HE DAILY EXAML T «ce Leapine DatlLy NEWSPAPER or P. E. Istanp, issued every afternoon, from the office of | th EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY, In the} woudon House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCR) Qne YEAR Six Monrus at SAVE money. You can dothis by trading with us. We have a complete stock of Boots and Shoes that cannot be surpassed in KUALiTY or PRice. It wil] be to YOUR advantage to see our stock before buying elsewhere. A large assortment to choose from at prices that will please you. It Turek MonTHs - > [will mean x Mc i eves os Percces Bent post pat to any part of Canada or the TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Euripides. Single Oopies Two Oents MONEY The Weekly Examiner —— ek ie Sais tious os. Latior Elem Goeen a i+ issued every Friday morning from the received and selling low. : radi is p 1ade »o & 7. _ “4 + : g paises in hin adn oy of mater WONT, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1895. NO 87 eae ine first-class weekly newspaper—interesting ° 136 Queen Street. nd fall ofthe latest news Two Doors Below Prowse Bras, . —— . _ — ———— -— —————— —— CALENDAR FOR OCTOBER, 1895 Full Moon, i day, 6h S49%m p. m. Last Quar lith day, 10h 21 im. a. m, New Moon, 18 lay 75m. a m. First Quar, 25th day, 6h. 51.5m. am. al Sun Sun High Day of W ee kK : x . rises | sets water 7 Pa ie ih m{b m! morn 1} Tuesday 6 4:5 35 9 39 2} Wednesday ‘= | 10 12 3] Thursday ee 10 40 4 Friday 8 ae St fl 5 | Saturday | 9 27} 11 44) 5 | Sunday ] 25 | aft 18] 7 | Monday 1s 23) 0 57 s | Tuesday 13 att UC CO 9 Wednesday 15 | 19 | 2 25 ® | Thursday ‘cr 28) 848 = | Friday : 7 le SS 12 | Saturday 19 | 14 6 36 13 | Sanday | 20 | 12 | 2 47 4 | Monday 21 | lUot 8 40 > | Tuesday 23! Hi 69 8s 16 | We tnesday 21 | 715 16 2 17} Thursday 26 5 10 47 8. Friday 27 | as 38 3 if | Saturday 28 1] morn 20 | Sunday 30 0 0 9 21 | Monday 3l | 4 i | 0 53 22 | Tuesday 33 ,- 86 1 49 23 | Wednesday 34) 54) 32 32 24 | Thursday S6i G2i 38 29 25 | Friday Bri: G14 € SY 26 | Saturday 38 50 5 48 27 | Ss inday 40 48 | 6 52 28 ; Mon lay 41 | 46 | 7 43 29 ! Tuesday 43] 454, 8 24 30; We inesday 4} 3 on 31 | Thursday 646 4 <2 | 9 38 DR. H. 0. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THRGA! Office -- ‘ont Stroet Aug 16, 94—1y ~The Prince Edward Island COMMERCIAL COLLEGE THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Commercial College and Shorthand In-ti tute is now open. Young men and women desirous of acquiring a Business Education should embrace this opportunity. Subjects taught include Book-keeping, Commercial Arithmetie, Ccommercia! Law, Business and Legal Forms, Business Correspondence, Penmanship, Shorthand and Typewriting. Students admitted at anv time. We guarantee attention to bu-iness, S.F. HODGSON, W. HH. CROSSKILL Principal. Teacher of Phonography NELLIE M. HODGSON, Asst. Teacher. sox 242, Charlottetown. sept3e MONTAGUE Carriage Factory. We are showing this season a finer line of Carriages than shown by us heretofore. The assortment consists of Top and Open Buggies, Jump Seats and Road Carts. For style, comfort, durability and excel ence of workmanship our stock cannst be surpassed. Also at hand, at lowest prices, CARTS, TRUCK WAGONS, and all Carriage Findings, such as Pocket Boots, Whip Socket+, Washers, etc., usually found in a first-class Carriage Shop. Prompt attention to Repairs. a speciaity. Terms reasonable. JOHN McLEAN & SON. julyl3—dy & wky JUST SO. For fineness of finish, artis- tic posing and moderate prices our Photos are unsurpassed anywhere. Children’s Pic- tures a specialty. All kinds of Copying and Enlarging done from old pictures. C. LEWIS, Fatrance on Grafton Street, Opposite P.O septls Painting For Sale or To Rent The well-known Basness Stand, the “ Central Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway House,” situated on Richmond Street. 