2 THE ( BIAHA DAILY BEE : MONDAY , AUGUSTJ3 1886. Lcavcnworth street , 400 yards from Miiottrl Pacific depot and 7r.s.s than half a m tic from the Canning Factory , ands / between the JMt Line and Mintottrl I'ari/lr railway. It contain * ! Hi of the mott beautiful lai/lity lolx on Lcarenirortli atrrcl. I'rtrcn range from. $ > 00 to $7 > O ; oni'-foni-lh c nh , balance easy terms , first come , Jlrat k This is a decided bargain , 215 S. i3fh St. , Up-sfairs. l Hen on the Ucllcvtir ronil ami h within four Mocha of the street cars , In on tlic route laid out for the contlntinlloti of the street railway to the /South / Omaha Stock Yards. In on the hill lop overlooking the city , well sttpinicrt with nJtadc trees. J'rlccs range from $500 to $1,000 ; easy terms. A delightful place to live. 215 S. 13th st. , Up-sfairs. QLlcsltelwcen 16lh and Saumlcr.i ste..just north of Lalie st ; north and soitthfronts , ranainu inprlcc from $1OOO to $1,500 , anil all that is its Vcqitircd IsGpcr cent cash and balance on cany tcrina , on conditionhow ever , that the purchascrbnlld a house of a certain value within one year from-purchase. Within two lilocltsof street cars , city water and gas. I have only fourteen lots left. W. H. GREEN , 315 S. 13fh sf.9 Up-siairs. I HAVE I $ Eore frontage on railroads for warehouse pur poses , more centrally located property ; better terms and bargains , more carefully selected than any agent in the city. W H. GREEN , REAL ESTATE AGENT , 215 S , 13th St. , Up-stairs. MILLIONAIRE MONUMENTS , Pursa Strings Pull Tight in Life Loosened by Death , SOME RECENT BENEFACTIONS , I'ulillo Institutions roundcil niul lUclily jtulo\\cl ; bj Ucnlthy Aincrlcnns Moilcls for tlio LilvlnK. Many of the possrssors of the groato t fortunes won in this country , says the Ni-w York'Sun , have died within a coin- par.itivoly few yours , and distributed their wealth by will. Let us see how they have done It. ( tcorirc Poabodv , who died in London on the llh of Novombnr , 1800 , had not , it is true , accumulated all hia vast property in the United Slates , but he laid the foundations of hH fortune here , where ho started life iw a poor Massachusetts boy , and it was aftonviud greatly increased by his American investments. Mr. Pen- body had given away many millions during his life , the sum of his moro con spicuous benefactions reaching about $7,000,000. Wlton ho died ho made be quests to objects of public utility , but the residue of his fortune was enough to en rich his relatives with about $5,000,000. Ilia greatest benefactions were sj2r,00,000 , as a. fund for the building of lodging houses for the London poor , and $2,100,000 as a "southern educational fund. " However great has been the sum of the actual bonchls conferred by these princely cifts , alter the lapse of nearly a quarter of a century it is not too much to say that it lias been far below the expec tation of the philanthropist. The Lon don poor are no better housed than they were in his day. and the Peabody lodg ing houses are oiuj object of much criti cism. Now the cry is that the govern ment itself must do the work of improve ment , for all Hngland has lately been aroused by descriptions of the awful misery of the poor crowded in London hovels. In spite of his gift for the benefit of southern education in 1800 , congress in 188ii has had before it a bill to distrib ute many millions of the public- money for the same purpose. Mr. Peabody's benefaction was only n drop in the bucket John Jacob Astor died on the 29th of March , 1818 , at the age of eighty-live , leaving his estate , with the exception of a bequest of * 100,000 for the Astor Library and borne minor legacies , to his son , William H. Astor , who died on the 24th of November , 1875 , leaving his o state to his sons , less a legacy of about 4250.000 to the Astor Library. The vast Astor estate , the greatest landed estate in America , has thus como down sub stantially intact from its founder , and tlio onlv conspicuous benefaction of the family'has