w taH Js it .Another Souvenir $ i On Wednesday mokkiko nert IV4 JPATCH will issue a WASHINGTON SBsbp Souvenir. Agents should send ders early. lX)RTY-rOUIlTH "TEAR - i Ethe Chief Feature of the Wash ington Inauguration CentenniaK MEW YORK IS MAGNIFICENT pn Her Eadiance, Appearing . as a Bride Awaiting -' Her LoYer. -? 'HESTK HAY'S EXERCISES T i Lf"' ' Successfully Conducted According to Programme, but on a Grander Scale. ti I'BECEPIION OP THE PEESIDENT, 'T Jy fJHli, an Attempt to Have His Landing' Y , -Eesemble That of Washington, One Hnndrei Tears Aco. kr- k DETAILED HIBTOEI OP THE DAI COMIXG EFENTS. ( Tuesday. 9 A. M. Thanksgiving Scr-rices To essay, 10 A. 91.. ..Commemorative Ex- erciscs. Tuesday, 10 A. M.... Military Pnrnde Start. Tuesday, Noon Parade in Fall Swine. Tuesday, 6:36 P. M.. Centennial Banquet. Tuesday, 8 P. 01...... Illumination. I Wednesday, 10 A. M.Civic Parade. ,The first day of the three days' Centen nial celebration of the inauguration of Washington as the first President of the United States has come and gone. New York scored a great success in the manner in -which the programme was carried out. President Harrison entered the city in a somewhat similar manner to that of General "Washington, and held two receptions dar ing the day, besides reviewing the nava' paradeand attending theball in the evening. rsrZCIAI. TEIXGBAX To THX DISPATCH. KEW YOKE, April 29. Mag nificent stood New York this morn ing, fraud, splen ) did heyondT-even ' her usual magnifi- cence. Badiant she was and glori ous with color irom end to end and side to side, at the meeting of the waters, when day broke. She was as a bride awaiting a bride groom, and her dress was as gaudy all aflutter with ' ffJ y If M AjossPjtt Kj ? -a ww -ja m ribbons as was ever the garb of ancient J Venice in the days when her doges wedded her'to the Adriatic. 'T.Day broke beneath a sullen sky. The last thing at night the eyes of the expectant -million were turned to the sky where the ?- brilliant lanterns of the night sparkled V- their confirmation of the constant promises -''by the Signal Service of fair weather. The 4first thine: in the morning every face was -i turned to the sky, but it was hid by clouds A against which the brisk westerly wind Therefore the pleasure- seeking crowds turned out with umbrellas, jand all looked for the rain that was not: tn fe-come after all. ; An Early Start Made by everybody. Jt The streets in all parts of the town were filled soon after daybreak. New Yorkers jjgand strangers elbowed one another all over ,wo. oeiaom, it ever, nave so many out Isiders been seen among us. Tbe crowds of Iwork-folk on the early trains and cars gave place to crowds of sightseers, all in holiday attire, and much of that attire the uniforms of military bodies. r-Away over on the East side, in the un- celieit neighborhood, countrymen and women were standing open-mouthed before ''the fire houses. In the furthest points on 'the "West side strapping rustics were askim ?; the direction to the Battery. 1 'The strangers betrayed themselves most l&musinglyon the .elevated roads. "Here, lb"oss, stop this train; I want to get out," trampled the feet of his lellow passengers sidSiwung his arms in a Third avenue - strain, between Houston street and the Cooper Institute. Parted pairs of country- .-jnen tacked across the tracks at the station, fan3'oth:ersblockaded the passage ways as theyEclaBiored for tickets to the special placesthey wanted to go to. "'tVcll Pnld for Getting TJp Early. But our guests were well repaid for their early rising. In all the Uptown streets they tsaw the shapely arms and jeweled fingers of our graceful housewives, festooning their P.--"" t,-- jv..reiiiii. u UI bunting; thpy saw the menservants of the rich put out the storm-belated flags; they saw the chromatic figures of the hurrying soldier, and the gilt and feathers of the proud staff officers already hastening to quarters. But of all the city's achievements, what she did in the way of decoration was most to be dwelt upon with the eye and with mental satisfaction. In the past, on occa sions of jubilee or grief, we have capari- ;eu our nouses mainly on the principal cets, but to-day there is .no section so !r remote from the actual scene of scelebratioa that it does not vie with all rf-K$ Edition. -; ; f " r i. The D-' .INAUGURAL tnytheiror. the others in the glory of its decking. If there is an exception it is the case of Broad way. That makes A Poor and Inadequate Display. "We lave long known by the signs that reach from the City Hall to Thirty-fourth street, that this majestic artery has passed into the bands of men of foreign birth, but we never knew until to-day that they were deficient in loyalty or parsimonious in tne expression ot it For brilliancy, for actual outlay, for fervent co-operation with the people, lower Broadway, where the old cor porations of the city are, was the banner street of the town in this holiday movement. One other thing that did us no credit onr guests also saw. That was the series of arches put up by vthe city. .Elizabeth had none so shabby; a "Western boom town might have been expected to do better. These arches were at the foot ofWall street and at Twenty-fifth and Twenty-third streets and Broadway. They were small, cheap and either inartistic or hideous. The one at the foot of "Wall street, a shell of canvas dotted with shields and hung with mere ropes of bunting, does not become a great city. The one at Twenty-sixth street, distinguished by Drunken Pasteboard Soldiers, would be refused by the manager of a Bowery theater if a scene painter offered it there. The one noble, imposing and beautiful arch is that at the foot of Fifth avenue. It was designed by Mr. Stanford White, and even he may well be proud of it. But the town asva whole never was so gay, and as the tresh west wind raced the streets and set all the ends and loops and folds of bunting snapping and fluttering, and stretched each flag out rigid from its pole, the sight was beautiful. Combined with the gaudy trimming here and there were thousands of portraits of "Washington, and these