.THE OREGON SUNDAY JC" lOHTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING," NOVEMBER 12, 1C0J. GMiRUM DANX.GIB80N has quit tiS.OQO a ysar 'and fame In order that he may take up a new -line er art worn. ' In thta workaday world, ..practical and hard-heeded, it takes' som audi lllus- tratlon a that to show that ome peo . tle really Jove their art for Itself alone. He ha . quit the pen and Ink and crayon. In which he excelled, to take up the brush aad palette, and study paint ing- in ripaln. , . . Mr. Olbaon will be a distinct loss to America. His clever pictures will be . trussed rrom the mngaxlnea. bis lllu - tratlons from the books; but the type he created deny it as he may. and dpes persists in the American girl as h worm at large Knows, her tall, stata ssque, witn features , clear cut like a cameo, (race in her every pose, eotor in her eyes, the latent potentiality of innnit aissea- lingering . within her .'. Hps. .-. - Before. Charles Dana Gibson synthe tlaed bis ideal woman the American girl was vau, nondescript, inchoate;, there was no type or her to which one could - point and sayi That l tho typical . American. girl." But as soon as the world saw Gibson's ideal it bowed down before it in adoration, sarins;: "Lo, at last the typical American airir Not Only did the susceptible American men .,' acknowledge her. their queen, but the glrla themselves hailed her as their own portrait and strove, to live up to the likeness. Thus did nature follow 4a the footsteps of art. and thus did . the Gibson girl become legion and the world take her to Its heart as the type or American, womanhood. . . The honor of being the "original Gib son sin- naa been claimed by many . women. The question who - was the .- original has been put often to Mr. Gib' son. and he has always answered it thus: . ... "There was no original Gibson girl I had no modal for my Ideal, but it was v. the result of my own . conception ol what a woman abould be, formed after . . drawing many women, from many mod' SIS," . V. -. ,..' v , To soma, his intimate friends, ho has w said that svs wife was the original Gib- son girl; but ho never knew it until he met her and recognised In the flesh the very woman he bad seen in his dreams ; of beauty and shown to the world as his Ideal. . .. ... Mr. Gibson also created a typo of man the square-shouldered, firm-jawed, vcleen-shaven, well-groomed, wholesome youth for which he and kla friend Rich- - era Harding Davis were tha models, and the American young man less con- , sctoosly than ' ths American girl set ; himself to imitate ths type. It was Gibson's pea which seat mustache, out . of faehion and mad the tailors pad 1 the shoulders of well-cut coats, t . -1 have no favorlta, said ths young - artist. "I could not pick out on hesd or ono figure and say. 'I like thU better 7 than any other.? No, I like them all. I ,, have enjoyed drawing them; I drew each individual type as well aa 1 could, -striv- - ing for as much variety as possible, and I can say with- sbsolute honesty that I have no preference for ono above an- other." - , ; ,' .. - ... . , - But If Mr.. Gibson had no conscious . preference among ths girls, his uncon- .: scions liking is distinctly traceable in his work. The head reproduced by per ' mission of P. F. Collier 4k Sons, who hold tha copyright, is one of his latest and shows how- a certain tenderness - hss ' crept over his ideal. His first girls were - statues, his latest are women. - . . i have' drawn many women, many . ' men. . som hundreds, 1 suppose," . be added. . The publlo has boon kind enough to like them, and this liking has - placed me la a position to gratify my , .ambition to become a painter. I have -." Inevef had any. time to study 'painting heretofore.' having been kept so busy ''. with my black-and-white work, but now I propose to begin at the very bottom and eiudy as a beginner." JL.