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I distinctly saw you throw at my hat, sir," and Professor Tines shook his finger at Tom.
"I--I know it, sir. I admit it," confessed the captain. "Only--only----"
"We didn't know it was your hat, sir," went on Sid. "I'm afraid it's quite--quite unfit to wear, sir," and Sid tried to put the flapping piece back into place, for the professor had dropped the tile, and Sid had picked it up.
"Unfit to wear! I should say it was. Fit to wear! Why I intend delivering a lecture on 'The Art of Repose as an Aid to High Thinking'
and now, sir--now, you young vandals have ruined the hat I was going to wear! It's infamous--infamous! I shall have you expelled! I shall let your parents know of your shameless conduct! I shall have you dismissed at once!" and the irate professor shook his fist first at Tom, then at Sid and then at Phil. "Your conduct is a disgrace to the school!" he went on. "Here, give me my hat!" and he fairly s.n.a.t.c.hed it from Sid.
"Come with me at once to Dr. Churchill. He shall know about this outrage!"
"If you please, Professor Tines, we didn't know it was your hat," was about all Phil could think of to say.
"So much the worse. You thought it belonged to some defenseless student, and that you could ruin it with impunity. But I shall soon show you how mistaken you were. Come with me at once!" and Professor Tines, holding his hat in one hand, seized Tom's coat sleeve in the other, and led him toward the president's office, followed by Phil and Sid.
"I--I have a tall hat, which I'll give you, until you can have this one fixed," spoke Sid, as they walked along.
"Until I get this one fixed? It is beyond fixing!" declared Mr. Tines wrathfully.
Good Dr. Churchill looked pained when the three culprits were ushered into his presence.
"Look here, sir! Look here!" spluttered Professor Tines, his voice fairly trembling as he thrust the battered hat close to the president, who was near-sighted. "Just look at that, sir!"
"Ha! Hum!" murmured the doctor. "Very interesting, I should say. Very interesting."
"Interesting?" and Mr. Tines stood aghast.
"Yes. I presume you have been ill.u.s.trating to your cla.s.s the effect of some explosive agent on soft material. I should say it was a very complete and convincing experiment--very complete, convincing and interesting. I congratulate you."
"Congratulate! Interesting experiment!" gasped the irate "Pitchfork."
"Yes. It was very well done. My, my! The crown of the hat is almost completely gone. Almost completely," murmured the doctor, looking interestedly at the dilapidated tile. "What sort of an explosive did you use, Professor Tines? I trust your cla.s.s took careful notes of it."
"Explosion!" burst out Professor Tines, looking as if he was likely to blow up himself. "That was no explosion, sir! My best hat was ruined by a baseball in the hands of these vandals, sir! I demand their expulsion at once."
"Baseball?" queried Doctor Churchill.
"I threw it, sir," declared Tom quickly. "I'm very sorry. I did not know the hat belonged to Professor Tines, and I will pay for it at once," and the captain made a motion toward his pocket.
"Let me have the whole story," requested the president, and Tom thought there was a twinkle in his eyes. Professor Tines related most of it, in his usual explosive fashion, and the lads could only plead guilty.
The owner of the hat ended by a demand for their dismissal, and Dr.
Churchill said he would take the matter under advis.e.m.e.nt, but there was that in his manner which gave the culprits hope, and when he sent for them a little later, it was to pa.s.s the sentence that the three of them must go shares in buying a new hat. Tom wanted to stand all the damage, but Dr. Churchill, with a half-laugh, said he must mete out punishment all around.
"I say, will you lend me my share of the money, for a few days?" asked Sid, of Tom, when they were on their way back to the room.
"Sure!" was the answer. "Say, what do you do with all your cash, Sid?"
for Mr. Henderson was known to be well off.
"I--er--Oh, I have uses for it," replied Sid, and he hurriedly turned the conversation.
The nine played Richfield, a strong college team, on Sat.u.r.day, and was nearly beaten, for just when some good hitting was needed, Pete Backus, who was filling Sid's place, went to the bad. Randall did manage to get the lead of a run, and kept it, due mainly to Tom's magnificent pitching, but the final score was nothing to boast of, though Randall came home winners.
"We certainly do miss Sid," remarked Tom, as he was sitting beside Phil, in the train on the way back. "If there's anything that's going to make us win or lose the championship this year it's batting, and that's Sid's strong point. I wish we could get him back on the team."
"Maybe we can."
"How?"
"By getting up a pet.i.tion, and having all the fellows sign it. Maybe if the faculty understood what it meant they would vote to rescind the order not allowing Sid to take part in games."
"By Jove, it's worth trying!" cried Tom. "We'll do it! I'll go talk with Ed Kerr and Mr. Leighton."
The manager and coach thought the plan a good one, and a few days later a pet.i.tion was quietly circulated. Nothing was said to Sid about it, for fear he would object. The students were anxious to get their names down, and soon there was an imposing list.
"I want to get the freshmen now," decided Tom, one afternoon, when the pet.i.tion was nearly ready for presentation. "I'm making a cla.s.s affair of it, each year's students by themselves, and I let the freshmen go until last. I'll see Bascome, who is the cla.s.s president, ask him to call a meeting, and have his fellows sign."
Tom sought out Bascome a little later, and explained what was wanted, asking the freshman to call a session of his cla.s.smates.
"In other words you want me and my friends to help you out of a hole?"
asked Bascome, and he was sneering.
"That's about it," answered Tom, restraining a desire to punch the overbearing freshman. "We want to strengthen the nine, and we can do it if we can get Henderson back on it."
"Then you'll never get him back with my signature nor that of my friends!" cried Bascome. "I'll get even with you fellows now, for the way you've treated me!"
He was sneering openly. Tom looked him full in the face.
"You sneaking little cad," was what he said, as he turned away.
CHAPTER XXVI
TOM STOPS A HOT ONE
There was much excitement of a quiet sort when it was known what stand Bascome had taken. He was roundly condemned by the soph.o.m.ores, juniors and seniors, and even by a number of the freshmen students. But Bascome remained firm, and he carried the cla.s.s with him. Only a few freshmen put their names down on the pet.i.tion, and they resigned from the exclusive freshman society to be able to do so.
For there was, that year in Randall, a somewhat bitter feeling on the part of the whole freshman cla.s.s against the soph.o.m.ores, on account of some severe hazing in the fall. It had created trouble, had engendered a sense of injury, and there was lacking a proper spirit in the college.
This had its effect, and the freshmen were almost a unit against the nine, which (and this was perhaps unusual) happened to be composed mainly of soph.o.m.ores that season.
"What do you think of the dirty sneak?" asked Tom of Phil, to whom he narrated the refusal of Bascome.
"Think of it? I'd be ashamed to properly express myself, Tom. It's rotten, that's what it is. But I guess we've got enough names as it is."
"Hope so, anyhow. I'm going to send it in, at any rate."
The pet.i.tion was duly delivered to Dr. Churchill, and a faculty meeting was called. A unanimous vote of the corps of instructors was needed to reinstate a student suspended from athletics for a violation of the rules, such as Sid had been accused of, this being one of the fundamental laws of the college since its inception. Now the absence of the names of the majority of the freshman cla.s.s tended to operate against the pet.i.tion being accorded an unprejudiced hearing, but what did more to keep Sid out was the vote of Professor Tines.