Desert Dust By 6dwin £. Sabin Author of “How Are You Feeling?” ef& b—intimimiMatiiinii^iii'niiijiiiiinini in; iiiiiuaisiiiiiiniHinnunniiiiiiHHumitiwnOTiiiiiiiimiJW^'iiLiiuBmtiitinnenBniBiiiin !'~&rr* ;i-wr.i ■ •. , 1: With that, she accepted my arm. We promenaded, Jim i sauntering near. And as she em ! phaLically was the superior of aU other women upon the floor I ; did not fail to dilate with the . distinction accorded me: felt it in the fiances, the deference and the ready make-way which at ’ tended upon our progress. Frank t iy to say, possibly I strutted—as a young httfft Wtti \vhen “torti j fi©d” witbfci and without and ele i fated, from the start on of non ' descript stranger to that of favor ed beau. j Whereas an hour before I had i been crushed and beggarly, now } I turned out my toes and stepped i bravely—my twenty-one dollars ,in pocket, my six-shooter at belt, ■'a red 'kerchief at throat, the ! quaen of the hall on my arm, and jrajr trunk all unnecessary to my ; welt-being. ' Thus in easy fashion we moved • amidst eyes and salutations from i the various degrees of the com Jpany. She made no mention of [any husband, which might have : been odd in the East but did not J impress me as especially odd j here in the democratic Far West. : The women appeared to have an independence of action. “Shall we risk a play or two?” •’she proposed. “Aro you ac ' quainted with three-card mon 1 tef “ “Indifferently, madam,” said 'I “flat I am green at all ’ gambling devices.” , “Yon shall learn,” she en • couraged lightly. “In Benton ! ®s in Rome, you know. There is. i no disgrace attached to laying , down a dollar here and there— : we all do it. That is part of our i amusement, in Benton.” She [halted. “Yon are game, sirt , What is life but a scries of ! ehancesT Are you disposed to ! win a little and flout the danger of loaing?” • I am in Benton to win,” I valiantly assorted. “And if un der your direction, so much the quicker. What first, then? The three-card monte ? ’' “It is the simplest. Faro would be beyond you yet. Rondo eoolo is boisterous and confusing ’■—and as for poker, that, is a long ueasion of nerves, while chuck a-luck, though all in the open, is tor children and fools, You might throw the dice a thousand limes and never east a lucky com bination. Roulette is as bad. The percentage in favor of the bank in a square game is forty i pec cent, better than stealing. | 111 initiate you on monte. Are your eyes quick?” “For some things,” I replied - meaningly. I She conducted rae to the near est monte game, where the “spieler”—a smooth-faced lad of not more than nineteen-—sat j behind his three-legged little ta ble, green covered, and idly shifting the cards about main | tained a rather bored flow of ! conversational incitement to bets. I As happened, he was illy pa | tronised at the moment. There < were not more than three or four on-lookers, none risking but all . waiting apparently upon one another. At our arrival the youth glanc I ed up with the most innocent I pair of long-lashed brown eyes that I ever had seen. A hand some boy he was. “Hello, Bob.” 1 • ■ 1 0 ■ " my pocket. “Allow me. I will furnish the funds if you will do the playing.” “I choose the card?” said she. “That is up to you, sir. You are to learn.” “By watching, at first,” I pro tested. “We should be part ners.” “ Well,” she consented, “if you say so. Partners it is. A lady brings luck, but I shall not al fvay'S do your playing for you, sir. That ^ipd of partnership Comes to grief.’’ lain nopetui oi playing on my own score, in due time,” I responded. “As you will see.” ‘‘What’s the card, Bob? We've a dollar on it, as a starter.” He eyed her, while facing the cards up. “The ace. You see it—the ace, backed by ten and deuce. * Here it is. All ready?” He turned them down, in order; methodically, even listlessly moved them to and fro, yet with light, sure, well-nigh be-wikler ing touch. Suddenly lifted his hands. ‘‘All set. A dollar vou don’t face up the ace at ^irst try.” She laughed, bantering. ‘‘Oh, Bob! You're too easy. I wonder you aren’t broke. You’re no monte spieler. Is this your best?” And I believed that. I myself knew which card was the ace. ‘‘Vou hear me, and there's my dollar.” He coolly waited. ‘‘Not yours; oura. Will you make it. five?” ‘‘One is my limit on this throw. You named it.” “Oho!” With a dart of hand she had turned up the middle card, exposing the ace spot, as I had anticipated. She swept the two dollars to her. “Adios,” she bade. He