CAN YOU FOLLOW THIS YAftN? 8EIS It WILL RAIN jOMLQ)KD5K .iii MB "FIVE GEESE IN A FLOCK" Particularly Amusing Game to Play When Your Little Friends Come to Pay Short Visit; P When your friends como to seo you, play "Five Geese In a Flock." The children sit on the Brass, or on a bank or bench, sldo by side. Ono ntands ns Market Woman opposite tho row of players. She walk's along tho row and touches each child, beginning whore Children Making Merry. she pleiiblc, hiiu bii.s word of the following rhyme to each as sho touches her: v 'TleaBe good former cut the corn, Keep tho wheat and burn the thorn. 'Shutr your gate and turn tho lock, Keep the 'flvo geeso in a flock." As soon ns she says tho word "flock." tho ono first touched Jumps up and runs away. Tho market wom an pursues her. Dut while she is catching her, the other geeso have fled, and sho has to catch each play er and reseat her In her place before tho game can begin again. Tho ono first caught becomes in her turn the market woman. "Den" is a good out-of-doors game. Each boy takes tho nnmo of a wild beast and has a tree to himself, which represents his den.. Any player who leaves his den Is llablo to bo tagged by tho next one out The best runner generally starts out first, a second pursues him, and so on until nil may bo out at once. If a player can tag any ono he has a right to capture, he takes him home to his own den, nnd the latter must help him, to take the rest. Tho pursuer cannot be tagged whilo bringing homo a pris oner. The children sit In a row with hands folded to play "Button, Button, Who's Got the Button?" Ono takes a button and, holding it between both hands, pretends to give it to each ono of tho players, who open their hands as if to receive it. As she does this tbe leader says to each one, "Keop all I give you." Wben she has finisher she puts tho question to each ono in turn, "But ton, button, who's got tho button?" The answer is "Next door neighbor' When sho returns to tho head of the line and asks "Who'B got the but ton?" tho player mentions the name of the one she thinks has it The successful guesser takes the leader's place. Acting Animals. This is a game called acting ani mals. One child pretends to bo somo kind of nnimal and acts Just as that animal would act Then tho other children guess what he is trying to be. T'flo child who guesses correctly may bo tho next ono to represent an animal. It 1b really very funny, espe cially if you try to imitate something like a stork standing on one leg or a rhinoceros or a turtlo or oven n mosqrilto, for insects are Included as well as animals. Sometimes It Is well to allow tho guessers threo questions that may be answereM by "yes" or "no." THEE B-MRDBElia TFR.BB. to conns oa fffts (B"&0G3HGa 'vma. Off lh PEUflOff ffiQDff WOtf P0,WBK, aGttB.AfiB SWaSff AGS fiMB ARB 80GOG1. I ijl 1 1 Ft IT ay Tom and Vera Have Secret Detween Them and Each In Burst of Con fldence Tells Friend. Tom and Vera bad a secret between them. In n burst of confidence Tom told It to a mutual friend. Will; but regretting bin action, obtained a prom ise from Will that he would never let Vera know that the secret bad been told. Will, however, told Vera that Tom had let him Into the secret but made hor promise not to tell Tom that he (Will) had Informed her of having obtained tho Information from Tom. A little later Tom decided to let Vern know that hp hitd told the secret to win, out lnstructea ncr not to ion Will that ho (Tom) had admitted to giving away tho secret to Will. Vera went to Will and told hlm that Tom had confessed to having lot him Into tho secret, but she mado Will promlso not to let Tom Know that sbo had given him this information. Sho also went to Tom and told Jilm, In strict confidence, that Will had told her about having learned tho secret from him, Will next went to Tom and Inform ed him. of Vera having stated that ho (Tom) had admitted to giving away tho secret Tom retorted by saying that Vera had told him that ho (Will) had advised her of being lot Into tho secret. They both promised not to toll Vera of having given awny tho confidences which sho had late ly given. Dut this is the question: Wero any moro confidences necossary? Or had all of the three friends heard enough to bo convinced that the others know everything that could bo told? Sue'n disposition was so sweet Sho couldn't bear to cross tlie strcet And I havo even heard her beg Iter mother not to beat an egg I GREAT STADIUM AT TAC0MA Structure Is Shaped Like a Horse hoe and Will Comfortably Seat Twenty-Five Thousand f Tacoraa's high school, which plays an Important part in Pacific-Coast ath letics, Is tho only high school in Amer ica having an Olympic stadium, If not the only ono In the wholo world. It la a ponderous mass of steel and con cretc, Just completed at a cost of moro thun $100,000 In a gulch at ono sldo of tho high school building. Tho gulch happened to bo Just tho right shnpo for tho stadium, so but Uttlo excava tion was required. Tho structuro Is shaped llko a horscshoo, with the open end overlooking Commencement bay. It will sent twonty-flvo thousand peo' pie, has a center sufficiently largo for baseball, football, track and field events, and will also bo used for out door musical concerts and entertain ments. A movement is already on foot to securo tho next Olympic games In America, the peoplo of Washington believing that in the Tacoma stadium they havo ono of the best arenas In the United States for such an ovent Baby on Its Hind Legs. Little Besslo was so accustomed to seeing tho baby crawl around tho room that sho thought it was his natural mode of traveling. Ono day when he succeeded in standing up with the aid of a chair sho was much astonished and, running to her moth or, exclaimed: "Oh, mamma, como quick! Baby is standing up on his hind legs' mm Vm ffiB C308OG3. SS SGDOJS 0? SftflO(L8S TO acta oa&a Aiaa awow. Kansas Farmer Stakes $30,000 on the Weather. Has Tried It Five Timet and He's Out 175,0O0 If He Ever Wins He'll Be Rich. Colby. Kan. "Jim" Flko Is trying to got rich betting against toe weather, Last August ho staked $30,000 on the ehanco that it would rain within three months. If it had rained, as he bot it would, ho would havo mado a quarter of a million nnd got his $30,- 000 back, too. But It didn't rain. Tho weather Is a frcakifh thing out on this high plateau, and Fiko will be mighty thankful If tho $30,000 Is returned to him bo ho can havo It to tako another flyer against tho weather this year. Fiko calls his method of fortune hunt ing "Gambling against tho weather." Ho has been at it now for flvo years and has never won. "But," ho says, 'Til mnko tho big killing ono of theso years, Just ns euro's shootln', nnd whon I do I'll put on patent leather shoes and go to tho seashore." Fiko has staked $176,000 In flvo years on tho chnnco that there would bo onough rain and seasonnblo weather to gtvo him a bumper crop of whent. Each year of tho five something went wfong, either it dldn t rain enough to start tho wheat right, or It didn't frcezo enough to glvo It a good Btand, or tho high winds blow most of it out of tho ground, or the drought hindered it from maturing; but thero was enough of a crop in the worst of the flvo years to return him nearly all ho bad ventured, and In several of tho years ho mado n profit of a moro $20,- 000 or so. Tho thing ho 1b after Is a crop that will average twenty-flvo or thlrty-flvo bushelB of wheat to tho acre. If over ho gets that he may go to tho seashore Buro enough, or to any old plnco. And it 1b a suro thing that ho will get It If ho stays with tho gamo, for In 1003 "Jim" Flke In the Field. thousands of acres of wheat in thli county yielded 42 bushels to the acre and many Holds cut 35 bushels nnd .hotter. You can figure it for yourself. Ht has 17,000 acres in wheat this year and It was planted wua less cost thnn any other wheat in tho state. Hit traction plows tore up tho earth, har rowed It and seeded It, all In ono op eration, at tbe rato of. ono hundred acres a day. It cost him $30,000 when tho 17,000 acres wero in. If h should happen to get an average of 26 bushols to tho acre ho won't, because tho weather won tho bet this year bul it ho had won and tho nverago yield was 25 bushels to tho aero, thai would bo 425,000 bushols. Now, tako your pencil again: 425, 000 bushels of wheat at, we'll say, $) a bushel; that's $425,000; enough profit thero for somo carloads of pat cnt leather shoos and trips to the sea shore and around tho world. Flko sat scrooched down in his of flco chair in this town tbo othor day, an old slouch hat pulled down ovci his eyes, his muddy boots up on his desk, and be looked through tho win dow at the drltzllng rain. "Pity that rain didn't como last fall Jim." said ono ofnis nolghbors. "Y-a-a-s," Fiko drawled. "But il didn't It's a gamble," be said "We've struck flvo poor years. In a bad year wo got bIx or seven bushel! to the aero and barely pull out. In n good year it's easy to cut 25 to 3E bushols here. In that kind of a year with the rains coming right, raising wheat In this country Is llfco shooting fish In a barrel. That's the kind ol a year I've been flgurln' on getting If I once get It I'll tell old Rockefel ler to go chase hlmeolf. But It's been a scrap, l'vo been increasln' my acre age faster than I've boon gettln whent A fulr year with, Bay, fifteen thousand acres In, would mnko me better than $200,000 clear profit, and a. ringer, mat's wnat I am waltln' for r ringer, I'll clean up a good quarter of a million in one crop, and If several good crops follow ono after another, bh they have dono In times past, and as they auroiy will again, you can put my name with tho other millionaires' In tho Who's Who In America book, that book with tho red covers' nnd gold lotters on tho back. 