his defunct quadruped. Seeing Hicks abstract a Louisville
+Slugger from the bat-bag, the students roared facetious remarks at the
+irrepressible youth:
+
+"Home-run Hicks--he made a home-run--<i>on a strike-out</i>!"--"Put Hicks in
+the game, Captain Butch--he will win it."--"Watch Hicks--he'll pull
+some <i>bonehead</i> play!"--"Bring home the Championship, but--lose Hicks
+somewhere!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the battered engine of the jit. yielded to
+old Dan's cranking, and kindly consented to start, surveyed the yelling
+students, seized a bat, and struck an attitude which he fatuously believed
+was that of Ty Cobb, about to make a hit; taking advantage of a lull in the
+tumult, the lovable youth howled at the hilarious crowd:
+
+"Just leave it to Hicks! I will win the game and the </i>Championship</i>, for my
+Alma Mater, and--I'll do it by my headwork!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR'S. HEADWORK
+
+
+"Play Ball! Say, Bannister, are you <i>afraid</i> to play?"
+
+"Call the game, Mr. Ump.--make 'em play ball!"
+
+"Batter up! Forfeit the game to Ballard, Umpire!"
+
+"Lend 'em Ballard's bat-boy-to make a full nine!"
+
+Captain Butch Brewster, his honest countenance, as a moving-picture
+director would express it, "registering wrathful dismay," lumbered toward
+the Ballard Field concrete dug-out, in which the Gold and Green players
+had entrenched themselves, while from the stands, the Ballard cohorts
+vociferated their intense impatience at the inexplicable delay.
+
+"We have <i>got</i> to play," he raged, striding up and down before the bench.
+"The game is ten minutes late now, and the crowd is restless! And here we
+have only <i>eight</i> 'Varsity players, and no one to make the ninth--not even
+a sub.! Oh, I could--"
+
+"That brainless Skeet Wigglesworth!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who, arrayed like a lily of the field, reposed his splinter-structure on
+the bench with his comrades. "In some way, he managed to <i>miss</i> that train
+from Baltimore! They didn't come on the noon C, N. & Q. train, and there
+isn't another one until night. My directions were as plain as a German
+war-map, and it beats me how Skeet got befuddled!"
+
+Gloom, as thick and abysmal as a London fog, hovered over the Bannister
+dug-out. On the concrete bench, the seven Gold and Green athletes, Beef,
+Monty, Roddy, Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, with Team Manager T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., stared silently at Captain Butch Brewster, who seemed in
+imminent peril of exploding. Something probably never before heard of in
+the annals of athletic history had happened. Bannister College, about to
+play Ballard the big game for the State Championship, had lost a short-stop
+and five substitutes, in some unfathomable manner, and it was impossible
+to round up one other member of the Gold and Green baseball squad. True, a
+hundred loyal alumni were in the stands, but only <i>bona fide</i> students, of
+course, were eligible to play the game, and--the Faculty ruling had kept
+them at old Bannister!
+
+"Here comes Ballard's Manager," spoke Beef McNaughton, as a brisk,
+clean-cut youth advanced, a yellow envelope in hand. "Why, he has a
+telegram. Do you suppose Skeet actually had <i>brains</i> enough to wire an
+explanation?"
+
+"Telegram for Captain Brewster!" announced the Ballard collegian, giving
+the message to that surprised behemoth. "It was sent in my care--collect,
+and the sender, name of Wigglesworth, fired one to me personally, telling
+me to deliver this one to Captain Butch Brewster, and collect from Team
+Manager Hicks--he surely didn't bother to save money! I've been out of
+town, and just got back to the campus; of course, the telegrams could not
+be delivered to anyone but me, hence the delay."
+
+Big Butch, thanking the Ballard Team Manager, and assuring him that the
+charges he had paid would be advanced to him after the game, ripped open
+the yellow envelope, and drew out the message. Like a thunder-storm
+gathering on the horizon, a dark expression came to good Butch's
+countenance, and when he had perused the lengthy telegram, he transfixed
+the startled and bewildered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with an angry glare:
+
+"</i>Bonehead</i>!" he raged, apparently controlling himself with a superhuman
+effort. "Oh, you lunatic, you wretch, villain--you--<i>you</i>--"
+
+To the supreme amazement and dismay of the puzzled Hicks, Beef, next in
+line, after <i>he</i> had scanned Skeet's telegram, followed Butch's example,
+for <i>he</i> glowered at the perturbed youth, and heaped condemnations on his
+devoted head. And so on down the line on the bench, until Monty, Roddy,
+Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, reading the message, joined in gazing
+indignantly at their gladsome Team Manager, who, as the eight arose <i>en
+masse</i> and advanced on him, sought to flee the wrath to come.
+
+"Safety first!" quoth T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. "'Mine not to reason why, mine
+but to haste and fly,' or--be crushed! Ouch! Beef, Monty--have a heart!"
+
+Captured by Beef and Monty Merriweather, as he frantically scrambled up
+the steps of the concrete dug-out, the grinning Hicks was held in the firm
+grasp of that behemoth, Butch Brewster, aided by the skyscraper Ichabod,
+while Cherub Challoner thrust the telegram before his eyes. In words of
+fire that burned themselves into his brain--something his colleagues
+denied he possessed--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., saw the explanation of Skeet
+Wigglesworth's missing the train from Baltimore that A. M. Dazed, the sunny
+youth read the message on which over-charges must be paid:
+
+
+"Hicks--you bonehead! The time-table of the C.N. & Q. you gave me was an
+old one--schedule revised two weeks ago! Train now leaves Balto. at 6.55
+A.M.! When we got to station at 7.05 A.M. she had went! No train to Ballard
+till night! I and subs, had to wire Bannister for money to get back on!
+You mis-manager--the <i>head-work</i> you boasted of is boneheadwork! Pay the
+charges on this, you brainless insect! I'll send it to Butch, for you'd
+never show it to him if I sent it to you! Indignantly--
+
+"SKEET."
+
+
+"</i>Mis</i>-manager is <i>right</i>!" seethed Captain Butch, for once in his campus
+career really wrathy at the lovable Hicks. "We are in a fix--eight players,
+and the crowd howling for the game to start. Oh, I could jump overboard,
+and drag you with me!"
+
+"Bonehead! Bonehead!" chorused the Gold and Green players, indignantly.
+"Gave Skeet an out-of-date time-table--never looked at the date! Let's drag
+him out before the crowd, and announce to them his brilliant headwork!"
+
+Captain Butch, "up against it," to employ a slightly slang expression,
+gazed across Ballard Field. In the stands, the students responding
+thunderously to their cheer-leaders' megaphoned requests, roared, "Play
+ball! Play ball! Play ball!" Gay pennants and banners fluttered in the
+glorious sunshine of the June day. It was a bright scene, but its glory
+awakened no happiness in the heart of the Bannister leader, as his gaze
+wandered to the somewhat flabbergasted expression on the cheery Hicks'
+face. That inevitably sunny youth, however, managed to conjure up a faint
+resemblance of his Cheshire cat grin, and following his usual habit of
+letting nothing daunt his gladsome spirit, he croaked feebly: "Oh, just
+leave it to Hicks! I will--"
+
+"Play the game!" thundered Butch, inspired. "Beef, see the umpire and say
+we'll be ready as soon as we get Hicks into togs-show him the telegram, and
+explain our delay! I'll shift Monty from the outfield to Skeet's job at
+short, and put this diluted imitation of something human in the field, to
+do his worst. Come to the field-house, you poor fish--"
+
+"Oh, Butch, I can't--I just <i>can't</i>!" protested the alarmed Hicks,
+helpless, as the big athlete towed him from the trench, "I--I can't play
+ball, and I don't want to be shown up before all that mob! It's all right
+at Bannister, in class-games, but--Oh, can't you play the game with <i>eight</i>
+fellows?"
+
+"That is just what we intend to do!" said Butch, with grim humor.
+"But--we'll have a dummy in the ninth position, to make the people believe
+we have a full nine! Cheer up, Hicks--'In the bright lexicon of youth
+there ain't no such word as fail,' you say! As for your making a fool of
+yourself, you haven't brains enough to be classed as one! Now--you'll pay
+dearly for your bonehead play."
+
+Ten minutes later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as agitated as a <i>prima donna</i>
+making her début with the Metropolitan: Opera Company, decorated the
+Bannister bench, arrayed in one of the substitutes' baseball suits. It
+was too large for his splinter-structure, so that it flapped grotesquely,
+giving him a startling resemblance to a scarecrow escaped from a cornfield.
+With the thermometer of his spirits registering zero, the dismayed youth,
+whose punishment was surely fitting the crime, heard the Umpire bellow:
+
+"Play ball! Batter up! Bannister at bat--Ballard in the field!"
+
+Hicks, that sunny-souled youth, had often daydreamed of himself in a big
+game of baseball, for his college. He had vividly imagined a ninth inning
+crisis, three of the enemy on base, two out, and a long fly, good for a
+home-run, soaring over his head. How he had sprinted--back--back--and at
+the last second, reached high in the air, grabbing the soaring spheroid,
+and saving the game for his Alma Mater! Often, too, he had stepped up to
+bat in the final frame, with two out, one on base, and Bannister a run
+behind. With the vast crowd silent and breathless, he had walloped the
+ball, over the left-field fence, and jogged around the bases, thrilling to
+the thunderous cheers of his comrades. But now--
+
+</i>"Oooo!"</i> shivered Hicks, as though he had just stepped beneath an icy
+shower-bath. "I wish I could run away. I just <i>know</i> they'll knock every
+ball to me, and I couldn't catch one with a sheriff and posse!"
+
+However, since, despite the blithesome Hicks' lack of confidence, it was
+that sunny Senior, after all, whom fate--or fortune, accordingly as
+each nine viewed it--destined to be the hero of the Bannister-Ballard
+Championship baseball contest, the game itself is shoved into such
+insignificance that it can be briefly chronicled by recording the events
+that led up to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, self-prophesied "head-work."
+
+Without Skeet Wigglesworth at shortstop, with the futile Hicks in
+right-field, and the confidence of the nine shaken, Captain Butch Brewster
+and the Gold and Green players went into the big game, unable to shake off
+the feeling that they would be defeated. And when Pitcher Don Carterson,
+in his half of the frame, passed the first two Ballard batters, the belief
+deepened to conviction. However, a fast double play and a long fly ended
+the inning without damage, and Bannister, likewise, had failed to make an
+impression on the score-board. In the second, Don promptly showed that he
+was striving to rival the late Cy Morgan, of the Athletics, for he promptly
+hit two batters and passed the third, whereupon, as sporting-writers
+express it, he was "derricked" by Captain Butch.
+
+Placing the deposed twirler in left field, Captain Brewster, as a last
+resort, believing the game hopelessly lost, with his star pitcher having
+failed, and his relief slabmen, thanks to Hicks, mislaid <i>en route</i>, sent
+out to the box one Ichabod Crane, brought in from the position given to
+Don Carterson. This cadaverous, skyscraper Senior, who always announced,
+himself as originating, "Back at Bedwell Center, Pa., where I come from--"
+was well known to fame as the "Champion Horse-Shoe Pitcher of Bucks
+County," but his baseball pitching was rather uncertain; like the girl in
+the nursery jingle, Ichabod, as a twirler, "When he was good, he was very,
+very good, and when he was wild, he was <i>horrid</i>!" Like Christy Mathewson,
+after he had pitched a few balls, he knew whether or not he was in
+shape for the game, and so did the spectators. With terrific speed and
+bewildering curves, Ichabod would have made a star, but his wildness
+prevented, and only on very rare days could he control the ball.
+
+Luckily for old Bannister's chances of victory and the Championship, this
+was one of the elongated Ichabod's rare days. He ambled into the box, with
+the bases full, and promptly struck out a batter. The next rolled to first,
+forcing out the runner at home, while the third hitter under Ichabod's
+régime drove out a long fly to center-field. Thus the game settled to one
+of the most memorable contests that Ballard Field had ever witnessed, a
+pitchers' battle between the awkward, bean-pole youth from "Bedwell Center,
+Pa.," and Bob Forsythe, the crack Ballard twirler. It was a fight long
+to be remembered, with hits as scarce as auks' eggs, and runs out of the
+reckoning, for six innings.
+
+At the start of the seventh, with the Ballard rooters standing and
+thundering, "The lucky seventh! Ballard--win the game in the lucky
+seventh!" the score was 0-0. Only two hits had been made off Forsythe, of
+Ballard, whose change of pace had the Bannister nine at his mercy, and
+but three off Ichabod, who had superb control of his dazzling speed. T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cavorting in right field, had made the only error of
+the contest, dropping an easy fly that fell into his hands after he had run
+bewilderedly in circles, when any good fielder could have stood still and
+captured it; however, since he got the ball to second in time to hold the
+runner at third, no harm resulted.
+
+"Hold 'em, Bannister, <i>hold</i> 'em!" entreated Butch Brewster, as they went
+to the field at their end of the lucky seventh, not having scored. "Do your
+best, Hicks, old man--never mind their Jokes. If you can't <i>catch</i>
+the ball, just get it to second, or first, without delay! Pitch ball,
+Ichabod--three innings to hold 'em!"
+
+But it was destined to be the lucky seventh for Ballard. An error on a hard
+chance, for Roddy Perkins, at third, placed a runner on first. Ichabod
+struck out a hitter, and the runner stole second, aided somewhat by the
+umpire. The next player flew out, sacrificing the runner to third; then--an
+easy fly traveled toward the paralyzed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one that
+anybody with the most infinitesimal baseball ability could have corralled,
+as Butch said, "with his eyes blindfolded, and his hands tied behind him!"
+But Hicks, who possessed absolutely <i>no</i> baseball talent, though he made
+a desperate try, succeeded in doing an European juggling act for five
+heartbreaking seconds, after which he let the law of gravity act on the
+sphere, so that it descended to terra firma. Hence, the "Lucky Seventh"
+ended with the score: Ballard, 1; Bannister, 0; and the Ballard cohorts in
+a state bordering on lunacy!
+
+"Oh, I've done it now--I've lost the game and the Championship!" groaned
+the crushed Hicks, as he stumbled toward the Bannister bench. "First I made
+that bonehead play, giving Skeet an old time-table I had on hand, and not
+telling him to get one at the station. How was </i>I</i> to know the old railroad
+would change the schedule, within two weeks of this game? And now--I've
+made the error that gives Ballard the Championship. If I hadn't pulled that
+boner, Skeet would be here, and the regular right-fielder would have had
+that fly. What a glorious climax to my athletic career at old Bannister!"
+
+Hicks' comrades were too generous, or heartbroken, to condemn the sorrowful
+youth, as he trailed to the dug-out, but the Ballard rooters had absolutely
+no mercy, and they panned him in regulation style. In fact, all through
+the game, Hicks expressed himself as being butchered by the fans to make a
+Ballard holiday, for he struck out with unfailing regularity at bat, and
+dropped everything in the field, so that the rooters jeered him, whenever
+he stepped to the plate, and--it was quite different from the good-natured
+ridicule of his comrades, back at old Bannister.
+
+"Never mind, Hicks," said good Butch Brewster, brokenly, seeing how
+sorrow-stricken his sunny classmate was, "We'll beat 'em--yet! We bat this
+inning, and in the ninth maybe someone will knock a home-run for us, and
+tie the score."
+
+The eighth Inning was the lucky one for the Gold and Green. Monty
+Merriweather opened with a clean two-base hit to left, and advanced to
+third on Biff Pemberton's sacrifice to short. Butch, trying to knock a
+home-run, struck out-</i>à la</i> "Cactus" Cravath in the World's Series; but the
+lanky Ichabod, endeavoring to bunt, dropped a Texas-Leaguer over second,
+and the score was tied, though the sky-scraper twirler was caught off base
+a moment later. And, though Ballard fought hard in the last of the eighth,
+Ichabod displayed big-league speed, and retired two hitters by the
+strike-out route, while the third popped out to first.
+
+"The <i>ninth</i> Inning!" breathed Beef McNaughton, picking up his Louisville
+Slugger, as he strode to the plate. "Come on, boys--we will win the
+Championship <i>right now</i>. Get one run, and Ichabod will hold Ballard one
+more time!"
+
+Perhaps the pachydermic Beef's grim attitude unnerved the wonderful Bob
+Forsythe, for he passed that elephantine youth. However, he regained his
+splendid control, and struck out Cherub Challoner on three pitched balls.
+After this, it was a shame to behold the Ballard first-baseman drop the
+ball, when Don Carterson grounded to third, and would have been thrown
+out with ease--with two on base, and one out, Roddy Perkins made a sharp
+single, on which the two runners advanced a base. Now, with the sacks
+filled, and with only one out--
+
+"It's all over!" mourned Captain Butch Brewster, rocking back and forth on
+the bench. "Hicks--is--at--bat!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his bat wobbling, and his knees acting in a similar
+fashion, refusing to support even that fragile frame, staggered toward the
+plate, like a martyr. A tremendous howl of unearthly joy went up from the
+stands, for Hicks had struck out every time yet.
+
+"Three pitched balls, Bob!" was the cry. "Strike him out! It's all over but
+the shouting! He's scared to death, Forsythe--he can't hit a barn-door
+with a scatter-gun! One--two--three--out! Here's where Ballard wins the
+Championship."
+
+Twice the grinning Bob Forsythe cut loose with blinding speed--twice the
+extremely alarmed Hicks dodged back, and waved a feeble Chautauqua salute
+at the ball he never even saw! Then--trying to "cut the inside corner" with
+a fast inshoot, Forsythe's control wavered a trifle, and T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., saw the ball streaking toward him! The paralyzed youth felt like a man
+about to be shot by a burglar. He could feel the bail thud against him,
+feel the terrific shock; and yet--a thought instinctively flashed on him,
+he remembered, in a flash, what a tortured Monty Merriweather had shouted,
+as he wobbled to bat:
+
+"Get a base on balls, or--if you can't <i>make</i> a hit--<i>get hit</i>!"
+
+If he got hit--it meant a run forced in, as the bases were full! That, in
+all probability, would give old Bannister the Championship, for Ichabod was
+invincible. It is not likely that the dazed Hicks thought all this out, and
+weighed it against the agony of getting hit by Forsythe's speed. The truth
+is, the paralyzed youth was too petrified by fear to dodge, and that before
+he could avoid it, the speeding spheroid crashed against his noble brow
+with a sickening impact.
+
+All went black before him, T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., pale and limp, crumpled,
+and slid to the ground, senseless; therefore, he failed to hear the roar
+from the Bannister bench, from the loyal Gold and Green rooters in the
+stands, as big Beef lumbered across the plate with what proved later to be
+the winning run. He did not hear the Umpire shout: "Take your base!"
+
+ "What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!
+ He was never a star in the baseball game,
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks-he's all right!"
+
+"Honk! Honk!" Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, rattling up the driveway,
+bearing back to the Bannister campus the victorious Gold and Green nine,
+and the State Intercollegiate Baseball Championship, though the hour was
+midnight, found every student on the grass before the Senior Fence! Over
+three hundred leather-lunged youths, aided by the Bannister Band, and every
+known noise-making device, hailed "The Dove," as that unseaworthy craft
+halted before them, with the baseball nine inside, and on top. However, the
+terrific tumult stilled, as the bewildered collegians caught the refrain
+from the exuberant players:
+
+ "He was never a star in the baseball game--
+ But he won the Championship just the same--
+ What's the matter with our Hicks--he's all right!"
+
+"Hicks did what?" shrieked Skeezicks McCracken, voicing through a megaphone
+the sentiment of the crowd. Captain Butch had simply telegraphed the final
+score, so old Bannister was puzzled to hear the team lauding T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., who, still white and weak, with a bandage around his classic
+forehead, maintained a phenomenal quiet, atop of "The Dove," leaning
+against Butch Brewster.
+
+"Fellows," shouted Butch, despite Hicks' protest, rising to his feet on the
+roof of the "jit."--"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., today won the game and the
+Championship! Listen--"
+
+The vast crowd of erstwhile clamorous youths stood spellbound, as Captain
+Butch Brewster, in graphic sentences, described the game--Don Carterson's
+failure, Ichabod's sensational pitching, Hicks' errors, and--the wonderful
+manner in which the futile youth had won the Championship! As little Skeet
+Wigglesworth and the five substitutes, who had returned that afternoon, had
+spread the story of Hicks' bonehead play, old Bannister had turned out to
+ridicule and jeer good-naturedly the sunny youth, but now they learned that
+Hicks had been forced by his own mistake into the Big Game, and had won it!
+Of course, his comrades knew it had been through no ability of his, but the
+knowledge that he had been knocked senseless by Forsythe's great speed, and
+had suffered so that his college might score, thrilled them.
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" thundered Thor, he who at one time would
+have called this riot foolishness, and forgetting that the nine had just
+chanted the response to this query.
+
+"He's all right!" chorused the collegians, in ecstasy.
+
+"Who's all right?" demanded John Thorwald, his blond head towering over
+those of his comrades. To him, now, there was nothing silly about this
+performance!
+
+"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" came the shout, and the band fanfared, while the
+exultant collegians shouted, sang, whistled, and created an indescribable
+tumult with their noise-making devices. For five minutes the ear-splitting
+din continued, a wonderful tribute to the lovable, popular youth, and then
+it stilled so suddenly that the result was startling, for--T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., swaying on his feet arose, and stood on the roof of the "jit."
+
+With that heart-warming Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance, the
+irrepressible Hicks seized a Louisville Slugger, assumed a Home-Run Baker
+batting pose, and shouted to his breathlessly waiting comrades:
+
+"Fellows, I vowed I would win that baseball game and the Championship for
+my Alma Mater by my headwork! With the bases full, and the score a tie, the
+Ballard pitcher hit me in the head with the ball, forcing in the run that
+won for old Ballard--now, if that wasn't <i>headwork</i>--"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY
+
+
+ "We have come to the close of our college days.
+ Golden campus years soon must end;
+ From Bannister we shall go our ways--
+ And friend shall part from friend!
+ On our Alma Mater now we gaze,
+ And our eyes are filled with tears;
+ For we've come to the close of our college days,
+ And the end of our campus years!"
+
+Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., Bannister, '92; Yale, '96, and Pittsburgh
+millionaire "Steel King," stood at the window of Thomas Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, room, his arm across the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, his
+only son and heir. Father and son stood, gazing down at the campus. On the
+Gym steps was a group of Seniors, singing songs of old Bannister, songs
+tinged with sadness. Up to Hicks' windows, on the warm June: night, drifted
+the 1916 Class Ode, to the beautiful tune, "A Perfect Day." Over before the
+Science Hall, a crowd of joyous alumni laughed over narratives of their
+campus escapades. Happy undergraduates, skylarking on the campus,
+celebrated the end of study, and gazed with some awe at the Seniors, in cap
+and gown, suddenly transformed into strange beings, instead of old comrades
+and college-mates.
+
+"'The close of our college days, and the end of our campus years--!'"
+quoted Mr. Hicks, a mist before his eyes as he gazed at the scene. "In a
+few days, Thomas, comes the final parting from old Bannister--I know it
+will be hard, for </i>I</i> had to leave the dear old college, and also Yale. But
+you have made a splendid record in your studies, you have been one of
+the most popular fellows here, and--you have vastly pleased your Dad, by
+winning your B in the high-jump."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, last study-sprint was at an end, the final Exams.
+of his Senior year had been passed with what is usually termed flying
+colors; and to the whole-souled delight of the lovable youth, he and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the Human Encyclopedia, had, as Hicks chastely
+phrased it, "run a dead heat for the Valedictory!" So close had their
+final averages been that the Faculty, after much consideration, decided to
+announce at the Commencement exercises that the two Seniors had tied for
+the highest collegiate honors, and everyone was satisfied with the verdict.
+So, now it was all ended; the four years of study, athletics, campus
+escapades, dormitory skylarking--the golden years of college life, were
+about to end for 1919. Commencement would officially start on the morrow,
+but tonight, in the Auditorium, would be held the annual Athletic
+Association meeting, when those happy athletes who had won their B during
+the year would have it presented, before the assembled collegians, by
+one-time gridiron, track, and diamond heroes of old Bannister.
+
+And--the ecstatic Hicks would have his track B, his white letter, won in
+the high-jump, thanks to Caesar Napoleon's assistance, awarded him by his
+beloved Dad, the greatest all-round athlete that ever wore the Gold and
+Green! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., <i>en route</i> to New Haven and Yale in
+his private car, "Vulcan," had reached town that day, together with other
+members of Bannister College, Class of '92. They, as did all the old
+grads., promptly renewed past memories and associations by riding up to
+College Hill in Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus--a youthful, hilarious crowd of
+alumni. Former students, alumni, parents of graduating Seniors, friends,
+sweethearts--every train would bring its quota. The campus would again
+throb and pulsate with that perennial quickening--Commencement. Three days
+of reunions, Class Day exercises, banquets, and other events, then the
+final exercises, and--T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., would be an alumnus!
+
+"It's like Theophilus told Thor, last fall, Dad," said the serious Hicks.
+"You know what Shakespeare said: 'This thou perceivest, which makes thy
+love more strong; To love that well which thou must leave ere long.' Now
+that I soon shall leave old Bannister, I--I wish I had studied more, had
+done bigger things for my Alma Mater! And for you, Dad, too; I've won a B,
+but perhaps, had I trained and exercised more, I might have annexed another
+letter--still; hello, what's Butch hollering--?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, his pachydermic frame draped in his gown, and his
+mortar-board cap on his head, for the Seniors were required to wear their
+regalia during Commencement week, was bellowing through a megaphone, as he
+stood on the steps of Bannister Hall, and Mr. Hicks, with his cheerful son,
+listened:
+
+"Everybody--Seniors, Undergrads., Alumni--in the Auditorium at eight sharp!
+We are going to give Mr. Hicks and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a surprise
+party--don't miss the fun!"
+
+"Now, just what does Butch mean, Dad?" queried the bewildered Senior.
+"Something is in the wind. For two days, the fellows have had a secret
+from me--they whisper and plot, and when </i>I</i> approach, loudly talk of
+athletics, or Commencement! Say, Butch--</i>Butch</i>--I ain't a-comin' tonight,
+unless you explain the mystery."
+
+"Oh, yes, you be, old sport!" roared Butch, from the campus, employing the
+megaphone, "or you don't get your letter! Say, Hicks, one sweetly solemn
+thought attacks me--old Bannister is puzzling <i>you</i> with a mystery, instead
+of vice versa, as is usually the case."
+
+"Well, Thomas," said Mr. Hicks, his face lighted by a humorous, kindly
+smile, as he heard the storm of good-natured jeers at Hicks, Jr., that
+greeted Butch Brewster's fling, "I'll stroll downtown, and see if any of
+my old comrades came on the night express. I'll see you at the Athletic
+Association meeting, for I believe I am to hand you the B. I can't imagine
+what this 'surprise party' is, but I don't suppose it will harm us. It will
+surely be a happy moment, son, when I present you with the athletic letter
+you worked so hard to win."
+
+When T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, beloved Dad had gone, his firm stride
+echoing down the corridor, that blithesome, irrepressible collegian, whom
+old Bannister had come to love as a generous, sunny-souled youth, stood
+again by the window, gazing out at the campus. Now, for the first time, he
+fully realized what a sad occasion a college Commencement really is--to
+those who must go forth from their Alma Mater forever. With almost the
+force of a staggering blow, Hicks suddenly saw how it would hurt to leave
+the well-loved campus and halls of old Bannister, to go from those comrades
+of his golden years. In a day or so, he must part from good Butch, Pudge,
+Beef, Ichabod, Monty, Roddy, Cherub, loyal little Theophilus and all his
+classmates of '19, as well as from his firm friends of the undergraduates.
+It would be the parting from the youths of his class that would cost him
+the greatest regret. Four years they had lived together the care-free
+campus life. From Freshmen to Seniors they had grown and developed
+together, and had striven for 1919 and old Bannister, while a love for
+their Alma Mater had steadily possessed their hearts. And now soon they
+must sing, "Vale, Alma Mater!" and go from the campus and corridors, as
+Jack Merritt, Heavy Hughes, Biff McCabe, and many others had done before
+them.
+
+Of course, they would return to old Bannister. There would be alumni
+banquets at mid-year and Commencement, with glad class reunions each year.
+They would come back for the big games of the football or baseball season.
+But it would never be the same. The glad, care-free, golden years of
+college life come but once, and they could never live them, as of old.
+
+"Caesar's Ghost!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., making a dive for his
+beloved banjo, as he awakened to the startling fact that for some time he
+had been intensely serious. "This will never, never do. I must maintain my
+blithesome buoyancy to the end, and entertain old Bannister with my musical
+ability. Here goes."
+
+Assuming a striking pose, </i>à la</i> troubadour, at the open window, T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., a somewhat paradoxical figure, his splinter-structure
+enshrouded in the gown, the cap on his classic head, this regalia symbolic
+of dignity, and the torturesome banjo in his grasp, twanged a ragtime
+accompaniment, and to the bewilderment of the old Grads on the campus, as
+well as the wrath of 1919, he roared in his fog-horn voice:
+
+ "Oh, I love for to live in the country!
+ And I love for to live on the farm!
+ I love for to wander in the grass-green fields--
+ Oh, a country life has the charm!
+ I love for to wander in the garden--
+ Down by the old haystack;
+ Where the pretty little chickens go 'Kick-Kack-Kackle!'
+ And the little docks go 'Quack! Quack!'"
+
+From the Seniors on the Gym steps, their dignified song rudely shattered by
+this rollicking saenger-fest, came a storm of protests; to the unbounded
+delight of the alumni, watching the scene with interest, shouts, jeers,
+whistles, and cat-calls greeted Hicks' minstrelsy:
+
+"Tear off his cap and gown--he's a disgrace to '19!"
+
+"Shades of Schumann-Heink--give that calf more rope!"
+
+"Ye gods--how long must we endure--that?"
+
+"Hicks, a Senior--nobody home--can that noise!"
+
+"Shoot him at sunrise! Where's his Senior dignity?"
+
+Big Butch Brewster, referring to his watch, bellowed through the megaphone
+that it was nearly eight o'clock, and loudly suggested that they forcibly
+terminate Hicks' saengerfest, and spare the town police force a riot call
+to the campus, by transporting the pestiferous youth to the Auditorium,
+for his "surprise party." His idea finding favor, he, with Beef and Pudge,
+somewhat hampered by their gowns, lumbered up the stairway of Bannister,
+and down the third-floor corridor to the offending Hicks' boudoir, followed
+by a yelling, surging crowd of Seniors and underclassmen. They invaded the
+graceless youth's room, much to the pretended alarm of that torturesome
+collegian, who believed that the entire student-body of old Bannister had
+foregathered to wreak vengeance on his devoted head.
+
+"</i>Mercy</i>! Have a heart, fellows!" plead T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., helpless in
+the clutches of Butch, Beef, and Pudge, "I won't never do it no more, no
+time! Say, this is too much--much too much--too much much too much--I,
+Oh--<i>help--aid--succor--relief--assistance--"</i>
+
+"To the Auditorium with the wretch!" boomed Butch; and the splinter-youth
+was borne aloft, on his broad shoulders, assisted by Beef McNaughton. They
+transported the grinning Hicks down the corridor, while fifty noisy youths,
+howling, "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow!" tramped after them. Downstairs
+and across the campus the hilarious procession marched, and into the
+Auditorium, where the students and alumni were gathering for the awarding
+of the athletic B. A thunderous shout went up, as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+was carried to the stage and deposited in a chair.
+
+"</i>Hicks! Hicks! Hicks</i>! We've got a surprise for--</i>Hicks</i>!"
+
+"Now, just what have I did to deserve all these?" grinned that
+happy-go-lucky youth, puzzled, nevertheless. "Well, time will tell, so all
+I can do is to possess my soul with impatience; old Bannister has a mystery
+for me, this trip!"
+
+In fifteen minutes, the Athletic Association meeting opened. On the stage,
+beside its officers, were those athletes, including T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+who were to receive that coveted reward--their B, together with a number of
+one-time famous Bannister gridiron, track, basketball, and diamond stars.
+Each youth was to receive his monogram from some ex-athlete who once wore
+the Gold and Green, and Hicks' beloved Dad--Bannister's greatest hero--was
+to present his son with the letter.
+
+There were speeches; the Athletic Association's President explained the
+annual meeting, former Bannister students and athletic idols told of past
+triumphs on Bannister Field; the football Championship banner, and the
+baseball pennant were flaunted proudly, and each team-captain of the year
+was called upon to talk. Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., a great favorite
+on the campus, delivered a ringing speech, an appeal to the undergraduates
+for clean living, and honorable sportsmanship, and then:
+
+"We now come to the awarding of the athletic B," stated the President. "The
+Secretary will call first the name of the athlete, and then the alumnus who
+will present him with the letter. In the name of the Athletic Association
+of old Bannister, I congratulate those fellows who are now to be rewarded
+for their loyalty to their Alma Mater!"
+
+Thrilled, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., watched his comrades, as they responded
+to their names, and had the greatest glory, the B, placed in their hands by
+past Bannister athletic heroes. Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty, Ichabod, Biff,
+Hefty, Tug, Buster, Deacon Radford, Cherub, Don, Skeet, Thor, who had
+won the hammer-throw. These, and many others, having earned the award by
+playing in three-fourths of a season's games on the eleven or the nine, or
+by winning a first place in some track event, stepped forward, and were
+rewarded. Some, as good Butch, had gained their B many times, but the fact
+that this was their last letter, made the occasion a sad one. Every name
+was called but that of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and that perturbed youth
+wondered at the omission, when the President spoke:
+
+"The last name," he said, smiling, "is that of Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and we are glad to have his father present the letter to his son, as Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., is with us. However, we Bannister fellows have
+prepared a surprise party for our lovable comrade, and I beg your patience
+awhile, as I explain."
+
+Graphically, Dad Pendleton described the wonderful all-round athletic
+record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old Bannister, and
+sketched briefly but vividly his phenomenal record at Yale; he told of
+Mr. Hicks' great ambition, for his only son, Thomas, to follow in his
+footsteps--to be a star athlete, and shatter the marks made by his Dad.
+Then he reminded the Bannister students of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+athletic fiascos, hilarious and otherwise, of three years. He explained how
+that cheery youth, grinning good-humoredly at his comrades' jeers, had been
+in earnest, striving to realize his father's ambition. As the spellbound
+collegians and grads. listened, Dad chronicled Hicks' dogged persistence,
+and how he finally, in his Senior year, won his track B in the high-jump.
+Then he described the biggest game of the past football season, the contest
+that brought the Championship to old Bannister. The youths and alumni heard
+how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., made a great sacrifice, for the greater goal;
+how, after training faithfully in secret for a year, hoping sometime to win
+a game for his Alma Mater, he cheerfully sacrificed his chance to tie the
+score by a drop-kick, and became the pivotal part of a fake-kick play that
+won for the Gold and Green.
+
+"I have left Hicks' name until last," said Dad, with a smile, "because
+tonight we have a surprise party for our sunny comrade, and for his Dad. In
+the past, the eligibility rule, as regards the football and baseball B, has
+been--an athlete must play on the 'Varsity in three-fourths of the season's
+games. But, just before the Hamilton game, last fall, the Advisory Board of
+the Athletic Association amended this rule.
+
+"We decided to submit to the required two-thirds majority vote of the
+students this plan, inasmuch as many athletes, toiling and sacrificing all
+season for their college, never get to win their letter, yet deserve
+that reward for their loyalty, we suggested that Bannister imitate the
+universities. Anyone sent into the Yale-Harvard game, you know, wins his
+H or Y. If one team is safely ahead, a lot of scrubs are run into the
+scrimmage, to give them their letter. Therefore, we--the Advisory
+Board--made this rule: 'Any athlete taking part, for any period of time
+whatsoever, in the Ballard football or baseball game as a regular member of
+the first team shall be eligible for his Gold or Green B. This rule, upon
+approval of the students, to be effective from September 25!'
+
+"Now," continued the Athletic Association President, "we decided to keep
+this new ruling a secret until the present, for this reason: Many good
+football and baseball players, not making the first teams, lack the loyalty
+to stick on the scrubs, and others, not as brilliant, but with more
+college spirit, give their best until the season's end. We knew that if we
+announced this rule last fall, several slackers, who had quit the squad,
+would come out again, just on the hope of getting sent into the Ballard
+game, for their B. This would not be fair to those who loyally stuck to the
+scrubs. So we did not announce the rule until the year closed, and then a
+practically unanimous vote of the students made the rule effective from
+September 25. So--all athletes who took part in the Ballard football game,
+last fall, for any period of time whatsoever, are eligible for the gold B,
+and the same, as regards the green letter, applies to the Ballard baseball
+game this spring."
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., gasped. Slowly, the glorious truth dawned on the
+happy-go-lucky Senior--he had been sent into the Bannister-Ballard football
+game; the crucial and deciding play had turned on him, hence he had won his
+gold letter! And thanks to his brilliant "mismanaging" of the nine, losing
+shortstop Skeet Wigglesworth and the substitutes, he had played the entire
+nine innings of the Ballard-Bannister baseball contest, and, therefore,
+was eligible for his green B. In a dazed condition, he heard Dad Pendleton
+saying:
+
+"You remember how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was sent into the Ballard
+game, and how the fake-play fooled Ballard, who believed he would try
+a drop-kick? Well, knowing Hicks to be eligible for his football B, we
+planned a surprise party. The Advisory Board kept the new rule a secret,
+and not until this week was it voted on. Then, the required two-thirds
+majority made it effective from last September--we managed to have Hicks
+absent from the voting, and the fellows helped us with our surprise! So
+instead of Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., presenting his son with one
+B, that for track work, we are glad to hand him <i>three</i> letters, one for
+football, one for baseball, and one for track, to give our own T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr. And, let me add, he can accept them with a clear conscience, for
+when the rule was made by the Advisory Board, we had no idea that Hicks
+would ever be eligible in football or baseball,"
+
+A moment of silence, and then undergraduates and alumni, thrilled at Dad
+Pendleton's announcement, arose in a body, and howled for T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his beloved Dad. Mr. Hicks, unable to speak, silently
+placed the three monograms, gold, green, and white, in his son's hands, and
+placed his own on the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, who for once
+in his heedless career could not say a word!
+
+"What's the matter with Hicks?" Big Butch Brewster roared, and a terrific
+response sounded:
+
+"He's all right! Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"
+
+For ten minutes pandemonium reigned. Then, regardless of the fact that, in
+order to surprise Mr. Hicks and his son, other athletes, eligible under the
+new rule, had yet to be presented with their B, the howling youths swarmed
+on the stage, hoisted the grinning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his happy
+Dad to their shoulders, and started a wild parade around the campus and the
+Quadrangle, singing:
+
+"Here's to our own Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own
+Hicks--drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own Hicks--When he
+starts a thing, he sticks--Drink it down--drink it down--down! Down!
+Down!"
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., aloft on the shoulders of his behemoth class-mate,
+Butch Brewster, was deliriously happy. The surprise party of his campus
+comrades was a wonderful one, and he could scarcely realize that he had
+actually, by the Athletic Association ruling, won his three B's! How glad
+his beloved Dad, was, too. He had not expected this bewildering happiness.
+He had been so joyous, when his sort earned the track letter, but to
+have him leave old Bannister, with a B for three sports--it was almost
+unbelievable! And, as Dad had said--there had been no thought of Hicks when
+the Advisory Board made the rule, so Hicks had no reason to suppose it was
+done just to award him his letter.
+
+Then, Hicks remembered that rash vow, made at the end of his Freshman year,
+a vow uttered with absolutely no other thought than a desire to torment
+Butch Brewster, "Before I graduate from old Bannister, I shall have won
+my B in three branches of sport!" Never, not even for a moment, had the
+happy-go-lucky youth believed that his wild prophecy would be fulfilled,
+though he had pretended to be confident to tease his loyal comrades; but
+now, at the very end of his campus days, just before he graduated, his
+prediction had come true! So the sunny Senior, who four years before had
+made his rash vow, saw its realization, and suddenly thrilled with the
+knowledge that he had a golden opportunity to make Butch indignant.
+
+"Oh, I say, Butch," he drawled, nonchalantly, leaning down to talk in
+Butch's ear, "do you recall that day, at the close of our Freshman year,
+when I vowed to win my B in three branches of sport, ere I bade farewell to
+old Bannister?"
+
+"No, you don't get away with that!" exploded Butch Brewster, indignantly,
+lowering his tantalizing classmate to terra firma. "Here, Beef, Pudge,
+catch this wretch; he intends to swagger and say--"
+
+But he was too late, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., dodging from his grasp,
+imitated the celebrated Charley Chaplin strut, and satiated his fun-loving
+soul. After waiting for three years, the irrepressible youth realized an
+ambition he had never imagined would be fulfilled.
+
+"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth he, gladsomely. "I told you I'd win
+my three B's, Butch, old top, and--<i>ow</i>!--unhand me, you villain, you
+<i>hurt</i>!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+
+
+ "Oh, it was '</i>Ave</i>, Alma Mater--'
+ We sang as Freshmen gay;
+ But it's '</i>Vale</i>, Alma Mater' now
+ As our last farewells we say!"
+
+"</i>Honk-Honk! Br-r-rr-r-Bang! Honk-Monk! Br-rr-rr-r--"</i>
+
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., big Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Pudge Langdon,
+Scoop Sawyer, and little Theophilus Opperdyke--late Seniors of old
+Bannister--roosted atop of good old Dan Flannagan's famous jitney-bus
+before Bannister Hall. It was nearly time for the 9.30 A. M. express, but
+the "peace-ship" had inconsiderately stalled, and the choking, wheezing,
+and snorting of the engine, as old Dan frenziedly cranked, together with
+the Claxon, operated by Skeet Wigglesworth, rudely interrupted the Seniors'
+chant. A vociferous protest arose above the tumult:
+
+"Oh, the little old </i>Ford</i>--rambled right along--like heck!"
+
+"Can that noise-we want to sing a last song, boys!"
+
+"Chuck that engine, Dan, and put in an alarm clock spring!"
+
+"Christmas is coming, Dan-u-el--we've graduated you know!"
+
+"'The Dove' doesn't want us to leave old Bannister, fellows!"
+
+Commencement was ended. The night before, on the stage of Alumni Hall,
+before a vast audience of old Bannister grads, undergraduates, friends, and
+relatives of the Seniors, the Class of 1919 had received its sheepskins,
+and the "Go forth, my children, and live!" of its Alma Mater. T, Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and timorous little Theophilus had jointly delivered the
+Valedictory, eight other Seniors, including Butch, Scoop, and the lengthy
+Ichabod, had swayed the crowd with oratory. Kindly old Prexy, his voice
+tremulous, had talked to them, as students, for the last time. The Class
+Ode had been sung, the Class Shield unveiled, and then--Hicks and his
+comrades of '19 were alumni!
+
+It had been a busy, thrilling time, Commencement Week. There had been
+scarcely any spare moments to ponder on the parting so soon to come; after
+the memorable Athletic Association meeting, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+and his beloved Dad had been given a wonderful "surprise party" by the
+collegians, and Hicks had corralled his three B's, time had "sprinted with
+spiked shoes," as the sunny Hicks stated. Event had followed event in
+bewildering fashion. The Seniors, dignified in cap and gown, had been fêted
+and banqueted, the cynosure of all eyes. Campus and town were filled with
+visitors. Old Bannister pulsated with renewed life, with the glad reunions
+of former students. There had been the Alumni Banquet, the annual baseball
+game between the 'Varsity and old-time Gold and Green diamond stars, Class
+Night exercises, the Literary Society Oratorical Contests, and the last
+Class Supper; and, Commencement had come.
+
+It was all ended now--the four happy, golden years of campus life, of glad
+fellowship with each other; like those who had gone before, T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr., and his comrades of 1919 had come to the final parting. The
+sunny-souled youth's Dad had gone to New Haven, to Yale's Commencement.
+Alumni and visitors had left town; the night before had witnessed farewells
+with Monty, Roddy, Biff, Hefty, and the underclassmen, with that awakened
+Colossus, John Thorwald. All the collegians had gone, except the few
+Seniors now leaving, and they had remained to enjoy Hicks' final Beefsteak
+Bust downtown at Jerry's.
+
+The campus was silent and deserted. No footsteps or voices echoed in the
+dormitories, and a shadow of sadness hovered over all. The youths who were
+leaving old Bannister forever felt an ache in their throats, and little
+Theophilus Opperdyke's big-rimmed spectacles were fogged with tears. Three
+times, in the past, they had left the campus, but this was forever, as
+collegians!
+
+"I don't care if we miss the old train!" declared Scoop Sawyer, as the
+jitney-Ford's engine wheezed, gasped, and was silent, for all of Dan's
+cranking. "Just think, fellows, it's all over now--'We have come to the end
+of our college days-golden campus years are at an end--!' Say, Hicks, old
+man, what's your Idea. What future have you blue-printed?"
+
+"Journalism!" announced T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sticking a fountain pen
+behind his ear, and fatuously supposing he resembled a City Editor, "In me
+you behold an embryo Richard Harding Davis, or Ty--no, I mean Irvin Cobb.
+I shall first serve my apprenticeship as a 'cub,' but ere many years, I
+shall sit at a desk, run a newspaper, and tell the world where to get off."
+
+"That is--If Dad says so!" chuckled Butch Brewster. "You know, Hicks, it's
+the same old story--your father wants you to learn how to own steel and
+iron mills, and when it comes to a showdown, you must convince Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., that you'd make a better journalist than Steel King!"
+
+"Nay, nay-say not so!" responded the happy-go-lucky alumnus of old
+Bannister, as the perspiring" Dan Flannagan cranked away futilely. "My Dad
+has a broader vision, fellows, than most men. He and I talked it over last
+night, and he would never try to make me take up anything but a work that
+appeals to me. While, as Butch says, he'd like to train me to follow in his
+footsteps, he understands my ambition so thoroughly that he is trying to
+get me started--read this:"
+
+The lovable youth produced a letter, the envelope bearing the heading: "THE
+BALTIMORE CHRONICLE;" Butch Brewster, to whom he extended it, read aloud:
+
+
+"Baltimore, Maryland,
+
+"June 12, 1919.
+
+"DEAR OLD CLASSMATE:
+
+"I'd sure like to be with you, back at old Yale, next week, but I can't
+leave the wheel of this ship, the </i>Chronicle</i>, for even a day. Give my
+regards to all of old Eli, '96, old man.
+
+"As regards a berth for your son, Thomas. The </i>Chronicle</i> usually takes
+on a few college men during the summer, when our staff is off on
+vacations. We always use undergraduates, and often, in two or three
+summers, we develop them into star reporters. However, for old time's
+sake, I'll be glad to give your son a chance, and if he means business,
+let him report for duty next Friday, at 1 P.M., to my office.
+Understand, Hicks, he must come here and fight his own way, without any
+favor or special help from me. Were he the son of our nation's
+President, I'd not treat him a whit better than the rest of the Staff,
+so let him know that in advance. On the other hand, I'll develop him all
+I can, and if he has the ability, the </i>Chronicle</i> long-room is the place
+for him.
+
+"Yours for old Yale,
+
+"'Doc' Whalen, Yale, '96,
+
+"City Editor--</i>THE CHRONICLE</i>."
+
+
+"Here's my Dad's ultimatum," grinned Hicks, when. Butch finished the
+letter. "I am to take a summer as a cub on the </i>Baltimore Chronicle</i>,
+making my own way, and living on my weekly salary, without financial aid
+from anyone. If, at the end of the summer, City Editor Whalen reports that
+I've made good enough to be retained as a regular, then--Yours truly for
+the Fourth Estate. If I fail, then I follow a course charted out by Mr.
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.! So, it is up to me to make good--"
+
+"You--you will make good, Hicks," quavered Theophilus, whose faith in the
+shadow-like youth was prodigious. "Oh, that will be splendid, for I am
+going to take a course at a business college in Baltimore. I want to become
+an expert stenographer, and we'll be together,"
+
+"It's work now, fellows!" sighed Beef McNaughton, shifting his huge bulk
+atop of the jit "College years are ended, we're chucked into the world, to
+make good, or fail! Butch and I have not decided on our work yet. We may
+accept jobs as bank or railroad presidents, or maybe run for President
+of the U.S.A., provided John McGraw or Connie Mack do not sign us up.
+However--"
+
+At that moment, the engine of old Dan Flannagan's battered "Dove" consented
+to hit on two cylinders, and the genial Irishman, who was to transport
+Hicks and his comrades, as collegians, for the last time, yelled, "</i>All
+aboard</i>!" loudly, to conceal his emotion at the sad scene.
+
+"We're off!" shrieked Skeet Wigglesworth, stowed away below, as the
+jitney-bus moved down the driveway. "Farewell, dear old Bannister! Run
+slow, Dan, we want to gaze on the campus as long as we can."
+
+The youths were silent, as the 'bus rolled slowly down the driveway and
+under the Memorial Arch, old Dan, sympathizing with them, and finding he
+could make the express by a safe margin, allowing the jitney to flutter
+along at reduced speed. From its top, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his vision
+blurred with tears, gazed back with his class-mates. He saw the campus, its
+grass green, with stately old elms bordering the walks, and the golden
+June sunshine bathing everything in a soft radiance. He beheld the college
+buildings--the Gym., the Science Hall, the Administration Building,
+Recitation Hall, the ivy-covered Library; the white Chapel, and the four
+dorms., Creighton, Smithson, Nordyke, Bannister. One year he had spent in
+each, and every year had been one of happiness, of glad comradeship.
+He could see Bannister Field, the scene of his many hilarious athletic
+fiascos.
+
+And now he was leaving it all--had come to the end of his college course,
+and before him lay Life, with its stern realities, its grim obstacles, and
+hard struggles; ended were the golden campus days, the gay skylarking
+in the dorms. Gone forever were the joyous nights of entertaining his
+comrades, of Beefsteak Busts down at Jerry's. Silenced was his beloved
+banjo, and no more would his saengerfests bother old Bannister.
+
+A turn in the street, and the campus could not be seen. As the last vision
+of their Alma Mater vanished, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., smiling sunnily
+through his tear-blurred eyes, gazed at his comrades of old '19--
+
+"Say, fellows--" he grinned, though his voice was shaky, "let's--let's
+start in next September, and--do it all over again!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+This file should be named 8hick10.txt or 8hick10.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 8hick11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 8hick10a.txt
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/old/8hick10.zip b/old/8hick10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..057fde5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/8hick10.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/8hick10h.htm b/old/8hick10h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..69b0912
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/8hick10h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11490 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>New File</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+<style type="text/css">
+<!--
+body {background:#faebd7; margin:15%; text-align:justify}
+h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {color:#A82C28}
+blockquote {font-size:14pt}
+P {font-size:14pt}
+-->
+</style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: T. Haviland Hicks Senior
+
+Author: J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+Release Date: July, 2005 [EBook #8550]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on July 22, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, David Widger,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR</h1>
+
+<br>
+<h2>BY J. RAYMOND ELDERDICE</h2>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3><br>
+TO MASTER LLOYD ELDERDICE</h3>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h2><br>
+CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<pre>
+    I. HICKS&mdash;WILD WEST BAD MAN<br>
+   II. "LEAVE IT TO HICKS"<br>
+  III. HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY<br>
+   IV. QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER<br>
+    V. HICKS MAKES A DECISION<br>
+   VI. HICKS MAKES A SPEECH<br>
+  VII. HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY<br>
+ VIII. COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN<br>
+   IX. THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK<br>
+    X. THOR'S AWAKENING<br>
+   XI. "ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"<br>
+  XII. THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS<br>
+ XIII. HICKS&mdash;CLASS KID&mdash;YALE '96<br>
+  XIV. THE GREATER GOAL<br>
+   XV. HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"<br>
+  XVI. THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON<br>
+ XVII. HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY<br>
+XVIII. T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.'S HEADWORK<br>
+  XIX. BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY<br>
+   XX. "VALE, ALMA MATER!"
+</pre>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h1><br>
+T. HAVILAND HICKS, SENIOR</h1>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>CHAPTER I</p>
+
+<p>HICKS&mdash;WILD WEST BAD MAN</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, a bold, bad man was Chuckwalla Bill&mdash;<br>
+  An' he lived in a shanty on Tom-cat Hill;<br>
+  Ten notches on the six-gun he toted on his hip&mdash;<br>
+  For he'd sent ten buckos on the One-way Trip!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister
+College football<br>
+squad, his behemoth bulk swathed in heavy blankets and crowded
+into a<br>
+narrow bunk, shifted his vast tonnage restlessly. He was dreaming
+of the<br>
+wild and woolly West, and like a six-reel Western drama thrown on
+the<br>
+screen in a moving-picture show, he visioned in his slumbers a
+vivid and<br>
+spectacular panorama.</p>
+
+<p>The first lurid scene was the Deserted Limited held up at a
+tank station in<br>
+the great Mojave Desert by a lone, masked bandit who winged the
+dreaming<br>
+Butch in the shoulder, the latter being an express guard who
+resisted.<br>
+After the desperado, Two-Gun Steve, had forced the engineer to
+run the<br>
+train back to a siding, he had ordered Butch to vamoose. Quite
+naturally,<br>
+then, the collegian next found himself staggering across the arid
+expanse,<br>
+until at last, half dead from a burning thirst, seeking vainly
+for a<br>
+water-hole, the vast stretch of sandy, sagebrush-studded wastes
+shimmered<br>
+into a gorgeous ocean of sparkling blue waters. Then, as he
+collapsed on<br>
+the scorching-hot sand, helpless, the cool water so near,
+suddenly the<br>
+scene shifted.</p>
+
+<p>In quick and vivid succession, Butch Brewster beheld a burning
+stockade<br>
+besieged by howling Indians, and a frontier town shot up by
+recklessly<br>
+riding cowboys on a jamboree. Then he became a tenderfoot,
+badgered by<br>
+yelling, shooting roisterers, and later a sheriff, bravely
+leading his<br>
+posse to a sensational battle with that same Two-Gun Steve and
+his gang,<br>
+entrenched in a rock-bound mountain defile.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, he stood with hands above his head in company with
+other<br>
+passengers of the Sagebrush Stagecoach, while a huge, red-shirted
+Westerner<br>
+with a fierce black mustache and a six-shooter in each hand
+belching<br>
+bullets at Butch's dancing feet, roared out huskily:
+"Oh&mdash;I'm a ring-tailed<br>
+roarer (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm a rip-snortin', high-falutin',
+loop-the-loopin'<br>
+<i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I'm wild an' woolly, an' full
+o' fleas, an' hard<br>
+to curry below the knees&mdash;I'm a roarin' wild-cat, an' it's
+my night to howl<br>
+(<i>bang-bang</i>)! Yip-yip-yip-<i>yeee</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch, opening his eyes and starting up, gazed about him
+in sheer<br>
+surprise; for an instant, in that state of bewilderment that
+comes with<br>
+sudden awakening, he almost believed himself in a Western ranch
+bunkhouse,<br>
+and that some happy cowboy outside roared a grotesque ballad. He
+gazed at<br>
+the interior of a rough shack built of pine boards, with bunks
+constructed<br>
+in tiers on both sides. There were figures in them&mdash;Western
+cowboys,<br>
+perhaps. Then it seemed, somehow, that the voice drifting from
+the outside<br>
+was strangely familiar. Back at Bannister College, where he
+remembered he<br>
+had gone in the dim and dusty past, he had often heard that same
+fog-horn<br>
+voice, roaring songs of a less blood-curdling character, and
+accompanied by<br>
+that same banjo twanging, which tortured the campus, and bothered
+would-be<br>
+studious youths!</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not in a moving-picture show," Butch informed himself, as
+he donned<br>
+khaki trousers, football sweater, and heavy shoes. "I'm not on a
+Western<br>
+ranch, either. I'm in the sleep-shack of Camp Bannister, the
+football<br>
+training-camp of the Bannister College squad! Those fellows in
+the bunks<br>
+are not cowboys, Indians, and bandits&mdash;they are my
+teammates! I did dream<br>
+stuff that would shame a Wild West scenario, but I understand it
+all<br>
+now&mdash;my dreams were influenced by T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.!"</p>
+
+<p>At that dramatic moment, to substantiate his statement, the
+raucous voice,<br>
+accompanied by resounding chords strummed on a banjo, sounded
+again. The<br>
+vocal and instrumental chaos was frequently punctured by revolver
+reports,<br>
+as the torturesome Caruso outside roared:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, Chuckwalla Bill thought life was sweet&mdash;<br>
+  Till he met up with Sure-shot Pete;<br>
+  A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw&mdash;<br>
+  But Sure-shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"</p>
+
+<p>The pachydermic Butch, fully dressed&mdash;and awake, raging
+in his wrath like<br>
+an active volcano, glanced at his watch, and discovered that it
+was exactly<br>
+five A.M.! Intensely pacified by this knowledge, he lumbered
+toward the<br>
+bunkhouse door and flung it open, determined to crush the
+pestersome youth<br>
+who thus unfeelingly disturbed the quietude of Camp Bannister at
+such an<br>
+unearthly hour! However, his grim purpose was temporarily
+thwarted&mdash;before<br>
+him spread a beautiful panorama, a vast canvas painted in rich
+hues and<br>
+colors, that indescribably charming masterpiece of nature,
+entitled dawn.</p>
+
+<p>Butch, gazing from the bunkhouse doorway toward the pebbly
+shore of the<br>
+placid lake stretching out for two miles before him, beheld Old
+Sol,<br>
+blood-red, peeping above the wooded hills on the far-off,
+opposite strand<br>
+of Lake Conowingo; the luminous orb laid a flaming pathway across
+the<br>
+shimmering waters, and golden bars of light, like gleaming
+fingers<br>
+outstretched, fell athwart the tall pines that towered on the
+high bluff<br>
+back of the camp. The glorious sunshine, succeeding a flood of
+rosy color,<br>
+inundated the scene; it bathed in a gorgeous radiance the early
+autumn<br>
+woods, it illumined the bunkhouse, and another rude shanty known
+to the<br>
+squad as the grub-shack, it poured down on old Hinky-Dink, the
+ancient<br>
+negro cookee, setting the breakfast tables just outside the
+canvas<br>
+cook-tent.</p>
+
+<p>"Deed, cross mah heart, Mistah Butch," grinned old Hinky-Dink,
+seeing, as<br>
+a motion picture director would express it, "Wrath registered on
+the<br>
+countenance" of Butch Brewster, "Ah done tole dat young Hicks dat
+a bird<br>
+what cain't sing an' will sing mus' be made <i>not</i> to sing!
