THE CENTURY—ITS FRUITS AND ITS FESTIVAL.
VI. THE DISPLAY—INTRODUCTORY.

FAÇADE OF THE SPANISH DIVISION, MAIN BUILDING.
All things being ready for their reception, how were
exhibits, exhibitors and visitors to be brought to the grounds?
To do this with the extreme of rapidity and cheapness was
essential to a full and satisfactory attendance of both objects
and persons. In a large majority of cases the first
consideration with the possessor of any article deemed worthy
of submission to the public eye was the cost and security of
transportation. Objects of art, the most valuable and the most
attractive portion of the display, are not usually very well
adapted to carriage over great distances with frequent
transshipments. Porcelain, glass and statuary are fragile, and
paintings liable to injury from dampness and rough handling;
while an antique mosaic, like the "Carthaginian Lion," a hundred square feet in
superficies, might, after resuscitation from its subterranean
sleep of twenty centuries with its minutest tessera
intact and every tint as fresh as the Phoenician artist left
it, suffer irreparable damage from a moment's carelessness on
the voyage to its temporary home in the New World. More solid
things of a very different character, and far less valuable
pecuniarily, though it may be quite as interesting to the
promoter of human progress, exact more or less time and
attention to collect and prepare, and that will not be bestowed
upon them without some guarantee of their being safely and
inexpensively transmitted. So to simplify transportation as
practically to place the exposition buildings as nearly as
possible at the door of each exhibitor, student and sight-seer
became, therefore, a controlling problem.
In the solution of it there is no exaggeration in saying
that the Centennial stands more than a quarter of a century in
advance of even the latest of its fellow expositions. At Vienna
a river with a few small steamers below and a tow-path above
represented water-carriage. Good railways came in from every
quarter of the compass, but none of them brought the locomotive
to the neighborhood of the grounds. In the matter of tram-roads
for passengers the Viennese distinguished themselves over the
Londoners and Parisians by the possession of one. In
steam-roads they had no advantage and no inferiority. At each
and all of these cities the packing-box and the passenger were
both confronted by the vexatious interval between the station
and the exposition building—often the most trying part of
the trip. Horsepower was the one time-honored resource, in '73
as in '51, and in unnumbered years before. Under the ancient
divisions of horse and foot the world and its
impedimenta moved upon Hyde Park, the Champ de Mars and
the Prater, the umbrella and the oil-cloth tilt their only
shield against Jupiter Pluvius, who seemed to take especial
pleasure in demonstrating their failure, nineteen centuries
after the contemptuous erasure of him from the calendar, to
escape his power. It was reserved for the Philadelphia
Commission to bring his reign (not the slightest intention of a
pun) to a close. The most delicate silk or gem, and the most
delicate wearer of the same, were enabled to pass under roof
from San Francisco into the Main Building in Fairmount Park,
and with a trifling break of twenty steps at the wharf might do
so from the dock at Bremen, Havre or Liverpool. The hospitable
shelter of the great pavilion was thus extended over the
continent and either ocean. The drip of its eaves pattered into
China, the Cape of Good Hope, Germany and Australia. Their
spread became almost that of the welkin.
Let us look somewhat more into the detail of this unique
feature of the American fair.
Within the limits of the United States the transportation
question soon solved itself. Five-sixths of the seventy-four
thousand miles of railway which lead, without interruption of
track, to Fairmount Park are of either one and the same gauge,
or so near it as to permit the use everywhere of the same car,
its wheels a little broader than common. From the other sixth
the bodies of the wagons, with their contents, are transferable
by a change of trucks. The expected sixty or eighty thousand
tons of building material and articles for display could thus
be brought to their destination in a far shorter period than
that actually allowed. Liberal arrangements were conceded by
the various lines in regard to charges. Toll was exacted in one
direction only, unsold articles to be returned to the shipper
free. As the time for closing to exhibitors and opening to
visitors approached the Centennial cars became more and more
familiar to the rural watcher of the passing train. They aided
to infect him, if free from it before, with the Centennial
craze. Their doors, though sealed, were eloquent, for they bore
in great black letters on staring white muslin the shibboleth
of the day, "1776—International Exhibition—1876."
The enthusiasm of those very hard and unimpressible entities,
the railroad companies, thus manifesting itself in low rates and gratuitous
advertising, could not fail to be contagious. Nor was the
service done by the interior lines wholly domestic. Several
large foreign contributions from the Pacific traversed the
continent. The houses and the handicraft of the Mongol climbed
the Sierra Nevada on the magnificent highway his patient labor
had so large a share in constructing. Nineteen cars were
freighted with the rough and unpromising chrysalis that
developed into the neat and elaborate cottage of Japan, and
others brought the Chinese display. Polynesia and Australia
adopted the same route in part. The canal modestly assisted the
rail, lines of inland navigation conducting to the grounds
barges of three times the tonnage of the average sea-going
craft of the Revolutionary era. These sluggish and smooth-going
vehicles were employed for the carriage of some of the large
plants and trees which enrich the horticultural department,
eight boats being required to transport from New York a
thousand specimens of the Cuban flora sent by a single
exhibitor, M. Lachaume of Havana. Those moisture-loving shrubs,
the brilliant rhododendra collected by English nurserymen from
our own Alleghanies and returned to us wonderfully improved by
civilization, might have been expected also to affect the
canal, but they chose, with British taste, the more rapid rail.
They had, in fact, no time to lose, for their blooming season
was close at hand, and their roots must needs hasten to test
the juices of American soil. Japan's miniature garden of
miniature plants, interesting far beyond the proportions of its
dimensions, was perforce dependent on the same means of
conveyance.

