Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 22, 1892, Page 2

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o . ' , T T——_—— SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 15392 -TWELVE PAGES THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ! <he: N hold any | her eyes from the drudgery that has op- | that all men and women of every clime may l with realistic offeots surpassing the most | Weo have had full onough of the dramatic and | hibit. Thoy, ndeed, are our crown jowels; | and enthusiasm for the of 3;."“'":3”:: T mpttion phich oxeites LhE pressed et since prnhh!nrl’r avs. feel that the evidence of matsrial brogress | aplendid and imgressivo achievoments of | sensational, and noed a sewson of mediocrity | the truest, though the inovitable, n"{,.r‘..", YIOn Gouriey ™ tho old flag and our com- praise, it is but the ouc-croppiug of the Ro- The sesult is that women s a sex have | whioh may hore meet the eye is good only so | the modern stage.” Nt one, who hius haa the | and repose. But may we not ascribe the ra- | of our civilization and dovelopment; the 'ne world has been breught into contaot Pan courage on & new concinent, in a later | boen liverated. They now nave time to think, | far as it may promote that higher life which | good fortune to jeesthe models of this ex- | tionat way in which the people are going | roprosentatives of o manhood vitalized and | wnd sympathy, The electrio current thrilis age. y " ba educatod, 1o plan . snd pursus | Is the trao alm of civilization— that the ovi- | traordinary work of art, can have falled to | about their businoss to larger knowledgo and | fuvigorated by toil amd oare, of & womanhood | And unifios the people of th wlobe. Pows & coms 1o you men of older eivilizations | careers of = thelf Own . choosing. As | dences of wewlth here exhibiied and the | bo moved by tho walan, which it embodles, | experienco and afairor spirit than havo hith- | elovated and inspirea by liborty wnd educa: | and productior, nighways and transports 10 (bis Soung oity Whoss most ancient land- | 8 result of the freedom and training | Stimulus horein given to lndustey are go0e of the antique in history and the current lu | erto marked our party contentions! ton. God bless the ohildron and their [ have been so multiviied and improved by fn 1o1bis voung €1ty 0N e ot n prosont | now granted them womay conlljentiy awaty | 0nly 80 far as they may oxtend tno acea of | life and thoughtj\ds, beginuing wilh the | Partics aro as cssential to freo government | mothors | Giod bless our countrs’s flag ! Atd | vontive genius, that within the. centate of | Tife. Our hospitalities ana our weicome We | not a rennissance, but the first blooming of | human hapvine weird mendieant fainting upon the hillside | s oxywen to the atmospere, or sunshine to | God be with us now and ever, God 1n tho | our independence 64,000,000 of people bay | tend without reserve, without regard | the perfect flower of womauhood. After As the presiaent of the commission turned | of Santa Rabida, it traves tho strange adven- | vegetation. And pariy spirit is inseparablo | roof-troe’s shade and God ou the hichway, | hupny bomes and improved conditi itbin 3 S TATIOURIIY, (ol b TRE, e Eoeatal prusing. nto conyen. | to Vice Prosidont Morton t the close and | tures of the (goaso seor from tho royal | from purly organisim. To tho extent Wit it | God In tho winds and waves, uad God in ali | out bordors. We havo Acoamluted Wonltn | B % tional shapes to meed the requiremonts of an | asked the reprasontative of the nation to | camp of Santa “Fo to the sunny co is tempered by wood senso and good feeling, | our hearts y 18t beyond tho vistons of the CELLey of o : Seleetion from the Dedicatory Ode. el T the slrears and props have | dedicate the buildings and grounds tohu- | of ~ the isles”" 8t “Ind; through [ by lovo ol country and intexrity of purpose, | The heart of overs hoarer was thrilled by | lumbus or the Eidorado of Do \~:‘nlm"n°’ Voo H Mrs, Sarah G, Lamovuo then rond With | been thrown mway. \e snail learn by wateh. | manity, the ~sentiment of tho occasion | the wonry watahes. of the ' endless [ it is a suprame virtue; and there should bo no | the eloquent sentonces of tho magnetic | farmors and frocholdors, tho snviies binie ! beautiful effect seleotions from the dedi- | ing the beauty and the vigor of the natural | reached Its climax, and cheers from 100,- night, whose soutingl stars seemed set | gag shortof a decent rogard for tho sensi- | orator's addréss and at every point of Lis | and shops illustrate it \mu-urml“u«n”-“fk' 1 oatory ode, written by Miss Harriet Monroe. | growth in the open air and sunshino how ar- | 000 throats welcon.ed the veneravle vioe | to mock but not to guide; through the track- | biiitics of others put upon its freodom and | masterly effort the great American was in- | tion. The majority aro its NOTINNORS § 1 i As Mrs. Lomoyne concluded the reading and | tificial and false was the ideal we nad previ- | presidontof the United States. less and shoreloss wastes of the mystic sea, | plainness of utterance, Oiherwise, the | terruptea by the tribute of cheering thou. | administrators. (n Iuvu-un('mnl 1ivi %! i At Foamo. her soat, 1Pecstdent | onaly chorished. Onr efforts to frustrato na | By & common impulse evers man and | sproad day by day to bear upon every rise | limpid pool of domocracy would Stagnato, | sands. At the cioso the speil of enthusiasm | the elemonts which make the toila L | T O etem iy thio wroATh | fieb sl soein 10t sL 1o, fof $ho may alays | worunin th6 monstor assomblago arosoto | and fall of fta Redving bosom tho death of | ana we should have n republic only in nume. | rolencd supramo in evory heart, and a8 o | respecting and rospectod citisen. i avenoo | B by 1110 1adies of Chicago, dellvered | he trusted to prosored bertypos. Our utmost | thele feet fn spontaneous tribute to the | falr, fond hoves, tHo birth of fantastic fears; | Bt we should never coase to be admonished | grand chorus strack up tho *Star-Spaugled | of topo and ambition for childton, 16 811 that | ft to Mrs. Lemoyne in & graceful little | hope is thut woman mav become a more con- | highest dignitary of the oceasion, the peeriess and tamiliing revelation, and all | by the warning words of the father of nis | Banuer,” Bishop Fowlier forvently shouted | gives broader scove and keoner 'vx:u:n»‘wm:“ Mpeech. Tuarty applaise grected hee as she | anial companion and it vartner for her that has followod to the very moment that | country against the oxcoss of party spirity | “Everyuody to his foot,” and the suekostion | existonc, the e of. this Fopublic enjoy | @ecoptod the tribute to ber exceilent reading | justrious mate, whose destiny she has shared beholds us here, citizons, freemon, equal | reinforced ns they are by the experionce of | found an instant responso from @ hundred | advantages far bovond those of other lamye | of the ode. during the centuries g sharoholders in the miracle of American civi- | a century of party warfare; a warfare han- | thousand rover 1al Afaericans | Matoriaf prospority has not dobased. iitea There wern loud cries for Miss Monroe, and | Wo ure proud that the statesmen of our | Hle Approves the Builaings and Bids An | lization and development Is there one | pily culmmating in the comp'ete trinmph of ture noe d MQ“.