42 REVOLUTION" stalks again in Cuba. The unhappy island of unrest, whose fair soil has for a century been soaked in the blood of insurgents and their tyrants. Is once again in tur-. moil. Three brief years of peace. Interven ing since the achievement of independ ence, are now over, and the traditional warfare is resumed. When Estrada Palma. once chieftain of a political junta, quit his quiet school at Little Falls. New York, to become the first President of the Cu ban Republic, he little knew what a complex problem awaited him. The spirit that kept Cuba fighting for liberty against Spain grew not only from a de sire for liberty. It was the expression of the restless mind of the Cuban that never Is at peace and turns to strife on the least excuse. After being freed from Spain, Cubans wanted the fruits of freedom at once. They saw no reason why' they should wait. During the period that the United States remained in control, the strength of Washington was able to preserve or der, but it was inevitable that strife should come under the Palma regime. The disappointed seekers for patron age had to be heard from. Quentin Bandera, a brave general in the Cuban Wars of the last 30 years, thought it no more than a fair reward that he should be Chief of Police, but Palma, a man of education, shrank from put ting in a place of power a man who cquld not write his own name. They made Bandera a door-keeper at J7S a month, and he nursed his griev ance till at -the first outbreak of revolt he took the part of the insurgents. His death under the machetes of the Cuban guards a few weeks ago took from the Insurgents their best fighting leader. Leaders Xot Lacking. But the revolt will not lack for lead ers. There are always lots of them to THIRTEEN enjoys among numerals a dual position peculiarly its own. It is somewhat singular that a number regarded by some so sacredly as to bo reverently venerated should have acquired in the eye of others an unpop ularity stigmatized by all that is evil, unlucky and undesirable. Passing ewiftly from the remoter ages of superstition to more modern times of seemingly sounder reasoning, one finds it typical alike of good and evil according to the particular circumstances of the care. Superstition dies hard, and while the 20th century, with its ripening intel ligence is wonderfully able to accept with alacrity what the revolution of ages has brought about in so many desirable di rections, one sees it clinging here and there, like linipets to the rock, some per sons even still going so far as to refuse to dine In a company of 13 lest death should thereby claim too soon an unwil ling victim. This notion is popularly sup posed to have arisen through that memor able meal from which Judas rose to meet hi doom. Nothing is more surprising than the in consistency and contrariness at times of the human race. Dr. G. Russell Forbes has recently drawn passing attention to what is recorded in verse on the marble table in the chapel of the Trlclnium Pau perum in Rome, adjoining the Church of . St. Gregory on the Caelian hill namely, that Pope Gregory the Great was in the habit of entertaining every morning 12 poor men. On one occasion Christ ap peared as the 13th and 'henceforth 13. be came "lucky" for the time being. Here, as elsewhere in the numeral world, may be observed a strong tendency to let fancy take so powerful a possession of the mind that it appears to that abnor mal imagination no longer as fancy, but JC ; ri-v arise when the fires of insurrection stir the Pearl of the Antilles. Such men as Velez Garcia. General Carlos Garcia and General Justo Gar cia, sons of General Calixto Garcia, Gen erals Monteagudo and Loynaz del Cas tillo and Colonels Piedra ano Alberti are relentless fighters who will stick to their cause, right or wrong, with that perti nacity that seems peculiarly characteris tic of the Cuban rebel. The target at which they are aiming is said to be President Palma, and fear Is felt by many that the Chief of the Re public may fall by the assassin's hand. Precautions have been taken by the army and police authorities to extend every protection to Palma at all times. In such crises there. is always a large degree of danger from within. President Palma has been to especial pains to as sure the loyalty of all parts of his gov ernment. He has called into confer ence all the chiefs of his various depart ments, has armed the customs employes, and Increased the guard around the treasury. Seditious proclamations have been traced to their source as far as pos sible, and the publishers . punished. Warnings have been posted in all parts of the Republic forbidding all persons to take part in any movement inimical to the present authority, and promising sum mary justice on those who do. Ever since the triumph of Palma and the Liberal regime at the recent election started the talk of rebellion, the police have been gathering the names of the disturbers in Havana and other centers, and these are under surveillance so that they may be arrested at the first open act of treason. There is little of a political Issue in the revolt. It is rather the personal ad- Is Thirteen 'Really an Unlucky Number? as fact. Thirteen, however, was th svm bol of death considerably earlier than the beginning of the Christian era. If the tarot or gipsies' gospel be referred to it will be found that the 13th card is repre sented by a skeleton with his