were so varied and so extraordinary as to demand a passing mention. Their vari ety reminded one of what Mark Twain said of the pictures of the apostles, when he went abroad and found the saints all German in Germany, all French in France, and all Spanish in Spain. Here there were "Wash ington to suit every taste, "Washingtons of every nationality. Now and then one was seen that the rain had partially dissolved, so that the austere features of the great leader took on a bibulous and disorderly air. The movement of tbo Multitude in the streets all the morning was toward the Battery, tempered with an indefinable current towaVd the river sides and the heart of the city. Hour after hour the tide on Broadway set strongly toward the city's float, and hour after hour the elevated trains of all the lines discharged their crowds at the Battery, Hanover square and Rector street Every glimpse of either river front disclosed the piers and the ship ping all gay with colors, and nature lent her aid in the parks and churchyards with the vivid green of the crass plats and trees and shrubs bursting into bud and leaf and blossom. The people themselves caught the infec tion. Ours is the only nationality in the world that does not confine fine dress to the rich, and in to-day's crowds all were in their best apparel. The women, with that graceful instinct that glorifies the sex, wore pretty bows of red, white and blue, and pinned badges upon their children, so that they were to be considered with the military, as enhancing the gayety of every scene. HID HEESELF HEOHD. The Old Town of Elizabeth GWes New Yorkers Pointers on tbe Art of Decorat ing and Building Arches His tory a Trifle Oat of Date. "When 8 o'clock was reached the prelimi nary celebration at Elizabeth was well under way. Historically, it should have taken place six days ago, for it was on April 23, 1789, that George "Washington stopped at the ancient burgh and was enter tained by Elias Boudinot, of the Centen nial Congress, and by the people. But all things, even history, has bent to the plans of onr committees. President Harri son made "Washington's long journey in one night, and this morning before 720 he was in Elizabeth, where the people lined the sidewalk and about 4,000 men were in parade ranks. He and the Vice-President, the Chief Justice, and Justices Blatchford and Field, rode to the house of Governor Green on Cherry street amid the ringing of the church bells, the cheering ot the people, and the salutations of cannon. The Hon. John Keen took the members of the Cabinet to his historic old house, that was so famous in "Washington's day. The Cabinet members, justices," and the rest of the official party, came together in a splen did train of palace coaches. Parade Reviewed by tbo President. After the breakfast at Governor Green's the President took his place at about 9 o'clock on a reviewing stand before the Governor's house, and there saw more than half the procession. "When this part had gone by he entered a carriage and followed the other marching men past the other paraders drawn up in Una on either side of the road. It was a notable display. Four companies of the Third Regiment of New Jersey troops led the van; then 2,000 men of the Grand Army, and then the Odd Fellows, members of the United Order of American Me chanics, the PlattdeuUchers, Knights of Pythias in uniform. Knights of St John, and 13 boys in Centennial uniform. Then came the Hibernians, 600 strong, and last of all the farmers, descendants of those who had met "Washington at "Wheatsheaf, a cen tury and six davs before. These farmers were now dressed as Continental soldiers, as Indians, as boys going to mill, as old time farmers with scythes and sickles, hoes and rakes, and they carried with them floats on which were scenes representative ot Old-Time Pleasures and Duties. such as spinning the wheel and sleighriding with a troup of merry folk in a very ancient sleigh drawn by four horses. This Eliza bethan feature of the great spectacle was more unique than anything New York had to show, and not less interesting. "When President Harrison reached the cross roads, half way to Elizabethport, he had to pass under a most beautiful arch of triumph, one that would make us New Yorkers blush for the bad taste of our serv ants could ve all haveseen it It istalled the "Living Arch," because it was so cov ered with beautiful girls in white as to seem to have been formed of young maidens. They represented the States and Territories. They carried banners, and when the Presi dent was directly beneath them they flung down upon him a great store of roses, in sin gle blossoms and in bunches.' A city of that size that could spend $5,000 in decorations may well be imagined to have looked gay, and so it did. From its house balconies to the top of the old First Church, where a steeple climber had put up some great flaes, the old town lanehed with joyous emblems of its patriotic thanks giving. THE PRESIDENT ABOARD THEDI8PATCH. Ho Takes a Dose of Qnlnlne to Prevent Having Chill. "When the President reached the water side and went Into the Alcyon Boat Club house, he saw the water seemingly in motion 5 .SSte .V-' !;. '.- Sfc. M wmpwm am with a multitude of small craft, while the air was rent with acclamations and rejoic ings measured only by steam, valves. The Dispatch lay out in the deeper channel, at Shooter's Island, and the President was taken to it in a small boat The great "Washington made the journev to New York in a barge, royally furnished with a crimson canopy. Sloops bore down upon his'boat with companies of singing men and women, and the water was dotted with sailing craft Only one man-of-war, the Galveston, of .the Spanish navy, was there to lend the tnunder of her guns. President Harrison's grand entree was differently ordered. Even in the trifling matter of weather the occasion differed, for "Washington came to town oh a bright and golden day, when the sky was cloudless, the sun was radiant, and the then pure waters of the harbor were as clear and green as emerald. Reception on tbe President's Boat. "When the President