Wisconsin at tub Centennial. 
3G1 
AVERAGE DAILY ATTENDANCE. 
The following table shows the daily average attendance at the 
exhibition by months: 
May (from the 10th). 19,046 
June. 26,756 
July. 24,481 
August. 33,655 
September. 81,961 
October. 89,789 
November (till 10th). 102,100 
GENERAL GOOD ORDER. 
The order that prevailed on the ground, during the entire exhi¬ 
bition, was a very remarkable feature. The police regulations were 
admirable. A distinguished writer, in giving a general description 
of the whole affair, says: “The popular attendance was, after all, 
the great triumph of the American exhibition; the crowds were the 
most notable thing exhibited. It is not presumptuous to say, that 
no nation in the world could have gathered in its capital, such 
throngs of decent, orderly and intelligent people as visited Fair- 
mount Park during September and October. Of riot and tumult 
there was never a symptom; of ruffianism or lewdness, the display 
was incredibly small; of drunkenness, despite the freedom in the 
exposure of ales and wines to which the majority of visitors were 
wholly unaccustomed, the instances were fewer, in the whole course 
of the exhibition, than often occur at a county fair in a single day.” 
IMMENSE PASSENGER TRANSPORTATION. 
The passenger transportation was a wonderful feature. On the 
“ Pennsylvania Day,” there were run into and out of Philadelphia, 
On the two great lines of railroad, G38 passenger trains, in which 
w'ere 2,993 cars, with 130,245 passengers. 
We have thus glanced at a few of the prominent points connect¬ 
ed wnth the preparation for, and the running of, this great Interna¬ 
tional Exhibition. Of the exhibition itself we cannot speak. It 
has spoken itself, in language stronger than can be written; no pen 
can describe its magnitude and grandeur. It more than met the 
most sanguine expectations of its projectors, and of those interest¬ 
ed in its management. It was a proud presentation of the products 
of our own country, in comparison with those of other nations, and 
