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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1888)
" - - ' ! "T-- THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ; SUNDAY ; SEPTEMBER 30. 18891SIXTEEN PAGES. Have you noticed the improvements gibing on in the western part of the city" ? A ride in that direction will prove a greai surprise to anyone who has not been through j that section for the past month or so. Farnarn street is now graded to tne city limits and sidewalks laid nearly to the Belt Line railway ! Ouming street is being paved to Lowe Avenue - < nue , and graded and sidewalked to the city limits. The growth of Omaha is decidedly west ward , and new houses are being erected in most every quarter. Dundee Place lies just outside the city line , and is bounded on the south by Dodge street , extending north beyond Ouming street. The development of this property has attracted buy. ers and home-seekers from all parts of Omaha , and many from other places , who purpose mak ing their future homes here. Will be THE place for comfortable and fine homes , no house oan be built to cost less than $2,500 while others will cost many times that amount. There will be no business oi any kind in the residence district , and no nuisance will ever be permitted under penalty of a forfeiture of title- Dundee Place will not only be a most select and desirable place for a home , but will also prove one of the most profitable investments to those who buy the ground now , while the price is low and choice lots can be secured. Parties who wish to build and desire a loan , can be accomodated with liberal building loans. We are pleased to show this property at any time. Flats can be obtained at our office. The Patrick Land Company of Omaha ' o * SOLE OWNERS OF DUNDEE PLACE. DUNDEE Room 25 , Chamber of Commerce , Omaha , Nebraska. W , H , CRAIG , President , N , D , ALLEN , Vice President , W , K. KURTZ , General Manager , MOTHER GREAT ENTERPRISE A Matter of Great Importance to Kearney and Vicinity. NEW IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. Visitors at the State Fair Worked By a Couple or Frauds Supreme Court Notes lilncoln Notes. LINCOLN BUKEAU or Tns Oiun * . BBB , ) 1029 P STHBHT. V LINCOLN , Sept. 29. I Mr. B. H. Goulding , of Kearney , fllod articlca Incorporating the George W. Frank Improvement company with the secretary of talc yesterday afternoon. The articles show this to bo a corporation of great importance t the citizens of that place aud surrounding country. It is the Immediate outgrowth of the water power created there about a year go , and the company comprises some of the best known teen of that city , .and an eastern syndicate of great wealth. This corporation began iu existence on the 18th day of September , and will continue until the 80th day of June , 1037. The scope of the business of the company Is best stated In the language of the articles , as follows : "Uuyins , selling , renting and dealing in real estate and lunds ; city , village and town sites ; town , village , city and other lots ; layIng - Ing out , platting , improving nud developing town , city and village sites and lots. "Buying , selling and dealing lit , improving and developing farms , mill sites , water privi leges and water powers. "Building , operating and running mill * of all kinds , particularly Hour and grist milts , flax mills , oil mills , sorghum mills , saw mills , pinning mills , woolen mills , plaster mills , paper mills and woolen manufactories , ana buying , selling and dealing in the pro ducts of all such business or any of them. "Buying , selling and dealing in grains and all kinds of agricultural , horticultural and farm productions. "Buying , polling nnd dealing in horios , mules , cnttlo , hogs , sheep utid other livu stock. "Manufacturing , b ing , selling and dealIng - Ing in bricks , lime , agricultural machines , tools , Implements and utensils. "Building , Ibaslng or renting abbativo and packing houses for beef , pork or any kinds of moats or vegetables , "loo houses aud refrigerating processes. "Hallways to bo operated by steam , eleo- trlcity , horse or water power. "The business of banking , loaning , selling of exchange , notes , bonds. wO Including the loaning of money upon real cstaU < , and the KU ranteeinR of such loans * nd the int | gt on the same. Halving deposits and the issuing tnero- tot certificates of deposit with or without interest. "The building of city waterworks , electric light works , selling uud renting water , elec tricity and the manufacture of any devices W operate the same. "Buying , building , occupying , using , ope rating , selling , leasing and routing ware houses , clovators , mills , shop. * , manufacto ries , stores , houses and dwellings. "Building , constructing and improving parks , roads , tramways , viaducts , reservoirs , races , canals , Irrigation of lands , sluices bridges aud such other structures as may tx deemnd necessary , useful , or convenient IT the prosecution of the business of the com1 pany. "Buy Inp , selling and dealing In lumber , ROOdi , wurc * ami merchandise , and porforu and transact all other incidental business. " The rrpital stock of the company is fixed a' ' t3VOXH ( ( > and the principal place of buslncsi Kearney i Buffalo county , Nebraska. , and thi indebtedness of the company ran at no tlm < run above JiOa,000. The gentlemen incorpor ating are as fellows : ( jcorgo W. Frank Kearney ; H. D. Watson , Greenfield Ma&s. ; K. L. Spencer , Wellington ! Conn. ; C. M. Clnpp , Binghamn ton , N. Y. : W. H. Knight , Boston , Mass. ; a fYed Suilill , Hartford , Conu. ; John S. Foote Mew Haven , Conn. ; A , G. and O. T. Doolittle trustees , New Haven , Conn. ; E. P. Carpen tcr , Brattleboro , Vt. ; Samuel V. Poor , Hyde Park , Mass. ; J. A. Martin , Wallinpford , Conn. ; E. L. Morris , Boston , Mass. ; H. G. Wiley , Kearney ; H. E. Howard. Springfield , Moss. ; J. T. O'Hrien , M. E. Hunter , Augustus Frank , C. H. Elmendorf and George W. Frank , Jr. . Kearney ; T. M. Stewart , Charl- ton , la. : C. M. nice. 13. H. Bicknell and N. A. IJaker , Kearney. LOOK OUT ron THEM. During the state fair an old couple hailing from St. Joe , Mo. , did the city mid fair visitors promiscously , attended by a little girl , who held the cup for the charltes of the public that chanced to pity the aged and blind. It is not drawing it too strong to say that no greater frauds ever visited the city. The authorities of St. Joe say that while the couple in question arc old and blind , they possess a fortune of not less than $30,000 and do not need aid from any one. And , moreover , they resort to ways that arc dark to gather In the nickels and dimes. While hero the little girl who was with them was kidnapped , stolen from her homo and forced to hold the "charity cup" while the old man played tbo violin and the old woman did ths song act. The parents getting wind of the whereabouts of their little daughter wired the police to send her homo , but the old frauds had loft the city. However , a day or two ago , they put in their appearance hero again , and are now begging from corner to corner and street to street. The public will do well to give them a wide berth. They do not need aid. They are better ublo to care for the poor than to be cared for. They are big and fat , from lifty to sixty years oJ ago and their identity need never become a matter of ques tion. From the state fair the couple went to Kearney , and worked the Grand Army boys and regulars during their week of encamp ment. lIKIJLTOli TV. S. STAKKET VS. JUDGE FIELD. The brief of Attorney Lambertson In the case of the State ox vel W. S. Starkoy vs. Judge Allen W. Field was filed in the su preme court to-day. The petition sets up the interesting fact that the relutor , W. S. Star- key , has a case pending in the Lancaster court against the Chicago , Burlington & Qulnoy railroad company , which the respond ent refuses to try because he says the cause has been removed. Starkey alleges that no petition bos ever beeu filed asking the respondent to remove the casu , and no order has been made by him directing or consenting to its removal , and asks the supreme court for a writ of manda mus to compel the respondent to give the case a hearing. The re Into r further states that an application for removal must bo to a state court , and that said court must have something to say before it can bo robbed of ill jurisdiction. "Here , however , the district court wrenches the c.iso from tnu state court without oven showing the scant courtesy of obtaining * * 3 consent , " but tbo principal " "Sund upon which the rclaU.r'i . _ > ret-f1on Is based is , that nuder Uie. pretitlaw a removal can not be had ° ? ' " "ground of local prejuce where any of the defendants are residents of the same state as that ot the plaintiff. If this position is incorrect it is argued that the present law Is a violent departure from all the other re moval laws , especially where the ground for such removal Is local prejudice. Tne caic will bo submitted on the brief of Attorney Lambertson next week. The case is of con siderable interest and decision upon U will be wutched with Inturrst. IN nosou or im. LIVIXGSTO.V. A special train will bo run to PlaUmouth from this city , o\cr the llurlington , to give an opportunity for friends to attend Dr. Liv Ingston's funeral cervices. His many friend ! and admirers in tbo Capital city will bo glad to learn this. The news of his death was re ceive' here with profouud sorrow. Ho was widely known and loved , and consequently i widely mourned , but at no place outside 01 i Platsmoutu Is his death more