The Melbourne Centennial Exhibition was organised to celebrate a century of European settlement in Australia. The Exhibition Building, constructed in 1880 for the Melbourne International Exhibition, was extended and reused. The Centennial Exhibition focused on Australia itself, and emphasised music and painting that attracted many visitors.[2] However the Exhibition wasn't recognised by the Bureau of International Expositions as a World's Fair.
Parer & Higgins Co. paid £1250 to operate the bar and light refreshments, one of only three areas where the sale of alcohol was permitted.[3]
References
^The Argus (Melbourne, Vic.), 11 March 1889, p.6 [1]
Victorian International Exhibition of Wine, Fruit, Grain & other products of the soil of Australasia with machinery, plant and tools employed (Melbourne, 1884)
Victorians Jubilee Exhibition (Melbourne, 1885)
Jubilee Juvenile and Industrial Exhibition (Geelong, 1887)