BALBOA PARK HISTORY
Balboa Park Notes from Richard Amero
Panama-California Exposition Company: Collier, president; Spreckels, first vice president; Davidson, second vice president, Mc Lure, third vice president; Burnham, fourth vice president; Frank P. Allen, Jr., Director-General; Winfield Hogaboom, secretary. . . . H. O. Davis made Director-General in July, 1913.
San Diego County, California by Samuel F. Black, Vol. 1, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1913.
Chapter 64, pp. 351-363: San Diego - Panama Exposition (Note: the following article should be read with caution as it contains numerous errors.)
On July 19, 1911, ground was broken for the exposition to be held in San Diego, commemorative of the opening of the Panama canal. The pageantry exercises at the exposition grounds and noted men and women taking part therein, were all described in a felicitous manner by John S. McGroarty, editor of the West Coast Magazine. His article is given below:
"On July 19th last ground was broken for the Panama-California Exposition at San Diego. On the day of the groundbreaking and for three days following, the event was fittingly celebrated in a most unique, unusual and impressive manner by the people of San Diego and many thousands of visitors from other parts of California and the world. Pageantry by day and by night, carnival that revived the old Spanish spirit of care-free and pleasure-loving California, music, color and gaiety held sway.
"Historically, epoch-making, and from a serious point of view the celebration was distinctly important. The success of it all, which was very notable, indeed, is regarded as a certain indication that San Diego's Exposition in 1915 will prove the most attractive as well as the most unique show ever given on the American continent.
"The San Diego Exposition will be entirely different from the world's fair to be held in San Francisco in 1915. The San Diego show will be a Pan-American affair. Congress has recently authorized the president to request the republics of South and Central America to participate in the Exposition at San Diego. As a consequence, these nations will make great efforts to be splendidly represented. In addition to all this, our own southwest will be exploited in a fascinating manner, its ancient life and history will be shown - antedating as it does, the civilization of any other portion of the United States --- and its progress in mineral, agricultural and commercial lines will be brought out in an original and vivid manner. Irrigation will be particularly exploited with all the miracles that have been wrought in its name.
"The San Diego Exposition will be a floral and a horticultural wonder. It will be an archaeological and ethnological marvel. Every flower that grows, every tree than man has known, the prehistoric races of man, the ancient temples in which they worshipped, the sacrificial altars, the pueblos, the cliff dwellings and the teepees of the nomads --- all these will appear. No exposition of such fascinating possibilities has ever been planned or dreamed of before anywhere in the world.
"The groundbreaking for the Exposition was fixed to place practically on the anniversary of the foundation of San Diego, which is also the date that marks the beginning of California as an integral part of the civilized world. California was discovered in the year 1542, only fifty years after Columbus had discovered the New World, but it was not until July 1, 1769, that the Franciscan padres came to San Diego bearing with them the Cross of Christianity and the stakes of the white man's civilization. On July 16, 1769, the Mission of San Diego was founded --- the first of that marvelous line of Mission Hospices that were builded along El Camino Real, the "King's Highway" between San Diego and Sonoma, a distance of 700 miles, the remains of which now constitute the only historical ruins of any extent existing within the borders of the United States.
"It was fitting and entirely consistent, therefore, that the groundbreaking for San Diego's Exposition which is to celebrate the completion of the Panama Canal, should be held in the month of July, the month of the first miracle performed one hundred and forty-two years ago before on the same spot, under the same blue sky, and on the shores of the same bright Harbor of the Sun. And it is no wonder that the people gathered from far and near by the thousands and hundreds of thousands to witness an event at once so stirring and fascinating, appealing as it did to the imagination of even the dullest beholder.
"The first act which the first white men who settled in California performed was the celebration of a military mass on the shores of San Diego bay. It was done by the Franciscan Fathers, assisted by the Spanish military forces which accompanied the expedition from Old Mexico.
"In order, then, to preserve the atmosphere of history, the Exposition groundbreaking began also with the celebration of a military mass celebrated by Franciscan Fathers on the same historic spot. Thus was the pendulum of history swung backward across the dusty pathways of nearly a century and a half of time on the morning of July 19, 1911, in San Diego.
"On the shores of the Harbor of the Sun the same Te Deum was sung that Junipero Serra chanted when he came up from La Paz with Don Gaspar de Portola, footsore and weary, but with a heart bursting with joy as he plucked a wild rose from its stem and said: 'The is a beautiful land. The roses are like the roses of Castile.'
"From far away Santa Barbara, San Luis Rey, and the still more distant missions of the Sierra came, cowled and sandaled, the brown priests of St. Francis. In the heart of the hills that overlook the Sunset Sea and the purpled isles of the Coronados they reared an altar hard by the old Presidio Hill on which Father Serra had builded the first Christian shrine ever erected on these western shores. Not far away they could see the ruined towers and crumbled walls of the ancient Mission of San Diego de Alcala which signalized the first victory of civilization over heathenism in California. Almost at their feet tricked the waters of the first irrigation ditch ever made by white men within the borders of the United States, as at present constituted. Down in the quiet, peaceful Mission Valley stretched the sacred fields where was shed the blood of California's first martyr,
"The celebration of the Solemn Pontifical Military Field Mass was a most entrancing and colorful spectacle. It was carried out with not only all the precision of military discipline, but also with the perfect organization of the Roman liturgy. The swing of the centuries was behind it.
"The magnificent altar, set in a natural amphitheater with the blue sky for its dome was an exact replica of an old altar of Loreto. An immense painting of Our Lady of Carmel formed the background. The floors were of spotless white and the enclosures were of Roman pillars adorned with gorgeous wild flowers and cut roses from the magic gardens of San Diego.
"Twenty-five thousand people were gathered on the open hillsides as the procession of acolytes, friars, secular clergy, distinguished guests, the Bishop and the military filed across the new made trails down to the altar. A hush fell upon the multitudes for a moment; they then broke into a deep murmur of admiration that sounded like the tones of some mighty organ.
"Franciscan priests were in full charge of the mass, the celebrant being Father Benedict, Provincial of the Order, who came from St. Louis for the occasion. Rt. Rev. Thomas James Conaty, Bishop of Monterey and Los Angeles, occupied a purple throne. Fully one hundred clergymen attended him. Within the sanctuary were seated Hon. John Barrett, representing the president of the United States, and Joseph W. Sefton, representing the director-general of the Exposition, recipients of the most unusual honor to non-Catholics.
"After the bugles of the troopers ceased to ring their wild music across the sun swept hills, the band played 'Nearer My God To Thee,' and then the stately bishop in his resplendent vestments arose in Cappa Magna and delivered the historical address of the day. It was a notable oratorical effort and was received with cheer after cheer by the people present, who represented all shades of religious belief.
"The actual groundbreaking ceremonies took place on the same spot where the Military Field Mass had been celebrated. The program began in the early afternoon in the presence of another monster throng of people.
"When the procession arrived at the site selected for the future exposition buildings, U. S. Grant, Jr. introduced Rev. Edward F. Hallenbeck, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, who delivered an invocation. This was followed by the exposition ode, '1915,' sung by a triple quartet. Mr. Grant then presented Joseph W. Sefton, Jr., acting director-general, as master of ceremonies. Mr. Sefton made a short welcoming speech and introduced Acting Mayor P. E. Woods. The latter in turn presented Lee C. Gates, the representative of Governor Johnson. Mr. Gates spoke eloquently of the glories of California. Hon. John Barrett, as the representative of President Taft, made a brief address.
"The came the actual groundbreaking. Mr. Sefton loosened the earth with a silver pick. He then handed a silver spade to Mr. Barrett and the latter turned the first sod. The spade was then passed in succession to Mr. Grant, Acting Mayor Wood, Mr. Gates, President Charles Moore of the Panama-Pacific Exposition, John D. Spreckels, Governor Richard E. Sloan of Arizona, Will H. Parry, representing the governor of Washington, and to several prominent San Diego citizens. Each turned a spadeful of earth, the implement being finally passed back to Mr. Sefton, who turned the last sod.
"Mr. Barrett again addressed the gathering, this time in behalf of the Pan-American republics. Then followed the unfurling of the American flag to the strains of the 'Star Spangled Banner.' Next the President's flag was broken out amid a great cheering, the release being effected by President Taft touching an electric button at the White House. The band greeted the President's flag with 'Hail Columbia.'
"Flags of the southern republics were next thrown to the breeze as the band played a medley of the airs of all nations.
"G. Aubrey Davidson spoke on 'The Inauguration of the Panama-California Exposition.' He was followed by Charles C. Moore, whose them was 'San Francisco and Her Great World's Fair.'
"Several San Diego gentlemen followed with remarks. The band played a medley of national airs and the groundbreaking ceremonies were ended.
During his address Mr. Barrett read the following letter from the president of the United States:
'The White House, Washington,
July 11, 1911
'My Dear Mr. Barrett: I have yours of July 11, in which you advise me that in response to an invitation to you as director-general of the Pan-American Union you are going to the groundbreaking of the Panama-California Exposition, to be held in San Diego from January 1 to December 31, 1915. This ceremony, I believe, is to take place from the 19th to the 22nd of the present month.
'I beg that you will acknowledge for me the courtesy of the management in having extended an invitation to me to attend this ceremony. I cannot myself be present, but I should be very glad to have you represent me there and make appropriate remarks on the occasion.
'San Diego is so situated that she is necessarily very much interested in the opening of the Panama Canal, and the fact that this exposition is to give particular attention to the relations between this country and Central and South American countries is sufficient reason why the American public should be especially interested in its success.
'You will convey my compliments to the managers and to the people of San Diego and say to them what you know of my interest in our Central and South American relations and in the usefulness and successful issue of the exposition.
'Sincerely yours,
'William H. Taft
'Hon. John Barrett, Director-General, Pan-American Union.
'P.S. - I know San Diego because I have been there twice, my father and mother and sister lived there for years, and my father died there. I appreciate the singular beauty of its situation and the wonderful character of its climate. And all these circumstances give me a personal interest in promoting its welfare and in helping to assure the success of an enterprise like this. W. H. T.'
"On the evening of the first day of the celebration the long looked for arrival of 'King Cabrillo' and the crowning of 'Queen Ramona' nearly approached the dignity of pageantry although conceived wholly in a spirit of pleasantry. The light on the waters of the bay and the costumes of the queen and her ladies in waiting were quite gorgeous.
"The affair was handled with admirable care and success. A Spanish caravel was seen to come from across the waters of the harbor just as sunset. As the ancient vessel slowly crept from North Island toward the pier in San Diego the tremendous throngs on shore seemed to grow excited. Lights flashed from all kinds of craft in the harbor --- here, there and everywhere. The caravel sailed on and on and at length reached the shore.
"In the prow of the ship a strange figure appeared who announced that he was Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, the discoverer of California, and that he had returned to revisit the scene of his exploits in the year 1542, when he first came to San Diego. Cabrillo seemed to doubt that the magnificent city he saw before him could possibly be the San Diego of old. He was assured that it was the identical spot and he was urged to come ashore and accept the freedom of the city which he had put on the map nearly four hundred years ago. A golden key to the city's gates was placed in the old sailor's hands and he was told that the people were eager to declare him king in preference to Colonel Collier or anybody else.
"His welcome seemed so genuine that Cabrillo was delighted, and he stepped ashore, whereupon he was placed in a sedan chair and borne by a band of Indian carriers up the main street of the town until the courthouse was reached. There at the doorway of the temple of justice, he found Queen Ramona sitting on a golden throne. The mob wildly demanded that Cabrillo should crown the queen. The immortal navigator gladly complied, performing the ceremony with all the traditional chivalry of his nation.
"Ten thousand people then swept both Cabrillo and Ramona before them to 'The Isthmus,' which was a wonderful place similar to the Pike at St. Louis or the Midway at Chicago. There were endless noises from countless horns and a din that would raise the padres from their graces in the Old Mission churchyard.
'The Queen, who in private life is Miss Helene Richards of Point Loma, was chosen for her exalted position by a vote of the people, her popularity outrunning all rivals. Tall, and possessed of a brunette beauty, she graced her position and became the most acclaimed personage of the carnival. Wherever she went she was greeted with salvos of cheers. Prominent ladies and gentlemen of San Diego formed Her Majesty's court and did much to make it the striking success that it was.
"On the morning of the second day there was a most beautiful floral parade. At night came the Historical Pageant, the object of which was to impress upon the people, the march of time in the magnificent southwest, the land of sunshine, of wastes redeemed by living waters from immemorial deserts; and to pay tribute to the ancient art and skill in engineering which not only the Franciscan fathers displayed nearly a century and a half ago, but also to acknowledge the greatness of the old Aztecs, who made the southwest their place of dwelling longer ago than the memory of man.
