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BIRDS-EYE VIEW OF THE COTTON STATES AND INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION, ATLANTA, 18D5.
r UIU irAIMTIC ' PROPORTIONS XaTi
t - c ;rjn"xsh“±' -
tn-odigious enterprise with another
the same sort in less than a decade.
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UASUFACrtTKCS A Nil I.lUF.RAL AUT3. 1 *
to be a superlative audacity in the the public mi
dertakiug, and for a while
was inclined to take it as a kind of
transcendent advertisement. Very Atlan- soon,
hovrever, it was nude clear that
ta was terribly in earnest, and would
know no such word as fail.
The United States government was
asked for recognition, and when con
gross had recovered from its surprise, an
appropriation of $200,000 was made for
a building and exhibit. In the
on __ the appropriation many of the most
distinguished orators of all three politi
cal parties vied with each other in on
thusiastic commendation of the enter
Jjrise. It is said that General Coggswell
of sachusetts, itmAtlanta, who hud helped Slier
man bi had tears in his eyes
when he spoke of her resurrection, and
advocated the appropriation for a gov
ornment exhibit.
That debate and the action of the gov
ernment international placed the exposition plane, at when once
upon an and
the invitations to foreign powers were
sent out through the state department
with the commendation of the govern
rnent. they received serious considera
tion govormnents to whom thev
were addressed. Already the formal
acceptances of a number of governments
havo lieen remved and the international
character of tho exhibits is already as
eared.
President Diaz , promptly
very an
nonneed that Mexico would be repre
sented, and formal acceptances have
been received from \ euczuela audNica
ragua. favorable exhibits have
Advices to
been received from Colombia, Honduras,
Switzerland, Belgium. Liberia, the Con¬
go Free Sure, Cuba, San Domingo and
Bcnador. and
. Commissioners arc now in South
Central America and will visit Brazil,
Argentina, Chili, Peru, Bolivia, Para
guay, Uruguay, Salvador and'Costa
Rica.
The commercial journals of France
and Belgium have asked for informa
tion, and have published articles on the
* X ?he sectary
of the Spanish legation
at bn- uTitten for infor-
If ~ ':u Vity.'Lat. u i. - , ■V- , ,
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MACBINERT B4U. :
. li„lj inttn,.
® tton
who are noted for th«
of their oonsolax service,
informed of the oommerdsl
1 of the enterprise. Their
Atlanta called the attention
J5®2S toh that tw they ^. have 1 begun
aastie iaquiries look
nxm erf rfbihita.
have been made for
**■ >
make the best exhibit vet presented The by
the United States at an exposition.
gsss5s.‘t»t 'rhs
increases the height of the structure to
S^hnSu^SiT^ maSriui^^ 0
<s?w w,-2 a« h.. i8 h«
of >0d feet, will bo constructed a turret
ed tower, having at its apex a platforin the
lor the exposure of instruments of
weather bureau. An electric search
light and a time lull will be operated
by the navy department at conspicuous
jioiuts on the roof.
In the center pavilions, _ _ on, each front
of the building, are located the en
trances through arches 25 feet in width
by CO lVs-t high. Ample provision is
made for the requisite offices, toilet
rooms stairs, etc., which are all con
venicntly located in the promoting pa
vilious at tiio sides of the entrances,
thus making available the entire floor
space of the main building for the vari
ous exhibits. The roofs of the clere
ctory and towers will be supported Winter! by
of ^neat'* design, 11 ' affOrdii^au interior
vio;v „f the entire of the
building
The legislature of Georgia has now
nn der consideration an appropriation of
^ a ?p 0 00 for a state exhibit, which has
eJ1 rec bmmeuded by the finance com
’
The legislature of Louisiana, at its
Bammer s „ SMio)li provided tho southern for a state ex
an( i most of states
ar£) * 1( , cte)l t0 foltow snit .
Jt is s ., irt that tho North Carolina ex
j,j b j r w hich was made at the World’s
F j j U1 itr d it j ho ^j that
it will be brought here.
Prominent men in Florida are work
j ni7 on a state exhibit, and it is said that
Governor Oates will, in a special mes
sa g. t , j nrge the legislature of Alabama to
previde for a stare exhibit.
The Exposition Bnlldlns*.
In additiou to the government build¬
ing, plans have been accepted and work
commenced on the following:
M . nuf . rs . ^ Liberal Arts .316x370 ft.
Machinery.................. . 100x500 ft.
Minerals and Forestry..... . S0.x230 ft.
Agriculture................ .150x300 ft.
