CO V* AT GOOD OLD SIWASH Twenty-five yards with four Muggledorfer men hanging on his legs FKUSTISPIKCE. Ste paye 19 AT GOOD OLD SIWASH BY GEORGE FITCH ILLUSTRATED BOSTON LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 1911 Copyright, 1910, 1911, BY THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY. Copyright, 1911, BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. AU rights reserved Published, September, 1911 THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A. PS 35 PREFACE LITTLE did I think, during the countless occa sions on which I have skipped blithely over the preface of a book in order to plunge into the plot, -that I should be called upon to write a preface myself some day. And little have I realized until just now the extreme importance to the author of having his preface read. I want this preface to be read, though I have an uneasy premonition that it is going to be skipped as joyously as ever I skipped a preface myself. I want the reader to toil through my preface in order to save him the task of trying to follow a plot through this book. For if he attempts to do this he will most cer tainly dislocate something about himself very seri' ously. I have found it impossible, in writing of col lege days which are just one deep-laid scheme after another, to confine myself to one plot. How could I describe in one plot the life of the student who carries out an average of three plots a day? It is unreasonable. So I have done the next best thing. There is a plot in every chapter. This requires the use of upwards of a dozen villains, an almost equal number of heroes, and a whole bouquet of heroines. vi Preface But I do not begrudge this extravagance. It is neces sary, and that settles it. Then, again, I want to answer in this preface a num ber of questions by readers who kindly consented to become interested in the stories when they appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. Siwash is n't Michigan in disguise. It is n't Kansas. It is n't Knox. It is n't Minnesota. It is n't Tuskegee, Texas, or Tufts. It is just Siwash College. I built it myself with a typewriter out of memories, legends, and contributed tales from a score of colleges. I have tried to locate it myself a dozen times, but I can't. I have tried to place my thumb on it firmly and say, " There, darn you, stay put." But no halfback was ever so elusive as this infernal college. Just as I have it definitely located on the Knox College campus, which I myself once infested, I look up to find it on the Kansas prairies. I surround it with infinite caution and at tempt to nail it down there. Instead, I find it in Minnesota with a strong Norwegian accent running through the course of study. Worse than that, I often find it in two or three places at once. It is harder to corner than a flea. I never saw such a peripatetic school. That is only the least of my troubles, too. The college itself is never twice the same. Sometimes I am amazed at its size and perfection, by the grandeur of its gymnasium and the colossal lines of its stadium. But at other times I cannot find the stadium at all, and the gymnasium has shrunk until it looks amazingly Preface vii like the old wooden barn in which we once built up Sandow biceps at Knox. I never saw such a college to get lost in, either. I know as well as anything that to get to the Eta Bita Pie house, you go north from the old bricks, past the new science hall and past Browning Hall. But often when I start north from the campus, I find my way blocked by the stadium, and when I try to dodge it, I run into the Alfalfa Belt House, and the Eatemalive boarding club, and other places which belong properly to the south. And when I go south I frequently lose sight of the college al together, and can't for the life of me remember what the library tower looks like or whether the theological school is just falling down, or is to be built next year ; or whether I ought to turn to my right, and ask for directions at Prexie's house, or turn to my left and crawl under a freight train which blocks a crossing on the Hither, Yonder and Elsewhere Railroad. If you think it is an easy task to carry a whole college in your head without getting it jumbled, just try it a while. Then, again, the Si wash people puzzle me. Pro fessor Grubb is always a trial. That man alternates a smooth-shaven face with a full beard in the most startling manner. Petey Simmons is short and flaxen- haired, long and black-haired, and wide and hatchet- faced in turns, depending on the illustrator. I never know Ole Skjarsen when I see him for the same rea son. As for Prince Hogboom, Allie Bangs, Keg Bearick and the rest of them, nobody knows how they look but the artists who illustrated the stories; and viii Preface as I read each number and viewed the smiling faces of these students, I murmured, " Goodness, how you have changed ! " So I have struggled along as best I could to admin ister the affairs of a college which is located nowhere, has no student body, has no endowment, never looks the same twice, and cannot be reached by any reliable route. The situation is impossible. I must locate it somewhere. If you are interested in the college when you have read these few stories, suppose you hunt for it wherever college boys are full of applied deviltry and college girls are distractingly fair ; where it is necessary to win football games in order to be half-way contented with the universe; where the spring weather is too wonderful to be wasted on College Algebra or History of Art ; and where, what ever you do, or whoever you like, or however you live, you can't forget it, no matter how long you work or worry afterward. There ! I can't mark it on the map, but if you have ever worried a college faculty you '11 know the way. GEORGE FITCH, July, 1911. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I OLE SKJARSEN'S FIRST TOUCHDOWN ... 1 II INITIATING OLE 28 III WHEN GREEK MEETS GROUCH 50 IV A FUNERAL THAT FLASHED IN THE PAN . . 78 V COLLEGES WHILE You WAIT 105 VI THE GREEK DOUBLE CROSS 135 VII TAKING PACE FROM FATHER TIME . . . .169 VIII FRAPPED FOOTBALL 196 IX CUPID THAT OLD COLLEGE CHUM . . . .[223 X VOTES FROM WOMEN 253 XI Sic TRANSIT GLORIA ALL AMERICA . . 284 IX ILLUSTRATIONS Twenty-five yards with four Muggledorfer men hanging on his legs Frontispiece PAGE " Aye ent care to stop," he said. "Aye kent suit you, Master Bost " 20 He pulled himself together and touched Ole gently 26 There wasn't a college anywhere around us that didn't have Ole's hoof-marks all over its pride . 33 Martha caused some mild sensation 63 My, but that girl was a wonder! 74 " Har 's das spy! " he yelled. " Kill him, f alters; he ban a spy!" 120 We spent another five minutes hoisting him aboard a prehistoric plug 125 He may have been fat, but how he could run! . .132 Naturally I was somewhat dazzled 147 He was so bashful that his voice blushed when he used it 151 With our colors on and four particularly wicked- looking chair legs in our hands 167 xi xii Illustrations PAGE Our peculiar style of pushing a football right through the thorax of the whole middle west . 205 " If you don 't like that bean bag, eat it.". ... 220 He invited Miss Spencer to go street-car riding '.with him 246 You can always spot these family friends .... 252 It was a blow between the eyes 264 " How are all the other good old chaps? " she said 270 Why, they even made us cut chapel to go walking with them . 280 AT GOOD OLD SIWASH CHAPTER I OLE SKJABSEN'S FIRST TOUCHDOWN AM I GOING to the game Saturday? Am I? Me? Am I going to eat some more food this year ? Am I going to draw my pay this month ? Am I going to do any more breathing after I get this lungful used up ? All foolish questions, pal. Very silly conversation. Pshaw! Am I going to the game, you ask me? Is the sun going to get up to-morrow ? You could n't keep me away from that game if you put a protective tariff of seventy-eight per cent ad valorem, whatever that means, on the front gate. I came out to this town on business, and I '11 have to take an extra fare train home to make up the time; but what of that? I 'm going to the game, and when the Siwash team comes out I 'm going to get up and give as near a correct imitation of a Roman mob and a Polish riot as my throat will stand; and if we put a crimp in the large-footed, humpy-shouldered behemoths we 're going up against this afternoon, I 'm going out to night and burn the City Hall. Any Siwash man who 2 At Good Old Siwash is a gentleman would do it I '11 probably have to run like thunder to beat some of them to it. You know how it is, old man. Or maybe you don't, because you made all your end runs on the Glee Club. But I played football all through my college course and the microbe is still there. In the fall I think football, talk football, dream football, even though I haven't had a suit on for six years. And when I go out to the field and see little old Siwash lining up against a bunch of overgrown hippos from a university with a catalogue as thick as a city directory, the old mud-and-perspiration smell gets in my nostrils, and the desire to get under the bunch and feel the feet jabbing into my ribs boils up so strong that I have to hold on to myself with both hands. If you Ve never sat on a hard board and wanted to be between two halfbacks with your hands on their shoulders, and the quarter ready to sock a ball into your solar plexus, and eleven men daring you to dodge 'em, and nine thousand friends and enemies raising Cain and keeping him well propped up in the grandstands if you have n't had that want you would n't know a healthy, able-bodied want if you ran into it on the street. Of course, I never got any further along than a scrub. But what 's the odds ? A broken bone feels just as grand to a scrub as to a star. I sometimes think a scrub gets more real football knowledge than a varsity man, because he does n't have to addle his brain by worrying about holding his job and keeping Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 3 his wind, and by dreaming that he has fumbled a punt and presented ninety-five yards to the hereditary enemies of his college. I played scrub football five years, four of 'em under Bost, the greatest coach who ever put wings on the heels of a two-hundred-pound hunk of meat; and while my ribs never lasted long enough to put me on the team, what I did n't learn about the game you could put in the other fellow's eye. Say, but it 's great, learning football under a good coach. It 's the finest training a man can get any where on this old globule. Football is only the smallest thing you learn. You learn how; to be patient when what you want to do is to chew some body up and spit him into the gutter. You learn to control your temper when it is on the high speed, with the throttle jerked wide open and buzzing like a hornet convention. You learn, by having it told you, just how small and foolish and insignificant you are, and how well this earth could stagger along with out you if some one were to take a fly-killer and mash you with it. And you learn all this at the time of life when your head is swelling up until you mistake it for a planet, and regard whatever you say as a volcanic disturbance. I suppose you think, like the rest of the chaps who never came out to practice but observed the game from the dollar-and-a-half seats, that being coached in football is like being instructed in German or calculus. You are told what to do and how to do 4 At Good Old Siwash it, and then you recite. Far from it, my boy ! They don't bother telling you what to do and how to do it on a big football field. Mostly they tell you what to do and how you do it And they do it artistically, too. They use plenty of language. A football coach is picked out for his ready tongue. He must be a conversationalist. He must be able to talk to a greenhorn, with fine shoulders and a needle-shaped head, until that greenhorn would pick up the ball and take it through a Sioux war dance to get away from the conversation. You can't reason with football men. They 're not logical, most of them. They are selected for their heels and shoulders and their leg muscles, and not for their ability to look at you with luminous eyes and say : " Yes, Professor, I think I understand." The way to make 'em under stand is to talk about them. Any man can understand you while you are telling him that if he were just a little bit slower he would have to be tied to the earth to keep up with it. That hurts his pride. And when you hurt his pride he takes it out on whatever is in front of him which is the other team. Never get in front of a football player when you are coaching him. But this brings me to the subject of Bost again. Bost is still coaching Siwash. This makes his 'steenth year. I guess he can stay there forever. He 's coached all these years and has never used the same adjective to the same man twice. There 's a record for you ! He 's a little man, Bost is. He played end Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 5 on some Western team when he only weighed one hundred and forty. Got his football knowledge there. But where he got his vocabulary is still a mystery. He has a way of convincing a man that a dill pickle would make a better guard than he is, and of making that man so jealous of the pickle that he will perform perfectly unreasonable feats for a week to beat it out for the place. He has a way of saying " Hurry up," with a few descriptive adjectives tacked on, that makes a man rub himself in the stung place for an hour; and oh, how mad he can make you while he is telling you pleasantly that while the little fellow playing against you is only a prep and has sloping shoulders and weighs one hundred and eleven stripped, he is making you look like a bale of hay that has been dumped by mis take on an athletic field. And when he gets a team in the gymnasium between halves, with the game going wrong, and stands up before them and sizes up their insect nerve and rubber backbone and heredi tary awkwardness and incredible talent in doing the wrong thing, to say nothing of describing each indi vidual blunder in that queer nasal clack of his well, I 'd rather be tied up in a great big frying-pan over a good hot stove for the same length of time, any day in the week. The reason Bost is a great coach is because his men don't dare play poorly. When they do he talks to them. If he would only hit them, or skin them by inches, or shoot at them, they wouldn't mind it so much; but when you get 6 At Good Old Siwash on the field with him and realize that if you miss a tackle he is going to get you out before the whole gang and tell you what a great mistake the Creator made when He put joints in your arms instead of letting them stick out stiff as they do any other sign post, you 're not going to miss that tackle, that 's all. When Bost came to Siwash he succeeded a line of coaches who had been telling the fellows to get down low and hit the line hard, and had been showing them how to do it very patiently. Nice fellows, those coaches. Perfect gentlemen. Make you proud to associate with them. They could take a herd of green farmer boys, with wrists like mules' ankles, and by Thanksgiving they would have them familiar with all the rudiments of the game. By that time the season would be over and all the schools in the vicinity would have beaten us by big scores. The next year the last year's crop of big farmer boys would stay at home to husk corn, and the coach would begin all over on a new crop. The result was, we were a dub school at football. Any school that could scare up a good rangy halfback and a line that could hold sheep could get up an adding festival at our expense any time. \Ye lived in a perpetual state of fear. Some day we felt that the normal school would come down and beat us. That would be the limit of disgrace. After that there would be nothing left to do but disband the college and take to drink to forget the past. But Bost changed all that in one year. He did n't Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 7 care to show any one how to play football. He was just interested in making the player afraid not to play it. When you went down the field on a punt you knew that if you missed your man he would tell you when you came back that two stone hitching- posts out of three could get past you in a six-foot alley. If you missed a punt you could expect to be told that you might catch a haystack by running with your arms wide open, but that was no way to catch a football. Maybe things like that don't sound jabby when two dozen men hear them ! They kept us catch ing punts between classes, and tackling each other all the way to our rooms and back. We simply had to play football to keep from being bawled out. It 'a an awful thing to have a coach with a tongue like a cheese knife swinging away at you, and to know that if you get mad and quit, no one but the dear old coll. will suffer but it gets the results. They use the same system in the East, but there they only swear at a man, I believe. Siwash is a mighty proper college and you can't swear on its campus, whatever else you do. Swearing is only a lazy man's substitute for thinking, anyway; and Bost wasn't lazy. He preferred the descriptive; he sat up nights thinking it out. We began to see the results before Bost had been tracing our pedigrees for two weeks. First game of the season was with that little old dinky Normal School which had been scaring us so for the past five years. We had been satisfied to push some awkward 8 At Good Old Siwash halfback over the line once, and then hold on to the enemy so tight he could n't run ; and we started out that year in the same old way. First half ended to 0, with our boys pretty satisfied because they had kept the ball in Normal's territory. Bost led the team and the substitutes into the overgrown barn we used for a gymnasium, and while we were still patting our selves approvingly in our minds he cut loose : " You pasty-faced, overfed, white-livered beanbag experts, what do you mean by running a beauty show instead of a football game ? " he yelled. " Do you suppose I came out here to be art director of a statuary exhibit? Does any one of you imagine for a holy minute that he knows the difference between a football game and ushering in a church? Don't fool yourselves. You don't; you don't know any thing. All you ever knew about football I could carve on granite and put in my eye and never feel it. Nothing to nothing against a crowd of farmer boys who have n't known a football from a duck's egg for more than a week ! Bah ! If I ever turned the Old Folks' Home loose on you doll babies they 'd run up a century while you were hunting for your handkerchiefs. Jackson, what do you suppose a half back is for? I don't want cloak models. I want a man who can stick his head down and run. Don't be afraid of that bean of yours ; it has n't got any thing worth saving in it. When you get the ball you 're supposed to run with it and not sit around trying to hatch it. You, Saunders ! You held that Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 9 other guard just like a sweet-pea vine. Where did you ever learn that sweet, lovely way of falling down on your nose when a real man sneezes at you ? Did you ever hear of sand ? Eat it ! Eat it ! Fill your self up with it. I want you to get in that line this half and stop something or I '11 make you play left end in a fancy-work club. Johnson, the only way to get you around the field is to put you on wheels and haul you. Next time you grow fast to the ground I 'm going to violate some forestry regulations and take an axe to you. Same to you, Briggs. You 'd make the All- American boundary posts, but that 's all. Vance, I picked you for a quarterback, but I made a mistake ; you ought to be sorting eggs. That ball is n't red hot. You don't have to let go of it as soon as you get it. Don't be afraid, nobody will step on you. This is n't a rude game. It 's only a game of post-office. You needn't act so nervous about it. Maybe some of the big girls will kiss you, but it won't hurt." Bost stopped for breath and eyed us. We were a sick-looking crowd. You could almost see the re marks sticking into us and quivering. We had come in feeling pretty virtuous, and what we were getting was a hideous surprise. " Now I want to tell this tea-party something," continued Bost. " Either you 're going out on that field and score thirty points this last half or I 'm going to let the girls of Siwash play your football for you. I 'm tired of coaching men that are n't good 10 At Good Old Siwash at anything but falling down scientifically when they 're tackled. There is n't a broken nose among you. Every one of you will run back five yards to pick out a soft spot to fall on. It 's got to stop. You 're going to hold on to that ball this half and take it places. If some little fellow from Normal crosses his fingers and says ' naughty, naughty,' don't fall on the ball and yell * down ' until they can hear it uptown. Thirty points is what I want out of you this half, and if you don't get 'em well, you just dare to come back here without them, that 's all. Now get out on that field and jostle somebody. Git ! " Did we git ? Well, rather. We were so mad our clothes smoked. We would have quit the game right there and resigned from the team, but we did n't dare to. Bost would have talked to us some more. And we didn't dare not to make those thirty points, either. It was an awful tough job, but we did it with a couple over. We raged like wild beasts. We scared those gentle Nonnalites out of their boots. I can't imagine how we ever got it into our heads that they could play football, anyway. When it was all over we went back to the gymnasium feeling righteously triumphant, and had another hour with Bost in which he took us all apart without anaes thetics, and showed us how Nature would have done a better job if she had used a better grade of lumber in our composition. That day made the Siwash team. The school went wild over the score. Bost rounded up two or three Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 11 more good players, and every afternoon he lashed us around the field with that wire-edged tongue of his. On Saturdays we played, and oh, how we worked! In the first half we were afraid of what Bost would say to us when we came off the field. In the second half we were mad at what he had said. And how he did drive us down the field in practice! I can remember whole cross sections of his talk yet: " Faster, faster, you scows. Line up. Quick ! Johnson, are you waiting for a stone-mason to set you ? Snap the ball. Tear into them. Low ! Low ! Hi-i ! You end, do you think you 're the quarter pole in a horse race ? Nine men went past you that time. If you can't touch 'em drop 'em a souvenir card. Line up. Faster, faster ! Oh, thunder, hurry up ! If you ran a funeral, center, the corpse would spoil on your hands. Wow! Fumble! Drop on that ball. Drop on it ! Hogboom, you 'd fumble a loving-cup. Use your hand instead of your jaw to catch that ball. It is n't good to eat. That 's four chances you 've had. I could lose two games a day if I had you all the time. Now try that signal again low, you linemen ; there 's no girls watching you. Snap it ; snap it. Great Scott ! Say, Hogboom, come here. When you get that ball, don't think we gave it to you to nurse. You 're supposed to start the same day with the line. We give you that ball to take forward. Have you got to get a legal permit to start those legs of yours ? You 'd make a good vault to store footballs in, but you 're too stationary 12 At Good Old Siwash for a fullback. Now I '11 give you one more chance " And maybe Hogboom would n't go some with that chance ! In a month we had a team that would n't have used past Siwash teams to hold its sweaters. It was mad all the time, and it played the game carnivorously. Siwash was delirious with joy. The whole school turned out for practice, and to see those eleven men snapping through signals up and down the field as fast as an ordinary man could run just congested us with happiness. You 've no idea what a lovely time of the year autumn is when you can go out after classes and sit on a pine seat in the soft dusk and watch your college team pulling off end runs in as pretty formation as if they were chorus girls, while you discuss lazily with your friends just how many points it is going to run up on the neighboring schools. I never expect to be a Captain of Industry, but it could n't make me feel any more contented or powerful or complacent than to be a busted-up scrub in Siwash' with a team like that to watch. I 'm pretty sure of that. But, happy as we were, Bost wasn't nearly con tent He had ideals. I believe one of them must have been to run that team through a couple of brick flats without spoiling the formation. Nothing satis fied him. He was particularly distressed about the fullback. Hogboom was a good fellow and took sig nal practice perfectly, but he was no fiend. He Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 13 lacked the vivacity of a real, first-class Bengal tiger. He would n't eat any one alive. He 'd run until lie was pulled down, but you never expected him to ex plode in the midst of seven hostiles and ricochet down the field for forty yards. He never jumped over two men and on to another, and he never dodged two ways at once and laid out three men with stiff arms on his way to the goal. It was n't his style. He was good for two and a half yards every time, but that did n't suit Bosk He was after statistics, and what does a three-yard buck amount to when you want 70 to scores? The result of this dissatisfaction was Ole Skjarsen. Late in September Bost disappeared for three days and came back leading Ole by a rope at least, he was towing him by an old carpet-bag when we sighted him. Bost found him in a lumber camp, he afterward told us, and had to explain to him what a college was before he would quit his job. He thought it was something good to eat at first, I believe. Ole was a timid young Norwegian giant, with a rmk of white hair and a reenforced concrete physique. He escaped from his clothes in all directions, and was so green and bashful that you would have thought we were cannibals from the way he shied at us though, as that was the year the bright hat-ribbons came in, I can't blame him. He wasn't like anything we had ever seen before in college. He was as big as a cart horse, as graceful as a dray and as meek as a mis sionary. He had a double width smile and a thin 14 At Good Old Siwash little old faded voice that made you think you could tip him over and shine your shoes on him with im punity. But I would n't have tried it for a month's allowance. His voice and his arms did n't harmonize worth a cent. They were as big as ordinary legs those arms, and they ended in hands that could have picked up a football and mislaid it among their fingers. No wonder Ole was a sensation. He did n't look exactly like football material to us, I '11 admit. He seemed more especially designed for light derrick work. But we trusted Bost implicitly by that time and we gave him a royal reception. We crowded around him as if he had been a T. R. capture straight from Africa, Everybody helped him register third prep, with business-college extras. Then we took him out, harnessed him in football armor, and set to work to teach him the game. Bost went right to work on Ole in a businesslike manner. He tossed him the football and said: " Catch it." Ole watched it sail past and then tore after it like a pup retrieving a stick. He got it in a few minutes and brought it back to where Bost was raving. " See here, you overgrown fox terrier," he shouted, " catch it on the fly. Here ! " He hurled it at him. " Aye ent seen no fly," said Ole, allowing the ball to pass on as he conversed. " You cotton-headed Scandinavian cattleship bal last, catch that ball in your arms when I throw it Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 15 to you, and don't let go of it ! " shrieked Bost, shoot ing it at him again. " Oil right," said Ole patiently. He cornered the ball after a short struggle and stood hugging it faithfully. " Toss it back, toss it back ! " howled Bost, jump ing up and down. " Yu tal me to hold it," said Ole reproachfully, hugging it tighter than ever. " Drop it, you Mammoth Cave of ignorance ! " yelled Bost. " If I had your head I 'd sell it for cordwood. Drop it ! " Ole dropped the ball placidly. "Das ban fule game," he smiled dazedly. " Aye ent care for it. Eny faller got a Yewsharp ? " That was the opening chapter of Ole's instruction. The rest were just like it You had to tell him to do a thing. You then had to show him how to do it. You then had to tell him how to stop doing it. After that you had to explain that he wasn't to refrain forever just until he had to do it again. Then you had to persuade him to do it again. He was as good- natured as a lost puppy, and just as hard to reason with. In three nights Bost was so hoarse that he could n't talk. He had called Ole everything in the dictionary that is fit to print ; and the knowledge that Ole did n't understand more than a hundredth part of it, and didn't mind that, was wormwood to his soul. For all that, we could see that if any one could 16 At Good Old Siwash teach Ole the game he would make a fine player. He was as hard as flint and so fast on his feet that we could n't tackle him any more than we could have tackled a jack-rabbit. He learned to catch the ball in a night, and as for defense his one-handed catches of flying players would have made a National League fielder envious. But with all of it he was perfectly useless. You had to start him, stop him, back him, speed him up, throttle him down and run him off the field just as if he had been a close- coupled, next year's model scootcart. If we could have rigged up a driver's seat and chauffeured Ole, it would have been all right. But every other method of trying to get him to understand what he was expected to do was a failure. He just grinned, took orders, executed them, and waited for more. When a two- hundred-and-twenty-pound man takes a football, wades through eleven frantic scrubs, shakes them all off, and then stops dead with a clear field to the goal before him because his instructions ran out when he shook the last scrub you can be pardoned for feeling hopeless about him. That was what happened the day before the Mug- gledorfer game. Bost had been working Ole at full back all evening. He and the captain had steered him up and down the field as carefully as if he had been a sea-going yacht. It was a wonderful sight. Ole was under perfect control. He advanced the ball five yards, ten yards, or twenty at command. Nothing could stop him. The scrubs represented only so Ole Skjarsen's First Touchdown 17 many doormats to him. Every time he made a play he stopped at the latter end of it for instructions. When he stopped the last time, with nothing be fore him but the goal, and asked placidly, " Vere skoll I take das ball now, Master Bost ? " I thought the coach would expire of the heat. He positively steamed with suppressed emotion. He swelled and got purple about the face. We were alarmed and were getting ready to hoop him like a barrel when he found his tongue at last. " You pale-eyed, prehistoric mudhead," he splut tered, " I 've spent a week trying to get through that skull lining of yours. It 's no use, you field boulder. Where do you keep your brains ? Give me a chance at them. I just want to get into them one minute and stir them up with my finger. To think that I have to use you to play football when they are paying five dollars and a half for ox meat in Kansas City. Skjarsen, do you know anything at all ? " " Aye ban getting gude eddication," said Ole serenely, " Aye tank I ban college f aller purty sune, I don't know. I like I skoll understand all das har big vorts yu make." " You '11 understand them, I don't think," moaned Bost. " You could n't understand a swift kick in the ribs. You are a fool. Understand that, mutton- head ? " Ole understood. " Vy for yu call me fule ? " he said indignantly. " Aye du yust vat you say." Colleges While You Wait 125 explain that there was no other way of getting out to Siwash and that the Faculty would take it as a personal insult if he didn't come. We also had to explain how disagreeable the Faculty was when it was insulted. And then after he had consented we spent another five minutes hoisting him aboard a prehistoric plug and telling him how to stick on. Then the line filed out through the alley with a regu lar ghost-dance yell, while we detained Petey. We were about to massacre him for leaving us to sweat all morning, but we forgot all about it when Petey told us what he had been doing. He admitted that, in order not to annoy the profs and cause unnecessary questions, he had taken the liberty to build a tem porary Siwash College for this special occasion. Yes, sir; nothing less than that. You remember Dillpickle Academy, the extinct college in the west part of town? It had been closed for years because the only remaining student had gotten lonesome. But most of the equipment was still there, and Petey had borrowed it of the caretaker for one day only, promising to give it back as good as new in the morning. Petey could have borrowed the great seal away from the Department of State. He and his Rep Rho Betas had let a lot of students into the deal, had been working all morning, and Siwash was ready for business at the new stand. We wanted to measure Petey for a medal then and there, but he refused, being needed on the firing- line. He rode off and we made a grand rush for 126 At Good Old Siwash the new Siwash College special one-day stand, benefit performance. We got there before the es corting committee and had a fine view of the grand entry. The Reverend Pubby had fallen off four times, and the last mile he had led his horse. It was a sagacious scheme bringing him along, as none of the others had a chance to exhibit their extremely sketchy horsemanship in anything better than a mile-an- hour gait. Old Dillpickle Academy was busier than it had ever been in real life when we got there. Fully fifty students were on the scene. They were decked out in cowboy clothes, hand-me-downs, big straw hats, blankets any old thing. One thing that impressed me was the number of books they were carrying. At Siwash we always refused to carry books except when absolutely necessary. It seemed too affected as if you were trying to learn something. But out there at near-Siwash every man had at least six books. I saw geographies, spellers, Ella Wheeler Wilcox's poems, Science and Health, and the Con gressional Record. Learning was just naturally ram pant out there. Students were studying on the fence. They were walking up and down the campus " boning " furiously. They were even studying in the trees. You get fifty college boys to turn actors for a day and you will see some mighty mixed results. There was " Bay " Sanderson, for instance. " Bay's " idea of being a wild and Western student was to sit on the front gate with a long knife stuck CoUeges While You Wait 127 in his belt and read detective stories. He did it all through the performance, and whenever the guest was led past him he would turn the book down care fully, pull the knife out of his belt and whoop three times as solemn as a judge. You never saw any one so interested as the Rever end Ponsonby Diggs. His eyes stuck out like incan descent globes. He had been pretty well jolted up, and he yelled in a low, polite way every time he made a quick movement, but his thirst for informa tion was still vigorous. As head host Petey was pumpee, and he was always four laps ahead of the job. " Eh, I say," said Pubby, after surveying the scene for a few minutes. " This is all very inter esting, you know. But what a little place ! " " Hell, Reverend," said Petey emphatically. " she 's the biggest school in the world." The Reverend was a man of guile. He did n't bat an eye. " How many students has the college ? " he in quired. " We 've got a hundred, all studying books and learning things," said Petey proudly. " Reahly, now ? " said the Reverend ; " I say, reahly ? And these cows ! Might I ask if these cows are a part of the college ? " " Sure thing," said Petey. " Sophomore roping class uses 'em. Great class to watch." " I say now, this is extraordinary," said the Rev- 128 At Good Old Siwash erend. "You don't mean to tell me you tie up cows?" " Hope 'em and tie 'em and brand 'em," said Petey. " What 's college for if it ain't to learn you things ? " " I say now, this is extraordinary," said the Rev erend. I gave him four more " extraordinaries " before I did something violent He 'd used two hun dred that morning. " Might I see the class at work ? " he inquired. Petey did n't even hesitate. " Sorry, Reverend," says he. " But the Professor of Roping and Brand ing has been drunk for a week. Class ain't work ing now." The college bell tapped three times. " That 's cleaning-up bell," said Petey. " Oh, I say now," said the Reverend, hauling out his notebook. " What 's cleaning-up bell ? " " Why, to clean