NEW REBELLION IS UNDER WAY Kiuht Mexican Mates Keiusc to ,J,r" . .. Recognize llucrta. Ki-Humption of Dlag Methods Forecast- Madcro'a Ilruthers In Field With Many Men. Ia Laredo, Tex. Kight Mexican state .urateens, Coahuila, Nuevo I,eon, I Chihuahua, San Luis Potosl, Vera! Crux, Sinaloa and Puebla - have ex-' .reused ilissatiafactlon with the new retime in Mexico and will not aupport the government set up 'X -''"1 Huerta. .rcnlin to inforrn-tlon gathered from federal telegraph (Miurres nere. It IS rumoreu w.av uunwr v.r-; ranza, of the state of Coahuila, la at j the head of tha goverrnent to start a ...in . -(...- i... new rep... m.c . .u .-v - ... ig made to bring about the secession f several other ststes. , Mexico City-It Is certain that the new administration in Mexico must deal with a new revolution in addition U, the remnants or tne oi.l one. I nree . L'uvernor of states In the republic , fortnullv have refused to recognixe ' I'mviiiionul I'resident llunrta, ami two or three others are doubtful. Vemmtiano Carranza, governor of the tute of Coahuila, with 1200 men, i working with Kmilio and Itaoul MadiTo. brother of the deposed presi- I - . .. I... n ! linn I'uilm M biI..mt.m lll'lll, Will, IW M k,f vaiw, ,i m old home, near Saltillo, which ia Car riinta's bane. Juxe (isyoil, former governor of So noru. hn telegraphed from Mexicali tn (lonrnor Maytorena, of Sonora, oirering :iooo men and 2,000,000 pesos to reKture Madera to olHce. (toveror Mavtnrena has telegraphed the RenBte mid I'roviHloiiul l'reilent iluerta re pudiating the new adminiatration. The governor of Yucatan, ignorant of the death of (luHtnvo Madcro, has telegraphed h.m otTering the aervlce. . I H I ... . . mrdi M' .... i n n ... )! In new revolution. IMtODl'CK "TKirsr IS FINKI) Portlund Commiasion Men I'lcad (iuilty and Fcape Jail. Portland Fourteen Front street produce merchants pleaded guilty in the I'nited States District ('ourt to in dii'tments that charged them with con npiracy in restraint of trade, contrary to the provisions of the Sherman anti trut law. A fifteenth admitted his truilt through his attorney. In the court mom were many mem l.er of the merchants' families, who were fearful that jail sentences would !... irnKiacd. This was generally ex peeled, in view of the recent sentence of other Federal judges in similar raoea for breaches of the same law, but only fines were Imposed. The Heciflc item in the indictments i lmrgfd the produce merchants with having controlled ami operated an as sociation, known as the Portland Pro duce Merchants' association, by which the members absolutely controlled the . rn j - .rt of produce into this city and fixed a price for it, and that if its members did not desire to purchase; Jefferson City, Mo. The Missouri that which was sent In by carload houm of preventatives sent to en l..ts. it owners must ship these cars to KrogHm.nt the constitutional amend- othef IKlintS and not disimSO of them ..nli,.ir ,i(Trnir t women. to dealer who were not members of the association. Diaz Would Pacify North. Kl I'aao, Tex. Another attempt to pacify the northern revolutionists waa made Saturday. General Felix Iiax invited two rrM represcntatiova to hurry to Mexico City. Thia ia under stood to te in addition to the two northern rebeta appointed on lluerta'a cabinet, neither of whom has accepted. The message from Iias waa aerit orig inally to Colonel Pascual Oroxco, Sr., at Nueva Laredo, who transmitted it here to Iticardo Oomea Kobelo, the younger Orozco'a personal agent. Kcliela and federals in Northern Mexico remain in the aame positions as Ix-fore the Mexico City revolt. Cotton Compreaa Rums. Columbus, Ga Fire which practi cally destroyed the Atlantic Cotton Compress plant Sunday night con sumed 1 1,000 balea of cotton, destroy ed 16 freight cars, and spread to the plants of the Columbus Barrel com pany and the Georgia Cotton Oil com pany's plant It appeared they would be entirely destroyed. The damage la estimated at mora than $1,000,000. The fire In the compress la declared to have started simultaneously In four places and ia believed to have been of incendiary origin. Taft Refuse Pardon. Waahlngton, D. C President Taft declined Saturday to pardon or com mute the aentencea of Frederick A. Hyde and Joost H. Schneider, convict ed in this city in 1908 of conspiracy to defraud the United Statea in connec tion with landa in California and Ore Ron. Thia action