boon the establishment and enrichment of the splendid library which bears its name. But the Astors. all the same , have been and are public bene factors. In founding the library the lirst creator of the fortune did an in estimable service to society , for the Astor library is one of the choicest and most useful collections of books in the United States , and supplies a want which all students know to bo imperative. Be sides that , this family has administered its vast landed possessions in Now York with a wise method which has greatly served the interests of the public. They have expended their wealth in building up the city , and tire known and honored through out its limits as the justcst of landlords. They have also made many benefactions for public objects which have been the moro praiseworthy because they wcro unostentatiously and most in telligently bestowed. Of all American estates of magnitude the best preserved has been that of the Asters. The late Johns Hopkins died at Balti more , December 34 , 187IJ , at the age of seventy-eight years. Ho was one of the most penurious and miserly of men , but be surpassed oven Mr. Tilden in the mag nificence of his benefactions. He gave to the foundation of the Johns Hopkins university and the Johns Hopkins hos pital , in all , some eight millions of money , and they are two ot tno greatest monuments ments that any citizen over raised to his own memory. If lie gave twice as much to the public welfare as Mr. Tildon did , it was simply because lie happened to have twice as much. Besides , his eight millions atoned for and in a certain do- grcejustilied his personal earnerwhereas Mr. Tilden's four were used to express the lilting and modo.st climax of a life of devotion and unselfish interests' . Like Mr. Tilden , Mr. Johns Hopkins wns a bachelor. A. T. Stewart died in Now York on the 10th of April , 1870 , leaving a widow , but no children. Ho was reputed to bo ono of the three richest men in the United States , the others being Commodore Van- bcrbilt and John Jacob Astor , the younger , who had n few weeks before Mr. btowart'p death inherited the bulk of the Astor csttito. Mr. Stewart had made bis great fortune in this country , and because - cause of his lack of children there was much curiosity as to tlio will of the sa gacious merchant. Before his death ho had started two vast entornrises for the bunelit of the public , or rather , for the good ot special objects of his considera tion. These were Harden City , on Long Island , to provide homos for industrious mechanics and other deserving persons of modest means , and a home for working girls on Park avenue in this city. Gar den City is now a rather fashionable cen ter , being frequented by the golden voutli who hunt the anise-seed bag. The working women's homo has been trauatormcd into a ho tel in which no working girl can nll'onl to live unless she goes there as n servant. A grand cathedral has been erected at Garden City in memory of the dead man , but the crypt provided for the reception of his body is vacant , for his corpse was stolen from St. Mark's church yard , and no one knows where it has crumbled to dust. By his will , the vast estate of Mr. Stuwart , witli the exception of legacies of 1,000,000 to Judge Hilton , one of his executors , and $325,000 to his employes , was left to his wife. After his decease , first his wholesale business was substantially closed up by its removal from the warehouse at the corner of Chambers street and Broadway , which was the pride and tlio wonder of old Now York , and then his famoui retail liouso pa.ssed into other hands. It is supposed , too , that his estate in the possession of his wife has greatly diminished , for his vast manufacturing interests seem to have been sold at a sacrifice. At any rate , tlio Stewart estate , once so provocative of envy and astonishment , has cea.sed to da/,7.1o the publio witli its granilcur , James Liok , who had worked himself up fiom poverty to affluence , died at San L'rauoisco. October 