- Not only does ths Gibson girl vanish from the placer that she filled so long, - but there dies with hsr all the other fig ures biiglnatlnjg with Mr. Gibson, and -rhoee presence has become familiar In every household. The pursy millionaire, the fat, coarse woman of ths "newly rich," the tailor-made college man With his six feet of brawn and muscle and his .Greek profile;, the bulbous-nosed club man; the men and women of the Four J Hundred all the types of eccentric . character with which he has made us familiar, are to be buried by her side. The reason Is that Mr. Gibson baa re-t-t tt iipffn a fisissr that netted him each year rather more tnsn the salary or the President of the United States, and, turning back forever upon the phase of his career which won for him ft me, face a new and larger field and become a painter in oils and colors. When, - in JDeoeraber. ho sails for Europe, there to begin ths course of study which may in tha course of years lead blm to foremost rank in tha higher walks of art, he will bid bis home in America good-by for all time, never to return save In ths character of a fleeting visitor. '. ' Ths true secret of Mr. Gibson's change of heart can be known only to himself. And perhaps even he could scarcely de- fjie the Influences that slowly but In- "A Year in Hell ' H i : -- ' i a, .. i From th Nw York World "A 1 TEAR IN HE Lid, or a Rail 'road ' Man'a Observations Along the Highway of Jus tice," Is ths title John 8. Paokham. a one-year man In Jail at - Macon. Missouri, has given to a book he haa nreosred for publication. It la a collection of his experiences, mixed with morailsatlona on what he calls ths "unjust attitude" the publlo assumes toward th man - whom cir cumstances . throws Into the clutches of ths law. Following is from his In troduction: ; , ' - ' - ' When Big Hugh, the London rioter, was tsklng his last look at earth from the gallows, he said: There's nothing more unlet any man bar haa a .. fancy for my pet dog and will treat him well. You wonder why I think about a do Just now. IfKnytVnan deserved 4t-f-me half -as. well I'd .thin.jrfl him? - . "Soolety, stsndlng with clutched skirts, and ahrlnklng from his contam inating touch, will never reform a crim inal. The superlatively good and im- . maculate have run up the black flag; not the man behind tha bara. ."Today, as in the days Of th Newgate -rials, .the broadcloth and aatin shriek: 'To ths dungsoBl' . Thsjjrand of Cain . a convict Out again, yet a convict ' No friendly hand outstretches. So be it. The war la on. But I warn you good people that you are-responelble for a greater part of ths sowing thsn you . may think, You., cannot - dehumanise - men In a loathsome tomb, condemn them r..n humiliating servility and expect to ,; reap a crop of angels. If you do, their .wings will be black and their horns long and sharp." . Packham" was' born In Linn county, Missouri, In lis. He went to the public schools In Brookf leld for a while, and ' avttably have shaped his will to this heroto resolve. , In truth It needs somstnlng In the na ture of heroism, to calmly sacrifice an Income estimated at fll.OOS la pursu ance of a set purpose, with no present reward attached to It. The friend who are nearest to him believe that the dawning of an Idea which waa to aslum a definite form ard purpose earn when, a ysar ago, ho prepared a ssrlea of pastels for ths firm of Charles Sorlb ner's Sons, Identified with him through so many years aa the publishers of "The Gibson Books." Probably in ths dell cate coloring required for these pastels oame the first suggestion that his draughtsmanship might be employed In a line of work that would bring him en during fame. It is on his great skill as a draughtsman that his fellew artists, the critics and the expert Judgea base their hope of bia success. "I hav bent myself through all my earner years,- ne says, "to tn needs of the moment, to the demands of ths publlo and tha publishers for the work with which my name haa been Identi fied. I feel now that t have earned my emgncTpatluii.' and,1 iialng oei ed faltli fully, may follow my own ideals and try to fulfill my ambition. . "And only the artists who have been compelled to work to order can realise what it meas to bo free. Through H A Railroad Man's Ob serrations on Justice at tha ago of 14 entered tha service of th Burlington railroad as a callboy. working hla way up to a place tn the cab of a locomotive. Svoi year after maturity bo disappeared. . The body if a man waa round on day at Sheffield. on th Kansaa City Southern. Thomas m U DaMbhant WtltOk'aB Ah IA..ilJd.s I a. I II jsrookneid. . There waa a funeral and for a while jonn waa remembered only for th gojd that waa in him. : 'But ni day Packham received a Brookfleld paper describing bis funeral and th -sorrow ever his death. Ths prodigal decided that tf they thought oo mucn or mm a ratted eair was due him on his return to life. So ho hastened bom and extended two hands to hla be. reaved father.