VAGK 0 n UTIZKN, FRIDAY, AIMUIj 12, 1013. HYPNOTIZING SUBJECTS FOR OPERATING TABLE. D-!. b!. r- UUII. N.J.. e... rauviit oniya gviiys iiiiv wiiuvi sju I - . geon's Knife. Fornnndo Q. Iioutzcnhclsor sent John Lyons, nscd forty-five. Into n deep Hypnotic sleep wlille Drs. A. O. nnd E. C. 11 rant operated on lilm In InKleflldc hospital, Cnnton, O., for yaricosc vclnn. Tho pntlcnt was In deep sleep for for ty minutes, although the operation last ed only twenty minutes. During tho operation the patient sntiR songs at tho command of the hypnotist. Tho operating surgeons were assist ed by Dr. T. C. Slffert, who wns pro pared to furnish an anaesthetic should nental suggestion fall. riaclng his hand on the forehead of lie patient, the hypnotist murmured: "You nrc going to sleep deep sleep. You nro sound asleep. Now go Rounder, sounder, sounder. You nro going to sleep deeper, deeper, deeper." Lyons eyes closed, nnd it was eri dent that he was under full control. Tapping Lyons on the forehead aud clasping one of his hands, the hypno tist commanded: "Sny it will not hurt me, hurt me, hurt me; I am numb, numb, numb. I will suffer no pain, no pain, no pain. You arc still In a deeper sleep now, are you not?" The unconscious man answered the questions and repeated the words lie was told to say. For an Instant the strain which he was under caused tho hypnotist to gasp. As he called for n glass of water ho pitched to the floor In a faint. It lasted for only a second, and he was helped to n stool at the head of his subject and immediately regained the control. "Some one struck me," murmured Lyons, nut his rcmnrk was cut short at the command of Loutzenhelser, wlu told him to sing. "Sing that song you sang for me tho other night; sing 'Speak Kindly to Your Mother.'" KNIFE CHANGES HIS NATURE. Famous Convict Who Reformed After Operation to Be Paroled. Incarcerated In the state prison at Marquette, Mich., for more than twenty-two years, Redmond llolzhay, thu best known and the most remarkable man in that institution, will be releas ed on parole in November, 1913. His release at that time is made possible as n result of legislation enacted last winter which extends the benefits of the parole law to convicts undergoing Ufo sentences. llolzhay was known as "Rlack Bart" when taken to Marquette from Gogebic county, where he had been tried and convicted for the murder of a Wiscon sin banker. Fie was illiterate and pos sessed a record as a desperado and stagecoach and train robber. Ho gave the prison ollicinls much trouble dur ing the first few years, but following a. surgical operation his character changed completely, aud he became a model prisoner. lie has since been a student He has given himself a good education. For years he has been tho prison librarian nnd photographer. llolzhay Is the only one remaining of the first 1,100 persons serving terms in the penitentiary. He is forty-five yenrs old and la in excellent health. SUFFRAGE ORATOR AT NINE. Daughter of Tennessee Governor Is First Suffragette Heard at Capital. Little Miss Anna 15. Hooper, nine-year-old daughter of Governor Hooper, has the distinction of delivering the flrst equal suffrage speech over made in the Tennessee statchouse. It was all of her own planning. Appearing at the capltol, she mount ed the rostrum of the house and deliv ered herself as follows: "My Fellow Citizens I come plead ing for you men to let the women vote. Do you believe in the way Mrs. I'ank hurst is trying to got votes? No, I do not I do not believe In smashing up the windows, but I do think you ought to let us vote. Why shouldn't we help to make tho laws of our country? Tho ignorant men are allowed to vote, but tho educated women are denied this privilege. This Is not right, aud every sensible man knows it." SECOND YALE TERM FOR TAFT. Alumni Will Re-elect Him as One of tho University Trustees. Prcsldeut Taft will be given n second term by Yale men. Six years ago hi) was elected a member of the univer sity corporation or trustee board, and his term expires next June Tho elec tion to fill the vacancy will take place at tho annual commencement exercises Just a week after tho Itepublicau na uon.il convention nt Chicago. President Taft has consented to bo r candidate for re-election, nnd tho alum ni plan to elect him for his second term hy a unanimous vote. It is understood that no rival alumnus will enter against him. President Taft Is expect ed to attend tho commencement exor cises. Comet Discoverer Gets Medal. Dr. William It. Brooks, director of Smith observatory nnd professor of as tronomy in nobart college, Geneva, Bf. Y has received tho award of the comet medal of tho Astronomical So ciety of tho Pacific for his discovery of tho Brooks comet of 1011. This Is the tenth medal received by Dr. Brooks from this society. The Paris Academy f Sciences bestowed upou him tho Lando .medal a few years ago and the Astronomical Society of Mexico Us gold medal for his discovery of com- WHAT ARE THE RECALL A! Measures That Have Been Adopted In Some States In