mark the loss of a fight extending over four year to ot aside a sentence in Hyde's case of two years in prison and a fine of $10,000, and in Schneider's case of 14 month in prison and a fine of $1000. Embassy Staff Reinforced. Washingon, D. C Charles Jenkin snn, assistant in tha Iitin-American bureau and Clinton R. MarEachran, private secretary to Assistant Secre tary of Stata Wilson, left Washington Saturday night for Mexico City by way of Key West and Havana, to re inforce the staff of the American em bassy in tha Mexican capital, which ia understood to ba greatly exhausted by the heavy demands upon their services Vichita Ranishea Idle Mexican. Whlta, Kan. A railway enaeh Wolidle Mexican waa shipped to fetlnullne Saturday by tba Wlehl VMe. The m0 war arrested la jWATKll WASTK IS DKI'MIKKI) . Co-Operation Needed lietween Stale anil Federal Government, j Washington, I). C. - Kxtravaganee In the present system of improving watjirwava an.l Ihu n...l -I i-tion between nut.- ami Federal I government ra emi.hu.., i .1,.. senate In a fight over certain provis ions of tha annual river ami harbor aipruiriatliin hill. Senator Nelson, chairman of the ' senate commerce committee, said bet- j tor results rould bo secured in water-1 way Improvement if congress would! appropriate a lump sum ami leave the i detail of river improvement to a com- miHaion of army engineer. Both branrhea of congress struggled I with appropriation meaaurea through- j out the day, the house devoting tta time to further debate over the $113,- ! c,v" ,""' .,e ures of the measure were the subject of extended debat. T,, Bllllin took up the fight 00", 000 aumiry civil bill. Many feat- , over Federal waterpower control in L-bate on tha rivers and harbors bill. An amendment providing for a 30-foot ! dam near Minneapolis by which water '. . - 1. 1 i.. .i.... ...... i ...... ...i. . wcr wuuiu u. w viw- -a-., f Qf t , U,, rjjn,we,, thj tmt about the Connecticut river dam bill last week. Final action was not taken on the , bj S,.nator McLean, of Connecticut, , wi otJt!r Ul0 Connecticut river dam bi , , h u t , ....l, f (i,l.atH. aa an atni.niltiii.nl In ,i, ,i i,uri. kin The senate passed without debate I the annual diplomatic and consular ap , propriation bill authorizing $:t, 700,000 i for the supKirt of the government' foreign ervice. The measure will nvw Ut le JM.rfected in a conference committee. The senate committee on public I buildings and ground completed the , public buildings bill, which carries ap ! proximately $20,000,000 more than the houne bill. A memorial bridge across the Potomac river from Vanh 1 ington to Arlington National cemetery at a coat of $5,000,000 is provided for. HOLDINT. COXt'KKNS KAri'EI) SUney (-alU Thvm HurKlar TooU 1 oi legitimate I'uaineaM. I Washington, I. C. Representative Stanley, of Kentucky, urged the house i judiciary committee to recommend the passage of his bill to prohibit holding ' companies from engaging in interstate commerce. "The Sherman law." said Mr. Stan ley, "is easily eluded and does not pre vent monoioly. Reorganization of the : Standard Oil and American Tobacco ; companies was just as iniquitous as the original trusts. To enforce the Sherman law it muHt be proved that ; there has been a combination in re strsint of trade. There is no law to prevent a con! mine or a factory from owning a railroad, but there is a law to prevent the railroad from owning the industrial corporation. "Holding companies are the burglar tools of legitimate business. They : exist solely as subterfuges to escape the Mnalty of the law, and should be alwlinhed. " Sl'FFKACISTS fiAIN GROUND Missouri, Iowa and Michigan leg islatures Take Action. The ,nat already ha taken aimilar action. Dea Moines, la. The lower house ' of the Iowa legislature adopted the i reaolution recently introduced provid 1 ing for the submission to the voters of ; the state of an epial suffrage amend ment to the constitution. The vote I waa 81 to 2G. Ijinsing, Mich. The house of rep resentatives adopted a resolution pro viding for the re-submission of the woman suffrage question at the April election this year. The bill now goes to the senate. Filial suffrage in Michigan waa defeated in the fall election by a close vote. Wine Ia Health Receipt. New York - Dr. Stephen Smith, "father" of New York City'a sanitary : laws and dean of the surgeons in thia j city, haa just celebrated hia ninetieth birthday, still