scythe. This symbolism may be traced through ancient oral tradition to the 13th letter of that sacred word of the Hebrew Kabbalah, lod-he-vau-he. a word never, it is sup posed, uttered by the Israelites them selves, and only by the high priest once a .year. A number being attributed to each letter of the alphabet, every word in due course gained a numerical value, and 60. from this ancient conception of an occult meaningfin numbers certain re sults were attained. As the principal doc trines of the Kabbalah endeavored to portray not only the nature of the deity, the divine emanations, the cosmogony the creation, the nature of the angels and of men. but also their destiny, it can be understood how "death" became associ ated with its "own" number. The Thirteenth Guest. Sitting down as the 13th at dinner was. we are told in the old Norse myth ology, deemed "unlucky" by the Scan dinavians because at a banquet in the Valhalla Loki. the Scandinavian god of strife and evil, intruded himself on one occasion, making the "13th" guest, and succeeded in his desire to kill, with an arrow of mistletoe. Balder, the god of peace. It is noticeable that in this Instance the 13th guest was the emblematic embodiment of evil. In the case of Pope Gregory the 13th gruest was the symbolic omVn of good. "Thirteen," says Wynn Westcott in his treatise on numbers, "was the sa cred number of the Mexicans and the people of Yucatan. The method of computation among the Mexican priests." he continues, "was by weeks of 13 days their year being 28 weeks of 13 days and one over. Thirteen THE SUNDAY OKEGONIAX. PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 23, 1906. V venture of those whose ambitions have been disappointed by the Palma regime. Skilled In Guerilla Warfare. In the conflict between the government and the mal-contents, there will be little open fighting. Methods in Cuba tend dis tinctly to bushwhacking. It is the policy of the revolutionists to be mosquitoes. to take advantage of a knowledge ' of the country, to strike a swift and un expected blow, then disappear from the danger of vengeance, to return for an other blow as soon as the chance of fers. The Cubans are masters at this style of warfare. They employed it against Spain with such good success that the flower of Castillina generals and troops returned in disgrace from Cuba, with reputations ruined by months of non success. . This was the policy of Marti and of the incomparable Gomez. It was the un doing of Spanish generals like Weyler, Compos, Arolas and Linares. Quartermasters' and commissaries problems, the bane of regularly organ ized armies, the Cuban insurgent simply eliminates. He scorns such a supposedly military necessity as a base of supplies. He lives upon the country. He does habitually what Sherman did In Georgia and Sheridan In the Shenandoah Valley. In a pinch he can subsist on a yard or two or sugar cane cut from the field with his convenient machete, which was an implement of husbandry, by the way, long before it became a dreaded weapon of war, and a." few yams or plantains years formed an indiction a week of years the 13 days over forming an other week. Four times 13, or 52, was their cycle.' In Yucatan there were 13 snake gods." He draws attention, too, to the fact that old authors speak of 13 as a number used to procure agreement among married people. Thirteen, it should be pointed out, is the number of the Hebrew - word "achad" "unity." We find from the old Julian calendar that the feast known as epulum Jovls took place on November 13, and, ac cording to the Breviary of Salisbury, festivals were, before the reformation, held on January 13 August 13. October 13 and September 13. Europe Generally Prejudiced. In opposition to this the Turks. Rus sians, Italians, French and English have all shown themselves more or less prejudiced, from time to time, against "13." Moore in his diary refers to a dinner of 13 at line. Catalini's when a French countess was hastily sum moned to remedy the grievance. French prejudice, if report be true, has even gone so far as to delete the dreaded figure from their door numbers, while individuals styled quartoziennes have held themselves in readiness to avert by their presence a supposed foreshad owing calamity. Tet prior to 1825 the Irish, superstitious in many ways though they be. could calmly carry about with them a coin worth just 13 pence. Thirteen the "baker's dozen" is. of course, everywhere regarded as includ ing a vantage loaf. "Would you not." pertinently asks Dr. Forbes in contend ing for the luck lurking in 13, "rather have 13 guineas than 12?" A Thirteen Club at one time made it self conspicuous in a ludicrous endeav or to upset this widely spread preju dice and other ill-foreboding omens by boldly breaking mirrors and otherwise Successfully for a Century, They Know How to Worry Palma ! V 0fp """""MM make him a sufficient, though frugal, dinner. So the Cuban Insurgents' most efficient commissary generals are the warm sunshine and the marvelous soil of his lavishly fruitful Island. As for quartermaster's supplies, fili busters must, for the most part,- furnish the insurgent with his arms and ammu nition, and often these supplies are scant enough. The immediate bodyguard of old Maximo in the days of 1S96 were a fairly well equipped body of riflemen, but the vast- majority of his followers and those of the dreaded Maceo had lit