t i h '*; , i " * ' . \ zi \ ky at the P^n- (can "l • '- : Swasam. % 5̂ |'f ". _____ « • • . i . i illuminations and slectri- Jts will form conspicuous fea- i$ti% f^AmerlcaaaxpNtSSik Unantly flttint *» ntimM&b mm&jmm progress mads ittaHrtrieat acles** dvrln( tbt ptirt decstfpi $M 'Us- of tlw great plaeta irtWagarti which the electric power la •anilpailiS.., Tja --uUiusl llfawlnsilwne of t*e ̂. -. ..... tfee ffleetrio Twrer. tktt and at her hydraulic displays lA the outlining of the dttfsrent by rows of tacendesocat lampe. There frtll bo combined wafer aad eteetrlc elects and the central flgureef the whole setting will, or eosai»,be the Beetric Tower, with, Its most waadsrfal sad bsautltol electrleal Tho Electricity Building It self has Bioat appropriately Imm lo- eetei adjoining the Bleetrie Tower. Fpobi Its eaatorn end an t wluiilty will be afforded tor Tiding Ika WMM illuminatioae 4 tho tow- «r during the night dlsplaya. The of the boildlng la alao for- ln rlew of tha fact that Just the mall, tho broad avenue upon tha «ftatlM*a aUe of tha Bleotrlelty Stand* tha Machinery and the means to thla end. On thla spsoant It la hoped to illustrate them i&tke Pxpostttoa• it nefc a tm t*w later-reiation * the various «*W»S»ti *ili *s «mt» apparent Tho tttBlsattoft Of electrietty In various Dai'H ol maoufacturing industries will alfa to illustrated. This utilization of ̂ It? Is destined to be one of tike -greatest of lta fields and tha :tmmm ftwWsr '• (tow an object 1c--a to thla respect, for tho develop ment of Niagara power la almoaterary dajr drawing new industries to ^ .tft * «t* ^ ":^"V lty N "V fC A / * l" « ' * <*> 4 V " *, /< rpgloa jtocause the proximity and tiwt availability of thla powar render tho manufacturing opportunities 90 tlonal. Bipodtlw IMplw*. No exposition of tha paat such elaborate sculptural as will be a leading characteristic if the Pan-American BxpoaltSoa. . Tho buildings and grounds of the Bxpoel- tloa at Buffalo will bo ombelllahad pro fusely with most artistic creations from the hands of some thirty-five of the best known sculptors on tho Am erican continent CyelHur at lipaiitlwu The Pan-American Exposition will BTt»n< m »«iw>mhi| hand to tha mil i ̂ v" '• "i, * *g\~ 'l*t * * . 4-, .-•, -&(,>•*' r ' v - v - - ^ f * {'i ! \ « •y*% x m Ik* ' -fc.- dM.it _vr exposition __ tail iMb de- . . t o m i B i M l b u i l d i n g ̂ ' •t tho wwklng eoloalee of baas tha great •arlety of bee koepars' supplies which will constituta tihis exhibit This will un- deubt^Sy^ iwl'jqiOSt £StS~S»Tc be? eS- ti'alt «scr ia this or any other part of the wofMU - Anyone who is not * student Of *M Mnre little reallasa the very frehl tt#o«tance of thla tn- dnatry.It ts satimated that there are 100,000 persons engaged in bee cul ture in the United States alone and that the present annual value of honey and wax is In e&eas of 920.000,000. There are lid societies devoted to the alo r̂ and v&umta* of bee keeping. Eht Joumala ore sustained by this Mbrjr. |1il«iMii steam power factor ies s*e prodndat supplies of various ktnda tor the nse of bee keepers, Am- honey tnde a market in many distant countries, the United States producing more honey than any other - VI:-., "' 2 * 1 'Jt ̂ / If- toroaeportation bufMtng, so that visit ors can easily pass from one to the * other and make comparisons between the closely allied apparatua in the two fcuUdlnga. In tile northwest corner of the Blectriclty Building will probably he located the S.000 H. P. transformer plant whleh will transform the Niagara power polyphase current from H,000 volts to , 1,800 ' volte for distribution stout the grounds. Smaller step- down traaaformera win be used in sev eral hundred transformer pits about ̂ the grounds and in the various bulld- where the current will be reduced 1,100 volts to 104 volts. At thla pressure lights and electric motors sad ether sppliances will be operated. The progress in the development and application of the various branches of electrical science and industry of recent years makes the exhibit at the Pan-American exposition of the utmoet Importance and Interest At the time of the World's Fair at Chicago, eleo- trte transportation over street car lines Of cities waa in its Infancy. 