F 199 .R48 Copy 1 Wt V M /r :JHCUV# *^ Bird's Eye View. East From Monument. Peace Monument. THE CITY BEAUTIFUL? "»i Descriptive Ten by Charles B Reynolds PUBLISHED <5 COPVRIGHTED fiy <^e B.S.REYNOLDS COMPANY WASHINGTON , D.C. THE CAPITOL. THE United States Capitol has place among the great architectural achievements of the world; its beauty of design and mag- nificence of proportions command universal admiration. To an American it makes direct and powerful appeal as the seat of govern- ment. In the far extending marble walls, the columned porticoes, the majestic dome uplifted against the shy, in the whole stately fabric, he sees a material and visible embodiment of the soul of the nation. The entire length is 751 feet, the width 350 feet, and the Dome rises 300 feet. The corner stone was laid by Washington in 1793, the central building was occupied in 1827, and the Senate and House extensions in 1857 and 1859. .OOl.A.KI 5 THE CAPITOL. THE CAPITOL FROM THE WEST. 'T'HE Capitol is set on a hill overlooking the amphithea- ter of the Potomac. From the West front the view extends over the far-flung city and the encircling hills to Arlington beyond the river. The central building contains the Supreme Court Room, Statuary Hall and the Rotunda. In the north wing is the Senate Chamber, and in the south the Hall of Representatives. Ample grounds with noble trees and sloping lawns secure for the Capitol an air of retirement and aloofness from the turmoil of the town. THE CAPITOL FROM THE WEST LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. AS here seen from the Capitol, the out-standing features of the Library of Congress are the central entrance pavilion, with its Corinthian columns, the gold dome and the finial Torch of Science, ever burning. The windows of the facades carry carved heads of the races of men , and in those of the pavilion are colossal portrait busts of authors. Above the entrances are sculptured Literature, Science and Art; the bronze doors personify Tradition, Writing and Printing. Thus the exterior adornment is everywhere suggestive of the purpose of the Library Building; and prepares one for the gorgeous and daz- zling splendor within — the polished marbles and pictured walls of vestibule and hall and corridor and pavilion, and the great central rotunda reading room. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WHITE HOUSE. '"THE White House seen through the trees from Penn- sylvania Avenue is one of the most familiar of American scenes. The dignity and grace of the edifice are enhanced by the spacious lawns and the fine old trees. A peculiar human interest attaches to the White House as the home of the President's Family; and the successive changes of occupancy have filled its past with historic incident. It is the oldest public building here; the corner- stone was laid by Washington in 1792, and it has been the Executive Mansion from the time of John Adams. Presidents come and Presidents go; the White House endures to welcome the coming, speed the going guest. I WHITE HOUSE WHITE HOUSE-EAST ENTRANCE. T^HE East Entrance is the one most familiar to the visitor who comes to the White House not on pubiic busi- ness but as the possessor of a one hundred-millionth share of ownership in the Nation's domestic establishment. The colonnaded approach leads to the basement corridor. Here are portraits of the wives of the Presidents and in a room opening off the corridor is displayed an interesting exhibit of the china table services used by successive mis- tresses of the White House. \fW-"~i » rs\ ., s ^y >W - I L^ :«-V-^-., >i>->