up the college," said Petey. " We clean it up once a week. With the fellows riding their horses into class and tracking mud and clay in, and eating lunches and stuff around, it gets pretty messy before the end of the week. We make the Freshmen clean it out. There they go now." A dozen " supes " filed slowly into the building with brooms and shovels. Pubby could n't have looked more interested if they had been crowned heads of Europe. Just then a fine assortment of sounds broke out in the old building. The doors burst open and a young CoUeges While You Wait 129 red-headed Mick from the seventh ward near by rode a pony down the steps and away for dear life. Be hind him came a double-sized gent with yard-wide mustaches. He was dressed in a red shirt, overalls and firearms. He was a walking museum of weap ons. Petey told me afterward that he had borrowed him from the roundhouse near by, and that for a box of cigars he had kindly consented to play the part of an irritable arsenal for one afternoon only. " That 'B the janitor," said Petey in an awestruck whisper. " Get behind a tree, quick. He 's sure some vexed. He hates to have the boys ride their ponies into classroom." We got a fine view of the janitor as he swept past. He was a regular volcano in pants. Never have I heard the English language more richly embossed with profanity. Firing a fat locomotive up the grades around Siwash with bad coal gives a man great talent in expression. We listened to him with awe. Pubby was entranced. He asked me if it would be safe to take anything down in his notebook, and when I promised to protect him he wrote three pages. By this time the campus was filling up. Word had gotten around the real college that the big show of the season was being pulled off up at Dillpickle, and the students were arriving by the dozen. We were getting pretty nervous. The new arrivals were n't coached, and sooner or later they were bound to give the snap away. We decided to introduce our guest to the president. If we could keep things 130 At Good Old Siwash quiet another half hour all would be safe, Petey assured us. We took the Reverend up to the main entrance, Petey's thinker working like a well-oiled machine all the way. He pointed out the tree where they hanged a horse thief, and Pubby made us wait till he had gotten a leaf from it. The Senior classes at Dillpickle had had the custom of hauling boulders on to the campus as graduation presents. Petey explained that each boulder marked the resting place of some student whose career had been fore shortened accidentally, and he described several of the tragedies invented them right off the reel. Pubby was so interested he did n't care who saw his notebook. When Petey told him how a pack of tim ber wolves had besieged the school for nine days and nights, four years before, he almost cried because there was no photograph of the scene handy. We had to promise him a wolf skin to comfort him. Dillpickle Academy was a plain old brick building, with one of those cupolas which were so popular among schools and colleges forty years ago. I don't know just what mysterious effect a cupola has on education, but it was considered necessary at that time. In front of the building was a wide stone porch. Inside we could see half a dozen dogs and a horse. Pubby looked a bushel of exclamation points when Petey explained that they belonged to the president. He looked a lot more when he saw a counter with a fine assortment of chewing tobacco CoUeges While You Wait 131 and pipes on it. That, Petey whispered to me, was his masterpiece. He had borrowed the whole thing from a corner grocery store. Petey had just put his eye to the window of the president's room, ostensibly to find out whether Prexy was in a good humor and in reality to find out whether Kennedy, an old grad who had consented to play the part, was on duty, when one of the boys hurried up and grabbed me. " Just evaporate as fast as you can," he whispered ; " there are six cops on the way out. They 're going to pinch the whole bunch of us." Wow this was a fine predicament for a young and promising college to be arrested by six lowly cops on its own campus, in the act of showing a distin guished visitor how it ran the earth, and was par ticular Hades with the trigger-finger! Bangs was showing Pubby the window through which the Pro fessor of Arithmetic had thrown him the term before, and I told Petey. He sat down and cried. " After all this work and just as we had it cinched ! " he moaned. " I '11 quit school to-morrow and devote my life to poisoning policemen. This has made an anarchist of me." There was nothing to do. We could n't very well explain that the college would now have to run away and hide because some enthusiastic Freshman had fired a horse-pistol on the streets of Jonesville. I looked at the crowd of fantastic students getting ready to bolt for the fence. I looked at our victim, 132 At Good Old Siwash fairly punching words into his notebook. It was the brightest young dream that was ever busted by a fat loafer in brass buttons. Then I saw Ole Skjarsen and had my one big inspiration. " Excuse me," I said, rushing over to Pubby, " but you '11 have to mosey right out of here. There 's Ole Skjarsen, and he looks ugly." "Oh, my word!" said Pubby; he remembered Ole from the night before. " Right around the building ! " yelled Petey, grab bing the cue. Naturally Ole heard him and saw those whiskers. " Har 's das spy ! " he yelled. " Kill him, f allers ; he ban a spy ! " We dashed around the building, Ole following us. And then, because the cops had arrived at the front gate, the whole mob thundered after us. Well, sir, you never saw a more successful race in your life. There were no less than a hundred Siwash students behind us, and, though no one but Ole Skjarsen had any interest in us, they were all trying to break the sprint record in our direction, it being the line of least resistance. And, say! We certainly had misjudged the Reverend Ponsonby Diggs. He may have been fat, but how he could run! His work was phenomenal. I think he must have been on a track team himself at some earlier part of his career, for the way he steamed away from the gang would have reminded you of the Lusitania racing the Statue of Liberty. He lost his cap. He shed his long black coat. He rolled over the fence 2 3 o CoUeges While You Wait 133 at the rear of the campus without even hesitating, and the last we saw of him he was going down the road out of Jonesville into the west, his legs revolv ing in a blue haze. Even if we had wanted to stop him, we could n't have caught him. And besides, Ole caught Petey and me just outside of the campus and we had to do some twenty-nine-story-tall ex plaining to keep from getting punched for harboring spies. No one had thought to put him next to the game. That all? Goodness, no! We cleaned up for a week and had been so good that the Faculty had about decided that nothing had happened when the Reverend Ponsonby Diggs appeared in Jonesville again. He came with a United States marshal for a bodyguard, too. He had footed it to the next town, it seems, and had wired the nearest British consul that he had been attacked by savages at Siwash College and robbed of all his baggage. They say he demanded battleships or a Hague conference, or something of the sort, and that the consul's office asked a Government officer to go out and pacify him. They stepped off the train at the Union Station and went right up to college only four blocks away. Petey and I remained considerably invisible, but the boys tell me that the look on the Reverend's face when he arrived at the real Siwash was worth per petuating in bronze. He went up the fine old avenue, past the fine new buildings, in a daze; and 134 At Good Old Siwash when our good old Prexy, who had him skinned forty ways for dignity, shook hands with him and handed him a little talk that was a saturated solution of Latin, he could n't even say " most extraordinary." You can realize how far gone he was. Some of the boys got hold of the marshal that day and told him the story. He laughed from four p. M. until midnight, with only three stops for refresh ments. The Reverend Pubby Diggs stayed three days as the guest of the Faculty and he didn't get up nerve enough in all that time to talk business. We saw him at chapel where he could n't see us, and he looked like a man who had suddenly discovered, while falling out of his aeroplane, that somebody had removed the earth and had left no address be hind. His baggage mysteriously appeared at his room in the hotel on the first night, and when he left he had n't recovered consciousness sufiiciently to inquire where it came from. I think he went right back to England when he left Siwash, and I '11 bet that by now he has almost concluded that some one had been playing a joke on him. You give those Englishmen time and they will catch on to almost anything. CHAPTER VI THE GEEEK DOUBLE CEOSS SUFFERING bear-cats ! Say ! excuse me while I take a long rest, Jim. I need it. I 've just read a piece of information in this letter that makes me tired all over. What is it? Oh, just another variety of compe tition smothered with a gentlemanly agreement that 's all ; another bright-eyed little trust formed and another readjustment of affairs on a business basis. We old fellows needn't break our necks to get back to Siwash and the frat this fall, they write me. Of course they'll be delighted to see us and all that ; but there 's no burning need for us and we need n't jump any jobs to report in time to put the brands on the Freshmen and rescue them from the noisome Alfalfa Belts and Sigh Whoops be cause there is n't going to be any rescuing this fall. They 've had an agreement at Siwash. They 're going to approach the Freshies under strict rules. No parties. No dinners at the houses. No abduc tions. No big, tall talk about pledging to-night or staggering through a twilight life to a frowzy-headed and unimportant old age in some bum bunch. All 136 At Good Old Siwash done away with. Everything nice and orderly. Freshman arrives. You take his name and address. Call on him, attended by referees. Maintain a gen eral temperature of not more than sixty-five when you meet him on the campus. Buy him one ten-cent cigar during the fall and introduce him to one girl age, complexion and hypnotic power to be care fully regulated by the rushing committee. Then you send him a little engraved invitation to amalga mate with you; and when he answers, per the self- addressed envelope inclosed, you are to love him like a brother for the next three and a half years. Gee ! how that makes me ache ! Think of it ! And at old Siwash, too ! Siwash, where we never considered a pledge safe until we had him tied up in a back room, with our colors on him and a guard around the house ! That settles me. I 've always yearned to go back and cavort over the campus in the fall when college opened; but not for me no more! Why, if I went back there and got into the rushing game, first thing I knew they 'd have me run up before a pan-Hellenic coun cil, charged with giving an eligible Freshman more than two fingers when I shook hands with him; and I 'd be ridden out of town on a rail for rush ing in an undignified manner. Bushing? What's rushing? Oh, yes; I forgot that you never participated in that delicious form of insanity known as a fall term in college. Rush ing is a cross between proposing to a girl and abduct- The Greek Double Cross 137 ing a coyote. Rushing a man for a frat is trying to make him believe that to belong to it is joy and inspiration, and to belong to any other means misery and an early tomb; that all the best men in college either belong to your frat or couldn't get in; that you 're the best fellows on earth, and that you 're crazy to have him, and that he is a coming Senator; that you can't live without him ; that the other gang can't appreciate him ; that you never ask men twice ; that you don't care much for him anyway, and that you are just as likely as not to withdraw the spike any minute if you should happen to get tired of the cut of his trousers; that your crowd can make him class president and the other crowds can make him fine mausoleums ; that you love him like real brothers and that he has already bound himself in honor to pledge and that if he does n't he will regret it all his life; and, besides, you will punch his head if he doesn't put on the colors. That's rushing for you. What 's my crowd ? Why, the Eta Bita Pie, of course. Could n't you tell that from my skyscraper brow? We Eta Bites are so much better than any other frat that we break down and cry now and then when we think of the poor chaps who can't be long to us. We 're bigger, grander, nobler and tighter about the chest than any other gang. We 've turned out more Senators, Congressmen, Supreme Justices, near-Presidents, captains of industry, for eign ambassadors and football captains than any two 138 At Good Old Siwash of them. We own more f rat houses, win more college elections, know more about neckties and girls, wear louder vests and put more cross-hatch effects on our neophytes than any three of them. We 're so im measurably ahead of everything with a Greek-letter name that every Freshman of taste and discrimina tion turns down everything else and waits until we crook our little finger at him. Of course, sometimes we make a mistake and ask some fellow that is n't a man of taste and discrimination; he proves it by going into some other frat; and that, of course, keeps all the men of poor judgment out of our gang and puts them in the others. Regular automatic dis pensation of Providence, isn't it? It 's been a long time since I had a chance to gather with the brethren back at Siwash and agree with them how glorious we are, but this note brings it all back. My ! how I 'd like this minute to go back about ten years and cluster around our big grate fire, which used to make the Delta Kaps so crazy with envy. Those were the good old days when we came back to college in the fall, looked over the haycrop in the Freshman class, picked out the likeliest seed repositories, and tthen proceeded to carve them out from the clutches of a round dozen rival frats, each one crazy to get a spike into every new student who looked as if he might be president of the Senior class and an authority on cotillons some day. No namby-pamby, drop-three-and-carry- one crochet effects about our rushing those days! The Greek Double Cross 139 We just stood up on our hind legs and scrapped it out. For concentrated, triple-distilled, double-X ex citement, the first three weeks of college, with every frat breaking its collective neck to get a habeas corpus on the same six or eight men, had a suffra gette riot in the House of Parliament beaten down to a dove-coo. There was nothing that made us love a Freshman so hard as to have about six other frats after him. I 've seen women buy hats the same way. They 've got to beat some other woman to a hat before they can really appreciate it. And when we could swat half a dozen rival frats over the heart by waltzing a good-looking young chap down the walk to chapel with our colors on his coat, and could watch ihem turning green and purple and clawing for air well, I guess it beat getting elected to Congress or marrying an heiress-apparent for pure, unadulter ated, unspeckled joy! Competition was getting mighty scarce in the country even then. There were understandings be tween railroad magnates and beef kings and biscuit makers and even the ministers had a scale of wedding fees. But competition had a happy home on our campus. About the best we had been able to do had been to agree not to burn down each other's frat houses while we were haltering the Freshmen. I Ve seen nine frats, with a total of one hundred and fifty members, sitting up nights for a week at a time working out plans to despoil each other of a runty 140 At Good Old Siwash little fellow in a pancake hat, whose only accomplish ment was playing the piano with his feet. One frat wanted him and that started the others. Of course we 'd have got along better if we 'd put the whole Freshman class in cold storage until we could have found out who the good men were and who the spoiled fruit might be. We were just as likely to fall in love with a suit of clothes as with a future class orator. We took in one man once because he bought a pair of patent-leather tan shoes in his Junior year. We argued that, if he had the nerve to wear the things to his Y. M. C. A. meetings, there must be some originality in him after all and we took a chance. We won. But it 's a risky business. Once five frats rushed a fellow for a month because of the beautiful clothes he wore and just after the victorious bunch had initiated him a clothing house came down on the young man and took the whole outfit. You can't always tell at first sight. But then, I don't know but that college fraternities exer cise as much care and judgment in picking brothers as women do in picking husbands. Many a woman Jias married a fine mustache or a bunch of noble clothes and has taken the thing that wore them on spec. That 's one more than we ever did. You could fool us with clothes; but the man who came to Siwash with a mustache had to flock by himself. He and his whiskers were considered to be enough company for each other. There were plenty of frats in Siwash to make The Greek Double Cross 141 things interesting in the fall. There were the Alfalfa Delts, who had a house in the same block with us and were snobbish just because they had initiated a locomotive works, two railroads and a pickle fac tory. Then there were the Sigh Whoopsilons, who got to Siwash first and who regarded the rest of us with the same kindly tolerance with which the Indians regarded Daniel Boone. And there were the Chi Yis, who fought society hard and always had their picture taken for the college annual in dress suits. Many 's the time I 've loaned my dress suit to drape over some green young Chi Yi, so that the annual picture could show an unbroken row of open-faced vests. And there were the Shi Delts, who were a bold, bad bunch; and the Fli Gammas, who were good, pious boys, about as exciting as a smooth-running prayer-meeting; and the Delta Kappa Sonofaguns, who got every political office either by electing a member or initiating one; and the Delta Flushes; and the Mu Kow Moos; the Sigma Numerous; and two or three others that we did n't lie awake nights worrying about. Every one of these bunches had one burning ambition that was to initiate the very best men in the Freshman class every fall. That made it necessary for us, in order to maintain our proud position, to disappoint each one of them every year and to make ourselves about as popular as the directors of a fresh-air and drinking-water trust. Of course we always disappointed them. Would n't 142 At Good Old Siwash admit it if we did n't. But, holy mackerel ! what a job it was! Herding a bunch of green and timid and nervous and contrary youngsters past all the temptations and pitfalls and confidence games and blarneyfests put up by a dozen frats, and landing the bunch in a crowd that it had never heard of two weeks before, is as bad as trying to herd a bunch of whales into a fishpond with nothing but hot air for gads. It took diplomacy, pugnacity and psycho logical moments, I tell you; and it took more: it took ingenuity and inventiveness and cheek and second sight and cool heads in time of trouble and long heads on the job, from daybreak to daybreak. I 'd rather go out and sell battleships to farmers, so far as the toughness of the job is concerned, than to tackle the job of persuading a wise young high- school product with two chums in another frat that my bunch and he were made for each other. What did he care for our glorious history? We had to use other means of getting him. We had to hypno tize him, daze him, waft him off his feet; and if necessary we had to get the other frats to help us. How ? Oh, you never know just how until you have to; and then you slip your scheme wheels into gear and do it. You just have to ; that 's all. It 's like running away from a bear. You know you can't, but you 've got to ; and so you do. Makes me smile now when I think of some of the desperate crises that used to roll up around old Eta Bita Pie like a tornado convention and threaten to The Greek Double Cross 143 engulf the bright, beautiful world and turn it into a howling desert, peopled only by Delta Kappa Whoops and other undesirables. I 'm far enough away, now, to forget the heart-bursting suspense and to see only the humor of it. Once I remember the Shi Delts, in spite of everything we could do, man aged so to befog the brain of the Freshman class president that he cut a date with us and sequestered himself in the Shi Delt house in an upper back room, with the horrible intention of pledging himself the next morning. Four of the largest Shi Delts sat on the front porch that evening and the telephone got paralysis right after supper. They had told the boy that if he joined them he would probably have to leave school in his Junior year to become governor ; and he did n't want to see any of us for fear we would wake him up. I chuckle yet when I think of those four big bruisers sitting on the front porch and guarding their property while I was shinning up the corner post of the back porch, leaving a part of my trousers fluttering on a nail and ordering the youngster in a blood-curdling whisper to hand down his coat, unless he wanted to lose forever his chance of being captain of the football team in his Sopho more year. He weighed the governorship against the captaincy for a minute, but the right triumphed and he handed down his coat. I sewed a big bunch of our colors on it, discoursed with him fraternally while balancing on the slanting roof, shook hands with him in a solemn, ritualistic way and bade him 144 At Good Old Siwash be firm the next morning. When the Shi Delts came in and found that Freshman pledged to another gang they had a convulsion that lasted a week; and to this day they don't know how the crime was committed. There was another Freshman, I remember, who was led violently astray by the Chi Yis and was about to pledge to them under the belief that their gang contained every man of note in the United States. We had to get him over to the house and palm off a lot of our alumni as leading actors and authors, who had dropped in to dinner, before he was sufficiently impressed to reason with us. Of course this is not what the English would call " rully sporting, don't you know ! " but in our consciences it was all classified as revenge. We got the same doses. Fillings, of the Mu Kow Moos, pulled one of our spikes out in beautiful fashion once by im personating our landlord. He rushed up the steps just as a Freshman rushee was starting down all alone and demanded the rent for six months on the spot, threatening to throw us out into the street that minute. The Freshman hesitated just long enough to get his clothes out of the house, and we did n't know for a month what had frozen his feet The Fli Gams weren't so slow, either. They found out once that one of the men we were just about to land had a great disgust for two of our men. What did one of their alumni do but happen craftily over our way and mention in the most The Greek Double Cross 145 casual manner the undying admiration that the boy had for those two? Of course we sandwiched him between them for a week and of course we were pained and grieved when he tossed us into the dis card ; but we got even with them the next year. We picked up an eminent young pugilist, who made his headquarters in the next town, and for a little con sideration and a suit of clothes that was a regular college yell we got him to hang around the campus for a week. We rushed him terrifically for a day and then managed to let the Fli Gams get him. They rushed him for a week in spite of our carefully regulated indignation and then proposed to him. When he told them that he might consider coming to school as soon as he had gone South and had cleaned up a couple of good scraps they let out an awful shriek and fumigated the house. They were nice young chaps, but no judge of a pugilist. They expected to be able to see his hoofs. Well, it was this way every year all fall. Ding- dong, bing-bang, give and take, no quarter and pretty nearly everything fair. As I said, it was n't con sidered exactly proper to burn a rival frat house in order to distract the attention of the occupants while they were entertaining a Freshman, but other wise we did pretty nearly what we pleased to each other only being careful to do it first. Of course a lot of things are fair in love and war that would not be considered strictly ethical in a game of cro quet. And rushing a Freshman is as near like love 146 At Good Old Siwash as anything I know of. It is n't that we love the Freshman so much. When I think of some of the trash we fought over and lost I have to laugh. But we could n't bear the idea of losing him. To sit by and watch another gang win the affections of a young fellow who you know is designed by Nature for your frat and the football team; to note him gradually breaking off the desperate chumminess that has grown up between you in the last forty-eight hours; to think that in another day he will have on the pledge colors of another fraternity and will be lost to you forever and ever and ever, and then some what is losing a mere girl to some other fellow com pared with that ? Of course I realize now that, even if a Freshman does join another frat, you can eventu ally get chummy with him again after college days are over if you find him worth crossing the street to see; and I find myself lending money to Shi Delts and borrowing it from Delta Whoops just as freely as if they were Eta Bites. But somehow you don't learn these things in time to save your poor old nerves in college. When I was in school the Alfalfa Delts, the Sigh Whoopsilons and the Chi Yis were giving us a hor rible race. I 'm willing to admit it now, though I 'd have fought Jeffries before doing it ten years ago. Each fall was one long whirlwind. The President of the United States in an ofiice-seekers' convention would have had a placid time compared with the Freshmen, We did n't exactly use real axes on each Naturally I was somewhat dazzled Page 147 The Greek Double Cross 147 other and we did n't actually tear any Freshman in two pieces, but we came as near the limit as was comfortable. No frat was safe for a minute with its guests. If you tried to feed 'em there was kero sene in the ice cream. If you entertained them some frat with a better quartet worked outside the house. If you took them out to call the parlor would fill up with riffraff in no time; and if you took your eye off your victim for a minute he was gone some other gang had got him. I sometimes think some of the crowds knew how to palm Freshmen the way magicians do, from the way they disappeared. Even the girls took a hand in it. When I was a Sophomore I was intrusted with the task of leading a Freshman three blocks down to Browning Hall to call on one of our solid girls, and before I had gone a block two Senior girls met us. They were bare acquaintances of mine, being strong Delta Kap. allies, and they usually managed to see me only after a severe effort ; but this time you 'd have thought I was a whole regiment of fiances. They literally fell on my neck. It was cruel of me, they declared, to be so unsociable. There I was, a football hero I 'd just broken my rib on the scrub team and every girl in school was dying to tell me how grand it was to suffer for one's college ; and yet I would n't so much as hint that I wanted to come to the sorority parties and lots more talk of the same kind. Naturally I was somewhat dazzled and I 'd walked about half a block with the prettiest one before I 148 At Good Old Siwash noticed that the other one was steering Freshie the other way. I turned around and never even said " Good day " to that girl ; but it was too late. About a dozen Delta Kaps appeared out of the ground and tried to look surprised as they gathered around that scared little Freshman and engulfed him. We never saw him again that is, in his innocent condition and the boys wouldn't even trust me with the pledges we were rushing around for bait the rest of the fall term. Bait? Oh, yes. Sometimes we 'd pledge a man on the quiet and leave him out a week or two, so that plenty of frats could bid him made them appreciate his worth, you know, and got every one well acquainted. By the time I was a Senior the competition was desperate. We spent the summers scouring the country for prospects and we spent the first week of school smuggling our trophies into our houses and pledging them, without giving the other fellow a look in that is, we tried to. We came back fairly strong in my Senior year, with a good bunch of prospects; but the one that excited us most was a telegram from Snooty Vincent in Chicago. It was brief and erratic, like Snooty himself, and read as follows: Freshman named Smith will register from Chi cago. Son of old man Smith, multimillionaire. Kid 's a comer. Get him sure ! SNOOTY. The Greek Double Cross 149 That was all. One of the half million Smiths of Chicago was coming to college age, weight, com plexion, habits and time of arrival unknown. That telegram qualified Snooty for the paresis ward. We did n't even know what Smith his millionaire father was. The world is full of Smiths who are pestered by automobile agents. All we knew was the fact that we had to find him, grab him, sequester him where no meddling Alfalfa Delt or Chi Yi could find him, and make him fall in love with us inside of forty-eight hours. Then we could lead him forth, with the colors and his art^nouveau clothes on, spread the glad news and there would n't have to be any more rushing that fall. ,We 'd just sit back and take our pick. We sat back and built brains full of air-castles for about three minutes and then got busy. It was matriculation day. There were half a dozen trains to come yet from Chicago on various roads. We had to meet them all, pick out the right man by his aura or by the way the porter looked when he tipped him, and grab him out from under the rave nous foe. The next train was due in ten minutes and the depot was a mile away. We sent Crawford down. He was trying for the distance runs anyway. The rest of us went out to show a couple of classy boys from a big prep school how to register and find a room, and pick out textbooks; and incidentally how to distinguish a crowd of magnificent young student leaders from eleven wrangling bunches of The Greek Double Cross 151 Petey grabbed his hat and discharged himself toward the depot. We brought in those big prep school boys and tried to give them the time of their lives, but our hearts were n't in it. We were think ing of those Mu Kow Moos that f rat of all others blissfully towing home a prize they'd stumbled onto and did n't know anything about ! We thought of those beautifully designed air-castles we were hoping to move into and we got pumpkins in our throats. Stung on the first day of school by a bunch that had to wear their pins on their neckties to keep from being mistaken for a literary society! Oh, thunder! We went in to dinner all smeared up with gloom. Then the door opened and Petey came in. He was five feet five, Petey was, but he stooped when he came under the chandelier. He had a suit case in one hand and a stranger in the other. " Boys," he said, " I want you to meet Mr. Smith, of Chicago." At first glance you wouldn't have taken Smith for a perambulating national bank, with a wheel barrow of spending-money every month. He was well-enough dressed and all that, but he did n't loom up in any mountainous fashion as to looks. He was runty and his hair was a kind of discouraged red. He had freckles, too, and he was so bashful that his voice blushed when he used it. He didn't have a word to say until dinner, when he said " thank you " 152 At Good Old Siwash to Sam, the waiter. Altogether he was so meek that he had us worried; but then, as Allie Bangs said, you can't always tell about these multimillionaires. Some of them didn't have the nerve of a mouse. He 'd seen millionaires in New York, he said, who were afraid of cab drivers. " And besides," said Petey, when a few of us were talking it over after dinner, " I 'd never have got him if he had n't been so meek. I was determined that no Mu Kow Moo was going to hang anything on us; and when I saw the three of them coming I waded right in. Allison and Briggs, those two dumb Juniors, were doing the steering. It was like taking candy from the baby. I just fell right into them and took about five minutes to tell those two how glad I was to see them back. I introduced myself to Smith ; and would you believe it ? he was still carrying his suitcase ! I grabbed it and apologized for not having carried it all the way up from the station. You should have seen those yaps scowl. They wanted to shred me up, but I never noticed them again. I pointed out all the sights to Smith and told him his friends had written me about him. There was so little room on the sidewalk that I suggested we two walk ahead ; and I shoved him right into the middle of the walk and made Allison and Briggs fall behind. I had a piece of luck just then. Old Pete and his sawed-off cab came by and I flagged him in a minute. I shoved Smith in and got in after him. Then I told the two babes that I could take care of Smith all right and that The Greek Double Cross 153 there was no need of their walking clear up to the house. After that I shut the door and we came away. If looks could kill I 'd be tuning up my harp this minute. Say, if I didn't have any more nerve than those two I 'd get a permit from the city to live. And all the time Smith never made a kick. I had him hypnotized. Now I 'm going in and make him jump through a hoop." We should have been very happy and we would have been, but just then Symington came in with some astounding news. The Alfalfa Delts had a man named Smith, of Chicago, over at their house. He was on the front porch, with the whole gang around him ; and from the looks of things they 'd have him benevolently assimilated before twenty- four hours. Naturally this created a tremendous lot of emotion around our house. It was a serious situ ation. We might have the right Smith and then again we might have a Smith who would be borrow ing money for car fare inside of ten minutes. We had to find out which Smith it was before we tam pered with his young affections. Did you ever snuggle up to a young captain of industry and ask him who his father was and whether he was important enough in the business world to be indicted by the Government for anything? That was the job we tackled that night Smith was meek enough, but somehow even Petey's nerve had its limits. We approached the subject from every cor ner of the compass. We led up to it, we beat around 154 At Good Old Siwash it and finally we got desperate and led the boy up to it. But he was too shy to come down with the information. Yes, he lived in Chicago. Oh, on the North Side. Yes, he guessed the stock market was stronger. Yes, the Annex was a great hotel. No, he didn't know whether they were going to put a tower on the Board of Trade or not. Yes, the Lake Shore Drive was dusty in summer. [Good!] He wouldn't care to live on it. [Bah!] Altogether he was as unsatisfactory to pump as a well full of dusty old brickbats. Just then Rawlins, who had been scouting around seeing what he could run against in the dark of the moon, arrived with the stunning information that the Chi Yis had a man named Smith, of Oak Park, at their house and that every corner of the lawn was guarded by picked men! When we got this news most of us went upstairs and bathed our heads in cold water. Oak Park sounded even more suspicious than Chicago. It 's a solid mahogany suburb and everybody there is somebody or other. You have to get initiated into the place just as if it were a secret society, it 's so exclusive. That meant there were three Smiths from Chicago in school. We had only one Smith. We had a one-in-three shot. We stuck the colors on the boys from the big prep school just to keep our hands in and went to bed so nervous that we only slept in patches. Still, two Chicago Smiths in other frat houses were better than The Greek Double Cross 155 one. It meant that at least one f rat was n't sure of its man. Maybe neither one was. Our scouts had reported that, from what they could pick up, neither Smith had it on our Smith much in looks. That could only mean one thing: there had been a leak in the telegraph office again. What show has a guile less sixty-five-dollar-a-month operator against a bunch of crafty young diplomatists ? They had read our telegram and were after the same Smith that we were. By morning the suspense around the house could have been shoveled out with a pitchfork. If one of the other frats had the right Smith and knew it, and had pledged him during the night, there was positively no use in living any longer. Petey, who had shared