Electricity.....:............ . 01x250 ft
Transr>°rtstion. ........... .126x418 ft
,110x120 ft
Building..? Building .100x246 ft.
jf egr0 .100x900 ft
« «• no / proposed to buiW cheap imi
tations of the World sFair buildings, or
atantial, roomy baildinas, which will
famish ample spae*. w e U lighted and
ventilated for the, display of every thorinsgh- aes
eription of exhibits, and will
ly protect and preserve such exhibit*
2 S'.S^ftLrlKw.U«tapt«d
well organized police force will
exhibiU and virit
Mach>«.rr Hail.
the build
S
ery building, for instance: That, in its
interior construction, is a simple f^oe;
sSMuysa;^?^
Manufacture and r,st»»rai Art*.
The manufactures and liberal arts
sssnsTair . suz&sx
£» 0 *s“ ifss
midal Shape. The electricity building
has towers and arches which can be
itvrKe?irtth^SStS th^llake? tTgreat
light effect can be secured. The towers
building‘artery largel^ud anything can^^d of
for restaurant purposes, or
SSSL^T-SSt^S magnificent advantage
also be used to
for restaurant purposes.
For^Ntry nntl Mineral*.
The building designed for forestry
and minerals is to bo erreted of natural
wood, embracing all the foliage found
in the south, ami it is proposed to fes¬
toon the entire interior at the ceiling
line with southern moss and greens.
The spaces between the principal form- posts
aa( j p rac es, which are themselves
©d of natural trees, will t*e covered with
bark, thus forming a most unique Ae
sign, covering an area of 26,000 square
f oe t. while a roof promenade or garden,
of the same area, is also provided, the
entire sides of which will he formed of
pal ins and palmettoes. An enormous
fountain adorns the central portion of
fp e building, the background of which
is formed of minerals lrom all sections
0 f tbe south.
The transportation tmilding will coy
er an area of 65,000 square feet, and is
conveniently located for tlic installation
0 f fp e heavy exhibits proposed for this
building. '
---- ---
AIJ R LON DON n NEWS ^ n4J
London, , , ,, November, . 25.—One V,
has heard so niuch about the deli
cate . state , , of , , health ... of , the ., crown
princess of Sweden, who for three
y cars has . , been reported in the last
stages of consumption, 1 it being K pro- 1
claimed at the commencement of
each wdnter that she could not pos- ‘
sibly live till . that i^ a.
spying, is Some
what startlinir to learn that a con
sultation .. ot , the ., most . eminent . Oer
man, Swedish and French special
jsts, assembled for the purpose at
Baden, has resulted in a definite
decision that there is nothing on
earth the matter with the princess
save a nervous ailment of a hypo¬
chondriac character, ahnost identi¬
cal wdth thaf from which her
mother-in-law, the queen of Swe¬
den, is suffering.
These grpat medical authorities
have at length decided that her
throat andi lungs are in an abso¬
lutely healthy condition; that the
physicians w'bo have been htmor
ing her firm conviction that she
was-dying of tuberculosis and treat¬
ing her for that ailment have been
culpable of preferring to court their
royal patient rather than to give an
honest diagnosis, and that there
was no reason whatsoever for her
passing her winters in hot climates
such as that of Cairo, Biskra in Al¬
giers, and in Sicily, as she has
'■> «Se h*Mt of doing.
All this must be exceedingly
mortifying J to the • relative* of the
princess, all the more when , they
to mind the fuss made about
her, tipcci.Uy when travoniog,
the y°“-W'*d y ta.i,<£oo beta*
conveyed to and from her railroad
m apparetldy m
sn almost unconscious condition.
It remains to be seen what die
worthy Swede* will say to this.
They have hitherto been content to
dispense with the princess’ presence
a t Stockholm on the understanding
*•»»»«.!.». f her i„„*s dM
has remained to all intents and
purpoges U.. without any lady at its
«*.% ..b« „ f Ki „i
,° his scar second ' s t son, wl '° who \ s ti attracted ?° an 8
alliance with Miss Munck.
The worst feature of the whole
affair is that the crown princess
has been content to live almost
permanently apart from her thrive
little hoys, the eldest and the
youngest 6, who reside permanent
j y w ith their father, the crown
in Sweden, among the peo
pie over whom the eldest of them
is eventually to reign.
The funny point in all is that the
Swedes have undergone almost the
same experience^with their queen,
who lias been a confirmed hypo¬
chondriac for years, and has im
magined herself into a state of de¬
bility from which she will probab¬
ly never entirely recover. For
years she consulted the leading
specialists of Europe, but only two
—Dr. Metzger of Amsterdam and
Wiesbaden and Dr. Friedrich of
Heidelberg—had the courage to
tell her that her malady was pure¬
ly imaginary, and that if she was
suffering from anything it was
merely from the medicines given
to her by complaisant physicians
who had found it worth their while
to humor her belief that she was
consumptive.
