Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 27, 1893, Page 6

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6 IHE ()MAHA DAIl.Y llFl’M 'fi()\ I)AY MARCH 27 18”&. . " 'Q mortality and length of time in contrac \ have eliminated the accumulative hu-lm', S u n-n!ng its classes again and Mr. | out of the week, and there must bo some | something frof savornme! vhats fruit of wise investments. |m.-|. mainly from the less intelligent | 'l‘I|I~ was the erucial test of the real The other New York schools do not | senator was one day informed that “old — 1t has been xlmnluivhl(-,'.n-t( (w;i»m)i and the impecunious classes, Ac umu- | r— ;‘nluu of Inu.- sague. The acaden \\"xw .inm-r from the leaguo in classes or | M } arrived from Woodford N years that the individual has realized | Jation is held to be exclusively the busi- s K\ ree, and had taken the league's in n methods. A deseription of one set county Kentue was " He That is Well Insured Mellows the Tears | 3, "0ty of making money by en- | ness of the individual and not of the They Are the Nucleus of the Best of Every- | gy\ugtor, yet such was the spirit of the | of oclasses s a doseription of all. | consult with ll...‘f.‘ l.:'."\.lu.\n‘ .“,\."m~’:..:|f: of the Mourners, dowment polieies or aceumulated divi- | company. Carried to its logieal conelu- | thing in- America. | new institution that students found it | Many of the same professors go to the | tant matteah,’ e dends through the application of the | gjon this view of the functions of capital more to their advantage to work there | different schoos, and to a easnal on- “Well, Moses," bogan Senator Blacks prineiple of compound interest. This | would have neutralized organized effort than at any other school. | looker there seems to be little difference | burn, as the grinni AMMrican wad MODERN INSURANCE AND ITS POSSIBILITIES | may secm to be in w strict sense impossi- | from the dawn of civilization. SKETCHES OF FOUR HIGH CLASS SCHOOLS Schools grow to have traditions and a | in aim or scope. Tt is all in the in- | ushered into his presence, “what brings ble. for the insurance company must be W management freed from an- personality, and it is this that has made | dividuality, wi chis ereated by the | you to Washington? \selves ) Toe," replicd Mose fme Academy of Design, in | prossively, “I'se paid for the risk of death, and that must | tiquated pr a4 Craft | come out of the p the league what it is in the art education | v of Design, the Art | of America. Mr. Shirlaw can dent and dead tradition; s the miums in one way or | gecumulation superimposed upon in- | The National Acade in where | The Natio Fantastically Named and Equiy portant bhusine Afloat on the Ocenn of Life-The Propri. | anoth Compound interest might” not | demnity: legitimate methods of increas Students Leagun, the Metropolitan and Mr. Wilmarth had gone out. The fourth | its beautiful building, "modeled on a [ sah. | wants er or ! T 7 And the Praternal--Paging and alone produce anticipated results. t | ing accummulation systematically cm- the Cooper Unton — The Classes brought Mr. Beckwith and N'r | Venetian palace, holds classes almost “You want anoffice! Why, Mose, whas e the investment of premiums held to | ployed: adoption of long deferred and Methods of Teaching. se, who returned from abroad to put | identical in every way. They have no { can you Nonpaying Enterprises. await the maturity of policies, by meth- | poriods of repayment or distribution their mark on the league, which has | preparatory school at” the academy, and “Do, s ods not contemplated under the early | yecognition of the fact that insuran limitations assumed to be fundamental, | must bo conducted on a paying basis, The possibilities of insurance are de- | may and often does supplement the pro- | just like any other business that suc- termined, like those of any other busi- | cess of wecumulation at compound in- | eeds: in fine, a continuousty productive ness, by ascertaining how far it can be | terest, and thus resuits in actuallysmak- | union of the capital of the intell Mars' Joe? What docs everybody orfice? Bloss yer hearty don'tun‘erstand ole Mose. ) 4 1 the {1 hain't lookin' fo' work, sah; L only ing traditions, and there is | wants er orfiec less of the inspiration of comrade natc own from the loft to a beautiful new | a drawing ‘must be passed upon by the The great art collections that were building on Fifty-Seventh street, and | professors befor pupil may enter. It it 1 Bar 4 AT e from a little drawing class with one ‘ is a little more conservative th sent from Europe to the Centennial eX- | tenchor to 1,000 pupils with nine of the | league, position in Philadelphia came to an | e \m.-n..mm-n.-umim 1ctors, | ipy s Blackburn wit s 0! A made to pay, writes Richard A. McCurdy | ing money for the insured. | policy holder and the skilled labor of | almost entire untrained vision, writes | farroll Beckwith, Geor, de I, | which is so valuable in the leaguoe. L serion 8 n:‘ l(\.- l.wl\:x il y. ':ln::y;\n,“l\.