his room with our Smith, reported that he was now like wax in our hands. But that did n't comfort us much. It was too confoundedly puzzling. Maybe we had the heir to a subtreasury panting to join us and maybe his freckles were his fortune. All Petey had gouged out of him during the night was the fact that his father wanted him to come to Siwash because it was a nice, quiet place. Oh, yes; it was deadly calm! It could n't have been more than seven o'clock when the telephone rang. Petey answered it. A relative of Smith's was at the hotel and had heard the boy was at our house. Would we please tell him to come right down? Petey said he would and then rang off. Then he grabbed the 'phone again 156 At Good Old Siwash and asked Central excitedly why she had cut him off. Central said she had n't, but of course she rang the other line again. "Hello!" said Petey blandly. "This is the Alfalfa Belt house?" " No ; it 's the Chi Yi house," was the answer. Petey put the receiver up contentedly and we all turned handsprings over the library table. Fifty per cent safe, anyway. The Chi Yis were trying to sort out the Smiths, too. It was an hour before anything else happened. Then Matheson of the Alfalfa Delts, a ponderous personage, who wore a silk hat on Sunday and did instructing, came over and asked if we had a man named Smith with us. He was to be a pupil of his, he said, and he wanted to arrange his work. Of course Matheson was hoping to get a green man at the door, but he didn't have any luck. Bangs him self let him in and let him read two or three maga zines through in the library while we turned some more handsprings in the dining room this time. The Alfalfa Delts were fishing, too. It was a fair field and no favors. After a while Bangs told Matheson that the man named Smith presented his compliments and said it was all a mistake. His tutor's name was not Matheson, but Muttonhead. That sent Matheson away as pleasant as you please. All that day we sat around and beat off the enemy and got beaten off ourselves. Our Smith got a The Greek Double Cross 157 Faculty notice to appear at once and register that is, it got as far as the door. We sent it back to the Chi Yi house. We sent the Alfalfa Belt Smith a telegram from Chicago, reading : " Father ill. Come at once." That only got as far as a door, too. Some Alfalfa Delt got it and sent the boy back with the answer : "So careless of father ! " Blan- chard called up the fire department and sent it over to the Chi Yi house, hoping to be able to slip over and cut out Smith in the confusion that followed; but the game was too old. The Chi Yis had played it themselves the year before and refused to bite. Meantime we had found a Chi Yi alumnus in the kitchen trying to sell a book to the cook ; and in the proceedings that followed we discovered that the book had a ten-dollar bill in it. All around, it was an entertaining but profitless day. By night, there was n't another idea left in the three camps. We sat exhausted, each clutching its Smith and glaring at the other two. As far as our Smith was concerned we almost wished some one would steal him. He was about as interesting as a pound of baking powder. What with fishing for his Bradstreet rating, and inventing lies to keep him from going out and seeing the town, and watching the horizon for predatory Alfalfa Delts and Chi Yis, we were plumb worn out. We were so skittish that, when the bell rang about eight o'clock, we let it ring four times more before we answered it; and when the ringer claimed to be an 158 At Good Old Siwash ' Eta Bita Pie from Muggledorfer who had come over to attend Siwash, we made him repeat pretty nearly the whole ritual before we would consider his cre dentials good. He got in at last, slightly peevish at our un- brotherly welcome, and took his place in the library circle. We were explaining the whole situation to him, when Allie Bangs gave an earnest yell and stood on his head in the corner. " What did you say your name was ? " he asked the visitor after he had been set right side up again. " Maxwell, of Fella Kappa chapter," said the latter. " No, it is n't," said Bangs earnestly. " You ought to know your own name ! " he went on severely. " It 's Smith and you 're a barb from the corn field ! You 've come to Siwash to forget how to plow and to-morrow you 're going to organize a Smith Club. Do you hear? Don't let me cateh you for getting your name now and listen closely." It was all as simple as beating a standpat Con gressman. Maxwell was a stranger, of course. He was to pin his Eta Bita Pie pin on his undershirt and go forth in the morning a brand-new Smith, green and guileless. It was to occur to him just before chapel that a Smith Club ought to be formed and he was to post a notice to that effect. He would get a couple of well-known non-fraternity Smiths in terested and have them visit the houses and see the Chicago Smiths. With all the Smiths in session The Greek Double Cross 159 that night he ought to have no difficulty in finding out which was the son of old man Smith. He could be lowdown and vulgar enough to ask right out if he wished. If he found out he was to cut out that Smith and bring him to our house if he had to bind and gag him. If he didn't he was to bring all three if he could. There was a quiet and most reassuring tone in Maxwell's voice as he said : " I can." They evi dently had their little troubles at Muggledorfer, too. " After we get them here," said Bangs earnestly, " we '11 just pledge all three. We '11 surely get the right one that way and perhaps the other two will not be so bad." Upstairs, Petey Simmons was wearily explaining to our Smith for the ninth time that Freshmen were not allowed to appear on the campus for the first three days: and that it was considered good form to keep indoors until the Sophomore rush; and that there was n't a room left in town anyway, and he might as well stay with us a while; and that the police were looking for college students downtown and locking them up, as they did each fall, to show their authority. Blanchard relieved him of his task and he came downstairs mopping his brow. Then we went to work and planned details until midnight. It was to be the plot of the century and every wheel had to mesh. We spent the next day in a cold perspiration. Neither Alfalfa Delt nor Chi Yi paraded any 160 At Good Old Siwash pledged Freshmen. They were still hunting for the right Smith, too - evidently. They fell for the Smith Club plan with such suspicious eagerness that it was plain each bunch had some nasty, low-lived scheme up its sleeves. We were righteously indig nant. It was our game and they ought not to butt in. But Maxwell only smiled. He was a Napoleon, that boy was. He just waved us aside. " I '11 run this little thing the way we do at Muggledorfer," he explained. " You fellows can play a few lines of football pretty well, but when it comes to sur rounding a Freshman and making a Greek out of him, I would n't take lessons from old Ulysses him self." And so we left him alone and held each other's hands and smoked and cussed and hoped and hoped and hoped. Maxwell went after the three Smiths himself that night. He had taken a room in an out-of-the-way part of town and his plan was to take them over there after the meeting to discuss the future good of the Smith Club. Then about a dozen of us would slide gently over there and a curtain would have to be drawn over the woe that would ensue for the other gangs. Meanwhile, all we had to do was to sit around the house and gnaw our fingers. Maxwell called for our Smith last and he had the other two in tow. Oh, no ; we did n't invite them in. Two Alfalfa Delts and three Chi Yis were sitting on our porch, visiting us. Three Chi Yis and two Eta Bita Pies were sitting on the Alfalfa Delt porch. The Greek Double Cross 161 Four Eta Bites and two Alfalfa Belts were calling on the Chi Yi house. It was a critical moment and none of us was taking chances. We couldn't keep our Smiths from wandering, but we could make sure they did n't wander into the wrong place. Maxwell led his flock of Smiths away and we all sat and talked to each other in little short bites. The Chi Yis were nervous as rabbits. They looked at their watches every five minutes. The Alfalfa Delts listened to us with one ear and swept the other around the gloom. The night was charged with plots. Innumerable things seemed trembling in the immediate future. When the visitors excused themselves a little later, and went away very hur riedly, we learned with pleasure from one of our boys, who had been wandering around to break in a new pair of shoes or something, that the Smith meeting, which had been called for the Erosophian Hall, had been attended by four nondescript and unknown Smiths and fourteen Chi Yis, who had dropped in casually. First blood for us! Maxwell had evidently succeeded in segregating his Smiths. We expected a telephone call from his room at any minute. We kept on expecting it until midnight and then strolled down that way. The house was dark. A very mad landlady came down in response to our earnest request and informed us that the young carouser who had rented her room had not been there that evening; and that if we were his rowdy 162 At Good Old Siwash friends we could tell him that he would find his trunk in the alley. Then we went home and our brains throbbed and gummed up all night long. We went to chapel the next morning to keep from going insane outright. The Chi Yis were there look ing perfectly sour. The Alfalfa Delts on the other hand were riotous. Every one of them had a pleasant greeting for us. They slapped us on the back and asked us how we were coming on in our rushing. Matheson was particularly vicious. He came over to Bangs and put his arm around him in a friendly way. " I am going to have dinner with my pupil to-night," he said triumphantly. " He wants me to come over and get his trunk. Says he 's got a good room now and he 's much obliged to you fellows for your trouble. Have you heard that there 's another Smith in school son of a big Chicago man ? There 's some great material here this fall, don't you think?" Bangs tripped on Matheson's pet toe and went away. Something horrible had happened. How we hated those Alfalfa Delts! They had stung us be fore, but this was a triple-expansion, double-back- action, high-explosive sting, with a dum dum point. We hurt all over ; and the worst of it was, we had n't really been stung yet and did n't know where it was going to hit us. Did you ever wait perfectly help less while a large, taciturn wasp with a red-hot tail was looking you over ? The Alfalfa Delts frolicked up and down college The Greek Double Cross 163 that day, Smithless but blissful. We consoled our selves with a couple of corking chaps whom the Delta Flushes had been cultivating, and put the ribbons on them in record time. Ordinarily we would have been perfectly happy about this, but instead we were perfectly miserable. We detailed four men at a time to be gay and carefree with our pledges; and the rest of us sat around and listened to our bursting hearts. Of all the all-gone and utterly hopeless feel ings, there is nothing to compare with the one you have when your f rat the pride of the nation has just been tossed into the discard by some hollow- headed Freshman. I took my head out of my hands just before din ner and went down the street to keep a rushing engagement. I had to pass the Alfalfa Delt house. It hurt like barbed wire, but I had to look. I was that miserable that it could n't have bothered me much more, anyway, to see that wildly happy bunch. But I did n't see it. I saw instead a crowd of fel lows on the porch who made our dejection look like disorderly conduct. There was enough gloom there to fit out a dozen funerals, and then there would have been enough left for a book of German phi losophy. The crowd looked at me and I fancied I heard a slight gnashing of teeth. I did n't hesitate. I just walked right up to the porch and said: " Howdedo ? Lovely evening ! " says I. " How many Smiths have you pledged to-day ? " The gang turned a dark crimson. Then Matheson 164 At Good Old Siwash got up and came down to me. He was as safe-looking as somebody else's bull terrier. " We don't care to hear any more from you," he said, clenching his words ; " and it would be safer for you to get out of here. We 're done with your whole crowd. You 're lowdown skates that 's what you are. You 're dishonorable and sneaky. You 're cads ! We '11 get even. I give you warning. We '11 get even if it takes a hundred years." " Thanks ! " says I. " Hope it takes twice as long." Then I went back home and let my date take care of itself. * * We went through dinner in a daze and sat around, that night, like a bunch of vacant grins on legs. Our grins were vacant because we did n't know why we were grinning. We 'd stung the Alfalfa Belts. We did n't know why or how or when. But we 'd stung them! We had their word for it. Sooner or later something would turn up in the shape of par ticulars; only we wished it would hurry. If it didn't turn up sooner we were extremely likely to burst at the seams. It turned up about nine o'clock. There was a commotion at the front door and Maxwell came in. He was followed by an avalanche of Smiths. There was our Smith, and a tall, lean Smith, and a Smith who waddled when he walked. They were all dirty and dusty; they all wore our pink-and-blue pledge The Greek Double Cross 165 ribbons on their coat lapels and when they got in the house they gave the Eta Bita Pie yell and sang about half of the songbook. Maxwell had not only pledged them, but he had educated them. After we had stopped carrying the bunch about on our shoulders, and had put the roof of the house back, and had righted the billiard table, and per suaded the cook to come down out of a tree in the back yard, we allowed Maxwell to tell his story. " It was perfectly simple," he said. " Did n't expect to be kidnapped, of course ; but it 's all in the day's work. You 've no idea what a job I had getting colors to pin on these chumps. If it had n't been for my pink garters and a blue union suit I 'd put on yesterday " We stopped Maxwell and backed him up to the starting pole again. But he was no story-teller. He skipped like a cheap gas engine. We had to take the story away from him piece by piece. He 'd dodged his Smiths down a side street, it seems, on the plea that there were n't any more Smiths coming and they might as well go over to his room. All would have been well if one Smith hadn't got an awful thirst. There was a corner drug store on the way to the room and while the quartet were insulting their digestions with raspberry ice-cream soda a college man with a wicked eye came by. A few minutes later, just as they were crossing the railroad viaduct near Smith's home, two closed carriages drove up and six husky villains fell upon them, 166 At Good Old Siwash shouting : " Chi Yi forever ! " And after dumping them in the carriages, they sat on them, while the teams went off. " After I 'd got my man's knee out of my neck," said Maxwell, " I did n't seem to care much whether I was kidnapped or not. It would bind us four closer together after we escaped; and, besides, I have never found kidnapping to pay too much risk. Anyway, they drove us nothing less than twenty miles and bundled us into an old deserted house. The leader told us, with a whole lot of un necessary embroidery, that we were to stay there un til we pledged to Chi Yi if we rotted in our shoes. Then, of course, I saw through the whole thing. It was an Alfalfa Delt gang disguised as Chi Yis. The Alfalfa Belts would send another gang out the next day, rout the bogus Chi Yis and allow the poor Freshies to fall on their necks and pledge up. That used to be popular at Muggledorfer. " I did the talking and let my knees knock together considerably. I told them that we 'd been too badly shaken up to think, but if they would let us alone that night we 'd try to learn to love them by morning. So they put us upstairs and warned us that every window was guarded; then we lay down together and I began at the first chapter and pumped those chaps full of Eta Bita Pie all night. " It was six o'clock when they finally pledged. When the gang came up they found us adamant. 'Never!' said I. 'We'll pledge Alfalfa Delt or The Greek Double Cross 167 die martyrs to a holy cause ! ' Of course they did n't dare give themselves away. They could n't even shout for joy. All they could do was to wait for the rescuing party. I spent the day teaching the boys the songs and the yell in whispers ; and about three o'clock I got my grand inspiration about the colors and rigged them out. Then I dug my own pin out and put on my vest and about four o'clock the rescuing party drove up. Say, you 'd have laughed to see that fight! Ham-actors in Richard the Third would have made it look tame. The Chi Yis put up a fist or two, threw a brick and then cut for the timber ; and the noble Alfalfa Delts burst open the door just as I got the chorus going on that grand old song: " ' Oh, you 've got to be an Eta Bita Pie Or you won't get a scarehead when you die I ' " When they saw us there, with our colors on and four particularly wicked-looking chair legs in our hands, they gave one simultaneous gasp and say, boys, I don't believe in ghosts, but I don't see yet how they disappeared so instantaneously! And anyway, for Heaven's sake, bring out the prog. We drilled eight miles to a railroad station and my vest buttons are tickling my backbone." Just then a telegram arrived. " Don't look for Smith. Changed his mind and went to Jarhard! " SNOOTY." 168 At Good Old Siwash No wonder we could n't blast any information out of our Smiths! Oh, they were our Smiths all right and they were n't such a bad bunch at that. The fat one turned out to be the champion mandolin teaser in school and the lean one made the debating team; while our own particular first-edition Smith won the catch-as-catch-can chess championship of the college three years later. Just the same, I 'd like to get one fair crack at that Smith who went to Jarhard. I 'd get even for those three days, I '11 bet a few ! CHAPTER VII TAKING PACE FROM FATHER TIME HONESTLY, Bill it's so hard to keep up to date these days, that sometimes I 'm afraid to go to sleep at night for fear I '11 find myself in an ethnological museum when I wake up the next morning, with people making funny cracks about the strange clothes I was wearing when they caught me. I 'm not constitutionally a back number myself either. I come as near wearing next year's styles as most fellows, and I had my wrist broken cranking an automobile before most Americans believed the things would go. I was tired of this hand-chopped furniture fad years ago, and if you hand me any slang that I can't catch on the fly you '11 have to make it up right now. But there 's no use talking. No one man can keep up with this world all by himself. Sometimes I get to thinking I 'm so far ahead that I can afford to sit down and get a breath or two, and when I get up I have to eat dust for the next year trying to catch up. Take colleges, for instance. I 've been conceited enough to think that these nappy little college boys, with their front hair brushed back down on their 170 At Good Old Siwash necks, could n't show me anything that I was n't tired of. I 've kept up to date on college things, I 've always flattered myself. You might lose me now and then on some new way of abusing lettuce during a salad course, perhaps, but as far as looking startled at anything that might be said or done around a college campus goes, I 've had a notion that I was n't in the learning class which shows how much I knew about it. This morning a gosling from the old school a Sophomore came in and visited with me for a few minutes, on the strength of the fact that he knew my baby brother in high school. We had n't talked a minute before he handed me " pragmatism " and " zing-slingers." While I was rolling my eyes and clawing for a foothold he confessed that he was the best glider in college. When I remarked that I had been somewhat of a glider myself, but that I had preferred the twostep, he laughed and explained that he was captain of the aviation team that they had three gliders and were finishing a monoplane that had a home-made engine with concentric cylinders. Can you beat it? There I was, Petey Simmons' best friend, and personally acquainted with eleven thousand forms of college excitement, listening to an infant with my mouth open and stopping him every few words to say " land sakes," " dew tell " and " what d' ye mean by that ? " I never was so humiliated in my life, but there 's no getting around the truth. I 've been ten years out of college, and Taking Pace From Father Time 171 when I go back they '11 pull the grandfather clause on me and wheel me in early nights. I 'm a back number and I know the symptoms. When that young Sophomore told me the boys of Eta Bita Pie had just spent twenty dollars apiece on a formal dance and house party, I put up the same kind of a lecture to him that my father gave me when I explained that we simply had to spend five dollars apiece on our party, or belong in the fag end of things. And I suppose when my father's crowd blew in a couple of dollars for a load of wood, his father reminded him that when HE went to college they did n't coddle themselves with fires in their dormitories. And I suppose that some day this Sophomore will be telling his son that when he was in college a simple little home-made aeroplane furnished amusement for twenty fellows, and that they never dreamed of dropping over to the coast on Saturdays for a dip in the surf in their private monoplanes. Oh, well, it 's human nature and natural law, I suppose. No use trying to put a rock on the wheels of progress and there 's no use trying to ride the darned thing either. It '11 throw you every time. When I went to college, Billy loud pedal on that " I " things were different. We did n't spend our time fooling with gliders or blow ourselves up mon keying with pragmatism. We attended strictly to business. We were there for educational purposes and we had no time to chase humming birds and chicken hawks. Why, the gasoline money of a young 172 At Good Old Siwash collegian to-day would have paid my board bills then! We didn't go to Japan on baseball tours, or lug telescopes around South America when we ought to have been studying ethics. We lived simply and plainly. There was n't an automatic piano in a single frat house when I was in college, and as for wasting our money on motion-picture shows and taxi- cabs nonsense. We 'd have died first. You see I 'm getting into practice. Some day I '11 have a son, I hope, and he '11 go back to Siwash. Just wait till he comes home at the end of the first semester and tries to put across any bills for radium stickpins and lookophonic conversations with the co-eds at Kiowa. I '11 pull a When-I-was-at-Siwash lecture on him that will make him feel like a spider on a hot stove. If I 've got to be a back number I want to romp right back far enough to have some fun out of it. I '11 make him sweat as much lugging me up to date as I had to perspire in the old days to illuminate things for Pa. After all, there is no question at college more serious than the Pa question, anyway, Bill. It was always butting into our youthful ambitions and tying pig iron to our coat-tails when we wanted to soar. It 's simply marvelous how hard it is to educate a Pa a hundred miles or more away into the supreme importance of certain college necessities. It is n't because they forget, either. It 's because they don't realize that the world is roaring along. I can see it all since this morning. Take my Taking Pace From Father Time 173 father, for instance. There was no more generous or liberal a Pa up to a certain point. He wanted me to have a comfortable room and vast quantities of good food, and he was glad to pay literary society dues, and he would stand for frat dues; but when it came to paying cab hire, you could jam an appro priation for a post-office in an enemy's district past Joe Cannon in Congress more easily than you could put a carriage bill through him. He just said " no " in nine languages; said that when he went to Siwash " and it turned out good men then, too, young fellow " the girls were glad to walk to enter tainments through the mud; and when it was un usually muddy they were n't averse to being carried a short distance. I believe I would have had to lead disgusted co-eds to parties on foot through my whole college course if I had n't happened across an old college picture of father in a two-gallon plug hat. That gave me an idea. I put in a bill for a plug hat twice a year and he paid it without a mur mur. Then I paid my carriage bills with the money. Plug hats had been the peculiar form of insanity prevalent at Siwash in his day and he thought they were still part of the course of study. I got along much easier than many of the boys, too. Allie Bangs' Pa made him buy all his clothes at home, for fear he 'd get to looking like some of the cartoons he 'd seen in the funny papers. " Prince " Hogboom was a wonder of a fullback, and his favor ite amusement was to get out at night and try to pull 174 At Good Old Siwash gas lamps up by the roots. He was a natural born holy terror, but his father thought he was fitted by nature to be a missionary, and so Hoggie had to harness himself up in meek and long-suffering clothes and attend Bible-study class twice a week. The crimes he committed by way of relieving himself after each class were shocking. Then there was Petey Sim mons, who was a perpetual sunbeam and greatly be loved because it was so easy to catch happiness from him. And yet Petey went through school with a cloud over his young life, in the shape of a Pa who gave him a thousand dollars a year for expenses and would n't allow a single cent of it to be spent for frivolity. And he had a blanket definition for frivolity that covered everything from dancing parties to pie at an all-night lunch counter. By hard work Petey could spend about four hundred dollars on necessary expenses, and that left him six hundred dollars a year to blow in on illuminated manuscripts, student lamps, debating club dues and prints of the old masters. He had to borrow money from us all through the year, and then hold a great auction of his art trophies and student lamps, before vacation came, in order to pay us back. But all of these troubles were n't even annoyances beside what Keg Rearick had to endure. Keg was an affectionate contraction of his real nickname " Keghead." He had the worst case of " Pa " I ever heard of. He was a regular high explosive one of these fine, old, hair-triggered gentlemen, who consider Taking Pace From Father Time 175 that they have done all the thinking that the world needs and refuse to have any of their ideas altered or edited in any particular. Keg had had his life laid out for him since the day of his birth, and when he left for Siwash on the precise day announced by his father eighteen years before the old man stood him up and discoursed with him as follows : " My son, I am about to give you the finest edu cation obtainable. You are to go down to Siwash and learn how to be a credit to me. Let me impress it on you that that is your only duty. You will meet there companions who will try to persuade you that there are other things to be done in college besides becoming a scholar. You will pay no attention to them. You are to spend your time at your books. You are to lead your class in Latin and Greek. Mathematics I am not so particular about. You are to waste no time on athletics and other modern curses of college. I shall pay your expenses and I shall come down occasionally to see how you are progressing. And you know me well enough to know that if I find you deviating from the course I have laid out in any particular, you will return home and go into the store at six dollars a week." That 's the way Keg always repeated it to us. With that affectionate farewell ringing in his ears he came on down to Jonesville; and when the Eta Bita Pies saw his honest features and his particularly likable smile, they surrounded and assimilated him in something less than fifteen minutes by the clock. 176 At Good Old Siwash And then his troubles began. Keg's father had come down the week before school and had selected a quiet place about three miles from the college out beyond the cemetery in a nice lonely neighborhood, where there was just about enough company to keep the tele phone poles from getting despondent. Moreover, he had n't given Keg any spending money. "Education is the cheapest thing in the world," he roared. " You don't have to keep your pockets full of dollars to live in the times of Homer and Horace. I 've told them to let you have what you need at the bookstore. For the rest, the college library should be your haunt and the debating society your recreation." If ever any one was getting knowledge put down his throat with a hydraulic ram, it certainly was Keg Rearick. It is n't hard to imagine the result. Keg toiled away three miles from anything interesting and got bluer and gloomier and more anarchistic every day. Would n't have been so bad if nobody had loved him. Lots of fellows go through college with no particular friends and emerge in good health and spirits. But we had courted Keg and had tried to make it im possible for him to live without us. We liked him and we hankered for his company. We wanted to parade him around the campus and confer him upon the prettiest co-ed in his boarding hall, and teach him to sing a great variety of interesting songs, with no particular sense to them, and snatch off two or three important offices around school. Instead of that Taking Pace From Father Time 177 he only got to say " howdy " to us between classes, and the rest of his time he spent Edward Payson Westoning back and forth from his suburban lair, without a cent in his pockets and the street-car motor- men giving him the bell to get off of the track into the mud every other block. We very soon found this wasn't going to do. Keg's spirits were down about two notches below the absolute zero. If this was college life, he said, would somebody kindly take a pair of forceps and remove it. It ached. The upshot was we made Keg steward of the frat-house table, which paid his board and room and moved him into the chapter house. He objected at first, because of what his father would say when he heard of it. But he finally concluded that anything he might say would be pleasanter than going all day without hearing anything, so he sur rendered and came along. The first night at dinner, when we pushed back our chairs and sang a few lines by way of getting ready to go upstairs and chink a little assorted learn ing into our headpieces, Keg cried for pure joy. He buckled down to work the way a dog takes hold of a root, and inside of a week he couldn't remember a time in his young existence when he had been un happy. He was tossing out Greek declensions to the prof, like a geyser, and Conny Matthews, our cham pion Livy unraveler, had shown him how to hold a Latin verb in his teeth while he broke open the rest of the sentence. And, besides that, we had introduced 178 At Good Old Siwash him to all the nicest girls in the college and had assisted the glee club coach to discover that he had a fine tenor voice. He was a sure-enough find, and fitted into college life as if it had been made to measure for him. Of course all this pleasantness had to have a gloom spot in it somewhere. Rearick's father furnished the gloom. He was certainly the most rambunctious, most unreconstructed and most egregious Pa that ever tried to turn the sunshine off of a bright young college career. Regularly once a week a letter would come to Keg from him. It always began " When I was in college," and it always wound up by order ing Keg to eat a few assorted lemons for the good of his future. He was to go to morning prayer, regularly there had n't been any for twenty years. He was to become as well acquainted as possible with his professors, because of the inspiration it would give him fancy snuggling up to old Grubb. He was to take a Sunday-school class at once. He was to re member above all things that though it was a dis grace to waste a minute of the precious college years it was equally a disgrace to go through college with out being self-supporting. He should by all means learn to milk at once. He, Keg's father, had been valet to a couple of very fine Holstein cows while he was in college, and he attributed much of his success to this fact. He would of course pay Keg's expenses while he had to, but he would hold it to his discredit. He must at once begin to find work* Taking Pace From Father Time 179 This last command impressed Keg deeply, for he had been sailing along with us without a cent. He 'd been earning his board and room, of course, but that was already paid for for a month out on the edge of the planet; and as it was the first time the family that owned the house had ever got a student boarder they firmly declined to rebate. It 's pretty hard to butterfly joyously along with the fancy- vest gang without any other assets than unlimited credit at the bookstore, so Keg began to prowl for a job. Presently he picked up a laundry route. The laundry wagon was a favorite vehicle on which to ride to fame and knowledge in those days. By getting up early two mornings a week and working late nights, Keg man aged to put away about six dollars and forty-five cents a week, providing every one paid his laundry bill. He was so pleased and tickled over the idea that he wrote to his father at once explaining that he now had plenty of work, but had had to move downtown in order to do it. Did this please old pain-in-the-f ace ? Not notice ably. There had been no such things as laundry wagons in his day. Students were lucky if they had a shirt to wear and one to have washed at the same time. He wrote a letter back to Keg that bit him in every paragraph. He was to give up the frivolous laundry job and get some wood to saw. That and tending cows were the only real methods of toiling through college. He, Keg's father, had received his board and room for milking cows and doing chores, 180 At Good Old Siwash and he had sometimes earned as much as three dollars a week after school hours and before breakfast saw ing cord-wood at seventy-five cents a cord. It was healthful and classic. He would send his old saw by express. And he was further to remember there were about four more pages to memorize, a headache in every page. Good old Keg did his best to be obedient, but he had no chance. In the first place, cord-wood was phenomenally scarce in Jonesville, and anyway, peo ple had a vicious habit of hindering the cause of education by sawing it at the wood-yards with a steam saw. There were plenty of cows in the out skirts, but they were either well provided with com panions for their leisure hours, or their owners declined to allow Keg to practice on them he know ing about as much about a cow as he did about a locomotive. And so he dawdled on with us at the chapter house, gulping down Livy, getting a strangle hold on Homer, and pulling in six or seven dollars a week at his frivolous laundry job, some of which cash he was saving up for a dress suit. And then, one day, Pa Rearick blew in for another visit and caught his son playing a mandolin in our lounging room far, far from the nearest cyclone cellar. To judge from the conversation that followed we could n't help hearing it, although we went out- of-doors at once one might have thought that Keg had been caught in a gilded den of sin, playing poker with body-snatchers. Pa Rearick simply cut loose Taking Pace From Father Time 181 and bombarded the neighborhood with red-hot ad jectives. That he should have brought up a son to do him honor and should have found him dawdling his college moments away with loafers; fawning on the idle sons of the rich ; tinkling a mandolin instead of walking with Homer; wasting time and money instead of trying to earn his way to success " Bah," likewise " Faugh," to say nothing of other picturesque expressions of entire disgust from all of which one would judge almost without effort that Keg was in bad, and in all over. I suppose Keg attempted to explain. Possibly some people try to argue with a funnel-shaped cloud while it is juggling the house and the barn and the piano. Anyway the explanations were n't audible. Presently Pa Rearick announced, for most of the world to hear, that he was going to take his idle, worthless, dis graced and unspeakable nincompoop of a son back to his home and set him to weighing out dried apples for the rest of his life. Then up rose Keg and spoke quite clearly and distinctly as follows : " No, you 're not, Dad." " Wh-wh-wh-whowho w wy not ! " said Pa Rearick, with perfect self-possession but some difficulty. " Because I like this college and I 'm going to stay here," said Keg. " I 'm standing well in my studies and I 'm learning a lot all around." " All I have to say is this," said Pa Rearick. I