'James N. Flke, millionaire wheat king of Kan sas bow'll that look, hey?" VICTIM OF AIRSHIP WRECK Ho Is n lawyer and wna for mony years Bordeaux. Ho was minister of Justlco from 1890 to 1002, has been vlcc-preaU dent of the sonnto, where ho Bits ns sqnator of tho Glromle, nnd wns n former deputy. He has been decorated with tho Grand Cross of tho Order of tho Whlto Eagle of Russia. Tho doplorablo accident, which caused tho 47th donth from that Bourco within threo years, will not interfero where nlready hundreds of aeroplanes French army. Bather, It will causo stringent regulations In tho management of crowds at aviation meets. GATES TELLS TRUST SECRETS. John V. Gates furnished tho open ing Bonsntlon In tho Investigation when ho revealed tho history of tho United States Steel corporation. Pros- cnt at tho birth of tho greatest stool manufacturing concern In tho world. ho described how It wns tho natural outcome of what ho described ob tho refusal of, Andrew Carneglo to bo bound by tho "gentlomen's agree ments" that marked tho enrly day of open competition In tho stool busi ness. Ho told of millions lost nnd crentod almost tn n breath; how tho Carnegie mills, npprnlBcd at $1GO,000,000, wero recognized as worth $320,000,000; tho grim clash in tho formatlvo days, whon John D. Rockefeller was dis suaded from Joining in tho creation of tho corporation, and the manner in which others wero proventcd from engaging in tho steel trado. Rotating how Carneglo had been forced to abandon plans for extending mlttod tho gigantic industrial combination was formed to throttle competition, nnd ho surprised tho commlttoo with D. Rockefeller had sought to enter through by which tbe Standard Oil magnato was forced to soli out for 40 cents on the dollar. Because of the marked discrepancies In tho accounts of tho absorption of tho Tennossco Coal and Iron company In tho panicky days of 1907, aB glvon tho Stanley "Stool Trust" commltteo on that deal should bo obtained, and d6 with it should bo examined. HEAD OF A BIG EXPOSITION the burden of responsibility for currying out every detnil of exposition man ngoment. Tho appointment of all exposition ofllclals and dopartment heads will devolve upon him nnd to hlm every dopartment chief will bo responsible MEXICO'S NEW Benor Do la Barra's successor In Washington is Senor Zamaconn, whoso father was minister to tho United States from 1878 to 1882. During tho fathor's tenuro of office tho son lived with him In Washington, so that our government nnd tho ways of things nt our capital are familiar to tho new minister. Zamaconn Is about forty live years of age and for tbo past two years has been Mexico's financial rep resentative In London. Pre.vlous to this ho served at director of tho In ternational roenue of Mexico and also represented tho Mexican govern ment's Interests in tho Mexican Cen tral railroad. Uo Is a man of brains; If ho has discretion In equal quantity he will provo an acccptnblo successor to Do la-Barra. Senor do la Barra provod himself a gifted ard altogether welcome repre sentative of Mexico In Washington, doing mu;h to strengthen tho bonds of friendship between the two coun tries. Ho Is nn advanced thinker, thoroughly In sympathy with tho advance ment of civilization nnd tho growth of popular government. His worth was rocognlzed when President Diaz, forcod by tho gathering strength of tho rebellion, called him from Washington to bocomo ono of his now and modern cablnot, and especially so when both tho FedorallBts and In surroctoB, the latter led by General Madero, chose him to serve as tomporary president to succeed Diaz until an election can bo held some half a year hence. That was n terrlblo accident which happened in Franco, when n runaway aeroplane plunged Into a crowd of spectators gnthorcd to witness tho start of tho Paris to Madrid raco for heavier than air machlnos, killing Minister of War Bortoaux, severely Injuring Premier Monls, and qulto badly wounding sovcrnl othorB. Premier Monls, whoso portrait la shown hero, was burlod bonenth tho wrcckago of tho monoplane Ho was taken out as quickly as possible, and examined by military surgeons, who found that ho had Buffered compound fractures of two bones In the right leg, that his noao was broken, hie faco badly contused, and that there wero bruises on tho breast nnd abdomen. Antolno Ernest Emmnnuol Monls, proralor and minister of tho Interior of Frnnco, who camo Into power on tho fall of tho Brland roglmo on March 1 this year, was born at Chatoaunoufsur-Chnrcnto (Chnronto J . an ndvocato In tho court of appeal at with tho progress of aviation In Franco; nro In uso or ordored for tho uso of tho his steel