iOfficial Miniature View Boor fANAM^pI^miATIONAL IMPOSITION ffiSj ri "?£! C' n d R Section of the Exposition Water Front PUBLISHED BY ROBERT A. REID, OFFICIAL EXPOSITION VIEW BOOK PUBUSHER 150 Halleck Street, San Francisco Copyright, 1915, by Panama-Pacific International Exposition CompanyTHE BROAD SPIRIT OF THE EXPOSITION. Education, information and human uplift have, therefore, been the prime factors that have moved us. In our architecture, color landscape, lighting effects, statuary, music and all branches of art and the material things of life as well, we have striven to produce a result that would benefit every visitor that comes within the Exposition gates, mindful always that the event we celebrate warrants superlatively the best effort of all.—C. C. Moore, President of the Exposition. These exhibits installed upon forty-seven miles of aisles are the basis of a great university. The exhibitors are the faculty, the exhibits are the lessons and the laboratory and the visitors are the student body.—Dr. F. J. V. Skiff, Director-in-Chief. The work of constructing this Exposition which you people of California have placed in our hands is now completed. We feel justly proud of the fact that we have completed our work on time.—Wm. H. Crocker, Chairman Building Committee. What is shown in the palaces reflects the achievements of mankind in the arts of peace during the period of ten years of truly wonderful development in science, in art, in commerce and industry.—R. R. Hale, Vice President of Exposition. This is the world’s wonderland, the carnival of all nations, the playground of the universe. Cast aside all care; toss away all worry; be happy; enjoy yourselves; feast your eyes, your minds upon this splendid spectacle.—James Rolph, Jr., Mayor of San Francisco. On this day, a triumph for you of San Francisco, a day in which you ask all the earth to participate; on this day, with hearts willing and in accord, we all, with a unity for all men from all climes; with a beginning with singular presentment, with symposiums in art, in what science has done, in what has been accomplished by progress and advancement throughout the world, begin in this Exposition a new era for our State.—Hiram Johnson, Governor of California. The sons of the pioneers, theirs be the glory today, for they slashed the continent in two, they have cut the land that God made as if with a knife, they have made the seas themselves to lift the ships across the barriers and mountains, and this accomplishment we celebrate.— Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior.A.n Exposition Audience Within the Main EntranceThe Tower of Jewels and South GardensThe Tower of Jewels Illuminated ' K^SS&A.. < ’-; SSSjRtfSS :?'.^. >^v--f'- v.> .^s'SVAyfrV. mWW&Q »*» :«•>*; Sill ^*»i Festival Hall1—Court of Palms 2—Court of Flowers *» H ■ 1 K.HS^W fcnr KfflMEatP LJUjP-, * WmaftS $ \->i .”.- V>V The Palace of HorticulturePalace of Horticulture IlluminatedYistas About the Fine Arts Palace wm. mm wMwm W0&04 $&$*£ wav!wS 1811 ?^K@S ■x* A'M'X'.-i drf. ■ Palace of Fine Arts Palace of Varied Industries Mullgardt’s Tower, Court of Abundance II i-v>wv. 4*M*V‘ Mfi*y-—|JT| ||»■■■ Mu»«t-*a*■*•*«*■>'vNN'.'wy v■"\\\v'V,,w ".v.wvy,.'w<«-• • ■ '-.w.-.w V.“ « V.V r Palace of Education from Fine Arts Lagoon ’/A&r- m He Avenue of Progresst Palace of Liberal ArtsPalace of Bcachej^ui His Biplane1 Effffc Garden Scenes at the ExpositionPalace of Agriculture Palace of Minesr^- *■ ■ ------~- -*->...........- Administration Avenue, with Fine Arts Palace on the Left sx. Xlie Palace of Machinery from Fillmore Street Entrance1, The Court of Palms. 2 and 3, Court of Flowers. 4, Court of Four SeasonsThe Esplanade, Looking Towards the Massachusetts BuildingMural Paintings in the Court of the Four SeasonsBfF I; ' If to % v ■* + • ■ r : * .v1 »*• / / « ✓ * % •? •r\i "V r * ♦ i i> «■ % *OVEE VIEWS 150