really have n't time to repeat all of those few words, but the ukase, when it was completely out, was the 182 At Good Old Siwash following: Keg was to have a chance to ride home in the cars if he packed up within ten minutes. After that he could walk home or dance home or play his way home with his mandolin. And he was given to understand that, when he finally arrived, the near est substitute to a fatted calf that would be prepared for dinner would be a plate of cold beans in the kitchen with the hired man. " You may stay here and dawdle with your worth less companions if you desire," shouted Pa Rearick to a man in an adjoining county. " The lesson may be a good one for you. I wash my hands of the whole matter. But understand. Don't write to me for a cent. Not one cent. You 've made your bed. Now lie on it" With which he went away, and we tiptoed carefully in to rearrange the shattered atmosphere and comfort Keg. We found him looking thoughtfully at nothing, with his hands deep in his pockets, from which about six dollars and seventy-five cents' worth of jingle sounded now and then. We waited patiently for him to speak. At last he turned on us and grinned pensively. " Do you know, boys," he said, " as a bed-maker I can beat the owner of that prehistoric old corn-husk mattress out in the suburbs with one hand tied behind me." Of course it is a sad thing to be regarded with indignation and disgust by one's only paternal parent, Taking Pace From Father Time 183 but Keg bore up under it pretty manfully. He dug into his work harder than ever and he was a good student. Latin words stuck to him like sandburrs. That was n't his fault, of course. Some men are born with a natural magnetism for Latin words; and others, like myself, have to look up quoque as many as nine times in a page of Mr. Horace's cele brated metrical salve-slinging. Keg went into a literary society, too, and developed such an unholy genius at wadding up the other fellow's words and feeding them back to him that he made the Kiowa debate in his Freshman year. He also chased locals for the college paper, made his class football team, got on the track squad and won the Freshman essay prize. In fact, he killed it all year long and likewise he trained all year long with his idle and vicious companions meaning us. It beats all how much benefit you can get from training with idle and vicious companions, if you are built that way. Of course we taught him how to play a mandolin, and how to twostep on his own feet exclusively, and how to roll a cigarette without carpeting the floor with tobacco, and how to make a pretty girl wonder if she is as beautiful as all that, without really saying it himself, and dozens of other pretty and harmless little tricks. But that was n't half he picked up while he was loafing away the golden hours of his college course in our chapter house. Conny Matthews, whose hobby was Latin verse, plugged him up to sending in translated sonnets from 184 At Good Old Siwash Horace for Freshman themes. Noddy Pierce showed him how to grab the weak point in the other fellow's debate and hang on to it through the rebuttal, while the enemy floundered and struggled and splattered disjointed premises all over the hall. Allie Bangs had a bug on fencing, and because he and Keg used to tip over everything in the basement trying to skewer each other, they got to reading up on old French customs of producing artistic conversations and deaths and other things, and eventually they wrote one of those " Ha " and " Zounds " plays for the Dramatic Club. In fact, there 's no limit to what you can absorb from idle and vicious companions. In one term alone I myself picked up banjo playing, pole vaulting, a little Spanish, a bad case of mumps, and two flunks, simply by associating with the Eta Bita Pie gang twenty-seven hours a day. But nobody had to show Keg how to get jobs after his first experience. He had a knack of scenting a soft financial snap a mile away to leeward, and work ing his way through college was' the least of his troubles. It used to make me tired to see the non chalance with which he would sleuth up to a nice fat thing like a baseball season program, and put away a couple of hundred with a single turn of the wrist and about four days' hard soliciting among the long- suffering Jonesville merchants. I never could do it myself. I had the popular desire to work my way through school when I entered Siwash, and I pic tured myself at the end of my college career receiving Taking Pace From Father Time 185 my diploma in my toil-scarred fist, without having had a cent from home. But pshaw ! I was a joke. I mowed one lawn in my Freshman year, after hunting for work for three weeks ; and I lost that engagement because the family decided the hired girl could do it better. After that I gave up and took my checks from home like a little man. In Siwash it is all right to get sent through school, and nobody looks down on you for it. The boys who make their own way are very kind and never taunt you if you have to lean on Pa. But all the same, you feel a little bit disgraced. Why, I Ve seen a cotillon leader run all the way home from a downtown store where he clerked after school hours, in order to get into his society harness on time ; and when the winner of the Inter state Oratorical in my Freshman year had received his laurel wreath and three times three times three times three from the crazy student body, he excused himself and went off to the house where he lived, to fill up the hard-coal heater and pump the water for the next day's washing. As I started to say, some time ago, Keg proved to be a positive genius in nailing down jobs. He had n't been with us three months until he had presented his laundry route to one of the boys. He did n't have time to attend to it. He had hauled down a chapel monitorship that paid his tuition. He got his board and room from us for being steward, and how he ever got the fancy eats he gave us out of four dollars per week per appetite is an unsolved wonder. He 186 At Good Old Siwash made twenty-five dollars in one week by introducing a new brand of canned beans among the hash clubs. He took orders for bookbinding on Saturdays, and sold advertising programs for the college functions after school hours. More than once I borrowed ten dollars from him that year, while I was living on hope and meeting the mailman half-way down the block each morning just before the first of the month. And I was n't the only man who did it, either. Perhaps you wonder how he had time to do all this and to mix up in all the various departments of student bumptiousness, besides absorbing enough in formation laid down and prescribed by the curriculum to batter an " A " out of old Grubb, who hated to give a top mark worse than most men hate to take quinine. That 's one of the mysteries of college life. Xo one has time to do anything but the busy man. In every school there are a few hundred joyous loafers who hold down an office or two, and make one team, and then have only time to take a few hasty peeps at a book while running for chapel ; and there are a dozen men who do the debating and the heavy thinking for half a dozen societies, and make some athletic team, and get their lessons and make their own living on the side and who always have time, somehow, to pick up some new and pleasant pastime, like reading up for an oration on John Randolph, of Roanoke, or some other eminent has-been. When I think of my wasted years in college and of how I was always go ing to take hold of Psych, and Polykon and Advanced Taking Pace From Father Time 187 German, and shake them as a terrier does a rat, just as soon as I had finished about three more hands of whist oh, well, there 's no use of crying about it now. What makes me the maddest is that my wife says I 'm an imposingly poor whist player at that. Keg went home with one of us for the semester holidays. And at commencement time he wrote an affectionate letter home to his volcanic old sire, and told him that he was going to stride forth into the unappreciative world and yank a living away from it that summer. That was the great ambition of almost every Siwash boy. When we were n't thinking of girls and exams in the blissful spring days, we were stalking some summer job to its lair and sitting down to wait for it. There was n't anything that a Siwash boy would n't tackle in the summer vacation. The farmer boys had a cinch, of course. They were skilled laborers; and, besides, they came back in the fall in perfect condition for the football squad. Some of the town boys became street-car conductors. The new railroad that was built into Jonesville about that time was a bonanza for us. It was no uncommon thing, the summer of my Sophomore year, to find a dozen muddy society leaders shoveling dirt in a con struction crew and singing that grand old hymn com posed by Petey Simmons, which ran as follows: I 've a blister on me heel, and me beak 's begun to peel; I 've an ache for every bone that 's in me back. I 've a feeling I could eat rubber hose and call it sweet, And me hands is warped from lugging bits of track. 188 At Good Old Siwash Oh, me closes they are tore, and me shoulders they are sore, And I sometimes wish that I had died a ' horning '; And me eye is full of dirt, and there 's gravel in me shirt, But I 'm going back to Siwash in the mor-r-r-r-r-r-r-rning. One of our own boys is a division superintendent on one of the big western roads to-day, and he caught the railroad microbe in the shovel gang. The boys got newspaper positions and clerked in the stores, and one or two of them tooted cornets or other disturbances at summer-resort hotels. One junior, during my time, aroused the envy of the whole college by painting the steeple of the First Baptist Church during vacation; and when he finished the job his class numerals were painted in big letters on top of the ornamental knob that tipped the spire. At least, so he announced, and no rival class had the nerve to investigate. But the most popular road to prosperity during the summer was the canvassing route. About the last of April various smooth young college chaps from other schools would drift into Siwash and begin to sign up agents for the summer. There were three favorite lines books, stereopticon slides and a patent com bination desk, blackboard, sewing-table, snow-shovel, trundle-bed and ironing-board which was sold in vast numbers at that time by students all over the country. All though May the agents fished for vic tims. They signed them up with contracts guaran teeing them back-breaking profits, and then instructed Taking Pace From Father Time 189 them with great care in a variety of speeches. Speech No. 1, introductory. Speech No. 2, to women. Speech No. 3, clinching talk -for waverers. Speech No. 4, to parents. Speech No. 5, rebuttal to argument that victim already has enough reading matter. Speech No. 6, general appeal to patriotism and love of progress. Then on Commencement day the hope ful young collegians would go forth to argue with the calm and unresponsive farmer's wife and sell her something that she had never needed and had never wanted, until hypnotized by the classic eloquence of a bright-eyed young man with his foot in the crack of the half-opened door. I chose the book game one summer, and went out with about thirty others. Twenty-five of them quit at the end of the first week. That was about the usual proportion but the rest of us stuck. I devastated a swath of territory fifty miles wide and a hundred miles long. I talked, argued, persuaded, plead, threatened and mesmerized. I sold books to men on twine binders, to women with their hands in the bread dough, and once, after a farmer had come grudgingly out to rescue me from his dog, I sold a book to him from a tree. I worked two months, tramped four hundred miles, told the same story of impassioned praise for and confidence in my book eleven hundred times, and sold sixty-five volumes at a gross profit of seventy-nine dollars my expenses being eighty dollars even. But it was worth the effort. I was a shy young thing at the beginning 190 At Good Old Siwash of the summer, who believed that strangers would invariably bite when spoken to. When school began I was a tanned pirate who believed the world belonged to him who could grab it, and who would have walked up to a duke and sold him a book on practical farming with as much assurance as if it were a subposna I was serving. Keg went out with the desk crowd, and it was evi dent from the first minute that he was going to return a plutocrat. He sold a desk to the train brakeman on his way to his field, and another to a kind old gentleman who incautiously got into con versation with him. He raged through four counties like a plague, selling desks in farmhouses, public libraries, harness stores, banks and old folks' homes. He was the season's sensation and won a prize every month from the proud and happy company. When he had finished collecting he took a hasty run to Denver on a sight-seeing trip, and came back to Siwash that fall in a parlor car, with something over four hundred dollars in his jeans. Naturally we would have ceased worrying about the probability of keeping Keg with us then if we had not done so long before. As a matter of fact, he was more prosperous than any of us. He had made his own money and he drew his own checks when he pleased, instead of taking them the first of the month wrapped up in a cayenne coating composed of parental remarks on extravagance and laziness. He gave away all of his little jobs to the rest of us Taking Pace From Father Time 191 first thing, and said he was content with what he had ; but, pshaw ! when a man has the gift he can't dodge prosperity. Keg had to manage the college paper that year because no one else could do it quite so well; and it netted him about fifty dollars a month. When the glee-club manager got cold feet over the poor prospects, Keg backed a trip himself and I hate to say how much he cleared from it. That was the first year we swept the West with our famous football team of trained mastodons; and at the earnest solicitation of about a dozen daily papers here and there, Keg dashed off something like one hundred yards of football dope at five dollars a column sort of a literary hundred-yard dash. He used to write it between bites at the dinner table. And then to top off everything, his precious desk company came along and stole him from us early in April. It considered him too valuable a man to tramp the country selling desks, while there were other young collegians who only needed the touch of a magic tongue to get them into the great calling. So Keg made a tour of Kiowa and Muggledorfer and Hambletonian and Ogallala colleges, lining up can vassers at a net profit of something like fifty dollars per head full or empty. When he blew in at the end of the year to spend Commencement week with us he was nothing short of an amateur Cro3sus. He bulged with wealth. I remember yet the awe with which the rest of us, hoarding our last nickels at the end of the long and billful year, took a peep at the 192 At Good Old Siwash balance in his checkbook and touched him humbly for advances, great and small. Keg had gone out the second evening of Commence ment week to bring a little pleasure into the barren life of a girl who hadn't been shown any attention by any one for upward of four hours. The rest of the boys were also away scattering seeds of kindness in a similar manner, and so I was alone when Pa Rearwick stumped up the walk to the chapter-house porch and glared at me. " I want to see my boy," he said, out of the corner of his beard. He seemed to suspect that I had made him into a meat pie or otherwise done away with him. " He 's out," I said, not very scared ; " but if you want to wait for him, won't you make yourself quite at home ? " He took a seat on the porch without a word. I went on smoking a cigarette in my most abandoned style and saying all I had to say, which was nothing. After a while Pa Rearick glared over at me again in a most belligerent manner. " Is he well ? " he asked. " Finer 'n silk," I answered, most disrespectfully. " Humph ! " said he ; which, being freely trans lated, seemed to mean : " If I had an impudent, lazy, immoral, shiftless, unlicked cub like you, I 'd grind him up for hen feed." Much more silence. I lit another cigarette. " Does he get enough to eat ? " Taking Pace From Father Time 193 " When lie has time," I said. " He 's generally pretty busy." " Playing the mandolin, I suppose." " Most of the time," said I. " He runs the college in his odd moments." " He would n't have run the Siwash I went to," said Pa Rearick grimly. " No," said I, " you egregious timber-head, he J d have spent his time limping after Homer." But as I said it only to myself, no one was insulted. " Has he learned anything ? " said old Hostilities, after some more silence. " Took the Sophomore Greek prize this year," I said, blowing one of the most perfect smoke rings I had ever achieved. " I don't believe it," said Pa Eearick deliberately. I blew another ring that was very fair, but it lacked the perfect double whirl of the first one. And presently the neatest spider phaeton that was owned by a Jonesville livery stable drew up before the house and Keg jumped out, telling a delicious chiffon vision to hold old Bucephalus until he got his topcoat. Keg was a good dresser, but I never saw him quite as letter-perfect and wholly immaculate as he was just then. He hurried up the steps, took one look, and yelled " Dad," then made a rush ; and I went inside to see if I could n't beat that smoke ring where there was not so much atmospheric disturbance. 194 At Good Old Siwash Pa Rearick stayed the rest of the week, and after he had interviewed certain professors the next day he moved over to the house and stayed with us. Mrs. Rearick came down, too, and on this account we did n't see quite as much of Keg as we had hoped to. The girl in chiffon did n't, either, but that 's neither here nor there. She was only a passing fancy, any way. By successive degrees Keg's father viewed the rest of us with disapproval, suspicion, tolerance, be nevolence, interest and friendliness. But I am con vinced that it was only on Keg's account. He gave us credit for exercising unexpected good taste in liking him. And maybe it was n't interesting to see him thaw and melt and struggle with a stiff, wintry smile, as a young man does with his first mustache, and finally give himself up unreservedly to fatherly pride. When a father has religiously put away these things all his life for fear of spoiling a son, and finally finds that that son is unspoilable, even by friendliness and parental tenderness, he has a lot of pleasure to indulge himself in during his remaining years. It was like the old fire-eater to call us together before he went and punished himself. I suppose it was his sense of justice which was too keen for any good use. " I 've misjudged my son," he said to us ; " and I want to make public admission of it. I am perhaps a little out of date a little old-fashioned. The world did n't move so fast when I was a boy here. When I was in school we saved our money and studied. My son tells me he can't afford to save Taking Pace From Father Time 195 money that time is too precious. I don't pretend to understand all your ways, but he seems to think you have been good to him and I want to thank you for it. My son has made his way alone these two years. I threw him out to support himself. When I casually mentioned yesterday that times were very hard in the business just now, he wanted to put five hundred dollars into it. I want you to know I 'm proud of him. I hope you young gentlemen will feel free to stop and visit us when you come through our town. I must say, times seem to have changed." Right he was. Times have changed. And here I have been dunderheading along in just his way, imagining that I was pacing them, instead of sitting on the fence and watching them go by. If I can find that little Sophomore who insulted me this morn ing, I 'm going to make him come to dinner and tell me some more about the way they do things this afternoon. As for to-morrow what does he or any one else know about it ? CHAPTEK VIII FKAPPED FOOTBALL AS a rule there is only about one thing to mar -^-the joy of college days and nights and early mornings. That is the Faculty. Honestly, I used to sit up until long after bedtime every little while trying to figure out some real reason for a college Faculty. They interfere so. They are so inappro priate. Moreover, they are so confoundedly ignorant of college life. How a professor can go through an assorted col lection of brain stufferies, get so many college degrees that his name looks like Halley's Comet with an alphabet tail, and then teach college students for forty years without even taking one of them apart to find out what he is made of, beats my time! That 'a a college professor for you, right through. He thinks of a college student only as something to teach whereas, of all the nineteen hundred and eighty- seven things a college student is, that is about the least important to his notion. A boy might be a cipher message on an early Assyrian brick and stand a far better chance of being understood by his professor. A college Faculty is a collection of brains tied Frapp6d FootbaU 197 together by a firm resolve said resolve being to find out what miscreant put plaster of Paris in the keyhole of the president's door. It is a wet blanket on a joyous life ; it is a sort of penance provided by Providence to make a college boy forget that he 's glad he 'a alive. It 's a hypodermic syringe through which the student is supposed to get wisdom. It takes the place of conscience after you 've been de stroying college property. When I sum it all up it seems to me that a college Faculty is a dark, rainy cloud in the middle of a beautiful May morning at least that 's the way the Faculty looked to me when I was a humble seeker after the truth in Siwash College. The Faculty was to boys in Siwash what indigestion is to a jolly good fellow in the restaurant district. It was always either among us or getting ready to land on us. Our Faculty had thirty-two profs and thirty- three pairs of spectacles. It also had two good average heads of hair and considerable whiskers. It could figure out a perihelion or a Latin bill-of-fare in a minute, but you ought to hear it stutter when it tried to map out the daily relaxations of a college full of husky young hurricanes, who had come to school to learn what life looks like from the inside. Fairy tales in the German and tea and wafers with quo tations looked like a jolly good time to the Faculty; and it could n't understand why some of us liked to put gunpowder in the tea. Now don't understand me to say that there isn't 198 At Good Old Siwash anything good about a college professor. Bless you, no ! There 's a lot of it. A Faculty is a lot of col lege profs in a state of inflammation, but individually most of the Siwash profs were nearly human at times. I look back at some of them now with awe. They really knew a lot. They knew so much that most of them are there yet; and I go back and look at them with a good deal more respect than I used to have. I '11 tell you it fills a chap with awe to see a man teaching along for twenty years at eighteen hundred dollars per, and raising children, and buying books, and going off to Europe now and then on that princely sum and coming through it all happy and content with life. I go around them nowadays with my hat off and try to persuade them that if it wasn't for my sprained arm I could quote Latin almost as well as the stone dog in front of Prexy's house. And some of them are bully good fellows, too. Nowadays they take me into their studies at Com mencement and give me good cigars, making sure first that there are no undergraduates around. Why, one of the profs I worried the most, when I was a cross between a Sophomore and a spotted hyena, is as glad to see me nowadays as though I owed him money. He runs a little automobile, and I hope I may get laid out in the subway if I have n't heard him cuss in real United States when the clutch slipped. And he was the chap who used to pick out the passages in Livy that had inflammatory rheuma tism and make me recite on them, and who always told Frapped Football 199 me that a student who smoked cigarettes would be making a wise business move if he brought his hat to recitation and left the less important part of his head at home. But, as I was saying, the Faculty at Siwash, like all other Faculties, did n't know its place. It was n't satisfied with teaching us Greek and Latin and Evi dences of Christianity and tall-brow twaddle of all sorts. It had to butt into our athletics and regulate them. Did you ever see a farmer regulate a weed patch with a hoe? You know how unhealthy it is for the weeds. Well, that was the way the Faculty regulated our athletics. It did n't believe in athletics anyway. They were too interesting. They might not have been sinful, but they were not literary and they were uneconomic. Of course all the professors admitted that good outdoor exercise was healthy for college boys, but most of them believed that you ought to get it in the college library out of JSTature books. And so the way they went at the real athletics, to keep them pure and healthful, almost drove us into the violent ward. Those were the days at Siwash when our football team could start out for a pleasant stroll through any teams in our section and wonder after it had passed the goal line, why those undersized fellows had been jogging their elbows all the way down the field. That was the kind of a team we built up every fall ; and it was n't half so much trouble to keep other teams from beating it as it was to keep 200 At Good Old Siwash the Faculty from blowing it to pieces with non- eligibility notices. There was something diabolical about that Faculty when it was wrestling with the athletic problem. It was n't human. It was like Mount Etna. You never could tell just when it would stop being lovely and quiet, and scatter ruin all over the vicinity. Its idea of regulating athletics at Siwash was to think up excuses for flunking every man who weighed over one hundred and fifty-five and could have his toes stepped on without saying " Ouch ! " And it never got the excuses thought up until the night before the most important games. The Faculty pretended to be as bland and innocent as Mary's lamb, but no one can ever tell me it didn't know what it was about Men have to have real genius to think up the things it did. You could n't do it accidentally. When a Siwash Faculty could moon along happily all fall until twenty-four hours before the Kiowa game and then discover with regret that our two-hundred-and-twenty-pound center had mis spelled three words in an examination paper the year before ; that our two-hundred-pound backs did n't put enough rear-end collisions into their words when they read French; and that Ole Skjarsen read Latin with a Norwegian accent and was therefore too big an ignoramus to play football, I decline to be fooled. I never was fooled. Neither was Keg Rearick. But that is hurdling about three chapters. Honestly, we used to spend one day out of six Frapp6d Football 201 building up our football team and the other five defending it from the Faculty. It positively hun gered for a bite out of the line-up. It had us help less. If we did n't like the way it ran things we could take our happy young college life up by the roots and transplant it to some other school, where the football team moved around the field like a parade. Theoretically the Faculty could sit around and take our best players off the team, as fast as we developed them, for non-attention to studies. But, as a matter of fact, it was n't an easy matter. It beats all how early in the morning you have to get up to get ahead of college lads who have got it into their heads that the world will gum up on its axle and stop dead still if their innocent little pleasures are interfered with. I remember the fall that the Faculty decided Miller could n't play because he had n't attended chapel quite persistently enough the spring before. Miller was our center and as important to the team that year as the mainspring of a watch. The pon derous brain trust that sat on this case did n't decide it until the day before the big game with Muggle- dorfer; then they practically ruled that he would have to go back to last spring and take his chapel all over again. It took us all night to sidestep that outrage, but we did it. The next morning an in dignation committee of fifty students met the Faculty and presented alibis that were invincible. It was demonstrated by a cloud of witnesses that Miller had been absent nine times hand-running because he 202 At Good Old Siwash had been sitting up nights with a sick chum. The Faculty was inexperienced that year and let him play; but, when it found out the next day by con sulting the records that the chum had attended chapel every one of those nine mornings, it got more par ticular than ever and its heart seemed to harden. On the day before the Thanksgiving game that year the Faculty held a long meeting and decided that our two guards were ineligible. There was n't a word of truth in it. They weighed two hundred and twenty pounds apiece and were eligible to the All- American team, but you could n't make the human lexicons look at it that way. They found them de ficient in trigonometry and canned them off the team. It was an outrage, because the two chaps did n't know what trigonometry meant even and could n't take an examination. We had to call the trig, professor out of town by a telegram that morning and then have the suspended men demand an immediate examina tion. That worked, too ; but every time we managed to preserve a glory of old Siwash, the Faculty seemed to get a little more crabby and unreasonable and diabolically persisted in its determination to regulate athletics. The next fall it was well understood when football practice began that there was going to be war to the knife between the Faculty and the football team. We were meek and resigned to trouble, but you can bet we were not going to sit around and embrace it. The longest heads in the school made themselves into Frapp6d FootbaU 203 a sort of an unofficial sidestepping committee; and we decided that if the Faculty succeeded in massacring our football team they would have to outpoint, out- foot, outflank and outscheme the whole school. Just to draw their fire, we advertised the first practice game as a deadly combat, in which the honor of Old Si wash was at stake. It was just a little romp with the State Normal, which had a team that would have had to use aeroplanes to get past our ends ; but the Faculty bit. It held a special session that night and declared the center, the two backs and the cap tain ineligible because they had not prepared orations the spring before at the request of the rhetoric pro fessor. That was first blood for us. We chased the Normalites all over the lot with a scrub team and Keg Rearick sat up nights the next week writing the orations. The result was we got four fine new dry- cleaned records for our four star players and the Faculty was so pleased with their fine work on those orations that we could scarcely live with it for a week. That was only a skirmish, however. We knew very well that the sacred cause of education would come right back at us and we decided to be else where when it struck its next blow for progress. We talked it all over with Bost, the coach, and the result was that a week before the Muggledorf er game, the last week in September, Bost gave out his line-up for the season in chapel. There were a good many surprises in the line-up to some of us. It seemed 204 At Good Old Siwash funny that Miller should n't make the team out and that Ole Skjarsen should have been left off; but the best of men will slump, as Bost explained, and he had picked the team that he thought would do the most good for Siwash. It was a team that I would n't have hired to chase a Shanghai rooster out of a gar den patch, but the blind and happy Faculty did n't stop to reason about its excellence. It held a meet ing the night before the Muggledorfer game and suspended nine of the men for inattention to chapel, smoking cigarettes during vacation and other high crimes. The whole school roared with indignation. Bost appeared before the Faculty meeting and almost shook his fist in Prexy's face. He told the Faculty that it was the greatest crime of the nineteenth cen tury; and the Faculty told him in very high-class language to go chase himself. So Bost went sorrow fully out and put in the regular team as substitutes. The next day we whipped Muggledorfer 80 to 0. I think that would have discouraged the Faculty if it hadn't been for Professor Sillcocks. Did I ever tell you about Professor Sillcocks ? It 's a shame if I have n't, because every one is the better and nobler for hearing about him. He was about a nickel's worth of near-man with Persian-lamb whis kers and the disposition of a pint of modified milk. Crickets were bold and quarrelsome beside him. He knew more musty history than any one in the state and he could without flinching tell how Alexander waded over his knees in blood; but rather than take V<4- Our peculiar style of pushing a football right through the thorax of the whole middle west Page 205 Frapp6d FootbaU 205 off his coat where the world would have seen him he would have died. He was just that modest and conventional. He had to come to his classes through the back of the campus up the hill ; and they do say that one day, when half a dozen of the Kappa Kap Pa jama girls were sitting on the low stone wall at the foot of the hill swinging their feet, he cruised about the horizon for a quarter of an hour waiting for them to go away in order that he might go up the hill without scorching his collar with blushes. That was the kind of a roaring lion Professor Sill- cocks was. Well, to get back from behind Robin Hood's barn, Professor Sillcocks had a great hobby. He believed that college boys should indulge in athletics, but that they should do it with their fingers crossed. Those were n't his exact words, but that was what he meant. It was noble to play games, but wicked to want to win. In his eyes a true sport was a man who would start in a foot race and come in half a mile behind carrying the other fellow's coat. Our peculiar style of pushing a football right through the thorax of the whole Middle West nearly made him shudder his shoes off and every fall in chapel he delivered a talk against the reprehensible state of mind that finds pleasure in the defeat of others. We always cheered those talks, which pleased him ; but he never could understand why we did n't go out afterward and -offer ourselves up to some high-school team as victims. It pained him greatly. 