4 is Hotel contains 21 rooms, with large %u0p and good stabling for 25 horses. Is centrally s:tuated, and within two minutes walk of Market House and Post Office Apply to THUMAS CAMPBELL, Richmond Street. ap23—dy 246 & wky W. & W. Popular Shoe Stor. W. & W. Z JUST WHAT YOU WANT. The latest productions in Quality, Style and Comfortable FOOTWEAR. Our New Stock is up to date and well selected in the best market for spot cash. Your purse will open quickly when you gaze upon the bargains we offer in our new lines of Fall and Winter Stock of Boots, Shos, Rubbers and Overshoes, now selling at the lowest bottom prices for cash. Come and see the goods; we will make the prices right. Remember the place. WEEKS & WARREN, Next to Lewis’ Photo Rooms, Market Square. O WT - AR < Cc bs S. |.ttetown, September 13 35. & w ky FiRE. Haszard’s Sea Shooting Powder, F, F, Acadia . Smokeless 1-22 Papers ’ Shells, Nos. 8, 10, 12, Wire Cartridges, Loaded Cartridges,10 and 12, Shot, all Sizes, Wads and Caps, 1 Double Barrel No. 8 Gun (Muzzle), Guns, Muzzle and Breech Loaders, 10 & 12 SIMON WW. CRABBE, Ch’town, Aug. 23, 1895—135 & wy Stoves and Hordware, Walker's Corner WATERPROOF YET POROUS. Acmits the air and keeps out the water. . . « « This may seem an impossibility but it can be explained. The RIGBY process renders the fabric a non absorbent and a repellent to water. It makes the material so that it will shed water like a duck’s back, otherwise it is not changed in appearance or feeling. It permits the free respira- tion of the skin, and at the same time keeps you dry. suitable for Tweeds, Mel- Male in all woolen materials, La lies’ and Gentlemen's Garments, tons, Serges, Mixtures, etc. octa—31 (636) Furniture ! sf Furniture ! 7 Furniture | E All the latest things in Cobbler Seat Reekers, Rettan Rockers, Plush Seat Rockers, Desks, Cabinets, Bedroom and Parlor Suits, aadia full line of General Furniture. The priees low to clear out, to make room for new goods. Call now. P. S.—See our Ladies’ Secretaries; very cheap. JOHN NEWSON. ee PHOTOGRAPHY Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate Newson Block, Victoria Row. Charlottetown, October 9, 1895. : prices combine to make these | Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown ‘o-day. GEO.H. COOK Corner Queen & Grafton Sts, —i¥ YOou- —_ Want a wife, NY PEOPLE imagine they cannot get a stylish, up- ’ to-date, made-to-order Suit of Clothes \ under $20.00 or $25.00. T’aese people Want a7cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want a servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to rent «@ house, Want to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grein Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN have never seen the Suits we make for $12.00, $14.00, $16.00 and $18.00. Fit, workinanship and material guaran- ‘yu, teed, thoroughly made and trimmed. Also, Rubber Coats, Fur Coats, lur sipes, made-up Ulsters. All our stock up to date, and every- ing in the store genuine ve lue. JOHN MACLEOD & CO., Charlottetown, October 9, 1895 F , me Tired but Sleepless Is a condition which gradually wears away the strength. Let the blood be purified and enriched by Ilood’s Sar- sapariila and this condition will cease. “ For two or three years I was subject to poor spells. I always felt tired, could not sleep at night and the little I eould eat did not do me any good. I read about Hood’s Sarsaparilia and decided to try it. Before I had finished two bottles I began to feel better and in a short time I felt all right and had gained 21 pounds in weight. Iam stronger and healthier than Ihave ever been in my life.” JoHn W. CovuGHLIN, Wallaceburg, Ontario. Hood’s Sarsaparilla y' Is the Only | True Blood Purifier Prominently in the publiceye today. Be sure to get Hood’s and only Hood’s. Do not be induced to buy and other. € Hood’s' Pills sir, /2uss Wash Wash Easy Quick WITH Sunlight SOAP TWIN C. BAR Books For Wrappers Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. t MORTGAGE SALE To be sold by Public Auction, at the Law Courts Building in Charlottetown, on TUESDAY, the fifth day of November, A. D. 1895, at 12 o’clock, noon :— All that tract of land situate on Town- ship number fifty-two, in King’s County, P. E.I., bounded as follows :—Commen- For every 12 “Sunlight” wrappers sent to ¢ Lever Bros., Ltd., Toronto, a useful paper- bound book, 160 pages, will be sent ] cing on the north siae of the roaa leading from Head of Cardigan to Pisquid, extend- ing thereon or having a front of eleven chains, and extending back north by paral- lel lines for the dist: nee of one hundred chains, being bounded on the west by laud now or formerly in possesion of Kenneth Beaton and John Scrimgeour, and on the east by land now or formerly in possession of Norman McLean, and containing an area of one hundred and ten acres of land, a little more or less, and is the farm lately in possession of Malcolm McLean. The above sale is being made under and by virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain Indenture of Mortgage of said lands, dated the 16th day of March, A. D. 1889, aud made between Frederick W. Craswell, of Head of Cardigan, in King’s County, ant Margaret E. Craswell, his wife, of the one part, and the undersigned of the other part. For further particulars apply at the ottice of A. A. McLean, Solicitor, Char- lottetown. Dated at Milton, this 4th October, A. D. 1895. DAVID C. HOOTER, JAMES M. HOUPER, oct4— 4i 1 a w. (5) Mortgagees. -PRDANORUFF GENTLEMEN FINO _PALMO “TAR SOAP EXCELLENT IT CLEANSES THE SCALP, RELIEVES THE ORYNESS AND SO PREVENTS HAIR JP FALLING OUT, i Bic Cane - Put uP Huosowel’ © 258 | Painless Dentistry. CRAPAUD. Pr J E MeDona'd, Dentist, will bein Cra paud, at Dr Robertson’s, for TWO DAYS ently, Friday and Saturday, Isth and 19th inst, where he will demonstrate his now ‘amous method of Painless Extraction of feeth. No | bad after effects follow the use of this method and the doubter is requ sted to try it and | judge for himself. Observe the dates, Friday and faturday, Ocvober Isth and 19th inst, at Crapau |. My Pr nee County patients will please note my absence from Summerside on the above dates cies J E McDONALD, DDS. Summerside, Oct 7, 159), : Dommien Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointe role selling Agents in the Province 0 Prince Edward Island for the above Com y,are now prepared to issue orders for und, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hard to supply customers at lowest prices, PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Charlotte town, May 25, 1894—tf FOR SALE. The House and Land on the corner of Pownal and Sidney Streets. For further particulars apply to the owner, MRS. BOSWALL, Or EUSTACE HAVILAND, ESQ. sept 19—dy A MODERN LUMBER MILL Methods Have Changed Since the Days of the Oid-Time Sawmill. I wanted to see a fin de siecle lum- ber mill. When I was a boy in the Pine woods on tie Aliegheny hills they had saw mills on the creeks and river? that used to do business with the logs in a way that seemed to be amazing. They used to have buzz saws in those days about as big around as the full rroon, and the way that a little Gypsy engine of three or four horse power could make them revolve was a WOn- der. But they told me here that I was out of date, and that the Alie- eheny pine woods were not in it. So then I went down to a real lum- bill mill—a Minneapolis lumber mill— yesterday. The show is worth the price of admission. A Minneapolis lumber mill is a place where they feed a forest into one end and draw a frame house out of the other. A Minneapolis lumber mill is the Kellar of the me- chanic art. lit swallows a kg and vomits a wagon load of toothpicks, There is prestidigitation for you. The modern lumber mill is a place where the men are machinery and the ma- 2hinery seems to do the thinking. Seems isn’t really the word. It does think. Or, if you can prove that it doesn't you can’t make me believe it. I saw it think. I saw a great big leviathan ofa thing, a jagged hooked, long-toott- sd monster, reach over and pick up a leg, a log that was half as big as teh steel arch bridge, and pat it and ca- ress it and turn it over as a woman would a baby, tuck it in, and then— rip! It was all over with Mr. Log. It made me think of when the wolf un- masked himself to Little Red Riding tiood. He had been good and kind nd loving, and all that, you know, but