smiled, indulgent. !So soon? Don t i get my re venge? You, sir.” And he ap pealed to me. “You see how easy it is. I'll throw you a turn for a dollar, two dollars, five dol lars—anything to combiue busi ness and pleasure. Whether I . win or lose I don’t eare. You’ll j follow the lead of the lady? | What?” I was on fire to accept, but she stayed me. “Not now. I’m showing him around, Bob. You’ll get your re- j venge later. Good-bye. I’ve drummed up trade for you.” As if inspired by the winning several of the by-standers, some newly arrived, had money in their hands to stake. So we stroll ed on; and I was conscious that i the youth’8 brown eyes briefly flicked after us with a peculiar glint. “Yours,” she said, extending the coins to me. I declined, the coins to me. I declined. “No, indeed. It is part of my tuition. If you will play I will stake.” She also declined. “I can’t have that. You I'lll i at least take your own money back.” “Only for another try, mad am,” I assented. “In that case we’ll find a live lier game yonder,” said dir. “Bob’s just a lasy boy. His game is a piker game. He* a too slow to learn from. Let us watch a real game.” He smiled, with white teeth. “Hello yourself.” My lady and he seemed to * know each other. * ,4P0vr goes it to-night, BobV* k “Slow. There’s no nerve or money in this camp any more. She’a a dead one.” I “I'll not have Benton slander My Lady gai,y retorted. ] We’ll buck your game, Bob. |Bnt yon must be easy on us. We’re green yet.” Bob shot a quick glance at me —in one look had read me from hat to boots. He had shrewder eyes that their first languor in timated. ‘Pleased to accommodate you. I’m sure,” he answered. “The greenies stand as good a show at this board as the profesh.” “Will you play for a dollar!” “I’ll play for two bits, to-night. Anything to start action.” He twisted liis mouth with ready chagrin. “I'm shout ripe to bet against myself.” She fnntbled at her reticule, bat I was beforehand. “No. no.” Ahd 1 fished into CHAPTER Vin I Stake On The Queen Jim had disappeared; uutil when we had made way to another monte table there he was, his hands in his pockets, his cigar half smoked. More of a crowd was here; the voice of the spieler more insist ent, yet low-pitched and busi nesslike. He was a study—a square-shouldered, well set-up, W'iry man of olive complexion, finely chiseled features save for nose somewhat cruelly beaked, of 1 short black moustache, dead black long w*avy hair, and, placed boldly wide, contrastive hard gray eyes that lent atmos phere of coldness to his face. His hat was pulled down over his forehead, he held an unlighted cigar between his teeth while he I mechanically spoke and shifted the three cards (a diamond flashing from a finger, upon the baize-covered little table. Money had been w agered. He j had just raked in a fewT notes, ad ding them to bis pile. His mono tone droned on. “Next, ladies and gentlemen, sometimes j win, sometimes I lose That is my business. The play is yours. You may think I have two ch; i ccs to your one; that is not so. You make the choice. Always the queen, always the queen. You have only to watch the queen, one card. I have three cards. You have your two eyes, I have my two hands. You spot the card only when you think you can. I meet all comers. It is an even gamble.” Jim remarked us as we joined. “How you cornin’ now?” he greeted of me. “We won a dollar,” My Lady responded. “Not I. She did the choos ing,” I corrected. “But you would have chosen the same card, yon said,” she prompted. “You saw how easy it was.” “Easy if you know how,” Jim asserted. “Think to stake a leetle here? I’ve been keepin’ cases and luck’s breaking ag’in the bank to-night, by gosh. Made several turns, myself, already.” “We’ll wait a minute tib we get his system,” she answered. “Are you watching, ladies and gentlemen?” bade the dealer, in that even tone. “You see the eight of clubs, the eight of spades, the queen of hearts. The qneen is your card. My hand against your eyes, then. You are set? There you are. Pick the queen, some one of you. Put your money on the queen of hearts. You can turn the card yourself. What? Nobody? Don’t be pikers. Let us have a little sport. Stake a dollar. Why, you’d toss a dollar down your throat—you’d lay a dollar on a cockroach race—you <1 bet tnat much on a yellow dog if you owned him, just to show your spirit. And here I’m offering you a straight proposition.” With a muttered “I’ll go you another turn, Mister,” Jim step ped closer