“_‘I the -l.l . “‘;-‘l‘“ litera~ the retired little authoross of the ode was | own country have boen the first to soe be- Nattons \eloom among us who does not thank his Maker that | American prineiples, but brought many tmes CONTINENDS T1% MONUMRNT | preaiyaed ner ropressod Tavellbetual ROV forcod to come ta tho front and bow her | noath thoe surface and to understand that the At the close of the ovation Vice President | he has livea to join in this universal colebra augerousiy near 1o the anuihilation of al The hudiblea, an . HOORESE el Ry Ay acknowledgments 10 her chicering admirers. | old order of things hns passed away, and vnat | yeoe 008 ol tion, this jubiles of mankind? that was great and noble in the nationai life. | Ciiauncey M. Drepiw's Grand Tribute to | poriodiosls whose prics 18 conated 1 penntos. ! Inufew \\-m‘\‘r of eulogy -“f.‘lh'\r“'\‘: it H‘;_‘-”-‘ | new method 1":‘:“.';" it ',",f”,l\"‘".',p}\,',',l“'y'f\\: Mr, Presidont: Deep indeed tust be the The Magnitude of the Theme, AL Up Your Hearts, & the Discoverer of Ameriea. A library larger, fallor and more variod thay ! Preident Paimer prosonted Miss MOIEoe | 1o cxproes o e b0 e o s Cgreat | 80rFow which prohibits tho president of tho | I am appailed when L reflect upon tho por- | Sursum cords, Wo have in our own time carcely was the ovation endad when | Was Within the reach of tho rich in the time the boquot which had also beeu sont up by_| United States for havine mai'e (b8 K| Uaited States from boing the central fiuro | tentand meaning of the proclamation which | seanthe rapublic survive an irreprossivie con- | Chauncoy M. Depew of Now York advanced | f Columbus, AR R L forth dosing | oD o ot ehdorsed 1ho plans of | i these cercmomals, Itealizing from these | has boen dolwered iu our presuace, Tho | ict, sown in tho blood and marrow of tho liver the Columbian oration wis L'he sum of human happiness bas been in: Again the cuorus burst forth inac & | queatiy approved an rse nl slmtuons. scrrotndings the astont of de. | painter employed by the king's commond to | social order. We huve scen the fedoral union, | noarly 8 minute bofore the nor b, | finitely increased by tho millions from the Selectinn from the od ARAL ““;”‘ ’ ." ”’, 1o bontuiot iy '“‘"‘,"f"‘ s “",*,’l” for | #1i0, the adequacy of exocution and the vast- [ Fender to the aye some particular exploit of | not 100 strongly put togethier in the first | o y ," elore the applause sub- | old world who have improved their condis { pressive l'\w"(.\ll the "rm“x‘:“!:w” r‘v'.n chora | fested 9'.;} their liveral appropriation O A e row | tho peoplo, or the tarone, knows In ndvance | pince, comooutot . great war of sections | 200 and whon sileuce was finaliy restored | tions in the now, and the veturning tiae of 1 music to whioh the oda had boenset, | | cateying thetd out, - eiate tho assistance | Ardently ho has aspired to be officially | breclscly what ho has to do; there s limit | strongerthun when it went {nto it, its faith Mr. Depew spoke as follows : lesson and experienco has incaloulably ons i pebho uaauimous sontiment of Hhose Bl | o o e Taont of the: Unite | and porsonally connccted with this great | 88t uhon his purposs, his canvas {s meas- | renowed, its credit rehabliitated and it tlag | This day belongs nov 1o America bat to vicheo the fathorlands, Tho divine vight | D O I O bla aotit | e e b rtmons of Stats and oar | WOPk, 80 Iinked to thio past and totko present | ured, his colors ‘are blendod und. with th saluted Wwith love and homage by SIXty | the world, ‘Pho resalts of tho avent it com- | of KIS Bas taken its place with tho instru. H e potTormed woll tho almost Infinito | foraian ministors. W hopo 10 have ocea. | Of America. - With what cloguent words ho | steady and sure hand of the master, he [ millions of (odfearing men anl wom {RBHbIALAS 1 THOHEPLATSIOE. tho Daspias ot | DXoia of | TeaiovaL ierlus RTHIaIEIE i b, D 4 Ahae s We hopo o bave ocet | ild have spoken of the herolo wehiovo. | proceeds, touch upon touch, to body | thoroughly roconciled and homogeneous! | ([ curiosities of the antiquar Ouly the labor ase.cucd them in Lo seleotion and | sion to thani all of the other great devarte | [0 oy radiant futureof hisbeloved coun- | forth the forms of things known aud | We havo soen tho fedoral constitution out: | S¥CEY FACo wud cilme, We colobrate the | shidow of kinely nuthority stands votween i tratuing of this grand chorus. ments of the governinent beiore wo finl try! While profoundly _ anguished in | visible. Who shail measure the canvas or | last the strain, not meroly of a recoustruc- | €mancipation of man. The preparation was the government of'themsolves by themseivos ot e 7 CLbAWCLLOE tant than the discovery | Nis most tender earthiy affection, ho would | blond the colors that are to bring to the | tory ordeal and a presideutial impeachment, | the work of almost countless centuries, tho | 8ud the people of Norway and Sweden. The i DIRECTOR BURNIAM, Kyen more important thin the discovery | o4 iy us. doluy or falter In theso odi- | mind's eyo of the presont tho sconos of tho | but a dispuied count of the eclectoral | realization was tho rovelation of one. 'Tho | Uioh I onsempireof statos in Gornany is the 5 —— of Uolumbus, Which o0 et that the gon. | catory services, and we can only offer to | pastin American glorg! Who shall dare at. | voto, 8 = congressional —deadlock —and | eross on Calvary was hope; tho cross ralsod symbol of Teutonic power, and the hope of | (i Hle Speaks of the Work of the Men Who | gether to celobrato, is the fach LAt the K80 | o, ;,port his courage oy a profound and uni- | tempt to summon the doad to life, and out of | an 'extra constitutional tribunal, yet | 0n San Salvador was opportunity. But for Germany liboralism. The potty despotisms ] Planned and Builded. A RVHTISH L FORTRIES sal svmpathy. . The ttention of our | the tomb of the ages recall the tones of the | standing frm ngainst the assaults ‘of “its | tho first Columbus would never have sailed, | Of 1taly huve been mergod into 8 nationality ' Cneaao, Tl Vet 21 —Tue super Iuhas just sent out o flachiicht from 112 | Whiolo country uid of ail paopies elsawhero | MAFtyrs and heroes whose voicos, though si- | enemies, whilst yiolding itsell with admira- | but for tho second thero would huve ‘boon | Which us contratized its authority in its | 8 of the entire works of the expo Do, 8O L e Whon tho exposi- | €oncerned 1n_ indusirial progress is today | lent forovor, still spoak to us ln all that wo | ble flexivility ' to tho “meeds ~of the | to place for tho planting, tho nurture and ancient capital on the hills of Rome. Franco 4 Burnham, was introduced by o e Whatwill be. its next mes. | fixed upon tho city of Chicago. The namo | 8re as & nation, in all that we do as men and | country and the time. Aud, finally, | the expansion of civiland religious liberty. | Was rudely roused from the sullen submis- Palmer. Mr. Burnham turned to Mr. Hig- | sage to \‘l", 5 of Chicago has become familiar with | woment we saw the gigantic fabric of tho | Ancient history is a dreary record of up- | Sion of centaries to intolerablo tyranny or. ) A g 1He Bpocol” of Wil Givilited - comibnnities: The Retrospect. federal government transferred from | stablo civilization. ISach rewched its zenith | DY ~ her —soldiers roturning from gintotham and spoke as follows: TRANSFERRED THE BULLDINGS. Buresus are established at many points in Wo look befors and atter and we see | hunds that had held it a quartor of a century | of material splendor and perished. L Sl k] “In August, 1585, the World's Columbian uropo for tho purpose of providing trans- | through the haif-drawn folds of time as | to other hands, without a protest, aithough | Absolutism in the state, ana bigoted wntol- [ NOW In tho fulluoss of time, and through the . oxposition committes was to decido upon a st Migginbothnm Turns Them Over | portation hither, aud during the coming | through the solown archways ot some grand | 0 close was the poll in tho final count thata | erance in the chureh, shackled popular ua- | fRaining in theschool of hardest experionce, site for the great exposition. Without hesi to President Palmer. year the first place suggested to the mind | cashedral the (ong procession pass, as silont | Single blanket might have covered both con- | rest and imprisoned thought and euterprise the French people have reared and onjoy a etlal o, bl AL UL G "1 president Higgnbotham of the world's | When men tallcof America will bo the ety | aud ns real as a droam; Lho caravels, Lossing tostanis for the chief magisterial ofice. With | in the fifteenth century. The diviue right of | Permanent repuvlic. Hugiand of the May of Amevican landseape artists to join tue g a b of Chicago. 