Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 17, 1886, Page 11

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Ve Ry i TR S THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JULY 1 GHO. IN. HICKS, REAL ESTATE BROKER, 1616 HOW ARD STRHHET. Offers for sale the following bargains in Omaha property nally reserved by Mr. Hanscom, and now first placed on the market as the choice Ty S, T VO SRR SRR T The fine s in HANSCOM PLACE <ldence property of Omaha, Elegant east front lots, splendid corner lots; just on grade. Magnificont view, near stréet cars, park, and surrounded by o lots at PRICES AND TERMS THAT PLACE THEM WITHIN THE REACIT OF ALL who desire “Hand rome Homes."" And for investment, these lots cannotbe excelled, as their location, natural advantages and the great number of costly houses to be erected will cause them to advance rapidly in price during the next six months, Also offer 8 beantiful east front lots in Marsh's Addition, beautiful homes and a splendid elass of people. Over thirty substantial houses costing from $2,000 to $10,000 each, will bo built this season in the immediate vicinity. Will sell the near corner 25th and Leavenworth, one biock from street cars, pavement, St. Mary's Avenue and church, covered with fine shade trees; each 300. Seven flne east front lots in Leavenworth Te ¢; two blocks from Belt Line railway depot on Leavenworth street; lots around ave selling for $700 to $000; can offer these lots for a fow days only at $550 each. Two south front lots in Cli on Place, three blooks from strect cars, one block from Leavenworth street, with its proposed grading, paving and Cable Line, covered with large oak and maple trees—a big bargain—the two at §2,400. Light lots in Burr Oak, convenient to street cars and railroad, at 300 to $000. Two lots fronting south on pavenworth street, each 61 feet front, one a corner, will be valuable business property in one year, the two for $1,500. Two acres in West Omaha, will make ton good lots, high and sightly location, splendid neighborhood; lots bayond are seliing for 1,000 and $1,200; c n sell the two acres if sold at once for §7,000. yme nice lots in Hawthorne, near Thirty-third and Davenport; the nearness of these lots to center of town make them especailly desirable investments at $900. Five lots, one a corner, on Lowe avenue, near Dodge street, high and healthy location, spiendid place for a home, yery easy terms, only $1,100 each, Six lots in Hartford Place, just this side of new M. P.depot and eanning factory, cheapest property in the market, only $300; $40 down, 810 per month, wo lots, one a corner, in Shinn's 2nd addition, if sold quick, the two only $1,600. A few choice lots in Ambler Place, Thornburg, East Side, Clark's Place, Walnut Hill, Washington Hill, West End, Orchard Hill and other CTTEN DAYS THE FINEST EIGHT-ROOM COTTAGE AND EAST FRONT LOT IN HANSCOM PLACE, ON GEORGIA AVENUE, N WATER, A PERFECT GEM OF A HOME, ONLY $4,300 IF SOLD QUICK, Also several six-room cottages with eistern and city water, slate mantels, good location, only $2,250; §350 cash, favonite additions. Also offor a large list of improved rcsidence property, ranging in price from $2,000 to $6,000. CAN OFFER FOR THE N ELEGANT NEIGHBORHOOD, CITY AND C between Fourteenth and Fifteenh streets, at $2,000; first-class location for business, 66 feet on Howard, near Thirteenth street, only $18,000; ensy terms property and rapidly improving; has eight bric per month. 44-foot front on Harney, splendid site for wholesale or warehouse purposes. 166-foot front on Capitol avenue, next to Masonic Block. 1s spiendid business stores all rented; can make this the biggest bargain in Omaha if sold soon. Also offer two sections of e¢ho co farm land in Howard county, near goed railroad station and St. Paul, the county seat, a town of 2,000 inhabitants. No better soil B 1n the state; can plow every acres; urrounded by a good cluss of people and cultivated farms. Can offer this land for the next thirty the ci jsata low figare and remarkably ensy terms, The above are a fow of the bargains [ offer for sale. Investors, and cspecially parties from outside ing clsewhere. y willdo well to consult the list of property I offer before bu CULTURED MND A\"D MUbClE the difference were manifold. One cause } out in the homes of their race, and are | civilization make upon it.” Read the | tribute much not only to the health of | and men were scouring the country for | ¢ A \ L was their physical education. Hand in | giving