206 At Good Old Siwash Naturally Professor Sillcocks participated with great enthusiasm in the work of pruning our line-up, and after the Faculty had thrown up its hands he climbed right in and led a new campaign. We had to admire the scientific way in which he went about it, too. For a man whose most violent exercise con sisted of lugging books off a top shelf, and who had learned all he knew about football from the Literary Pepsin or the Bi- Weekly Review, he got onto the game in wonderful style. Somehow he managed to learn just who were our star players what they played and how badly they were needed and then he went to work to quarantine these players. First thing we knew the Millersburg game, which was always a fierce affair, arrived ; and on the morn ing of the game Bumpus and Van Eiswaggon, our two star halfbacks, got notices to forget there was such a game as football until they had taken Fresh man Greek over again they being Seniors and re membering about as much Greek as their hats would hold on a windy day. I '11 tell you that mighty near floored us; but virtue will pretty nearly always tri umph, and when you mix a little luck into it, it is as slippery to corner as a corporation lawyer. We had the luck. There were two big boners, Pacey and Driggs, in college who wore whiskers. There always are one or two landscape artists in college who use their faces as alfalfa farms. We took Bumpus and Van Eiswaggon and the leading man of a com pany that was playing at the opera house that night Frapp6d Football 207 over to these two Napoleons of mattress stuffing and they kindly consented to be imitated for one day only. Old Booth and Barrett had a tremendous layout of whiskers in his valise and before he got through he had produced a couple of mighty close copies of Pacey and Driggs. That afternoon the two real whisker kings went out in football suits and ran signals with the team until their wind was gone. Then they went back into the gym and their improved editions came out. Most of the college cried when they found that the two eminent authorities on ton- sorial art were going to try to interfere with Millers- burg's ambition, but those of us who were on to the deal simply prayed. We prayed that the whiskers would n't come off. They did n't, either. It was a grand game. We won, 20 to 0; and the school went wild over Pacey and Driggs. Even Prexy came out of it for a little while and went into the gym to shake hands with them. It took lively work to detain him until we could get them stripped and laid out on the rubbing boards. They were the heroes of the school for the rest of the year and, being honest chaps, they naturally objected. But we persuaded them that they had saved the college with their whiskers ; and before they graduated we begged a bunch from each of them to frame and hang up in the gym some day when the incident was n't quite so fresh. Naturally, by this time, we believed that the Faculty ought to consider itself lucky to be allowed 208 At Good Old Siwash to hang around the college. Professor Sillcocks looked rather depressed for a day or two, but he soon cheered up and seemed to forget the team's existence. We swam right along, beating Pottawattamie, scoring sixty points on Ogallala and getting into magnificent condition for the Kiowa game on Thanksgiving, That was the game of the year for us. Time was when Kiowa used to beat us and look bored about it, but that was all in the misty past. For two years we had tramped all the lime off her goal lines; and maybe we were n't crazy to do it again ! As early as October we used to sit up nights talking over our chances, and as November wore along the suspense got as painful as a good lively case of too much pie. We watched the team practise all day and dreamed of it all night. And then the blow fell. It wasn't exactly a blow. It was more like a dynamite explosion. School let out the day before Thanksgiving, and when announcement time came in chapel Professor Sillcocks got up and begged per mission to make a few remarks. Then this little ninety-eight-pound thinking machine, who could n't have wrestled a kitten successfully, paralyzed half a thousand husky young students and a whole team of gladiators with the following remarks: " I have long held, young gentlemen, that the pur suit of athletic exercises for the mere lust of winning is one of the evils of college life. It does not strengthen the mind or build up one's manhood. It does not encourage that sporting spirit which leads Frapped Football 209 a man to smile in defeat or to give up his chances of winning rather than take an undue advantage. It does not make for gentleness, mildness or generosity. I have, young gentlemen, endeavored to make you see this in the past year by all the poor means at my disposal. I have not succeeded. But this morning I propose to bring it to you in a new way. As chair man of the credentials committee which passes upon the eligibility of your football players I have decided that the entire team is ineligible. If you ask for reasons, I have them. They may not, perhaps, suit you, but they suit me. These players are ineligible because they play too well. With them you cannot hope to be defeated and I am determined that the Siwash football team shall be defeated to-morrow. Your college experience must be broadened. Your football team, I understand, has not been defeated in three years. This is monstrous. All of you, except the Seniors, are totally uneducated in the art of tak ing defeat. This education I propose to open to you to-morrow. I have made it more certain by suspend ing all of what you call your second team and your scrubs I believe that is correct. And the Faculty joins me, young gentlemen, in assuring you that if the game with Kiowa College is abandoned abro gated called off, I believe you express it football will cease permanently at Siwash. Young gentlemen, accept defeat to-morrow as an opportunity and try to appreciate its great benefits. That is all." That last was pure sarcasm. Imagine an execu- 210 At Good Old Siwash tioner carving off his victim's head and murmuring politely, " That is all," to the said victim when he had finished ! There we were, wiped out, utterly ex tinguished legislated into disgrace and defeat and all by a smiling villain who said " That is all " when he had read the death sentence ! There was n't a loophole in the decree. Sillcocks had carved the entire football talent of the school right out of it with that little list of his. We would have to play Kiowa with a bunch of rah-rah boys who had never done anything more violent than break a cane on a grandstand seat over a touchdown. The chaps who were butchered to make a Roman holiday did n't have anything at all on us. We were going to be tramped all over by our deadly rival in order to afford pleasure to a fuzzy-faced old fossil who had peculiar ideas and had us to try them out on. I guess, if the students had had a vote on it that day, Professor Sillcocks would have been elected resident governor of Vesuvius. We seethed all day and all that night. The board of strategy met, of course, but it threw up its hands. It did n't have any first aid to the annihilated in its chest. Besides, Pro fessor Sillcocks had n't played the game. He had just grabbed the cards. It was about to pass resolutions hailing Sillcocks as the modern Nero, when Rearick began to come down with an idea. Nowadays people pay him five thousand dollars apiece for ideas, but he used to fork them out to us gratis and they had twice the candle-power. As soon as we saw Rearick Frapped Football 211 begin to perspire we just knocked off and sat around, and it was n't two minutes before he was making a speech. " Fellows," he said, " we 're due for a cleaning to-morrow. It 's official. The Faculty has ordered it. If I had a Faculty I 'd put kerosene on it and call the health department ; but that 's neither here nor there. We Ve got to lose. We 've got to let Kiowa roll us all over the field; and if we back out we Ve got to give up football. Now some of you want to resign from college and some of you want to burn the chapel, but these things will not do you any good. Kiowa will beat us just the same. Therefore I propose that if we have to be beaten we make it so emphatic that no one will ever forget it. Let 's make it picturesque and instructive. Let 's show the Faculty that we can obey orders. Let 's play a game of football the way Sillcocks and his tools would like to see it. You let me pick the team now, and give me to-night and to-morrow morn ing to drill them, and I '11 bet Kiowa will never burn any property celebrating." Bost was there with his head down between his knees and he said he did n't care Rearick or Sill- cocks or his satanic majesty could pick the team. As for himself, he was going to leave college and go to herding hens somewhere over two thousand miles from the Faculty. So we left it to Rearick and went home to sleep and dream murderous dreams about meeting profs in lonesome places. 212 At Good Old Siwash The first thing I saw next morning when I went out of the house was a handbill on a telegraph pole. It was printed in red ink. It implored every Siwash student to turn out to the game that afternoon. " New team new rules new results ! " it read. " The celebrated Sillcocks system of football will be played by the Siwash team. Attendance at this game counts five chapel cuts after Thanksgiving. Admis sion free. Tea will be served. You are requested to be present." Were we present? We were every one of us that was n't tied down to a bed. There was some thing promising in that announcement. Besides, the greenest of us were taken in by that chapel-cut busi ness. Besides, it was free! College students are just like the rest of the world. They 'd go to their great- grandmother's funeral if the admission was free. Our gang put on big crepe bows, just to be doing something, and marched into the stadium that after noon with hats off. It was packed. Talk about pro motion work. Rearick had pasted up bills until all Jonesville was red in the face. And the Faculty was there, too. Every member was present. They sat in a big special box and Sillcocks had the seat of honor. He looked as pleased as though he had just reformed a cannibal tribe. I suppose the programs did it. They announced once more that the celebrated Sill- cocks system of football as worked out by the coach and Mr. Keg Rearick would be played in this game by the Siwash team. The whole town was there too, Frapp6d FootbaU 213 congested with curiosity. In one big bunch sat all the Siwash men who had ever played football, in their best clothes and with their best girls. They were the guests of honor at their own funeral. The Kiowa team came trotting out behemoths, all of them ready to get revenge for three painful years. They had heard all about the massacre and regarded it as the joke of the century on Siwash. They also regarded it as their providential duty to emphasize the joke to sharpen up the point by scor ing about a hundred and ten points on the scared young greenhorns who would have to play for us. All our ex-players stood up and gave them a big cheer when they came. So did everybody else. It 's always a matter of policy to grin and joke while you 're being dissected. Nothing like cheerfulness. Cheerfulness saved many a martyr from worry while he was being eaten by a lion. Then our gymnasium doors opened and the brand- new and totally innocent Siwash football team came forth. When we saw it we forgot all about Kiowa, the Faculty, defeat, dishonor, the black future and the disgusting present. We stood up and yelled ourselves hoarse. Then we sat down and prepared to enjoy ourselves something frabjous. Rearick had used nothing less than genius in picking that team. First in line came Blakely, a mandolin and girl specialist, who had never done anything more daring than buck the line at a soda fountain. He had on football armor and a baseball 214 At Good Old Siwash mask. Then came Andrews. Andrews specialized in poetry for the Lit magazine and commonly went by the name of Birdie, because of an unfortunate sonnet that he had once written. Andrews wore evening dress, and carried a football in a shawl strap. Then came McMurty and Boggs, sofa-pillow pun- ishers. They roomed together and you could have tied them both up in Ole Skjarsen's belt and had enough of it left for a handle. James, the champion featherweight fusser of the school, followed. He car ried a campchair and a hot-water bottle. Petey Simmons, five feet four in his pajamas, and Jiggs Jarley, champion catch-as-catch-can-and-hold-on-tight waltzer in college, came next. Then came Bain, who weighed two hundred and seventeen pounds, had been a preacher, and was so mild that if you stood on his corns he would only ask you to get off when it was time to go to class. He was followed by Skeeter Wilson, the human dumpling, and Billings, who always carried an umbrella to classes and who had it with him then. Behind these came a great mob of camp-followers with chairs, books, rugs, flowers, lunch tables, tea-urns and guitars. It was the most sensational parade ever held at Siwash ; and how we yelled and gibbered with delight when we got the full aroma of Rearick's plan! The Kiowa men looked a little dazed, but they did n't have time to comment. The toss-up was rushed through and the two teams lined up, our team with the ball. It would have done your eyes good Frapped Football 215 to see Rearick adjust it carefully on a small doily in the exact center of the field, mince up to it and kick it like an old lady urging a setting hen off the nest. A Kiowa halfback caught it and started up the field. Right at him came Birdie Andrews, hat in hand, and when the halfback arrived he bowed and asked him to stop. The runner declined. McMurty was right behind and he also begged the runner to stop. Boggs tried to buttonhole him. Skeeter Wilson, who was as fast as a trolley car, ran along with him for twenty-five yards, pleading with him to listen to reason and consent to be downed. It was no use. The halfback went over the goal line. The Kiowa delegation did n't know whether to go crazy with joy or disgust. Our end of the grandstand clapped its hands pleasantly. Down in the Faculty box one or two of the professors, who had n't forgotten every thing this side of the Fall of Rome, wiggled uneasily and got a little bit red behind the ears. The teams changed goals and Rearick kicked off again. This time he washed the ball carefully and changed his necktie, which had become slightly soiled. The other Kiowa half caught the ball this time; he plowed into our boys so hard that McMurty could n't get out of the way and was knocked over. Our whole team held up their hands in horror and rushed to his aid. They picked him up, washed his face, re arranged his clothes and powdered his nose. He cried a little and wanted them to telegraph his mother to come, but a big nurse with ribbons in her cap it 216 At Good Old Siwash was Maxwell came out and comforted him and gave him a stick of candy half as large as a barber- pole. By this time you could tell the Faculty a mile off. It was a bright red glow. Every root-digger in the bunch had caught on except Sillcocks. He was in tensely interested and extremely grieved because the Kiowa men did not enter into the spirit of the occa sion. As for the rest of the crowd, it sounded like drowning men gasping for breath. Such shrieks of pure unadulterated joy hadn't been heard on the campus in years. When the teams lined up again Kiowa had got thoroughly wise. They had held a five-minute session together, had taken off their shin, nose and ear guards, had combed their hair and had put on their hats. The result was what you might call picturesque. You could hear ripping diaphragms all over the stadium when they tripped out on the field. The two teams lined up and Rearick kicked off again. This time he had tied a big loop of ribbon around the ball ; when it landed a Kiowa man stuck his forefinger through the loop and began to sidle up toward our goal, holding an imaginary skirt Our team rushed eagerly at him, Billings and his umbrella in the lead. On every side the Kiowa players bowed to them and shook hands with them. The critical moment arrived. Billings reached the runner and promptly raised his umbrella over him and marched placidly on toward our goal. Hysterics from the bleachers. The Kiowa man did n't propose to be out- Trapped FootbaU 217 done. He stopped, removed his derby and presented the ball to Billings. Billings put his hand on his heart and declined. The Kiowa man bowed still lower and insisted. Billings bumped the ground with his forehead and would n't think of it. The Kiowa man offered the ball a third time, and we found after ward that he threatened to punch Billings' head then and there if he did n't take it. Billings gave in and took the ball. " Siwash's ball ! " we yelled joyfully. The two teams lined up for a scrimmage. Right here a diffi culty arose that threatened to end the game. The opposing players insisted on gossiping with their arms around each other's necks. They would not get down to business. The referee raved he was an imported product, with no sense of humor, and was rapidly get ting congestion of the brain. " Don't hit in the clinches ! " yelled some joker. For five minutes the teams gossiped. Then our quarter gave his signal the first two bars of " Oh Promise Me " and passed the ball to Wilson, who was fullbacking. It was twice as interesting as an ordinary game because nobody knew what Wilson would do; in fact, he did n't seem to know himself. He stood a minute dusting off the ball carefully and manicuring his soiled nails. The Kiowa team and our boys strolled up, arm in arm. Wilson still hesitated. The Kiowa captain offered to send one of his men to carry the ball. Wilson would n't think of causing so much trouble. Our captain suggested that the ball 218 At Good Old Siwash be taken to our goal. The Kiowa captain protested that it had been there twice already. Some one sug gested that they flip for goals. The captains did it. Siwash won. Calling a messenger boy, our captain sent him over to Kiowa's goal with the ball, while the two teams sat down in the middle of the field and the Kiowa captain set 'em up to gum. By this time people were being removed from the stadium in all directions. There was a sort of purple aurora over the Faculty box that suggested apoplexy. The learned exponents of revised football looked about as comfortable as a collection of expiring beetles mounted on large steel pins that is, all but Professor Sillcocks. He was beaming with pleasure. I never saw a man so entirely wrapped up in manly sports as he was just then. Evidently the new foot ball suited him right down to the ground. He clapped his hands at every new atrocity ; and whenever some Siwash man put his arm around a Kiowan and helped him tenderly on with the ball, he turned around to the populace behind him and nodded his head as if to say : " There, I told you so. It can be done. See?" When the Kiowa center kicked off for the next scrimmage he introduced a novelty. He produced a large beanbag, which I presume Rearick had slipped him, kicked it about four feet and then hurriedly picked it up and presented it to one of our men. All of our boys thanked him profoundly and then lined up for the scrimmage. Immediately the Kiowa Frapp6d FootbaU 219 captain put his right hand behind him. Our captain guessed " thumbs up." He was right and we took the ball forward five yards. Deafening applause from the stadium. Then our captain guessed a num ber between one and three. Another five yards. Shrieks of joy from Si wash and desperate cries of " Hold 'em ! " from the Kiowa gang. Then the Kiowa captain demanded that our captain name the English king who came after Edward VI. That was a stonewall defense, because Rearick had flunked two years running in English history. Kiowa took the ball, but the umpire butted in. It was an offside play, he declared, because it was n't a king at all. It was a queen and it was Siwash's ball and ten yards. That made an awful row. The Kiowa cap tain declared that the whole incident was " very re grettable," but the umpire was firm. He gave us the ball ; and on the very next down Rearick conjugated a French verb perfectly for a touchdown. All of this was duly announced to the stadium and the excitement was intense. I guess there were as many as two hundred Chautauqua salutes after that touchdown. Both teams had tea together and our rooters' chorus sang " Juanita," while old Professor Grubb got up, with rage printed all over his face in display type, and went home. He never went near the stadium again as long as he lived, I understand. It was a most successful occasion up to this point, but somehow college boys always overdo a thing. The strain was telling on the two teams; for, when you 220 At Good Old Siwash come right down to it, no Siwash man loves a Kiowa man any more fervently than a bull pup loves a cat. The teams lined up again and began playing " ring- around-a-rosy " to find who should make the next touchdown, when something happened. Klingel, the two-hundred-and-ten-pound Kiowan guard, started it. He was just about as good a fellow as a white rhinoceros, and an hour of entire civilization was about all he could possibly stand. He had the bean- bag and he was tired of it. Beanbags meant nothing to him. He could n't grasp their solemn beauty. He offered it to Petey Simmons. Petey declined, with profuse thanks. Klingel insisted. Petey bowed very low and swore that rather than make another touch down on Kiowa he would suffer wild horses to tear him into little bits. Then Klingel began to get offside. " You hear what I say, you little shrimp ! " he said politely. " If you don't take this thing and quit your yawping I 'm going to make you do it." " Listen, you overfed mountain of pork ! " said Petey, with equal cordiality. " If you don't like that beanbag eat it. It would do you good. You don't know beans anyway." Then Klingel, without further argument, hit Petey in the eye and laid him out. Wow! Talk about irritating a hornet convention. Klingel was a great little irritator. The whole game had been torture for our real team, cooped up among the ruffles in the stadium; and when they saw little If you don't like that bean bag eat it " Page 220 Frapped Football 221 Petey go down they gave one simultaneous roar and vaulted over the railing. It was a close race, but Ole Skjarsen beat Hogboom out by a foot. He hit .Klingel first. Hogboom hit him second, third, fifth and thirty-fourth. Then the two teams closed to gether and for five minutes a cyclone of dust, dirt, sweaters, collars, arms, legs, hair and bright red noses swept up and down the field. The grandstand went crazy. The five hundred Kiowa rooters grabbed their canes and started in. They met about seven hundred Siwash patriots and then the whole universe exploded. The police interfered and about half an hour later the last Siwash student was pried off the last Kiowan. It was the most disgraceful riot in the history of the college. I don't think there was a whole suit of clothes on the field when it was over ; and the Siwash man who did n't have two or three knobs on his head was n't considered loyal. The girls all cried. The Faculty went home in cabs, the mayor declared mar tial law and the Kiowa gang walked out of town to the crossing and took the train there to avoid further hard feelings. We were all ashamed of ourselves and I think the two schools liked each other a little better after that. Anyway, we regarded the whole affair as only logical. The Faculty held a meeting that lasted all the next day. Then it adjourned and did absolutely nothing at all except to pile upon us more theses, themes and special outrages that semester than any 222 At Good Old Siwash body of students had ever been inflicted with in a like period. The profs would n't speak to us. They regarded us as beneath notice. But when the real Kiowa game was scheduled by mutual consent, two weeks afterward, there was n't a remark from head quarters. We played Kiowa and spread them all over the map and not a Faculty member was in town that day. I understand Professor Sillcocks is not yet thor oughly persuaded that his style of football was n't a success. " But for that unfortunate riot, which comes from playing with less cultured colleges," he remarked to a Senior the next spring, " that would have been the most successful exhibition of mental control and inherent gentility ever seen at Siwash." True, very true. CHAPTER IX CUPID THAT OLD COLLEGE CHUM WELL ! Well ! Well ! Here 's another maga zine investigator who has made a great dis covery. Listen to this, Sam : " Co-education, as found in American colleges, is amazingly productive of romance, and the great number of marriages result ing between the men and women in co-educational schools indicates all too plainly that love-making occupies an important part of the courses of study." Those are his very words. Is n't he the Christopher Columbus, though! Who would have thought it? Who would have dreamt that there were any mutual admiration societies in co-educational colleges ? I am amazed. What won't these investigators discover next? Why, one of them is just as likely as not to get wise to the fact that there is a hired-girl problem. You can't keep anything away from these gimlet- eyed scientists. Oh, sure! I knew it was just about time for some kind of an off-key noise from you, you grouchy old leftover. Just because you graduated from one of those paradises in pants, where they import a car- 224 At Good Old Siwash load of girls from all over the country to one dance a year and worry along the rest of the time with chorus girls and sweet young town girls who began bringing students up by hand about the time Wm. H. Taft was a Freshman, you think you are qualified to toss in a few hoots about co-education. Back away, Sam ! That subject is loaded. I 've had palpitations on a college campus myself; and I want to tell you right here that it beats having them at a stage door, or at a summer resort, or in a parlor just around the cor ner from nine relatives, or in one of those short-story conservatories, or in the United States mails, forty ways for Sunday ; and, besides, it 's educational. We co-educationalists get a four years' course in close- coupled conversation and girl classification while you fellows in the skirtless schools are getting the club habit and are saving up for the privilege of dancing with other fellows' fiancees at the proms once a year. Honestly, I never could see just why a fellow should wait until he is through college before he begins to study the science of how to make some particular girl believe that if Adam came back he would look at him and say : " Gee, it swells me all up to think that chap is a descendant of mine ! " And I may be thick in my thought dome, but I never could see any objection to marrying a classmate, either, even though I did n't do it myself. I admit co-educational schools are strong on matrimony. Haven't I dug up for thirty-nine wedding presents Cupid That Old College Chum 225 for old Siwash students already? And don't I get a shiver that reaches from my collar-button down to my heels every time I get one of those thick, stiff, double-barreled envelopes, with " Kindly dig," or words to that effect, on the inside? Usually they come in pairs the bid to the next wedding and the bill for the last present. Why, out of sixty-five ninety-umpters with whom I graduated, six couples are already holding class reunions every evening; and just the other day another of the boys, who thought he would look farther, came back after hav ing made a pretty thorough inspection all over the civilized world, and camped outside of the home of a girl in our class until she admitted that he looked better to her than any of the rising young business men who had bisected her orbit in the last ten years. They 're to be married this spring and I 'm going back to the wedding. Incidentally I 'm going to help pay for three more silver cups. We give a silver cup to each class baby and each frat baby, and I Ve been looking around this past year for a place where we can buy them by the dozen. Weddings ! Why, man, a co-educational college is a wedding factory. What of it? As far as I can see, Old Siwash produces as many governors, con gressmen and captains of industry to the graduate as any of the single-track schools. And I notice one thing more. You don't find any of our college couples hanging around the divorce courts. There is a peculiar sort of stickiness about college marriages. 226 At Good Old Siwash They are for keeps. When a Siwash couple does n't have anything else agreeable to talk about it can sit down and have a lovely three months' conversation on the good old times. It takes a mighty acrimonious quarrel to stand a college reunion around a breakfast table. Take it from me, you lonesome old space- waster, with nothing but a hatrack to give you an affectionate welcome when you come home at night, there is no better place on earth to find good wife material than a college campus. Of course I don't think a man should go to college to find a wife; but if his foot should slip, and he should marry a girl whose sofa pillows have the same reading matter on them as there is on his, there 's nothing to yell for help about. Ten to one he 's drawn a prize. Girls who go through co-educational colleges are extra fine, hand-picked, sun-ripened, carefully wrapped-up peaches and I know what I 'm talking about. How do I know ? Heavens, man ! did n't I go through the Siwash peach orchard for four years? Don't I know the game from candy to carriages ? Did n't I spend every spring in a light pink haze of perfect bliss ? And was n't all the Latin and Greek and trigonometry and athletic junk crowded out of my memory at the end of every college year by the face of the most utterly, superlatively marvelous girl in the world ? And was n't it a different face every spring? Oh, I took the entire course in girlology, Sam! I never skipped a single recitation. I got a Summa Cum Laudissimus in strolling, losing frat Cupid That Old CoUege Chum 227 pins, talking futures and acquiring hand-made pen nants. And the only bitter thought I 've got is that I can't come back. You '11 never realize, my boy, how old Pa Time roller-skates by until you go back to a co-ed college ten years afterward. Here, in the busy mart of trade, I 'm a promising young infant who has got to " Yes, sir " and " No, sir " to the big ones, and be good and get to work on time for thirty years before I will be trusted to run a monopoly alone on a quiet day; but back on the Siwash Campus, Sam, I 'm a patriarch. That 's one reason why I don't go back. I 'm married and I don't care to be madly sought after, but also I don't care to make a hit as a fine old antique for a while yet, thank you. When I am forty, and have gummed up my digestion in the dollar-herding game until I wheeze for breath when I run up a column of figures, I '11 go back and have a nice comfy time in the grandpa class. But not now. The only difference between a thirty-year- old alumnus and the mummy of Rameses, to a college girl, is in favor of the mummy. It does n't come around and ask for dances. I suppose, Sam, you think you Ve been all lit up under the upper left-hand vest pocket over one or two girls in your time, but I don't believe a fellow can fall in love so far over his ears anywhere in the world as he can in Siwash College. That 's only natural, for the finest girls in the world go to Siwash except one girl who went to another school by acci- 228 At Good Old Siwash dent and whom I ran across about three years ago wearing an Alfalfa Delt pin. I '11 take you up to the house to see her some time. She was too nice a girl to wear an Alfalfa Delt pin and I just naturally had to take it off and put on an Eta Bita Pie pin; and somehow in the proceedings we got married and all I have to say about it is three cheers for the universe ! Anyway, as I was saying, it was as easy to fall in love at Siwash as it was to forget to go to chapel. We got along all right in the fall. We liked the girls enormously and were always smashing up some foot ball team just to please them. And, of course, we kept ourselves all stove up financially during the win ter hauling them to parties and things in Jonesville's nine varnished cabs. It took about as much money to support those cabs as it does to run a fleet of battle ships. But it was in the spring that the real fireworks began. Suddenly, about the first Wednesday after the third Friday in April, the ordinary Siwash man discovers that some girl whom he has known all year isn't a girl at all, but a peachblow angel who is just stopping on earth to make a better man of him and show him what a dull, pifflish thing Paradise would be without her. Life becomes a series of awful blank spots, with walks on the campus between them. He can't get his calculus because he is busy figuring on a much more difficult problem; he is trying to figure whether three dances with some other fellow mean anything more to Her than charity. He gets Cupid That Old College Chum 229 cold chills every time lie reflects that at any minute a member of some royal family may pass by and notice Her, and that he will have to promote inter national spasms by hashing him. He realizes that he has misspent his life ; that football is a boy busi ness; that frats are foolish, and that there ought to be a law giving every college graduate a job paying at least two thousand dollars a year on graduation. He is nervous, feverish, depressed, inspired, anxious, oblivious, glorified, annihilated, encouraged and all cluttered up with emotion. The planet was invented for the purpose of letting Her dig Her number three heels into it on spring afternoons. Sunshine is im portant because Her hair looks better with the light on it. Every time She frowns the weather bureau hangs out a tornado signal, and every time She smiles somebody puts a light-blue sash around the horizon and a double row of million-candle-power calcium lights clear down the future, as far as he can see. That 's what love does to a college boy in spring. It 's a kind of rose-colored brainstorm, but it very seldom has complications. By the next fall, the ozone is out of the air; and after a couple has gone strolling about twice, football and the sorority rushes butt in and it 's all over. Freshman girls are a help, too. Beats all how much assistance a Freshman girl can be in forgetting a Senior girl who is n't on the premises! Even in the spring-fever period we didn't get engaged to any extent. The nearest I ever came to it was to ask the light of my life for 230 At Good Old Siwash ninety-several if she would wear my frat pin forever and ever until next fall. And, let me tell you, there wasn't any local of the Bondholders' Union on the Siwash Campus. That 's another place where you soubrette worriers have us figured out wrong. Rush ing a Siwash girl was about as distant a proposition for us as trying to snuggle up to the planets in the telescopic astronomy course. For cool, pleasant and skillful unapproachability, a co-ed girl breaks all records. We just worshiped them as higher beings, and I find that a lot of Siwash boys who have married Siwash girls are still a little bit dazed about the whole affair. They can't figure how they ever had the nerve to start real businesslike negotiations. This very high-class insulation in our love affairs caused us fellows a lot of woe once in a while. You never could tell whether or not a girl was engaged to some fellow back home. We did n't get imperti nent enough to ask. I think there ought to be a law compelling a girl who comes to college engaged to some rising young merchant prince in the country store back home to wear an engagement ring around her neck, where it can be easily seen. More than once, a Siwash man who had been conservative enough to worship the same girl right through his college course and who had proposed to her on the last night of school, when the open season for thou- beside-me talk began, has found that all the time some chap has been writing her a letter a day and that she has only regarded the Siwash man as a Cupid That Old CoUege Chum 231 kind friend, and so on. Never will I forget when Frankling got stung that way ! Of course we did n't generally know when a tragedy of this sort happened, but in his case he brought it on himself. If he had n't made a furry-eared songbird out of himself when Ole Skjarsen drew his girl at the Senior class party You want to know about this girl lottery business, you say ? Well, it 's plain that I shall have to begin right back at the beginning of the Siwash social sys tem and educate you a little at a time. Now this class party drawing is an institution which has been handed down at Siwash ever since the ancients went to school before the war. You see, at Siwash, as at most colleges, there is the fraternity problem. The frat men give parties to the sorority girls as often as the Dean of Women will stand for it, and every one gets gorgeously acquainted and extremely sociable. The non-f ratters go to the Y. M. C. A. reception at the beginning of each year and to the Commencement exercises, and that 's about all. Of course they pick up lots of friends among the non-sorority girls ; and I guess D. Cupid solders up about as many jobs among them as he does among the others. But there is n't much chance for these two tribes to mix. That was why the class lottery was invented. It has been a custom at Siwash, ever since there has been a Siwash, for each class to hold a party each year. Now class parties are held in order that pure and perfect democracy may be promoted, and it is necessary to 232 At Good Old Siwash take violent measures to shuffle up the people and get every one interested. So they draw for partners. The class which is ahout to effervesce socially holds a meeting. At this meeting the names of all the men are put in one hat and the names of all the girls in another. Then two judges of impregnable honesty draw out a name from each hat simultaneously and read them to the class. When I was at Siwash a class party was the most exciting event in college. For uncertainty and breath- grabbing anxiety they made the football games seem as tame as a church election. Of course everybody can't be a Venus de Milo or an Apollo with a Beveled Ear, as Petey Simmons used to call him. Every class has its middle-aged young ladies, who are at tending college to rest up from ten or fifteen years of school-teaching, and its tall young agriculturalists with restless Adam's apples, whose idea of being socially interesting is to sit all evening in the same chair making a noise like one of those $7.78-suit dummies. That 's what made the class lotteries so in teresting. The plow-chasers drew the prettiest girls in the class and the most accomplished fusser among the fellows usually drew a girl who would make the manager of a beauty parlor utter a sad shriek and throw up his job. Of course every one was bound in honor to take what came out of the hat. Nobody flinched and nobody renigged, but there was a lot of suppressed excitement and well-modulated regret. I have been reasonably wicked since I left