tle or nothing in the way of long range firearms, except what they took from the Spaniards. Many had old-fashioned revolvers slung about their almost naked waists, and practically all carried and knew how to use the keen-edged, heavy machete knife. With camp equipage, except of the most primitive and portable kind, the insurgent In the field disdains to cumber his move ments. While In camp a thatched hut, hastily knocked together from cane, bam boo or palm branches, readily serves the purpose of a shelter. In a country per ennially balmy, clothing is the least of his troubles. He usually goes bare footed from choice. If not from necessity. Four Generations of Fighters. : In the present conflict both sides un derstand the art of guerilla warfare, for both practiced it against Spain. What they were able to do shoulder to shoulder they must now accomplish against each other, and unless the United States should be forced to intervene to protect its own identifying themselves with skulls and skeletons, black cats, cross-eyed wait ers and coffin-shaped salt cellars, so that the London Spectator In 1S94 found itself unable to refrain from facetious ly exclaiming: "Who could have be lieved that there were 169 men In Lon don so singularly lacking in humor?" Mention might also be made of the cel ebrated Thirteenth regiment of whom it was spoken: "Gallant deeds in all parts of the country for upward of 106 years, combined Vith excellent conduct in quarters, have obtained for the regi ment the respect of the country, and the queen (Victoria) has graciously named it after her royal consort in testimony of its many and varied services." Our Original Thirteen States. Attention may now be turned to sev. eral lately revived instances in the an nals of American history of thirteen be ing felicitous rather than the reverse. The country of this ever increasingly prosperous people was. it is contended, discovered on the 13th, comprised ' orig inally thirteen states, and the national motto, intentionally or, not. "E Pluribus Unum." consists of just thirteen letters. The American eagle claims to have ex actly thirteen feathers on each wing. General Washington when raising the republican standard was saluted by thir teen guns. It might also be styled the "Land of Thirteen." A remarkable example in evidence of the influence which personal feeling may have over one's opinion is worth recall ing. Bismarck is credited with holding in supreme veneration the number three, but he had a particular antipathy to it when preceded by the figure one, and would never, it is said, sit down to dine if he happened to be the thirteenth at table. Pythagoras declared three to be the "perfect" number, typical of "be ginning, middle and end." Bismarck's reasons for his predilection were briefly Fighting Spain it 5v WW y x jy V , , - . V" ' Hid Mil irt T'l j A- 71 N iriterests. the turmoil will certainly lengthen out over a considerable period. The daring of the rebels is shown by stated at the time of his death. He served three masters; he was responsible for and fought in three great wars; he signed three treaties of peace; he ar ranged the meeting of' three emperors; he establishd the triple alliance; in the Franco-German war he had three horses killed under him: he had three names (Bismarck, Schoenhausen and Lauen burg); he acquired three' titles (count, prince, duke); the ancient arms of his family are a leaf of clover and three oak leaves. His family motto, "In Trini tate robur" "Strength in Trinity" was surely In itself sufficient td give a mean ing in this particular direction. So close ly were his feelings associated with the triple number that the caricaturist rep resented him with three hairs on his head. He had three children. Under his administration the conservatives, national liberals and ultramontanes were formed. These circumstances considered, then it is hardly to be wondered at that Bis marck should have had a penchant for "three'" rather than for " thirteen." "Wagner's Preference. Richard Wagner, the musician, on the other band, preferred "thirteen." Born in 1813, fate endowed him with a name of thirteen letters and In course of time allowed him to compose thirteen works. His "Tannhauser" was finished on April 13. and was first performed in Paris on March 13. He left Bayreuth on Sep tember 13 and died on February 13. Ever In the present year of grace folks may be found firmly believing that there is "luck in odd numbers," not alone in three and thirteen, but in seven also. As shown In a former paper, like "three" and "thirteen," "seven" has played no inconspicuous part in the story of the past. Had Cobden been a man of con stitution a little less matter of fact he might have dwelt with a sense of satis faction on the number seven, for was it not owing to the power of seven men AM? A the fact that one of their number. Senor Pino Guerra, a former representative, re cently captured San Luis, a town of about S00O inhabitants. He did it with a force of 400 men. This so emboldened the rebels that they began plans on Ha vana, and these, it is said, are being de veloped gradually, open action being with held till some underhand coup, as for instance the taking off of Palma puts them in a position to strike. President Palma has at his command some 6000 troops. The strength of the rebellion, numerically, is problematical. Probably a victory would swell the num bers by magic, and a defeat would cause just as great a shrinkage. In the ranks of the insurrectionists are the scions of four generations of fighters against the existing order. Some boast that their great-grandfathers fought with Bolivar in the gallant effort of 1826, that might have accom plished Cuban freedom but for the at titude? of the United States. The year 1848 saw another outbreak when the grandfathers of the present malcontents strove for a breaking of the yoke that bound them to Madrid. Again the United States Government declined .: . 