+Ah done info'med<br>
+him dat yo'-all was layin' fo' him, cause he done bus' up yo'
+sleep!"</p>
+
+<p>A jay bird, a flashing bit of vivid blue, shot from a tall
+pine, jeering<br>
+shrilly at Butch; out on the lake, a trout leaped above the water
+for an<br>
+infinitesimal second, its shining scales gleaming in the
+sunshine. From the<br>
+cook-tent, where old Hinky-Dink grumbled at the frying pan, the
+appetizing<br>
+odor of frying fish assailed the football captain, softening his
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>High above the shanties, on a tall flagpole made from a
+straight young<br>
+pine, floated a big gold and green banner, its bright colors
+gleaming in<br>
+the sunshine; it bore the words:</p>
+
+<p>    CAMP BANNISTER<br>
+    TRAINING CAMP<br>
+    THE FOOTBALL SQUAD<br>
+    BANNISTER COLLEGE</p>
+
+<p>Head Coach Corridan, smashing the precedent that had made
+former Gold and<br>
+Green squads have their training camp at Bannister College, had
+brought<br>
+the Varsity and second-string stars to this camp on the shore of
+Lake<br>
+Conowingo, in the Pennsylvania mountains. For two weeks, one of
+which had<br>
+passed, they were to train at Camp Bannister, until college
+officially<br>
+opened; swimming, hunting, cross-country runs, and a healthful
+outdoor<br>
+existence would give the athletes superb condition, and daily
+scrimmages on<br>
+the level field back of the bluff rounded out an eleven that
+promised to be<br>
+the strongest in Bannister history.</p>
+
+<p>As big, good-natured Butch Brewster stood in the bunkhouse
+doorway, his<br>
+wrath at the pestiferous Hicks forgotten, in his rapture at the
+glorious<br>
+dawn, he saw something that showed why his dreams had been of the
+wild<br>
+West! The expression of indignation, however, yielded to one of
+humorous<br>
+affection, as he gazed toward the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't be angry with Hicks!" breathed Butch, beholding a
+spectacle more<br>
+impressive than dawn. "So, the irrepressible wretch has Coach
+Corridan's<br>
+revolvers, used in starting our training sprints, and a lot of
+blank<br>
+cartridges! He is giving an imitation of a Western bad man. No
+wonder<br>
+I dreamed of Indians, cowboys, and hold-ups; I'll have revenge on
+the<br>
+heartless villain, routing me out at five!"</p>
+
+<p>He saw a massive rock, rising thirty feet in air, its sheer
+walls scaled<br>
+only by a rope-ladder the collegians had rigged up on one side.
+Atop of<br>
+"Lookout There!" as the campers humorously designated the rock,
+roosted<br>
+a youth who possessed the colossal structure of a splinter, and
+whose<br>
+cherubic countenance was decorated with a Cheshire cat grin.
+Quite unaware<br>
+that his riotous efforts had brought out the wrathful Butch
+Brewster,<br>
+the youthful narrator of Chuckwalla Bill's stormy career
+continued his<br>
+excessively noisy s&eacute;ance.</p>
+
+<p>His costume was strictly in character with his song. He wore a
+sombrero,<br>
+picked up on his Exposition trip the past vacation, a lurid
+red<br>
+outing-shirt, and he had wrapped a blanket around each locomotive
+limb to<br>
+imitate a cowboy's chaps. Two revolvers suspended from a loosened
+belt, &agrave;<br>
+la wild West, and as Butch stared, the embryo Western bad man
+twanged a<br>
+banjo noisily, and roared the concluding stanza of his desperado
+hero's<br>
+history:</p>
+
+<p>  "Said Chuckwalla Bill, 'Oh, boys, plant me<br>
+  With my boots on&mdash;on the wide prair-eee'&mdash;<br>
+  Where the coyotes howl, they planted Bill&mdash;<br>
+  An' so far as I know, he's sleepin' there still!"</p>
+
+<p>"Here they come," grinned Butch, hearing a tumult in the
+bunkhouse, and<br>
+a confused Babel of voices. "Hicks has awakened the camp. Now
+watch the<br>
+fellows wreak summary vengeance on his toothpick frame!"</p>
+
+<p>From the sleep-shack, aroused at that weird hour by the clamor
+of the<br>
+irrepressible youth, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., tumbled others of
+the squad,<br>
+in varying stages of <i>d&eacute;shabille</i>; big Beef
+McNaughton, right half-back,<br>
+Roddy Perkins, the Titian-haired right-end, Pudge Langdon, a
+ponderous<br>
+tackle, and Monty Merriweather, a clean-cut, aggressive candidate
+for left<br>
+end. From within, other wrathy youths howled vociferous protests
+at their<br>
+tormentor:</p>
+
+<p>"Stop that noise; put your muzzle on again,
+Hicks!"&mdash;"Where's the fire?<br>
+Say, Hicks, muffle your exhaust!"&mdash;"Say, Coach, must we
+endure this day and<br>
+night?"</p>
+
+<p>The bunkhouse fairly erupted angry collegians, boiling out
+like bees<br>
+swarming from a disturbed hive; Hefty Hollingsworth, the
+Herculean<br>
+center-rush. Biff Pemberton, left half-back, Bunch Bingham, Tug
+Cardiff,<br>
+and Buster Brown, three huge last-year substitutes; second-string
+players,<br>
+Don Carterson, Cherub Challoner, Skeet Wigglesworth, and Scoop
+Sawyer. A<br>
+dozen others, from sheer laziness, hugged their bunks devotedly,
+despite<br>
+the terrific turmoil outside.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a disgrace, a <i>howling</i> shame!" exploded Beef, his
+elephantine frame<br>
+swathed in blankets to conceal a lack of vestiture, "Last night,
+until<br>
+midnight, that graceless wretch roosted on 'Lookout There' and
+because the<br>
+glorious moonlight made him sentimental and slushy, he twanged
+his banjo<br>
+and warbled such mushy stuff as 'My Love is young and fair. My
+Love has<br>
+golden hair!' When does he expect us to sleep?"</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't!" explained Monty Merriweather, with succinct
+lucidity,<br>
+grinning at his comrades. "Say, fellows, you know how Hicks
+dreads a cold<br>
+shower-bath; well, some of you rage at him from the other side of
+the rock,<br>
+while I climb up the rope-ladder and close with him! Then some of
+you<br>
+prehistoric pachyderms ascend, and we'll chuck that pestersome
+insect into<br>
+the cold, cold lake&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Done!" chuckled Butch Brewster, delightedly. So, while he,
+Beef<br>
+McNaughton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and others beguiled the jeering
+Hicks,<br>
+expressing in dynamic, red-hot sentences their exact opinions of
+his<br>
+perfidy, the athletic Monty imitated a mountain-scaling Italian
+soldier.<br>
+He climbed stealthily up the swaying rope-ladder; nearer and
+nearer to the<br>
+unsuspecting youth he crept, while the cherubic Hicks, to
+tantalize the<br>
+group below, again burst forth:</p>
+
+<p>"Whoop-eee! I'm a bold, <i>bad</i> man (<i>bang-bang</i>)! I
+got ten notches on my<br>
+ole six-gun&mdash;I'm a <i>killer</i>. I wings a man before
+breakfast every day! I<br>
+got a private burying-ground, where I plants my victims
+(<i>bang-bang</i>)!<br>
+Yip-yip-yip-<i>yee</i>! Oh, I'm a&mdash;Ouch, Monty&mdash;leggo
+me&mdash;Oh, I'll be<br>
+good&mdash;why didn't I pull that rope-ladder up here? Don't bust
+my banjo<br>
+&mdash;don't let Butch get me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Monty Merriweather, reaching the flat top of the rock, had
+courageously<br>
+flung himself, without regard for the Bad Man's desperate record,
+on the<br>
+startled Hicks, whose first thought was for his beloved banjo.
+While he<br>
+held the blithesome tormentor helpless, Butch, Beef, and Roddy
+Perkins<br>
+climbed the rope-ladder, and the grinning youth was soon in their
+clutches,<br>
+while the collegians below, like a Roman, mob aroused by the
+oratory of Mr.<br>
+Mark Antony, howled for revenge:</p>
+
+<p>"Bust the old banjo over his head, Butch!"&mdash;"Sing to him,
+Beef&mdash;that's<br>
+an <i>awful</i> revenge on Hicks!"&mdash;"Tie him to the
+rock&mdash;make him miss his<br>
+breakfast!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," growled Butch, eyeing his sunny comrade ominously,
+"you ought to<br>
+be tarred and feathered, and shot at sunrise! When Bannister
+opens, you<br>
+will be a Senior, and you'll disgrace '19's dignity! This is a
+sample of<br>
+what we have endured at college for three years, and the worst is
+yet to<br>
+come! You have committed the awful atrocity of awakening Camp
+Bannister<br>
+at five A. M. with your ridiculous imitation, of a Western
+desperado. To<br>
+dampen your ardor, we will chuck you into the cold
+lake&mdash;just as you are!"</p>
+
+<p>"Help! Assistance! Aid! Succor!" shouted the happy-go-lucky
+Hicks, as the<br>
+behemoth Butch and Beef seized him, swinging him aloft with
+ludicrous ease,<br>
+"Police! Fire! Murder! Take care of my banjo, Monty. Tell all the
+fellows<br>
+at old Bannister I died game, and plant Hair-Trigger Bill with
+his boots<br>
+on! Oooo, Beef, Butch, <i>have a heart</i>, that water is
+<i>cold</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., relieved of banjo and revolvers, but
+his<br>
+shadow-like structure still clad in shoes, trousers, with
+imitation "chaps"<br>
+and flamboyant red shirt, with his classic head still adorned
+by<br>
+the sombrero, was swung back and forth by the two bulky
+football<br>
+stars&mdash;once&mdash;twice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Three&mdash;Let him go!" shouted Butch Brewster, and like a
+falling meteor,<br>
+the splinter-like youth, who had already fallen from grace, shot
+from the<br>
+rock, head-first, disappearing with a spectacular splash in the
+icy waters<br>
+of Lake Conowingo. Knowing Hicks to be as much at home in the
+water as a<br>
+fish in an aquarium, the hilarious squad on shore prepared to
+jeer his<br>
+reappearance above the water; however, their program was
+interrupted by<br>
+old Hinky-Dink, who stood in the cook-tent doorway, belaboring a
+dishpan<br>
+lustily with a soup-ladle, and shouting:</p>
+
+<p>"Breakfus' am served; fus' an' las' call fo' breakfus; all dem
+what am late<br>
+don't git no breakfus!"</p>
+
+<p>"Breakfast!" exclaimed Monty Merriweather, who, with Roddy,
+Butch, and<br>
+Beef, remained on the rock, despite the summons of the Cookee.
+"Hurry up,<br>
+Hicks, I'm ravenous. Say, Butch, suppose all that Western regalia
+makes him<br>
+water-logged; he's a terribly long while down there! Didn't he
+look like<br>
+the hero in a moving-picture feature? We've given him the
+water-cure, but<br>
+he will do that same stunt over again. That sunny-souled Hicks is
+simply<br>
+Incorrigible!"</p>
+
+<p>A second later, the grinning, cheery countenance of T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., shot above the water, and simultaneously with his
+appearance, just as<br>
+though he had been chanting below the surface, for the
+entertainment of the<br>
+finny denizens of Lake Conowingo, the irrepressible youth
+roared:</p>
+
+<p>  "A hotter shootin' match Last Chance never saw&mdash;<br>
+  But Sure-Shot Pete was some quicker on the draw!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER II</p>
+
+<p>"LEAVE IT TO HICKS"</p>
+
+<p>Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, known to toil-tortured Gold
+and Green<br>
+football squads from time immemorial as "the Slave-Driver,"
+Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster, and serious Deacon Radford, the star Bannister
+quarter-back,<br>
+foregathered around a table in the Camp Bannister grub-shack.</p>
+
+<p>It was ten-thirty of the morning whose dawn T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., had<br>
+blithesomely hailed with an impromptu musicale and saengerfest on
+"Lookout<br>
+There!" rock, and the football triumvirate were in togs. The
+squad, over in<br>
+the bunkhouse, noisily donned gridiron armor for the morning
+practice, and<br>
+the pestiferous Hicks was maintaining a mysterious silence,
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>This football trio, on whom rested the responsibility of
+rounding out a<br>
+winning Bannister eleven, vastly resembled a coterie of German
+generals,<br>
+back of the trenches, studying a war-map. Before them was spread
+what<br>
+seemed to be a large checker-board. It was a miniature gridiron,
+with the<br>
+chalk-marks painted in white; there were thumb-tacks stuck here
+and there,<br>
+some with flat tops painted green and gold, others, representing
+the enemy,<br>
+were solid red. The former had names printed on them, Butch,
+Roddy,<br>
+Beef, and so on. By sticking these on the board, the three
+directors of<br>
+Bannister's football destiny could work out new plays, and
+originate<br>
+possible winning lineups.</p>
+
+<p>"We've just got to win the State Championship this season,
+Coach!" declared<br>
+Butch, banging the table emphatically, as he stated a
+self-evident fact.<br>
+"It's my last year for Old Bannister, and so with Beef and Pudge.
+I'll give<br>
+every ounce of strength I possess In every game, to make that
+pennant float<br>
+over Bannister Field!"</p>
+
+<p>"Bannister <i>will</i> win it!" vowed the behemoth Beef, his
+good-natured<br>
+countenance grim, and his jaw set. "Not for five years has a Gold
+and Green<br>
+team won the Championship&mdash;not since the year before Butch
+and I were<br>
+Freshmen! We've got a splendid bunch of material to build a team
+with,<br>
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Our biggest problem is this," spoke Coach Corridan, as with a
+phenomenal<br>
+display of strength he took Beef McNaughton between thumb and
+forefinger<br>
+and placed him on the field. "We must strengthen both line and
+backfield,<br>
+for we lost by graduation Babe McCabe, Heavy Hughes, and Jack
+Merritt. Now,<br>
+to replace that lost power&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Just then, from directly beneath the open window by which they
+had<br>
+gathered, like the midnight serenade of a romantic lover,
+sounded<br>
+the well-known foghorn voice of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as to
+the<br>
+plunkety-plunk of a banjo accompaniment, he warbled
+melodiously:</p>
+
+<p>  "Gone are the days&mdash;I used to spend with
+Car-o-li-nah!<br>
+  She had the sunshine in her laughter
+(<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)<br>
+  Just like that state they named her after&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" announced Butch, stealthily approaching the window,
+and<br>
+beckoning his companions. "Easy&mdash;look at him, Deke, there he
+is, Hicks,<br>
+the irrepressible! We might as well attempt to stab a rhinocerous
+to death<br>
+with a humming-bird's feather, as to try and reform
+<i>him</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Arrayed like a lily of the field, a model of sartorial
+splendor, Hicks<br>
+occupied a chair beneath the window, tilted back gracefully
+against the<br>
+side of the grub-shack. He had decked his splinter-structure with
+a<br>
+dazzling Palm Beach suit, and a glorious pink silk shirt, off-set
+by a<br>
+lurid scarf. A Panama hat decorated his head, white Oxfords and
+flamboyant<br>
+hosiery adorned his feet, while the inevitable Cheshire cat grin
+beautified<br>
+his cherubic countenance. A latest "best seller" was propped on
+his knees,<br>
+and as he perused its thrilling pages, he carelessly strummed his
+beloved<br>
+banjo, and in stentorian tones chanted a sentimental ballad:</p>
+
+<p>  "Gone are the days&mdash;the golden days I'm dreaming
+of,<br>
+  I think I hear her softly calling (plunkety-plunk)<br>
+  'Will you be back? Will you be back? (plunk-plunk)<br>
+  Back to the Car-o-li-nah you love?'"(plunkety-plunk),</p>
+
+<p>For three golden campus years T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+gayly pursued the<br>
+even tenor (or <i>basso</i>, since he possessed a foghorn,
+subterranean voice)<br>
+of his Bannister career. He absolutely refused to take life
+seriously, and<br>
+he was forever arousing the wrath&mdash;mostly pretended, for no
+one could be<br>
+really angry with the genial youth&mdash;of his comrades, by
+twanging his banjo<br>
+and roaring out rollicking ballads at all hours. He was never so
+happy<br>
+as when entertaining a crowd of happy students in his cozy
+quarters,<br>
+or escorting a Hicks' Personally Conducted expedition downtown
+for a<br>
+Beef-Steak Bust, at his expense, at Jerry's, the rendezvous of
+hungry<br>
+collegians.</p>
+
+<p>However, despite his butterfly existence, Hicks, possessed of
+a<br>
+scintillating mind, always set the scholastic pace for 1919, by
+means of<br>
+occasional study-sprints, as he characteristically called them.
+But when it<br>
+came to helping his beloved Dad realize a long-cherished ambition
+to behold<br>
+his only son and heir shatter Hicks, Sr.'s, celebrated athletic
+records, it<br>
+was a different story. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., ever since he
+committed<br>
+the farcical <i>faux pas</i> of running the wrong way with the
+pigskin in<br>
+the Freshman-Sophomore football contest of his first year, had
+been a<br>
+super-colossal athletic joke at old Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>His record to date, beside that reverse touchdown that won for
+the<br>
+Sophomores, consisted of scoring a home-run with the bases
+congested, on a<br>
+strike-out; of smashing hurdles and cross-bars on the track;
+endangering<br>
+his heedless career with the shot and hammer; and making a
+ridiculous farce<br>
+of every event he entered, to the vast hilarity of the students,
+who, with<br>
+the exception of Butch Brewster, had no idea his ridiculous
+efforts were in<br>
+earnest. In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable
+promise,<br>
+which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.</p>
+
+<p>Hicks, the lovable, impulsive, and irrepressible, with his
+invariable sunny<br>
+disposition, his generous nature, and his democratic, loyal
+comradeship<br>
+for everybody, was loved by old Bannister. The students forgave
+him his<br>
+pestersome ways, his frequent torturing of them with
+banjo-twanging and<br>
+rollicking ballads. His classmates idolized him, Juniors and
+Sophomores<br>
+were his true friends, and entering Freshmen always regarded
+this<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth as a demigod of the campus.</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, who was forever futilely lecturing the
+heedless Hicks,<br>
+thrust his head from the grub-shack window, fought down a grin,
+and sternly<br>
+arraigned his graceless comrade:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you frivolous, campus-cluttering, infinitesimal atom
+of nothing,<br>
+you labor under the insane delusion that college life is a
+continuous<br>
+vaudeville show. You absolutely refuse to take your Bannister
+years<br>
+seriously, you banjo-thumping, pillow-punishing,
+campus-torturing<br>
+nonentity. You will never grasp the splendid opportunities within
+your<br>
+reach! You have no ambition but to strum that banjo, roar
+ridiculous songs,<br>
+fuss up like a tailor's dummy, and pester your comrades, or drag
+them down<br>
+to Jerry's for the eats! You won't be earnest, you Human Cipher,
+Before you<br>
+entered Bannister, you formed your ideas and ideals of campus
+life from<br>
+colored posters, moving-pictures, magazine stories, and stage
+dramas like<br>
+'Brown of Harvard"; you have surely lived up, or down, to those
+ideals,<br>
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Them's harsh words, Butch!" joyously responded the grinning
+Hicks,<br>
+unchastened, for he knew good Butch Brewster would not, for a
+fortune, have<br>
+him forsake his care-free nature. "Thou loyal comrade of my happy
+campus<br>
+years, what wouldst thou of me?&mdash;have me don sack-cloth and
+ashes, strike<br>
+'The Funeral March' on my golden lyre, and cry out in anguish,
+'ai! ai!<br>
+'Nay, nay, a couple of nays; college years are all too brief;
+hence I<br>
+shall, by my own original process, extract from them all the
+sunshine and<br>
+happiness possible, and by my wonderful musical and vocal powers,
+bring joy<br>
+to my colleagues, who&mdash;Ouch, Butch&mdash;look out for that
+nail, you inhuman<br>
+elephant&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch, at that juncture of Hicks' monologue, had
+effectively terminated<br>
+it by leaning from the window, grasping his unsuspecting comrade
+by the<br>
+scruff of the neck, and dragging him over the window-ledge, into
+the<br>
+grub-shack, and the presence of Coach Corridan and Deacon
+Radford.<br>
+Strenuous objection was registered, both by the futilely
+struggling Hicks,<br>
+and a nail projecting from the sill, which caught in the Palm
+Beach<br>
+trousers and ripped a long rent in them; fortunately, Hicks'
+anatomy<br>
+escaped a similar fate.</p>
+
+<p>"A ripping good move, eh-what?" chuckled Hicks, twisting like
+a<br>
+contortionist, to view the damage done his vestiture, "Hello,
+what have we<br>
+here?&mdash;the German field-map, by the Van Dyke beard of the
+Prophet! I<br>
+bring the Kaiser's order, ham and eggs, and a cup of coffee. No,
+that's a<br>
+mistake. General Hen Von Kluck, lead a brigade of submarines up
+yon hill to<br>
+thunder the Russian fort! Von Hindering-Bug, send a flock of
+aeroplanes and<br>
+Zeppelins to the Allied trenches, the enemy is shooting Russian
+caviare<br>
+at&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster's
+indignation,<br>
+"you are such a wonder at solving perplexing problems by your
+marvelous<br>
+'inspirations,' suppose you turn the scintillating searchlight of
+your<br>
+colossal intellect upon the question that Bannister must solve,
+to produce<br>
+a championship eleven!"</p>
+
+<p>It was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, inveterate habit, whenever a
+baffling<br>
+situation, or what the French call an "<i>impasse</i>" presented
+itself, to<br>
+state with the utmost confidence, "Oh, just leave it to Hicks!"
+On<br>
+most occasions, when he made this remark, accompanied by a
+swaggering<br>
+braggadocio that never failed to make good Butch Brewster
+wrathful, the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth possessed not the slightest idea of how the
+problem<br>
+was to be solved. He just uttered his rash promise, and then
+trusted to his<br>
+needed inspiration to illuminate a way out! And, as the Bannister
+campus<br>
+well knew, Hicks had solved more than one torturing question by
+an<br>
+inspiration that flashed on his intellect, when all hope of a
+satisfactory<br>
+solution seemed dead.</p>
+
+<p>For example, in his Sophomore year, when the Freshman leader,
+James<br>
+Roderick Perkins, that same Titian-haired Roddy who was now a
+bulwark at<br>
+right end, became charged with a Napoleonic ambition, and
+organized a<br>
+Freshman Equal Rights campaign, paralyzing Bannister football by
+refusing<br>
+to allow Freshmen to try for athletic teams, unless their demands
+were<br>
+granted. Hicks, when his inspiration finally smote him, smashed
+the<br>
+Votes-for-Freshmen crusade, and quelled Roddy, Futilely racking
+his brain<br>
+for a counter-attack, having blithely told the troubled campus,
+"Just leave<br>
+it to Hicks," he had ceased to worry, and then the inspiration
+had come, By<br>
+The Big Brotherhood of Bannister giving the upper-classmen full
+government<br>
+over Freshmen, a scheme successfully carried through, the peril
+had been<br>
+thwarted.</p>
+
+<p>"I got a letter from Dad yesterday," began Hicks, somewhat
+irrelevantly,<br>
+considering the Coach's remarks, "and he said&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'&mdash;Inclosed find the check you wrote for,'" quoth Deacon
+Radford,<br>
+humorously. "'If you keep up this pace, I shall have to turn my
+steel<br>
+mills to producing war munitions, to pay your college bills.'
+Say, Hicks,<br>
+seriously, listen to our problem, and suggest what Coach Corridan
+should<br>
+do."</p>
+
+<p>While Hicks' athletic powers were known to equal those of the
+paralyzed<br>
+oldest inhabitant of a Civil War Veterans' Home, the sunny youth
+knew<br>
+football thoroughly; often he originated plays that the team
+worked out<br>
+with success, and his suggestions were always weighed carefully
+by the<br>
+football directors. So, after he had adjusted his lurid scarf at
+the<br>
+correct angle, and gazed ruefully at his torn habiliments, the
+sunshiny<br>
+Senior seated himself at the table, before the "war-map," and
+gave heed to<br>
+the Coach.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="aw.jpg (100K)" src="aw.jpg" height="839" width="549">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Here's the problem, Hicks," said the Slave-Driver, indicating
+the<br>
+Bannister eleven, represented by the gold and green topped
+thumb-tacks.<br>
+"From the line we lost Babe, a tackle, Heavy, a guard, and Jack
+Merritt, a<br>
+star end. Now, Monty Merriweather will hold down Jack's place O.
+K.&mdash;l can<br>
+shift Beef from right half to guard, and put Butch at right-half,
+while<br>
+Bunch Bingham can take care of Babe's old berth at tackle. But I
+have no<br>
+one to shoot in at full-back, when I shift Butch; you see, Hicks,
+my plan<br>
+is to build an eleven that can execute old-time, line-smashing
+football,<br>
+and up-to-date open play as well; I want fast ends and halves,
+with a<br>
+snappy quarter, and I have them; also, the backfield is heavy
+enough for<br>
+line-bucking, if I get my beefy full-back. I must have a big,
+heavy, fast<br>
+player, a giant who simply can't be stopped when he hits the
+line. With<br>
+Butch and Biff at halves, Deke at quarter. Roddy and Monty ends,
+and my<br>
+heavy line&mdash;why, a ponderous, irresistible Hercules at
+full-back will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Say!" grinned the irrepressible Hicks, as Coach Corridan
+warmed up to<br>
+his vision, "you don't want <i>much</i>, Coach! Why don't you ask
+Ted Coy, the<br>
+famous ex-Yale full-back, to give up his business and play the
+position for<br>
+you? Maybe you can persuade Charlie Brickley, a <i>fair</i> sort
+of dropkicker,<br>
+to quit coaching Hopkins, and kick a few goals for old Bannister!
+I get<br>
+you, Coach&mdash;you want a fellow about the size of the
+Lusitania, made of<br>
+structural steel, a Brobdingnagian Colossus who will guarantee to
+advance<br>
+the ball fifteen yards per rush, or money refunded!</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Coach, while you are wanting things, just wish for a
+chap who will<br>
+play the entire game himself, taking the ball down the field,
+while the<br>
+rest of the team are pushed along in rolling-chairs, while
+imbibing pink<br>
+tea. Get a prodigy who will instill such terror into our rivals
+that<br>
+instead of playing the schedule, Bannister will simply arrange
+with other<br>
+teams to mark themselves down defeated, and then agree what the
+scores<br>
+shall be."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew it!" growled Butch Brewster, glowering at the jocular
+youth. "We<br>
+should never have consulted him on this problem, for it is not
+one within<br>
+his power to solve, even though he performed the miracle of
+talking<br>
+seriously about it Now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Now&mdash;" echoed Hicks, with pretended seriousness, "Coach,
+you just hand me<br>
+the blue-prints and specifications of said Gargantuan Hercules,
+and I'll<br>
+try to corrall just such a phenomenon as you desire. Never
+hesitate to<br>
+consult me on such important matters, for I am ever-ready to cast
+aside my<br>
+own multifarious duties, when my Alma Mater needs my mental
+assistance,<br>
+or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, are you <i>crazy</i>?" fleered Deacon Radford, moved
+to excitement,<br>
+despite his great faith in the versatile youth. "Full-backs like
+that do<br>
+not grow on trees; the only one I ever read of was Ole Skjarsen,
+in<br>
+George Fitch's 'Siwash College Stories,' and he was purely
+fictitious. We<br>
+know you have accomplished some great things by your
+'inspirations,' but as<br>
+for this&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Just leave it to Hicks" quoth the irrepressible youth,
+swaggering toward<br>
+the door with an affected nonchalant self-confidence that aroused
+Butch to<br>
+wrath, and vastly amused his companions. "I'll admit a human
+juggernaut<br>
+like Coach Corridan dreams of will be hard to round up, but, I'll
+have an<br>
+inspiration soon. Don't worry about your old eleven, your problem
+will be<br>
+solved, and you will have a team that can play fifty-seven
+varieties of<br>
+football. Raw revolver, my comrades."</p>
+
+<p>When the graceless T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had sauntered
+gracefully out of<br>
+the grub-shack, big Butch Brewster, almost exploding with
+suppressed wrath,<br>
+stared at Slave-Driver Corridan and staid Deacon Radford a full
+minute;<br>
+then he grinned,</p>
+
+<p>"That&mdash;Hicks!" he murmured, struggling against a desire
+to laugh. "What a<br>
+ridiculous prophecy! 'Just leave it to Hicks!' Well, that means
+the problem<br>
+goes unsolved, for though I confess he <i>is</i> brilliant, and
+his so-called<br>
+'inspirations' have helped old Bannister; when it comes to
+rushing out and<br>
+lassoing a smashing. Herculean full-back&mdash;<i>bah</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, when Coach Corridan and the Gold and Green
+squad climbed<br>
+the bluff to the field back of Camp Bannister, for morning signal
+drill,<br>
+their last memory was of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., arrayed in
+radiant<br>
+vestiture, his chair tilted against the bunkhouse&mdash;the
+chords of the banjo,<br>
+and his foghorn voice drifting to them on the warm September
+air:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, father and mother pay all the bills
+(<i>plunk-plunk</i>)<br>
+  And we have all the fun (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>)<br>
+  With the money that we spend in college life!"</p>
+
+<p>Two hours afterward, as a tired, perspiring squad scrambled
+down the bluff,<br>
+and made for the cool waters of Lake Conowingo, a mysterious
+silence,<br>
+like a mighty wave, literally surged toward them. Camp Bannister
+seemed<br>
+deserted, the sun was still shining, the birds sang as cheerily
+as ever,<br>
+but instinctively the collegians felt an indescribable
+loneliness, a sense<br>
+of tremendous loss.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" shouted Butch Brewster, loudly, his voice shattering
+the<br>
+stillness. "Hicks&mdash;ahoy! I say, Hicks&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Old Hinky-Dink, a letter in his hand, hobbled from the
+cook-tent toward<br>
+them; like a sinister harbinger of evil he advanced, grinning
+deprecatingly<br>
+at the squad:</p>
+
+<p>"Mistah Hicks am gone!" he announced importantly. "He done gib
+me fo' bits<br>
+to row him ober to de village, to cotch de noon 'spress fo'
+Philadelphy!<br>
+Heah am a letter what he lef'&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, to whom the <i>billet-doux</i> was
+addressed in T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while
+the squad<br>
+listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled
+youth;</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR BUTCH:</p>
+
+<p>"Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on!
+I'm called<br>
+away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow
+it in the<br>
+room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next
+century.<br>
+Give my <i>adieux</i> to Coach Corridan and the squad.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours truthfully,</p>
+
+<p>"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S.: Tell Coach Corridan he should worry&mdash;<i>not</i>!
+I'm hot on the trail of<br>
+a fullback that will make Ted Coy at his coyest look like the
+paralyzed<br>
+inmate of an old man's home. Just leave it to Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER III</p>
+
+<p>HICKS' PRODIGIOUS PRODIGY</p>
+
+<p>  "Has anybody here seen our Hicks?<br>
+  H-i-c-k-s!<br>
+  Has anybody here seen our Hicks?<br>
+  If you've seen him, answer, 'Yes!'<br>
+  He's tall and slim, and he wears a grin,<br>
+  And his banjo-thumping is a sin.<br>
+  Has <i>anybody</i> here seen our Hicks&mdash;<br>
+  Hicks&mdash;and his old banjo?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Butch Brewster, big Beef McNaughton, the Phillyloo
+Bird&mdash;that<br>
+flamingo-like Senior&mdash;and little Theophilus Opperdyke, the
+timorous boner<br>
+whom Bannister College called the "Human Encyclopedia," roosted
+on the<br>
+sacred Senior Fence, between the Gymnasium and the Administration
+Building.<br>
+A gloomy silence, like a somber mantle, enshrouded the four
+members of '19,<br>
+as they listened to a rollicking parody on, "Has Anybody Here
+Seen Kelly?"<br>
+chanted by some Juniors in Nordyke, with T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+as the<br>
+object of solicitude. Nor did the melancholy youths respond to
+the queries<br>
+hurled down at them from the dormitories' windows:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Butch Brewster, where is that crazy Hicks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Beef, ain't our Hicks a-comin' back here no more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Phillyloo, any word from our Hicks yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ahoy there, Theophilus, where is Hicks, the Missing?"</p>
+
+<p>The seven-thirty study-hour bell was ringing, its mellow
+chimes sounding<br>
+from the Administration Building tower. From the windows of the
+dormitories<br>
+gleams of light shot athwart the darkness. Over in Creighton
+Hall, the<br>
+abode of Freshmen, a silence reigned, but in Smithson, where the
+Sophomores<br>
+roomed, Nordyke, home of the Juniors, and Bannister, haunt of the
+solemn<br>
+Seniors, pandemonium obtained. In these dorm. rooms and corridors
+that<br>
+night, just as in the class-rooms, or on the campus, and
+Bannister Field<br>
+that day, there was but one topic. Whenever two students met,
+came the<br>
+query inevitable:</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Hicks? Isn't Hicks coming back this year?"</p>
+
+<p>The Freshmen, bewildered, quite naturally, at the furore made
+over<br>
+one missing student, asked, "Who is Hicks?" Seeking information
+from<br>
+upper-classmen they received innumerable tales, in the nature of
+Iliad<br>
+and Odyssey, concerning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; they heard of his
+campus<br>
+exploits, such as his originating The Big Brotherhood of
+Bannister, and<br>
+they laughed, at recitals of his athletic fiascos. They were told
+of his<br>
+inevitably sunny nature, his loyal comradeship, his generous
+disposition,<br>
+and as a result, the Freshmen, too, became intensely interested
+in the<br>
+all-important campus problem: "Where is T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Theophilus Opperdyke, whose big-rimmed spectacles, high
+forehead,<br>
+and bushy hair gave him an intensely owlish appearance,
+sighed<br>
+tremendously, stared solemnly at his class-mates, and became the
+author of<br>
+a most astounding statement: "I&mdash;I can't study," quavered
+the "boner,"<br>
+he whose tender devotion to his books was a campus tradition, and
+whose<br>
+loyalty to his firm friend, the blithesome Hicks, was as that of
+Damon<br>
+to Pythias, "I just <i>can't</i> care about my studies, without
+Hicks here!<br>
+Somehow, it&mdash;it doesn't seem like old times, on the
+campus."</p>
+
+<p>"I should say not!" ejaculated the Phillyloo Bird,
+sepulchrally, his<br>
+string-bean length draped with extreme decorative effect on the
+Senior<br>
+Fence, "Life at old Bannister without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is
+about as<br>
+interesting as 'The Annual Report of the Department of
+Agriculture!'<br>
+Prexy thought he started the college on its Marathon three days
+ago, but<br>
+Bannister will not be officially opened until Hicks stands by his
+window<br>
+some study-hour, twangs that old banjo, and shatters the campus
+quietude<br>
+with a ballad roared in his fog-horn voice!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, enshrouded in melancholy, instinctively
+gazed up at the<br>
+windows of the room T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. had reserved on the
+third floor<br>
+of Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., as if he fully expected to
+behold<br>
+the missing youth materialize. There, in lonely grandeur, waited
+the<br>
+sunny-souled Senior's vast aggregation of trunks, crates, and
+packing<br>
+boxes, together with Hicks' baggage brought down from Camp
+Bannister. The<br>
+bothersome banjo had disappeared at the same time the youthful
+Caruso<br>
+imitated the Arabs, folding his figurative tent, and stealing
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a strange paradox," boomed Butch Brewster, finding that
+no Hicks<br>
+appeared at the window, "but for three years Bannister has
+stormed at Hicks<br>
+for bothering us during study-hour, or at midnight, with his
+saengerfest,<br>
+and now I'd give anything to see him up there, and to hear that
+banjo, and<br>
+his songs! It is just as if the sun doesn't shine on the campus,
+when T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., is away!"</p>
+
+<p>Bannister College had been running for three days "on one
+cylinder," as<br>
+the Phillyloo Bird quaintly phrased it, on account of the
+gladsome Hicks'<br>
+mysterious absence. Not a word had the Head Coach, Captain
+Brewster, the<br>
+football squad, or any of the collegians received from the
+blithesome<br>
+youth, since the <i>billet-doux</i> he left with old Hinky-Dink
+at Camp<br>
+Bannister. Old students, returning to the campus for another
+golden year,<br>
+invaded Hicks' room in Bannister, ready to enjoy the cozy den of
+that<br>
+jolly Senior, but they encountered silence and desolation. No one
+had the<br>
+slightest knowledge of where the cheery Hicks could be; they
+missed his<br>
+singing and banjo strumming, his pestersome ways, his cheerful
+good nature,<br>
+his cozy quarters always open house to all, and his Hicks'
+Personally<br>
+Conducted tours downtown to Jerry's for those celebrated
+Beefsteak Busts.</p>
+
+<p>A telegram to Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., in Pittsburgh,
+sent by the<br>
+worried Butch Brewster, had brought this concise response:</p>
+
+<p>No knowledge of Thomas' whereabouts. He should be at
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer," reflected Beef McNaughton, shifting his bulk on the
+protesting<br>
+fence. "We know Hicks will be back, for all his luggage is stowed
+away<br>
+in his room, and we are sure he is giving us all this mystery
+just for a<br>
+joke&mdash;he dearly loves to arrange a sensational and dramatic
+climax&mdash;but<br>
+we just can't get used to his not being on the campus. When
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke can't study, it's high time the S.O.S. signal was sent
+to T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not the worst of it," growled Captain Butch Brewster,
+his arm<br>
+across little Theophilus' shoulders. "The football squad misses
+Hicks,<br>
+Beef. For the past two seasons he has sat at the training-table,
+his<br>
+invariable good-humor, his Cheshire cat grin, and his sunny ways
+have kept<br>
+the fellows in fine mental trim so they haven't worried over the
+game. But<br>
+now, just as soon as he left Camp Bannister, the barometer of
+their spirits<br>
+went down to zero and every meal at training-table is a funeral.
+Coach<br>
+Corridan can't inject any pep into the scrimmages, and he says if
+Hicks<br>
+doesn't return soon, Bannister's chances of the Championship are
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>"As Theophilus says," responded the gloomy Beef, "we just
+can't get used<br>
+to his not being here. We miss his good-nature, his sunny smile,
+the jolly<br>
+crowds in his cozy quarters&mdash;why, the campus is talking of
+nothing but<br>
+Hicks&mdash;and I don't know what Bannister will do after Hicks
+graduates&mdash;shut<br>
+down, I suppose!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you know," grinned the Phillyloo Bird, his cadaverous
+structure<br>
+humped over like a turkey on the roost, "our Hicks hath sallied
+forth on<br>
+the trail of a full-back, a Hercules who will smash the other
+elevens to<br>
+infinitesimal smithereens! He told the squad to just leave it to
+Hicks,<br>
+so don't be surprised if he is making flying trips to Yale,
+Harvard, and<br>
+Princeton, striving to corral some embryo Ted Coy. Remember how
+Hicks often<br>
+fulfills his rash prophecies!"</p>
+
+<p>"A Herculean full-back&mdash;Bah!" fleered Butch, for all the
+campus knew of<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, extremely rash vow to unearth a
+"phenom." "The<br>
+truth of it is, fellows. Hicks has failed to locate such a wonder
+as Coach<br>
+Corridac outlined, for there ain't no such animal! He doesn't
+like to<br>
+come back to Bannister without having made good his promise,
+without that<br>
+Gargantuan giant he vowed to round up for the Gold and
+Green."</p>
+
+<p>Just then, as if to substantiate Butch's jeering statement, a
+youth wearing<br>
+the uniform and cap of The Western Union Telegraph Company
+and<br>
+advancing across the campus at that terrific speed always
+exhibited by<br>
+messenger-boys, appeared in the offing. Periscoping the four
+Seniors on the<br>
+fence, he navigated his course accordingly and pulling a yellow
+envelope<br>
+from his cap, he queried, in charmingly chaste English:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, kin youse tell me where to find a feller name o'
+Brewster, wot's<br>
+cap'n o' de football bunch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right here, Little Nemo," advised the Phillyloo Bird,
+solemnly. "Hast thou<br>
+any messages from New York for me? John D. Rockefeller promised
+to wire me<br>
+whether or not to purchase war-stocks."</p>
+
+<p>The Phillyloo Bird, at this stage of his monologue, was
+interrupted by a<br>
+yell that would have caused a full-blooded Choctaw Indian to turn
+pale.<br>
+This came from good Butch Brewster, who, having signed for the
+message,<br>
+and imagined all manner of catastrophes, from world-wars,
+earthquakes,<br>
+pestilence and loss of wealth, down to bad news from Hicks, after
+the<br>
+fashion of those receiving telegrams but seldom, had scanned the
+yellow<br>
+slip. Never before, or afterward, not even when the luckless
+Butch fell in<br>
+love, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., assisted Cupid, did the
+pachydermic Butch<br>
+act so insanely as on this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"Whoop-<i>eee! Yee-ow! Wow-wow-wow</i>!" howled the supposedly
+solemn Senior,<br>
+tumbling from the Senior fence and rolling on the campus like a
+decapitated<br>
+rooster. "Hip-hip-<i>hooray</i>! Ring the bell, Beef, get the
+fellows out, have<br>
+the Band ready, Oh, where is Coach Corridan? Read it, Beef,
+Theophilus,<br>
+Phillyloo. Oh, Hicks is <i>coming</i> and he's got&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It is possible that little Theophilus, who firmly believed
+that big Butch<br>
+Brewster had gone emotionally insane, would have fled for help,
+but at that<br>
+juncture members of the Gold and Green football squad, with Head
+Coach<br>
+Patrick Henry Corridan, appeared, marching funereally toward the
+Gym.,<br>
+where a signal quiz was booked for seven forty-five. Beholding
+the<br>
+paralyzing spectacle of their captain apparently in paroxysms on
+the grass,<br>
+Hefty Hollingsworth, Biff Pemberton, Monty Merriweather and Pudge
+Langdon<br>
+hurled themselves on his tonnage, while Roddy Perkins sat on his
+head, and<br>
+wrested the telegram from his grasp,</p>
+
+<p>"Call up Matteawan," shouted Roddy, unfolding the slip, "Butch
+is getting<br>
+barmy in the dome, he&mdash;Oh, Coach, fellows&mdash;<i>great
+joy</i>! Just heed."</p>
+
+<p>James Roderick Perkins, as excited as a Senator about to make
+his first<br>
+speech, read aloud the telegram, on which the heedless Hicks had
+triple<br>
+rates:</p>
+
+<p>"BUTCH:</p>
+
+<p>"Coming 8.30 P. M. express today. Discharge entire
+eleven&mdash;got whole team<br>
+in one. Knock out partitions between five rooms. Make space for
+Thor, the<br>
+Prodigious Prodigy! Leave it to Hicks!</p>
+
+<p>"T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR."</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks is coming!" shrieked the Phillyloo Bird, soaring down
+from the<br>
+Senior Fence like a condor. "He will be here in less than an
+hour; he sent<br>
+this wire just before his train left Philadelphia. Money is no
+object, when<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>"'Discharge entire eleven,'" quoth Butch Brewster, having
+somewhat subdued<br>
+his frenzy. "'Got whole team in one&mdash;knock out partitions
+between <i>five</i><br>
+rooms&mdash;make space for Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy!' Now,
+what in the world<br>
+has that lunatical Hicks done? Who can Thor be?"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Cardiff, Buster Brown, Bunch Bingham, Scoop Sawyer, little
+Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth, Don Carterson, and Cherub Challoner, not having
+given their<br>
+brawn to the subduing of Butch, now kindly donated their brain,
+in all<br>
+manner of weird suggestions. According to their various surmises,
+T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., had lured the Strong Man away from Barnum
+and Bailey's<br>
+Circus, had in some way reincarnated the mythical Norse god,
+Thor, had<br>
+hired some Greco-Roman wrestler, or by other devices too numerous
+and<br>
+ridiculous to mention, had produced a full-back according to
+Coach<br>
+Corridan's blue-prints and specifications.</p>
+
+<p>Big Beef McNaughton, seized with an inspiration that
+supplied<br>
+locomotive-power to his huge frame, lumbered into the Gym., and
+soon<br>
+appeared with monster megaphones, used in "rooting" for Gold and
+Green<br>
+teams, which he handed out to his comrades. Then the riotous
+squad, at his<br>
+suggestion, sprinted for the Quad., that inner quadrangle or
+court around<br>
+which the four class dormitories, forming the sides of a square,
+were<br>
+built; anyone desiring an audience could be sure of it here,
+since the<br>
+collegians in all four dorms. could rush to the Quadrangle side
+and look<br>
+down from the windows. In the Quadrangle, under the brilliant
+arc-lights,<br>
+the exuberant youths paused,</p>
+
+<p>"One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;let 'er go!" boomed Beef, and
+the football squad, in<br>
+<i>basso profundo</i>, aided by the Phillyloo Bird's uncertain
+tenor, and<br>
+Theophilus' quavery treble, roared in a tremendous vocal
+explosion that<br>
+shook the dormitories:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks is coming! Hicks is coming! Everybody out on the
+campus! Get ready<br>
+to welcome our T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.! Hicks is bringing
+Bannister's<br>
+full-back&mdash;a Prodigious Prodigy!"</p>
+
+<p>Windows rattled up, heads were thrust out, a fusillade of
+questions<br>
+bombarded the squad in the Quadrangle below; from the three
+upper-class<br>
+dormitories erupted hordes of howling, shouting youths, and soon
+the Quad.<br>
+was filled with a singing, yelling, madly happy crowd. The
+Bannister Band,<br>
+that famous campus musical organization, following a time-honored
+habit of<br>
+playing on every possible occasion, gladsomely tuned up and soon
+the<br>
+noise was deafening, while study-hour, as prescribed by the
+Faculty, was<br>
+forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody on the campus, at once!" Butch Brewster,
+Master-of-Ceremonies,<br>
+boomed through his megaphone, having aroused excitement to the
+highest<br>
+pitch by reading Hicks' telegram. "Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus
+will soon<br>
+heave into sight. Let the Band blare, make a <i>big noise</i>.
+Let's show Hicks<br>
+how glad we are to have him back to old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>It is historically certain that Mr. Napoleon Bonaparte
+returning from Jena<br>
+and Austerlitz, Mr. Julius Caesar, home at Rome from his
+Conquests, or Mr.<br>
+Alexander the Great (Conqueror, not National League pitcher)
+never received<br>
+such a welcome as did T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., from his Bannister
+comrades<br>
+that night. To the excited students, massed on the campus before
+the Gym.<br>
+awaiting his arrival, every second seemed a century; everybody
+talked at<br>
+once until the hubbub rivaled that of a Woman's Suffrage
+Convention. Thomas<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and
+he was<br>
+bringing "The Prodigious Prodigy," whatever that was, with him.
+Knowing the<br>
+cheery Senior's intense love of doing the dramatic and his great
+ambition<br>
+to startle his Alma Mater with some sensational stunt, they could
+hardly<br>
+wait for old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus to roll up the
+driveway,</p>
+
+<p>"Here he comes!" shrieked, little Skeet Wigglesworth, an
+excitable Senior,<br>
+who had climbed a tree to keep watch. "Here comes our Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Honk&mdash;Honk!" To the incessant blaring of a raucous horn,
+old Dan<br>
+Flannagan's jitney-bus moved up the driveway. The genial Irish
+Jehu, who<br>
+for over twenty years had transported Bannister collegians and
+alumni<br>
+to and from College Hill in a ramshackle hack drawn by Lord
+Nelson, an<br>
+antiquated, somnambulistic horse, had yielded to modern invention
+at<br>
+last. Lord Nelson having become defunct during vacation, Old Dan,
+with<br>
+a collection taken up by several alumni at Commencement, had
+bought a<br>
+battered Ford, and constructed therewith a jitney-bus. This
+conveyance was<br>
+fully as rattle-trap in appearance as the traditional hack had
+been, but<br>
+the returning collegians hailed it with glee.</p>
+
+<p>"All hail Hicks!" howled Butch Brewster, beside himself with
+joy,<br>
+"Altogether&mdash;the Bannister yell for&mdash;Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>With half the collegians giving the yell, a number
+shouting<br>
+indiscriminately, the Bannister Band blaring furiously, "Behold,
+The<br>
+Conquering Hero Comes," with the youths a yelling, howling,
+shrieking,<br>
+dancing mass, old Dan Flannagan, adding his quota of noises with
+the<br>
+Claxon, brought his bus to a stop. This was a hilarious spectacle
+in<br>
+itself, for on its sides the Bannister students had painted:</p>
+
+<p>HENRY FORD'S "PIECE-OF-A-SHIP," THE DOVE!<br>
+ALL RIDING IN THIS JIT DO<br>
+SO AT THEIR OWN RISK! TEN CENTS<br>
+FOR A JOY-RIDE TO COLLEG HILL! YES,<br>
+IT'S A FORD! WHAT DO YOU CARE? GET ABOARD!</p>
+
+<p>On the roof of "The Dove," or "The Crab," as the collegians
+called it when<br>
+it skidded sideways, perched precariously that well-known,
+beloved youth,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. He clutched his pestersome banjo and was
+vigorously<br>
+strumming the strings and apparently howling a ballad, lost in
+the<br>
+unearthly turmoil. As the jitney-bus stopped, the grinning Hicks
+arose, and<br>
+from his lofty, position made a profound bow.</p>
+
+<p>"Speech! Speech! Speech!" A mighty shout arose, and Hicks
+raised his hand<br>
+for silence, which was immediately delivered to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows, one and all," he shouted, a mist before his eyes,
+for his<br>
+impulsive soul was touched by the ovation, "I&mdash;I am
+<i>glad</i> to be back!<br>
+Say&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;well, I'm glad to be back&mdash;that's
+all!"</p>
+
+<p>At this masterly oration, which, despite its brevity,
+contained volumes of<br>
+feeling, the Bannister students went wild&mdash;for a longer
+period than any<br>
+political convention ever cheered a nominated candidate, they
+cheered T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+"Roar&mdash;roar&mdash;roar&mdash;<i>roar</i>!" in deafening
+sound-waves,<br>
+the noise swept across the campus; never had football idol,
+baseball hero,<br>
+or any athletic demigod, in all Bannister's history, been
+accorded such a<br>
+tremendous ovation.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows," called T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., climbing down from
+his precarious<br>
+perch, "stand back; I have brought to Bannister the 'Prodigious
+Prodigy.'<br>
+I have rounded up a full-back who will beat Ballard all by
+himself. Behold<br>
+the new Gold and Green football eleven, 'Thor'!"</p>
+
+<p>From the grinning Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, like a Russian
+bear charging<br>
+from its den, lumbered a being whose enormous bulk fairly
+astounded the<br>
+speechless youths; Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Tug Cardiff,
+Bunch<br>
+Bingham, Buster Brown, and Pudge Langdon were popularly regarded
+as the<br>
+last word in behemoths, but this "Thor" dwarfed them, towered
+above them<br>
+like a Colossus over Lilliputians. He was a youth, and yet a
+veritable<br>
+Hercules. Over six feet he stood, with a massive head, covered
+with tousled<br>
+white hair, a powerful neck, broad shoulders, a vast chest. To a
+judge of<br>
+athletes, he would tip the scales at a hundred and ninety pounds,
+all solid<br>
+muscle, for that superb physique held not an ounce of superfluous
+flesh.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, gazing at the
+mountain of<br>
+muscle, "if <i>size</i> means anything, you have brought old
+Bannister an entire<br>
+football squad! What splendid material to train for the Big
+Games, why&mdash;he<br>
+will be irresistible!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER IV</p>
+
+<p>QUOTING SCOOP SAWYER'S LETTER</p>
+
+<p>  "I didn't raise my Ford to be a <i>jitney</i>&mdash;<br>
+  To run the streets, and stay out late at night!<br>
+  Who dares to put a jitney sign, upon it&mdash;<br>
+  And send my <i>peace-ship</i> out for fares to fight?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., standing by his open window at 3 P. M.
