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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1905)
"THE SIMPLE LIFE." I WORLD FAMOUS BOOK AND ITS AUTHOR, CHARLES WAGNER. What Prcaldeat Itooaerelt far About ue Volume Inferealing C rerr of th Dlnciple or Simplicity How th Book Klr.t Mad a Hit. Clinries Wagner, author of "Tlie Sim- plo Life," wan practically ruado famous by President Kooouvelt, author of "The Ifitivnuoiia Ufa" Early In 1902 certain well known Now York publlnhers brought out vtry quietly a truimlatlou 'of "Tho Simple Life." At first tlie book (lid not attract much attention, except among tliu literary few, but among tlie Uturary few wna PrcHltlout Roosevelt. On him tbo Httlo volume mudo such an imiircsnlvu that he re ferred to It In one of hla public ad- dresatd as follow: "The other day I picked up a little book called 'The Simple Life,' written by an Alautlan, Charles Wagner, and he preached inch wholesome, lound doctrine that I wish It could be lined as a tract throughout our country. To him the whole problem of our complex, somewhat feverish modem life can bo solved only by getting men and women to lead bettor live. lie aeea that the permanence of liberty and democracy depend upon a majority of the people bolug ateadfant In that good, plain morality which ai a national attribute cornea only as tho result of the slow and painful lubor of centuries and which can lie squandered In a genera tion by the thoughtless and vicious. He preaches the doctrine of tlie suiwrlorlty of the moral to the material, but he Instats, as we of this nation should al ways Inalat, upon the Infinite superior ity of the moral and the sordid doutrno- ?xk "'i Wv - ' ::,' . I 'v','; t ..' I ' v. I V J ; f hist. tuARLEfl xnatrm. tlon which comes upon either the na tion or the individual If It or he be comes absorbed only In the deslrs to get wealth," This public commendation from the president of the Unitod States, who was tint nutbor of a book that Seomod tho very an tl thesis of "The Simple Life," aroused public curiosity, and In a very short time there was a large demand for the volume. Charles Wagner Is a popular evan gelical In Paris, and It seems the height of Incongruity that such a work should come from such a source. As Grac King says In her biographical sketch: "From tho great metropolis and sov ereign see of modern dvlllintlon, from the world's heart of sophistication, from I'aris, tlie complex oily, comes tills volume of little essays npon tlie simple llfo. A limpid, bubbling spring, fresh and cool from Its forest source, running down one of the boulevards would hardly appear more miraculous to tho eye or more refreshing to the sense." Wagner is a noted man in Tarls, the kind of man whom people stare after In the streets. Among the dapper and uudorgrown Tarlatans be bulks large, with bis great height and mtuwtve chest and shoulders. There are vari ous legends, constituting a Bort of lit- no mytuaiogy, about his enormous physical strength and the feats sup posed to have been achieved by blm Id his pensaut days. For the rest he Is described as a man of singular sweet ness and straightforwardness of char acter, with a strong personal chnrm IIo has a wide following, personal as well as ethical. The early career of this noteworthy man Is interesting. He is the son of a Lutheran minister of Alsace, born at W lbersvllle, in the Vosges, on Smidny morning, Jan. 8, 1852, while his father was preaching In the village church. He wus only seven years old when his father died, and yet he was the eldest of live children. The family moved to rhalsbourg, and there Charles labored In tlie fields and studied for the min istry. IIo was sent to Pnrls at four teen and took a degree at the Sorbonne In lfkiO. He was a student of theology at the University of Rtrassburg during the Franco-Prussian war, and there he underwent a sort of spiritual revolu tion, losing his religious fnlth. He rend Spinoza and found In that philosopher something to compensate for what lis bad lost, but two simple Incidents led to tho restoration of his religious life. One was the fljt sight of the Alps. The niniintatiis seemed to him Ood's witnesses. Tho other event was some thing tllut has happened to mmrly