[The Rover Boys at College by Edward Stratemeyer]@TWC D-Link bookThe Rover Boys at College CHAPTER XVI 1/11
SOMETHING ABOUT A CANE But if Koswell and Larkspur were guilty, they kept very quiet about it, and the Rover boys were unable to prove anything against them.
The bill for the cut-up tire came to Dick, and he paid it. The college talk was now largely about football, and one day a notice was posted that all candidates for admission on the big eleven should register at the gymnasium. "I think I'll put my name down," said Tom. "And I'll do the same," returned Dick, "but I doubt if well get much of a show, since they know nothing of our playing qualities here." There were about thirty candidates, including thirteen who had played on the big team before.
But two of these candidates were behind in then studies, and had to be dropped, by order of the faculty. "That leaves a full eleven anyway of old players," said Sam.
"Not much hope for you," he added to his brothers. "They'll do considerable shifting; every college team does," said Dick; and he was right.
After a good deal of scrub work and a general sizing up of the different candidates, four of the old players were dropped, while another went to the substitutes' bench. It was now a question between nine of the new candidates, and after another tryout Dick was put in as a guard, he having shown an exceptional fitness for filling that position.
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