I .- 1 ! THE . SCRANTON TEIBTJKE SATURDAY HOBOING, APRIL It, 1890. 4cii' r 9iko ' ill iv'" THE WONDERS OF ALASKA From the Land of Geysers to That ' " of Glaciers. WHERE FROST REIGNS ALWAYS Urat Day'e Viowaand Reflection! During - a Beautiful and Instructive Journey " to I'nclo Sam'a Too Little Appre slated Polar Province. Written for The Tribune. t Here beglnneth another chapter of our Journey through wonderland. From Yellowstone the land of geysers to Alaska-Hhe land of glaciers as seen with American eyes. John Ruskln says, In the Sunday School Times, "the greatest thing that u human soul ever does In this world is to see something and tell what It sees In. a plain way." What applies to Sunday school teacher may ap ply; equally well to a traveler. To visit these greatest of "God's won ders" tins been my dream for many years. I have read all within my reach that has been written about Alaska, and the more I read and the more I heard the more I hoped and the more anxious I became, until at last my fond hope has been fully real ised. American people are awakening to the realization that there is some thing tp,be seen in their own country. Htm few, comparatively, have ever . seen the , glories and grandeurs, the beauties and sublimities of their own matchless land? How many of them know or ever dream that their own our own is Incomparably the grandest continent on all the globe? The more one sees of our glorious con- tlnental American republic "our ma jestic half-world" the less patience he can have with those absurd peoplo, who .every year flock by tens of thou sands to other lands and spend mil lions of their money, while they have Been virtually nothing and know com paratively nothing of their own coun try. Knrth has no other land like ours and "Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean," Is peerless. I would know my own native land first and then seek a foreign country. Tho folly of Ameri cans who travel abroad, before they, have seen their own country thorough ly.ls well Illustrated by the gcrantonlan whose home Is within a stone's throw of The Tribune ofllce. He Is now trav eling in the northwest, and we under Htand has ureceded us on our Alaskan voyage. He says, in substance: "I went abroad for both pleasure and business, Intending to remain for some time. I was proud of my country and did not fail to let It be known that I was an American. But I was asked by foreigners so many questions concern ing places that 1 have never seen and could not answer, that I cut short my trip and just returned home, vowing 1 would know and see and study the geography of my country and not be enlightened by foreigners." MODERN ALASKA. From New England's Icy mountains, to Alaska's Icy domains Is many thou sand miles. The geography In our boy hood days told of a certain Russian America seemingly away out of the world like Greenland, where the-Inhabitants were Indians,- polar bears, seals and Icebergs. But time has wrought wonders and changes, and Russian America Is not found on the maps today. . Russian America has Kone to stay and Alaska has come to stay. This change was brought about by the astute statesmanship of the late Secretary William H. Seward In May, 1867, at a cost to the United States of 17,200,000 In gold not silver or green backs, but gold and this "great white elephant, a so-called land of ice and snow, was added to our national do main, for less than one-half a cent an ere. ... COTTOLENE is Genuine has Made omy Dy , t :T::mittmmi:!i.init;rtt INLAND Time has proved the wisdom of his diplomacy. As a paying Investment, Dr. Ball says: "Alaska returned a clear net profit of 8 per cent, upon the first cost for the first five years. The two tiny Seal Islands paid 4 per cent, on the original $7,20u,'ooo, and In their first lease returned a sum equal to the purchase money to the United States treasury. The gold mines have since added an equal sum to the wealth of the world, and the salmon Industry yielded !7,r00.000 in six years, from 1884 to 1890." Not only was It a protltable bargain to us from the point of view of the seal fisheries and Immense mineral wealth, but its possession gives to our country the most magnificent Iceland In the world, so far as Is yet known. Mr. Wheeler says: "Swltierland, with her Alps and Mont Blanc and the Mat terhorn, has been compelled to yield precedence to the American North land." . More and more each year does the tide of tourist travel turn towards Alaska to see and learn of the wonders of the Almighty.. AN EMPIRE BY ITSELF. Where Is Alaska? What of our great possessions? What