+one<br>
+afternoon a week after his sensational return to Bannister
+College, with<br>
+the "Prodigious Prodigy" in tow, indulged in the soul-satisfying
+pastime of<br>
+twanging his banjo, and roaring, in his subterranean voice, a
+parody on "I<br>
+Didn't Raise My Boy to be a Soldier." It was actually the first
+Caruso-like<br>
+outburst of the pestersome youth that year, but his saengerfest
+brought<br>
+vociferous howls of protest from campus and dormitories:</p>
+
+<p>"Bow-wow-wow! The Grand Opery season is starting!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sing some records for a talking-machine company, Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Kill that tom-cat! Listen to the back-fence musicale!"</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Hicks&mdash;we'll take your word for that noise!"</p>
+
+<p>On the Gym. steps, loafing a few moments before jogging out to
+Bannister<br>
+Field for a strenuous scrimmage under the personal supervision
+of<br>
+Slave-Driver Corridan, the Gold and Green football squad had
+gathered. It<br>
+was from these stalwart gridiron gladiators that the caustic
+criticism of<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, vocal atrocities emanated, and the
+imitation of a<br>
+mournful hound by "Ichabod," the skyscraping Senior, was indeed
+phenomenal.<br>
+Added to the howls, whistles, jeers, and shouts of the squad,
+were like<br>
+condemnations from other collegians, sky-larking on the campus,
+or in the<br>
+dorms.</p>
+
+<p>"At that," grinned Captain Butch Brewster happily, "it surely
+makes me feel<br>
+jubilant to hear Hicks' foghorn voice shattering the echoes, with
+his<br>
+banjo strumming disturbing the peace&mdash;for which offense it
+shall soon be<br>
+arrested. We can truly say that old Bannister is now officially
+opened for<br>
+another year, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., has performed his
+annual rite&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Right&mdash;!" scoffed big Pudge Langdon, indignantly, as he
+gazed up at the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth, at the window of his room on the
+third-floor, campus<br>
+side, of Bannister Hall, "Hicks ought to be tarred and feathered;
+there is<br>
+<i>nothing right</i> in the way he has acted since his return to
+college! He<br>
+struts around like Herman, the Master-Magician, and all the
+fellows fully<br>
+expect to see him produce white rabbits from his cap, or make
+varicolored<br>
+flags out of his handkerchief."</p>
+
+<p>"We ought to toss him in a blanket," stormed Beef McNaughton,
+in ludicrous<br>
+rage. "Ever since he mystified Bannister by going out and
+corralling a<br>
+Hercules who is an entire eleven in himself, Hicks has maintained
+that<br>
+sphinx-like silence as to how he achieved the feat, and he
+swaggers around,<br>
+enshrouded in <i>mystery</i>! All we know is that 'Thor' is John
+Thorwald, of<br>
+Norwegian descent. If we ask <i>him</i> for information, that
+wretch Hicks has<br>
+him trained to say, 'Ask the little fellow, Hicks!'"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in truth, had acted in a most
+reprehensible manner<br>
+since that memorable night when he brought "Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy,"<br>
+to the campus. Not that he ceased to be the same sunny-souled,
+popular and<br>
+friendly youth. The collegians, happy at finding his room
+open-house again,<br>
+flocked to his cozy quarters, Freshmen <i>fell</i> under the
+spell of his<br>
+generous nature, his Beef-Steak Busts, down at Jerry's were
+nightly<br>
+occurrences, and he was the same Hicks as of old. But, after the
+dramatic<br>
+manner in which Hicks had mysteriously made good the rash vow
+uttered at<br>
+Camp Bannister and had brought to Coach Corridan a blond-haired
+giant who<br>
+seemed destined to perform prodigies at full-back, the sunny
+Senior had<br>
+evidently labored under the delusion that he was "Kellar, The
+Great<br>
+Magician."</p>
+
+<p>Instead of relieving the tortured curiosity of the students,
+wild to know<br>
+how and where Hicks had unearthed this physical Hercules, who in
+every way<br>
+filled the details of Head Coach Corridan's "blue-prints," T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., enjoying to the full this novel method of torturing
+his<br>
+comrades, made a baffling mystery of the affair, much to the
+indignation of<br>
+his friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Just leave it to Hicks," he would say, when the Bannister
+youths<br>
+cajoled, implored, threatened, or argued. "Thor is eligible to
+play four<br>
+years of football at old Bannister. I call him Thor, after the
+great Norse<br>
+god, Thor; he is of Norwegian descent. That is all of the
+Billion-Dollar<br>
+Mystery I can disclose; ten thousand dollars offered for the
+correct<br>
+solution."</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes Scoop Sawyer," said Monty Merriweather, as that
+Senior, waving<br>
+his arms in air, catapulted from Bannister Hall, and strode
+toward the<br>
+squad on the Gym. steps; his appearance registered wrath, in
+photo-play<br>
+parlance, and on reaching his comrades he immediately acquainted
+them with<br>
+its cause.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to that Hicks!" he exploded, gesticulating with a
+sheaf of papers.<br>
+"Hicks, the mocking-bird! He is mocking <i>us</i>&mdash;with his
+'Billion-Dollar<br>
+Mystery!' Say&mdash;here I am writing to Jack Merritt; he played
+football four<br>
+years for old Bannister; he was captain of the Gold and Green
+eleven; last<br>
+Commencement he graduated, and the last thing he said to me was,
+'Scoop,<br>
+old pal, write to me next fall, tell me everything about the
+football<br>
+season; keep me posted as to new material!' Everything&mdash;keep
+him posted<br>
+as to new material&mdash;Bah! If I write that Hicks has brought a
+fellow he<br>
+calls 'Thor,' who spreads the regulars over the field, Jack will
+want<br>
+to know the details, and&mdash;that villainous Hicks won't
+divulge his dread<br>
+secret!"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, Scoop Sawyer, so-called because he was
+ambitious to be a<br>
+newspaper reporter, after graduation, and for his humorous
+articles in the<br>
+Bannister Weekly, had his intense wrath soothed by that which
+has<br>
+"power to soothe the savage breast"; T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+displaying a<br>
+wonderful originality by composing, then chanting, his parody,
+concluded<br>
+the chorus roaring lustily, to a rollicking banjo
+accompaniment:</p>
+
+<p>  "If street car companies gave seats to all patrons<br>
+  The strap-hangers in jitneys would not ride.<br>
+  There'd be no jits. today<br>
+  If Ford owners would say,<br>
+  I didn't raise my Ford to be a&mdash;jitney!"</p>
+
+<p>"That is too much!" raged Captain Butch Brewster, facing his
+excited<br>
+colleagues. "Come on, fellows, we'll invade Hicks' room, read him
+Scoop's<br>
+letter to Jack Merritt, and <i>make</i> him solve the Mystery!
+We're done with<br>
+diplomacy; now, we'll deliver the ultimatum; when the squad
+returns from<br>
+scrimmage, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., will tell us all about Thor,
+or be<br>
+tossed in a blanket! Are you with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are <i>ahead</i> of you!" howled Roddy Perkins, leading a
+wild charge for<br>
+the entrance to Bannister Hall. Following him up the two flights
+of stairs<br>
+with thunderous tread came Butch, Beef, Monty, Biff, Hefty,
+Pudge, Tug,<br>
+Ichabod, Bunch, Buster, Bus Norton, and several second-team
+players,<br>
+Cherub, Chub Chalmers, Don, Skeet, and Scoop Sawyer with his
+letter. With<br>
+a terrific, blood-chilling clatter, and hideous howls, the
+Hicks-quelling<br>
+Expedition roared down the third corridor of Bannister, and
+surged into the<br>
+room of that tantalizing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.!</p>
+
+<p>"Safety first!" shrieked that cheery collegian, stowing his
+banjo in the<br>
+closet and making a strenuous but futile effort to dive
+head-first beneath<br>
+the bed, being forcibly restrained by Beef, who clung to his left
+ankle.<br>
+"Say, to what am I indebted for the honor of this call? Why, when
+I got<br>
+back to Bannister, you fellows gushed, 'Oh, we're <i>so</i> glad
+you're back,<br>
+Hicks, old top; we missed even your saengerfests,' and when I
+start one&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," pronounced Butch Brewster grimly, holding the genial
+offender<br>
+by the scruff of the neck, "you tantalizing, aggravating,
+irritating,<br>
+lunatical, conscienceless degenerate! You assassin of Father
+Time, you<br>
+disturber of the peace, <i>heed</i>! Scoop Sawyer is writing to
+Jack Merritt, to<br>
+tell about the football team, and Bannister's chances of the
+Championship;<br>
+he wants to tell Jack all about this Thor! Now, you have acted
+like<br>
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston long enough, and hear our final word. Read
+Scoop's<br>
+letter, and if when you finish its perusal you fail to give us
+full<br>
+information, and answer all questions about Thor&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The football team will toss you in a blanket until you do!"
+finished Monty<br>
+Merriweather, "We intended to wait until after the scrimmage, but
+Butch<br>
+evidently believes we should end your bothersome mystery as once,
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'Curiosity killed the cat!'" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.;
+then seeing<br>
+the avenues and boulevards of escape were closed, but fighting
+for time,<br>
+"let me peruse said missive indited by our literarily
+overbalanced Scoop. I<br>
+am reluctant to dispel the clouds of mystery, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Scoop Sawyer thrust the typewritten pages of the
+letter&mdash;composed on<br>
+the battered old typewriter in the editorial sanctum of the
+Bannister<br>
+Weekly&mdash;into Hicks' grasp and with a grin, that blithesome
+youth read:</p>
+
+<p>Bannister College, Sept, 27.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR OLD JACK:</p>
+
+<p>There is so <i>much</i> to tell you, old pal, that I scarcely
+know where to<br>
+start, but you want to know about the football eleven, so I'll
+write about<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and his 'Billion-Dollar Mystery,' as he
+calls it;<br>
+about Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. You well know what a
+scatter-brained<br>
+wretch Hicks is, and how he dearly loves to plot dramatic
+climaxes&mdash;to<br>
+mystify old Bannister. Just now Hicks has the campus as wrathful
+as it is<br>
+possible to be with that lovable youth; he has originated a great
+mystery,<br>
+and achieved a seemingly impossible feat, and instead of
+explaining it, he<br>
+swaggers around like a Hindoo mystic enshrouded in mystery and
+the fellows<br>
+are wild enough to tar and feather the incorrigible villain!</p>
+
+<p>To get off to a sprint-start, up in Camp Bannister, before
+college opened,<br>
+when the squad was in training camp, Butch Brewster says that
+Coach<br>
+Corridan one day, before Hicks, expressed a fervid ambition to
+find a huge,<br>
+irresistible fullback&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Here the chronicle must hang fire, while T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., grinning<br>
+at the wrath his mysterious behavior aroused, peruses those
+sections of<br>
+Scoop Sawyer's epistle telling of two scenes already described;
+first,<br>
+the one in the Camp Bannister grub-shack, where Head Coach
+Corridan<br>
+blue-printed the Gargantuan athlete he desired, and the
+blithesome Hicks<br>
+confidently requested that the Herculean task be left to him;
+second, the<br>
+scene of intense excitement on the campus the night that the
+missing Hicks<br>
+returned personally conducting that mountain of muscle, the
+blond-haired<br>
+Thor.</p>
+
+<p>Having grinned at these descriptions, the pestiferous Hicks
+scanned a<br>
+picturesque description by Scoop of the events that transpired
+between that<br>
+memorable night and the present invasion of the sunny Senior's
+room by the<br>
+indignant squad.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;Naturally, Jack, old Bannister was intensely curious to
+know who this<br>
+"Thor" could be, and how Hicks unearthed such a giant. But,
+instead of<br>
+swaggering a trifle, as he inevitably does, and saying, 'Oh, I
+told you<br>
+just to leave it to Hicks!' then telling all about it, after
+accomplishing<br>
+what everyone believed a ridiculously impossible quest, he
+maintains that<br>
+provokingly mysterious silence, and John Thorwald (we know his
+name,<br>
+anyway) stolidly refers us to Hicks. So where Thor originated or
+how under<br>
+the sun Hicks got on his trail, after making his rash vow to
+corral a<br>
+mighty fullback, is a deep, dark mystery.</p>
+
+<p>Now for Thor himself. Words cannot describe that Prodigious
+Prodigy; he<br>
+must be seen to be believed! We do know that he is John Thorwald,
+and of<br>
+distinctly Norwegian descent, so that calling him after the
+mythic Norse<br>
+god is extremely appropriate. And he is reminiscent of the great
+Thor, with<br>
+his vast strength and prowess. Thanks to T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s, love of<br>
+mystery, and of tantalizing old Bannister, we know nothing of
+Thorwald's<br>
+past, but we are sure he has lived and toiled among <i>men</i>,
+to possess<br>
+that powerful build. I can't describe him, old man, without
+resorting to<br>
+exaggeration, for ordinary words and phrases are utterly
+inadequate with<br>
+Thor! Conjure up a vision of Gulliver among the Lilliputians and
+you can<br>
+picture him towering over us. He is a Viking of old, with his
+fair features<br>
+and blond hair. Probably twenty-five years old, he has a powerful
+frame and<br>
+prodigious strength, he dwarfs such behemoths as Butch and Beef,
+and makes<br>
+such insignificant mortals as little Theophilus and myself seem
+like<br>
+insects!</p>
+
+<p>Thor is so <i>big</i>, Jack, that when he gets in a room, he
+crowds everyone<br>
+into the corridor, and fills it alone. No wonder Hicks
+telegraphed to knock<br>
+out the partitions between five rooms to make space for Thor!
+When he<br>
+stands on the campus he blots out several sections of scenery,
+and the<br>
+college disappears, giving the impression he has swallowed it.
+Thor is a<br>
+slow-minded being, but possessed of a grim determination. To get
+an idea<br>
+into his mind requires a blackboard and Chautauqua lecturer, but
+once he<br>
+masters it, he never lets go; so it will be with football
+signals, once let<br>
+him grasp a play, he will never be confused. He is simply a huge,
+stolid<br>
+giant. He has a bulldog purpose to get an education, and nothing
+else<br>
+matters. As for college spirit, the glad comradeship of the
+campus, he has<br>
+no time for it; he pays no attention to the fellows at all, only
+to Hicks.</p>
+
+<p>His devotion to that wretch is pathetic! He follows Hicks
+around like a<br>
+huge mastiff after a terrier, or an ocean leviathan towed by a
+tug-boat; he<br>
+seems absolutely helpless without T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and so
+we have<br>
+a daily Hicks' personally conducted tour of Thor to interest us.
+Briefly,<br>
+Jack, John Thorwald is a slow-moving, slow-minded, grimly bulldog
+giant,<br>
+who has come to Bannister to study, and as for any other phase of
+campus<br>
+existence, he has never awakened to it!</p>
+
+<p>Now for the football story: Well, the day after Hicks'
+sensational arrival,<br>
+which I described, Coach Corridan, Captain Butch Brewster, Beef,
+Buster,<br>
+Pudge, Monty, and Roddy with yours truly, went to Thor's room in
+Creighton<br>
+just before football practice. We found that Colossus, who had
+matriculated<br>
+as a Freshman, aided by Hicks, patiently masticating mental food
+as served<br>
+by Ovid. Coach Corridan said, 'Come on, Thorwald, over to the
+Gym.; we'll<br>
+fix you out with togs, if we can get two suits big enough to make
+one for<br>
+your bulk! Ever play the game?' 'I play some,' rumbled Thor
+stolidly, never<br>
+raising his eyes from his Latin. 'Don't bother me, I want to
+<i>study.</i><br>
+I have not time for such foolishness. I am here to study, to get
+an<br>
+education!' 'But,' urged the coach earnestly, 'you <i>must</i>
+play football for<br>
+your Alma Mater, for old Bannister. Why, you&mdash;you
+<i>must</i>, that's all!' Thor<br>
+gazed at Hicks questioningly&mdash;I forgot to add that insect's
+name&mdash;and<br>
+asked, 'Is it so, Hicks? I <i>got</i> to play for the college?'
+And when Hicks<br>
+grinned, 'Sure, Thor, it must be did. Bannister expects you to
+smear the<br>
+other teams over the landscape,' that blond Norwegian Viking
+said, 'Well,<br>
+then, I play.'</p>
+
+<p>All Bannister turned out to behold the "Prodigious Prodigy" on
+the football<br>
+field. Somewhere&mdash;Hicks won't divulge where&mdash;Thor has
+learned the rudiments<br>
+of the game. With that bulldog tenacity of his, he has learned
+them well.<br>
+Hence he was ready for the scrubs, and in the practice game it
+was a<br>
+veritable slaughter of the innocents. The 'Varsity could not stop
+Thor.<br>
+Remember 'Ole' Skjarsen, the big Swede of George Fitch's 'Siwash
+College'<br>
+tales? Thor, after the ten minutes required to teach him a play,
+would take<br>
+the ball and just wade through the regulars for big gains. The
+only way to<br>
+stop him was for the entire eleven to cling affectionately to his
+bulk,<br>
+and then he transported them several yards. He is a phenom, a
+veritable<br>
+Prodigious Prodigy, and maybe old Bannister isn't <i>wild</i>
+with enthusiasm.<br>
+His development will be slow but sure, and by the time the big
+games for<br>
+the championship come, he will be a whole team in himself. Right
+now he<br>
+goes through daily scrimmage as solemnly as if performing a
+sacred rite. He<br>
+doesn't thrill with college spirit, but as for
+football&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Hicks to read the rest of Scoop Sawyer's long missive,
+terminating<br>
+with indignant condemnation of the sunny youth's love of mystery,
+the<br>
+terrific enthusiasm roused at old Bannister by the daily
+appearance on<br>
+Bannister Field of Thor, and his irresistible marches through the
+'Varsity,<br>
+must be chronicled and explained.</p>
+
+<p>Not for five seasons, not since the year before Hicks, Pudge,
+Butch, Beef<br>
+and the others of 1919 were Freshmen, had the Gold and Green
+corraled that<br>
+greatest glory, The State Intercollegiate Football Championship!
+In Captain<br>
+Butch's Sophomore year, he had flung his bulk into the fray,
+training,<br>
+sacrificing, fighting like a Trojan, only to see the pennant lost
+by a<br>
+scant three inches, as Jack Merritt's forty-yard drop-kick for
+the goal<br>
+that would have won the Championship struck the cross-bar and
+bounded back<br>
+into the field. And the past season-old Bannister could still
+vision that<br>
+tragic scene of the biggest game.</p>
+
+<p>The students could picture Captain Brewster, with the
+Bannister eleven a<br>
+few yards from Ballard's goal-line, and the touchdown that would
+give the<br>
+Gold and Green that supreme glory. One minute to play; Deacon
+Radford had<br>
+given Butch the pigskin, and like a berserker, he fought entirely
+through<br>
+the scrimmage. But a kick on the head had blinded him, in the
+<i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>&mdash;free<br>
+of tacklers, with the goal-line, victory, and the Championship so
+near, he<br>
+staggered, reeled blindly, crashed into an upright, and toppled
+backward,<br>
+senseless on the field, while the Referee's whistle announced the
+end of<br>
+the game, and glory to Ballard. Even then, after the first
+terrible shock<br>
+of the loss, of the cruel blow fate dealt the Gold and Green
+two<br>
+successive seasons, the slogan was: "Next year&mdash;Bannister
+will win the<br>
+Championship&mdash;<i>next year</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>It was now "next year!" Losing only Jack Merritt, Babe McCabe
+and Heavy<br>
+Hughes from the line-up, and having Monty Merrlweather and Bunch
+Bingham,<br>
+fully as good, Coach Corridan's Gold and Green eleven, before the
+season<br>
+started, seemed a better fighting machine than even the one of
+the year<br>
+before. But when the irrepressible T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in
+some<br>
+mysterious fashion making good his rash vow to produce a smashing
+full-back<br>
+that can't be stopped, towed that stolid, blond Colossus, Thor,
+to old<br>
+Bannister, enthusiasm broke all limits!</p>
+
+<p>Mass-meetings were held every night. Speeches by Coaches,
+Captain, players,<br>
+Faculty, and students, aroused the campus to the highest pitch;
+every day,<br>
+the entire student-body, with The Bannister Band, turned out on
+Bannister<br>
+Field to cheer the eleven, and to watch the Prodigious Prodigy
+perform<br>
+valorous deeds, like the god Thor. "Bannister College&mdash;State
+Championship!"<br>
+was the cry, and with the giant Thor to present an irresistible
+catapulting<br>
+that could not be stopped, the Gold and Green exultantly awaited
+the big<br>
+games with Hamilton and Ballard.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, the stolid, unemotional, unawakened Thor, on whom
+every hope of<br>
+the Championship was based, whom all Bannister came out to watch
+every day,<br>
+practiced as he studied, doggedly, silently. It was evident to
+all that<br>
+he hated the grind, that he wanted to quit, that his heart was
+not in the<br>
+game, but for some cause, he drove his Herculean body ahead, and
+could not<br>
+be stopped!</p>
+
+<p>"Now, you abandoned wretch," said Butch Brewster grimly, as
+the<br>
+happy-go-lucky Hicks finished Scoop's letter, and glanced about
+him wildly<br>
+seeking a way of escape, "in one minute you will tell us all
+about John<br>
+Thorwald, alias 'Thor,' or be tossed sky-high in a blanket by the
+football<br>
+squad, and please believe me, you'll break all altitude
+records!"</p>
+
+<p>"Spare me, you banditti!" pleaded Hicks, reluctant to cease
+torturing<br>
+Bannister with his Billion-Dollar Mystery, yet equally unwilling
+to aviate<br>
+from a blanket heaved by the husky athletes. "Why seek ye to
+question the<br>
+ways of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.? You have your Prodigious
+Prodigy&mdash;your<br>
+smashing full-back is distributing the 'Varsity over the scenery
+with<br>
+charming nonchalance that promises dire catastrophe for other
+teams, once<br>
+he makes the regulars, so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that dramatic moment, just as Butch Brewster glanced at
+Hicks'<br>
+alarm-clock, to start the minute of grace, a startling
+interruption saved<br>
+the gladsome youth from having to make a decision. A heavy,
+creaking tread<br>
+shook the corridor, and the squad beheld, looming up in the
+doorway, Thor.<br>
+He was not in football togs, and as he started to speak his fair
+face as<br>
+stolid and expressionless as that of a sphinx, Captain Butch
+Brewster<br>
+stepped toward him.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor!" he exclaimed, seizing the blond Colossus by the arm,
+"You aren't<br>
+ready for the scrimmage; hustle over to the Gym. and get on your
+suit."</p>
+
+<p>But John Thorwald, as passive of feature as though he
+announced something<br>
+of the most infinitesimal importance, and were not hurling a
+bomb-shell<br>
+whose explosion, was to shake old Bannister terrifically, spoke
+in a<br>
+matter-of-fact manner: "I shall not play football&mdash;any
+more,"</p>
+
+<p>"What!" Every collegian in Hicks' room, including that dazed
+producer<br>
+of the Prodigious Prodigy, chorused the exclamation; to them it
+was as<br>
+stunning a shock as the nation would suffer if its President
+calmly<br>
+announced, "I'm tired of being President of the United States. I
+shall not<br>
+report for work tomorrow." Bannister College, ever since the
+night that<br>
+Thor arrived on the campus, had talked or thought of nothing but
+how this<br>
+huge, blond-haired Hercules would bring the Championship to the
+Gold and<br>
+Green; his prodigies on the gridiron, his ever-increasing
+prowess, had<br>
+aroused enthusiasm to fever heat, and now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I was told wrong," said Thor, shifting his vast tonnage
+awkwardly from one<br>
+foot to the other, and evidently bewildered at the consternation
+caused by<br>
+what he believed a trifling announcement, "I understood that I
+<i>had</i> to<br>
+play football, that the Faculty required it of me, and the
+students let me<br>
+think so. I have just learned from Doctor Alford that such is not
+true,<br>
+that I do not have to play unless I choose, hence, I quit. I came
+to<br>
+college to study, to gain an education. I have toiled long and
+hard for<br>
+the opportunity, and now I have it, I shall not waste my time on
+such<br>
+foolishness."</p>
+
+<p>Then, utterly unconscious that he had spoken sentences which
+would create<br>
+a mighty sensation at old Bannister, that might doom the Gold and
+Green<br>
+to defeat, lose his Alma Mater the Championship, and bring on
+himself the<br>
+cruel ostracism and bitter censure of his fellows, John Thorwald
+lumbered<br>
+down the corridor. A moment of tense silence followed and then
+Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster groaned.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all over, it's all over, fellows!" he said brokenly,
+"Bannister loses<br>
+the Championship! We know it is impossible to move Thor on the
+football<br>
+field, and now that he has said 'No!' to playing football,
+dynamite can not<br>
+move him from his decision."</p>
+
+<p>Then, crushed and disconsolate, the football squad filed
+silently from the<br>
+room, to break the glad news to Coach Corridan, and to spread the
+joyous<br>
+tidings to old Bannister. When they had gone, T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.,<br>
+staring at the figurative black cloud that lowered over his Alma
+Mater,<br>
+strove to find its silver lining, and at last he partially
+succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>"Anyway," said Hicks, with a lugubrious effort to grin,
+"Thor's<br>
+announcement shocked the squad so much that I was not forced to
+explain my<br>
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER V</p>
+
+<p>HICKS MAKES A DECISION</p>
+
+<p>"In the famous words of Mr. Somebody-Or-Other," quoth T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., "something has <i>got</i> to be did, and immediately to
+once!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster nodded assent. So did Head Coach Patrick
+Henry Corridan,<br>
+Beef McNaughton, Team Manager Socks Fitzpatrick, Monty
+Merriweather, Dad<br>
+Pendleton, President of the Athletic Association, and Deacon
+Radford,<br>
+quarter-back, also Shad Fishpaw, who, being Freshman
+Class-Chairman,<br>
+maintained a discreet silence. Instead of the usual sky-larking,
+care-free<br>
+crowd that infested the cozy quarters of the happy-go-lucky
+Hicks, every<br>
+collegian present, except the ever-cheerful youth, seemed to have
+lost his<br>
+best friend and his last dollar at one fell swoop!</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, something has got to be did!" fleered Beef
+McNaughton, the<br>
+davenport creaking under the combined tonnage of himself and
+Butch<br>
+Brewster, "But who will do it? Where's all that
+Oh-just-leave-it-to-Hicks<br>
+stuff you have pulled for the past three years, you pestiferous
+insect?<br>
+Bah! You did a lot; you dragged a Prodigious Prodigy to old
+Bannister,<br>
+enshrouded him in darkest mystery, and now, when he pushed the
+'Varsity off<br>
+the field and promised to corral the Championship, single-handed,
+he puts<br>
+his foot down, and says, 'No&mdash;I will not play football!' Get
+busy, Little<br>
+Mr. Fix-It."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" accommodated that blithesome
+Senior, with a<br>
+cheeriness he was far from feeling. "You all do know why Thor
+won't<br>
+play football; it is not like last season, when Deke Radford, a
+star<br>
+quarter-back, refused either to play, or to explain his refusal.
+Let me<br>
+get an inspiration, and then Thor will once again gently but
+firmly thrust<br>
+entire football elevens down the field before him!"</p>
+
+<p>As evidence of how intensely serious was the situation, let it
+be<br>
+chronicled that, for the first time in his scatter-brained campus
+career,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., did not dare strum his banjo and roar out
+ballads<br>
+to torture his long-suffering colleagues. Popular and beloved as
+he was,<br>
+the gladsome youth hesitated to shatter the quietude of the
+campus with<br>
+his saengerfest, knowing as he did what a terrible blow Thor's
+utterly<br>
+astounding announcement had been to the college.</p>
+
+<p>It was nine o'clock, one night two weeks after the day when
+John Thorwald,<br>
+better known as Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, so mysteriously
+produced by<br>
+Hicks, had stolidly paralyzed old Bannister by unemotionally
+stating his<br>
+decision to play no more football. Since then, to quote the
+Phillyloo Bird,<br>
+"Bannister has staggered around the ring like a prizefighter with
+the<br>
+Referee counting off ten seconds and trying to fight again before
+he takes<br>
+the count." In truth, the students had made a fatal mistake in
+building<br>
+all their hopes of victory on that blond giant, Thor; seeing his
+wonderful<br>
+prowess, and beholding how, in the first week of the season, the
+Norwegian<br>
+Colossus had ripped to shreds the Varsity line which even the
+heavy Ballard<br>
+eleven of the year before could not batter, it was but natural
+that the<br>
+enthusiastic youths should think of the Championship chances in
+terms of<br>
+Thor. For one week, enthusiasm and excitement soared higher and
+higher,<br>
+and then, to use a phrase of fiction, everything fell with a
+dull,<br>
+sickening thud!</p>
+
+<p>In vain did Coach Corridan, the staff of Assistant Coaches,
+Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster, and others strive to resuscitate football spirit;
+nightly<br>
+mass-meetings were held, and enough perfervid oratory hurled to
+move a<br>
+Russian fortress, but to no avail. It was useless to argue that,
+without<br>
+Thor, Bannister had an eleven better than that of last year,
+which so<br>
+nearly missed the Championship. The campus had seen the massive
+Thor's<br>
+prodigies; they knew he could not be stopped, and to attempt to
+arouse the<br>
+college to concert pitch over the eleven, with that mountain of
+muscle<br>
+blotting out vast sections of scenery, but not in football togs,
+was not<br>
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>"One thing is sure," spoke Dad Pendleton seriously, gazing
+gloomily from<br>
+the window, "unless we get Thor in the line-up for the Big Games,
+our last<br>
+hope of the Championship is dead and interred! And I feel sorry
+for the big<br>
+fellow, for already the boys like him just about as much as a
+German<br>
+loves an Englishman; yet, arguments, threats, pleadings, and
+logic have<br>
+absolutely no effect on him. He has said 'No,' and that ends
+it!"</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't understand things, fellows," defended T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+with surprising earnestness. "Remember how bewildered he seemed
+at our<br>
+appeal to his college spirit, and his love for his Alma Mater. We
+might as<br>
+well have talked Choctaw to him!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster, Socks Fitzpatrick, Dad Pendleton, Beef
+McNaughton, Deacon<br>
+Radford, Monty Merriweather, and Shad Fishpaw well remembered
+that night<br>
+after Thor's tragic decision, when they&mdash;part of a Committee
+formed of the<br>
+best athletes from all teams, and the most representative
+collegians of old<br>
+Bannister, had invaded Thor's room in Creighton Hall, to wrestle
+with the<br>
+recalcitrant Hercules. Even as Hicks spoke, they visioned it
+again.</p>
+
+<p>A cold, cheerless room, bare of carpet or pictures, with just
+the<br>
+study-table, bed, and two chairs. At the study-table, his huge
+bulk<br>
+sprawling on, and overflowing, a frail chair, they had found the
+massive<br>
+John Thorwald laboriously reading aloud the Latin he had
+translated,<br>
+literally by the sweat of his brow. The blond Colossus, impatient
+at the<br>
+interruption, had shaken his powerful frame angrily, and with no
+regard for<br>
+campus tradition, had addressed the upperclassmen in a growl:
+"Well, what<br>
+do you want? Hurry up, I've got to study."</p>
+
+<p>And then, to state it briefly, they had worked with (and on)
+the stolid<br>
+Thorwald for two hours. They explained how his decision to play
+no more<br>
+football would practically kill old Bannister's hopes of the
+Championship,<br>
+would assassinate football spirit on the campus, and cause the
+youths to<br>
+condemn Thor, and to ostracise him. Waxing eloquent, Butch
+Brewster had<br>
+delivered a wonderful speech, pleading with John Thorwald to play
+the<br>
+game. He tried to show that obviously uninterested mammoth that,
+like the<br>
+Hercules he so resembled, he stood at the parting of the
+ways.</p>
+
+<p>"You are on the threshold of your college career, old man!" he
+thundered<br>
+impressively, though he might as well have tried to shoot holes
+in a<br>
+battleship with a pop-gun, "What you do now will make or break
+you. Do you<br>
+want the fellows as friends or as enemies; do you want
+comradeship, or<br>
+loneliness and ostracism? You have it in your power to do two
+<i>big</i> things,<br>
+to win the Championship for your Alma Mater, and to win to
+yourself the<br>
+entire student-body, as friends; will you do that, and build a
+firm<br>
+foundation for your college years, or betray your Alma Mater, and
+gain the<br>
+enmity of old Bannister!"</p>
+
+<p>Followed more fervid periods, with such phrases as, "For your
+Alma Mater,"<br>
+"Because of your college spirit," "For dear old Bannister," and
+"For<br>
+the Gold and Green!" predominating; all of which terms, to the
+stolid,<br>
+unimaginative Thorwald being fully as intelligible as Hindustani.
+They<br>
+appealed to him not to betray his Alma Mater; they implored him,
+for his<br>
+love of old Bannister; they besought him, because of his college
+spirit;<br>
+and all the time, for all that the Prodigious Prodigy understood,
+they<br>
+might as well have remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you something," spoke Thor, at last, with an air
+of impatient<br>
+resignation, "and don't bother me again, please! I have come to
+Bannister<br>
+College to get an education, and I have the right to do so,
+without being<br>
+pestered. I pay my bills, and I am entitled to all the knowledge
+I can<br>
+purchase. I look from my window, and I see boys, whose fathers
+are toiling,<br>
+sacrificing, to send them here. Instead of studying, to show
+their<br>
+gratitude, they loaf around the campus, or in their rooms,
+twanging banjos<br>
+and guitars, singing silly songs, and sky-larking. I don't know
+what all<br>
+this rot is you are talking of; 'college spirit,' 'my Alma
+Mater,' and so<br>
+on. I do not want to play football; I do not like the game; I
+need the time<br>
+for my study, so I will not play. Both my father and myself have
+labored<br>
+and sacrificed to send me to college. The past five years, with
+one great<br>
+ambition to go to college and learn, I have toiled like a
+galley-slave.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, when opportunity is mine, do you ask me to
+<i>play</i>? You want me to<br>
+loaf around, wasting precious time better spent in my studies.
+What do I<br>
+care whether the boys like me, or hate me? Bah! I can take any
+two of you,<br>
+and knock your heads together! Their friendship or enmity won't
+move me. I<br>
+shall study, learn. I will not waste time in senseless
+foolishness, and I<br>
+<i>won't</i> play football again."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. was silent as he stood by the window of
+his room,<br>
+gazing down at the campus where the collegians were gathering
+before<br>
+marching to the Auditorium for the nightly mass-meeting that
+would vainly<br>
+strive to arouse a fighting spirit in the football "rooters."
+That<br>
+blithesome, heedless, happy-go-lucky youth was capable of far
+more serious<br>
+thought than old Bannister knew; and more, he possessed the rare
+ability<br>
+to read character; in the case of Thor, he saw vastly deeper than
+his<br>
+indignant comrades, who beheld only the surface of the affair.
+They knew<br>
+only that John Thorwald, a veritable Colossus, had exhibited
+football<br>
+prowess that practically promised the State Championship to old
+Bannister,<br>
+and then&mdash;he had quit the game. They understood only that
+Thor refused to<br>
+play simply because he did not want to, and as to why their
+appeals to his<br>
+college spirit and his love for his Alma Mater were unheeded they
+were<br>
+puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>But the gladsome Hicks, always serious beneath his cheerful
+exterior, when<br>
+old Bannister's interests were at stake, or when a collegian's
+career<br>
+might be blighted, when the tragedy could be averted, fully
+understood. Of<br>
+course, as originator of the Billion-Dollar Mystery, and producer
+of the<br>
+Prodigious Prodigy, he knew more about the strange John Thorwald
+than did<br>
+his mystified comrades. He knew that Thor, as he named him, was
+just a vast<br>
+hulk of humanity, stolid, unimaginative of mind, slow-thinking, a
+dull,<br>
+unresponsive mass, as yet unstirred by that strange, subtle,
+mighty thing<br>
+called college spirit. He realized that Thor had never had a
+chance to<br>
+understand the real meaning of campus life, to grasp the glad
+fellowship of<br>
+the students, to thrill with a great love for his Alma Mater. All
+that must<br>
+come in time. The blond giant had toiled all his life, had
+labored among<br>
+men where everything was practical and grim. Small wonder, then,
+that he<br>
+failed utterly to see why the youths "loafed on the campus, or in
+their<br>
+rooms, twanging banjos and guitars, singing silly songs, and
+skylarking."</p>
+
+<p>"I must save him," murmured Hicks softly, for the others in
+his room were<br>
+talking of Thor. "Oh, imagine that powerful body, imbued with a
+vast love<br>
+for old Bannister, think of Thor, thrilling with college spirit.
+Why,<br>
+Yale's and Harvard's elevens combined could not stop his rushes,
+then. I<br>
+must save him from himself, from the condemnation of the fellows,
+who just<br>
+don't understand. I must, some way, awaken him to a complete
+understanding<br>
+of college life in its entirety, but how? He is so different from
+Roddy<br>
+Perkins, or Deke Radford."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every
+year of his<br>
+campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath,
+deserved or<br>
+otherwise, of the students. In his Freshman first term, T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., indignant at the way little Theophilus Opperdyke, the
+timorous,<br>
+nervous "grind," had been alarmed at the idea of being hazed, had
+by a<br>
+sensational escape from a room locked, guarded, and filled with
+Sophomores,<br>
+gained immunity for himself and the boner for all time, thus
+winning the<br>
+loyal, pathetic devotion of the Human Encyclopedia. As a
+Sophomore, by<br>
+crushing James Roderick Perkins' Napoleonic ambition to upset
+tradition,<br>
+and make Freshmen equal with upperclassmen, Hicks had turned
+that<br>
+aggressive youth's tremendous energy in the right channels, and
+made him a<br>
+power for good on the campus.</p>
+
+<p>And, a Junior, he had saved good Deacon Radford. When that
+serious youth, a<br>
+famous prep. quarter, entered old Bannister, the students were
+wild at the<br>
+thought of having him to run the Gold and Green team, but to
+their dismay,<br>
+he refused either to report for practice or to explain his
+decision. Hicks,<br>
+promising blithely, as usual, to solve the mystery and get Deke
+to play,<br>
+discovered that the youth's mother, called "Mother Peg" by the
+collegians,<br>
+was head-waitress downtown at Jerry's and that she made her son
+promise<br>
+not to own the relationship, and that while she worked to get him
+through<br>
+college, Deacon would not play football. The inspired Hicks had
+gotten<br>
+Mother Peg to start College Inn, and board Freshmen unable to get
+rooms<br>
+in the dormitories, and Deacon had played wonderful football. For
+this<br>
+achievement, the original youth failed to get glory, for he
+sacrificed it,<br>
+and swore all concerned to secrecy.</p>
+
+<p>"But Roddy and Deke were different," reflected Hicks,
+pondering seriously.<br>
+"Both had been to Prep. School, and they understood college life
+and campus<br>
+spirit. It was Roddy's tremendous ambition that had to be curbed,
+and Deke<br>
+was the victim of circumstances. But Thorwald&mdash;it is just a
+problem of how<br>
+to awaken in him an understanding of college spirit. The fellows
+don't<br>
+understand him, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A sudden thought, one of his inspirations, assailed the
+blithesome Hicks.<br>
+Why not make the fellows understand Thor? Surely, if he explained
+the<br>
+"Billion-Dollar Mystery," as he humorously called it, and told
+why<br>
+Thorwald, as yet, had no conception of college life, in its true
+meaning,<br>
+they would not feel bitter against him; perhaps, instead, though
+regretful<br>
+at his decision not to play the game, they would all strive to
+awaken the<br>
+stolid Colossus, to stir his soul to an understanding of
+campus<br>
+tradition and existence. But that would mean&mdash;"I surely hate
+to lose my<br>
+Billion-Dollar Mystery!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+remembering<br>
+the intense indignation of his comrades at his
+Herman-Kellar-Thurston<br>
+atmosphere of mystery, "It is more fun than, my 'Sheerluck
+Holmes'<br>
+detective pose or my saengerfests. Still, for old Bannister, and
+for Thor."</p>
+
+<p>It would seem only a trifle for the heedless Hicks to give up
+his mystery,<br>
+and tell Bannister all about Thor; yet, had the Hercules
+reconsidered, and<br>
+played football, the torturesome youth would have bewildered his
+colleagues<br>
+as long as possible, or until they made him divulge the truth. He
+dearly<br>
+loved to torment his comrades, and this had been such an
+opportunity for<br>
+him to promise nonchalantly to produce a Herculean full-back,
+then, to<br>
+return to the campus with the Prodigious Prodigy in tow, and for
+him to<br>
+perform wonders on Bannister Field, naturally aroused the
+interest of the<br>
+youths, and he had enjoyed hugely their puzzlement, but
+now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Say, fellows," he interrupted an excited conversation of a
+would-be<br>
+Committee of Ways and Means to make Thor play football, "I have
+an<br>
+announcement to make."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't pester us, Hicks!" warned Captain Butch Brewster,
+grimly. "We love<br>
+you like a brother, but we'll crush you if you start any
+foolishness,<br>
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with the study-table between himself
+and his<br>
+comrades, assumed the attitude of a Chautauqua lecturer, one hand
+resting<br>
+on the table and the other thrust into the breast of his coat,
+and<br>
+dramatically announced:</p>
+
+<p>"In the Auditorium&mdash;at the regular mass-meeting
+tonight&mdash;T. Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., will give the correct explanation of Thor, the Prodigious
+Prodigy, and<br>
+will solve the Billion-Dollar Mystery!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER VI</p>
+
+<p>HICKS MAKES A SPEECH</p>
+
+<p>The announcement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had practically
+the same<br>
+effect on Head Coach Corridan and the cheery Senior's comrades as
+a German<br>
+gas-bomb would have on the inmates of an Allied trench. For
+several seconds<br>
+they stared at the blithesome youth, in a manner scarcely to be
+called<br>
+aimless, since their looks were aimed with deadly accuracy at
+him, but in<br>
+general, with the exception of Hicks, those in the room resembled
+vastly<br>
+some of the celebrated Madame Tussaud's wax-works in London.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," breathed Monty Merriweather, with the appearance of
+dawning<br>
+intelligence, "that's so, Coach, Hicks never has disclosed the
+details of<br>
+his achievement; we were about to extort a confession from him,
+when Thor<br>
+broke up the league with his announcement, and since then,
+Bannister has<br>
+been too worried over Thorwald to trifle with Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"That's a good idea!" exclaimed Coach Corridan, who had been
+remarkably<br>
+silent, for him, pondering the football crisis, "Hicks can make
+his<br>
+explanation at the regular mass-meeting tonight, in the
+Auditorium. I'll<br>
+post an announcement of his purpose, and you fellows spread the
+news among<br>
+the students, stating that Hicks will tell how he rounded up
+Thor. Some<br>
+have shirked these meetings since Thorwald quit the game, and
+this will<br>
+bring them out, so maybe we can arouse the fighting spirit
+again!"</p>
+
+<p>So well did Butch, Beef, Socks, Monty, Dad, Deacon, and Shad
+tell the news,<br>
+that when the bell in the Administration Hall tower rang at ten
+o'clock it<br>
+was ascertained by score-keepers that every youth at Bannister,
+Freshmen<br>
+included, except that Hercules, Thor, had assembled in the
+Auditorium. That<br>
+stolid behemoth, who regarded the football mass-meeting as
+foolishness, was<br>
+reported as boning in his cheerless room, fulfilling the mission
+for which<br>
+he came to college, namely, to get his money's worth of
+knowledge, which he<br>
+evidently regarded as some commodity for which Bannister served
+merely as a<br>
+market.</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, on the stage of the Auditorium, the big
+assembly-hall<br>
+of the college, along with Coach Corridan, several of the Gold
+and Green<br>
+eleven, two members of the Faculty, several Assistant Coaches,
+and T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., stepped forward and stilled the tumult of
+the excited<br>
+youths with upraised hand.</p>
+
+<p>"We have with us tonight," he spoke, after the fashion of
+introducing<br>
+after-dinner speakers, "Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the
+celebrated<br>
+Magician and Mystifier, who will present for your approval his
+world-famous<br>
+Billion-Dollar Mystery, and give the correct solution to Thor,
+the problem<br>
+no one has been able to solve. I take great pleasure in
+introducing to you<br>
+this evening, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr."</p>
+
+<p>The collegians, firmly believing it was another of the
+pestiferous Hicks'<br>
+jokes, and wholly unaware of the deep purpose of the
+sunny-souled,<br>
+irrepressible youth's speech, went into paroxysms of glee, as
+the<br>
+shadow-like Hicks stepped forward. For several minutes, the hall
+echoed<br>
+with jeers, shouts, groans, whistles, and sarcastic comments:</p>
+
+<p>"Hire a hall, Hicks; tell it to Sweeney!"&mdash;"Bryan better
+look out. Hicks,<br>
+the Chau-talker;"&mdash;"Spill the speech, old man; spread the
+oratory!"&mdash;"Oh,<br>
+where are my smelling-salts? I know I shall faint!"&mdash;"You'd
+better play a<br>
+banjo-accompaniment to it, Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., for once in his campus career,
+fervidly wished he<br>
+had not been such a happy-go-lucky, care-free collegian, for now,
+when he<br>
+was serious, his comrades refused to believe him to be in such a
+state.<br>
+However, quiet was obtained at last, thanks to the fact that the
+youths<br>
+possessed all the curiosity of the proverbial cat who died
+thereby, and the<br>
+sunny Senior plunged earnestly into his famous speech, that was
+destined,<br>
+at old Bannister, to rank with that of Demosthenes "On The
+Crown," or any<br>
+of W. J, Bryan's masterpieces.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows," began Hicks, without preface, "I know I've built
+myself the<br>
+reputation of being a scatterbrained, heedless nonentity, and
+it's too late<br>
+to change now. But tonight, please believe me to be thoroughly in
+earnest.<br>
+Bannister faces more than one crisis, more than one tragedy. It
+is true<br>
+that the football eleven is crippled by the defection of Thor,
+that we<br>
+fellows have somewhat unreasonably allowed his quitting the game
+to shake<br>
+our spirit, but there is more at stake than football victories,
+than even<br>
+the State Intercollegiate Football Championship! The future of a
+student,<br>
+of a present Freshman, his hopes of becoming a loyal, solid,
+representative<br>
+college man, a tremendous power for good, at old Bannister, hang
+in the<br>
+balance at this moment! I speak of John Thorwald. You students
+have it in<br>
+your power to make or break him, to ruin his college years and
+make him a<br>
+recluse, a misanthrope, or to gradually bring him to a full
+realization of<br>
+what college life and campus tradition really mean."</p>
+
+<p>"I have made a great mystery of Thor, just for a lark, but the
+enmity and<br>
+condemnation of the campus for him because he quit football
+suddenly, shows<br>
+me that the time for skylarking is past. For his sake, I must
+plead. He is<br>
+not to blame, altogether, for quitting. Myself, and you fellows,
+gave him<br>
+the impression that it was a Faculty requirement for him to play
+football,<br>
+for we feared he would not play, otherwise; when he learned that
+it was not<br>
+a Faculty rule, he simply quit."</p>
+
+<p>Here T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., seeing that at last he had
+convinced the<br>
+collegians of his earnestness, though they seemed fairly
+paralyzed at the<br>
+phenomenon, paused, and produced a bundle of papers before
+resuming.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I'll try to explain the 'mystery' as briefly and as
+clearly as<br>
+possible. Up at Camp Bannister, before college opened, Coach
+Corridan, as<br>
+you know, outlined to Butch, Deke, and myself, his dream of a
+Herculean,<br>
+irresistible full-back; I said, 'Just leave It to Hicks!' and
+they believed<br>
+that I, as usual, just made that remark to torment them. But such
+was not<br>
+the case. When I joined them, I remarked that I had a letter from
+my Dad;<br>
+Deke made some humorous remarks, and I forgot to read it aloud,
+as I<br>
+intended. Then, after Coach Corridan blue-printed his giant
+full-back, I<br>
+kept silent as to Dad's letter, for reasons you'll understand.
+But, after<br>
+all, there was no mystery about my leaving Camp Bannister, after
+making a<br>
+seemingly rash vow, and returning to college with a 'Prodigious
+Prodigy'<br>
+who filled specifications, In fact, before I left Camp Bannister,
+at the<br>
+moment I made my rash promise&mdash;I had Thor already lined
+up!"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall now read a dipping or two, and a letter or two from
+my Dad. The<br>
+clippings came in Dad's letter to me at Camp Bannister, the
+letter I<br>
+intended to read to Coach Corridan, Deke, and Butch, but which I
+decided to<br>
+keep silent about, after the Coach told of the full-back he
+wanted, for<br>
+I knew I had him already! First, a clipping from the San
+Francisco<br>
+Examiner, of August 25:</p>
+
+<p>MAROONED SAILOR RESCUED&mdash;TEN YEARS<br>
+ON SOUTH SEA ISLAND!SOLE SURVIVOR OF<br>
+ILL-FATED CRUISE OF THE ZEPHYR</p>
+
+<p>"The trading-schooner Southern Cross, Captain Martin Bascomb,
+skipper,<br>
+put into San Francisco yesterday with a cargo of copra from the
+South Sea<br>
+Islands. On board was John Thorwald, Sr., who for the past ten
+years<br>
+has been marooned on an uninhabited coral isle of the Southern
+Pacific,<br>
+together with 'Long Tom' Watts, who, however, died several months
+ago.<br>
+Thorwald's story reads like a thrilling bit of fiction. He was
+first mate<br>
+of the ill-fated yacht Zephyr, which cleared from San Francisco
+ten years<br>
+ago with Henry B. Kingsley, the Oil-King, and a pleasure party,
+for a<br>
+cruise under the southern star. A terrific tornado wrecked the
+yacht, and<br>
+only Thorwald and 'Long Tom' escaped, being cast upon the coral
+island,<br>
+where for ten years they existed, unable to attract the attention
+of the<br>
+few craft that passed, as the isle was out of the regular lanes.
+Only when<br>
+Captain Martin Bascomb, in the trading-schooner Southern Cross,
+touched<br>
+at the island, hoping to find natives with whom to trade supplies
+for<br>
+copra, were they found, and 'Long Tom' had been dead some
+months."</p>
+
+<p>"Despite the harrowing experiences of his exile, Thorwald, a
+vast hulk of a<br>
+stolid, unimaginative Norwegian, who reminds one of the Norse
+god, 'Thor,'<br>
+intends to ship as first mate on the New York-Christiania
+Steamship Line.<br>
+It is said that Thorwald has a son, at this time about
+twenty-five years of<br>
+age, somewhere In this country, whom he will seek,
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., at this juncture, terminated the
+newspaper story,<br>
+and finding that his explanation held his comrades spellbound, he
+produced<br>
+a letter, and drew out the message, after stating the youths
+could read the<br>
+entire news-story of John Thorwald, Sr., later.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the letter I received from my Dad," he explained to
+the intensely<br>
+interested Bannister youths, who were giving a concentrated
+attention that<br>
+members of the Faculty would have rejoiced to receive from them.
+"Up at<br>
+Camp Bannister&mdash;I was just about to read it to Coach
+Corridan, Butch, and<br>
+Deke Radford, when Deke chaffed me, and then the Coach outlined
+the mammoth<br>
+full-back he desired, so I kept quiet. I'll now read it to
+you:</p>
+
+<p>"Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept, 17.</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR SON THOMAS:</p>
+
+<p>"Read the inclosed clipping from the San Francisco Examiner of
+August 25,<br>
+and then pay close attention to the following facts: At the time
+of this<br>
+news-story I was in 'Frisco on business, as you will recall, and
+for<br>
+reasons to be outlined, when I read of the Southern Cross finding
+the<br>
+marooned John Thorwald, and bringing him to that city, I was
+particularly<br>
+interested, so much so that I at once looked up the one-time
+first mate of<br>
+the ill-starred Zephyr and brought him to Pittsburgh in my
+private car.<br>
+My reason was this; in my employ, in the International Steel
+Combine's<br>
+mill, was John Thorwald's son, John Thorwald, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>"To state facts as briefly as possible, almost a year ago, as
+I took some<br>
+friends through the steel rolling mill, I chanced to step
+directly beneath<br>
+a traveling crane, lowering a steel beam; seeing my peril, I was
+about to<br>
+step aside when I caught my foot and fell. Just then a veritable
+giant,<br>
+black and grimy, leaped forward, and with a prodigious display of
+strength,<br>
+placed his powerful back under the descending weight, staving it
+off until<br>
+I rolled over to safety!</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of course, I had the fellow report to my office, and
+instinctively<br>
+feeling that I wanted to show my gratitude, without being
+patronizing, he<br>
+responded to my question as to what I could do to reward him, by
+asking<br>
+simply that I get him some job that would allow him to attend
+night school.<br>
+He stated that, owing to the fact that he worked alternate weeks
+at night<br>
+shift he was unable to do so. Questioning him further, I learned
+the<br>
+following facts:</p>
+
+<p>"He was John Thorwald, Jr., only son of John Thorwald, Sr., a
+Norwegian;<br>
+his mother was also a Norwegian, but he is a natural born
+American.<br>
+Realizing the opportunities for an educated young man in our
+land,<br>
+Thorwald's parents determined that he should gain knowledge, and
+until he<br>
+was fifteen years old, he attended school in San Francisco. When
+he was<br>
+fifteen, his father signed as first mate on the yacht Zephyr,
+going with<br>
+the oil-king, Henry B. Kingsley, on a pleasure cruise in the
+Southern<br>
+Pacific; Thorwald, Sr.'s, story you read in the paper. Soon after
+the news<br>
+of the Zephyr's wreck, with all on board lost, as was then
+supposed,<br>
+Thorwald's mother died. Her dying words (so young Thorwald told
+me, and I<br>
+was moved by his simple, straightforward tale) were an appeal to
+her<br>
+boy. She made him promise, for her sake, to study, study, study
+to gain<br>
+knowledge, and to rise in the world! Thorwald promised. Then,
+believing<br>
+both his parents dead, the young Norwegian, a youth of fifteen
+without<br>
+money, had to shift for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas, Jack London could weave his adventures into a
+gripping<br>
+masterpiece. Starting in as cabin-boy on a freighter to Alaska,
+young<br>
+Thorwald, in the past ten years, has simply crowded his life
+with<br>
+adventure, thrill, and experience, though thrills mean nothing to
+him. He<br>
+was in the Klondike gold-fields, in the salmon canneries, a
+prospector, a<br>
+lumber-jack in the Canadian Northwest, a cowboy, a sailor, a
+worker in the<br>
+Panama Canal Zone, on the Big Ditch, and too many other things to
+remember.<br>
+Finally, he drifted to Pittsburgh, where his prodigious strength
+served him<br>
+in the steel-mills, and, let me add, served <i>me</i>, as I
+stated.</p>
+
+<p>"And ever, no matter where he wandered, or what was his toil,
+whenever<br>
+possible, Thorwald studied. His promise to his mother was always
+his goal,<br>
+and in the cities he studied, or in the wilds he read all the
+books he<br>
+could find. The past year, finding he had a good-pay job in
+Pittsburgh, he<br>
+settled to determined effort, and by sheer resolution, by his
+wonderful<br>
+power to grasp facts and ideas for good once he gets them, he
+made great<br>
+progress in night school, until he was shifted, a week before he
+saved my<br>
+life, to work that required him to toil nightly, alternate weeks.
+So, for a<br>
+year, Thor has had every possible advantage, some, unknown to
+him, I paid<br>
+for myself; I got him clerical work, with shorter hours, he went
+to night<br>
+school, and I employed the very best tutor obtainable, letting
+Thorwald<br>
+pay him, as he thought, though his payments wouldn't keep the
+tutor in<br>
+neckties. The gratitude of the blond giant is pathetic, and
+suspecting that<br>
+I paid the tutor something, he insisted on paying all he could,
+which I<br>
+allowed, of course.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, in August, a year after Thorwald rescued me from
+serious injury,<br>
+perhaps death, I was in 'Frisco, and read of Thorwald, Sr.'s
+rescue and<br>
+return. Overjoyed, I took the father to Pittsburgh, to the son. I
+witnessed<br>
+their meeting, with the father practically risen from the dead,
+and all<br>
+those stolid, unimaginative Norwegians did was to shake hands
+gravely!<br>
+Young Thorwald told of his mother's last words, and of his
+promise, of his<br>
+having studied all the years, and of his late progress, so that
+he was<br>
+ready to enter college. His father, happy, insisted that he enter
+this<br>
+September, and he would pay for his son's college course, to make
+up for<br>
+the years the youth struggled for himself&mdash;Kingsley's heirs,
+I believe,<br>
+gave Thorwald, Sr., five thousand dollars on his return. So,
+though<br>
+grateful to me for the aid I offered, they would receive no
+financial<br>
+assistance, for they want to work it out themselves, and help the
+youth<br>
+make good his promise to his dying mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Much as I love old Bannister, my Alma Mater, I would not have
+tried to<br>
+send Thorwald there, had I not deemed it a good place for him.