1 1 'I "KM V to give sympathy, though other Nations that- pitied the woes of Cuba had prom- ised to help. Sacredly Venerated by Some People and Stigma tized as Evil by Many Others. and the patience of seven years that those crushing corn laws were in the end so completely conquered and overthrown? "Luck will come if it can" was, in sub stance, what Carlyle tersely and soundly predicted, to which one ventures to add: Yes, and in the train of three and seven and thirteen, irrespectively and in spite of rather than because of any particular number. The reflection carries with it an amazing amount of comforting conso lation. But it should not be forgotten that while awaiting its appearance one may actually be speeding its advent in a calm pursuance of the Chelsea philos opher's sensible counsel: "Work work hard: work well." An instance in which this may be seen and in association with the so-called "un lucky" number is in the time-honored and still popular game of whist. Thirteen cards are dealt out to and rigorously de manded by each player. It depends largely, of course, upon the player him self whether these thirteen cards are turned to his advantage or disadvan tage. One more remark anent thirteen. At roulette quite recently "thirteen" was re ported having come up "three times in succession," losing the casino, it was stated, no less than 5.000 pounds ster ling, enough, one would think, to upset the prejudiced attitude of many a. su perstitious mind. The Forgotten Gift. She had been cleaning up her "den" and came across various and sundry unfamiliar books in the process. After thinking hard she had restored tiiem all to their rightful owners with a fine and conscious sense of virtue. Only one remained and one night the man with whom she connected this particu lar book called. She brought it out. "Here's a little old book of yours," she announced in her usual flippant way, "and I wish you'd take it home. During the period between 1?26 and the beginning of President Grant's adminis tration it is estimated that 250.V0 lives were sacrlfied in the effort of Spain to suppress the rebelion. Of these four fifths were Spaniards, which gives some little idea of the difficulties attending the suppression of a revolt In the island of unrest. In Grant's administration the Spanish government was permitted to fit out six teen gunboats in New York, which act the Cubans denounced as a bitter as sault on liberty by the Nation which should be freedom's champion. In 1S71 the Cubans had gained so much that they overran the island, but Span ish control of the sea thwarted their hopes of independence. Xinder Cespedes the Cubans won battle after battle, in flicting serious injuries on the enemy, but never being able to drive him out. The fathers of the present rebels took part in this war, and they continued to engage In the Intermittent struggle of 30 years till finally the United States was forced on the right side of the quar rel, and chased Spain off the Western Hemisphere. But a republic for Cuba has not meant peace for Cuba, and perhaps never will. The spirit of strife burns without cessa tions and uprisings follow uprisings. Per haps before he is through with it all, Estrada Palma will regret that he left 3 a; r 1 , V-it . his peaceful school to become the shinlns I target in a country where peace is stranger. I've given it house room long enough.' He took the book and looked at hee rather queerly. "All right," he said, but there wal no enthusiasm in his tone. "It's yours, isn't it?" she demanded. "Well, not exactly." he replied. "I gave it to you for a birthday present about two years ago." Now she is writing her name la every book she owns. I The Unexpected. W. A. Glasgow, Jr., of the Interstate) Commerce Commission's counsel, smiled. He had been interrogating a reporter ia his hotel, and the reply he received was unexpected. "That was an unlooked-for answer, truly," he said. "It was like the answer; the policeman gave to the good citizen. "A good citizen, breathless and excited, ran up to a large, calm policeman one day and cried: " 'Officer, there's a terrible fight going on around the corner to the right.' " 'Thank you. sir. I'll do as much for you some day. sir, said the policeman, gratefully, as he took the turning to the left and quickly disappeared." He Followed Style. The press agent of a successful farc produced during the past Winter tells of his experience with the compositors of a, paper in Chicago who persisted in "boil ing down" the advertising matter sub mitted to them. The press agent hadi wrlten for one of the Chicago dailies poetical "ad." reading as follows: "From half-past eight till half-past ten. You laugh and laugh and laugh again." To the indignation of the advertising man, the compositor set up the adver tisement thus: "From S:3D till 10:30 You laueh and laush and laugh asaln.' A