Is there in this so called "kingdom of Ice and snow" to admire? Well, let us see., A hundred pages cannot fully describe this Amer ican wonderland, as the sequel will show. . The aboriginal name Is Al-ak-shak, and means a great country and truly Is a great country, and much of It yet unexplored. It comprises nearly 600.T 000 square miles of Ice, snow, earth, rocks, rivers, mountains nnd forests, also a few stunted Indians, an area equal to one-fourth of all the rest of the United States. It Is the most sparsely Inhabited part of the United States, averaging only one inhabitant to nineteen square miles. It is an em pire of Itself. It Is larger than twelve states the size of New York and nine times the size of New England. Its extreme length Is ovei 2,000 miles, and its width 1,400 miles more. Its shore line Is computed at between two and three times the coast line of the Unit ed St&tes 'on the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, exclusive of Alaska itself. "The sun never sets i"i Amerlan soil. When It 8 p. m. at Atto Island, Alaska, it is 9.38 a. m. the next day on the coast of Maine." The possession of Alaska, as before stated, completes the variety of scen ery found within the bounds of the United States. To have Niagara Falls, the Grand Canyon of Colorado, Royal Gorge, Black Canyon, the Yosemlte Valley and YellowstgnePark all with in the domains of our own country Is in Itself glory enough, but add to this the grandest glaciers Ice scenery of the worldj then we have a category of sights that ought to draw not only our own countrymen, but the wealth, the culture and refined of earth Itself to our shores to see them. The -Alaskan tour Is pronounced by those who are the great travelers of the world to be the grandest trip under the sun. The reader Who desires to take this trip, "as It were by proxy," we Invite to follow us-jeach day in our meandering through this inland sea, to the land of the midnight sun, UP PUGET SOUND. ..; The steamship Queen with Captain James Carroll commander, starts from Tacoma Aug. 11, at 6 o'clock in the morning, for the far and mysterious Northland, a voyage of over 2,400 miles, within the narrow limit of fourteen days. Her sister boats, the City of Topeka and Mexico, who carry freight, aa well- as passengers, make the trip In from nineteen to twenty-one days. This tour extends to within six degrees of the Arctic circle and embraces the greatest of the wonders of that land of Icebergs and glaciers. We board the steamer at nine o'clock at Seattle. After a long blow of the whistle, a fifteen minutes warning, an other short whistle, the call "All ashore that's, not going," the adieux are said, the whistle blows again, a signal to the engine room; there is a turn of the wheel, a command from Captain Car roll "cost off the bow line," "throw off the breast line," "hold fast stern," "let her go," Captain Carroll waves his hat, the people cheer, and off we go sailing sold everywhere in one, trade-marks "Cottokne" and steeds head in cotton-plant wreath on every tin. - w . u. fauuank company, eweago, . Mewvoik, PASSAGE! TO up the picturesque waters of Puget sound for Alaska. The early part of our voyage Is through these waters. Before us lies the broad expanse of the finest harbor and inland sea In the world, the docks lined with shipping at rest, for this Is the Puritan Sabbath. The waters are all dimpled and smiling in the beautiful sunlight as we sit on the deck of our noble Queen, admiring the glories of nature and drawing from the fresh morning air new lll'e at every breath. On the left are the snow-capped serrat ed Olympic range, from 6.000 to s.OUO feet high, and the Cascade range on the right with the eternal Bnow peaks of Mounts Tacoma nnd Baker looming up against the sky In regal majesty, the former to nearly three miles above the sound. THE FIRST PAUSE. This three hours' sail of forty miles to Port Townsend wus enjoyable in the extreme. When the Queen left Seattle she had nearly her full complement of passengers, but the purser, Mr. 11. M. Rogers, informed us there was another batch to be taken on at Port Town send and also Victoria. At Fort Town send we found, the steamer Umatilla direct from San Francisco, awaiting us. We remain here two hours. 