and Vice President reached the "Dispatch in the Alcyon's barge, - - Hsk 4& a A t A 1 JlLj yr "' ms1 iisssWWffBsffl'iWiFT''. ' t 'ltI I UH JvU MsPfoJ IIP r siln I ft BBry W PWVi - - r? s the wAsnixGTOir arch at fiith avenue and Washington SQUAEE Drawn by Charla Graham for Harper's Weekly. the former was received at the gangway by Mr. Jackson S Schultz, on behalf of the Committee on Navy, without any remarks further than a respectful salutation and greeting. Mr. Schultz introduced the Presi dent to the other members of the committee, and the President was then escorted to the main deck by Messrs. Gerry and Bo wen, Chairman and Secretary of the Executive Committee, and presented to the several members of the party on board. The same routine was carried out in the 'reception of Vice President Morton. On the Dispatch, beside those named above, on the trip to the city, were the members of the Committee on Navy, in whose technical charge the ship was;" Gov ernor David B. Hill, Mayor Hugh J. Grant, Admiral David D.Porter, GeneralJohn M. Schofield, Secretary Tracy and his son Frank, Secretary Proctor, Secretary Noble, Attorney General Miller, General Sherman, Commodore Bamsey, of the navy yard, and James M. Barnum of the Plan and Scope Committee. Mr. Ilarrison Tnkcs a Little Quinine. There was a little delay in getting the Dispatch under way, a part of which Presi dent Harrison utilized in securing a dose of quinine, as a preventive against possible harm resulting from the exposure on the bay. He was not in any way uncomforta ble, despite the fact that his overcoats had become "shifted" at Elizabeth, and his heavy winter garment, which he needed now if ever, was then on its peaceful way to the Fifth Avenub Hotel, and buttoned around him was a lighter weight for protec tion against the mild breezes, on land, of spring and falL CEOWDS AND CEOWBS. Multitudes Congregate nt the Lower End of the Busy City to Welcome tho Presi dent Roofs, Streets and Side walks Packed With Peo ple An Impressive Scene. Let us return to the metropolis and see what the people were at in the busy city, while Yankee Doodle was on his glorious way to town, impersonated by the chief magistrate. "Wall street and lower Broad way were the chosen places for the now swarming multitude to congregate in, and the people were now coming not only from TOE MARINE PAGEANT OT 1SS9 PRESIDENT HARBISON SANDING IN NEW YORK. the upper city but from Brooklyn, Long Island, New Jersey and Staten Island, and they were coming as the waters come in a thunder shower or as autumn leaves fall in an October gale. Never was any street in this city so near ly curtained with radiant bunting as was Wall street The biggest flags the people ever saw were those that the sailors hung before the Custom House, And yet many other buildings were almost as nearly hid den behind similar gay holiday clothing. From the fluttering colors on the "Ward Line pier, at the foot ot the street, to the gaudy drapery at the doors of Trinity Church, was one continuous fluttering, bellying, brilliant, almost flaming mass of color. The magnificent horses of the mounted police, the first cavalry horses in the town, were all tethered in front of the Custom House, each with an impressive night-stick sheathed on the saddle, and officers stood near by white-gloved, freshly-shaven, and prepossessing. Somo of tho Street "Scenes. It was 9 o'clock and the streets were humming with the cries of the1 curbstone peddlers selling programmes, inedals, flags, .A. a. a. . , PITTSBURG, TUESDAY, pigs-m-clover boxes, sandwiches and whiti ever they fancied the crowds could be in duced to buy. But the one notable, im pressive and. extraordinary feature of the morning was in progress of development It was the massinir of a multitude upon the housetops and the "wharfroofs and the pier ends, wnen all nad taken tneir piuces, rmmanitv formed a nvrflmid at the Battery. The crowds rose up irom sidewalk to bal conies, from balconies to windows, from windows to roofs, from roofs to towers, then1 down again to the sidewalks on the other side of town a huge moving wedge of mea and women uplifted against the sky. The best of all these picantio niles for sightseeing was Cyrus w. Field's "Wash- jngion ouiimng, ut uie corner ueiwccu uo Bowling Green and Battery Park. Mr. Field neoDled its roof with invited guests. supplied with numbered tickets, and iur nished with step-like stands facing the narnor. An Unobstructed View Obtainable. From this building the view was unob- structed in all directions. The North river the East river and the upper bay, the Nar rows, Brooklyn, New Jersey, and even the distant Highlands, all were in plain sight Next to being in a balloon, it was best to have a seat on the roof of the Field build ing. The sight from there was at once glo rious, imposing and beautiful. The gathering of the people hour after hour from daylight Until noon was a move ment that history will take note of. Xet us not waste time In" noting its development, but leap at once to the moment when the crowd was the greatest, just when, at 11:45 o'clock, the gun on a naval tusr at the month of the Kill yon Kull told of the arrival of the President on the D4spatch, at the edge of the bay. Then it might be soberly said that the upper air above the city was densely peopled. The unprivileged, happy-go-hazard crowd at large bad chosen the Battery sea wall as the best public vantage ground for viewing the water spectacle. On that fringe of pave ment, between the water and the green grass plaU of the park, 10,000 men, women and children stood seven or eight rows deep, tip toeing to see over one another's shoulders, and moving about difficultly in vain efforts to improve their facilities. From far above they looked for all the world Liko Ants in a Swarm. Beyond them Castlo Garden's roof was crowded, and beyond that the grass on Gov ' ernor's Island and the parapet on Castle "William was crowded with sightseers. There were other crowds on the Army building, on the Cotton Exchange, and on some old-time storehouses between the two. There were stands heavily laden with