In good health and ac tive aa a consulting surgeon of Itelle vue hospital. Up to 60 years old. Dr. Smith said In explaining haa present state of health, he was a victim of dyspepsia, but aa a delegate to Pari to a medical conference on cholera, he learned for the first time to drink wine with meals. He declared that he had never suffered from dyspepsia alnce. Opera Prize Ia Offered. Memphis, Tenn. Mr. Jason Walk er of thia city, chairman of the music committee of the National Federation of Musical cluha received a communi cation from Mra. J. F. Kinney, presi dent of the association, announcing that eitixena of Los Angeles, had raised $10,000 to be awarded the com poser of a prixe opera. Thia produc tion I to be of distinctive American origin, and will be staged at the Panama-Pacific exposition. The compe tition will be under supervision of the American music committee. John D. Protect Home. TNew York Approximately $1,000, 000 la the price paid by John D. Rock efeller to block business invasion which might be regarded as undesir able on the Fifth avenue comer ad joining hia reaidence on Weat Fifty fourth street. The property which the oil magnate bought included the residence of Dr. and Mra. Seward Webb, and had been advertised for lease. Mra. Webb ia a daughter of tha late William II. Vanderbilt, Record Corn Cargo Shipped. Baltimore What ia believed to be a reeord-breaklng cargo of taken out of an Atlantic per ........ V.rlHnr. whl ?"""V",n here for Am.t.rd.m'ii. -Z7. re stowed In the.v . . i. TAFT WOULD PAY Sinking Fund Would Clear Ob ligation In 20 Years. Iludget System Proposed for Nation Declare Congress Should Have Gross Figures. Washington, I). C Proposing to provide for extinguishing the national debt. President Taft in his budget message to congress, said that the plan of adjuating expenditure to rev- enuea would be of great benefit In the i consideration of appropriation bills ' and added that the United States, in consequence of being the only great nation that did not use the budget sys tem, wa without plan or program. Soma of the advantage of the system he indicated as follows: A means of locating responsibility for estimates in keeping with reve nue. A means of allowing congress to see how much gross it will have to spend before it begins appropriating for each department or detail of govern ment machinery. Recause it would furnish congress and the public with ready reference to report and detailed records of ac count. To cancel the nation's debt, through a sinking fund, and to eliminate the deficit, which is slowly growing. The president promises legislation which would wipe out the national debt in 20 year after July 1, 1914. Congres should set aside $45,000,000 annually for the purpose. That would be $15,000,000 a year less than the present amount required by law. That fund should be invested in 3 per cent government bonds and in 20 years the $1,160,000,000 debt, the president says, would be retired. The adoption of a definite theory is recommended for future proposals for internal improvements, so that such improvements would be in accord with a well-thought-nut plan. In that con nection the president suggested the saving of the rent paid in Washington for buildings used by the government, by the construction of new buildings, to cost altout $100,000,000 to be paid for through a period of 20 years. "Briefly stated," wrote the presi dent, "my suggestion is that the gov ernment first plan for it land pur chases., buildings and public works, then borrow money to acquire and to construct them, proportioning the cost over a period of 20 years, and making the bonds issued to meet the cost pay able out of an adequate sinking fund." Of a reduction of the salary roll of the government amounting to about $6,500,000 annually, two-third, the president declared, would be saved by adopting hi scheme to classify what are now presidential appointments. Almost $3,000,000 annually could be kept In government coffers through poKtoffice department changes. Flimination of waste in the distri bution of public documents; reduction of the number of United States assay ollices and possibly the number of mints and their consolidation into one, are other recommendations. TO INSURE CANAL EMPLOYES Government Will Compensate Men Injured at Work. Washington, I). C. A carefully drawn system of compensation for persona injuries of Panama canal em ployee ia embodied