June, 1921 
FOREST AND STREAM 
267 
DR. HENSHALL AT 
THE WORLD’S FAIR 
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 250) 
stood on the bridge spanning the La- 
goon, close by the Walton and Cotton 
fishing lodge, and as we turned our 
gaze from the gorgeous scene just de 
scribed to the modest little structure 
nestling on the bank of the Lagoon, 
my friend said, the tears welling up in 
his eyes: 
“To me it ip very remarkable but 
most gratifying that amidst all this 
grandeur, splendor and magnificence 
erected for the admiration of the na- 
tions of the world, that there should be 
a thought of our master, good old 
Izaak, who passed away three hundred 
years ago, and that loving hearts and 
willing hands have erected this humble 
tribute to his memory. To me it is all 
very touching.” 
“Yes,” I assented, “it renews one’s 
faith in human nature, and shows that 
there are still hearts filled with the 
brotherly love and reverence that have 
existed, not only for three hundred 
years but for two thousand years, when 
James and John and Andrew went a- 
fishing in the Gallilean Sea.” 
A few days after penning the above 
I learned the sad news, through the 
London “Fishing Gazette”, that Wil- 
liam Senior had crossed the silent river 
to that undiscovered country from 
whose bourne no traveler returns. 
T HE Chicago Fair was the most 
unique, original and characteris- 
tic Exposition in the history of 
World’s Fairs. It was genuine in 
every feature. In Liberal Arts and 
Manufactures I recognized the same 
shop keepers that I had seen in Flor- 
ence, Naples and Venice, exhibiting the 
same characteristic wares. I also no- 
ticed the same oriental merchants I had 
seen in the bazaars of Cairo and Con- 
stantinople with the same attractive 
wares. And in the shows, novelties and 
various entertainments on the Midway, 
where were congregated representa- 
tives of all nations, civilized and bar- 
baric, there were no fakes; all were 
genuine and to the manner bom. In 
the “Streets of Cairo” I recognized the 
same donkey boys whom I had em- 
ployed in Cairo, also some of the native 
employees of the hotels, all of whom 
knew me at sight. 
And “Far away Moses”, of Constan- 
tinople, a dealer in oriental rugs, called 
to me as I was passing, and was re- 
joiced to meet some one who had been 
to Turkey. He proved his pleasure by 
presenting me with a decorated pipe 
with a long wooden stem inlaid with 
mother of pearl. 
“And how is our good friend Judge 
Longworth?” he asked. 
“I am very sorry to inform you, 
Moses.” I replied, “that he has gone 
on before. He is in Heaven. He left 
us a year or two ago after an illness 
of two or three days with pneumonia.” 
As I left Moses the visit of my friend 
and myself to Constantinople was vivid- 
7« Writing to 
A 
I M 
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im&aM 
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