THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. The River I GERTY HARDIN'S DINNER PROVES AN ORDEAL FOR ALL WHO ARE PRESENT. Synopsis, K. C. RIckard, nn engineer of tlio Ovcrlund Pacific, Is called to tlio olllce of President Murshull In Tucson. While waiting Rlck nrd reads n report on the ravages of tho Colorado river, which occurred despite tho efforts of Thomas Hardin, head of the Desert Reclamation company. Hardin had been a student under Itlckard In nn custom col lego and had married Gcrty Holmes, with whom Itlckard had fancied he Was In love. Marshall tells Itlckard tho Overland Pacific must step in to save tlio Imperial valley and wishes to send Itlckard to take charge. RIckard declines because he foresees embarrassment In supplanting Hardin, but is wou over. RIckard goes to Calexlco end, on the way, learns much about nardln and Ills work. Itlckard meets Mr. and Mrs. Hardin and Innes Hardin, the former's half sister. At the company offices he finds the engineers loyal to Hardin and hostile to him. RIckard attends a meeting of tho directors nnd asserts his authority. Hardin rages. Estrada, a Mexican, son of tho "Father of the Imperial Valley," tells RIckard the general situation and expresses,, forebodings that the work will' fall. Innes Hardin Is bitter against RIckard for supplanting her brother, out she tries to cheer up tho latter. Hardin discovers that RIckard is planning a levee to protect Calexlco nnd puts him down as Incompetent Gcrty thinks her husband is Jealous. CHAPTER X Continued. i She didn't need to pierce those can vas walls to know that there hud beon feverish activity for this dinner. A. now gown would appear tonight, mado secretly. An exquisite meal, and no ono must comment on Its elab oration. Twice Tom nnd she bad been asked to take their lunch at the hotel. "Bccauso of a headache I" A headache I Tom's wifo could not even shop openly I Bundles had always the air of mystery, never opened before Tom or herself. She must have yards of stuff laid away, kept for sudden emer gencies. "She can't help It. It's her disposi tion. She can't help being secretive. Look at your face, Innes Hnrdlnl" What was It to her, tho pettiness of a woman whom nn accident of life had swept upon tlio bench bcsjdo her? Gcrty was not her kind, not the sort nho would pick out for a friend. Sho was an oriental, ono of tho hnrem women, whoso business It Is In life to plcuso one man, to keep his homo soft, his comforts ready, keep him con vinced, moreover, that It is tho desiro of his life to support her. Herself dis satisfied, often rebellious, staying by hlra for self-interest, not for love ah, that was her impeachment. "Not lov ing I" Soberly alio covered her plain bras slero with n white waist of cotton ducking. A red leather belt and crim son tie she added self-consciously. "Whero Is my bloodstone pin?" Hadn't she spent an hour at least matching that particular leather belt? But ho was a man, in battle. Tho hcadgato held up; It was too bad. Silent, Bodefcldt, Wooster, Grant, nil of them fighting mad becuuso of tho deadlock nt tho Heading. All up in arms, nt last, against Marshall, bo cnuso of thlB cruel cut to their hero, Hardin. Her eyes glowed like yellow lamps as sho recalled their fervid par tisanship. "Only one mnn who enn savo tlio valley, nnd that's Tom Hardin." Woos ter had said that; but they all be lieved It. Tho loyalty of tlio force mado her ashamed of her soft woman fears. For there were times when sho questioned her brother's ability. He had a inrgo, Ioobo way of handling things. Ho was too optimistic. But thoso men, thoso engineers must know. It was probably tho man's way of sweeping ahead, Ignoring detail. Tho verdict of those fleld-trlcd men told her that tho other, tho careful, plan nlng wny, was tho ofilco method. RIck ard, as a dinner neighbor, she had found Interesting; but for great un dertakings a man who would let n Gcrty Holmes Jilt him, ruin hid Hfo for him I The wholo story sprang nt last clear from tho dropped Innuendos. ( Sho adjusted a barrctto In her smoothly brushed hnlr. Slowly sho walked over to tho neighboring tent, i Gerty frowned at tho whlto duck. "You might nt least have worn your blue I" "You'ro elegant enough for tlio two f ub. Isn't that something new?" Gerty said' carelessly thut sho had had It for a long time. For sho had had tho material a long timet It ,wasa't necessary to explain to her husband's sister that it had been made up that week. Sho hoped that eho didn't look "fussed up." Would Mr. RIckard