this Country. WHAT aro the initiative, the ref erendum and the recall? Thuy aro words In every body's month Just now, but a pretty fair proportion of those who' talk nbout them have a vague Idea of what they mean. t Summing them up, they may be said to be three instruments whereby the, representative system of government so long In use in this country will bu considerably enfeebled nnd the people will obtain n more direct control nnd ' muuagciueut of the government than, they have over had. State after state ' la adopting one or all of these new measures When the nineteenth cen-1 tury closed only one state had the Inl- j tlative aud referendum. Now many states have it. The recall did not come , Into existence in America until llXKi, 1 but now the country Is dotted with communities whero it is in force nnd is actively used. j All these threo propositions are im portations from Switzerland, where the ; Initiative and referendum have been In force for half n century, thu recall uot bo long. Fundamental Principles. The states and cities that have adopt ed these Swiss innovations have varied r.nd altered theiu to suit the local taste, eo that a definition of the referendum as it exists iu one state does uot al ways desTibo the same law In another. But the fundamental principles are usually the same and may be summed up as follows: The Initiative. If a certain percent age of voters wish a certulu law adopt ed they can submit it to the legislature, which must in turn submit it to a ref erendum. The Referendum. If a certain num ber of voter- demand an opportunity to vote upon a bill the legislature must submit It to them and the people de cide by a vote whether it shall or shall not become law. just as in New York btate ihey vote upon an amendment to the state constitution. The referen dum can be demanded not only on bills previously pmpocd by the initia tive, but upon bills which have their origin In the legislature Itself. The Recall. If a certain percentage of voters demand the right to decide whether a public otliclal shall continue to hold office or must retire to private life the question must be submitted to the people at an election. If they vote against him he must give up his office, whether the term for which he was elected Is anywhere near Its end or is just beginning. "The Initiative." said Henry Jame Ford of Princeton university in an ad dress before the Economic club of Bos ton, "means simply this that sections of the people themselves shall have the right to initiate legislation and to so licit for It the approval of their fellow citizens. Tho referendum means that If the legislature passes a measure that measure shall be referred to the people before It becomei a law." In Oregon. And In Oregon the governor has no veto power over measures enacted by the people themselves. The operation and purpose of the Initiative and referendum were ex plained In a clear and lucid manner by the highest court In Oregon In a case known as Oregon versus Pacific States Telegraph and Telephone com pany, 53 Ore., 102. Said the court: "By the adoption of the initiative and referendum into our constitution the legislative department of the state is divided into two separate and dis tinct iuwmuking bodies. There re mains, however, as formerly, but one legislative department of the state. It operates, It Is true, differently from be foreone method by the enactment of laws directly through that source of all legislative power, the people, aud the other, as formerly, by their rep resentatlves but tho change thus wrought neither gives to nor take from tho legislative assembly tho pow er to enact or repeal uhy law except In such manner aud to such extent as may therein bo expressly stated. The powers thu reserved to the people merely took from the legis lature tho exclusive right to enact laws, at the samo time leaving it a co-ordl nate legislative body with them. This dual system of making and unmaking laws has become the Fettled pulley of tho state and so recognized by dec! slons upon the subject" South Dakota First to Adopt. South Dakota was the flrst ntnte to adopt the initiative and referendum, and Its laws on tho subject are regard ed as models of the kind. The South Dakota constitution originally provided that "tho legislative power shall be Tested in a legislature which shall con sist of a senato and a house of repre sentatives." This was amended by adding a provision that "tho people expressly reserve to themselves the right to propose measures, which measures tho legislature shall enact nnd submit to a voto of tho electors of the state, nnd also tho right to require that any laws which tho legislature ' may have enacted shall be submitted E, 1 The Three Propositions Are Importations From Switzerland. fore going into effect, except such laws as may be neccssnry for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health or safety, support of the state govern ment aud Its existing public Institu tions, provided that not more than 5 per cent of the qualified electors