in an executive order promulgated by President Taft, taking effect March 1. The Panama canal act. passed last August, directed the president to provide the method for adjusting the claim of employes. Every canal employe and family de pendent upon him is insured against the result of injuries received in the course of hia work, without reference to questions of contributory negligence or any of the other restrictive rules of the common law limiting the liability of the employer In such cases. Lady Ruga to Save Crops. Sacramento, Cal. Thirty-six mil lion lady bugs have been captured and caged for shipment by the California State Insectary, and will be sent to various sections of the state within the next few weeks to save the melon crop. The ladybugs prey on the melon aphis, devastating insects that destroy the new vines. Hopgrower will get some of the insects this year, as well aa melongrowers. Field Agent Brani gan is catching ladybugs now near Col fax. Collections have been made in Napa and Placer counties. W. D. Haywood Recalled. New York In a nation-wide vote of all the dues-paying members of the party, William D. Haywood, head of the Industrial Workers of the World, haa been recalled from the national executive committee of the Socialist party. John N. Work, national sec retary of the party, said that the count showed 22.500 votes against j Haywood and 1000 for him. Utter ances made by Haywood In ravor or direct action, the general strike and sabotage, led to the movement, ft waa laid to oust him from the committee. Diplomat Is Confirmed. Washington, D. C. Irwin B. Laughlin waa confirmed Thursday by the enate aa first aecretary of the United Statea embassy at Ixndon. Hi nomination had been held up in the fight between Republican and Democrata with several . hundred other nomination by President Taft. but In view of the gravity of the diplomatic questions pending between the United States and Great Britain the senate broke Ita deadlock for thia cause. Seamen's Bill Is Favored. Washington, D. C The seamen' involuntary aervltude bill, abolishng tha Involuntary restraint now imposed open American seamen in rorin Dorta. ud to require mtorm tumt manrtinar f maevhaa k 1 1 lad mmms, w eor sm mm ti THE' CHILDREN LITTLE rrw umc-T suneiur IUT MUdl AMUdlNU Flgurts of Two Pugilists Swing Back and Forth Under Impact of Thslr Own Blows. A moat amusing toy that can be made by any Ingenious boy baa been pateuted by an Illinois man. It con sists of a piece of cardboard or thin wood upon which tha figures of two boxer swing back and forth under tba Impact of their blowa. These blows, j by tha way. are delivered by the oper-1 ator linger, which are tbrut through onenlnc In the shoulders of the figures and have miniature boxing ! glves fastened on the tips, converting them Into lifelike looking arms Tba Amusing Fighter. lower portion ot the fighter from waist down Is drawn on the card, but their torsos and heada are In separate pieces, pivoted at the waist, ao that they awing freely. There I a (top, however, so that If one of the men gets an unusually vigorous punch In the Jaw be will only bend back to a certain point and will spring forward again to the fray. . KISSING WAS IN STYLE THEN In 17th Century English Womin Were Offended at Other Greet ing Now a Lost Art. Kissing Is almost a lost are in Eng land, tba London Chronicle statea. Its universal prevalence In tbe sev enteenth century was the wonder of the foreigner. Nlcolaus de Ilethlen. who visited this country In 1663. re lates that "my brother and I behaved very rudely on one occasion, being unaware that It was customary In that coutnry to kiss the corner ot the mouth of women. Instead of shaking hands as we do In Hungary. We were Invited to dine at the bouse of a man of high rank and found his wife and thre daughters (one of them married) ready to receive us. We kissed the girls, but not the married women, and thereby greatly offended the latter. Duval apologized for our blunder and told us when saluting we must always kiss tbe senior women first and leave the girls to tha last" PUZZLE OF LITTLE MONKEY! Small Animal Desires to Collect Pen nies From Twelve Windows aa 8pedlly as Possible. The thoughtful expression worn by ' the monkey Is due to the fact that hia master baa ordered him to visit tha 12 j wlndowa and return with bla crop of nonnlna aa armed ilr as nosalhla. I Joko la calculating the ahortest ' route which will take him paat all Tha Monkey Puzxl. the wlndowa and back to hia master's shoulder. Now, If you were In Joko'a place, in what order would you visit tha aocl able looking residents? Joko's shortest rout In visiting tha 12 windows and returning to hia mas ter's shoulder Is as follows: Noa. 10. 