think sho was attaching any Importance to tlio stmplo llttlo 'visit? For It was nothing to him, of .course. A man of his standing, whom tho great Tod Marshall ranked so high, probably dined out several times acK week, with white-capped mnlda and candelabra 1 If Tom had only made tho most of his opportunities. iWhat a gamble, Hfo to a woman I i Sho mado a trip Into her bedroom aA took a reassuring survey In her -Mirror. Tho Ungcrio frock would look tfdmple to a man who would nover .'aspect it of hand-mado duplicity. flfr class declared tho hund-whlnned Srfedalllons casual nnd elegant. And a long time ago, a Ufctlmo ago, Rick nrd had told her that sho always should wear blue, because of her eyes, Lbbm frost Uu atxt room could hear Gcrty teasing Tom to wenr his Tux edo. "Isn't ono dudo enough for you?" growled her surly lord. Innes recog nized the mood and shrank from tho ordeal ahead. It was the mood of tho Hardin in tho rough, the son of his frontier mother, tho fruit of old Jasper Glngg, whoso smithy hnd been the rendezvous for tho wildest roughs, the fiercest cattlemen In Missouri. "I'd let him see you knew what's what, oven If wo do llvo like gipsies." The answer to thnt was another growl. Innes could bear him dragging out tho process, grumbling over each detail. That confounded laundry had torn his shirt. Ho hadn't a decent collar to his name. Whero was his black string tlo? If Gert would keep his things In tho lowest drawer I Hang that button I Gerty emerged from tho encounter, her fnco very red. Innes could see her biting her Hps to keep tho tears back as sho put tho last touches to the table. "She's tired out," thought tho sister of Tom Hnrdln. "She's probably fussed herself to death over this din ner." A few, minutes later RIckard nr rived In a sack suit of tweeds. Gerty'B greeting was n llttlo abstracted. How could she make Innes understand to tell Tom to cl.ango his coat?' Tho duty of a host, sho suddenly remem bered, was to dress down rather than up to tho chances of his guest. She rcgrotted bitterly her Insistence. Wns ever anyone so obtuse as Innes? Mr. RIckard would seo that they thought It a big event Sho was watching tho curtain whero Tom would emerge. And his coat was a styl6 of several seasons ago and absurdly tight I Sho made an unintelligible excuse and darted behind tho portiere. Tom's faco was apoplectic. Ho was wrestling with n mussed tie; tho col lar showed a desperate struggle. Gerty mado wild signals for him to change his clothes. Sho waved a hand Indicating RIckard; sho pointed to Tom's sack suit lying on tho floor where ho had walked out of It "What Is It all about?" "Ssh," whispered his wife. Again the wild gestures. "Well, urcn't you satisfied? Don't look Uko a guy?" no could bo heard distinctly In tho next room. Gcrty gave It up in de spair. Sho dabbed somo moro powder on her nose nnd went out looking llko a martyr n very pretty martyr 1 RIckard praised tho miracles of tho tent. Gcrty's soft flush reminded In nes of their old relation. "Exit Innes," Bho wns thinking, when Tom, red and perspiring, brought nnothcr element of discomfort Into tho room. Gcrty ushered them Immcdhtcly to tho stable. Sho covered tho first mln utes which might bo awkward with hor small chatter. Somewhcro sho had read that It was not well to mako apologies for lack of maid or fare Besides Mr. RIckard remembered Lawrenco! That dreadful dining room, tho over-sot tablol How sho had hated it, though sho had not known how fearful It was until sho had escaped. "Wo aro stmplo folk here, Mr. RIck ard," sho announced, ns thoy took their places around tho pretty tnble. That was hor only allusion to duilclcn clcs, but It covered her noiseless move ments nround tho board between courses, filled up tho gaps when alio mado necessary dives into kitchen or prlmltlvo Ice chest, and set tho key for tlio homeliness of tlio meal Itself, Tho dinner wns a triumph of apparent simplicity. Only Innes could guess the tlmo consumed in tho perfection of detail, details dear to tlio hostess' heart. Tho almonds she hnd blanched of courso, hcrsejf; had dipped and salted them. The cheese straws were her own. Sho did not mnko tho nils tnko of stringing out endless courses, An Improvised buffet near ut hand mndo tho serving a triumph. Rlckurd praised each dish; openly ho was admiring her achievement Innes, remembering tho story Gcrty had told her in dots and dashes, tho story nt tho old rivalry, glanced cov- Copyrltfht. Bobbi-Merrlll Company lertly at Tom sulking nt tho head of 'his