tinally he showed his cruel teeth. That is the way this human monster, this machine that thought did with the log, the poor log that it had pretended to be so fond of, and had coddled and made love to. Down in this mill where I was _ there were three saws running. This isn't tethnical, and I don’t know for sure what they call them, but one was a buzz saw—I know a buzz saw when I see it—and another was a saw like a leather belt, a piece of leather belting, I mean. It must have been 25 or 30 feet long, and it ran over a big wheel that went around a million times a second. Four or five feet of the saw came down vertically, just at the edge of @ little railroad about 50 or 60 feet long, inside the mill. There was a fat @ar on the railroad and a big pis- ton rod was its motive power. The car Was fastened to the rod. Ruth wes half as surely tangled up. ‘Whither thou goest?’’ Well, when the rod went you may be sure the car went, right away, A man pulled the string, and the car did the rest. It Was on to this car that the thing with the wolf teeth dumped the logs one by one. When they were in po- stition, all tucked in and feeling pretty comfortable, I thank you, all at once that string was pulled and in about a second the poor, unsuspecting log had its nose up against that leather beit saw and was being sliced and trim- med into a stick of square timber. in about two minutes it had lost all its self-respect. It was nude, shameface.d, pitable. Then someone pulled another string, or touched a button, I don’t know which, and what was left of the log was ignominiously thrown overboard. It fell upon a moving sidewalk, some- thing like that thing they had down by the steamer pier at the World’s Fair, and the sidewalk carried it off, first scuth, then east. I think this side- walk thought, too. It seemed to. It did just the right thing at the right time. It never made anything that looked to me like a mistake. It took this big timber and ran i over to the middle of the mill and laid it on another sidewalk that was at rest. The brother of the moving sidewalk was very busy on the other side of the mill, taking care of the timbers the buzz saw was turning out, turning them into the same centre. Every few minutes six or eight squared timbers would be piled up on the sidewalk that was at rest. Then some one pulled another string. The sidewalk that was at rest got a move on itself; not very fast, but about as fast as a fat man with $160 in his pocket would walk after taking dinner at the West. Down the pike a little way was a cider press, Or something. Maybe it wasn’t a cider press, for I am not a mechanical expert, but it looked like it. It was about as big as a ton of hay, and inside of it twenty-four saws were going up and down, not around. but straight up and down like a type- writer girl’s jaws when she chews gum and thinks she is thinking. The side- walk in the middle of the mill walked right into the mouths of these twenty- four devils that were doing this ver- tical dance. . And it was all off. You have seen. possibly, a colored gentleman, an a‘- tache of your favorite free lunch count- ar, cut up a cheese, haven’t you? Well, his work was hard compared to that of the cider mill. It seemed to have 2 positive relish for timber. It went through that stack of lumber—about half a carload—like a tramp through a hand-out; and when, in about seven seconds, the sidewalk had pushed them entirely through the mill, there was a vile of inch planks ready for market This sidewalk business seems to be a sort of main push—a_ sort of floor walker (that’s not half bad)—around a tumber mill. When the cider mill gets through with the inch planks they travel right along on to another mov- ing sidewalk, It receives them cour- teously to its bed and bears them away as a bridegroom. Most any obi place around the mill yard is good enough for the moving sidewalk tc go to. The new-made lumber is car ried along east, west, or south until a good easy place to dump it shows up, and then the sidewalk lets go of its load, stops, piles it up, and goes pack after more. That’s the honest truth. I stood on the bridge and saw two men with pike poles steering the logs that came down the boom. An endless cable road came out of the water and ran up a sharp incline into the miil. It had great hooked teeth in it every ten feet. The men with the pike poles would push the nose of a log on to the cable, and in half a second the big teeth would seize it by the throat, then by the belly, then by the feet, and it was gone. It was as a python carry- ing off a crocodile.