college. Cupid That Old CoUege Chum 233 Once or twice I have slapped down a silver dollar or thereabout and have watched the little ball roll round and round a pocket that meant a wagon-load of tainted tin for me; and once in a while I have placed five dollars on a pony of uncertain ability and have watched him go from ninth to second before he blew up. But I never got half the heart- ripping suspense out of these pastimes that I did out of a certain few party drawings, when I waited for my name to come out and wondered, while I looked across the hall at the girl section, whether I was going to draw the one girl in the world, any one of four or five mighty interesting runners-up, or the fat little girl in the corner with ropy hair and the general look of a person who had had a bright idea a few years before and had been convalescing from it ever since. Talk about excitement and consequences! Those drawings kept us on the jump until the parties were pulled off. Generally the proud beauties who had been drawn by the midnight-oil destroyers did not know them, and some one had to steer the said de stroyers around to be introduced. What with drag ging bashful young chaps out to call and then seeing that they did n't freeze up below the ankles and get sick on the night of the party ; and what with teach ing them the rudiments of waltzing and giving them pointers on lawn ties ; or how to charter a good sea worthy hack in case the girl lived on an unpaved street; and bracing up the fellows who had drawn 234 At Good Old Siwash blanks, and going to call on the blanks we had drawn and getting gloriously snubbed give me a wall flower for thorns ! well, it was no cinch to run a class party. But they were grand affairs, just the same, and promoted true fellowship, besides furnish ing amusement for the whole college in the off season. And, besides, I always remember them with gratitude for what they did to Frankling. You know there are two kinds of fussers in college. There is the chap like Petey Simmons, for instance, whose heart was a directory of Siwash girls; and there is the fellow who grabs one girl and stakes out claim boards all around her for the whole four years. That was Frankling's style. He was what we always called a married man. He and Pauline Spencer were the closest corporation in college. They entered school in the same class, and he called on her every Friday night at Browning Hall and took her to every party and lecture and entertainment for the next three and a half years except, of course, the class parties. It was one of our chief delights to watch Frankling grind his teeth when some lowbrow as he called them drew her name. She always had rotten luck you never saw such luck! Once Ettleson drew her. He was a tall, silent farmer, who wore boots and a look of gloom ; and he marched her through a mile of mud to the hall without saying a word, handed her to the reception committee and went over to a corner, where he sat all evening. But that wasn't so bad as the Junior she drew. His Cupid That Old College Chum 235 name was Slaughter. His father had a dairy at the edge of Jonesville and Slaughter decided that, as the night was cold and rainy, a carriage would be appro priate. So he scrubbed up the milk wagon thor oughly, put a lot of nice, clean straw on the floor, hung a lantern from the top for heat and drove her down to the party in state. She was game and did n't make a murmur, but Frankling made a pale-gray ass of himself. As I said, I never liked Frankling. He had a nasty, sneering way of looking at the whole school, except his own crowd. His father owned the locomotive works and he always went to Europe for his summers. He was one of those unnecessary indi viduals who are solemnly convinced that if you don't do things just as they do something is lacking in your mind; and, though he was perfectly bred, he was only about half as pleasant to have around as a well- behaved hyena. I never could see what Miss Spencer saw in him, unless it was the locomotives. As far as we could tell we never got much chance to judge she was a real nice girl. She was a little haughty and never had much to say, and always acted as if she was a princess temporarily off the job. But she was a good scout, and proved it at the class parties by making it as pleasant as she could for the nervous nobodies who took her; while the yellow streak in Frankling was so broad there was n't enough white in him to look like a collar. That 's why the whole college went crazy with delight over the Ole Skjarsen 236 At Good Old Siwash affair. Last station, ladies and gents. Story be gins here. When we were Seniors Ole Skjarsen was the chief embarrassment of the class. As a football player he was a wonder, but as a society fritterling he was one long catastrophe. He just could n't possibly get hep that was all. He was as companionable and as good-natured as a St. Bernard pup and just as incon venient to have around. He dressed like a vaudeville sketch, and the number of things he could do in an hour, which are not generally done in low-vest and low-neck circles, was appalling. [However we all loved Ole because of his grand and historic deeds on the team, and we took him to our parties and never so much as fell out of our chairs when he took off his coat in order to dance with more comfort and energy. The girls were as loyal as we were and danced with him as long as their feet held out, and we made them leather hero medals and really had a lot of fun out of the whole business all except Frankling. It just about killed him to ihave to mingle with Ole socially ; and when the time for the Senior class party drew near he got so nervous that he called a meeting of a few of us fellows and made a big kick. " I tell you, fellows, this has got to stop ! " he de clared. " We 've encouraged this lumber-jack until he has gotten too fresh for any use. Why, he '11 ask any girl in the college to dance with him, and he goes and calls on them, too. Now, it 's up to us to Cupid That Old College Chum 237 show him his place. I 'm dead against putting his name in the hat for the party. He '11 be sure to draw a girl who will be humiliated by having to go with him; and I have a little too much regard for chivalry and courtesy to allow him to do it. We '11 just have to hint to him that he 'd better have an other engagement the night of the class party, that 's all." Thereupon we all rose joyously up and told Frank- ling to go jump in the creek. And he called us muckers and declared we were ignorant of the first principles of social ethics. He said that Skjarsen might be near enough our level to be inoffensive, but as for him he declined to have anything to do with the class party. Thereupon we gave three cheers, and that made him so mad that he left the meeting and fell over three chairs trying to do it with speed and dignity. Altogether it was a most enjoyable occasion. We 'd never gotten quite so much satis faction out of him before. The drawing took place the next week and, sure enough, Frankling declined to allow his name to be put in the hat. We put Ole's name in and were prepared to have him draw a Class A girl ; but what happened knocked the props out from under us. His name came fourth and he drew the mortgaged and unapproachable Miss Spencer. We did n't know whether to celebrate or prepare for trouble. It seemed reasonable that Miss Spencer would back up Frankling and reduce Ole to an icicle 238 At Good Old Siwash when lie asked her to go with him. But the next morning, when we saw Frankling, we were so happy that we forgot to worry. He was one large paroxysm. I never saw so much righteous indignation done up in one bundle. He cornered the class officers and de clared in passionate tones that they had committed the outrage of the century. They had insulted one of the finest young women in the college. They had made it advisable for all persons of culture to remain away from Siwash. The disgrace must not be al lowed. He didn't speak as a friend, but as a dis interested party who wanted justice done; and he proposed to secure it. We took all this quite humbly and asked him why he didn't see Ole himself and order him to unhand the lady. From the way he turned pale, we guessed he had done that already. Ole weighed two-twenty in his summer hair-cut and was quick-tempered. We then asked him why he did n't buy Ole off. We also asked him why he did n't shut down the college, and why he didn't have Congress pass a law or some thing, and if his head had ever pained him before. He was tearing off his collar in order to answer more calmly and collectedly when Ole came into the room. Ole had combed his hair and shined his shoes, and he had on the pink-and-blue necktie that he had worn the month before to the annual promenade with a rented dress suit. He seemed very cheerful. " Veil, fallers," says he, " das leetle Spencer gal ban all rite. She say she go by me to das party. Cupid That Old College Chum 239 Ve ban goin' stylish tu, Aye bet yu." Then he saw Frankling and went over to him with his hand out. " Don't yu care, Master Frankling," he said, with one of his transcontinental smiles. " Aye tak yust sum good care by her lak Aye ban her steddy faller." Phew! Ole took Miss Spencer to the party. There is n't a bit of doubt but that he took her in style. He put more care and exertion into the job than any of the rest of us and he got more impressive results. Ole has his ideas about dress. Ordinarily he wore one of those canned suits that you buy in the coat-and- pants emporiums, giving your age and waist measure in order to get a perfect fit. He wore a celluloid collar with it and a necktie that must have been an heirloom in the family; and he wore a straw hat most of the year. He wore each one till it blew away and then got another. This rig was good enough for Ole in ordinary little social affairs, but when it came to dances and receptions he blossomed out in evening clothes. He had made a bargain with a second-hand clothes-man downtown split his wood all winter for the use of a dress suit that had lost its position in a prominent family and was going downhill fast. You know how the tailors work the dress-suit racket. They can't exactly change the style of a suit it 's got to be open-faced and have tails but they work in some little improvement like a braid on or off, or an extra buttonhole, or a flare in the vest each 240 At Good Old Siwash year; so that a really bang-up-to-date chap would blush all over if he had to wear a last year's model. I notice the automobile makers are doing the same stunt. They can't improve their cars any more, so they put fore doors on one year, cut 'em in two the next and take them off the year after. This has n't anything to do with Ole except that that dress suit of his was behind the times one hun dred and two counts. It had been a fat man's suit in the first place. It fitted him magnificently at the shoulders. He and the suit began to leave each other from that point down. At the waist it looked like a deflated balloon. The top of the trousers fitted him about as snugly as a round manhole in the street. The legs flapped like the mainsail of a catboat that 's coming about. They ended some time before his own legs did and there was quite a little stretch of yarn sock visible before the big tan shoes began. Ole had two acres of feet and he polished his shoes himself, with great care. They were not so large as an ordinary ballroom, but somehow he used them so skillfully that they gave the effect of covering the entire space. Four times around Ole's feet constituted a pretty fair encore at our dances ; and I Ve seen him pen up as many as three couples in a corner with them when he got those feet tangled. That was Ole's formal costume. But he did n't regard it with awe. Any one could wear a dress suit. It seemed to him that a Senior party to which he was to escort Miss Spencer was too important to pass Cupid That Old CoUege Chum 241 airily off with the same old suit. He had another card up his sleeve. " Aye ent tal yu," he explained when we asked him anxiously what it was he proposed to wear. " Yust vait. Aye ban de hull show, Aye tank. Yu fallers yust put on your yumpin'-yack suits. Aye mak yu look lak torta cent." Of course we waited. We didn't have anything else to do. We worried a little, but we had gotten used to Ole, anyway and what was the difference ? It would be a little hard on Miss Spencer, but it would be magnificently horrible to Frankling, who considered that a collar of the wrong cut might en danger a man's whole future career. So we resigned ourselves and attended to our own troubles. The night of the party was a cold, clear January evening. There was snow on the ground and it was packed hard on the sidewalks. This was nuts for the oil-burners. They walked their girls to the hall. Four of the reckless ones clubbed together and hired a big closed carriage affair from the livery stable. It happened to be a pallbearers' carriage during tho daytime, but they didn't know the difference and the girls did n't tell them ; and what you don't know will never cause your poor old brain to ache. We frat fellows blew our hard-worked allowances for varnished cabs and thereby proved ourselves the big gest suckers in the bunch. To this day I can't see why a girl who can dance all night, and can stroll all afternoon of a winter's day, has to be hauled three 242 At Good Old Siwash blocks in a two-horse rig every time she goes to a party. The money we spent on cabs while I was at Siwash would have built a new stadium, painted every frat house in town and endowed a chair of United States languages. But, there ! I 'm on my pet hobby again. How it did hurt to pay for those hacks! I got there late with my girl she was a shy little conservatory student, who evidently regarded conver sation as against the rules and I found the usual complications that had to be sorted out at the begin ning of every class party. Stiffy Short was sore. He was short five dances for his girl had been working on her program for a week and he accused the fellows of dodging because she could n't dance ; and was threatening to be taken sick and spend the evening in the dressing room smoking cigarettes. Miss Worthington, one of our Class A girls, did n't have a dance, because Tullings, who had drawn her, had presumed that she was to sit and talk with him all evening. Petey Simmons was in even worse. His girl couldn't dance, but insisted on doing so. She had done it the year before, too. Petey had been training up for two weeks by tugging his dresser around the room. Then there was Glenallen. We always had to form a committee of national defense against Glenallen. He could n't dance, either, and he would insist on hitching his chair out towards the middle of the room. I Ve seen him throw as many as four couples in a night. And there was a telephone call Cupid That Old College Chum 243 from Miss Morse, class secretary and first-magnitude star. Her escort had n't shown up. He never did show up. When we went around to lynch him the next day he explained desperately that at the last minute he found he had forgotten to get a lawn necktie. You know how a little thing like a lawn necktie that ain't can wreck an evening dress, unless you are an old enough head to cut up a handkerchief and fold the ends under. We had gotten things pretty well straightened out before we discovered that Ole was missing. That would never do. If Miss Spencer needed rescuing we were the boys to do it. Three of us rushed down the stairs to send a carriage over to Browning Hall, and that minute Ole arrived at the party. He had worn his very best the suit he was proudest of and the one he knew could n't be dupli cated. It was his lumber-camp rig corduroy trou sers, big boots and overshoes, red flannel shirt, canvas pea-jacket and fur cap. He came marching up the walk like the hero in a moving-picture show and we thought he was alone till he reached the door. Then we saw Miss Spencer. She was seated in state be hind him on one of those hand-sledges the farmers use for hauling cordwood. There were evergreen boughs behind her and all around her, and she was so wrapped up in a huge camp blanket that all we could see of her was her eyes. We gave Ole three cheers and carried Miss Spencer upstairs on the evergreen boughs. The two were 244 At Good Old Siwash the hits of the party. We never had a better one. The incident broke more ice than we could have chopped out in a month with all the dull-edged talk we had been handing around. Every one had a good laugh by way of a general introduction and then we all turned in and made things hum. The wallflowers got plucked. Somebody taught the president of the Y. M. C. A. how to waltz and poor Henry Boggs for got for two hours that he had hands and feet, and that they were beyond his control. It was a tremen dous success; we were so enthusiastic by the time things broke up that we told the cabmen to go hang and all walked home to the Hall, the men fighting for a chance to pull on the sledge-rope with Ole. Hold on, Sam. Put down your hat. This is n't the end, thank you. It 's just the prologue. Of course we all expected, when Ole unloaded Miss Spencer at the Hall and she bade him good evening, and thanked him for her delightful time and so on, that the incident would be closed. Never dreamed of any thing else. Lumber- jack suits and cordwood sledges are fine for novelties, but they can't come back, you know once is enough. And that 's why we fell dead in rows when Ole, straw hat and all, walked over to Lab. from chapel with Miss Spencer the next day and she did n't call for the police. We could n't have stared any harder if the college chapel had bowed and walked off with her. And we had n't Tecovered from the blow when Friday night rolled around and those of us who went to call at the Hall Cupid That Old CoUege Chum 245 found Ole seated in Frankling's particular corner, entertaining Miss Spencer with an average of one remark a minute, which, so far as we could hear, con sisted generally of " Aye tank so " and " No, ma'am." By this time we had decided that Frankling was sulking and that Miss Spencer was showing him that if she wanted to be friendly with Ole, or the town pump, or the plaster statue of Victory in the college library, she had a perfect right to. I guess she showed him all right, too, for after a couple of weeks he surrendered and then the queerest rivalry Siwash had ever seen began. Frankling, son of the locomo tive works, authority on speckled vests and cotillons, was scrapping with Ole Skjarsen, the cuffless wonder from the lumber camps, for the affections of the prettiest girl in college. ~No wonder we got so inter ested that spring that most of us forgot to fall in love ourselves. I don't to this day believe that Miss Spencer meant a word of it. I think that she was simply good-natured, in the first place, and that, when Frankling began to bite little semicircular pieces out of the air, she began mixing her drinks, so to speak, just for the excitement of the thing. Anyway, Frankling walked over to chapel with her and Ole lumbered back. Frankling took her to the basket ball games and Ole took her to the Kiowa debate and slept peacefully through most of it. Frankling bought a beautiful little trotting horse and sleigh and took Miss Spencer on long rides. In Siwash, young people 246 At Good Old Siwash do not have chaperons, guards, nurses nor conserva tors. That was a knockout, we all thought; but it never feazed Ole. He invited Miss Spencer to go street-car riding with him and she did it. Some of us found them bumping over the line in one of the flat-wheeled catastrophes that the Jonesville Company called cars and Miss Spencer did n't even blush. She bowed to us just as unconcernedly as if she was n't breaking all long-distance records for eccen tricity in Siwash history. Frankling dodged the whole college and got wild in the eyes. He looked like an eminent statesman who was being compelled to act as barker in a circus against his will. It must have churned up his vitals to do his sketch act with Ole; but when you have had one of those four-year cases, and it has gotten tangled up in your past and future, you can't always dictate just what you are going to do. It was plain to see that Miss Spencer had Frankling hooked, hal tered, hobbled, staked out, Spanish-bitted, wrapped up and stamped with her name and laid on the shelf to be called for; and it was just as evident that she considered he would be all the nicer if she walked around on him for a while and massaged his dis position a little with her little French heels. So Frankling continued to divide time with Ole, and all the fellows whom he had insulted about their neckties and all the girls whom he had forgotten to dance with sat around in perfect content and watched the show. He invited Miss Spencer to go street-car riding with him Page 246 Cupid That Old CoUege Chum 247 We all thought it would wear out after a few weeks. But it did n't. The semester recess came and, when college assembled again, Ole cut Frankling out for the athletic ball as neatly as if he had been in the girl game all his life. Frankling countered with the promenade two weeks later, but he went clear to the ropes when Miss Spencer came out one fine morning at chapel with Ole's football charm the one he had won the year the team had annihilated two universities and seven assorted colleges. He came back gamely and decorated her with fraternity hat pins, cuff buttons, belt buckles and side combs; and on the strength of it he got three Friday evenings in a row. That might have jarred any one but Ole. But he came up smiling and took Miss Spencer to a Y. M. C. A. social, where he bought her four dishes of ice cream and had to be almost violently restrained from offering her the whole freezer. Winter wore out and spring came. Frankling brought the whole resources of the locomotive works into play. He got a private car and took a party off to the Kiowa baseball game, with Miss Spencer as guest of honor. He bombarded her with imported candy and American beauties, and cluttered up the spring with a series of whist parties, which butted into the social calendar something frabjous. Ole plowed right along with his own peculiar style of argument. He met the private-car business with a straw ride and his prize offering was a hunk of spruce gum from his pine woods, as big as your two fists; 248 At Good Old Siwash and, so far as we could see, the gum got exactly the same warmth of reception as the candy though it did n't disappear with anywhere near the rapidity. As April went by, we Seniors got busy with the first awful preliminaries of Commencement. It be gan to be considered around college that Senior Day would settle the affair one way or the other. Senior Day is the last event of Commencement Week at Siwash and more engagements have been announced formally or otherwise that day than at any other time. If a Senior man and girl, who had been making a rather close study of each other, walked out on the campus together after the exercises and took in the corporation dinner at noon side by side, no one hesi tated about offering congratulations. They might not be exactly due, but it was a sign that there was going to be an awful lot of nice-looking stationery spoiled by the two after the sad partings were said. Now we did n't have a doubt that either Frankling or Ole would amble proudly down between the lilac rows on Class Day with Miss Spencer, under the good old pretense of helping her locate the dinner-tables a hundred yards away; and betting on the affair got pretty energetic. Day after day the odds varied. When Frankling broke closing-time rules at Browning Hall by a good thirty minutes some two-to-one money was placed on him. When Ole and Miss Spencer cut chapel the next day the odds promptly switched. You could get takers on either side at any time, but I think the odds favored Ole a little. You can't help Cupid That Old College Chum 249 boosting your preferences with your good money. It 's like betting on your college team. Commencement Week came and, although we were Seniors, we went through it without hardly noticing the scenery. We watched Ole and Frankling all through Baccalaureate, and when Ole won a twenty- yard dash across the church and over several of us, and marched down the street with Miss Spencer, it looked as if all was over but the Mendelssohn busi ness. But Frankling had her in a box at the class play the next night. How could you pay any attention to the glorious threshold of life and the expiring gasps of dear college days with a race like that on ! Commencement was on Wednesday and Senior Day was Thursday. Up to Wednesday night it was an even break steen points all. One of the two had won. We hadn't a doubt of it. But, if both men had been born poker players, drawing to fill, in a jack-pot that had been sweetened nine times, you couldn't have told less to look at them. Frankling was as glum as ever and Ole had the same reenforced- concrete expression of innocence that he used to wear while he was getting off the ball behind somebody's goal line, after having carried it the length of the field. We were discussing the thing that night on the porch of the Eta Bita Pie house and were putting up a few final bets when Ole came up, carpet-bag in hand and his diploma under his arm, and bade us good-by. He was going out on the midnight train going away for good. 250 At Good Old Siwash For a minute you could have heard the grass grow ing. If Ole was going away that night it meant just one thing: the cruel Miss Spencer had tossed him over and he was bumping the bumps downward into a cold and cheerless future. We were so sorry we could hardly speak for a minute. Then Allie Bangs got up and put his arm as far across Ole's shoulder as it would go. " By thunder, I 'm sorry, old chap ! " he said huskily. For a man who had just had an air-castle fall on his neck, Ole did n't talk very dejectedly. " Vy yu ban sorry ? " he demanded. " Aye got gude yob St. Paul vay. De boss write me Aye skoll come Friday. Aye ent care to be late first t'ing." " But, Ole " Bangs began. Then he stopped. You can't bawl out a question about another man's love affairs before a whole mob. " Yu fallers ban fine tu me," Ole began again. " Aye lak yu bully ! Ven yu come by St. Paul, take Yim Hill's railroad and come to Sven Akerson's camp, femt'n mile above Lars Hjellersen's gang. Aye ban boss of Sven's camp now. Aye gat yu gude time and plenty flapyack." He turned to go. Allie and I got up and walked firmly down the walk with him. We were going to be relieved of our suspense if we had to buy the information. " Now, Ole," said Allie, grabbing his carpet-bag, " you know we 're not going to let you go down to the Cupid That Old College Chum 251 train alone. Besides, we want to know if everything is all right with you. You know we love you. We 're for you, Ole. You you and Miss Spencer parting good friends ? " " Yu bet ! " said Ole enthusiastically. " She ban fine gur'rl, Aye tal yu. Sum day Aye ban sending her deerskin from lumber camp." Bangs braced up again. " Er you and Miss Spencer er not engaged, are you ? " he said, the way a fellow goes at it when he is diving into cold water. Ole looked around in perfect good humor. " Get married by each odder ? " he said. " Yee whiz ! no, Master Bangs. She ban nice gur'rl. It ent any nicer in Siwash College. But she kent cook. She kent build fire in woodstove. She kent wash. She kent bake flatbrot. She kent make close. She yust ban purty, like picture. Vat for Aye vant to marry picture gallery ? Aye ban tu poor f aller fur picture gallery, Aye tank." " But, Ole," says I, jumping in, " you Ve been rushing the girl all winter as if your life depended on it. What did you mean by that ? " Ole turned around patiently and sat down on the steps of the First Methodist Church, which happened to be passing just then. " Veil, Aye tal yu," he ex plained. " Miss Spencer she ban nice tu me. She go tu class party 'nd ent give dam vat das Frankling f aller say. Aye ent forget dat, Aye tal yu; 'nd, by yimmuny Christmas! Aye show her gude time all right." " 252 At Good Old Siwash We took Ole to the station and sat down to rest three times on the way back. So all that terrific performance was a reward for Miss Spencer ! " O gratitude ! " says the poet, " how many crimes are committed in thy name ! " We were so dazed that night that it did n't occur to us to wonder why Miss Spencer stood for all the gratitude. But the next day, when the exercises were over, that young lady stepped down from the platform and was met by a tall chap whom she later introduced to us as a friend of the family from her home town. You can always spot these family friends by the way the girl blushes when she introduces them. Miss Spencer wore a fine new diamond ring and we knew what it meant. It was just another case where the girl came to school and the man stayed at home and built a seven-room house on a prominent corner four blocks from his hardware store and waited and tried not to get any more jealous than possible. I suppose Miss Spencer used Ole as a sort of para chute to let Frankling down easily at the last Any way, we wiped the whole affair off the slate after that. She was n't one of us, anyway. Made us shiver to think of her. What if one of us had sailed in the Freshman year and cut Frankling out! CHAPTEE X VOTES FROM WOMEN DO I BELIEVE in woman's suffrage? Cer tainly, if you do, Miss Allstairs. As I sit here, where I could n't help seeing you frown if I did n't please you, I favor anything you favor. If you want the women to vote just hand me the ax and show me the man who would prevent them. If you think the women should play the baseball of our country it 's all right with me. I '11 help pass a law making it illegal for Hans Wagner to hang around a ball park except as water-boy. If you believe that women ought to wear three-story hats in theaters No, I 'm not making fun of you. I hope I may never be allowed to lug a box of Frangipangi's best up your front steps again if I am. If you want the women to vote, Miss Allstairs, just breathe the word, and I '11 go out and start a suffragette mob as soon as ever I can find a brick. And I would be a powerful advocate, too. You can't tell me that women would n't be able to handle the ballot. You can't tell me they would get their party issues mixed up with their party gowns. I Ve seen them vote and I 've seen them play politics. And let me tell you, when woman gets 254 At Good Old Siwash the vote man will totter right back to the kitchen and prepare the asparagus for supper, just to be out of harm's way. His good old arguments about the glory of the nation, the rising price of wheat and the grand record of those sterling patriots who have succeeded in getting their names on the government payroll won't get him to first base when women vote. He '11 have to learn the game all over again, and the first ninety- nine years' course of study will be that famous sub ject, " Woman." How do I know so much about it ? Just as I told you. I 've been through the mill. I 've seen women vote. I 've tried to get them to vote my way. I 've never herded humming birds or drilled goldfishes in close formation, but I 'd take the job cheerfully. It would be just a rest cure after four years' experience in persuading a large voting body of beautiful and fascinating young women to vote the ticket straight and to let me name the ticket. Oh, no ! I never lived in Colorado, and I never was a polygamist in Utah, thank you. I 'm nothing but an alumnus of Siwash College, which, as you know, is co-educational to a heavenly degree. I 'm just a young alumnus with about eighty-nine gray hairs scattered around in my thatch. Each one of those gray hairs represents a vote gathered by me from some Siwash co-ed in the cause of liberty and progress and personal friends. Eighty-nine was my total score. Took me four years to get 'em, working seven days in the week and forty weeks in the year. I 'm no brass- Votes From Women 255 finished and splash-lubricated politician, but I '11 bet I could go out in any election and cord up that many votes with whiskers on them in three days. " Votes for Women " is a fine sentiment and very appropriate, Miss Allstairs, but " Votes from Women " has always been the motto under which I have fought and been bled I beg your pardon ; that just slipped out acci dentally. Of course there was nothing of the sort possible. Now there is n't the slightest use of your getting angry and making me feel like an Arctic ex plorer in a linen suit. If you insist I '11 go out on the front porch and sit there a few weeks until you forgive me, but that 's the very best I can do for you. I will positively not erase myself from your list of acquaintances. When a man has been hanging around the world in a bored way for thirty-two years, just waiting for Fate to catch up with its assignments and trundle you along within my range in order to give the sun a rest Oh, well if you forgive me of course I '11 stop anything you say. Though really, now, that was n't joshing. It came from the depths. Anyway, as I was saying, " Votes from Women " excuse me, please ; I fell off there once and I 'm going to go slow " Votes from Women " was the burning ques tion back at Siwash when I infested the campus. The women had the votes already no use agitating that. The big question was getting 'em back when we needed them. You see, the Faculty always insisted on regu lating athletics more or less and on organizing things 256 At Good Old Siwash for us did n't believe we mere college youths could get an organization together according to Hoyle, or whoever drew up the rules of disorder in college societies, without the help of some skyscraper-browed professor. So they saw fit to organize what they called a general athletic association. Every student who paid a dollar was enrolled as a member, with a vote and the privilege of blowing a horn in a lady or gentleman like manner at all college games. And just to assure a large membership, the faculty made a rule that the dollar must be paid by all students with their tuition at the beginning of the year. That, of course, enrolled the whole college, girls and all, in the Athletic Association. And it was the Athletic Asso ciation that raised the money to pay for the college teams and hired the coaches and greased old Si- wash's way to glory every fall during the football season. Now this did n't bother any for a few years. The men went to the meetings and voted, and the girls stayed at home and made banners for the games. Everything was lovely and comfortable. Then one day, in my Freshman year just before the election, there was a crack in the slate and the Shi Belts saw a chance to elect one of their men president it was n't their turn that year, but you never could trust the Shi Delts politically any farther than you could kick a steam roller. They put up their man and there was a little campaign for about three hours that got up to eleven hundred revolutions a minute. Votes From Women 257 We clawed and scratched and dug for votes and were still short when Reilly got an idea and rushed over to Browning Hall. Five minutes before the polls closed he appeared, leading twenty-seven Siwash girls, and the trouble was over. They voted for our man and he was elected by four votes. But, incidentally, we tipped over a can of no, wait a minute. I 've sim ply got to be more classical. What 's the use of a college diploma if you have to tell all you know in baseball language ? Let 's see you remember that beautiful Greek lady who opened a box under the impression that there was a pound of assorted choco late creams in it and let loose a whole international museum of trouble? Dora Somebody eh? Oh, yes, Pandora. I always did fall down on that name. Anyway, the box we opened in that election would have made Pandora's little grief repository look like a box of pink powder. The kind you girls oh, very well. I take it back. Honestly, Miss Allstairs, you '11 get me so afraid of the cars in a minute that I '11 have to ditch this train of thought and talk about art. Ever hear me talk about art? Well, it would serve you right if you did. I talked about art with a kalsominer once, and he wanted to fight me for the honor of his profession. However, as I was saying, the women voted at Siwash that fall and I guess they must have liked the taste, for the first thing we knew we had the woman vote to take care of all the time. The next fall pretty nearly every girl in the college turned out to class 258 At Good Old Siwash meetings, and the way they voted pretty nearly drove us mad. They seemed to regard it as a game. They fussed about whether to vote on pink paper or blue paper; voted for members of the Faculty for class president ; one of them voted for the President of the United States for president of the Sophomore class; wanted to vote twice; came up to the ballot box and demanded their votes back because they had changed their minds; went away before election and left word with a friend to vote for them. Took us an hour, right in football practice