and planked down a dollar. The dealer cast a look up at him as with pleased sur prise. “You, sir? Very good. You have spirit. Money talks. Here is my dollar. Now, to prove to these other people what a good guesser you are, which is the queenT” “Here,” Jim said confiden tially; and sure enough he faced up the queen of hearts. “The money’s yours. You never earned a dollar quicker^. I’ll wager, friend,” the dealer acknowledged, imperturbable— for he evidently was one who never evinced the least emotion, whether he won or lost. “Very good. Now.” From behind him a man—a newcomer to the spot, who looked like any respectable Eastern merchant, being well dressed and grave of face—touched him upon the shoulder. He turned ear; while he inclined farther they whispered together, and I wit nessed an arm steal swiftly for ward a my side, and a thumb and finger slightly bend up the ex treme corner of the queen. The hand and arm vanished ; when the dealer fronted us again the ?ueen was apparently just as be ore. Only we who had seen would have marked the bent corner. The act had been so clever and so audacious that I fairly held my breath. But the gambler re sumed his flow of talk, while he fingered the cards as if totally unaware that they had been tampered with. “Now, again, ladies and gen tlemen. You see how it is done. You back your eyes, and you win. I find that l aliall have to close early to-night. Make your hay while the sun shines. Who’ll be in on this turn! Watch the queen of hearts. I place her here. I coax the three cards a lit tle-” he gave a swift flour ish. “ There they are ’ ’ His audience hesitated, as if fearful of a trick, for the bent corner of the queen, raising this end a little, was plain to us who knew. It was absurdly plain. “I’ll pick out the queen ag'in for a dollar.” “I’ll go you another, Mister,” Jim responded. The gambler smiled grimly and shrugged his shoulders. “Ob, pshaw, sir. These are small stakes. You’ll never get rich at that rate and neither shall I.” “I reckon I can set my own limit,” Jim grumbled. “Yes, sir. But let’s have action. 'Who’ll join this gentle man in his guesst Who’ll back his luckf He's a winner, I admit that.” The gray eyes dwelt upon face and face of our half circle; and still I, too, hesitated, although my dollar was burning a hole in my pocket. My Lady whispered to me. “All’i fair in love and wat Here—pul in*-, on, with youra. for me.” She slipped a dollar ol i her own into my hand. Another man stepped forward, lie was, I judged, a teamster His clothes, of flannel shirt, belt ed trousers and six-shooter and dusty boots, so indicated. And his beard was shaggy and un ; kempt, almost covering his face ! wulerneath his drooping slouch hat. “I'll stake you a dollar,” he said. “Two from me,” I heard my self saying, and I saw my hand depositing them. “You’re all on this gentle man’s card, remember?” We nodded. The bearded man tipped me a wink. “You, sir, then, turn the queen if you can,” the gambler chal lenged of Jim. With quick movement Jim flopped the bent-corner card, 8nd the queen herself seemed to wink jovially at us. The gambler exclaimed. “By God, gentlemen, but you’ve skinned mi again. I’m clumsy to-night. I’d better quit.” And he scarcely varied his level tone despite the chuckles of the crowd. “You must let me try once more. But I warn you, I want action. I’m willing to meet any sum you stack up against me, if it’s large enough to spell action. Shall we go another round or two before 1 close up?” He gathered the three cards. “ You see the queen —my unlucky queen of hearts. Here she is.” He stowed the card between thumb and finger, “Here are the other two.” He held them up in his left hand— j the eight of clubs, the eight of spades. He transferred them— j with his rapid motion he strewed | the three. “Choose the queen, i I put the game to you fair and square. There are the cards. ■ Maybe you can read their backs. That’s your privilege.” He fixed : his eyes upon the teamster. “You, | sir; where’s your money, half of ! which was mine?” He glanced ! at Jim. “And you, sir? You’ll follow your luck?” Lastly he surveyed me with a flash of 'steely bravado. “And you, i young gentleman You came in ! before. I dare you.” The bent corner was more pro nounced than ever, as if aggra vated by the manipulations. It could not possibly be mistaken ‘ by the knowing. And a sudden shame possessed me—a glut of this crafty advantage to which I was stooping; an advantage gained not through my own