FAÇADE OF THE EGYPTIAN DIVISION, MAIN BUILDING.
The locomotive was summoned to the aid of foreign exhibitors
on the Atlantic as on the Pacific side, though to a less
striking extent, the largest steamships being able to lie
within three miles of the exposition buildings. It stood ready
on the wharves of the Delaware to welcome these stately guests
from afar, indifferent whether they came in squadrons or alone.
It received on one day, in this vestibule of the exposition,
the Labrador from France and the Donati from Brazil. Dom
Pedro's coffee, sugar and tobacco and the marbles and canvases
of the Société des Beaux-Arts were whisked off in
amicable companionship to their final destination. The
solidarity of the nations is in some sort promoted by this
shaking down together of their goods and chattels. It gives a
truly international look to the exposition to see one of
Vernet's battle-pieces or Meissonier's microscopic gems of
color jostled by a package of hides from the Parana or a bale
of India-rubber.
Yet more expressive was the medley upon the covered
platforms for the reception of freight. Eleven of these, each
one hundred and sixty by twenty-four feet, admitted of the
unloading of fifty-five freight-cars at once. At this rate
there was not left the least room for anxiety as to the ability
of the Commission and its employés to dispose, so far as
their responsibility was concerned, of everything presented for
exhibition within a very few days. The movements of the
custom-house officials, and the arrangements of goods after the
passing of that ordeal, were less rapid, and there seemed some
ground for anxiety when it was found that in the last days of
March scarce a tenth of the catalogued exhibits were on the
ground, and for the closing ten days of the period fixed for
the receipt of goods an average of one car-load per minute of
the working hours was the calculated draft on the resources of
the unloading sheds. Home exhibitors, by reason of the very
completeness of their facilities of transport, were the most
dilatory. The United States held back until her guests were
served, confident in the abundant efficiency of the
preparations made for bringing the entertainers to their side.
Better thus than that foreigners should have been behind
time.
When the gates of the enclosure were at last shut upon the
steam-horse, a broader and more congenial field of duty opened
before him. From the rôle of dray-horse he passed to that
of courser. Marvels from the ends of the earth he had, with
many a pant and heave, forward pull and backward push, brought
together and dumped in their allotted places. Now it became his
task to bear the fiery cross over hill and dale and gather the
clans, men, women and children. The London exhibition of 1851
had 6,170,000 visitors, and that of 1862 had 6,211,103. Paris
in 1855 had 4,533,464, and in 1867, 10,200,000. Vienna's
exhibition drew 7,254,867. The attendance at London on either
occasion was barely double the number of her population. So it
was with Paris at her first display, though she did much better
subsequently. Vienna's was the greatest success of all,
according to this test. The least of all, if we may take it
into the list, was that of New York in 1853. Her people
numbered about the same with the visitors to her Crystal
Palace—600,000. Philadelphia's calculations went far
beyond any of these figures, and she laid her plans
accordingly.
Some trainbands from Northern and Southern cities might give
their patriotic furor the bizarre form of a march across
country, but the millions, if they came at all, must come by
rail, and the problem was to multiply the facilities far beyond
any previous experience, while reconciling the maximum of
safety, comfort and speed with a reduction of fares. The
arrangements are still to be tested, and are no doubt open to
modification. On one point, however, and this an essential one,
we apprehend no grounds of complaint. There will be no
crowding. The train is practically endless, the word
terminus being a misnomer for the circular system of
tracks to which the station (six hundred and fifty by one
hundred feet) at the main entrance of the grounds forms a
tangent. The line of tourists is reeled off like their thread
in the hands of Clotho, the iron shears that snip it at stated
intervals being represented by the unmythical steam-engine. The
same modern minister of the Fates has another shrine not far
from the dome of Memorial Hall, where his acolytes are the
officials of the Reading Railroad Company.
Care for the visitor's comfortable locomotion does not end
with depositing him under the reception-verandah. The
Commission did not forget that a pedestrian excursion over
fifteen or twenty miles of aisles might sufficiently fatigue
him without the additional trudge from hall to hall over a surface of four
hundred acres under a sun which the century has certainly not
deprived of any mentionable portion of its heat. Hence, the
belt railway, three and a half miles long, with trains running
by incessant schedule—a boon only to be justly
appreciated by those who attended the European expositions or
any one of them. His umbrella and goloshes pocketed in the form
of a D.P.C. check, the visitor, more fortunate than Brummel or
Bonaparte, cannot be stopped by the elements.

FAÇADE OF THE SWEDISH DIVISION, MAIN BUILDING.
We shall have amply disposed of the subject of
transportation when we add that the neighborhood or city supply
to the thirteen entrance-gates is provided for by steam-roads
capable of carrying twenty-four thousand persons hourly, and
tram-roads seating seven thousand, besides an irregular militia
or voltigeur force of light wagons, small steamers and
omnibuses equal to a demand of two or three thousand more in
the same time. It was not deemed likely that Philadelphia would
require conveyance for half of her population every day. Should
that supposition prove erroneous, the excess can fall back upon
the safe and inexpensive vehicle of 1776, 1851, 1867 and
1873—sole leather.
Let us return to our packing-cases, and see where they go.