'Which gives the tourist an opportunity to take In the town. Favored by nature In many ways. Port Townsend has the finest roadstead and the best anchorage grounds In these waters. The city Is ploturesquely located on a gently slop ing bluff facing the harbor. It is called not Inaptly, the Gate or Key City of the Hound. It Is the port of entry for the Puget sound customs district and the last American port touched at before entering British waters. More Ameri can tonnage is registered In Port Town Bend than In any other port except New York. The United States government has a custom house costing $22i),M'0, and Is about to erect fortifications near the light house at a cost of $500,000. The business portion of the town lies principally along the water' front while the residences occupy a level plateau fifty feet or more above, affording a charming view of the sound and the Straight of San Juan do Fuca, the out let to the Pacific. The population is 4,553. Its many tine public and private buildings presented an Impressive ap pearance from the steamer, especially Its churches, with their glistening spires pointing heavenward. IN BRITISH WATERS. Leaving Port Townsend. the steamer crosses the strait to Victoria, a dis tance of thirty-five miles. We soon sight the heavily timbered British Is land of Vancouver, and as we draw nearer to the north the British (lag can be seen from the English naval station of the North Pacific. Here is experienced a choppy Bea and the lady passengers, as a rule, "retire to. the seclusion that the cabin grants." With Mt. Tacoma receding from view, or growing more cloud-like against the Intense sky, and Mt. Baker gradually brightening we reach the English Metropolis. Victoria Is picturesque In every de tail. It Is located on the southeast ex tremity of Vancouver Island, the larg est one In the Pacific const of North America, overlooking the strait of Fuca. This strait is twelve miles wide and across It are the beautiful Olympic mountains, on American soli. The city Is situated In a rock-bound and land protected bay, with the sea on three sides, bordered by picturesque shores and grassy hills, and backed by a Btretch of dense forests. It Is built on the site of Old Fort Victoria, a Hudson Bay company trading post that great British monopoly that held nearly all British America under Its control for two hundred years. Victoria as a city Is quaint and calm, staid and conservative, and thoroughly English, but presents many Interest ing features to the tourist. Its beauties do not command they implore atten tion. By permission of Captain Carroll we disembark and are allowed four hours on English soil. Taking a bar rouche we commence to Inspect the town. Cities, like individuals, have their hobbles, and the municipal hobby of Victoria is her macadamized roads, not only through the city, but leading is three and five pound tins. Beware of imitations; 1 """TTiifintimtttmmiMitiMipniitl ALASKA. far into- the suburbs and around the shores of the bays. She has no super ior on that point on either the Pacific or Atlantic coast, even on the contin ent. The system comprises about one hun dred miles of beautiful drives, and many of them are lined with very handsome suburban residences, sur rounded with Inwns. and parks, en closed by high fences in which are luxuriant tropical flowers. The air wus full of floral perfume wherever we went and the eye was satisfied with the wealth of roses, among the most gor geous we have ever seen. Such nicely trimmed hedges, such neatly painted garden gates, "all so English, you know," were truly delightful to be hold. Cabs are cheap and the drives about the city are as much famed for the picturesque scenes they lead to, as they are for the perfect road-beds. The business avenues have a sub stantial appearance and all the Btreets are wide and evidently well kept. The city has many public buildings and large commercial houses that carry on an extensive trade. The government buildings, five in number, overlooking James bay, are built In Swiss style, and occupy a prettily adorned public square. In front of them is a granite Bhaft erected to the memory of Sir James Douglas, the first governor of the colony. The Ivy-covered cottages for the workmen and the stately church edifices also were notable features of the city. There is, too, 'a populous Chinatown, said to number 10,000, alse many Songhish Indians. There is a reservation of this tribe near the city. The Chinese quarters are always In teresting to visitors; their little quaint and smoke-stained, and dingy looking stores, and curiosity Bhops, crowded with relics to tempt the tourist, were inevery nook and street corner. BRITISH FORETHOUGHT. An electric railway syBtem of fifteen miles, connects the outside wharf with the business part of the city and sub urbs and a branch line reaches Esqui mau, the British naval station three miles north of the