'In ton years the electric motor In lti applica tion to both transportation and In dustry has effected well nigh an Indus trial revolution. In the electric light- tag industry, and in the telephone eye- tern there has been great progress dar ing this decade. Wireless telegraphy has some to the front within a few yeare and is destined to effect still farther radical changes In methods of electrle communication. Automobiles electri cally propelled have come Into use. In all these fields the Pan-American Ex position will have electrical exhibits illustrating this marvelous progress. There will be a collection of historical matter relating to the subject whleh Will show the gradual development of the apparatus used. An especially in teresting exhibit will toe that illustrate lag the application of electricity po the propulsion of cars and vehicles like the automobiles. Most persons are more faimlliar with the successful operation of ouch vehicles by electricity than lions of Cyclists and AutomoblHsts of the Americas during the summer of 1901. The automobile exhibit, It Is promis ed, will be Ihe finest ever seen at any expoeition. There will also be a large and complete display of bicycles, repre senting all stages of progress from the heavy and clumsy iron-tired veloci pedes to the finest pneumatic-tired modern machines, including the "good old ordinary" or high wheel bicycle fitted with small solid rubber tires which was first exhibited in this coun try twenty-five years ago. at Philadel phia. A grand carnival of cycle races will be held In "the magnificent Stadium which is now being erected on the Pan- American grounds. This vast arena will be In many respects equal the famous old Coloeseum at Rome. Horttealtn* at SipwltlM. Horticultural exhibits at the Psa- American Exposition have a beautiful setting in and about an exceedingly handsome building 220 feet square. The height of the building is 236 feet to the top of the lantern, and the gen eral proportions are of«commanding grandeur. Fruits of all kinds win be placsd on exhibition during the summer. Much of the fruit will be preserved in cold storage, though the exhibit will change as the season advances and the differ ent varieties ripen. A number of states have made arrangements to pro vide colloctiveexhibits that will proper ly represent.the horticultural products of their particular section. California is arranging tor a special exhibit of the wonderfully diversified fruit pro ductions of that state. Cther states are taking the matter up with the prospect of making the horticultural exhibit the most complete ever at tempted. The same care that charac terizes other sections of the Exposition will be given the Horticultural divi sion with the view of making it repre- The bee exhibits at the Pan-Amert- can Exposition will be so arranged that the bees may enter their hlvee from the exterior of the building and carry on their work of honey collec tion undisturbed by visitors, yet in full view through the glass aides it their hives. The successful manage- of an apiary requires a knowl- of botany as well as the habits and requirements of the bees them- selves. The little honey bee plays a very important part la the general economy. The failure of fruit crops may be due to the absence of bees whose special function is to fertilise the blossoms by carrying the pollen from stamens to pistil. - VEDWARD HALB BRUSH. I CAN'T BACK OUT- Week of Gay Festivities at Thi - Hague. QUEEN 15 VERY POPULAR. 9fcs Stassds UsstsfccsfiES Sss Bitter to W*t«h 3,500 Fet*oa* ICarclt Or-- Makes tfen Bgk> m fWnwHfc tm a» * say rmmmrn Mao*. Akwl InkN Om« Matt SY SbIMWBC RTPIRTI. After the meeting of the Colorado Academy of Science recently, at which President Regis Chauvenet of the School of Mines delivered an ad dress, there was an argument about snakes, says the Denver Republican. It was continued in a desultory way soon after at the state capitol by Cura tor Will C. Ferrll of the Historical so ciety, and Captain Cecil Deane of tbe war relic department, the men who started It at the meeting on the day {previous. Curator Ferril claims that he jhas proved that a rattlesnake, when ^pursued, will retreat and go into its hole backward. He says that a month ago he ran across a rattlesnake which slowly went toward its hole. He fol lowed with discretion and a gun and when the rattler reached its home it went in, according to Mr. Ferril, tail first, so that it could protect Itself if attacked. Mr. Ferril is aware that this statement .is contrary to established records, but says that because It haa never before been known to the world does not prove that it is not true. He will mention this discovery in his bi ennial report now being compiled. Captain Cecil A. Deane of the war relic department says that he never heard of such a thing. He claims that the theory is ridiculous and that it is a well established fact that the rattlers go home head first. In proof ht this claim he says that the way fh which curio dealers secure rattlers in large numbers for sale is to follow the snakes to their holes and cut off their tails as they dive into the holes. Cap tain Deane says he has pursued thia method on