11. 12, 8, 4. 3, 7. . f, 1. t. and . Tha two upper floors being closer together than the first and aecond, makes such routes aa 10, 6, 7, 11. 12, 8, 4. S. 2, 1. 6. and slightly longer than tbe route given above, which la the shortest possible answer, and may not ba varied. Higher Education. A mountaineer led his gawky, over grown son Into a country schoolhouse, "This here boy' arter larnln'." he announced. "What'a yer bill o' fare?" "Our curriculum, sir," corrected the schoolmaster, "embraces geography, physiology, arithmetic, algebra, trigo nometry " "That'll do." Interrupted the father. "Load htm up heavy with trlggernom etry. Ile'a tha only poor shot In our family." Words. There are some worda that can walk backward aa well as forward and mean the aame thing. See how many you can And. Here are a few of then: Hannah, nan. npspw ms, mmxmm. lav.. - ; IP IP if ! SURE WAY TO KILL ROACHES Preparation vf Boraa and Whlta Sugar I Fatal to tha Filthy Intacta. Mil dry, powdered borai with Ha own bulk of wblta sugar, and aet la , hallow vessel all about wbera tha crawling things disport themselves. ' Renew tha mixture every few daya, j taking cara to sweep up and burn all : tha dead Iniect. I r"nt " P'p. nl where they enter the wall periodical- . lr with tumentlne. Let the tureen-1 tin run down and around tba pipes. ', especially hot water pipes. But ba careful to do It when tha water la cooL Now and again pour a spoon ful of pura turpentine down sinks and trapa. Cut Irish potatoes In half, dtp tha cut aldea In tha borax and augar and t w . I. L. . J ...I. a mwA 7 iuvu bwui uuuer iiuu, iuu uu elnaAfa TWi tMa Inv.ril AVAnlnff In : tba morning gather tha potatoes, which abould lie. cut aide down, vary quickly, and drop them Into bucket of bollna- water if ln.eta are Dlentr. there probably will ba from ona to a i dosan clinging to each piece. REAL ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING i ' How Thle Toothsome Dessert la Pre- pared In the Country Where It Originated. Bkln one-half pound of beef suet and chop finely, add to It eight table- spoons of flour, one-half pound of rat- alna, one-quarter pound of mixed peel. one-half grated nutmeg, two teaspoon- fula of cinnamon, one-quarter pound raisin, one-quarter pound of cur- rants, a pint of fine bread -rumba, two tableapoonfula mixed spice, four table- poena of desiccated cocoanut or ahredded almonds, pinch salt Mix all together with a small cup of milk. four egg. well beaten and added on . """" " " ,T glassful of rum or brandy. Mix well, put into a well-buttered basin, boll for about four boura or steam at leaat five. When ready to serve, turn out, put sprig of holly in the top. pour brandy around it and light with a match. Bend to table blazing. Braised Beef. Three pounds of beef from lower round, two thin slices fat salt pork, one-half teaspoonful peppercorns, ona cup each of diced carrots, turnips, on ion and celery (or use a little cel ery aalt Instead); also salt and pep per. Try out pork and remove scraps, wipe meat, sprinkle with salt : brown entire surface In pork fat. i Place meat In earthen dish, surround j with vegetables, peppercorna and three cupa boiling water. Cover close-: ly and bake four boura In slow oven. 1 Tha reason for browning the meat la that it keepa the Juice In and It doea not get ao dry. Also be sura to add boiling water. This I fine. Delicate Three Egg Cake. Two cupa of pulverized sugar, three fourth cup of butter, one cup of weet milk, one and one-half cupa each of corn starch and flour, and four level teaspoons of baking powder. Mix butter and sugar to a cream, then add milk, next corn starch and part of the flour with the baking pow der alfted with It; next the whites and yolks of three eggs beaten to a froth and lastly the remaining of the flour. Vae any flavoring desired. In baking any kind of cake In loaves the pan should be lined with a piece of oiled . paper cut to fit the bottom of the pan and pressed down closely before put- ting in the batter. Raisin and Apple Conserve. Peel and quarter twelve large or eighteen small applea. and put them over tha fire with a pound and a half of augar and a half pint ot awet cider, Cook very alowly until they are ten- i der. While they cook, atone four ! pounds ot large, plump raisins, put a i little water w 1th these, and let them elmmer for an hour, watching them 1 that thev do not burn. Mix with the applea atew very gently for an hour more, press through a vegetable preee I . i. . n ... Or a COianuer mu pai: iu mail jai - . This can be eaten with crackera. or people groaned beneath the bur with cream aa a deaert.