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e 3 g R T i i 2 THE DAILY BEE--TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1883, = THE MORAL OF IT. JLHE MORAL OF 17, |FINE ART IN PHOTOCRAPHY. please about pain; but the fact is, L NG A Talk With Brady, the Photographer, !hn?'l‘ \;;c don't like it whih(:i itrlasts, and that we want t t ri i can. Whetter cased by on Photographs and Photography. soon as we can. Whether caused by Daniel Webster, John C, Calhoun, rheumatism, gout, disordered liver, weak nerves, irregular kidneys, bad and Jenny Lind Before the Camera, blood, or anything else that is just the reverse of what it should be, the sooner it is out of the system the happier we_are. Wliether pain is the result of imprudence or of acci- dent, or is sent as a punishment for our sins, may be a nice question for -k the philosophers to argue; but peo- [Neilson ve. Lantry—Dickens and Pro- ple who are suffering want first to be fessor Morse—Oscar Wildeand rid of the pain, after which those American Art, who are fond of argument may argue the matter to their hearts’ content. Above all theory, argument, and philosophy, comes the Jf“lighlful fact that BROWN's IRON BITTERS drives pain away. Sufferers run no risk in trying this medicine, the only com- pound containing iron which carries no mischief with it. Those who have used it will tell you so; and you can giy for yourself by buying a bottle the nearest druggist. .7 Correspondence Cleveland Leader. New York, August 23,1 met Brady, the great photographer, in the Fifth Avenue Hotel to-night, an active, black eyed, dark complected man with the years of sixty but the faculty of thirty,” He looks a8 young now as he did twenty ars when he traveled with the Union my and took photographs of the battle tields. Mr, Brady may be called the father of American photography, He and PROFESSOR. MORSE, the inventor of the telegraph, made the lirst daguerreotypes in this country, and a8 far back as 1861, Brady tock the prize over European photography in the Werld's Fair at London. Brady and Morse had their daguerreotype establish- ment in a long room in Beekman street, in the lower part of New York. New York was then a city of about three hun- dred thousand. *‘While Morse was daguerreotyping,” says Mr, Brady, ‘‘he was at his invention. The room was half filled with little machines and wire was coiled about it, fastened to the walls and stretched here and there about the room, When he had accomplished his object he had great trouble in getting congress to | take it up. Ho finally got an apptopria- ton of three thousand dollars, and this aided him in putting the line from Balti- more to Wu"lingmu, which established his success. When he was working here in Now York the people laughed at him. He was caricatured in the newspapers, and was looked upon as somothing of a crack-brained !nn‘.” “What kind of a man was he?” ““One of the pleasantest and most gen- tlemanly I have ever known,” was the re- Mo Grastest Medical Diseovery Sines the Dawa ot itistrs, | ply. ‘‘He was a man of much learning, 1681t rovives the drooping spirits, Invigorater s | very refined, and broad in his views. He x:‘_‘;::“%wnm;flm'::::‘:fln: had a hard timoe of it for years, but suc- , restores tho. + i i wmm.:‘:rh“":nmh,"m oo ol ;:gl;x‘i;“ tho end, and died worth a great Eo Pemticans U I and Proserio I Froaly-w | ‘M. Brady,” said I, “you have pho- 1¢ romoves faintneas, flatulency, destroyn allcravia | tographed every prominent character who m“*':‘;;‘:":m:;;;"m have.come before the country for the oetlng of oy 3 f " n ' bylte past thirty years, have you not! ":-Il- .-..".'r"x'ia".'.‘,"x":fflil" :v‘fi:lu: “I suppose I hLve," ‘was the reply. ) this Compound 1s unsu; “Well, then, whom do you consider } — % .YDIA B, rfl%":'&,e”%{;‘v'm’z '":f‘ QREATEST MAN “’E'";::..:‘::m e, smong them? He i '/ %Wfifizzm '.