—Minneapolis Presa Poor DICESTION leads to nervousness, chronic dyspepsia anc great misery, The best remedy is HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. $10 per Set Partial Set TE $2 and upwards. Gold and Porcelain Crowning. Best material, best workmanship, best satisfaction. — DR. J. P. MURRAY, u25 Queen Street, Charlottetown. a ODDS AND ENDS. How to Get a “Sunlight” Book, Send 12 “Sunlight” soap wrappers to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto who will send post-paid a paper-bound book 160 pages. For 6 “Life buoy” Car- bolic Soap wrappers, a similar book will be sent. This 1s a splendid opportunity to obtain good reading. Send your name and addrese written carefully. Remember “Sunlight” sells at 6 cts. per twin-bar, and “Life buoy” at 10 cts. One cent postage will bring your wrappers by leaving the ends open. rat&w People in Madison county, Kentucky, who have paid their taxes are entitled to be married free by the sheriff. Two Neglects and the Resujt. Neglect cold in the head and you will surely have catarrh. Neglect nusal cat- arrh and you will as surely induce pul- monary diseases or catarrh of the stomach with its disgusting attendants, foul breath, hawking, spitting, blowing, &c. Stop it all by using Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure, 25 cents a box cures. In 1869 there were in London only 500 miles of underground wires, whereas there are now 13,000 miles. Heed the Warning, The common an! ever-present warning of kidney trouble, back ache and weakness in back are quickly relieved by Dr. Chase’s Pills. The original and only 25 cent Kid- ney-Liver Pills. When all other remedies fail they cure. William Ludlam White, of. Jamaica, N, Y., who will be 15 years old in October, now weighs 262 pounds. srnenisttsiamertiaeilleramee tii seaman 5 Lines On K, and L. I find the people around here prefer Dr. Chase’s Kiduey-Liver Pills toany other I have in stock. They are a wonderful pill. Send 3 dozen at once, I am nearly out. P. S8.— Send by post to J.W. Ireland, Gourock Male elephants are employed, as well as female, in the Indian army, althongh the latterare preferred. When the former are captured they cannot be liberated again, for in that case the chances of imprisoning other elephants in the same district would be at an end, as they would wera others away. A Caution! A Warning! Tf, on blowing the nose in the morning, lumps and flakes are discharged colored with biood, especially on one side, Jose no time in applying a remedy. Catarrh of the very worst kind has become seated, the walls are sore ani full of smail ulcers, and if not soon cured will be hard to cure and eradicate. “A stitch in time saves nine.” Use Chase’s Catarrh Cure. There is a storp told about Gibbon, the historian, He was invited by a friend to join a shooting party. When he wished ta return to town he could not find his hat, and it then transpired that for a whole fortnight he had not once used it. He took his shooting in the library among books. Science Triumphant at Last. Miller’s Emulsion. of Cod Liver Qii is the outcome of the latest scientific re- searches, There was always a prejudice agaiust taking Cod Liver Oil on account of its disagreeable taste, but Miller’s Emul- sion is agreeable to the palate, and that is one reason why it has become so popular with the medical fraternity, the hospitals of the country and the households wher- ever consumption or lung troubles pre- vail. Milier’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthener and biood maker, and cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis. Scrofula