city. Here Is a fine harbor with several iron-clads sta tioned In It, also an extensive dry-dock, hewn out of the solid rock and capacious enough to receive the largest vessels. It Is 400 feet long, 65 feet wide and 26 feet deep, with an entrance of 90 feet, and cost $250,000. This dock is a piece of mason ry worth the admiration and attention of an American who, too seldom sees such things so well executed In his own country. Extensive fortifications are projected by the imperial and dominion governments and are to be defended by heavy armament at a cost of over $1,000,000. The shore is granite bound with frowning head lands and very pic turesque coves, heavily wooded. , The city limits embrace an area of eight square miles. The population In 1891 was 32,981 and there Is probably no more self-contained city of Its size In the world, for It has Its own orchards and pastures, forests and coal fields, while Its numerous manufactories are as varied as those of many cities many times Its size. The salmon furnishes one of the material sources of Its finan cial growth. 370.000 cases of salmon have been shipped In one year (1889) from the Frazer river alone. The hand some public buildings and fine resi dences with their well kept gardens, are evidence of the wealth and prosper ity of the citizens, and also the richness of the soil. The scenery is grand. All the upper end of the sound and Fura straits are dominated by Mount Baker, an extinct volcano, with its ever snow-clud top conspicuous In the distance, rising to the height of 10,810 feet. Victoria is noted for its delightful climate, in sum mer always cool and pleasant. In win ter the mercury rarely falls below 16 degrees above zero. Victoria Is pleas ant, though quaint, nnd we shall stop here on our return trip to learn more of Its characteristics. SAILING NORTHWARD. At Victoria our complement of pas sengers was augmented by some; of the moHt eminent of American citizens, Captain Carroll says, "probably the mo3t distinguished company the Queen has ever taken to the Glacier fields of Alaska." Among " them were Vice President Stevenson and family, Judge This It ? This is COTTOLENE -that is fast banishing lard from the kitchens of the world. This is the newshortening that house keepers say is so much more economical and de licious than lard. This is the product that physi cians say is destined to make dyspepsia a disease of the past. It's the great est step of modern science toward pure food, better . cooking, perfect health. ; Judge for yourself whether : it's time you let lard go the way of the candle " and the spinniner-wheel. Pblladclpbia, Pittsburgh. By permiaslon of Evang.lUi Jenkins and Receiver Payne of the Northern Pacific railway, with their families; Vice-President W. G. Purdy and party, of the Chicago, Rock Island and Iaclllc railway; C. J. Ives and fam ily, ot B. C. It. and N. railway, besides several American congressmen and Judges and noted travelers from abroad, also several clergymen, among them Rev. Dr. D. C. Chllds. of Washington, D. C, and Rev. Dr. Warren F. Day, of Los Angeles, Cal., with their families. ' At early evening we again set sail and steam through Haro strait. We bid guod-by to telegraph, to railroad, to telephone, to postman and all the rush and fever of the world of business. All we have to do from this time forth is to see and enjoy the sights; to eat drink and be merry, for we sull now, as It were, to a veritable unknown land, through cold northern waters,and this is the last point where friend or foe can reach us by mall or telegram. As the Queen gets under way, we begin to feel as though our voyage had at last begun In good earnest. Before reach ing any broad expanse of open water our steamer passes through a pictur esque archipelago, a group of pretty Islands like theThousand Islands of the St. Lawrence, only on. a greatly mag nified scale. When we come to the Gulf of Mexico, one of the widest por tions of the inland passage, a momen tary Interest is here excited by our passing on the right, the Island of San Juan, concerning the possession of which the United States and Great Britain came very near coming to na tional blows, and which was finally awarded to us In 1872, by the emperor of Germany. The British post Is on one end of the Island, with an American post on the other. Having passed through these Islands we come to the greatest expanse of water to be met with on our entire Inland trip, the Gulf of Georgia, save when now and then we look out on - the open Pacific, and during the n'.aht we sail through this great gulf, leaving