CHAPTER XI-—Continued wn] Fifteen minutes later, they were entering the crowded rooms of the Club Torquay. The scent of expen- sive perfumes, cigarette smoke, and food in the offing, filled the place. Men in dinner coats, women in eve- ning gowns sat around the gaming tables, while persons wishing they had seats stood behind them, watch- ing the play. Two seats were finally vacated, and Aunt Linnie and Mrs. Bascom hurriedly slipped into them. ‘‘Are vou going to play?’ Miss Cotswell asked Mary over her shoulder. ‘“‘Heavens, no!’ Mary answered, and glanced across the table just in time to see two more people get up, a defeated expression on their tired faces, and Lelia and Balianci slid into their little gilt and rose- velvet chairs. Miss Cotswell opened her evening bag, extracted a fifty dollar bill, and asked the long-faced banker for fifty one-dollar chips. The game went on and on. placing of new bets before Here, there, winning number. Mrs. Bascom had lost consistent- ly; had purchased one batch of chips after another; but Aunt Linnie, bet- ting, as she said, *‘‘like a piker,” had been fairly lucky. Balianci, after a brief time, re- linquished his seat to Mr. Bascom, and was now standing next to Mary, his moist hand encircling her elbow. Linnie had asked her again and again if she did not wish to play: had even offered her a bunch of counters when an adjacent seat had suddenly been vacated; and again and again, Mary had firmly re- fused. Eventually, however, Linnie had risen from her chair. ‘Listen, Ma- ry,’ she whispered, ‘I simply have to go to the powder room. Now here are five chips for your very own. Please play them while I'm gone. Hold this seat for me, or someone’'ll grab it the minute I leave. Whatever you win with them is yours. Go on, darling.” Thus importuned, Mary grudging- ly took Linnie’s place at the table. Everybody about her was intent upon placing chips on their chosen numbers or colors before the next turn of the wheel, but Mary, never having played roulette before, just sat there, the chips Aunt Linnie had given her clasped tightly in her hand, “Go on and play,” Mrs. Bascom whispered. “They don't like it when people just sit around doing noth- ing.” The "‘guests’ were again placing their bets on numbers or colors: and rousing herself to action, Mary dropped just one of her five chips on Black. Again the croupier spun his wheel, and the ball dropped on Red: bounced out and landed on another Red; fitfully leaped out and settled itself comfortably on Black. “You've won!" hissed Mrs. Bascom, who had again placed her chips on a losing number. “Leave it there! It's worth two dollars now.” “Just leave it?" Mary inquired breathlessly. “Of course! Leave it on Black.” Again the croupier spun his wheel. Again Black won. “It’s worth four dollars now,” said Mrs. Bascom. “Black's evidently your lucky color!” “Oh, but maybe it won't win again! Perhaps I'd better try a number now!” “Faites votre jeu!" admonished the croupier coldly, and before Mary had time to do anything at all, his wheel had again been turned, and her four dollars’ worth of chips had remained, willy-nilly, on Black. Again the bouncing of the ball here and there—and again Black won. “Mary! This is uncanny! Leave it there, darling, Your chips are now worth eight dollars!” “But it can't go on this way!" Mary demurred. “I ought to stop now, or place those chips on some- thing else!” “Well, do as you like, but I'm switching to Black.” Mary grabbed her chips and looked about the table in search of a magic number. “My birthday's the fourth of April," she told Mrs. Bascom. “I'm playing number four this time. Eight dollars on number four!” The wheel spun. The ball bounced here and there. ‘‘You'll be sorry,” Mrs. Bascom whispered. “Black’ll win! I'm playing on your luck, Mary -—fifty dollars’ worth of chips!” The ball was still bouncing. Then, with a spasmodic jerk, it rose in the air, and fell with a brittle thud on «number four. “I won again!” Mary cried, turning around and looking at Count RDalianci. “How much is it now, Umberto?" Balianci removed a cigarette from his mouth, “Two b ndred and eighty dollars, fearatasy ,/ not counting the eight dollars you played.” “Two hundre | and eighty dol- lars!” Mary ex laimed. “Well, it is time for me t¢ stop!” “Don’t you dare!’ cried Mrs. Bas- com, grabbing a iifty dollar bill from her purse, and signaling the banker for more chips. ‘Play just once more, Mary. If you win this time, you'll really get something worth while.” “Faites votre jeu!" the croupier commanded icily. “lI want