and all Lung affections. In Big Bottles, 50c. and $1, atall Drug Stores. Some ingenious rogues in Calcutta and Bombay purchase favorite brands of lig- uor in the original packeges. They re- move the good liquor without touehing the cork or the capsule and substitute vile stuft. This done by drilling a hole in the bottom of the bottle. HANDSOME FEATURES. Sometimes unsightly blotches, pimples or sallow opaque skin, destroys the attrac- tiveness of handsome features. In all such caees Scott’s Emulsion will build up the system, and impart freshness and beauty. Statistics from the U. S. railway service show that one passenger is killed for every 2,000,000 passengers carried, or every 44,103,228 miles travelled. One is injured for every 4,709,771 miles travelled, or one out of every 204,248 passengers carried. Orilla’s Prominent Furniture Dealer Gives Facts, Oritia, Feb. 10th, 1894. Epmanson, Bares & Co. Gentlemen,—Abont three or four weeks ago I had an attack of Itching Piles. I tried two or three different remedies re commended by druggists as_ the “best and only cure,” etc., but got no relief. About the time I was beginning to despair of find- ing any relief, with some slight miegiv— ings I bought a box of your pile cure, which I am pleased to say gave me almost instant relief and permanent cure. I con- sider your Dr. Chase’s Ointment a God- send, ALF. J. DEAN. Japanese houses in the large cities are of one general shape, two stories high, and put together by a carious method of mor- tising, at which these people are adepts, not one nail being used throughout the construction of the building. a — cott’s ilfa I A MOTHER'S REMEDY regulating and streagthening the maternal functions. It purifies the female system of ulcerative weaknesses and debilitating humors. It expels the first symptoms of hereditary humors in children and youths that may owe their origin to past genefations. It searches out and renders the system free from disease-breeding germs “THE KIND THAT CURES.” There are nos many forms of disease upoe which Scott's Sarsaparilla does not act favor: ably, because pure blood carries to the diseased parts renewing and building up properties. This medicine makes pure blood which builds up where disease has torn down, and carries away the impurities upon which it feeds, HEREDITARY DISEASES. SE SCOTT'S SKIN SOAP xecrs THE SKIN SOM See ie aa | TRICKS. BEHIND THE SCENES AT FAMOUS MONTE CARLO. GAMBLING Meducing the Piayers Show to Nearly Nothing—A Man Whe “Goes Broke” Can Kecover 16 Per Ceut of His Losses aud Get Kailway Fare Liome. The police of Monte Carlo are & admirably organized that a tew hours after anybouy’s arrival the nuime oi the visitor is already reported to th administration of the cercle, with, oa course, the address and various de- tails, such as the amount of luggage, the appearance, the price of the room or pension taken, etc. These details are all important to the inspecior du Vatique—a venerable looking old scoun- drets whose duty it is to repatriate broken down gamblers. Anybody whe has lost every penny he has brought with him can on application either recover 10 per cent. of his losses, or ii the sum is small, his railway fare io the extent of from i4 to i6 is paid. This last is called the vatique, and is given dgainst a regular I. O. U., which has to be refunded before the recipient cau be admitted again to,the gambling house. We may merifion, en passant, that no less than £40,000 is distributed im this guise every year, and that no less than £30,000 is actually paid back. The information of the police in and outside of the building is so precise that it is no use for anybody to pre- tend to have lost £1,000 if he has lost only £50. The statement is accepted with great politeness, only he is ask- ed to walk along the rooms with an inspector, and then to wait awhile. Ere long the inspector will return and tell you not only how much, more or jess, you have lost, but he will tell you what your game wzas—single or multiple chances, a “martingale” or at random—and if you protest he will add yet some more information, such