deeply la mcnted than hem. As a physician be had opportunity to scatter acts of charity that ii death leaves him mourner * In almost everj city and town in the state. The train \vil leave the Uurlingtou depot about 0:33 : o'clocl t Monday morning , nnd It is understood that i i largo delegation of Lincoln citireus will at s tend the funeral services of the dlMiuguUhec i dond , which takes place from hi * renidcnci in Plattsinouth at 2 o'clock In the afternoon "njutmnusB" AND "GREEKS. " The student * of the sUte university held t moss meeting it the chipcl last evening ti discuss the fraternity question. SInce thi formation of the fraternities in the institu Uon , dating several years bpck , there ha. been a itrong opposition to them. Still , dur lug the post two years , the opposition U them has been rather dormant. This year , however , the battle promises to rage with all the former bitterness , and unless the line is drawn somewhere bad blood will exist in deep wells before the year has gone. The fraternities have announced that the literary societies must go. But a majority of the students are "barbarians" and they have commenced to plan their campaign , and will have it inaugurated'in good time. The meet ing last night was well attended and very enthusiastic. "When Greek meets Greek then comes the tug of .war. " C1TT NEWS AXD NOTES. Mr. George W. Frank , of Kearney , passed through the city yesterday evening en route for New York , on business connected with immediate improvement of the county seat of Buffalo county. Kearney evidently has a bright future. Mr. Charles Hands , of this city , and Miss May Lalhrop , of Plattsmouth , were married yesterday afternoon at the home of the bride's stepfather. S. P.Vanatta , Rev. Bur gess performed the ceremony after the rites of the Episcopal church. Mr. Hands repre sents the musical department of Max Mey er's business , Omaha , and Is well and favor ably known. The Lincoln woolen mill plant is well nigh finished in every department , and business will commence about the 15tn of October. The company expects to put a traveling man on the road with a full line of samples at that time. A great deal is expected of the plant by the citizens and business men of tbo city. The Hand hardware company received their first invoice of goods this morning. This company promises to bo one of the most extensive wholesale hardware dealers in the west. Five carloads of shelf hardware goods comprised the invoice of the first ship ment. Colonel Gadd , financial agent of Bathing Hcighths , the seat of the new Christian uni versity , went to Omaha to-day on business connected with his work. Mr. Gadd reports work on the university building progressing rapidly and a fair sale of lots , both residence and business. The opening week of the Wesleyan uni versity has been most auspicious. The at tendance has gone beyond the most sanguine expectations of Chancellor Creighton , and the future promise is flattering. Both fac ulty ana matriculants are proud of the start. The university promises to bo one of the most useful Institutions of the state. Personal Paragraphs. R. F. Lytle of Lincoln is at the Murray. D. S. Elliott of Sioux City is a Murraj guest. J. P. Smith of Seribner , and H. P , Foster of Lincoln , are at the Millard , General Agent Hamilton , of the Ued Star line. VTis in the city yesterday. John H. Pickett and P G. Hoffman of DCS Moincs , are guests of the Millard. John H. Ames of Lincoln and H. S. Boat of North Platte , are at the Pax ton. C , B. Wai to , H. K. Krug , W. IL Axtaler and C. L. Chipman of Lincoln were in Omaha yesterday. "Boss" Shopbard and John C. New leave this morning for Denver , to enlist capital in their now paving. There will bo a mooting of the Joint assem blies of the Knights of Labor at Gate City hall this afternoon at the usual hour. F. E. White of Plattsmouth , W. A. Keeler of Fairmont , and A. S. Harding of Nebraska City , were Omaha visitors yesterday. BREVITIES. The internal revenue collections yesterday amounted to (7,737.50. A couple were married by Judge Shields yesterday , but requested him to keep the names from the reporters until Monday , as a publication of the marriage before that time would "inconvenience" them. As predicted by Tnx BEE some time ago , Union Pacific officials have decided that il is to the best interest df tbo road , as well as to thfl public , to restore the overland fiyci recently withdrawn , and ou and after Octo ber 15 it will again leave Omaha every daj at 12:20 p. m. A boy named Lusa. who says ho lives on the bottoms , was picked up by Driscal ! Brothers this afternoon and sent to the po lice station. The lad was so ill that be could hardly walk. Ha said that ho had not boei out of bed for a month. A doctor who c-x amlned him stated that he was suffering from a complication