“:l:l- in the North American Review. sinstance: Large profits were made | the experienced and successful life | Margaret Field in Munsey's Magazine B u~.h William M. Chase, Kenyon Cox, The Cooper Union Art school is a lit- [ sured Mose that he was powerless to The particular form of insurance to be | during our eivil war by sales of gold at | underwriter, supported by highly in- | Twenty years ago Americans went F. V. du Mond, H. Siddons Mowb: tle different in being particularly assist him to an “‘orfice,” but that he considered in the following remarks is | high premiums, Much money has been | gtrueted and organized agency forces EYVORAToom YHe Saboatd. Bitlad=n 1ew Augustus Saint Gaudens, J. H. Twacht- | women. From this school come many of | might provide employment in some life insurance, with incidental refer ' by rises in real property bought | these today ave demonstrating the pos- o 0 the seaboar man, J. Alden Weir, these are the men | the women teachers and amatenr actists | private concorn. Old Mose's face foll [ ] to other branches. for vement or taken in at judicial | sibilities of insurance in ways till ‘\n_f them—and now and then a | und whose eye the workers in the | we find all overthe eountry. Theschool | but soon brightened a; 4 i Any form of insurance, whether it be | sa Advances in the value of many | pecently not fully understood, and it is | rich man from the interior took [ league learn to paint. Each man is in- | was founded esp ly to help women “Well, N ! he, hopefully, § puvely mutual, proprietary or fraternal, | sceurities held by insurance comy 5 | to these that we must look for even | his family to Europe, but the | dividual after his own fashion. Mr. [ who needed helpi and there is a sym- | “of yo k o' me, sah, ,” f not condueted on a paying basis, must | have greatly incréased cither their sur- | greater developments in the future. constant stream of travel of | Chase and Mr. Weir ave as distinet as it | pathy and an intes rest felt th e not | jes' hustle e o ,,..”,i‘..,s : necessarily lf. | The purc \‘ ulx’n ].‘lll [)‘\ 1 vly;» .|,\’m‘.!m1 paying |n-[n| . ll“\‘~ pose — today was unknown, Theart collections :I*( 'd”f.{” ‘.» 1’n i:".'v ‘vh. qvm‘(. n|~| utz':-”m | kl;mulx m v:]’\.- b ui\ life of the mh;-r' I ain’t at all 't " company will drop asunder: stockhold- | plain that if the money paid for premi- ; " Shiladelphi sreat influence | MO danger of imitating styles, but the | schools. There have come into the = ersina proprict v company will wind up Vs e o B WHQ D productive in the THE WORLD'S NEW BOOKS. in | ""j“' Iphia had a great influen one defect of the league seems 1o lie ina | Cooper Union Art school numbers of A Dublio Meeting the concern, or it'will go into the hands | hands of the insurers than it would have —_ nov only upon the public, but also upon | clinging to elassic methods of work. | women from all over the country who Nofet GxnvastoR, Tox.: Mot 'he T i idelvor by of law: enth been in the hands of the insured, the | Sixty Thousand Poure r, Ger- | the artists. Up to that time there were In the Julien school in Pavis, the pupil little homes of their own hero | zealous eitizens of North Galveston recently asts who sustain addition will go to the cost of the y only two or thy good drt schools in | is told to paint. Paint what you sce ¥ Many of them will be entirvely | e with pe her for the purpose stions of municipal in scussing s benefit machiinery and to reduce the cost of the The average Ame and employ \ and ¥y tore insuranc der has [ Apjerica. The avtists clung to classie | never mind what or how anybody els itions inschools, They | au odly Erow v It follows that if the gddition | very little knowledge how large the | models in style and the public had grown | sees.” The Beaux Arts is the exponent arning to make a living imount was subscribed for insure ’ we them to their | can be made lavge enough the whole of | flood of new books is yearly in the civil- | to think the + the only style. The | of the elassic school, and it is this that | The Metropolitan Avt gal ln-’ \.wulrumu of o by s Iien's elu fate. Assessment socic ¢ the premiwm or its equivalent might be | ized world and how véry small the shave | modern sehools, which were exemplitied | the league scems to be following, But | tral park has an exeellent schod e T i TSt g when the as ents returned to the insured, at last, and the | of this country is in adding to it. Most | in the European exhibit, were o revela- | one look at the Paris schools will show | the very best artists lecture and insteae v gl BRI e often, and the shores of t protection w { cost him nothing. And | Americans, if they were asked, would | tion alike to painters and pub! that it is Julien's pupils who take the [ The students there have the adva e of | this y which has enjoyed more life demnit trewn with wreck this is not a hypothe It is a | feel cortain that about as many new t American artists were edu- | Beaux Avts prizes. They go over there | the galleries as illustrations, and many of | and few months than any other fantastically named and equipped, which | fact. The records of the progres- | books were written in this country as in ance and in the majority of | for this opportunity, but " the training copy the great pict But this | Texas city has done in as many years, pos- ve met the common s of all non- | sive companies show rany instances | any in the world. As a matter of 1 where they found sympathy | they in the untrammeled school. | privilege is also open to the pupils in | 508 a substantial backbone iu'the publio ‘ ing enterprises in a commercial age. | where this has been the case. It | therve is no civilized country in Europe ial surroundings. 