OCR Text |
Show wrong with them; they have new troubles every day; they can't suit any-body, any-body, not even thu contractors, ami wo haul been raddled over the silo question, ques-tion, ami the financial question, and tho action of congress, and the inaction of many foreign governments, and tint negligence: of half thu states of tho I'nion. Most of the people of Chicago have given up the big ideas that they once had about the exhibition, and even the boomers have grown hoarse. I don't seo how it can bo a iirst cl.iss thing." Such amLsimilar flings are kept standing stand-ing in the metropolitan papers out of pure spitii. There is no truth in thorn. What dilliculties were experienced in the beginning, however mueh aggravated by boomers, wero due entirely to inexperience. inexperi-ence. Jt was inevitablo that, wholly new to their work, tho World's lair directors should have made some mistakes mis-takes at lirst. Hut we have conlidence enough in thfl enterprise of Chicago to bolieve that her exhibition will be tho largest ever held in any city In the world, ami it ill behooves New York to throw obstacles in the way of this consummation con-summation simply because she failed to get the show. Since the fair has been made a national enterprise it should at least not Immaligned as it is for foreign nations to take notice and perhaps warning of. That is petty work from a petty town, notwithstanding her big size. JK ALOIS MCW YORK. In tho New York Sun of tho 53d we fad the following interview: "I ra dis-pruntled dis-pruntled over the Chicago exposition," said a Chicagoan yesterday, "and go lire lots of other people in Chicago. Its managers complain of all sorts of cm-LarrassmcuUt. cm-LarrassmcuUt. Almost everything goes |