various occasions and nev er saw a rattler even attempt to go into its hole tail first. He asserts that scientific experiments have already demonstrated that a rattler cannot "back up" or "back down" and that Mr. Ferril is needlessly exciting the scientific world in bringing up a sub ject whleh has already been disposed of. QUEER TITLES FOR SERMONS That eccentric preacher, Lorenzo; Dow, once preached to thoughtless ! young women who with their gorgeous bonnets had taken the higheet eeata ; In the room, from the text. "Topknot Gome Down." One of the most bril liant preachers of a generation ago, now a "castaway," preached to young people from the text, *'l«et Her Drive." Several years ago a bright preacher advertised to enlighten his people on Sunday morning by "Les sons from Croquet." Last year It was "Lessons from Golf." "Born too Late; the World Has the Start of Him," Is the form of an offer of enlightenment to young men. "A Love Sons," "A Love Adventure," and "Leeaona In Courtship," of course attracted instant attention. ONE IMPROVEMENT OF THE CENTURY | Communication between man and wso as expensive as it was at the beginning of the 19th It cost a shilling to get a letter any where, when the century began, and a filling in those days represented far Mrs than it now doea. Now two eSots iWfll carry a letter to California or around the corner. Then the mail matter handled was too insignificant tor statistics; now there are 75.000 postoffices in this country, handling postal matter of all kinds, psr annum, of <,570,810,000 pieces. •orted by ' a Jteheveningeii int&ueiftsti$ wonderfully ermen throughout one lost but ahe seni Wllhdaiina of Thursday at Tho Hague to tha Duke Henry of Mecklenburg- Schwerin. The civil marriage occurred. In the presence nearest rela tives. The royal party then proceeded to the fchurch in prouwBUjin. Religious Services were held, tollowed by the return of the royal in procession to the palace. Here Queen Wilhetmina held court and received congratula tions of other* than members ef thft ' * s QtTHifrN Wtl.HElJMINAV'AND THE PRINCE CONdORT. royal families. At 1:80 p. m. a lunch eon. was served and at 4:15 p. m. the royal couple departed on their honey moon. The day previous to the wedding was one of festivity throughout the city. Clear but bitterly cold weather fav ored the popular procession today, people came from all parts of the country to take part in the parade and to extend their felicitations to the royal bride and bridegroom. About 8,600 persons marched in the pro cession. There were many bands and a perfect forest of banners carried by various public and private societies, which marched through the principal streets, finally paseiwg tfes palace ̂ it of hussars, couple a most ./The Queen is the fish- Never is a generous purse to his family. 4itfiaKtiingly they er»tffl ij» hsr ksito r tto saique tri- tuaghai Uiohes composed w£ Bali rag nets, barrels, and other paraphernalia of their trade and bearing appropri ate decorations. , WMhttae INMNN nwerthiSii U The Queen's wedding COWB, woven of the finest silver tissue^ waa em broidered at the School of Art Needle- worx in Amsterdam and was after ward made up in Paris. It is orna mented with silver-threaded seed pearls. The robe and train are lined with rich white silk. The bodice, which is plain and cut low, is trimmed with antique lace. The trails are cov ered with embroidery, almost meet ing at the waist and broadening over to the hem. The court train Is two and a half yards long, the embroidery running around In light trails. The gowns of the Queen's trosseau are mostly pale greens, grays, blues and whites, these suiting her blonde com plexion best For her public entering into Amsterdam her Majesty has a royal robe of white velvet, with a train trimmed with ermine, and a mantle lined with ermine. At one of the re ceptions in Amsterdam after the honeymoon die will wear a gown of white satin, embroidered around the hem and bodice with a small tracery of orange leaves, and a court train of rich orange velvet lined with white silk. She has sn outdoor gown of deli- rate gray combined with white and pale blue, scarcely showing embroid ered steel and silver sequins. With this goes a large hat She has also a soft hunting costume of dark bottle green, unornamented, and another of trimmed clothe applique. There is a walking dress of dark green with gold threads, and another of green migno nette cloth, combined with white. The Queen luu* tour plain riding habits. Sam of th* Wedding Site. Amsterdam's gift to the Queen, the magnificent gilded chariot originally built for her coronation, was formally presented on Mohday. In it ahe rode to church Thursday. One of the rich