'This 18 due not only tothe ' o 8, ve oir 88 e- | such a record bohind us, who shall vo arraia | kings stamped out the faintest ghimmor of | HOW A he Second, En and givo advice, Fhe suwgestions of these | Columbian exposition now formally tendered from Atlantic billows, have their salls r gland of | Columbus exposition, which marks in epoch, | filled from the easi and beer away to tho | of the futurat revolt against tyranny, and the probiems of | (icoree the Thirs andof Lora North, has en- mnow wers adopted. Tn Docomber it became | tho oxposition buildings to President Palmer [ but to the matvelous growth and enersy of | west; the land 1s roached and fulfilled i3 the | . The young mantood of the country may | Science, whether of the skies or of tho earty, | lirzed suffrago und is today ammated and necessary to select the archtects | ofphe World's Columbian exposition in the | the sccond commercial city of the union. vision whose actualitios are to bo gatherea | take this lessou from those of us who livad | whether of astronomy or geography, were | #OY rned by the democratie spirit, of the buildines. Agin the corporation in- | o 0Tl gc L am not nere to recount the wonderful | by othier hands than his who/ planuca tho | through timos that dia, indeed, try men's | solved or submerged by ecclesinstical de Three millions of Germans, who are among trusted the work of choosing to an expert. | O Ao, Palmer. Prosident of the | SLOrY of this city's rise and advarcement, of voyage and stecred tho bark of discovery: | Souls—when, pressed down from dav to day | croes. tho best citizons of the republic, sond greot und since that time no sinzie importantsten | o {"",_ i Ll ch Astas g 1”( ietor. | the matchless courage of her people, of ber | the long sonent, solden day has come to | DY awful respousibilitics and suspense, each Pifty years before Columbus sailed from | M tothe fatherland. their prido in its clori of the Worle’s Columbian exposition has _l[w'l: ) _‘f' um mu;( tu'mu_:f:...m.. ,n ‘\n‘“ " | second bivth out of the ashes of the most Spain at lust and Castiian conquests tread | BHight brought or with every thought of | Palos Guttenberg and 1Manst had forged the | OUs bistory, its ripe literature, its traditions been taken without 1 ico of an expert, | dny theso surrounding ac ; j“‘A”,[““ L) i3 | notable contlacration of modern times, nor | one upon another fast enough to pile up per- | thL morrow and, when, look whete we would, | hammer which was to break the bonus of nd - associations, Ivish, equul in number to % When before hos any community so in- | 'vvllv Rl Lt n;_‘ljm -‘Id“-ll" ”l‘ I\. \\;u‘ tho eminent position sho has conquered n | petunl power and viches. there were light and hope nowhere—that God | supsrstition and open the prison doors of the | those who stiil remain upon the Emerald trusted its interests to its strougestsons? [ fuwls in thoir 'f'”‘.'.‘; D '; Sl \“ cotmmerce, in manufactures, in science and But even as simple justice was deuicd | Feiens and wills, and tnat this fair land is, | wind. ‘They had invented the printing pross Islo, who nave illustrated theie davo: And what are the resultst Tuey lie around | O by Moy oter | 10 the arts. These are known toall men who | Columbus was lusting tenure denied the | 8ud alwass has been, in his own keoping and movable types. [ts first sorvice, liko all | Hon to their adoptea utry on many a gou; - Waian thls day stnll stand i the } SO0UCT < 1d grandeur unrivaled by noy Other | yeop pacs with the world's progross. BRRATATD; Tho carse of slavery is gous. 1t was a | of its succoeding efforts, was for the people. hting for tho union and its per- long perspective of tho past anc your | Spot on ey o oo All We look again and wo 500 in tho “ar north- | J0IT heritage of woo to bo wiped out and Tho firstboru of tho marvelous croation of | PAtELY biwve rather i H arvelo aterial dovelopy S east tho old-world struggle botween the | 2Xpiated in blood and flame. The mirage of | these primitive printers of Mayence was the | ished their love for th epoch, one of those rare moments which can | tion of that marvelous I'” Sl "“"l‘ 1 am here in behalt of the government of cench and ISnghsh trausterred 1o the new, | the confederacy has vanished, It was essen- | printed bible. Lo fo only, with intervals of centuries, come. 1 | and that unprecodentec :.:-.\( h of national | the United States, in be alfotall the peodle, | auding wn the tragedv upon the heights above | Ually oucolie, a vision of Arcadie, the | mude possiblo Amo; ROnEERIIIBLO tho oity upon Lo devation and | Breatness, which, since the dav of Columbus | (o bid all huil to Chicago, all bail to tho Co- C Wil be called an | Herein wa bohold a miniature ropresenta- We tensified than dimin- land of tho shamrock o, howoever. which | and their sympathy with tho aspirations of At Ju- | their bretiren at home. The Itatian, the children read the sto 3 1 ROLTVE BE O SHIE e [t SCOPE W S T Spaniara and the Frenchman, the Novw ST 3 o 6w Quebee; we seo the sturdy. Puritans in bali- | dream of a most attractive economic faliacy. | ence upon Ilurope, was the open bivle by the P R rman, the Norwo. generosity of her sons,which bave mude this | have churacterized the bistory of the uew | Jumbian exposition. crowned hats aud sable garments assail in: | Lhe constitution 1s no longer a rope of sand. | family firesido, gian, the Swedoe aud the Dane, the English, duy possible, 1 congratuiate the company { world. i oot I'rom the St Lawrence to tho guif, from | yyequal battle the savage and tha eloments, | The exact relation of the states to the fed- God always hasin training soms command. | 1he Scoteh and the Welsh, are none the less upon the suceess it has attained by its wise I'he idle boy, strolling along the shors of | tho peeriess cosmopolitan capital by the sea 4 X rove! ol 2 v the c v y loval and devoted Americans because hi A S L AL 1 v s a I overcoming both to rise agaiust a mightier | eral government, laft open to double con- | Ing gentus for the coutrol of great erises in | LoVl s 4 4 causo in this course in suffering its expert aavisers to | this inland ses, carel ?.\_\ H‘l\: b/ \I_‘Ilhj'l‘l to thie Golden Gate of Califoraia, therois no [ pioe ORGS0 0y but dauntloss cavaliors | Struction by the authors of our oveanic be- | the aTairs of nations und pooples. Noither | SOngrass of their kin the tendrils of affeotion Jond it on' and in supporting them so nobly | 1nto the ‘biue waters. 1ot that eettes of | fonger a rivel ciiy Lo Chicago, oxcent 1o emu- | (0t} southward join hauds with the round. | V€ because they ¢ould nol agrea among | ¥ealism not romance furaishos o moro sivik. draw them closer to the hills and valleys, the With its millions and 1ts perfoet faith. 