1 , 1870. Two years before hu hud placed all his property In the hands of trustees for various public purposes , but subsequently ho revised that disposition , reserving to himself JOOO.OOO , and giving to his son $150.000 , and sums varying from $2,000 to $5,000 to his relatives. Hi * most conspicuous gifts wcro $700,000 for an observatory with the most powerful telescope ever made , 9540,000 for a California school of mo- ohamcal arts , $150,000 for free publio butliB in San l-'rancisco , $00,000 for n montinutnt to Francis bcott ICoy , the author of the "Ktar Spangled Banner , " and f 100.000 for a group of bronze stat uary in ban Francisco , reurosenting the history of California. Ills benefactions amounted to about $3,000,000. CoruoliiiD Vauderbilt died at New York on thojlth of January , 1877 , at the ago of eighty-threo yoacs , leaving nn estate which was estimated awfrom sixty to ono hundred millions , all of which sunii ex cept about fifteen' Millions , was oc- queatltod to his fsonVVIlliam II. Vtinder- bill , and a mpmortililo find most deplor able contest occurred ever his will , Dur ing bis life ho had givrn toward n million to found Vanderbilt university at Nash ville , Tenn. , a now prosperous and us < v ful institution , whiuhMIS further and btindsomely ondowitd by hisson William. William It VandpTbilt died in this city on the Sth of December of last year at the ago of sixty-four , and about eight years after the death of his father hail put him in possession of o vast an estate. Hut his life was kept iti turmoil for the lirst year or two by the bitter and mortifying contest over the testament of the old commodore , so tlmt the period during which lie enjoyed his wealth was quite short. Yet he was commonly reported to have doubled his inheritance , and that in- eroaseil estate , with the c\ception of l > er- haps a million for charities , lie divided nmong his widow and eight children , his two oldest sons receiving the lion's Hharo. Hoforo his death i\Fr. \ Vanderbilt had given largo sums to Vanderbilt uni versity , and find bountifully contributed to the College of Phvsielaus and .Sur geons , n medical school of this i-itywhich lias been further bcnolitcd by bis lioirn , who also have undertaken the foundation of ji handsome club house for their em ployes. James honor died In Now York on 1'cbruary 18 , 1880 , at winch time lie was held to bo ono of the live wealthiest men in the city Previous to his death he had founded and endowed the Presbyterian hospital at Seventieth and Sevenly-lirst streets , expending about n million dollars lars , llu spout over half n million in building the Lenox library , and subse quently stocked It with hid remarkable collection of books and works of art ; but as yet the library has been of little use to public , for admission to it is dlfllcull. and students oven do not take full advantage of the boons. It i.s a most imposing building architecturally , it is beautifully situated , many rare editions are on its shelves , and it contains pictures and sculptures of great beauty , but they are still almost as much locked up , so far as the people are concerned , as if" they had been buried in Mr. Lenox's tomb. \V'o must not omit from this list Girard of Philadelphia , who left more than $9,000,000 , together with a plot of ground , to found Uininl college in that city ; Ste vens of llobokon , who bequeatncd $1,000,000 to complete the Stevens bat tery , and $1,000,000 for the Stevens insti tute at Ilobokcn ; Roosevelt of New York , who left about n million to found tlio hospital that bears his name ; and Wil liam W. Corcoran of Washington , who has given about $2,000,000 during his life to establish an art gallery and a homo for decayed gentlewomen there. Of other rich men who have died ot re cent years are the Goclct. brothers , great landlords , but their property has all gene to their natural heirs and their relatives who arc now among the richest people in New York. Samuel J. Tildcnvlio , died on the 4th of this month , left about fi.OOO.OOO , r.ll of which , except about $1,000,000 , goes to public objects a inagnificent bequest , liut his will scorns tq. transfer trom him self to his executors the responsibility for devising the means through which the benefaction shall go. They have pretty full discretion , and the good the public will derive 'from ' tlio liberality of the great statesmen will Iarg3lv de pend on the wisdom.of these three men. The main intention . 