as “You have no luggage; you dine at cheap places,” or “you live at a cheap pension,” ete. The above only foes to show how carefully everything and everybody is watched. The wait- ers, the hotel proprietors, the railway officials and the croupiers living at boarding houses all send in the results of their observations every day. Now, as to the precautions against obstinate good luck for punters. The first is in the fact that the gambling house is a cercle—a club—to which adnrittance is gained on presenting & card issued by the administration for cne day only. This card has to be personally renewed every day, and nothing is easier than to refuse this to a too persistent winner. No reason is vouched for the refusal, and the staff of “chuckers-out” within easy reach Icok too convincing to attempt intrusion or arguments. Should the objection- able punter be too big game for such a summary proceeding there is quite an army of agents provocateurs, both men and women, around each table, and they, according to instructions, pick a quarrel with the lucky player— generally over a stake—a row ensues, both parties are chucked out, and then the inspector explains that the rule of ihe cercle ts not to admit again those who make a disturbance and spoil the partie. Recriminations are useless, and as whatever law or justice there is at Monte Carlo is In the hands of the “Societie des Bains de Mer,” just a= is the police, there is neither protection nor appeal. It must, however, be explained here that these extreme measurs apply on- ly to succssful “martingalists’’—system players—or to “lightning” punters— gamblers who come every day for a few minutes, stake three times some maximums, win by some remarkable fluke and go away. These are the most hated, if only because of the supersti- tion as to playing sur la tete du ponte —that is, following en masse the stakes of a lucky player. There have been cases where successive banks have been broken thus. A roulette bank gen- erally starts with from £2,000 to £3,000, according to season, and the bank is considered broken when this sum is lost. Very often when the bank has been broken twice in succession the play is stopped at this particular ta- ble and the roulette taken away—an- other proof of the precautions referred to, and as a patent instance that the administration does not believe in the possibility of pure chance. It is either the roulette or the croupier that must be out of gear. As a matter of fact( a crounier does get out of gear, because after a certain time—15 to 30 minutes—he sets the disk moving and the ball rolling with the same swing, so to say, and the result that the ball will fall time after time into the same section of the disk. The consequences of this phenomenon have been more than once disastrous on the bank in years past. Hence croupiers are changed every half hour, or each 3¢ coups are made by a fresh hand, Some 800 coups are played daily at each table. As a further proof that the hand can acquire a certain dynamic monotony, if one may use the expres- sion, and a high evenness of impulse may be cited the fact that at the croupiers’ school at the Condamnine there is a daily practice of “aiming at zero.” It is well known that zero is the bank’s chance of winning all other stakes, except, of course, its own, and the single ones which are put “en pris- en,” tied over until the next coup. Viser au zero is the croupier’s con- stant preoccupation, and we find in this practice another instance of what was said in the beginning about the chances of the punter, Rows happen mostly in the summer season, wher. small players and sy5- tem players swarm around the tables. This is also the busy time for those appointed to watch over the various “martingalistes,” for, although the founder of the house, old Blanc, used to say that he would give a million to anybody who could prove that it ts possible to win 5 francs at roulette with absolute certainty, still the present ad- ministration will not even leave this loophole to chance. Hence a staff of ruiaed gamblers, salaried by the socit- le