To watch the gradual dispersal of a congregation to their
several places of abode is always interesting. Especially is it
so when those places of retreat bear the names and fly the
flags of the several nations of the globe. This stout cube of
deal, triple-bound with iron, disappears under the asp and
winged sphere of the Pharaohs. That other, big with rich
velvets and broideries, seeks the tricolor of France. Yonder, a
wealth of silks and lacquer finds a resting-place in the carved
black-walnut étagères of Japan. Here go,
cased in the spoils of the fjelds, toward a pavilion
seventy-five paces long and twenty wide, the bulky
contributions of the Norsemen. Swedish carpentry in perfection
offers to a deposit separate from that of the sister-kingdom a
distinct receptacle. Close at hand stand the antipodes in the
pavilion of Chili, that opens its graceful portal to bales
sprinkled mayhap with the ashes of Aconcagua. There "crashes a
sturdy box of stout John Bull;" and Russia, Tunis and
Canada roll into close neighborhood with him and each other. A
queer and not, let us hope, altogether transitory show of
international comity is this. Many a high-sounding,
much-heralded and more-debating Peace Congress has been held
with less effect than
that conducted by these humble porters, carpenters and
decorators. This one has solidity. Its elements are palpable.
The peoples not only bring their choicest possessions, but they
also set up around them their local habitations. It is a
cosmopolitan town that has sprung into being beneath the great
roof and glitters in the rays of our republican sun. In its
rectangularly-planned streets, alleys and plazas every style of
architecture is represented—domestic, state and
ecclesiastical, ancient, mediæval and modern. The spirit
and taste of most of the races and climes find expression,
giving thus the Sydenham and the Hyde Park palaces in one. The
reproductions at the former place were the work of English
hands: those before us are executed, for the most part, by
workmen to whom the originals are native and familiar. In this
feature of the interior of the Main Building we are amply
compensated for the breaking up of the coup d'oeil by a
multiplicity of discordant forms. The space is still so vast as
to maintain the effect of unity; and this notwithstanding the
considerable height of some of the national stalls, that of
Spain, for example, sending aloft its trophy of Moorish shields
and its effigy of the world-seeking Genoese to an elevation of
forty-six feet. The Moorish colonnade of the Brazilian pavilion
lifts its head in graceful rivalry of the lofty front reared by
the other branch of the Iberian race. In so vast an expanse
this friendly competition of Spaniards and Portuguese becomes,
to the eye, a union of their pretensions; and a single family
of thirty-three millions in Europe and America combines to
present us with two of the handsomest structures in the
hall.

FAÇADE OF THE BRAZILIAN DIVISION, MAIN BUILDING.
A moderate dip into statistics can no longer be evaded. We
must map out the microcosm, and allot to each sovereign power
its quota of the surface. The great European states which have
assumed within the century the supreme direction of human
affairs are assigned a prominent central position in the Main
Building. Great Britain and her Asiatic possessions occupy just
eighty-three feet less than a hundred thousand; her other
colonies, including Canada, 48,150; France and her colonies, 43,314; Germany, 27,975;
Austria, 24,070; Russia, 11,002; Spain, 11,253; Sweden and
Belgium, each 15,358; Norway, 6897; Italy, 8167; Japan, 16,566;
Switzerland, 6646; China, 7504; Brazil, 6397; Egypt, 5146;
Mexico, 6504; Turkey, 4805; Denmark, 1462; and Tunis, 2015.
These, with minor apportionments to Venezuela, the Argentine
Confederation, Chili, Peru and the Orange Free State of South
Africa, cover the original area of the structure, deducting the
reservation of 187,705 feet for the United States, and
excluding thirty-eight thousand square feet in the annexes.
France must be credited, in explanation of her comparatively
limited territory under the main roof, with her external
pavilions devoted to bronzes, glass, perfumery and (chief of
all) to her magnificent government exhibit of technical plans,
drawings and models in engineering, civil and military, and
architecture. These outside contributions constitute a link
between her more substantial displays and the five hundred
paintings, fifty statues, etc. she places in Memorial Hall.
In Machinery and Agricultural Halls, respectively, Great
Britain has 37,125 and 18,745 feet; Germany, 10,757 and 4875;
France, 10,139 and 15,574; Belgium, 9375 and 1851; Canada, 4300
and 10,094; Brazil, 4000 and 4657; Sweden, 3168 and 2603;
Spain, 2248 and 5005; Russia, 1500 and 6785; Chili, 480 and
2493; Norway, 360 and 1590. Austria occupies 1536 feet in
Mechanical Hall; and in that of Agriculture are the following
additional allotments: Netherlands, 4276; Denmark, 836; Japan,
1665; Peru, 1632; Liberia, 1536; Siam, 1220; Portugal,
1020.

DOM PEDRO, EMPEROR OF BRAZIL.
The foreign contributions in the department of machinery
are, it will be seen, hardly so large as might have been
anticipated. When the spacious annexes are added to the floor
of the main hall, the great preponderance of home
exhibitors—five to one in the latter—is shown to be
still more marked. In Agricultural Hall the United States claim
less than two-thirds. The unexpected interest taken in this
branch by foreigners will enhance its prominence and value
among the attractions of the exposition. The collection of
tropical products for food and manufacturing is very complete.
The development of the equatorial regions of the globe has
barely commenced. Even our acquaintance with their natural
resources remains but superficial. The country which takes the
lead in utilizing them in its trade and manufactures will gain
a great advantage over its fellows. England's commercial
supremacy never rested more largely on that foundation than
now. Brazil, the great power of South—as the Union is of
North—America, possesses nearly half of the accessible
virgin territory of the tropics. Our interest joins hers in
retaining this vast endowment as far as possible for the
benefit of the Western World. A perception of this fact is
shown in the exceptional efforts made by Brazil to be fully
represented in all departments of the exposition, and in the
visit to it of her chief magistrate, as we may properly term
her emperor, the only embodiment of hereditary power and the
monarchical principle in a country that enjoys—and has
for the half century since its erection into an independent
state maintained—free institutions.