"The idea of the poet who conceived the pageant was to carry the people in imagination out of the mists of forgotten times, along the fateful pathway of the centuries, down to yesterday, with a glimpse of the vistas of tomorrow.
"What the poet dreamed, the consummate skill of the artist carried out. To Edwin H. Cough, the poet, and to Henry Kabierske, the artist, let the praise be given.
"The first float in the pageant represented a group of ancient Aztec priests sacrificing to the god of war. To make this representation faithful Mr. Cough drew upon all his vast knowledge of Aztec history and tradition as well as the mind of man can conceive it. We saw the priests of that wonderful civilization which was as old as Egypt. As the picture went slowly through the streets, the dullest imagination could not but feel the glamour of another day that faded long before the Atlantic shores knew the white man's footsteps.
"Next came Balboa taking possession of the Pacific for the King of Spain. It was all as innumerable American boys have seen it in history and geography from the childhood of Benjamin Franklin to the present hour. There stood the great conquistador in helmet and coat of mail, knee deep in the waters of the mother of all oceans, the banner of Castile in one hand and his sword in the other, as he shouted to wind and wave that all the vast expanse of billows before him was then and should forever be vassal to the monarch whose golden throne bore the arms of Castilian power.
"Then came the next step in the tragedy of the years that saw the fall of Aztec dynasties and the rise of Christian rule. The tableau showed Montezuma in the dust and Cortez, the grim Spanish conqueror, standing triumphantly over him. About the fallen king were his dead warriors, who had once beaten Spain back and whose prowess and valor had sent Cortez weeping under the yew tree on that black night of his bitter defeat. But the Aztecs were doomed to go down at last. Spain was not long to be balked. The picture brought out very vividly the terrible page in history which it was designed to delineate. Following the conquest of Mexico history tells the thrilling story of the search for the famed seven cities of Cibola. Cortez was the most eager man of his time to find those cities which were said to be built of gold.
"Faithful to the chronicle, the fourth float in the pageant portrayed Cortez directing Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo to sail northward upon the unknown seas in search of Cibola. The portrayal was one of the most striking in the procession, with the conqueror pointing to the vague distance and Cabrillo, the intrepid mariner, eagerly expressing his desire to go on that immortal voyage which resulted, not in the finding of the seven golden cities, but in the discovery of the golden land of California.
"The fifth float was the Caravel of Cabrillo. It was very beautiful, the little ship with its joyous sails that came up the coast of glory so long ago, passing into San Diego's harbor of the sun, then on to San Pedro, to Santa Barbara and as far as the windy headland of Mendocino, whence it doubled back to leave the great admiral in his last sleep in the warm heart of the land he found.
"Now appeared the splendid pageantry of the Brown Padres who built the old California missions along the sunny stretches of El Camino Real from San Diego to Sonoma, in the Valley of the Seven Moons. The tableau showed Junipero Serra planting the cross on the shores of San Diego Bay, Surrounding the heroic figure of the old Franciscan were wondering, half-naked savages, Catalonian soldiers, the Gubernador, Don Gaspar de Portola, the neophytes from Mexico, the muleteers, and other actors in that fateful drama of July 1, 1769.
"The ninth float was one that sent the greatest thrill through the miles of spectators who lined the streets of the city. It was the tableau of the raising of the first American flag in San Diego, which was, as some authorities contend, the first American flag to be raised on the Pacific coast. There is a tradition that a man in San Diego was in advance of Sloat at Monterey in planting Old Glory on California soil, although his flag was a necessarily crude production, seeing the he manufactured it out of his own red and white underwear. The pageant ignored this prosaic legend and showed a much more poetic transaction, which was greeted with tremendous outbursts of cheers all along the line.
"A very beautiful tableau was presented by the float which had an allegorical representation of Neptune presiding at the wedding of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, thus typifying the completion of the Panama Canal.
"The last and most elaborate float in the pageant told the story of San Diego from its first discovery by Cabrillo down to the present day, including of course, the intermediate epoch of the founding of the first mission by the Franciscans. This float, in its fascinating beauty of light and color, can be called nothing less than a masterpiece of stage ingenuity. Here the poet and the artist reached a climax. No indoor stage could have possibly done this conception justice. It needed the open highway and that was what it had. David Belasco would have gained something in craftsmanship had he been in San Diego.
"The third day was given over to a fine industrial parade which was greatly enjoyed by the crowds. Then on the morning of the forth and last day of the celebration came the event for which the people had so eagerly looked forward. It was the Pageant of the Missions.
"There is no appeal to equal the appeal that the old Franciscan Missions make to the people of California, the whole southwest, and, indeed, the whole country. The ruins of the ancient establishments are strewn along the old King's Highway, which was the celebrated 'El Camino Real,' or Royal Road of the glorious days of the Spanish era.
"The spectacle presented was without doubt the most successful attempt at pageantry ever made in America. There were twenty-one floats, each representing a mission, beginning with Mission San Diego de Alcala, which was the first mission, and ending with the Mission San Francisco de Solano, which was the last.
"The pageant represented a stretch of more than a half century of time as to the life of the missions; that is to say, from the building of the hospice at San Diego in 1769 to the building of the Sonoma Mission in 1822. It also represented the entire length of the King's Highway, seven hundred miles, from San Diego's Harbor of the Sun to Sonoma's Valley of the Seven Moons.
"There were nearly one thousand living characters in the procession, who represented monks, soldiers, knights, Indians and all the historical associations that surround not only the legends of the founding of the missions, but their actual establishment as well.
"For instance, the float representing San Juan Capistrano showed the warrior priest as he was in the distant centuries in which he lived. Characters to represent that era were brought forth. In addition to these there were characters to represent the time the mission was actually founded in California. There were hundreds of monks, trudging along on foot, hundreds of outriders, and hundreds more of Indians, soldiers and attendants.
"As the long, glorious procession came up the sunny street a deep hush fell upon the people who numbered a hundred thousand and made the biggest crowd that San Diego had ever entertained at any one time in her history. The pageant's slow and solemn movement created the right atmosphere. It seemed as though the people were in attendance upon a religious ceremony, which it really was. Not a carnival horn was blown, not a noisy bell jangled.
"Back again from the mists and memories of the well-loved past came the brown-robed padres, so dear to the soul of California. Back came the days when a man could travel from San Diego to Sonoma and stop every night at a mission whose doors swung open to him without price.
"The replicas of the old ruins were faithfully portrayed by Mr. Kabierske, who had charge of the pageant under the direction of the Historical and Industrial Pageant Corporation of Philadelphia. This master artist here accomplished the crowning achievement of his career. He walked at the end of the procession and was greeted with hearty cheers by the assembled multitudes.
"All in all, the groundbreaking celebration here described was a splendid augury of the success with which San Diego will carry out the California-Panama Exposition of 1915. The pageantry and the carnival gave us a foretaste of which we shall see and hear when the trails of all the world lead to the Harbor of the Sun, less than four years hence, and the show shall be in full swing on these bright and luring shores."
Steadily forward has been the movement of the forces engaged in preparing for the record that is to be written in San Diego in 1915 in celebration of the formal opening of the Panama canal. There has been no cessation of activities, nor even a slacking of the steady forward movement with which the preparatory work of the exposition has been prosecuted. The work of the year has been that of laying the foundation of the great project, making smooth the rough spots and paving the way for the greater building work that is to mark the year 1913.
To plan and execute a mammoth project requires time and care and the constant vigilance and earnest application of a force working in harmony throughout every department. So much of the ultimate success of an enterprise depends upon the care with which the ground work is constructed that the year just closed has been one of unusual importance to the exposition management, and yet there has been in the year such a condition of harmony and such hearty cooperation throughout the construction forces that the exposition officials feel that the work of the year has been well done and that a substantial basis has been established for the work yet to be done.
It has been written that "All roads lead to Rome." The simile may be found in that the roads traveled by all departments of the exposition work have had a common center and now, at the end of the year, it is found that all have served to work to a common purpose. As in the weaving of a blanket the warp and woof cross and recross, in the end producing one great whole, so have the diversified threads of effort at the exposition ground, interlaced, been vitalized and now, at the beginning of the year of greater construction, give assured promise of the fulfillment of the magnificent plans of ultimate decoration and arrangement.
The progress of the year at the exposition is written in letters large. The first notable work was the completion of the administration building at the eastern approach to the Canyon de Cabrillo, where are housed the departments and from which are directed all the works on the grounds. As the scope of these works widened the departmental forces were enlarged until now the administration building is a hive of humanity. Each department has found multiplied details of labor to accomplish, but these have been met with vigor and the departments are well organized as a result of the year's activities.
Other buildings that will have permanent place during the exposition have been erected during the year. The first of these to be constructed was the service building, where are houses for the horses and wagons used in exposition construction work, and where are stored all the construction supplied purchased in large quantities. This building, while serving a utilitarian purpose only, is of mission style of architecture. This building is the distributing point for all jobs on the grounds. When its present use is terminated the structure will become the headquarters of the exposition street cleaning department and an emergency repair station, this continuing throughout the exposition year.
The new years will bring thriving activities in building construction at the exposition, and this work is certain to be attended by accidents. Little of the work done in 1912 has involved workmen in danger, but meeting the demand that must arise later, the exposition management prepared and opened on December 15 an emergency hospital. This building carries, of course, the mission style of architecture. It is in charge of Dr. C. L. Caven as medical director.
Of more than passing interest is the exposition hospital. It will serve in all cases of accidents to employees of the exposition company from the date of its opening to the close of the exposition and also all emergency cases requiring surgical or medical treatment arising on the exposition grounds during the exposition period. The operating room is equipped as completely as that of any other hospital on the Pacific coast, and every article installed is of the latest design and finest construction. Nowhere can be found better apparatus. Furniture, chairs, sterilizers, operating tables, etc. represent the most advanced ideas in such equipment for hospital service. Dr. Caven has at his command a corps of highly trained and competent nurses. A great manufacturing company has contributed the entire equipment of the hospital to the exposition free of charge, even paying the freight on the shipment to the exposition site. This equipment is loaned to the exposition and is to be returned to the manufacturing company at the close of the exhibition at the contributor's expense. The hospital is equipped to care for twenty-six patients.
Extreme good fortune has attended the work on the exposition grounds during the year. Many tons of dynamite have been used for blasting for drives and in grading building sites, and yet there has not been one instance of injury to any employee necessitating surgical attention.
There will be no unsightly fences about the exposition grounds. These, embracing six hundred and fifteen acres in the center of Balboa park, will be enclosed by a fence, strong and durable, but this will be a solid wall of green. One-half of this fence has been erected during the year and it will be completed early in 1913. Immediately after its completion, vines will be planted at the base and these will have two years of growth prior to the opening of the exposition. This work was given attention early in the construction period that the overgrowing vines might be planted at a time to insure development by the opening date.
This fence skirts Canyon de Cabrillo.
Horticultural activities have progressed splendidly at the exposition nurseries during the year. An addition was made to the smaller lath house where thousands of specimens of hundreds of varieties of trees and shrubs are being developed for transplanting, and another lath house, much larger, has been erected to shelter a larger stock of these growths. At this time the nurseries at the exposition contain about one and one-half million specimens of horticultural production, and while fifty thousand of trees have been planted during the year, many other thousands will be placed during 1913, while the exposition display stock will be nurtured and brought to full stature in endless variety well in advance of the opening.
Grading work on the streets and boulevards is eighty-five percent completed at this time. Following a well-defined plan of progression in building the exposition, the management has cared for this essential feature before beginning the construction of exposition structures. All the grading around the building sites, the platting of walks, etc. has been finished. Much of this work has been difficult, requiring the use of dynamite in blasting away the hardpan of red disseminated limestone found beneath the soil, and forming a building foundation endurable through the ages. This stone, also, when broken, constitutes a natural base for the asphalt surfaces of the walks and drives and eliminates the cost of constructing the ordinary macadam foundation. This favorable condition will be of vast importance in expense saving and time when the work of surfacing the drives is reached after the buildings are completed.
In addition to these things, the foundation has been placed for the southern counties building, this being located near the eastern entrance to the grounds at the terminal of Midland drive, and due east of the administration building. This building will be finished early in 1913. Three separate plantations are provided for the displays of the southern counties and two of these have been planted and these ought to be bearing by September, 1913. These plantations include oranges, lemons and grapefruit.