est presents is a great tapestry repre senting the garden of the Hesperides. This is from the French republic. The City of Hague gave a porcelain service Of JMO piocea. From tho womea «t Kkrptfi lamlr KhfOrak. The Khedive of Egypt is one of the few Eastern rulers who has lived In a genuine love story, with the heroine, for his wife. The lovely Ikbal Hanem is of the Circassian race. She was for merly a slave of the Vldldl (Dowager) Khedivah, at whose house the then young ruler of Egypt first saw her. As beauty gives rank In the Orient, the young slave's condition did not inter fere with her advancement She was courted and won by the dashing young prince and finally formally married to him and raised to the rank of Khe divah. The happy couple model their household after the European fashion She neither paints nor powders her face, as is the custom of Egyptian women of high rank. She likes Euro pean dress and has European servants and governesses for her three daugh ters. She studies with her children, and has an open, inquiring mind The Khedivah has one of the most sumptu ous yachts in the world. The saloons are most magnificently upholstered in white satin, brocaded with pink roses, the cornices done In real gold, while the panels are hung with beautiful plc- turea. Her own room is decorated In pink and white, the bed. with its lace trimmings, looking particularly Invit ing. • a 4; ; . : s 1; * * u 1 «r OidmT Railroad men in Atchison, Kan , are puzzled over a question of duty or orders. On one of its sections near Atchison a railroad has Just two men, the foreman and one hand. The print ed rules of the company require that In case a rail should be found broken, one eection hand must go in one direc tion and another in the other, tor the purpose of flagging trains. Now, the question troubling Atchison is, how could the rail be mended with the en tire force away flagging trains? THE PALACE IN THE WOODS, NEiAR THE HAGUE, WHERE ROYAL COUPLE ARE PA SSING THEIR HONEYMOON. where Queen Wilhelmina and Duke g Hague the Queen received a stiver Henry reviewed the parade from the balcony. The Queen stood bareheaded In the frosty air. She wore a blue velvet dress, which was partly cov ered by a heavy sable cape. Duke Henry, in the uniform of a Vice Ad miral, stood by her side. The Queen- mother also appeared on the balcony, but for a few moments only. The banner bearers dropped out of the procession in front of the palace and mirror and a jeweled bracelet, and from her ladies in waiting a silver crater piece for flowers. The mother of Duke Henry gave her son a writing table inlaid with pearls, and the mother of the Queen has given her a necklace of brilliants and sapphires with a brooch of the same. Moat Noteworthy of AH.. The most noteworthy gift is thi csr- pet on which the Queen was married. 1 QUEEN WILHELMINA'S PALACE AT THE HAGUE. *HB OPftdAI* RESIDENCE OF THE QUEEN AND THE PRINCE CONSORT. massed there In a great crescent so that when the end of the parade ^ reached that point they formed a great splash of color. An interesting fea ture of the parade was four great floats bearing emblematic representa tions of the fishing industry. The It is an immense rug, the handiwork of sixty persons participating in tho festivities. $ Makes tb« IHtk* m Prta**. Queen Wilhelmina has conferred upon Duke Henry the title of Prince of the Netherlands. Not counting the national capital, there are forty-four towns and cttlss bearing the name of Washington. On Trnmm Without Ddgr. The collector of customs st Ban Francisco was recently called up to decide whether or not a valuable urs should pay duty. The urn contained the ashes of an American cltixen whs had died abroad and his remains wen being brought home in this shape. Aft er considering the matter for som< time tho collector decided that tho urs and its contents should be admitted. This is the first time that an urn worth several .hundred dollaca wa# passsd without sssessmea* A BOSTON PHILANTHROPIST Frank A. Schirmer, a member of one of the leading business firms in Bos ton, performed an act of practical philanthrophy recently. On Saturday last he had the police captain in one of the poorer precincts in the Hub in struct his officers to obtain the ad dress of families? who were in need of coal. Then going to a dealer he gave his check in payment for 100 tons of coal to be delivered under the direc tion of the police captain, whom he had previously consulted. Up to Saturday evening 72 families had hsea supplied with their winter's fuel. ^WASHINGTON WOULDN'T BE IN IT ROW The richest man in the United States at the latter end of the 18th century was George Washington, who was worthy pretty nearly a million