- HI mother was dead, Ths father shook his bead. "Guess not. We've burled Jack. Yon'll hav to travel further, young man.'! But a doubt entered the father mind and simultaneously way to aov it. "My son was t fireman, ho aald. "No. 41 la about to start oast Coma over and let's see how you handle ths scoop." .... Jack fired tha looomotlv down to the next station, the elder critically eyeing his method. "You are a little awkward." he aald. "but eo waa Jack. Guesa I don't risk much In adopting you, anyhow. ' . Th calf died, and while th family were rejoicing over it a deputy walked In and attached the prodigal. The offi cer said Jack, before he left bom, had obtained money from ths New Cambria bank on Indorsements which, th state charges. Jack wrote himself. A Year in Holl ' has been gathering fuel since Jack's residence In Macon. His cell la a literary workshop. There are paper-racks, stands and desks all , ss that of hi son, and bad' It shipped tdP'J" n(l llht of day, -i:(raf3 mom. ' ' '."JtS"" w"1 in. V-V'-1 1..-T'.."ejk many months I hav worked a little In colors. But It Is Impossible for any busy artist-to draw a line and give the time necessary for perfection In eolor painting. M am not ungrateful to the made from pins boxss by tha industrious author. Ths prisoner did not nrsitate to hang up th motto, "Thou ahalt not steal." ; . A large part of his book la devoted to suggestions for the betterment of the prisoners' health and tha turning1 of their minds Into wholesome channels. Packham doea not aay that a ertmlnal should not be punished, but he Insists thst rengeanc abould not go to the ex. tent of waking a worss malefactor than he was when the doors closed between Here la a quotation from a chapter on tha condi tion of county jjalla: . v . . "Present day ..civilisation looks with horror .upon ths Inquisition with ' Its red hot pincers. Its weights for tha body and ite racks. But I want some good physician to tell me If they were any worse on a man s mental and pnysieai health than to deprive him of daylight and air, in a living tomb, where damp- noss haa to be expelled, 'even in aummet time, by th is of tovT" j- Home-made illustrations and a fsw photographs show ths physical deterior ation of prisoners after 10 days' confine ment, those prisoners who have nothing to around the Jail fair faster than those who sr employed at something. Negroes stand th confinement better than whltss. Boys and men from farms fall faster than chronlo crooks from the cities. Ninety-nine out of hundred prisoners drink and smoke, or uae chew ing tobacco. Every man who has been a prisoner since th first of ths year be lieves In God. but has little faith In modern Christianity. - Ths reason for this Is, the author asserts, that a min ister or church member rarely calls to them. The prlsonsrs take this to. mean that present day religion' sees no hop for them- V ' - But, on the whole, the book . Is not pessimistic. Psckham is good, Ms tu red, and bis sunny laugh does much to cheer np his prison mates. He thus reports a visit made during th early part of th year by a preaoher who was not afraid .11 - it J ' zlfflj : i r .... -. ; - i -Tl j' r ee . fl 4 3 JT1 - say . career which has enabled me to win. first bread, and then Independence.' - But In th hours of my greatest success thers has over been an unsatisfied long ing "In my heart for something newer and better, and now that the future of my wife and my children la secure, that longing. if God gives mo the power, shall b satisfied." Thus, at 40 years old, does master In black and white go to tha old world to learn from other masters. For 20 years he hss been aiming at ths position ho has reached today. Ha haa chafed under the thought that those whom be loved believed that he had no higher ambition than ths pursuit of money, And so he euts the ropes that bound of getting stain on his clothe by enter lng th dark holes: , " "A young clergyman of St Louis, who hag had experience In alum work there, waa th guest of a friend on Sunday. He visited th Jail and waa cordially received by Lone Jim, than Judge of our kangaroo court, who was awaiting trial for burglary. When" acquainted with th mission of th visitor, Jim mounted th card table In th main corridor and called the boys aroundr- " 'Fellers, hs said, this is Elder Fall ing, of St, Louis, who wants to shoot