Substantial progress has been made on the construction of the great bridge that is to span Cabrillo canyon, with its western end at the Laurel street entrance on West Park boulevard, its eastern end at the administration building and squarely in the acreage devoted to sites for exposition buildings. This massive bridge, 900 feet long, 120 feet high and 40 feet wide, a reproduction in design of a famous bridge in Spain, and spanning a lake, is taking shape rapidly. The eastern approach is nearly completed, the foundations for the arches have been placed in the lake and on the eastern and western slopes of the canyon, and concrete is being poured into the forms of the eastern arch of the structure.
The Laguna de Cabrillo is completed. An earth dam has been constructed with a concrete spillway, and a concrete outlet and this reservoir is ready for the water which will not be turned in until the big bridge is completed.
Road work outside the exposition grounds and in the park has been advanced greatly during the year. While the rough grading inside the grounds is eighty-five percent completed, including the Plaza de California, the Prado, the Plaza de Panama, the Water Cascade, the Terrace, the Plaza Internationale, the Avenidas Internationale, the Calle Cristobal, the Calle Colon and the Isthmus thoroughfares outside the grounds have been brought to a high state of perfection. The West Park boulevard has been relocated and resurfaced and a complete fill made from the western entrance at Laurel street to the western approach to the bridge. Midland drive from the western entrance to the grounds at Russ high school has been relocated and resurfaced. The drive through the Canyon de Cabrillo, beneath the great bridge and crossing the lagoon, with its branching paths leading to different parts of the park, has been regraded and its steeper ascents eliminated. Along this drive hundreds of quail rise from the road with roar of wings to fly a few years and again settle to watch the passerby. Here, too, rabbits scurry aside and turn to watch with sober eyes the noisy truck or silent car, and here hundreds of song birds flit from tree to tree and send forth their cheering notes of welcome to the visitors, secure in the long protection that has been afforded them within the park confines.
One of the busy structures on the exposition grounds is the mill. This was erected in conjunction with the erection of the great bridge spanning the canyon. While a rule of the exposition management is that no needed expense shall be spared in prosecuting the work, economy consistent with this rule is practiced and the erection and operation of the mill has proved economical of time and money.
In the construction of the bridge, hundreds of forms are used as molds for concrete, and to have these made elsewhere on specifications would have entailed delays in construction that would be costly in the extreme. The problem presented was solved quickly by the commissioners of buildings, who established the exposition mill, thoroughly equipped with the most modern high-speed machinery for wood-working. This mill is provided with one machine for running shiplap, flooring, sizing timbers, beams, etc., having a capacity of 6,500 feet board measure daily. In addition there are humming crosscut and rip saws that turn out with rapidity the lumber demanded by the workmen in construction work, and a big band saw that is kept singing almost constantly, turning out scroll patterns for ornamental decorations as the designs are prepared by the men with the drafting board. Another machine quickly bores timbers for joints, and the plant is made complete by a saw filing and grinding equipment. Emery wheels, grindstones and forges, power-driven, are utilized to keep the tools of the workmen in the best of condition, axes, chisels, drills, shovels and all other individual equipment of the workingman being maintained in the highest state of usefulness at all times, and thereby increasing the effectiveness of the individual unit, which has proven during the year to be a mighty factor in the exceptional advancement of the work of building.
During 1912 the record of tree and shrub planting on the exposition grounds has kept place with that made by the men with the teams, the pick and shovel, and the annual report from the landscape gardeners shows that over fifty thousand trees and shrubs have been placed. It may appear that this is a large number, but this work has only begun and the record for the year constitutes only a small part of that outlined, and which must be done to realize the plan of the exposition.
The fast-growing eucalyptus has been utilized for decorative purposes and out of this planting has come a better knowledge of the tree. On the exposition grounds today are trees of this variety that are showing sturdy growth and vigor that were transplanted when sixteen months of age, and their stamina and development has exploded an old and firmly grounded idea that a eucalyptus could not be transplanted successfully after one year.
The visitors to the exposition now probably would doubt that the little sprouts of trees clustered on the sides of the ravines and canyons would be aught than shrubs by 1915, but startling promise of what these will be in two years is found in a number of trees near the administration building that were little bushes a few months ago, and which now lift their leafy tops high in the air. Trees will make the exposition grounds a bower of green beauty by 1915, and in the record of fifty thousand trees and shrubs planted in 1912 and the million and a half specimens of all kinds in the nurseries yet to be placed about the grounds or used for display purposes during the exposition is found the glowing promise that the Panama-California exposition will be resplendent in a swathing of emerald everywhere, and high and low.
The mill on the grounds has been used to splendid advantage in connection with the nurseries. At the beginning of 1912 the nursery stock was a few hundred thousand. Now these wonderful houses of lath contain over a million and a half plants in pots and boxes, ranging size from a pot two inches in diameter to a box four feet square. The mill during the year turned out thirty-five thousand of these boxes, with a range of size from one foot to four feet square. Nursing the stock in these boxes secures the greatest possible growth and every expedient is being used, even before the beginning of building construction, to insure the entire success of the horticultural features of the exposition.
Not the least of the accomplishments of the year by the exposition management is the provision made for the employees on the grounds. A large restaurant has been constructed, with neat bunk houses, where employees may obtain meals and lodging at extremely reasonable rates. The exposition management desired first of all to secure a force of workingmen who would remain "on the job." A shifting force means loss of efficiency in the organization and loss of efficiency means increased cost. To gather and retain a large staff of workingmen, weld them into an organization capable of the greatest accomplishment, and yet to make conditions such that they would be contented, was a problem to which the department of works devoted attention early in the year --- and the problem was solved.
Provision was made for the housing of four hundred workingmen. In the plan adopted is a radical departure from the ordinary bunk hose, with hundreds of bunks in tiers, sheltering a heterogeneous company of all sorts and conditions, temperaments and inclinations, and indifferent cleanliness. The exposition company constructed small bunk houses, each containing four bunks only, light, airy, comfortable and clean. This plan is capable of quick expansion and as the working force is increased as the exposition progresses, provision will be made for others as the demand arises.
Then the exposition provided a large restaurant, as light and airy and as clean as the little bunk houses. Here the large body of workmen employed on the grounds take their meals, and for this service and the use of the bunk houses, the rates are made barely sufficient to maintain these appreciated adjuncts. There was no desire to convert this service into a profit, and the rates have been extremely satisfactory to the workingmen. The result has been the securing and retention of a crew of workingmen who might find it convenient to move on to other work were conditions not entirely to their liking. To the retention of this contented force, individually acquainted with the work, is attributed much of the success that has attended the preliminary construction work of 1912.
San Diego Union, January 1, 1912, I
p. 2. Plants gathered from all quarters of globe.
p. 3. Exposition building accomplishments of the year 1912: Administration Building; Emergency Hospital; Foundation of Southern California Counties Building; Work on bridge; No unsightly fences; Grading 85 percent complete; Laguna de Cabrillo; Relocation of West Park Boulevard; Relocation of Midland Drive; Regrading of Cabrillo Canyon Drive.
Mill kept busy: used to make nursery boxes; 50,000 trees and shrubs planted in 1912.
Restaurant for employees; bunk houses for 400 workmen - each bunkhouse containing 4 bunks.
p. 4. Year's progress revealed in pictures
p. 5. More pictures of San Diego's Exposition.
p. 6. Value of Exposition to states, counties, nations
p. 7. Early history of San Diego's Fair, its conception.; State Societies of San Diego boosting Exposition.
p. 8. Builders of San Diego's Fair in 1915; Frank P. Allen, Jr., Director-General.
p. 9. Educational value of fair is incalculable (cont'd. from p. 6.)
p. 10:1. Playgrounds of San Diego region
p. 10: 2-3. Early history of San Diego Fair (cont'd. from p. 7.)
p. 11:1-4. Coronado Tent City unique resort, started as a tiny camp 13 years ago.
San Diego Union, January 1, 1913, 3:1-9, 9:3. Exposition building accomplishments of year 1912: laying foundations, making smooth the rough spots, paving the way . . . completion of Administration Building . . . completion of service building in Mission style housing horses and wagons --- to be used later as headquarters of exposition street cleaning department and as an emergency repair station . . . emergency hospital opened December 15, 1912 --- equipped to care for 26 patients, manufacturing company donated equipment and paid freight . . . many tons of dynamite used in blasting and in grading building sites . . . 615 acres enclosed by a fence - one half completed in 1912, vines to be planted at base of fence to provide wall of green . . . 50,000 trees planted in 1912 . . . grading on streets and boulevards, 85 percent complete . . . grading around building sites and planting of walks finished . . . foundations placed for Southern California Counties Building . . . plantations of oranges, lemons and grapefruit . . . progress made on construction of bridge - reproduction of a famous bridge in Spain, 900 feet long, 129 feet high, 40 feet wide; spans a lake . . . eastern approach nearly completed; foundation for arches placed in lake and on eastern and western slopes of canyon - concrete is being poured into forms of the eastern arches of the structure . . . Laguna de Cabrillo completed . . . rough grading of road inside park 85 percent complete . . . West Park Boulevard relocated and resurfaced and a complete fill made from the western entrance at Laurel Street to the western approach to the bridge . . . Midland Drive from western entrance to grounds of Russ High School relocated and resurfaced . . . drive through Cabrillo Canyon regraded . . . mill erected in conjunction with building of bridge . . . fast-growing eucalyptus used for decorative purposes . . . restaurant and bunk houses for employees on grounds - housing for 400 workmen to keep a workforce that would stay on the job; small bunk house consisting of 4 bunks each.
Paul G. Thiene, chief nurseryman; owner of Ramona Nursery, North San Diego; appointed Superintendent of Nursery in 1912 and later Superintendent of Landscape.
San Diego Sun, January 3, 1913, 1:3-4. Work on State Exposition Building Is Ordered; Commissioners (G. W. Marston, Thomas O'Hallaran and R. C. Allen) decided further delay is unnecessary; Frank P. Allen to go ahead with work providing it does not cost more than $250,000; plans reported to be on the way from the east.
San Diego Union, January 3, 1913, 1:3, 6:3. Rosarians plant roses on Exposition grounds; child leads visitors in pretty ceremony in Balboa Park.
San Diego Union, January 3, 1913, II, 13:4. Charles Bowers of Montana suggests elk in Balboa Park; says they may be secured from Yellowstone.
San Diego Union, January 4, 1913, 6:1. Spain will enter exhibit at San Diego Fair.
San Diego Union, January 5, 1913, II, 13:2-4. Salt Lake capitalists obtain lease on new Spreckels hotel on south side of D street, between Union and State.
San Diego Sun, January 7, 1913, 2:1. New directors for Exposition to be elected Friday; President Collier left for conference with representatives of Exposition Commissioners in Watsonville, Calif.
Park Commissioners Minutes, January 10, 1913. Frank P. Allen, Jr. authorized to construct Electricity, Manufacturing and Mining buildings according to present plans.
San Diego Sun, January 10, 1913, 1:6-7. Colonel Collier reelected head of Exposition; Collier presided over meeting.
San Diego Union, January 10, 1913, 5:2. Park flowers survive freezing.
San Diego Union, January 10, 1913, 9:1. State of Washington will probably be represented at Fair.
San Diego Union, January 10, 1913, II, 13:1. Marston is candidate for mayor.
San Diego Union, January 11, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Exposition Appropriation Bills . . . As will be seen by a special dispatch from Sacramento to the Union this morning, San Diego's representatives in the legislature are losing no time in preparing to obtain appropriations for the Panama-California Exposition. Several bills, carrying a total of $900,000 to enable the state to be worthily represented at Balboa Park in 1915 have been framed. After their presentation and reference, they will stand over, in common with other measures introduced during the first thirty days of the session, until the legislature shall reconvene after the months' recess which will be taken in accordance with the new provision of the constitution, which aims to allow time for legislators to study bills and hear from their constituents before passing upon measures proposed for enactment. The recess will presumably occupy the month of February. The exposition bills, then should come up for action in March.
. . . Since the legislature made a small appropriation two years ago for the Panama-California exposition, that undertaking has shown a progress that causes the admiration of all who have noted it. San Diego has given proof that it is thoroughly in earnest in its great project. For the state to stand aloof, or participate merely to the extent of the small appropriation already voted, would be very ungracious.
San Diego Union, January 11, 1913, 5:3. Vacancy of Board of Directors is filled; Stockholders elect John A. Boal to succeed Colonel Fred A. Jewell.
San Diego Union, January 11, 1913, 7:1. Panama decides to exhibit at Exposition.
San Diego Union, January 12, 1913, 1:4-5. Work on Fair buildings soon to begin; plans are approved for three permanent structures as part of group; Spanish-Colonial style of architecture to prevail throughout.
San Diego Union, January 12, 1913, 43:1-3. What prominent men say about the Exposition.