my chips, please,” Mary hastily informed the assistant crou- pier nearest at hand; and, with a quick motion of the man’s rake, her winnings were deftly deposited in front of her. state of helpless indecision, casting an almost angry look at Mrs. Bas- com. “If only that woman would stop urging me on," she told her- self, “I might be able to figure this thing out.” The phrase eighty dollars . . eighty i» “Two hundred and . Two hundred and dollars! whirled dizzily Mary jumped from her chair. “I'm through!” she announced. around in her mind. “How much that would mean to Dad! Yet, how wonderful itm It was unthinkable, of course, that she should risk one cent of those why not take one last chance, win or lose, with the eight one-dollar chips? Before she could act on this de- cision, however, the wheel had again been set in motion, and the croupier was now calling out, "Rien pas plus! spin. She would have her chips ready when the croupier again gave notice. she was still gripping in her left hand four of those five original chips which had been Aunt Lipnie's gift to her, and, with a feeling of com- plete abandon, she added them to her prospective stake. “One more play!’ she told herself sternly. “Twelve dollars! Win or lose!” “Faites votre jeu!" command. Mary placed her final bet on num- ber twenty-two. ‘‘That’s my age,” she told Balianci. “Maybe it'll bring me even more luck!” The croupier turned the wheel, and with enchanted eyes, she saw it go around again and again. The ball now clicked on to four; bounced out; now dropped into number sev. en; popped out! Now it bounced up again and then, incredibly enough, settled on number twenty-two, “You've won again, Mary!" Bali- anci almost shouted. "Four hundred and twenty dollars!” Mary jumped from her chair. “I'm through!” she announced to the table at large, and the croupier in particular. “Take my chips off! I'm going to cash them!" “Piker!’” jibed Mrs. Bascom. | “I don't care if I am,” Mary re- torted. “I'd be a fool not to quit now." “Yes, you would, Mary,” Aunt Linnie, who had just returned from the powder room, agreed in a low voice. “Cash in!" “l want my chips cashed,” Mary told the banker, and her voice trem- bled with excitement. “Oh, Aunt Linnie,”” Mary breathed, “isn’t it just too miraculous?” “Yes, darling,” Linnie replied. “I'm very happy for you.” Then, turning to Mrs. Bascom and to Bali- anci, whose swarthy face was as blank as the croupier’s, “We'll see you later in the foyer!" “All right,”’ Mrs. Bascom replied. “I'm nearly through.” Balianci bowed, but said nothing. “Come on into the powder room, Mary,” Aunt Linnie murmured, “to count your winnings, and-—regain your equilibvium." “I must have won about seven hundred dollars,’ Mary whispered as they made their way through the crowded room. “But, Aunt Linnie, it really belongs to you. It was your money I played with.” | “Fiddlesticks!"” said Miss Cots- well. “I gave you those five count- ers, and it was your own good luck that made them win." *“Then,’”! said Mary, ‘‘you must, at least, take half. If you hadn't given them to me, I'd never have played.” “Hush!” commanded Miss Cots- well. ‘Not another word out of you about my sharing your little for- tune. Every dime of it is yours! Here's the powder room. Come in and freshen up. You look as if you'd been in a cyclone.” In the meantime, that she had her Balianci her side immediately. frown between his brows, dark eyes smoldered. behind for the pas appeared eign she could hardly understand him. She glanced at him sharply. Had the man been drinking? “1f you like.” suggested. thing." Without a word, the fover, Balianci at her heels. Once there, she turned about and confronted him. "Well," she said coldly, “what do you want?" “It is this,” he began in a low voice. “Why is Mary so extremely excited over winning a few hundred mad with joy." “Well, why shouldn't countered. “Seven hun are not to be sniffed body, particularly Mary. that money, Balianci, and she needs it badly." The Italian looked stunned. how can it mean so much to her if she is an heiress?" she?” Lelia dred dollars at by any- disdain that she felt for the man. “And where did you get the idea that Mary was an heiress?” Balianci spread his long thin hands, the palms pointing to heav- en. "But she is Miss Cotswell's niece! Miss Linnie Cotswell's own leads a life of luxury!" Lelia regarded Balianci for one long, burning moment. “So, that's you proposed to Mary,” she nally said. “lI might have known Ev. knows you're a fortune A gigolo!" “Perhaps it would be better to Lelia regarded