the highest point (Point Rob ert) of the United States off to our right In the distance, on the forty-ninth par allel. . Thus endeth our first day on the Alas kan Itinerary. - J. E. Richmond. THE VOTING MOTHER. Published toy Request of the American woman eunruge Association. The right of suffrage for women has neen claimed with unanswerable argu minis, and is being slowly granted. The benefit of woman suffrage to the com munity has been enlarged upon theso many years, and it is In many respects unquestionable. The right of the mother to vote for the protection of her child Is also a point storngly made, and one diffi culty to combat, but that the woman her self and esiieclally the mother will be tho moat benefited. Is not often claimed. It la, however, one of tho strongest grounds uiui ran oe laxen. II .11 II - Government by universal suffrage Is most valuable, not (or the preeminent ex cellence of Its official forms, but because u mases oeuer men. The governed man, the voiceless, voteless, powerless man. Is less valuable as a citizen than 'he who forms his mind and uses It in the free atmosphere of a fully representative aov ernnient. Suffrage as a social function is educational and elevating to those who exercise it. A non-voting class, living with a voting class, Is at a perpetual Uls- au.vo.mage; ana, wnere nair the communl ty vote and the other half do not, the vastness of their numbers Inno wav alters their relation, which Is that of governor anu governed. A class which is governed has not the same knowledge of, Interest In, or sense of responsibility to the coun try they live In, or the wise and Just ad ministration of its affairs; it Is politically Inferior, not only in the expression of Judgment and will, but in 1he possession of juuKinem anu will wnicn conies only Dy mien irmiom or expression, wnen thii voteless, governed, and. "therefore, molltl rally Inferior class, are persons of such immense racial importance as the mothers of the community, it becomes a serious matter. II II II So long as the inferiority of the non voting class can be confined to a certain proportion or the community, and per haps exploited by the voting portion to some common service. It Is not so hope lessly bad: but, wheu the Inferiority of ine non-voiing class in transmitted by heredity, driven In by education, and steadily supplied by association In tho dally living of all the inhabitants, it means a great racial . drawback. Tho growth of true democracy with all that it means In mental and moral power and clarity. Is incessantly -thwarted by the political condition of our mothers. They do not live in a democracy at nil, but in a despotism. We do not live In our government, but under archaic forms long since passed away irom tfte man s world Our sons, our voting citizens, are all born of and reared by non-voting citizens who cannot possibly be capable of trans mitting the enlightened Ideas, the breadth of vision, the iiower of cnlm Judglmr, which come with the exercise of this so cial function In a free government. The government by women In the family itself is too often but a despotism, mild, af fectionate, full of privilege and "mater- nausm, Dut not rree and not Just. II II ll Tims we nave a constant succession of young citizens growing up to assume the duties of representative government, en tering upon the large social-responsibility where the good of the whole and the rignts or each must -always be held In mind: yet each with his own mind In- nerue-i irom a million subject mothers, trained carefully bv the loving dominnnr-e of her Who rules all Die more riesiiotli-nllv In the little world of home because she has no range In the larger one, nnd full to the brim of the inordinate pressure of close personal interest. Thus It Is that our politics lack so much of -the laro-e statesmanship which enn legislate with far-seeing wisdom for nil men and all time nnd remains so larc-ely a grab-ng where each man tries continually to turn thinvs his way that he may better provide for his own local, personal and family inter- 'I II II When all our women vote thn( win mi that all our mothers will he full trartl- iiik i-mzeiis. v nen tney nnve practise i-iiiBeiir-iui! n wn'ie, inv win earn to e more, patient with Inrjre, slow naMnr evils, and not hone to do them up like week's wash. They will be more matlcnt with the mighty criminals of our time who nre often as helpless a product of elr cumstiwces as any pail per, arid will not Imagine that such erlrenols rnn he spanked nnd forgiven like the bahy. They will learn to understand soclnl life and