San Diego Sun, January 14, 1913, 8:1-2. Sacramento Valley folks vote $150,000 for Exposition; delegation from north impressed by Fair work; will urge county supervisors to place adequate exhibition here.
San Diego Union, January 14, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Bright Prospects for the Exposition . . . The first fortnight of 1913 brings wonderfully bright prospects for the great exposition to be opened in this city two years later. Hardly a day now passes without new evidence of substantial support from the outside world.
San Diego Union, January 14, 1913, 12:3-4. Sacramento Valley section will be installed at Exposition.
San Diego Union, January 15, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Generous Support for the Exposition.
San Diego Union, January 16, 1913, 4:6-7. The Zoo and Its Inhabitants, by Frederick J. Haskin.
San Diego Union, January 17, 1913, 11:1. Guatemala to have exhibit at Exposition.
San Diego Union, January 18, 1913, 7:2. Park Board fights injunction suit; effort to enjoin 6th Street extension meets opposition . . . To enjoin or not to enjoin the park board from permitting the extension of Sixth street through the west part of Balboa park was the subject of a hearing before Judge Sloane yesterday in the case of C. S. Alverson and Maud T. Frary against Julius Wangenheim and others.
Crouch and Harris, attorneys for the petitioners are attempting to show that the park board my be legally enjoined from permitting the construction of a roadway through the park. City Attorney Andrews, for the park board, and A. H. Sweet for the thirty-five or forty defendants, contend that the court has no legal right to enjoin the park board in the performance of a duty lying within its jurisdiction.
The case is being contested every step and long legal debates over points of law relating to the introduction of evidence took up the greater part of the day.
It is expected that several days will be consumed before the hearing is finished.
San Diego Union, January 18, 1913, 6:2. 6th Street extension suit is nearing finish; contention made that Park Board has no authority to divert property.
San Diego Union, January 19, 1913, 7:1-3. Hospital at Fair answers its first call.
San Diego Union, January 19, 1913, 13:1-2. What prominent man say about Exposition.
San Diego Union, January 21, 1913, 9:1. Dr. Edgar L. Hewett finds much encouragement for Fair on trip to East.
San Diego Union, January 21, 1913, 11:1. Governor Hanna of North Dakota favors appropriation for Fair.
San Diego Union, January 22, 1913, 9:3. Montana Exposition Commissioners become boosters on short notice.
San Diego Union, January 23, 1913, 10:2. Real reason why Montana should have exhibit; Fair Commissioners say state needs farmers.
San Diego Union, January 24, 1913, 6:1. Ohioans herald home Fair work; write letters urging home state representation.
San Diego Union, January 24, 1913, 6:5. D. C. Collier to start on education campaign; president of Exposition will address joint session of Colorado legislature.
San Diego Union, January 24, 1913, 14:1. Montanans enthusiastic over Exposition; select site.
San Diego Union, January 25, 1913, 5:2. Hearing on 6th Street suit closed; Judge Sloane intimates Park Board acted within its jurisdiction . . . After nearly a week of night hearings before Judge Sloane in superior court, the evidence in the case of C. S. Alverson and Mrs. Maud Thayer Frary against Julius Wangenheim, John Forward, Sr., Frank J. Belcher, Jr., and many other property owners in favor of extending Sixth street through the park, was concluded Thursday night.
Before the adjournment, Judge Sloane intimated, after a brief summary of the evidence, that he was perfectly satisfied as to the good faith of the commissioners in making the order for the opening of the driveway through what is known as Mulvey canyon, adding that he was largely interested in hearing argument as to the law. Arguments will being Thursday evening a 7:30 o'clock.
The case was heard last week during the regular court hours, but was interrupted by the criminal calendar. It has since been heard in evening sessions.
The plaintiffs claim that the motives of the park board in extending Sixth street were commercial, and that the work required would impair the natural beauty of the park.
Attorneys Crouch and Harris appeared for the plaintiffs, and A. H. Sweet and City Attorney Andrews for the defendants.
San Diego Union, January 26, 1913, 7:1. Expenses of Exposition shown in report; annual statement filed gives total of $624,424.18 expended during 1912.
San Diego Union, January 28, 1913, 7:4. Exposition finds favor in Dakotas . . . Secretary Hogaboom of the San Diego exposition has received a letter from Thomas Hall, secretary of state of North Dakota, which says there is a well-defined sentiment among the legislators as well as all over he state favoring an exhibit at San Diego. The North Dakotans realize the chance that is offered to advertise their resources and opportunities by means of an exhibit at San Diego.
In a communication from a prominent South Dakotan the exposition officials are notified that the bill providing for an appropriation for an exhibit here in 1915 has already gone to the legislature and will be passed upon in the near future.
These sister states are beginning to understand the ultimate aim of the San Diego exposition to aid the west in the development of its resources. They are learning that the San Diego celebration will be more than a mere collection of amusements and amazements: that it is a great signboard calling the world's attention to the opportunities offered for settlement and investment of capital throughout the great west.
The North and South Dakota societies here are credited with aiding largely in creating this favorable sentiment among the residents of the two states towards the San Diego exposition.
The members of these two societies, all natives or former residents of North or South Dakota, and many with a wide acquaintance in the two states, wrote hundreds of letters to old friends still living there.
The legislatures were memorialized by the two state societies. Signed by hundreds of former North and South Dakotans these memorials were forwarded to the governing bodies of the two states sometime ago
Not only in this way, but by writing letters to the newspapers of the two Dakotas, did the members of the societies here aid the exposition in putting the idea of an exhibit here in 1915 strongly before the people of North and South Dakota.
San Diego Union, January 28, 1913, 11:1. Exposition asks $753,100 of State Legislature; Exposition appropriation bills total $535,000; California Building total is $200,000.
San Diego Union, January 28, 1913, 11:1. Denverites give great reception to Colonel Collier.
San Diego Union, January 29, 1913, 12:1. Virginian commends local Fair; urges a state exhibit.
San Diego Union, January 31, 1913, 22:1. Commissioner of Portland Fair makes unsolicited plea to Oregon legislature surging support for San Diego Exposition.
Park Commissioners Minutes, January 31, 1913. No further permits for house moving through park to be allowed; salary of Superintendent of Parks increased to $225.00 per month; Superintendent instructed to erect enclosures for 3 elk and 3 buffalo donated to local Park Department by the Board of Park Commissioners, San Francisco.
San Diego Sun, February 1, 1913, 17:1-3. Alameda, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Benito and San Luis Obispo have divided to combine on an exhibit at the San Diego Exposition.
San Diego Union, February 1, 1913, 3:2. Montana counties to exhibit at Exposition.
San Diego Union, February 1, 1913, 12:1. Collier's campaign awakens Denver to Exposition; Coloradans display great interest in San Diego and Southern California; Collier says great event will be advertised in local literature.
San Diego Union, February 2, 1913, 8:1. Permit is taken out for Electrical Building; fair structure will cost $40,000; two stories with auditorium, 116x175 feet; of Spanish design with plastered exterior; arcade along south and west sides, tower three stories high at southwest corner.
San Diego Sun, February 3, 1913, 3:1. Colonel Jewell off on an Exposition tour.
San Diego Union, February 3, 1913, 1:1-2. Marston committee opens campaign.
San Diego Union, February 4, 1913, 6:1. Colorado solons consider bill for Fair; measure seeking appropriation of $100,000 for San Diego Exposition introduced.
San Diego Union, February 9, 1913, 10:1. Assemblyman E. C. Hinkle says Legislature sure to pass appropriation bills for $525,000; $200,000 for state building; $25,000 for state exhibits, furnishings, equipment and improvement of grounds.
San Diego Union, February 9, 1913, 27:1. Mayor Holleman of East San Diego says Colorado alive to San Diego sprit.
San Diego Union, February 9, 1913, 31:1. Montana commissioners estimate that state will appropriate $104,200 for building for San Diego Exposition.
San Diego Union, February 11, 1913, 11:1. Utah legislature goes on record for San Diego; bill introduced provides for expenditure of $75,000 for state exhibit at Exposition.
San Diego Union, February 11, 1913, 12:1. Marston outlines ideas of municipal government.
San Diego Union, February 15, 1913, 10:1. New Mexico's lower House passes Fair bill; calls for expenditure of $75,000 for state exhibit at Exposition.
San Diego Union, February 23, 1913, 13:1. Princely home and courtly grace not qualifications for mayor, say Women for O'Neall.
San Diego Union, February 24, 1913, 7:1. Marston says drydock is an absolute necessity.
San Diego Sun, February 25, 1913, 7:4. Judge Sloane denies 6th Street Extension injunction against Park Board.
San Diego Union, February 25, 1913, II, 13:1. Arizona lawmakers invite President Collier to address them.
San Diego Union, February 26, 1913, 9:4. Judge Sloane's decision upholding Park Board's action in proposed 6th Street extension to be appealed.
San Diego Union, February 26, 1913, 10:2. C. Stowell Smith, assistant district forester now in San Diego, experiments in timbers; tests all commercial kinds of California woods and announces results; three kinds of borers; all teredos dead at Santa Fe pier, but thriving west of Coronado ferry slip.
San Diego Union, February 26, 1913, 11:3. Exposition lagoon fills with water; heavy rainfall fills impounding basin in Cabrillo Canyon but does not damage.
Park Commissioners Minutes, February 28, 1913. Frank P. Allen presented plans of Art Building to be erected on Exposition grounds.
San Diego Sun, March 1, 1913, 1:3. Judge Sloane denied motion of counsel for Maud Thayer Frary for a continuance of temporary restraining order in 6th Street extension case.
San Diego Union, March 1, 1913, 15:1. Report praises Superintendent of Parks; annual statement shows expenditures for 1912; $700,000 remains; 10,612 trees planted . . . More than $700,000 of the $1,000,000 bond issue voted for the improvements of Balboa park remains unexpended, according to the report of the board of park commissioners for 1912, made to the mayor by Julius Wangenheim, president.
Of the $276,594.96 used on the park, about $172,000 was spent under contract by the director of works of the exposition and $106,500 was spent by the park commissioners on other portions of the park. Included in the latter expenditure was the laying out and planning of an extensive road system, and the increasing of irrigation facilities adequately to care for the added area planted to trees and shrubs.
Many trees planted
J. G. Morley, superintendent of parks, reports that 10,612 trees, including thirty-five varieties, were planted in Balboa Park the last year, and 5,868 shrubs of sixty-three varieties.
In addition to the tree planting, Morley reports that 220,600 square feet of roads have been re-graded and surfaced; culverts and drains put in where necessary; nearly six acres of lawn seeded, and a sprinkler system has been installed. On the west side of Balboa park, between West boulevard and Cabrillo canyon, eighty-five acres were plowed and graded, and prepared for planting, two-thirds of which has been planted to trees and shrubs.
In the nursery are 44,500 trees and shrubs, raised by the park board, and 5,551 of purchased stock.
Financial condition good
That the finances of the park board are in a healthy condition is shown by the report, $15,000 of the $33,000 (?) maintenance fund provided for 1912 being still left in the treasury.
Superintendent Morley is highly commended in the report for the general excellence of his work.
Of the small parks, the superintendent calls attention to the general excellence of maintenance of La Jolla, the plaza and New Town parks. In La Jolla park 863 shrubs and trees are reported to be growing well. The superintendent recommends that some of the walks in New Town park be done away with and the space converted into lawns.
Regarding the Old Town and Mission Hills parks, the superintendent recommends the purchase of the whole square up to Fort Stockton drive and the development of the park.
San Diego Union, March 2, 1913, 31:1. Court ruling for 6th Street Extension; Judge Sloane refuses to enjoin Park Board from proceeding with work . . . Judge W. A. Sloane yesterday refused to grant an injunction, pending a decision of the supreme court on the petition of C. S. Alverson and Maud Frary Thayer against the extension of Sixth street through the west side of Balboa Park.
Crouch and Harris, attorneys for the petitioners, asked for an injunction until such time as the supreme court could be petitioned to enjoin the park board from proceeding with the work of constructing the road. Judge Sloane took this request under advisement.
W. R. Andrews, city attorney, in his argument against continuing the injunction, insisted that the action was not brought in good faith and that John H. Gay and not the petitioners was the real party to the action and was furnishing the sinews of war.
Crouch and Harris claimed the action was brought in good faith and that regardless of Judge Sloane's ruling, it would be appealed to the supreme court. Attorneys for the petitioners also insisted that, notwithstanding the court's decision, they had not abandoned their contention that the transaction was tainted with fraud.