time, to get the ticket through in our class; and what with lending pen cils and chasing girls who carried their ballots away with them, and getting called down for trying to see that everything went along proper and shipshape and according to program, we boys were half crazy when it was all over. But the girls liked it enormously. It was a nov elty for them, and we saw right there that it was a case of organize the female vote or have things hopelessly muddled up before the end of the year. In the interests of harmony things had to be done in a businesslike manner. Certain candidates had to be put through and certain factions had to be gently but firmly stepped on. Harmony, you know, Miss Allstairs, is a most important thing in politics. Without harmony you can't do a thing. Harmony in politics consists of giving the insurgents not what they ask for, but something that you don't want. I was a grand little harmonizer in my day too. I ran Votes From Women 259 the oratorical league the year before it went broke and then traded the presidency to the Chi Yi-Delta Whoop crowd for the editorship of the Student Weekly. That 's harmony. They were happy and so was I. When I saw how hard they had to hustle to pay the association debts the next fall I was so happy I could hardly stand it. No, Miss Allstairs, that was not meanness on my part. It was politics. There is a great deal of difference between meanness and politics. One is low-down and contemptible and nasty, and the other is expedient. See? Why, some of the most generous men in the world are politicians. Time and again I 've seen Andy Hoople, the big politician of our town, pay a man's fare to Chicago so that he could go up there and rest during the last week of a political campaign and not bother himself and get all worried over the way things were going and the man would be on the other side too. Anyway, to wait a minute ; I 'm going to hook over some French now. Look out, low bridge to rendezvous to our muttons how 's that ? In a good many ways there are worse jobs than that of persuad ing a pretty girl to vote the right way. Sometimes I liked the job so well that I was sorry when election came. But, on the whole, it was hard, hard work. We tried arguments and exhortation and politics, and you might as well have shot cheese balls at the moon. Never touched 'em. I talked straight logic to a girl for an hour once, showing her con- 260 At Good Old Siwash clusively that it was her duty as a patriotic Siwash student to vote for a man who could give a strong mind and a lot of money to the debating cause ; and then she remarked quite placidly that she would al ways vote for the other man for whatever office he wanted, because he wore his dress suit with such an air. I had to take her clear downtown and buy her ice cream and things before she could under stand the gravity of the case at all No, indeed, Miss Allstairs, I did n't bribe her. You must be very careful about charging people with bribery. Bribery is a very serious offense. It 's so serious that nowadays it 's a very grave thing to charge a politician with it. I think it will be made a crime soon. I bought ice cream for this girl because she could understand things better while she was eating ice cream. It made her think better. Of course, you can't do that with a man in real politics. You have to give him an office or a contract or something in order to get his mind into a cheerful condition. You can argue so much better with a man when he is cheerful. No, indeed. I would n't bribe a fly. Nobody would. There isn't any bribing any more anyway. Illinois has taught the world that. But that was the least of our troubles. After you had persuaded a girl to vote right you had to keep her persuaded. Now most any man might be able to keep one vote in line, but that was n't enough. Some of us had to keep four or five votes all ready for use, Votes From Women 261 for competition was pretty swift and there were a tremendous number of co-eds in school. You never saw such a job as it was. No sooner would I have Miss A. entirely friendly to my candidate for the editorship of the Weekly than Miss B. would flop over and show marked signs of frost and then I would have to drop everything and walk over from chapel with her three mornings hand-running, and take her to a play, and make a wild pass about not knowing whether any one would go to the prom with me or not And then just as she would begin to smile when she saw me Miss A. would pass me on the street and look at me as if I had robbed a hen roost. And just as I was entirely friendly with both of them it would occur to me that I had n't called on Miss C. for three weeks and that Bannister, of the Alfalfa Delts, was waiting for Miss D. after chapel every morning and would doubtless make a low-down, underhanded attempt to talk politics to her in the spring. For a month before each election I felt like a giddy young squirrel running races with myself around a wheel. Some college boys can keep on terms of desperate and exclusive friend liness with a dozen girls at a time Petey Sim mons got up to eighteen one spring when we won the big athletic election but four or five were as many as I could manage by any means, and it kept me busted, conditioned and all out of training to accom plish this. And when election-time approached and it came to talking real politics, and the girl you had 262 At Good Old Siwash counted on all winter to swing her wing of the third floor in Browning Hall for your candidate would suddenly remember in the midst of a businesslike talk on candidates and things that you had cut two dances with her at the prom, and you could n't ex plain that you simply had to do it because you had to keep your stand-in with a girl on the first floor who had the music-club vote in her pocket-book well, I may get out over Niagara Falls some day on a rotten old tight-rope, with a sprained ankle and a fellow on my shoulders who is drunk and wants to make a speech standing up but if I do I won't feel any more wobbly and uncertain about the future than I used to feel on those occasions. Of course it was entirely impossible for the few dozen college politicians to make personal friends and supporters of all the girls in Siwash. We did n't want to. There are girls and girls at Siwash, just as there are everywhere else. Maybe a third of the Siwash girls were pretty and fascinating and wise and loyal, and nine or ten other exceedingly pleasant adjectives. And perhaps another third were well, nice enough to dance with at a class party and not remember it with terror. And then there was another third which oh, well, you know how it goes everywhere. They were grand young women, and they were there for educational purposes. They took prizes and learned a lot, and this was partly because there were no swarms of bumptious young collegians hanging around them and wasting Votes From Women 263 their time. Far be it from me, Miss Allstairs, to speak disparagingly of a single member of your sex you are all too good for us but, if you will force me to admit it, there were girls at Siwash ex-girls who would have made a true and loyal student of art and beauty climb a high board cer tainly, I said I was n't going to say anything against them, and I 'm not. Anyway, it 's no great com pliment to be admired for your youth and beauty alone. Age has its claims to respect too oh, very well ; I '11 change the subject. As I was saying, we couldn't influence all the co-ed vote personally, but we handled it very syste matically. Every popular girl in the school had her following, of course, at Browning Hall. So we just fought it out among the popular girls. Before elections they 'd line up on their respective sides, and then they 'd line up the rest of the co-ed vote. On a close election we 'd get out every vote, and we 'd have it accounted for, too, beforehand. The real precinct leaders had nothing on us. It took a lot of time and worry; but it was all very pleasant at the end. The popular girls would each lead over her collection of slaves of Horace and Trig, and Counter point and Rhetoric, and we 'd cheer politely while they voted 'em. Then we 'd take off our hats and bow low to said slaves, and they would go back to their galleys after having done their duty as free- born college girls, and that would be over for an other year. Everything would have continued lovely 264 At Good Old Siwash and comfortable and darned expensive if it had n't been for Mary Jane Hicks, of Carruthers' Corners, Missouri. No, I Ve never told you of Mary Jane Hicks. Why? The real reason is because when we fellows of that period mention her name we usually cuss a little in a hopeless and irritable sort of way It 'a painful to think of her. It 's humiliating to think that twenty-five of the case-hardened and time-seasoned politicians of Siwash should have been double-crossed, checkmated, outwitted, out-generaled, sewed up into sacks and dumped into Salt Creek by a red-headed, freckled-nosed exile from a Missouri clay farm; and a Sophomore at that say, what am I telling you this for, Miss Allstairs ? Honestly, it hurts. It 's nice for a woman to hear, I know, but I may have to take gas to get through this story. This Mary Jane Hicks came to Siwash the year before it all happened and was elected to the un- noticeables on the spot. She was a dumpy little girl, with about as much style as a cornplanter ; and I suspect that she bade her pet calf a fond good-by when she left the dear old farm to come and play tag with knowledge on the Siwash campus. Nobody saw her in particular the first year, except that you could n't help noticing her hair any more than you can help noticing a barn that 's burning on a damp, dark night. It was explosively red and she did n't seem to care. She always had her nose turned up a little just on principle, I guess, And when It was a blow between the eyes See page 268 Votes From Women 265 you see a red-headed girl with a freckled nose that turns up just locate the cyclone cellars in your im mediate vicinity, say I. Well, Mary Jane Hicks went through her Fresh man year without causing any more excitement than you could make by throwing a clamshell into the Atlantic Ocean. She drew a couple of classy men for the class parties and they reported that she towed unusually hard when dancing. She voted in the various elections under the protecting care of Miss Willoughby, who was a particular friend of mine just before the Athletic election, and that 's how I happened to meet her. I was considerably grand at that time being a Junior who had had a rib smashed playing football and was going to edit the college paper the next year but the way she looked at me you would have thought that I was the fractional part of a peeled cipher. She just nodded at me and said " Howdedo," and then asked if the vest-pocket vote was being successfully ex tracted that day. That was nervy of her and I frowned ; after which she remarked that she objected to voting without being told in advance that the cause of liberty was trembling in the voter's palm. I remember wondering at the time where she had dug up all that rot. Miss Hicks voted at all the elections along with the rest of the herd, and as far as I know no rude collegian came around and broke into her studies by taking her anywhere. Commencement came and 266 At Good Old Siwash we all went home, and I forgot all about her. The next fall was a critical time with the Eta Bita Pie- Fly Gam-Sigh Whoopsilon combination, because we had graduated a large number of men and we had to pull down the fall elections with a small voting strength. So I went down to college a day early to confer with some of the other patriotic leaders re garding slates and other matters concerning the good of the college. I had n't more than stepped off the train until I met Frankling, the president of the Alfalfa Delts, and Randolph, of the Delta Kappa Sonofaguns, and Chickering, of the Mu Kow Moos, in close consul tation. It was very evident that they were going to do a little high-class voting too. And before night I discovered that the Shi Delts and the Delta Flushes and the Omega Salves had formed a coalition with the independents, and that there was going to be more politics to the square inch in old Siwash that year than there had been since the year of the big wind that 's what we called the year when Max well was boss of the college and swept every election with his eloquence. There were any number of important elections coming off that fall. There were all the class elec tions, of course, and the Oratorical election, and a couple of vacancies to fill in the Athletic Association, and a college marshal to elect, and goodness knows what all else to nail down and tuck away before we could get down to the serious job of fighting con- Votes From Women 267 ditions that fall. I was so busy for the first three days, wiring up the new students and putting through a trade on the Athletic secretaryship with the Delta Kap gang, that I couldn't pay any atten tion to the class elections. But they were pretty safe anyway. It was only about a day's job to put through a class slate. The Junior election came first, and we had arranged to give it to Miss Wil- loughby. We always elected women presidents of the Junior class at Siwash. Little Willoughby had a cinch because, of course, our crowd backed her hard and we were strong in Juniors and, be sides she had a good following among the girls. So we just turned the whole thing over to the girls to manage and thought no more about it, being mighty hard pressed by the miserable and un-American bi partisan combination on the Athletic offices. School opened on Tuesday. The Junior class election came off on Thursday afternoon and a Miss Hamthrick was elected president. I would have bet on the college bell against her. It was the shock- ingest thing that had happened in politics for five years. Miss Hamthrick was a conservatory student. Even when you shut your eyes and listened to her singing she did n't sound good-looking. Davis drew her for the Sophomore class party the year before and exposed himself to the mumps to get out of going. Not only was she elected president, but the rest of the offices went to no, I '11 not describe them. I 'm sort of prejudiced anyway. They made 268 At Good Old Siwash Miss Hamthrick seem beautiful and clever by comparison. It was a blow between the eyes. The worst of it was we couldn't understand it. I went over to see Miss Willoughby about it, and she came down all powdery and beautiful about the eyes and nose and talked to me as haughtily as if I had done it myself. She said she had trusted us, but it was evident that all a woman could hope for in politics was the priv ilege of being fooled by a man. She even accused me of helping elect the Hamthrick lady, said she wished me joy, and asked if it had been a pretty ro mance. That made me tired, and I said oh, well, no use remembering what I said. It was the last thing I ever had a chance to say to Miss Willoughby anyway. I was pretty miserable over it polit ically, of course, I mean, Miss Allstairs. You understand. Now there 's no use saying that. It was n't so. College girls are all very well, and one must be entertained while getting gorged with knowledge ; but really, when it comes to more serious things, I never All right, I '11 go on with my story. The next day we got a harder blow than ever. The Fresh man class election came off on a snap call, and about half the class, mostly girls, elected a lean young lady with spectacles and a wasp-like conversation to the presidency. We raised a storm of indig nation, but they blandly told us to go hence. There was nothing in the Constitution of the United States Votes From Women 269 to prevent a woman from being president of the Freshman class, and there did n't seem to be any other laws on the subject Besides, the Freshman class was a brand-new republic and didn't need the advice of such an effete monarchy as the Senior class. While we were talking it all over the next day the Sophomores met, and after a terrific struggle between the Eta Bita Pies, the Alfalfa Delts and the Shi Delts, Miss Hicks was elected president by what Shorty Gamble was pleased to term " the gar goyle vote." I wouldn't say that myself of any girl, but Shorty had been working for the place for a year, and when the twenty girls who had never known what it was to have a sassy cab rumble up to Browning Hall and wait for them cast their votes solidly and elected the Missouri Prairie Fire he felt justified in making comments. By this time it was a case of save the pieces. The whole thing had been as mysterious as the plague. We were getting mortal blows, we could n't tell from whom. All political signs were failing. The game was going backward. A lot of the lead ers got together and held a meeting, and some of them were for declaring a constitutional monarchy and then losing the constitution. My! But they were bitter. Everybody accused everybody else of double-crossing, underhandedness, gum-shoeing, back biting, trading, pilfering and horse-stealing. I think there was a window or two broken during the discussion. But we didn't get anywhere. The 270 At Good Old Siwash next day the Senior class elected officers, and every frat went out with a knife for its neighbor. A quiet lady by the name of Simpkins, who was one of the finest old wartime relics in school, was elected president. That night I began putting two and two and frac tional numbers together and called in calculus and second sight on the problem. I remembered what the Hicks girl had said to me the year before. That was more than the ordinary girl ought to know about politics. I remembered seeing her doing more or less close-harmony work with the other midnight-oil consumers and the upshot was I went over to Browning Hall that night and called on her. She came down in due time kept me waiting as long as if she had been the belle of the prom and she shook hands all over me. " My dear boy," she said, sitting down on the sofa with me, " I 'm so delighted to renew our old friendship." Now, I don't like to be " my dear boyeoL," by a Sophomore, and there never had been any old friend ship. I started to stiffen up and then did n't. I didn't because I didn't know what she would do if I did. " How are all the other good old chaps ? " she said as cordially as could be. " My, but those were grand days." I did n't see any terminus in that conversation. Besides, she looked like one of those most uncom- " How are all the other good old chaps?" she said Paye 270 Votes From Women 271 fortable girls who can guy you in such, an innocent and friendly manner that you don't know what to say back. So I brushed the preliminaries aside and jumped right into the middle of things. " Miss Hicks," says I, " why are you doing all this ? " " Singular or plural you ? " she asked. " And why am I or are we doing what, and why should n't we?" " Help," said I, feeling that way. " Do you deny that you have n't been instrumental in upsetting the whole college with those fool elections ? " " I am a modest young lady," said she, " so, of course, I deny it. Besides, this college is n't upset at all. I went over this morning and every professor was right side up with care where he belonged. And, moreover, you must not call an election a fool because it does n't do what you want it to. It can't help itself." " Miss Hicks," says I, feeling like a fly in an acre of web, " I am a plain and simple man and not handy with my tongue. What I mean is this, and I hope you '11 excuse me for living do you admit that you had a hand in those class elections ? " Miss Hicks looked at me in the friendliest way possible. "It is more modest to admit it than to declare it, is n't it ? " she asked. " Certainly," says I ; " and this leads right back to question Number One Why did you do it ? " " And this leads back to answer Number One Why should n't I ? " she asked again. 272 At Good Old Siwash " Why, don't you see, Miss Hicks," says I, " that you 've elected a lot of girls that never have been active in college work, and that don't represent the student body, and " " Don't go to the proms ? " she suggested. " I did n't say it and I 'd die before I did," said I virtuously. " But what 's your object ? " " Education," said Miss Hicks mildly. " I 'm paying full tuition and I want to get all there is out of college. I think politics is a fascinating study. I did n't get a chance to do much at it last year, but I 'm learning something about it every day now." "But what's the good of it all?" I protested. " You '11 just get the college affairs hopelessly mixed up " " Like the Oratorical Association was last year ? " she inquired gently. " Oh, pshaw ! " said I, getting entirely red. " Let 's not get personal. What can we do to satisfy you ? " " You 've been satisfying us beautifully so far," said Miss Hicks. " Who 's us ? " I asked. " I don't in the least mind telling you," said Miss Hicks. " It 's the Blanks." "The Blanks!" I repeated fretfully. "Never heard of 'em." " I know it," said Miss Hicks, " but you named them yourselves. What do you say you 've drawn when you draw a homely girl's name out of the hat as a partner for a class party ? " Votes From Women 273 "Oh! "said I. " We 're the Blanks," said Miss Hicks, " and we feel that we have n't been getting our full share of college atmosphere. So we 're going into politics. In this way we can mingle with the students and help run things and have a very enjoyable time. It 's most fascinating. All of us are dippy over it." " Oh," said I again. " You mean you 're going to ruin things for your own selfish interests ? " " My dear boy," said Miss Hicks my, but that grated " we 're not going to ruin anything. And we may build up the Oratorical Association." That was too much. I got up and stood as nearly ten feet as I could. " Very well," said I. " If there 's no use of arguing on a reasonable basis we may as well terminate this interview. But I '11 just tell you there 's no use of your going any further. Now we know what we have to fight, we '11 take precious good care that you do not do any more mischief." " Oh, very well," said Miss Hicks she was in- furiatingly good-natured " but I might as well tell you that we 're going to get the Athletic offices, the prom committee, the Oratorical offices and the Athletic election next spring." " Ha, ha ! " said I loudly and rudely. Then I took my hat and went away. Miss Hicks asked me very eagerly to drop in again. Me ? I 'd as soon have dropped on a Mexican cactus. It could n't be any more uncomfortable. 274 At Good Old Siwash I went away and called our gang together and we seethed over the situation most all night. They voted me campaign leader on the strength of my ser vice, and the next day we got the rest of the frats together, buried the hatchet and doped out the cam paign. It was the pride and strength of Siwash against a red-headed Missouri girl, weight about ninety-five pounds; and we couldn't help feeling sorry for her. But she had brought it on herself. Insurgency, Miss Allstairs, is a very wicked thing. It 's a despicable attempt on the part of the minority to become the majority, and no true patriot will de sert the majority in his time of need. I 'm not going to linger over the next month. I '11 get it over in a few words. We started out to ex terminate Miss Hicks. We put up our candidate for the Oratorical Association presidency. The hall was jammed jsvhen the time came, and before any thing could be done Miss Hicks demanded that no one be allowed to vote who had n't paid his or her dues. Half the fellows we had there never had any intention of getting that far into Oratorical work, and backed out; but the rest of us paid up. There had never been so much money in the treas ury since the association began. Then the Blanks nominated a candidate and skinned us by three votes. When we thought of all that money gone to waste we almost went crazy. But that was just a starter. We were determined to have our own way about the Junior prom. What Votes From Women 275 do wall-flowers know about running a prom? We worked up an absolute majority in the Junior class, only to have a snap meeting called on us over in Browning Hall, in which three middle-aged young ladies who had never danced a step were named, The roar we raised was terrific, but the presiden' sweetly informed us that they had only followed precedent we 'd had to do the same thing the year before to keep out the Mu Kow Moos. We appealed to the Faculty, and it laughed at us. Un fortunately, we didn't stand any too well there anyway, while most of the Blanks were the pride and joy of the professors. Anyway, they told us to fight our own battles and they 'd see that there was fair play. Oh, yes. They saw it. They passed a rule that no student who was conditioned in any study could vote in any college election. That disenfranchised about half of us right on the spot. If ever anarchy breaks out in this country, Miss Allstairs, it will be because of college Faculties. We made a last stand on the Athletic Association treasurership. It looked for a while as if it was going to be easy. We threw all the rules away and gave a magnificent party for all the girls we thought we could count on. It was the most gorgeous affair on record, and half the dress suits in college went into hock afterward for the whole semester. The result was most encouraging. The girls were de lighted. They pledged their votes and support and we counted up that we had a clear majority. 276 At Good Old Siwash We went to bed that night happy and woke up to find that Miss Hicks had entertained the non-frater nity men in the gymnasium that night and had served lemonade and wafers. She had alluded to them playfully as slaves, and they had broken up about fifty chairs demonstrating that they were not. When the election came off she had the unattached vote solid, and we lost out by a comfortable major ity. An estimable lady, who did n't know ath letics from croquet, was elected. And when the reception committee of the prom was announced the next day it was composed exclusively of men who would have had to be led through the grand march on wheels. After that we gave up. I tried to resign as cam paign manager, but the boys would n't let me. They admitted that no one else could have done any better, and, besides, they wanted me to go over and see Miss Hicks again. They wanted me to ask her what her crowd wanted. When I thought of her pleasant conversational hatpin work I felt like resigning from college; but there always have to be martyrs, and in the end I went. Miss Hicks received me rapturously. You would have thought we had been boy and girl friends. She insisted on asking how all the folks were at home, and how my health had been, and had n't it been a gay winter, and was I going to the prom, and how did I like her new gown? While I was at it I thought I might as well amuse myself, too, so I Votes From Women 277 asked her to marry me. That was the only time I ever got ahead of her. She refused indignantly, and I laughed at her for getting so fussed up over a little thing. " Marriage is a sacred subject," she said very soberly. " So was politics," said I, " until you came along. If you won't talk marriage let 's talk politics. What do you girls want ? " " Oh, I told you a while ago," she said. " But, Great Scott ! " said I. " Are n't you going to leave a thing for us fellows who have done our best for the college ? " " Now you put it that way," she said quite kindly, " I '11 think it over. We might find something for you to do. There 's a couple of janitorships loose." " Hicksey," says I. " Miss Hicks," says she. " I beg your pardon my dear girl, then," said I. " I 've come over to the bunch to confess. You 've busted us. We 're on the mat nine points down and yelling for help. We don't want to run things. We only want to be allowed to live. We surrender. We give up. We humbly ask that you prepare the crow and let us eat the neck. Is n't there any way by which we can get a little something to keep us busy and happy ? We 're in a horrible situation. Are n't you even going to let us have the Athletic Association next spring ? " 278 At Good Old Siwash " I was thinking of running that myself," said Miss Hicks thoughtfully. I let out an impolite groan. " But I '11 tell you what you might do," said Miss Hicks. " You boys might try to win my crowd away from me. You see, you 've played right into my hand so far. You haven't paid any attention to my supporters. Now, if you were to go after them the way you do the other girls in the college I shudder to think what might happen to me." " You mean take them to parties and theaters ? " "Why not?" asked Miss Hicks. "You see, they 're only human. I '11 bet you could land every vote in the bunch if you went at it scientifically." "But " " Oh, I know they 're not pretty," said Miss Hicks. " But they cast the most bee-you-ti-ful votes you ever saw." " What you mean," I said, " is that if we don't show those girls a superlatively good time this winter we won't get a look at the election next spring ? " " They 'd be awfully shocked if you put it that way," said Miss Hicks ; " and I would n't advise you to talk to them about it. Their notions of honor are so high that I had to pay for the lemonade for the independent men myself at the last election." " Oh, very well," says I, taking my hat, " we '11 think it over." " You might wear blinders, you know," she sug gested. Votes From Women 279 " Oh, go to thunder ! " said I as earnestly as I could. " Come again," she said when she closed the door after me. " I do so enjoy these little confidences." Honestly, Miss Allstairs, when I think of that girl I shrink up until I 'm afraid I '11 fall into my own hat. It ought not to be legal for a girl to talk to a man like that. It 's inhuman. We thought matters over for two weeks and tried one or two little raids on the enemy with most hor rible results to ourselves. Then we gave in. We put our pride and our devotion to art in cold storage and took up the politicians' burden. We gave those girls the time of their young-to-middle-aged lives. We got up dances and crokinole parties and concerts for them. We took them to see Hamlet. We had sleighing parties. We helped every lecture course in the college do a rushing business. We just backed into the shafts and took the bit without a murmur. And maybe you think those girls did n't drive us. They seemed determined to make up for the drought of all the past. They were as coy and un certain and as infernally hard to please as if they 'd been used to getting one proposal a day and two on Sunday. Let one of us so much as drop over to Browning Hall to pass the time of day with one of the real heart-disturbers, and the particular vote that he was courting would go off the reservation for a week. It would take a pair of theater tickets at the least to square things. 280 At Good Old Siwash We gave dances that winter at which only one in five girls could dance. We took moonlight strolls with ladies who could remember the moon of seventy- six, and we gave strawrides to girls who insisted on talking history of art and missionary work to us all the way. When I think of the tons of candy and the mountains of flowers and the wagonloads of lat est books that we lavished, and of the hard feelings it made in other quarters, and of our loneliness amid all this gayety, and of our frantic efforts to make the prom a success, with ten couples dancing and the rest decorating the walls, I sometimes wonder whether the college was worth our great love for it after all. But we were winning out. By April it was easy to see this. The Blanks thawed with the snow drifts. They got real friendly and sociable, and after the warm weather came on we simply had to entertain them all the time, they liked it so. When I think of those beautiful spring days, with us saun tering with our political fates about the campus, and the nicest girls in the world walking two and two all by themselves Oh, gee ! Why, they even made us cut chapel to go walking with them, just as if it was a genuine case of " Oh, those eyes ! " and " Shut up, you thumping heart." All this time Miss Hicks would n't accept any in vitation at all. She just flocked by herself as usual, and watched us taking her votes away from her without any concern apparently. I always felt that she had something saved up for us, but I couldn't Why, they even made us cut chapel to go walking with them Page 280 Votes From Women 281 tell what it was; and anyway, we had those votes. By the time the Athletic election came around there was n't a doubt of it. I must say the women did pretty well during the year. They 'd cleaned up the Oratorical debt, and somehow there was about three times as much money in the Athletic treasury after the football season as there had ever been before. But they 'd raised a lot of trouble too. No passes. Dues had to be paid up. Nobody got any fun out of the class affairs. They got up lectures and teas and made the class pay for them. And, anyway, we wanted to run things again. We 'd felt all year like a bunch of last year's sun flowers. Besides, we 'd earned it. We 'd earned a starry crown as a matter of fact, but all we asked was that they give our little old Athletic Association back and let us run it once more. Miss Hicks announced herself as a candidate, and we felt sorry for her. Not one of her gang was with her. They were enthusiastically for us. We 'd planned the biggest party of the year right after the election in celebration, and had invited them already. Election day came and we hardly worried a bit. The result was 189 to 197 in favor of Miss Hicks. Every independent man and every bang-up-to-date girl in college voted for her. Of course it looks simple enough now, but why could n't we see it then ? We supposed the real girls knew that it was a case of college patriotism. And, of course, it was a low-lived trick for Miss Hicks to 282 At Good Old Siwash float around the last day and spread the impression that we 'd never loved them except for their votes. She simply traded constituencies with us, that 's all. Take it coming or going, year in or year out, you could n't beat that girl. I '11 bet she goes out to Washington state and gets elected governor some day. I went over to Browning Hall the night after the election, ready to tell Miss Hicks just what every body thought of her. I was prepared to tell her that every athletic team in college was going to disband and that anarchy would be declared in the morning. She came down as pleasant as ever and held out her hand. " Don't say it, please," she said, " because I 'm going to tell you something. I 'm not coming back next year." " Not coming back ! " said I, gulping down a piece of Belief as big as an apple. " No," she said, " I 'm I 'm going to be mar ried this summer. I 've I Ve been engaged all this year to a man back home, but I wanted to come back and learn something about politics. He 's a lawyer." " Well, you learned enough to suit you, did n't you ? " I asked. " Oh, yes," she said with a giggle. " Was n't it fun, though ! My father will be so pleased. He 's the chairman of the congressional committee out at home and he 's always told me an awful lot about politics. I 've enjoyed this year so much." Votes From Women 283 " Well, I have n't," I said ; " but I hope to enjoy next year." And then I took half an hour to tell her that, in spite of the fact that she was the most arrant, deceitful, unreliable, two-faced and scuttling poli tician in the world, she was almost incredibly nice. She listened quite patiently, and at the end she held up her fingers. They 'd been crossed all the time. No, that 's the last I ever saw of her, Miss All- stairs. She left before Commencement. She sent me an invitation to the wedding. I '11 bet she did n't quite get the significance of the magnificent silver set we Siwash boys sent. We sent it to the groom. That was the end of women dominion at Siwash. There wasn't a rag of the movement left next fall. But we boys never entirely forgot what happened to us, and it 's still the custom to elect a co-ed to some Athletic office. They do say that the only way to teach a politician what the people want is to bore a shaft in his head and shout it in, but our expe rience ought to be proof to the contrary. Why, all we needed was the gentle little hint that Mary Jane Hicks gave us. CHAPTER XI SIO TRANSIT GLORIA AJLL-AMERICA HOW did the Siwash game come out Saturday? Forget it, my boy. You '11 never know in this oversized, ingrowing, fenced-off, insulated metropolis till some one writes and tells you. Every fall I ask myself that same question all day Saturday and Sunday, and do you suppose I ever find a Siwash score in one of those muddy-faced, red-headed, ward- gossip parties that they call newspapers in New York ? Never, not at all, you hopeful tenderfoot from the unimportant West. After you 've existed in this secluded portion of the universe a few years you '11 get over trying to find anything that looks like news from home in the daily disturbances here. And I don't care whether your home is in