some good Into you. The Lord knows yon need It. Gather arqund th bench now and I'll introduce ' you. Elder, this man her Is Antonio Thomasso To basoo, or something like that, who shot hi wife while on a drunken spree. He won't understand all you aay, but you can cheer ' him some by making signs of wher he ll go If bo Wt repent That grinning negro over IfTSreyln the corner is '"Frog Eye" Davis, waiting his medicine for stealing chickens In ths night time. Tho tall, good-looking gentleman, fondling a pair of kings, Ic "Dynamo Al. susptctoned of stopping th payboss out at tha mine, but he assure us on hla solemn word of honor that he waa a hundred mllea away. This fellow behind me w call "Quo Vadla." because neither him or anybody elseVoould tell wher he's going for ths last 30 years. He's In for vagrancy and on general principles.' r- , "Th 'Judge' ' went on describing his colony, and modestly took hts stand be hind the group. The preacher ascended the table and started t talk. . He was earnest and knew . how to reach men. He did not preach, but spoks as eomrsde sddresslng comrade. There was no talk of punlsbment no threats, what wss done was don and could not b helped; the thing wss now to resolve to do hatter, and become good and respected cltlsens. . , s "While he talked. Trog Eye' Da via. th chicken atealer, went to aleep and, ' - jar s .,-.r. v y ' HI ' ' ' OrT; - S . . . ' vcrKisftr war - buFKCQtZJER&im WEEKLY. I jA f .,.:V 7 blm to th Gibson girl and all - other creations, and sets out wlth his school books under his arm," and with all ths fervor and enthusiasm of a boy to learn a now art , Mr. Gibson has - earned so much money In th last 10 yesrs thst hs owns bouses and property which bring htm a large Income, an income suffi cient to support him and hla family In luxury for the rest of their lives. And every cent of It he bss earned himself. T shall come back." he says. "I shall always remain an American end consider this my home.- My summers rrin trTfK1r irr-rnt In amtxlriy but I go to Europe in order that I may study without Interruption. There are too many call upon me here in New York; in Europe nooooy Know me, ana I hope to bo able to work as a student among students. I shall begin at the very bottom, learning th AB C of painting. I go first to Madrid, wher I expect to stay about a year; wher I shall go after that I do not know Rome, Munich, Paris, London wherever my inclination or my advlsera may send ms. , - "It has always been my ambition to become a painter, but not until now bavo I seen ray way clear to giving up my black-and-white work . in order to devote th time necessary to study." fell off bis bog stool with a crash. "Lone Jim' instantly aelsed him, boxed bia aara aoundly and threw him into a? cell. - Tt'a all right, alder,' ha aald aa ha returned, -panting from bia exertion, 'that fool nigger never heard a aertnon before, you mustn't mind him.', , Th preacher finished bia kindly die course by volunteering to do anything ha could for the boys.' and told thsm not to bo backward about telling blm of nnythlng of which they stood In need. The 'court followed htm to the grating and then remarked: - " 'Elder, this Is bully for yon. and all the boys think you're tha real thing. You done 'em a world of good. "Tha young minister's face lightened and h bowed tn courteous acknowledg ment. This encouraged tho 'Judge' to hand out hla prise compliment "Tou aee, you-1 don't put on airs like aoms do, he said; you act same's If yon was one of ua.' -r- r "The minister smiled and shook hands warmly. He knew what Lon Jim' had on his mind, and laid no literary yard stick ong the words." i Orang Tre ag Tears Old StUl Prolific From tbs Sacramento Be. - Traft Crump brought-to the Bee office today' several specimens 'of the fruit from what be considers ono of th most remarkable orange trees In California. The tre is 65 year old, but shows no sign of Intention of going out of busi ness. . i In 1(4$ Thomas Hanna, an early-day auctioneer- returned to these shores from a visit - to the Sandwich Islands with ths tre tn a small oyster can. Us presented it to Mr. Crump In 1851, after having provided a box for the tre and nurd it growth until It was thre feet high. The highest yearly yield from the eld tree ha been 1.600 golden globes. "not counting those th boy got away ' master of kings. Monarch had pros with before w had 1 chanc to nick I trated themselves before thl puny Jig them," aa Traft Crump aayr ' lur In the dark green coat, and tdnlght I ' ,' ' v . --- .