own table. , "Poor sulky Achilles," she thought. "Dear, honest old bear!" "Innes!" cried Mrs. Hnrdln. She turned to find that the guest was staring nt her. She had not heard his effort to Include her in tho con versation. "Mr. Rlcknrd asked you if you like it here?" "Thank you why, of course I" Her answer sounded pert to herself. Her slstcr-ln-law hastened to add thnt Miss Hardin was very lonely, was really all alone in tlio world ; that they Insisted on her making her homo with them. Innes had with dlfllculty restrained a dental. After all, what other homo hnd she? Still the truth had been de flected. She recalled the sacrifice It had been to cut her college course In order to make a home In the desert for the brother who hnd always so gently fathered her, who had helped her Invest her small capital that it might spell n small Income. She re called his rcalstnnco when she had called In a mortgage; who could watch thnt mad scapegoat of a river playing pranks with desert homes nnd not yearn to heln? Not a Hardin. Sho 'still gloried In remembering thnt sho I had nt least driven ono nlle Into thnt rebellious stream, even if when she left the valley It would be as n bread winner. She was prepared. She was a good draftsman; she would go as an apprentice in nn architect's office. She had already settled on tho archi tect! "Are you going to Los Angeles soon?" Sho heard tho new manager address' his host "I'm taking orders!" There was another awkward mo ment when Hardin pushed bnck his plate declaring ho hnd reached his limit; It was too big a spread for him I It was the stupid rudeness of the small bad boy; even Innes flushed for her sister-tn-law. With resolution Gerty assumed con trol of the conversation. Her role sounded casual; no ono could have suspected It of frequent rehearsal. They must not talk of the river; that was taboo. Railroad matters wero also excluded. Equally difficult would be reminiscences of Lawrenco dnys. So sho began brightly with a current book. Tho theater proved a safe topic, and by that .natural route they reached New York. Innes, who had never been farther east than Chi cago, was grateful to play audience, nardln, who know his New York per haps better than either, refused to be drawn Into tho gentle stream. Things must be kept sprightly. Hnd Mr. RIckard met many of tho valley people? And It was then that Bhe throw her bomb toward tho listening, silent Hnrdlns. She would like Mr. Rlcknrd to meet some of their friends. ne said that he would bo delighted, but that ho was planning to lenvo shortly for tho Heading. Of course." She did not give her husband timo to speak. Sho meant afterward I Sho wns planning to give something a bit novel In his honor. She refused to see tho glnro from the angry mnn In his outgrown dinner coat Sho did not glance toward the sister. What did Mr. RIckard think about a progressive ride? "It sounds very entertaining, but what do you do?" There was a loud guffaw from Tom. With deepened color Gcrty told her Idea. A drive, changing partners, so ho could meet nil the guests. "I think It will surprise you to find bo many nlco peoplo In here; it cer tainly did me. Ono doesn't expect to find congenlnl peoplo In a new country llko this." Rlckurd remembered that he hnd to get back to his hotel. He had let ters to write. It had been n splendid dinner I And what a wonderful home sho had mndo out of n sand-baked lot, out of a tent! He spoke of tho roses nnd the morning glories. His eyes fcl. on the open plnno, tho rending table with the current magazines, Now ho couldn't understand why they over went to that hotel 1 Gerty's eyes wero shining as deep pools of water on which tho sun plays, Sho looked nlmost Infantile ns sho stood by tho two tall men, her head perched blrdllke. "Good-byl and hopo you'll como again I" Of courso he'd como again 1 "And you will let mo know when you return, so that I may sot tho date for my party?" innes did not get his answer. Sho had been observing that ho was not taller than her brother IIo looked taller. Ho was lean ltU Will V" IIO growing stocky, She wished ho would not slouch so. his bunds In his pock cts I In Tucson, before sho know thut she must dislike RIckard, she hud had an Impression of virile distinction, of grace, n suggestion of mastered mus cles. Ho had known that It was her brother he "was supplanting did ho get any satisfaction from tlio fact that It was the husbnnd of tho woman who had Jilted him? Anywny, she did not llko him. She could nover forglvo n hurt that wns dono to