Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 23, 1912, WANT-ADS, Image 32
8 ' . - VC j THE OMAHA ' SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 23, 1912, V J ' - c ... ot:' THEY have exalted the panoply, the romance, the frenzy, tKe reckless im pulse, the clamor and the theatricality of contending hosts, the wearying marches, the starvation, the deprivations, the exposures, the drudgery, awi they tell us nothing. poet have turned and the brutality of portray ; the hospital the' stone-bruised, ra battalions, but The; artist and the y from the cruelty ars. Thev do not they ; do not show and mud-stained fged fttitures Lilce This Wifl St od War! ,. XL - Such pictures speak the truth, : Never before has the world been able to view jn a calm, sane mood the ac curate, precise, authentic records 4 of a great conflict. ' ' ; War is terrible, war is unnecessary, war accomplishes nothing tlat reason and justice cannot: bring to pass. 1 War is wasteful, it destroys the vir ility, the strength, the youth, the hope of oeooles. It calls to its sacrifice the hncsuana tne-steuncDcst. it drags .wvAWiia iine manhood to the altar of hate. levastates homes,- it widows Vnd ians; it is not beautiful, it -is sW- it starves; it blights. No human pen has ever depicted brush has ever reproduced , war ia "true aspect, in its real colors and in J detail. . Of the price that was paid, .or the ypc of men who paid the price, we" jenew nothing until the discovery of the ling-Lost and Original ' .... : Oil YTTT 7 T7T1 . II WW f I - II Y I m . II 1 1 1 1 V ' I 1 , 11,11 11 IB IV f II II W-J1 I II If 1 & W1 V Ml V V (Dili 21 1111 iograpla Brftcyvcearawin io roof to win humuvty to the cause of ustvefs&l peace thuut ill the ontQijr tiutt can fall from the Hpi of man. Lotrt tbt ikffmnAt pbieMluthlvbeen diacovered, unhanned, undimmed. They hew a mighty message to a wait in? world a world anxiotu or (acta, a world eager for a greater cmliMtion. - y . . After you have teen them unbiaaed, unprejudiced, grant ing fuU credit and full jtttu to North and South afikeafter you bare tmroed back the page of time fifty jmn and walked through the tnachet, throegh 9m oocpitala, in . the campa, yo will realize what die Gr3 War meant, what all war meant. You owe it to youraelf, you owe it to your children, to let . them ie all this and learn all this. - " , . f . - Nerer before has a newspaper been able to do its readers a more valuable service. We have secured the rights in this city for the famous Brady photographs, taken on the actual fields of battle, and lost for many years. These historic sc Jives, with full history of the great struggle, newly written by Prof. Henry W Flann nt Dhia ITitiversitv. will he Mitued in sixteen terttoni S each complete in kself, and known as The Civil War Through the Camera Section 4 Now Ready Contains a Complete and llirilling Narrative of the Seven ; Days' Battle Before Richmond Enaccsscsts at Meck&nicsYiDs. Gaines' MiD, The Retreat of the Federal Army, The Battla of Malvern Hill, The Battle of Corinth f , ' With Original Brady War Photographs: Generals McDowell and McOeHan Leaders in the ' Advance on Richmond. " . 1 ' Generals Johnstoo and Let Two Great Generals of . the Confederate Army. , : " The Batdefield at EOeison's Mill Where the Con- fedorate Division assaulted. Bridges over the Chickahominy, across which the Union . Army marched. . , The Union Army in Retreat after Gaines Mill A Field Hospital at Savage's Station. , White Oak Swamp,, through which McClellan's Army Retreated. General J. H. Mardndale and Staff Hero of Malvern . HiH ; , " . .