his smiling face as It's isn't a mon- eybag for you to marry.” “You mean, then, she has noth- ing? Absolutely nothing?” “Yes, I mean just that. Mary's father is a lawyer in a small town. Mary worked in a book shop until she came to New York to be the guest of her aunt. And, by the way, as rich as you think. Besides, she expects to enjoy a very happy life for many years to come; and what's more, I don't know that Mary would be her heir—even were Miss Cots- well to die tomorrow." . “Unfortunate,” purred Balianci. “Very unfortunate. I am crushed.” “Oh, I guess not!" Lelia retorted. “In fact, I think you'll survive very happily. I might even recommend something to speed your recovery.” “And that is?" Balianci mur- mured. “That you book passage on the Iroquois sailing for Havana tomor- row noon! I happen to know that Mrs. Ulmstead, widow of the soap- flakes potentate, and her two home- ly, but, oh, so well-endowed daugh- ters, are listed among the passen- gers.” ‘Ah, Mrs. Ormsby! How you wrong me! How can you think , . .?"” Lelia pushed past him, her head high, her face flaming. “Good night, Count Balianci. You'd better run along now, You haven't a moment to lose.” A second later, she joined Linnie | and Mary in the powder room. Mrs. Jascom, having lost three hundred | dollars, had finally left the roulette i table, and was there, too. “Balianci's not feeling well, { Mary,” Lelia said. “He's asked to i be excused.” “Oh, all right," Mary replied, | thinking, “Maybe, with this nest-egg { to see Dad and along for a , 1 won't have to marry Bali- {| anci or anybody! I'll tell him to- morrow that I've changed my mind. | Of course, it was never made up! { He simply took things for granted. Oh, thank heavens, this happened! | Aunt Linnie says she won't take a cent of the money—that I earned it { all—that every bit of it is mine. Sev- { en hundred ‘ and twelve dollars. | What a windfall at this time! I'll send Dad a money-order for six i hundred and twenty-five of it tomor- row. Maybe I'd better send him | more, yet with Aunt Linnie going | away and my being left on my own, i I really believe I'd better hold out the remaining eighty-seven in case of an emergency!’ Mother ’ CHAPTER XII Mary woke early the next morn- with happy ney she had won juay. She wondered i dare get up and the nearest branch post. » wanted to get a money- | order off to her father as quickly as possible. She wanted, too, to send a note by special delivery to Balianci. She must tell him at once that her apparent acquie al of marriage, the night before, had been a mistake; that she did not love him; that she could not gc through with the thing. Suddenly, the door the hall opened sof and Addie’s face ap- peared in the wedge. Mary raised her hand to be quiet, but Addie tiptoed in, holding up to view a Western U lope; qui- etly approached Mary's bed, and, without a word, ped it on the coverlet. Then, undlessly, she made her way to the door and closed it behind her. Mary hoisted herself to a sitting position, hastily removed the { message from its envelope. It was signed, she noted at once, “"Umber- to Balianci,” and it read: FORGIVE ME MY DEAR BUT 1 FEEL 1 SPOKE IN HASTE LAST NIGHT AND THAT OUR PLANS HAD BEST BE FORGOT- TEN STOP AM SAILING FOR HAVANA TODAY ON THE IRO- QUOIS. Mary slowly reread the message: then, forgetting that Lelia was | office. cence to his propos- into as a signal non en dr just as 5 rut ana that this was quite the funniest thing burst into laughter, “What's so funny?" Lelia inquired drowsily. “lel! Are you awake?" “1 couldn't very well be asleep after that wild peal of merriment you just let forth! What's about, anyhow?" (TO BE CONTINUED) One of the most famous cases in American history had its beginning in the old courthouse in St. Louis. It was in the west wing of this clas- sic structure that Dred Scott first maintained that he was entitled to his freedom, and thereby brought to a head the controversy which was to be settled only in thé bitter con- flict of the Civil war, writes Ruth Moore in the St. Louis Star-Times. As the slave of an army surgeon, Dred Scott had spent several years in free territory before he returned with his master to the slave state of Missouri. Scott then sued, claim- ing that he had been freed by living in a territory where slavery was prohibited. In a decision which rocked the state the St. Louis Circuit court up- held his petition, Scott was free! The case was at once appealed to the Supreme court of Missouri and promptly reversed. Once more a slave, Scott and his family were sold to a