wit, either, but through the dishonor able trick of another. “There’s your half from me, if you want it,” said Jim, slapping down two dollars. “This is my night to howl.” For Favors Received. Mae: "My modiste wrote to my hue band eaylng she would make no more dresses for me until my account was settled." Rae: "And what did hubby dot" Mae: "Oh, he Just sent her a letter of thapks.” Sympathetic Interest. From the Kansas City Star. "The dismemberment of Germany seems at hand," remarked Prof. Pate. “The people are starving, the Separat ists are In rebellion, the monarchists are rising, the treasury is smptjr and a foreign foe has seised the Mineral resources of the country.” "tTh-huh!" returned J Fuller Gloom "Looks somewh.at like rain, off to the southwest, doesn’t It?" Understanding Hiram From the Anaconda Standard. If we get Hiram aright, Calvin Coolidge could mnke the finest liv ing ex-President of the United States. Plenty of That. From the Duluth Herald. About the only thing European na tions now have In common la a lack of confidence in the other fellow. An Exooption. From the American Legion Weekly. Rub: "Ignorance of the law excueee no one.” Dub: “I wonder how my lawyer es caped." _ Outside th« Law. From the Topeka Capital. A salesmanltks looking inspector was surprised to And a dirty roller towel in the washroom. Indignantly hs said to the landlord: “Don't you know that it has been against the law for years to put up a roller towel?" "Sure. I know it," replied the pro Srletor. “but no ex-posto law goes In iansas and that there towel was put up before the law was passed." Reasonable. From Punch. Golfer (whose unknown opponent has driven a straight 250 yards from the first tee—“Say. does he often do that?" Caddie—“It’s all right, sir—'Is foot slipped.'’_ _ _ From the Telegraph Table. Frank Weaver, Kansas University's "oldest student," Is dead, Mr. Weaver, who obtained his engineering degree from the university at the age of 81 years, last June, died of pneumonia at bis home In Pueblo, Colo, recently. Weaver, a civil war veteran, had com pleted two years at the university prior, to 1871, then took up practical work. Having found a perfect rib roast, ons cut from “Broadus White Sock* " grand chamPtol> steer of the recent livestock exhibition In Chicago, Dean Munford of the University of Illinois has refused to eat it. but will have It preserved in aloohol in the university laboratory. Ha • says he wishes the students to have an opportunity to study portions of fat cud leaJ | in the roast. BANKERS WILL MEET C00LI9GE NEXT MONDAY Fifty Financiers Expected to Attend Conference Called In Washington BY JOHN A. KENNEDY Special Tribune Correspondent Washington, Jan. 28.—-The adminis tration’s conference for rehabilitating the banking structure of the middle northwest will be held here next Monday. President Coolidge an nounced Monday. Decision to invite some 60 finaclal and business leaders on that date was reached following a conference be tween the president, Secretary# Hoover, Mellon and Wallace, Comp troller of Currency Dawes, George Janies, members of the Federal Re serve board, and Governor Crissinger of the Federal Reserve board. The main object of the meeting will be to demonstrate to insurance, railroad, mortgage and banking Interests just how the straightening out of the fi nancial tangle in the northwest will benefit the country generally. Use "Big Stock” It is also known that at this time President Coolidge will devise means of using the “Big Stick” on the larger banking interests In his plan to com pel they to join in the government’s program of relief for the middle northwest. Secretary Hoover, who Is in charge of arrangements foe next Monday’s conference, will issue further details of his plans Tuesday, it was said at his office Monday evening. It became known Monday that the Federal Reserve board held two im portant meetings here Saturday, fol lowing the return of members James and Cunningham, who participated in the Chicago meeting a week ago. The main purpose of the meeting was to devise methods by which the board can come- to the aid of Dakotas’ banking situation. Board Expected to Act. It is thought that the Federal Re serve board will send out orders to its Chicago and Minneapolis banks to loosen up In acceptances of some of the slower paper now in the hands of individual banks. Idaho, and Montana Agricultural interest, repre sented -by delegations from those two states, had conferences with the president Monday, urging aid for the stricken region. The progressive group in the Sen ate, composed of the nine senators from the middle northwest, elected during the past two years, sent out a request to farming interests asking what type of legislation would best suit the farmer at the present time. They expect to have the answers to the questions when the agricul tural committees make their report. PARIS AROUSED BY PLAIN TALK FROM BRITAIN Break in Relations of Two Governments Regarded As Possibility Paris, Jan. 28.