1t wasaf JIn the league, as in the othe ew | other schools * people, o primary facts: and yet they | will be objected that this is not insur- | of any size, not even excepting Ru: awakening that many of these | York schools—the training in all is very The art student's life in New York has & o involve an ent paradox ance, but banking ov simple tradin which does not match or overmatch the | men eome home and have sinee spe similar—the standacd for enterir none of the picturesque tures of the What He . For there is, theoretically, no money | ranted: but the bankin d the trad- | literary product of the United States. yea under of th lives teaching the ve anding of the { life in oit Free Press ntigue. The p aiE D iy of the pupils man in the D — made by insurance. Insurance is techn ing are anci y Lo > and they This country, to take statistics of the | yudiments of theiv art, in order thal paratory s thool takes the pupil thrc young girls, who go either to some nmieh hat was doing most of the 1y held to be all loss. Companies or |y the waste of the one by the | Publishers’ Weekly, in 1802 published | there might be American schoc the study of casts and blocks—making | school, where they t upa lan d the drummer was doing the listen ions which carry on the busi- | profit of the other, This is the | 4,074 books and 788 new_editions of old | They have suceeeded in sueh fashion | studies in ch | ‘ that they muy be {itting themselves for | in are only distributors of 1oss. 1 anal to, ulthough undoubt books, or 4.862 in all. This is close 0 | that all the advantages of art education | The rooms ight, airy and « | tudy abroad, or they go, two or il 1in Blue G * he askeds voluntary I submitted to | ex; on of, the fundamental eighty new books, not volumes, a week, | in Furope, unle be the traditi ful, and one of the amazing things together, to some boarding house. Many suid the deummer, at once Dby 'h«' insured, removes | tions of the husiness. [ust and near ninety-cight issues weekly of | apmospheve, can today be found in 2 youth of the pupils, The different ve- | of them live at their own homes, - t what it used to be. [Fifteen { ‘ angoer of a preminms are cast on a gcal ) ill strike most peo- | York, There is ot only the ability to | Sults achi even by the same method There is in the distriet about Wash there wasn't a likeli nin otherwise happen at shall feave substantial margins of sur- | ple as a very fair lite tivity, In | do good work, but theee 1s the fc of work are curious to note. One young | ington square a colony of artists and of Now it ain’t m rave- [ as the prime purpose of the plus in addition to reserves required to | Great B n, however, which has only | that it will be appreciated when it man, almost a boy, had drawn a stidy in | young men who have come back | ¥a Gamblin' and shootin' and ( premiums is to pay lo guarantee faltillment of obligatio a lxm.-u\-v halfof our population, there | qone. chareoal of a cast of a reclining female | from the Paris schools and who f whoopin® it up twenty-four hours a day, premium paid in cach ) Interest above the rate imed in thei published 4,915 new It is often said of art schools that | figure. In his drawing 1t of | the French signs and the busement caf nd worse on Sunday. [ remember once s primarily a loss to the in calenlation is always rveckoned as one h..vL~ wl 1,339 new editions of works | they are of no practical u that the | the cast was eliminated yked on | and the general freedom of that portion ttin’ in game there with Dick Jim- The ship that goes to the bottom, of the sources of surplus and as such | previously issued, in all 6,254, just about | man or woman with the real soul of i his paper it was a woman “with Ruben: of the city, wh models o son. Half Breed Joe, and man from warchouse that is burned, or the beeomes an integral fuctor, Not is | 120 new works or twenty ev working | the avtist would arvive at excellence | like fHesh. When a pupil can make | 20 unnoticed, some reminder of Texas, The ante was %5 and the limit that perishes, takes out of existence it the case in varions forms of day, so that if a man | 0 on_ the showed down Half ht, Dick Jimson ad ten hours a | without the help; and continual | & first rate drawing from the | life abroad. was nowh There was day every week day he would have | {llustrations ave being drawn from | cast he goes to = the 1tique Jut even this is not so distinet as it | ¢loth and when v about half an hour to'give to each book, | the well known men who have fought | class, where he is looked over | Was. Theartists and the studio build- | Breed Joe held a &0 much actual or potential capital lative policies the insurance money that and 1 This is pure :nt methods have me | [ | | | | o which ‘ both kinds, This { | | | | | | | | whole or in part is only the product of | the banking factor to greater fruition | often consisting of several volumes. their own way into vecognition. The | by Mr. Cox, Mr, Beckwith and Mr. du | ings are moving up town, many of them | heldan ace and three k the Texas individual contributions of smaller sums, | for the benefit of the insured. Th This omnivorens reader would have to | tpue idea of an school is entirely lost | Mond. about the new league building. The | man held four aces and which have been sacrificed in ad insured are also, through the aggrega- | double his industey if he lived in France | sight of in this argument. An art Mr. Cox and Mr. Beckwith are well | student the schools knows almost Jerusalem!” interrupted the drum- in prevision of the dreaded eatastrophe | tion of small individual contvibutions, | The new books and new editions theve in | sehool, fike a literary sehool, is intend- | known, but Mr. du Mond is one of the | nothing of this life. His taste has not ' merat his revelation, “and what did you or of the inevitable doom, g made pactners, pro rata, of those who | 1802 were 13,13 He would have to | ed, not always as a training in pr very new men. Five ago he was a | been formed for it, and it is seldom o hold?