In art domestic exhibits utterly lose their preponderance. Our
artists content themselves with a small fraction of the wall-
and floor-space in Memorial Hall and its northern annex. In
extent of both "hanging" and standing ground they but equal
England and France, each occupying something over twenty
thousand square feet. Italy in the æsthetic combat
selects the chisel as her weapon, and takes the floor with a
superb array of marble eloquence, some three hundred pieces of
statuary being contributed by her sculptors. She might in
addition set up a colorable claim to the works executed on her
soil or under the teaching of her schools by artists of other
nativities, and thus make, for example, a sweeping raid into
American territory. But she generously leaves to that division
the spoils swept from her coasts by the U.S. ship Franklin,
together with the works bearing her imprint in other sections,
satisfied with the wealth undoubtedly her own, itself but a
faint adumbration of the vast hoard she retains at home. Italy
does not view the occasion from a fine-art standpoint alone. Of
her nine hundred and twenty-six exhibitors, only one-sixth are
in this department.

JAPANESE CARPENTERS.
Nor, on the art side of our own country, must we overlook
the Historical division, the perfecting of which has been a
labor of love with Mr. Etting. He allots space among the old
Thirteen, and reserves a place at the feast of reunion to the
mother of that rebellious sisterhood.
Forty acres of "floor-space" sub Jove remained to be
awarded to foreign and domestic claimants. Gardening is one of
the fine arts. Certainly nothing in Memorial Hall can excel its
productions in richness, variety and harmony of color and form.
Flower, leaf and tree are the models of the palette and the
crayon. Their marvelous improvement in variety and splendor is
one of the most striking triumphs of human ingenuity. A few
hundred species have been expanded into many thousand forms,
each finer than the parent. It is a new flora created by
civilization, undreamed of by the savage, and voluminous in
proportion to the mental advancement of the races among whom it
has sprung up. Progress writes its record in flowers, and
scrawls the autographs of the nations all over Lansdowne hill.
No need of gilded show-cases to set off the German and
Germantown roses, the thirty thousand hyacinths in another
compartment, or the plot of seven hundred and fifty kinds of
trees and shrubs planted by a single American contributor. The
Moorish Kiosque, however, comes in well. The material is
genuine Morocco, the building having been brought over in
pieces from the realm of the Saracens, of "gul in its bloom"
and of "Larry O'Rourke"—as Rogers punned down the poem of
his Irish friend.
The nations comfortably installed, we must sketch the
tactical system under which they are drawn up for peaceful
contest. The classification of subjects adopted by the
Commission embraces seven departments. Of these, the Main
Building is devoted to I. Mining and Metallurgy; II.
Manufactures; III. Education and Science;
Memorial Hall and its appendages, to IV. Art; Machinery
Hall, to V. Machinery; Agricultural Hall, to VI.
Agriculture; and Horticultural Hall and its parterres,
to VII. Horticulture. These habitats have, as we have
heretofore seen, proved too contracted for the august and expansive inmates
assigned them. All of the latter have overflowed; mining, for
instance, into the mineral annex of thirty-two thousand square
feet and the great pavilion (a hundred and thirty-five feet
square) of Colorado and Kansas; education into the Swedish and
Pennsylvania school-houses and others already noted;
manufactures into breweries, glass-houses, etc.; and so on with
an infinity of irrepressible outgrowths.

FAÇADE OF THE DIVISION OF THE NETHERLANDS, MAIN
BUILDING.
Department I. is subdivided into classes numbered from 100
to 129, and embracing the products of mines and the means of
extracting and reducing them. II. extends from Class 200 to
Class 296—chemical manufactures, ceramics, furniture,
woven goods of all kinds, jewelry, paper, stationery, weapons,
medical appliances, hardware, vehicles and their accessories.
III. deals with the high province of educational systems,
methods and libraries; institutions and organizations;
scientific and philosophical instruments and methods;
engineering, architecture in its technical and
non-æsthetic aspect, maps; physical, moral and social
condition of man. Fifty classes, 300 to 349 inclusive, fence in
this field of pure reason. Department IV., Classes 400-459,
covers sculpture, painting, photography, engraving and
lithography, industrial and architectural designs, ceramic
decorations, mosaics, etc. V., Classes 509-599, takes charge of
machines and tools for mining, chemistry, weaving, sewing,
printing, working metal, wood and stone; motors; hydraulic and
pneumatic apparatus; railway stock or "plant;" machinery for
preparing agricultural products; "aërial, pneumatic and
water transportation," and "machinery and apparatus especially
adapted to the requirements of the exhibition." VI., Classes
600-699, assembles arboriculture and forest products, pomology,
agricultural products, land and marine animals, pisciculture
and its apparatus, "animal and vegetable products," textile
substances, machines, implements and products of manufacture,
agricultural engineering and administration, tillage and
general management. Under Department VII., Classes 700-739,
come ornamental trees, shrubs and flowers, hothouses and
conservatories, garden tools and contrivances, garden
designing, construction and management.