There are, of course, lots of hy
poehondriacs of this kind—people ■
w ho are, convinced that they arc |
suffering from every malady under j
the sun—and one of the most em¬
inent and famous specialists in di¬
seases of the chest in London open¬
ly confessed to me on one occasion
that at least 80' per cent of the
great ladies thronging ins waiting
rooms were afflicted with immagi
nary complaints.
“It would not do, however, to
tell them so,” he said, “If I were
to do this they would merely go to
other physicians, and would com
plain everywhere of me as' in- (
capable of understanding their j
cases.”
astonishing Let me add that that the it is all the more priii- |
crown
cess of Sweden should have turned
out thus, as she has received a most
thorough and sensible education,
her mother, the grand duchess of
Baden, only daughter of old Em-!
peror William, being one of the
shrewdest, most unaffected and
kindest-hearted women in Europe
and most deservedly popular.
I wonder what Emperor Wil
ham, who is very proud of his per- j
formances as r composer, will say
witaokob^ ttMHwr Siegfried !
>V agner, on being questioned by
the newspaper men of Paris aa to
what success was attending thcqiro
duction of bis majesty’s “Hymn to
■dEgir,” remarked that it was re¬
ceived everywhere in Germany
with “a rwpectru! smile.” This
is all the more unkind on the psrt
of ‘b- v>a cf t*?e grt;Yt ma=3tr?, as
Emperor William is an 1 erithusias
tic Wagnerian and has simply over
whelmed with favors both the
truth in the stories current in Eu*
ropean and American newspapers
.. which «....
f;:^ nor is there r S truth ! iz? in the l. tale t « as 1 * to
how he surprised his father and
mother on one anniversary of their
wedding day by playing one of
Strauss’ most popular waltzes on
that instrument.
Those rc.pon.iblc for the circul*.
tlon of this purely complimentary
tale forget that the Emperor’s left
arm is withered and useless and his
hand deformed, He is not even
able to hold a fork with his left
hand, using instead a specially con¬
structed knife and fork combined
with the right hand. It is there¬
fore difficult to understand how
he could either hold his violin or
finger the strings. It is probable
that people confound him in this
particular with his sailor brother,
Prince Henry, who is a violinist of
considerable skill,,arid has on more
thaii one occasion followed the ex¬
ample of his uncle. Queen Vic¬
toria’s second son, the duke of Co¬
burg, and played in public.
As might have been expected,
Belgian courts have deckled in fi¬
nal appeal in favor o^thc king in
the law’suit brought against him by
the two counts de Cunchy. The
latter charged his majesty with luiv
ing obtained by unfair means and
at one-fourth of its value a large
piece of their property which he
considered necessary to complete
the park surrounding, his lovely
castle of Ciergnon, ifi the Ardennes
mountains.'
The counts showed in the course
of the trial that his majesty’s agents
had first of all induced them to
mortgage their property for the pur
pose of raising sufficient capital to
work some imaginary mines alleged
to have been discovered in the dis
trict; that the king’s agents had
acquired these mortgages secretly,
and that within tw’o hours after
failure to pay the quarterly in¬
terest, 6wing to their absence at
Pari.*, the mortgage had been fore
apd a pretext of sale ar
ranged, the result being that the
king secured for considerably less
1,000,000 franc, property the
ratable value of which amounted to
over 4 ,000,000, franc. Le Rot.
NOTICE.
If you want to sa^
come up and pay
^ oUr C*itV tllXCS bC
•
1016 tllC UOOK.S C 1 OS 6
on Decembov TO.
W m. McClure, city
Marshal.
When you used Him Jok Prlating
why mot patrmi** Nome >
•.V.»
1
w f
iiT IT IS
AND jJA ABSOLUTELY
*3 TheBesf
SAVE^m SEW NO
MONEY MACHINE
we OB OOb'oeaUBS can acll
foa machine* cheaper than you can
get eUewhar*. The KBW HOJIi to
our boat, bat wo make cheaper klato »n4
ouch aa the CU.TAX, IbEAt
other High Arm Full ftlckel Pitted
Sewing machines for $16.00 tad BP;.
Call on our agent or wrllo na. W
want your trade, and If prteoa, kran w*U
and aqnsre dealing will win, wa
have It. Wa ehallong* the world to
produce a BETTER $50.00 Sawlon:
Machine fbr $50.00, or a bettor $*$.
■awing Machine fbr $90.00 than poh
ran bay front no, or our Agent*.
THE HEW HOME SEMHG MACH1IE CO.
aMEKP* -
rod BALE BY
L. C. FURR, Clatkcsx-illc,
-------- • ............
’BICYCLES
If you want a cycle it will pay
yoii^to see The Times, We can
also save you money on buggies*
and sewing-machines, which we
have taken in payment for adver
Using. We can sell you a good
cycle for $45—-one that can be
used either by lady or gcntlcmap.
■11.1 11 m in. ...... mmmvmmi 1 1 i M i m i jl fj
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