\'DIA E. PINKHAMW'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND, 15 Positive Jure for all these Painful Complaints and Wenknesss ver . Invented by n Womss Propared by a Woman, . — The reply came without hesitation: e e e owa: Niaas, ‘Frimed | ‘Danicl Webstor. Ho was tho greatest fither, 81, 8ix bottles for 85, Bent by madl nthe tora | by far. He stands like a giant above all M pills, or of lozenges, onFeccipt ot price, §1 per b3 for eltner, Mrs. Plnkham free,, answors all lottors ¢ mqulry. Encloso Sct.stamp, Send for pamphiot. fmily should bo without LYDIA E. PINKHAM! @ PILLS, They cure gonstipation, billousn torpidity of the liver, 25 cents per box. others. Webster was a grand man intel- lectually, physically, and \nllyningnmnic ally. e had a grave, noble, dignified face; large, luminous dark eyos, full of x " |luster, and a high, broad, full: forchead. aF-sold by all Drugista €8 U | Fo wag a pleasant man before the camera, T and his face stood its scrutiny well. TV d JOHN €, CALHOUN A was another giant, whom I have often taken, and Clay was another. Calhoun had the most wonderful eye I have ever seen, Through the camera it looked like a blazing ball of light. 1t was set deep within the past few years. The dry pro cesa, or that of instantaneous photograph enables us to photograph places and old process. wards developed by the means of acids. The photographs 0 taken are may be made in this direction.” “'I nee, Mr. while the statement that the art of PHOTOORAPHING IN COLORS has at last been perfected. that a possibility!” “I should fear to say,” was the reply of this young gray-haired man, “that anything was an_impossibility. 1 have scen so many evident impossibilities be- come possible actual facts. This seoms improbable. All the chemists of the world have been working on it for years, and as yet no one has succeeded. Thirty yoars ago there was a man named Hill somewhere up in the Catskills who pre- tended to have discovered this art. He made Professors Morse, Silliman and others believe in him, and he also wrote I appointed a meeting with him, m I would put $10,000 into the bank of New York, and would 50,000 more for the development of his invention if he could show me that it was a bona fide one. He failed to ap- pear, and soon became known asa fraud. “In_photraphing in colors no compo- ition has yet been found which will suc- d. The using of different composi- tions and colors for different parts does not make good pictures, and so far black and white is all we have in the photo- graph. The old daguerreotype, made on silver plates, gives the most life-like tints, and I still think it makes the best like- nesses. Photographs are cheaper, how- ever, and thayfimvo run out the daguer- reotype. “What people make THE BEST PHOTOGRAPHS in the world, Mr. Brady?"” “‘The Americans make as good as any. Thirty years ago, when I went to Europe to find some improvements to bring here, I found we were ahead of the Europeans, Since then the demand for scenery shotographs and photographs of pictures |m\'u brought up iflurnpenu plmgms»hy. But there are no photographers anywhere who can beat 0}\0 six or seven best establishments here, and the California photographers excell all others in scenic work. Good photographing is now done in almost every county in the Union, and our photographers are improving in taste and draping yearly." “Isee that many photographs fade, Mr. Brady; what is the cause of this?" It lies in the use of poor materials. A good photograph will not change under the influence of light, but to make good work costs more, and those people who buy a cheap article often unknowingly buy a poor one.” “Speaking of faces, Mr. Brady, what do you think of OSCAR WILDE'S?” ““1tis a very peculiar one,” was the re- ply, *“Oscar may be something of a fool, but he has set the Americans wild on color. I think he has donme good for America. Ho has gotten us out of the ruts of ungainly blick and white. Tt may be that the bright substitute he has given us is not the best. But the peo- ple are awakened, and their inventive genius may not conduct a new art, tinctively American. Carr, e