1 | neitation there spread the circling wave | jate her in promoting 1Mo Success of this pmselves, and e g i A F legends aud the loves associated with th A > . beads in holy robollion And lo! down from | themselves, and uiion was the paramount | ing and picturesque figure thau that of | ¥ ssociated with' their congratulute the old country in tho vosses- | which 1'-""“' -“m’*l”ll'm. bl ""‘lilifl} work. 4 the greonwailed hills of New Ingland, owt | 0%Ject, bos been clearly aud definitely fixed | Christopher Columous. Tho mystery about | YOUth 5 Mon of such & mopulace, whoso spitil_has | lostatlast in todistant ealm. Notsodid | Now York has signalized the opening of | rrominaswanps of the Caroliuas,como fuintly | DY thelast threo anendiments to the originul | s orisie heghitens tho charm of his story All hail, Columbus, disvoverer. dreamer, Mot to stieh an oceasion, And I congratu. | the zreat thought come and vanish Which | tho now cra by o commemorative function | (b iy aan ke e asay fofoet loaves stirrey | Chart, whict constituto the real treaty of T'o scolro the means to test the truth of | 1°ro and apostio! Neither marble nor brass Iate the world upon tl > rosult bas culmiated in these preparations for the | justructive tothe student, My conntrsmen, yeu have freed the arm | Worla's Columbian exposition. It wasnot | the philanthropist and acmonitory to the of tho allied artists, which hus until now | the suggestive jmpulse of auy sinele brain | forces arrayed aguinst liberty been bound siuce Columbus aay, 400 years | OF localily that originated this notle enter Her houses of worship, without distinetion | 250, & prise. From many minds and many locali- | of creed, nave voiced toewr thhnks to al- on have bidden architecture, sculpture, | Ues there secmed to come, spontaneously | mighty God for religious freedom; her chil- puinting and music be free; ano, as has in unison, the sugeestions klm‘ a Colum- | gren to the numover of 25,000 have marcied been the case, when after many centuvies o | bian celebration. Those individual aud.| yuder the wmspiration of a light far broader encouraging to [ yo music by autumn winds, the drum- | Peace between the north and the south, ‘and | bis svecufations this poor and unknow: can fitly form his statue, Coutinents are his taps of the revolution; = the tramp | €8l ourbonds as a nution forevor amer must win the support of kings and | Monument, and unnumoorot millions, pust, of the minutemen, Isracl Putuam riding The republic represents at last the letter rcome the hostility of the church. He | Presentand to come, who enjoy in their liber- before: the hoof-U8ats of Sumter's horse | Aud the spirit of the sublime Declaration | never doubted his ability todo byth. His | 113 and their happiness the fruits of his galloping to the froni; the thunderof Staric’s | The fetters that bound her to the earth are | unshaken faith that Christopher Columbus faith, will reverontiy guard and preserve from guns in spirit battle’; the gloam of Marion’s | burst asunde The razs that degraded her | was commissioned from heaven to carry [ COHtury to century mis name and fame. Wateh-fires 1n whottly bivouacs and there, | Deauty are cast aside. Liko the onchanted | “Clrist across the son” to new continents _Tho “tirst to grocet tho aistinguished New v anks on fame's | Priucess in the legend, clad in spotless rai- | and pagan peoples lifted him so fur above Yorker as ho concluded his orvation was Lcommunity sliaxes o 1o sordid chiaius of | local sentiments did not die out like the | thar. Columous wita all his thirst for knowl. :,'\‘f,’-,',u‘:"-u::;:(,::‘:'m-sa“‘::fll:k? i Mont and wearing acrown of livine light, she | the discouragoments of an empty purse ana | Henry Watterson, who clasped is hand and S DIt the. wilicd arts tave ropaid vour | WAYES, butin an juverse ralio grow moro | edgo enjoyed ot the university of : a0 steps in the porfection of her maturity upon | a contemptuous court that tie was proof | ¢Oueratulated him warmly upon his eloquont dovotion o produced this resul and more powerful, until tiey misgied and | Payia, and for three days and nizhts proces- e nat e the sceno of this. the latest and proudest of | against the rebuffs of fortunc or of trienas, | Words. ! Tace the bonor (o present fo you tha | culminated i tho 'wrand and uuiversal re- | sional progresses ou land and water, aided by s asEaipeiinonsals her victories to bid a welcome 1o the world | The mighty soul of the great admiral was ARDIN o master artists of the exnosition. solve of the American veople, “Iushall be | Spain and ltaly and France, saluted the 7 zinak TR R undaunted by the ingratitude of the princes CARDINAL GIBBONS! PRAYER, ke £ done.” z o memory of tho great pilot with the fruits of | 85 amid the singingof angels in heaver the LIS and the hostility of the people, by imprison- | REORIVED TN BUILOINGS I'he citizens of Chicago cherished the | the great discovery in a pageant more brit- | sceno is shut out from our mortal vision by ed ] pursuc the theme? This vast as- | mootand neglect. He died a8 1o was seeuring | FOF¥ont Words of tho Groat b toho ' ambition to furnish the facilities for the ex- | hant than_that at Barceloaa, when upon a | proud and happy temrs, semblage speaks with a resonance and mean- | 1ho peans and proparing a campaien for the O lyingy Presiaent Higxinbothnm Acoopts the Struc- | Po31Hon, which,in characte -*llw“lfl assume | tnrone of Persinn fabrics Ferdinand and Isa- We sea the rise of the young repubiic; and | ing which words can never veach. It speaks | yosouo of tho holy sepulcher at Jorusalem The twilight of approaching dusk was AL ] a uational and international importance. | belly, disregarding the etiquette of Castilo | the gentlpmen in kpee breeches and pow- | from the fields that are blessed by ths never- Ihey B c Lob Crtain the picasing Dope hat they | and Amesos. reeelvelinion staeding attonded | dered wigs who siguad the Deolaration and | failing waters of tha Kennebec and from tho | {ime. o oA ooty ia aicating] hrone i tholuui M b iRy M EDR ety ~ AfterMr. Buratwm’s remarks Prosident | hava not come sbort of the nation's demand, | by the most $plendid court of christendom. the gentlemen in juee-breeches and pow- | farms that sprinkle the valley of the Con- | rhe. craendes. of Godirey of Bonilion and | concluded his oration, aud the mellowing I8 Higginbotham, in a flattering sprech, pre- | and of the world’s expectation. Permit us, And weat a spectacle is prosentea to us | dered wigs who made. the constitution. - We | necticut with mimic principalities more po- | Richard of the Lion Heart was u bloody and | boo¢ Wis favorablo to the fervent words ot ! sonted the medals of tho exposition to the | sir. 10 believe that it1s nota narrow ambi- | nare. As we gaze upon these munificent | scethe little natiou anenacsd from without. | tent and lasting than tho real; it spoaks in | fryjtiess romunco the discovers of America | CBrdinal Gibbons as he uttered the followlng | master arusts of construction. tion, born of local pride aud selfisnness, that | evections, with their columns and arches, | Wesec tho rifizman fn thunting shirt and | the whirr of tho milis of Pennsylvania and | wag \he salvation of the worla.” The tomb of | mvocation: Me Buennam s Geontlemen: Tt oo, | A3ked for the location of the World's Colum- | thewr cutablatures and adoraments, when we | buckskin swarm from .the cabm in the | in the ring of tho woodeuttor's ax from