business, Qntes frankly ad' tho further Information that when John tho steel business a deal had boon put by tho United States Stoel corporation by John W. Gates and Elbort H. Gary, of tho houso decided that further light thut ovory person who bad anything to ChnrlcB C Mooro of San Francisco has boon unanimously, chosen by tho board of directors of tho Panama-Pacific international exposition company as tho active as well as tho formal hoad of tho 1915 exposition. Tho qucs tlon of oxecutivo leadership has boon settled finally. Thero will bo no dl rector gcnoral of tho Panama-Pacific exposition. Mooro, ns president, will combine tho functions which havo boon divided In all previous world's expositions between n president and1 a dlroctor general. Tho board of directors of tho expo sition has adopted a complete plan of organization, dlffortng In Us essential features from that of any exposition that ovor has been bold. Tho 1915 fair 1b to bo conducted as a business propo sition, orgunlzed upon tho lines of great business corporation, Mooro, as oxecutivo head of the exposition, will bo tho ono man upon whom will rest AMBASSADOR Mis Hone, she up en shuk huh hftld En Mow she ttahed o' wcnliln Deta iimn olS blooms ontlll she's dsld, En' Mlstah Phlox come tenhliv Krroun' de plot en sny hit nay I "1's thoo wld dls or blossom 1" Ho nnyi "lilts out o' style tordny J-ct's (nice dem oft en toss 'em." i Den Mlstnh Phlox en young: MIm Hose - Dov rouse un nil dn tuddens En shout: "Come on I Let's Kit new clo'es, Po' slstchs cn do bruddehsl" Miss Lily sho nx fo' now styles, En Mo'nln' Glory, wlnnin'. Bayt "Pet I'se dono a million miles . Dcss cllmbln' up n twlnln'." Don of Mis' Applo Tree say. "Hush! You' tnouehty foolish chlllun. Don't ro nt dls tn ecli a rush Yo's nil o' yo' too wlllln'," nut, huh! Dey dont henh huh nt all, HflO mnlr ilitv Iaavaii nil frnrkleil. Miss Daisy clomli up on de wall ltn sit unn, red en spocxieai , Out enmn da Indies den, oompooh! I toll yo' dey Is fussln'. Dey scol' dem Howehs thoo en thoo Almos' Ink menfolk cussln. Dey sAy Miss Rosa Is plum gone daf En Mlstah l'hlox is silly, En nil o dem deis luff en lnft When dey look at Miss Lily. De 'elusion yo' mus' draw turn dls Is dat do bes' to do Is To do yo' bes' eh neveh miss Do chnnco to bo whut true Is. In co'so da llnwclm mado folks smite When dey nil chnnxed doy trlmmln Dey didn't know dnt changln' style Wu on'y meant folk wlmment S Tbe New Disease. "What arb hla symptoms?" asked tho doctor to whom tho mother of tho young person has come for ad vice "Ho scorns to have an insano desire io buy post cards. Why, It's worse than tho clgnretto habit with him. He buys two or threo dozon of thom overy day and sends them off by mall. Ho droamB about post cards, ho talks about post cards, and unless he Is glvon tbe opportunity to buy and mall as many of them as ho likes he al most gooa Into collapso. I am afraid IiIb heart Is affected, ho gotB so nerv ous and excited whon ho Is crossed In his wishes in that respect." "Yes," says iho physician, thought fully rubbing hla eyeglasses. "The symptoms you montlon Indicate card iac disturbances. Wo might call thorn poBtcardlac." Without a umllo he writes a pro scription for something that will taste llko tho gum on tho" back of a stamp. Knew the Sex. "Sir," said tho, eminent woman's rights agltntrcss to the colobrate geog rapher. "I havo called to protest against your unfair discrimination." "In what way, madam?" asks the geographor, looking up from tho map ou which be Is marking the new bound aries of Manchuria. "You do not glvo propor recognition to my sex In tho names you give to countries and places. For Instance, you have the Isle of Man, and there Is no Isle of Woman." "Your complaint Is perfectly Just, madam,' courteously says tbe geog raphor, "and tho difficulty you apeak ol shall bo remedied In tho noxt geog raphies. Wo shall have an "I'll ol Mun" and an "I'll Not of Woman." Uusually the Case.' "It In awful," moralized tho profe nor, "to seo how somo coquettish worn en will lead a man on." "Lead him on I" exclaimed the dam sel. "I've noticed that after a man has followed a woman until she oludei him ho sets up tho plea that be wai led." Innocent. "Splggles," says the host, "You nr a Judge of tobacco, aren't you, I'd llko you to try ono of my Imported Ha vann cigars." Tho host Is lifting tho lid of his cl gar Jar when Splggles enters a utaj of proceedings. "l'vo tried 'em. They're not guilty.' Her Curiosity. "They say Flossie announced hot engagoment to Mr. Gatsap beforo b had proposod to her," 'Y'es. Sho said sho wasn't going to accept him until sho know how hoi friends would regard hor engagoment' Preference. We dislike people who are cold The trnlt Is only human. We'd rnther have our shoes half soled ny some good, whole souled ulioeman.