New Yorker and his case was carried to the United States Circuit court of appeals, and from there to the Supreme court of the United States. Chief Justice Taney, in one of the most momentous rulings ever hand- ed down from the Supreme court bench, held that Scott was a slave for the reason that congress had no constitutional power to prohibit slavery north of the latitude 38 de- grees, 30 minutes, in the Louisiana Purchase. This had been the territorial divid- ing line agreed upon by the pro- and anti-slavery interests in congress when Missouri was admitted as a slave state. It was known as the Missouri compromise. With Taney's decision the entire shaky structure regulating the ex- pansion of slavery into the terri- tories was abruptly wiped out. Many historians believe that the Civil war thereupon became inevitable, Early Franking Privilege The franking privilege of con- gressmen in the United States pre- dates the Constitution. An ordinance was passed in 1782 by the Continen- tal congress which provided that let- ters, packages, and dispatches from the members and secretaries while attending congress on official busi- ness should be mailed without pay- ment of postage. The privilege has continued and has been extended to other government officials and de- | partments from time to time, WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK.—Filming of Kip- + ling's “The Light That Failed” on the New Mexico desert, near Santa Fe, was delayed the other 2 day when a Sandstorm Mild savage wind Compared to blew the tents Director’s Past away. The pug- nacious William Wellman, the director, long known as “Wild Bill,” enjoys fighting sand- storms, having licked one single-handed when he was filming “Beau Geste,”" in Arizona. He probably got a few good shots of the storm and will work them into the film, with his gift for improvi- zation, He was the flying partner of Tommy Hitcheock, the polo player, in the Lafayette Esca- drille in the World war, and re- vealed an instinet for showman- ship by playing tunes on Ger- man tower bells with a machine gun as he zipped around the belfry. It was said that, before the Germans dropped him in a tree and sent him home, he could peg out “Silver Threads Among the Gold” without a sour note. In aviation effectively both hi ic and his training in air acrob His film, "Wi " of 1928, to off his With Wings, 18, he has employed by discernin bracket film, tion from the day brothers’ first flight. He was known at times, around Hollywood, as “‘Serewball Bill,” but has simmered down considerably since he married Dorothy Coonan, finding a des- ert sandstorm only mildly di- verting, considering his rough- and-tumble past. He is, however, as Irish as ever, and his famous serial fight with an unknown Paris antagonist probably will continue. On leave in Paris, he found it nec- essary to re- buke an offen- give stranger by knocking Late, in Chi- Engages in a Serial Fight With Unknown him stiff as a plank. cago, the stranger, spying Mr. Well- man on the street, did the same to A year or two later, in Holly- known sparring partn ! the street, Mr. Wellman put himself one up by a blow to the chin. There have been other encounters. I believe the score is now even. But he bears no grudge. It is just a detail of his native ebul- lience, which leads him to such de- vices as galvanizing the chairs on the lot so his working crew can't sit down. With Capra, La Cava and Hitchcock, he is achieving a sharp characterization and fin- ished technique, as the movies get into long pants and offer adult entertainment. He grew up in Brookline, Mass., tried to sell chocolates and woolen goods, but didn't, went to the war with an ambulance unit and won the Croix de Guerre with the Lafayette Escadrille, His friend, Douglas Fairbanks 8r., steered him to Hollywood, soon after the war, as a mes- senger boy for Goldwyn. In 10 years, he did almost everything for every studio in Hollywood, before he hit his stride with “Wings.” He is 43, slender, whippy, with a touch of gray in his curly brown hair, and is apt to sock anybody in an argument and then affectionate- ly buy him a drink, Born’ hiked his fame considerably. wt o— formed persons if they knew tary of the United States treasury. . None of them Women in Office gid. Mrs. Blair No Longer Rate Banister, who ‘Scare Heads’ holds fice, would find encouragement in that. the Regional Conference of Demo cratic Women at Washington that the decreasing public excitement about women in office is a good sign. 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