hor own. Sho wns u Hurdln. When the Colorado Burst Its Banks and Flooded the Imperial Valley California By EDNAH "Innest Mr. Rlcknrd said good n'Snt '" She gnvo him the tips of her cool, browned lingers. Her eyes did not mppt tils; she would not meet that lniiphing scrutiny. "Good night, Mr. RIckard." CHAPTER XI. I The Fighting Chance. "Casey's back, spying 1" nnnounced Wooster ut mess ono evening. By that tlim tho feeling against "Marshall's man" wns actively hostile. There had been a smudge of slumbering fires be- fore RIckard had left the towns, Fanned by much talk during his ub- sence, it hnd burst into ucttve blaze. They were ready to show their resent- meat against the man who had sup- 0f activity here because bo's buffn planted Hnrdln, their Napoleon, If it i0Cd; ho doesn't know how to tncklo cost them their plnces. By this time the Job out there." !,irf?Lo?rrS "3 Cm" " h'ld b to look thnt way to the lily banners of France to tho fol- nf r,,., ,. , f ,,, lowers of the Little Corporal. Itlckard was not expected. He hnd JV.P Cf" ni.uwi n wiui. ui u IltT- :.:",.V. " 1" hushing an active babel of tongues. He knew what he would find, ample reasons why! He was not given the satisfaction of locating any particular act of disobedience. The men pre- scnted a blank wall of politeness, rea- sonuble and ineffectual. Silent er. nhl.. n nnllnnf mnnh mnn nf i, tnrn tvn h.,a in tho Mn n ,na. trict, trying to push the shnttered Wis- tnrln through by n new routo before thnt vonr's erons worn entirely ruined. A gang was at Grant's Heading; the floor needed bracing. Another squad, Irish's, was in the Volcano Lake re- clon. whero they wero excavating for the new headgate. "No hurrv for that." RIckard was glad to pick n flaw in such a perfect pattern. "You might have withdrawn those men and put them to work on the levee." "I was given no authority to do that" Tho chief pretended to" accept the reason ; else it were a case of chang- lag horse3 In mldstrenm. What he Her Eyes Did Not Meet His. had seen at tlio Heading, his peep at another rub. There wns no enmp I It tho exposed valley, his gleaning of was not equipped for a sudden lnfla the river's history had convinced him tlon of men. The Inefficiency of tho that in hasto and concentration lay tho valley's only chance, no must re- fuse to see tho Insubordination of tho engineers, the seasoned desert sol- dlers. He needed them, must win their confidence if ho could. If not they must save tho valley anyway I Tho Imperturbable front of Silent, his bland, big stare, exasperated him ; casler to coutrol tho snapping terrier of a Wooster. He had told Silent dls- tlnctly to gather his men and rush tho levee. A good soldier hnd mndo n bet- ter guess thnn his. nnd had stoppcu tho casual work at Black Butte, or hnd found Indians 1 Thoughtfully RIckard followed that last suggestion across tho ditch into Mcxicall. Tin irnth,.rn,i nil thn remits ho needed that morntne. The Indians, Inzv Coconnhs. eront out of their huts to earn a few of tho silver dollars hem out to them by tho now whlto boss, A few Mexican laoorcrs were bribed t ..... i m 1 1. to loss un enrtn to tno west oi mu town. Estrada, nt his request, put n sqund of his road forco at tho service of tho manager. Ho could not spnro ninny men. Tho railroad hnd nlrendy Btnrtcd tho lino projected by nurdln to Mar- shall tho year before, n spur across tho desert, dipping Into Mexico be- Cwecn tho lean, restless Bundhllis, from Calexlco to Yuma. The Mexican government hnd ngreed to pny flvo thousand dollars n mile wero the rouu completed nt n certain period. Estrada wns kcplng his men on tho Jump to fill tlio contract, to make his nntlon pay tho prlbo. Tho completion of tho road meant help to the vulloy; sup- plies, men, could bo rushed through tho break. In spito of bis haunting senso AIKEN J ultimate failure the crowing belief In the omnipotence of the Grent Yellow Dragon ns the Cocopahs visualized It, Estrada's work wns ns Intense as though ho Were hastening n sure vie tory. Tho dauntless spirit of tho elder Estradu pushed the track over the hot sands where ho must dance at times to keep his feet from burning. Many of the rails they lnld at nlcht "Rlckard's cone hoc-wild." Hardin told his fumily the next morning. "Building a levee between the towns I The man's off his hend." "There Isn't nny dnnger?" Gerty's anxiety mado the decn blue eyes look hlnelc. Innes looked tin for Tom's answer. His face was ugly with passion. "Dancer t It;s n bluff, a hie show vsvsull.ft OllIV 144 1 1 1 VJ J Li li. UU1,C of the D. R. company whero the engi neers foregathered; among tho chair "Item who Idled In front of the Des nrt nm, .1 .., i. ow to tnckle his Job!" A levee, nnd the gate held up ! What protection to rUB T' " "l ? 