Judge Sloane held that the question of fact would not be reviewed by the appellate court and that with that question obliterated, there was nothing for the supreme court to consider.
San Diego Sun, March 3, 1913. Temporary restraining order dissolved; 6th Street case brought to close by Department 3 of Superior Court today.
San Diego Union, March 4, 1913, II, 13:4-5. Collier addresses solons of Arizona.
San Diego Union, March 5, 1913, 7:3. State Society "postcard day" to be held March 17 when 50,000 views of Exposition will be mailed boosting city.
San Diego Union, March 5, 1913, 12:1. Marston defends City Beautiful idea in talk to women.
San Diego Union, March 5, 1913, II, 13:4. Collier portrays benefits of Fair; addresses Phoenix Board of Trade.
San Diego Union, March 6, 1913, II, 13:1., 15:3-5. O'Neall Club asks explanation for Marston's past action.
San Diego Union, March 7, 1913, 14:1. Nevada Exposition Committee inspect site for State exhibit; will appropriate $100,000 for San Diego Fair.
San Diego Union, March 7, 1913, 24:1. Foreign-born men defend alien newcomers; score speech of woman worker for Marston.
San Diego Sun, March 8, 1913, 2:3. Kansas exhibit assured; State Senate passes bill.
San Diego Union, March 9, 1913, 9:1. O'Neall supporter asks Marston questions.
San Diego Union, March 9, 1913, 25:2. Joseph Jessop urges more streetcars for Balboa Park; wants line to pass through grounds.
Editor, San Diego Union: Since the series of articles which appeared recently in your paper relative to street car development of the near future, the writer has given some thought to the question and especially to the suggestion that a line be run through Balboa park.
One phase of the matter especially appeals to me --- that of making the interior of the park accessible by street car to those of our population who need the park most. I refer to the old people, the women and children.
Those who are not so fortunate as to possess automobiles can scarcely see more than the fringes of the park, for they are not able to take such an exhausting walk. With a street car line properly placed and ornamented or concealed, the most picturesque canyons and unfrequented spots would become accessible to a vastly increased number of citizens.
I hope that the sentiment of San Diegans and the plans of the railway company will favor the proposed route through the park at the proper time.
The advantages of furnishing transportation to exposition visitors and of relieving the congestion on the No. 1 and No. 2 lines is, of course, obvious to all. The rapidly increasing population north and east of Balboa park deserves good transportation facilities and this is the most practicable route, being shortest and most direct.
Another thing that has occurred to me with relation to getting the most use of our great Balboa park is the excellent adaptability for circus grounds and baseball grounds. Why should not the city reap the benefit of the large lease moneys paid by the frequent circuses that come to town? The park grounds are closer that those now in use and should be more acceptable.
I wish to see this community take advantage of every possible attraction offered by this great park, and, therefore, I feel that it should be made accessible by street car so that the masses may be able to get over it without unnecessary inconvenience.
Joseph Jessop, San Diego, 952 Fifth street.
San Diego Union, March 11, 1913, 11:2. President E. P. Ripley of Santa Fe taken on a trip over city and to Exposition site by Colonel Collier and G. A. Davidson; promises Santa Fe will keep pace with San Diego.
San Diego Sun, March 13, 1913, 7:4. Electricity Building – first exhibit building to be erected – will soon be rising.
Sam Diego Union, March 13, 1913, 1:2. State of Washington Senate passes bill, March 12, appropriating $25,000 for San Diego Fair.
San Diego Union, March 13, 1913, 15:1. S. H. Moore, Oregon bird expert, seeks 5-acres concession at San Diego Fair for pheasant farm.
San Diego Union, March 14, 1913, 9:1, 10:2. Rival candidates O'Neall and Marston re-avow their friendship at Rotary Club luncheon.
San Diego Union, March 15, 1913, 12:4. Burbank thornless cactus farm may be seen on 5-acre concession at San Diego Fair.
San Diego Union, March 15, 1913, 24:1. Southern California Counties first to erect building; to cost $62,252; exhibit to cover 15 acres; building described . . . The first building to be erected in the San Diego exposition by an exhibitor will be the Southern California counties building, for which the contract has been let and work upon which will commence within the next few days. The John Simpson Construction company has the contract, the bid being $45,252 (?).
The Southern California counties include the eight south of the Tehachapi and the cost of the building and splendid exhibit to be installed will be divided among the counties pro rata to the assessed valuation of each.
To occupy fifteen acres
The southern counties exhibit will cover about fifteen acres. Besides the building there will be a large tract of formal gardens and a model citrus orchard.
The site of the building has been in readiness for some time, all necessary retaining walls and fills having been made. The site is at the northeast corner of the intersection of the Prado, or main street, and the Calle Cristobal, not far from the east entrance.
The building will be 195 feet wide and 225 feet long. The main entrance on the Prado is through an arcade which leads into a large patio. This patio will be filled with lawn and flowers and deep cloisters will run north, east and west. On the left will be the administration department, including reception room and offices.
Room for entertainments
The small lecture room, 33x55 (?) feet, seating 250 people is at the right of the patio. Here will be held the smaller public entertainments and the display of motion pictures showing all the beauties and development of Southern California.
The central portion of the building will be occupied by the main exhibit hall, around which will run a gallery. The west entrance will include broad cement steps and a platform on which will play a small fountain. The men's smoking room and lavatory, and the women's sitting room and lavatory, as well as the quarters for the caretakers, will also be on the west side.
The gardens at the north of the building will be of a formal nature. Smooth paths will wander here and there between masses of shrubbery and drooping trees. Tiny shelters, belvederes and vine-hung pergolas will be flanked by masses of color from the flowers for which Southern California is rightfully famous.
Five-acres orchard
Recalling old gardens of England and Colonial days, or those early periods in California's own history when time was counted by light and darkness, there will be a quaint sundial in one corner. At the northwest end of the formal garden will be a gate, admitting the visitor into the five-acre orchard, which will be the chief exhibit of the southern counties. There will be found 800 trees in full leaf of their sturdy four years of life, demonstrating to the world the possibilities of the ideal citrus orchard. Spraying, cultivation and irrigation will be carried on during the exposition year in the same manner which would be employed on an actual ranch.
San Diego Union, March 15, 1913, 12:4. Thornless cactus farm concession at Exposition will occupy 5 acres.
San Diego Union, March 16, 1913, 4:4. EDITORIAL - on San Diego and San Francisco Expositions.
San Diego Union, March 16, 1913, 4:4. Panama Expositions, by Frederick J. Haskin . . . The San Diego exposition easily will rank with the Pan-American, the Lewis and Clark, and the Yukon fairs. Enthusiasts claim it will far surpass them. Certainly it will be more unique, and will have a richer setting. The fair will cause an outlay of fully $20,000,000. The citizens of San Diego, a city of less than 75,000 people, raised the sum of $2,000,000 to start the project. Nearly $6,000,000 is being spent on a magnificent sea wall. John D. Spreckels is building the San Diego and Arizona railroad a distance of 220 miles on a new and lower grade. Nearly $5,000,000 will be spent in Balboa Park the magnificent domain of 1400 acres, in whose lap the exposition will be held. Over eleven miles of dock and 1000 acres of reclaimed land for warehouses will be ready to astonish visitors when the fair opens, January 1, 1915.
San Diego Union, March 16, 1913, 24:1. D. C. Reed, former mayor of San Diego, declares for O'Neall; calls Marston an obstructionist.
San Diego Union, March 16, 1913, 20:1. Nevada decides to spend $40,000 on Exposition buildings and exhibits.
San Diego Union, March 16, 1913, 30:2-3. View of Administration Building and work being done on bridge over canyon to Exposition grounds; frame work on bridge carrying beam and girder section shown.
San Diego Union, March 16, 1913, 44:1-5. What newspapers say about Exposition.
San Diego Union, March 19, 1913, 24:1. New Mexico plans monster exhibits at Exposition; $30,000 for building.
San Diego Union, March 20, 1913, 9:1. Visitors from Alameda and Santa Clara Counties are guests of city; ask to see site of Exposition.
San Diego Union, March 20, 1913, 15:2-3. M. A. Luce tells part taken by Marston in Temecula cut-off.
San Diego Union, March 20, 1913, 15:2. Louis J. Wilde prefers O'Neall.
San Diego Union, March 20, 1913, 24:1. New Mexico building to cost $30,000; plan big exhibit.
San Diego Union, March 21, 1913, II, 13:2-3. Wilde tells charity ball promoters to "Go plumb to hell."
San Diego Union, March 21, 1913, 14:1. Alameda and Santa Clara Counties united for Exposition exhibit . . . The Alameda and Santa Clara county supervisors and exposition commissioners concluded their visit to San Diego last night with a business meeting in the green room of Hotel del Coronado, which resulted practically in a decision to participate on an extensive scale in the San Diego exposition.
The delegation from Alameda, being the largest, led in the decision. Santa Clara country concurring heartily. Members of both parties favored a strong representation.
Plan joint exhibit
The plan proposed for participation contemplates a joint exhibit by the counties of Alameda, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Luis Obispo and San Benito, and it is believed this ultimately will be adhered to.
(The names of representatives from Alameda and Santa Clara counties follow.)
The party returned north this morning in a special car attached to the owl.
Park Commissioners, Minutes, March 21, 1912. Superintendent reported arrival of 2 elk donated by San Francisco Board of Park Commissioners.
San Diego Union, March 22, 1913, 8:1. Diamonds wanted for Balboa Park . . . It is the intention of the park commission, as expressed by one of the commissioners last night, not only to have ball fields, but tennis courts and various fields for sports in the big park, and that if the demand were sufficient it might not be inopportune to begin plans at once.
San Diego Union, March 23, 1913, 6:2-3. What prominent men say about Exposition.
San Diego Union, March 23, 1913, 9:1. Tractors at work at Exposition; practical exhibit of great interest to farmers is planned; time-saving machines to be compared with those of old-style agriculturists..
San Diego Union, March 23, 1913, 26:1-2. Mrs. Horton says Marston is "tried and true."
San Diego Union, March 24, 1913, 10:1. San Diego native M. D. Sherman scores Marston's record.
San Diego Union, March 25, 1913, II, 13:3. Lumber arrives for Exposition . . . Three steamers, two of them new and making their maiden voyages, arrived at San Diego docks within the last week, with lumber and shingles, the greater part of which is for exposition construction work. The cargoes made a total of 910,000 feet of lumber and 5,000,000 shingles.
Workmen are busy pushing the bridge to the exposition grounds far out into the canyon. The electrical building and mill beyond the administration building are fast reaching a point where the walls will rise far more rapidly than do those of an ordinary constructed building because this building is to be put up in sections.
A crane of heavy timbers has been put in place over the foundations and floor timbers of the building, and a large amount of lumber cut to measurement is ready for putting together.
A huge 500-ton motor truck honks back and forth constantly between the work and the stone crusher, bringing a each trip an immense load of crushed stone, which is dumped automatically to the floor of the bridge, where it is mixed with cement and disappears, as if by magic, into the cavernous maw of the frame-structure, whose appetite for concrete seems never to be satisfied.
San Diego Union, March 26, 1913, 10:3-4. Article in recent issue of Philadelphia Star gives San Diego Fair valuable publicity.
San Diego Union, March 26, 1913, 12:3. Committee considers favorably appropriation of $200,000 for California State Building at San Diego Fair; State may spend $250,000 in all.
San Diego Union, March 26, 1913, 12:2. Residents to decide Park Boulevard paving . . . All previous proceedings having been repealed, the question of parking and grading Park boulevard has been again left open by the council.
Park Boulevard property owners, who live north of University Avenue, want their street paved with asphalt. Residents living south of University Avenue want Park Boulevard surfaced with decomposed granite. Property owners, both north and south of the boulevard, are divided on the question of parking. Some of them want no parking, some want the parking in the middle of the street, and some again want it on each side along the walks.
San Diego Union, March 27, 1913, 11:1. Utah votes $75,000 for two Fairs; San Diego portion will be at least $37,500.
San Diego Union, March 28, 1913, 22:1. 50,000 postcards mailed advertising city; decision to make it a semi-annual affair.
San Diego Union, March 29, 1913, 3:5. Assembly, March 28, favored $200,000 building for San Diego Fair' appropriation bill passed unanimously in quick order.
San Diego Union, March 30, 1913, 3:2-3. What newspapers say about Exposition.
San Diego Union, March 30, 1913, 15:1. Dr. Hewett chosen to be Director of Exhibits; delighted with plans.
San Diego Union, March 30, 1913, II, 19:1. Overland climbs hills with 40 percent grade in park.
