.fKf THE COURIER. 0 - i &- ' M S ?'" ' " ' ftejfcj- , -r - r THE COURIER ! CbUBS WITH ANY MAGAZINE. WRITE FOR TERMS. .; i, , V '' " v ' ' ., -. ,.' .'- -"' "'"' '"'",'" ' ,v' -..JC.S-. v '. ' i THE DBWDEY MEDAL. By the courtesy of the sculptor, Dan iel C. French, Harper's Weekly is able to publish the first authentic reproduc tion of his completed design for the Dewey medal. The Tiffany company will cut the dies and strike the medals in copper 1635 in all. Upon the obverse is a lifelike present' ment of the head of Commodore Dewey, with the following inscription: "The gift of the people of the United States to the officers and men ot the Asiatic Squadron under the command of Com modore George Dewey." Upon the re verse, surrounded by the words, "In memory of the victory of Manila Bay, May, 1, 1898," is the figure of a young sailor stripped to the waist, who sits up on a gun, with the flag across his knees, and one foot resting upon a swinging loop of rope. In this beautiful figure Mr. French has adu.irably embodied the genius ot the episode in its highest and purest aspect the spirit ot the fleet, such as one's imagination may p'cture it to have been on that memor able morning, and also the spirit of the country on whose behalf it was going jnto action. The chinf characteristic of the face 1b youth the beauty, confi dence and pure intention of youth. Tn the pose of the figure are alertness, fear loBa uprightness, and the unconscious grace and composure of aesured strength. The very dispisition of the flig is BUggestive. The moment repre Bented is not the one of victory, but of preparedness thereto. The flag is not a menace to the world, nor under the pre text of its name is a policy of aggrandize ment foreshadowed. It is safe in the keepiug of Young America, and when the cause is right it will be uplifted. It placiog in the circle secures an admirable balance between the varied portious and tne flat ones enjoyable to P Utoar n -rut IN' KJOk - WAtfRrja t -? f j u t .X V X i Tk Dwy Ci MU1. After drawing In lUrwr'i WHy. opyrigbt, W9,by lUrptr A Urotlitrt. If you want the MO I ill i You want the Clean, well ventilated cars. Cool in Bummer. Warm in winter. Elegant diners. Fay only for what you order. Ele gant chair cars. Attentive porters. Everything the best by the Burlington. G. W. BONNEfoL, C. P. &T. A ute to the decoration of the whole. Lastly, the whole possesses that quality which is such a charm of low relief "enveloppe" as the sculptors call ib. At mosphere is, perhaps, our nearest Eng lish woid; the pattern of the decoration is not one merely ot light and dark, but of several degrees of light and several decrees of dark, as it viewed through varying planes of atmosphere. The re sult is, though, not hard and gritty, but luminous, rich and velvety. vr wi7oJ '1y' BB''vb' IsT l the eye? The strong horizontal bar formed by the cannon, low down in the Bpace, lifts up the lithe figure of the youth, and gives it a dignity and sense of size very difficult to obtain in so small a compass. Again the poise ot that foot upon the rope observe how ex q llsitoly sensitive it is! brings into the narrow space at the bottom an interest and distinction which make it contrib. We have the new stock for 1899. No job lots. Our men have reputations. Do you want your work done nice. Do you want your house painted good? If so we are the people. , f J. W. MITCHELL CO. , 1338 O Street. Telephone 237.