Its processes as they do not now: nlso to un derstand men nnd their professes nnd be more lntellltrnt frleuls with them: nlso to rnider-tmitl home life In relation to the world's llfe-nnd that means much. When we have votlns- .mothers, we shall have wlse.r sons,- better, government and hap pier -homes. Charlotte Perkins Stetson. Got His Voncv's Worth. Frizzly Frazr-"Vot ye bin doln in Ao biirlifr shon. Willie?". Willie "Bin glttln' n bay rum shave! ' Frizzly Krazer "Wot?, Say,. you must have money ter burn." Willie "Nawl I pot mo money's wort', fer when -he wasn't lookln' I drunk de bay rum." Truth. . Showed It. Dr. Probe "Three of my patients died this -week." Dastmway "I thought you looked tu If. you had been working hard." Truth. COLDiGAKOiilE WP.L0 Descriptlot of That Sumptions Temple of Ounce, the Casino. JUST HOW THC GAME IS FLAYED It la a Fair Gams, bat tfca Maaagemeat Maaages to Get Three Par Ccat. of 'All Stake-"Breaking tha Baak" a Mlaaotaer. Special Correspondence of The Tribune. ' Monte Carlo, March 15. Whatever opinion the -visitor to Monte Carlo may have In regard to the gaming tables, which have made the name of the town known the world over, he can have only one opinion as to the beauty of its sit uation. The consensus of opinion among people who have seen all the ritlea and sights of Europe Is that Monte Carlo, and with It Monaco, for the two are virtually one town, for plcturesquenesa and beauty, easily bears off the palm. It nestles at the foot of the moun tains, which have almost run Into the Bea, there being only enough room for the town .at their base, and is, built around a charming little circular bay. On one of the promontories forming this bay stands the Casino, and on the other the little walled town of Monaco. When to Its wonderful naturul scenery Is added all that money can do to make the place beautiful, .the total result attains nearly to perfection. If It were not for the gaming tables the place would be the leading winter resort of the Riviera, aa a great many peoplo say that the only thing that keeps them from going there now Is that they do not care, to have their letters ad dressed Monte Carlo. Well patronized as tho Casino Is, It Is a cheering sign that the vast majority of the people along the Riviera would like to see it abolished. . . SUPPORTED BY GAMBLING. The principality of Monaco, which the French government allows to exist merely to satisfy what little conscience it may have In regard to gambling. Is a trifle over two miles long, and varies In width from two hundred feet to half a mile. Its reigning princes of the house of Grlmaldl derive their sole in come from the company which runs the Casino, the Cercle I'Etrangers, or an glicised Foreigners' club,- of Monaco, for the custom house and postal ser vice are In the hands of France, and the Inhabitants of the principality pay no taxes. The sum which the company pays the prince is said to be $250,000 per years, and with it he Is enabled to maintain a diminutive army and keep up a sumptuous palace. The town of Monaco, his capital. Is well built and clean, and contains a very fine cathedral, which he has built to satisfy his, or rather his wife's, scruples as to the source of his In Come. Monte Carlo Is about a mile from Monaco. The approach to the Casino Is through magnificent - gardens, - In which are growing palms and other tropical trees, and which receive an amount of attention that makes them perhaps the most beautiful In Europe, The Casino Itself, a handsome build ing designed by Charles Gamier some what in the French renaissance style, is approached by a broad flight of steps. Entrance to it is free, tickets being ob tained on presentation of a visiting card and the visitor giving the name of his hotel. He must,- however, be over 21 years of age, and a foreignerfor no Inhabitant of the principality of Mon aco is allowed to visit the rooms. The managers of the club know very well that If the people of Monaco were given the opportunity of losing their money at the tables their popularity would cease, and they take good care that such an event shall not occur. INSIDE THE CASINO. After obtaining your ticket at the office, you enter through a fine hallway, a large, mosaic paved promenade hall, the roof of which is supported by col ored marble pillars. Sitting in the chairs and sofas at the sides, or wan dering up and down the hall, are a crowd of very well dressed men and women, chatting and comparing their losings or winnings. To the right Is a buffet. Immediately In front of the con cert hall, and to the left the'Salles