place to the strong new-comers rswered mean_ Lo see fai p b, coolly. following facts with regard to Chicago: | the body m gencral, but also to the vigor | miles around in the hope of eatching the hand with the mental discipline, which As to individuals, what kinds of mon | From 1832 to 1868, population increased | of the organs lying underneath them. | villain. A week had passed and no clew At this the sharper turned white with was simple but thorough, went gym- | fight their way to the front ranks in all [ 51 times to what it was in the first | So, too, in walking, how few use the | had been found. rage and made a rush forward as if to Physioal Tralnine and Mental Disoipline | nastie exerateo. SUntl ‘the i of | callings, and hold their places thore, as | period Tho doatn rate incroased. 33 i Alexander, the main_subjects of educa: | men eminent in their day and genera- | times. The deaths from nervous di BE3 Must Go Hand in Hand. tion among the Grecks wore music and | tion? Men of strong body. Consider | dors increasod 204 times. Chi o gymnastics, bodily traming and mental | the premiers of England —men like | pexhaps a fast plaee, but the | Anclent and Modern Educational | culture. Thy first duty of o Groek boy | Browgham, Palmerston’ and Gladstone— | signifiennt of the wear of ol muscles of the calt of the leg? Mo On the night of January 20, two young | strike his informer. But at a look from merely stamp along the path or | men were standing on the platform at | his confederate ho subdued his anger and They do not use the foot from heel | C——— awaiting the night train, which was | quickly drew from his pocket a large to toe, They to rise on the toes at the | to earry them to & the station ten | pocketbook and took out a card on which tep, ind do” not push them- | miles below. It was a clear, cold night, | was written, “Robert J. 8t. Clair,"” and n i " was to learn fiis letters, a feat which was | working at an age when n a woakor | nervous system. selves along with those important mem: | and it wuss a relief to them when the | handing it to Blake said Theories Discussed—Lessons trom | 41, coincident with loarning to swim. [ man would either bo in his gravoor be [ 1o poealcg oo bers of the foot. “Thus they lose the best | train came thundering in and they had | “Sir, T have been grossly insultod by Older Nations—Strong Points By the fourtcenth year the Greek boy !m' aring for it, Some exercise--horse- [ o e Aneriean dango®? part of the leverage of that important | taken their seats near’ the stove in one | you in' the presence of these gentlemon! in College Athletics, would have begun to devote himself m(‘l( riding or felling trees—keeps up ;m! BRI NAVOEIears: In-RILE6oNHtEl muscle or st of museles ot the lower | end of the last car, i therefore d W your unqualified ST seriously to athletics.”” Could such a | their strength long after threescore and are liablo to it, butin our country elir leg. 'llmki ult I|| n-‘-lumrml_\ |‘nlvhv)-h.| I'he vounger of the two men was about | apology or you'll take the consequences.” B0 ethon B ipets Ta RISRARHA of Faldlohltage v || CrcsTh it CONUIHOUN EERIBRICHLS | tamu TUPIN pon Iy henaasaty toN MEMHON iiihiveyices inutonss b taIGy A UtdBe 1S A o L | S Ho was tall And the conscquencest” said Blake. t uvon the | Washington, Jackson, Webster and Lin- tho body powor. 16 avo | coln to-oall attention to tho fact that e nes ¢ the body power. 1t gave | coln to call attention to the fact tha LA the brain force. Had thus force not been | among eminent American public men Many old theories of education are | gonverted all the while into intellect and | yigor of mind and vigor of body go to- being mercilessly discussed. Many new | wsthetic sense, the Greeks would have | gether. Notice tho great pulpit orators theories elaim the places of the old. The | formed a race of fine animals only. But | of to.day—such as Spurgeon, Beecher, lassienl sonolar still elaims for the an- | their mental discipline saved them. Un- | John Hall and Phillips Brooks, Among | wd pinches the toes, making any move: | and wore a ‘st ment of them painful, even if it does not | y | prevent them from moving at all. wa By making regular daily use of the | part of his face. He was the first to muscles—of all the muscles, if that were | speak possible--we shouid do ono thing toward | “Itell you what, Fred,” he said, *“tho establishing perfect health of boay by | reward offered for the old lady's assassin all mustache. His com- nion was three yoars Ins