™ v Where, then, is the point of contact | ofien control the world of finance and | treble his reading powers or give each | teehnicalities for immediate use student at the le and it was only | formed in New York. The day when | “Well," he said, “as I was the coroner betwe the first and sccond proposi- | reap the profits which attend the | new book six minutes apiece in Ger- | 4 liberal edues It might last 3 me back from his | the artist was traditionally a Bohemian | 8t the time, 1 held an inquest on the tions? sagaciol Tt is here: That while pure insura fs but a distribution of loss, the ma- employment of large capi at propitious junctures. The aposties of the non possumus propaganda de- : German | justly a sand univ studies in Paris v iblishers were issuing LLS03 works | ties were of no il use, beeause | febvee, Hi i eoun- : not one graduate in a thousand becomes acy, m th Boulanger and has pas style is new and of extreme | paint de up of curves and a trans- nnot s d by, He no longer expects to | Texas man.” W picturesquely starve. If he 1L his paintings, he looks about I ¥ ‘ Fly. In 1881 the issues in th —— chinery of distribution must 80 con- | pounce this as he but | try we 4,888, 1 than a thivd. In | 4 poet, tion of form that is exquisite | in a sensible way and tries to und and A WOMAN'S HEAD structed as to impose the minimum of the theory of management of the | 1890, when the issuc ) 4 The art schools are making an audi- rom these classes in the antique the | Why. He knows it must be because they is level and her |.f.| gelf-sacrifice upon the insured and to so- ve Ameriean life insurance | those in Germany we ,or more | anee. An artist exists because he has | pupil goes to the lifo class, and here the | aré not up to the standard, for the deé d wiien ke gute for his money tl ximuwm of pro- toduy, and has given, and | than four the e, 50 much | gppeeciators, and the act practical 1 work begins. It is a saying among | mand for good work distances the sup aith in Dr, | ductiveness, Those 1 1 be at- | promises to give in the future, t the | move rapidly is the production of baoks | value of this art education disseminated | ar tif aman can paint the ply. He goes into illustrative work, Fuvorite tained under litions of the business | husiness of pure life inswm growing there than here. In 1802 the | from the great schools is being shown | m figure ho can paint srhaps, and draws for sime of the in- scription. There established hy lone and wide vience. | but a disteibutor of loss, the | production was close to 20,000 in in the new archifecture of the coun- | anything. ~ When a pupil numerable pictorial journals. g P11 Experience is used in its many by | | ood health, actually m money for and this, too, without' the nt purposcs, means ap- | trve conservatism. Probably no mos 1 and conservative set of men | le v population two-thivds as large | fpy. Avehitects find the | and with not a thivd of the wealth of | cylled out by people whe the United States, which brofight out | cated into i sen than a quarter as many books as | putting up buil | lom indc pos i an | Itis s value—transparent, | unless he i showing the flesh beneath—he has | artistic 'ned what painting means. But the | of the school best talent | give the shadows on = ht have be f true art that a student, sed of con ble to I'ne life ¢ meaning applied statisti tiveness, for pr plied intelligenc y expects (o ome really beaus tiful from the uso of complexion | rab through one in any of wedu- | flesh their prope ul 11 over the land lit care y auti- How far have the possibi f in- | could be found in any center of financial | Germany. which are enducing monuments of ¢ to this is long and arduous. | them is difficult to enter. A pupil is ad- Sflers. Bright eyes, sui ance been alr activity than ave the managersof the | The United States not only publishes | peguty. The pupils come from all over the | vanced as rapidly as his ability will clear skin and ros Fr in his s of Life Tn- | investment function of life insuranc wer books than other cotntries, but here are in New York, which is still | country, many of them with only u vague | tllow, but the ordinavy cd is five X S AE surance,” enumerates, in addition to the | companies in general and of these popu- | among those a larger proportion are | the center of the best of everything idea of what it means to be an artist, | years, and in five years of acute criti- ood food, and—the judicious u~.