tho i bian cxposition at Chicazo. Kather 1ot it | consider their boauty and rapidity of realiza. | wilderness to the,resoue of country and | forests of tho luke verinsulas; it speaks Lol ron e rlos Sh Ao |l spasreasqmbled, OLL.orslio Kllviame ) comes my ugroenble duty, on behalf of the | justly bosaid that it wasin view of Lho | tian they would ssem to bs €voked ut a | bomes and our heaktsswall to asecond and | fron tho ercat plantations of the south and | Pracody af tho conturics, but tho now. contls | handrod th amrvor acs oy Lpmngo tho fou board of directorsof the Worid's Columbian | Tact that 25.000,000 of peole live withinga | wizira's touch of Aladdin’s lamp. final decroo of. independsice won by tho | west, woining with stapios that insure us | SaBCaye s be the homo aud tomple of the | this cesbnoantivorsucy of the discovery ot exposition, 1o receive from you thoso build. | Fadius of 500 miles of Chicago,ana that | Praso for tho organization and accom- | Prowess and valor of Amorican arws upon | weslth and power and stability, vea, 8nd | [iving God. ' We nloro Ty, wisdom inlohoosing forithls lugs, which represort your thougnt, siull | S1auding hore so ucut tho center of popu. | plishment, for the architeot aud tho builder, | the land and se, from the mines and forests and quarries of | “ya rulers of the old world bozan with | providential mission ‘Ihy servant Columbus, yithe artistaad A s ere is no lifo | Micnizan and Wisconsin, of Ala and labor as master artists of construction. forihojartishondithojiartisan,imaysnolanow, Anceiisnand then.talneaitheroilna ity o abemn jand larger number of Awerican people, who aro | detain me, for 11 the vears to como in the | of nations or of men without its shacow and ovcia, of Tennessee fnd Kentucky, far | FaritONINE f:::s;;l;‘,,,t,!f"L('u':,‘i'.‘,f""’u AL (|(mho nuiten toithie sElll and daride DEMNATLS f It 1 difieult to command fanguage fully | the creators of our wealth and prosperity, | mouths of ali men it will be unstnted. 118, Borrow=-shero (Gomop (n+Gays When thel| away" 1o the ‘ veglons of - miivats &nd | Boredvanmat: sefuge.. Tointens who bes | Haar not. codl oL an japostle; and adequate 1o express our sulisfaction with | than would any other city on the contincnt, heso. aro worthy spocimons to record the | spirits of the fatners no longer walk upon | gold, that have linked —the Colorado | jioved men capable of higher dostintes and | of entiching his Sovorelgn with th “-“l"‘: ' Jout achiovemonts. - Wo have obsorved with | b citizens of Chicago have been nctuated | aciioyements of the two Americas, and to | he battlements of frocdom, and allis dari. | ana’ tho Rio Grando jn closo om- | yiioy vesponsibilitios, aud bious poople who | of now daminione, but was . Inspired . Lamiration the rapid developmont of | by tho most patriotic sentiments in asiing | place them side by sido with the arts and in | and all seems lost, save liberty and honor, | brace, and unmililated time and | ST TP Riblo to that union of church | with the sublime ambition of carrving. th i your' plaus, until there stand . before us | fov the location of the exposition at this | qustrics of the eider world, to the end that | 8nd, praise God, our blessed unios. With | space — between tho Atlantio and L mbition of carrying the and state where cach sery tne temporal bene tant and b today structures that represent the ripest | place. Avimated by the most publie-spirited | o may wisdom of the ages motives, thov have made such prepavations Never before have men brougsht to their | for the exposition as we frust yoi 4 s tho other for | lignt of the gospol to & people buried in the it of both fled to these dis- | durkness of idolatry. spitaolo lands from intolarance | But not for this be stimulated and encouraged o | these surviviug, who snall marvel at what | the Pacific; it speaks i ono word new endeavors, Columbus s not in chains, | We see today; this land filled with the treas. | from the bearthstone in lowa and illiois, 20n0t | nor are Columbian ideas in fetters. Isag | ures ol eartn; this city, snatehed from the | from the homs in Mississippi and Arkansas, wwthly inborita: ce only > y 3 { boneless oppression at home. The Puri- | do we thank Thee, but still more $ 3 sk greater knowledge, higher aiws, ov more | but 1ok upon with satisfaction. B e 1 the rent pictare indor thé dome | ashes, to risa 1 splendor aud renown, pass- | from tho hearts ‘of 30,000,0) of " fearless, | {it Sitiied in New Eoglana and the cavallor O T s ] resolate purpose. Naver before hevo such [ The board of vircetors now begs leave 101 of the capitol, with kneeling figures about | ing the mind to proconceive! frce-born'mon and woman, and that one word | ;t5a south. Thoy representod the opposites | we possass; for oven this favored land of magnificent fruits been the result of thought | tender lo the Worlu's Columbian commwission | him, vetokening no lougor tho coutrition of | Truiv. out of trial comes the strength of | is, tWnion I} ; : of spiritual g temporal life and opinions. | ours would be to us a dry and DArFon Wast and toil. The earth aud all it contains have | and to the nation these buildings in fulfill- | s followers, but the homago of waukind, | man, out of disaster comes tho glory of tho There is no geogravhy in Amerivan man- | g processes of liberty liberalizea the one | if it were not moistenod by the dew of 1ibe i heen subservient 1o vour will. You have | ment of Chicago’s pledue and in honor of the | wath erect form and lofty mien, animating | state! X hood. There aremno sections to Amorican 1d elevated the other. Washington and | erty. Wo humbly implore Theo to continue pursued vour work lovally, hevoicaily, and | greatevent we celebra these children of anew world to higher The Occaslon, fraternity, 1t noeds butsix weoks to chan; Adams were the new types. Their union in a | to bless our beloved country and her chor- : with an unselfish devoti n that commands the — fuets and bolder tneories. We ars met this day to honor the memory | & Vermonterinto aTexan and therenever has | yoypon cause eave tho world a republic | ished institations, and we Solemnly vow, in applause of the Yourcountry and e ro T T T ST of Christopher Colutbus, to celebrate tho | DEen atime wheu upon the battlefield or the | j4tp stable and free. It possessed couscerva- | this vast zssembly and in the name of our nations of the earth will join us in congratu- —— N i 400th annual return of the year of his trans- | froutier Puritan and cavalier wore not con- | iy wirnout bigotry, aud liverty without ii- | follow citizons, to exert all our power in pre- 3 lating you upon tho splendid issue of your | Fresident Paluer Transtors the Trast to | We may not now anticipate the character | gondant achievement, and, with fitting rites, [ vertivie tevms, having in the bogivning a | conso. It founded institutions strong enough | serv ug this logacy unimpaiced and in trans- plans and undertukings. Vice President ton. and value of our nutional exnibit. Rather | 3o'iodicate to America and the universe s | 0ommon origin, and so diffusad aad diluted | {6500 ravolution, and elastic ouough for | mittisge it as a nricelass hotrioom to succeod- We accept these buildings from you, | 1 the address the presidentof the local | IP8Y We modestly anticipato that a conserva- | concrote exposition of the world’s progress | 0B American soil asno longor Lo possess & | jydefinito extension tomeet the requirements | ing eenerations. exultinzg in the belief that these beautiful i tive award will be made by the world’s crit- | hogweeu 