. Zigzag journeys in the White city. With visits to the neighboring metropolis . ip Illinois . 205 Columbian Fountain and Court of Honor 213 Mr. Field 218 Hungarian Dancers 219 Musicians from Moorish Theatre . 223 Page Electricity and Manufactures Building . 233 Kansas Building 238 Florida Building 239 California State Building 241 Illinois State Building 243 Womans Building 245 Chinese Theatre 248 A Family of Berberines in the Street of Cairo, — Midway 253 Masonic Temple 259 Japanese Ho-o-den 265 City Hall 273 Ceylon Building 277 Manufactures Building 281 Clock Tower in the Manufactures Build
. Zigzag journeys in the White city. With visits to the neighboring metropolis . ip Illinois . 205 Columbian Fountain and Court of Honor 213 Mr. Field 218 Hungarian Dancers 219 Musicians from Moorish Theatre . 223 Page Electricity and Manufactures Building . 233 Kansas Building 238 Florida Building 239 California State Building 241 Illinois State Building 243 Womans Building 245 Chinese Theatre 248 A Family of Berberines in the Street of Cairo, — Midway 253 Masonic Temple 259 Japanese Ho-o-den 265 City Hall 273 Ceylon Building 277 Manufactures Building 281 Clock Tower in the Manufactures Build-ing 282 French Department of the Manufactures Building . 283 French Colonies Building 283 Horticultural Building and Womans • Building 297 Draw-bridges 3°[ Stock-Yards 3°5 Peristyle, from the Agricultural Building 311The Electrical Building on a Moonlight Night 313 German Building 315 Javanese Fiddler, from the Midway . 316 The Ferris Wheel at Night . . 317 Administration Building by Night . 319 India Building: 32° Zigzag Journeys in the White City. CHAPTER THE MARLOWES AT HOME. ANTON MARLOWE was the Superintendent ofthe Public Schools, and the President of the Folk-Lore Society in his native town, which consisted ofa New England village surrounded by a wide extentof country. He was usually the chairman of theCommittee on Patriotic Celebrations ; and he tookan active interest in the Society for Schoolhouse Decorations, andin the Society for the Improvement of the Country Roads. He wasa Sam Adams-like man, always busy in some plan for the publicgood. His father was Ephraim Marlowe, the Quaker, and he had ason named Ephraim, a lad some fifteen years old, — old Ephraim andyoung Ephraim, the townspeople called them. The Village Improvement and Folk-Lore Society, as an activeorganization in the old town had come at last to be called, passedsome singular resolutions in the spring of 1S93. This society hadbegun as a village improvement effort; but it had found so many ol
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectworldsc, bookyear1894