‘l.rrfin ordinary forms of life, marine and fice | larly known as the “great” life insur- | meve ephe L novels. Last year, out | Ame four high cluss artschools— | Lt looks s easy to put paint on canvas, | cism and hevd study he is apt to discover cription.” insurance and annuitics, among others, [ anee companies in particular, of our 4, bovks published, 1,1( the National Academy of Design, the | But when they discover that it takes | the value of his work. All women roguire a tonic and nervine at the following schemes: to insure mar- But the banking feature, however im- | over a fifth, were novels. — In Gern Art Students Leagtie, the Metropolitan | yeavs to learn to draw, and more years —————— some period of their lives, Whether suffer- vinge pértions; for preventing and sup- | portant it may bo, is nevertheless only | out of 18,873 books in 1890, only 1,7 Artschool, in conneetion with the gal- | to learn to paint, and that all this Busy paoplohave o time, and sensiblopso. | | 8 Hom DAcyousio, dizsinok e pressing thicves and robbers: for insur: [ one of the many elements of successful | less than a tenth, were devoted to either | jory, and the Cooper Union At sehool. | technigue goes for little, unless nature | 1o h3yene inglination to use pills thatmaico |- FEFBEIRERE Tt B o 5 [ seamens wagos; for tho ins of | life underwriting. Probably in no otiier { poetry or fiction. u years ago only Yie National Academy of Design is | has given ideality to blend with train- | TPhevhave learnsd that the uss of Dé Witts | OF general O Prescription®. g debts; to insure masters and mistr business are so many educated intelli- | 1,260 such books out of 14,774 were pub- | the oldest, and has the greatest reputa- | ing, then there begins to come a_doubt wrly Risers doss not interfere w reaches the origin of the trouble rects i . 8gainst losses by servants, thefts, genees brought into the service of the | lished in y. Here last year, of | tion outside of New York. The N. | inmany minds. Gradually in this way 1ealth by causiag nausea, pain or geip- | it Guaraateed to benefit, or the money is & . forinsuring and increasing childr participants in its succe To the de- n--\vl“mH posmns together, 1, }'-l \:;'- k*[ A. after a member's name is a title of n..\r classes are weeded out’ yeur by yew 'hese 1 > pitls are pe in lon refunded. | fortunes: insurance from hous velopment of the Amevican idea, from | were published, or over one-fourth of | honor. It grew out of the old academy MENOHaes has o Bl IIfa. oliss: that s, vogulating the stomich an S insurance from highwaymen wnco | the formulas of the early manngors and | the wholo. It is only in England that | whick was founded in 1802, and which | is very interesting. It is here that o mennpelan HEEIRE S AuC v et T e ane from lying; vum insurance and cattle in- | actuaries to the present combinations, | our appetite for fiction is matehed. | was created and managed by men of al- | the way to handle textures s taught. | b ihe are prevented, ' They vleanse the isadeT ute) prevenien ey slen ¢ | reward offered for an incurable case. most any profession save that of art, It | Frank ~Duveneck painted his celo | bragan fapic comploxion und tone up th was the wsthetic child of that eavly ma- | brated “Turkish Page” from one of | lows. terial day in New York, and was | Mr. Chase's groupings for the still life made much of for a time. The then | effect. Mr. Duveneck passed through [ d minister to France, Chancelor Li the room where the boy and the kettle There is a long Buran which almost exhaust the capabilities of | There, last year, 1,537 novels were i ; The marauding barons of the middle | the interest and mortality tables, must | sued, ora full quarter of all the book § agos who, after lives of vapine, built | bo attributed in a greater measuve than | published, and 217 poems, in all 1 churches and left mone, s masses, may | to the banking element the phenomen: works. Whe be eonsidered to have made elementavy | growth of life insurance in vhis ¢ untry: | & fifth of its literary LA T il |l I e wanted, SOUTII OM. \lel t of sable citizens | ~~~mn The Salary W attempts to insure their future feli but still more is due to the unil and England a qu ingstone, caused Na holeon o be made had been placed for the pupils, and | Who fancy they enjoy a stout democratic i ] mn Whother the fnvestuent paid has nev energy und prolific ingenuity of the | turns a tenth of its writing energy in | honorary membe Bl that o acity | pleased with the idea, and z.f“g«-upy an | pull,” and who are or will be applicants Union Stock Yards CO‘T}D]]Y, been rtained. men—execntive offic and matne- | this divection. the first’ consul sent several casts and | idle moment, brought his easel and | for positions of authovity, says Kate South Omaha b It is recorded, also, that pilgiims to | maticians of high scientific at- [ This simply means that the seri engravings to the academy. paints and worked with them. The re- | Field’s Washington. The story of a H the Holy Land established a sort of ton- | tainments working for a com- | Work of investigation in science, in But the business men who had founded | sult was his best known picture. ent application made o Senator | oy caute Ho and Sheep markot In tha west 5 tine, by depositing monay before ieaving, | mon end—who have infused into their | tory and in all practical fields is being | the institution and fostered it had many | The draped model class is one of the o ¢ an old negro from Ken- ~*~ which was to be returned two or three- | business activiiies the enthusiasms of a | done better and more completély in € wi some of the members died, and | most important. It is here that the the eagerness to secure fold to those who had the luck to | new crusade