ev erybodysimply tho sight of his moth er on returning homo nfter a long ab sence. She wns there, loyal to her du ty, doing her dally work with trnmiuil energy, never wearied and never dis couraged, and tlie very thought of her brought quietude, contont, faith. He went from Rtrassburg to Oat tlngen in 1S7B, and from there he re- I turned to AIsbco and became assistant I pastor at the fut of hte. (Mill moun- tutu. His native place hod been taken Into tho Prussian territory, his pastor ate was within the new German fron tier, and for the first time the political chunge began to weigh on htm. There wus no sense of political oppression, but a consciousness that intellectual Independence was not possible for him In the conquered provinces. He set to work, therefore, to mnster tlie French luugunge, accepted a position at Ile miremont, in the French Vosges, and In 1882 went to Paris, where be en tered upon a successful career as a minister and a literary man. "The Simula life" Is the best kSfwg pf t era! works that he has written, tnougn "Toutb and Courage" and "The Iletter Way" are fairly well known to Ameri can readers. Aftor President Hoosovelt spoke in complimentary terms of "Tl.e Siiuplo Life" such Interest In the book and Its author developed In America that Itev. Mr. Wagner came across the Atlantic to lecture. One of the first men he call- ed upon was President KotisiT.ilt, mid j concerning the visit he wrote the fol- j lowing for Success magazine: I "I wns particularly struck with the , simplicity of the home llfo of the presl- deut To one accustomed to viewing tlie pomp nnd ceremony which sur round the rulers of Europe there seems to be something notable In the entire lack of ostentation In the lCoose- Tclt family. I wns surprised tit Mr. Roosevelt's habit of inviting to UU prl- vate dining table those who are doing good work In the world rpille regard less of what tlielr power or social po sition may be. He looks to the man him self rather than to his iiiiurtcii;i; and this Is a brushing away i the superfluities which Is rare In men of bis position. In Washington I saw his boys starting to a public school, mid one of them did not even bother tj wear a hat. This, of course,, was a small matter, but It Impressed me. In Europe tho children of a ruler with not ene-tentu of the power of Mr. Roose velt do not go to school nt all, much less to a public school. They have a corps of privato tutors and rarely ven ture into the streets except In elabo rate equipages. "The observance of complete sim plicity In his personal nnd family lll'o by the president of tlie I'nltcd States. one or uio most powerful rulers on earth, has a wholesome Inlluencc not only upon America, but also upon the world at large." When he landed In New York not long ago Itev. Mr. Wagner said: '1 love the American people, 1 want ed to see them In their own country and to know them personally. To ob tain that end I learned their language and hero I am." Ho referred to the kind of Knglhib he was about to speak, saying hu had studied the Kngllsh hinguago only short while ago to tell the American people of simplicity, and that If any "accidents" occurred It would not be by premeditation. "I know that you are saying In your courts that It Is not possible to live the simple life In this great city of rush Ing thought and energy, this city of trtmetMlous Brevities and skyscrapers he snkl, "but I toll you that It Is." "It is possible to llvo tho simple life on the twenty-fourth floor of a Now Tork skysuraper lu the midst of all tho noise and confusion. The uhuplo life Is not a thing of the first floor or the fortieth, not of the shoes or tho walst eoat, but of the heart. "Ouce lu Purls, thut greut city of dust and busy human llfo, I heard a lark singing In a garden. IIo was a prisoner, it Is true. Itut when I heard him lifting np his voice to the blue sky and I remembered tho freedom of tho hills and tho fields that had been mine as a boy, the wulls and housen of tho great city seemed to fndo away, to stretch out and expand. "I speak to you hero in tho center of one of tho most tremendous cities in tlie world. I sing my song of simplici ty like a lark In a cage but it Is a good place to sing It. The uioro I study