7",? bf that 0y 1CV?. f JJZ ?!lld rf,,rAn1on one ,E t8 ! ,,SPrC?S? i l'-?0' tt JS0 ' not guarded? He was " , , b"icik; one oi .vlili.n.n,1 t I . - ..minium n tiuiKa. no WHS ClVCn a 8ll0rt 1,1110 t0 Dl0W himself OUt A bookman, a theorist. , As wcl1 Put sentinels n few miles from Pr,8on and le,lve the Jail doors 0Pen 1 This wns Wooster's gibe. All BUW U,B "'orauo as a marauder nt mree- "And "ttle heap of sand stacked up to scare It off! It's n scream!" Mrs. Hardin found it difficult to mcet wlth diplomacy the confidences which inevltnbly camo her way. As "arum s wue sne was expected to cn- J" ie universal censure tne new man waa ncqulrlng. Gerty's light touches, too slight for championship, passed as a sweet charity. Her own position those days was trying. She' did not yet know her diplomatic lesson. Apparently unaware of the talk, RIckard spent the greater part of his time superintending the levee. Ho could trust no one else to do It, no one unless It were Estrada, who was rushing his steel rails through to tho front nnd was needed there. Things were moving under his con- stnnt goading. The extra pay was showing results He should be at tho Heading now, he kept telling himself, but he was convinced that the lnstunt he turned his back, tho work on tho levee would stop; nnd all the reasons excellent I Some emergency would be cooked up to warrant the withdrawal of tho hands. Chafe us he might at the sltuution, It was to be guerrilla warfare. Not a fight in the open, he knew how to mcet thnt, but that baf. fling resistance, the polite sllcnco of the office when ho entered "Well, they'll be doing my wny pretty soon, or my namo Isn't Rlcknrd. That's flat" Ho was fretting to he nt work, to stnrt the wheels of the O. P., its vast machinery toward his problem. Ho knew that that organization, like well drilled militia, was ready for his call Tho call lagged, not thnt he did not need men, but there wns no place ready for them. Tho camp, that was projectors of this desert scheme had never seemed so criminal as when ho had surveyed tho equipment at the in' tnke. "Get ready first ; your tools. your stoves, your beds." That was the training of the good executive, of men like Marshall and MncLean. Nothing to be left to chance; to foresee emer- gencles, not to be taken by them un- aware. Tho reason of nnrdln's down fall was his slipshod habits. How could he bo n good officer who had never drilled ns a soldier? There was tlio gap nt tne intnke, unruin's grotesque folly, widened from ono hundred feet to ten times the original cut; widening every day. with ncljhcr equipment nor camp adequate to push through a worK of half the original magnitude. Cut- ting away, moreover, was tne lsianu Disaster Island ; it had received apt cnnsiening Dy mo engineers, ua uup- tlsmal water the Colorado. Tlie last floods hnd played with it as though it imam n Lin. rt riii.ni. fPlmA itna nn u m nu. rock nt hand ; no rock on tho wny, no rock ordered. Could anyone piece to- geincr sucn recKiessncss t Rlcknrd knew where ho would get his rock. Already ho hud requisitioned the entlro output of the Tacna and Patagonia quurrlcs. Ho had orucreu steam shovels to bo instnlled nt the qunrry bncK or old uninlln's. Thnt rock pit would bo Ida flrst crutch, and tho gravel bed that was a find! As no puceu tno levee west or tho towns, ho was planning his cuuipnlgu. Por- ter was scouring Zncatecus for men he himself had offered, as bait, free transportation; tho O. P. ho know would hack him. no was going to to throw out a spur-track from tho Head' Ing, touching at tho qunrry nnd gravel of I pit, on to tho main road at Yuma. Double tracli most ot tho way; sidings every thrco miles. Rock must bo rushed; tho trains must bo pushed through. Ho Itched to begin. It never occurred to him thnt, llko Hnrdln, ho might fnil. "Though It's no pink ten," ho told himself, "It's no picnic." At Tucson he knew thnt the situation was a grave one, but his talk with Brandon, who knew his river ns docs a good In dian, mado the year a significant eventful one. Matt Hamlin, too, whoso shrewd eyes hud grown river-wise, ho, too, hnd had tales to tell of tho tricky river. Maldonado, the half-breed, had confirmed their portents whllo they sat together under his oleander, famous throughout thnt section of Uie