'of the testator , to provide a grand frco library for New York , was worthy of the sagacity so con spicuously manifested in the accumula tion of his vast fortxmo , but even with re spect to such an institution the executors are allowed full discretion and power ot decision. They are public-spirited men , and they know the wishes of tlio de ceased. Therefore'wo nan expect from them that his munificence will be so ad ministered as to best serve the interests- of the people among whom ho was an honored figure. Hut , looking over all these various dis positions of a fortune , what one affords t'lo best guide for a ricli man who would most wisely distribute his possessions ? A $2 Washing Machine Free. To introduce them in Omaha we will give away 1,000 Self-Operating Washing Machines. If you want ono send your name and street address at onco. Ad dress Monarch Laundry Works , 101 Ran dolph street , Chicago , ill. Have Evans or Blackburn drive you out to Deer Park or Plainview to see lots on and near Twentieth street at low prices and easy terms. A lovely home , cast front , on Virginia avenue , two story house , full lot , only $4,500. , J. B. EVANS & Co. Paint your roofs with I. X. L. Slate Paint. Leave orders at ofllco , Room 0 , over Commercial National Bank. You can buy tnrmturo cheaper of A. L. Fitch ft Co. , 12th st. % bet Farnam and Douglas , 1 ban nnv other place in the city. One of the handsomest pieces of prop erty for residence in the city , improved , within block of street cars and paved street , south of Farnam , east front. Make offer. J. B. EVAXS & Co. Ilomoycd. John Seh % > oedor , harness and saddlery has removed , his business from 1510 Far nam to 1705 St. Mary's avenue , whore ho has commodious room for his business , and will bo glad to see all his old friends aa well as many new ones. California canned fruit still 20c per can at llcimrod's. Tlio Bible Sooioty has Bibles for flalu cheap. Depository in Y. M. C. A. rooma. nail & Van IJruiit'H Bargains. East front on Virginia avenue , half block from St. Mary's avenue corner , n great bargain for only ? ; ) , UOO. Must bo sold quick. For sale by Ball & Van Brunt , 110 south 15th St. , who uUo have many other cholco bargains , including Reservoir addition , In which are the cheapest lots in the cly ! ( It will pay you to s > eo them. _ J Beautiful 1 east front , two-story house , excellent neighborhood. Virginia nvo- nuo , llanscom place ; ' $1,500. J. B. Kvans & Co. , ' , GET HOWK & KEitnJrf miens ON Fonxi- TUltK. MlODoUGLAS TIjbKT. The "Cat" ? ! Jfinost cigar ist(0 ( three for a quarter cigar m Taking quality into consideration , 1 am selling LUMBER cheaper than any yard in town. My now olllce , Oth mid Douglas street is very convenient. FUEU W. GUAV. St. Paul lumber yard. 'f'hirleontii and California streets , inaktw lowest prices on build intr material. for Sale Iloalilonoo , My lot , house ( with or without furni lure ) and barn for sale on easy pay ments. For particulars apply to Mus F. M. 1'niM.irH. ' 'ilO Dodge St. The "Excelsior" cigar is the lino.st live cent cigar in the city. An excellent smoke , Try it. Goodman's Pharmacy , 1110 Furnam &t. Lots in Hawthornu advanced to-day to $1,200 and $ liQO. ( J. B. Kvans & ( Jo. CniCKEUIKo7 STKIN\VAV AND OTHKlt uritiuuT riANO'd to rent , $ r and up wards. Call at Max Meyer & ttro.s wareroonu. Invitations to inspect Ramgo's goods. DIAMONDS IN EARLY DAYS , The Value , Woighli Composition ftnil Method of Polishing. How to I'rovo tlio Genuine Article 'J.'lio Aiiulant mill 31 oil c fii Cnr.it A