--.- - 'i . .. ' ,. . -: . v City of Mexico Sw; the Gamblers K K K City of Mexico Telegram to Jhe New York World. - THIS authorities of the federal dls trtct, who do nothing by halves, ..have swept . th gambling houses so long protected by law and custom Out of existence here. and th gamblers, who had all along boasted thst "nothing would come of all the talk.': have' sat down In despair or betaken themselves to Interior cities, hoping to continue . "business" , on a smaller scale. This reform has come gradually, th first stsp having been to drive the gam blers out of their houses in the center of th city., wher they were a demoralt Ixlng inflaenc and th cause of th ruin of many young men intrusted with funds of employers. When the gaming houses were in the central streets and open day and night it waa easy for a young man who had collected a large amount from th firm's customers to drop In to try his luck. Th result) was sometimes ruin and suicide, or, aa often happened, relative bad to - mak-good the money lost to th gamblers. The gambling concerns long gav th district government a dally revenue of more than Il.ooo, and iwer practically under the control of on man. who ac cumulated a fortune and owned city property, haciendas, etc. Being a chart table man, b did much for needy per sona . i ... . The breaking up ef th gambling houses mad a holeln the revenues, but tho authorities had come to recognlss the demoralisation caused by this vice. The first step waa to send the gam bler to streets remote from th center, end, although they fitted up their es tablishments aa "olubs," men who de sired to gamble, had to take more trouble to find them. ' One "club" was much frequented by tourists from the United States a class that ha always shown a keen desire to gss on th tiger In hi den. It was most proper, and decorous tourists who used to haunt the little Monte Carlo tn Tacubaya, a suburb of the city, left no little money with the well-bred gam blers. One of Th most Intelligent of" tha gamblers explained that, after all. no on lost In his place In a month what would b easily dropped in Wall street In a day. . "W are all called .gamblers." he aald. "but we do far less harm thsn do your greet American market riggers and high-class speculators." ! Th little Mont Carlo of Tacubaya was a "qulnta," or country house, sur rounded by a pretty garden, always with grass and flowers and trees in lesf ths year through. . Ths standard card games were going on always, and, of course, roulette, which hss so great a fascina tion for tha women. The tourists would flock out from ths city to try their lock end sometimes would make lit to 1100. Th story of their winnings would spread through the hotels and tha next evening there would be a rush to Tacu baya. whsn "tourist luck" would sud denly change. . , . The Mexican professional- gambler la almost Invariably a charming and Inter esting person. Some gamblers are re spectable persons, - and one old chap with white chin whiskers might hav been taken for a New England deacon of strict views.' Others had a dashing. romantic air. fetching with h fair sex. Well might they all smile and preserve their sang froid; their business wss "sure thing." The greedy public. Intent on winning, merited - th plucking of tneir line leathers. ; No persons ar more charitable, mora heedful of a "hard luck" tory than th professional gamblers. Often In the big gambling-houses, now closed, a young man wno nad lost bis last dollar was taken aside and given money to break the force of tils ruin. "I don't run my place to rob children," the biggest gam bler in Mexico used to say. The employes of the gamblers wars well paid and rarely- did they woo tha gnddessv-vpf chance on their own account Tha most Important gambler tn the country left the cards alone. This man would not permit one of his employes to gamble: It meant instant dismissal. People Jiave often asked' if a gambler in Mexico was not in good social stand Ing. Visiting Americans hav always seemed to think that by no possibility could " gambling-house proprietor In this country be looked Upon as unfit for general society. Yet the fact has long been evident that "good society" frowned upon gamblers and their fami lies. - Th women folk of aambler mlrht prfrtflaT t'osiiy