WHICH SHOWS THE EASIEST WAY TO MAKE A
BUCKET-SHOP PAY
Within three days, Wix, who was a
curious blend of laziness and energy, had fitted up
an office in a sample-room leading off the lobby of
the Grand Hotel. Over the name on the door he
puzzled somewhat, and it was only his hatred for every
component syllable of “Jonathan Reuben Wix”
that caused the sign finally to appear as “La
Salle Grain and Stock Brokerage Company.”
The walls were freshly papered in deep red, a thick,
red carpet was put upon the floor, a resplendent cashier’s
wicket and desk were installed, fine leather-padded
chairs faced a neatly ruled blackboard; and the speculative
element of Filmore walked right into its first real
bucket-shop and made itself at home. It was a
positive pleasure to lose money there, and it was a
joy to have young Wix take it. He did it so jovially.
Punctually every evening Wix handed
to Gilman his half of the profits on the trades closed
that day, and each week the profits became larger.
Gilman was thrown into a constant state of delight;
Wix bought him a horse and buggy. Gilman saw
fortune just ahead of him; Wix saw possible disaster.
It pained him to note that Filmore was optimistic.
There were many more bulls than bears, which was not
the ideal condition. There should have been a
bear to offset every bull, in which case the La Salle
Grain and Stock Brokerage Company would have run no
risk whatever.
Of course, the inevitable happened.
All the wheat and stock gamblers of Filmore got in
on a strong bull market and stayed in. When the
market finally turned back and the “longs”
were frightened out, the crash came, and every dollar
was lost of the original three thousand. Wix,
having anticipated the possibility of such an event,
was disappointed but “game.” Gilman,
having more at stake and being at best a cheerful
winner only, was frantic.
“What shall I do? What
shall I do?” he moaned, over and over.
“Dig up more money,” Wix cheerfully advised
him.
“I can’t!” cried
Gilman. “I’ve gone now even deeper
than I dared.” He was silent for a long
time. Great beads of perspiration came on his
brow. His hair was wet. “Wix,”
he finally burst out, “I’ve got to tell
you something; something that no living creature knows
but me.”
“No, you don’t!”
Wix sharply stopped him. “If you have any
secrets, keep them to yourself. I am stone deaf.”
Gilman’s eyes widened with a
look of positive terror. For the first time in
his life he had met that glare in the eyes of a supposed
friend which denied friendship, sentiment or emotion
of any sort; which told only of cold self-interest.
Two or three times he essayed to speak, but he could
not. He only stood with his sides heaving, like
a spent dog.
“There is no use whining about
this thing,” Wix went on sharply. “We’ve
got to raise money, and that’s all there is to
it. How about your profits that I’ve been
handing you? I’ve spent mine.”
There was no answer.
“You said something about owing
four hundred dollars before we began,” Wix went
on. “I suppose you repaid that that
loan.”
Gilman dumbly nodded.
“I’ve paid you over a
thousand dollars rake-off. I suppose you saved
the rest of it?”
Again Gilman nodded his head.
“Well, bring me that six hundred or whatever
it is.”
Gilman mechanically produced it, all
in one-hundred-dollar bills folded very flat.
That morning Wix faced the business
anew with six hundred dollars, and felt keenly his
limited capital. His severe losses had been a
good advertisement, and every man who had won a dollar
was prepared to put it back. Wix, with a steady
hand at the helm, stood through this crisis most admirably,
refusing trades from buyers until he had sellers enough
to offset them, and refusing excess trades from sellers
until he had buyers to balance. Within two weeks
he had a comfortable little sum, but now the daily
division of spoils brought no balm to Gilman.
He was suddenly old, and upon his face were appearing
lines that would last him throughout his life.
Upon the florid countenance of Wix there was not even
the shadow of a crease.
“Good money, boy,” said
he to Gilman, upon the day he handed over the completion
of five hundred dollars. “This business
is like a poker game. If the players stick at
it long enough the kitty will have all the money.”
“I don’t want it all,”
replied Gilman wearily. “Wix, if I ever
get back the twenty-five hundred dollars that it will
take to make me square, I swear before my Maker,”
and he held up his trembling, white hand, “never
to touch another investment outside the bank as long
as I live.”
“Your liver must be the color
of a sick salmon,” retorted Wix, but nevertheless
he was himself disillusioned. The bucket-shop
business was not what he had imagined it to be.