+However,<br>
+since it is a liberal, not a technical, education he wants, it is
+all<br>
+right; and that prodigious strength will serve the Gold and Green
+on the<br>
+football field. Now, Thomas, I want you to meet him in
+Philadelphia, and<br>
+take him to Bannister, look out for him, get him started O. K.,
+and do all<br>
+you can for him. Get him to play football, if you can, but don't
+condemn<br>
+if he refuses. Remember, his life has been grim and
+unimaginative; he has<br>
+toiled and studied, it is probable he will not understand college
+life at<br>
+first."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all I need to read of Dad's letter, fellows,"
+concluded T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr. "After I got it, and Coach Corridan, Butch, and Beef
+heard my<br>
+seemingly rash vow to round up a giant full-back, I made a
+mystery of it; I<br>
+loafed in Philadelphia and Atlantic City until I met Thor, and
+brought him<br>
+here. You have all the data regarding Thor, 'The Billion-Dollar
+Mystery.'"</p>
+
+<p>The students, almost as one, drew a deep breath. They had been
+enthralled<br>
+by the story, and their feeling toward Thor had undergone a vast
+change.<br>
+Stirred by hearing of his promise to his dying mother, thrilled
+at the way<br>
+the stolid, determined Norwegian had ceaselessly studied to make
+something<br>
+of himself for the sake of his mother's sacred memory, the
+Bannister youths<br>
+now thought of football, of the Championship, as insignificant,
+beside the<br>
+goal of Thorwald, Jr. The blond Colossus, whom an hour ago all
+Bannister<br>
+reviled and condemned for not playing the game, who was a campus
+outcast,<br>
+was now a hero; thanks to the erstwhile heedless Hicks, whose
+intense<br>
+earnestness in itself was a revelation to the amazed collegians,
+Thor stood<br>
+before them in a different light, and the impulsive,
+whole-souled, generous<br>
+youths were now anxious to make amends.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! Thor!" was the thunderous cry, and the Bannister
+yell for<br>
+the Prodigious Prodigy shattered the echoes. Then T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+ecstatically joyous, again stilled the tumult, and spoke in
+behalf of John<br>
+Thorwald.</p>
+
+<p>"We all understand Thor now, fellows," he said, beaming on his
+comrades.<br>
+"We want him to play football, and we'll keep after him to play,
+but we<br>
+won't condemn him if he refuses. At present, Thor is simply a
+stolid,<br>
+unimaginative, dull mass of muscle. As you can realize, his
+nature, his<br>
+life so far have not tended to make him appreciate the gayer,
+lighter side<br>
+of college life, or to grasp the traditions of the campus. To
+him, college<br>
+is a market; he pays his money and he takes the knowledge handed
+out. We<br>
+can not blame him for not understanding college existence in its
+entirety,<br>
+or that the gaining of knowledge is a small part of the
+representative<br>
+collegian's purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, boys, here's our job, and let's tackle it together: To
+awaken in<br>
+Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to
+stir his<br>
+practical soul. Let every fellow be his friend, let no one speak
+against<br>
+him, because of football. We must work slowly, carefully,
+gradually making<br>
+him grasp college traditions, and once he awakens to the real
+meaning of<br>
+campus life, what a power he will be in the college and on the
+athletic<br>
+field! Maybe he will not play football this season, but let us
+help him to<br>
+awaken!"</p>
+
+<p>With wild shouts, the aroused collegians poured from the
+Auditorium, an<br>
+excited, turbulent mass of youthful humanity, a tide that swept
+T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., on the shoulders of several, out on the campus.
+Massed beneath<br>
+the window of John Thorwald's room, in Creighton Hall, the
+Bannister<br>
+students, now fully understanding that stolid Hercules, and
+stirred to<br>
+admiration of him by T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, great speech,
+cheered the<br>
+somewhat mystified Thor again and again; in vast sound waves, the
+shouts<br>
+rolled up to his open window:</p>
+
+<p>"Rah! Rah! Rah-rah-rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!" Captain Brewster,
+through a<br>
+big megaphone, roared; "Fellows&mdash;What's the matter with
+Thor?"</p>
+
+<p>And in a terrific outburst which, as the Phillyloo Bird
+afterward said,<br>
+"Like to of busted Bannister's works!" the enthusiastic
+collegians<br>
+responded:</p>
+
+<p>"He's&mdash;all&mdash;right!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Butch, apparently in quest of information, persisted:</p>
+
+<p>"Who's all right?"</p>
+
+<p>To which the three hundred or more youths, all seemingly
+equipped with<br>
+lungs of leather, kindly answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>Still, though the Phillyloo Bird declared that this vocal
+explosion caused<br>
+the seismographs as Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and in
+Salt Lake<br>
+City, Utah, to register an earthquake somewhere, it had on the
+blond<br>
+Freshman a strange effect. The vast mountain of muscle lumbered
+heavily<br>
+across the room, gazed down at the howling crowd of collegians
+without<br>
+emotion, then slammed down the window, and returned to study.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night" called Hicks. "The show is over! Let him have
+another yell,<br>
+boys, to show we aren't insulted; then we'll disband!"</p>
+
+<p>Considering Thorwald's cool reception of their overtures,
+which some youth<br>
+remarked, "Were as noisy as that of a Grand Opera Orchestra," it
+was quite<br>
+surprising to the students, in the morning, when what occurred an
+hour<br>
+after their serenade was revealed to them. As the story was told
+by those<br>
+who witnessed the scene, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, Beef,
+Monty, Pudge,<br>
+Roddy, Biff, Hefty, Tug, Buster, and Coach Corridan after the
+commotion<br>
+subsided, retired to the sunny Hicks' quarters, where the
+football<br>
+situation was discussed, along with ways and means to awaken
+Thor, when<br>
+that colossal Freshman himself loomed up in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>As they afterward learned, several excited Freshmen had dared
+to invade<br>
+Thor's den, even while he studied, and give him a more or less
+correct<br>
+account of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s masterly oration in his
+defense. Out of<br>
+their garbled descriptions, big John Thorwald grasped one salient
+point,<br>
+and straightway he started for Hicks' room, leaving the indignant
+Freshmen<br>
+to tell their story to the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," said Thor, not bothering with the "Mr." required of
+all Freshmen,<br>
+as his vast bulk crowded the doorway, "is it true that Mr. Thomas
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Sr., wants me to play football? He has been very kind to
+me, and<br>
+has helped me, and so have you, here at college. After a year of
+study, I<br>
+should have had to stop night-school, but for him&mdash;instead,
+I got another<br>
+year, and prepared for Bannister. I did not know that <i>he</i>
+desired me to<br>
+play, but if he does, I feel under obligation to show my great
+gratitude,<br>
+both for myself and for my father,"</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence, for the glorious news could not be
+grasped in a<br>
+second; those in the room, knowing Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.'s,
+brilliant<br>
+athletic record at old Bannister, and understanding his great
+love for<br>
+his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister
+to play<br>
+football for the Gold and Green, though, as he had written his
+son, he<br>
+would not have done so had he honestly believed that another
+college would<br>
+suit the ambitious Goliath better.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he?" stammered the dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while
+the others<br>
+echoed the words feebly, "Yes, I should say he <i>does</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>For a second, the ponderous young Colossus hesitated, and
+then, as calmly<br>
+as though announcing he would add Greek to his list of studies,
+and wholly<br>
+unaware that his words were to bring joy to old Bannister, he
+spoke<br>
+stolidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shall play football."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER VII</p>
+
+<p>HICKS STARTS ANOTHER MYSTERY.</p>
+
+<p>  "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!<br>
+  Drink and the Devil had done for the rest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"</p>
+
+<p>T HAVILAND HICKS, JR., his chair tilted at a perilous angle,
+and his feet<br>
+thrust gracefully atop of the study-table, in his cozy room, one
+Friday<br>
+afternoon two weeks after John Thorwald's return to the football
+squad, was<br>
+fathoms deep in Stevenson's "Treasure Island." As he perused the
+thrilling<br>
+pages, the irrepressible youth twanged a banjo accompaniment, and
+roared<br>
+with gusto the piratical chantey of Long John Silver's buccaneer
+crew;<br>
+Hicks, however, despite his saengerfest, was completely lost in
+the<br>
+enthralling narrative, so that he seemed to hear the parrot
+shrieking,<br>
+"Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!" and the wild refrain:</p>
+
+<p>  "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!"</p>
+
+<p>He was reading that breathlessly exciting part where the
+cabin-boy of the<br>
+Hispaniola, and Israel Hands have their terrible fight to the
+death, with<br>
+the dodging over the dead man rolling in the scuppers, the
+climbing up the<br>
+mast, and the dirk pinning the boy's shoulder, before Hands is
+shot and<br>
+goes to join his mate on the bottom; just at the most absorbing
+page, as he<br>
+twanged his beloved banjo louder, and roared the chantey, there
+sounded,<br>
+"Tramp&mdash;tramp&mdash;tramp!" in the corridor, the heavy tread
+of many feet<br>
+sounded, coming nearer. Instinctively realizing that the
+pachydermic parade<br>
+was headed for <i>his</i> room, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., rushed to
+the closet,<br>
+murmuring, "Safety first!" as usual, and stowed away his banjo.
+He was just<br>
+in the nick of time, for a second later there crowded into his
+room Captain<br>
+Butch, Pudge, Beef, Hefty, Biff, Monty, Roddy, Bunch, Tug,
+Buster, Coach<br>
+Corridas, and Thor, the latter duo bringing up the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you unjailed public nuisance!" said Butch Brewster,
+affectionately.<br>
+"We, whom you behold, are going for to enter into that room
+across the<br>
+corridor from your boudoir, and hold a football signal quiz and
+confab. We<br>
+should request that you permit a thunderous silence to originate
+in your<br>
+cozy retreat, for the period of at least a hour! A word to the
+<i>wise</i> is<br>
+sufficient, so I have spoken several, that even you may
+comprehend my<br>
+meaning,"</p>
+
+<p>"I gather you, fluently!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+taking up<br>
+"Treasure Island" and his graceful pose once more. "Leave me to
+peruse the<br>
+thrilling pages of this classic blood-and-thunder book, and I'll
+cause a<br>
+beautiful serenity to obtain hither."</p>
+
+<p>"See that you do, you pestiferous insect!" threatened Beef
+McNaughton,<br>
+ominously. "Come on, fellows, Hicks can't escape our vengeance,
+if<br>
+he bursts into what he fatuously believes is song. Just let him
+act<br>
+hippicanarious, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>When the Gold and Green eleven, half of which, to judge by
+size, was<br>
+Thor, had gone with Coach Corridan into the room across from that
+of the<br>
+blithesome Hicks, the sunny-souled Senior tried to resume his
+perusal of<br>
+"Treasure Island," but somehow the spell had been broken by the
+invasion of<br>
+his cozy quarters. So, after vainly essaying to take up the
+thread of the<br>
+story again, Hicks arose and stood by the window, gazing across
+the campus<br>
+to Bannister Field, deserted, since the football team rested for
+the game<br>
+of the morrow. As he stood there, the gladsome Hicks reflected
+seriously.<br>
+He thought of "Thor," and decided sorrowfully that the problem of
+awakening<br>
+that stolid Colossus to a full understanding of campus life was
+as unsolved<br>
+as ever.</p>
+
+<p>"But I <i>won't</i> give it up!" declared Hicks, determinedly.
+"I have always<br>
+been good at math, and I won't let this problem baffle me."</p>
+
+<p>Since the night, two weeks back, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+had made his<br>
+memorable speech, explaining to his fellow-students the
+"Billon-Dollar<br>
+Mystery," and arousing in them a vast admiration for the
+slow-minded,<br>
+plodding John Thorwald, every collegian had done his best to
+befriend the<br>
+big Freshman. Upperclassmen helped him with his studies. Despite
+his almost<br>
+rude refusal to meet any advances, the collegians always had a
+cheery<br>
+greeting for him, and his class-mates, in fear and trembling,
+invaded<br>
+his den at times, to show him they were his friends. Yet, despite
+these<br>
+whole-hearted efforts, only two of old Bannister did the silent
+Thor<br>
+seem to desire as comrades: the festive Hicks, for reasons
+known,<br>
+and&mdash;remarkable to chronicle&mdash;little Theophilus
+Opperdyke, the timorous,<br>
+studious "Human Encyclopedia."</p>
+
+<p>"Colossus and Lilliputian!" the Phillyloo Bird quaintly
+observed once when<br>
+this strangely assorted duo appeared on the campus. "Say,
+fellows&mdash;some<br>
+time Thor will accidentally sit on Theophilus, and we'll have
+another<br>
+mystery, the disappearance of our boner!"</p>
+
+<p>The generous Hicks, longing for Thor's awakening to come, was
+not in the<br>
+least jealous of his loyal little friend, Theophilus. In fact, he
+was<br>
+sincerely delighted that the unemotional Hercules desired the
+comradeship<br>
+of the grind, and he urged the Human Encyclopedia to strive
+constantly to<br>
+arouse in Thor a realization of college existence, and a true
+knowledge of<br>
+its meaning. At least one thing, Theophilus reported, had been
+achieved by<br>
+Hicks' defense of Thorwald, and the subsequent attitude of the
+collegians&mdash;<br>
+the colossal Freshman was puzzled, quite naturally. When over
+three hundred<br>
+youths criticized, condemned, and berated him one night, and the
+next, even<br>
+before he reconsidered his decision about football, came under
+his window<br>
+and cheered him, no wonder the young Norwegian was
+bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>On the football field, with his dogged determination, his
+bulldog way of<br>
+hanging on to things until he mastered them, big Thor progressed
+slowly,<br>
+and surely; the past Saturday, against the heavy Alton eleven,
+the blond<br>
+Freshman had been sent in for the second half, and, to quote an
+overjoyed<br>
+student, he had "busted things all up!" It seemed simply
+impossible to stop<br>
+that terrible rush of his huge body. Time after time he plowed
+through the<br>
+line for yards, and old Bannister, visioning Thor distributing
+Hamilton and<br>
+Ballard over the field, in the big games, literally hugged
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, despite Thorwald's invincible prowess, despite the
+vast joy of<br>
+old Bannister at the chances of the Championship, some
+intangible<br>
+shadow hovered over the campus. It brooded over the
+training-table, the<br>
+shower-rooms after scrimmage, on Bannister Field during practice;
+as yet,<br>
+no one had dared to give it form, by voicing his thought, but
+though no<br>
+youth dared admit it, something was wrong, there was a defective
+cog in the<br>
+machinery of that marvelous machine, the Gold and Green
+eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks," quoth that sunny youth, at
+length, turning<br>
+from the window; "I'll solve the problem, or what is more
+probable,<br>
+Theophilus may stir that sodden hulk of humanity, after awhile. I
+won't<br>
+worry about it, for that gets me nothing, and it will all come
+out O.K.,<br>
+I'm positive!"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., picked up
+"Treasure Island"<br>
+again, he heard drifting across the corridor from the room
+opposite, in<br>
+Butch Brewster's familiar voice:</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;Yes, I'll win three more Bs'&mdash;one each in
+football, baseball and track;<br>
+next spring, I'll annex my last B at old Bannister,
+fellows&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His <i>last</i> B&mdash;The words struck the blithesome Hicks
+with sledge-hammer<br>
+force. Big Butch Brewster was talking of his last B, when he, T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., had never won his first; with a feeling almost of
+alarm, the<br>
+sunny youth realized that this was his final year at old
+Bannister, his<br>
+last chance to win his athletic letter, and to make happy his
+beloved Dad,<br>
+by helping him to realize part of his life's ambition&mdash;to
+behold his son<br>
+shattering Hicks, Sr.'s, wonderful record. His final chance, and
+outside of<br>
+his hopes of winning the track award in the high-jump, Hicks saw
+no way to<br>
+win his B.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., as has been chronicled, the
+beloved Dad of the<br>
+cheery Senior, a Pittsburgh millionaire Steel King, was a
+graduate of old<br>
+Bannister, Class of '92. While wearing the Gold and Green, he had
+made<br>
+an all-round athletic record never before, or afterward, rivaled
+on<br>
+the campus. At football, basketball, track, and baseball, he was
+a<br>
+scintillating star, annexing enough letters to start an alphabet,
+had they<br>
+been different ones. Quite naturally, when the Doctor, speaking
+anent<br>
+the then infantile Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., said, "Mr. Hicks,
+it's a<br>
+boy!"&mdash;the one-time Bannister athlete straightway began to
+dream of the day<br>
+when his only son and heir should follow in his Dad's footsteps,
+shattering<br>
+the records made at Bannister, and at Yale, by Hicks,
+<i>p&egrave;re</i>.</p>
+
+<p>However, to quote a sporting phrase, the son of the Steel King
+"upset the<br>
+dope!" At the start of his Senior year, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+had not<br>
+annexed a single athletic honor, nor did the signs point to any
+records<br>
+being in peril of getting shattered by his prowess; as Hicks
+himself<br>
+phrased it, "Dame Nature was <i>some stingy</i> when she handed
+out the Hercules<br>
+stuff to me!" The happy-go-lucky youth, when he matriculated as a
+Freshman<br>
+at Bannister College, was builded on the general lines of a
+toothpick, and<br>
+had he elected to follow a pugilistic career, a division somewhat
+lighter<br>
+than the tissue paperweight class would have had to be devised
+to<br>
+accommodate the splinter-student. A generous, sunny-souled,
+intensely<br>
+democratic collegian, despite his father's wealth, the festive
+Hicks, with<br>
+his room always open-house to all; his firm friendship for star
+athlete<br>
+or humble boner, his never-failing sunny nature, together with
+his famous<br>
+Hicks Personally Conducted Expeditions downtown to the Beef-Steak
+Busts he<br>
+had originated, in his three years at old Bannister, had made
+himself the<br>
+most popular and beloved youth on the campus, but, he had not won
+his B!</p>
+
+<p>And he had tried. With a full realization, of his Dad's
+ambition, his<br>
+life-dream to behold his son a great athlete, the blithesome
+Hicks had<br>
+tried, but with hilariously futile results. Nature had endowed
+him, as he<br>
+told his loyal comrade, Butch Brewster, with "the Herculean build
+of a<br>
+Jersey mosquito," and his athletic powers neared zero infinity.
+In his<br>
+Freshman year, he inaugurated his athletic career by running the
+wrong way<br>
+in the Sophomore-Freshman football game, scoring a touchdown that
+won for<br>
+the enemy, and naturally, after that performance, every athletic
+effort was<br>
+greeted with jeers by the students,</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>have</i> tried!" said Hicks, producing two letters from
+the study-table,<br>
+"But not like I should have tried. I could never have played on
+the eleven,<br>
+or on the nine, but I have a chance in the high-jump. I know I've
+been<br>
+indolent and care-free, and I ought to have trained harder. Well,
+I just<br>
+must win my track B this spring, but as to keeping the rash
+promise I made<br>
+to Butch as a Freshman&mdash;not a chance!"</p>
+
+<p>It had been at the close of his Freshman year, after Hicks, in
+the<br>
+Interclass Track Meet, had smashed hurdles, broken high-jumping
+cross-bars,<br>
+finished last in several events, and jeopardized his life with
+the shot and<br>
+hammer, that he made the rash vow to which he now had reference.
+Butch,<br>
+believing his sunny friend had entered all the events just to
+entertain the<br>
+crowd, in his fun-loving way, was teasing him about his
+ridiculous fiascos,<br>
+when Hicks had told him the story&mdash;how his Dad wanted him to
+try and be a<br>
+famous athlete; he showed Butch a letter, received before the
+meet, asking<br>
+his son to try every event, and to keep on training, so as to win
+his B<br>
+before he graduated. Butch, great-hearted, was surprised and
+moved by the<br>
+revelation that the gladsome youth, even as he was jeered by his
+friendly<br>
+comrades, who thought he performed for sport, was striving to
+have his<br>
+Dad's dream come true; he had sympathized with his classmate, and
+then his<br>
+scatter-brained colleague had aroused his indignation by vowing,
+with a<br>
+swaggering confidence:</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, just leave it to Hicks!' Remember this, Butch, before I
+graduate from<br>
+old Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of
+sport!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch had snorted incredulously. To win the football or the
+baseball B,<br>
+the gold letter for the former, and the green one for the latter
+sport,<br>
+an athlete had to play in three-fourths of the season's games, on
+the<br>
+"'Varsity"; to gain the white track letter, one had to win a
+first place in<br>
+some event, in a regularly scheduled track meet with another
+team. And now,<br>
+Butch's skepticism seemed confirmed, for at the start of his last
+year at<br>
+college, Hicks had not annexed a single B, though he bade fair to
+corral<br>
+one in the spring in the high-jump.</p>
+
+<p>"Heigh-ho!" chuckled Hicks, at length. "Here I am threatening
+to get gloomy<br>
+again! Well I'll sure train hard to win my track letter, and that
+seems<br>
+all I can do! I'd like to win my three B's, and jeer at Butch,
+next June,<br>
+but&mdash;<i>it can't be did</i>! I shall now twang my trusty
+banjo, and drive dull<br>
+care away."</p>
+
+<p>Quite forgetful of the football conclave across the corridor,
+and of Butch<br>
+Brewster's request for quiet, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. dragged out
+his<br>
+beloved banjo, caressed its strings lovingly, and roared:</p>
+
+<p>  "Fifteen men sat on the dead man's chest&mdash;<br>
+  Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum!<br>
+  Drink and the&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" Big Butch Brewster crashed across the corridor, both
+doors being<br>
+open. "Is this how you maintain a quiet? I'm going to call Thor
+over and<br>
+make him sit down on you! Why, you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Have mercy!" plead the grinning Hicks. "Honest, Butch, I
+didn't go to bust<br>
+up the league&mdash;I&mdash;I heard you talk about your B's, and
+I got to thinking<br>
+that I have but little time to make my Dad happy; see, here's
+proof&mdash;read<br>
+these letters I was perusing&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Puzzled, Butch scanned the first one, dated back in the May of
+their<br>
+Freshman year; Hicks had received it before the class track meet,
+and, as<br>
+chronicled, he had heard from his sunny comrade later, how it
+impelled the<br>
+splinter youth to try every event, while Bannister believed him
+to enter<br>
+them for fun. The letter was post-marked "Pittsburgh, Pa.," and
+it read:</p>
+
+<p>DEAR SON THOMAS:</p>
+
+<p>Your last term's report gratified me immensely, and I am proud
+of your<br>
+class record, and scholastic achievements. Pitch in, and lead
+your class,<br>
+and make your Dad happy.</p>
+
+<p>But there is something else of which I want to write, Thomas.
+As you must<br>
+know, it has always been a cause of keen regret to me that you
+have never<br>
+seemed to care for athletics of any sort; you appear to be too
+indolent and<br>
+ease-loving to sacrifice, or to endure the hardships of training.
+I suppose<br>
+it is because of my athletic record both at Bannister and at old
+Yale that<br>
+I am so eager to see you become a star; in fact, it is my life's
+most<br>
+cherished ambition to have you become as famous as your Dad.</p>
+
+<p>However, I realize that my fond dream can never come true.
+Nature has not<br>
+made you naturally strong and athletic, and what athletic success
+you may<br>
+gain, must come from long and hard training and practice. If you
+can only<br>
+win your college letter, your B, Thomas, while at Bannister, I
+shall be<br>
+fully content.</p>
+
+<p>I said nothing when you failed even to try for the teams at
+your<br>
+Preparatory School, but I did hope that at Bannister, under good
+coaches<br>
+and trainers, you would at least endeavor to win your letter. I
+must admit<br>
+that I am disappointed, for you have not even made an earnest
+effort to<br>
+find your event. Often, by trying everything, especially in a
+track meet, a<br>
+fellow finds his event, and later stars in it.</p>
+
+<p>I really believe that if you would start in now to develop
+yourself by<br>
+regular, systematic gymnasium work, and if you would only try, in
+a year<br>
+or so you could make a Bannister team. Theodore Roosevelt, you
+know, was a<br>
+puny, weakly boy, but he built himself up, and became an athlete.
+If you<br>
+want to please me, start now and find your event. Attempt all the
+sports,<br>
+all the various track and field events, and always build yourself
+up by<br>
+exercise in the Gym.</p>
+
+<p>And you owe it to your Alma Mater, my son! Even if, after
+conscientious<br>
+effort, you fail to win your B, to know that you have given your
+college<br>
+and teams what help you could, will please your Dad. Remember,
+the fellow<br>
+who toils on the scrubs is the true hero. If you become good
+enough to give<br>
+the first eleven, the first nine, the first five, or the first
+track squad<br>
+a hard rub and a fast practice, you are serving Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>I don't ask you to do this, Thomas, I only say that it will
+make me happy<br>
+just to know you are striving. If you never get beyond the
+scrubs, just to<br>
+hear you are serving the Gold and Green, giving your best, in
+that humble<br>
+unhonored way, will please me. And if, before you graduate, you
+<i>can</i> win<br>
+your B, I shall be so glad! Don't get discouraged, it may take
+until your<br>
+Senior year, but once you start, <i>stick</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Your loving</p>
+
+<p>DAD.</p>
+
+<p>"Read this one, too, Butch," requested Hicks, hurriedly, as a
+hail of, "Oh,<br>
+you Hicks, come here!" sounded down the corridor, from Skeet
+Wigglesworth's<br>
+abode. "I'll be back as soon as Skeet finishes his foolishness.
+Don't wait<br>
+for me, though, if I am delayed, for you want to be talking
+football."</p>
+
+<p>Left alone, big Butch Brewster, who of all the collegians that
+had known<br>
+and loved the sunny Hicks, some now graduated, understood that
+his athletic<br>
+efforts, jeered good-naturedly by the students, were made because
+of a<br>
+great desire to win his B and make happy his Dad, read the second
+letter,<br>
+dated a few days before:</p>
+
+<p>DEAR SON THOMAS:</p>
+
+<p>You are starting the last lap, son, your Senior year, and your
+final chance<br>
+to win your B! Don't forget how happy it will make your Dad if
+you win your<br>
+letter just once! Of course, you cannot gain it in football, for
+nature<br>
+gave you no chance, nor in baseball; but in track work it is up
+to you.<br>
+Train hard, Thomas, and try to win a first place; just win your
+track B,<br>
+and I'll rest content!</p>
+
+<p>Your college record gives me great pleasure. You stand at the
+top in your<br>
+studies, and you are vastly popular, while the Faculty speak
+highly of you.<br>
+Let your B come as a climax to your career, and I'll be so proud
+of you.<br>
+Don't forget, you are the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and those
+sons of old<br>
+Eli want you to win the letter. As to football, you cannot win
+your gold B<br>
+by playing three-fourths of a season's games, but you might get
+in a big<br>
+game, even win it, if you'll get confidence enough to tell Coach
+Corridan<br>
+about yourself. Don't mind the jeers of your comrades&mdash;they
+just don't<br>
+know how you've tried to please your Dad; you owe it to your Alma
+Mater<br>
+to tell, and, take my word as a football star, you have the
+goods! Your<br>
+peculiar prowess has won many a contest, and old Bannister needs
+it this<br>
+season, I hear&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>There was more, but big Butch scarcely saw it, bewildered as
+the behemoth<br>
+Senior was; what new mystery had Hicks set afoot? What did Hicks,
+Sr.,<br>
+mean by writing, "You might get in a big game, even win it, if
+you'll get<br>
+confidence enough to tell Coach Corridan about yourself? You owe
+it to your<br>
+Alma Mater to tell, and take my word, as a football star, you
+have the<br>
+goods&mdash;" Why, everyone knew that T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+possessed no more<br>
+football ability than a Jersey mosquito, and yet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Another Hicks mystery," groaned Butch, holding the two
+letters<br>
+thoughtfully. "And father and son are in it, But if Hicks don't
+get his B,<br>
+it will be a shame. Say, I know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A few moments later, good-hearted Butch Brewster, in the
+behalf of his<br>
+sunny comrade, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was making to the Gold and
+Green<br>
+eleven and Coach Corridan, as eloquent a speech as that
+blithesome youth,<br>
+two weeks before, had made in defense of the condemned and
+ostracized Thor!<br>
+He read them the two letters of Hicks' beloved Dad, and told how
+the cheery<br>
+collegian wanted to win his B for his father's sake; graphically,
+he<br>
+related Hicks, Sr.'s, great ambition, and how Hicks, Jr., for
+three years<br>
+had vainly tried to make good at some athletic sport, and to win
+his<br>
+letter. Big Butch, warming to his theme, spoke of how T. Haviland
+Hicks,<br>
+Jr., letting the students believe that he entered every event in
+the track<br>
+meet of his Freshman year just for fun, had been trying to find
+his event,<br>
+and train for it; he explained that the festive youth, ever
+sunny-natured,<br>
+under the good-humored jeers of his comrades, who did not know
+his real<br>
+purpose, really yearned to win his B.</p>
+
+<p>"You fellows, and you, Coach," he thundered, "all know how
+Hicks, unable<br>
+to make the 'Varsity, has always done humble service for old
+Bannister,<br>
+cheerfully, gladly; how he keeps the athletes in good spirits at
+the<br>
+training-table, and is always on hand after scrimmage to rub them
+out. He<br>
+is chock-full of college spirit, and is intensely loyal to his
+Alma Mater.<br>
+Why, look how he rounded up Thor&mdash;he ought to have his B for
+that!"</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to Butch's speech, the Gold and Green football stars,
+most of whom<br>
+were Hicks' closest friends, saw the scatter-brained,
+happy-go-lucky<br>
+youth in a new light; his eloquent defense of John Thorwald had
+shown old<br>
+Bannister that he could be serious, but the knowledge that T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., even as he made a ridiculous farce in athletics, was
+ambitious<br>
+to win his B, just to make his Dad happy, stunned them. For three
+years,<br>
+the sunny Hicks' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a
+team, had<br>
+meant a small-sized riot of jeers and good-natured ridicule at
+his expense;<br>
+but Hicks had always grinned &agrave; la Cheshire cat,&mdash;and
+no one but good<br>
+Butch Brewster, all the time, had known how in earnest the
+lovable<br>
+collegian was.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," concluded Butch, "Hicks <i>may</i> win a B in track
+work, if he gets a<br>
+first place in the high-jump, and if so, O.K., but if he does
+not&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean&mdash;" Monty Merriweather&mdash;understood, "if he
+fails, then the<br>
+Athletic Association ought to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Present him with a B!" said Butch, earnestly, "as a deserved
+reward for<br>
+his faithful loyalty and service to old Bannister's athletic
+teams. Don't<br>
+let him graduate without gaining his letter, and making his Dad
+realize a<br>
+part of his ambition&mdash;a two-thirds vote of the Athletic
+Association can<br>
+award him his letter, and when all the students know the truth
+about his<br>
+ridiculous fiasco on Bannister Field, and realize the serious
+purpose<br>
+beneath them all, they&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We'll give him his B!" shouted Beef, loudly, "If he fails in
+track work<br>
+next spring, we'll vote him his letter, anyway!"</p>
+
+<p>Out in the corridor, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., returning from
+Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth's room and entering his own cozy quarters, could not
+help<br>
+hearing the conversation, as the doors of both his den and the
+room across<br>
+the corridor were open. A great love for his comrades came to his
+impulsive<br>
+heart, and a mist before his eyes, as he heard how they wanted to
+vote him<br>
+his B in case he failed to win it in track work; he thrilled at
+Butch's<br>
+speech, but&mdash;</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="bw.jpg (92K)" src="bw.jpg" height="851" width="545">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Fellows," he startled them by appearing in the doorway,
+"I&mdash;I thank you<br>
+from the bottom of my heart. I couldn't help hearing, you
+know&mdash;I <i>do</i><br>
+appreciate your generous thoughts, but&mdash;I can't and won't
+accept my B<br>
+unless I win it according to the rule of the Athletic
+Association."</p>
+
+<p>A silence, and then Butch Brewster, gripping his comrade's
+hand<br>
+understandingly, held out to him the two letters.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, old man," he breathed, "for reading them aloud,
+but I wanted<br>
+the fellows to know, to appreciate you! And say, Hicks, what does
+your Dad<br>
+mean by saying that you are the 'Class Kid' of Yale, '96, and
+that those<br>
+sons of old Eli want you to win your letter? And what does he
+mean by<br>
+saying that you may get in a <i>big game</i>&mdash;may <i>win</i>
+it&mdash;that you have<br>
+the goods in football, but lack the confidence to announce it to
+Coach<br>
+Corridan? Also that old Bannister needs just the peculiar brand
+you<br>
+possess?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his sunny, Cheshire cat grin
+illuminating his<br>
+cherubic countenance, beamed on the eleven and Coach Corridan a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's a <i>mystery</i>," he said, cheerfully. "If I
+<i>do</i> gain the courage<br>
+and confidence, I'll explain, but unless I do&mdash;it remains
+a&mdash;<i>mystery</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER VIII</p>
+
+<p>COACH CORRIDAN SURPRISES THE ELEVEN</p>
+
+<p>"ALL MEMBERS OF THE FIRST ELEVEN ARE<br>
+URGENTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT IN<br>
+THE ROOM OF T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR.&mdash;<br>
+AT EIGHT P. M. TONIGHT;<br>
+YOU WILL BE DETAINED ONLY A FEW MINUTES,<br>
+BUT LET EVERY PLAYER COME, AS A MATTER OF<br>
+EXTREME IMPORTANCE WILL BE PRESENTED.<br>
+PATRICK HENRY COERIDAN, HEAD-COACH."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, what do you suppose is up Coach Corridan's sleeve?"
+demanded T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cheerfully. "Has Ballard learned our
+signals, or some<br>
+Bannister student sold them to a rival team, as per the usual
+football<br>
+story? Though the notice doth not herald it, I am to be present,
+for my<br>
+room is to be used, and the Coach gave me a special invitation to
+cut the<br>
+Gordian knot with my keen intellect."</p>
+
+<p>The sunny Hicks, with Butch, Beef, Tug, and Monty, had just
+come from<br>
+"Delmonico's Annex," the college dining-hall, after supper; they
+had paused<br>
+before the Bulletin Board at the Gymnasium entrance, where all
+college<br>
+notices were posted, and the Coach's urgent request had caught
+their gaze.<br>
+The announcement had caused quite a stir on the campus. The
+Bannister<br>
+youths stood in excited groups talking of it, and in the
+dormitories it<br>
+superseded all thought of study; however, there seemed little
+chance that<br>
+any but the "'Varsity" and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., who was always
+consulted<br>
+in football problems, would know what took place in this
+meeting.</p>
+
+<p>"There is only one way to find out, Hicks," responded big
+Butch Brewster,<br>
+his arm across his blithesome comrade's shoulders, "and that is,
+attend<br>
+the meeting! You can wager that every member of the eleven will
+be there,<br>
+except Thor&mdash;he regards it as 'foolishness,' I suppose, and
+he won't spare<br>
+that precious time from his studies."</p>
+
+<p>At five minutes past eight, Butch's prophecy was fulfilled,
+for every<br>
+member of the eleven <i>was</i> in Hicks' cozy room, except Thor,
+the Prodigious<br>
+Prodigy, whose presence would have caused a mild sensation. It
+was an<br>
+extremely quiet and orderly gathering, for Coach Corridan, who
+had the<br>
+floor, was so grave that he impressed the would-be sky-larking
+youths.<br>
+Having their undivided attention, he proceeded to make a speech
+that, to<br>
+all intents and purposes, had much the same effect on the team
+and Hicks as<br>
+a Zeppelin's bombs on London:</p>
+
+<p>"Boys," he spoke, in forceful sentences, driving straight to
+the point,<br>
+"I am going to take the eleven, and Hicks, whose suggestions are
+always<br>
+timely, into my confidence, in the hope that we, working
+together, may<br>
+carry out an idea of mine for the awakening of Thor to a
+realization<br>
+of things! I ask you not to let what I shall tell you be known to
+the<br>
+student-body, but you fellows play with Thor every day, and you
+will<br>
+understand the crisis, and appreciate <i>why</i> it is done, if I
+decide it<br>
+necessary to drop John Thorwald from the football squad."</p>
+
+<p>"Drop Thor from the squad!" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+staggered, and<br>
+then pandemonium broke loose among the players. Drop the
+Prodigious Prodigy<br>
+from the squad, why, what <i>could</i> the Slave-Driver be
+thinking of? Why,<br>
+look how Thorwald, on the scrubs, tore through the heavy 'Varsity
+line for<br>
+big gains. He was simply unstoppable; and yet, almost on the eve
+of the big<br>
+game that old Bannister depended on Thor to win by his splendid
+prowess, he<br>
+might be dropped from the squad! Excited exclamations sounded
+from Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster, Beef, and the others of the Gold and Green
+eleven:</p>
+
+<p>"Why not give the big games to Ballard and Ham, Coach?"</p>
+
+<p>"Say, shoot Theophilus Opperdyke in at full-back!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by, championship! No hopes now, fellows!"</p>
+
+<p>"If Thor doesn't play in the Big Games&mdash;good night!"</p>
+
+<p>A greater sensation could not have been caused even had kindly
+white-haired<br>
+Prexy announced his intention of challenging Jess Willard for the
+World's<br>
+Heavy-Weight Championship. Dropping that human battering-ram,
+Thor, from<br>
+the football, squad was something utterly undreamed-of. Coach
+Corridan<br>
+raised his hand for silence, and the youths subsided.</p>
+
+<p>"Hear me carefully, boys," he urged, "I know that old
+Bannister has come to<br>
+regard John Thorwald as invincible, to use his vast bulk as a
+foundation<br>
+on which to build hopes of the Championship, which is a bad
+policy, for no<br>
+team can be a <i>one-man</i> team and win. I realize that as a
+football player,<br>
+Thor hasn't an equal in the State today, and if he had the right
+spirit, he<br>
+would have few in the country. It would be ridiculous to decry
+his prowess,<br>
+for he is a physical phenomenon. But you remember T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s,<br>
+splendid defense of Thor, a week or so ago? Hicks gave you a full
+and clear<br>
+explanation of the big fellow, and showed you <i>why</i> he does
+not know what<br>
+college spirit is, what loyalty and love for one's Alma Mater
+mean! His<br>
+masterly speech changed your attitude toward Thor, and even
+before he<br>
+decided to play football, for Mr. Hicks' sake, you admired him,
+because<br>
+of his indomitable purpose, his promise to his dying mother. Now
+I am<br>
+telling you why he may be dropped from the squad, because I want
+you<br>
+fellows to give Thor a square deal, to remember what Hicks told
+you of him,<br>
+and to keep on striving to awaken him to the true meaning of
+campus years,<br>
+to make him realize that college life is more than a mere buying
+of<br>
+knowledge. I want to keep him on the squad, if humanly possible,
+and I<br>
+shall outline my plot later.</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow we play Latham College. It is the last game before
+the big games<br>
+for The State Intercollegiate Football Championship. Saturday
+after this,<br>
+we play Hamilton, and the following week Ballard, the Champions!
+The eleven<br>
+I send in against those teams must be a solid unit, <i>one</i> in
+spirit and<br>
+purpose&mdash;every member of the Gold and Green team must be
+welded with his<br>
+team-mates, and they must forget everything but that their Alma
+Mater must<br>
+win the Championship! With no thought of self-glory, no other
+purpose in<br>
+playing than a love for old Bannister, every fellow must go into
+those<br>
+games to fight for his Alma Mater! Now, as for Thor, I need not
+tell you<br>
+that he is not in sympathy with our ambition; he simply does not
+understand<br>
+campus tradition and spirit. He is as yet not possessed of an
+Alma Mater;<br>
+he plays football only because of gratitude to Mr. Thomas
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Sr., and he hates to lose the time from his studies for the
+practice.<br>
+The football squad knows that his presence is a veritable wet
+blanket on<br>
+enthusiasm and the team's fighting spirit."</p>
+
+<p>It was true. That intangible shadow of something wrong,
+brooding over<br>
+training-table, shower-room, and Bannister Field, that
+self-evident<br>
+truth which almost every collegian had for days confessed to
+himself yet<br>
+hesitated to voice, had been given definite form by Coach
+Corridan talking<br>
+to the eleven. The good that Thorwald might do for the team by
+his superb<br>
+prowess and massive bulk was more than offset and nullified by
+his<br>
+attitude.</p>
+
+<p>To the blond Colossus, daily practice was unutterable mental
+torture. His<br>
+mind was on his studies, to which his bulldog purpose shackled
+him; he<br>
+begrudged the time spent on Bannister Field; he was stolid,
+silent, aloof.<br>
+He scarcely ever spoke, except when addressed. He reported for
+practice at<br>
+the last second, went through the scrimmage like a great, dumb,
+driven ox,<br>
+doing as he was ordered; and when the squad was dismissed he
+hurried to his<br>
+room. He was among the squad, but not of them; he neither
+understood nor<br>
+cared about their love for old Bannister, their vast desire to
+win for<br>
+their Alma Mater; he played football because he was grateful to
+Hicks, Sr.,<br>
+for helping him to get started toward his goal, but as Coach
+Corridan now<br>
+told the 'Varsity, he killed the squad's enthusiasm,</p>
+
+<p>"All of this cannot fail to damage the <i>esprit de corps</i>,
+the <i>morale</i>, of<br>
+the eleven," declared Coach Corridan, having outlined Thor's
+attitude. "I<br>
+know that every member of the squad, if Thor played the game
+because of<br>
+college spirit, for love of old Bannister, would rejoice at his
+prowess.<br>
+But as it is they are justly resentful that he is not in the
+spirit of the<br>
+game. What we may gain by his playing, we lose because the others
+cannot do<br>
+their best with his example to hurt their fighting spirit. I do
+not want,<br>
+nor will I have on my eleven, any player who plays for other
+reasons than a<br>
+love for his Alma Mater, be he a Hogan, Brickley, Thorpe, or
+Mahan. I have<br>
+waited, hoping Thorwald would be awakened, as Hicks explained,
+but now I<br>
+must act. Tomorrow's game with Latham must see Thor awakened, or
+I must,<br>
+for the sake of the eleven, drop him from the squad for the rest
+of the<br>
+season.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I beg of you, in case the plan I shall propose fails,
+remember Hicks'<br>
+appeal! Do not condemn or ostracize John Thorwald in any degree.
+He has<br>
+three more seasons of football, so let us keep on trying to make
+him<br>
+understand campus life, college tradition. Be his friends, help
+him all you<br>
+can, and sooner or later he will awaken. Something may suddenly
+shock him<br>
+to a true understanding of what old Bannister means to a fellow.
+Or perhaps<br>
+the awakening will be slow, but it must come. And Bannister can
+win without<br>
+Thor, don't forget that! We'll make one final effort to awaken
+Thor, and<br>
+if it fails, just forget him, boys, so far as football goes, and
+watch the<br>
+Gold and Green win that championship."</p>
+
+<p>"What is your scheme, Coach?" questioned Captain Butch
+Brewster, his honest<br>
+countenance showing how heavily the responsibility of team-leader
+weighed<br>
+upon him. "You are right; as Thor is now, he is a handicap to the
+eleven,<br>
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My idea is this," explained the Slave-Driver earnestly.
+"Select some<br>
+student to go to Thorwald and try to show him that unless he gets
+into the<br>
+game and plays for old Bannister, he will be dropped from the
+squad. If<br>
+possible, let the fellow make him understand that, in his case,
+it will be<br>
+a shame and a dishonor. Now, Butch, you and Hicks can probably
+approach<br>
+Thor, or perhaps you know of someone who&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, cherubic countenance showed the
+light of dawning<br>
+inspiration, and Coach Corridan paused, as the sunny youth
+exhibited a<br>
+desire to say something, with him not by any means a
+phenomenal<br>
+happening; given the floor, the blithesome youth burst forth
+excitedly:<br>
+"Theophilus&mdash;Theophilus Opperdyke is the one! He has more
+influence over<br>
+Thor than any other student, and the big fellow likes the little
+boner.<br>
+Thor will at least listen to Theophilus, which Is more than any
+of us can<br>
+gain from him."</p>
+
+<p>After the meeting had adjourned, and the last inspection had
+been made in<br>
+the other dorms, the Seniors being exempt, several members of the
+Gold and<br>
+Green team&mdash;Captain Butch, Beef, Pudge, Monty, Roddy, and
+Bunch, together<br>
+with little Theophilus Opperdyke, dragged from his
+studies&mdash;foregathered in<br>
+the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; those who had heard
+the<br>
+coach's talk were still stunned at the ban likely to be placed on
+the<br>
+Brobdingnagian Thor. On the campus outside Creighton Hall, a
+horde of<br>
+Bannister youths, incited by Tug Cardiff, who gave them no reason
+for his<br>
+act, were making a strenuous effort to awaken the Prodigious
+Prodigy,<br>
+evidently depending on noise to achieve that end, for a vast
+sound-wave<br>
+rolled up to Hicks' windows&mdash;"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor!
+Thor!<br>
+He's&mdash;all&mdash;right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Listen!" exploded T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., indignantly. "You
+and I,<br>
+Theophilus, would give a Rajah's ransom just to hear the fellows
+whoop it<br>
+up for us like that, and it has no more effect on that sodden
+hulk of a<br>
+Thor than bombarding an English super-dreadnaught with Roman
+candles!<br>
+Howsomever, Coach Corridan exploded a shrapnel bomb on old
+Bannister's<br>
+eleven tonight."</p>
+
+<p>Then Hicks carefully outlined to the dazed little boner the
+substance of<br>
+the coach's talk to the team, and Theophilus was alarmed when he
+thought of<br>
+Thor's being dropped from the squad. When Captain Butch had
+outlined the<br>
+Slave-Driver's plot for striving to awaken the Colossus to a
+realization of<br>
+what a disgrace it would be to be sent from the gridiron, though
+he did not<br>
+announce that the Human Encyclopedia had been elected to carry
+out Coach<br>
+Corridan's last-hope idea, Theophilus sat on the edge of the
+chair,<br>
+blinking owlishly at them over his big-rimmed spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>"After all, fellows," quavered Theophilus nervously, "Coach
+Corridan, if he<br>
+drops Thor from the squad, won't create such a riot on the campus
+as you<br>
+might expect. You see, the students, even as they built and
+planned on<br>
+Thor, gradually came to know that there is vastly more to be
+considered<br>
+than physical power. That great bulk actually acts as a drag on
+the eleven,<br>
+because Thor isn't in sympathy with things! Still, if he could
+only be<br>
+aroused, awakened, wouldn't the team play football, with him
+striving for<br>
+old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for
+Hicks' dad?<br>
+Oh, I <i>do</i> hope the Coach's plan succeeds, and he awakens
+tomorrow; I<br>
+know the boys won't condemn him, if he doesn't,
+but&mdash;I&mdash;I want him to<br>
+understand!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's his last chance this season," reflected T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+enshrouded in a penumbra of gloom. "I made a big boast that I
+would round<br>
+up a smashing full-back. I returned to Bannister with the
+Prodigious<br>
+Prodigy. I made a big mystery of him, and
+then&mdash;biff!&mdash;Thor quit football.<br>
+Then I explained the mystery, and got the fellows to admire him,
+and when<br>
+Thor decided to play the game I thought 'All O.K.; I'll just wait
+until<br>
+he scatters Hamilton and Ballard over Bannister Field, then I'll
+swagger<br>
+before Butch and say, "Oh, I told you just to leave it to
+Hicks!"' But now<br>
+Thor has spilled the beans again."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I hope that the one you have chosen to appeal to
+Thor&mdash;" spoke<br>
+Theophilus timorously, "will succeed, for&mdash;Oh, I
+<i>don't</i> want him to be<br>
+dropped from the squad, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, who had been gazing at little Theophilus
+Opperdyke with<br>
+a basilisk glare that perturbed the bewildered Human
+Encyclopedia, suddenly<br>
+strode across the room and placed his hand on the grind's thin
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Theophilus, old man, it's up to you!" he said earnestly.
+"Thor has a<br>
+strong regard for you; in fact, outside of his good-natured
+tolerance<br>
+for Hicks, you alone have his friendship. Now I want you to go to
+him,<br>
+Theophilus, and make a last appeal to Thor. Try to awaken him, to
+make him<br>
+understand his peril of being dropped from the squad, unless he
+plays<br>
+the game for his college! It's for old Bannister, old man, for
+your Alma<br>
+Mater&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go to it, Theophilus!" urged Beef McNaughton. "Coach Corridan
+said Thor<br>
+might be suddenly awakened by a shock, but no electric battery
+can shock<br>
+that Colossus, and, besides, miracles don't happen nowadays. Yes,
+it's up<br>
+to you, old man."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment little Theophilus, his big-rimmed spectacles
+falling off<br>
+as fast as he replaced them, and his puny frame tense with
+excitement,<br>
+hesitated. Sitting on the extreme edge of the chair, he surveyed
+his<br>
+comrades solemnly and was convinced that they were in earnest.
+Then, "I&mdash;I<br>
+will <i>try</i>, sir!" exclaimed Theophilus, who would
+<i>never</i> forget his<br>
+Freshman training. "I'm <i>sure</i> Hicks, or somebody, could do
+It better than<br>
+I; but&mdash;I'll try!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER IX</p>
+
+<p>THEOPHILUS' MISSIONARY WORK</p>
+
+<p>  "College ties can ne'er be broken&mdash;<br>
+  Loyal will remain each heart;<br>
+  Though the last farewell be spoken&mdash;<br>
+  And from Bannister we part!</p>
+
+<p>  "Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!<br>
+  Echoes softly from each heart;<br>
+  We'll be ever loyal to thee&mdash;<br>
+  Till we from life shall part!"</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous, intensely studious Human
+Encyclopedia,<br>
+stood at the window of John Thorwald's study room. That behemoth,
+desiring<br>
+quiet, had moved his study-table and chair to a vacant room
+across the<br>
+second-floor corridor of Creighton, the Freshman dormitory, when
+the<br>
+Bannister youths cheered him, and he was still there, so that
+Theophilus,<br>
+on his mission, had finally located him by his low rumblings, as
+he<br>
+laboriously read out his Latin. The little Senior was gazing
+across the<br>
+brightly lighted Quadrangle. He could see into the rooms of the
+other<br>
+class dormitories, where the students studied, skylarked,
+rough-housed,<br>
+or conversed on innumerable topics; from a room in Nordyke, the
+abode of<br>
+care-free Juniors, a splendidly blended sextette sang songs of
+their<br>
+Alma Mater, and their rich voices drifted across the Quad. to
+Thor and<br>
+Theophilus:</p>
+
+<p>  "Though thy halls we leave forever<br>
+  Sadly from the campus turn;<br>
+  Yet our love shall fail thee never<br>
+  For old Bannister we'll yearn!<br>
+    Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!"</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus turned from the window, and looked despairingly at
+that young<br>
+Colossus, Thor. The behemoth Norwegian, oblivious to everything
+except the<br>
+geometry problem now causing him to sweat, rested his massive
+head on his<br>
+palms, elbows on the study-table, and was lost in the intricate
+labyrinth<br>
+of "Let the line ABC equal the line BVD." The frail chair creaked
+under his<br>
+ponderous bulk. On the table lay an unopened letter that had come
+in the<br>
+night's mail, for, tackling one problem, the bulldog Hercules
+never let go<br>
+his grip until he solved it, and nothing else, not even
+Theophilus, could<br>
+secure his attention. Hence the Human Encyclopedia, trembling at
+the<br>
+terrific importance of the mission entrusted to him, waited,
+thrilled by<br>
+the Juniors' songs, which failed to penetrate Thor's mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what <i>can</i> I do?" breathed Theophilus, sitting down
+nervously on the<br>
+edge of a chair and peering owlishly over his big-rimmed
+spectacles at the<br>
+stolid John Thorwald. "I am sure that, in time, I can help Thor
+to&mdash;to know<br>
+campus life better; but&mdash;<i>tomorrow</i> is his last chance!
+He will be dropped<br>
+from the squad, unless&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As Thor at last leaned back and gazed at his little comrade,
+just then, to<br>
+the tune of "My Old Kentucky Home," an augmented chorus drifted
+across the<br>
+Quadrangle:</p>
+
+<p>  "And we'll sing one song<br>
+  For the college that we love&mdash;<br>
+  For our dear old Bannister&mdash;good-by"</p>
+
+<p>To the Bannister students there was something tremendously
+queer in the<br>
+friendship of Theophilus and Thor. That the huge Freshman, of all
+the<br>
+collegians, should have chosen the timorous little boner was most
+puzzling.<br>
+Yet, to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a keen reader of human nature, it
+was<br>
+clear; Thorwald thought of nothing but study, Theophilus was a
+grind,<br>
+though he possessed intense college spirit, hence Thor was
+naturally drawn<br>
+to the little Senior by the mutual bond of their interest in
+books, and<br>
+Theophilus, with his hero-worshiping soul, intensely admired the
+splendid<br>
+purpose of John Thorwald, toiling to gain knowledge, because of
+the promise<br>
+of his dying mother. The grind, who thought that next to T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., Thor was the "greatest ever," as Hicks phrased it, had been,
+doing<br>
+what that care-free collegian termed "missionary work," with the
+stolid,<br>
+unimaginative Prodigious Prodigy for some weeks. Thrilled with
+the thought<br>
+that he worked for his Alma Mater, he quietly strove to make
+Thorwald<br>
+glimpse the true meaning and purpose of college life and its
+broadness of<br>
+development. The loyal Theophilus lost no opportunity of
+impressing his<br>
+behemoth friend with the sacred traditions of the campus, or of
+explaining<br>
+why Thor was wrong in characterizing all else than study as
+foolishness and<br>
+waste of time.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor," began Theophilus timidly yet determinedly, for he was
+serving old<br>
+Bannister now, "old man, do you feel that you are giving the
+fellows at<br>
+Bannister a square deal?"</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald, slowly tearing open the letter that had come
+that night,<br>
+and had lain, unnoticed, on the study-table while he wrestled
+with his<br>
+geometry, turned suddenly. The Human Encyclopedia's vast
+earnestness and<br>
+the strange query he had fired at Thor, surprised even that
+stolid mammoth.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what do you mean, Theophilus?" spoke Thor slowly. "A
+square deal?<br>
+Why, I owe them nothing! I sacrifice my time for them, leaving my
+studies<br>
+to go out and waste precious time foolishly on football.
+Why&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean this," Theophilus kept doggedly on, his earnest desire
+to stir Thor<br>
+conquering his natural timidity. "You were brought to old
+Bannister by<br>
+Hicks, who made a great mystery of you, so we knew nothing of
+you; but the<br>
+fellows all thought you were willing to play football. Then,
+after they<br>
+got enthused, and builded hopes of the championship on
+<i>you</i>, came<br>
+your quitting. Hicks defended you, Thor, and changed the boys'
+bitter<br>
+condemnation to vast admiration, by telling of your life, your
+father's<br>
+being a castaway, your mother's dying wish, your toil to get
+learning, and<br>
+your inability to grasp college life. Then from gratitude to Mr.
+Hicks you<br>
+started to play again&mdash;naturally, the students waxed
+enthusiastic, when you<br>
+ripped the 'Varsity to pieces, but now you may be dropped by the
+coach,<br>
+after tomorrow, because you don't play for old Bannister, and
+your<br>
+indifference kills the team's fighting spirit. You do not care if
+you are<br>
+dropped; it will give you more time to study, and relieve you of
+your<br>
+obligation, as you so quixotically view it, to play because Mr.