jewtn gim wasr tasteful gowns, but always the whisper would go around: Tou don't know them, of course. They ar th So-and-So. ramblers, and quit impossible." Thus th gambling professionals and their women ar kept on th fringe of society. There has long been among th better classes a marked aversion to "taking up" ths ladles Of a professional gambler's family. una or th tasks of th polio, acting Under their strict orders, baa been to Max Pemberton's Napoleon at ,t M AX PEMBERTON In hla latest novel. "Th Hundred Days," has as the chief motlv Na poleon's last throw for em pire from th landing at FreJue to th overthrow V Waterloo. - Mr, Pemberton give ns a fine scene where the emperor alone rides forward on the march to Parla to overcome the resistance of a regiment drawn up across his path at Grenoble: "Step by step, pregnant or: rat, a figure that th whole world might have watched with bated breath, the man of destiny drew near his - children. To him clearer, louder than to th others, cam th vole of tb colonel com manding hi men to make ready. He did not flinch, did not hesitate. A bogle rang out Again th vole cried "Fire!" The emperor did hot draw back the silence waa tha ellence of death. And then "hla words, h magi r of that tongue which none had ever resisted. casting up frlsnd and enemy allk a spell whose thrill was to be felt during ths centuries: ( "Soldiers, you hav been told that I fear death. If ther be on among you who" would kill his emperor.- let him In stantly plunge hi bayonet into this bosom. . Here I am.' .' "Ah! miracle of a nam of on man'a genluat The answer came as upon the tongue of tempest, a wild cry that seemed to echo -every sentiment of which the human heart la capable love, triumph, sorrow, joy; a cry which know neither, frtend nor foe, but th children of Franc leaping to a father' knee, th children at the gate of home, called there from th wilderness to tho sanctu ary they never mor would quit." Her I hi plctur of an interview with Napoleon: Here, so eloa to blm that an out stretched hsnd could have touched the epaulette . upon th shoulder, was th conqueror' of the western world, the hunt out the poker dens, a by Americans In aliie s . Wher visiting American wou. -on one pretext or anotner and 1 unmercifully. Stories have benn I men who had lost their mnT 1 taken out to the auhurhe and r . J to com back to the city or the would arrest them and peck t to prison. The victims Cf C ; gamblera would b thrown tntu a t i ef panlo and stsrt for anywhere. man was -put on the king's hl"'' Aoapuloo and told to walk to th Feci. eoaat. Th stranger to th country ann Its ways la easily frightened and usually keeps a still tongue In his bead for fear of som dreadful hardening. Many an American1 vit to tn ci-v haa been a polled by such Incidents. Hav ing no notion that th police would pro tect the victim of sharpers, th ruined man wss In fear of being apprehended. What th gamblera reared waa that a knowledge of their doings won Id come t th ear of th authorities. Som mys terious suicides ar attributable t tha fright Induced among vtctlrae by th . poker sharps. Ths authorities or tn reaerai aisinev hav this year stopped the minor sort of. gambling games at ths suburban "ferlas or fairs. Th reason waa tb plucking of th poorer sort ef people bv -game palpably unfair. And it lsrr" curloua faot that when "el jnego." or gambling, la cut out of a country fair's 1 Lll III. . uiHHI,m ,H (W. , little Interest for th masse. '. The example given by th federal 41s- trtct government is likely to spread t Interior States, and thus gambling In a publlo and notorious manner will re ceive its deathblow. For a long, tlm ; th high play in th dub baa been under the ban of tb law, and th pour t hav enured their precinct at night tt ' see that th regulation were observed. f Baccarat waa stopped In on great club. It being charged with th ruin ef young ; men In good society. Dice throwing ; and mechanical apparatua for gambling war forbidden In barrooms and govern ment employes were menaced with dis missal If caught gambling. Not a few !. men lost their position in the gorera- ; ment departments for thl cans.. - i Thar has been .talk recently ef set-' ' tmg up a great Mont Carlo In some on of th Interior states, remote from the , federal capital, but It t unlikely .that -the government would tolerate it. - The ' avowed" policy of the high authorltle is ' to