The accumulated experience of past expositions, seconded by
the judgment and systematic thoroughness apparent in the
preparations for the present one, makes this a good "working"
classification. It has done away with confusion to an extent
hardly to have been hoped for, and all the thousands of objects
and subjects have dropped into their places in the exhibition
with the precision of
machinery, little adapted as some of them are to such
treatment. Very impalpable and elusive things had to submit
themselves to inspection and analysis, and have their elements
tabulated like a tax bill or a grocery account. All human
concerns were called on to be listed on the muster-roll and
stand shoulder to shoulder on the drill-ground. Some curious
comrades appear side by side in the long line. For example, we
read: Class 286, brushes; 295, sleighs; 300, elementary
instruction; 301, academies and high schools, colleges and
universities; 305, libraries, history, etc.; 306, school-books,
general and miscellaneous literature, encyclopædias,
newspapers; 311, learned and scientific associations, artistic,
biological, zoological and medical schools, astronomical
observatories; 313, music and the drama. Then we find, closely
sandwiched between, 335—topographical maps,
etc.—and 400—figures in stone, metal, clay or
plaster—340, physical development and condition (of the
young of the genus Homo); 345, government and law; 346,
benevolence, beginning with hospitals of all kinds and ending
with—in the order we give them—emigrant-aid
societies, treatment of aborigines and prevention of cruelty to
animals! In the last-named subdivision the visitor will be
stared out of countenance by Mr. Bergh's tremendous exposure of
"various instruments used by persons in breaking the law
relative to cruelty to animals," the glittering banner of the
S.P.C.A., and its big trophy, eight yards square, that
illuminates the east end of the north avenue of the Main
Building, in opposition to the trophy at the other end of the
same avenue illustrating the history of the American flag. But
he will look in vain for selected specimens of the
emigrant-runner, the luxuries of the steerage and Castle
Garden, or for photographs of the well-fed post-trader and
Indian agent, agricultural products from Captain Jack's
lava-bed reservation and jars of semi-putrescent treaty-beef.
He will alight, next door to the penniless immigrant, the red
man and the omnibus-horse, on Class 348, religious
organizations and systems, embracing everything that grows out
of man's sense of responsibility to his Maker. It will perhaps
occur to the observer that, though the juxtaposition is well
enough, religion ought to have come in a little before. His
surprise at the power of condensation shown in compressing
eternity into a single class will not be lessened when he
passes on to Class 632, sheep; 634, swine; and 636, dogs and
cats!
A glance over the classification-list assists us in
recognizing the advantages of the system of awards framed by
the Commission and adopted after patient study and discussion.
It discards the plan—if plan it could be called—of
scattering diplomas and medals of gold, silver and bronze right
and left, after the fashion of largesse at a mediæval
coronation, heretofore followed at international expositions.
These prizes were decided on and assigned by juries whose
impartiality—by reason of the imperfect representation
upon them of the nations which exhibited little in mass or
little in certain classes, and also of their failure to make
written reports and thus secure their
responsibility—could not be assured, and whose action,
therefore, was defective in real weight and value. The juries
were badly constituted: they had too much to do of an illusory
and useless description, and they had too little to do that was
solid and instructive. Special mentions, diplomas, half a dozen
grades of medals and other honors, formed a programme too large
and complicated to be discriminatingly carried out. So it
happened that to exhibit and to get a distinction of some kind
came, at Vienna, to be almost convertible expressions; and who
excelled in the competition in any of the classes, or who had
contributed anything substantial to the stock of human
knowledge or well-being, remained quite undetermined. What
instruction the display could impart was confined to spectators
who studied its specialties for themselves and used their
deductions for their individual advantage, and to those who
read the sufficiently general and cursory reports made to their
several governments by the national commissions. The official awards and reports of the
exposition authorities amounted to little or nothing.

THE CORLISS ENGINE, FURNISHING MOTIVE-POWER FOR MACHINERY
HALL.
A sharp departure from this practice was decided on at the
Centennial. Two hundred judges, of undoubted character and
intelligence and entire familiarity with the departments
assigned to them, were chosen—half by the foreign bureaus
and half by the U.S. Commission. These were made officers of
the exposition itself, and thus separated from external
influences. They were given a reasonable and fixed compensation
of one thousand dollars each for their time and personal
expenses. An equal division of the number of judges between the
domestic and foreign sides gives the latter an excess, measured
by the comparative extent of the display from the two sources.
But this is favorable to us, as we shall be the better for an
outside judgment on the merits of both our own and foreign
exhibits. Were it otherwise, the excess of private observers
from this country would counterbalance our deficit in judges.
The foreign jurors have to see for the millions they represent.
Our own will have vast numbers of their constituents on the
ground.
Written reports are drawn up by these selected examiners and
signed by the authors. The reports must be "based upon inherent
and comparative merit. The elements of merit shall be held to
include considerations relating to originality, invention,
discovery, utility, quality, skill, workmanship, fitness for
the purpose intended, adaptation to public wants, economy and
cost." Each report, upon its completion, is delivered to the
Centennial Commission for award and publication. The award
comes in the shape of a diploma with a bronze medal and a
special report of the judges upon its subject. This report may be published by
the exhibitor if he choose. It will also be used by the
Commission in such manner as may best promote the objects of
the exposition. These documents, well edited and put in popular
form, will constitute the most valuable publication that has
been produced by any international exhibition. To this we may
add the special reports to be made by the State and foreign
commissions. These ought, with the light gained by time, to be
at least not inferior to the similar papers scattered through
the bulky records of previous exhibitions. Let us hope that
brevity will rule in the style of all the reports, regular and
irregular. There is a core to every subject, every group of
subjects and every group of groups, however numerous and
complex: let all the scribes labor to find it for us. When we
recall the disposition of all committees to select the member
most fecund of words to prepare their report, we are seized
with misgivings—a feeling that becomes oppressive as we
further reflect that the local committee which deliberately
collected and sent for exhibition eighty thousand manuscripts
written by the school-children of a Western city is at large on
the exposition grounds.