of the state shall be required to Invoke either the Initiative or tho referen-1 dum." 1 When 5 per cent or moro of the vot-' era wish to use the referendum on any law passed by the legislature In that state they file a petition with the sec-1 rotary of state within ninety days aft er the adjournment of the legislature. The law must then be submitted to i the people. As will be seen from the quotation Just given from the consti tution, thl'i R per cent can also propose legislation through the Initiative, which they do through a petition to the leg-1 islnture. That body has no cliolfe. It must submit to n referendum the law thus proposed through the Initiative. If tho result of the referendum is fa vorable to the proposed law It goes into effect at once. Besides this state wide referendum, local laws nnd ordinances In the cities and towni of South Dakota aro sub mitted to the voto of the communities affected by them. In San Francisco the initiative and referendum are in force, but it takes 15 per cent of the voters to invoke the Initiative. It Is generally assumed that the adoption of the initiative nnd referen dum would lead to more radical legis lation. However. Dr. Edwin E. Slos son, writing to the Independent from Switzerland, where he has been a spec tator at a referendum electiou, ex pressed tho opinion based on what he had 'observed that the electorate was more likely to err In the direction of conservatism than of radicalism. He wrote after seeing the referendum wipe an old age pension law off the statute books three months after it had been enacted. Recall In Los Angeles. The recall had Its American begin ning In Los Anrreles. where It was Inserted In the city charter in 190S. The clause providing for it announces, "The holder of any elective office may be removed at any tlmo by the elector qualified to voto for a successor of such incumbent." If 2o per cent of the voters petition for tho removal of such an officer tho petition is filed with the city clerk. It must contain a state ment of the reasons for which the offi cial's removal is sought. The city clerk has ten days in which to ascertain If the petition contains th'e requisite number of signatures, and upon his certificate to that effect the city council must order an election within from thirty to forty days. Un less the accused official requests other wise in writing his name must be put upon the ballot as n candldato to suc ceed himself. The candldato receiving the highest number of votes, whether It Is ho or nnother, takes the office. A Curious Case. The other cities that havo followed Los Angeles' lead havo modeled their recall laws after hers as a rule, though some of them require as high a per centage of voters as 30 or 40 to make tho demand. Oregon in 1003 adopted a constitutional amendment making ev ery elective officer In the state, "from constable to governor" and, of course, including Judges, subject to the recall. In that stato tho reasons for the recall of the official must be stated within 200 words, and he Is allowed the same space In which to defend himself. A very curious case came up In Ore iron last year in which a circuit Judge named Coke wns made tho subject of a recall petition because of his conduct of a murder trial. Tho defendant was acquitted becauso of the judge's charge, and the petition for Coke's recall charged him with "giving unfair and erroneous Instructions as to tho law." Thus the laymen of Douglas county. Ore., were nctuully asked to pass upon a Judge's knowledge aud Interpretation of the law, not of tho facts. RANK OF AMBASSADORS'WIVES King George Makes a New Court Rule In Favor of Mrs. Whltelaw Reid. An Interesting change In court pre cedence has been ordered by King George, whereby the wives of am bassadors will take rank with tholr husbands, nitherto tho wives of am bassadors to the court of St. James had no rank of their own. If they appeared nt court unattended by their husbandt they were obliged to take n low position In tho procession, coming after tho Junior ministers. The continued indisposition of White law Held, the American ambassador, as well as tho illness of the Marqul Imperial!, tho Italian ambassador, placed the wives of these two diplo mats In n delicate position. At tho last court Mrs. Held refrained from at tending, and the presentations of American women wero made by the Countess Benckendorff, tho wife of the Itusstan ambassador, who is the doyenne of the diplomatic corps. King Georce Immediately cut this mrranv REFERENDUM CANNING OF KISSES ? A COLLEGE STUDY. Feminine Students at Chicago Univer sity Add New 8olanee to Currieulum. Tho University of Chicago Btudcnts made an Important addition to tho curriculum. It has been a long time since the co-cducatlonnl Institution ha Had a real sensation, and sevon of the co-eds decldod to start one. So they ruled that the university could Intro duce a new science osculography. The others wcro informed that a clique of leap year aspirants In Bos ton had Invented the science which, after all, is