for the elevation of an ad- ny than anywhere clse. —In newspa- | the academy was almost forgotten. The | pupil must begin to see under the COMMIS310N HOUSES come back alive. he stay-at-home | ministrative experiment into a_ robust | pers and novels we beat ( out of | Napoleon casts were stored for several | line into the characte and to give R S e TR = % members. in aceovdance with the spivit | sehool of faith and practice. The en- | band, but in serious books we ave simply | years, and then in 1816 they were | what he sees expression on his % TWANTEYDIE Wood Brothars 5 of the age. probably lay in wait for the | thusiasms of these have beon passed on | nowhere by the side of Germany. Iven | hrought out and exhibited, giving a new | canvas. It is heve also that the e ; RN ood Brothars, 4 returning travelers made money. | to and assimilated by hosts of bright | Russia, which in 1588 published start to the academy. o was, how- | treme of individual fostered. The Ly DISTRICTS, WATZR Mcdern travelers insurance companies, | minded and aggressive agents to whom | book - do not, however, com: to our ( s the death of | the blending of philanthropy with [ 4,716 to 4,55 531, and in I8¢ shows a greater ever, an avowed d 5 ve § )] 183l archint inclination to having | model, in this case an old Prenchman COMPANIES, 6T.R.R.CCMPARIES.ctc Live Stock Commisilon Morchuats. artists as members of the board of | with ¢ rectly buttoned cout and pointed Comamnunighsane ated i A Bouth Omah hone 1157, - Chicage A their policy holders. They give them | closely calculated monetary problems | activity than this count Qivectors, The business men sooffed at | beard, is seated on a platform in the K.W.HARRIS & COMPANY,Bankers, OIS0 DADIMAN. | tancors the option of *‘your money or your life,” | offers'sympathetic attractions possessed | reader the idea of avtists by ing ablo to mana center of the room. All about were the 163-185 Dearborn s:;‘e;&. c'D:,ISAGO- WALTER B, W00 E and—they take the money. by no mere project of profit without pro- | nuy anything. Young piinters, who had no | easels of carnest students painstakingly (BN AINE Cant; THEINRY ORNS : . ey mil AL v caneCully k- But this is a digression. teetion or of protection without profit, These comparisons ave not particularly | pe utation to commend them to the | transferring their idea of the model to ERigsHON Today we have in successful operation | No other business entery commands | soothing to our national pride, but it i s, could not find a place in the | the ca . The k is to make a employers liability companies and vari- | the services of agents possessing, as a | well t our national disposition to im- | oy ”1.”. ms. Merit without reputation acteristic portrait. What nature ous companies which insuve pinst de- | eluss, higher moral and intellectual | agine that this ¢ mm-‘.\ leads in all de- | ¢hey did not understand. put in the face must go down with OMA H A falcation and breach of trust, real estate | qualities and their devotion is scenved | partments should be sharply corrected Fhere was at this time a young | exactness, and what life has put into it = titles, plate glass and balers, live stoc as much by this appeal to their symy by the facts. Taking the known facts as | aretist in New York ed Morse, who | must be more than ggested, It is a [ v \ hail, investments, health and accidents. | thies as to their pocke The Ame to Germany, France, England, Russia | was not only d fiecd himself, but | puzzle to the person who has never Manufactur)ers and P The insurance of impaired lives has also | can people are not slow to recognize | and the United States and estimating | gpew other ‘men in the same state of | studied avt, and it is a mystery to many been practiced to some extent, but with | and to 1y d devotion and enterprise | s the rest of Burope and the yearly | mind. In June, 1825, he sent out an in- [ who have studied for yi , how to paint limited sucees wherever they meet it, and especially | grist of new books in the civilized world | yvitation to a number of young men, as a face with the same features in the § But in each and all of the above abso- | among their own eounteymen, They t be put at about G0,000. We have | jng them to come to his room to eat Ame reposs and give an en- 4 lutely nothing is looked for by the in- | veeognize with pateiotic pride the | iderably over a fifth of the popula- | strawberries and cream. The little note | tively different — character. — Uncon- 0 ers ll”ec OP sured excopt reimbursement ina mone- | achievements of Amevican companies, | ion which supplies wiiters and read- | which he wrote to one of the men is still us as we may be of it, there tary way for loss. The company, as dis- | which, through American agencies, for this annual literary flood; but we preserved as a document in the act his- [ ard strokes of the brush or pencil whic 2 3 tinguished from the assured, must make | have pu t acy in every civil- | l-wi‘k.