of heart and lung dis ordori. He was removed to the roar fam yesterday afternoon , where bo will 2s attention. A GREAT AND NEEDED WORK. American Literature From the Ear liest Settlement to the Present Time. From the point of view alike of the scholar , the student and patriot , a work which judiciously presents the repre sentative thought in American litera ture from the first colonial days to the present time , a period of two and three- quarter centuries , is a contribution to the sources of knowledge and to national pride and aspiration of the vert' high est value. Such a work the country needs aud has long needed. It is re quired for the interests of popular en lightenment. It is a want which every student feels. It is n fountain to which the scholar may go to refresh his thought. It is a repository where the American poet , orator and patriot may find ideas and inspiration. The coun try has been most inadequately sup plied with sources of information re garding the progress of its literature and the best thought of those who have made its literature. The greater part of all that has been hitherto done to supply this knowledge has not been thoroughly and capably done. It is not wanting in the evidences of research and industry , but in most other condi tions it is defective and unsatisfactory. What was required was a work that should place before the reader select and character istic examples of the literature of the country , presented in chronological ar rangement , and chosen for the genuine interest of their style or subject matter. Such a work we now have in "A Li brary of American Literature , " com piled and edited by Edmund Clarence Stedman and Ellen Mackay Hutchison , and published by Charles L. Webster Co. , of New York. This work will be in ten volumes and the labor of its preparation has already consumed five years. We hayo the authority of so competent and independent a critic as Mr. W. D. Howells that the labor has been most judiciously performed , juid no one will hesf- . tnte tosccept this verdict who has any knowledge of the high literary qualifi cations of Mr. Stedman and his peculiar fitness for a task of this kind , while the accomplished lady who has been his co- laborer occupies a place in the front rank of literaryistuuents and critics. Their work U tt. . monument to their ability , industry , and discrimination which will stand , for generations and has deservedly , received the unqualified corataendatlon , , qi the most capable judges of its merU. Wo cannot present such a review of this most valuable work as its worth ! VroM'd justify. Columns might bo occupied in giving it just and merited consideration. It covers , as wo'have already said , two and three-quarto * ' centuries of Amer ican literature , divided into successive periods , so that tko reader can have no difficulty in tracing the march of liter ary aspiration , effort and achievement. Ho will also be enabled to discover in the process of literary evolution in this country , which has really been very rapid , the growth of social and political changes , as well as trace the advance in morals and religion away from the hard and severe conditions of the early colonists. It is replete with instruction that cannot fail to deeply interest every intelli gent American , and which must be considered essential to a finished edu cation in this country. The work is finely printed and bound , and ia illustrated by 160 portraits of authors , twenty of which are steal. It should have a place in every private , public and school library , and indeed , no library will hereafter be complete with out it. WELCOME MOHTON. The Democrats Will Endeavor to Suppress a Despondency. The various democratic organizations in Omaha met at the headquarters Jof the Omaha Democratic club last night for the purpose of perfecting arrangements in the matter of tendering J. Sterling Morton an ovation upon his arrival in this city , where he will address the democracy in the Exposi tion hall to-morrow evening. W. H. Crary called the meeting to order and Hobert Pat rick and W. C. Wakeley were chosen chair man and secretary respectively. All the wards were represented , in connection with which were represented the James E. Boyd , McShano Invincibles , Danish , Swedish , Omaha Flambeau , South Omaha and Omaha Democratic clubs. A. C. Wakeley stated that ho was in receipt of a telegram from Mr. Morton , stating that ho would been on hand on this occasion. The assembly conferred tbo honor of presenting the demo cratic congressional nominee to the audience upon Judge Poppleton. On motion of Jeff Megeath the trades unions in the city were invited to send each a delegate to the meeting , the same to be Riven a posi tion on the stage during the speaking. The following as a committee on reception tion was appointed : First word , Thomas Lowry ; Second , John Ennis : Third , Ed. Rothery ; Fourth , John Drexel ; Fifth , Henry Ostoff ; Sixth , J. W. Tierney ; Seventh , M. Hughes ; Eighth , P. O'Malley ; Ninth , C. D. Sutphen ; Danish club , William Neve ; Omaha Flambeau , Otto Lund ; McShano In- vinciblos , Louis Bochmo ; J. E. Boyd , M. Pickard ; South Omaha , Mayor Sloan ; Omaha Democratic club , A. C. Wakeley. Colonel Thomas Burrell was made erand marshal of the affair. The line of march will be as follows : Forming at 7:30 : p. in. at Thir teenth and Howard streets , it will move on Howard to Eleventh , thence on Eleventh to Harney , thence on Harney to Ninth , thence north on Ninth to Farnam , west thence to the halL It Is arranged so that Morton may be enabled to view the procession from the veranda of the Paxton hotel as it passes. Political Notes. The republicans of the Ninth ward had a pole raising last night on Farnam street , near Thirtieth. They were assl&t by the Lancers and. tb.0 Seventh ward clubs , who turj'Ca out with uniforms and torches. Speeches were mode by Messrs. M. S. Lindsay , John Wharton , W. J. Council , J. P. Green and J.V. . Elbcr , and were received with enthusiasm. The Young Men's Republican club will moot Monday evening at the Millard hotel. Every membjr Is expected to do his duty by being there. About nilloits People. London Telegraph : Some people are born bilious , and others have biliousness thrust upon them through the enormous amount of indigestible food-stuffs they consume and the little exercise they take to counteract the effects. Kemblo ( as wo learn from Archbishop Trench , used to protest against the consumption of tea nnd coffee , declaring that they had done more harm to mankind "even than the doctrines of Helvetius. " Dr. Richardson would , no doubt , not agree with the celebrated actor's advice to substitute Johatmisberg and beer for the eastern leaf and berry ; yet temperance advocates should not bo too sure that their own favorite boveragCB do network work injury to the constitution in some way they know very little about. There is less drunkenness nowadays than formerly , when boor and spirits were consumed more largely , but there is more heart disease. The sale of tem perance drinks has greatly increased , but so has all the tribe of ttarvous ail ments. We find the learned lecturer at the Royal Institution bearing his testimony to the ill results which fol low on any stimulation of the action of the heart : "In proportion to the un natural tax Inflicted was the reduction of the storage of life , and every luxu rious and fast mode of living was a shortenor ot the natural term of exist ence. " Tea and coffee , therefore , stand at once condemned ; so docs tobacco ; to does alcohol. At the same time , if wo are never to have our heart-beats quickened , wo are never to exert ourselves , never to climb a hill , never to leave level ground , never run , never ride , never do or say anything calculated to make life in the least degree interest ing or entertaining , or even useful. A man at manual work has his heartbeats quickened ; but then Dr. Richardson would probably reply in that case , as work and exercise are necessary , so much stimulation of the heart is a nat ural and not an unnatural tax on us. It is. at all events , satisfactory to find that biliousness has some compensating ad vantages. Bilious people live long , wo are told , for which they ought to bo grateful , although there are occasions on which those who are obliged to en counter them in daily life feel that it might be possible to spare them alto gether. In fact , some bilious people are a nuisance to themselves as well as to all around them , and would hardly welcome the prospect of length of days as any advantage. Others who are only moderately bilious ought to thank Dr. Richardson for his comforting disclosures. They may suf fer much from bile and its attendant train of furies ; they may bo morbidly suspicious , ridiculously envious , horri bly boorish , and dolorously sour-vis- aged ; but they at least have the satis faction of reflecting that they are prob ably booked for good long innings of oxibtence. The last word of science seems , therefore , to bo "a long life and a bilious one" which , taken as a motto , is not very hopeful : but then science also knows that billiousness is one of those demons that can bo pretty well exorcised by proper diet. "The Lamplighter. " A tattered and thumb-marked copy of Habbortou's "Helen' * Babies" lay Open ' tu6 shelf of one of the largest s'ccond- hand bookstores in New York , and sug gested the question to a Sun reporter whether it had not had a larger fale than auy American work of fiction , ex cepting "Uncle Tom's Cabin. " The proprietor , who knows as much about books as Joseph H. Choalc does of law , replied