e 20 ol *Why is Mrs. Lydin E. Pinkham's ing, which is now used largely, is a great advancement in certain directions, It things which we could not get with the By this an audience, a car, or & horse race, may be taken and after: not superior, if they are equal, to those taken with the old process, but improvements y, every once in & Do you think Vegetable compound like the Mississippi - tice on a pumpkin to perfect his aim. We - | withhold the names of the parties on ac- oount of the lady, who will continue her residence here. | L — Worked Wonders, “My daughter was very bad off_on aceount of a cold snd pain in her lungs. Dr. Thomas' Jclectric Uil cured her in tcenty-four howrs. One of the boys was cured of sore throat. This medicine has worked wonders in our fam. ily. Alvah Pinckney, Lake Mahopae, N, Y. B erere PROTECTION FROM LIGHTNING, A Code of Rules Prepared by the English Lightning Rod Confercnce. Boston Travellor. The immense damage done by light- ning in the recent elictrical storms em- phasizes the need of protecting houses from thunderbolts more effectively and more gennerally than now done in this country, The late destruction of the Standard Oil company's tanks the shat- toring of a Long Branch church stecple, and the accident to the telephone ex- change at Dayton, Ohio, show that light. ning rods are going into disuse, or hei left out of ¢ until they be- o dangerous. The most eminent electricians have labored hard to devise rules for giving absolute efficiency to lightning conductors. The English Light ning Rod Conference last year matured a codo of such rules, and presented them in a form intelhgible to all minds, Among those rules are some suggestions not generally observed. The rods *‘should preferentially be taken down the side of the building which is most exposed to rain,” should ‘“‘not be bent abruptly round sharp corners,” and_*in no case should the length of the rod between two points be more than half as long again as the straight line joining thew,” while all joints in the conductor, ‘“besides b well cleaned, screwed, scarfed or ri ed, should be thoroughly solder- ed.” These important cautions, it may be feared are often overlooked. In the construction of lightning rods all external metallic masses, such as lead and zine roofing, vanes and metal tanks, should be connected with the rod by metal fastenings, but the rod should not be attached to any metal body wholly within the house. ~ When suitable con- ductors (of copper weighing not less than six ounces per foot, or galvanized iron weighing not less thah two and a quar- ter pounds to the foot) are provided their efficiency and the area of protection they will afford must largely depend on their ‘‘earth” connections. It seems best that the rod should bifurcate close below the surface of the ground; one part en- tering shallow, damp ‘‘earth,” and the other deep ‘‘earth” in a cast-iron pipe sunk in a well, and giving, if possible, a hundred square feet of surface to the water. In cities one part of the bifur- cated rod may be connected with the water main, and bound to it with wire for a distance of four feet, and then thor- oughly soldered to it, while the other is led by a copper or iron plate to a metal plate three feet square, buried in permanently wet earth and sur- rounded by cinders or coke. In case per- manently wet earth cannot be had, the Lightning Red conference proposes the alternative of connecting the rod by many yards of rust-proof metal tape, laid in a coke-filled trench, with a stitf metal plate prosenting a surface *‘not less than eight- cen feet square.” If these precautions seem to involve too much expense, it should be remembered that they are nec- essary to the safety of lifo and property, amounting to millions in value, annually destroyed by lightniag- Broom Corn’ MACHINERY ! A FULL LINE -CONSISTING OF Presses, DOUBLE CYLINDER SCRAPERS AND HORSE POWERS To Match. The Best in the Market. Manufactured by C.D. COLTON & CO,, Galesbury, [l #arSend for Circular and Price List RE ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE THE BEST BY ALL WHO HAVE PUT THEM T0 A PRACTICAL TEST. ADAPTED TO Hard and Soft Coal, COKE OR WO00D. MANUPACTURE %1 BUCK STOVE CO, SAINT LOUIS, Pierc/ & Bradford. SOLE AGENST FOR OMAHA PECK'S REAL ESTATE AGENCY. Opposite Postoffice. FIRST-CLASS BUSINESS PROPERTY IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED THROUGHOUT THE CITY ! Resident Property --- Impro Axnd the Last No such BARTGAINS Offered in a General Li FURNITURE! | One More—S—p—ecial Sale A Until September 1st, we will ofter some Special Goods in all Depart- ments of our business at Greatly Reduced Prices, to Close Out. ' Passenger ElevaIMAS. SHIVERICK, 1 To All Floors. J —— & { for This ‘Toar. i have ever before been ne of FURNITURE. 1206, 1208, Street, Omaha. 1219 Farnham Skylights &0 Galvanized lronCornices, Window Thirteenth Stroet Caps Finials, Ne 74 o CGOINC EAST AND WEST, Elegant Day Coaches, Parlor Cars, with Reclin ing Chairs (seats freo), Smoking Cars. with Re, volving Chairs, Pulman Palace Sleeping Cars and the famous C. B. & Q. Dining Uars run daily to and from Chicago & Kansas City, Chicago & Council [Bluffs, Chicago & Des Moines, Chicago, St. Jo- seph, 'Atchison & Topeka. Only through line be- tween Chicago, Lincoln & Denver Through cars betwedn Indlanapolis & Council Bluffs via Peoria All connections made fn Union Depots. It 18 known as the great THROUGH CAR LINE. Vice-Pres't and Gen'l Manager RLINGTON HOUTE" (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad.) AN P AT —— Soae Finest Equipped Rallroad in the World for all Classes of Travel. (T. J. POTTER, 84 , PR ey IaE e COING NORTH AND SOUTH. Solid Trains of Elegant Dar Coaches and Pull man Palace Sleeping Cars are run daily _to_an from St Louis, via Hannioal, Quincy, Keok Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Albert Lea to St Paul and Minneapolis: Parlor Cars with Reclining Chairs to and from St Louis and Peoria and to change of cars between St Moines, lowa, Lincoln, Nebrasks, and Denver, orado. It 15 universally admitted to be the PERCEVAL LOWELL, Gen. Pass. Ag't, Chicago.| WIL.SON’'S . | in hil d to draw s 8 —— : $ :i:gx“ r)ll:ld'-:z:l:;. iftwe Colhoun's hair | Tiver in a spring freshot? Becauso the “MyMGrandfather's Clock" 9 4 room house on Harney stroct, noar new ) g8 \C . 1 g ot ¢ ' this heali i My{ 3 court house. . . .. 2500 stood up in earlior years like that of |immense volume of this healing riverie, o o0 very popular song, but like many | 10 8 room house near Aiich Sclinoi on Daven- i Alad;:aw .{llchon. Later it wu;mou[ther moves with such momentum that it |other sentimental tunes it doosn’t wear wel 2100 {4 and his cheeks were more sunken fro vay all obstacl d is 1i Dr. Thomas' £ clestric Uil will wear: it wil 3 500 the consumption which was gnawing nw? nflv":im ’“:;:;y;“ ! sl ol wear away all aches, sprains, and pains, and D 1 00 OMAHA, S ¢ o 5 a - NEBRASKA. his lifo. His forehead was high, but his | “°"8 s repay its purchaser a hundred fold. 18i5 rouenbouie; cor. Lot on “ma;",:',’,““,fm 8 090 | Buitd all kinds of Steam Boilers, Smoke Stacks, Breeching Lard, Water and Oil Tanks, and do a genors,,~ : hair grow down upon it. Ho was a B = L BTG\ 1o Do st e 1000 plate-iron busiuess, Repairing done in City and Country. All work o modest fellow, very refined and very| Senator Trumbull's Two Troubles, i i Gl te Pri w v o iy Three Dead Heroes. near Webster on 19th 3 000 a s m a n a rr \ GENGY "‘",‘,‘;‘,’,‘ Eirks Sunr,élo‘anntAnt-Annn French, ina lcture | Now York Times, August 18, S8 [T Hoe AR AG gglhlo;ma"twfik s ces d anted N J . upon “Ten Years About the Senate,” re-| The daily rocord of accidents proves| 27 Eleven room houso,s scres; birgais 3 559 | Second-hand Bolers ept on hand. Having had many vears experiencein the tradoin different FENTRNTIIR WoMAN Iated tho following: ~ *Lyman Trumbul | thatin the rank und file thore are heroos | 2 Good houseand lofusarki Marylaritis 4 600 | o Boan Hraibtmene, - v o 1 N MTWILSON Bropristor.” you lh;vo oyex takun?"l R mfmthz:w great hi}vlf"'k?"d & g0od | whoso deeds should place their names | = partof thocity e 36w ¥ ave taken nearly all of #he actres- | deal of & statesmen, Like Fessenden, a|high on the list of noble and self-sacrific- ouse, barn, 1 are in west Omaha...". ‘8 700 P - } sesand o great may society belles, but[debator rather than an orator. A sharp|ing men. Read the brief story of Jamos | °t muo owhouses teoand thre room each o Double and Single Acting Power and Hand L] OFFER BARGAINS IN Business Property, Resgidence Property Suburban Property. |y, i IMPROVEDZANDIUNIMPROVED to have him him lecture in America under | science, which makes him uncertain.” In| A group of excursionists were crossing | 18! ,:’;"‘." :lflnn')l:’yt» 27thand’ 25th, Douglae 5 my management. This was just before | these modern times there may be many |the railway tracka fow days ago, at|1s45 AL m’.‘u s et as ettt : % Lands | Near Omaha AND WE HAVE A RANCH OF 4,900 Acres Stockod WHICH WE OFFER, Farms in all Parts of Nebraska. the prettiest of all was Adelaide Neilson, She was the nearest perfect in face and form of any woman I have ever seen. She stood the test of the camera, under which every line comes out, and which often turns beauty into ugliness, The faces of fow society belles will stand the test. Adelaide Neilson's face was with- out a flaw, and her form was that, of a goddess.” “What do you think of Langtry?” ‘I have not seen her except in photo- graph. But she is not a_perfect woman by any means. She is a fine-looking ani- mal, has & good physique, but her face lacks strength, and is barren of intellect- uality. It is too long, and it shows forth no soul.” *‘Have you ever taken CHARLES DICKENS distinguished by great acutness of nation and accuracy of statement and of judgment. Notas strong & man as Fessenden, but in many traits like him, There was a time, while Mr, Trum- bull was chairman of the senate commit- tee on the judiciary, that Benjamin But- lor was chairman of the judiciary commit- tee of the house. It was during this period that a delegation from one of the southern states visited Washington with a desire to securs the impeachment and removal of the federal judge of their state. They interviewed Mr. Butler as to the probability of carrying such a meas- ure through that session. ‘I don’t know,’ was Mr. Butlor's reply. ‘I am chairman of the judiciary committee of the house. The necessary can be had here. But Ly- man Trumbull is chairman of the senate committe, and Judge Trumbull is troub- “‘No. But I knew him personally, [led with two things—the dyspepsia, and I sent & man to England to arrange [ which makes him miserable, and a con- the opening of the war, and after he had | others besides General Butler who would written those American Notes, which |sneer at a senator for being caught in made him so unpopular here for a time. | Washington with a conscience, but there He was a little afraid to come to the|must be left some of the old-fashioned United States, and foared ho might be rooplo who in their simplicity, would mobbed. Horace Gruelufl and others at | honor the man all the more,” my instance assurod him hewould be well T ——— treated, and joined in pressing him to Instantly Relieved, come. Then his troubles with his wife | ® Mrs, Ann Lacour of New Orleans, La., came on, and his publishers would not | writes:—I have a von who has heen sick for lot him leave, fearing his wife's lnxen “’0“{""'1 he has been attended by our leading b him ; : physicians but all to no purpose. “This mornin . orou n consequence, tha was put offfrom one day to another until | feemed 'lmminent. We had in the house the war broke out, and then ho could not | bottle of DR. WM. HALL'S BALSAM for me. Some years later he did visit the mi;l; ‘;’l“‘j lfi'::km;;:fi 24 l‘xuullu;-d. -whu nited States, but it was under diifferent 418 b f ety ol . auspices than ‘mino. I met him first at ;fi‘{fl‘,‘:{;’;‘,‘:“ffl?