It was not “easy money!” It had fluctuations,
must be constantly watched, was susceptible to bankruptcy and
meant work! The ideal enterprise was one which,
starting from nothing, involved no possible loss; which
yielded a large block of cold cash within a short
time, and which was then ended. Daw’s idea
was the most ideal that had come under his observation.
That was really an admirable scheme of Daw’s,
except for one very serious drawback. It was
dangerous. Now, if as clever a plan, and one
without any menace from the law, could only be hinged
upon some more legitimate business say
a bucket-shop concern....
There is no analyzing a creation,
an invention. It is not deliberately worked out,
step by step. It is a flash of genius. At
this moment young Wix created. The principle he
evolved was, in fact, to stand him in good stead in
a score of “safe” operations, but, just
now, it was a gaudy new thing, and its beauty almost
blinded him. The same idea had been used by many
men before him, but Wix did not know this, and he
created it anew.
“Sam,” he said to the
cigar-store man next morning, “I want you to
invest in The La Salle Grain and Stock Brokerage Company.”
“Not any,” declared Sam.
“You have two hundred of my money now.”
“Not the entire roll,”
denied Wix. “I only got twelve and one-half
per cent.”
“If you’d take twelve
and a half per cent. eight times you’d have it
all,” retorted Sam. “That’s
why I quit. I stood to lose two hundred dollars
on a seven-point drop, or win a hundred and seventy-five
on an eight-point raise. When I finally figured
out that I had the tweezers into my hair going and
coming, I didn’t wish any more.”
“But suppose I’d offer
you a chance to stand on the other side of the counter
and take part of the change?”
“I’d let you stand right
here and talk a while. What’s the matter?”
“Haven’t capital enough,”
explained Wix. “I think I refused to take
a trade of yours one time, just because I had to play
safe. I had to be in position to pay off all
my losses or quit business.”
“How much are you increasing?”
asked Glidden, interested.
“A twenty-five-thousand-dollar
stock company: two hundred and fifty shares at
a hundred dollars each.”
“I might take a share or two,” said Sam.
“You’ll take twenty,”
declared Wix, quite sure of himself. “I
want four incorporators besides myself, and I want
you to be one of them.”
“Is that getting me the stock any cheaper?”
“Fifty per cent.; two thousand
dollars’ worth for a thousand. After we
five incorporators are in we’ll raise the price
to par and not sell a share for a cent less.”
“How much do you get out of
this?” Sam asked, with a leer of understanding.
“Ten per cent. for selling the
stock, and have the new company buy over the present
one for ten thousand dollars’ worth of shares.”
“I thought so,” said Glidden
with a grin. “Fixtures, established business
and good will, I suppose.”
Wix chuckled.
“You put it in the loveliest words,” he
admitted.
“You’re a bright young
man,” said Glidden admiringly. “You’d
better pay for those fixtures and put in the whole
business at five hundred.”
“What do you suppose I’m
enlarging the thing for, except to increase my income?”
Wix demanded. “With ten thousand dollars’
worth of stock I’d get only two-fifths of the
profit, when I’ve been getting it all heretofore.
As a matter of fact, I’m doing pretty well not
to try to capture the majority.”
They both laughed upon this, and Glidden
capitulated. Within forty-eight hours Wix had
his four directors, all ex-traders who would rather
make money than gamble, and each willing to put in
a thousand dollars. As soon as they were incorporated
they paid Wix his hundred shares for the old business,
and that developing financier started out to sell
the balance of the stock, on commission.
It was an easy task, for his fellow-directors
did all the advertising for him. Practically
all he had to do was to deliver the certificates and
collect. It was while he was engaged in this pleasant
occupation that he went to Gilman with a blank certificate
for twenty-five shares.
“I think you said, Gilman, that
if you could get your remaining twenty-five hundred
dollars out of the La Salle you’d be satisfied,
didn’t you?”
“Satisfied!” gasped Gilman.
“Just show me how it can be done!”
“Here’s twenty-five hundred
dollars’ worth of stock in the new company I’ve
incorporated from the old one, and it’s selling at
par like beer at a German picnic.”
“That would ruin me,”
Gilman protested in a panic. “You must sell
it for me or I’m gone. Why, Wix, this new
state bank inspection law has just gone into effect,
and there may be an inspector at the bank any day.”
“I see,” said Wix slowly,
looking him straight in the eye, “and they may
object to Smalley’s having loaned you that money
on insufficient security. Well, I’ll see
what I can do.”