-Woman'a "t taxation he decided that it Horn Companion. I M thm- n1 , that it would be well to gain a rev- Hickory Nut Macaroons. Take meats of hickory nuts, pound fine and add mixed ground spice and nutmeg. Make frosting aa for cakes, atlr meat and spice In, putting in enough to make It convenient to handle; flour the hands, make the mixture into balls the alze of nutmega. 1 lay them on buttered tins, giving room to spread, tiaae in a uuica ui They are delicious. Ltmon Sauce. A very nice lemon sauce la mad by boiling together ona cup of augar. ! change worked In the fortunea of the half a cup of water, tha rind and Juice princlpaJU7 that today the Monegaa of two lemona for ten mlnutea. Beat ; que, r, clamoring to pay the taxea of tha yolka of three egga. strain tha lnip j m.h)cn they hmTe been long relieved, and stir the beaten egga Into It Bat I for iay theTi an UQtaxed people can the pan into a double boiler and beat ' .x.,rctaa n0 proper control over public quickly until the mixture la thick ' aSBlra and Bmootn. Kemove tne pan rrora tha boiler and beat for Ova mlnutea longer. Lettuce and Pimento Salad. Get .the canned plmentoa. rinse them in cold water. Arrange the let - tuca on each plate, lay In tha mid- die of It a pimento, opening thla and putting In the center a cube of cream chaeae and folding the pimento overpium, descended to tne parior io una It so that the cheeae la half concealed. Pour French dressing over the salad. Chicken a la Boston. One cup cold cooked chicken cat In strips three cold boiled potatoes, cut In one-half inch allcea, one truffle cut In atrtpa, three taoiespoons nutter. three tablespoons flour, one and one halt cupa scalded milk, aalt and pep per. Make a aauce of butter, flour and mll- Add chicken, potatoes and truffle, and aa aoon aa heated add seasoning. Chocolate Doughnuts, peat two aava. add one ai half eiipfale of eaawr. aaaaJ LZ-IVV I mt a aad mm Hfflf :o F all tha smaller countries ia tba world none poaaeaaiea a mora dangerous fascination for tha public at large than Monaco, probably tba small- tta la Europe, which Ilea at ma outl1 ' fYnc on ih unnT ahorea tb Mediterranean. In ita Hoy araa of. eight square mllea the Principality ot Monaco, and la particular IU ona , and only town, Monta Carlo, contrives ; to present contra Is aa strange aa can hVWorfd.la PracUcan faTa'tinto'Ttha Income of tha gambling tables tha clt- UeM of the republic are tbemaelvee forbidden tba fearful Joya of tha ta- Dlegi an(1( to ,dd to tbe lrony tha situation, tha prince who rulea over th famoui pleasure town has a wori(j.w,do reputation for the dapth of w, ,cientlflc Investigations. On of the worW flocks w, t(nTj. tory for the attractloM of the ciDOi wh,t another iTAWD hltner to tudy graphy and anthropology, And M a ,upreme 1, thla little gtat wnlch eem haT, maIntaln. e(J ,u ,ndependence by almoet mlracu. ,oug meang through all the centurlea wh,ch cha d th of Eu reaJ1 looked on b ,u thou. aanda of vlaltora aa being the common property of all who can afford to lay down a five-franc piece. Why Roulette Waa 8tarted. Very different, Lowever, was tha condition of Monaco some 60 years ago. The people were In a rebellious frame of mind, for, being without any means of communication with the out- MontA fArlo sr world aave that of a defective road, they had no Industries, were terribly poor, and found that to keep a royal family at their own expenae waa be coming a costly luxury. The Grim aldla, on the other hand, had reigned ' for nearly a thour tnd yars, the first of them. It is aald. entering in the garb of a monk with a aword con- cealed beneath hia cassock. Charlea I"-. e relaning monarch, had no wuh to lav down els crown. Since i ,. ,'ar Mh, mhllna.. On October 14. 