Buffalo, Chicago or Strawberry Point, Iowa, either. Go down on the East Side and beat up a policeman, and you '11 get immortalized in ten-inch type. Go back West and get elected governor, and ten to one if you 're mentioned at all they '11 slip you the wrong state to preside over. Excuse me, but I 'm considerably sore, just as I am every Sunday during the football season. Here I am, eating my heart out with longing to know Sic Transit Gloria All-America 285 whether good old Siwash has dusted off half a town ship with Muggledorfer again, and what do I get to read ? Four yards of Gale ; five yards of Jarhard ; two yards of Ohell; and a page of Quincetown, Hardmouth, Jamhurst, Saint Mikes, Holy Moses College and the Connecticut Institute of Etymology. Nice fodder for a loyal alumnus eleven hundred and then some miles from home, is n't it ? Honest, when I first hit this seething burg I used to go down to the Grand Central station on Sunday afternoon and look at the people coming in from the trains, just because some of them were from the West. Once I took a New Yorker up to Riverside Park, pointed him west and asked him what he saw. He said he saw a ferryboat coming to New York. That was all he had ever seen of the other shore. He called it Hinterland. That made me mad and I called him an electric-light bug. We had a lovely row. But we 're blasting out a corner for the old coll., even back here. We 've got things fixed pretty nicely here now, we Siwash men. Down near Gramercy Park there 's an old-fashioned city dwelling house, four stories high and elbow-room wide. It 's the Siwash Alumni Club. There are half a hundred Siwash men in New York, gradually getting into the king row in various lines of business, and we pay enough rent each year for that house to buy a pretty fair little cottage out in Jonesville. Whenever a Siwash man drops in there he 's pretty sure to find another Siwash man who smokes the same brand of 286 At Good Old Siwash tobacco and knows the same brand of college songs. We Ve got one legislator, four magazine publishers, two railroad officials, a city prosecutor and three bankers on the membership roll, and maybe some day we '11 have a mayor. Then we '11 pass a law requiring the boys and girls of New York to spend at least one hour a day learning about Siwash Col lege, Jonesville, the big team of naughty-nix and the formula for getting credit at the Horseshoe Cafe. We '11 make it obligatory for every newspaper to pub lish a full page about each Siwash game in the fall, with pictures of the captain, the coach and the full back's right leg. Hurrah for revenge! I see it coming. Join the club ? Why, you don't have to ask to join it. You 've got to join it. Ten dollars, please, and sign here. When we get a little huskier financially we won't charge new-fledged graduates anything for a year or two, but we Ve got to now. The soulless landlord wants his rent in advance. You '11 find the whole gang there Saturday nights. Just butt right in if I 'm not around. You 're a Siwash man, and if you want to borrow the doorknob to throw at a hackman you Ve a perfect right to do it. I '11 tell you, old man, you don't know how nice it is to have a hole that you can hunt in this hurri cane town, when you 're a bright young chap with a glorious college past and a business future that you can't hock for a plate of beans a day ! Leaving col lege and going into business in a big city is like Sic Transit Gloria All-America 287 taking a high dive from the hall of fame into an ice-water tank. Think of that and be cheerful. You 've got a nice time coming. Just now you 're Rudolph Weedon Burlingame, Siwash Naughty- several, late captain of the baseball team, prize orator, manager of two proms and president of the Senior class. To-morrow you '11 be a nameless cum- berer of busy streets, useful only to the street-car companies to shake down for nickels. To-morrow you 're going around to the manager of some firm or other with a letter from some customer of his, and you 're going to put your hand on your college di ploma so as to have it handy, and you 're going to hand him the letter and prepare to tell the story of your strong young life. But just before you begin you '11 go away, because the manager will tell you he 's sorry, but he 's busy, and there are fourteen applicants ahead of you, and anyway he '11 not be hiring any more men until 1918, and will you please come around then, and shut the door behind you, if you don't mind. Yep, that 's what will happen to you. You '11 spend your first three days trying to haul that diploma out. The fourth day you '11 put it in your trunk. I 've known men to cut 'em up for shaving paper. You '11 stop trying to tell the story of your life and in about a week you '11 be wondering why you have been allowed to live so long. In two weeks a clerk will look as big as a senator to you and you '11 begin to get bashful before elevator men. 288 At Good Old Siwash You '11 get off the sidewalk when you see a man who looks as if he had a job and was in a hurry. You '11 envy a messenger boy with a job and a future ; you '11 wonder if managers are really carnivorous or only pretend to be. You feel as tall as the Singer Build ing to-day, but you '11 shrink before long. You '11 shrink until, after a long, hard day, with about nine turndowns in it, you '11 have to climb up on top of the dresser to look at yourself in the glass. That 's what you 're going up against. Then the Siwash Club will be your hole and you '11 hunt it every evening. You '11 be a big man there, for we judge our members not by what they are, but by what they were at school. You '11 sit around with the boys after dinner, and the man on your right, who is run ning a railroad, will be interested in that home run you made against Muggledorfer, and the man on your left, who won't touch a law case for less than five thousand dollars, will tell you that he, too, won the Perkins debate once. And he '11 treat you as if you were a real life-sized human being instead of a job hunter, knee high to a copying clerk. You '11 be back in the old college atmosphere, as big as the best of 'em, and after you 've swapped yarns all evening you '11 go to bed full of tabasco and pepper, and you '11 tackle the first manager the next morn ing as if he were a Kiowa man and had the ball. And sooner or later you '11 get old Mr. Opportunity where he can't give you the straight arm, and if you don't put a knee in his chest and tame him for Sic Transit Gloria All-America 289 life you have n'*t got the real Si wash spirit, that 's all. ' Funny thing about college. It isn't merely an education. It 's a whole life in itself. You enter it unknown and tiny just a Freshman with no rights on earth. You work and toil and suffer and fall in love and climb and rise to fame. When you are a Senior, if you have good luck, you are one of the biggest things in the whole world for there is n't any world but the campus at college. Freshmen look up to you and admire men who are big enough to talk with you. The Sophomores may sneer at faculties and kings, but they would n't think of sassing you. The papers publish your picture in your football clothes. You dine with the professors, and prominent alumni come back and shake you by the hand. Of course, you know that somewhere in the dim nebulous outside there is a President of the United States who is quite a party in his way, but none of the girls mention it when they tell you how grand you looked after they had hauled the other team off of you and sewed on your ear. They talk about you exclusively because you 're really the only thing worth talking about, you know. When Commencement comes you move about the campus like some tall mountain peak on legs. The students bring their young brothers up to meet you and you try to be kind and approachable. They give you a tremendous cheer when you go down the aisle in the chapel to get your prizes. You are referred 290 At Good Old Siwash to on all sides as one of the reasons why America is great. The professors when they bid you good-by ask you anxiously not to forget them. Then Commence ment is over and college life is past, and there is nothing left in life but to become a senator or run a darned old trust. You leave the campus, taking care not to step on any of the buildings, and go out into the world pretty blue because you 're through with about everything worth while ; and you wonder if you can stand it to toil away making history eleven months in the year with only time to hang around college a few weeks in spring or fall. You 're done with the real life. You 're an old man, you 've seen it all ; and it sometimes takes you two weeks or more to recover and decide that after all a great career may be almost as interesting in a way as college itself. So you buck up and decide to accept the career and that 's where you begin to catch on to the general drift of the universe in dead earnest. Take a man of sixty, with a permanent place in Who 's Who and a large circle of people who believe that he has some influence with the sunrise and sun set. Then let him suddenly find himself a ten-year- old boy with two empty pockets and an appetite for assets, and let him learn that it is n't considered even an impertinence to spank him whenever he tries to mix in and air his opinions. I don't believe he would be much more shocked than the college man who finds, at the conclusion of a glorious four-year slosh in fame, that he is really just about to begin life, and Sic Transit Gloria All- America 291 that the first thing he must learn is to keep out from under foot and say " Yes, sir," when the boss barks at him. It 's a painful thing, Burlingame. Took me about a year to think of it without saying " ouch." The saddest thing about it all is that the two careers don't always mesh. The college athlete may discover that the only use the world has for talented shoulder muscles is for hod-carrying purposes. The society fashion plate may never get the hang of how to earn anything but last year's model pants; and the fishy-eyed nonentity, who never did anything more glorious in college than pay his class tax, may be doing a brokerage business in skyscrapers within ten years. When I left Siwash and came to New York I guess I was as big as the next graduate. Of course I had n't been the one best bet on the campus, but I knew all the college celebrities well enough to slap them on the backs and call them by pet names and lend them money. That of course should be a great assistance in knowing just how to approach the presi dent of a big city bank and touch him for a cigar in a red-and-gold corset, while he is telling you to make yourself at home around the place until a job turns up. Allie Bangs, my chum, went on East with me. We had decided to rise side by side and to buy the same make of yachts. Of course we were sensible. We did n't expect to crowd out any magnates the first week or two. We intended to rise by honest worth, if it took a whole year. All we asked was that the 292 At Good Old Siwash fellows ahead should take care of themselves and not hold it against us if we ran over them from behind. We didn't think we were the biggest men on earth not yet. That's where we fell down. We've never had a chance to since. You've got to seize the opportunity for having a swelled head just as you have for everything else. It took us just six weeks to get a toe-hold on the earth and establish our right to breathe our fair share of New York air. At the end of that time neither one of us would have been surprised if we had been charged rent while waiting in the ante-rooms of New York offices to be told that no one had time to tell us that there was no use of our waiting to get a chance to ask for anything. Talk about a come down ! It was worse than coming down a bump-the- bumps with nails in it. It was three months before we got jobs. They were microscopic jobs in the same company, with wages that were so small that it seemed a shame to make out our weekly checks on nice engraved bank paper jobs where any one from the proprietor down could yell " Here, you ! " and the office boy could have fired us and got away with it. If I had been hanging on to a rope trailing behind a fifty-thousand-ton ocean liner I don't be lieve I should have felt more inconsequential and totally superfluous. But they were jobs just the same and we were game. I think most college graduates are after they get their feelings reduced to normal size. We hung Sic Transit Gloria All-America 293 on and dug in, and sneaked more work into our positions, and did n't quarrel with any one except the window-washer's little boy who brought meat for the cats in the basement. We drew the line at letting him boss us. And how we did enjoy being part of the big rumpus on Manhattan Island. We had a room it was n't so much of a room as it was a sort of stationary vest and we ate at those hunger cures where a girl punches out your bill on a little ticket and you don't dare eat up above the third figure from the bottom or you '11 go broke on Friday. By hook or crook we always managed to save a dollar from the wreckage each week for Sunday, and say, did you ever conduct a scientific investigation into just how far a dollar will go providing a day's pleasure in a big city? We did that for six months, and if I do say it myself we stretched some of those dollars until the eagle's neck reached from Tarrytown to Coney Island. We saw New York from roofgarden to subcellar. We even got to doing fancy stunts. W T e 'd dig out our dress suits, go over to one of those cafes where you begin owing money as soon as you see the head waiter, and put on a bored and haughty front for two hours on a dollar and twenty cents, including tips. And what we did n't know about the Subway, the Snubway and the Grubway, the Clubway, and the various Dub- ways of New York was n't worth discovering or even imagining. We had n't been conducting our explorations for more than a week when a most tremendous thing 294 At Good Old Siwash happened to us. You know how you are always run ning up against mastodons in the big town. You see about every one who is big enough to die in scare- heads. Taking a stroll down Fifth Avenue with an old residenter and having him tell about the people you pass is like having the hall of fame directory read off to you. Well, one Sunday night when we were blowing in our little fifty cents apiece on one of those Italian table d'hote dinners with red varnish free, Allie looked across the room and began to tremble. " Look at that chap," says he. " Who is he ? " I asked, getting interested. "Roosevelt?" " Roosevelt nothing," he says scornfully. " Man alive, that 's Jarvis ! " I just dropped my jaw and stared. Of course you remember Jarvis, the great football player. At that time I guess most of the college boys in America said their prayers to him. Out West we students used to read of his terrific line plunges on the eastern fields and of his titanic defense when his team was hard pushed, and wonder if any of us would ever become great enough to meet him and shake him by the hand. What did we care for the achievements of Achilles and Hector and Hercules and other eminent hasbeens., which we had to soak up at the rate of forty lines of Greek a day ? They had old Homer to write them up the best man ever in the business. But they were too tame for us. I 've caught myself speculating more than once on what Achilles would have done if Jarvis Sic Transit Gloria All-America 295 had tried to make a gain through him. Achilles was probably a pretty good spear artist, and all that, but if Jarvis had put his leather-helmeted head down and hit the line low about two points south of the solar plexus they would have carted Ac. away in a cab right there, invulnerability and all. That 's about what we thought of Jarvis. We had his pictures pasted all over our training quarters along with those of the other super-dreadnoughts from the colleges that break into literature, and I imagine that if he had suddenly appeared back in Jonesville we should have put our heads right down and kow-towed until he gave us permission to get up. And here we were, sitting in the same cafe with him. I '11 tell you, I had never felt the glory of living in the metropolis and prowling around the ankles of the big chiefs more vividly than right there in that room the night we first saw him. We sat and watched Jarvis while our meat course got cold. There was no mistaking him some peo ple have their looks copyrighted and Jarvis was one of them. We would have known it was he if we had seen him in a Roman mob. After a while Bangs, who always did have a triple reenforced Harveyized steel cheek, straightened up. " I 'm going over to speak to him," he said. " Sit still, you fool," says I ; " don't annoy him." " Watch me," says Bangs ; " I 'm going over to introduce myself. He can't any more than freeze me. And after I Ve spoken to him they can take my little 296 At Good Old Siwash old job away from me and ship me back to the hay- fields whenever they please. I '11 be satisfied." " You ought to bottle that nerve of yours and sell it to the lightning-rod pedlers," says I, getting all sweaty. " Just because you introduced yourself to a governor once you think you can go as far as you like. You stay right here " But Bangs had gone over to Jarvis. I sat there and blushed for him, and suffered the tortures of a man who is watching his friend making a furry-eared nuisance of himself. There was the greatest football player in the world being pestered by a frying-sized sprig of a ninth assistant shipping clerk. It was preposterous. I waited to see Bangs wilt and come slinking back. Then I was going to put on my hat and walk out as if I didn't belong with him at all. But instead of that Bangs shook hands with Jarvis, talked a minute and then sat down with him. When Bangs is routed out by the Angel Gabriel he '11 sit down on the edge of his grave and delay the whole procession, trying to find a mutual acquaintance or two. That 's the kind of a leather- skin he is. Presently Bangs turned around and beckoned to me to come over. More colossal impudence. I was n't going to do it, but Jarvis turned, too, and smiled at me. Like a hypnotized man I went over to their table. " I want you to meet Mr. Jarvis," said Bangs, with the air of a man who is giving away his aero plane to a personal friend. Sic Transit Gloria All-America 297 " Glad to meet you," said Jarvis kindly. " M-m-m-mrugh," says I easily and naturally. Then I sat down on the edge of a chair. Well, sir, Jarvis it was the real Jarvis all right was as pleasant a fellow as you would ever care to meet. There he was talking away to us fishworms just as cordially as if he enjoyed it. He did n't seem to be a bit better than we were. I Ve often noticed that when you meet the very greatest people they are that way. It 's only the fellows who are n't sure they 're great and who are pretty sure you are n't sure either, who have to put up a haughty front. Jarvis offered us cigarettes and put us so much at our ease that we stayed there an hour. It was a dazzling experience. He told us a lot about the city, and asked us about ourselves and laughed at our experiences. And he told us that he often dined there and hoped to see us again. When we got safely outside, after having bade him good-by without any sort of a break, I mopped my forehead. Then I took off my hat. " Bangs," said I, " you 're the world's champion. Some day you '11 get killed for impudence in the first degree, but just now I 've got ten cents and I 'm going to buy you a big cigar and walk home to pay for it." Incredible as it may sound, that was the beginning of a real friendship between the three of us. Jarvis seemed to take a positive pleasure in being demo cratic. And he was wonderfully thoughtful, too. He realized instinctively that we had about nine cents 298 At Good Old Siwash apiece in our clothes as a rule, and he didn't offer to be gorgeous and buy things we could n't buy back. We got to dropping in at the cafe once a week or so and eating at the same table with him. Why on earth he fancied eating around with grubs like us, when he could have been tucking away classy fare up on Fifth Avenue, we could n't imagine. Some people are naturally Bohemian, however. It seemed to delight Jarvis to hear us tell about our team, and our college, and our prospects, and how lucky we had been up to date, not getting stepped on by any financial magnate or other tall city monument. He wasn't a talkative man himself. It was especially hard to pry any football talk out of him, probably because he was so modest. When we insisted he would finally open up, and tell us the inside facts about some great college game that we knew by heart from the newspaper accounts. And he would mention all the famous players by their first names you can't imagine how much more alarming it sounded than calling a president " Teddy " and we would just sit there and drink it in, and watch history from behind the scenes until suddenly he would stop, look absent and shut up like a clam. No use trying to turn him on again. Presently he would bid us good night and go away. The first time we thought we had offended him and we were miserable for a week. But when we ran across him again he seemed as pleased as ever to see us. It was just moods, after all, we finally decided, and Sic Transit Gloria All-America 299 thought no more about it. Great men have a right to have moods if they want to. We admired his moods as much as the rest of him, and were only glad they were n't violent. It was a couple of months before we got up courage enough to ask him to drop in at our room. Even Allie got timid. He explained that he did n't want to break the spell. But finally I braced up myself and invited him to drop around with us, and he con sented as kindly as you please. Came right up to our little three by twice and wouldn't even sit in the one chair. Sat on the bed and looked over our col lege pictures, and chatted until Allie asked him if he was going back for the big game that fall. Then he said sort of abruptly that he could n't get away, and a few minutes afterward he went home. We thought we 'd offended him again, but a week afterward he turned up and called on us we 'd asked him to drop in any time. We decided that he didn't like to have too much familiarity about his football career and we respected him for it. It 's all right for a man like that to be affable and democratic, but he must n't let you crawl all over him. He 's got his dignity to maintain. As the winter came on Jarvis dropped up to see us quite frequently. He never asked us to come and see him and we were really a little grateful for I don't believe I should have had the nerve to go bouncing into the apartments of a national hero and hobnob with the mile-a-minute class. Anyway we 300 At Good Old Siwash did n't expect it or dream of it. And we did n't ask him any more questions about himself. We did n't care to try to elbow into his circle. If he chose to come slumming and sit around with us, we were more than content. We had seen enough of him already to keep us busy paralyzing Siwash fellows for a week when we went back to Commencement. " Jarvis ? Oh, yes. Fact is, he 's a friend of ours. Comes up to our rooms right along. We happened to meet him in a cafe. And say, he tells us that when he made that fifty-yard run and so on." We used to practise saying things like this naturally and easily. We could just see the undergrads at the frat house sitting around in circles and lapping it up. All this time we were plugging away down at the plant, early and late, with every ounce of steam we had. There 's one good thing about business in this Bedlam when you break in you keep right on going. By the time Commencement rolled around we were getting checks with two figures on them, and had a better job treed and ready to drop. Ask for a vacation ? Why, we would n't have asked for four days off to go home and help bury our worst enemy. That 's what business does to the dear old college days when it gets a good bite at them. There we were, one year out of Siwash, breaking forty-five reunion dates, and never even sitting around with our heads in our hands over it This business bug is a bad, bad biter all right. Just let it get its tooth into Sic Transit Gloria All-America 301 you, and what do you care if some other fellow is smoking your two-quart pipe back in the old chapter house ? And for that matter, what do you care about anything else until you get up far enough to take breath and look around ? Sometimes, after a couple of weeks of extra hard work, I 've taken my mind off invoices long enough to wag it around a bit and I 've felt like a swimmer coming up after a long dive. We landed those promotions in July and went right after another pair. I got mine in August Allie in September. And along in December they called us both up in the office, where the big crash was. He said nice things to us about getting a chance to fire our own chauffeurs if we kept on tending to business, and first thing we knew we had offices of our own in the back of the building, with our names painted on the doors, and call-bells that brought stenographers and the same old brand of office boys that used to blow us out of the other offices along with their cigarette smoke. And we realized then that if we worked like thunder for thirty years more and saved our money and made it earn one hundred per cent, perhaps some of the real business kings would notice us on the street some day. That 's about the way the college swelling goes down. All this time we had n't seen much of Jarvis. He 'd stopped coming to the cafe and we 'd really been so busy that we almost forgot about him. It 's simply wonderful the things business will drive out 302 At Good Old Siwash of your mind. It was n't until late in the winter that we realized that we 'd probably lost track of Jarvis for good that is, until we climbed up into his set and discovered him at some dinner that was a page out of the social register. We mixed around a lot more now. We went to the million-candle-power restaurants every now and then, and ate a good deal more than sixty-five cents' worth apiece without batting an eye; and we went to see a play occasionally and did n't climb up into the rarefied atmosphere to find our seats, either. And whenever we broke in with the limousine crowd we kept a bright lookout for Jarvis. We wanted to see him and show him that we were coming along. We wanted him to be proud of us. I 'd have given all my small bank balance to hear him say : " Fine work, old man ; keep it up." I '11 tell you when a big chap like that takes an interest in you, it 's just as bracing as a hypodermic of ginger. Baccalaureates and inspirational editorials can't touch it. I was holding down the proud position of shipping clerk and Allie was my assistant the next spring, and it seemed as if we had to empty that warehouse every twenty-four hours and find the men to load the stuff with search-warrants. Help was scandalously scarce. We could n't have worked harder if we had been standing off grizzly bears with brickbats. I 'd just fired the fourth loafer in one day for trying to roll barrels by mental suggestion, when the boss came into my office. Sic Transit Gloria All-America 303 " Can you use an extra man ? " he asked me. " Use him ? " says I, swabbing off my forehead I 'd been hustling a few barrels myself. " Use him ? Say, I '11 give him a whole car to load all by himself, and if he can get the job finished by yesterday he can have another to load for to-day." "Now, see here," said the boss, sitting down; " this is a peculiar case. This chap 's been at me for a job for months. There 's nothing in the office. He 's a fine fellow and well educated, but he 's on his uppers. He can't seem to land anywhere. I 'm sorry for him. He looks as if he was headed for the bread line. He 's too good to roll barrels, but it won't hurt him. If you '11 take him in and use him I '11 give him a place as soon as I get it ; let me know how he pans out." " Just ask him to run all the way here," I said, and put my nose down in a bill of lading. After a while the door opened and some one said, " Is this the shipping clerk ? " It was the ghost of a voice I used to know and I turned around in a hurry. It was Jarvis. I don't suppose it is strictly business to cry while you are shaking hands with a husky you 're just putting into harness at one-fifty per. I did n't intend to do it, but somehow when your whole conception of fame and glory comes clattering down about your ears, and you find you 've got to order your star and idol to get a hustle on him and load the car at door four damquick, you are likely to do something 304 At Good Old Siwash foolish. I just stood and sniveled and let my mouth hang open. Neither of us said a word, but presently I put my arm around his shoulders and led him out into the shipping room. " There 's the foreman," I said, in a voice like a wet sponge. " And you report here at six o'clock sharp." Then I went and hunted up Allie and for once we let business go hang in business hours. We could n't work. We kept claw ing for the solid ground and trying to readjust so ciety and the universe and the beacon lights of progress all afternoon. When quitting time came we waited for Jarvis. We did n't say anything, but we loaded him into a cab and took him up to the old cafe. Then he told us his story, while we learned a lot of things about glory we had n't even vaguely suspected before. He was one of the greatest football players who ever car ried a ball, Jarvis was. Of that there was no doubt. He admitted it himself then. I might say he con fessed it. He 'd come to his university without any real preparation you know even in the best regu lated institutions of learning they sometimes get your marks on tackling mixed with your grades on en trance algebra. He 'd spent two hours a day on football and the rest of his time being a college hero. He 'd had to work at it like a dog, he said. How he got by the exams, he never knew. It seemed to him as if he must have studied in his sleep. By the time he graduated he 'd had about every honor that has been invented for campus consumption. He belonged Sic Transit Gloria All-America 305 to the exclusive societies. All kinds of big people had shaken hands with him asked for the privilege. He had a scrapbook of newspaper stories about his career that weighed four pounds. He knew the differences between eight kinds of wine by the taste and he had a perfect education in forkology, waltz- ology, necktiematics, and all the other branches of' social science. He would never forget, he said, how he felt when he was graduated and the university moved off be hind him and left him alone. It was up to him to keep on being a famous character, he felt. His college demanded it. He had to make good. But there he was with a magnificent football education and no more football to play. His financial training consisted in knowing when his bank account was over drawn. His folks had pretty nearly paralyzed them selves putting him through and he was n't going to draw on them any further. He went to New York because it seemed to be almost as big as the uni versity, and he started all alone on the job of shoulder ing his way past the captains of finance up to the place where his college mates might feel proud of him some more. The result was so ridiculous that he had to laugh at it himself. He lost five yards every time he bucked an office boy. His college friends kept in viting him out and he went until they began offering him help. Then he cut the whole bunch. He did n't care to have them watch the struggle. He 'd been in 306 At Good Old Siwash New York two years when he met us, he said, and he had n't earned enough money to pay his room- rent in that time. There were times when he might have got a decent little job at twelve dollars per, or so, but he would have had to meet the boys who had looked up to him as a world-beater and somehow he just could n't tackle it. When we had come over and paid homage to him he saw we had taken him for a successful man of the world, as well as a mem ber of the All- America team, and he had n't been able to resist the desire to let two human beings look up to him again. He had n't invited us to his room, he said, because part of the time he did n't have a room; and he even confessed that once or twice he 'd walked up to our rooms from downtown be cause he was crazy for a smoke and did n't have the price. I guess there never was a more peculiar dinner party in New York. Part of the time I sniveled and part of the time Allie sniveled, and once or twice we were all three all balled up in our throats. But after a while we braced up and I told Jarvis what the Boss had told me, and we drank a toast to the glad new days, and another to success, and another to Jarvis, the coming business pillar, and some more to our private yachts and country homes, and to Com mencement reunions, and this and that. Then we chartered a sea-going cab and took Jarvis home with us. We made him sleep in the bed while we slept on the floor, and the next morning we loaned him a Sic Transit Gloria All-America 307 pair of overalls that we had honorably retired and we all went down to work together. The next three months were perfectly ridiculous. We simply could n't order Jarvis around. Suppose you had to ask the Statue of Liberty to get a move on and scrub the floors ? We could n't get our in grained awe of that freight hustler out of our systems. Of course when any one was around we had to keep up appearances, but when I was alone and I had something for Jarvis to do I 'd call him in and get at it about this way : " Er say, Jarvis, could you help me out on a little matter, if you have the time \ You know there 's a shipment for Pittsburgh that '3 got to go out by noon. I think the car is at door 6. Those barrels ought to be put into the car right away, and if you 'd see that they get in there I 'd be very much obliged to you. I 'd attend to it myself, but they 've given me a lot of stuff to go over here." Then Jarvis would grin cheerfully and hustle those barrels in before I could get over blushing. If you don't believe football has its advantages in after life you ought to watch a prize tackle waltzing a three- hundred-pound barrel through a car door. By day we ordered Jarvis about in this fashion, and made him earn his one-fifty with the rest of the red-shirted gang. But at six o'clock we dropped all that like a hot poker. Nights we were his adoring young friends again. We sat together in restaurants and said " sir " to him to his infinite disgust, and made him tell over and over again the stories of 308 At Good Old Siwash the big games and the grand doings of the old days. When his promotion came, three months later, and he went into a small job in the office, with a traveling job looming up in the offing, we held a celebration that set us back about half the price of a railroad ticket home. It meant more to us than it did to him. To him it was three dollars more a week, congenial work and a chance. But to us it was the release of a great man from grinding captivity a racehorse rescued from the shafts of a garbage cart ; a Richard the Lion-hearted hauled from the gloomy dungeon, where he had had to peel his own potatoes, and set on the road to kingly pomp and circumstance again. Excuse me for this frightful mess of language. I can't help getting a little squashy with my adjectives when I think of that glorious banquet night. I 'm glad to say that Jarvis kept coming along after that. He developed into a first-class salesman, and in a couple of years he came in from the road and took a desk in the house with his name on the side in gilt letters. When this happened we made him look up every one of his old college friends again. He hesitated a little, but we got behind him and pushed. We pushed him into his college club and back to Com mencement, and we really pushed him out of our life for every one was glad to see him, of course, and to his amazement he found that he was still a grand old college institution among the alumni. So he trained with his own crowd after that, but even now we go over to his club and dine with him at least once Sic Transit Gloria All-America 309 a year always on some anniversary or other. And for the last two years he has been sending his machine around for us. Oh, no, you don't! I-'m paying for this lunch, young fellow. Don't fight any one about paying for your lunch just because you still have the price. It 's a privilege we older chaps insist on with you new comers anyway. And remember, there is always a bunch of us before the fire at the club Saturday evenings, and we don't talk business. While you 're waiting for that job, don't you dare miss a meeting. And say one thing more. Don't be afraid of those blamed office boys. They 're all a bluff. I 'm getting so I can fire them without even getting pale. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. FIB 1 3 1989 RENEWALS 3 1158 01201 5755 UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000747615 3