people on the Cheseborough building and the Field building, and the roof of the "Welles build ing was black with men and women. There were a few persons in the Produce Exchange tower, but tho great roof of that structure was bare. The Tost building was the scene of another mass meeting. In short, wherever there was standing room and safety there were throngs of sight seers. But no matter where the people con gregated, bunting flew above them all. The city was fenced in with bunting. Nearly all the ships were glorious with the flags'of all nations, and with the standard used in the international code system of signaling. From the tallest masts and the shortest, and from those that had spars and those that had none, the strings of flags were dis played, while every boat that floated on the waters otforged through them was gorgeous with colors. x JHE NAUTICAL SHOW. A Scene That Surpasses Description The Greatest Marine Display Ever Seen Erenln Now York How the Illcn-of-War Showed Up. "Who that did not witness the scene can appreciate what it was?The common fancy must have free rein to comprehend it, for description will not suffice. New York had before this- appreciated the advantage she enjoys as the largest of our ports for nautical spectacles. "We had a great marine display in May, 1883, at the opening of the Brook lyn bridge, and in November of the year, when we celebrated the evacuation of the city by the British.- But they were trifling displays beside this. They were like the efforof a giant who playfully tries his btreqjh before he realizes What it is. Iifthe earlyv morning the daylight re- veNed the men-of-war and "revenue cutters , atneaorea in a long line from a point off the - V APRIL $30. 1889. Battery to a distance of ,2W miles down the bay". They presented an imposing effect, but were destined ,-to be belittled by the mercantile disnlav thxtw.tftafterw&rdmade. It was fitting that this should be the case iu an effort of the kind by a country so pacific as our own. But the men-of-warwere'proud oojects, for all that The War Ships In Line. In the line were the Bewcruiser Chicago, the old Kearsarge, the Essex, ihe Brooklyn, the new cruiser Atlanta, the Jamestown, the Juniata, the Yorktowh, and the new cr.uiser Boston. All were trimmed with rainbow linra of colors from their bows to a poigt abft "their "sterns, where the colors dipped'intd the water. The new -vessels, though only .cruisers, were iall larger than the fighting ships of the war epoch. They had a modern, stately manner, impres sive, trim and" soldier-like, if the term may be used. Theirnewness shone, in every line of their construction, in every flag, in every finishing touch of color or of bright work. Among them all the Boston, furthest away thoqgh she was, was distingushed by her color or absence of it, for she was white while all the others were black. The cutters Grant.of New York; Gallatin, of Boston; Dexter, of Newport; McLane aud Ewing, of Baltimore, and the boarding tugs Manhattan, Chandler and "Washington, of New York, steamed alone behind the war ships, veering from one position to another with the changing tide. The schoolship St Mary's was anchored in the East river, between the Battery and Governor's Island. She was as gay with flags as her sister ships, buther bunting rose from the water before ber, and, rising over her three masts, fell only to her stern rail. An Admirable Admlrnl. The big blue admiral's flag, with a white anchor in a ring of stars, floating from the Chicago's mainpeak, showed that Admiral Jouett was aboard her, to whom be all credit for what is to follow here respecting the great water display; for, though Ad miral Porter was nominally in charge, the work of superintending and devising the great spectacle fell to the hands of "Fighting Jim Jouett" Of all the ancestries we are boasting just now in the city and nation at large, scarcely any is more noble than his, for he was born of a race of fighting seamen who made their records under the Stars and Stripes. James Edward Jouett himself has been in thenavy since 1841, when he was 13 years old. He was twice wounded in Galveston harbor, and his ship, the Metacomet, was lashed to Farragut s frigate, the Hartford, iu Mobile Bay, where he shared in the greatest naval fight we had made since Perry's battle on Lake-Erie. It has been said byne deep thinker that the purpose of civilization Is for every man to find some else to do his work, and in obedience to- this economic principle Ad miral Jouett turned the mercantile part of the display over to Mr. O. "W, "Woolsey, the Superintendent of the Hoboken ferries. An Idea of tbo Immensity. "When it is considered that to-day's water display included 1,000 vessels, and was participated in by more than 20,000 souls actually on the water, its immensity will be appreciated. The scene of preparation for the gigantic steam parade was so lively and of such mul tiform parts that the bay was literally alive with boats; not alive, as is a fish well on a Nantucket smack after a successful cruise, but the next thing to that There was no confusion, but every channel was strained to facilitate the passage of the boats to their anchorages. Down the North river came the stately steamboats, high-walled and white, and many windowed. Down the East river raced the steam yachts, deer-like in swift ness, arrow like in build. Bobbing to and fro between the Battery and the war ships were numberless launches and oared barges, the latter brineintr realisti- leally to mind the boat in.whicfu the father ui luovuuuuv uittuc uia iriuuipuai progress to this capital. The little vessels tossed like corks upon the hfgh waves. The sky was still overcast, and the wind was fresh and free to a sailor's nicety. Now and then the channel between the city and Governor's Island Would be All Cluttered With Boats, and in all the channels all the vessels were making toward the lee front of Staten Island to gradually fill that offing with boats as J with a thousand islands. Threading their war among them all were the ferryboats, and lumbering clumsily beside the rest were seen