1492 and 1592 No twenty centuries | local habitation or a nativity, except in the cover t of ever-enlarging ar i : i ultinz ) 1 iecior B 10 8 IH Dt IOl ot Bationett] | Lyaawarll neis cu 1492 and 1802 No twenty centuries ; in government of ever-enlarging arcas o Wao pray Thoe, O God of might, wisdom structures furnish proof to the world that, icism to a young nation eagerly listening 1o | can bw compared with those four centuries, | Dational unit. population, and the nceds of progress and | and ji 0, through wh thority is with all our material growth and prosperity | commission, rosponded as follow tho beckotilug future, withia whose 1limits | gither in importanco or in iter=st, as no pre- | , The men who rlart”{ the signals of | ;iowiy, 7 viiehtly admiuisterod, laws _aro opaocad and aince tho Columbian dicovery of Américn, | The teacher of Socrates, when dyine, was | the lightning was first pluckea from heaven | vious coromonial can be eompared with | American civilization upon that sucred rock | “1o™Mayfiower with the Pileritis and a | judgment dGocreod, Lo wesist with b it wo have not neglected those civilizing arts | asked what he wished for o monument. He | #tthe will of man, where tuo expausive | {nis in its wide significance and | DY Plymouth bay were Enghshmen, and 80 |y ship laden with African slaves were | spirit PR e e S i which minister 1o a peoplo’s relineuient, and | avswered: “Give tho beys a holiday.” power of steum was first compolied to- trans- | yoacn: " beosuse, | sinco * ihe advent - of | Were the mon who struck tho const a little | gi'{il grein at the sane time, e oo sail- | of tassa Unitod States that bis ad ministra become the chief glory of & nation. 1t was a happy thougbt to have linked | Port mankind aud merchandise ovor | yho Son of (od, no event has had | Jower down, calling their haven of rest after oM AR RO DBOLA. RHAL LD othar | for | e el D el AEHMES ILAVIDIMANIE Y ol “p I her victories with the achievements of Coluzubus and Pin- | the waterways — of —the world, | 5o great an influence upon buman affairs as | the great republican commoner, and found- | \iy inia, This compauy of saints, and first {CONTINUED ON FIFTI PAGE. | | No less renowned than war' z0n, which doubled the area of the hubitable | Whero —the implements of agricul- | ype'discovery of this western hemisphere, | 108 by Hampton Roads uraco of herocs and | .05 ot siaves, vepresentea the forces which | In this oxposition. 0o of tho adoruing vie- | £lobe, au undertaking whereby wo ope to | ture and —handicraft ~ have bech .80 | Fuch of the'centuries that have iutervoned | Siatesmen. tho mention of whoso names | oy (o peril and rescus free govorament I8 tories of our age of peuce, you tuke conspicu- | 11lustrate tho fact thav they also made possi- | perfocted as to lighten the burdens of toil, | yarks many revolutions, Tho merest cata- | bringsa thrill to every heart, The south | 4y, slaver was the product of tho commer- i1 DU it id Lo wors accomplishes rafnota, | Die more thin a duplication of blessiags to-| and whero the subtio forces of nature, act” | [Gzue would erowd & thousand pages. Tno | €laims Lincola, tho immortal, for its own: | gl spint of Great Britun, and the greed of | and will continue 1o reflect, honor alike upon | maukind, ing through the telegraph and the telephone, story of ths lecast of nations would fill the north hus no rvight to reject Stonewall the times to stimulate productiou in the | yoarsalves and upon your country. Iour hundred years ago today, Rodvigo de | are daily stariling the world oy victories | u"yolume, In what I have to say | Jackson, the one typical Duritan soldior ol | ¢ojonies, Tho men who wrote iu the cabin {1 In recognition of vour faithful and eficient | Triann, from the prow of tho Pinta, eried | Over matter wuich in the davs of Columbus | ypon this occasion, thorefore, I shall | the war, for its own! Nor will it! The | ,¢" ¢y Mayflower the first chupter of froc ot o o hoi falth Tl and eMicient | Liand.” That ory murkod tho comuionce- | miKht huve boen reckoned among the mir- | ooifine mysolf 1o out owns aud, 1 speaiing | UM is coming, is almost boro, when hunging | Gou s govarnment of just and equal luws, - substantinlly thail by mere woras tho sue- | Mentof an era wherein has beon coudensed | ucles. of the Unitec States of Amorica, | propose | duove every mautel board in faiv New Eug- | \wopg " linte band of *protestants against i Cossful termination. Of your Ereat work ae | more of zood import to the race than tn any | We can safely predict, however, thoso who | raihor to dweli upon our character as u peo. | lAnd—glorifying mavy a cottage in the sunny | guory form of injustice and tyrauny. Tne H Inaster artists of construgtion, the board of | other. ‘Lo tthe flood-ume of the era, | Will come from the nearand distunt rezions | plo"and our reciprocal obligations and duties | 50uth—shall be seen bound tozether in ev de possible the of their principlos i reminded of what that ¢ i directors hns Issucd tbis medal, which I | We o untry and who will themsclves invulved, | of our « ) ! P an agerogation of Communities. hold to. | lusting love and honor, two cross swords car- | SatEt on' of 'Tndependence, lioerated the I8 Bave tno honor by mrsomt to oanl whieh 1 4id o1 bow much there Is yet to do 1o give it | make part of the national exhibit. Wo shalt | po /N EEHCUE" Gnstitition, and cnargea | F1d o battlo respectively by tho grand- D nd fotndad the fre0 commonwenlths i token it is which finds its real and abiding | its fullest significance. see the descondunts of tho loval cavaliers of | wiih the custody of aunion upon whose pres- | father who wore tho biuo and tho grand- f (hici' form the republic of the United | Value not in \ts intrinsic worth, bt rather | TUere are no moro continents to discovert | Virginin, of tho Pilerim fathers of New | arvation and porpotuation in its oviginai | {SLher who wore the gray. Slitos, i in the bigh merit whieh roceives nnd the | but there is'much 1o Ao to mako botn hewis- | Bngiand, of the sturdy Hollanders who in | gpivit and purpose the future of free, pop- A Welcome to Waakin? Piatforms of principles, by pention, or s grateful appreciation which bestows it. pkeres the homo of intelligouce, virtue, and | 1624 bonght the 22,000 acres of the island of | ylar government depends, thao to enter into | T canaot trust myself to proceed, We have | protest, or statement, have been as frequont | conscjnont happiness. To thav eud noone [ Manbattan for the sum of $24, of the adher- | u jjssertation upon abstract principles, or | come here not 5o much to recall bygone sor- | s revoils agaiust established authority. P AN THE FAIR. material thing can coutribute moro than ox- | ents of —the old Christian faith Who | 1o undertak an_ historic essuy. Wo are a | vowsand glories, as to bask in tho sunshine [ They are partof tho political litoraturs of ull | gz’ a2y positions to which ave luvitea, in a frateroal | found & rasting place in Baiti- i : ; 3 vlain, practical people. Woare a race of in- | of prasent prosperity and happizess, to inter- | nations. ‘e Declaration ot Independonce or's Address for the Lady { SPitit, all nations, tribes and peoples, whore | Hmore, of e Quakers and Palatine | voyutors and workors, not of poets and artists. | enange ....u-mn'u grootings and indulze good | proclaimed at Philadelpuma July 4, 17706, is Mun each shall give and receivo accordivg to tucir | Gormans who seitled w Dennsylvania and | We have lea the worid's movement, not its | augurios, and, above all, to moet upon the | the ouly