coun try. And powerfully hnd Cor'nel, tho Indian who had piloted Estrada's party across the desert, whom RIckard hnd mot nt tho Crossing, deeply hnd ho Im pressed him. The river grew Into a mnlevolent, mocking personality; ho could seo It n dragon of yellow waters, dragging its slow, sluggish length across the bnked desert sands; deceiv ing men by Its Inertness; luring tho explorer by a mild mood to rise sud denly wjth Its wild fellow, the Gila, sending boat and boatmen to their swift doom. RIckard was thinking of tho half breed, Maldonado, as ho Inspected tho new stretch of levee between tho towns. He hnd heard from others be sides Estrada of tho river knowledge of this descendant of trapper and squaw, and had thought It worth whllo to ride tho twenty miles from down the river to talk with him. Tho man's suavity, his narrow silts of eyes, tho Hps thin nnd facile, deep lines of cru elty falling from them, had repelled his visitor. Tho mystery of the place followed him. Why tho dobo wnll which completely surrounded tho small, low dwellings? Why the cau tious admittance, the atmosphere of suspicion? RIckard had seen the wife, a frightened shadow of a woman ; had seen her flinch when tho brute called for her. He had questioned Cor'nel about the half-breed. Ho was remem bering the wrinkles of contempt on tho old Indian's fnce ns ho delivered him self ofan oracular grunt "White man? No. Indian? Not Coyote I" Though he suspected Mnldonndo would He on principle, though It might be thnt two-thirds of his glib tissuo were false, yet a thread of truth co Incident with the others, Brnndn nnd Hamlin and Cor'nel, might be Dulled out of Ms romantic fabric. "When the waters of the Oiln run red look out for trouble 1" Ho doubt ed that they ever ran red. He would ask Cor'nel. He haa also spoken of a cycle, known to Indies, of a nun dredth year, wlien the Dra grows resiicss; mis no nau ueciarea 7qS a hundredth year. Following his talk with Maldonadovf nnd the nccldentnl hnppy chance mcet- nig with uoronei at tne Crossing luck ard had written his first report to Tod Marshall. Before he had como to the neadlng he had expected to advise ngninst the completion of the wooden headgate at the Crossing. Hamlin had given him a new viewpoint. There was n fighting chance. And he wanted to be fair. Next to being successful he wanted to be fair. "It's time to be hearing from Mar shall," Rlcknrd was thinking, as hu walked back to the hotel. "I wonder what he will say." He felt it had been fair to put It up to Marshall! personally, he would llko to begin with a clean slate begin right Oumsj work had been done, it was true, ye there Were urgent reasons now fol haste; nnd the gate was nearly haU done! He had gone carefully ovei the situation. The heavy snowfall, un precedented for years, a hundred, ac cording to the Indlnns on tho Wind Rover mountains the lakes swollen with Ice, the Gila restless, the summei floods yet to be met ; perhaps, he no thought, he had been overfalr in em? phaslzlng the arguments for tho head- gate. For the hundred feet were nov u thousand feet yet he had spoken of that to Marshall: "Calculate fo yourself the difference In expensa since the flood widened tho break. It Is n vastly different problem now, Disaster island, which they figured on for anchor, is a mere pit of corroding sugar In the channel. An Infant Col orudo could wash It away. However, a lot of work has already been dono, nnd n lot of money spent Tbcre Is a fighting chnnce, Perhaps tho bad yeai Is all Indian talk." A guess, at best, whatever they did I It was pure gamble what the trlckj Colorado would do. Anyway, he had given the whole situation to Marshall. In his box at tho hotel was a tele gram which hud been sent over from the ofilco from Tod Marshall. "Tak the fighting chance. But remember to speak moro respectfully of Indians." "Marshall all over," laughed his sub ordinate. "Now It's a case of hustle I But dollars to doughnuts, as Junlai says, wo don't do It!" Was it Hardin's luck? RIck ard scouted the Idea and charged It to puro Inefficiency. Whatever the cause, fate and Hardin's failure to carry out Instructions seemed to have combined to wreck Rlckard's plans. Don't miss the next Installment (TO BE CONTINUED.) Creatures That Weep. Among tlio creatures thatvvecp most easily are tho ruminants. All hunters know thut tho stag weops, and it is asserted that the bear sluMs tears when severely wounded. Tho glrnffo is not less sensitive and regards with tearful eyes tho hunter who hsM wounded It . l