'i- V THE HESPERIAN. WESLEYAN WINS. fifteen hundred gations nnutstd t yelU; dlfTcrcnt called the mcc gram was begun. JHBHii 0 The dlffcrlfdclc ivlnlh lyes and trn'mtdtence by gSvinglhc 4. & i ' , cheering $ ,N PrcMdenW, Baughman ting to u?ypf tAfter a short dplay 'the, jpro-. m ! OUR OWN MR. FOGARTY CLOSE SECOND. A loJ A Good Contest, a Large Crowd Present and Much Interest in toe Association Manifested Much Dissatisfaction at the Re sult The Officers for the Next Year. At last the long expected state oratorical contest has come and gone. We were beaten, according to the marks of the judges; but the sympathy and hopes of the audience were with ouc man, ifwc may judge any thing by the continuous cheer ing of the entire audience when he had finished. We arc not going to pull out of the association, however, on account of our defeat. We will try again and try to win Hexttimc. At 12:30 yesterday about 150 students headed by the baud, marched to the Elkhorn depot to meet the delegation from Gates College. The train soon arrived and the Gates people to the number of thirty were received with a continu ous roar of U u-u-ni Vcr vcr-vcrsiti Nc-braski Oh my! The two delegations then marched to the B. & M. depot, where, after a few minutes wailing, the train arrived from Crete. Here the University yell was repeated with great vigor as be . fore. But the Doanc people came provided with a yell and soon it pierced the air: Do-do-do Ra-me, Sol-sol-sol- La-sc, Do-a-n-e, Doanc! After a lew preliminaries the march was again resumed up P street to Eleventh, thence north to the University. The band led the procession and was followed by the Gates, " Doanc and University delegations in the order named. At the University the crowd was dismissed and a grand rush was made for the street cars for the Wcslcyan. Several hundred people went out during the afternoon. The principal attrac tion for many was the meeting of the delegates as it was an ticipated that a lively time would be witnessed, when it came to the election of officers. A short program had been adver tised to be held in the chapel at 4 o'clock and when that time ai rived the delegates adjourned to the Ooiophilian society hall where they finished their session. THE CONTEST. . At 7 o'clock last night the crowd began filing into Buliau an's large hall and for an .hour and a half people kept com ing. By half past eight an audience of between twelve and After an overture by the University orche:tit the 'invoca tion was offered by Professor Lowe of the Wcslcyan. Thc chairman then made the very painful announcement thnt'ow- ing to sickness Mr. Collins of Gates college would probably ...... . . .. .... - .uil not uc ai)ic 10 appear, loiter it was announccu mat iMMWas. dangerously ill, being threatened with pneumonias The Adclnhian quartette then favored the audfentftl MUttl song, "Bedouin Love Song." This was heartily receiycdby the audience and an encore was insisted on. The first orator of the evening was then announced, Mr. Geo. O. Ferguson, of the Wcslcyan. We print below his oration in full. His delivery was very mechanical, each ges ture being made just so, reminding one of high school orator ical contests. His articulation was excellent, however, and on the whole his delivery was pleasing. After another selection by the orchestra the president an nounced the man who would undoubtedly have been gircn first place by the audience, John uRogarty. Mr. Fogarty's ora tion was on "Charles Stewart Parnell." We will not attempt to give a summary of this. No summary could do this jus tice. Suffice it to My that it was one of the most splendid eulogkc ,en Panwll that has ever been heard m the city of Lincoln.- This prodactwn was strkUy attention. It did not savor of the deep sounding phdoiophy that characterized the winning oration, something too deep for the audience and the orator also. It was crisp and directly to the point. The long continued cheering after Mr. Fogarty had finished showed that he Kd"made an excellent impression on the audience and his friends were confident of success. Aftei another excellent song by the Doanc ' quartette, Mr. L. A. Turner, of Doane college was introduced. His subject was "The Redemption of Japan." This oration was a ser mon. It pictured out what Japan had been and and what it has been made by the noble efforts of the Christain mission aries. It wound up with an appeal that the Americans should extend a hand of welcome and encourage her to a place among the nations of the earth. Mr. Turner's delivery was rather mechanical, but on the whole fair. Pending the announcement of the decision of the judges Mrs. Emma D. Gregg gave a reading in a very pleasing way. The decision of the judges was then announced by Presi dent Baughman. In announcing the result he first gave Mr. Fogarty winning first place, and then after the cheering had progressed for awhile corrected himself in saying that Mr. Ferguson had won first place. Whether this was intentional or not is not known. It is to be hoped for the honor of Mr. Baughman that it was not. After the scis had tossed both Mr. Ferguson and Mr. Fogarty, the assembly dispersed and all was over. V