dollars. Probably the richest man today is Jonn D. Rockefeller, whose wealth is reck oned at 1300,000,000. Mr. Carnegie Is supposed to be worth 8200,000,000, while William K. Vanderbilt and Will iam Waldorf As tor probably come next with over 8100,000,000 apiece. These great millionaires cannot estimate their owft ^iGhea wt$iaa a paK«iB M millions. * „ *1 U'. , ....... •art SIM* Cn> veaii it* p--ba--«t. Rome, X l̂pr'tO 'Pall Mall Gazette: For many yssM tho conflict between church and state haa rendered bigamy la Italy not oOly possible, but also easy and not punlahable by law. As the marriage taws now stand only the civil ceremony is legal, but as the oSrarch up to the prescst time has re- . fe?cd to recognize this law the priest 1 lias daily performed the marriage serv ice and given the blessing of the church without the civil ceremony. The consequence is that a man so In clined marries one wife at the city hall and another before the priest Such a state of affairs is so gross a scandal that many projects have been brought before the religious compulsory, with a heavy punishment to any priest toreaking this law. However, the effort has always been useless, as either from personal religious sentiment or tor tsar of oftsadlng their devout support ers the deputies have even refused to support the bill. This has prbduced the present absurd situation. It is an nounced that the holy see, to prevent a man from having two wives, has rec ommended the parish priests to In quire well into the circumstances and in ordinary cases strongly to advise the couple first to go through the civil marriage, to be followed on the same day, if passible, by the religious one. "Panorcu ffetm tootmnsa College professor, railroad man. gold dteKer, adventurer. bunder, mfnr, gnporlntenJan* ^ driver--ilkcew are uw Of tits tions tollowed by Lstsc Is today the most talked-of maa mi Pacific slope. Btillist Isamialns: j nata, railroad promoter genius at the present time, with < in San Francisco, Baker City, and ether places. Letaon was hohr! QUE DOLLAR PER PILL Ifottto HItw th* Pi--Sy Tfcat Cm< S*r Would mm Cheap as Tfcta . Cincinnati, O., Feb. 11, 1901.--(Spe cial.)--Miss Netta Hixon is Sergeant- at-Arms of Camp No. 1, Patriotic Order of America. Her home la at No. 1717 Hughes street, this city. She is a very popular and influential lady. For three years she has been ill. Now she is well. She says: "I cannot praise Dodd's Kidney Pills too highly for what they have done for me. I was troubled for three years with weakness, aad often had dizzy spells, so that 1 dared net go out alone. My head would aehe continually for four or five days at a time, until life became simply 0 burden. "All the medicine I took did me no good, until my physician advised me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I secured a bene, and soon found that my head ache was leaving me. I felt encourag ed sad kept on taking them and get ting stronger. The pains gradually diminished, until I had used four boxes, and all trace of pain had gone. I am today a strong and well woman, thanks to Dodd's Kidney Pills. If the price was one dollar per pill, instead of 50c a box, they would be cheap, compared with other so-called medi cines placed before a suffering public." This is but a sample of the letters re ceived every day by the hundred. They all tell the same story of sickness and soreness, changed into health and vigor by the use of Dodd's Kidney Pills. They neiver fail. 50c a box, six boxes for 12.60. Buy tnem from your local druggist if you can. If he cant supply you, send to the Dodda Medi cine Co,, Buffalo, N. Y. fur SoMlen. > France has enacted a new law which will permit a soldier and sailor of Trance lb send two simple letters per month post free. To carry out this project and in order that the stamps may not be utilized by others, a series of new stamps Is to be produced. They will bear across the vignette the two letters F. M., "franchise milltaire," and, in order to prevent the sales of these stamps a regulation has been issued to the effect that the soldier and sailor must deliver his stamped letter to the baggagemaster--vague- meotre--who will sse that they are duly posted. AN0 CHARACTER OP ABRAHAM LINCOLN. An address by Joseph Choate, Am bassador to Great Britain,on the career and character of Abraham Lincoln-- his early life--his early straggles with the world--his character as developed in the later years of his life and his administration, which placed his name so high on the world's roll of honor and fame, has been published by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul Rail way and may be had by sending six (6) cents in postage to