. The American bee keeper. Bee culture; Honey. I^KE HURON, BY LOUIS A. GUDEBKOU. This figure occupies a niche in the west wing of the EUectric Tower, and Lake Huron i& typified by an Indian, since this one of the great lakes has been named after one of the powerful Indiaji tribes which occupied lower Canada at the time of the iirst white exploration and settlement. The face and figure of the Indian are finely and vigorously GROUP OF THE "FIVE SENSES" BV CHAS GKAFLY. This group supports the upper portion of the Fountain of ; by Charles Grafly, in front of the ma


. The American bee keeper. Bee culture; Honey. I^KE HURON, BY LOUIS A. GUDEBKOU. This figure occupies a niche in the west wing of the EUectric Tower, and Lake Huron i& typified by an Indian, since this one of the great lakes has been named after one of the powerful Indiaji tribes which occupied lower Canada at the time of the iirst white exploration and settlement. The face and figure of the Indian are finely and vigorously GROUP OF THE "FIVE SENSES" BV CHAS GKAFLY. This group supports the upper portion of the Fountain of ; by Charles Grafly, in front of the main United States Government Building. SURPASSING BEAUTY. Tlie following editorial reference to the Pan- American Exposition is made by the Toronto (Ont.) World: "The Pan-American Exhibition cannot fail to draw immense crowds of people. Buffalo has really produced a spectacle of the first magnitude. Nothing has ever been designed in ancient or modem times to equal the view that is presented from a dozen different points within the grounds. The architecture, the coloring of the buildings, the illumination, the water effects, the statuary, easily sui'iuiss the efforts of the Chicago people in their great World's Fair of 1893. The feature of the Pan-American spectacle is its condensation. It covers a much less area than the World's Fair. Everytliing is compact and the eye is surfeited with the combination of beautiful effects that everywhere meets it. We imagine that even Pari;-" will readily acknowledge that its efforts of year have been surpassed by the architects and artists of the New \\'orld. As far as the illumina- tion goes, nothing, of course, has ever been at- tempted on such a magnificent scale as is seen at Buffalo. Within the space of a few minutes the grounds are converted from twilight into a beau- tiful incandescence, soft, yet powerful, a combina- tion of sunlight and moonlight. It is not only what one actually sees that appeals to the imagin- ation,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbeeculture, bookyear1