+Hicks will<br>
+be glad; but&mdash;think of the fellows.</p>
+
+<p>"They, Thor, disappointed in you, their hopes of your bringing
+by your<br>
+massive body and huge strength the Championship to old Bannister
+shattered,<br>
+are still your friends&mdash;they of the eleven, I mean
+especially, for, as yet,<br>
+the rest do not know you may be dropped. And the fellows came
+beneath your<br>
+window tonight to cheer you; they will do so, Thor, even if you
+are dropped<br>
+and they know that you will not use that prodigious power for
+their Alma<br>
+Mater in the big games; they will stand by you, for they
+understand! Just<br>
+think, old man; haven't the fellows, despite your rude rebuffs,
+<i>tried</i><br>
+to be your comrades? Haven't they helped you to get settled to
+work and<br>
+assisted you with your studies? Why, you have been a big boor,
+cold and<br>
+aloof, you have upset their hopes of you in football, and yet
+they have no<br>
+condemnation for you, naught but warm friendliness.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not giving them or yourself a square deal, Thor! You
+won't even<br>
+<i>try</i> to understand campus life, to grasp its real purpose,
+to realize what<br>
+tradition is! The time will come, Thor, when you will see your
+mistake; you<br>
+will yearn for their good fellowship, you will learn that getting
+knowledge<br>
+is not all of college life. You will know that this 'silly
+foolishness' of<br>
+singing songs and giving the yell, of rooting for the eleven, of
+loyalty<br>
+and love for one's Alma Mater, is something worth while. And you
+may find<br>
+it out too late. Oh, if you could only understand that it isn't
+what you<br>
+take from old Bannister that makes a man of you, it is what you
+give to<br>
+your college&mdash;in athletics, in your studies, in every phase
+of campus life;<br>
+that in toiling and sacrificing for your Alma Mater you grow and
+develop,<br>
+and reap a rich reward!"</p>
+
+<p>Could T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and
+Green eleven<br>
+have heard little Theophilus' fervent and eloquent appeal to John
+Thorwald,<br>
+they would have felt like giving three cheers for him. They loved
+this<br>
+pathetic little boner, who, because of his pitifully frail body,
+could<br>
+never fight for old Bannister on gridiron, diamond, or track, and
+they<br>
+tremendously admired him for working for his college and for the
+redemption<br>
+of Thor. Timorous and shrinking by nature, whenever his Alma
+Mater, or a<br>
+friend, needed him the Human Encyclopedia fought down his painful
+timidity<br>
+and came up to scratch nobly.</p>
+
+<p>It was Theophilus whose clear logic had vastly aided T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., to originate The Big Brotherhood of Bannister, in 1919's
+Sophomore<br>
+year, and quell Roddy Perkins' Freshman Equal Rights campaign. In
+fact, it<br>
+had been the boner's suggestion that gave Hicks his needed
+inspiration.<br>
+And, a Junior, Theophilus had been elected business manager of
+the<br>
+Bannister Weekly, with Hicks as editor-in-chief as a colossal
+joke. The<br>
+entire burden of that almost defunct periodical had been thrust
+on those<br>
+two, and, thanks to the grind's intensely humorous "copy," the
+Weekly had<br>
+been revived and rebuilt. And Theophilus, in writing the humorous
+articles,<br>
+had been moved by a great ambition to do something for old
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at me, Thor!" continued Theophilus Opperdyke, his puny
+body dwarfed<br>
+as he faced the colossal Prodigious Prodigy. "A poor, weak,
+helpless<br>
+nothing! I'd cheerfully sacrifice all the scholastic honor or
+glory I ever<br>
+won, or shall win, just to make a touchdown for the Gold and
+Green, just to<br>
+win a baseball game, or to break the tape in a race for old
+Bannister!<br>
+And you&mdash;<i>you</i>, with that tremendous body, that massive
+bulk, that vast<br>
+strength&mdash;you won't play the game for your Alma Mater, you
+won't throw<br>
+that big frame into the scrimmage, thrilled with a desire to win
+for your<br>
+college! Oh, what wonderful things you <i>could</i> do with your
+powerful build;<br>
+but it means nothing to you, while I&mdash; Oh, you don't care,
+you just won't<br>
+awaken; and, unless you do, in tomorrow's game you'll be dropped
+from the<br>
+squad, a disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald-Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, that Gargantuan
+Freshman of<br>
+whom Bannister said he possessed no soul&mdash;stirred uneasily,
+shifted his<br>
+vast tonnage from one foot to the other, and stared at little
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke. That solemn Senior, who had not seen the slightest
+effect his<br>
+"Missionary Work" was having on the stolid Thor, was in despair;
+but he did<br>
+not know the truth. As Hicks had once said, "You don't know
+nothing what<br>
+goes on in Thor's dome. There's a wall of solid concrete around
+the<br>
+machinery of his mind, and you can't see the wheels, belts, and
+cogs at<br>
+work!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with all his keen insight into human
+nature, had<br>
+failed utterly to diagnose Thor's case, had not even stumbled on
+the true<br>
+cause of that young giant's aloofness. The truth was unknown to
+anyone,<br>
+but there was one natural reason for John Thorwald's not mingling
+with his<br>
+fellows of the campus-the blond Colossus was inordinately
+bashful! From his<br>
+fifteenth year, Thor had seen the seamy side of life, had lived,
+grown and<br>
+developed among men. In his wanderings in the Klondike, the wild
+Northwest,<br>
+in Panama, his experiences as cabin-boy, miner, cowboy,
+lumber-jack, and<br>
+Canal Zone worker, he had existed where everything was roughness
+and<br>
+violence, where brawn, not brain, usually held sway, where
+supremacy was<br>
+won, kept, and lost by fists, spiked boots, or guns! In his
+adventurous<br>
+career, young Thorwald had but seldom encountered the finer
+things of life,<br>
+and his nature, while wholesome, was sturdy and virile, not
+likely to be<br>
+stirred by sentiment; so that now, among the good-natured,
+friendly boys of<br>
+old Bannister, he, accustomed to rude surroundings and rough
+acquaintances,<br>
+was bashful.</p>
+
+<p>And Theophilus, as well as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., shot far
+wide of the<br>
+mark in believing that the big Hercules had no power to feel; he
+possessed<br>
+that power, but, with it the ability to conceal his feelings.
+They thought<br>
+nothing appealed to him, had stirred his soul, at college, but
+they were<br>
+wrong; true, Thor was unable to understand this new, strange
+life; he was<br>
+puzzled when the collegians condemned and ostracized him at
+first, when<br>
+he quit football because it was not a Faculty rule to play, but
+he was<br>
+grateful when Hicks defended him, and the admiration of the
+student-body<br>
+was welcome to him. He had thought he was doing all they desired
+of him,<br>
+when he went back to the game, and now&mdash;when Theophilus told
+him that he<br>
+might be dropped from the squad, he was bewildered. He could not
+understand<br>
+just why this could be, when he was reporting for scrimmage every
+day!</p>
+
+<p>But the friendliness of the youths, their kind help with his
+studies,<br>
+the assistance of the genial Hicks, and, more than all, above
+even<br>
+the admiration of the Freshmen for his promise and purpose, the
+daily<br>
+missionary work of little Theophilus, for whom the massive Thor
+felt a real<br>
+love, had been slowly, insidiously undermining John Thorwald's
+reserve. No<br>
+longer did he condemn what he did not understand. At times he had
+a vague<br>
+feeling that all was not right, that, after all, he was missing
+something,<br>
+that study was not all; and yet, bashful as he was, fearing to
+appear<br>
+rough, crude, and uncouth among these skylarking youths, Thor
+kept on his<br>
+silent, lonely way, and they thought him untouched by their
+overtures. Of<br>
+late, when unobserved, the big Freshman had stood by the window,
+watching<br>
+the collegians on the campus, listening to their songs of old
+Bannister,<br>
+and yet because he felt embarrassed when with them, he gave no
+sign that he<br>
+cared.</p>
+
+<p>Now, however, the splendid appeal of loyal, timorous
+Theophilus stirred<br>
+Thor, and yet he could not break down the wall of reserve he had
+builded<br>
+around himself. He had deluded himself that this comradeship was
+not for<br>
+him, that he could never mingle with these happy-go-lucky youths,
+that<br>
+he must plod straight ahead, and live to himself, because his
+past had<br>
+roughened him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a Freshman!" spoke Theophilus, unaware that forces
+were at work on<br>
+Thor, and making a last effort. "You stand on the very threshold
+of your<br>
+campus years; everything is before you. I am at the journey's
+end&mdash;very<br>
+nearly, for in June I graduate from old Bannister. I never had
+the chance<br>
+to fight for my Alma Mater on the athletic field, and
+you&mdash;Oh, think of<br>
+what you can do! About to leave the campus, I, and my
+class-mates, realize<br>
+how dear our college has become to us. If <i>you</i> could just
+know that<br>
+Bannister means something to you, even now, if you only felt it,
+you<br>
+could make your years mean great things to you. Thor, could you
+leave old<br>
+Bannister tomorrow without regret, without one sigh for the dear
+old place?<br>
+We, who soon shall leave it forever, fully understand
+Shakespeare, when in<br>
+a sonnet he wrote:</p>
+
+<p>  "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
+strong&mdash;<br>
+  To love that well which thou must leave ere long!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence, and then Thor slowly drew out a letter
+from its<br>
+envelope, scanning the scrawl across its pages. A few moments,
+while its<br>
+meaning seemed to seep into his slow-acting mind, and then a look
+of<br>
+helpless bewilderment, as though the stolid Freshman just could
+not<br>
+understand at all, came to his face; a minute John Thorwald
+stood, as in a<br>
+trance, staring dully at the letter.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! What's the matter? What's wrong?" quavered the
+alarmed<br>
+Theophilus, "Have you gotten bad news?"</p>
+
+<p>"Read it, read it," said the big Freshman lifelessly,
+extending the letter<br>
+to the startled Senior. "It's all over, I suppose, and I've got
+to go to<br>
+work again. I've got to leave college, and toil once more, and
+save. My<br>
+promise to my mother can't be fulfilled&mdash;yet. And just as I
+was getting<br>
+fairly started."</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus Opperdyke hurriedly perused the message, which had
+come to Thor<br>
+in that night's mail but which the blond giant had let lie
+unnoticed while<br>
+he tackled his geometry. With difficulty Theophilus deciphered
+the scrawl<br>
+on an official letterhead:</p>
+
+<p>THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANA STEAMSHIP LINE</p>
+
+<p>(New York Offices)</p>
+
+<p>Nov. 4, 19&mdash;.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR SON:</p>
+
+<p>I am writing to tell you that I've run into a sort of
+hurricane, and you<br>
+and I have got a hard blow to weather. I started you at college
+on the<br>
+$5,000 received from the heirs of Henry B. Kingsley, on whose
+yacht, as<br>
+you know, I was wrecked in the South Seas, and marooned for ten
+years. I<br>
+figured on giving you an education with that sum, eked out by my
+wages, and<br>
+what you earn in vacations.</p>
+
+<p>I had the $5,000, untouched, in a New York bank, and I wanted
+to take it<br>
+over to Christiania; when I was about to sail on my last voyage,
+I drew out<br>
+the sum, and put it in care of the Purser of the Norwhal, on
+which I<br>
+was mate, intending, of course, to get it on docking, and deposit
+it in<br>
+Christiania. At the last hour I was transferred to the Valkyrie,
+to sail<br>
+a few days later, and I knew the Norwhal's purser would leave the
+$5,000<br>
+for me in the Company's Christiania offices, so I did not bother
+to<br>
+transfer it to the Valkyrie.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps you read in the newspapers that the Norwhal struck a
+floating<br>
+mine, and went down with a heavy loss of life. The Purser was
+among those<br>
+lost, and none of the ship's papers were saved; my $5,000, of
+course, went<br>
+down also.</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry, John, but there seems nothing to do but for you to
+leave<br>
+college and work. For your mother's sake, I wish we could avoid
+it; but we<br>
+must wait and work and tackle it again. Your first term expenses
+are paid,<br>
+so stay until the term is out. Perhaps Mr. Hicks can give you a
+job in one<br>
+of his steel mills again, but we must work our own way, son.
+Don't lose<br>
+courage, we'll fight this out together with the memory of your
+promise to<br>
+your dying mother to spur you on. The road may be long and rocky
+but we'll<br>
+make it. Just work and save, and in a year or two you can start
+at college<br>
+again. You can study at night, too, and keep on learning.</p>
+
+<p>I'll write later. Stay at college till the term is up, and in
+the meantime<br>
+try to land a job. However, you won't have any trouble to do
+that. Keep<br>
+your nerve, boy, for your mother's sake. It's a hard blow, but
+we'll<br>
+weather it, never fear, and reach port.</p>
+
+<p>Your father,</p>
+
+<p>JOHN THORWALD, SR.</p>
+
+<p>P.S. I am sailing on the Valkyrie today, will write you on my
+return to<br>
+New York, in a few weeks.</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus looked at the massive young Norwegian, who had
+taken this<br>
+solar-plexus blow with that same stolid apathy that characterized
+his every<br>
+action. He wanted to offer sympathy, but he knew not how to reach
+Thor. He<br>
+fully understood how terrific the blow was, how it must stagger
+the<br>
+big, earnest Freshman, just as he, after ten years of grinding
+toil, of<br>
+sacrifice, of grim, unrelenting determination, had conquered
+obstacles and<br>
+fought to where he had a clear track ahead. Just as it seemed
+that fate had<br>
+given him a fair chance, with his father rescued and five
+thousand dollars<br>
+to give him a college course, this terrible misfortune had
+befallen him.<br>
+Theophilus realized what it must mean to this huge, silent
+Hercules, just<br>
+making good his promise to his dying mother, to give up his
+studies, and go<br>
+back to work, toil, labor, to begin all over again, to put off
+his college<br>
+years.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me, please," said Thor dully, apparently as unmoved by
+the blow<br>
+as he had been by Theophilus' appeal. "I&mdash;I would like to be
+alone, for<br>
+awhile."</p>
+
+<p>Left alone, John Thorwald stood by the window, apparently not
+thinking of<br>
+anything in particular, as he gazed across the brightly lighted
+Quad. The<br>
+huge Freshman seemed in a daze&mdash;utterly unable to comprehend
+the disaster<br>
+that had befallen him; he was as stolid and impassive as ever,
+and<br>
+Theophilus might have thought that he did not care, even at
+having to give<br>
+up his college course, had not the Senior known better.</p>
+
+<p>Across the Quadrangle, from the room of the Caruso-like
+Juniors,<br>
+accompanied by a melodious banjo-twanging, drifted:</p>
+
+<p>  "Though thy halls we leave forever<br>
+  Sadly from the campus turn;<br>
+  Yet our love shall fail thee never<br>
+  For old Bannister we'll yearn!</p>
+
+<p>  "'Bannister, Bannister, hail, all hail!'<br>
+  Echoes softly from each heart;<br>
+  We'll be ever loyal to thee<br>
+  Till we from life shall part."</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, the behemoth Thorwald was not thinking so
+much of having<br>
+to give up his studies, of having to lay aside his books and take
+up again<br>
+the implements of toil. He was not pondering on the cruelty of
+fate in<br>
+making him abandon, at least temporarily, his goal; instead, his
+thoughts<br>
+turned, somehow, to his experiences at old Bannister, to the
+football<br>
+scrimmages, the noisy sessions in "Delmonico's Annex," the
+college<br>
+dining-hall, to the skylarking he had often watched in the
+dormitories. He<br>
+thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks,
+good Butch<br>
+Brewster, loyal little Theophilus; and as he reflected, he heard
+those<br>
+Juniors, over the way, singing. Just now they were chanting
+that<br>
+exquisitely beautiful Hawaiian melody, "Aloha Oe," or "Farewell
+to Thee,"<br>
+making the words tell of parting from their Alma Mater. There was
+something<br>
+in the refrain that seemed to break down Thor's wall of reserve,
+to melt<br>
+away his aloofness, and he caught himself listening eagerly as
+they sang.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow he felt no desire to condemn those care-free youths,
+to call their<br>
+singing silly foolishness, to say they were wasting their time
+and their<br>
+fathers' money. Queer, but he actually liked to hear them sing,
+he realized<br>
+he had come to listen for their saengerfests. Now that he had to
+leave<br>
+college, for the first time he began to ponder on what he must
+leave. Not<br>
+alone books and study, but&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>As he stood there, an ache in his throat, and an awful sorrow
+overwhelming<br>
+him, with the richly blended voices of the happy Juniors drifting
+across to<br>
+him, chanting a song of old Ballard, big Thor murmured
+softly:</p>
+
+<p>"What did little Theophilus say? What was it Shakespeare
+wrote? Oh, I have<br>
+it:</p>
+
+<p>  "'This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
+strong&mdash;<br>
+  To love that well, which thou must leave ere long.'"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER X</p>
+
+<p>THOR'S AWAKENING</p>
+
+<p>  "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,<br>
+  And we'll put Bannister in that hole!<br>
+  In that hole&mdash;in&mdash;that&mdash;hole&mdash;<br>
+  Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"</p>
+
+<p>"In the famous words of the late Mike Murphy," said T.
+Haviland Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+"the celebrated Yale and Penn track trainer, 'you can beat a team
+that<br>
+can't be beat, but&mdash;you can't beat a team that won't be
+beat!' Latham must<br>
+be in the latter class."</p>
+
+<p>It was the Bannister-Latham game, and the first half had just
+ended.<br>
+Captain Butch Brewster's followers had trailed dejectedly from
+Bannister<br>
+Field to the Gym, where Head Coach Corridan was flaying them with
+a tongue<br>
+as keen as the two-edged sword that drove Adam and Eve from the
+Garden of<br>
+Eden. A cold, bleak November afternoon, a leaden sky lowered
+overhead, and<br>
+a chill wind swept athwart the field; in the concrete stands, the
+loyal<br>
+"rooters" of the Gold and Green, or of the Gold and Blue,
+shivered,<br>
+stamped, and swung their arms, waiting for the excitement of the
+scrimmage<br>
+again to warm them. Yet, the Bannister cohorts seemed silent
+and<br>
+discouraged, while the Latham supporters went wild, singing,
+cheering,<br>
+howling. A look at the score-board explained this:</p>
+
+<p>    END OF FIRST HALF: SCORE:<br>
+      Bannister ........ 0<br>
+      Latham ........... 3</p>
+
+<p>The statement of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a gold and
+green<br>
+blanket and humped on the Bannister bench, to shivering little
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke, the Phillyloo Bird, Shad Weatherby, and several more
+collegians<br>
+who had joined him when the half ended, was singularly
+appropriate. In<br>
+Latham's light, fast eleven, trained to the minute, coached to a
+shifty,<br>
+tricky style of play with numberless deceptive fakes from which
+they worked<br>
+the forward pass successfully, Bannister seemed to have
+encountered, as<br>
+Mike Murphy phrased it, "A team that won't be beat!" According to
+the<br>
+advance dope of the sporting writers, who, in football, are
+usually as good<br>
+prophets as the Weather Bureau, Bannister was booked to come out
+the winner<br>
+by at least five touchdowns to none. But here a half was gone,
+and Latham<br>
+led by three points, scored on a rather lucky field-goal!</p>
+
+<p>The psychology of football is inexplicable. Yale, beaten by
+Virginia,<br>
+Brown, and Wash-Jeff, with the Blue's best gridiron star
+ineligible to<br>
+play, a team that seemed at odds with itself and the 'Varsity,
+mismanaged,<br>
+poorly coached, journeys to Princeton to battle with old Nassau;
+the Tiger,<br>
+Its tail as yet untwisted, presents its best eleven for several
+seasons, a<br>
+great favorite in the odds, and yet the final score is Yale, 14;
+Princeton,<br>
+7! A strange fear of the Bulldog, bred of many bitter defeats, of
+similar<br>
+occasions when a feeble Yale team aroused itself and trampled an
+invincible<br>
+Orange and Black eleven, when the Blue fought old Nassau with a
+team that<br>
+"wouldn't" be beat, gave victory to the poorer aggregation. So
+many things<br>
+unforeseen often enter into a football contest, shifting the
+balance of<br>
+power from the stronger to the weaker team. One eleven gets the
+jump on the<br>
+other, the favorite weirdly goes to pieces&mdash;team dissension
+may exist, a<br>
+dozen other causes&mdash;but, boiled down, Mike Murphy's
+statement was most<br>
+appropriate now.</p>
+
+<p>Latham simply <i>would not</i> be beat! The sporting pages had
+said: "Latham<br>
+simply can't beat Bannister!" Here the team, that could not be
+beaten was<br>
+being defeated, and the team that would not be defeated was, so
+far, the<br>
+victor. Perhaps the threatened dropping of Thor from the Gold and
+Green<br>
+squad shook somewhat Captain Butch's players; more likely, the
+Latham<br>
+aggregation got the jump on Bannister, opening up a bewildering
+attack of<br>
+criss-crosses, line plunges, cross-bucks, and tandems, from all
+of which<br>
+the forward pass frequently developed; they literally overwhelmed
+a<br>
+supposedly unbeatable team. And once they got the edge, it was
+hard for<br>
+Bannister to regain poise and to smother the fast plays that
+swept through<br>
+or around the bewildered eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"We have <i>got</i> to beat 'em!" growled Shad, "Mike Murphy
+or not. Why,<br>
+if little old Latham cleans us up, smash go our chances of the
+State<br>
+Championship! Oh, look at Thor&mdash;the big mountain of muscle.
+Why doesn't he<br>
+wake up, and go push that team off the field?"</p>
+
+<p>Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy, his vast hulk unprotected from
+the cold wind<br>
+by a football blanket, squatted on the ground, on the side-line,
+apparently<br>
+in a trance. Ever since the night before, when his father's
+letter had<br>
+dealt such a knock-out blow to his hopes of fulfilling the
+promise to his<br>
+dying mother, had rudely side-tracked him from the climb to his
+goal, the<br>
+blond giant had maintained that dumb apathy. If anything, it
+seemed that<br>
+the cruel blow of fate had only served to make Thor more stolid
+and<br>
+impassive than ever, and Theophilus wondered if the Colossus had
+really<br>
+grasped the import of the tragic letter as yet. The news had
+spread over<br>
+the college and campus, and the students were sincerely sorry for
+Thor. But<br>
+to offer him sympathy was about as difficult as consoling a Polar
+bear with<br>
+the toothache.</p>
+
+<p>Coach Corridan, carrying out his plot, had decided not to
+start Thor in<br>
+the first half of the game. So the Norwegian Hercules, having
+received no<br>
+orders to the contrary, however, donned togs and appeared on the
+side-line,<br>
+where he had sat, paying not the slightest heed to the scrimmage
+and<br>
+seemingly unaware that the Gold and Green was facing defeat and
+the loss of<br>
+the Championship, for a game lost would put the team out of the
+running.<br>
+All big John Thorwald knew was, in a few weeks he must leave old
+Bannister,<br>
+must give up, for a time, his college course. Just when the grim
+battle was<br>
+won, he must leave, to work. Not that the Viking cared about
+toil. It was<br>
+the delay that chafed even his stolid self. He was stunned at
+having to<br>
+wait, maybe two years, before starting again.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, as he squatted on the side-line, oblivious to
+everything but his<br>
+bitter reflections, the Theophilus-quoted words of Shakespeare
+persisted in<br>
+intruding on his thoughts:</p>
+
+<p>  "This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
+strong&mdash;<br>
+  To love that well, which thou must leave ere long."</p>
+
+<p>Try as he would, he could not fight away the keen realization
+that<br>
+books and study were not all he would regret to leave. He was
+forced to<br>
+acknowledge that his mind kept wandering to other things. He
+found himself<br>
+pondering on the parting with Theophilus Opperdyke, with that
+crazy Hicks;<br>
+he wondered if he, out in the world again, toiling his lonely
+way, would<br>
+miss the glad fellowship of these care-free youths that he had
+watched,<br>
+but never shared, if he would ever think of the weeks at old
+Bannister.<br>
+Somehow, he felt that he would often vision the Quad at night,
+brightly<br>
+lighted, dormitories' lights agleam, students crossing and
+recrossing,<br>
+shouting at studious comrades. He would hear again the
+melodious<br>
+banjo-twanging, the gleeful saengerfests, the happy skylarking of
+the boys.<br>
+He had never entered into all this, and yet he knew he would miss
+it all;<br>
+why, he would even miss the daily scrimmage on Bannister Field;
+the noisy<br>
+shower-room, with its clouds of steam, and white forms flitting
+ghostlike.<br>
+He would miss the classrooms; in brief, <i>everything</i>!</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald was awakening! Even had this blow not befallen
+him, the huge,<br>
+slow-minded Norwegian, in time, with Theophilus Opperdyke's
+missionary<br>
+work, would have gradually come to understand things
+better&mdash;at least, to<br>
+know he was wrong in his ideas, which is the beginning of wisdom.
+Already,<br>
+he had ceased to condemn all this as foolishness, to rail at the
+youths<br>
+for wasting time and money. Already something stirred within him,
+and yet,<br>
+stolid as he was, bashful among the collegians, he was apparently
+the same.<br>
+But the sudden shock Head Coach Corridan spoke of had come. His
+father's<br>
+letter telling of his loss and that Thor must leave Bannister had
+awakened<br>
+him to the startling knowledge that he did care for something
+more than<br>
+study, that all the things that had puzzled him, that he had
+sneered at,<br>
+meant something to his existence, that he dreaded leaving other
+things than<br>
+his books.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I don't understand things," thought Thorwald.
+"But&mdash;if I could only<br>
+stay, I'd want to learn. I'd try to get this 'college' spirit!
+Oh, I've<br>
+been all wrong, but if I could only stay&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As if in answer to his unspoken thought, the big Freshman
+beheld marching<br>
+toward him Theophilus Opperdyke, his spectacles off, and his face
+aglow,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., evidently in the throes of emotional
+insanity; a<br>
+Senior whom he knew as Parson Palmetter; Registrar Worthington,
+and Doctor<br>
+Alford, the kindly, beloved Prexy of old Bannister. The last
+named placed<br>
+his hand on the puzzled behemoth's ponderous shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Thorwald," he said kindly, "Hicks, Opperdyke and Brewster,
+last night,<br>
+came to my study and acquainted me with your misfortune. They
+told me of<br>
+your life-history, of your splendid purpose to gain knowledge, to
+make<br>
+something of yourself, for your dying mother's sake. Old
+Bannister needs<br>
+men like you, Thorwald. Perhaps you do not understand campus ways
+and<br>
+tradition yet, perhaps you are not in sympathy with everything
+here; but<br>
+once a love for your Alma Mater is awakened, you will be a power
+for good<br>
+for your college.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I at once took up the matter with Mr. Palmetter,
+President of The<br>
+Students' Aid Bureau. This year, for the first time in our
+history, we have<br>
+dispensed with janitors and sweeps in the dormitories, and with
+dining-hall<br>
+waiters, so that needy and deserving students may work their way
+through<br>
+Bannister. Owing to the fact that Mr. Deane, a Senior, has given
+up his<br>
+dormitory, Creighton Hall, as he has funds for the year and needs
+the time<br>
+to study, we can offer you board and tuition, in exchange for
+your work in<br>
+the dormitory, and waiting on tables in the dining-hall. Since
+your first<br>
+term bills, until January first, are paid, if you will start to
+work at<br>
+once, we will credit any work done this term on books and
+incidentals for<br>
+next term. By this means&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you don't&mdash;you <i>can't</i> mean&mdash;" rumbled
+Thor, who had just dimly<br>
+grasped the greatest point in Prexy's speech. "Why, then I won't
+have to<br>
+leave Bannister&mdash;I won't have to quit my studies! Oh, thank
+you, sir; thank<br>
+you! I will work <i>so</i> hard. I am not afraid of work; I love
+it&mdash;a chance to<br>
+toil and earn my education, that's what I want! Thank you!"</p>
+
+<p>"And in addition," said the Registrar, "Mr. Palmetter reports
+that he can<br>
+secure you, downtown, a number of furnaces to tend this winter,
+which you<br>
+can do early in the morning and at night; this will bring you an
+income for<br>
+living expenses, and in the spring something else will offer
+itself. It<br>
+means every moment of your time will be crowded, but Bannister
+needs<br>
+workers&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Something stirred in John Thorwald. His heart had been touched
+at last. He<br>
+thought of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch, and little Theophilus
+worried<br>
+at his having to leave college, going to Doctor Alford; of Prexy,
+the<br>
+Registrar, and Parson Palmetter, working to keep Thor at old
+Bannister.<br>
+He recalled how sympathetic all the youths had been, how they
+admired his<br>
+purpose and determination; and he had rewarded their friendliness
+with<br>
+cold aloofness. He felt a thrill as he visioned himself working
+for his<br>
+education, rising in the cold dawn, tending furnaces, working in
+the dorm.,<br>
+waiting on tables&mdash;studying. With what fierce joy he would
+assail his<br>
+tasks, glad that he could stay! He knew the students would
+rejoice, that<br>
+they would not look down on him; instead, they would respect and
+admire<br>
+him, toiling to grow and develop, to attain his goal!</p>
+
+<p>"Go to it, Thor!" urged T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. "We all want
+you to stay,<br>
+old man; we'll give you a lift with your studies. Old Bannister
+<i>wants</i><br>
+you, <i>needs</i> you, so <i>stick</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, please!" quavered little Theophilus. "You don't want to
+leave your<br>
+Alma Mater; stay, Thorwald, and&mdash;you'll understand things
+soon,"</p>
+
+<p>"Report at the Registrar's office at seven tonight, Thorwald,"
+said Prexy,<br>
+and then, because he understood boys and campus problems, "and to
+show your<br>
+gratitude, you might go out there and spank that team which is
+trying to<br>
+lick old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald, when Doctor Alford and the Registrar had gone,
+arose and<br>
+stood gazing across Bannister Field. He saw not the white-lined
+gridiron,<br>
+the gaunt goal-posts, the concrete stands filled with spectators,
+or the<br>
+gay banners and pennants. He saw the buildings and campus of old
+Bannister,<br>
+the stately old elms bordering the walks; he beheld the Gym., the
+four<br>
+dormitories&mdash;Bannister, Nordyke, Smithson, and
+Creighton&mdash;the white Chapel,<br>
+the ivy-covered Library, the Administration and Recitation Halls;
+he<br>
+glimpsed the Memorial Arch over the entrance driveway, and big
+Alumni Hall.<br>
+All at once, like an inundating wave, the great realization
+flashed on<br>
+Thor that he did not have to leave it all! Often again would he
+hear the<br>
+skylarking youths, the gay songs, the banjo-strumming; often
+would he see<br>
+the brightly lighted Quad., would gaze out on the campus! It was
+still<br>
+his&mdash;the work, the study, and, if he tried, even the glad
+comradeship of<br>
+the fellows, the bigger things of college life, which as yet he
+did not<br>
+understand.</p>
+
+<p>The big slow-minded youth could not awaken, at once, to a full
+knowledge<br>
+and understanding of campus life and tradition, to a knowledge of
+college<br>
+spirit; but, thanks to the belief that he had to leave it all, he
+had<br>
+awakened to the startling fact that already he loved old
+Bannister. And<br>
+now, joyous that he could stay, John Thorwald suddenly felt a
+strong desire<br>
+to do something, not for himself, but for these splendid fellows
+who had<br>
+worried for his sake, had worked to keep him at college. And just
+then he<br>
+remembered the somewhat unclassical, yet well meant, words of
+dear old<br>
+Doctor Alford, "And to show your gratitude, you might go out
+there and<br>
+spank that team, which is trying to lick old Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald for the first time looked at the score-board; he
+saw, in big<br>
+white letters:</p>
+
+<p>    BANNISTER .......... 0<br>
+    LATHAM ............. 3</p>
+
+<p>From the Gym. the Gold and Green players&mdash;grim,
+determined, and yet worried<br>
+by the team that "won't be beat!"&mdash;were jogging, followed by
+Head Coach<br>
+Patrick Henry Corridan. The Latham eleven was on the field, the
+Gold and<br>
+Blue rooters rioted in the stands. From the Bannister cohorts
+came a<br>
+thunderous appeal:</p>
+
+<p>  "Hold 'em, boys&mdash;hold 'em,
+boys&mdash;hold&mdash;hold&mdash;<i>hold</i>!<br>
+  Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!"</p>
+
+<p>A sudden fury swayed the Prodigious Prodigy; it was his
+college, his<br>
+eleven, and those Blue and Gold youths were actually beating old
+Bannister!<br>
+The Bannister boys had admired him, some of them had helped him
+in his<br>
+studies, three had told Doctor Alford of him, had made it
+possible for him<br>
+to stay, to keep on toward his goal. They would be
+sorrow-stricken if<br>
+Latham won! A feeling of indignation came to Thor. How dare those
+fellows<br>
+think they could beat old Bannister! Why, <i>he</i> would go out
+there and show<br>
+them a few things!</p>
+
+<p>Head Coach Corridan, let it be chronicled, was paralyzed when
+he ducked<br>
+under the side-line rope&mdash;stretched to hold the spectators
+back&mdash;to collide<br>
+with an immovable body, John Thorwald, and to behold an eager
+light on that<br>
+behemoth's stolid face. Grasping the Slave-Driver in a grip that
+hurt, Thor<br>
+boomed:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Corridan, let me play, <i>please</i>! Send me out this
+half. We can win.<br>
+We've <i>got</i> to win! I want to do something for old
+Bannister. Why, if we<br>
+lose today, we lose the Championship! I don't understand things
+yet, but I<br>
+do love the college. I want to fight for Bannister. Please let me
+play!"</p>
+
+<p>The astonished coach and the equally dazed Gold and Green
+eleven, with the<br>
+bewildered collegians who heard Thor's earnest appeal, were
+silent a few<br>
+moments, unable to grasp the truth. Then Captain Brewster, his
+face aglow,<br>
+seized the big Freshman's arm excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure you'll play, Thor!" he shouted. "Fullback, old man! Come
+on, team.<br>
+Thor's awake! He wants to fight for his Alma Mater; he wants
+Bannister to<br>
+win! Oh, watch us shove Latham off the field&mdash;everybody
+together now&mdash;the<br>
+yell, for Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Right here," grinned an excitedly happy T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., when the<br>
+yell was given, "is where a team that won't be beat gets licked
+by a chap<br>
+what can lick 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>What took place when the blond Prodigious Prodigy lumbered on
+Bannister<br>
+Field at the start of the last half of the Bannister-Latham game
+can be<br>
+imagined by the final score-board figures:</p>
+
+<p>    BANNISTER ......... 27<br>
+    LATHAM ............. 3</p>
+
+<p>It can best be described with the aid of Scoop Sawyer's
+account in the next<br>
+Bannister Weekly:</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;At the start of the second half, however, the Latham
+cohorts were given<br>
+a shock when they beheld a colossal being almost as big as the
+entire Gold<br>
+and Blue eleven, go in at fullback for Bannister. And the Latham
+eleven<br>
+received a series of shocks when Thor began intruding that
+massive body<br>
+of his into their territory. Tennyson's saying, "The old order
+changeth,<br>
+yielding place to new" was aptly illustrated in the second half;
+for<br>
+Bannister's bugler quit sounding "Retreat!" and blew "Charge!"
+Four<br>
+touchdowns and three goals from touchdowns, in one half, is
+usually<br>
+considered a fair day's work for an entire team. Even Yale or
+Harvard; but<br>
+when one player corrals four touchdowns in a half&mdash;he is
+going some! Well,<br>
+Thor went some! Most of the half he furnished free transportation
+for<br>
+two-thirds of the Latham team, carrying them on his back, legs,
+and neck,<br>
+as he strode down the field; a writ of habeas corpus could not
+have stopped<br>
+the blond Colossus. Anyone would have stood more show to stop an
+Alpine<br>
+avalanche than to slow up Thor, and the stretcher was constantly
+in<br>
+evidence, for Latham knockouts.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="cw.jpg (97K)" src="cw.jpg" height="853" width="538">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>The game turned into a Thor's Personally Conducted Tour.
+Thorwald, escorted<br>
+by the Gold and Green team, made four quick tours to the Latham
+goal-line.<br>
+It was simply a matter of giving the ball to the Prodigious
+Prodigy, then<br>
+waving the linesmen to move down twenty yards or more toward
+Latham's line.<br>
+Thor was simply unstoppable, and more beneficial even than his
+phenomenal<br>
+playing was his encouragement to the team. He kept urging them to
+action,<br>
+his foghorn growl of, "Come on, boys!" was a slogan of victory!
+Judging by<br>
+Thor's awakening, and his work of the Latham game, Bannister's
+hopes of The<br>
+State Intercollegiate Football Championship are as roseate as the
+blush on<br>
+a maiden's cheek at her first kiss, and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>That night, in the cozy room of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., John
+Thorwald,<br>
+supremely happy yet withal as uncomfortable as a whale on the
+Sahara<br>
+Desert, overflowed an easy-chair. The room was filled, or what
+space Thor<br>
+left, with the Bannister eleven, second-team players, Coach
+Corridan, and<br>
+several students; on the campus a riotous crowd of Bannister
+youths "raised<br>
+merry Heck," as Hicks phrased it, and their cheer floated up to
+the<br>
+windows:</p>
+
+<p>"Rah! Rah! Rah! Thor! Thor! Thor!
+He's&mdash;all&mdash;right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, fellows," spoke T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's sing to the captain, good old Butch! Let 'er go!"</p>
+
+<p>  "Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink it down!<br>
+  Here's to good Butch Brewster! Drink It down!<br>
+  Here's to good Butch Brewster&mdash;<br>
+  He plays football like he <i>uster&mdash;</i><br>
+  Drink it down! Drink it
+down&mdash;down&mdash;down&mdash;down!"</p>
+
+<p>A strange sound startled the joyous youths; it was a rumbling
+noise,<br>
+like distant thunder, and at first they could not place it. Then,
+as It<br>
+continued, they located the disturbance as coming from the
+prodigious body<br>
+of Thor, and at last the wonderful phenomenon dawned on them.</p>
+
+<p>"Thor is singing college songs!" quavered little Theophilus
+Opperdyke,<br>
+so happy that his big-rimmed spectacles rode the end of his nose.
+"Oh,<br>
+Hicks&mdash;Butch&mdash;Thor is awake at last! He is trying to
+get college spirit, to<br>
+understand campus life&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., suddenly realized that what he had so
+ardently<br>
+longed for had come to pass; aided by Theophilus' missionary work
+and by<br>
+the sudden shock of Thorwald, Sr.'s, letter. Thor was awakened,
+had come to<br>
+know that he loved old Bannister. His awakening, as shown in the
+football<br>
+game, had been splendid. How he had towered over the scrimmage,
+in every<br>
+play, urging his team to fight, himself doing prodigies for old
+Bannister.<br>
+Thor, who had been so silent and aloof! Then the sunny-souled
+youth<br>
+remembered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I told you I'd awaken Thor, Butch!" he began, but that
+behemoth<br>
+quelled him with an ominous look.</p>
+
+<p>"You!" he growled, with pretended wrath, "<i>you</i>! It was
+Theophilus<br>
+Opperdyke who did the most of it, and Thorwald's father did the
+rest! Don't<br>
+you rob Theophilus of his glory, you
+feeble-imitation-of-some-thing-human!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinned &agrave; la Cheshire cat. The
+happy-go-lucky<br>
+Senior was vastly glad that Thor had awakened, that now he would
+try<br>
+to grasp the real meaning of college existence. He felt that the
+young<br>
+Hercules, from now on, would slowly and surely develop to a
+splendid<br>
+college man, that he would do big things for his Alma Mater. And
+the<br>
+generous Hicks gave Theophilus all the credit, and impressed on
+that<br>
+happy Human Encyclopedia the fact that he had done a great deed
+for old<br>
+Bannister. Just so, Thor was awakened.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I say, Deke Radford, Coach, and Butch," Hicks chortled,
+getting the<br>
+attention of that triumvirate as well as that of the others in
+the room,<br>
+"remember up in Camp Bannister, in the sleep-shack, when Coach
+Corridan<br>
+outlined a smashing full-back he wanted?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure!" smiled Deke. "What of it, Hicks?"</p>
+
+<p>Then T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., that care-free, lovable,
+irrepressible youth,<br>
+whose chance to swagger before this same trio had been postponed
+so long<br>
+and seemingly lost forever, satiated his fun-loving soul and
+reaped his<br>
+reward. Calling their attention to Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy,
+and asking<br>
+them to remember his playing against Latham that day, the sunny
+Senior<br>
+strutted before them vaingloriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I told you just to leave it to Hicks!" he declared,
+grinning happily.<br>
+"I promised to round up an unstoppable fullback, a Gargantuan
+Hercules, and<br>
+I did! Just think of what he will do to Hamilton and Ballard in
+the big<br>
+games! As I have often told you, <i>always</i>&mdash;leave It to
+Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XI</p>
+
+<p>"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, what we'll do to Ballard<br>
+  Will surely be a shame!<br>
+  We'll push their team clear off the field<br>
+  And win the football game!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one night three days after the first
+big game, that<br>
+with Hamilton, a week following Thor's great awakening in the
+Latham game,<br>
+sat in his cozy room, having assumed his favorite
+position&mdash;chair tilted<br>
+back at a perilous angle and feet thrust atop of the radiator.
+The<br>
+versatile youth, having just composed a song with which to
+encourage<br>
+Bannister elevens in the future, was reading it aloud, when his
+mind was<br>
+torpedoed by a most startling thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Land o' Goshen!" reflected the sunny-souled Senior, aghast.
+"I haven't<br>
+twanged my ole banjo and held forth with a saengerfest for a
+coon's age! I<br>
+surely can do so now without arousing Butch to wrath. Thor has
+awakened,<br>
+Hamilton is walloped, and Bannister will surely win the
+Championship!<br>
+Everything is happy, an' de goose hangs high, so here goes!"</p>
+
+<p>Holding his banjo &agrave; la troubadour, the blithesome
+Hicks, who as a Senior<br>
+was harassed by no study-hours or inspections, strode from his
+room and out<br>
+into the corridor, up and down which he majestically paced, like
+a sentinel<br>
+on his beat, twanging his beloved banjo with abandon, and roaring
+in his<br>
+foghorn, subterranean voice:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, the way we walloped Hamilton<br>
+  Surely was a shame!<br>
+  And we're going to win the Championship&mdash;<br>
+  For we'll do Ballard the same!</p>
+
+<p>  "And Bannister shall flaunt the flag<br>
+  For at least three seasons more;<br>
+  Because&mdash;no team can win a game<br>
+  While the Gold and Green has Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>On Bannister Field, three days before, the Gold and Green had
+crushed the<br>
+strong team from "old Ham" to the tune of 20 to 0; Thor's
+magnificent<br>
+ground-gaining, in which he smashed through the supposedly
+impregnable<br>
+defense of the enemy, was a surprise to his comrades and a shock
+to<br>
+Hamilton. Time and again, on the fourth down, the ball was given
+to<br>
+Thorwald, and the blond Colossus, with several of old Ham's
+players<br>
+clinging to him, plunged ahead for big gains. So now with a
+monster<br>
+mass-meeting in half an hour, the exultant Bannister youths
+pretended to<br>
+study, but prepared to parade on the campus, cheer the eleven and
+Thor,<br>
+and arouse excitement for the winning of the biggest game, a
+victory over<br>
+Ballard, a week later.</p>
+
+<p>From the rooms of would-be studious Seniors on both sides of
+the corridor,<br>
+as Hicks patrolled it, came vociferous protests and classic
+criticisms,<br>
+gathering in force and volume as the breezy youth's foghorn voice
+roared<br>
+his song; that heedless collegian grinned as he heard:</p>
+
+<p>"R-r-rotten! Give that Jersey calf more rope!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks has had a relapse! Sing-Sing for yours, old man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrest Hicks, under the Public Nuisance Act!"</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Shoot it quick! Don't let it suffer!"</p>
+
+<p>Just as T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., strumming the banjo blithely
+and Carusoing<br>
+with glee, reached the end of the corridor and executed a brisk
+'bout-face,<br>
+he heard a terrific commotion on the stairway, and, a moment
+later, Butch<br>
+Brewster, Beef McNaughton, Deacon Radford and Monty Merriweather
+gained the<br>
+top of the stairs. As they were now between the offending Hicks
+and<br>
+his quarters, there seemed no chance for the sunny Senior to play
+his<br>
+safety-first policy; so he waited, panic-stricken, as Butch and
+Beef<br>
+lumbered heavily down the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>"Help! Aid! Succor! Relief! Assistance!" shrieked Hicks,
+leaning his<br>
+beloved banjo against the wall and throwing himself into what
+he<br>
+fatuously believed was an intensely pugilistic pose. "I am a
+believer in<br>
+preparedness. You have me cornered, so beware! I am a follower of
+Henry<br>
+Ford, but even I will fight&mdash;at bay!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you are at <i>sea</i> now!" growled Beef, tucking the
+splinter youth<br>
+under one arm and striding down the corridor, followed by Butch
+with the<br>
+banjo, and Monty with Deacon. "You desperado, you destroyer of
+peace and<br>
+quietude, you one-cylinder gadabout! You're off again! We'll
+instruct you<br>
+to annoy real students, you faint shadow of something human!"</p>
+
+<p>"Them's harsh sentences, Beef!" chuckled T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., as that<br>
+behemoth kicked open Hicks' door, bore the futilely squirming,
+kicking<br>
+youth into the room, and hurled him on the davenport. "Watch my
+banjo,<br>
+there, Butch; have a couple of cares! Say, what'smatter wid youse
+guys,<br>
+anyhow? This is my first saengerfest for eons. Old Bannister has
+a clear<br>
+track ahead at last, the Championship is won for <i>sure</i>, and
+Thor, that<br>
+mighty engine of destruction to Ham's and Ballard's hopes, after
+much<br>
+tinkering, is hitting on all twelve cylinders. Why, I prithee,
+deny me the<br>
+pleasure of a little joyous song?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., since the memorable Latham game, when
+Thor had<br>
+awakened between halves, and the Prodigious Prodigy had shown
+himself<br>
+worthy of his title by winning the game after defeat leered at
+old<br>
+Bannister, had suffered a relapse, and was again his old sunny,
+heedless,<br>
+happy-go-lucky self. Now that John Thorwald had been startled
+into<br>
+realizing that he loved his college and had been saved from
+having to<br>
+leave, now that he played football for his Alma Mater, and
+Bannister's<br>
+hopes of the Championship were roseate, the blithesome Hicks had
+abandoned<br>
+himself to a golden existence of Beefsteak Busts downtown at
+Jerry's,<br>
+entertaining jolly comrades in his cozy room, and pestering the
+campus with<br>
+his banjo and ridiculous imitations of Sheerluck Holmes, the
+Dachshund<br>
+Detective. Big Butch Brewster, lecturing him for his care-free
+ways, as<br>
+futilely as he had done for three years past, gave up in
+despair.</p>
+
+<p>"I might as well be showing moving-pictures to the inmates of
+a blind<br>
+asylum," he growled on one occasion, "as to persuade you to quit
+acting<br>
+like a lunatic! You, a Senior&mdash;acting like an escaped
+inhabitant of<br>
+Matteawan! Bah!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, drawing a chair up to the davenport,
+assumed the manner<br>
+of a physician toward a recalcitrant patient, while Beef
+carefully stowed<br>
+the banjo in the closet and Deacon Radford, an interested
+spectator, sat<br>
+on the bed. The happy-go-lucky Hicks, at a loss to account for
+the strange<br>
+expressions of his comrades, tried to arise, but the football
+captain<br>
+pinned him down with one hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Seriously, Hicks," spoke Butch, "your saengerfest came at a
+lamentably<br>
+inopportune time! I regret to Inform you that old Bannister faces
+another<br>
+problem, with regard to Thor, and unless it is solved, I
+fear&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thor has balked again?" gasped the dazed Hicks, whom Butch
+now allowed to<br>
+sit up, as he showed interest. "Has the engine of destruction
+stalled?<br>
+Why, as fast as we get him lined up, off he slides at an angle!
+Well, you<br>
+fellows did perfectly right to bring this baffling problem,
+whatever it is,<br>
+to me. What is the trouble&mdash;won't Thor play football?"</p>
+
+<p>The irrepressible Hicks was bewildered at hearing that a new
+problem<br>
+regarding Thor had arisen, and, naturally, he at once connected
+it with<br>
+football, since the big Freshman had twice balked in that
+respect. Since<br>
+his awakening, effected by Theophilus' missionary work, his last
+appeal,<br>
+and Thor's letter from his father, Thor had earnestly striven to
+grasp the<br>
+true meaning of college life, to understand campus tradition. No
+longer did<br>
+he hold aloof, boning always, in his lonely room. Instead, he
+mingled with<br>
+his fellows, lingering with the team for the skylarking in the
+shower-room<br>
+after scrimmage, turning out for the nightly mass-meeting. Often,
+as the<br>
+youths practiced songs and yells on the campus, Thor's terrific
+rumble was<br>
+heard&mdash;some had even dared to slap his massive back and say,
+"Hello, Thor,<br>
+old man!" and the big Freshman had responded. It was evident to
+all that<br>
+Thorwald was striving to become a collegian, and knowing his
+slow, bulldog<br>
+nature, there was no doubt as to his ultimate success; hence T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., was vastly puzzled now.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Thor hasn't backslid!" smiled Beef. "You see, Hicks, it's
+this way:<br>
+Owing to Mr. Thorwald's losing the five thousand dollars, Thor,
+as you<br>
+know, is working his way at Bannister. Well, with his hustling,
+his studies<br>
+and football scrimmage, he simply does not have a minute for the
+other<br>
+phases of college life, for the comradeship with his
+fellows&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Here is his day's schedule," chimed in Deacon, referring to a
+paper: "Rise<br>
+at four-thirty A. M. Hustle downtown to tend several furnaces
+until seven.<br>
+Breakfast at seven. Till nine, make beds and sweep dormitory
+rooms.<br>
+Nine till three-fifteen P. M., recitation periods and dormitory
+work,<br>
+sandwiched. Then until supper, football practice, and nights
+study. Add<br>
+to that waiting on tables for the three meals, and what time has
+Thor to<br>
+broaden and develop, to take in all the big things of campus
+existence, to<br>
+grow into an all-round college man?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wonderful to chronicle, was silent. He
+was<br>
+reflecting on the irony of fate; as Deacon said, now that Thor
+had<br>
+awakened, and earnestly wanted to be a collegian, he had no time
+to enter<br>
+into campus life. Glad at being able to stay at old Bannister, to
+keep on<br>
+with his studies, climbing steadily toward his goal, and finding
+a joy in<br>
+his new relationship with the students, the ponderous Thorwald
+had flung<br>
+himself into his hustling, as the youths called working one's way
+at<br>
+college, with zeal. To the huge Freshman, toil was nothing, and
+since it<br>
+meant that he could keep on with his study, he was content. The
+collegians<br>
+vastly admired his grim determination; they aided all they could
+with<br>
+his studies, and helped with his work, so he could have more time
+for<br>
+scrimmage, and yet another phase of the problem came to
+Hicks.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed unjust that John Thorwald, after his long years of
+hard physical<br>
+toil, and his mental struggles, often after hours of grinding
+work, at the<br>
+very time when the five thousand dollars from Henry B. Kingsley's
+heirs<br>
+promised him a chance to study without a body tortured and
+exhausted,<br>
+should be forced again to take up his stern fight for knowledge.
+And it<br>
+was cruel that Thor, just awakening to the true meaning of
+college life,<br>
+striving to grasp campus tradition, and eager to serve his Alma
+Mater in<br>
+every way, should have so little time to mingle with his fellows.
+He should<br>
+be with them on the campus, on the athletic field, in the dorms.,
+the<br>
+literary society halls, the Y. M. C. A. He should be realizing
+the golden<br>
+years of college life, the glad comradeship of the campus.
+Instead, he must<br>
+arise in the bitter cold, gray dawn, and from then until late
+night toil<br>
+and study unceasingly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a howling shame!" declared the serious Hicks, a heart
+full of<br>
+sympathy for Thor. "Just as he wakes up and is trying to
+understand things<br>
+at old Bannister, bang! the Norwhal is blown up by a stray mine,
+and<br>
+down goes his dad's money. Why didn't Mr. Thorwald get the five
+thousand<br>
+transferred to the Valkyrie? Oh, if that money hadn't gone down
+to Davy<br>
+Jones' locker, Thor would be awakened and have time for college
+life, too!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster started to speak when the thunderous tread of
+John Thorwald<br>
+sounded in the corridor. The Prodigious Prodigy seemed
+approaching at<br>
+double-quick time, and the youths stared at each other. However,
+when<br>
+Thor appeared in the doorway, a letter in hand, they gazed at him
+in<br>
+bewilderment, for his face fairly glowed.</p>
+
+<p>"Read it, fellows, read it!" he breathed, with what, for him,
+was almost<br>
+excitement. "It just came! Oh, isn't that good news? Read it out,
+Captain<br>
+Butch. Won't we wallop Ballard now!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, mystified by Thor's happiness, and urged
+on by his<br>
+equally puzzled comrades, drew out the letter, and a glad smile
+coming to<br>
+his honest countenance, he read aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA. STEAMSHIP LINE (New York
+Office)</p>
+
+<p>"Nov. 18, 19&mdash;.</p>
+
+<p>"MR. JOHN THORWALD, JR., Bannister College.</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR SIR:</p>
+
+<p>"We beg to state that your father, first mate on our liner,
+the Valkyrie,<br>
+three days outbound from New York to Christiania, sent a message,
+<i>via</i><br>
+wireless, to our New York offices by the inbound Dutch Line's
+Rotterdam.<br>
+The Rotterdam relayed the message to us, and we forward it
+herewith,<br>
+<i>verbatim:</i></p>
+
+<p>"'DEAR SON: Purser of my ship, the Valkyrie, informed me today
+that the<br>
+purser of the ill-fated Norwhal, learning of my transfer to this
+liner,<br>
+transferred my $5,000 to the Valkyrie before he sailed to his
+fate. I am<br>
+sending this <i>via</i> the Rotterdam, inbound, and our office
+will forward it<br>
+to you. Will write on arriving at Christiania. Father.'</p>
+
+<p>"We are sorry for the delay in forwarding this message, but
+through an<br>
+accident, it was mislaid in our office for a few days.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours truly,</p>
+
+<p>"THE NEW YORK-CHRISTIANIA STEAMSHIP LINE,</p>
+
+<p>"per J. L. G."</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence; outside on the campus the Bannister
+youths, preparing<br>
+for the mass-meeting in the Auditorium, started cheering. Someone
+caught<br>
+sight of Thor, standing now by the window of Hicks' room, on the
+third<br>
+floor of Bannister Hall, and a few seconds later there
+sounded:</p>
+
+<p>"Thor! Thor! Thor! Thor will bring the Championship to old
+Bannister! Rah!<br>
+Rah! Rah!&mdash;Thor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," shouted T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., grinning happily, his
+arm across<br>
+Thor's massive shoulders, "'All's well that ends well,' as Bill
+Shakespeare<br>
+says. It's all right now, Thor. Fate dealt you a hard punch, but
+it served<br>
+its purpose; for it made you realize how you would regret to
+leave college.<br>
+Now you won't have to hustle and have all your time filled with
+toil and<br>
+study; you can go after every phase of campus life, and serve old
+Bannister<br>
+in so many ways."</p>
+
+<p>John Thorwald stood, a contented look on his placid, impassive
+face,<br>
+gazing down at the campus below and hearing the plaudits of the
+excited<br>
+collegians. The stately old elms, gaunt and bare, tossed their
+limbs<br>
+against a leaden sky; a cold, dreary wind sent clouds of dry
+leaves<br>
+scurrying down the concrete walks. In the faint moonlight that
+struggled<br>
+through the clouds, the towers and spires of old Bannister were
+limned<br>
+against the sky-line. Across the campus, on Bannister Field,
+the<br>
+goal-posts, skeleton-like, kept their lonely vigil. On that
+field, in<br>
+less than a week, the Gold and Green must face the crucial
+test&mdash;against<br>
+Ballard's championship eleven, in the Biggest Game; and now,
+almost on the<br>
+eve of battle, the shackles had been knocked from him; he was
+free of the<br>
+great burden, free to serve his Alma Mater, to fight for the Gold
+and<br>
+Green, to grow and develop into an all-round, representative
+college man.</p>
+
+<p>All of a sudden it dawned on the slow-thinking young Norwegian
+just how<br>
+much this freedom to grow and expand meant to him, and he turned
+from the<br>
+window. From below, the shouts of "Thor! Thor! Thor!" drifted,
+stirring his<br>
+blood, as he looked at Hicks, Butch, Beef, Monty and Deacon.</p>
+
+<p>"'All's well that ends well,' you say. Hicks," he spoke
+slowly, his face<br>
+joyous. "That's true; but I'm just starting, fellows. I'm just
+<i>beginning</i><br>
+to live my college years, not for myself, but for old Bannister,
+for my<br>
+Alma Mater, for I am awake, and <i>free</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XII</p>
+
+<p>THEOPHILUS BETRAYS HICKS</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, a life-sized picture of despair, roosted
+dejectedly on<br>
+the Senior Fence, between the Gym and the Administration
+Building. It was<br>
+quite cold, and also the beginning of the last study-period
+before Butch's<br>
+final and most difficult recitation of the day, Chemistry. Yet
+instead<br>
+of boning in his warm room, the behemoth Senior perched on the
+fence and<br>
+stared gloomily into space.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat, enveloped in a penumbra of gloom, the campus
+entrance door of<br>
+Bannister Hall, the Senior dorm., opened suddenly, and T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., that happy-go-lucky youth, came out cautiously, after the
+fashion of a<br>
+second-story artist, emerging from his crib with a bundle of
+swag, the<br>
+last item being represented by a football tucked under Hicks'
+left arm.<br>
+Beholding Butch Brewster on the Senior Fence, the sunny-souled
+Senior<br>
+exhibited a perturbation of spirit seeming undecided whether to
+beat a<br>
+retreat or to advance.</p>
+
+<p>"Now what's ailin' <i>you</i>?" demanded Butch wrathily,
+believing the<br>
+pestersome Hicks to be acting in that burglarious manner for
+effect. "Why<br>
+should <i>you</i> sneak out of a dorm., bearing a football like
+it was an auk's<br>
+egg? Why, you resemble a nigger, making his get-away after
+robbing a<br>
+hen-roost! Don't torment me, you
+accident-somewhere-on-its-way-to-happen. I<br>
+feel about as joyous as a traveling salesman who has made a town
+and gotten<br>
+nary a order!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's <i>awful</i>!" soliloquized T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+perching beside the<br>
+despondent Butch on the Senior Fence. "I am not a fatalist, old
+man, but<br>
+it <i>does</i> seem that fate hasn't destined Thor to play
+football for old<br>
+Bannister this season! Here, after he won the Ham game, and we
+expected him<br>
+to waltz off with Ballard's scalp and the Championship, he has to
+tumble<br>
+downstairs! Oh, it's tough luck!"</p>
+
+<p>It was two days before the biggest game, with
+Ballard&mdash;the contest that<br>
+would decide the State Intercollegiate Football Championship.