de Jeu, or gambling rooms. These latter rooms. In fact all the bulldlnix, are decorated with great magnificence. Im mediately before you on entering Is the first table. A Utile further on, to the right nnd left, are two more, then an other immediately behind the first, and in a room behind this are another pair of tables. At these tables the game of roulette is played exclusively. Clustered ns-ound each table Is a crowd of people, all intently watching the spinning wheels, and a great many, though by no menus all, staking their money. The tables are somewhat larger than a billiard table and the wheel Is situated In the center of each one. In front of the wheel, on each side of the table, sits a croupier, and before him are piled up bank notes, gold and silver. The two ends of the table are ruled off into oblongs and squares on which the gamhlers place their money. The center of each end Is occupied by thirty-seven small squares, thirty-six of which bear num bers and one a cipher. These little squares are arranged in three rows, twelve in each row, and at their sides are larger spaces on which money can be waged for red or black, odd or even, or above or below. The wheel, . which is of very fine workmanship and is set level with the table, has thirty-seven little compart ments numbered to correspond with the little squares on the table. Eigh teen of these compartments are pulut ed red, and eighteen black, and one, the one bearing the cipher, green. This cipher represents the bank's percent age of gain, which is one In thirty six. ....... THE CROUPIER'S WORK. Above the wheel with these compart ments is a shallow groove running all the way around It In which runs a little wooden bnll. At Pearly regular Intervals, when the bystanders have placed their money on the table, the croupier takes this bull, and by a deft motion, sends it whirling around the groove, at the snme time giving the wheel a twirl In the opposite direction. These two motions prevent any possi bility of the croupier ever becoming so dextrous as to send the ball to any given number and It Is a very mistaken notion to suppose that money Is lost at Monte Carlo through an unfairness of the play. The bank makes, in the long run, three per cent, of all the money wagered, and is content with that, which in the aggregate Is a princely sum. When the wheel stops, and the mar ble, lenving the groove, llnnlly settles Into one of the compartments the croupier calls out the number anil the color of that compartment., as for In stance, "Seventeen, Red," und the peo FAILING MANHOOD General and Nervous Debility. Weakness of Body and Mind, Effects of Errors or Kxoesses in Old or Young. Kobust, Noblo Manuuod f illy Restored. How to Knlfwtco and Strengthen Wenk, Un I developed Portions of ttnny. Ausoimeiy on fallingBome Treatment. llaimntft in a da v. mm fiO Ht.iLtf-4 and Fni-uio-n Countries. Send for Descriptive Book, ex planaUoa and proofs, tuallod (sealed) f rue, ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N. Y, Krn ij.Mt.lftf f ple who have wavered oa the red are paid the amount of their stake, while those whose money was oa black lose. If any one has placed his money on the number seventeen he Is paid thirty-six times the amount he watered. There are many different ways of plac ing the money. It mar he put on a space at the foot ot any tier of twelve numbers. In which case a person is paid three times hla "stake It any one ot those numbers Is called. Or he may place it on the dividing line ot tour numbers. In which case his winnings are nine times his stake. Most of the play, however. Is made aim ply red or black, as In this way a given sum will last longer and thus give the gamblers more time at the tables, but which ever way he plays he Is certain In the long run to lose, and for this reason, whenever the ball falls Into the com partment bearing the cipher, which '11 naturally happen once in thlrty- the money placed on the board. It Is this seemingly small percentage In their favor which enables the company to maintain the superb room. to pay the expenses of the principality of Monaco, and to declare large dividends to their stock holders. For them It la a very safe business for they stake practically no risk. BREAKING THE BANK. The man who broke the. bank at Monte Carlo does not exist. What la known as breaking the bank la this;. At the beginning of each day's play a certain sum Is placed on each table. It sometimes happens that by an ex- traordinary run of luck, a player wins all of this sum, and. of course, what the bank has won from other players at