senior, e shorter and a full beard hid the lower e Popnlar Setence Monthly for July. A 1616 th wular Seience M v for July. mind? It go cloped n r in form these intluences we have ‘lml\:ll chi cteristics, show and feature. We do thin We are in hast We are in haste to be no time for exercise. We have no time for play. ro by scrious provided you are not a s flashing, but his voice under control. ong | el i ; ¢ namo the place and hour. I wil SRy sill cluims for the a | foitunntely for the pormanence of the | mnoneyed men, did not Commodore Van. | Both oXcreiso wid play ave by setious | ajowing to ono very largo part of'it & | is a good ono. and would keen us in stvle | 1 yhirar LUDRUIIES LELG Gt cient languages the greatest educational | Groulc jower, that power was not built | derbiit owe something of his vast fortune | B0 pon a8 a wi chance to appropriate its proper ele- | at Saratoga this sammer.” 3 time for adults, however good they may be for children and young people. "A boy must be a man before his time, and a givl must be prim and staid, and must not romp like her more fortunate brothers, but must be a sober woman after she h entered her téen It seems as if the I):ll!IuInI' modern {if-- (at h»nsllnr modern city life) w. attle. of the neryes. sional | ko qurs vower. The advocate of modern lan- | yjon « mors ) 0 basis. When, by means of | to his strong body? "Could he have en- guages says life is too short to study dead | their conquests, wealth and luxury eame | dured the strain of building that fortune, things, and that modern languages fur- | to them, the Greeks met the usual fate of | and would he have had the vigor to ex nish enough discipline, and are besides, | hutions weak in the moral sens Their | tend it, had it not been for the out-door e e moiitist Soienee is god of | disciplne was relaxed, and they suc- | life of kis carly manhood? If you find a e | O T T really successful mi builds and B 15 Gtlantan s HoTes b BT "The training of the Romans was largely | keeps either a reputati 1 fortune by is properly educated unless his mind is |y vieal’ Thoy were trained tor war, | honest hard work, he is genes Il? o man stored with scientific ideas and tramed by | But they, too, were overcome by stronger | 0f vizorous body. *“All profe ments from the blood, and opportunity Yes, you're right, Mott; but you don't | - The place is of little importance to to give back its used-uy tissue to be elim- | eateh n und looking fora cut. | M the gambler replied. ““There is an inated from the system in natural and | threat. sty in tho ono-horso | ODCN space i tho woods half way ey lealthy wags. We should be doing mor we're bound fo tween here and C—. 1 think we will than simply repafring the museles. We ell,” said Motf, “we won't qu be undisturbed there. The hourls 5 a. should be also evolving heat——a very im point, but vou ecan rest Ll ‘“"""""'"5“"1‘_":,‘““‘“* 1 weapons. portant factor of lif \\;- should be | that Ll bag the fellow if I geta chance.” | TN 0‘!"\5’” e eiotod Blako, “IedT sisting all the other parts of our organ- By this time the train had reached L) bR bt D Bt th b s DL & e e o 'c:)‘“lr:“'zm]:{ wae can'settle’ this dispute in a very short 8 ) ngor | o Vi e Ui v to school ,from school to | iZition t0 do the ot 1 I time.” Then the sharper said something fho scientific methods of the nincteenth | races when they relaxed their own disci- | biography toaches that o win listing | ooljare ‘or fo work, the 'strain of brain | [Ke the hoart-itself u very bundlo of | arouiid " them Blake and his com- | 5" jow voice to his companion and % e N T .| pline and gave up their martial ames | distinction in sedentary in-door oceupa- | o 0 - : ¢ muscular flbers, now that as long | panion, Mott Stevens, arted for the oot ) 1Y century. Languages, ancient and mod- | | g 1 i St 1 goes on, and strain of L S N 4 strode from the room 3 SRt R e ians hilosophy, | #nd athletic” exercis ng gladintors ns, which task the brain and nevvous | giye " dlaminations, speculations. we live, wheih ing or waking, | hotel, which was situated a little way out * ern, mathematics, science, Philosophy, | ¢, 4)0ir sport and mercenarics for their | 8ystem, extraordinary toughness of body | oses SECRATE S Bae Hr e | that wonderful organ keeps up its rezi- | of the town on the main road. It was s all advance their cluims to be the best |y ey, must_accompany f‘h‘;fl'xwr:lin:xr' mentil | HOHTROE ar i b NOTRToLERo lar contractions and expansions. Bat, | about 10 o'clock when they reached the | _ A