Buffalo Fair Is Hard Hit
Revulsion Following the Murder of President Injures
Enterprise—Appeal
to the Country for Support.
Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 22.—This city
is pulling itself together again after a fortnight of anxiety and
sorrow, such as it has never known. What was intended to be the
gala period of its history was turned into unspeakable grief, which
has gone into every home with a force hard for any one not here
to realize.
There never was a community more engrossed
in a great undertaking than Buffalo was with the Pan-American Exposition
three weeks ago. The revulsion was terrible and now that it has
passed the question of what is to come is interesting. The public
feeling is strong, and all one way. Every one seems to realize that
the stockholders of the exposition have met a great loss, probably
of not less than a million dollars. That practically means the citizens,
for about every Buffalonian has stock in the exposition, according
to his means. The dollars and cents seem pretty thoroughly to be
eliminated from the calculation now, but the work to be done and
the end to be achieved seem foremost in every man’s mind. They feel
now that the exposition must be carried to a glorious finish as
a labor of patriotism and of love. President Milburn put this thought
strongly. He said:
“There must be no faltering in our
efforts now, considering how much the success of the Pan-American
Exposition means in the development of closer political and commercial
relations between the peoples of the Western Hemisphere. That was
a policy earnestly favored by President McKinley and which interested
him so deeply in the exposition from its first inception.
“There are six weeks more of the life
of the exposition, and it is in the full bloom of its beauty and
interest. Every feature of it has been developed to its highest
point, and it is being operated in a more elaborate scale than ever.
It is a complete mass of varied activities and entertainments, more
than adequately carrying out its aims and purposes. It is a national
enterprise and should be supported as such for the credit of our
country as the leading nation of this hemisphere.”
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