stop gambling. Of course it la lm- . possible to prevent high play In private families, but if it i known that gam- bllng I a regular thing In any houe ' there are ways of . police interference i. being made.' . In th AM Anvm Mmhllns waa without hindrance and in th mlddl of th last i century th highest society of this city would annually move out to San Au- gustm. now Tialpam, pretty suburb ; to th southwest of this city, for thre i days of th most reckless play. The . country houses would b thronged with . guests, sometimes to in on house, th . gentleman provided with large amounts . Of money for thos wer th days -when caballero played for ' golden ounces and the " green . tables were; stacked with tha yollow metal. . - ; j During th annual gambling fiesta at i San "Au giiitlh. a sort of " glortfted" TjN?i nlo occasion, large amounta were lost or " won. It waa "th thing" to play high. , and etiquette demanded th utmost im perturbability among th players. Mn nnteA fnr thai wealth wtuM lav 1 Attn . ounce on a card and los them without a chang of countenance. - It was not uncommon for men to lose f 100,000 in -a day or night Nobody bemoaned his losses or exulted over his Winnings. , -All thl went m-In the midst of th5 nobleat scenery In ths world, th greet white-topped volcanoes looking dowrv on th charming garden and great sitn-i slons of th opulent, wher th high ' play wss going on. Out on the grsas ' ladles, charmingly attired, danced with their cavalier . and . muslo filled the air. ...... , ' . ' .: Th elite of society were there, and so, ) also, that strange claas of people who down to th present tlm haunt alt j country fairs In Mexico a Wandering, j gypsy-ltks folk who seem nomadic and . to hav no settled homes. Th pooreet Indian could find gambling . booths 1 suited to his means and could gamble . away his coppers. Th swells and the pelade mingled In that democratic . fashion which Is one of the -strange y featuraa of Mexican Ufa on gala ooc- i slons. All was animation and order.1! reigned. It was a tropical carnival, in Ita way. a time when rich aad poor felt themseivss stirred by a common pas- , sion. . . r In a minor way all this hss been common down to within two years. At ' county fairs hav been seen in the Jewels and best gown seated near men of ordinary clans and Indians clad In cotton cloth. ' with tbelr blankets over , their shoulder, reaching out between i the gentry to wager their eentavoe. .' Gambling obliterated social rank. . ' By and by there will be her a mod ern stock exchange, and parhap tbr will be brokera who will hsve speculat ing parlors set sslde for women, and ' peoplo will b ruined In ' th modern way. ) , . he, who had been named a forever! Outcast, th ngur of a lost causa, the t whipped monster, th decrowned par-1 venu, here from th palac h dictated that appeal to hla oidirs which one , mor should open th floodgates of hi 7 ambition and pour a stream ef death and biood npon th placid field of v Europe." ;'. , .. And last scene of all: ' .. . - "Thl waa not tb Napoleon of j Jena and Austsrltta, nor ven the Napoleon ot Lelpatc. How stout he had grown; how the fat wrinkles upon his flabby beaks; how thin th vole ' had becoma! And yat It could not. p' denied that th perception waa a keen f as vr, and th ambition aa nqunrh- abl. Th vary desperation, th patbetit arnatnsa of th spoken wrda de-' nled a mental deterioration .or any abatement of thos gigantic power ol will and foresight y which h had i om to Immortality." ; A Xafe-Saviag Ca. From th Solentlflq American. A London tailor has Invented a new life-saving coat and gaiters, with which Is It ponslbls for " a-petson---clothed therein to maintain an upright position when Immersed In the water, even If not possessing any knowledge of swim ming. The coat resembles In appearance an ordinary pilot cost, but it is fitted with an air belt which is Inflated with through a tube. The galtera eaeh t'ii tw pound and r fitted alth l brass wings or blade fastened to' the back of the heel. As the weerer ' e his feet In the water these wlnts eren snd shut snd not only p-opel the wrr along like oars, but enable him to malt tain an upright position froia the .t upward in tne water. A practical demonstration ef the Utility of the Invention waa t':.' undertaken in the Kivr TMmn by Inventor snd Its erf Id-f and 1; tv1ng qualities clears -" ' .Wn, w.aa moving sgalnat i,a tola. 1