ouo of them which arvested tho at- +The Work of the Buard of Lady Mana- ctive capacities, . | Now Jersey, of the Huguenots who flod from | yhought, Our deeds are to bo found 110t upon | threshold the stranger within our gate, not | toution of the world when it wes published, P g foundations of civilization have been | the revocation of the edict of Nantes to the | frascood walls, or in ample librarie ,butin | as a foreigner, but as a guest and friend, for | ana has neld its undivided interest evor gers” was the subject of un address by Mrs. Uuniversal enlightcament, now ne- | banks of the Hudsou in the north and to | the machine shop. whero the spindles sing | whom nothing that we have is too £0od, " siner. Povter Palmor, and although tho lady’s | knowledged ns the safosubstructureof every | those of the Coover and Ashley rivers in the | gng tne looms thunder; on the open plaln, | - irom wheresoever he comoth wo weicome | Equal rights and common onportunity for foublo volco was unbeard by those further | SIate, reciives o udded impulse from tho | south, of the rofuzeos from Salzburg in | whora the steam piow, the reaper and tho | bim with all our honrts—tho sou of to | all hve beoi tho spurs of mnbition ind the than 1ty feot away, man's chivairons trib. | Somannglicg of peoplios and ihe fraterniza- | (uorgla and of Chirles wdwards in North | mower contend with one another in fricadly | Rtiono and _the Garonno, of our godmotnor, | motors of progress., (o iave sstulisid ute of applause to womnu was not wanting | LLOF FIeS, SUSh a8 aro ushered in by te | Caroling, and elthar in persun ot w tholr | war againot the obduracios of nature; in the | Iranco, to whom we owe so muct, o shall | tho common sctiools and built the public Mrs, Anna Sutherland | Bethio Lintn pageaut of today. sons the thousands of others from many | magio of clectricity as it penetrates the | beour Lafaverte; the son of the ithineand | libraries. A sovereign peoplo has learnea | - 3 Hitherto the work of the national commis- j climes, who with elaborate fortunes have iost caverns with its irresistiole power | the Mozelle, ho sbail be our Goethe and our | and enforced the lesson of free education, | Oficial representation for women, upon so ud xposition company hus beon | Joled their future to that of the ropuolie o | ana light. Lot us consider oursolves and | Wagner: the son of the Campagna and the | The practics of government is itselt a lil ul Goit From ey 10th 40 Years important an oceasion as the prasent, is un- | 9 d‘nm it bul convergent lines: today the | Whose "l“‘"“.u‘:ri“m have opened our water- | our conditions, as far as wo are abie, with a | Vesuvian bay, bo shall be our Michael A education. 1’eople who make their own OITre year, causin precodunted. Tho provision of tho et of | FPA1s unite, aud it may not bo amiss at this | wavs wnd builded our ironways Kalamazoo, Mich., lad swellings b the neck, or 3 R - candor yutingad by cynicism, and a confi- clo and our Garibaldi; the son of Arragon | laws need uo lawgiv Aftor a century of greatsuffering. Whenshe caught cold could not A BahEraas that, the boad of 184y lnaasgors | L0010 SBEdk of the Work nlteady dons, Of | | TDs speakor then prooecded o akstoh the | dence having no air of sssuradce. Bad tho [ndos, ho shall |bo our Ubristophor | successful trial the system has passed the | i two blocks without fulnting, She took rs | (he commission and its agencies, its diractor- | 1f¢ of Christopher Columbus and bis voy- ; . . D ox ol ot aad its’ damonstratod | : ? ol ber pae | - Aot OYOLS T The True American Polity, Columbus, fitly honored a¢ last throughout | period of experiment, an | b4 ' Appoint u jury ot her peers to pass judwment and the heads of its departments, | 8ges of discovery, togother with the progress ! d the world pormauency and power are vevoutowzng | Mood’s Sarsa arilla Upon woman's work adds to the significancs | 1ts azents and eavoys, I, although o part of | Of the world, particulurly the new world, | A better opportunity could not=be desirea [ G NONT, 0 s of Euglaud needs no | the governients of tho world. 1t has raised 00 P 3 of the innovation, for never bufore was jt | that national organization, may be permitted | ettje that ume. for a study of our padafidrities than is fur- | Wordl SPVDacial civility and coartosy from | tho largest aroios of modern times for seif | Aud s now freo from it all. Sho has urged ; Ahouzht necossary to apply this fundamental | 103Pcak: Called togetner by “the president | “In the name of the government of the | nished by the presentmgment. us. For him, tho latch string 1s ever on the | preservation, and at the successful to | many others to take Hood's Sursaparilla and ‘ ppiy this mental | two vears ago, 11s organic law difficult of | Uuited States & nereby dedicato these build- [ We are in the mitst'ct the quadrennial | 0% "8 A T8 BERE R CE B BT ot, we | tiou of tho war returnod the soldiers to pur- |y v also been cured. Ttwill do you good. ,,,llm,,,l,, 'n'.‘ justico to our sex. It bus been | construction, With roow for bonest and yeu | iugs and other appurtenances ntended by the | period estabhished fok the'sclection of a chiof | SUSSito: MAPIRC VR T VR EE REheelt | suits of peace. It bas so mdjusted itself to | 200 y aole 1o bromden the scopo of its work aud | contradiciory opinions, it Las striven hon- | congress of the United States for the World’s | magistrate, Each ¢ftlZed bas his right of | 5:%home A common language enables us to | the pride and patriotisw ol the defeate HOo0D'8 PILLS Cura il Livor Iils, jaundice, 3 extond 1ts lutluence throush the co-operation | estly, patriotically sad diligeutly to do its | Colimbian exposition of the worid's progress | cholce, each bas his Y to vote aad to bavo | 4o 01 stide to one another, at the festive | they vie with Lbe vietors iu tnels oy ol uaness, sour stomacl uausom: and u!.r(»luuc-.' 50 generously furnished by whole duty, Through its ageicies it has | ib art, in science, in agriculture and in wan- | his vote frecly cast and Lnl’-ly counted, Wher- " Aard rl:r the arena of debate; warning . | - ey b 1he Columbian commission and the hoaid of | readued to the ultermost parts of the earth | Wfactures. I dedicate them to humanity. God | ever this rigbt is assiflea for any cause | pobrGer 064 ben it TO0GS Urainst further par. | = B o diraciors of the oxposition. Rivaiiz the | to gather i all thit could contribute to make | save tho Unitod States of America ! wrong is done and ¥ “must, follow, fieat to | Pt O W3 1 GUES LORS P - S EM BN AMUSEMENT =, poterosity of tho directors, the nationul | tins wot oaly the museum of tho savane and | At tho concluding soutence of o vica | tho vzholo country, wiiieh nas an interest in | 194 7 M0 DRI O T 046 be welcome bere; AMUSEMENTS. 