Holitnlro Symphony. Cornlilll Maga/.lnc : Whore HIP dia- luoiul coino * from noboily knows. You can no more predict tht ovistonro of diamonds mends tlinn you can the o\istonco of genius , though , to bo sure nil diamond- llclds to n certain extent resemble e-ieli other , and sill , borrowing us they do their light from the sun , are found only in warm olimatos. Nor can you tell where tin ; dluinond goes to on combustion. Hum it and it loaves no ash ; the flume is o\terior , like tlmt of cork , and when it has bta/.ed itself out there remains not oven so much us would dust the antenna of ik butterfly. Tlio ancients were us sure no diamonds could bo burnt as they were that none could bo broken. It wns not till UiO ! ) Unit Do Hoot suspected its inflammability , nor till 1073 that it was actually burnt. In 1C9I , Avornri , and Targlonl , of Cimonto , nl the instigation ot Cosmo HI , the grand iluko of Florence , burnt , the dinmoiul in the focus of concentrated sunrays , where it was seen tocrack.coruseatc , and dually disappear. They had tried to learn the " secret of its com"poltlon , and , like a true unirtyr , it liad perished unconfossod ; it had burnt itself out like : i sun. Forty- four years after the dcatli of Newton ( who guessed the diamond to bo homo ' 'unctuous body ooagiilaler , " perhaps tlio Vegetable secretion of the Human tree , bettor to shake than the Pagoda ) , a mag- nilieent diamond was burnt , on July 20 , 1771 , in tiio laboratory ofM.Macquer.and in the presence , among others , of a well known Parisian jeweler , M. Le Hlnnc , who , notwithstanding what ho had just seen , stood forward mid declared the diamond mend to bo indestructible in the furnace. for I hat ho had himself often subjected stones to intense heat to rid them of blemishes , and that they had never suf fered the slightest injury in the process. Thereupon the two chemists , IJ'Arcel and Houellc , demanded tlio experiment should lo made before them on the spot , with the result that poor La Hhuic found himself , after three hours trial in the crucible , at the temperature that melts silver , minus onoof the most precious of his stock in trade. No ! If you doubt yonr diamond , do not cither try to burn it or to break it. You mav test it with bluck mastic , to which , if it bo real , it will adhere closely. You may even , if your ears bo sharp , rub two together , and mark the inucscrioablc grating , croaking sound tlicv give out ; so o the ollloqrs ot tlio Junta Diamanlina in the Bra//ils with their doubtful stones ; and , lastly , you mav try its refractive power , for , unlike all other crystals , the diamond hasnodoublo'rofraction that is to say , objects looked at tluough the diamond mend remain objects still , and arc not doubled. It was not for many centuries , not till the iiftccuth , that the. diamond was cut , when , in 1450 , Louis do Berquem , of Burges , discovered the secret ot cutting and polishing tlio stone by its own aid diamond cut diamond. Ten years later a , guild was established , and in 1170 Charles the Hold , IJuke of Burgundy , sent him three fine stones one for Sixlus IV. one for Louis XI , and one for him self , which was taken off hi.s de id linger by a soldier and sold to a priest after the battle of Nancy in 1477. Louis' grand son , Itobcrt , says he received 0,000 ducats for his work , and describes how his pupils , after learning from him all lie had to teach , went and set up for them selves in Antwerp , Amsterdam and in Paris Then the Dutchmen carried the art to India ? travelers sMmk | of them there and in Persia , and at Ispahan Tavcrnior came upon one established , In Lisbon gems were cut by the Jews. who , on their expulsion at the end of the sixteenth century , went to Holland , settling tliero within \ear . to tlio num ber of 10,000 , connected in one way or the other with diamonds. In Paris , by Ma/arin's influence , twelve of the most famous of the French crown jewels were rcciit. of which only the stone known as the Tenth Mazarin , of 10 