lighters and float ing derricks and tall grain elevators and high bare-pro wed steam lighters. Behind the long, impressive line of warships were the sailing yachts, bare-poled and idle and out of the way. In the cluster of steamboats at the other end of the bay the signal boats and flag boats shot to and fro like water spiders, turning the officers of the parade into marine cavalrymen. One tug was missing. It was that of the Dispatch. That busy boat was with the President in the Kill Von Kull. But on the other boats, sprinkled all over the harbor, was the omnipresent Dispatch reporter, so that nothing could be missed by the public, happen what may. At 10:15 the sun shone out warm and glorious. The clouds flew away and dried up. The day became perfect At 12:45 o'clock a distant gun announced the arrival of the Dispatch at the loner end of the upper bay. The gun sounded Like a Cork Palled In a Napkin. In another few moments the Presidental procession was seen coming into the thick of the fleet of vessels, through which a road- -way had been left. The Dispatch loomed above every other boat, and outshone them all in the glory of her bunting, which was Lhung not only fore and alt, but from rail to rail pver the mastheads in both directions. The great blue flag of the President waved above others, an indigo field with an eagle in its center and a shield of red and white stripes on the breast of the bird whose feet clutch a spray of laurel and a bunch of arrows. This flag, totally unfamiliar to most Americans, is said to have been de signed by President Arthur. Following the President were the police boat Patrdl, the press boat Laura M. Starin, the Crystal "Wave, tho J. B. Schuyler, The Dispatch tugt the Sirus, with the official ladies of "Washington, the Maine and the Monmouth, with the Governors and the State representatives aboard. The'peopleof some ot these boats crowded forward to see the sights until one or two of the biggest boats seemed about to go down bow first. A Noise John Adams Wonld Ilnve Liked. "With the appearance of the Dispatch arose a noise that would delight the heart of old John Adams, who believed that patriot ism could be well expressed with cannon and crackers. Every whistle valve was opened, and above every vessel arose a cloud of steam. Presently the Dispatch passed the last of the revenue cutters, and began the review of the naval parade. Then from side to side of each boat was seen a belch ing of flame and smoke, followed by the resonant boom of a cannon. The starboard guns were heari in NewjYork instantly, but the noise of the port firing had to travel to New Jersey and rebound before the citv heard them. Each vesseUfired the Presi dental salute, last of all the Chicago. Then Castle William chimed in with her pop guns, aud while they were banging at the city the schoolship St. Mary's ended -he noise with her saluting howitzers. As each ship was passed the colors were dipped. Before that the tars' who had been clustered at the mastheads spread apart over the yards and stood like heavy black railings above the'decks, TJp the North River to Wall Street. The JSattery was reached at 12:25, under brilliant sunshine. Then, the Dispatch turned and went up the North river, but at the mouth ot it she halted, with the effect of halting all her escort and literally filling the narrow water with boats. At this moment the President, seeing the" (Continuedvn seventh jpagtTj ,v . .. THE BALL OF BAILS Forms an Appropriate Close to .the First Day's Exercises of TSE INAUGURATION CENTENNIAL. A Mammoth Opera House Transformed info a Magnificent Ballroom. THE DEC0KATI0HS EEAIJjI ESQUISITEi Too Many People Present tat tbe Danelng to to a Com plete Success, As a fitting finale to the first day's exer cises of the Washington Inauguration Cen tennial the ball at the, Metropolitan Opera House was a perfect success. There were too many people present, for dancing to be very agreeable, but all enjoyed themselves looking at the flowers, sights, notable peo ple present, fine dresses and beautiful ISPECIAL T1I.EOIUM TO TRS DISFATC1I.1 New York, April 29. To "a man who adores women the Metropolitan Opera House to-nigbt was elysium; to a tufthunter, cur rying the favor of the great, it was a seventh heaven of delight; to an artist it was a masterpiece of graceful form and glorious color; to the seeker for novelty it was the great event of a lifetime; to womeu who appreciate the courtly graces and the homage of man it was like a dream; to the truly great it was the richest vellum bound book of human nature that a Catesby ever studied or a Gortschakoff ever mastered. In a phrase, it was indeed the ball of the century. The time for opening the Opera House was 9 o'clock. At that hour upper Broad way was packed with people who told each other that Daly's was a waxworks museum, who asked the conductors whether the Brooklyn bridge was further up town or where it was, and with men in the attire of gentlemen who behaved in such a way as to call for eulogies on their capacities from the sporting gentlemen who usually rendez vous at Twenty-eighth street and Broadway. ALL GOIXQ ONE WAY. At this time the whole east side of the great artery was occupied by two lines of carriages moving slowly at a caterpillar pace toward the Opera House. The faint lights of the pole-denuded thoroughfare threw into the carriage windows pale gleams that revealed dimpled arms and shoulders weighted with gems beside impa tient male faces behind the plate-glass win dows of the vehicles. On opera nights and ball nights in the past there have been scores of carriages, but here were hundreds of them, hundreds in each of the two .lines, and the lines moving at snail paces, for it was the one unique, colonial, unparalleled ball of our day that their precious loads of wealth and intellect, beauty and grace were destined for. The Opera House had grown to meet the occasion. Its front had been pushed out upon the sidewalk of Broadway; its lower side covered Thirty-ninth street with A gigantic framework of raw pine. PICKETS TAKElt At IHE CUBB.' v ? At the very curbstone men In