your national character hero In Amer ica, the nioro I look Into tho founda tions of your government, the morn I see of yonr stupendous energy, the more I realise that at tho bottom of it all is the simplicity of your national character. "1 visited the White !Iou"e at Wnh lngton. I found there nothing of the grandeur of the homes of kings nitd kalsors, but the pure simplicity of n great people expressed In the homo of a chief executive. I was a guest of your president. I pressed his hand, and I had many long talks with hlin upon tho great questions of tho day. And again I felt that a splendid sim plicity wns at the root of your national Chnrncter. Htay true to your tradi tions; be true to your convictions. Tlie human race demands it of you." Dr. Wagner told how he cniuo to write "The Simple Life." He was call ed upon while a pastor In Paris to marry a workman and his sweetheart. One of tho six witnesses was the daughter of a great politician. "I talked to tliem upon the beauty of living simply," he said. "A row days afterward the young lady came to me to ask me to perform her marriage, and she asked me to give Just the same talk that I had to tlie workman. There were to bo 2,000 people present, Includ ing tho greatest diplomats, the greatest politicians and the leaders lu the In tellectual and social life of Purls. 1 consented nnd talked to them sim ply nnd straightforwardly upon the simple life. There was a publisher presont, as there always Is, and the next day he asked me to write 'Tlie Blmple Life.' I did. and It bns gone through the world everywhere. As t.r me, I Intend to remain a boy, with a boy's heart, till I am an old, old man " I The author-clergyman's chnpel In the Doulevard BonmnnrehnH Paris. Iihh grown ffom a qnalnt little upper room and Is now too small to bold the crowds that flock to hear him, and generally more than 1,000 persons are turned REJECTED SUIT0B& FAMOUS LOVERS WHO HAVJ EGEW VICTIMS OF CUPID'8 PRANK Byron's Cruel Experience With Miss Clia north Shelley' Affairs of the llrnrt-The Girl -W ho Was Much Too Good to Marry Abe Lincoln. It may be of some consolation to the fejected lover to remember that many of tlie greatest men In history have Buffered equal pangs and survived the name ordeal to llnd married happiness elsewhere, Even I'yron, thut most beautiful and gifted of iiicn, hud more than bis share of refusals, and one of them at leust was accompanied by words which left a Btlng to his last day. IIo was only a Harrow schoolboy of sixteen when lit- fell madly in love with Miss Cha wortli of Anncslcy, a young heiress of some beauty, who wus two years older than himself. , I'.ut Miss Cluiworth treated all the boy's shy advances with laughter nnd contempt, and, although he was "suf fering the tortures of Hie lost" for her sake, refused to take blm seriously. Hut the crowning blow came when, lu an adjacent room, lie overheurd Miss Cluiworth say to her maid, "Ho you think I could care anything for that lame loy'(" "This cruel speech," he ufterwnrd said, "wus like a shot through my heart. Although It was lute and pitch dark, I darted out of the house and never stopped running until I reached Newsteud." Shelley, too, almost as handsome and as gified us l'.yron, knew from more than one experience tho "pangs of re Jecllon." After he laid been expelled from Oxford and went to London with his fellow culprit, Hogg, to live, he fell violently in love with his Inndlady'i daughter, who bore the unroiiiantle mime of I'.ll.a Jenkins. Hut Kliza, even though he threatened to commit Bulclde in his despair, refused to huve anything to do with hlin, and when few months later, having thought bet ter of tlie suicidal threat, he sought to console himself by paying court to .Miss Han-let drove, a pretty cousin she was so alarmed at his heterodoxies thut she sent him very'decldedly about his business. When Sheridan, following the exam pie of many other amorous young men. fell over head and curs lu love with Miss I.lnlcy, the beautiful singer, "slio only laughed nt his ardor and nindo faces ut 111 tlx behind his back," nnd yet lie used that subtle and eloquent tongue of Ills to such purpose that ho actually ran aw ay with her to u French nunnery and married her after