that while "Helen's Babies" had been one of the most extraordinary successes in the book trade , it did not stand second to "Uncle Tom's Cabin. " Then ho rumaged around on a dusty fihelf , and took down n thick volume , whose colors had faded from original black to a light drab color , and blowing the dust from the leaves , said that ho presumed that book had , next to "Uncle Tom's Cabin , " the largest Bale of any work of fiction by an American author. Making out the faded letters of the title , it was the "Lamplighter. " The book is now almost unknown to the younger generation of readers , but thirty years ago it c-aiibcd countless tears to llow. It would give Mr. Howells the horrors to read it , and yet more copies of it , throa or four times over , have been sold than all of Howells' books put to othor. Over two hundred editions of a thousand copies each were sold , and there is even now more de mand for It , mainly from persons who road it years ago , nnd , remembering it with delight , sought ii again. "Tho Lamplighter" was written by a Boston woman , and is u Boston talc. But , though iU succusn was so phenomenal , the author was for many years unknown , and even now hur name would bo un recognized oven by persons of literary habits if it were mentioned. It was a single flavor of her talent'and though it brought bomo money to her purse , it never made for her the fame that Its nuecesi ought to have glvon her. Roth- is known of this author except that she was a school teacher and had worked at odd moments for several years upon the story. Then it rcmainea in her desk some time longer , and afterward mot the fate of manuscript of unknown authors ) in being promptly rejected by several publishers. Wife. The Rutland ( Vt. ) Herald tells n story of how , near the close of the last cen tury , n physician , Frederick Aubory , living in the neighborhood of Burling ton , left his wife nnd child to make a visit to Germany. As he did not return for some years and no tidings came from him , his wifosupposiug him to be dead , was joined in marriage to Abel Castle , of Burlington. Not long after this mar riage , very unexpectedly and unher alded , the doctor came back. His wife , now married to another man , rcfuMd to go back to him. saying "she had buried him once and would not bury him again. " Dr. Aubery then departed resignation , but the writer to the land Herald has just found the for the doctor's yielding up hl without complaint. Ho sayn : " ? l visiting recently at the late hoMat Mrs. Esther Ingruhamof Wheatoa. DL , A daughter of Abel Castle , I was awn a receipt found among her papers , cony of which is hero given : Received , Essex , August 11 , 1791 , of Mr. Abel Castle , a certain obligation for OWKMT four years old and a heifer two yean W ; and when paid in full of all demandsof wfcsV soever name or nature soever from thefcs * ginning of the world to the data hereof ; r ef any demand on the woman that s ld CMtte If now married to , which wan once my UwlM wife , 1 buy received by me. FiiEDEitiuK AcMMrr. Nathin Castle. The above consideration , one cow MA a heifer , received by the bereave * hat band , was in those days probably ra- ' gardcd as a very generous equlvftlrat for n wife ; nnd n Js certainly lorg-tly fa Sxcessof what a Kansas man lately * T- ccivcd in exchange for his wife , whtek wns only " 82 in cash and a yeller do * . " Mrs. ingraham , above named , was CM wife of the Rev. Chester Ingraham , M F.ssex , mid the young child referred M WUH named John F. Aubory , and Hre4 in after years on Gough street , in Bur lington. Grandsons and other rclatlVW of Mr. Abel Castle are now living l Essex and Jericho. In the cemetery a $ Essex , on a plain tombstone , is a concerning the wife referred to "When OffcM Are Scnroe. Chicago Tribune : "If this Is final answer , MibsJrobiuson , " the yWMMf man said with ill-concealed ch&grla , M ho picked up his hat and turned toft\ "I can do nothing but submit. Ti , has it ever occurred to you that wfcffi lady passes the ago of thirty ere * sfck is not likely to lind herself as bought after by desirable young : she once was ? ' "It occurred to mo with Hudden i painful distinctness when you yourbflf just now , " aho replied , night , Mr. Peduncle.1' A lload for nuslnps * . ' i Lowell Citizen : "Young MM , ? - shouted her papa over tlio baoUt fia about 1 a. m. . ' 'you seem U > talc * MI < note of time ! " "No " ' , replied the JIM 1 porous young merchant in a burii like tone , "never for more than Uld % . days. " Ana the old man reUrirtl quietly to bed nnd dreamed of his pectivc son-in-law and boodle. An Oltl Roman Game. N. Y. Sun : Teacher What was name of the great resort for snorts , amusements in ancient Rornar Smart Pupil Colosseum. Teacher Name Bema favorllv time of the old Romans. SmartPuull Running ident.