picaa-iii x u«ca iitrn IU CUt UU tiitJ Olfellow.—A very interesting: contribution to Power Hall—Mr. George Gray’s department—is in the Geo. T. Smut exhibit. »It is ye old mill—a model of the oldest Irish mill In the country. This mill was built in 1784, by General James Findlay, over one hundred years ago, and is situated on Muddy Creek, at the foot of Devil’s Baek-boue, in Green Township, eight miles from Cincinnati, and is now owned and operated by Mr. A. J. K,uehn. This model was made by a son of Mr. Kuehn, at the age of eighteen years, on a scale of one inch to. the foot. It is run by water power, and shows exactly how the old patriarchs managed the milling business. To hear the creaking of the wheel and the soughing of the water over it is to be transported back to the early days.—Among the prominent visitors to the Exposition yesterday was Captain H. H. Williams, of Urbana, President of the Northwestern Ohio Volunteer Firemen’s Association. He is in conference with Commissioner Trost.