\' lr‘“] "‘r 1 lm-ml; of the e tory of New York. Thisme are harsh n]n }u'n{ soft, rlmllnniv or JVININGS AND mns = , s AN OVAGE S moeney, but the money so made is onl ized country one of the exemplary insti- | books, and of our round 5,000 *n out results that @ been cordant. It is using these means, |~ 2 fERac 80 much additional tax imposed on the | tuti ns of their land, and they ‘reward | books from 800 to 1,000 ave imported | York's civilization. which the genius feels and the educated | Omaha Tent-Awning | Wolf Bros. & Co., jReclor & Wilhelmy | Lok & Lim, assured, which he is compelled to sub- | thew by their generous patronage and | from kngland and reissued here. We One evening the “deawing class” was | artistof talent has learned, that char- COMPANY. pufactarors of tonts. | COMPANY, | s s i mit to in order to obtain | support, outmateh the world in railroads and | formed. Asher Brown Durand was made | acter is expressed. Lines mean one | “wwainge ot 0iTand | Corner10th nna daoxson | mecaanto iy | Y the benefits of the co-operative prin- The whole difference between the time | telegeaphs, in cotton and corn, in news- | president and S, K. B, Morse | thing znui\]llll’!.l-nl‘lx:b:m]nl SE g 700 5. Lith t _ An | panDlaLi His S ciple. A distinction must there | when our ancestors were aged in the | pape and live stock, but not in new | was appointed The Mr. du Mond has a sketeh cluss in the | = = | 33 ] fore be drawn between insurance | rudest industey, and barely obtained a | books. rules .were simple. members | late afternoons, where the pupils bring | _BAGS AND TWIN'S. | BIOYDLER. = 2l = el = | conducted simply as a loss-distributing | precarious existence by constant exer- o o were to meet three evenings out of [ ina model, or pose for one an ther., Bemis Omaha B1g M. 0. Dixn e ATS, ET3, | IR WK . E: ncy by and for the benefit of the con- | tion, to the present condition of eom A Porter Taken Dow the week, each member to bring his own :\lx,\ lI\l‘Ah\(ul]A:‘ pen u\llui ink, lln"\bn ;'r' pen- AT ) £ il 3 tributors, and the business of insura, industrious person and of lux Louis Globe Democrat: For once | material, and the lamp was to be extin- | cil, 1s used he Mr. Saint Gaudens in= |y, o ers and man. frs. | Bleycles sobl on monthly j | 2 Qoto 4 cavried on at the expense of the ¢ mtrib- multitudes does not | i T Eawitha clordlat all ha bum |istished apdio'alocks structs the classes in clay modeling. | "Hiue sl g, | © 70 0 R W.A.L‘.Gllbb)‘n&(l). ‘OmlhalSflvv‘_nllr)l 4 utors by others for their own profit. In o that hus heen made | voys” the sleoping-cav porter, non- |~ The academy noticed this eluss of | fow pupils Gome '“:“"’ T"'("'l “‘l'[" el e R P P A s e b R T i 4 the first case there i theovetically no resourees, or in the for | plissed. Lt was on the Houston & Texas [ young men, and almost demanded that | liberately intending to be scalptors $ WD SHOES. | CEloves. mistens, 23 | tron shatters a0l fire o8 ofity in the other there may or may not f man, The entire change 1 tral railvoad, a fow days ago. When | they should matriculate as members of | does not seem to attract the student as | _BOOTS AND SHUES, L. and Harnoy ts. capes. Aniram & Gare according to cirenmst We have, thercfore, to consider how | application of intellig the practical conduct of the insurance es and resourc Tt business can be made profitable, first, to | forces are const b those who conduct it, and, second, to | progressi et T Al in ckaon ught about imply by the | at the little town of Richardson, on the | its own body. This they refused to do, | painting docs. But many of the pupi e nee o these | upper end of the line, two ladies boarded | and in defiance they selected fifteen of | find that their proper expression is form; o) OWmem 10( - i g 3 3 LUMBER, :50il and the | the tain, and by some mistake were | their own membe il in- | that by tangibility only can they ntitios, The | leus, and these MIWH dinto the: Pullman cav, — That | corporated themsolves into the National | bring out their i 7 3 sdeling ) I a in umulation ladies their neat und quiet | Academy of the Arts of Design. They | naturally find places in the modeling flrcnuuy}mms dohn A Wakelall, | Crles R i, their patrons, It mist pay the i of wealth is mevely brai Like every | appavel, with their modest refined fac moved from one rodm to another, always | reom. L e\t T e .7';" ' no attemy uld be m « an activity, if ins e | clcarly showed, though their old-f; she | gaining in strength and numbers and A The &‘ulllk“l ‘;“"'i‘ ue is n~| 1'»: x“ \l ok — tand-gala | f it on. It must pay the second | be made to pay it must be by the appli- | ioned, inexpensive, indeed cheap style | ability, In 1841 the old scademy was | A pupil works upon his own respo Sh kst 1 % or any such attempt, in the long | cation of ingenuity, of thought, of ex- | of dress, indicated that they werc in in- | incorporated into the new, the new bug- | bility, | e ‘lm‘\‘llf'“] s gomes wid Morse 0o Shoe Company, run, would be unsuccessful. Is it not | perionce, of wisdom. Cun these, in | digent eiveumstances. My lovd in the | ing its effects for 00 goes when he ple ut is alWiys | gyesro0m and Ofice 1107 1100 1111 Howard *t s : possible to carry on the business of in- | sulticient power, be brought intoitsserv- | beass buttons sallied up 0 them, and, | ‘The artists, boginning to go abzoad in | Working seemingly toward some fmpori: Jaoory=iivia-istovare 8 | ____LIQUOR. Lo MR surance, by and for the contributc ice with such elfect as to make it 5o | finding out the mistake that led to their | 1820, had sent pictures to the galle ant goal. The nigsters come two days | we sre the oxiy Manufastwior: of | Frick & Harbarl, |1, Obuefaldy & Co the sume lines as those on w useful that the risk may be carcied and | being in that car instead of the day coach, | at home, and soon . very res- & keneral [nvitation Iy extend d to ull 40 1oy | :;u.lm‘-,.