{;’“‘“ %o directions aud he Elliott’s death in Philadelphia. On Wed- nesday last this man, a poor cripple, whose years were three-score and ten, was limping by the side of the railway tracks picking up scatteréd and neglected bits of coal. Near at hand were two lit- tlo boys between the rails of the main line,on which the fast express train from this city was swiftly approaching, . The poor eripple shouted to them, and they did not hear. But soon they saw the taain and were made helpless by fright. Elliott hobbled along as fast as his rheu- matic legs would carry him, and reached them in time to save them from a horri- ble death One had been pulled away by his trembling arms and the other had been pushed aside with all the old man’s failing strength, when the merciless loco- mative struck the brave old cripple and the wheels cut his body in pieces. He had rounded out and completed his life with an act of rare heroism. Woodside, on Long Island. A train was coming, only twenty yards away, anda woman who saw it stopped in her course paralyzed by fear.. When death was close upon her, Michael Quinn leaped from the platform, grasped her in his arms, and threw her headlong from the rails. But he could not save himself, and perhaps he had not thought of his own peril. The locomotive hurled him through the air with his blood streaming from a dozen wounds, and in twenty min- utes his wife was a widow and his siy lit- tle children were fatherless. But the woman had been saved without a bruise. A few days before Quinn sacrificed his life John Murphy was walking on the railway track, near Ansonia, Conn., with 108 Eleven room hous, large bar: 1 location, St. Mary's avenue 126 Two houses, in first-class ord other conveniency cars, cash. ... 150 House, 12 rooms, water, half lot, corn block and a half from P. 0. 165 2 story house, 6 rooms, near Grace; well impro 170 House and full cor, ave. Pleasant plac ot near § cash near 20th and Harney, 1ot 50x: 177 New hous oms, barn and othiér im- new court house, Har- 146 6 room Cottage, barn and other improve- ments, near west school, on Pleasant St. 170 House of 7 rooms, large cor. lot beautiful view of the city; great bargain A 174 House of 6 rooms, good barn, lot 64xi; very desirable lot of city. 80 New house, 8 lots, near on Coburn street. o 230 8. 108 House and 2 full lotson 10th and Hiek 72 Fine residence near 16th and California, ; 94 Houso and tull lot near 5th and Walnut St 96 Cottage, b rooms, near cor, Hickory and CLASS (L.) 20 choice, large lots near street car, i Millard and Caldwell addition. 1o Fineresidonco lots in “Hanscom Place."" Good rms. Thirty elogant, resident lots in “Redick's” sddition. Twenty:threo Iots in “Shinn’s” addition. A fow choleo lota in E. V. Smith's addition, Lota in “Kountae's* addition. Prices and torus given at wy office, for lots in all parts of the city. Acre Tracts, CLASS (A). Ten acres near Ft, Omaka. Four acres near Omaba. o dinner n;‘ rl')ulmnnico'n, and liked him e — two of l:i:slchnldruln whux:l\ h"l lwnf; Efl{iug Ten acros 1ear lu-wnu(r_," very muchi , A PEEKLESS CHEEK, out for a day in the woods, The babbling | Oneacre ucar Hansoom Zark. AT A LOW PRICEI 'Did you ever photograph him?" AN 0 AURIED.A e MO o the | Two and oneohalt acres Torth Saders strvet. WITH A “‘Yes, very, Nearly every notabilit - threo to cscape. Catching up his little wold, wend torma nd tull deseription and we will find Ruge of Soveral Thousand - AGTGS. | ks them eithor himaol, ‘or through | Grand 1atand Nowe, by, he e R et Y T Fn the Siate. BEDFORD & SOUER, for the photographer, and they somotimes | Grand Tsland last week o induco his | girl to place of safety on the other side, B on Porpensy for Joa, u axchende. | M0, IGOR Farnam Street = - - - OMAHA. 