San Diego Union, March 31, 1913, 2:1. Mayoral candidate O'Neall regrets opponent Marston's wife was driven by low gossip to defend her husband; says his committee has had no part in spreading slanders.
San Diego Union, April 2, 1913, 1:1. 2:5. 15 states of United States and foreign governments appropriated more than $2,300,000 for buildings and exhibits.
San Diego Union, April 2, 1913, 6:2-3. Sehon's open letter on Marston attack.
San Diego Union, April 2, 1913, 6:4. H. L. Moody replies to Marston "ad" in Sunday newspaper.
San Diego Union, April 4, 1913, 6:1. Kids urge better quarters for animals; say cages are "too small"; Wangenheim replies to protest.
San Diego Union, April 6, 1913, II, 17:2-4. "King Mike," regal Billy Goat, and some of his subjects and caretakers at zoo in Balboa Park.
San Diego Union, April 7, 1913, 9:3. Colonel Collier makes public letter accepting Marston's resignation and praising his mayoral candidacy.
San Diego Union, April 8, 1913, 1:3, 2:3. Great canyon road linking San Diego with Imperial Valley to be opened tomorrow.
San Diego Union, April 8, 1913, 9:2. Montana to take part in 1915 Fair; Governor Stewart to name commission to investigate both expositions.
San Diego Sun, April 9, 1913, 1:8. O'Neall elected mayor over Marston by a narrow margin of 657 votes -- 7,291 to 7,948; Captain John Sehon defeated for Council.
San Diego Union, April 9, 1913, 1:7-8. O'Neall is mayor by 668 majority; Manney, Benbough and Schmidt are elected councilman; Sehon is defeated.
San Diego Union, April 9, 1913, 9:4. Governor Johnson says $200,000 for San Diego Fair is all; Panama-California Exposition to have a state building with nothing in it; says State is in no position to spend money . . . "Nothing for the San Diego exposition except $200,000 for a state building to fulfill the pledge of the 1911 legislature and administration," was the statement of Governor Hiram Johnson to President Collier of the exposition.
The governor, in declaring he would not sign any appropriation bill for the San Diego fair, pleaded economy, as he did recently to Panama-Pacific fair officials who endeavored to secure his approval of a $1,000,000 state building at the San Francisco exposition.
"But if you refuse to sign any bills carrying appropriations for exhibits, heating plants and ground improvements, the building won't be worth much," President Collier told Governor Johnson. "We have a state building with nothing in it."
"I am sorry," said the governor, "but I feel as though the state is in no position to spend money in such a manner."
Bills totaling $353,000, exclusive of the $200,000 appropriation bill already passed by the lower house, have been introduced by Assemblyman J. Hinkle and Senator Wright in behalf of the exposition.
Senator Wright, since the legislature convened for the last session, has endeavored to get an audience with the governor as to his position on the matter. Wright, who is not in sympathy with the Bull Moose crowd, was denied admittance to the executive chamber.
The senator telegraphed Collier to sound the governor as to his attitude with reference to a building at the San Francisco exposition.
President Collier had very little to say tonight, but will ask the Southern California delegation to urge the passage of the exposition bills through both house and pass the responsibility to the governor.
"It looks as though we are to lose out," said Senator Wright.
"If the act of 1911 appropriating $50,000 for the fair, and promising to increase this donation $200,000 more had not passed, it is doubtful if the governor would have permitted the exposition to get any money this year."
San Diego Union, April 13, 1913, 5:1. Canadian participation in Fair is assured; only question is to extend invitation; northern government favors liberal appropriations.
San Diego Union, April 13, 1913, II, 17:2. Framing of Electricity Building at Fair grounds is practically finished . . . Work on the Electricity building at the exposition grounds is progressing so rapidly that its exterior will be completed within a very short time. Already its framework has been practically finished, there being but a slight amount of work to be done before the structure will be ready or the next and last stage --- its outside coat. Already it looms above the administration building from the city side of the canyon, and, within a week, it will take on the appearance of the finished building.
The ground to be occupied by the Machinery Building has been brought to grade, and the first of the week will find workmen laying the foundation timbers for this building.
A large amount of lumber is already on the ground for this building, and with the new construction method for erecting large buildings adopted by the board of works, building frames go up very quickly. The Machinery Building will be the second building to go up, and with its completion and the work to b started soon by the John Simpson Construction Company next week on the Southern California Counties Building, the exposition will commence assuming a much more definite form.
San Diego Union, April 13, 1913, 52:1-2. Arizona's snub of Exposition causes wide wail of protest; conflict between Governor and Legislature given as reason.
San Diego Union, April 15, 1913, II, 13:1. Appropriation from Japan will not be reduced . . . Larz Anderson, American ambassador to Japan, who recently returned to America from the Orient and who was at the Hotel del Coronado last week, says that anti-Japanese legislation threatened by California will not cause Japan to reduce its appropriation for the Panama-California exposition.
Anderson scouts the idea of friction between the United States and Japan. He says conditions were never better for a continuance of good feeling.
If Japan reduces its appropriation, it will be because economy is necessary. California should bear in mind, however, that Japan is very sensitive and would undoubtedly resent deliberate attempts to discriminate against its people the changes of reduction of the appropriation are remote, though, he said.
Anderson has presented his resignation to President Wilson. He has been connected with the diplomatic service for twenty years and wants to retire, explaining that private business requires all his time.
San Diego Union, April 17, 1913, 24:1. Roof contracts are let at Fair; 200 trees set out . . . The Russ lumber company and John Dee were yesterday awarded the contracts for roofing the 1915 exposition buildings being erected by the exposition company. The Russ Lumber company received the contract for material and the contract for putting it on the buildings went to Dee.
This is the same contract which two weeks ago was said to have been let to a Knoxville, Tenn. roofing contractor and supply man. The story printed at that time emanated from a Knoxville paper, which printed an alleged interview with the successful bidder, which, so far as anyone in San Diego was aware, was manufactured out of whole cloth.
In about ten days, the electricity building, now in course of erection, will be ready for its roof and, by the time that work is complete, it is believed the machinery building, the foundation of which is being laid, will be ready for the work of the roofing contractor.
The exhibition buildings, being erected by the exposition company, although large buildings, will all be constructed very rapidly, owing to the splendid organization of the department of works and the care with which preliminary details are worked out. Every load of lumber to go into the construction of each building is laid down at a designated spot and it is always found that when this material is wanted, it is at the most convenient point for the workmen.
A great many thousand feet of lumber and heavy frame timbers for the machinery building are not only on the ground, but a large part of the frame timber has already been cut and fitted, so that, by the time the foundation and floor is done, the electric crane will find its work ready for it.
Two hundred trees lining the Prado from the administration building to the east entrance were set out yesterday, materially altering the appearance of that thoroughfare, which is now clearly defined and separated from the ground prepared on either side for building.
Trees also have been transplanted in great numbers close under the west and north walls of the administration building, and, as these are nearly a third grown and of that variety, for the most part, of eucalyptus, making the most rapid growth in a very short time, they will assume height enough to soften greatly the rather severe lines of the building.
San Diego Union, April 20, 1913, 11:1-3. Rapid progress being made at Fair grounds; Electricity Building is nearing completion and framing to be started on Machinery Building this week.
San Diego Union, April 20, 1913, 12:1-2. Envelope used to boost San Diego Fair showing Exposition designs on front and back.
San Diego Union, April 20, 1913, 37:1-2. What newspapers say about Exposition.
San Diego Sun, April 21, 1912, 1:1. State Senate unanimously passed Senator Hinkle's bill providing for an appropriation of $200,000 for a state building at the Panama-California Exposition.
San Diego Union, April 22, 1913, 22:3. Four New Mexico counties plans separate exhibits; Coalfax Mining Company plans outlay of $25,000 on exhibits.
San Diego Union, April 23, 1913, 22:1. Making of movies to be shown at Exposition; Fair officials grant P. L. Holland novel studio concession; other concessions granted bring total to approximately $450,000.
San Diego Union, April 25, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Colonel Collier's Washington Mission . . . Colonel Collier's mission to Washington may not prove a success; nobody can predict what the new congress may or may not do. But it will be a mistake to regard that mission as a forlorn hope. It has more than a fighting chance if the people of San Diego will stand solidly behind the exposition president and back him in his courageous effort.
San Diego Union, April 25, 1913, II, 11:1. Colonel Collier's aim is to secure $1.0 million for Fair.
San Diego Union, April 25 1923, II, 11:2. E. B. Yerington, wealthy Nevadan, is to boost Fair.
San Diego Union, April 25, 1913, 11:3. Description of Southern California Counties building at Exposition; cost $100,000.
San Diego Sun, April 26, 1913, II, 13:1. Board of Directors votes to ask city for bond election for another one million dollars.
San Diego Union, April 26, 1913, 1:5. Board of Directors ask for new million dollar bond issue for Fair; money needed for construction of eight buildings and permanent improvements.
San Diego Union, April 26, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Make the Exposition a Success . . . Should the tentative plans for calling the bond issue be carried out, as now appears certain, the entire subject will have exhaustive discussion. Every point as to which there may be doubt will be fully explained. It will be hoped, however, that the discussion will be amicable and that the people of San Diego will manifest the same public spirit and show the same united front that have already carried the exposition project so far on the road to success.
San Diego Union, April 27, 1913, 1:5, 5:1. BABIES PUZZLE EXPOSITION BOARD; San Diego Women Discuss Infant Problem of Big Fair; Is Ingenious Suggestion of Nursery/Kindergarten Practical and Would Parents Visiting Exposition Allow Their Children to Be Cared or in Public Gaze of Throngs? Should Youngsters Work or Play? These Questions Call Forth Various Answers by Interested Women
"How about those babies? There's something I haven't thought of."
President D. C. Collier looked up from a paper he had been fingering meditatively and called in a number of his assistants who were at work in the same room. As nobody appeared to hear him the colonel made his inquiry more direct.
"Hogaboom, how about these babies?"
Hogaboom slanted a suspicious eye at his superior and then replied resignedly,
"I'll bite. What babies? I'm really very busy Colonel."
The colonel frowned majestically.
"This is no kid, Hogaboom. I'm talking about babies . . . the real live, kicking, crying, cooing article. Here is an application from a woman in Los Angeles who wants to take care of the babies at the exposition."
"What babies?," repeated Hogaboom.
"Any babies, all the babies, everybody's babies, regardless or race, creed or color. She specifies no conditions and names no limit."
The able assistants looked up from their desks and gasped in unison. Hogaboom retained his self-possession.
"What the deuce does she want to do that for?," he asked calmly.
Then Collier explained.
The woman who is courting the job, the mere consideration of which temporarily staggered the redoubtable colonel, is Mrs. C. Aber of Los Angeles. Mrs. Aber is at present conducting in a department store of that city such a retreat for the offspring of temporarily preoccupied parents as she wishes to introduce here on a much large scale in 1915. Her plan is unique, comprehensive and idealistic as described by the exposition men, though some doubt has been expressed as to its practicality. Collier, Hogaboom and Herbert Lewis, after giving the subject considerable thought and discussion last week, arrived at the conclusion there were too many angles and subtleties foreign to their checked experience.
"It impresses me," remarked Collier, "that it requires a feminine intelligence to cope with a proposition of this sort and with any degree of success. A baby is a -er -er-"
"A baby," suggested Lewis mildly.
"That's it," continued the colonel, breathing deeply. "A baby, being a baby, is an essentially feminine produce."
"There's no denying that," murmured Hogaboom.
"Well then, let's put it to the women."
And so it was definitely decided and it is for the purpose of guiding the exposition authorities to wise and beneficent action on Mrs. Aber's application that the Union has obtained opinions of twelve prominent women in this city, including mothers, physicians, club women and those active in organizations and philanthropic work. All agreed that the subject not only merited discussion, but should be given the most careful consideration before any definite decision was made and the details of Mrs. Aber's plans were frankly commended and criticized.
Mrs. Aber's idea, as outlined by the exposition men, is to have a large room set aside as a public nursery in which she, with a trained corps of assistants, would receive and check babies and young children, allowing their unencumbered parents to go upon their way, carefree and rejoicing. The unsuspecting infant, after being detached by fair promises from the maternal apron strings, is meanwhile enveloped in a maze of the most delightful deception. On the theory that a child is never so happy as when engaged in constructive work, occupations will be provided of such a beguiling character that, while the ideal is schooling, the deluded infant is unconscious of being engaged in anything but the most profitless enjoyment.
The chief attraction would be a miniature factory, in which baby hands would fashion paper furniture and flowers. The handiwork of the little ones might be sold to anyone sufficiently enraptured to buy. In addition to this possible revenue and the trifling sum changed parents for the double service to them and their children, Mrs. Aber believes that the instruction and amusement of children could be made an interesting exhibit in itself --- one worth a price of admission.