month had 1‘1'";““' 1t LE;I'I] beer educators of the coming man. Mean- r - o power.” Again, 'Po attaln success and | £ E O x ey vhen we use our muscles, their con- | hotel, or, more properly, the inn. very sorry month to young Blake. While the coming man is nothing tut a | , What are the conquering races of | fongtly of sefvicd fn any of the lnarned | frames, weary brains, jarring norvo eactile force upon, the blood-vessels helps | * Ty Wwie i suiall ono and oould | the morning following the night of hig chil “submit himsclf to his | fo fady S ot tha nations srong 4 woTogslond, inolidine i of teaching, n | s’ exigengies ol O SCRO0 | thy blogd along its anannals. aud (hus | not accommodate more than a 4o [adventura at e innabis e HIvEhbINY and eity lif The worstof the mi is that thisi strain falls most of all upon ce to advise a | those frony nature and circumstances | least able to hear it——upon our wome: W uing. But at that sey With his de- two ra- 1 essential. | in body—-strong by mheritance and keep- | Mgorous body is we | ing their strength by exercise? Germany ing to the theo of teachers or parents. | keeps her men strong in the army by It would be out of pl t For men, women, and childron alike, 1 | cCompulsory gymn: drill. Hor schools | farmer who is already tived of diggi enst ablo r § . : : am | teach gyninastics. ~ Many of her inhabi- | and plowing. ot 4 muson who has had | Public opinion {;-n\\-xh;qu..\ their exere wish to entera plea for avart of them |y sv5) 6 cities maintain their strength | enough of Dricklaying, to exercise his | ing like men. Yet, with a nervous much neglected in most discussions on | by {lie exercise which they havo in their | body. A little play to limber the stiftened | tem more sensitive than man’s, they n es a little laffor trom the propeiiing rt. It beats faster but with less effort: While helpmg the heart, mu re ercise helps the lun 1so. More e cise means for the lungs more breath; that is, more air inspired and more ear- elders to be experimented upon accord- on of Lhe year it | found himsel? face g 1 almost descrted by gugsts, o Blake | NOUnCer 'm the worc and his friend felt sive of a gdod room | POItS rang out. g and bed. When the simoke lifted and left the In one corner of the room which the | (uelists to view the sharper was seen young men entered n lurge fi lying on his face, shot through the ehes! el , A 4 s bonic-acid expired. By deeper | y)..n5 o0 ionod fire! Blake had been struck in the shoulder edueation, and too much left out of sight | excelient Turner system. muscles might hon good thing. A Jittle | the vory exercises (ont-ofdoors) Which, | iuiiiings dho involuntary misoles uro | purig i an old-fashioned Hropla by the bullet of IS victim, but with the inmost theories of education—the body. rgzland has i the bodies of her chit- | brain-work might be better. But of real oF mistakon hubli sontimant they \try | strensthened. Morcover, We are mado | gu"ong sidg, behind whieh stood rov assistance of his sceond he reached his TSt 158 Laan e T o the blood of thoso old royers who | hard-working exercise of body cach work- Ldon In fact, for centuries past, many eduea O e onats of Fanope | ingman gets enough from his day’s lubor, | house-work is often deputed to a s | in the early centuries of the Christian | If he only get good food and enough of either because too hard for our Ame tors have seemed to regard the body as a rival of the brain, if not an enemy of it. | o “iived with the blood of that vig- | 1t and have time for sufficient sleop, and | girls or too much beneath them. \ to breathe, and clean water They have apparently been filled with the | orous native stock, to subdue which, even | get pure a | to feel the need of greater lung-room + | Even after the age when full stature is supposed to be attained, that lung-room often comes, nature furnishing the sup- carringe and was driven to the village, lere ho f into tho hands of wound was healed ced on trial for bottles and decanters of various de - tions, plainly showed that it was not a temperance place. At the further corner of the room stood utly he was pl ! ca Of the hye ngents of heulth—exereise, | ply according to the demund.” MeLaren | ¢ pton : wurder, iden that strength and time given to the | when furnished with only ' barbarian | 0 drink and tobatho in, he wili do well | food, air, sleepand bathing—oxereise, to | hotes the case of one man, in his thirty- | three or four round tables, At one of | Moy (5o against him, The 5 the Roman | enough, as far as bodily healtn is con- | cortain extent, regulates the demand | sixth year, whos S8t IDIODIAGap1Y ; 2 ) chest, under system: 1c v n strength an i aken from | Arms, was no easy tas :.J;I)I“L‘Hlli‘lll:( ll'ur’.'m.u.:.:]ul;f"}z: e onuse | loions with all thelr military skill. In | corned. But_te brain-workors and 0 all | for the other ageuts. The museles, when | excieise, fereased In girth from thirt R his orroneous idea is | 1-hgland, too, this phy force is still | persons of sedvntary habits it can be | fully developed, constitute about a half | two to thirty-six and a half inches in two | 40 offobdisduoaron, jthisio rondoa M maintained by vigorous excroise taken | traly smd that vigorous exerciso of the | of the full.grown body. The muscular | months. There was an addition of four | § not held by teachers alone, but is a very | by ail classes, The higher classes have | entire body is not ““'l) advisable if they | contractions act upon the blood. The | and g half ipches o the cipeuniforence of | provaient one generally, the current dic- | their out-of-door sports, and some of | would enjoy health, but that it is ubso- | plood ‘is “the life-stream, cattying thy | the chest. “An addition of thr R tum being that, representing by unity n, | them of tho roughest kind, “gho lower | Jiely esscpiny to thut lifg, - The Loudon | atoms of nourishnient t every part of | to circumierenco of chest implios that person’s force, whatever part of this unit | ¢/A<5es alsc have their sports Whoreyer mes of December 1‘1‘ 833, records the | the body, and receiving the waste par- | the lungs, instead of containing 250 cubic | z the English race goos it carries with it | physieal and mental crioration which | tclos which have already done their | inches of air before thew functional ac- g k 15 taken for the body leaves necessarily | the love of exercise and the practice of | has fallen on the eivil \ | servants of India, | work. This process of depositing build- | tivity was exalted, are now oapable of just that much less for the mind. it. Bven their women engage in jt. Some | deseribed b?' an Indian correspondent: | jno substance and raceiving waste matter | receiving 300 cubic inches into their To combat this idea, and to replace it | of them follow the hounds. They pull | “‘Sinee the institution of competitive ex- | goos on uccording to alaw. This law, | cells.” This great increase of four and by o much more reasonuble idex, L had | the bow. They take walks, the length of | aminations, out of & hundred-odd eivil- | called, from its discoverer, the law of | a half inches meant not only incres almost snid by the very opposite idea, | Which would ‘shame many an American | $85 Bine Sk €1 and l“'{o have been | Troviranus, is: “Bach organ is, to every | Iung-room, but increasc of .ung-powe ghall be the chief though not the only ai man. So_the vigor of the stock never l",\ v"’T"““"‘ ORFRGLOUN "I p ‘l-\s".“ other, us an excreting organ. In other | Taking the quantity of air inspired in the of these pages. deeays. The race_increases and multi- | debility. Ten more wero considered quite | words, to insure perfect health, eve reclintng position” in u given fime us tho game of poker, and, judging from the | Jast day of the t \ul arrived. The cas: number of silver doliars scattered among | Wa }Q be given 1o the jury who woul chips, the game was in good progresd. | scal his faté. Blake had bHeen brought Spasthe s tablo Blukb and Stovons | into the court room and was quictly il chemsolves, and atter partakingof | awmting his sentence. e drinks they had ordered tirey furned | The judge ealled the court to order, oyes toward the poker players. Suddenly n bustle was heard in the buck The man who sat nearest Blake scemed | of the room, and a man rushed up to the to have all the money and luck. He lawyer of the defendant and, whisporin about forty years old, heavily buwlt, and | a few words, handed him a large sonle wore a large mustache and goatee. envelope. The lawyer quickly broke the Both of his companions were younger | seal and read aloud to the jury the fol- than he. The one seated opposite the | lowing: man_ desoribed, to fndge by the numbor | : of winks and signs” that were passed be- 1 do horeby mnke fu confession on ' 3 N ) 2 4 2 ! 