quite simple. It consists of Imprinting on a whlto card an im pression In rouge of one's lips. It la the "canned" kiss. "Now, we'll stnrt It," resumed the dean of tho Impromptu meeting of the curriculum committee. She fumbled blushlngly and produced a little rouge pot, removed the top and ndroltly cov red her lips. Then she drew n plain white card from n case. "Smack!" came a sound, and the dean held up the card. On It wns a neat Impression of what five young men, so 'tis said, have declared the prettiest lips on the midway campus. "Oo-ooh, what n prettah thought!" aid No. 2. "And" smack "what a prettah cahd I havo!" "Well." said No. 3, "I never, never, never used rouge before, but In the In terest of the university I will this once, nnd" smack "if this is not n better print than either of those I will eat it." Three cards lay on the table. The other four were quickly osculographed. even the girl who had a chapped lip contriving to pucker her mouth to the right position. They gathered tho seven cards nnd announced that the man who identi fied the marks could collect what re ward he believed fair. GOVERNMENT TO RAISE MINK. Commercial Test Planned to Improve Fur Producing Trade. The biological survey of tho agricul tural department has secured the co operation of the National Zoological park In experiments in breeding mink for the purpose of ascertaining the pos sibilities of rearing them in captivity for commercial purposes. This has never been attempted by the govern ment heretofore, but It Is hoped by the combined efforts of the two organiza tlons something of practical impor tance can be accomplished. The fact that the mink Is n native of the Dls trlct of Columbia gives promise to the undertaking. The main object Is to secure data rel ative to the best methods of rearing mluk for their fur, especially ns to de tails of housing, feeding, mating and caring for them. Some simple pens havo been constructed in tho zoo for about six of the nnlmnls In order to start the experiments, and additional ones will be built as occasion demands. The mink for these experiments will bo trapped in the District, if possible. It being considered preferable to ob tain specimens which havo their habi tat in that locality and are already ac climated rather than to bring them from a distance. Should this prove impossible specimens will be purchased from other localities. A few Individu als have been secured already from the vicinity of Washington, but the officials having tho enterprise in charge say they are not looking for results as yet. WON'T TRAIN WOMEN. School of Journalism Rules Them Out Flatly, For the Present at Least. Women will not be admitted to tho Pulitzer school of Journalism at Co lumbia university when It opens for students In September next. The ruling that women are to be ex cluded was made by tho advisory board of the school, which is headed by Whltelaw Held. The committee discussed the proposition as to whether women should be admitted for some time at Its last meeting and finally de cided that the best Interests of the school, for tho tlmo being nt least, de mand that tho courses be open to men only. By excluding women from its classes in Journalism Columbia Is not estab lishing n precedent, for excepting in tho summer session no women are per mitted to take courses In the Colum bia school of law, and the snme Is true at tho College of Physicians and Sur geons. At tho latter place women are allowed to attend lectures, but they are not permitted to register for a de gree and follow out the course to the end. No women have been admitted to Columbia college In more than twenty years. ASTRONOMY PRIZE TO WOMAN Miss Harwoed Is Awarded the $1,000 Nantucket Fellowship, The women's astronomical fellowship of the Nantucket Maria Mitchell usso elation was awarded to Miss Margaret narwood of Littleton, Mass. This fel lowship of $1,000 is made annually from a fund of $25,000 contributed by friends of the association with a gift of $15,000 from Andrew Cnrnegle. It Is to bo devoted to advanced astronom ical study nnd resenrch work for six months on Nantucket Island and six months at nny largo observatory which tho recipient may choose. Thero were eight applicants this year. Miss narwood is n graduate of Bad cliffe college and for tho past four years has studied and assisted In the ALCOHOL .1 ppu m' AVcgc able Prcparaiion rorAs slraialifrJihcFoodareincdula lmpu:SiomadtsandJJotlsof ii nirnT Promotes Digcstionfrrfurl ncss and ResLContalns ntirtr : OpiuTiLMorprtinc nor Mineral.1 WOT .NARCOTIC. jfrjxtcMn-siMcznrmiit JkdxtttSdtt jtmeSnd thru Seta- m Himr. Aperfecl Remedy for CorcTf a- uon aour aiomacn.uiamuu Yorras,CorrvTilsions.rewrislr ncss aralLoss OF Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Guaranteed under the Exact Copy of Wrapper, ABSOLUTE SBISBBlPJLCTRDI S, Guaranteed under tKHr4 1 3k J 1 1 1 WW I Wayne County Savings Bank HONESDALE, PA., 1871 41 YEARS BECAUSE we have been ABLE SERVICE to our customers. 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