carats , valued at JE2.000 , now remains , and by the min ister's encouragement there were at the end of tiio seventeenth century sirenty- five cutters at work. In 1775 they had dwindled down to seven only. In Am - stordam so thinned wore they by civil war , dissension and invasion that tliere were but six. There were no old diamonds mends to be recut , but there were B.832 carats of new waiting to be attacked , but the seven masters of Paris were either old and stupid or could not work fast enough , for the stones were sent to Antwerp , and at the revolution the cutters wore at work on them and on old stones from the crown of Franco in an aban doned convent of the Chartrouv. In the country of the Shangallas , in South Africa , wlwro there has over been a great commerce in gold , from time im memorial the natives have been ac- cu.stomod to use as weights the ceeds of the Krythrina corallodendron , from their almost precise similarity and equal weight when dried. The native wont for tlio seed appears to have been karat. From Africa it passes to India , and from a gold weight became used for precious stones , and , divided into lour grains , was early common to all tlio coun tries tralliuking with India. There are certain scumble differences between the carat of different countries between the carat , for in- htanco , of a jeweler at Florence and a jeweler at Madras. That is only to bo expected , considering tiio rather chance nature of the weight ; but what seems strange \a \ the fact that down to 1877 there was a variation oven among the first Paris houses until in that year "La Chambrn Syndlcalo dijs ncirociants en dianmnfs" decided that henceforth the carat should correspond exactly to 205 milligrammes. Note , pray , that above one oarat the value of the diamond increases us the square of the weight ; that is to say , : i stone double the weight of another has four times the value ; treble the weight , nine times the value ; ton times the weight , a hundred t linen the value. The best are worth 13 per carat. 1.18T. List of letters remaining uncalled foi in the postoflico for the week ending Aug. 10th , 1881V Note Parties calling for these loiters will please say "Advertised , " giving the date at the head of the list , and inquire ) for same at the "Ladies' Delivery Arm dow. " To avoid mistakes h.ivo your mail ad dressed to street and number. GENTI.KMKN'8 J.IST. Atkins I ) Artt'rhuinKE Anderson As Aimstion A Arvldiou A U Ah'atliifj 0 Ainoy It Anderson Win F Amlt'ifOM J I ! Angler K II Auiibbough K AIIIOII 1'J Allun I * American Tea ( Jo AXfilndoJO AinuIiUW llellK HalnKl' Hticlinntnvx [ ) llaldwlii K K Buck lev < < K UiinyiiiMi U Hiown O W Hrown U Hiirton O Uas < K Hlossiuston I ) E 2 Harbor K W Hijan P O Uloorn O Dales L 1' Union M Hltulltiil HimlenM Hrott A 15 Hrelono A Duck J HfllllH Hrown L It Hor/.liiasskl : It JioUUck < llptuln O Howmnn \ \ ' K Ustiivk * . P Ueasley Vf 11 Uiirry W ! TELEPHONE HARRISON , AMBLER & IOOLEY , DIHLKRS IN Estate Rooms 20 ami 20. Oiimluv National Bunk Biilldlnj : . Oiimhi. ; Nebraska , Do Stn'ct/y a Commission Business List Your Property FOR SALK- 8fl 1or Sale Lots In Ambler Place , ono of the Imest additions to Omaha , only 3 miles fioni court house and a little over i mile west of Hanseom Park. Lots $ .V > p to H')03 ) ouch , Kasy terms. ISO For Sale 2-story house , 7-rooinn. cellar , city water , stable , full lot. in llanseom place on Park nvo. , $5,000 , : $1,000 cash , balance to .suit. 187 Fine east front on Virginia avc. , $ ! ,7.VJ ; ? 1,000 cash , balance in 2 years' 1S.J- For sale at a bargain , 5 acres for $ looo ; half cash. 101 1'or. sale at a bargain -Corner lot Kt2 feet on South IJJlh st. 00 iVt ( deep with large house $20,000. half cash. 15S 2-sU > ry store building with lot 30x 1JO ! on Phil Sheridan ht. , f4,500. 114 J line lots on Bark avo. , $2,000 each. Cheap. 100 Lot 50x110 feet in Dupont Place , $050) ) ยง 200 each. Cheap. 70--Lot in Arbor Place , $150 ; $150 cash balance to .suit. 142. 