2@ o] g ; B my deathbed of a crime for which no T'o a1l tases which have shown power | plies. The little island cannot hold it. | unfit for their work on account of bodily | tissue, bone, nerve, tendon, or unit ... e 1 | tween thom, wus a confederate, man must be punished. On the mght of 0 Al e ¥ 4 > Sand | weaknes and eight have positively be- ] d ' ' In the game period of time the quantity of After Blake had watched the game for f L 5 2 in any direction the main source of that | Away it goes to conquer and colonize the RAST S ) 14 ely be- | should take from the blood e air inspired when standing is. -.......... 133 | awhile he suddenly turned to his friend | January 13,1881, a murder was committed ower has been physical. This is ac- | lobe, and to‘infuse its strength into all | come instne.” Here isarccord of "“‘"l)" terinls and return to it certain others. To | Whon walkine one milo per hour, 15120 1o [ NS K8 SRddenty at S——=, the victim a woman. The mur- R et to bo ks itis regard to the | the races of the carth. ning ]nm of'fl m;mlrzlu‘l Se{s‘?us‘yhyawf\l Y | do this, every organ must or ought to onywalidng tourmilosporhour, 1s 5 “Did b S T derer has never been found, nor will he conquering races of the past. With re- | What keeps us as a nauon irom de- | deficient. The hundred belonged to one | jiuve its period of activity and rest, 5o as | \ypon I WHE GOENE 3 1d you'sno that, Motc? ever be, for by the time this is read he of the strongest races of the earth. Dc not the fact testity to the nd sinew of the gard to the present, we are too apt to | terioration? The bone “What?" asked Mott in surpri think that the progress of civilization land--the culti ) the vital fluid in a proper st “What! Itell yout ate to nourish cvery other part.” So that, if sl will be dead—killed by the hand of Fred- [0 BE CONCLUDED 3 at demands R <} s0il—the con- the fact the gr b ! i erick Blake in an_ honorable ducl on_the changed the conditions of power, so that | querors of our new land—the men who | ©f civilization on thevitality of the people | wo give to the muscles their share’ of . If I'm not mista zot 1 1 morning of January. 91; 1881, ‘I ha#lno wos: physically weak, if they are only | buld our cities and the great highways | 0f modern timest But it will bo replied | i, indicatad by the ratio which cards undor the table and is using them | nocomplico in the erimo of January 18, e L b SRR e e that the elimato of Tndia had something oar o the whole body, according DETECTED BY A DUEL. ol his Edeily e Lo, | therefore let o one sulfor 2 finally overcome the strong races. with hand and body in all our fa ‘,f,‘ 49 With tho facts. Well, read what DI | to this law, we ouglt to give s large pro- | 4 Game of Cards Which Led io the m‘.k{‘..:(,‘_“:“\%‘;:}‘}‘fl‘\,f‘: ,I‘l‘r';:]‘|ll"’\'| arae, “I confess this before (Go Take the Greeks. For a long time they | It is true that brain directs all this activ- | 1 H. f Y e ot ohiuined o | portion of vur waking hours to their use. Discoyery of.a Muraderer T S A e “Roperr J. St. CLAm were a conquering “masters of the | ity, but musele is the motive-power. And | Yice of human kind has yet obtained a | Bag there are ecrtain involuntary muscles i 5 o couldace the cards ho drew with pe By W. A. Stoddard. feot A dozen men had gathered at the rail- | wgive P e o diss 1on at C—, Penn., and were ]”‘Ik‘“" me three eards,”” excl: ol As this name was pronounced n visible shudder was seen to run through the court room. St. Clair was known us one e st | Dermanent foothold upon this continent. | qoine thoir work all the time, night and in-power of the | Mounds at the west, vestiges in Flotida, | quy.” In' our usual vocations, (0o, how- VIt loe de. | ana traces elsewhere, proclaim at least world of their time. But their influence | the muscle of one genera extended far beyond their day and | and support of the br beyound the limits of their little world. “It | following generations. —*V med he. \ ere, ever confining they may be, we are | 2oud st > nn, and W saw him throw down the threo SO0 Dl il knoy i4 0. disgrace {0 nineteentiicentury | counts for tho prodigal nctivity” of the | tWo extinet races.n ' “The Indian whom | opligod to take 4 cortain amount of mus. | &t7ing at 4 placard that Lad been tacked | gards ho held und_vick up the onos doalt | ©F W renest villains of his time American to_go to school to the Greeks. | descendants of the early scttlers of this ;’“{f‘lllb‘l;"f confronted s KON avs | cular exercise, Consequently, in the really e Shioct of their attention was tho | Mim: They were no good. Witha quick | ~Blake was ncquitted of the charge They are still, in their own lnes, the | country but the fact that obliged, when | hold on the continent when the 1 necessary work of any ordinarily busy 19.10DI00y OF helrEi ALONLIONE W03 D movement the sharper drew three cards uinst him and hberally congratulated from unde co tle with the | flower anchored in Plymouth Bay, and is | horson, the muscles do saders of mankind. They arc the'mas: | caston a land like ours, to 0 ] leacs 7 by thely | now also rapidly disappearing.’ 