Nevertheless, he let Gilman’s
stock lie while he sold the treasury shares, and,
the market being still so eager that it seemed a shame
not to supply it, he sold his own!
There was now time for Gilman, and
Wix, with an artistic eye for dramatic propinquities,
presented his proposition to no less a person than
Smalley, grinning, however, as he went in.
“I couldn’t think of such
a thing, sir,” squeaked that gentleman.
“I’ll have nothing to do with gambling
in any way, shape or form.”
“No,” agreed Wix, and
carefully closed the door of Smalley’s private
office. “Well, this isn’t gambling,
Mr. Smalley. It’s only the people outside
who gamble. The La Salle doesn’t propose
to take any chances; it only takes commissions,”
and he showed to Mr. Smalley, very frankly, a record
of his transactions, including the one disastrous
period for the purpose of pointing out the flaw which
had brought it about.
Smalley inspected those figures long
and earnestly, while Wix sat back smiling. He
had penetrated through that leathery exterior, had
discovered what no one else would have suspected:
that in Smalley himself there ran a long-leashed gambling
instinct.
“But I couldn’t possibly
have my name connected with a matter of this sort,”
was Smalley’s last citadel of objection.
“Why should you?” agreed
Wix, and then a diabolical thought came to him, in
the guise of an exquisite joke. He had great difficulty
in repressing a chuckle as he suggested it. “Why
not put the stock in Gilman’s name?”
“It might be a very bad influence
for the young man,” protested Smalley virtuously,
but clutching at the suggestion. “He is
thoroughly trustworthy, however, and I suppose I can
explain it to him as being a really conservative investment
that should have no publicity. I think you said,
Mr. Wix, that there are only twenty-five shares remaining
to be sold.”
“That’s all,” Wix
assured him. “You couldn’t secure
another share if you wanted it.”
“Very well, then, I think I shall take it.”
“I have the certificate in my
pocket,” said Wix, and he produced the identical
certificate that he had offered Gilman some days before.
It had already been signed by the complacent Sam Glidden
as secretary. “Make this out to Gilman,
shall I?” asked Wix, seating himself at Smalley’s
desk, and poising his pen above the certificate.
“I believe so,” assented Smalley, pursing
up his lips.
With a smile all of careless pleasure
with the world, Wix wrote the name of Clifford M.
Gilman, and signed the certificate as president.
“Now, your check, Mr. Smalley,
for twenty-five hundred, and the new La Salle Company
is completely filled up, ready to start in business
on a brand-new basis.”
With his lips still pursed, Smalley
made out that check, and Wix shook hands with him
most cordially as he left the room. Outside the
door he chuckled. He was still smiling when he
walked up to the cashier’s wicket, where young
Gilman sat tense and white-faced. Wix indorsed
the check, and handed it through the wicket.
“Here’s your twenty-five
hundred, Cliff,” said he. “You can
turn it over on the books of the bank as soon as you
like.”
Gilman strove to voice his great relief,
but his lips quivered and his eyes filled, and he
could only turn away speechless. Wix had gone
out, and Gilman was still holding in his nerveless
fingers the check that had saved him, when Smalley
appeared at his side.
“Ah,” said Smalley; “I
see you have the check I gave Mr. Wix. Did he
deposit?”
“No, sir,” replied Gilman,
in a low voice; “he took currency.”
Mr. Smalley visibly winced.
“A bill of exchange might have
done him just as well,” he protested. “No
non-employing person has need of actual currency in
that amount. I’m afraid young Wix is very
extravagant very. By the way, Mr.
Gilman, I have been forced, for protection and very
much against my will, to take some stock in an enterprise
with which I can not have my name associated for very
obvious business reasons; so I have taken the liberty
of having the stock made out in your name,” and,
before young Gilman’s eyes, he spread his twenty-five-share
certificate of The La Salle Grain and Stock Brokerage
Company.
Gilman, pale before, went suddenly
ghastly. The blow of mockery had come too soon
upon the heels of his relief.
“I can’t have it,”
he managed to stammer through parched lips. “I
must refuse, sir. I I can not be connected
in any way with that business, Mr. Smalley. I I
abhor it. Never, as long as I live
Suddenly the fish-white face and staring
eyes of Gilman were not in the line of Mr. Smalley’s
astonished vision, for Gilman had slid to the floor,
between his high stool and his desk. Sam Glidden,
coming into the bank a moment after, found Smalley
working feverishly over the prostrate form of his
feebly reviving clerk.