to spot successful “‘martingalistes, discover in what the system consists, and get rid of them if to successful. The administration loves the punter who plays high, even if he wins, pro- yided he gambles the whole day. They «now then that the money won will come back, and all the rest will follow. —Pall Mall Gazette, Lilies of the valley in France ere called ‘virgins’ tears,” and are said to have ‘sprung upon the road between Calvary and Jerusalem during the night following he crucifixion. __ NOTICE. LAND SURVEYING, &c. The subscriber is now prepared to make Surveys of Land, run Boundary and Division Lines, furnish Plans, ete.; also, Mechank a and pep ns Drawings, Pians, Speci fi- cations J. P. NICHOLSON, Land 8 r, Pownal Caariotte wa, Aig, 25, 1804 —dy & wy , Victorien Sardou the Celebrated Author writes of THE IDEAL TONIC: ‘‘in truth, it is perfect, gives health, drives away the blues, is of excellent quality and de- licious to the taste.”’ Seer er eceer cere fiailed Free. : eC Te Seer eneveenereee Descriptive Book with Testimony and i Portraits OF NOTED CELEBRITIES. Beneficial and Agreeable. very Test Proves Reputation, Avyold Substitutions. Ask for‘ Vin Mariani? 4Sé Druggists and Fancy Grocers. Sole Agents for Canada LAWRENCE A. WILSON & CO., MONTREAL. Pane: 41 Bo. Haussuan~, ®Ew Yorn: 52 W. 15t~ Sracer, Lonoon ; 232 Oxroms Br. MonTRiAL; 28 HOsmre, Ge Canada Atlantic and Plant STEAMSHIP LINE. FOR BOSTON, -—CALLING AT—~— Hawkesbury and Halifax, AUTUMN SAILINGS 8. S. HALIFAX will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Char lottetown, Friday, Oct. llth, at noon, and Tuesday, Oct. 22nd, at 6 p.m., and every Tuesday thereafter until close of navigation. FROM BOSTON—Every Saturday at noon, calling at Halifax and Hawkesbury, arriving at Charlottetown Tuesday morn- ing. HALIFAX SERVICE. 8.S. HALIFAX will leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, THURSDAY, Oct. lich, at 8 a.m , aud every Thursday thereafter. Passengers arriving in Halifax WED- NESDAY evenings -can go directly on board steamer without extra charge. For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply to P. E. Island Railway Stations and at office of Charlottetown Steam Navigation Company. H. L. CHIPMAN, Canadian Agent, oct8 Plant Wharf, Halifax ees LX = ae ss aS STEAMER CITY OF GHENT, CAPT, McNEVEN, Will sail from Halifax on October 16, and weekly thereafter, for Charlottetown, call- ing at the following ports:—Spry Bay, Sheet Harbor, White Head, Salmon River, Sonora, Sherbrooke, Isaac’s Harbor, White head, Canso, Guysboro, Boylston, Perts Hawkesbury,Hastings and Port Hood each way,thus giving Island shippers an oppor- tunity to forward their produce direct and prompt every week at a low rate of freight. Steamer FASTNET will continue her regular trips as usual. Freight solicited. W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Charlottetown, Oct. 3, 1895. CHTOWN TO BOSTON ——BY THE—— Fast Steamship Olivette,” BUY YOUR TICKETS —FROM—5 W. W. Clarke, TICKET AGENT, Corner of Queen and Water Streets, . Charlottetown, May 14, 1895. FURNESS LINE. Regular Sailings Between ‘Lon don and Halifax. From London. From Halifax. SS. HALIFAX CITY. Sept. 2i Sent.14. 8S.DAMARA. Oct. 3 SS. MADURA. “10 « 98. SS.ST.JOHNCITY. “ 19 These Steamers have superior accom- modation for first-class passengers. Well ventilated Saloon and sleeping berths amidships, where least motion is felt. Lighted by electricity. Insurance effected at lowest possible rates, Each boat carries a doctor on board. FURNESS, WITHY & CO., Lap., Commission & Forwarding Agents, Halifax, N.S., Or W.W.Clarke, Passenger Agent Charlottetown. septl 4 SIMR. FASTNET ‘ill sail from Charlottetown every WED NESDAY Evening, at 8 o’clock, for Hali fax via Summerside. Returning, will leave Halifax every MONDAY Evening, at 6 o’clock, calling at Cap¢ Arichat, Hawkesbury and Souris. Freight solicited. W. W. CLARKE, aug3l Agent, TO LET. The Shop now occupied by J. T. Mc- Kenzie, Tailor. Possession immediately, Apply to F. W. L. MOCRE, . Solicitor, sept27—tf with, the Building! | 75 Sen Pannen es % A ie