evening dress were standing to take the tickets of the carriage passengers, and of the pedes trians who came by car and train, and fought their way-past the police to get there. Men pushed one another and women walked on the long trains of their sisters. The men were coated to the chin, and but for their fresh shaven faces, would have looked as they do on 'Change and in their offices, but tne women were enveloped in cloaks of the richest fabrics, iu shawls of historic make and fab ulous value. They were all bareheaded, or if their coiffured tresses were hidden un der airy mantillas of lace or worsted, there was a glint and sheen of jewelry under those coverings. At short intervals men were stationed with orders to direct the men to the cloak rooms, and there were appreciated anew tbe marvelous dimensions of this social tri umph, whose creator, Mr, Ward McAUiste -, was too proud to distinguish, after his shabby treatment by the tyros who tried to take his scepter from him, but who CROWNED HIM WITH A CORONET in doing so. The original lobbies of the Opera House, now far too small for this great ball, were transformed into. bowers of greenery and flowers. The doorways were framed with arbor vitro and hemlock, and all about the intervening spaces and the walls were the flowers of the olden time, hydrangeas, daisies, the lilium longifolium a'nd azaleas. Beyond these green and gaudy halls was the great auditorium of the theater, now including the stage, the largest in the country, but looking very small at the time, so crowded did the people make it who came to the grandest ball of the century. The rear end of the stage ended with a row of five boxes, which have been de scribed as thrones, but which are simply pretty boxes, fronted with red plush the central one, for the President being decked .with a brass stencil of the name of Washington, and capped by a banneret in imitation of theofficialflagoftheExecutive. Every box was two stories in height, and all were Jor the ever-present and far-from-mod-est committeemen, for the diplomats who wisely absented themselves alter the snubbing they got, and for the higher officials of the army, navy, higher grades of the civil service, and the State militia. 10T8 OF FLOWERS AND LIGHTS. - At the sides of the stage were curtains of flags and piles ot hydrangeas; overhead were brilliant clusters of hanging lights and a mass of 100 doves pinioned to vines, to be let down in a" sweeping curve over the heads of tbe people when the President should arrive. The ceiling of the auditorium had be come a mere starting point for a mass of broad ribbons of bunting of the national colors, reaching down to the topmost gal lery. The faces of the three upper galleries were illuminaeed with .clusters of flags and the coats of arms of the States on shields. With rare taste the gasaliers here and there on the gallery fronts were backed by flags, the red and white of which threw forth the light with brilliancy. The lower partiere of boxes was looped with gar lands of roses, and every gallery was hung with royal red plush. Never before was there such elaborate decorations of an American ballroom. The habitues of the Opera House would not have recognized it It was transformed for the greatest ball of the century. WHENVTHE CRUSH CAME. The crush came first at the door, but pres ently it extended to the ballroom itself. It was said that instead of 6,000 persons there were 10,000 present They kept on pack ing, packing, packing upon the floor until it was all but impossible to move about Then there filed in a squad of signal men of tbe State militia and Chief Signal Offi cer C. Stanton (otherwise and at other times the director of the opera") commanded them, arranging them in a line across the stage, in front of the private boxes. Next hq appeared with a company of artillery, and they formed a double file down the I auditorium, leaving a long paseage walled T ' 6 V. in by their sabers, np which the Prei was to pass. At 10:40 o'clock the trumpeters of IvJa Second Rattan? nntsirlA in tTi Tn?n inrk. S ridor. sent up a shrill melody, and the sharp jj. . i --"""I v "" ', rapping of the batons of the band lead ers followed. The bands in the upper tiers were alert in an instant, and when the trumpeters sent up a second bugle-like strain, the bands crashed out in, unison with the Washington March. THE PRESIDENT'S PARTS' ARRIVES. In a moment the Presidental party was on its way up the long lane of palpitating and gorgeously attired humanity. The cavalrymen bad their swords at present, and were as straight as arrows. The programme of the Presidental party was carried out to the letter. They appeared in this order: The Mayor, the President the Governor, the Vice President and Mrs. Harrison, the' Lieutenant Governor and Mrs, Morton, the President of the General Committee and Mrs. Jones. They Went immediately to their boxes.and two minutes later thedanceTsmthe Quadrille d'Honenr marched through the lane of beautiful women and their eecorts. On reaching the cleared space in front of the President's box they all bowed low and tbe President stepped out on the velvet steps to recipro cate the greeting. There, was a great deal of bowing, and the jam was increasing every moment Lander's orchestra played the opening bars of the quadrille at five minntes to 11. The tune was the "Declar ation quadrille," and it took just 18 min utes to execute the two figures that were danced. , PIOUEES OP THE DANCE. Standing in two lines, lengthwise of the stage and facing each other, the couples saluted, walked forward and back, then crossing hands with their partners, they balanced across and back. The second figure was tho simple "ladies' chain." Every body expected they would dance at least four figures, but there was such a crowd waiting to dance that those in the quadrille did not care to deprive them of the pleas ure longer than needed, that practically ended the dancing. The thousands of gallants and diamond decked ladles on the great ballroom floor broke through the wall of cavalrymen. The break was for the President's box. Every body wanted to see Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Morton. They stood the battery of eyes quite complacently, and were soon joined by President Harrison and his wife. Joseph Cho'ate, Colonel's. V. Cruger and Amass J. Parker, Jr. The President and Vice Presi dent and their wives chatted with their visitors and were particularly cordial in their bearing to Governor Hill and. Mayor Grant COSTUMES OF THE TiADTTA Mrs. Harrison, of course, attracted much attention. She "looked well and happy. Her dress was of heavy gros grain, cut with a Princesse train. The waist was trimmed with pearl and silver, the cor sage being filled with gauze, held in place with ostrich feathers, as was also the skirt. The front embroidery of the skirt was in a Grecian key pattern, worked in silver and pearls, meet ing panels of silver brocade and feathers, and a shower of silver ornaments fell from the skirt The most notable figure in the quadrille was Mrs. Levi P. Morton, the wife of the Vice President. Her costume was of heavy white brocade silk, the design being very ancient Clusters of pinks and wild straw berries were halt hidden behind festoons of lilacs, fringed with yellow interwoven in the material. The empire coat fronts were of lilac silk, falling over a princesse front of white crepe delisse. The corsage was of the brocade, trimmed with lilac, broad sash ends of the lilac silk being fastened to the back. i WY. tn KTnA7iTnrijin nn nnn T,ArJia tracted more" attention than -MrsTWilliaia Astor, and it was probably the valne and brilliancy of her diamonds that formed the basis of the attraction. THE CLEVELANDS APPEAR. All this time the bands were going through the list of dances. Nobody thought of dancing. It was simply out of the ques tion. Just before midnight Grover Cleveland, with Mrs. Cleveland and Mrs. Folsom and Colonel D. S. Lamont and Mrs. Lamont, entered the big box above Presi dent Harrison's. Mrs. Cleveland wore white silk, decollette, and diamonds. The ex-Fresidcnt's box immediate ly became an interesting spot, and while Dr. Depew and Mrs. Depew were downstairs, chatting with President Harri son and their circle, Governor Fitzhugh Lee and his staff and others made the box one of the loveliest in the Opera House. The Second Battery was summoned to clear a path to the dining room. Soon the gaudily-garbed soldiers came down with sabers at shoulder arms. In double file they cut Through the crush, and presently divided the assem-i blage on the first floor into parts. The .swath they made was over the middle aisle of seats, and at 11:48 President Harrison and Mrs. Morton led the way to the supper room. Behind them walked Mr. Morton and Mrs. Harrison, Mavor Grant and Mrs. Tracy, Governor Hill and Mrs. Pruvn, of Albany, Commodore Gerry and Mrs. Jones, Secretary Tracy and Mrs. McKee. TOO MANY PRESENT- TO EAT. It was in the dining-room as in the ball room. A crowd packed Itself at the dais where the highly honored guests sat Not even the soldiers could keep the curious back. At 12:40 the President and Mrs. Harrison left the ball and went home to Mr. Morton's house, escorted by mounted police men. The great event of the evening was after the Harrison party had gone to supper. Then Mrs. Cleveland, escorted by Judge. Howland, came through the crowd at the stage end of tbe house. She was observed, and immediately there was tremendous ap plause. It was a splendid ovation which was given her, and was the feature of the night The dancing began immediately after Mrs. Cleveland had passed from the hall, and was kept up until daylight dawned. A CHURCH SPLIT. Members of a Cleveland Episcopal Church Srcedo to the Reformed Church. 'tcvTrtlT. TXLXOBAU TO TBI DISPATCH.! Cleveland, April 29. Cleveland will soon have a parish of the Beformed Episco pal Church with about 150 members, who have left the Protestant Episcopal Church, on account of a split in their congregation. Some time ago Kev. B. T. Noakes, pastor of the Emmanuel Episcopal Church, a Euclid avenue congregation of the fashionable East End, was compelled to resign his charge on account ot a strong feeling against his low church tendencies, together with Eersonal objections on this account. One undred and fifty of Dr. Noakes' parishion ers went with him, anil after a number of meetings held in an armory and at resi dences and any place at all suitable for services, it was decided to form a new con gregation to be know as the Church of the Epiphany. A wrangle then arose as to the boundary lines of the new congregation, and the trouble was submitted to tbe stand ing committee of the diocese of Ohio. The decision of the committee was unfa vorable to the new church, and as a result the Epiphany people have renounced the Protestant Episcopal Church and resolved to join the Beformed Episcopal Church. Dr. Noakes and Mr. B. C. Field, one of the church members, have gone to Chicago to inform Bishop Sweeney, of the Beformed Episcopal Church, of the news, and to re quest all the necessary instruction, informa tion and papers of alliance. The Beformed Episcopal Church was the outcome of a split in the Protestant Episcopal Church about ten years ago. It has about a dozen parishes throughout the country, and will now be represented. here, 5p The Washington CwiteimiaJ. THSDBFATCKsas perfected arrssgeaeBts ' for a complete account of .the CenteaBlai exercises la New York during the present- week. Sou Vim at Edition next Wednesday morning. v- THREE I kiw 's--i i r v-1-"., -' AJ JiPITTSBtJUG PATRIOT V : ' n Q &. X'W 'G y PoyS in Blue Of TIliS Eltt 01 tt" Wstate Permit Notkius - NVk EXCEIaW STAKS AND STEIPM To Ploat on the Breeze at -theig Ceitem nial Celebration. )j TWO'ESGLIStt ILAGS BD0N 10 WI A Woman Wis the Only Person to OStx Any OljeettM 1 to the Deed. -A squad of the Pittsburg militia jester? daylowered two English, flags which were conspicuous in the Centennial decoration at New York. The action attracted a largo crowd, which enthusiastically cheered th operation. A woman was the only one te appeal in behalf of the objectionable as sign. - fSPZCXU. tzxxorax to im DISPATCH.! New York, April 29. The citiMS