Young Wild West at Forbidden Pass""
barroom of the shanty saloon they saw
that had been staked out in the camp ma
and gamble, and they usually spent their idle time with the storeke
op standing almost in the centre of the room, the mine
way while our three friends were watching
as to try and make himse
we write, it so happened that there were none in Big Bo
was a sort of feeling against them that they were somethi
em, and hence his desire to make h
en, was to pull a chunky piece of bamb
ches in length and looked to
was up to, Hop suddenly gave the piece of bamboo a twist, and
d then he went parading around
owever, and then the parasol vanis
ece of bamboo in his hands
the middle of the room
e, so be," he observed, blandly. "M
the ceiling and as it came down he caught it in his
, so be," he went on to say
our hero and his partn
was one of those present. "Your funny Ch
was the reply. "What is the matter, Hop? W
ed Hop, shaking his head and looking serious. "Nobody
ad succeeded in doing what he had tried f
he stepped up to the bar, and, nodding p
ee dicee for um
ith a Chinee; but blamed if I don't do it jest t
e lillee dlink. If me lose me pay; if y
oo
he dice, and, shaking them in t
"There's fourteen fur yer ter beat.
reply; "me velly much
tle cubes and appeared to
oing somethi
he rattled the box preparatory to mak
were not st
n them, so no matter how they were roll
urnished by Hoker, it would be hard to tell the diff
dice and two sixes
erved, and then he picked up the dice a
eeper. "Come on, boys. It's on me. I lo
sorts of trick dice, and they could easily guess that
money involved, our her
the clever Celestial was always bent on cheating some one,
now that the Chinaman was a sharp and trick gambler, so just as Hoker prop
r, he can do things that you could not see. Just go it light on that point. I don't want to have him get into trouble, and that is what he generally does when he wins a whole lot of money. There is
advice," said the boss of the saloon. "I rec
ed air and went and
rk and the lamps were
ey got to talking about the cowboy
em say about Forbidden Pass, and the y
d the outlaws are anxious to have travel through the pass resumed. Well, I reckon I'll
l, and Sedgwick hastened to declare that he w
our hero assure
saloon and walke
y had no trouble in seeing the si
d nailed together, and the w
IDDEN
pay toll, or go
ate R
hen they had made it out our three friends looked at each other
out, a smile creeping over his bronzed face. "'Privat
suringly. "Just wait till to-morrow morning. We'll ta
as quit ther pass an' gone somewhere else," Sedgwick remarked. "If them cowboys is all righ
the outlaw gang, and that they came over here and talked that way just on purpose to get
at way, I'll
the pass to-morrow, I reckon. And we'll come
sounds made by a approachi
hrough now," said the
pered. "We will watch him as he goes p
later a horsem
se and rider, and when they saw the man halt right at
ng when he found that the sign was there all right,
eeper over in Silver Bend," Se
kon we'll go back to the saloon and find