4 A ) i { counmission has honored the boavd of Ludy | the well read, but the kindergarten of child | presidents address, and us ho pronounced | ali its parts, but mod¥*th'the community iui- | 150 the Bosphorus and the Black soa, the | § W e | Famam Seet Theater, | VehidnE | mioagers by putlaag into its hands all of tho | wua suge, tho dedicatory words, the wembers of the | meuiately involved, which must sctually [ ianiose woods aod the Danubian plaios N NTHIT arnam Street Thea'er, 3 Cebr) 5 interests of women iu conneetion with the Tho national commission will in aue | foreiwn diplomatic corps arose simultaus drink of tho cup ¥t 'has contained tho | feom Holland dyke to Alpine crag; from Beir THEATER SAT. MAT. FUN, MUSLC EXCITEMEN I exposition, 1:\ \:I 1l as the eutive control of | time take approprinte action touching the | ously to their feet in graceful abproval of | poison, ana can not n'\fi‘n‘u;llxll:lm'lmn. r“m“m,“ aleutta, and round to Ching seas VIR ) e | ot Nischs Connicnb Sunniay l\\ tinee, 1 v wowaids buidiog, : formal acccotance of the buildings pro- | the sentimeut, and the examplo so delicately | © Iho wbridgement of thd right of suftrage, | BTG SMINets of Japan, the isles of the COM VM ENCING TONIGHT Octatier 2 the Realistto Comedy Drama i Wittiout touchiog upon politics, suffrage, | vided under their divection by the World’s | Sct by the representatives of foreign nations | bowever, is very neadly btoportioned 1o the | Bisifie and the far-away capes of Africa— The Distingulshed Ohuracter Actor A BARREL OF MONEY : » or other irrelovaut issues, this unque orgau- | Columblan Exposition compauy for this | Was instautiy followed by ail the thoussuds | ignorance or indifferoBoéde the parties con- | apmaman. Christian and Jew-—the Amerl- 11 DAVIDSON “" IHE IRON MILLS AT WORK 3 ization of women for wowen will devote | nwiional unaioternational fairend o you,Mr, | 8ssembled beneath the vast roof. cerned by it,and therd 18 %oed reason to hiove | o A0, > T T TV [ it ¥ e T T Vo revelution 1 stage movhinl i self 10 the pramotion of \heir wdustrial w- | Vice Presid g L The - " P AR s 1 by lt.and th FYdson ® | oan, loving 1o country excep 0, And tho Beatifu) Young Antiste A po- V6 Foxelation (i staka moshinism ! ice Pt , @5 1he high representitive ue “hallevjah chorus that followed | that with the expan®uigihntelligence of the | oy, " pankind as his brother, bids' you AN T AU S TEN | A Sunerb company, sweet masie, celightful terests It will address iwself 1o the forma- | of the nation, is assigoed the honor of dedi- | ddded to whe deep solemnity of the scono and | masses ana the growviffg enhghtenment of | B8 AEERET0 TGl vol Darike with us MINS RAMIE AUSTEN [ e ine : tioh of a bublic sentiment which Will favor | cating them 10 the purposes detormined aud | Lho best true gravity of the moment was in- | the times this partiedtr form of coreuption | o “SANE (ER0E"0F 400 years of American T the Lateat, Most Emphatic Suceoss | WATINEE WEDS pspa Y. wounu's industrial equality, und her receiv- | declated by the cougress of the United | eMaccably imbressed on every wind, and | in elections will bo reduced below the dan- | Givilization and devolopment, and boehold f’ G t Ut { —— 3 30k Just compeusation. Lar wervices rondered. | States _ when at 11 couclusion Henry Wattorson ad. | ger line, civilization and dovelopment, aud behold | [Yana@erg OF @ Lreat LILY | H 1L will tey 1o secure for hor work the consid Iu betalf of the men and women who have | Vauced to deliver the formal dedicatory ora- [ T'o thit end, as to all otner good ends the | LRl 0 e ny freedoin B T T y NEW ., oration aud vespect which it deserves uud | devoted themselves to tiis wreat work, of | 109, the great editor recaived au ovation | moderation of public sentiment must ever | PERACRCETER I AT oy D NORT i N WO NIGH T 3 estublish Bor LMportaneo as an economic the rich who bave given of their abundance | Worthy to crown a lifetime of glory, be our chief relisnce; for whou men are he On P A 5 {'thriiliog situations. Super THEATER tae. Il:ll‘:l:lllul‘ uu‘:;l it &\'u\llguuunu‘hrumh o:.lmm and the poor who have ziven of their neces- o - forced by the general desive for truty, aud | ;\“t‘l\';*y ":;*:f';,l.l‘d\;:l"'m;:rg*“'l;‘gu:l""p'“l“):‘[" . i e el of LATER, 4 2 u these builaings cxbibits show- | sities: 111 vehalf of the archite ho hav 3 : ¢ s light which our modern vehicles of in- | ican union ol | wealism is reach lasnt praduetiag. - | o1 nd Tuend ot, 24 aud 4 ¥ 1 thio value of hor contelautions 1o the. fn- | given to LHOIE Hoals & Jock] BaBItation AG o DRRIOATORE QuaION; e b tpon \he (FUth, 10 discusy | wondrous talo of the discovery, and from | MEiHCIAI=A M Syrauh or Miss | Monduy and Tuesday, Oct. 24 and 3 ] dus’ries, sciences wid arts, as well s stalis- | name, aua the £ e RiVILg Lue proportiouate amount of her Work in every country. Of all the chuanges thut have resulted from e A urtists who have brought | ston. Henry Ut thntor durla hithor the three graces of modern life, form, color sud meloay, to decovate and lnspire; in ocualf of The workmeu who bave prepared 11t | Boston to Galveston, from the little log whi Watterson Delivers siy, | public questious for truth's sak hl ) B W, ArNOs! ver- 1l Ay e haat B s iai 1 tereats 6f public mon, as | sehoolbouse in the wilderness to the tower- | | CLARA MORRIS oul-1y g Address. st Yty 1o do this, sud when, | i0€ academy in tne city and the town, may : A dead silence reigued over the acres of | b4 1% tHeIE PIbIE FEES . 3 tnessed the uuprecedented specticlo of W ONDE ! Monday N § ores of | yiove ull, friends and neighbors cease to | be Wi I | | aont. Usial prices. it s the grout iugenuity aud suvantiveness of the | tho grounds wnd reared ho walls; in betul of | BUmBILY &3 the orator of the day delivered | lovn oue anothor loss becauso of Individual | & powerful ation captured by ab urmy of And Biiou Theater, All This Week m yuco, there is none \bat equals 10 importance | the chiefs who have orgauized the work of | the following address: difference of opinion about public affairs, the | lillioutians, of embryo men snd womeu, f g~ HOE IS CONTINUOUS SHOW <44 A 10 woman Lho upplication of machiuery 0 | the exbibitars: 1o - Bohalf of tno oity | Among tho wonders of oroative and con. | Strugglo for unfalr advantage will be vele- | topling boye snd wiels and uny elfs scareo | (VTN IAN SUBCIALLY €O, | YT T NPT Bhe porformuncoof the tover-cuaiig tasks | of Chicaga, . whioh — has munifle | SUUCLLYE Gonis I coures of menaretian x| Fated to those who have cither no charactor | Bif enough to lisg the numbors of the he AND TUE | Virst Thne tn Eaglish L tbat have previously been hers. The re. | ceutly voted aid, of the cougress | this festival of the L A tioual anttiom; scarce strong euough to lfy Euglish, i , whoso formal | o l0se or none to scei. ey e e el sast THORNTON DRAMATIC CO, movul frow the housebold to the various | which has generously given of the national | and odioial lnauguration has bu M| s dmitted on all - ides that the current | the minature fags that make of arid stree —=iN— o FACtories WRore Such WOrk 1s tow douo of | monevs: i bohulf of the World's Columbian | Bothor, Will Prasiily be Witucsel upen the | prosidential campiixn 18 freer from excite: | aud autuma wood o emblomeuic garden, W1 Py BLACK FLAG | spinniog, chrdiog, dveing, kniwting, the | commission, the World's Columbian Exposi+ | margin of thé interocean wiiioh elvesto this | mevt aud tumult than was ever known be- | Eladdes the sikht and 1o glorify the red, . AUMISSION 200 An aduptation frou the Geruian by Glara weaviog of teaile fabrics, sewiog, the cuttiug | tion cowpany, and the board of ledy | noble and beautiful ity (ne character ad | fore, and it is areued from this circumstance | White sud blus. W0 N 20c¢ Modiiuks’ 200 | Mo Balo opens Baturdey.Fireh oo sud wakiug of garmeuts, and many other | managers, 1 ask you to dedicate these build- | rank of a maritime metropolis, a spectato- | Lhat We are traversing the epoch of the com- Our youug barturians all at play MUSEMENTS LR & vt A e N | laborous ocouputions, bas enabled ber Lo ift | Lggs aud grounds to bumanity, 1o the end | Fium. wherein the Columbiaa epio will bo told | monplace. If this be 50, thaak God for v! | for betior thau Lhese we have nothiug to ex l A SIEMET . e e At g

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