The women who have given opinions are practically united in believing that a nursery where babies and children may be checked and properly cared for will be needed at the exposition. They advocate, however, great caution in selecting the person to whom the concession is granted and a careful examination of the qualifications of all applicants.
"I am glad the Union has taken up this discussion," said Dr. Louis Heilbron, a member of the San Diego Club. "Such a concession would have to be conducted on a most practical and scientific basis and anyone undertaking it must possess great executive ability. All applicants should be carefully examined as to their experience and efficiency. I do not know Mrs. Aber and she may be a woman splendidly equipped for the work. Personally, I should like to see it given to a San Diego woman, if there is anyone here willing and competent to undertake it."
Dr. Heilbron, in common with a number of others, does not consider the kindergarten idea or any effort aimed at systematic instruction practical, without a definite arrangement for daily or almost continuous attendance on the part of the children. She is also opposed to making the nursery an exhibit.
"I do not approve of having an admission charge," she continued. "Of course, an exhibition showing the systematic and scientific care of children would be instructive. But the parents and children are entitled to first consideration, and I think both would feel more at ease if the public were kept out entirely. Children receiving too much attention or even observation become distracted, if not self-conscious and spoiled."
Mrs. G. B. Miles, superintendent of the Children's Home, while recognizing the necessity for a place along the general lines of the one suggested, considered a number of Mrs. Aber's ideas visionary.
"I'd like to talk to that good lady," said Mrs. Miles, laughing good-naturedly. "I don't know it all, but I should not care to undertake the job as she has outlined it. I have all that I can manage here. We average between ninety and a hundred children all the time. The middle of last February we opened a baby's cottage where we have twenty-five children between two months and five years old. In the cottage along we have three day nurses, two young assistants, and one night nurse.
"I do not approve of exhibiting the children. Then I have been wondering how the nursery could be conducted along sanitary lines. With so many strange children coming and going daily it would seem well nigh impossible to eliminate the danger of disease and contagion. Then I think there is apt to be difficulty with the parents. I doubt if particular parents would be willing to leave their children in such a place anyway. Children vary so, not only in health and cleanliness, but in race and color. There would, it seems to me, to satisfy all, have to be a good many divisions made. The undertaking undoubtedly would require a large building and a great many attendants."
Most of the women consulted said that after considering a few of the more obvious possibilities of the idea they could not imagine leaving their own children in an exposition nursery, however well it might be conducted. One suggested as a primary color division, "a dark room, a light room and a medium room," another a corps of chemically-pure wet nurses for the proper nourishment of nursing infants, and a third an automatic sterilizer and all-around regenerator; a painless machine to be invented by some local wizard for the occasion, by means of which the grubby, ragged or sickly infant may be converted , for the nonce, into a radiant and spotless creature. But such frivolous and satirical sallies were always followed by dark threats of summary vengeance on anyone daring to publish them in connection with their names.
Mrs. Oscar J. Kendall of the Wednesday Club and the Talent Workers thinks the idea a splendid one for people who could not afford to make other provision for their children. She doubts, however, the advisability of trying to sell the articles made by the children as it might lead some parents to imagine that their children were being exploited or urged to work too hard.
"Such a nursery would be a god-send to the poor and I think it should be conducted as nearly as possible along charity lines. To make it as sanitary as possible, I think every child should be bathed and given a little play dress.," said Mrs. Kendall.
"To try to carry out the educational idea does seem too impractical. You never can tell what a child will go or not do, and the right sort of woman can accomplish wonders with them. A great deal can be done by suggestion and when started in a simple, amusing, constructive undertaking, a child is very apt to remain absorbed for a long time."
Mrs. E. M. Capps, president of the San Diego Club, said that Mrs. Aber's plan had impressed her as a "very visionary thing," beautiful in theory, but not likely to be carried out successfully.
"I am afraid it would be very difficult to persuade the younger children to leave their mothers at all," she said. "Babies two and three and four years old are very adverse to going to strangers and I am afraid may of them would spend a good part of their time crying. Then, personally, I would have fear of disease."
Mrs. J. E. Jennison, president of the Daughters of American Revolution in San Diego, expressed herself as having at the head of the enterprise a well-known San Diego woman, experienced in such affairs, who would receive the endorsement and assistance of woman's organizations. She would approve having the nursery open to inspection, In the world's fair at Chicago, she said, there was a children's building with a model nursery and a department with incubator babies, both of which were interesting exhibits.
Mrs. Grant Conard, wife of ex-mayor Conard, said:
"I think the idea is an excellent one, but I doubt if there would be sufficient demand to justify a nursery on a very large scale. Nearly everyone who has a place to live has a place to leave their children, and most parents do everything to avoid the necessity of leaving them in a public nursery. Splendid use could be made of the playgrounds in caring for the children.
"As for teaching the children anything, I have my doubts. Little could be done along that line without regular attendance."
Mrs. Julius Wangenheim was another who did not take the thought of instruction very seriously.
"If the nurses or attendants succeeded in entertaining the children and making them forget they were in the hands of strangers, they would be doing very well indeed, I believe," said Mrs. Wangenheim. "I do not imagine though that the children will cry or be so upset on leaving their parents that they cannot be made happy for a time at least. The class of women who will profit most by the nursery will be those who have been compelled to leave their children alone or in the hands of others anyway."
The frequency with which children are hurt or lost in crowds was given by Mrs. Carl Owens of National City, president of the San Diego County Federation of Women's clubs, as one of the chief reasons for having such a nursery.
"The children would not become worn out and irritable and the parents would be free to enjoy unhampered the things that the little ones could not enjoy," said Mrs. Owens. "I would be in favor of having a school for the children who could come everyday for a time and of exhibiting their handiwork. I hardly think it would be wise to sell anything."
"No ailing children or those with infectious diseases should be taken. Unless great caution were exercised, there would be danger of spreading disease.
Dr. Charlotte Baker is of the opinion that the dangers of infection and a number of other unpleasantnesses suggested would be reduced to a minimum by keeping the children in the open as much as possible.
"There would really be less danger of a lot of children together, under proper care and supervision, contracting diseases than there would be out among the crowds and in the buildings," she said.
"I do not like the idea of making the nursery an exhibition and would not allow incubator babies to be shown at all. The nursery should be kept up by the exposition and not run for profit for anyone. An adequate charge should be made for each infant and the superintendent should be paid a salary like any other employee. It would be a splendid thing if there were an emergency hospital in connection with the exposition. I think there will be plenty of use for it."
Mrs. Ivor M. Lawson and Miss Elizabeth Freese, both members of the Wednesday Club, considered Mrs. Aber's ideas ingenious but not practical.
Mrs. Aber's application will be held under advisement by Colonel Collier.
San Diego Union, April 27, 1913. 12:2-3. What newspapers say about Exposition.
San Diego Union, April 28, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Oregon at the San Diego Exposition.
San Diego Sun, April 29, 1913, 1:1. Collier leaves tomorrow for Washington, DC to work for government recognition and a one million dollar appropriation.
San Diego Union, April 29, 1913, 22:2. Exposition grants concession to scenic road; L. A. Thompson given contract to operate railway at grounds, four miles in length.
San Diego Sun, April 30, 1913, 1:1. California Building plans complete; $250,000 structure is to be permanent; architect Goodhue is coming; groundbreaking to be held soon. . . . The dome of the building will be 573 feet above sea level. The dome is designed after the Cathedral of Guadalajara and the Mirand tower in Spain.
San Diego Union, May 1, 1913, II, 13:4. Fraternity men to have building at Exposition; 2-story structure being designed after Green Pantheon with a glass roof; site not selected; plans being prepared by S. L. Holopeter, a draftsman in the office of Bristow and Layman, architects.
San Diego Examiner, May 2, 1913, 1:6-7. Let us vote the Fair bonds, but demand to know where the money goes.
San Diego Sun, May 3, 1913, 1:8. Work to be started soon on Domestic Liberal Arts Building and Foreign Liberal Arts Building; work on $200,000 State of California Building to start within the next 10 days. . . . The Domestic Liberal Arts Building will face El Prado on the south side, standing on the shores of Laguna Alta. The Foreign Arts Building will be next to it, at the southeast corner of the Plaza de Panama and El Prado. Also on Laguna Alta, opposite, are an emergency hospital and a service building.
San Diego Union, May 4, 1913, 3:1-4. Visitors surprised at marvelous progress made at Exposition.
San Diego Union, May 5, 1913, II, 11:2. Congressman Kettner introduces bill to allow exhibits for Fair to be admitted into the United States free.
San Diego Sun, May 6, 1913, 1:7-8. Mayor O'Neall says city park lands are fine places for schools. "I don't think any sentimental reasons should lead us to exclude schools from the park."
San Diego Sun, May 6, 1913, 1:7-8. Rustic canyon – once beauty spot – is now no more. Flowers and trees fall before the grader. Opening of 6th Street tremendous task. Property owners charge that Park Commissioners did not make good their promise to transplant uprooted trees elsewhere in park.
San Diego Sun, May 7, 1913, 16:5. Board of Directors change name of Electricity Building to Home Science Building; Machinery Building to Arts and Crafts Building; Domestic Liberal Arts Building to Commerce and Industries Building, and Foreign Liberal Arts Building to Foreign Arts Building.
San Diego Union, May 7, 1913, 1:4-6. Editors of California Press Association amazed by Fair work; praise San Diego's boost spirit.
San Diego Union, May 7, 1913, 1:7, 12:1-4. Businessmen here aim for one million dollar bonds for Fair.
San Diego Union, May 7, 1913, 7:1. Wangenheim resigns from Park Board; praises work by John Morley,
San Diego Union, May 7, 1913, 12:1. Collier making friends for Fair in the East.
San Diego Sun, May 8, 1913, 1:7-8. Park Commissioner John F. Forward urges park appropriations for the coming year of seven percent; current appropriation was five percent; Council agreed to increase rate, but specified Park Commission would have to pay city for water used in the park. Forward: "The park with its boulevards is fine for the wealthy man with his automobile. What we are trying to do is to make the park a resort where the poor man can enjoy himself. They should have grass to roll on, and other things should be provided for their comfort."
San Diego Union, May 8, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: Arizona's Surprising Course . . . San Diego will hope that the neighbor state's legislature will reopen this exposition question and determine it from a viewpoint of business interest, if not from that of sentiment.
San Diego Union, May 8, 1913, 10:1. Exposition buildings are given new names.
Park Commissioners Minutes, May 9, 1913. Commissioners Forward, Ferris and Chandler; Forward elected president. . . . Superintendent instructed to notify Mr. Davis, pound master, to remove dog pound from park . . . Board agreed to recommend bond issue of $850,000 for permanent park improvements . . . Mr. Adams, president of City Council, requested removal of Park Department office from City Hall; Superintendent instructed to vacate the office and to erect an office at the headquarters in Balboa Park.
San Diego Union, May 9, 1913, 7:1. State building plans forwarded.
San Diego Union, May 9, 1913, 12:3. San Diegans aboard Cleveland received great encouragement in the orient; think displays from Java for Fair are likely.
San Diego Sun, May 10, 1913, 1:4. The House passed, May 10, a bill authorizing free admission under bond of foreign exhibits for San Diego Exposition.
San Diego Union, May 10, 1913, 3:1. Chamber of Commerce endorses bond issue for park work; calls on Council to fix date for election.
San Diego Union, May 10, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: The Exposition Bond Issue . . . No very strenuous campaign should be necessary to carry this proposed bond issue. The people of San Diego have stood by the exposition in the past. There is no reason to doubt that they will continue to give it their hearty support.
San Diego Union, May 11, 1913, 1:1. Exposition bill providing for free entry of goods for exhibition passes House by unanimous vote, May 10; Kettner stifles opposition to San Diego measure; Senators pledged to support; equals U.S. recognition; Collier pleased by victory. . . . Bill provides for acceptance of cash or a bond by the Secretary of the Treasury to guarantee that all awards and other obligations to exhibitors shall be met by the Exposition Company.
San Diego Union, May 11, 1913, 10:1. Progress on Fair work amazing; water pipes are laid.
San Diego Sun, May 12, 1913, 2:1. John Simpson Construction Co. at work on Southern California Counties Building today; foundations laid some months ago; preliminary work of raising frames has been done.
San Diego Union, May 12, 1913, 20:1. Park Commissioner Schmidt wants to lease city park land to get more revenue.
San Diego Union, May 13, 1913, 20:7. Cracker and Preserve concern propose to build plant at Fair grounds.