fighting several duels with his rivals and her persecutors. When Iturlie, the great politician and orator, was a student at Trinity col lege, Publln, be Is said to have hud more than one love dlsnppointment. His first Infatuation was for the daughter of tt small publican, "whoso dark eyes llrcd the blood of the young Irishman," but after coquetting with blm for a time she Jilted him In tho most heartless fashion. His success, too, with his beautiful countrywoman. Margaret Wellington, wus no grentcr, although he remained her loyal lover to the last. When Abraham Lincoln, as a youth of eighteen, was "living in n rudo log cabin in Spencer county, Iiul., and picking up the rudiments of education In the Intervals of rail splitting and plowing," he fell lu love with tho daughter of a poor Irish settler In a neighboring log cabin, nnd uftor many clumsy failures to declare his lovo to her in person penned with difficulty one of his first letters, asking her to become bis wife. lie never received an answer to this "clumsy effusion," ns he afterward call ed It, but when next ho met Iirldget she tossed her head and looked another way." Slio was much too good, she Is Willi to hiivo declared, to marry n gawky farm laborer. Then It was that Lincoln left tho pnternal cabin and voyaged as hired hand on a Hat lioat Into that greater world which before long was to ring with the name of the gawky farm boy. When, thir teen years or so later, Abraham Lin- win became president of tho United Stales, Hrldget was still living, "tho slatternly wife of a farm laborer In a og cabin," and still preserved the 111 penned letter which might, If she had been wise, have made her the "first lady of tho land." It Is well known that Jenn Ilaptlsti; Pcrniidotle, when he was n private of marines, was Indignantly refused by a girl of very humble rank who thought herself "much too good to marry a common soldier." What her reflec tions were In later years, when tho dc plsed private was tlie powerful king of Sweden nnd Nnrwny, history does not record. 1'hlhidclphln Times. way from the doors on Sunday. The Syrlmi llulltul. Tho Syrian bulhul (nightingale) has tho loveliest voice of nil dud's cr. i tures and the saddest song ever heard. I Shady coverts fringing tlie Jordan Mill j shelter tho bird that ".'.lugs il .irUliiiij." i civiscs that suit the case, the bath and There Is n legend that the btilbul i toilet. This forms a mental attitude sat lu the olive tree In the garden of ; consistent with a good day's work. A Joseph of Artmathea and the night be : simple breakfast - some take none The l)a' Work. Much of the success of life depends on proper preparation for the dny's work. iMost people work either In the home or otllce, and they desire to get the most out of themselves. To rise lute, rush .through the toilet nnd gulp down a hasty breakfast Is no prepara tlon for a good day's work, yet It Is safe to say that the majority of women begin the day In this way. It Is Just as easy to rise In plenty of time, If one v III only do It. The tendency on wak ing is to stretch and yawn. A few minutes spent In this deep breathing Is always restful. Tills should be fol low'ed by a few breaths of fresh air. drinking a couple glasses of water, ex- Some Bargains. 83. 6 acres 4 mile out; berries and orchard. A beautiful location. Will be sold at a bargain. (2. 35 ucres one-half mile from Mt. Hood P. O. 11 acres in clover, 4 in hay lj in strawberries, 1 allure water, 2 nouses, all Tor Ifl-KJU. 21. 42 aerei one mile out, ltl acres In orcliurd, 10 full bearing. First-class im provements. A beautiful home. 28. 80 acres, 5 acres 7-year-old apple trees, balance in clover and general farming. rew 4-room House. 2. 40 acres in the most beautiful por tion of the valley. 4 acres in orchard one vear old, acres in berries, 4 acres in alfulfu, balance general fanning, til. 10 acres -1 miles out; splendid soil; 1 aero tipples, best varieties; one year planted, lj acres in strawberries, 2 acres in potatoes, f ucres in clover. 82. 421 acres 2 miles out, 20 acres in berries 2 years old; 10 acres in clover; 8 acres in apples, 3 and 5 years old, New- towns and SpiUen bergs; 2 good houses, windmill, packing house, etc.; 22 inch es free water. $2"i0 per acre. 114. Two KiO-aere tracts about nine miles out; one on east side, other west side. Choice fir $1100. 