1853. the roulette wheel waa sent spinning round for the first time, but Its patrons at first were few. No railway brought in vlaltora. and the steamship service was extremely bad. Tbe croupiers sat Idle at tbe tables. In 1S59 a revolu ; Uon WM iuppre,ged but the corn- munea of Menton and Roquebrune Lad to ba handed over to France, and the casino did not become a financial success until It was taken over by M. Francois Bland. Such baa been the j Mf A(jolphe Smith, who haa written , hutory of -Monaco and Monte Car- Wouldn't Yield to Big Sister. The loving girl, having lingered 1 minute in her room to adjuat ner i transformation, change the angle of her Grecian band, and make aura that ' her klrt fitted like the peeling of a tia fnmilv net ensconced upon the knee of the young man caller, her curly head nestled comfortably against Ms shoulder. "Why. Mabel." the young lady ex- laimed. "aren t you asnamea ot your- ,elf Get right down "Sha n't do It.' 'I got here first." retorted the child. Saving the Newest A weather-beaten woman, dressed in new and stylish clothing, waa narching up the street one Sunday .niinc. when down came a audden ,k.r. Tne wwn had aa mbralla. .uM mm a mmm mmmwmw mm mmr "-7i- J aJI - WvH. K m ii il'i m it vim e- 'A-t lo." glvea figure which show that la a year the "bank" netted a profit of $8,100,000, and in one single day It haa been known to win $180,000. Of course, tbe casino haa ita bad daya, and the public are credited with hav ing been $3,000 to- tha good on oaa of tbeee. "Breaking tha bank," aa It waa known at Haden-fJaden and Wiesba den, la impossible at Monta Carlo, for directly a table show slgaa ot dis tress It will receive an adltlonal sap ply of money $10,000 for roulette or double that mm for trente at quar ante. The bank at tha former gam la dally started with $14,000, and at the latter with $30,000. Tha question of Monte Carlo snV cldes and blood-stained dividends haa been often discussed but Mr. Smith ridicules the sensational stories which have been let afloat The players, apparently, value their Uvea mora than their cash, but tbe Inhabitant, forbidden tbe tables, seem to take no Joy In existence. In 1911 five gamb ler did commit suicide, yet the num ber aeem trivial when It la put on record that during the earn period eight of tbe 20,000 regular residents killed themselves. 1 Hold Pious Images. In a crowd that ona would aeem jus tified in characterizing aa worldly, some odd sight are to be seen in tha gaming rooms ot Monta Carlo. Gam blers may ba aeen holding ploua image, and the story la told of a old lady who had a firs frane pled which she had a managed to conceal 'A a among eome rosaries and tba coin had received an unwarranted blessing. Ot course she prtxed It too highly to use it for play, but she believed It brought luck to all the money which It touch ed, and In kindness of heart lent it to a friend. The friend, however, lost heavily, and at last ventured and loat the piece itself. ' Gamblers are notoriously subject to the whims of superstition, and play era use their favorite numbers. A for tunate Pole once took away 24.000 as the result ot backing 32 In all pos sible way, and tha lata M. Arthur de RothachUd Invariably put hia stake on No. 17. The Grand Duke Nicholas of Russia likes to cover his number In every possible way. and ao, though hia net gain may be Inconsiderable, he haa the satisfaction of generally haT lug something handed back to htm. He always walks away when he haa arranged hia money, for he hatea to see the wheel spin round. His broth er, the Grand Duke Michael, dislikes the middle of a table, and aWaya aeate himself at the end, a place which, atrange to say, hia mother would on no account ocupy. On the authority of a Monte Carlo official. It Is stated that the bank drawa most profit from persons of comparatively small means, since they are never content with moderate suc cess, and IT they lose heavily cannot afford to return for a revenre. "If ev ery person who won stopped playing after losing 50 per cent of his win nings the casino could jot exist out the woman, as she hurried along.. "I've had them the last sixty yeara. and I only got the hat yesterdsy." Harper Paiar. Sight for tha Neighbors. "See here, cabby, you have carried me past my house." "Well, sor. It must be a great pleas ure for a glntleman to look out ot tbe winder of an Ulgant cab Ilka thla waa, an' ride by tbe place wbera he Uvea sor." Ita Name. "I'm doing soma lovely things la; burnt wood." "Yea, I notice pyro mania is all tbe Can It Bat Bill What ia a 8pug? Jilt Why. I nmmm It's Ifarnka H Tka Smwil ... - m fl h