that table, during the day. In case such a thing happens, which It very rarely does, that table Is simply closed for the day, but the play goes on at all the other tallies Just the some. It rarely haptens, however, that the man who has succeeded In this peeuda "breaking the bank," has the resolution to keep away from the tables, and tha next day Is usually the bank's turn. The highest sum that ran be wagered In one stake at the roulette tables Is six thousand francs, the lowest, five francs. In another room, however, are two tables known as the gold tables, where only gold or bank-bills may be wagered, and at which the stake may run as high as twelve thousand francs. The game at these tables Is trente-et-quarante, but It is not aa popular aa roulette, which is the game at which most of the people play, WATCHING THE PLAYERS. . It is very Interesting to watch the fact's, of the players. Most of them keep a record of the winning numbers on little cards printed especially for that purpose, under the delusion that In that Way they are able to tell what numbers are likely to come afterwards. Of course the fact of a number having won once can have no bearing on the probability of Its winning again, but It is hard to convince these people ot that fact. We hear a great deal of the terrible faces one -sees at the tables of Monte Carlo, but truth compeils us to admit that as a usual thing the losers take their losses philosophically. In fact, the most of them have the appearance of being able to afford it, and a great many of the people who frequent the place know perfectly well that the chances are against thm, and only take a certain sum with. them each day and If that sum Is lost, play no longer. Not every one has the will power to do this, however, and in that lies the evil of the place, for the largest fortune Is sure to melt away in time if its posses sor stays long enough at the table. In addition to watching the tables the visitor can hear an excellent con cert, given by one of the best orches tras In the magnificent concert hall. This Is all absolutely free to him, and it la probnble that a great many peo plo are led to make their first play at the table with the feeling that they would like to pay something for the concert, which Is such a one as we would pay. a couple of dollars to hear in America. If they lose they are safe, but if they win it will take all their will power to prevent them going on playing such is the fascination of the game. TO CHARGE ADMISSION. . Next year It Is proposed to abolish, the free entrance plan, and to sell sea son tickets for one hundred francs. If this is done it will be an excellent thing for the mun who would pay one hun dred francs, or twenty dollars, for the privilege of gambling there would be very likely to be able to stand the losses. The most terrible thing now about the place Is that the facilities for entrnncu being so easy, a great many people of moderate means -are lend to start on a course- which usually ends In their utter ruin, too often giving them a place In that little plot of ground which in the best argument against Monte Carlo, the suicide's cemetery. Winford J. Northup. Hypocliondrical, despondent, nerv otis, "tired out' men .i i. lr.ee nf ai a vuj -fc-a ergy, im paired mem ory, dizzi ness, melan clioly and Hie re sult of ex- batistintr dis eases, or drains upon the system, excesses, or abuses, bad habits, or early vices, are treated through cor respondence at their homes, with uniform success, by the Specialists of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of BuiTalo, N. Y. A book of 136 large pages, devoted to the consideration of the maladies above hinted at, may be had, mailed se curely scaled f 1 out observation, in a plain envelope, by sending 10 cents in one-cent stamps (for postage on Book), to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, at the' above mentioned Hotel. For more than a quarter of a century, physicians connected with this widely cele brated Institution, have made the treatment of the delicate diseases above referred to, their sole study and practice. Thousands, have con sulted them. This vast experience has naturally resulted, in improved methods and means of cure. WILLIAM S MILLAR, Alderman 8th Wait Scrantoa ROOMS 4 AND S OAS AND WATER CO. BUILDINJ, CORNER WYOMING AVE. AND CENTER ST. OFFICE noma from 7.30 a. m. to pu m. (1 hour Intermission for dinner anjf auppor.j Particular Attention (liven to Collection. Prompt tettlemcnt Ousranteed, Vcur Bust, nets is Rsspestfully solicited, telephone 134. ii j it a a 'it?Mdv---Ta A