F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, IB. Antidote for A most remarkable application of the principle of inoculation Is in force in Brazil. Rattlesnake poison has long been in use by the natives for the cure of leprosy. A physician of apparent standing has made investiga tions and reports that from experi ments on fifteen lepers he believes that lepra tuberculosa, If not complicated with another disease, la curable by means of the rattlesnake's poisonf^ Stats O* Ohio, Crrr o* Toledo, i_ X.UOAS CODHTT, f , Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is th* senior partner of tho firm of P. J. Cheney A Co., doin* business in the City of Toledo, County •ndBttte aforesaid. Mid that saidtirni will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be Sworn to before me and subscribed in my iresence, this 0th day of December, A_I>- MBS BaU*s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and presence, t (SKAJU) W. GLEASON, Notary Public. acts dlreotly on the blood and mucous surfaces Of the system- Send for testimonials free. P. J. CHENEY & CO.. gold byDruggists, 75c. Bail's Family Pills are the best "•"J * • ' <t! s to Join G. A. R. Senator Hanna is to join the Grand Army of the Republic. He was one of the 100-day soldiers called to the de fense of Washington, but served as a lieutenant In the One Hundred and Fiftieth Ohio. Tm Can Got Alton's Foot-Ease Fro*. Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., for a FREE sample of Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet Makes new or tight shoes easy. A cer tain cun for Chilblains and Frost-bites. At all druggists and shoe etores; 2Sc. Mohammed dyed his beard red, and his example was extensively followed aiming the Arabians. He dial iked black hair, and his favorite wife bloa- dined her tresses with sulphur. The Strand district of London dis- osss of 21,000 tons of refuse per an tra* that neighborhood ihairi • % " '• ,4t'i & f t , v-:, '>wi V *• LBTSON BAJULlVr. Im IT years si» In what Is Itamm ss the "Anaconda of Onrn," a mtjk» tng district In the northern pstt sCfbs he owns tl copper **4 cati His Internets in Industrials te- tluds * laics ownership to In* sad tfrlek making plsats i The future appnrentlr n possibilities tor this flananeier. ffqfro fo Cofrfidtrufc Vsrsissj* Etobsrt R. Church of tributed 11.000 to the ftnrt for tainment of the Confederals tn that city la May next Chare* to'* isgro, born a slave. In theee two sentences Is Ised a whole volume of the hieievy et the African rase In the ssatences contain an ssrtation on the race prsblst. tall what the negro has In the few years of his trsedsssi tell of what he is oapsMs; tjaf of his opportunities and hit < ties here in the South, the relatione between tha raess eloquently than the moat tslnM tor or the most graphic writer sorer the same ground, remaxft Memphis Scimitar. Robert Church's contribution la I fids, as are nil the cheeks prsssatsi flNr i" - CHURCH, ROBERT R. No that have strings Kind of Mm /TmiM, Gemellus R. Paraons, whose da his home in Roohester, N. Y., eoi on Wednesday, served as map Rochester for fourteen yearn* « tag toy eleven years the tarsi of any other mayor of the etty. general excellence and his administration were the eloee of each term It granted he would <be his He served in the state ssseanMlf sat after quitting the mayor's «#- Ouibt to Be fhchwisrf. The duke pf Devonshire owas staaeet 200,000 acree of land in 1m& not an acre la the county taps wltlch he derived his title. The eaU at Sir- by owns 70,000 acres, but possesses ao land in the county of Darby, aad the duke of Fife is the proprietor of 000 seres of land in Scotland* bat Ian. no property In Fife. S.'$ Merely a Generat TTsiwor^ Judging by the charges that are iff ing made against Wilcox, the BanraHaa representative in congress, tha *Taad wich islanders are no more liidlalnaa in their selection of congressmen than the people of some districts In United Statee.--Pittsburg Times. t* Branded for Ijfe. Jease Lewelling, former GOT. I«weiling of probably will have on her forahaad tor life the letters "A. T. M." aa the leealt of hazing inflicted toy young wnma* of the Wichita Blgfe school. The e f c a r a c t e r e , i a Greek, were burned on her face with nitrate of silver, the acid penetrat ing the flesh to the depth of an eighth of aa Inch, leaving scars which, it ia toeH«ved, will not disappear. Hie hassrs are members of the Alpha Theta ety. The branding of Miss i during her lnli that society, and followed to go through with nations," as they say at WSst f̂ ftaL la justice to the yoaag be esid that they cfcaiacter of the losing. Mas Lewellia*. •r? r;: 7'" 2 Jh " *• \ V: f-f" 'i'%, i » } , t V r '* 'J •%: * \ '̂ii ; * _• i ••'•5