213 8.14th Street. | pay hundreds of dollars for a sitting, wife, who left him some time sinco on | His children were saved, but at the cost | dty. Ieuting houses a specialty. e A T R 13y the way,” continned Mr. Brady, | account of brutal treatment, to return to [ of his own life, for the locomotive cast| "ovths ERFECTIO H. PHILLIPS, THE LEADING NEW YORK TPATT.OR ! Onll and look over my new store aud seo wy o 1207 1207 FARNAM STRE! Under the mans ement of Mr. Kalish, o b ot ,M‘N,::,,.w l;{,:,’nd:fx’ p';“,m::fi'x:‘"'::m; Which a Pistol Bullet Could Not Pen- kept him from sitting to any other.” etrate—An Omaha Man's At- *Are such contracts common?” tempt at Suicide, his agent. 1t is & great card, you know, [ A party living in Omaha came to 1 was the first to photegraph JEN LIND, 1 got her to sit to me a week after she landed in Now York, and before she sang. n Fulton street. The people in a great | her refusal. She knew his habits too well crowd followed her to the office, and the | to relent, and he placed the muzzle of street for a block each way was filled | the pistol to his left temple and fired, She refused Omaha and live with him. to do so, and he came down town and yurchased a revolver and returned to the louse where she was stopping, threat J. E. HOUSE, with people to see her come out. We|The ball, a 22 calibre, glanced off and let her out a back way to avoid them, the powder burn was the only damage he “Was Jenny Lind fimu 7 received, Bystanders interfered and er No, she had a rather pleasant face, of | took the revolver away from him and h mml‘ Ili |:I||| [l!llul “d the Swedish order, square und red.” was taken before u judge, ,,).':. gu\: BURVEYOR, o o a7 the et tran o boing put i ho coolor. Mo Vot for a tino ab-luast thelr unsallal | E°12 FIRST PRIZE MEDALS, 3 For sale by g hd Makiog ART OF PHOTOGRAPHING, chose the former and sl on the | heroism make the world brighter to f Mr. Brady?" . Bext truin: The next. time he wanta to | those who kuow the story of these three By Wm. S. Kimball & Co. MILTON ROGERS & SONS, TS FheT, NATIONAL, BANK, | Tiny o/ Have beon no great improvements |shoot himself in the head he should prac- | obscure great men. IWILL BE READY SHORILY, e OALATIA, S “Are we making much advancement | him the choice of leaving town by the At this time I had an office on | ening to kill himself if she persisted in | rattlo of an approaching train and the cars were higden by a sharp curve. When Murphy saw the train it was plain that it wuuld ho almost impossible for the on one side, and then threw his little his body against a telegraph pole, and in twenty minutes he was dead, Murphy did to save his own, while Elliott and Quinn sacrificed themselves to save the lives of strangers; but each one of theso men was s hero. They were not led by hope of fame or applause; they simply did their duty and nhu{'ad the impulses of their great hearts. They were obscure and unknown men of the rank and file, in humble life, and the names a8 well as their deeds will soon be forgotten, save by two bereaved families Ml? h{ the strangers who were rescued. o1 car Fort Omiaha, One nore on Forty meresnear city. If you have city oF country property you wish perty, property and farma f salo at all’ tines at bargains, N PREPARATION | THE FINEST CIGARETTE, CLOTH -» GOLD (Straight Mosh.) -PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings Steam Packing at wholesalo and rejail. AND SCHOOL BELLS, HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH Corner 10th Farnam 'St., Omaha Neb. A. M. CLARK, e & PaperHangar SIGN WRITLR & DECORATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL | WINDOW SHADES & CURTAINS, Cornices, Curtain Poles and Fixtures, ~ " | IPAINTS, OIL & BRUSHES, 107 South 14th Stroet, 2 J, 0. PRESCOT PIANOS & ORGANS! Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. CHEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE j OMAHA, - & . ,' ] Ko P, CORTIOR J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO., Wholesale and Retail CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK OR SEND FOR PRICE IN Heating and Baking Is only attained by using —rw CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, o WITH WIRE GAUIE OVER DOORS k.