—“A violent rupture of the Franco-Brltish relations must not be excluded from the possibilities of tomorrow,” is the comment of the famous editor, Pertinax, In Echo De Paris, Monday morning. This accurately sums up the feel ing in official circles following the publication of an Interview with Premier Ramsay MacDonald, of Eng gland. In the socialist paper Quott dlen, In which the British premier declared to France In plain language: “The moral and material encour agement given by France to small nations is likely to make a new war inevitable. “The British people are-wondering, In all sincerity, whether England will not find It necessary to undertake new military measures and find other alliances.” The interview was followed up by Premier MacDonald sounding out Premier Poincare through an inter mediary In the person of the Beligan Foreign Minister Jaspar Sunday, re garding the British government’s plan for putting the Rhine frontier under the League of Nations. Poincare, a nationalist, and Mac Donald, an Internationalist, are as far apart as the two poles, neutral diplomats here say, and the only hope seen for the maintenance of tho entente would be the creation In France of a radical socialist goven ment with M. Serrlot as premier. Scrrlot's views in many particulars conolde with those of Premiei Mac Donald. The present French foreign office greets the reported plan of the British premier with complete skepticism and, it is stated, will not agree to the British project for an internation al conference unless the subject of the Ruhr is barred from discussion. Milady May Have CigareS To Match Her Gown Now New York. Jan. 28. (U. P.)— Women smoked 7,000,000,000 clgar ets in 1923, according to the na tional tobacco exposition in session here, so it was decided there should bo something new and special In cigarets henceforth for milady. That’s why vari-colored cigaretes— anything to match any gown—came Into vogue today. Cerise, lemon peach blossom, black and crimson are among the popular shades. I i I I ----i Britain Growing Tobacco As a matter of civic pride and in the interest of industrial development* Great Britain is making sUaatrous ef •fort to grow tobacco os a commercial scale and to Inculcate into the British Inhabitants a taste for the local week. Great Britain, since the day when Sir Walter Raleigh introduced smok ing, lias been getting her tobacco mainly from Havana, Jamaica, Nigeria and Virginia plantations. In fact, Great Britain once got finer leaf than did any American cigar makers. DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Take Tablet* Without Fear If You See the Safety “Bayer Cross." Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 23 year*. Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. A man isn’t necessarily brilliant be cause he sits down and reflects occa sionally. “CASCARETS” FOR LIVER AND BOWELS—lOo A BOX Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Rich Headache,Indigestion. Drugstores. Adv, Lamb with green peas suits soma men, but the bucket shop prefers iamb with greenbacks. Mrs. Eliza Teeter | HAVE YOU A COUGH? What This Woman Says is of Vita) Interest to You Goehen, Ind.—“I had coughed night and day for a whole year and had lost so much flesh I began to look like a walking skeleton. Two of my sisters had died from tuberculosis and I felt certain that my time had come. Finally, a friend re commended Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery to my husband, and it made pie feel new strength and vitality right from the start and m a year’s time I was lust as strong and hardy as ever. I have never suffered with a deep, hack ing cough since (that was about 20 years ago) and have always felt very grateful to Dr. Pierce."—Mrs. Eliza Teeter, 413 Middlebury St. Whenever you feel the need of good confidential medical advice, address Dr. Pierce, president Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo N. Y., and answer will be returned with* out slnxge of any kind.