soldiery of Pittsburg and"Westem Pennsyl vania generally succeed in distinguishing -themselves when abroad, but to-day they attracted more attention than is usual even for them. They have -at least impressed upon the citizens and visitors of this city the fact that they are most- intensely American, and profoundly devoted to the star-spangled banner. '.'If you will go down in Worth street, near Elm,'' said Steve Brodie to a reporter this afternoon, "you will get a good story full of patriotism, though perhaps in a mis guided direction." A few questions by the reporter elicited the details, as far as he was able to give them, of a story very much out of the usual run. "I was made acquainted with Sergeant Kitsley, I believe his name is, of the Pitta burg militia visiting New York, and a num ber of his men called at my place this morn ing when they were sight-seeing. They asked me to show them around a little, and of course I was ready to oblige them. 1 took them out through theTJoweryand down as far as Worth street, and after going with them as far as Centex street I bade them good morning, and returned to my place. I'm sorry now that 1 didn't stay with them, for Jf"I had I could have pre vented a not I had not reached the Bow ery on my way back when X saw that some thing was wrong with the soldi rs. CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE. "They had stopped between Elm and Center streets, on the south side of Worth, and were calling to some one in one of tho houses. A crdwd collected, and the gamins in the streets commenced to throw stones at the windows. I ran back as soon asl could, and there I saw the cause of the trouble. An English flag about 8 feet long was float ing from a shop window above an Ameri can flag of smaller dimensions, "This is what had angered the blue coats. But I've fold you enough; go down ther? and get it for yourself, and when you have finished at the first place go a block further and you'll strike another story of the same sort'' Armed with the factsas far as related; the reporter went to-Worth street, and by inquiry found thatthe first place where the Pittsburg soldiers had stopped was the fac tory "and dwelling rooms of J. EyieS, a manufacturer of coat and cloak racks. Tho building is 122 Worth street, and is three stories in height. The office door ws locked, bnt from inquiries in the neighbor hood among eyewitnesses to the small-sized riot that had taken place there a short time before, the statements of Mr. Brodie were fully verified and added to. ON FIRST SIGHT. Said one workman who was employed in a looking-glass factory, two doors below the place in question: "I was working here when tbe soldiers came up. There's a bloody British flag,' says one of them. 'Let's taKe it down or make them do it,N said another, and then they commenced to call to the people in the house. Of course that ciused every small boy in the neigh borhood to rush to Ithe scene, and in less time than it 'takes to tell it the street wa3 full. "Every mother's son in that crowd was American to the backbone, and they yelled and hooted at tbe English flag, and de manded that it be taken down. The ser geant in command ot the soldiera acted in a very quiet and orderly manner. He re quested Mr. rfyles to remove the flag, or at least to place it below the Stars and Stripes; "ihisAtr. Jiyies seemed wining to do when he saw .that the flag was obnoxieus to his neighbors, but his wife, I suppose it was, refused to permit him to touch it Well, to cnt the story short, the soldiers stripped the rag off the pole quicker than ever it was put on, and in less than a minute it was on the ground trampled under foot A WORD OF PRAISE. "Meanwhile some of the gamins in the street threw stones and broke a few small panes of glass,rand they only stopped whea ' a woman bearing a baby in her arms ap peared at one ot the windows. The soldiers did right, and it did me good to see it" Across the street from the Eyles place some workmen were found making packing boxes. One of them was willing to tell all he knew about the affair. "I was working here, this afternoon when the soldiers came along. They were not intoxicated, nor were they disorderly in any way. They saw the flag which had been noticed by many of the residents about here, and I wouldn't be sur prised to know that some of the business men in tbe street here told them about it "They asked that it be taken down, and their request was refused. They argued the matter for a minute or two, and then a crowd collected. Mrs. Eyles or some other women in the house refused to allow them to touch the English flag, but when they drew their knives and went after it no one made the slightest resistance. CHEERED BY THE CROWD. "When the flag came down the people cheered and every one was glad of it It did me more good than finding a $10 bill. Those Pittsbnrgers deserve all the praise thev can get for their patriotism." "Do yon know anything abont their tak ing down a flag at another place in the street?" was asked. "Oh, yes," replied the workman, "there was a big English flag on top of the Stars and Stripes at the big store of George. T. Knight & Co., 112 Worth street, and they took that down, too. I guess they didn't have any trouble there." At the store of White & Collins, 119 Worth street.it was ascertained that Messrs. Knight & Co. were English people, al though they had been in business iaNew York for years, and are in the highest standing. They flung an English flag te the breeze simply as a decoration, and had no idea it wonld be offensive to any one. As soon as the soldiers requested that thev take it down they complied gracefully and the soldiers and publio outside in the streets were satisfied. As the sdldiers passed on toward Broad way and disappeared from sight they were roundly cheered. Consratalatloas from Great BrHata. London, April 30. Beferring ,; Washington inaugural Celebration, the Daily Telegraph says: "From no quarter of the globe will heartier coagratmlatioaa uiau uiwt iriiam go to Aaenea," s 'H 1 If M- " -V. . ' &.- ' teiteLN. si- .!&.. s-fteSf sssssHsssKlsssssssl PEiM