SYSTEM OF CLASSIFICATION. 37 
play at the International Exhibition, will be allowed to go 
forward to the Exhibition buildings, under proper supervision 
of customs officers, without examination at such ports of 
original entry, and at the close of the Exhibition will be 
allowed to go forward to the port from which they are to be 
exported. No duties will be levied upon such goods, unless 
entered for consumption in the United States. 
6. The transportatian, receiving, unpacking and arrang- 
ing of the products for exhibition, will be at the expense of 
the exhibitor. 
7. The installation of heavy articles requiring special 
foundations or adjustment should, by special arrangement, 
begin as soon as the progress of the work upon the buildings 
will permit. The general reception of articles at the Exhibi- 
tion buildings will commence on November 1, 1892, and no 
articles will be admitted after April 10, 1893. 
Nore.—Weight of single article limited to 30,000 pounds. 
8. Space assigned to foreign commissions and not 
occupied on the roth day of April, 1893, will revert to the 
Director-General for re-assignment. 
9. If products are intended for competition, it must be 
so stated by the exhibitor ; if not, they will be excluded from 
the examination by the international juries. 
ro. An official catalogue will be published in English, 
French, German and Spanish. The sale-of catalogues is re- 
served to the World’s Columbian Exposition. 
The twelve departments of classification which will deter- 
mine the relative location of articles in the Exhibition —ex- 
cept in such collective exhibits as may receive special sanc- 
tion—also the arrangement of names in the catalogue, are 
as follows: 
(a). Agriculture, Forest Products, Forestry, Machinery 
and Appliances. 
(4). Viticulture, Floriculture, Horticulture. 
(c). Live Stock: Domestic and Wild Animals. 
(d.) Fish, Fisheries, Fish Products and Apparatus for 
Fishing. 
ES — --— la 