0 full sections of land in Cheyenne Co. , N-b. , at $1 pur acre , worth $0. Must bu sold soon. 101 For sale or exchange for Omaha imjpi'itv. IGOacresa miles from Pitger Nob. . ? 2.000 120 For Sale Good business property on ( . 'liming st. , $5,000. 1(8 ( ForSale or exchange , for house and lot or vacant lot , 101) aerus $1,000. 58 For Sale Good house and 3 lots In Hanseom Place , So000. ; Tor S.ile On Georgia , avenue , near Judge Diimly's , east front , 10-room house , barn ; all modern improvements. $7,500. 55 Kou SALI : House and lotonPiorco street : 2-storv noiihu , ti-rooms , good well and cistern , 'ROOO. Fou SAU : Splendid corner in Hans- com Place. 180x101) ) . will make 4 good lots. A great bargain , $1,000. 7 For Sain House 5 rooms S 18th st. cis tern , cellar ; monthly payments , $3 , 500. 3 For Sjlo House ami lot on Georgia avo. , near Wolworth , house of 7-rooms , everything in first class condition , a bargain. $ ' 1,800. 44 For Sale House and lot onN. 18th st , house 9 rooms , good barn , lot 05x 185 , $ > ,000. 414 1- milot on Harney St. , 41x171 , $ ) OJO , for8 days. 408 Fine east trout lot , llanscom Place , ' . ( room hoii.se , modern improvements , $ ; ! ,750. A bargain. 10.1 . Lot in Sliiim's addition , $1,400. 404 House and lot Shim's add. , house of 7 rooms. $ : ) ,50u. iOii Splendid lot in llanscom Place $1,200. , A great bargain. 402 Lot and half in llaubcom Place , fine location , $3SOO. 401 A new 2-story house , 8 rooms , Hans- coin Place , fi.OOO. 100 New house , 0 rooms , Virginia ave. , $3.000. 3911 Two fine east front lots in K. V. Smith's add. . $2,000 eacu. 398 LoL41i\-13'J on 2 < ith , near Harncy st , with 3 houses , $3,31)0. ) Special bargain. SOU Lot on Lake .street. 42,500. 395 Lot in Pelham Place , $900. A bar- gam. 392 Fine lot. south front , in Hanacom Place , $2,500. 391 Two lots with double house of 10 rooms , Shinn's -add. , $3,500. , A great bargain. 3 8 Lot anArmstrongs add. , $2,000. 380 Lot 38x100 in ivountxe's 2nd add. , new 2-ntorv House of 8 rooms , $2,500. ' ORO Three lots in Omaha View , $350. Cheap. OR5 Fine lot on St. Mary's avenue at n bargain. 304 House and lot on South 10th street. only $3,500. 373 2j acres only $250 nor acre. 37 ! ) Lot in Ilamcom Place , cast front , only $1,000. 378 Fine aero properly on Saunders st. 377 5 acre.s with ( j-room house , Saund- em htreot , $5,000. , 34(5 ( Corner lot , now house of 5 rooms Lake. st. , $3.000. nil ) 7-room house and lot on Colfax near Loaveinvorth st. , $ 1,000. 348 Kiht : front lot , llanscom Place , $900. iltO Lot In Cortlandt Place , $0.000. 3U5 Lot 30140 , Lake's add house of 5 rooms , only $ J,300 ; $300 cash , balance $25 per month. 3)3 ) Lot in Tliornburg , $550. 230 Lot on College street , just south of Luavenworlh. house of 4 rooms , good bani1$2,200$500ca.shbam ; nee monthly 220Lot un Diianc St. , Hanseom Place. $1,111)0. ) , 312-11011 ami lot on Popplelon ave , , Hanseom Place , $1,000. > 02-Lot on Catharine si. , $2,000. 195Lot opposite Judge Dundy's. $2,500. 11)0 ) HoiiM ) and lot in DoniHc'H addition , $2,500 ; $200 cash , balance $25 per mo. 147 Corner , 3 lots in Hansoom PJaco IIOIIHO of 0 rooms , good barn , $5,000. f9 ! 5 lots on Saunders st. , $1,100 each. A great Imrg.un. 415 House and lot in Ambler Place , 8 rooms , good barn , $1,000. 418-Corncr , 3 lots , Arlington , $1,550 for both. A bargain. 420Houso and lot in Lowe's addition $1 , 150 ; $500 cash , balance to suit. 4325 east front lot.s in Boyd's addition , $2.500 for all ; H cash , Imlanco to suit. 434 Corner lot in I eavonworth Terrace , south and oust front , $ -000 , $300 caih , balance to 424 { i jt33\UOfout on 13th street , near Howard , $ y,500. A gieat bargain for u few days , 420Lot in subdivision of J. I. Redick's addition , east front , $3.500. 427- House and lot on N. 17th Ht. , house 8 rooms , barn , A great bargain at RGOO ; i cash. If you want to neil list your property with us. Parties wautiup to purchaye ehould call on Harrison , Ambler & Woolley , Room 20,0inalia h'atloua Bant