San Diego Sun, May 14, 1913, 8:1. Workmen are building pergolas around citrus grove and Southern California model farms exhibit.
While the John Simpson Construction Company is busy building the Southern California Counties' Building at the eastern gateway of the Exposition, workmen are building the pergolas around the citrus groves and the Southern California model farms exhibit.
Three pergolas will act as a sort of frame for the settings of the win exhibits to be made by the seven southern counties, setting them off to the best possible advantage, beautifying them greatly, and at the same time adding to the comfort and pleasure of the visitor.
The pergolas are eight feet high and ample in width to cover a broad walk, and they will be thickly covered by creeping rose vines, as near a perpetual booming variety as possible, so that the flowers will be in constant evidence, reminding the visitor who walks beneath or occupies the rustic benches to be placed there, that he is in Sunny Southern California, where such things are not only possible, but natural the year around.
Outside the pergolas will be planted a row of handsome acacia trees.
San Diego Union, May 14, 1913, 22:4. Plan for real tea garden at Exposition; Sir Thomas Lipton sends agent to San Diego to arrange for exhibit.
San Diego Union, May 14, 1913, 14:1. City and County Building in park is favored.
San Diego Union, May 15, 1913, 3:2. Council endorses park bond issue; passes resolution favoring election on funds for park improvement.
San Diego Union, May 18, 1913, 1:1. Construction at Fair amazes one and all.
San Diego Union, May 18, 1913, 12:2. Wangenheim's park work appreciated; Board adopts resolution praising retiring commissioner for services.
San Diego Union, May 18, 1913, 13:1-3. Exposition's scope, loyalty of city is amazing
San Diego Union, May 19, 1913, 1:7, 5:2. Peaceful end comes to Captain Sehon.
San Diego Union, May 20, 1913, II, 11:1. Bids for California Building called for June 14.
San Diego Sun, May 21, 1913, 8:1. Kettner Bill giving local exposition international recognition passed by Senate on Monday and signed by President Wilson permits bonded warehouse at San Diego Exposition; suspends immigration laws to admit exhibitors, their workmen and assistants.
Following the signature of President Wilson to the Kettner bill, which passed the Senate Monday, it is possible the San Diego Exposition will be called upon to make room for some more foreign exhibits as the passage of the bill is recognition and authorization of the exposition by the government under the meaning of the act approved April 29, 1902.
The Kettner bill provides that both the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of Commerce may extend to the San Diego Exposition all rules and regulations necessary to suspect customs laws and create a bonded warehouse of the Exposition grounds, and the Commerce Department to suspend the alien labor and immigration laws for the same purpose and in the same district. The usual bond and safeguard is required and the notice will be sent by Department heads to all foreign governments through the American diplomatic service.
The passage of this bill puts the San Diego Exposition on an equal footing in foreign countries with than in San Francisco, with the difference that San Diego makes a more direct appeal to exhibitors, through its unique and favorable plan of operation, its scope and character.
Colonel Collier is in Washington and has wired his complete satisfaction at the end of two year's struggle for recognition, a struggle that was won in spite of opposition from sources from which there should have been no opposition.
The division of exhibits may now approach any foreign government or organization, exhibitor or art gallery, scientific society or college and do so on any equal footing with any exposition ever held. Exposition officials expect a big increase in the number and volume of exhibits following the approval of the bill, just passed by President Wilson.
San Diego Union, May 22, 1913, 2:1. Wild Animal Farm may add fame to San Diego.
San Diego Union, May 22, 1913, 2:4. Council sets July 1 as date for $850,000 bond election to make better Fair.
San Diego Union, May 22, 1913, II, 14:1. Visitors flocking to Exposition building.
San Diego Union, May 23, 1913, 4:1. EDITORIAL: On Exposition Bonds . . . As matters stand, the success of the exposition and the stupendous advantages that it will cause the city are fully assured, provided the people give to the undertaking the additional support which is now found to be required.
San Diego Union, May 23, 1913, 12:4. Automobile makers plan exhibition of motor-propelled vehicles; plans for building $200,000 structure; story of wheel will be told.
San Diego Union, May 24, 1913, 9:1. President Wilson signed Kettner's bill for a bonded warehouse, May 23, which all departments in Washington, DC, construe to mean recognition of the Exposition, making it in fact as well as in name an International Exposition.
San Diego Union, May 24, 1913, 9:1. Moore, president of Panama-Pacific Exposition, raps San Diego Fair; enrages Collier.
St. Louis, May 23. Col. D. C. Collier registered at the Jefferson hotel on his way back to San Diego from Washington, where he has been in the interest of the Panama-California exposition. The colonel was in fine fettle. He had just received a telegram from Congressman Kettner that the president has signed Kettner's bill for a bonded warehouse at the exposition, which all of the departments in Washington construe to be full recognition of the exposition, making it in fact as well as in name an international exposition.
He was particularly pleased at the action of the president because of the action of C. C. Moore, president of the San Francisco exposition, who, after the bill had passed both houses of congress, went out of his way to wire an dozen or more senators urging that the bill be reconsidered.
The colonel, upon learning of this, sent the following telegram to Moore: "Have seen most of your telegrams to senators. They are deeply resented in many quarters and I desire to formally notify you that unless you discontinue your entirely unwarranted interference with legislation in favor of San Diego, there will surely be reprisals, and you will encounter unexpected opposition to legislation essential to your exposition. (Signed) D. C. Collier."
He addressed himself as being utterly disgusted with the narrow and bigoted attitude of Moore and suggested that his time would be better passed in building rather than tearing down.
San Diego Union, May 25, 1913, 2:1-4. Priceless flora bedeck grounds.
San Diego Union, May 25, 1913, 12:1. Act authorizes governmental departments to make special rules and regulations for the free admission of exhibits and persons accompanying the same; places San Diego on same footing as previous expositions; makes it possible for San Diego to ask for a fair share of any appropriations for Exposition purposes in 1915; jubilee announced over success of bill; Collier to be guest of honor at banquet when he returns Friday.
San Diego Union, May 26, 1913, 3:2. Bridge work is rushed, spans chasm.
San Diego Union, May 26, 1913, 5:7. Strictest economy is Exposition watchword.
San Diego Union, May 26, 1913, 10:1-2. Fair bill's friends have hard fight to prevent mutilation; last clause attacked by Smoot and Penrose.
San Diego Union, May 26, 1913, 20:2-4. Fair structures arise, canyon bridge work spectacular.
San Diego Union, May 27, 1913, II, 11:3. Tickets for affair at Grant Gill Friday to honor Collier are now on sale.
San Diego Sun, May 28, 1913, 1:1. Tulare County to exhibit here . . . Exposition officials were very much interested today in a report that Tulare county was likely to cut out the San Francisco expo and use San Diego as her place to exhibit.
According to news dispatches, T. B. Twaddle, chairman of the Tulare supervisors, said that San Francisco's charge of $2.50 a square foot for exhibits was more than Tulare county would pay. It would cost $8,000 for the county to put an exhibit there.
"We have voted $5,000,000 for San Francisco," he said, "and that is enough." The other supervisors agreed with him and are said to be ready to vote on Monday to come here, Twaddle said.
"If San Francisco does not come down in her demands, it is likely we will show a county exhibit only at San Diego." "We kept asking them at Santa Cruz what they would do with the $5,000,000 voted They said it was for entertaining purposes. That was all the satisfaction we got."
San Diego Union, May 28, 1913, 11:1. Ohio man signs contract for Exposition space; plans to build bungalow.
San Diego Sun, May 29, 1913, 2:3. Collier back says passage of Kettner bill means much to San Diego.
San Diego Union, May 29, 1913, 12:1. Bombay Indian Company makes appropriation for space for exhibit of Indian silks and curios; rare wares and jewelry to be made before crowds.
San Diego Examiner, May 30, 1913, 1:3-5. Wilde's new bank building symbolizes strength and solidity.
San Diego Union, May 30, 1913, II, 13:1. Throngs scramble for tickets to Collier fete . . . With over 350 tickets out and people clamoring for more, it looks as if there will be a large crowd at the booster dinner tonight at the Grant grill, to be given in honor of Colonel Collier,
Nearly every man who took tickets to see had been back for more and the limitation were it not for the fact that the dining room will not any more could easily be raised to 600.
Most of the business houses will be closed today. That will make it easy for all the boosters to get to the dinner, which begins promptly at 7:30. Carl Heilbron will be toastmaster. Mayor O'Neall will speak on behalf of the city. J. Fred Lee will speak for the chamber of commerce. C. A. A. McGee will talk for the "newcomers." E. O. Tilburne will speak for the Order of Panama. Vice President George D. Burnham will answer for the exposition organization, and Colonel Collier will talk for himself.
From what he has said in personal conversations since his return home, his talk will be a red hot one, right from the shoulder, too. There will be several guests of honor, among them John D. Spreckels and Colonel J. Wellington Boyle of New York, who attended the dinner to Collier about a year ago when he roasted President Taft for interfering with San Diego's fight for recognition and predicted his political defeat.
Music, new booster songs, and all sorts of stunts will fill the evening.
San Diego Sun, May 31, 1913, 13:1-2. Collier given royal welcome by 500 men in Grant Grill; Spreckels confirms report that railroad will be completed by the time Exposition opens; Collier repeated the statement long known by business interests of the city that every cent for carfare for himself and his wife, every Pullman sleeper, every hotel bill and over personal Exposition expenses have been paid for out of his own pocket.
San Diego Union, May 31, 1913, 1:1-8. Flashlight banquet giving welcome to Collier, Exposition president, on his return from Washington, DC, where he obtained recognition of the 1915 Fair; Collier, who was unsalaried, calculated he had spent $100,000 out of his own pocket for traveling and other Exposition expenses; Spreckels promises railroad will be completed by the Exposition opening.
San Diego Union, May 31, 1913, 24:1. Order of Panama to be national fraternity; Brazilians want charter; details of Exposition are to be laid before Committee Tuesday night.
San Diego Union, June 1, 1913, 2:1. Thousands of rare pines and ornamental cedars, magnolias and live oaks, pepper trees and eucalyptus, acacias and grevilleas, Monterey and Italian cypress, and palms in infinite variety are being cultivated at Fair; Exposition grounds beginning to give some idea of paradise of verdure; paid for out of original $1,000,000 bond issue expended under the direction of the Park Board; palms in lower parts of canyons with smaller shrubs and vines and flowering plants extending up sides; derrick and machinery used in construction of bridge also used to lower and place heavier trees in the canyon; wire fences running along boulevards draped with free-growing rose bushes, ramblers and honeysuckle; 23-acre nursery; 600 acres to be treated..
San Diego Union, June 1, 1913, 11:1-2. Isthmus at Fair to be 25-acre fun tract; 8,000 feet frontage of freak amusements to include every sensation known; visitors can be frightened, shocked and pleased for a time.
When parting lovers, cheek to cheek here or anywhere are heard to sob out a long farewell and murmur brokenly, "Thismush, thismush," as they undoubtedly will begin to do within the next few months, let it not be supposed that they are merely exchanging cabalistic love stuff. No, no! For a while "thismush" can be used as a love word under stress of great emotion, when almost anything goes, it really has a more general significance. It means "The Isthmus" and when lover sob it brokenly on parting they are comforting each other with the thought of where they'll surely meet again, namely on "The Isthmus," not of Panama, but of the Panama-California Exposition in 1915.
What is The Isthmus? It isn't --- yet. But it will be very much so. So many have asked that the exposition people have been put to it to give an answer. Some have said that it sounds "spicy"; others "unique and lively." It will be all of these. Colonel Collier says it will be twenty-five acres of amusements, with an 8,000 foot frontage of fun, a sort of Broadway with tropical embellishments. Winfield Hogaboom says that it will be the Midway Pleasance with chili sauce. I. G. Lewis that it will be something "east of Suez" with all the refinements of civilization.
The Isthmus will be the amusement center of the exposition, the thoroughfare of thrills, as the inspired barker might put it; a journey of joy, extending from the north gate nearly to the east entrance, in the course of which every new sensation known to man and approved by the exposition censor may be experienced for the price of a dime, ten cents there or thereabouts.
To stroll calmly through the Cannibal Village, where tenderness is the only Christian asset, and enjoy the experience of being regarded as animated stew with one of its usual disadvantages; to wander at will in the Wilds of the Amazon; to sail down the Orinoco; to penetrate the fastness of the jungle; to mount to the topmost pinnacle of the Andes, and the next moment to plunge twenty thousand leagues under the sea; to negotiate all these terrifying and breath-taking adventures in a pair of pumps or a hobble skirt, with the comforting assurance