188. 40 acres 6 miles nut: raw land. Price, $2000. A number of 4, 10, 20 and 40 acre tracts of unimproved land that will bear investigation. Also a number of large tracts from KiO to 320 acres in Ore gon and Washington. Some few residences and lots in every portion of the city. j W. J. BAKER & CO. Real Estate Agents Hood River, Oregon. AT Til 10 Favorite Tlit' Finest Line of Bon Bons over shown in this city. Our ro'ts ;m beautiful. Make your selection while stock is complete. S. L. YOUNG, Prop. Announcement. I intend to retire from business, and wish to close out my stock of General Merchandise as soon as possible, for OAlh. I will buy no more goods, and wish to collect all accounts due as soon as possible. GEO. P. CROWELL. O. T. RAW80S. I . H. WTAXTOK HOOD RIVER NURSERY. Stock Grown em Fall Roots. We desire to let or friends nd patrers knew that for the fall plMrtfrg rro wffl bar ami aa sup ply in any number Cherry, Pear,Aprtcot,Pach& Plum Trees, GRAPES, CURRANTS, BERRY PLANTS, Shade and Ornamental Trees. Also, all the standard rarteftefl wt fjh tmt. Cm supply the trade witfe plenty f Jfevrtawn, 6p4toa berpc and Jonathan ppl trees. RAWSON & STANTON, Hood Rirer, Or. BRICK YARD. I am maniifjicturiiit'- at my ynrd near Columbia nursery sout h ot town, as fine aqual- it7 or common brick as can be found in the state. Have 2(0,0K to :( 10,000 brick on hand for inspection. Price at yard $8 per. thousand. " Come out to the yard and see now we make brick. A. T. ZKKK. Columbia Nursery 1 U. tfKOSIUS, Prop. Strawberry Plants, Top-Crafted Cherry Trees, 2-yr.o!d Apple Trees including Spitzenbenj, Newtown, Baldwin, Crtley, Winter Banana, etc (iuiir.'inteed true to mime. Hood Hivicr, Ok. BERT G. BOARDMAN, lias opened a General Store AT ODELL and will keep on hand a first- el ass stock of Groceries, Flour and Feed CENTRAL MARKET HAYES BROS., Proprietors. Dealers in AH Kinds of Fresh, Cured and Canned Meats. Headquarters for Vegetables and Fruits. Lumber Wood, Posts, Etc. Davenport Bros. Lumber Co. Have openeJ an office In Hood Elvar. Call and get priced and leava orden, which will be promptly filled. MILWAUKEE NURSERIES We Lv &Q.000 Yellow Nton Pippin ud Bnitienberg Apple Trees, alio ft f enrai Ta rts ty of Fruft Trees for tele fer the eeealBf KMon, and we ate fvluf to tell tfeea at reasonable prices. Onr Tren aie rim-clua and True to Kene. Grafted on whole rooti, with icloae "care fully selected from Rome of the beat Mr ing orchard! In Hood Elver Valley, fieud for prlcei to MILWAUKEE NURSERIES Milwaukee, Oregon T. S. STRANG N. B. HARVEY. Local Agent Proprietor McDonald &Henrich FARM Deatai la MACHINERY, BICYCLES VEHICLES T T Waqom 70 years tent. Iij; Bjooiaa-thaTerybMt "- mn, aw. OdltlTatora, Spray and Well Pomps Wind Mills, Gaaoline Eng's Champion Mowers, Rakes, Oil b4 Barb Wire. ' Heroules Stump Powdir E. R. Bradley PRINTING 9 SNOW & UPSON For All Kinds of Grubbing Supplies, Wood Choppers and Loggers Tools A full line of stock always on hand. Poos your horso interfere? Bring him in." No cure no pay PASHIOW STABLE Livery, Feed and Draying. BTKAflAHANS & BAGLEY. Horses booghl, sold or exchanged. Pleasure parties can secure first-clans rigs. Spe , Clal attention given to moving Ftmrittrre and l'lanos. Wi do everything horses ean do. HOOB HITTER, RE08K. O. L. GILBERT, Proprtte. 0. F. 6ILBKRT, Maaager. HIGH GRADE PAMPHLET AND COMMERCIAL WORK PROMPTLY PERFORMED rem always right g We are here to do your work today tomorrow and every other day. and onr money (what little we have) Is spent in Hood River. We want your work and can do it neatly and SATISFACTORILY Oregon Ssiotr line and Union Pacific Dkpabt Chicago Portland (fecial (:16 a. m. via Huntington. Allan tlo Expretu 8:15 p.m. via Huntington. Tin' juililic i.s invited to call lliil msiurt t ho stock. A square deal for all. for tho ruMirroctloii tlirutijji tin tltirkiiPHt) poured tint ln-r soul In sor rowing plaint aliovo (lie nt ill slfipcr In tbo tomb wherein wnx ih vi r nun laid. When tho llrst Haster ninniini: broke over tho custom Mils (lie cl.'s In tlio nost of the brooding bird sp.