The passion for independent effort characteristic of the
American people led to the supplementing of the official list
by sundry volunteer prizes. These are offered by associations,
and in some cases individuals. They are not all, like the
regular awards, purely honorary. They lean to the pecuniary
form, those particularly which are offered in different
branches of agriculture. Competition among poultry-growers,
manufacturers of butter, reaping-and threshing-machines,
cotton-planters, etc. is stimulated by money-prizes reaching in
all some six or eight thousand dollars. Agricultural machinery
needs the open field for its proper testing, and cannot operate
satisfactorily in Machinery Hall. Without a sight of our
harvest-fields and threshing-floors foreigners would carry away
an incomplete impression of our industrial methods, the farm
being our great factory. The oar, the rifle and the racer are
as impatient of walls as the plough and its new-fangled allies.
They demand elbow-room for the display of their powers, and the
Commission was fain to let their votaries tempt it to pass the
confines of its territory. The lusty undergraduates of both
sides of Anglo-Saxondom escort it unresistingly down from its
airy halls to the blue bosom of the Schuylkill, while "teams"
picked from eighty English-speaking millions beckon it across
the Jerseys to Creedmoor. And the horse—is he to call in
vain? Is a strait-laced negative from the Commission to echo
back his neigh? Is the blood of Eclipse and Godolphin to
stagnate under a ticket in "Class 630, horses, asses and
mules"? Why, the very ponies in front of Memorial Hall pull
with extra vim against their virago jockeys and flap their
little brass wings in indignation at the thought. The
thoroughbred will be heard from, and the judges that sit on him
will be "experts in their department."
Another specimen of the desert-born, the Western Indian,
forms an exhibit as little suited as the improved Arab horse to
discussion and award at a session fraught with that "calm
contemplation and poetic ease" which ought to mark the
deliberations of the judges. How are the representatives of
fifty-three tribes to be put through their paces? These poor
fragments of the ancient population of the Union have, if we
exclude the Cherokees and Choctaws and two or three of the Gila
tribes, literally nothing to show. The latter can present us
with a faint trace of the long-faded civilization of their
Aztec kindred, while the former have only borrowed a few of the
rudest arts of the white, and are protected from extinction
merely by the barrier of a frontier more and more violently
assailed each year by the speculator and the settler, and
already passed by the railway. If we cannot exactly say that
the Indian, alone of all the throng at the exhibition, goes
home uninformed and unenlightened, what ideas may reach his
mind will be soon smothered out by the conditions which
surround him on the Plains. It is singular that a population of
three or four hundred
thousand, far from contemptible in intellectual power, and
belonging to a race which has shown itself capable of a degree
of civilization many of the tribes of the Eastern continents
have never approached, should be so absolutely an industrial
cipher. The African even exports mats, palm-oil and peanuts,
but the Indian exports nothing and produces nothing. He lacks
the sense of property, and has no object of acquisition but
scalps. Can the assembled ingenuity of the nineteenth century,
in presence of this mass of waste human material, devise no
means of utilizing it? There stands its Frankenstein, ready
made, perfect in thews and sinews, perfect also in many of its
nobler parts. It is not a creation that is
demanded—simply a remodeling or expansion. For success in
this achievement the United States can afford to offer a
pecuniary prize that will throw into the shade all the other
prizes put together. The cost of the Indian bureau for 1875-76
reached eight millions of dollars. The commission appointed to
treat for the purchase of the Black Hills reports that the
feeding and clothing of the Sioux cost the government thirteen
millions during the past seven years; and that without the
smallest benefit to those spirited savages. Says the report:
"They have made no advancement whatever, but have done
absolutely nothing but eat, drink, smoke and sleep."

INTERIOR OF COOK'S WORLD'S TICKET-OFFICE.
Social and political questions like this point to a vast
field of inquiry. For its proper cultivation the exposition
provides data additional to those heretofore available. They
should be used as far as possible upon the spot. At least, they
can be examined, collated and prepared for full employment. To
this end, meetings and discussions held by men qualified by
intellect and study to deal with them are the obvious resort.
There is room among the two hundred judges for some such men,
but the juries are little more numerous than is required for
the examination of and report on objects. For more abstract
inquiries they will need recruits. These should be supplied by
the leading philosophical associations of this country and
Europe. The governments have all an interest in enlisting their
aid, and the Centennial Commission has done what in it lay to
promote their action. Ethnic characteristics, history, literature, education,
crime, statistics as a science, hygiene and medicine generally
are among the broad themes which are not apt to be adequately
treated by the average committee of inspection. So with the
whole range of the natural sciences. Dissertations based on the
jury reports will doubtless be abundant after a while, but
those reports themselves, being limited in scope, will not be
as satisfactory material as that which philosophic specialists
would themselves extract from direct observation and debate
upon the ground.
For the study of the commanding subject of education the
provision made at the present exhibition is exceptionally
great. In bulk, and probably in completeness, it is
immeasurably beyond the display made on any preceding occasion.
The building erected by the single State of Pennsylvania for
her educational department covers ten or eleven thousand square
feet, and other States of the Union make corresponding efforts
to show well in the same line. The European nations all
manifest a new interest in this branch, and give it a much more
prominent place in their exhibit than ever before. The
school-systems of most of them are of very recent birth, and do
not date back so far as 1851. The kingdom of Italy did not
exist at that time or for many years after, yet we now see it
pressing for a foremost place in the race of popular education,
and multiplying its public schools in the face of all the
troubles attendant upon the erection and organization of a new
state.