+Ballard, the<br>
+present champions, discounting even Hamilton's stories of Thor's
+prowess,<br>
+were coming to Bannister with an eleven more mighty than the one
+that had<br>
+crushed the Gold and Green the year before, with a heavy,
+stonewall line,<br>
+fast ends, and a powerful, shifty backfield. The Ballard team was
+confident<br>
+of victory and the pennant. Bannister, building on the awakened
+Thorwald,<br>
+superbly sure of his phenomenal strength and power, of his
+unstoppable<br>
+rushes, serenely practiced the doctrine of preparedness, and
+awaited the<br>
+day.</p>
+
+<p>And then John Thorwald, the Prodigious Prodigy, whose gigantic
+frame seemed<br>
+unbattered by the terrific daily scrimmage, whom it was
+impossible to<br>
+hurt on the gridiron, the day before, going downstairs in
+Creighton Hall,<br>
+hurrying to a class, had caught his heel on the top step, and
+crashed to<br>
+the bottom! And now, with a broken ankle, the blond Colossus,
+heartbroken<br>
+at not being able to win the Championship for old Bannister,
+hobbled about<br>
+on crutches. Without Thor, the Gold and Green must meet the
+invincible<br>
+Ballard team! It was a solar-plexus blow, both to the Bannister
+youths,<br>
+confident in Thor's prowess, building on his Herculean bulk, and
+to the<br>
+big Freshman. Thorwald, awakened, striving to grasp campus
+tradition, to<br>
+understand college life, was eager to fling himself into the
+scrimmage, to<br>
+give every ounce of his mighty power, to offer that splendid
+body, for his<br>
+Alma Mater, and now he must hobble impotently on the side-line,
+watching<br>
+his team fight a desperate battle.</p>
+
+<p>"If Bannister only had a sure, accurate drop-kicker!"
+reflected Captain<br>
+Butch hopelessly. "One who could be depended on to average eight
+out of ten<br>
+trials, we'd have a fighting chance with Ballard. Deke Radford is
+a wonder.<br>
+He can kick a forty-five-yard goal, but he's erratic! He might
+boot the<br>
+pigskin over when a score is needed from the forty-yard line, and
+again he<br>
+might miss from the twenty-yard mark. Oh, for a kicker who isn't
+brilliant<br>
+and spectacular, but who can methodically drop 'em over from,
+say, the<br>
+thirty-five-yard line! Hello, what's the row, Hicks?"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., started to speak, changed his mind,
+coughed, grew<br>
+red and embarrassed, and acted in a most puzzling manner. At any
+other<br>
+time, big Butch would have been bewildered; but with Thor's loss
+weighing<br>
+on his mind, the Gold and Green captain gave his comrade only a
+cursory<br>
+glance.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;Oh, nothing, Butch!" stammered Hicks, to
+whom, being "fussed," as<br>
+Bannister termed embarrassment, was almost unknown. "I&mdash;I
+guess I'll<br>
+take this football over to my locker in the Gym. I ought to
+glance at my<br>
+Chemistry, too. So-long, Butch; see you later, old top!"</p>
+
+<p>When the splinter-youth had drifted into the Gym., Butch
+Brewster,<br>
+remembering his strange actions, actually managed to transfer his
+thoughts<br>
+for a time from the eleven to the care-free T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr. The<br>
+behemoth Senior reflected that, to date, the pestiferous Hicks
+had not<br>
+explained his baffling mystery he recalled the day when he had
+told the<br>
+Gold and Green eleven of the loyal Hicks' ambition to please his
+dad by<br>
+winning his B, when he had described the youth's intense college
+spirit<br>
+and had suggested that if Hicks failed to corral his letter the
+Athletic<br>
+Association award him one for his loyalty to old Bannister. And
+Butch saw<br>
+again the bewildering sentences in the letter from Thomas
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Sr., to his son.</p>
+
+<p>"Evidently," meditated Butch, literally and figuratively "on
+the fence,"<br>
+"Hicks has failed to summon up enough self-confidence to explain
+his<br>
+mystery; queer, too, for he usually is bubbling with faith in
+himself. He<br>
+has acted like a bashful schoolgirl at frequent times&mdash;he
+starts to tell<br>
+me something, then he gets embarrassed, back-fires, and stalls.
+He and<br>
+Theophilus have been sneaking out in the early dawn, too. Wow!
+What did he<br>
+sneak out of the dorm. that way, with a football, for? He looked
+like a<br>
+yeggman working night shift. Why should <i>he</i> skulk out with
+a football? He<br>
+has never explained his dad's letter, or told just what Mr. Hicks
+meant by<br>
+calling him the "Class Kid" of Yale, '96, and saying those
+members of old<br>
+Eli wanted him to star! Oh, he's a tantalizing wretch, and I'd
+like to<br>
+solve his mystery, without his knowledge, so I could&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that instant, to the intense indignation and bewilderment
+of good Butch<br>
+Brewster, little Theophilus Opperdyke, the timorous Human
+Encyclopedia of<br>
+old Bannister, exited from Bannister Hall. The Senior boner gave
+a correct<br>
+imitation of the offending Hicks, in that he skulked out, gazing
+around<br>
+him nervously; but he portaged no pigskin, and, unlike the sunny
+youth, on<br>
+periscoping Butch, he seemed relieved.</p>
+
+<p>"Theophilus, <i>come here</i>!" thundered the wrathful
+football captain,<br>
+shifting his tonnage on the Senior Fence. "What's the plot,
+anyhow? It's<br>
+bad enough when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sneaks out, bearing a
+football,<br>
+like an amateur cracksman making a getaway; but when you appear,
+imitating<br>
+a Nihilist about to hurl a bomb&mdash;say, what's the answer to
+the puzzle, old<br>
+man?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Theophilus, his pathetically frail body trembling with
+suppressed<br>
+excitement, his big-rimmed spectacles tumbling off with
+ridiculous<br>
+regularity, and his solemn eyes peering owlishly at his behemoth
+classmate,<br>
+stood before the startled Butch. It was evident that the 1919
+grind<br>
+labored under great stress. He was waging a terrific battle with
+himself,<br>
+struggling to make some vast and all-important decision. He
+strove to<br>
+speak, hesitated, choked, coughed apologetically, and acted as
+fussed as<br>
+Hicks had done, until Butch was wild; then, as if resolved to
+cast the die<br>
+and cross the Rubicon, he decided, and plunged desperately
+ahead.</p>
+
+<p>"It's&mdash;it's Hicks, Butch!" he quavered, torn cruelly by
+conflicting<br>
+emotions. "Oh, I don't want to be a traitor&mdash;he trusted me
+with his secret,<br>
+and I&mdash;I can't betray him, I just can't! But he didn't make
+me promise not<br>
+to tell. He just told me not to. Oh, it's his very last chance,
+Butch, and<br>
+with Thor hurt, old Bannister might need him in the Ballard
+game."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Theophilus, old man?" Butch spoke kindly, for he
+saw the<br>
+solemn little Senior was intensely excited. "Tell me&mdash;if our
+Alma Mater<br>
+needs any fellow's services, you know, he should give them
+freely&mdash;since<br>
+you did not promise not to tell about Hicks, if Bannister may be
+able<br>
+to use Hicks against Ballard&mdash;though I can't, by any stretch
+of the<br>
+imagination, figure how&mdash;then it is your duty to tell! I
+think I glimpse<br>
+the dark secret&mdash;Hicks possesses some sort of football
+prowess, goodness<br>
+knows what, and he lacks the confidence to tell Coach Corridan!
+Now, were<br>
+it only drop-kicking&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is drop-kicking!" Theophilus burst forth desperately.
+"Hicks is a<br>
+drop-kicker, Butch, and a sure one&mdash;inside the thirty-yard
+line. He almost<br>
+<i>never</i> misses a goal, and he kicks them from every angle,
+too. He isn't<br>
+strong enough to kick past the thirty-yard line, but inside that
+he is<br>
+wonderfully accurate. With Thor out of the Ballard game, a
+drop-kick may<br>
+win for Bannister, and Deke Radford is so erratic! Oh, Hicks will
+be angry<br>
+with me for telling; but he just won't tell about himself, after
+all his<br>
+practice, because he fears the fellows will jeer. He is afraid he
+will fail<br>
+in the supreme test. Oh, I've betrayed him, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a drop-kicker!" exploded the dazed
+Butch, who<br>
+could not have been more astounded had Theophilus announced that
+the sunny<br>
+youth possessed powers of black magic. "Theophilus Opperdyke,
+Tantalus<br>
+himself was never so tantalized as I have been of late. Tell me
+the whole<br>
+story, old man&mdash;hurry. Spill it, old top!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster, by questioning the excited Human Encyclopedia,
+like a<br>
+police official giving the third degree, slowly extracted from
+Theophilus<br>
+the startling story. A year before, just as the Gold and Green
+practiced<br>
+for the Ham game, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., one afternoon, had
+arrayed his<br>
+splinter-structure in a grotesque, nondescript athletic outfit,
+and had<br>
+jogged out on Bannister Field. The gladsome youth's motive had
+been free<br>
+from any torturesome purpose. He intended to round up the
+Phillyloo Bird,<br>
+Shad Weatherby, and other non-athletic collegians, and with them
+boot the<br>
+pigskin, for exercise. However, little Skeet Wigglesworth,
+beholding him<br>
+as he donned the weird regalia of loud sweater, odd basket-ball
+stockings,<br>
+tennis trousers, baseball shoes, and so on, misconstrued his
+plan, and<br>
+believed Hicks intended to torment the squad. Hence, he hurried
+out,<br>
+so that when Hicks appeared in the offing, the football squad and
+the<br>
+spectators in the stands had jeered the happy-go-lucky Junior,
+and had<br>
+good-natured sport at his expense.</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., after Jack Merritt had drop-kicked a
+forty-yard<br>
+goal, made the excessively rash statement that it was easy.
+Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster had indignantly challenged the heedless youth to show
+him, and<br>
+the results of Hicks' effort to propel the pigskin over the
+crossbar were<br>
+hilarious, for he missed the oval by a foot, nearly dislocated
+his knee,<br>
+and, slipping in the mud, he sat down violently with a thud.
+However, so<br>
+the excited Theophilus now narrated, even as the convulsed
+students jeered<br>
+Hicks, hurling whistles, shouts, cat-calls, songs and humorous
+remarks at<br>
+the downfallen kicker, one of Hicks' celebrated inspirations had
+smitten<br>
+the pestersome Junior, evidently jarred loose by his crashing to
+terra<br>
+firma.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks figured this way, Butch," explained little Theophilus
+Opperdyke,<br>
+eloquent in his comrade's behalf, "nature had built him like a
+mosquito,<br>
+and endowed him with enough power to lift a pillow; hence he
+could never<br>
+hope to play football on the 'Varsity; but he knew that many
+games are<br>
+won by drop-kicks and by fellows especially trained and coached
+for that<br>
+purpose, and they don't need weight and strength, but they must
+have the<br>
+art, that peculiar knack which few possess. His inspiration was
+this:<br>
+Perhaps he had that knack, perhaps he could practice faithfully,
+and<br>
+develop into a sure drop-kicker. If he trained for a year, in his
+Senior<br>
+season, he might be able to serve old Bannister, maybe to win a
+big game.<br>
+So he set to work."</p>
+
+<p>Theophilus hurriedly yet graphically narrated how T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+had made the loyal, hero-worshiping little Human Encyclopedia his
+sole<br>
+confidant. He told the thrilled Butch how the sunny youth, from
+that<br>
+day on, had watched and listened as Head Coach Corridan trained
+the<br>
+drop-kickers, learning all the points he could gain. Vividly he
+described<br>
+the mosquito-like Hicks, as he with a football bought from the
+Athletic<br>
+Association began in secret to practice the fine art of
+drop-kicking! For a<br>
+year, at old Bannister and at his dad's country home near
+Pittsburgh, Hicks<br>
+had faithfully, doggedly kept at it. With no one bat Theophilus
+knowing of<br>
+his great ambition, he had gone out on Bannister Field, when he
+felt safe<br>
+from observation; here, with his faithful comrade to keep watch,
+and to<br>
+retrieve the pigskin, he had practiced the instructions and
+points gained<br>
+from watching Coach Corridan train the booters of the squad. To
+his vast<br>
+delight, and the joy of his little friend, Hicks had found that
+he did<br>
+possess the knack, and from before the Ham game until
+Commencement he had<br>
+kept his secret, practicing clandestinely at old Bannister; he
+had improved<br>
+wonderfully, and when vacation started the cheery collegian had
+told his<br>
+beloved dad, Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., of his hopes.</p>
+
+<p>The ex-Yale football star, delighted at his son's ambition to
+serve old<br>
+Bannister and joyous at discovering that Hicks actually possessed
+the<br>
+peculiar knack of drop-kicking, coached the splinter-youth all
+summer at<br>
+their country place near Pittsburgh. Under the instruction of
+Hicks, Sr.,<br>
+the youth developed rapidly, and when he returned to the campus
+for his<br>
+final year, he was a sure, dependable drop-kicker, inside the
+thirty-yard<br>
+line. As Theophilus stated, beyond that he lacked the power, but
+in that<br>
+zone he could boot 'em over the cross-bar from any angle.</p>
+
+<p>"He's been practicing all this season, in secret!" quavered
+the little<br>
+Senior, "and he's a&mdash;a <i>fiend</i>, Butch, at drop-kicking.
+And yet, here it is<br>
+time for the last game of his college years, and&mdash;he lacks
+confidence to<br>
+tell you, or Coach Corridan. Oh, I'm afraid he will be angry with
+me for<br>
+betraying him, and yet&mdash;I just <i>can't</i> let him miss his
+splendid chance,<br>
+now that Thor is out and old Bannister <i>needs</i> a
+drop-kicker!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch was silent for a time. The football leader was
+deeply impressed<br>
+and thrilled by Theophilus Opperdyke's story of T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.'s<br>
+ambition. As he roosted on the Senior Fence, the behemoth
+gridiron<br>
+star visioned the mosquito-like youth, whom nature had endowed
+with a<br>
+splinter-structure, sneaking out on Bannister Field, at every
+chance, to<br>
+practice clandestinely his drop-kicking. He could see the
+faithful Human<br>
+Encyclopedia, vastly excited at his blithesome colleague's
+improvement,<br>
+retrieving the pigskin for Hicks. He thrilled again as he thought
+of the<br>
+bean-pole Hicks, who could never gain weight and strength enough
+to make<br>
+the eleven, loyally training and perfecting himself in the
+drop-kick,<br>
+trying to develop into a sure kicker, within a certain zone,
+hoping<br>
+sometime, before he left college forever, to serve old Bannister.
+With Thor<br>
+in the line-up at fullback, he would not have been needed, but
+now, with<br>
+the Prodigious Prodigy out, it was T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s big
+chance!</p>
+
+<p>And Butch Brewster understood why the usually confident Hicks,
+even with<br>
+the knowledge of his drop-kicking power, hesitated to announce it
+to old<br>
+Bannister. Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team
+of Hicks'<br>
+being in earnest in his ridiculous athletic attempts of the past
+three<br>
+years, no one but himself and Hicks had dreamed that the sunny
+youth meant<br>
+them, that he really strove to win his B and please his dad. The
+appearance<br>
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., on Bannister Field was always the
+cause of<br>
+a small-sized riot among the squad and spectators. Hicks was
+jeered<br>
+good-naturedly, and "butchered to make a Bannister holiday," as
+he blithely<br>
+phrased it. Hence, the splinter-Senior was reluctant to announce
+that he<br>
+could drop-kick. He knew that when tested he would be so in
+earnest, that<br>
+so much would hang in the balance and the youths, unknowing how
+important<br>
+it was, would jeer. Then, too, knowing his long list of athletic
+fiascos,<br>
+ridiculous and otherwise, Hicks trembled at the thought of being
+sent into<br>
+the biggest game to kick a goal. He feared he might fail!</p>
+
+<p>"You are a <i>hero</i>, Theophilus!" said Butch, with deep
+feeling. "I can<br>
+realize how hard it was for Hicks to tell us. He would have kept
+silent<br>
+forever, even after his training in secret! And how you must have
+suffered,<br>
+knowing he could drop-kick, and yet not desiring to betray him!
+But your<br>
+love for old Bannister and for Hicks himself conquered. I'll take
+him out<br>
+on the gridiron, before the fellows come from class, and see what
+he<br>
+can do. Aha! There is the villain now. Hicks, ahoy! Come hither,
+you<br>
+Kellar-Herman-Thurston. Your dark secret is out at last!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., peering cautiously from the Gym.
+basement doorway,<br>
+in quest of the tardy Theophilus, who was to have accompanied him
+on a<br>
+clandestine journey to Bannister Field, obeyed the summons.
+Bewildered,<br>
+and gradually guessing the explanation from the shivering little
+boner's<br>
+alarmed expression, the gladsome youth approached the stern Butch
+Brewster,<br>
+who was about to condemn him for his silence. "Don't be angry
+with me,<br>
+Hicks, <i>please</i>!" pled Theophilus, pathetically fearful that
+he had<br>
+offended his comrade, "I&mdash;I just <i>had</i> to tell, for it
+was positively your<br>
+last chance, and&mdash;and old Bannister needs your sure
+drop-kicking! I never<br>
+promised not to tell. You never made me give my word,
+so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It was Theophilus' duty to tell!" spoke Butch, hiding a grin,
+for the<br>
+grind was so frightened, "and yours, Hicks, knowing as you do how
+we need<br>
+you, with Thor hurt! You graceless wretch, you aren't usually so
+like ye<br>
+modest violet! Why didn't you inform us, then swagger and say,
+'Oh, just<br>
+leave it to Hicks, he'll win the game with a drop-kick?' Now, you
+come with<br>
+me, and I'll look over your samples. If you've got the goods,
+it's highly<br>
+probable you'll get your chance, in the Ballard game; and I'm
+<i>glad</i>, old<br>
+man, for your sake. I know what it would mean, if you win it!
+But&mdash;now that<br>
+the '<i>mystery</i>' is solved, what's that about your being a
+'Class Kid,' of<br>
+Yale, '96?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's easy!" grinned T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his arm across
+Theophilus'<br>
+shoulders, "I was the first boy born to any member of Yale, '96;
+it is the<br>
+custom of classes graduating at Yale to call such a baby the
+class kid!<br>
+Naturally, the members of old Eli, Class of 1896, are vastly
+interested in<br>
+me. Hence, my Dad wrote they'd be tickled if I won a big game for
+Bannister<br>
+with a field-goal!"</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence, Theophilus Opperdyke, gathering from
+Hicks' arm,<br>
+across his shoulders, that the cheery youth was not so awfully
+wrathful at<br>
+his base betrayal, adjusted his big-rimmed spectacles, and stared
+owlishly<br>
+at Hicks.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you&mdash;you are not angry?" he quavered. "You are
+not sorry. I&mdash;I<br>
+told&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry?" quoth T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., "Class Kid," of Yale,
+'96, with a<br>
+Cheshire cat grin, "<i>sorry</i>? I should say <i>not</i>&mdash;I
+wanted it to be known to<br>
+Butch, and Coach Corridan, but I got all shivery when I tried to
+confess,<br>
+and I&mdash;couldn't! Nay, Theophilus, you faithful friend, I'm
+so <i>glad</i>, old<br>
+man, that beside yours truly, the celebrated Pollyanna resembles
+Niobe,<br>
+weeping for her lost children."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XIII</p>
+
+<p>HICKS&mdash;CLASS KID&mdash;YALE '96</p>
+
+<p>  "Brekka-kek-kek&mdash;Co-Ax&mdash;Co-Ax!<br>
+  Brekka-kek-kek&mdash;Co-Ax&mdash;Co-Ax!<br>
+  Whoop-up! Parabaloo! Yale! Yale! Yale!<br>
+  Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., swathed in a cumbersome Gold and Green
+football<br>
+blanket, and crouching on the side-line, like some historic
+Indian, felt a<br>
+thrill shake his splinter-structure, as the yell of "old Eli"
+rolled from<br>
+the stand, across Bannister Field. In the midst of the Gold and
+Green flags<br>
+and pennants, fluttering in the section assigned the Bannister
+cohorts, he<br>
+gazed at a big banner of Blue, with white lettering:</p>
+
+<p>YALE UNIVERSITY&mdash;CLASS OF 1896</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Butch," gasped Hicks, torn between fear and hope, "just
+listen to<br>
+that. Think of all those Yale men in the stand with my Dad! Oh,
+suppose I<br>
+do get sent in to try for a drop-kick!"</p>
+
+<p>It was almost time far the biggest game to start, the contest
+with Ballard,<br>
+the supreme test of the Gold and Green, the final struggle for
+The State<br>
+Intercollegiate Football Championship! In a few minutes the
+referee's<br>
+shrill whistle blast would sound, the vast crowd in the stands,
+on the<br>
+side-lines, and in the parked automobiles, would suddenly still
+their<br>
+clamor and breathlessly await the kick-off&mdash;then, seventy
+minutes of grim<br>
+battling on the turf, and victory, or defeat, would perch on the
+banners of<br>
+old Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>It was a thrilling scene, a sight to stir the blood. Bannister
+Field, the<br>
+arena where these gridiron gladiators would fly at each other's
+throats&mdash;or<br>
+knees, spread out&mdash;barred with white chalk-marks, with the
+skeleton-like<br>
+goal posts guarding at each end. On the turf the moleskin clad
+warriors,<br>
+under the crisp commands of their Coaches, swiftly lined down,
+shifted to<br>
+the formation called, and ran off plays. Nervous subs. stood in
+circles,<br>
+passing the pigskin. Drop-kickers and punters, tuning up, sent
+spirals, or<br>
+end-over-end drop-kicks, through the air. The referee,
+field-judge, and<br>
+linesmen conferred. Team-attendants, equipped with buckets of
+water,<br>
+sponges, and ominous black medicine-chests, with Red Cross
+bandages, ran<br>
+hither and thither. On the substitutes' bench, or on the ground,
+crouched<br>
+nervous second-string players; Ballard's on one side of the
+gridiron, and<br>
+Bannister's directly across.</p>
+
+<p>A glorious, sunshiny day in late November, with scarcely a
+breath of<br>
+wind, the air crisp and bracing; the radiant sunlight fell
+athwart the<br>
+white-barred field, and glinted from the gay pennants and banners
+in the<br>
+stands! Here was a riot of color, the gold and green of old
+Bannister; in<br>
+the next section, the orange and black of Ballard. The bright
+hues and<br>
+tints of varicolored dresses, and the luster of the official
+flowers<br>
+all contributed to a bewilderingly beautiful spectacle!
+Flower-venders,<br>
+peddlers of pennants, sellers of miniature footballs with the
+college<br>
+colors of one team and the other, hawked their wares, loudly
+calling above<br>
+the tumult, "Get yer Ballard colors yere!" "This way fer the
+Bannister<br>
+flags!" Ten thousand spectators, packed into the cheering
+sections of the<br>
+two colleges, or in the general stands, or standing on the
+side-lines,<br>
+impatiently awaited the kick-off. At the appearance of each
+football star,<br>
+a tremendous cheer went up from the mass. Across the field from
+each other,<br>
+the two bands played stirring strains. The confident Ballard
+cohorts<br>
+cheered, sang, and yelled and those of Bannister, not
+<i>quite</i> so sure of<br>
+victory, with Thor out, nevertheless, cheered, sang, and yelled
+as loudly,<br>
+for the Gold and Green.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of that vast Yale banner, so conspicuous, with its
+big white<br>
+letters on a field of blue, amidst the fluttering pennants of
+gold and<br>
+green, excited comment among the Ballard followers. The Bannister
+students,<br>
+however, knew what it meant; Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., and
+thirty<br>
+members of Yale, '96, were in the stand, ready to cheer Captain
+Butch's<br>
+eleven, and hoping for a chance to whoop it up for T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+if he got his big chance.</p>
+
+<p>Two days before, when little Theophilus Opperdyke, after a
+terrible<br>
+struggle with himself, divided between loyalty to Hicks and a
+love for<br>
+his Alma Mater, had betrayed his toothpick class-mate to Captain.
+Butch<br>
+Brewster, that behemoth Senior had rounded up Coach Corridan, and
+together<br>
+they had dragged the shivering Hicks out to the football field.
+Here, while<br>
+the rest of the student body, unsuspecting the important event in
+progress,<br>
+made good use of the study-hour, or attended classes in
+Recitation Hall,<br>
+the Gold and Green Coach, with the team-Captain, and the excited
+Human<br>
+Encyclopedia, watched T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. show his samples
+of<br>
+drop-kicks. And the success of that happy-go-lucky youth, after
+his nervous<br>
+tension wore off, may be attested by the Slave-Driver's somewhat
+slangy<br>
+remark, when the exhibition closed.</p>
+
+<p>"Butch," said Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, impressively,
+"what it<br>
+takes to drop-kick field-goals, from anywhere inside the
+thirty-yard line,<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., is broke out with!"</p>
+
+<p>The proficiency attained by the heedless Hicks in the
+difficult art of<br>
+drop-kicking, gained by faithful practice for a year, aided by
+his Dad's<br>
+valuable coaching, was wonderful. Of course, Hicks possessed
+naturally the<br>
+needed knack, but he deserved praise for his sticking at it so
+loyally. He<br>
+had no surety that he would ever be of use to his college, and,
+indeed,<br>
+with the advent of Thor, his hopes grew dim, yet he plugged on,
+in case old<br>
+Bannister might sometime need him&mdash;and yet, but for
+Theophilus, he would<br>
+not have summoned the courage to tell! To the surprise and
+delight of the<br>
+Coach and Captain, Hicks, after missing a few at first,
+methodically booted<br>
+goals over the crossbar from the ten, twenty, and thirty-yard
+lines, and<br>
+from the most difficult angles. There was nothing showy or
+spectacular in<br>
+his work, it was the result of dogged training, but he was almost
+sure,<br>
+when he kicked!</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<img alt="dw.jpg (89K)" src="dw.jpg" height="840" width="544">
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Good!" ejaculated Coach Corridan, his arm across Hicks'
+shoulders, as they<br>
+walked to the Gym. "Hicks, the chances are big that I'll send you
+in to try<br>
+for a goal tomorrow, if Bannister gets blocked inside the
+thirty-yard line!<br>
+Just keep your nerve, boy, and boot it over! Now&mdash;I'll post
+a notice for<br>
+a brief mass-meeting at the end of the last class period, and
+Butch and I<br>
+will tell the fellows about you, and how you may serve
+Bannister."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the idea!" exulted Butch, joyous at his comrade's
+chance to get in<br>
+the biggest game. "The fellows will understand, Hicks, old man,
+and they<br>
+won't jeer when you come out this afternoon. They'll root for
+you! Oh, just<br>
+wait until you hear them cheer you, and <i>mean</i>
+it&mdash;you'll astonish the<br>
+natives, Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>Butch's prophecy was well fulfilled. In the scrimmage that
+same day, T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., shivering with apprehensive dread, his heart
+in his<br>
+shoes, sat on the side-line. In the stands, the entire
+student-body,<br>
+informed in the mass-meeting of his ability, shrieked for "Hicks!
+Hicks!<br>
+Hicks!" Near the end of the practice game, the hard-fighting
+scrubs fought<br>
+their way to the 'Varsity's thirty-yard line, and another rush
+took it five<br>
+yards more. Coach Corridan, halting the scrimmage, sent the
+right-half-back<br>
+to the side-line, and a moment later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+hurried out<br>
+on the field with the Bannister Band playing, the collegians
+yelling<br>
+frenziedly, and excitement at fever height, the sunny youth took
+his<br>
+position in the kick formation. Then a silence, a few seconds of
+suspense,<br>
+as the pigskin whirled back to him, and then&mdash;a quick
+stepping forward,<br>
+a rip of toe against the leather, and&mdash;above the heads of
+the 'Varsity<br>
+players smashing through, the football shot over the
+cross-bar!</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" was the shout, "Hicks will beat
+Ballard!"</p>
+
+<p>That night, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., having crossed the
+Rubicon, and<br>
+committed himself to Coach Corridan and Captain Brewster, had
+dispatched a<br>
+telegraphic night-letter to his beloved Dad. He informed his
+distinguished<br>
+parent that his drop-kicking powers were now known to old
+Bannister, and<br>
+that the chances were fifty-fifty that he would be sent in to try
+for a<br>
+field-goal in the biggest game. On the day before the game, Mr.
+Thomas<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., in a night-letter, had wired back:</p>
+
+<p>Son Thomas:</p>
+
+<p>Am on my way to New Haven for Yale-Harvard game. Will stop off
+at old<br>
+Bannister&mdash;bringing thirty members of Yale '96. We hope our
+Class Kid will<br>
+get his chance against Ballard.</p>
+
+<p>Dad.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the Bannister-Ballard game, Mr. Hicks'
+private car the<br>
+Vulcan, with the Pittsburgh "Steel King," and thirty other
+members of<br>
+Yale, '96, had reached town. They had ridden in state to College
+Hill in<br>
+good old Dan Flannagan's jitney, where T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+proudly<br>
+introduced his beloved Dad to the admiring collegians. All
+morning, Mr.<br>
+Hicks had made friends of the hero-worshiping youths, who
+listened to his<br>
+tales of athletic triumphs at Bannister and at old Yale
+breathlessly. The<br>
+ex-Yale star had made a stirring speech to the eleven, sending
+them out on<br>
+Bannister Field resolved to do or die!</p>
+
+<p>"My Dad!" breathed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., crouched on the
+side line; as<br>
+he gazed at the Yale banner, he could see his father, with his
+athletic<br>
+figure, his strong face that could be appallingly stern or
+wonderfully<br>
+tender and kind. Like the sunny Senior, Mr. Hicks, despite his
+wealth,<br>
+was thoroughly democratic and already the Bannister collegians
+were his<br>
+comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"Here we go, Hicks!" spoke Butch Brewster, as the referee
+raised his<br>
+whistle to his lips. "Hold yourself ready, old man; a field-goal
+may win<br>
+for us, and I'll send you in just as soon as I find all hope of a
+touchdown<br>
+is gone. If they hold us back of the thirty-yard line, I'll try
+Deke<br>
+Radford, but inside it, you are far more sure."</p>
+
+<p>The vast crowd, a moment before creating an almost
+inconceivable din,<br>
+stilled with startling suddenness; a shrill blast from the
+referee's<br>
+whistle cut the air. The gridiron cleared of substitutes,
+coaches,<br>
+trainers, and rubbers-out, and in their places, the teams of
+Bannister and<br>
+Ballard jogged out. Captain Brewster won the toss, and elected to
+receive<br>
+the kick-off. The Gold and Green players, Butch, Beef, Roddy,
+Monty, Biff,<br>
+Pudge, Bunch, Tug, Hefty, Buster, and Ichabod, spread out,
+fan-like,<br>
+while across the center of the field the Ballard eleven, a
+straight line,<br>
+prepared to advance as the full-back kicked off. There was a
+breathless<br>
+stillness, as the big athlete poised the pigskin, tilted on end,
+then<br>
+strode back to his position.</p>
+
+<p>"All ready, Ballard?" The Referee's call brought an
+affirmative from the<br>
+Orange and Black leader.</p>
+
+<p>"Ready, Bannister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ready!" boomed big Butch Brewster, with a final shout of
+encouragement to<br>
+his players.</p>
+
+<p>The biggest game was starting! Before ten thousand wildly
+excited and<br>
+partisan spectators, the Gold and Green and the Orange and Black
+would<br>
+battle for Championship honors; with Thor out of the struggle,
+Ballard,<br>
+three-time Champion, was the favorite. The visitors had brought
+the<br>
+strongest team in their history, and were supremely confident of
+victory.<br>
+Bannister, however, could not help remembering, twice fate had
+snatched<br>
+the greatest glory from their grasp, in Butch's Sophomore year,
+when Jack<br>
+Merritt's drop-kick struck the cross-bar, and a year later, when
+Butch<br>
+himself, charging for the winning touchdown, crashed blindly into
+the<br>
+upright. Old Bannister had not won the Championship for five
+years, and<br>
+now&mdash;when the chances had seemed roseate, with Thor, the
+Prodigious<br>
+Prodigy&mdash;smashing Hamilton out of the way, Fate had dealt
+the annual blow<br>
+in advance, by crippling him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we've <i>got</i> to win!" shivered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.
+"Oh, I hope I<br>
+don't get sent in&mdash;I mean&mdash;I hope Bannister wins
+without me! But if I <i>do</i><br>
+have to kick&mdash;Oh, I hope I send it over that
+cross-bar&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A second later the Ballard line advanced, the fullback's toe
+ripped into<br>
+the pigskin, sending it whirling, high in air, far into
+Bannister's<br>
+territory; the yellow oval fell into the outstretched arms of
+Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster, on the Gold and Green's five-yard line,
+and&mdash;"We're off!"<br>
+shrieked Hicks, excitedly. "Come on, Butch&mdash;run it back! Oh,
+we're off."</p>
+
+<p>The biggest game had started!</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XIV</p>
+
+<p>THE GREATER GOAL</p>
+
+<p>"Time out!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., enshrouded in a gold and green
+blanket, and<br>
+standing on the side-line, like a majestic Sioux Chief, gazed out
+on<br>
+Bannister Field. There, on the twenty-yard line, the two lines of
+scrimmage<br>
+had crashed together and Bannister's backfield had smashed into
+Ballard's<br>
+stonewall defense with terrific impact, to be hurled back for a
+five-yard<br>
+loss. The mass of humanity slowly untangled, the moleskin clad
+players rose<br>
+from the turf, all but one. He, wearing the gold and green, lay
+still,<br>
+white-faced, and silent.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Biff Pemberton!" chattered Hicks, shivering as with a
+chill. "Oh, the<br>
+game is lost, the Championship is gone. Biff is out, and the last
+quarter<br>
+is nearly ended. Coach Corridan has got to send me in to kick.
+It's our<br>
+very last chance to tie the score, and save old Bannister from
+defeat!"</p>
+
+<p>The time keeper, to whom the referee had megaphoned for time
+out, stopped<br>
+the game, while Captain Butch Brewster, the campus Doctor, and
+several<br>
+players worked over the senseless Biff. In the stands, the
+exultant Ballard<br>
+cohorts, confident that victory was booked to perch on their
+banners, arose<br>
+<i>en masse,</i> and their thunderous chorus drifted across
+Bannister Field:</p>
+
+<p>  "There's a hole in the bottom of the sea,<br>
+  And we'll put Bannister in that hole!<br>
+  In that hole&mdash;in&mdash;that&mdash;hole&mdash;<br>
+  Oh, we'll put Bannister in that hole!"</p>
+
+<p>From the Bannister section, the Gold and Green undergraduates,
+alumni, and<br>
+supporters, feeling a dread of approaching defeat grip their
+hearts, yet<br>
+determined to the last, came the famous old slogan of
+encouragement to<br>
+elevens battling on the gridiron:</p>
+
+<p>  "Smash 'em, boys, run the ends&mdash;hold, boys,
+<i>hold</i>&mdash;<br>
+  Don't let 'em beat the Green and the Gold!<br>
+  Touchdown! Touchdown! Hold, boys, <i>hold,<br>
+  Don't</i> let 'em win from the Green and the Gold!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with a groan of despair, sat down on
+the deserted<br>
+subs. bench. With a feeling that all was lost, the splinter-like
+Senior<br>
+gazed at the big score-board, announcing, in huge, white letters
+and<br>
+figures:</p>
+
+<p>4TH QUARTER; TIME TO PLAY&mdash;2 MIN.; <br>
+BANNISTER'S BALL ON BALLARD'S 22-YD. LINE; <br>
+4TH DOWN&mdash;8 YDS. TO GAIN;<br>
+SCORE: BALLARD&mdash;6; BANNISTER&mdash;3.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a terrific contest, a biggest game never to be
+forgotten by<br>
+the ten thousand thrilled spectators! Each eleven had been
+trained to the<br>
+second for this decisive Championship fight, and with the coveted
+gonfalon<br>
+of glory before them, the Bannister players battled desperately,
+while<br>
+Ballard's fighters struggled as grimly for their Alma Mater. For
+six years,<br>
+the Gold and Green had failed to annex the Championship, and for
+the past<br>
+three, the invincible Ballard machine had rushed like a car of
+Juggernaut<br>
+over all other State elevens; one team was determined to wrest
+the<br>
+banner from its rival's grasp, and the other fully as resolved to
+retain<br>
+possession, hence a memorable gridiron contest, to which even the
+alumni<br>
+could find none in past history to compare, was the result.</p>
+
+<p>Weakened by the loss of Thor, whose colossal bulk and
+Gargantuan strength<br>
+would have made victory a moral certainty, presenting practically
+the same<br>
+eleven that had faced Ballard the past season and had been
+defeated by a<br>
+scant margin, old Bannister had started the first quarter with a
+furious<br>
+rush that swept the enemy to midfield without the loss of a first
+down.<br>
+Then Ballard had rallied, stopping that triumphal march, on its
+own<br>
+thirty-five yard line, but unable to check Quarterback Deacon
+Radford, who<br>
+booted a forty-three-yard goal from a drop-kick, with the score
+3-0 in<br>
+Bannister's favor, and Deacon, a brilliant but erratic kicker,
+apparently<br>
+in fine trim, the Gold Green rooters went wild.</p>
+
+<p>In the second half, however, came the break of the game, as
+sporting<br>
+writers term it. The strong Ballard eleven found itself, and with
+a series<br>
+of body-smashing, bone-crushing rushes, battering at the
+Bannister lines<br>
+like the Germans before Verdun, they steadily fought their way,
+trench by<br>
+trench, line by line, down the field. Without a fumble, or the
+loss of a<br>
+single yard, the terrific, catapulting charges forced back old
+Bannister,<br>
+until the enemy's fullback, who ran like the famous Johnny
+Maulbetsch,<br>
+of Michigan, shot headlong over the goal line! The attempt for
+goal from<br>
+touchdown failed, leaving the score, at the end of the third
+quarter,<br>
+Ballard&mdash;6; Bannister&mdash;3.</p>
+
+<p>And Deacon Radford, whose first effort at drop-kicking had
+been so<br>
+brilliant, failed utterly. Three times, taking a desperate
+chance, the<br>
+Bannister quarter booted the pigskin, but the oval flew wide of
+the goal<br>
+posts, even from the thirty-yard line. With his mighty toe not to
+be<br>
+depended on, with the Gold and Green line worn to a frazzle by
+Ballard's<br>
+battering rushes, unable to beat back the victorious enemy, the
+Bannister<br>
+cohorts, dismayed, saw the start of the fourth and final quarter,
+their<br>
+last hope. The forward pass had been futile, for the visitors
+were trained<br>
+especially for this aerial attack, and with ease they broke up
+every<br>
+attempt. And then, with the ball in Ballard's possession on
+Bannister's<br>
+twenty-yard line, came a fumble&mdash;like a leaping tiger, Monty
+Merriweather<br>
+had flung himself on the elusively bounding ball, rolled over to
+his feet,<br>
+and was off down the field.</p>
+
+<p>"Touchdown! Touchdown! Touchdown!" shrieked old Bannister's
+madly excited<br>
+students, as Monty sprinted. "Go it,
+Monty&mdash;<i>touchdown</i>! Sprint, old man,<br>
+<i>sprint</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>But Cupid Colfax, Ballard's famous sprinter, playing
+quarterback, was off<br>
+on Monty's trail almost instantly, and his phenomenal speed cut
+down the<br>
+Ballard end's advantage; still, by dint of exerting every ounce
+of energy,<br>
+it was on Ballard's forty-yard line that Monty Merriweather,
+hugging the<br>
+pigskin grimly, finally crashed to earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Bannister!" shouted Captain Butch Brewster, as the
+two teams<br>
+lined down. "Right across the goal-line, then kick the goal, and
+we win!<br>
+Play the game&mdash;<i>fight</i>&mdash;Oh, we can win the
+Championship right now."</p>
+
+<p>Then ensued a session of football spectacular in the extreme,
+replete with<br>
+thrilling plays, with sensational tackles, and blood-stirring
+scrimmage.<br>
+The Bannister players, nerved by Captain Brewster's exhortation,
+by sheer<br>
+will-power drove their battered bodies into the scrimmage. End
+runs,<br>
+line-smashing tandem plays, forward passes, followed in
+bewildering<br>
+succession, until the ball rested on Ballard's twenty-yard line,
+and a<br>
+touchdown meant victory and the Championship for old Bannister,
+Another<br>
+rush, and five yards gained, then, Ballard, fighting at the last
+ditch,<br>
+made a stand every bit as heroic and thrilling as that
+sensational march<br>
+in the first half. The Gold and Green's tigerish rushes were
+hurled<br>
+back&mdash;three times Captain Butch threw his backfield against
+the line, and<br>
+three times not an inch was gained. On the third down, Monty
+Merriweather<br>
+was forced back for a loss, so now, with two minutes to play and
+the ball<br>
+in Bannister's possession, with eight yards to gain, the play was
+on<br>
+Ballard's twenty-two-yard line!</p>
+
+<p>And the biggest game had produced a new hero of the gridiron.
+Biff<br>
+Pemberton, left half-back, imbued with savage energy, had borne
+the brunt<br>
+of that spectacular advance; and now, he stretched on the turf,
+white and<br>
+still.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, old man," T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. turned as a hand
+rested grippingly<br>
+on his shoulder. Head Coach Patrick Henry Corridan, his face
+grim, had come<br>
+to him, and in quick, terse sentences, he outlined his plan.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Bannister's last chance&mdash;" he said, tensely. "We
+<i>can't</i> make the<br>
+first down, the way Ballard is fighting, unless we take desperate
+odds.<br>
+Now, Hicks, it's <i>up to you</i>. On <i>you</i> depend old
+Bannister's hopes."</p>
+
+<p>A great, chilling fear swept over T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+leaving him weak<br>
+and shaken. It had come at last-the moment for which he had
+trained and<br>
+practiced drop-kicking, for a year, in secret, that moment he had
+hoped<br>
+would come, sometime, and yet had dreaded, as in a nightmare.
+Before that<br>
+vast, howling crowd of ten thousand madly partisan spectators,
+<i>he</i> must<br>
+go out on Bannister Field, to try and boot a drop-kick from
+the<br>
+twenty-eight-yard-line, to save the Gold and Green from defeat.
+And he<br>
+thought of the great glory that would be his, if he succeeded-he
+would be a<br>
+campus hero, the idol of old Bannister, the youth who saved his
+Alma Mater<br>
+from defeat, in the biggest game! Then he remembered his Dad,
+inspiring<br>
+the eleven, between the halves, by a ringing speech; he heard
+again his<br>
+sentences:</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor
+to our dear Alma<br>
+Mater, is our greater goal! Go back into the game, throw
+yourselves into<br>
+the scrimmage, with no thought of personal glory, of the plaudits
+of the<br>
+crowd&mdash;it is a fine thing, a splendid goal, to play the game
+and be a hero;<br>
+it is a far more noble act to strive for the greater goal, one's
+Alma<br>
+Mater!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now listen carefully," Coach Corridan rushed on, "Biff is
+knocked out.<br>
+They'll start again soon, we are going to take a desperate
+chance; your Dad<br>
+advises it! A tie score means the Championship stays with
+Ballard. To win<br>
+it, we must <i>win</i> this game&mdash;and on <i>you</i>
+everything depends."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;how&mdash;" stammered Hicks, dazed&mdash;the only
+way to <i>tie</i> the score was by<br>
+a drop-kick; the only way to win, by a touchdown&mdash;did the
+Coach mean he was<br>
+<i>not</i> to realize his great ambition to save old Bannister by
+a goal, the<br>
+reward of his long training?</p>
+
+<p>"You jog out," whispered Coach Corridan, hurriedly, for a
+stretcher was<br>
+being rushed to Biff Pemberton, "report to the Referee, and
+whisper to<br>
+Butch to try Formation Z; 23-45-6-A! Now, here is the dope: our
+only chance<br>
+is to fool Ballard completely. When you go out, the Bannister
+rooters, and<br>
+your Yale friends, will believe it is to try a drop-kick and tie
+the score.<br>
+I am sure that the Ballard team will think this, too, because of
+your<br>
+slender build. You act as though you intend to try for a goal,
+and have<br>
+Captain Butch make our fellows act that way. Then&mdash;it is a
+fake-kick; the<br>
+backfield lines up in the kick formation, but the ball is passed
+to Butch,<br>
+at your right. He either tries for a forward pass to the right
+end, or<br>
+if the end Is blocked, rushes it himself! Hurry-the referee's
+whistle is<br>
+blowing; remember, Hicks, my boy, it's the greater goal, it's for
+your Alma<br>
+Mater."</p>
+
+<p>In a trance, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., flung off the gold and
+green blanket,<br>
+and dashed out on Bannister Field. How often, in the past year,
+had he<br>
+visioned this scene, only&mdash;he pictured himself saving the
+game by a<br>
+drop-kick, and now Coach Corridan ordered him to sacrifice this
+glory! From<br>
+the stands came the thunderous cheer of the excited Bannister
+cohorts,<br>
+firmly believing that the slender youth, so ludicrously fragile,
+among<br>
+those young Colossi, was to try for a goal.</p>
+
+<p>"Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hicks! Kick the
+goal&mdash;Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>And from the Yale grads., among them his Dad, came a shout, as
+he jogged<br>
+across the turf:</p>
+
+<p>"Breka-kek-kek&mdash;co-ax&mdash;Yale! Hicks-Hicks-Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>But the Bannister Senior did not thrill. Now, instead, a
+feeling of growing<br>
+resentment filled his soul; even this intensely loyal youth, with
+all his<br>
+love for old Bannister, was vastly human, and he felt cheated of
+his just<br>
+rights. How the students were cheering him, how those Yale men
+called his<br>
+name, and he was not to have his big chance! That for which he
+had trained<br>
+and practiced; the opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, by
+kicking a goal<br>
+at the crucial moment, and saving Bannister from defeat, was
+never to be<br>
+his. Now, in his last game at college, he was to act as a decoy,
+as a foil.<br>
+Like a dummy he must stand, while the other Gold and Green
+athletes ran off<br>
+the play! Instead of everything, a tie game, or a defeat,
+depending on his<br>
+kicking, defeat or victory hung on that fake play, on Butch
+Brewster<br>
+and Monty Merriweather! So&mdash;the ear-splitting plaudits of
+the crowd for<br>
+"Hicks!" meant nothing to him; they were dead sea fruit,
+tasteless as<br>
+ashes&mdash;as the ashes of ambition. And then&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;And to serve old Bannister, to bring glory and honor
+to our dear Alma<br>
+Mater, is our greater goal&mdash;no thought of personal
+glory&mdash;a splendid goal,<br>
+to play the game and be a hero; It is a far more noble act to
+strive for<br>
+the greater goal&mdash;one's Alma Mater&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I was nearly a <i>traitor</i>" gasped T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+his Dad's words<br>
+echoing In his memory, and a vision of that staunch, manly
+Bannister<br>
+ex-athlete before him. "Oh, I was betraying my Alma Mater.
+Instead of<br>
+rejoicing to make <i>any</i> sacrifice, however big, for
+Bannister, I thought<br>
+only of myself, of my glory! I'll do it, Dad, I'll strive for the
+greater<br>
+goal, and&mdash;we just can't fail."</p>
+
+<p>Reaching the scrimmage, Hicks, whose nervous dread had left
+him, when<br>
+he fought down selfish ambition, and thirst for glory, reported
+to the<br>
+Referee, and hurriedly transferred Coach Corridan's orders to
+Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster; half a minute of precious time was spent in
+outlining the<br>
+desperate play to the eleven, for "time!" had been called, and
+then&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Z-23-45-6-A!" shouted Quarterback Deacon Radford. "Come on,
+line&mdash;hold!<br>
+Right over the cross-bar with it, Hicks&mdash;tie the score, and
+save Bannister<br>
+from defeat&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The Gold and Green backfield shifted to the kick formation.
+Ten yards back<br>
+of the center, on the thirty-two-yard line of Ballard, stood T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr.; the vast crowd was hushed, all eyes stared at that
+slender<br>
+figure, standing there, with Captain Butch Brewster at his right,
+and Beef<br>
+McNaughton on his left hand-the spectators believed the
+frail-looking<br>
+youth had been sent in to try a drop-kick. The Ballard rooters
+thought<br>
+it, and&mdash;the Ballard eleven were <i>sure</i> of their
+enemy's plan&mdash;Hicks'<br>
+mosquito-like build, his nervous swinging of that right leg,
+deluded them,<br>
+and helped Coach Corridan's plot.</p>
+
+<p>It was the only play, if Bannister wanted the Championship
+enough to try a<br>
+desperate chance; better a fighting hope for that glory, with a
+try for<br>
+a touchdown, than a field-goal, and a tie-score! The lines of
+scrimmage<br>
+tensed. The linesmen dug their cleats in the sod, those of
+Ballard tigerish<br>
+to break through and block; old Bannister's determined to
+<i>hold</i>. Back of<br>
+Ballard's line, the backfield swayed on tip-toe, every muscle
+nerved, ready<br>
+to crash through; the ends prepared to knock Roddy and Monty
+aside, the<br>
+backs would charge madly ahead, in a berserk rush, to crash into
+that slim<br>
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Boot it, Hicks!" shrieked Deke Radford, and as he shouted,
+the pigskin<br>
+shot from the Bannister center's hands; the Gold and Green line
+held nobly,<br>
+but not so the ends. Monty Merriweather, making a bluff at
+blocking the<br>
+left end, let him crash past, while he sprinted
+ahead&mdash;Captain Butch<br>
+Brewster, to whom the pass had been made, ran forward, until he
+saw he was<br>
+blocked, and then, seeing Monty dear, he hurled a beautiful
+forward pass.</p>
+
+<p>Into the arms of the waiting Monty it fell, and that Gold and
+Green star,<br>
+absolutely free of tacklers, sprinted twelve yards to the
+goal-line,<br>
+falling on the pigskin behind it! Coach Corridan's "100 to 1"
+chance,<br>
+suggested by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., had succeeded,
+and&mdash;the<br>
+Biggest Game and the Championship had come to old Bannister at
+last!</p>
+
+<p>Followed a scene pauperizing description! For many long years
+old Bannister<br>
+had waited for this glory; years of bitter disappointment,
+seasons when the<br>
+Championship had been missed by a scant margin, a drop-kick
+striking the<br>
+cross-bar, Butch Brewster blindly crashing into an upright. But
+now, all<br>
+their pent-up joy flowed forth in a mighty torrent! Singing,
+yelling,<br>
+dancing, howling, the Bannister Band leading them, the Gold and
+Green<br>
+students, alumni, Faculty, and supporters, snake-danced around
+Bannister<br>
+Field. A vast, writhing, sinuous line, it wound around the
+gridiron,<br>
+everyone who possessed a hat flinging it over the cross-bars.
+The<br>
+victorious eleven, were borne by the maddened
+youths&mdash;Captain Butch, Pudge,<br>
+Beef, Monty, Roddy, Ichabod, Tug, Hefty, Buster, Bunch,
+and&mdash;T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr. Ballard, firmly believing Hicks would try a
+field-goal, had<br>
+been taken completely off guard. Surprised by the daring attempt,
+it had<br>
+succeeded with ease, and the final score was Bannister&mdash;10;
+Ballard&mdash;6!</p>
+
+<p>"At last! At last!" boomed Butch Brewster, to whom this was
+the happiest<br>
+day of his life. "The Championship at last. My great ambition is
+realized.<br>
+Old Bannister has won the Championship, and I was the Team
+Captain!"</p>
+
+<p>After a time, when "the shouting and the tumult died," or at
+least quieted<br>
+somewhat, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., felt a hand on his arm, and
+looking down<br>
+from the shoulders on which he perched, he saw his Dad. Mr.
+Hicks' strong<br>
+face was aglow with pride and a vast joy, and he shook his son's
+hand again<br>
+and again.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand, Thomas!" he said, and his words were reward
+enough for the<br>
+youth. "It was a <i>big</i> sacrifice, but you made it
+gladly&mdash;I know! You<br>
+gave up personal glory for the greater goal, and&mdash;old
+Bannister won the<br>
+Championship! You helped win, for the winning play turned on
+<i>you</i>. It was<br>
+splendid, my son, and I am proud of you! No matter if your
+sacrifice is<br>
+never known to the fellows, I understand."</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence on Hicks' part; then the sunny youth
+grinned at his<br>
+beloved Dad, as he responded blithesomely: "I'm Pollyanna, that
+old<br>
+Bannister and I won out, Dad!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XV</p>
+
+<p>HICKS HAS A "HUNCH"</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies and gentlemen, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, human
+beings,<br>
+and&mdash;Freshmen! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Jr., the Olympic
+High-Jump<br>
+Champion, holder of the World's record, and winner at the
+Panama-Pacific<br>
+International Exposition National Championships, in his event, is
+about to<br>
+high jump! The bar is at five feet, ten inches. Mr. Hicks is the
+Herculean<br>
+athlete in the crazy-looking bathrobe."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his splinter-structure enshrouded in
+that<br>
+flamboyant bathrobe of vast proportions and insane colors, that
+inevitably<br>
+attended his athletic efforts, shaming Joseph's
+coat-of-many-colors, gazed<br>
+despairingly at his good friend, Butch Brewster, and Track-Coach
+Brannigan,<br>
+with a Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no use, Butch, it's no use!" quoth he, with ludicrous
+indignation,<br>
+as big Tug Cardiff, the behemoth shot-putter, through a huge
+megaphone<br>
+imitated a Ballyhoo Bill, and roared his absurd announcement to
+the<br>
+hilarious crowd of collegians in the stand. "Old Bannister will
+<i>never</i><br>
+take my athletic endeavors seriously. Here I have won two second
+places,<br>
+and a third, in the high-jump this season, and have a splendid
+show to<br>
+annex <i>first</i> place and my track B in the Intercollegiates,
+but&mdash;hear<br>
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a balmy, sunshiny afternoon in late May. The
+sunny-souled,<br>
+happy-go-lucky T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had trained indefatigably
+for<br>
+the high jump, with the result that he had won several points for
+his<br>
+team&mdash;however, he had not realized his great ambition of
+first place, and<br>
+his track letter.</p>
+
+<p>As Hicks now exclaimed to his team-mate and Coach Brannigan,
+no matter,<br>
+to the howling Bannister youths, if he <i>had</i> won three
+places in the high<br>
+jump, in regularly scheduled meets; his comrades had been jeering
+at<br>
+his athletic fiascos for nearly four years, and even had Hicks
+suddenly<br>
+blossomed out as a star athlete, they would not have abandoned
+their joyous<br>
+habit. Still, those football 'Varsity players to whom good Butch
+had read<br>
+Hicks, Sr.'s, letters, and explained the sunny youth's
+persistence, despite<br>
+his ridiculous failures, though they kept on hailing his
+appearance on<br>
+Bannister Field with exaggerated joy, understood the care-free
+collegian,<br>
+and loved him for his ambition to please his Dad. Since Hicks
+had<br>
+absolutely refused to accept his B, for any sport, unless he won
+it<br>
+according to Athletic Association eligibility rules, the eleven
+had kept<br>
+secret the contents of the letters Butch Brewster had read to
+them, for<br>
+Hicks requested it.</p>
+
+<p>The Bannister College track squad, under Track Coach Brannigan
+and Captain<br>
+Spike Robertson, had been training most strenuously for that
+annual<br>
+cinder-path classic, the State Intercollegiate Track and
+Field<br>
+Championships. The sprinters had been tearing down the
+two-twenty<br>
+straightaway like suburban commuters catching the 7.20 A.M. for
+the city.<br>
+Hammer-throwers and shot-putters&mdash;the weight
+men&mdash;heaved the sixteen-pound<br>
+shot, or hurled the hammer, with reckless abandon, like the
+Strong Man of<br>
+the circus. Pole-vaulters seemed ambitious to break the altitude
+records,<br>
+and In so doing, threatened to break their necks; hurdlers
+skimmed over<br>
+the standard as lightly as swallows, though no one ever beheld
+swallows<br>
+hurdling. The distance runners plodded determinedly around the
+quarter-mile<br>
+track, broad-jumpers tried to jump the length of the landing-pit.