-ir klod with gold, bine, oraugo and i iim son, and no wo color rggs at K.isii r for a memorial of the lone Binder who sang by the holy m-pnK-h.-r. --''l'Ii: City of the King," by Mrs. Low Wnllaoo. Bruin and llravn. Po you gain your living by your in tolled? Then do not allow your nno i and logs to grow utilT. Io you earn your broad by your pickax? Po n t forget to cultivate your mind and in eulargo your thought-l-rcndi Modk.il (ihoiild follow before nn unhurried Jour ney cither to otlieo or the routine of housework. Stand erect, breathe erect, think erect, and half the battle of life I won.--Housekeeper. llniiitft hi SliiKapore, I saw "Handel" played and adapted for Malays at Singapore. It was sung Instead of spoken, and mostly to Kng lisli tunes. Hamlet addressed the ;liost to tin- tune of "Her Ooldon Hair" nnd killed I'olonlus to "Listen to the Hand." I'olonlus addressed his son to "Thai's Kngllsh, You Know," and, wilh the king and queen, sang "Mary Was n Housemaid" to other words. Tho ghost scene included throe fhosts, two clowns and a bottle of whisky. Hood Hotel HOOD RIVER, OREGON. Headquarters for Tourists & Commercial Travelers Regular Rates, 91.S5 to $250 per dsvy. Ebeetal Kates by Week er Month. Stages leave dally for Cloud Ca rna tartnf JoTy, Aug nst and September. S. J. FRANK Dealer In Harness & Saddles AH Repairing Promptly Attended to HOOD RIVER OREGON iWMMJHgEBBBB KMWX A. IIKM)i:USt', Malinger. i Notary 1'ulillu for Oivgnn.) riiOmiTY I'OH iSAI.K. price, for Tho lots on tho hill for sul f-ll) cash. Lots fxlxliit) (Vet, . lot southeast of the high school ?.- on installments, MO down, K per mouth, at S per cent. Tho lols will ad vance $-" each soon. Tho lois overlooking the Columbia and llo ,i rivets. Price, $"tMI, part cash balance fit) per month at S percent. Two lots and :i-iioni house, plastered, just hark (. liiL'h school, house 20 foot sipuiro. t'rioe, f "0 cash. (i-iooin house, pl.ctercd, corrugated iron wooil-iied, insured tor :t warn f,,r fKl. full, paid up, lot oOxl.'iU: nriee. I'JiKi, easy terms. Two lots Ul'.ixldO, S-room house, plas-1 tered and papered, tenets nnd snlewilks' city wat.r and telephone, J-storv barn --tx.it), ifL'UK); f HKIU down, balance" mort gage at S per cent. Many ianusall over the vallcv at roa tollable prices. Kind on hemes, rent- houses for land lords, or liud houses for you to rent, colUct h.hs, negotiate loans "or find von money to loan. Call on mo 1 ill find von what vou want. KliYVlN A. HKNIi'KHSON, " i Manager. I TILTON BROS. MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED IRON TIN AND GRAVEL CORNICES ROOFING NORTHWESTERN AGEKTS FOR ROYAL WARM AIR FURNACES 105-107 North Fifth Bt. PORTLAND, OREGON. ygpo a Rojnl Furnace set up at Norton & Smith's Plumbing Shop. St. Paul Fast Mall vfa Bpokau TIME sCHEDIi Portland. Or. Salt Ijike, Denver, ri. vtonn.umana, Kann&a City, St. Louls.Chlcagoand Ea.it. Bait Ilte, Denver, r i. worm, uraana, KanBas City, 8t. Lonla,;hlcago and East, Walla Walla. Lewla- K'U, spoltane.Wal lace, Pullman, Alinneapollft, Nt. Paul, Duluth, Mil waukee, Chicago aud East. SOS p. I iOva.1 T:16a.i 70 HOURS PORTLAND TO CHICAGO No Change of Cars. Lowest Ratei. Qulckett Tim. OCEAN AND RIVER SCHEDULE FBOM PORTLAND. AO p.m. ill aalltnf dataa object to chant For Ran Franc! no- Ball Trj I daja Dafty Ei.Hunrtar r:0ri d. m. Earnrday 11) . te p. m. (:6a.m. Hon., Wed. and FrL 1 :f a. m. Tnn.. Thnr. .ndU Lt. ntparla 4 :f$ a. in. Daily except oaiuraay Chmbl Rlrr SttaMera. Toaatoriaand Wit Mnuiuia WlllaiMtt Ktrar. Balem, Indepen dent, Corralllai ana way landing!. Taatklll Rlrw. Oregon City, Dayton ana way landln Irak Rlvar. Rrparta to Lawlaloa 8 "00 p. m a. Sunday 8:S0 p. m. Tuea., Tan, 4:18 p.m. Mon., WL udFri. Lv.LtwIitoa 1:00 a. m. Dafly xopt jnamy. A. L. CRAIG, General Panenrar Afant, rortlaa,Of T. 1. KIJTN A1SD, Agent, Hood KlTt v4 BO YEARS J-a EXPERIENCE II Ml i Trade Marks DCSIONS Coavaiairra A ,"JZnt """"I and denfTlptlon nay enlok r aarertmn oor opinion free whether an tw.i.Mrtrtljreraiiidwiilal. Hnrtbook( Patent cm frt (M.1e.t n(Wnry for nn, palenu. I'Ht-iiu taken tnroorh Mann CoTwcSV n-wi nfi, without chunre, in the Scientific Jftnerlcaa. A hwirtsoraoly lllnMntted weekly. Tjirrmt i-IK MBUNJI4Co" New Tork branca OOoa. 6JS F K, Wtbtngtoo, .. '