\ is munaged for @ proprictary | the sueplus becoine a sibstantial contri- | hegun o show off his majestic powers | pectable collection was formed, . Classos our bew thetory, statal — | Wholesaloliquordsataes | 0f miil1iry. povlone :dy, so that the contributors may real- | bation to the wealth of the insured? | of fnsolence. He did not notice a gentle- | were kept up, the instruction being f. ce, > Mall ot4ars pro B Iety ‘ 120 & profit instead of & loss? Heor Experien answered that they e man who had boarded the teain at the | and good teachers: were usually forth- Kirkendall, Jones & |Amar. Hand-Sewed 10 Farnam 3t | 0w s e s J another paradox appurently greater than | and the answer becomes more. empl same station, and who stood quietly ob- | eomir i COMPANY. | Whalusala | 8 0 b 8 ey ‘ the first as the accumulation of wealth becomes | serving the seene from the door of the there a8 a period when the oS o jiot: | 1510 finrney St PAPER. | 0iLs The manager of a proprictary company | grcater, car. This gentloman now advanced, sre closed for lack of means to oo tharnoy 86 | S 3 s engaged in any other kind of business But time is of the ance of the prob- | saying, **Be scated, ladies, until we veach | sustain them, and at thi cr s the Ar e e does not make money by simply putting | lem al I'he tendeney of capital, when | the next town, when you can easily enter | Students league, which is e real art away his talent in o napkin, or, in other | it grows beyond a moderate amount, is | the other car.” Then, beek: ning to the Jlof Amevica, was born. By the words, relying alone on the preeess of | to inerease with great rapidity, and | eonductor tip the train, | closing of the classes, numbers of pupils sceumulation at compound interest,which | the longer the proc is continued | L. “He the con- left with a half completed term, and s the cardinal idea of improving funds | the gre r tho rapidity of the iner e, | " was a pull s was no prospect that the acad n) for insurance purposes purely, but by | Stephen G said that all the difi- [ of the b in stopped and | would reopen for some menths. T exercising the same s 1y and sa- | eulty of ting an enormous for- | the porter was ejected \ the car, the | students called a meeting at Mr. Wil gacity in the profitable employment of e the fiest $100,000; | captain saying to him: *Now walk the | mavth’s studio to decide what should be those funds in other ways for the bene- | and theve is no doubt that any man who | fifteen miles to Dallas, and study polite- | done. The outcome was the formation fit of the proprietors, as if he were an | succeeds, having started with his own | uess as you trudge along: you' are no | of the Art Students league “for the individual banker or manufacturer. | hands and brain, in collecting a moder- n i __COAL, CIKE. | COIRNIGE. 1 Carpenter Paper Co.| Standard 0il €, 0maha Coal, ks & | Eagle Cornics Works | “Fihuita/wra ot | aud lubricati g 0., hard und 90t | Mfrs. gnlvanizel iron papers, card cornte s wiilow caps, cvlights, ol he addec xlo gronse, ot ut 1 rope, the LLERERER PR RIEEIR R Brauch & Co, |Jas. A Clarx & G, ‘ 4 1] longer in our employ.” There was u | higher development of art culture. o Produoe, frulia af &l Apply the same principle to the man- | ate competence, will be able, by continu- | shower of expostulations, pleas for par- Mr. Wi th gave hisserviees gratu- bry goods, notlons, fur- | Not ',"" B '\‘.’”"'. Kinds, oystors sgement of insurance funds for periods | ing the same kind of effort cn the same | don and a shake or two of the fist at the itously at first and the leagae took rooms nlshin fuode eaeair lakio di,eir. 11ta aa of sufticlent duration to bring the results | principles, if only his life and en in. ‘bat it vanished | inw 10ft over a piano factory. All art fast vanishing tr ———————————————————————— > N 3 under the uniform operation of the law | remain to him, to multiply indefinitely | for all that. he gentleman who had udents who n ‘gvnl gi lln a ;IM* ’\\" o FuaNITSE, _ STOVE REPAIR3, S\S4, 0000 \' of average and we have found the key to | what he bas obtained. Thé longer the | set him the lesson was o high ofticial of | invited to join. Candidates for adu 2| » the combination. life and the effort the yreater the aceu- | the road. slon we:0 -Foquliod o subinlt o dvavsng “‘L“’%étfiifi..i‘%fl:u‘“;:,’,i‘r::‘.':"“ Omaha Upholstering | Beebss & Runyan | Omaha $Hiz Rapale |H.A DIy & Co i { Life insurauce is the only branch in | mulation. When the life or the effort —— - fry B llu;“mhlfllm‘ m"li to IIM\l '[“' ‘;'“" A cortaia eure for Consumption In &7 P WOILK®, stove repairs | Manufaeturors of sash which the two essential conditions of the | ceases the accumulation ceases ulso, One for cheap substitutes. Beware | month. w0 league fi urished for two Ahee e e ERiro o0 e A W P Ll faaiurers Of sAER Veat paying insurance are united. vz, | or two compuiics however, are bused on ok o o D Hirs. Cough Syrup | years and then the National Acad, | Fouillseg oy ,.,;':1'..31""1'.,‘:. BRI ne!® | oad 1aaa sie b Tl "Dolains ¥ | oo, Lith aad 1aaade °* [nrl«.s sclentific basis in the laws of | the principle of “pay as you go.” Tl has stood the test for uearly fifty years, l”u‘y announced its intention ¢ l B s ™ olesale omly. iyl i ¥ \

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