+And T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., vainly essayed to clear five-ten In the
+high-jump!</p>
+
+<p>It was the last-named event that "broke up the show," as the
+Phillyloo Bird<br>
+quaintly stated, somewhat wrongly, since the appearance of that
+blithesome<br>
+youth in the offing, his flamboyant bathrobe concealing his
+shadow-like<br>
+frame, had <i>started</i> the show, causing the track squad, as
+well as a<br>
+hundred spectator-students, to rush for seats in the stand. The
+arrival<br>
+of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., to train for form and height in the
+high-jump,<br>
+though a daily occurrence, was always the signal for a Saturnalia
+of sport<br>
+at his expense, because&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You can't live down your athletic past, Hicks!" smiled
+good-hearted Butch<br>
+Brewster. "Your making a touchdown for the other eleven, by
+running the<br>
+wrong way with the pigskin, your hilarious fiascos in every
+sport, your<br>
+home-run with the bases full, on a strike-out-are specters to
+haunt you.<br>
+Even now that you have a chance to win your B, just listen to the
+fellows."</p>
+
+<p>The track squad's "heavy weight&mdash;white hope" section,
+composed of<br>
+hammer-heavers and shot-putters&mdash;Tug Cardiff, Beef
+McNaughton, Pudge<br>
+Langdon, Buster Brown, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, and
+Bunch<br>
+Bingham, equipped with megaphones, and with the <i>basso
+profundo</i> voices<br>
+nature gave them, lined up on both sides of the
+jumping-standards, and<br>
+chanted loudly:</p>
+
+<p>  "All hail to T. Haviland Hicks!<br>
+  He runs like a carload of bricks;<br>
+    When to high jump he tries<br>
+    From the ground he can't rise&mdash;<br>
+  For he's built on a pair of toothpicks!"</p>
+
+<p>This saengerfest was greeted with vociferous cheers from the
+vastly amused<br>
+youths in the stands, who hailed the grinning Hicks with jeers,
+cat-calls,<br>
+whistles, and humorous (so they believed) remarks:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Hicks, you won't <i>never</i> be able to jump anything
+but your<br>
+board-bill!"</p>
+
+<p>"You're built like a grass-hopper, Hicks, but you've done lost
+the hop!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you keep on improving as you've done lately, you'll make a
+high-jumper<br>
+in a hundred more years, old top!"</p>
+
+<p>"You may rise in the world, Hicks, but never in the high
+jump!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't mind them, Hicks!" spoke Coach Brannigan, his hands on
+the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth's shoulders. "Listen to me; the
+Intercollegiates will<br>
+be the last track meet of your college years, and unless you take
+first<br>
+place in your event, you won't win your track B. Second, McQuade,
+of<br>
+Hamilton, will do five-eight, and likely an inch higher, so to
+take first<br>
+place, you, must do five-ten. You have trained and practiced
+faithfully<br>
+this season, but no matter what I do, I <i>can't</i> give you
+that needed two<br>
+inches, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it, Coach!" responded the chastened Hicks, throwing
+aside his<br>
+lurid bathrobe determinedly, and exposing to the jeering students
+his<br>
+splinter-frame. "Leave it to Hicks, I'll clear it this time,
+or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not!" fleered Butch, whom Hicks' easy self-confidence never
+failed to<br>
+arouse. "Hicks, listen to me, I can tell you why you can't get
+two inches<br>
+higher. The whole trouble with you is this; for almost four years
+you have<br>
+led an indolent, butterfly, care-free existence, and now, when
+you must<br>
+call on yourself for a special effort, you are too lazy! You can
+dear<br>
+five-ten; you ought to do it, but you can't summon up the energy.
+I've<br>
+lectured you all this time, for your heedless, easy-going ways,
+and<br>
+now&mdash;you pay for your idle years!"</p>
+
+<p>"You said an encyclopedia, Butch!" agreed the Coach, with
+vigor. "If only<br>
+something would just <i>make</i> Hicks jump that high, if only he
+could do it<br>
+once, and know it is in his power, he could do it in the
+Intercollegiates,<br>
+aided by excitement and competition! Let something <i>scare</i>
+him so that he<br>
+will sail over five-ten, and&mdash;he will win his B. He has the
+energy, the<br>
+build, the spring, and the form, but as you say, he is so
+easy-going and<br>
+lazy, that his natural grass-hopper frame avails him naught."</p>
+
+<p>"Here I go!" announced Hicks, who, to an accompaniment of loud
+cheers from<br>
+the stand, had been jogging up and down in that warming-up
+process known to<br>
+athletes as the in place run, consisting of trying to dislocate
+one's<br>
+jaw by bringing the knees, alternately, up against the chin. "Up
+and<br>
+over&mdash;that's my slogan. Just watch Hicks."</p>
+
+<p>Starting at a distance of twenty yards from the high-jump
+standards, on<br>
+which the cross-bar rested at five feet, ten inches, T. Haviland
+Hicks,<br>
+Jr., who vastly resembled a grass-hopper, crept toward the
+jumping-pit,<br>
+on his toe-spikes, as though hoping to catch the cross-bar off
+its guard.<br>
+Advancing ten yards, he learned apparently that his design was
+discovered,<br>
+so he started a loping gallop, turning to a quick, mad sprint, as
+though he<br>
+attempted to jump over the bar before it had time to rise higher.
+With a<br>
+beautiful take-off, a splendid spring&mdash;a quick, writhing
+twist in air, and<br>
+two spasmodic kicks, the whole being known as the scissors form
+of high<br>
+jump, the mosquito-like youth made a strenuous effort to clear
+the needed<br>
+height, but&mdash;one foot kicked the cross-bar, and as Hicks
+fell flat on his<br>
+back, in the soft landing-pit, the wooden rod, In derision,
+clattered down<br>
+upon his anatomy.</p>
+
+<p>"Foiled again!" hissed Hicks, after the fashion of a
+"Ten-Twent'-Thirt'"<br>
+melodrama-villain, while from the exuberant youths in the
+grandstand,<br>
+who really wanted Hicks to clear the bar, but who jeered at his
+failure,<br>
+nevertheless, sounded:</p>
+
+<p>"Hire a derrick, Hicks, and hoist yourself over the bar!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your <i>head</i> is light enough&mdash;your feet weigh you
+down!"</p>
+
+<p>"'Crossing the Bar'&mdash;rendered by T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.!"</p>
+
+<p>"Going up! Go play checkers, Hicks, you ain't no athlete!"</p>
+
+<p>While the grinning, albeit chagrined T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+reposed<br>
+gracefully on his back, staring up at the cross-bar, which
+someone kindly<br>
+replaced on the pegs, big Butch Brewster, who seemed suddenly to
+have<br>
+gone crazy, tried to attract Coach Brannigan's attention.
+Succeeding,<br>
+Butch&mdash;usually a grave, serious Senior, winked, contorted
+his visage<br>
+hideously, pointed at Hicks, and sibilated, "Now, Coach&mdash;now
+is your<br>
+chance! Tell Hicks&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Cardiff, Biff Pemberton, Hefty Hollingsworth, Bunch
+Bingham, Buster<br>
+Brown, Beef McNaughton, and Pudge Langdon, who had been attacked
+in a<br>
+fashion similar to Butch's spasm, concealed grins of delight, and
+made<br>
+strenuous efforts to appear guileless, as Track-Coach Brannigan
+approached<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr. To that cheery youth, who was brushing the
+dirt from<br>
+his immaculate track togs, and bowing to the cheering youths in
+the stand,<br>
+the Coach spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks," he said sternly, "you need a cross-country jog, to
+get<br>
+more strength and power in your limbs! Now, I am going to send
+the<br>
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade for a four-mile run, and you go
+with them.<br>
+Oh, don't protest; they are all shot-putters and hammer-throwers,
+but<br>
+Butch, and they can't run fast enough to give a tortoise a fast
+heat. Take<br>
+'em out two miles and back, Butch, and jog all the way; don't let
+'em loaf!<br>
+Off with you,"</p>
+
+<p>The unsuspecting Hicks might have detected the nigger in the
+woodpile, had<br>
+he not been so anxious to make five-ten in the high-jump.
+However, willing<br>
+to jog with these behemoths, with whom even he could keep pace,
+so as to<br>
+develop more jumping power, the blithesome youth cast aside his
+garish<br>
+bathrobe, pranced about in what he fatuously believed was Ted
+Meredith's<br>
+style, and howled:</p>
+
+<p>"Follow Hicks! All out for the Marathon&mdash;we're off!
+One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;<i>go</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>With the excited, track squad, non-athletes, and the baseball
+crowd, which<br>
+had ceased the game to watch the start, yelling, cheering,
+howling, and<br>
+whistling, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drawing his knees up in
+exaggerated<br>
+style at every stride, started to lead the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade<br>
+on its cross-country run. Without wondering why Coach Brannigan
+had<br>
+suddenly elected to send <i>him</i> along with the
+hammer-throwers and<br>
+shot-putters, on the jog, and not having seen the insane facial
+contortions<br>
+of the Brigade, before the Coach gave orders, the gladsome
+Senior<br>
+started forth in good spirits, resembling a tugboat convoying a
+fleet of<br>
+battleships.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! And over the country we go!'" warbled Hicks,
+as the squad<br>
+left Bannister Field, and jogged across a green meadow.
+"'&mdash;O'er hill and<br>
+dale, through valley and vale, Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho! Yo! Ho!'"</p>
+
+<p>"Save your wind, you insect!" growled Butch Brewster, with
+sinister<br>
+significance that escaped the heedless Hicks, as the behemoth
+Butch, a<br>
+two-miler, swung into the lead. "You'll <i>need</i> it, you fish,
+before we get<br>
+back to the campus! Not <i>too</i> fast, you flock of human
+tortoises. You'll be<br>
+crawling on hands and knees, if you keep that pace up long!"</p>
+
+<p>A mile and a half passed. Butch, at an easy jog, had led his
+squad over<br>
+green pastures, up gentle slopes, and across a plowed field, by
+way of<br>
+variety. At length, he left the road on which the pachydermic
+aggregation<br>
+had lumbered for some distance, and turned up a long lane,
+leading to a<br>
+farm-house. Back of it they periscoped an orchard, with
+cherry-trees,<br>
+laden with red and white fruit, predominating. Also, floating
+toward the<br>
+collegians on the balmy May air came an ominous sound:</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Woof! Bow-wow-wow! Woof!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, fellows!" urged Butch Brewster. "We'll jog across
+old Bildad's<br>
+orchard and seize some cherries&mdash;the old pirate can't catch
+us, for we are<br>
+attired for sprinting. Don't they look good?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing stirring!" declared Hicks, slangily, but vehemently,
+as he stopped<br>
+short in his stride. "Old Bildad has got a bulldog what am as big
+as the<br>
+New York City Hall. He had it on the campus last month, you know!
+Not for<br>
+mine! I don't go near that house, or swipe no cherries from his
+trees. If<br>
+you wish to shuffle off this mortal coil, drive right ahead, but
+I will<br>
+await your return here."</p>
+
+<p>T, Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, dread of dogs, of all sizes, shapes,
+pedigrees,<br>
+and breeds, was well known to old Bannister; hence, the
+Heavy-weights now<br>
+jeered him unmercifully. Old "Bildad," as the taciturn recluse
+was called,<br>
+who lived like a hermit and owned a rich farm, did own a massive
+bulldog,<br>
+and a sight of his cruel jaws was a "No Trespass" sign. With
+great<br>
+forethought, when cherries began to ripen, the farmer had brought
+Caesar<br>
+Napoleon to the campus, exhibited him to the awed youths, and
+said, "My<br>
+cherries be for <i>sale</i>, not to be <i>stole</i>!" which
+object lesson, brief as<br>
+it was, to date, had seemed to have the desired effect.
+Yet&mdash;here was Butch<br>
+proposing that they literally thrust their heads, or other
+portions of<br>
+their anatomies, into the jaws of death!</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Bunch Bingham at last, "I tell you what; we'll
+jog up to the<br>
+house and ask old Bildad to <i>sell</i> us some cherries; we can
+pay him when he<br>
+comes to the campus with eggs to sell, Come along. Hicks, I'll
+beard the<br>
+bulldog in his kennel."</p>
+
+<p>So, dragged along by the bulky hammer-throwers and
+shot-putters, the<br>
+protesting T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., in mortal terror of Caesar
+Napoleon, and<br>
+the other canine guardians of old Bildad's property, progressed
+up the lane<br>
+toward the house.</p>
+
+<p>"I got a hunch," said the reluctant Hicks, sadly, "that things
+ain't<br>
+a-comin' out right! In the words of the immortal
+Somebody-Or-Other, 'This<br>
+'ere ain't none o' <i>my</i> doin'; it's a-bein' thrust on me!'
+All right, my<br>
+comrades, I'll be the innocent bystander, but heed me&mdash;look
+out for the<br>
+bulldog!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XVI</p>
+
+<p>THANKS TO CAESAR NAPOLEON</p>
+
+<p>The Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, towing the mosquito-like
+T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., advanced on the stronghold of old Bildad, so named
+because he<br>
+was a pessimistic Job's comforter, like Bildad, the Shuhite, of
+old&mdash;like<br>
+a flock of German spies reconnoitering Allied trenches. Hearing
+the house,<br>
+with Butch and Beef holding the helpless, but loudly protesting
+Hicks, who<br>
+would fain have executed what may mildly be termed a strategic
+retreat, big<br>
+Tug Cardiff boldly marched, in close formation, toward the door,
+when the<br>
+portal suddenly flew open.</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Let go, Butch&mdash;there's the
+dog!"</p>
+
+<p>Amid ferocious howls from Caesar Napoleon, and alarmed
+protests from the<br>
+paralyzed Hicks, who could not have run, with his wobbly knees,
+had he<br>
+been set free by his captors, old Bildad, towed from the house by
+Caesar<br>
+Napoleon, who strained savagely at the leash until his face
+bulged, burst<br>
+upon the scene with impressive dramatic effect! It was difficult
+to decide,<br>
+without due consideration, which was the more interesting.
+Bildad, a huge,<br>
+gnarled old Viking, with matted gray hair, bushy eyebrows, a
+flowing beard,<br>
+and leathery face, a fierce-looking giant, was appalling to
+behold, but so<br>
+was Caesar Napoleon, an immense bulldog, cruel, bloodthirsty, his
+massive<br>
+jaws working convulsively, his ugly fangs gleaming, as he set his
+great<br>
+body against the leash, and gave evidence of a sincere desire to
+make free<br>
+lunch of the Bannister youths. As Buster Brown afterward stated,
+"Neither<br>
+one would take the booby prize at a beauty show, but at that, the
+bulldog<br>
+had a better chance than Bildad!" T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., let it
+be<br>
+recorded, could not have qualified as a judge, since his
+undivided<br>
+attention was awarded to Caesar Napoleon!</p>
+
+<p>"What d'ye want round here, ye rapscallions?" demanded Bildad,
+courteously,<br>
+holding the savage bulldog with one hand, and constructing a
+ponderous<br>
+fist with the other, "Hike&mdash;git off'n my land, y'hear? Git,
+er Caesar<br>
+Napoleon'll git holt o' them scanty duds ye got on!"</p>
+
+<p>"We want to&mdash;to buy some cherries, Mr.&mdash;Mr. Bildad!"
+explained Bunch<br>
+Bingham, edging away nervously. "We won't steal any, honest, sir.
+Well pay<br>
+you for them the very next time you come to the campus with milk
+and eggs."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho! Ho!" roared old Bildad, piratically, his colossal body
+shaking, "A<br>
+likely tale, lads&mdash;an' when I come for my money, ye'll jeer
+me off the<br>
+campus, an' tell me to whistle for it! Off my
+land&mdash;<i>git,</i> an' don't let me<br>
+cotch ye on it inside o' two minutes, or I'll let Caesar Napoleon
+make a<br>
+meal off'n yer bones&mdash;<i>git</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>To express it briefly, they got. T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., not
+standing on<br>
+the order of his going, set off at a sprint that, while it might
+have<br>
+caused Ted Meredith to lose sleep, also aroused in Caesar
+Napoleon an<br>
+overwhelming desire to take out after the fugitive youth, so that
+Mr.<br>
+Bildad was forced to exert his vast strength to hold the massive
+bulldog.<br>
+Butch, Beef, Hefty, Tug, Buster, Bunch, Pudge, and Biff, a
+pachydermic<br>
+crew, awed by Caesar Napoleon's bloodthirsty actions, jogged off
+in the<br>
+wake of Hicks, who confidently expected to hear the bulldog
+giving tongue,<br>
+on his trail, at every second.</p>
+
+<p>Another lane, making in from a road making a cross-roads with
+the one<br>
+from which they came to Bildad's house, ran alongside the orchard
+for two<br>
+hundred yards, inside the fence; at its end was a high roadgate.
+At<br>
+what they decided was a safe distance from the "war zone,"
+the<br>
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade, and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the
+latter<br>
+forcibly restrained from widening the margin between him and
+peril, held a<br>
+council on preparedness.</p>
+
+<p>"The old pirate!" stormed Butch Brewster, gazing back to where
+the vast<br>
+figure of old Bildad, striding toward the house, towered. "We
+can't let him<br>
+get away with that, fellows. I'll have some of his cherries now,
+or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no&mdash;<i>don't</i>, Butch!" chattered Hicks, whose
+dread of dogs amounted to<br>
+an obsession. "He can still see us, and if you leave the lane, he
+will send<br>
+Caesar Napoleon after us! Oh, <i>don't</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Butch Brewster, evidently wrathful at being balked, strode
+from the<br>
+path, or lane, of virtue, toward a cherry-tree, whose red fruit
+hung<br>
+temptingly low, and his example was followed by every one of the
+Brigade,<br>
+leaving the terrified Hicks to wait in the lane, where, because
+of his<br>
+alarm, he had no time to wonder at the bravado of his behemoth
+comrades.<br>
+However, finding that Bildad had disappeared, and believing he
+had taken<br>
+Caesar Napoleon into the house, the sunny Hicks, who was far from
+a coward<br>
+otherwise, but who had an unreasonable dread of dogs, little or
+big, was<br>
+about to wax courageous, and join his team-mates, when a wild
+shout burst<br>
+from Pudge Langdon:</p>
+
+<p>"Run, fellows&mdash;<i>run</i>! Bildad's put the bulldog on
+us! Here comes&mdash;Caesar<br>
+Napoleon&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>With a blood-chilling "Woof! Woof!" steadily sounding louder,
+nearer,<br>
+a streak of color shot across the orchard, from the house, toward
+the<br>
+affrighted Brigade, while old Bildad's hoarse growl shattered the
+echoes<br>
+with "Take 'em out o' here, Nap&mdash;chaw 'em up, boy!" For a
+startled second,<br>
+the youths stared at the on-rushing body, shooting toward them
+through the<br>
+orchard-grass at terrific speed, and then:</p>
+
+<p>"Run!" howled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., terror providing him
+with wings, as<br>
+per proverb. Down the lane, at a pace that would have done credit
+to Barney<br>
+Oldfield in his Blitzen Benz, the mosquito-like youth sprinted
+madly, and<br>
+ever, closer, closer on his trail, sounded that awful "Woof!
+Woof!" from<br>
+Caesar Napoleon, who, as Hicks well knew, was acting with full
+authority<br>
+from Bildad! He heard, as he fled frantically, the excited shouts
+of his<br>
+comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"Beat it, Hicks&mdash;he's right after you&mdash;run!
+Run!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jump the fence&mdash;he can't get you then&mdash;jump!"</p>
+
+<p>"He's right on your trail, Hicks&mdash;<i>sprint</i>, old
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Make the fence, old man&mdash;<i>jump</i> it&mdash;and you're
+<i>safe</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>The terrible truth dawned on the frightened youth, as he
+desperately<br>
+sprinted: the innocent bystander always gets hurt. He had
+protested against<br>
+the theft of Bildad's cherries, and naturally, the bulldog had
+kept after<br>
+<i>him</i>! But it was too late to stop, for the old adage was
+extremely<br>
+appropriate, "He who hesitates is lost." He must <i>make</i> that
+road-gate, and<br>
+tumble over it, in some fashion, or be torn to shreds by Caesar
+Napoleon,<br>
+the savage dog that the cruel Bildad had sent after the
+youths.</p>
+
+<p>Nearer loomed the road-gate, appallingly high. Closer sounded
+the panting<br>
+breath of the ferocious Caesar Napoleon, and his incessant
+"Woof-woof!"<br>
+became louder. It seemed to the desperate Hicks that the bulldog
+was at his<br>
+heels, and every instant he expected to feel those sharp teeth
+take hold of<br>
+his anatomy! Once, the despairing youth imitated Lot's wife and
+turned his<br>
+head. He saw a body streaking after him, gaining at every jump,
+also he<br>
+lost speed; so thereafter, he conscientiously devoted his every
+energy to<br>
+the task in hand, that of making the gate, and getting over it,
+before<br>
+Caesar Napoleon caught his quarry!</p>
+
+<p>At last, the road-gate, at least ten feet high, to Hicks'
+fevered<br>
+imagination, came so close that a quick decision was necessary,
+for Caesar<br>
+Napoleon, also, was in the same zone, and in a few seconds he
+would<br>
+overhaul the fugitive. T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., realizing that a
+second<br>
+lost, perhaps, might prove fatal to his peace of mind,
+desperately resolved<br>
+to dash at the gate, and jump; if he succeeded even in striking
+somewhere<br>
+near the top, and falling over, he would not care, for the
+bulldog would<br>
+not follow him off Bildad's land. From his comrades, far in the
+rear, came<br>
+the chorus:</p>
+
+<p>"Jump, Hicks! He's right on your heels!"</p>
+
+<p>Like the immortal Light Brigade, Hicks had no time to reason
+about<br>
+anything. His but to jump or be bitten summed up the situation.
+So, with<br>
+a last desperate sprint, a quick dash, he left the
+ground&mdash;luckily, the<br>
+earth was hard, giving him a solid take-off, and he got a
+splendid spring.<br>
+As he arose In air, al! the training and practicing for form
+stayed with<br>
+him, and instinctively he turned, writhed, and kicked&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>For a fleeting second, he saw the top of the gate beneath his
+body, and<br>
+he felt a thrill as he beheld twisted strands of barbed wire,
+cruel and<br>
+jagged, across it; then, with a great sensation of joy, he knew
+that he<br>
+had cleared the top, and a second later, he landed on the ground,
+in the<br>
+country road, in a heap.</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., that sunny-souled, happy-go-lucky,
+indolent youth,<br>
+for once in his care-free campus career aroused to strenuous
+action,<br>
+scrambled wildly to his feet, and forcibly realized the truth
+of<br>
+Longfellow's, "And things are not-what they seem!" Instead of
+the<br>
+ferocious, bloodthirsty bulldog, Caesar Napoleon, a huge,
+half-grown<br>
+St. Bernard pup gamboled inside the gate, frisking about
+gleefully, and<br>
+exhibiting, even so that Hicks, with all his innate dread of
+dogs, could<br>
+understand it, a vast friendliness. In fact, he seemed trying to
+say,<br>
+"That's fun. Come on and play with me some more!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hey, fellows," shrieked the relieved Hicks, "that ain't
+Caesar Napoleon!<br>
+Why, he just wanted to play."</p>
+
+<p>Bewildered, the members of the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade
+of the<br>
+Bannister College track squad rushed on the scene. To their
+surprise, they<br>
+found not a savage bulldog, but a clumsy, good-natured St.
+Bernard puppy,<br>
+who frisked wildly about them, groveled at their feet, and put
+his huge<br>
+paws on them, with the playfulness of a juvenile elephant.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it <i>isn't</i> Nappie, for a fact!" gasped Butch. "Oh,
+I am so glad<br>
+that old Bildad wasn't mean enough to put the bulldog after us,
+for he is<br>
+dangerous. He scared us, though, and put this pup on our trail.
+He wanted<br>
+to play, and he thought it all a game, when Hicks fled. Oho! What
+a joke on<br>
+Hicks."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care!" grinned Hicks, thus siding with the famous Eva
+Tanguay.<br>
+"You fellows were fooled, too! You were too <i>scared</i> to run,
+and if it had<br>
+been Caesar Napoleon, I'd have saved your worthless lives by
+getting him<br>
+after me! I'll bet Bildad is snickering now, the old reprobate!
+Why, Tug,<br>
+are you <i>crazy</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Cardiff, indeed, gave indications of lunacy. He marched up
+to the<br>
+road-gate, and stood close to it, so that the barbed wire top was
+even with<br>
+his hair; then he backed off, and gazed first at the gate, then
+at the<br>
+bewildered Hicks, while he grinned at the dazed squad in a
+Cheshire cat<br>
+style.</p>
+
+<p>"Measure it, someone!" he shouted. "I am nearly six feet tall,
+and it comes<br>
+even with the top of my dome! Can't you see, you brainless
+imbeciles, Hicks<br>
+cleared it."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait for me here!" howled big Butch Brewster, climbing the
+fence and<br>
+starting down the road at a pace that did credit even to that
+fast<br>
+two-miler. The Brigade, In the absence of their leader, tried to
+estimate<br>
+the height of the gate, and Hicks, gazing at its barbed-wire
+top,<br>
+shuddered. The St. Bernard pup, having caused T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., for<br>
+once in his indolent life to exert every possible ounce of energy
+in his<br>
+splinter-frame, groveled at his feet, and strove to express his
+boundless<br>
+joy at their presence.</p>
+
+<p>Butch Brewster, in fifteen minutes, returned, panting and
+perspiring,<br>
+bearing a tape-measure, borrowed at the next farm-house. With all
+the<br>
+solemnity of a sacred rite being performed, the youths waited, as
+Butch and<br>
+Tug, holding the tape taut, carefully measured from the ground to
+the top<br>
+of the barbed wire on the gate. Three times they did this, and
+then, with<br>
+an expression of gladness on his honest countenance, Butch hugged
+the<br>
+dazed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., while Tug Cardiff howled, "Now for
+the<br>
+Intercollegiates and your track B, Hicks! You <i>can</i> do
+five-ten in the<br>
+meet, for Coach Brannigan said you could dear it, if only you did
+it<br>
+<i>once</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;what do you mean, Tug?" quavered Hicks, not daring
+to allow himself<br>
+to believe the truth. "You&mdash;you surely don't
+mean&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean, that now you <i>know</i> you can jump that high,"
+boomed Tug, executing<br>
+a weird dance of exultation, In which, the Brigade joined, until
+it<br>
+resembled a herd of elephants gone insane, "for you have done
+it&mdash;allowing<br>
+for the sag, and everything, that gate is just five feet, ten
+inches high,<br>
+and&mdash;<i>you cleared it</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies and gentlemen&mdash;Hicks, of Bannister, is about to
+high jump! Hicks<br>
+and McQuade, of Hamilton, are tied for first place at five feet
+eight<br>
+inches! McQuade has failed three times at five-ten! Hicks' third
+and last<br>
+trial! Height of bar&mdash;five feet ten inches!"</p>
+
+<p>This time, however, it was not big Tug Cardiff, imitating a
+Ballyhoo<br>
+Bill, and inciting the Bannister youths to hilarity at the
+expense of the<br>
+sunny-souled T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.; it was the Official
+Announcer at the<br>
+Annual State Intercollegiate Field and Track Championships, on
+Bannister<br>
+Field, and his announcement aroused a tumult of excitement in the
+Bannister<br>
+section of the stands, as well as among the Gold and Green
+cinder-path<br>
+stars.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Hicks, old man!" urged Butch Brewster, who, with a
+dozen fully<br>
+as excited comrades of the cheery Hicks, surrounded that
+splinter-athlete.<br>
+"It's positively your last chance to win your track B, or your
+letter in<br>
+any sport, and please your Dad! If they lower the bar, and you
+two jump off<br>
+the tie, McQuade's endurance will bring him out the winner."</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>can</i> clear five-ten!" encouraged Bunch Bingham.
+"You did it once,<br>
+when you believed Caesar Napoleon was after you. Just summon up
+that much<br>
+energy now, and clear that bar! Once over, the event and your
+letter are<br>
+won! Oh, if we only had that bulldog here, to sick on you."</p>
+
+<p>Sad to chronicle, the score-board of the Intercollegiates
+recorded the<br>
+results of the events, so far, thus:</p>
+
+<p>    HAMILTON ............35 BALLARD .............20 BANNISTER
+...........28</p>
+
+<p>It was the last event, and even did Hicks win the high-jump,
+McQuade's<br>
+second place would easily give old Ham. the Championship. Hence,
+knowing<br>
+that victory was not booked for an appearance on the Gold and
+Green<br>
+banners, the Bannister youths, wild for the lovable, popular
+Hicks to win<br>
+his Bs vociferously pulled for him:</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Hicks&mdash;up and over, old man&mdash;it's
+<i>easy</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jump, you Human Grass-Hopper&mdash;you can do it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now or never, Hicks! One big jump does the work!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sick Caesar Napoleon on him, Coach; he'll clear it then!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., casting aside that flamboyant
+bathrobe, for what he<br>
+believed was the last athletic event of his campus career, stood
+gazing at<br>
+the cross-bar. One superhuman effort, a great explosion of all
+his energy,<br>
+such as he had executed when he cleared the gate, thinking Caesar
+Napoleon<br>
+was after him, and the event was won! He <i>had</i> cleared that
+height, it was<br>
+within his power. If he failed, as Butch said, the bar would be
+lowered,<br>
+and then raised until one or the other missed once. McQuade, with
+his<br>
+superior strength and endurance, must inevitably win, but as he
+had just<br>
+missed on his third trial at five-ten, if Hicks cleared that
+height on<br>
+<i>his</i> final chance, the first place was his.</p>
+
+<p>"And my B!" murmured Hicks, tensing his muscles. "Oh, won't my
+Dad be<br>
+happy? It will help him to realize some of his ambition, when I
+show him my<br>
+track letter! It is positively my last chance, and I <i>must</i>
+clear it."</p>
+
+<p>With a vast wave of determined confidence inundating his very
+being, Hicks<br>
+started for the bar; after those first, peculiar, creeping steps,
+he had<br>
+just started his gallop, when he heard Tug Cardiff's
+<i>basso</i>, magnified by<br>
+a megaphone, roared:</p>
+
+<p>"All together, fellows&mdash;<i>let 'er go</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Then, just as Hicks dug his spikes into the earth, in that
+short, mad<br>
+sprint that gives the jumper his spring, just as he reached the
+take-off,<br>
+a perfect explosion of noise startled him, and he caught a sound
+that<br>
+frightened him, tensed as he was:</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Bow! Wow! Woof! Woof! Woof! Look out, Hicks,
+Caesar Napoleon<br>
+is after you!"</p>
+
+<p>Psychology Is inexplicable. Ever afterward, Hicks' comrades of
+that<br>
+cross-country run averred strenuously that their roaring
+through<br>
+megaphones, in concert, imitating Caesar Napoleon's savage bark
+at the<br>
+psychological moment, flung the mosquito-like youth clear of the
+cross-bar<br>
+and won him the event and his B. Hicks, however, as fervidly
+denied this<br>
+statement, declaring that he would have won, anyhow, because he
+had<br>
+summoned up the determination to do it! So it can not be stated
+just what<br>
+bearing on his jump the plot of Butch Brewster really had. In
+truth, that<br>
+behemoth had entertained a wild idea of actually hiring old
+Bildad and<br>
+Caesar Napoleon to appear at the moment Hicks started for his
+last trial,<br>
+but this weird scheme was abandoned!</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes later, when T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., had
+escaped from the<br>
+riotous Bannister students, delirious with joy at the victory of
+the<br>
+beloved youth, the Heavy-Weight-White-Hope Brigade, capturing
+the<br>
+grass-hopper Senior, gave him a shock second only to that which
+he had<br>
+experienced when first he believed Caesar Napoleon was on his
+trail.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps our barking didn't make you jump it!" said Beef
+McNaughton, when<br>
+Hicks indignantly denied that he had been scared over the
+cross-bar, "but<br>
+indirectly, old man, we helped you to win! If we had not put up a
+hoax on<br>
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A <i>hoax</i>?" queried the surprised Hicks. "What do you
+mean&mdash;hoax?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was all a frame-up!" grinned Butch Brewster, triumphantly.
+"We paid old<br>
+Bildad five dollars to play his part, and as an actor, he has
+Booth and<br>
+Barrymore backed off the stage! We got Coach Brannigan to send
+you along<br>
+with us on the cross-country jog, and your absurd dread of dogs,
+Hicks,<br>
+made it easy! Bildad, per instructions, produced Caesar Napoleon,
+and<br>
+scared you. Then, with a telescope, he watched us, and when I
+gave the<br>
+signal, he let loose Bob, the harmless St. Bernard pup, on our
+trail.</p>
+
+<p>"The pup, as he always does, chased after strangers, ready to
+play. We<br>
+yelled for you to run, and you were so <i>scared</i>, you insect,
+you didn't<br>
+wait to see the dog. Even when you looked back, in your alarm,
+you didn't<br>
+know it was not Caesar Napoleon, for his grim visage was seared
+on your<br>
+brain&mdash;I mean, where your brain ought to be! And even had
+you seen it<br>
+wasn't the bulldog, you would have been frightened, all the same.
+But I<br>
+confess, Hicks, when you sailed over that high gate, it was one
+on <i>us</i>."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., drew a deep breath, and then a
+Cheshire cat grin<br>
+came to his cherubic countenance. So, after all, it had been a
+hoax; there<br>
+had not been any peril. No wonder these behemoths had so
+courageously taken<br>
+the cherries! But, beyond a doubt, the joke <i>had</i> helped him
+to win his<br>
+B. It had shown him he could clear five feet, ten inches, for he
+had done<br>
+it&mdash;and, in the meet, when the crucial moment came, the
+knowledge that he<br>
+<i>had</i> jumped that high, and, therefore, could do it,
+helped&mdash;where the<br>
+thought that he never had cleared it would have dragged him down.
+He had at<br>
+last won his B, a part of his beloved Dad's great ambition was
+realized,<br>
+and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth that sunny-souled,
+irrepressible<br>
+youth, swaggering a trifle, "It was my mighty will-power, my
+terrific<br>
+determination, that took me over the cross-bar, and
+not&mdash;<i>not</i> your<br>
+imitation of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Woof! Woof! Woof!" roared the
+"Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-Brigade" in<br>
+thunderous chorus. "Sick him&mdash;Caesar Napoleon&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XVII</p>
+
+<p>HICKS MAKES A RASH PROPHECY</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Butch! Atta boy&mdash;some fin, old top! Say, you
+Beef&mdash;you're asleep<br>
+at the switch. What time do you want to be called? More pep
+there,<br>
+Monty&mdash;bust that little old bulb, Roddy! Aw, rotten! Say,
+Ballard, your<br>
+playing will bring the Board of Health down on you&mdash;why
+don't you bring<br>
+your first team out? Umpire? What&mdash;do you call that an
+umpire? Why, he's<br>
+a highway robber, a bandit. Put a 'Please Help the Blind' sign on
+that<br>
+hold-up artist!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, captain of the Bannister College baseball
+squad,<br>
+navigating down the third-floor corridor of Bannister Hall, the
+Senior<br>
+dormitory, laden with suitcases, bat-bags, and other impedimenta,
+as Mr.<br>
+Julius Caesar says, and vastly resembling a bell-hop in action,
+paused in<br>
+sheer bewilderment on the threshold of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s,
+cozy room.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks!" stormed the bewildered Butch, wrathfully, "what in
+the name of Sam<br>
+Hill <i>are</i> you doing? Are you crazy, you absolutely insane
+lunatic? This<br>
+is a study-hour, and even if <i>you</i> don't possess an
+intellect, some of the<br>
+fellows want to exercise their brains an hour or so! Stop that
+ridiculous<br>
+action."</p>
+
+<p>The spectacle Butch Brewster beheld was indeed one to paralyze
+that<br>
+pachydermic collegian, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., the
+sunny-souled,<br>
+irrepressible Senior, danced madly about on the tiger-skin rug in
+midfloor,<br>
+evidently laboring under the delusion that he was a lunatical
+Hottentot at<br>
+a tribal dance; he waved his arms wildly, like a signaling
+brakeman, or<br>
+howled through a big megaphone, and about his toothpick structure
+was<br>
+strung his beloved banjo, on which the blithesome youth twanged
+at times an<br>
+accompaniment to his jargon:</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Skeet, take a lead (<i>plunkety-plunk</i>!) Say,
+d'ye wanta marry<br>
+first base&mdash;divorce yourself from that sack!
+(<i>plunk-plunk</i>!) Oh, you<br>
+bonehead&mdash;steal&mdash;you won't get arrested for it! Hi! Yi!
+Ouch, Butch! Oh,<br>
+I'll be good&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, the indignant Butch abruptly terminated T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr.'s, noisy monologue by seizing that splinter-youth firmly by
+the scruff<br>
+of the neck and forcibly hurling him on the davenport. Seeing his
+loyal<br>
+class-mate's resemblance to a Grand Central Station
+baggage-smasher, the<br>
+irrepressible Senior forthwith imitated a hotel-clerk:</p>
+
+<p>"Front!" howled the grinning Hicks, to an imaginary bellboy,
+"Show this<br>
+gentleman to Number 2323! Are you alone, sir, or just by
+yourself? I think<br>
+you will like the room-it faces on the coal-chute, and has hot
+and cold<br>
+folding-doors, and running water when the roof leaks! The bed is
+made once<br>
+a week, regularly, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you Infinitesimal Atom of Nothing!" growled big Butch,
+ominously.<br>
+"What were you doing, creating all that riot, as I came down the
+corridor?<br>
+What's the main idea, anyway, of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Heed, friend of my campus days," chortled the graceless
+Hicks, keeping<br>
+a safe distance from his behemoth comrade, "tomorrow-your
+baseball<br>
+aggregation plays Ballard College, at that knowledge-factory, for
+the<br>
+Championship of the State. Because nature hath endowed me with
+the<br>
+Herculean structure of a Jersey mosquito, I am developing a
+56-lung-power<br>
+voice, and I need practice, as I am to be the only student-rooter
+at the<br>
+game tomorrow! Q.E.D.! And as for any Bannister student, except
+perhaps<br>
+Theophilus Opperdyke and Thor, desiring to investigate the
+interiors of<br>
+their lexicons tonight, I prithee, just periscope the
+campus."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you are right, Hicks!" grinned Butch Brewster, as he
+looked from<br>
+the window, down on an indescribably noisy scene. "For once, your
+riotous<br>
+tumult went unheard. Say, get your traveling-bag ready, and leave
+that<br>
+pestersome banjo behind, if you want to go with the nine!"</p>
+
+<p>Several members of the Gold and Green nine, embryo American
+and National<br>
+League stars, roosted on the Senior Fence between the Gymnasium
+and the<br>
+Administration Building, with, suitcases and bat-bags on the
+grass. In a<br>
+few minutes old Dan Flannagan's celebrated jitney-bus would
+appear in the<br>
+offing, coming to transport the Bannister athletes downtown to
+the station,<br>
+for the 9 P.M. express to Philadelphia. Incited by Cheer-Leaders
+Skeezicks<br>
+McCracken and Snake Fisher, several hundred youths encouraged the
+nine,<br>
+since, because of approaching final exams., they were barred by
+Faculty<br>
+order from accompanying the team to Ballard. In thunderous chorus
+they<br>
+chanted:</p>
+
+<p>  "One more Job for the undertaker!<br>
+  More work for the tombstone maker!<br>
+  la the local ceme<i>tery</i>, they are
+very&mdash;very&mdash;<i>very</i><br>
+  Busy on a brand-new grave for&mdash;Ballard!"</p>
+
+<p>As the lovable Hicks expressed it, "'Coming events cast their
+shadows<br>
+before.' Commencement overshadows our joyous campus existence!"
+However, no<br>
+Bannister acquaintance of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., could detect
+wherein the<br>
+swiftly approaching final separation from his Alma Mater had
+affected in<br>
+the least that happy-go-lucky, care-free, irrepressible youth. If
+anything,<br>
+it seemed that Hicks strove to fight off thoughts of the end of
+his golden<br>
+campus years, using as weapons his torturesome saengerfests, his
+Beefsteak<br>
+Busts down at Jerry's, and various other pastimes, to the vast
+indignation<br>
+of his good friend and class-mate, Butch Brewster, who tried
+futilely to<br>
+lecture him into the proper serious mood with which Seniors must
+sail<br>
+through Commencement!</p>
+
+<p>"You are a Senior, Hicks, a Senior!" Butch would explain
+wrathfully. "You<br>
+are popularly supposed to be dignified, and here you persist in
+acting like<br>
+a comedian in a vaudeville show! I suppose you intend to appear
+on the<br>
+stage, and, when handed your sheepskin, respond by twanging your
+banjo and<br>
+roaring a silly ballad."</p>
+
+<p>Yet, the cheery Hicks had been very busy, since that memorable
+day when,<br>
+thanks to Caesar Napoleon and the hoax of the
+Heavy-Weight-White-Hope-<br>
+Brigade of the track squad, he had cleared the cross-bar at
+five-ten,<br>
+and won the event and his white B! Mr. T. Haviland Hicks, Sr.,
+overjoyed<br>
+at his son's achievement, had sent him a generous check, which
+the youth<br>
+much needed, and had promised to be present at the annual
+Athletic<br>
+Association Meeting, at Commencement, when the B's were
+awarded<br>
+deserving athletes, which caused Hicks as much joy as the pink
+slip.<br>
+With his final study sprint for the Senior Finals, his duties as
+team-<br>
+manager of the baseball nine, his preparations for Commencement,
+his<br>
+social duties at the Junior Prom., and multifarious other
+details<br>
+coincident to graduation, the heedless Hicks had not found time
+to be<br>
+sorrowful at the knowledge that it soon would end, forever, that
+he must<br>
+say "Farewell, Alma Mater," and leave the campus and corridors of
+old<br>
+Bannister; yet soon even Hicks' ebullient spirits must fail,
+for<br>
+Commencement was a trifle over a week off.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, you lovable, heedless, irrepressible wretch," said Big
+Butch,<br>
+affectionately, as the two class-mates thrilled at the scene.
+"Does it<br>
+penetrate that shrapnel-proof concrete dome of yours that the
+Ballard game<br>
+tomorrow is the final athletic contest of my, and likewise your,
+campus<br>
+career at old Bannister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Similar thoughts has smote my colossal intellect, Butch!"
+responded the<br>
+bean-pole Hicks, gladsomely. "But&mdash;why seek to overshadow
+this joyous scene<br>
+with somber reflections? You-should-worry. You have annexed
+sufficient B's,<br>
+were they different, to make up an alphabet. You've won your
+letter on<br>
+gridiron, track, and baseball field, and you've been team-captain
+of<br>
+everything twice! Why, therefore, sheddest thou them crocodile
+tears?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not for myself, thou sunny-souled idler!" announced Butch,
+generously,<br>
+"But for <i>thee</i>! I prithee, since you pritheed me a few
+moments hence, let<br>
+that so-called colossal intellect of yours stride back along the
+corridors<br>
+of Time, until it reaches a certain day toward the close of our
+Freshman<br>
+year. Remember, you had made a hilarious failure of every
+athletic event<br>
+you tried-football, basketball, track, and baseball; you had just
+made a<br>
+tremendous farce of the Freshman-Sophomore track meet, and to me,
+your<br>
+loyal comrade, you uttered these rash words, 'Before I graduate
+from old<br>
+Bannister, I shall have won my B in three branches of sport!'</p>
+
+<p>"I reiterate and repeat, tomorrow's game with Ballard is the
+last chance<br>
+you will have. There is no possibility that you, with your
+well-known lack<br>
+of baseball ability, will get in the game, and&mdash;your track
+B, won in the<br>
+high-jump, is the only B you have won! Now, do you still maintain
+that you<br>
+will make good that rash vow?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Where there's a will, there's a way.' 'Never say die.'
+'While there's<br>
+life, there's hope.' 'Don't give up the ship.' 'Fight to the last
+ditch.'<br>
+'In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as
+<i>fail</i>,'"<br>
+quoth the irrepressible Hicks, all in a breath. "As long as there
+is an<br>
+infinitesimal fraction of a chance left, I repeat, just leave it
+to Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't got a chance in the world!" Butch assured him,
+consolingly.<br>
+"You did manage to get into one football game, for a minute, and
+you were a<br>
+'Varsity player that long. By sticking to it, you have won your
+track B in<br>
+the high-jump, thanks to your grass-hopper build, and we rejoice
+at your<br>
+reward! Your Dad is happy that you've won a B, so why not be
+sensible, and<br>
+cease this ridiculous talk of winning your B in <i>three</i>
+sports, when you<br>
+can see it is preposterously out of the question, absolutely
+impossible&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It was not that Butch. Brewster did not <i>want</i> his sunny
+classmate to win<br>
+his B in three sports, or that he would have failed to rejoice at
+Hicks'<br>
+winning the triple honor. Had such a thing seemed within the
+bounds of<br>
+possibility, Butch, big-hearted and loyal, would have been as
+happy as<br>
+Hicks, or his Dad. But what the behemoth athlete became wrathful
+at was the<br>
+obviously lunatical way in which the cheery Hicks, now that his
+college<br>
+years were almost ended, parrot-like repeated, "Oh, just leave it
+to<br>
+Hicks!" when he must know all hope was dead. In truth, T,
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., in pretending to maintain still that he would make good the
+rash<br>
+vow of his Freshman year, had no purpose but to arouse his
+comrade's<br>
+indignation; but Butch, serious of nature, believed there really
+lurked in<br>
+Hicks' system some germs of hope.</p>
+
+<p>"We never know, old top!" chuckled Hicks, though he was
+<i>sure</i> he could<br>
+never fulfill that promise, as he had not played three-fourths of
+a season<br>
+on both the football and the baseball teams, "Something may show
+up at the<br>
+last minute, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that moment, something evidently did show up, on the campus
+below, for<br>
+the enthusiastic students howled in: thunderous chorus, as the
+"Honk!<br>
+Honk!" of a Claxon was heard, "Here he comes! All together,
+fellows&mdash;the<br>
+Bannister yell for the nine&mdash;then for good old Dan
+Flannagan!"</p>
+
+<p>As Hicks and Butch watched from the window, old Dan
+Flannagan's jitney-bus,<br>
+to the discordant blaring of a horn, progressed up the driveway,
+even as it<br>
+had done on that night in September, when it transported to the
+campus<br>
+T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and Thor, the Prodigious Prodigy. Amid
+salvos of<br>
+applause from the Bannister youths, and blasts of the Claxon, old
+Dan<br>
+brought "The Dove" to a stop before the Senior Fence, and bowed
+to the<br>
+nine, grinning genially the while.</p>
+
+<p>"The car waits at the door, sir!" spoke T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr., touching<br>
+his cap after the fashion of an English butler, before seizing a
+bat-bag,<br>
+and his suit-case. "As team manager, I must attempt to force into
+Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth's dome how he and the five subs, are to travel on
+the C. N. &amp;<br>
+Q., to Eastminster, from Baltimore. Come on, Butch, we're
+off&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You are always off!" commented Butch, good-humoredly, as he
+seized his<br>
+baggage and followed the mosquito-like Hicks from the room,
+downstairs, and<br>
+out on the campus. Here the assembled youths, with yells, cheers,
+and songs<br>
+sandwiched between humorous remarks to Dan Flannagan, watched the
+thrilling<br>
+spectacle of the Gold and Green nine, with the Team Manager and
+five<br>
+substitutes, fifteen in all, squeeze into and atop of Dan
+Flannagan's<br>
+jitney-Ford.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me check you fellows off," said Hicks, importantly,
+peering into the<br>
+jitney, for he, as Team Manager, had to handle the traveling
+expenses.<br>
+"Monty Merriweather, Roddy Perkins, Biff Pemberton. Butch
+Brewster, Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth, Beef McNaughton, Cherub Challoner, Ichabod Crane,
+Don<br>
+Carterson; that is the regular nine, and are you five subs,
+present? O. K.<br>
+Skeet, climb out here a second."</p>
+
+<p>Little Skeet Wigglesworth, the brilliant short-stop, climbed
+out with<br>
+exceeding difficulty, and facing T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., he
+saluted in<br>
+military fashion. The team manager, consulting a timetable of the
+C. N.<br>
+&amp;.Q. railroad, fixed him with a stern look.</p>
+
+<p>"Skeet," he spoke distinctly, "now, <i>get
+this</i>&mdash;myself and eight regulars,<br>
+<i>nine</i> in all, will take the 9 P. M. express for
+Philadelphia, and stay<br>
+there all night. Tomorrow, at 8 A. M., we leave Broad Street
+Station for<br>
+Eastminster, arriving at 11 A. M. Now I have a lot of unused
+mileage on<br>
+the C. N. &amp; Q., and I want to use it up before Commencement.
+So, heed: you<br>
+want to go <i>via</i> Baltimore, to see your parents. You take
+the 9.20 P. M.<br>
+express tonight, to Baltimore, and go from that city in the
+morning, to<br>
+Eastminster, on the C. N, &amp; Q.&mdash;it's the only road. And
+take the five subs<br>
+with you, to devour the mileage. Now, has that penetrated thy
+bomb-proof<br>
+dome?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure; you don't have to deliver a Chautauqua lecture, Hicks!"
+grinned<br>
+Skeet. "Say, what time does my train leave Baltimore, in the
+A.M., for<br>
+Eastminster?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see." T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., handing the mileage-books
+to the<br>
+shortstop, focused his intellect on the C. N. &amp; Q. timetable.
+"Oh, yes&mdash;you<br>
+leave Union Station, Baltimore, at 7:30 A.M., arriving at
+Eastminster at<br>
+noon; <i>it is the only train, you can get,</i> to make it in
+time for the game,<br>
+so remember the hour&mdash;7.30 A.M.! Here, stuff the timetable
+in your pocket."</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments, the team and substitutes had been jammed
+into old Dan<br>
+Flannagan's jitney, and the Bannister youths on the campus
+concentrated<br>
+their interest on the sunny Hicks, who, grinning &agrave; la
+Cheshire cat,<br>
+climbed atop of "The Dove," which old Dan was having as much
+trouble to<br>
+start as he had experienced for over twenty years with the late
+Lord<br>
+Nelson, his defunct quadruped. Seeing Hicks abstract a
+Louisville<br>
+Slugger from the bat-bag, the students roared facetious remarks
+at the<br>
+irrepressible youth:</p>
+
+<p>"Home-run Hicks&mdash;he made a home-run&mdash;<i>on a
+strike-out</i>!"&mdash;"Put Hicks in<br>
+the game, Captain Butch&mdash;he will win it."&mdash;"Watch
+Hicks&mdash;he'll pull<br>
+some <i>bonehead</i> play!"&mdash;"Bring home the Championship,
+but&mdash;lose Hicks<br>
+somewhere!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as the battered engine of the jit.
+yielded to<br>
+old Dan's cranking, and kindly consented to start, surveyed the
+yelling<br>
+students, seized a bat, and struck an attitude which he fatuously
+believed<br>
+was that of Ty Cobb, about to make a hit; taking advantage of a
+lull in the<br>
+tumult, the lovable youth howled at the hilarious crowd:</p>
+
+<p>"Just leave it to Hicks! I will win the game and the
+Championship, for my<br>
+Alma Mater, and&mdash;I'll do it by my headwork!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XVIII</p>
+
+<p>T. HAVILAND HICKS, JR'S. HEADWORK</p>
+
+<p>"Play Ball! Say, Bannister, are you <i>afraid</i> to
+play?"</p>
+
+<p>"Call the game, Mr. Ump.&mdash;make 'em play ball!"</p>
+
+<p>"Batter up! Forfeit the game to Ballard, Umpire!"</p>
+
+<p>"Lend 'em Ballard's bat-boy-to make a full nine!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Butch Brewster, his honest countenance, as a
+moving-picture<br>
+director would express it, "registering wrathful dismay,"
+lumbered toward<br>
+the Ballard Field concrete dug-out, in which the Gold and Green
+players<br>
+had entrenched themselves, while from the stands, the Ballard
+cohorts<br>
+vociferated their intense impatience at the inexplicable
+delay.</p>
+
+<p>"We have <i>got</i> to play," he raged, striding up and down
+before the bench.<br>
+"The game is ten minutes late now, and the crowd is restless! And
+here we<br>
+have only <i>eight</i> 'Varsity players, and no one to make the
+ninth&mdash;not even<br>
+a sub.! Oh, I could&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That brainless Skeet Wigglesworth!" ejaculated T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+who, arrayed like a lily of the field, reposed his
+splinter-structure on<br>
+the bench with his comrades. "In some way, he managed to
+<i>miss</i> that train<br>
+from Baltimore! They didn't come on the noon C, N. &amp; Q.
+train, and there<br>
+isn't another one until night. My directions were as plain as a
+German<br>
+war-map, and it beats me how Skeet got befuddled!"</p>
+
+<p>Gloom, as thick and abysmal as a London fog, hovered over the
+Bannister<br>
+dug-out. On the concrete bench, the seven Gold and Green
+athletes, Beef,<br>
+Monty, Roddy, Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, with Team Manager
+T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., stared silently at Captain Butch Brewster, who seemed
+in<br>
+imminent peril of exploding. Something probably never before
+heard of in<br>
+the annals of athletic history had happened. Bannister College,
+about to<br>
+play Ballard the big game for the State Championship, had lost a
+short-stop<br>
+and five substitutes, in some unfathomable manner, and it was
+impossible<br>
+to round up one other member of the Gold and Green baseball
+squad. True, a<br>
+hundred loyal alumni were in the stands, but only <i>bona
+fide</i> students, of<br>
+course, were eligible to play the game, and&mdash;the Faculty
+ruling had kept<br>
+them at old Bannister!</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes Ballard's Manager," spoke Beef McNaughton, as a
+brisk,<br>
+clean-cut youth advanced, a yellow envelope in hand. "Why, he has
+a<br>
+telegram. Do you suppose Skeet actually had <i>brains</i> enough
+to wire an<br>
+explanation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Telegram for Captain Brewster!" announced the Ballard
+collegian, giving<br>
+the message to that surprised behemoth. "It was sent in my
+care&mdash;collect,<br>
+and the sender, name of Wigglesworth, fired one to me personally,
+telling<br>
+me to deliver this one to Captain Butch Brewster, and collect
+from Team<br>
+Manager Hicks&mdash;he surely didn't bother to save money! I've
+been out of<br>
+town, and just got back to the campus; of course, the telegrams
+could not<br>
+be delivered to anyone but me, hence the delay."</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch, thanking the Ballard Team Manager, and assuring him
+that the<br>
+charges he had paid would be advanced to him after the game,
+ripped open<br>
+the yellow envelope, and drew out the message. Like a
+thunder-storm<br>
+gathering on the horizon, a dark expression came to good
+Butch's<br>
+countenance, and when he had perused the lengthy telegram, he
+transfixed<br>
+the startled and bewildered T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., with an angry
+glare:</p>
+
+<p>"Bonehead!" he raged, apparently controlling himself with a
+superhuman<br>
+effort. "Oh, you lunatic, you wretch,
+villain&mdash;you&mdash;<i>you</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>To the supreme amazement and dismay of the puzzled Hicks,
+Beef, next in<br>
+line, after <i>he</i> had scanned Skeet's telegram, followed
+Butch's example,<br>
+for <i>he</i> glowered at the perturbed youth, and heaped
+condemnations on his<br>
+devoted head. And so on down the line on the bench, until Monty,
+Roddy,<br>
+Biff, Ichabod, Don, and Cherub, reading the message, joined in
+gazing<br>
+indignantly at their gladsome Team Manager, who, as the eight
+arose <i>en<br>
+masse</i> and advanced on him, sought to flee the wrath to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"Safety first!" quoth T, Haviland Hicks, Jr. "'Mine not to
+reason why, mine<br>
+but to haste and fly,' or&mdash;be crushed! Ouch! Beef,
+Monty&mdash;have a heart!"</p>
+
+<p>Captured by Beef and Monty Merriweather, as he frantically
+scrambled up<br>
+the steps of the concrete dug-out, the grinning Hicks was held in
+the firm<br>
+grasp of that behemoth, Butch Brewster, aided by the skyscraper
+Ichabod,<br>
+while Cherub Challoner thrust the telegram before his eyes. In
+words of<br>
+fire that burned themselves into his brain&mdash;something his
+colleagues<br>
+denied he possessed&mdash;T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., saw the
+explanation of Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth's missing the train from Baltimore that A. M. Dazed,
+the sunny<br>
+youth read the message on which over-charges must be paid:</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks&mdash;you bonehead! The time-table of the C.N. &amp; Q.