The historian will find aliment less abundant. A century or
two of Caucasian life in America is but a thing of yesterday to
him, and, though far from uninstructive, is but an offshoot
from modern European annals. For all that, he finds himself on
our soil in presence of an antiquity which remains to be
explored, and which clamors to be rescued from the domain of
the pre-historic. It has no literary records beyond the scant
remains of Mexico. It writes itself, nevertheless, strongly and
deeply on the face of the land—in mounds, fortifications
and tombs as distinct, if not so elaborate, as those of Etruria
and Cyprus. These remains show the hand of several successive
races. Who they were, what their traits, whence they came, what
their relations with the now civilized Chinese and
Japanese—whom, physically, their descendants so nearly
resemble—are legitimate queries for the historian.
Geologically, America is older than Europe, and was fitted for
the home of the red man before the latter ceased to be the home
of the whale. The investigation of its past, if impossible to
be conducted in the light of its own records or even
traditions, is capable of aiding in the verification of
conclusions drawn from those of the Old World. If History,
however, contemptuously relegates the Moundbuilders to the
mattock of the antiquarian, she is still "Philosophy teaching
by example." As thus allied with Philosophy, she finds
something to look into at the Centennial, even though she look
obliquely, after the fashion of the observant Hollanders, who
have stuck the reflecting glasses of the Dutch street-windows
into the sides of their compartment in the Main Building, and
squint, without a change of position, upon the United States,
Spain, South America, Egypt, Great Britain and several other
countries.
Religion and philanthropy find the field inviting, and their
representatives, individual and associated, are busy in
preparing to till it. The enthusiasm of the leading religious
societies took the concrete shape of statuary. Hence the
Catholic Fountain, heretofore noticed; the Hebrew statue to
Religious Liberty, as established in a land that never had a
Ghetto or a Judenstrasse; the Presbyterian figure of
Witherspoon; an Episcopalian of Bishop White; and others under
way or proposed. The temperance movement, too, embodies itself
in a fountain that runs ice-water instead of claret. The less
tangible but perhaps more fruitful form of reunions and
discussions must in a greater or less degree enhance the power
for good of these organizations. They are led by men of mind
and energy, seldom averse to enlightenment, and all professing
to seek nothing else.
When men of these qualities, aiming at the same or a like
object, meet to compare their respective admeasurements of its
parallax made from as many different points, they cannot fail
to approach accuracy. Faith is a first element in all great
undertakings. It removes mountains at Mont Cenis, as it walked
the waves with Columbus. In our century even faith is
progressive, and does not shrink from elbowing its way through
what Bunyan would have styled Vanity Fair.
Modestly in the rear of the moral reformers, yet not wholly
and uniformly unaggressive, nor guiltless altogether of isms
and schisms, step forward the literary men. As a rule, they do
not affect expositions, or exhibitions of any kind. But one
general meeting, with some minor and informal ones, is on the
programme for them. This is well. The world and the fullness
thereof belongs to them, and they may care to come forward to
scan this schedule of their inheritance. We do not hear of
their having combined to put up a pavilion of their own, like
the dairymen and the brewers, "to show the different processes
of manufacture." The pen will be at work here, nevertheless,
and has been from the beginning, before the foundations of the
Corliss engine were laid or the granite of Memorial Hall left
the quarry. Without this first of implements none of the other
machinery would ever have moved. The pen is mightier than the
piston. It is the invisible steam that impels
all.

FRENCH RESTAURANT LA FAYETTE.
In a visible form also it is here. The publishers of the
London Punch have selected as the most comprehensive
motto for the case in which they exhibit copies of their
various publications a sentence from Shakspeare: "Come and take
choice of all my library, and so beguile thy sorrow." We do not
know that to dull his sorrows is all that can be done for man.
Literature assumes to do more than make him forget. The
lotos-eater is not its one hero. School-books, piled aloft "in
numbers without number numberless," may to the man be
suggestive of hours without thought and void of grief, but they
certainly are not to the boy. Blue books, ground out in a
thousand bureaus, and contributed in like profusion, may be
pronounced a weariness to the adult flesh, however sweet their
ultimate uses. Unhappy those who wade through them for
increasing the happiness of others! These humble but portly
representatives of political literature are the log-books of
the ship of state. They chart and chronicle the currents and
winds along its course, so that from the mass of chaff a grain
of guidance may be painfully winnowed out for the benefit of
its next voyage, or for the voyages of other craft floundering
on the same perilous and baffling sea. Everything comes pat to
a log-book. As endless is the medley of memoranda in
blue-books. They deal, like government itself, with everything.
They take up the citizen on his entry into the cradle, and do
not quite drop him at the grave. How to educate, clothe, feed
and doctor him; how to keep him out of jail, and how, once
there, to get him out again with the least possible moral
detriment; how to adjust as lightly as possible to his
shoulders the burden of taxation; how to economize him as food
for powder; and how to free him from the miasm of crowded
cities,—are but a small part of their contents. And the
index is growing, if possible, larger, as the apparatus of
government becomes more and more intricate. With such
contributions and credentials do the rulers of the nations
enroll themselves in the
guild of authorship. They are proud of them, and exhibit them
in profusion, in whole libraries, rich with gold and the
primary colors.

THE MAMMOTH RODMAN GUN.
Expositions, as we have before remarked, come into the same
worshipful guild by right of a special literature they have
brought into being. They come, moreover, into the blue-book
range by their bearing upon certain topics generally assigned
to it. It is found, for example, that, like other great
gatherings, they are apt to be followed by a temporary local
increase of crime. The police-records of London show that the
arrests in 1851 outnumbered those of the previous year by 1570,
and that in 1862 the aggregate exceeded by 5043 that of 1861.