1t re- | Y 'eCeteide, | Still, ther following not tors.’ Attica was about as large as | elements and conquer the fo f ve a fair share S imi e R 0 aces and g king. He now held four aces. | 05t erimivals the table. They we two | on ridding the world of one of her mean- Rhode Island. Rhode Island is a noble | own bodily strength, they lived an out. | Mains to be seen if the Anglo-Saxon race, | musclos which are used almost exelu- TR ARR. 1 L “Lll raise the blind fifty cents,” hesaid. | The day after the trial a messengor little commonwealth. Yet 1t has enjoyed | door life ‘in the main, and stored up an | Which has ventured upon u continent | sivoly, so that other muscles, with their paid for the capture, dei, At uls Lis confoderate dropped out, | arrived at O whither Blkedna kol political liberty longer than the denioe- | immense “capital of vitality” which they | that has proved the tomb of antecedent | connocting tendons, bones and nerves, or nlive, of tho assusin of | leaving one to fight for the pof ' | the night hefore, He inquired for Blake racy of Athens lnsted, and in the midst | handed down to their posterity? Somio | Fieos, can bo more fortunate than they | il from sheer neglect to contribute to Mrsovinglon, mho wps s ; Blake was determined t alr play, | and delivored into his hands s packege: of the blazing hght of this much-lauded | of that posterity are not content to use ",‘“;“-‘};"':""":-’: fll};‘ 2‘-‘““;“ 3 l; I“‘l’"‘“ the health of the whule hudT. How many ghtof January 18, 1831, © 20 under the pretense of going to the bar [ It contained a check for $1,000, hm century. What now is or will be the in- | the mterest of that capital, but arespend- | fA8 WeSIOrROrS OAC L Has B | women exercise fully the larize muscles CY v prr e F O T Ohs .0 he got near enough to whisper to the vie- | amount of the reward. fluence of Rhode Island on the world’s | ing the %-lnclpul, What 15 the conse- | g8 &I 8 W o8 D e 8 physiane | Of the back and loins, ov the muscles of | The murder of the old lady was the | tim of the sharper, but quick as the | Blake did not see exaotly how he had history compared with the unmeasured | quencet Not only enfeeblement of body | failed;unles can produce a physique | tha abdomen? Women who wash, or | talk of the village, and every means was | movement was it w . earned the money, but it came in very ' n to tell my | micely in building up « constitution somes hand?” exclaimed the gambler in a rage. ' what impoverished in the county jail, FOR SALE. 186 feet on 24th st., corner Douglas, $23,260. 44 feet on 24th, near Farnam, $6,500. Lot on Dodgs, corner 26th, H0x448, $3,500. A ility s d a'brain capable of meeting success- y il : 5 ; i et and 1mperishable influence of Athens? | and ming, but sterility; and thus many of | &1 ok 0 those who work in field or garden. Yot | being taken to capture the murderer. D— you! Do yon m Whenoe the difleroncor The ciusos of | the old New England familics are dying | flly the demands”that our climate and | ghesg fmportant musoles, whon used, con: | Tho reward offered was a liboral one i 0 LT T A 8 2 E T STEEET 3 [ Per Lot. lots. EET 5 N Lot on Docg), B0-feet front, corner, $3,000, STREET S1RE ; T REREREARRRRERTY TR > HY H Terms Easy---§25 to $50 down, balance in monthly payments. 48 foct on 26th strest, near Dodge, $1,600. The lols in this eddition are large, 50x130, beautiful Addition is one of The Becst T.ocated In order to give parties of moderate means an opportunity to sccurea good 1ot at a iow figure, we will for a short time put these lots on the market SCHLESINGER'S ADDITION. SCHLESINGER BROS,, REAL ESTATE DEALERS, I0I8 Farnam Sireet. s 5 e i i e ] N g 5| g $§ 595 B-acre lots i Farnam Park, §120 Diered i |6 § 1525 O ] per acre. Fasy terms, . i & SEEE ofed 2 " 4 : " %; H ) Stock of clothing and furaisking - A % 1 s ;O§ geods in good locatiou for sale o x- i n S | au) A 10: changs for Omaha rez! estate. 4 . e L = 5 a P = 3 = H o f s o i DY chlesinger Bros. g o | ey b by iy iy Real Estate Dealers - - - al kstate be g 7 o (I ¥ X 1 n|" 1018 FARNAM ST “I'm at your service,’ snid Blake, his

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