+you gave me was an<br>
+old one&mdash;schedule revised two weeks ago! Train now leaves
+Balto. at 6.55<br>
+A.M.! When we got to station at 7.05 A.M. she had went! No train
+to Ballard<br>
+till night! I and subs, had to wire Bannister for money to get
+back on!<br>
+You mis-manager&mdash;the <i>head-work</i> you boasted of is
+boneheadwork! Pay the<br>
+charges on this, you brainless insect! I'll send it to Butch, for
+you'd<br>
+never show it to him if I sent it to you! Indignantly&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"SKEET."</p>
+
+<p>"Mis-manager is <i>right</i>!" seethed Captain Butch, for once
+in his campus<br>
+career really wrathy at the lovable Hicks. "We are in a
+fix&mdash;eight players,<br>
+and the crowd howling for the game to start. Oh, I could jump
+overboard,<br>
+and drag you with me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Bonehead! Bonehead!" chorused the Gold and Green players,
+indignantly.<br>
+"Gave Skeet an out-of-date time-table&mdash;never looked at the
+date! Let's drag<br>
+him out before the crowd, and announce to them his brilliant
+headwork!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Butch, "up against it," to employ a slightly slang
+expression,<br>
+gazed across Ballard Field. In the stands, the students
+responding<br>
+thunderously to their cheer-leaders' megaphoned requests, roared,
+"Play<br>
+ball! Play ball! Play ball!" Gay pennants and banners fluttered
+in the<br>
+glorious sunshine of the June day. It was a bright scene, but its
+glory<br>
+awakened no happiness in the heart of the Bannister leader, as
+his gaze<br>
+wandered to the somewhat flabbergasted expression on the cheery
+Hicks'<br>
+face. That inevitably sunny youth, however, managed to conjure up
+a faint<br>
+resemblance of his Cheshire cat grin, and following his usual
+habit of<br>
+letting nothing daunt his gladsome spirit, he croaked feebly:
+"Oh, just<br>
+leave it to Hicks! I will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Play the game!" thundered Butch, inspired. "Beef, see the
+umpire and say<br>
+we'll be ready as soon as we get Hicks into togs-show him the
+telegram, and<br>
+explain our delay! I'll shift Monty from the outfield to Skeet's
+job at<br>
+short, and put this diluted imitation of something human in the
+field, to<br>
+do his worst. Come to the field-house, you poor fish&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Butch, I can't&mdash;I just <i>can't</i>!" protested the
+alarmed Hicks,<br>
+helpless, as the big athlete towed him from the trench,
+"I&mdash;I can't play<br>
+ball, and I don't want to be shown up before all that mob! It's
+all right<br>
+at Bannister, in class-games, but&mdash;Oh, can't you play the
+game with <i>eight</i><br>
+fellows?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is just what we intend to do!" said Butch, with grim
+humor.<br>
+"But&mdash;we'll have a dummy in the ninth position, to make the
+people believe<br>
+we have a full nine! Cheer up, Hicks&mdash;'In the bright lexicon
+of youth<br>
+there ain't no such word as fail,' you say! As for your making a
+fool of<br>
+yourself, you haven't brains enough to be classed as one!
+Now&mdash;you'll pay<br>
+dearly for your bonehead play."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., as agitated as a
+<i>prima donna</i><br>
+making her d&eacute;but with the Metropolitan: Opera Company,
+decorated the<br>
+Bannister bench, arrayed in one of the substitutes' baseball
+suits. It<br>
+was too large for his splinter-structure, so that it flapped
+grotesquely,<br>
+giving him a startling resemblance to a scarecrow escaped from a
+cornfield.<br>
+With the thermometer of his spirits registering zero, the
+dismayed youth,<br>
+whose punishment was surely fitting the crime, heard the Umpire
+bellow:</p>
+
+<p>"Play ball! Batter up! Bannister at bat&mdash;Ballard in the
+field!"</p>
+
+<p>Hicks, that sunny-souled youth, had often daydreamed of
+himself in a big<br>
+game of baseball, for his college. He had vividly imagined a
+ninth inning<br>
+crisis, three of the enemy on base, two out, and a long fly, good
+for a<br>
+home-run, soaring over his head. How he had
+sprinted&mdash;back&mdash;back&mdash;and at<br>
+the last second, reached high in the air, grabbing the soaring
+spheroid,<br>
+and saving the game for his Alma Mater! Often, too, he had
+stepped up to<br>
+bat in the final frame, with two out, one on base, and Bannister
+a run<br>
+behind. With the vast crowd silent and breathless, he had
+walloped the<br>
+ball, over the left-field fence, and jogged around the bases,
+thrilling to<br>
+the thunderous cheers of his comrades. But now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oooo!" shivered Hicks, as though he had just stepped beneath
+an icy<br>
+shower-bath. "I wish I could run away. I just <i>know</i> they'll
+knock every<br>
+ball to me, and I couldn't catch one with a sheriff and
+posse!"</p>
+
+<p>However, since, despite the blithesome Hicks' lack of
+confidence, it was<br>
+that sunny Senior, after all, whom fate&mdash;or fortune,
+accordingly as<br>
+each nine viewed it&mdash;destined to be the hero of the
+Bannister-Ballard<br>
+Championship baseball contest, the game itself is shoved into
+such<br>
+insignificance that it can be briefly chronicled by recording the
+events<br>
+that led up to T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, self-prophesied
+"head-work."</p>
+
+<p>Without Skeet Wigglesworth at shortstop, with the futile Hicks
+in<br>
+right-field, and the confidence of the nine shaken, Captain Butch
+Brewster<br>
+and the Gold and Green players went into the big game, unable to
+shake off<br>
+the feeling that they would be defeated. And when Pitcher Don
+Carterson,<br>
+in his half of the frame, passed the first two Ballard batters,
+the belief<br>
+deepened to conviction. However, a fast double play and a long
+fly ended<br>
+the inning without damage, and Bannister, likewise, had failed to
+make an<br>
+impression on the score-board. In the second, Don promptly showed
+that he<br>
+was striving to rival the late Cy Morgan, of the Athletics, for
+he promptly<br>
+hit two batters and passed the third, whereupon, as
+sporting-writers<br>
+express it, he was "derricked" by Captain Butch.</p>
+
+<p>Placing the deposed twirler in left field, Captain Brewster,
+as a last<br>
+resort, believing the game hopelessly lost, with his star pitcher
+having<br>
+failed, and his relief slabmen, thanks to Hicks, mislaid <i>en
+route</i>, sent<br>
+out to the box one Ichabod Crane, brought in from the position
+given to<br>
+Don Carterson. This cadaverous, skyscraper Senior, who always
+announced,<br>
+himself as originating, "Back at Bedwell Center, Pa., where I
+come from&mdash;"<br>
+was well known to fame as the "Champion Horse-Shoe Pitcher of
+Bucks<br>
+County," but his baseball pitching was rather uncertain; like the
+girl in<br>
+the nursery jingle, Ichabod, as a twirler, "When he was good, he
+was very,<br>
+very good, and when he was wild, he was <i>horrid</i>!" Like
+Christy Mathewson,<br>
+after he had pitched a few balls, he knew whether or not he was
+in<br>
+shape for the game, and so did the spectators. With terrific
+speed and<br>
+bewildering curves, Ichabod would have made a star, but his
+wildness<br>
+prevented, and only on very rare days could he control the
+ball.</p>
+
+<p>Luckily for old Bannister's chances of victory and the
+Championship, this<br>
+was one of the elongated Ichabod's rare days. He ambled into the
+box, with<br>
+the bases full, and promptly struck out a batter. The next rolled
+to first,<br>
+forcing out the runner at home, while the third hitter under
+Ichabod's<br>
+r&eacute;gime drove out a long fly to center-field. Thus the game
+settled to one<br>
+of the most memorable contests that Ballard Field had ever
+witnessed, a<br>
+pitchers' battle between the awkward, bean-pole youth from
+"Bedwell Center,<br>
+Pa.," and Bob Forsythe, the crack Ballard twirler. It was a fight
+long<br>
+to be remembered, with hits as scarce as auks' eggs, and runs out
+of the<br>
+reckoning, for six innings.</p>
+
+<p>At the start of the seventh, with the Ballard rooters standing
+and<br>
+thundering, "The lucky seventh! Ballard&mdash;win the game in the
+lucky<br>
+seventh!" the score was 0-0. Only two hits had been made off
+Forsythe, of<br>
+Ballard, whose change of pace had the Bannister nine at his
+mercy, and<br>
+but three off Ichabod, who had superb control of his dazzling
+speed. T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., cavorting in right field, had made the only
+error of<br>
+the contest, dropping an easy fly that fell into his hands after
+he had run<br>
+bewilderedly in circles, when any good fielder could have stood
+still and<br>
+captured it; however, since he got the ball to second in time to
+hold the<br>
+runner at third, no harm resulted.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold 'em, Bannister, <i>hold</i> 'em!" entreated Butch
+Brewster, as they went<br>
+to the field at their end of the lucky seventh, not having
+scored. "Do your<br>
+best, Hicks, old man&mdash;never mind their Jokes. If you can't
+<i>catch</i><br>
+the ball, just get it to second, or first, without delay! Pitch
+ball,<br>
+Ichabod&mdash;three innings to hold 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>But it was destined to be the lucky seventh for Ballard. An
+error on a hard<br>
+chance, for Roddy Perkins, at third, placed a runner on first.
+Ichabod<br>
+struck out a hitter, and the runner stole second, aided somewhat
+by the<br>
+umpire. The next player flew out, sacrificing the runner to
+third; then&mdash;an<br>
+easy fly traveled toward the paralyzed T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+one that<br>
+anybody with the most infinitesimal baseball ability could have
+corralled,<br>
+as Butch said, "with his eyes blindfolded, and his hands tied
+behind him!"<br>
+But Hicks, who possessed absolutely <i>no</i> baseball talent,
+though he made<br>
+a desperate try, succeeded in doing an European juggling act for
+five<br>
+heartbreaking seconds, after which he let the law of gravity act
+on the<br>
+sphere, so that it descended to terra firma. Hence, the "Lucky
+Seventh"<br>
+ended with the score: Ballard, 1; Bannister, 0; and the Ballard
+cohorts in<br>
+a state bordering on lunacy!</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I've done it now&mdash;I've lost the game and the
+Championship!" groaned<br>
+the crushed Hicks, as he stumbled toward the Bannister bench.
+"First I made<br>
+that bonehead play, giving Skeet an old time-table I had on hand,
+and not<br>
+telling him to get one at the station. How was I to know the old
+railroad<br>
+would change the schedule, within two weeks of this game? And
+now&mdash;I've<br>
+made the error that gives Ballard the Championship. If I hadn't
+pulled that<br>
+boner, Skeet would be here, and the regular right-fielder would
+have had<br>
+that fly. What a glorious climax to my athletic career at old
+Bannister!"</p>
+
+<p>Hicks' comrades were too generous, or heartbroken, to condemn
+the sorrowful<br>
+youth, as he trailed to the dug-out, but the Ballard rooters had
+absolutely<br>
+no mercy, and they panned him in regulation style. In fact, all
+through<br>
+the game, Hicks expressed himself as being butchered by the fans
+to make a<br>
+Ballard holiday, for he struck out with unfailing regularity at
+bat, and<br>
+dropped everything in the field, so that the rooters jeered him,
+whenever<br>
+he stepped to the plate, and&mdash;it was quite different from
+the good-natured<br>
+ridicule of his comrades, back at old Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Hicks," said good Butch Brewster, brokenly,
+seeing how<br>
+sorrow-stricken his sunny classmate was, "We'll beat
+'em&mdash;yet! We bat this<br>
+inning, and in the ninth maybe someone will knock a home-run for
+us, and<br>
+tie the score."</p>
+
+<p>The eighth Inning was the lucky one for the Gold and Green.
+Monty<br>
+Merriweather opened with a clean two-base hit to left, and
+advanced to<br>
+third on Biff Pemberton's sacrifice to short. Butch, trying to
+knock a<br>
+home-run, struck out-&agrave; la "Cactus" Cravath in the World's
+Series; but the<br>
+lanky Ichabod, endeavoring to bunt, dropped a Texas-Leaguer over
+second,<br>
+and the score was tied, though the sky-scraper twirler was caught
+off base<br>
+a moment later. And, though Ballard fought hard in the last of
+the eighth,<br>
+Ichabod displayed big-league speed, and retired two hitters by
+the<br>
+strike-out route, while the third popped out to first.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>ninth</i> Inning!" breathed Beef McNaughton, picking
+up his Louisville<br>
+Slugger, as he strode to the plate. "Come on, boys&mdash;we will
+win the<br>
+Championship <i>right now</i>. Get one run, and Ichabod will hold
+Ballard one<br>
+more time!"</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the pachydermic Beef's grim attitude unnerved the
+wonderful Bob<br>
+Forsythe, for he passed that elephantine youth. However, he
+regained his<br>
+splendid control, and struck out Cherub Challoner on three
+pitched balls.<br>
+After this, it was a shame to behold the Ballard first-baseman
+drop the<br>
+ball, when Don Carterson grounded to third, and would have been
+thrown<br>
+out with ease&mdash;with two on base, and one out, Roddy Perkins
+made a sharp<br>
+single, on which the two runners advanced a base. Now, with the
+sacks<br>
+filled, and with only one out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It's all over!" mourned Captain Butch Brewster, rocking back
+and forth on<br>
+the bench. "Hicks&mdash;is&mdash;at&mdash;bat!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his bat wobbling, and his knees acting
+in a similar<br>
+fashion, refusing to support even that fragile frame, staggered
+toward the<br>
+plate, like a martyr. A tremendous howl of unearthly joy went up
+from the<br>
+stands, for Hicks had struck out every time yet.</p>
+
+<p>"Three pitched balls, Bob!" was the cry. "Strike him out! It's
+all over but<br>
+the shouting! He's scared to death, Forsythe&mdash;he can't hit a
+barn-door<br>
+with a scatter-gun! One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;out! Here's
+where Ballard wins the<br>
+Championship."</p>
+
+<p>Twice the grinning Bob Forsythe cut loose with blinding
+speed&mdash;twice the<br>
+extremely alarmed Hicks dodged back, and waved a feeble
+Chautauqua salute<br>
+at the ball he never even saw! Then&mdash;trying to "cut the
+inside corner" with<br>
+a fast inshoot, Forsythe's control wavered a trifle, and T.
+Haviland Hicks,<br>
+Jr., saw the ball streaking toward him! The paralyzed youth felt
+like a man<br>
+about to be shot by a burglar. He could feel the bail thud
+against him,<br>
+feel the terrific shock; and yet&mdash;a thought instinctively
+flashed on him,<br>
+he remembered, in a flash, what a tortured Monty Merriweather had
+shouted,<br>
+as he wobbled to bat:</p>
+
+<p>"Get a base on balls, or&mdash;if you can't <i>make</i> a
+hit&mdash;<i>get hit</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>If he got hit&mdash;it meant a run forced in, as the bases
+were full! That, in<br>
+all probability, would give old Bannister the Championship, for
+Ichabod was<br>
+invincible. It is not likely that the dazed Hicks thought all
+this out, and<br>
+weighed it against the agony of getting hit by Forsythe's speed.
+The truth<br>
+is, the paralyzed youth was too petrified by fear to dodge, and
+that before<br>
+he could avoid it, the speeding spheroid crashed against his
+noble brow<br>
+with a sickening impact.</p>
+
+<p>All went black before him, T, Haviland Hicks, Jr., pale and
+limp, crumpled,<br>
+and slid to the ground, senseless; therefore, he failed to hear
+the roar<br>
+from the Bannister bench, from the loyal Gold and Green rooters
+in the<br>
+stands, as big Beef lumbered across the plate with what proved
+later to be<br>
+the winning run. He did not hear the Umpire shout: "Take your
+base!"</p>
+
+<p>  "What's the matter with our Hicks&mdash;he's all right!<br>
+  What's the matter with our Hicks&mdash;he's all right!<br>
+  He was never a star in the baseball game,<br>
+  But he won the Championship just the same&mdash;<br>
+  What's the matter with our Hicks-he's all right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Honk! Honk!" Old Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus, rattling up the
+driveway,<br>
+bearing back to the Bannister campus the victorious Gold and
+Green nine,<br>
+and the State Intercollegiate Baseball Championship, though the
+hour was<br>
+midnight, found every student on the grass before the Senior
+Fence! Over<br>
+three hundred leather-lunged youths, aided by the Bannister Band,
+and every<br>
+known noise-making device, hailed "The Dove," as that unseaworthy
+craft<br>
+halted before them, with the baseball nine inside, and on top.
+However, the<br>
+terrific tumult stilled, as the bewildered collegians caught the
+refrain<br>
+from the exuberant players:</p>
+
+<p>  "He was never a star in the baseball game&mdash;<br>
+  But he won the Championship just the same&mdash;<br>
+  What's the matter with our Hicks&mdash;he's all right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks did what?" shrieked Skeezicks McCracken, voicing
+through a megaphone<br>
+the sentiment of the crowd. Captain Butch had simply telegraphed
+the final<br>
+score, so old Bannister was puzzled to hear the team lauding T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., who, still white and weak, with a bandage around his
+classic<br>
+forehead, maintained a phenomenal quiet, atop of "The Dove,"
+leaning<br>
+against Butch Brewster.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows," shouted Butch, despite Hicks' protest, rising to
+his feet on the<br>
+roof of the "jit."&mdash;"T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., today won the
+game and the<br>
+Championship! Listen&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The vast crowd of erstwhile clamorous youths stood spellbound,
+as Captain<br>
+Butch Brewster, in graphic sentences, described the
+game&mdash;Don Carterson's<br>
+failure, Ichabod's sensational pitching, Hicks' errors,
+and&mdash;the wonderful<br>
+manner in which the futile youth had won the Championship! As
+little Skeet<br>
+Wigglesworth and the five substitutes, who had returned that
+afternoon, had<br>
+spread the story of Hicks' bonehead play, old Bannister had
+turned out to<br>
+ridicule and jeer good-naturedly the sunny youth, but now they
+learned that<br>
+Hicks had been forced by his own mistake into the Big Game, and
+had won it!<br>
+Of course, his comrades knew it had been through no ability of
+his, but the<br>
+knowledge that he had been knocked senseless by Forsythe's great
+speed, and<br>
+had suffered so that his college might score, thrilled them.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with Hicks?" thundered Thor, he who at one
+time would<br>
+have called this riot foolishness, and forgetting that the nine
+had just<br>
+chanted the response to this query.</p>
+
+<p>"He's all right!" chorused the collegians, in ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's all right?" demanded John Thorwald, his blond head
+towering over<br>
+those of his comrades. To him, now, there was nothing silly about
+this<br>
+performance!</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!" came the shout, and the band fanfared,
+while the<br>
+exultant collegians shouted, sang, whistled, and created an
+indescribable<br>
+tumult with their noise-making devices. For five minutes the
+ear-splitting<br>
+din continued, a wonderful tribute to the lovable, popular youth,
+and then<br>
+it stilled so suddenly that the result was startling,
+for&mdash;T. Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., swaying on his feet arose, and stood on the roof of
+the "jit."</p>
+
+<p>With that heart-warming Cheshire cat grin on his cherubic
+countenance, the<br>
+irrepressible Hicks seized a Louisville Slugger, assumed a
+Home-Run Baker<br>
+batting pose, and shouted to his breathlessly waiting
+comrades:</p>
+
+<p>"Fellows, I vowed I would win that baseball game and the
+Championship for<br>
+my Alma Mater by my headwork! With the bases full, and the score
+a tie, the<br>
+Ballard pitcher hit me in the head with the ball, forcing in the
+run that<br>
+won for old Ballard&mdash;now, if that wasn't
+<i>headwork</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XIX</p>
+
+<p>BANNISTER GIVES HICKS A SURPRISE PARTY</p>
+
+<p>  "We have come to the close of our college days.<br>
+  Golden campus years soon must end;<br>
+  From Bannister we shall go our ways&mdash;<br>
+  And friend shall part from friend!<br>
+  On our Alma Mater now we gaze,<br>
+  And our eyes are filled with tears;<br>
+  For we've come to the close of our college days,<br>
+  And the end of our campus years!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., Bannister, '92; Yale, '96, and
+Pittsburgh<br>
+millionaire "Steel King," stood at the window of Thomas Haviland
+Hicks,<br>
+Jr.'s, room, his arm across the shoulders of that sunny-souled
+Senior, his<br>
+only son and heir. Father and son stood, gazing down at the
+campus. On the<br>
+Gym steps was a group of Seniors, singing songs of old Bannister,
+songs<br>
+tinged with sadness. Up to Hicks' windows, on the warm June:
+night, drifted<br>
+the 1916 Class Ode, to the beautiful tune, "A Perfect Day." Over
+before the<br>
+Science Hall, a crowd of joyous alumni laughed over narratives of
+their<br>
+campus escapades. Happy undergraduates, skylarking on the
+campus,<br>
+celebrated the end of study, and gazed with some awe at the
+Seniors, in cap<br>
+and gown, suddenly transformed into strange beings, instead of
+old comrades<br>
+and college-mates.</p>
+
+<p>"'The close of our college days, and the end of our campus
+years&mdash;!'"<br>
+quoted Mr. Hicks, a mist before his eyes as he gazed at the
+scene. "In a<br>
+few days, Thomas, comes the final parting from old
+Bannister&mdash;I know it<br>
+will be hard, for I had to leave the dear old college, and also
+Yale. But<br>
+you have made a splendid record in your studies, you have been
+one of<br>
+the most popular fellows here, and&mdash;you have vastly pleased
+your Dad, by<br>
+winning your B in the high-jump."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, last study-sprint was at an end, the
+final Exams.<br>
+of his Senior year had been passed with what is usually termed
+flying<br>
+colors; and to the whole-souled delight of the lovable youth, he
+and little<br>
+Theophilus Opperdyke, the Human Encyclopedia, had, as Hicks
+chastely<br>
+phrased it, "run a dead heat for the Valedictory!" So close had
+their<br>
+final averages been that the Faculty, after much consideration,
+decided to<br>
+announce at the Commencement exercises that the two Seniors had
+tied for<br>
+the highest collegiate honors, and everyone was satisfied with
+the verdict.<br>
+So, now it was all ended; the four years of study, athletics,
+campus<br>
+escapades, dormitory skylarking&mdash;the golden years of college
+life, were<br>
+about to end for 1919. Commencement would officially start on the
+morrow,<br>
+but tonight, in the Auditorium, would be held the annual
+Athletic<br>
+Association meeting, when those happy athletes who had won their
+B during<br>
+the year would have it presented, before the assembled
+collegians, by<br>
+one-time gridiron, track, and diamond heroes of old
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>And&mdash;the ecstatic Hicks would have his track B, his white
+letter, won in<br>
+the high-jump, thanks to Caesar Napoleon's assistance, awarded
+him by his<br>
+beloved Dad, the greatest all-round athlete that ever wore the
+Gold and<br>
+Green! Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., <i>en route</i> to New
+Haven and Yale in<br>
+his private car, "Vulcan," had reached town that day, together
+with other<br>
+members of Bannister College, Class of '92. They, as did all the
+old<br>
+grads., promptly renewed past memories and associations by riding
+up to<br>
+College Hill in Dan Flannagan's jitney-bus&mdash;a youthful,
+hilarious crowd of<br>
+alumni. Former students, alumni, parents of graduating Seniors,
+friends,<br>
+sweethearts&mdash;every train would bring its quota. The campus
+would again<br>
+throb and pulsate with that perennial
+quickening&mdash;Commencement. Three days<br>
+of reunions, Class Day exercises, banquets, and other events,
+then the<br>
+final exercises, and&mdash;T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., would be an
+alumnus!</p>
+
+<p>"It's like Theophilus told Thor, last fall, Dad," said the
+serious Hicks.<br>
+"You know what Shakespeare said: 'This thou perceivest, which
+makes thy<br>
+love more strong; To love that well which thou must leave ere
+long.' Now<br>
+that I soon shall leave old Bannister, I&mdash;I wish I had
+studied more, had<br>
+done bigger things for my Alma Mater! And for you, Dad, too; I've
+won a B,<br>
+but perhaps, had I trained and exercised more, I might have
+annexed another<br>
+letter&mdash;still; hello, what's Butch hollering&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, his pachydermic frame draped in his gown,
+and his<br>
+mortar-board cap on his head, for the Seniors were required to
+wear their<br>
+regalia during Commencement week, was bellowing through a
+megaphone, as he<br>
+stood on the steps of Bannister Hall, and Mr. Hicks, with his
+cheerful son,<br>
+listened:</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody&mdash;Seniors, Undergrads., Alumni&mdash;in the
+Auditorium at eight sharp!<br>
+We are going to give Mr. Hicks and T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., a
+surprise<br>
+party&mdash;don't miss the fun!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, just what does Butch mean, Dad?" queried the bewildered
+Senior.<br>
+"Something is in the wind. For two days, the fellows have had a
+secret<br>
+from me&mdash;they whisper and plot, and when I approach, loudly
+talk of<br>
+athletics, or Commencement! Say, Butch&mdash;Butch&mdash;I ain't
+a-comin' tonight,<br>
+unless you explain the mystery."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, you be, old sport!" roared Butch, from the campus,
+employing the<br>
+megaphone, "or you don't get your letter! Say, Hicks, one sweetly
+solemn<br>
+thought attacks me&mdash;old Bannister is puzzling <i>you</i>
+with a mystery, instead<br>
+of vice versa, as is usually the case."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Thomas," said Mr. Hicks, his face lighted by a
+humorous, kindly<br>
+smile, as he heard the storm of good-natured jeers at Hicks, Jr.,
+that<br>
+greeted Butch Brewster's fling, "I'll stroll downtown, and see if
+any of<br>
+my old comrades came on the night express. I'll see you at the
+Athletic<br>
+Association meeting, for I believe I am to hand you the B. I
+can't imagine<br>
+what this 'surprise party' is, but I don't suppose it will harm
+us. It will<br>
+surely be a happy moment, son, when I present you with the
+athletic letter<br>
+you worked so hard to win."</p>
+
+<p>When T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, beloved Dad had gone, his firm
+stride<br>
+echoing down the corridor, that blithesome, irrepressible
+collegian, whom<br>
+old Bannister had come to love as a generous, sunny-souled youth,
+stood<br>
+again by the window, gazing out at the campus. Now, for the first
+time, he<br>
+fully realized what a sad occasion a college Commencement really
+is&mdash;to<br>
+those who must go forth from their Alma Mater forever. With
+almost the<br>
+force of a staggering blow, Hicks suddenly saw how it would hurt
+to leave<br>
+the well-loved campus and halls of old Bannister, to go from
+those comrades<br>
+of his golden years. In a day or so, he must part from good
+Butch, Pudge,<br>
+Beef, Ichabod, Monty, Roddy, Cherub, loyal little Theophilus and
+all his<br>
+classmates of '19, as well as from his firm friends of the
+undergraduates.<br>
+It would be the parting from the youths of his class that would
+cost him<br>
+the greatest regret. Four years they had lived together the
+care-free<br>
+campus life. From Freshmen to Seniors they had grown and
+developed<br>
+together, and had striven for 1919 and old Bannister, while a
+love for<br>
+their Alma Mater had steadily possessed their hearts. And now
+soon they<br>
+must sing, "Vale, Alma Mater!" and go from the campus and
+corridors, as<br>
+Jack Merritt, Heavy Hughes, Biff McCabe, and many others had done
+before<br>
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, they would return to old Bannister. There would be
+alumni<br>
+banquets at mid-year and Commencement, with glad class reunions
+each year.<br>
+They would come back for the big games of the football or
+baseball season.<br>
+But it would never be the same. The glad, care-free, golden years
+of<br>
+college life come but once, and they could never live them, as of
+old.</p>
+
+<p>"Caesar's Ghost!" ejaculated T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., making a
+dive for his<br>
+beloved banjo, as he awakened to the startling fact that for some
+time he<br>
+had been intensely serious. "This will never, never do. I must
+maintain my<br>
+blithesome buoyancy to the end, and entertain old Bannister with
+my musical<br>
+ability. Here goes."</p>
+
+<p>Assuming a striking pose, &agrave; la troubadour, at the open
+window, T.<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Jr., a somewhat paradoxical figure, his
+splinter-structure<br>
+enshrouded in the gown, the cap on his classic head, this regalia
+symbolic<br>
+of dignity, and the torturesome banjo in his grasp, twanged a
+ragtime<br>
+accompaniment, and to the bewilderment of the old Grads on the
+campus, as<br>
+well as the wrath of 1919, he roared in his fog-horn voice:</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, I love for to live in the country!<br>
+  And I love for to live on the farm!<br>
+  I love for to wander in the grass-green fields&mdash;<br>
+  Oh, a country life has the charm!<br>
+  I love for to wander in the garden&mdash;<br>
+  Down by the old haystack;<br>
+  Where the pretty little chickens go 'Kick-Kack-Kackle!'<br>
+  And the little docks go 'Quack! Quack!'"</p>
+
+<p>From the Seniors on the Gym steps, their dignified song rudely
+shattered by<br>
+this rollicking saenger-fest, came a storm of protests; to the
+unbounded<br>
+delight of the alumni, watching the scene with interest, shouts,
+jeers,<br>
+whistles, and cat-calls greeted Hicks' minstrelsy:</p>
+
+<p>"Tear off his cap and gown&mdash;he's a disgrace to '19!"</p>
+
+<p>"Shades of Schumann-Heink&mdash;give that calf more rope!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye gods&mdash;how long must we endure&mdash;that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks, a Senior&mdash;nobody home&mdash;can that noise!"</p>
+
+<p>"Shoot him at sunrise! Where's his Senior dignity?"</p>
+
+<p>Big Butch Brewster, referring to his watch, bellowed through
+the megaphone<br>
+that it was nearly eight o'clock, and loudly suggested that they
+forcibly<br>
+terminate Hicks' saengerfest, and spare the town police force a
+riot call<br>
+to the campus, by transporting the pestiferous youth to the
+Auditorium,<br>
+for his "surprise party." His idea finding favor, he, with Beef
+and Pudge,<br>
+somewhat hampered by their gowns, lumbered up the stairway of
+Bannister,<br>
+and down the third-floor corridor to the offending Hicks'
+boudoir, followed<br>
+by a yelling, surging crowd of Seniors and underclassmen. They
+invaded the<br>
+graceless youth's room, much to the pretended alarm of that
+torturesome<br>
+collegian, who believed that the entire student-body of old
+Bannister had<br>
+foregathered to wreak vengeance on his devoted head.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy! Have a heart, fellows!" plead T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.,
+helpless in<br>
+the clutches of Butch, Beef, and Pudge, "I won't never do it no
+more, no<br>
+time! Say, this is too much&mdash;much too much&mdash;too much
+much too much&mdash;I,<br>
+Oh&mdash;<i>help&mdash;aid&mdash;succor&mdash;relief&mdash;assistance&mdash;"</i></p>
+
+<p>"To the Auditorium with the wretch!" boomed Butch; and the
+splinter-youth<br>
+was borne aloft, on his broad shoulders, assisted by Beef
+McNaughton. They<br>
+transported the grinning Hicks down the corridor, while fifty
+noisy youths,<br>
+howling, "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow!" tramped after them.
+Downstairs<br>
+and across the campus the hilarious procession marched, and into
+the<br>
+Auditorium, where the students and alumni were gathering for the
+awarding<br>
+of the athletic B. A thunderous shout went up, as T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+was carried to the stage and deposited in a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Hicks! Hicks! Hicks! We've got a surprise
+for&mdash;Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, just what have I did to deserve all these?" grinned
+that<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth, puzzled, nevertheless. "Well, time will
+tell, so all<br>
+I can do is to possess my soul with impatience; old Bannister has
+a mystery<br>
+for me, this trip!"</p>
+
+<p>In fifteen minutes, the Athletic Association meeting opened.
+On the stage,<br>
+beside its officers, were those athletes, including T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+who were to receive that coveted reward&mdash;their B, together
+with a number of<br>
+one-time famous Bannister gridiron, track, basketball, and
+diamond stars.<br>
+Each youth was to receive his monogram from some ex-athlete who
+once wore<br>
+the Gold and Green, and Hicks' beloved Dad&mdash;Bannister's
+greatest hero&mdash;was<br>
+to present his son with the letter.</p>
+
+<p>There were speeches; the Athletic Association's President
+explained the<br>
+annual meeting, former Bannister students and athletic idols told
+of past<br>
+triumphs on Bannister Field; the football Championship banner,
+and the<br>
+baseball pennant were flaunted proudly, and each team-captain of
+the year<br>
+was called upon to talk. Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., a great
+favorite<br>
+on the campus, delivered a ringing speech, an appeal to the
+undergraduates<br>
+for clean living, and honorable sportsmanship, and then:</p>
+
+<p>"We now come to the awarding of the athletic B," stated the
+President. "The<br>
+Secretary will call first the name of the athlete, and then the
+alumnus who<br>
+will present him with the letter. In the name of the Athletic
+Association<br>
+of old Bannister, I congratulate those fellows who are now to be
+rewarded<br>
+for their loyalty to their Alma Mater!"</p>
+
+<p>Thrilled, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., watched his comrades, as
+they responded<br>
+to their names, and had the greatest glory, the B, placed in
+their hands by<br>
+past Bannister athletic heroes. Butch, Beef, Roddy, Monty,
+Ichabod, Biff,<br>
+Hefty, Tug, Buster, Deacon Radford, Cherub, Don, Skeet, Thor, who
+had<br>
+won the hammer-throw. These, and many others, having earned the
+award by<br>
+playing in three-fourths of a season's games on the eleven or the
+nine, or<br>
+by winning a first place in some track event, stepped forward,
+and were<br>
+rewarded. Some, as good Butch, had gained their B many times, but
+the fact<br>
+that this was their last letter, made the occasion a sad one.
+Every name<br>
+was called but that of T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and that perturbed
+youth<br>
+wondered at the omission, when the President spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"The last name," he said, smiling, "is that of Thomas Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+and we are glad to have his father present the letter to his son,
+as Mr.<br>
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., is with us. However, we Bannister
+fellows have<br>
+prepared a surprise party for our lovable comrade, and I beg your
+patience<br>
+awhile, as I explain."</p>
+
+<p>Graphically, Dad Pendleton described the wonderful all-round
+athletic<br>
+record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old
+Bannister, and<br>
+sketched briefly but vividly his phenomenal record at Yale; he
+told of<br>
+Mr. Hicks' great ambition, for his only son, Thomas, to follow in
+his<br>
+footsteps&mdash;to be a star athlete, and shatter the marks made
+by his Dad.<br>
+Then he reminded the Bannister students of T. Haviland Hicks,
+Jr.'s,<br>
+athletic fiascos, hilarious and otherwise, of three years. He
+explained how<br>
+that cheery youth, grinning good-humoredly at his comrades'
+jeers, had been<br>
+in earnest, striving to realize his father's ambition. As the
+spellbound<br>
+collegians and grads. listened, Dad chronicled Hicks' dogged
+persistence,<br>
+and how he finally, in his Senior year, won his track B in the
+high-jump.<br>
+Then he described the biggest game of the past football season,
+the contest<br>
+that brought the Championship to old Bannister. The youths and
+alumni heard<br>
+how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., made a great sacrifice, for the
+greater goal;<br>
+how, after training faithfully in secret for a year, hoping
+sometime to win<br>
+a game for his Alma Mater, he cheerfully sacrificed his chance to
+tie the<br>
+score by a drop-kick, and became the pivotal part of a fake-kick
+play that<br>
+won for the Gold and Green.</p>
+
+<p>"I have left Hicks' name until last," said Dad, with a smile,
+"because<br>
+tonight we have a surprise party for our sunny comrade, and for
+his Dad. In<br>
+the past, the eligibility rule, as regards the football and
+baseball B, has<br>
+been&mdash;an athlete must play on the 'Varsity in three-fourths
+of the season's<br>
+games. But, just before the Hamilton game, last fall, the
+Advisory Board of<br>
+the Athletic Association amended this rule.</p>
+
+<p>"We decided to submit to the required two-thirds majority vote
+of the<br>
+students this plan, inasmuch as many athletes, toiling and
+sacrificing all<br>
+season for their college, never get to win their letter, yet
+deserve<br>
+that reward for their loyalty, we suggested that Bannister
+imitate the<br>
+universities. Anyone sent into the Yale-Harvard game, you know,
+wins his<br>
+H or Y. If one team is safely ahead, a lot of scrubs are run into
+the<br>
+scrimmage, to give them their letter. Therefore, we&mdash;the
+Advisory<br>
+Board&mdash;made this rule: 'Any athlete taking part, for any
+period of time<br>
+whatsoever, in the Ballard football or baseball game as a regular
+member of<br>
+the first team shall be eligible for his Gold or Green B. This
+rule, upon<br>
+approval of the students, to be effective from September 25!'</p>
+
+<p>"Now," continued the Athletic Association President, "we
+decided to keep<br>
+this new ruling a secret until the present, for this reason: Many
+good<br>
+football and baseball players, not making the first teams, lack
+the loyalty<br>
+to stick on the scrubs, and others, not as brilliant, but with
+more<br>
+college spirit, give their best until the season's end. We knew
+that if we<br>
+announced this rule last fall, several slackers, who had quit the
+squad,<br>
+would come out again, just on the hope of getting sent into the
+Ballard<br>
+game, for their B. This would not be fair to those who loyally
+stuck to the<br>
+scrubs. So we did not announce the rule until the year closed,
+and then a<br>
+practically unanimous vote of the students made the rule
+effective from<br>
+September 25. So&mdash;all athletes who took part in the Ballard
+football game,<br>
+last fall, for any period of time whatsoever, are eligible for
+the gold B,<br>
+and the same, as regards the green letter, applies to the Ballard
+baseball<br>
+game this spring."</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., gasped. Slowly, the glorious truth
+dawned on the<br>
+happy-go-lucky Senior&mdash;he had been sent into the
+Bannister-Ballard football<br>
+game; the crucial and deciding play had turned on him, hence he
+had won his<br>
+gold letter! And thanks to his brilliant "mismanaging" of the
+nine, losing<br>
+shortstop Skeet Wigglesworth and the substitutes, he had played
+the entire<br>
+nine innings of the Ballard-Bannister baseball contest, and,
+therefore,<br>
+was eligible for his green B. In a dazed condition, he heard Dad
+Pendleton<br>
+saying:</p>
+
+<p>"You remember how T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., was sent into the
+Ballard<br>
+game, and how the fake-play fooled Ballard, who believed he would
+try<br>
+a drop-kick? Well, knowing Hicks to be eligible for his football
+B, we<br>
+planned a surprise party. The Advisory Board kept the new rule a
+secret,<br>
+and not until this week was it voted on. Then, the required
+two-thirds<br>
+majority made it effective from last September&mdash;we managed
+to have Hicks<br>
+absent from the voting, and the fellows helped us with our
+surprise! So<br>
+instead of Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., presenting his son
+with one<br>
+B, that for track work, we are glad to hand him <i>three</i>
+letters, one for<br>
+football, one for baseball, and one for track, to give our own T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr. And, let me add, he can accept them with a clear
+conscience, for<br>
+when the rule was made by the Advisory Board, we had no idea that
+Hicks<br>
+would ever be eligible in football or baseball,"</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence, and then undergraduates and alumni,
+thrilled at Dad<br>
+Pendleton's announcement, arose in a body, and howled for T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., and his beloved Dad. Mr. Hicks, unable to speak,
+silently<br>
+placed the three monograms, gold, green, and white, in his son's
+hands, and<br>
+placed his own on the shoulders of that sunny-souled Senior, who
+for once<br>
+in his heedless career could not say a word!</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with Hicks?" Big Butch Brewster roared, and
+a terrific<br>
+response sounded:</p>
+
+<p>"He's all right! Hicks! Hicks! Hicks!"</p>
+
+<p>For ten minutes pandemonium reigned. Then, regardless of the
+fact that, in<br>
+order to surprise Mr. Hicks and his son, other athletes, eligible
+under the<br>
+new rule, had yet to be presented with their B, the howling
+youths swarmed<br>
+on the stage, hoisted the grinning T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., and
+his happy<br>
+Dad to their shoulders, and started a wild parade around the
+campus and the<br>
+Quadrangle, singing:</p>
+
+<p>"Here's to our own Hicks&mdash;drink it down! Drink it down!
+Here's to our own<br>
+Hicks&mdash;drink it down! Drink it down! Here's to our own
+Hicks&mdash;When he<br>
+starts a thing, he sticks&mdash;Drink it down&mdash;drink it
+down&mdash;down! Down!<br>
+Down!"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., aloft on the shoulders of his behemoth
+class-mate,<br>
+Butch Brewster, was deliriously happy. The surprise party of his
+campus<br>
+comrades was a wonderful one, and he could scarcely realize that
+he had<br>
+actually, by the Athletic Association ruling, won his three B's!
+How glad<br>
+his beloved Dad, was, too. He had not expected this bewildering
+happiness.<br>
+He had been so joyous, when his sort earned the track letter, but
+to<br>
+have him leave old Bannister, with a B for three sports&mdash;it
+was almost<br>
+unbelievable! And, as Dad had said&mdash;there had been no
+thought of Hicks when<br>
+the Advisory Board made the rule, so Hicks had no reason to
+suppose it was<br>
+done just to award him his letter.</p>
+
+<p>Then, Hicks remembered that rash vow, made at the end of his
+Freshman year,<br>
+a vow uttered with absolutely no other thought than a desire to
+torment<br>
+Butch Brewster, "Before I graduate from old Bannister, I shall
+have won<br>
+my B in three branches of sport!" Never, not even for a moment,
+had the<br>
+happy-go-lucky youth believed that his wild prophecy would be
+fulfilled,<br>
+though he had pretended to be confident to tease his loyal
+comrades; but<br>
+now, at the very end of his campus days, just before he
+graduated, his<br>
+prediction had come true! So the sunny Senior, who four years
+before had<br>
+made his rash vow, saw its realization, and suddenly thrilled
+with the<br>
+knowledge that he had a golden opportunity to make Butch
+indignant.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I say, Butch," he drawled, nonchalantly, leaning down to
+talk in<br>
+Butch's ear, "do you recall that day, at the close of our
+Freshman year,<br>
+when I vowed to win my B in three branches of sport, ere I bade
+farewell to<br>
+old Bannister?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you don't get away with that!" exploded Butch Brewster,
+indignantly,<br>
+lowering his tantalizing classmate to terra firma. "Here, Beef,
+Pudge,<br>
+catch this wretch; he intends to swagger and say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But he was too late, for T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., dodging from
+his grasp,<br>
+imitated the celebrated Charley Chaplin strut, and satiated his
+fun-loving<br>
+soul. After waiting for three years, the irrepressible youth
+realized an<br>
+ambition he had never imagined would be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just leave it to Hicks!" quoth he, gladsomely. "I told
+you I'd win<br>
+my three B's, Butch, old top, and&mdash;<i>ow</i>!&mdash;unhand
+me, you villain, you<br>
+<i>hurt</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+CHAPTER XX</p>
+
+<p>"VALE, ALMA MATER!"</p>
+
+<p>  "Oh, it was 'Ave, Alma Mater&mdash;'<br>
+  We sang as Freshmen gay;<br>
+  But it's 'Vale, Alma Mater' now<br>
+  As our last farewells we say!"</p>
+
+<p>"Honk-Honk! Br-r-rr-r-Bang! Honk-Monk! Br-rr-rr-r&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., big Butch Brewster, Beef McNaughton,
+Pudge Langdon,<br>
+Scoop Sawyer, and little Theophilus Opperdyke&mdash;late Seniors
+of old<br>
+Bannister&mdash;roosted atop of good old Dan Flannagan's famous
+jitney-bus<br>
+before Bannister Hall. It was nearly time for the 9.30 A. M.
+express, but<br>
+the "peace-ship" had inconsiderately stalled, and the choking,
+wheezing,<br>
+and snorting of the engine, as old Dan frenziedly cranked,
+together with<br>
+the Claxon, operated by Skeet Wigglesworth, rudely interrupted
+the Seniors'<br>
+chant. A vociferous protest arose above the tumult:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the little old Ford&mdash;rambled right along&mdash;like
+heck!"</p>
+
+<p>"Can that noise-we want to sing a last song, boys!"</p>
+
+<p>"Chuck that engine, Dan, and put in an alarm clock
+spring!"</p>
+
+<p>"Christmas is coming, Dan-u-el&mdash;we've graduated you
+know!"</p>
+
+<p>"'The Dove' doesn't want us to leave old Bannister,
+fellows!"</p>
+
+<p>Commencement was ended. The night before, on the stage of
+Alumni Hall,<br>
+before a vast audience of old Bannister grads, undergraduates,
+friends, and<br>
+relatives of the Seniors, the Class of 1919 had received its
+sheepskins,<br>
+and the "Go forth, my children, and live!" of its Alma Mater. T,
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., and timorous little Theophilus had jointly delivered
+the<br>
+Valedictory, eight other Seniors, including Butch, Scoop, and the
+lengthy<br>
+Ichabod, had swayed the crowd with oratory. Kindly old Prexy, his
+voice<br>
+tremulous, had talked to them, as students, for the last time.
+The Class<br>
+Ode had been sung, the Class Shield unveiled, and
+then&mdash;Hicks and his<br>
+comrades of '19 were alumni!</p>
+
+<p>It had been a busy, thrilling time, Commencement Week. There
+had been<br>
+scarcely any spare moments to ponder on the parting so soon to
+come; after<br>
+the memorable Athletic Association meeting, when T. Haviland
+Hicks, Jr.,<br>
+and his beloved Dad had been given a wonderful "surprise party"
+by the<br>
+collegians, and Hicks had corralled his three B's, time had
+"sprinted with<br>
+spiked shoes," as the sunny Hicks stated. Event had followed
+event in<br>
+bewildering fashion. The Seniors, dignified in cap and gown, had
+been f&ecirc;ted<br>
+and banqueted, the cynosure of all eyes. Campus and town were
+filled with<br>
+visitors. Old Bannister pulsated with renewed life, with the glad
+reunions<br>
+of former students. There had been the Alumni Banquet, the annual
+baseball<br>
+game between the 'Varsity and old-time Gold and Green diamond
+stars, Class<br>
+Night exercises, the Literary Society Oratorical Contests, and
+the last<br>
+Class Supper; and, Commencement had come.</p>
+
+<p>It was all ended now&mdash;the four happy, golden years of
+campus life, of glad<br>
+fellowship with each other; like those who had gone before, T.
+Haviland<br>
+Hicks, Jr., and his comrades of 1919 had come to the final
+parting. The<br>
+sunny-souled youth's Dad had gone to New Haven, to Yale's
+Commencement.<br>
+Alumni and visitors had left town; the night before had witnessed
+farewells<br>
+with Monty, Roddy, Biff, Hefty, and the underclassmen, with that
+awakened<br>
+Colossus, John Thorwald. All the collegians had gone, except the
+few<br>
+Seniors now leaving, and they had remained to enjoy Hicks' final
+Beefsteak<br>
+Bust downtown at Jerry's.</p>
+
+<p>The campus was silent and deserted. No footsteps or voices
+echoed in the<br>
+dormitories, and a shadow of sadness hovered over all. The youths
+who were<br>
+leaving old Bannister forever felt an ache in their throats, and
+little<br>
+Theophilus Opperdyke's big-rimmed spectacles were fogged with
+tears. Three<br>
+times, in the past, they had left the campus, but this was
+forever, as<br>
+collegians!</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care if we miss the old train!" declared Scoop
+Sawyer, as the<br>
+jitney-Ford's engine wheezed, gasped, and was silent, for all of
+Dan's<br>
+cranking. "Just think, fellows, it's all over now&mdash;'We have
+come to the end<br>
+of our college days-golden campus years are at an end&mdash;!'
+Say, Hicks, old<br>
+man, what's your Idea. What future have you blue-printed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Journalism!" announced T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., sticking a
+fountain pen<br>
+behind his ear, and fatuously supposing he resembled a City
+Editor, "In me<br>
+you behold an embryo Richard Harding Davis, or Ty&mdash;no, I
+mean Irvin Cobb.<br>
+I shall first serve my apprenticeship as a 'cub,' but ere many
+years, I<br>
+shall sit at a desk, run a newspaper, and tell the world where to
+get off."</p>
+
+<p>"That is&mdash;If Dad says so!" chuckled Butch Brewster. "You
+know, Hicks, it's<br>
+the same old story&mdash;your father wants you to learn how to
+own steel and<br>
+iron mills, and when it comes to a showdown, you must convince
+Mr. Thomas<br>
+Haviland Hicks, Sr., that you'd make a better journalist than
+Steel King!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, nay-say not so!" responded the happy-go-lucky alumnus of
+old<br>
+Bannister, as the perspiring" Dan Flannagan cranked away
+futilely. "My Dad<br>
+has a broader vision, fellows, than most men. He and I talked it
+over last<br>
+night, and he would never try to make me take up anything but a
+work that<br>
+appeals to me. While, as Butch says, he'd like to train me to
+follow in his<br>
+footsteps, he understands my ambition so thoroughly that he is
+trying to<br>
+get me started&mdash;read this:"</p>
+
+<p>The lovable youth produced a letter, the envelope bearing the
+heading: "THE<br>
+BALTIMORE CHRONICLE;" Butch Brewster, to whom he extended it,
+read aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Baltimore, Maryland,</p>
+
+<p>"June 12, 1919.</p>
+
+<p>"DEAR OLD CLASSMATE:</p>
+
+<p>"I'd sure like to be with you, back at old Yale, next week,
+but I can't<br>
+leave the wheel of this ship, the Chronicle, for even a day. Give
+my<br>
+regards to all of old Eli, '96, old man.</p>
+
+<p>"As regards a berth for your son, Thomas. The Chronicle
+usually takes<br>
+on a few college men during the summer, when our staff is off
+on<br>
+vacations. We always use undergraduates, and often, in two or
+three<br>
+summers, we develop them into star reporters. However, for old
+time's<br>
+sake, I'll be glad to give your son a chance, and if he means
+business,<br>
+let him report for duty next Friday, at 1 P.M., to my office.<br>
+Understand, Hicks, he must come here and fight his own way,
+without any<br>
+favor or special help from me. Were he the son of our
+nation's<br>
+President, I'd not treat him a whit better than the rest of the
+Staff,<br>
+so let him know that in advance. On the other hand, I'll develop
+him all<br>
+I can, and if he has the ability, the Chronicle long-room is the
+place<br>
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours for old Yale,</p>
+
+<p>"'Doc' Whalen, Yale, '96,</p>
+
+<p>"City Editor&mdash;THE CHRONICLE."</p>
+
+<p>"Here's my Dad's ultimatum," grinned Hicks, when. Butch
+finished the<br>
+letter. "I am to take a summer as a cub on the Baltimore
+Chronicle,<br>
+making my own way, and living on my weekly salary, without
+financial aid<br>
+from anyone. If, at the end of the summer, City Editor Whalen
+reports that<br>
+I've made good enough to be retained as a regular,
+then&mdash;Yours truly for<br>
+the Fourth Estate. If I fail, then I follow a course charted out
+by Mr.<br>
+Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr.! So, it is up to me to make
+good&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you will make good, Hicks," quavered Theophilus,
+whose faith in the<br>
+shadow-like youth was prodigious. "Oh, that will be splendid, for
+I am<br>
+going to take a course at a business college in Baltimore. I want
+to become<br>
+an expert stenographer, and we'll be together,"</p>
+
+<p>"It's work now, fellows!" sighed Beef McNaughton, shifting his
+huge bulk<br>
+atop of the jit "College years are ended, we're chucked into the
+world, to<br>
+make good, or fail! Butch and I have not decided on our work yet.
+We may<br>
+accept jobs as bank or railroad presidents, or maybe run for
+President<br>
+of the U.S.A., provided John McGraw or Connie Mack do not sign us
+up.<br>
+However&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At that moment, the engine of old Dan Flannagan's battered
+"Dove" consented<br>
+to hit on two cylinders, and the genial Irishman, who was to
+transport<br>
+Hicks and his comrades, as collegians, for the last time, yelled,
+"All<br>
+aboard!" loudly, to conceal his emotion at the sad scene.</p>
+
+<p>"We're off!" shrieked Skeet Wigglesworth, stowed away below,
+as the<br>
+jitney-bus moved down the driveway. "Farewell, dear old
+Bannister! Run<br>
+slow, Dan, we want to gaze on the campus as long as we can."</p>
+
+<p>The youths were silent, as the 'bus rolled slowly down the
+driveway and<br>
+under the Memorial Arch, old Dan, sympathizing with them, and
+finding he<br>
+could make the express by a safe margin, allowing the jitney to
+flutter<br>
+along at reduced speed. From its top, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., his
+vision<br>
+blurred with tears, gazed back with his class-mates. He saw the
+campus, its<br>
+grass green, with stately old elms bordering the walks, and the
+golden<br>
+June sunshine bathing everything in a soft radiance. He beheld
+the college<br>
+buildings&mdash;the Gym., the Science Hall, the Administration
+Building,<br>
+Recitation Hall, the ivy-covered Library; the white Chapel, and
+the four<br>
+dorms., Creighton, Smithson, Nordyke, Bannister. One year he had
+spent in<br>
+each, and every year had been one of happiness, of glad
+comradeship.<br>
+He could see Bannister Field, the scene of his many hilarious
+athletic<br>
+fiascos.</p>
+
+<p>And now he was leaving it all&mdash;had come to the end of his
+college course,<br>
+and before him lay Life, with its stern realities, its grim
+obstacles, and<br>
+hard struggles; ended were the golden campus days, the gay
+skylarking<br>
+in the dorms. Gone forever were the joyous nights of entertaining
+his<br>
+comrades, of Beefsteak Busts down at Jerry's. Silenced was his
+beloved<br>
+banjo, and no more would his saengerfests bother old
+Bannister.</p>
+
+<p>A turn in the street, and the campus could not be seen. As the
+last vision<br>
+of their Alma Mater vanished, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., smiling
+sunnily<br>
+through his tear-blurred eyes, gazed at his comrades of old
+'19&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Say, fellows&mdash;" he grinned, though his voice was shaky,
+"let's&mdash;let's<br>
+start in next September, and&mdash;do it all over again!"</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's T. Haviland Hicks Senior, by J. Raymond Elderdice
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK T. HAVILAND HICKS SENIOR ***
+
+This file should be named 8hick10h.htm or 8hick10h.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 8hick11h.htm
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 8hick10ah.htm
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, David Widger,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart hart@pobox.com
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
+
diff --git a/old/8hick10h.zip b/old/8hick10h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..62d99a3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/8hick10h.zip
Binary files differ