-.. . i, , . , . - Co iiplete m 16 Sections Each ition 10c and the Coupon The "Monkor at Malvern Hill Gunboats on Tames aid the Armv. .Westover House General Fitt John Porters Head-! . quarters. ' . Colonel W. W. Averell The Colonel who Bluffe an Army. V- Charles Qty Court House, VWkua After the Sevei General W. S. Rosecrans The Man who Kept the Key in the West, (' ' 1 i Generals Van Dorh and Price Confederate Command ers at Connth. , ' i - Confederate Dead before Battery Robinett, and m; 1 . more pictures mciuaing A Colored Frootirpioc, Painted by J. V. Giet, entided Flan!king the JEnemy ready for framtf RcDidbar, the ORIGUIAL Brtdv Vair Photcgrapl an at tie Ovil Var Can Be Oik Obt!25ed In His C Brch Thh, te Coupon Below Is a Pass I It admib you within the lines of the armies of the North anJSouth.;:;JtsapeU'tt' back the pages of hiry. It carries you out of the present and lands you in leap into the Civil Wan - ; ' V Cut it out and bring or send it with 10 cents to this ice for your copy of Section 4, andisee and read the first il history -the first complete and thorough record of a jighty; conflict. - v " U r Writ wt I ci I. c S, clip tt tamvm thi wk. i w wfll FsSn.fjJH WAR SOUVENIR . W-'wSI isg . , - coupon Efjr 1wr;r '-"-.rLI'tZ.'.T TO f'.H$. CLEVEL ruier Mlatrn ( the White HeaM Kitrtlrlpalcs in School .... ; ' laaoviHJo. . - fht im exf Jliutly grat-eful compli to JL",j. Ciovf-!Bfid whirh tbe Stale. : vtinent or "-Jutdtlun In New Juney ' tut )MO effwt j ti ina gmitimt echooJ pupilii to be graduated Into the high schools re ceives from tbo former mistress of the White 1oum a letter. 'Incidentally she asks a few pertlnen questions. One that calls for an answer In particular ts: "What Is It the glrla and boys of the grammar achoola of New Jersey consider ihe very best thing which comes to them In their grammar school course?" Every graduating pupil is required to write an j answer to Mrs. loyeland whU tt U to j count as a test of prcflt:f,m.on-lEngl!i'h. Mr. Cleveland, settled in jha claaal'o ahadea of Princeton, where aha ia hon ored and esteemed like her husband, twice president of the United a States, retains the whole-hearted admiration and affec tion of the American people. She won It hy her girlish beauty and womanly rual ltiea when she' entered the White (ouse a radiant bride, and there was never a time when 'the- native gallar.trr and chiv alrous jtwiwament of the American peo ple allied that affectionate admiration for .Mrs. Cleveland to falter. Factional or party politics never affected It. ' i In " later years these grammar school pupils of New Jersey will look back with prtda on the fact that. tMey k were jsSlvi Ieged 'each to address a letter to' Mrs. Frances Folsom Cleveland, just as their grandparents would have treasured the memory of writing by Invitation totDolly Madison.r-PhiladelphlaPress. j Kejr to th SUuatlwn ifee Advertising. PRATTLE OF THE YOTTK: EES ' Mamma (severely) Johnny, you take that -cake from the Johnny My appetite, mamma Father-When Johnny ' struct you retaliate? Uttle Tommy-.No, sir: I and hit him back.'- From the oaf' window iu, did ft busy Daw, for the first time In her life saw cattails growing in swamp. ' "Oh, mamma." she exclaimed. "there's a lot of sausages growing on sticks," - ' "When you were a boy did you always mind your father?" asked the young hopeful. Y'Y""' ' "Not always, my ton," replied the gov ernor, "but I was soundly thrashed every time I disobeyed him." - - "Gee, then you didn't team any easier than t do, did you, dad?" was the retort of the Y. 11. -' ; ; , 1 ; A young mother who Still : considers Marcel waves as the most . fashionable Way of dressing the hair was at work on the job. , :-':-.;'', r Tlwi precocious child was .crouched. Its father'e lap, the baby fingers now and then sliding over' the smooth and glossy pate which Is father's. "No waves for you, father," remarked the little one.. .'-You're all beach." r I r 1., .A