It will at once occur that the population of the city was
greatly increased on each occasion, and that the influx of
thieves and lawbreakers generally must have thinned out that
class elsewhere, and in that way very probably reduced, rather
than added to, the sum-total of crime, the preventive
arrangements in London having been exceptionally thorough. The
drawback that would consist in an increase of crime is
therefore only an apparent result. An opposite effect cannot
but result, if only from the evidence that so vast and
heterogeneous an assemblage can be held without marked
disorder. The police as well as the criminals and the savants
of all nations come together, compare notes and enjoy a common
improvement.
This is the first opportunity the physicians of Europe have
had to become fully acquainted with the advances in surgery and
pathology their American brethren have the credit of having
made within the past few years. They will find it illustrated
in the government buildings and elsewhere; and they have an
ample quid pro quo to offer from their own researches.
The balancing of opinions at the proposed medical congress and
in private intercourse must tend to free medical science from
what remnants of empiricism still disfigure it, to perfect
diagnosis and to trace with precision the operation of all
remedial agents. Means remain to be found of administering the
coup de grâce to the few epidemics which have not
yet been extirpated, but linger in a crippled condition. This
will be aided by the illustrations afforded of processes of
draining, ventilation, etc.
Man's health rests in that of his stomach. The food question
is a concern of the physician as well as of the publicist. The
race began life on a vegetable diet, and to that it reverts
when compelled by enfeebled digestion or by the increasing
difficulty of providing animal food for a dense population. But
it likes flesh when able to assimilate it or to procure it, and
demands at least the compromise of fish. Hence, the revived
attention to fish-breeding, an art wellnigh forgotten since the
Reformation emptied the carp-ponds of the monks. Maryland, New
York and other States illustrate this device for enhancing the
food-supply, and the aquaria at Agricultural Hall, containing
twelve or fifteen thousand gallons of salt and fresh water,
present a congress of the leaders, gastronomically speaking, of
the finny people. The shad remains not only to be naturalized
in Europe, but to be reintroduced to the water-side dwellers
above tide, who once met
him regularly at table. He is joined by delegates from the
mountain, the great lakes and the Pacific coast in the trout,
the salmon and the whitefish, and by that quiet, silent and
slow-going cousin of the fraternity, the oyster, most valuable
of all, as possessors of those qualities not unfrequently are.
Europe does not dream, and we ourselves do not realize until we
come carefully to think of it, what the oyster does for us. He
sustains the hardiest part of our coasting marine, paves our
best roads, fertilizes our sands, enlivens all our festivities,
and supports an army of packers, can-makers, etc., cased in
whose panoply of tin he traverses the globe like a mail-clad
knight-errant in the cause of commerce and good eating. Yet he
needs protection. All this burden is greater than he can bear,
and it is growing. System and science are invoked to his rescue
ere he go the way of the inland shad and the salmon that became
a drug to the Pilgrim Fathers. It is not easy to frame a medal
or diploma for the fostering of the oyster. More effective is a
consideration of the impending penalty for neglecting to do so.
Ostrea edulis is one of the grand things before which
prizes sink into nothingness.
Another of them is that triumph of pure reason, chess, an
unadulterated product of the brain—i.e., of
phosphorus—i.e., of fish. Nobody stakes money on chess or
offers a prize to the best player. Honor at that board is its
own reward. So when we are told of the Centennial Chess
Tournament we recognize at once the fitness of the word
borrowed from the chivalric joust. It is the culmination of
human strife. The thought, labor and ardor spread over three
hundred and fifty acres sums itself in that black and white
board the size of your handkerchief. War and statecraft
condense themselves into it. Armies and nations move with the
chessman. Sally, leaguer, feint, flank-march, triumphant charge
are one after another rehearsed. There, too, moves the game of
politics in plot and counterplot. It is the climax of the
subjective. From those lists the trumpet-blare, the crowd, the
glitter, the banners, "the boast of heraldry and pomp of
power," melt utterly away. To the world-champions who bend
above the little board the big glass houses and all the
treasures stared at by admiring thousands are as naught.

SCENE AT ONE OF THE ENTRANCES TO THE GROUNDS—THE
TURNSTILE.
But man is an animal, and not by any means of intellect all
compact. The average mortal confesses to a craving for the
stimulus of great shows, of material purposes, substantial
objects of study and palpable prizes. It is so in 1876, as it
was in 1776, and as it will be in a long series of
Seventy-sixes.
It is the concrete
rather than the abstract which draws him in through the
turnstiles of the exposition enclosure. Separated by the
divisions of those ingeniously-contrived gates into taxed and
untaxed spectators, the masses stream in with small thought of
the philosophers or the chess-players. Their minds are reached,
but reached through the eye, and the first appeal is to that.
Each visitor constitutes himself a jury of one to consider and
compare what he sees. The hundreds of thousands of verdicts so
reached will be published only by word of mouth, if published
at all. Their value will be none the less indubitable, though
far from being in all cases the same. The proportion of
intelligent observers will be greater than on like occasions
heretofore. So will, perhaps, be that of solid matter for
study, although in some specialties there may be default. He
who enters with the design of self-education will find the
text-books in most branches abundant, wide open before him and
printed in the clearest characters. What shortcomings there may
have been in the selection and arrangement of them he will
have, if he can, himself to remedy. There stands the school,
founded and furnished with great labor. The would-be scholar
can only be invited to use it. The centennial that is to turn
out scholars ready-made has not yet rolled
round. |