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The Topeka Daily Capital from Topeka, Kansas • Page 13

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Topeka, Kansas
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13
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THE TOPE A DAILY CAPITAL: SUNDAY. AUGUST 30. 1891. 13 OF POTENTATE AND POET THE HISTORIAN OF OHIO. Then the conductor appeared and held out his hand for the fare.

Each woman otened her rtocketbnnk ft hope a- jo? it sares Jxjq her time and her kfcor, Ad fiJie'llfmd that Jier with a nouncing the death of Professor Everest, of Philadelphia, her tutor before she went abroad. He wrote the first song ever dedicated to her. The news of his death made her reminiscent. She got the old song and, humming it over, noticed that the first five notes on the staff were which she immediately adopted as her stage name. Signor Maina and his wife will take an active interest in the new conservatory.

Signor Maina is a native of Italy. He was a pupil of Tancioni, who was a classmate of Rossini, and carne to America under ths management of Mr. Strakosch. He has sung with Uerster and Kellogg, as Mephia-topbeles in "Faust," his voice being a powerful baso of excellent quality. He i a vocal teacher and also the leader of tha choir in St.

Patrick's church. Washington. Mme. Maina was known before her marriage as Pauline and received her first instruction from Barilli, in Washington. At the age of twelve she went to Milan to study with Lamperti.

After firs years of his tuition she made her debut in Catania, Italy. Directly afterward she made a tour through Europe under the manajrement of Mr. Abbey. She sang with Patti, who, as a token of appreciation of her merit, presented her with a necklace containing forty-five diamonds. Her voice is a rich, full contralto.

It has been heard in every country in the world except 4 i ilrlTifl urn sctff THE WW Columbian Transportation and Trust COMPANY. Chartered June 5, 1891. President; Saml. T. Howe, Treas.

Ji. D. McUinlet, Sec. S. M.

Lanham, Gen. Agt. DIRECTORS Hon. T. McCarthy, Larned; Gen.

Murray Myers Won. Vrnmt McGrath. Eelolt; Hon. o. 8.

Hyatt, Leavenworth; Hon. Ueorgo W. Wlnana, Topekai Hon. Saml. T.

Howe. Topeka; MaJ. T. J. Anderson, Topeka V.

A. 8. lilrd, Topeka; H. D. McGlnley.lopeka; s.

M. La ham, B. Powell, Topeka. Kansas aauonai liaux, This corporation Is duly oreanlied under contract with individuals, societies and corporations lor transportation to and from designated points, to provide hotel and other accommodations, take care ot baggage, eta. The company is now prepared to make contracts with individuals for transportation to the Columbian Expoeitlon and World's Fair at Chicago in isy.

it guarantees to provide rauroau rare to provide meals going and coming; to provide bfst hotel accommodations while in cmcago; to provice tickets 01 aamibf ion to tne exnioition; to provide street car rare to and from the exhibition; to rrovlde an excursion on Lake Michigan; to look after and care for your baggage: to provide a buresu of Information, furnish guides to large par ties, and to do any and all things possible for the convenience, comfort and accommodation of Its patrons. it will nave its own noteis. where its patrons may rest assured or nrst-class accommodations and where all nial! or messages may be directed. Will also provide private accommoaations ior lamnies or laaies wno ao not wisnto stop at noteis. The agent in your locality will furnish you an estimate on cost of the trip.

An average payment of fifty cents a week will provide money enough to take you through. Agents wanted in unoccupied territory. Address, N. L. McGINLEY, Secretary.

SjinH PREMIER TYPEWjfilTElt WASHINGTON'S SINGERS, WHO MAY BE IDENTIFIED WITH THE NEW CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC. A Temple of Harmony for Which a Con-greMlonat Appropriation Was Secured. Bright Gossip About Marie Oecca and Other Well Known Artists. iCopyrigtit, 1S91, by American Press The National Conservatory of Music, for the establishment of which congress at the last session made an appropriation, and which is to be located in Washington, will probably become one of the institutions of the capital city within a months. It iucctsa Li undoubted.

Washington has al- MARIK DECCA. ways been a musical center of importance. Many musicians of prominence give it as their birthplace or place of educat ion. And its physical beauties have attracted to it many persons who have no concern with government affairs, not a few of whom, have beeu musicians of note. There are, therefore, a reat number of people whose interest in the proposed conservatory is di reel and strong already in Washington and the actual opening of the conservatory will unquestionably attract many more.

It was through the eirorts of the Washington musicians that congress was induced to act. Congressmen are rarely enthusiastic musicians. That being the case, it was difficult to arouse their interest. What was to be gained by a conservatory of music at the capital? Finally, however, they yielded and voted for the appropriation, and the musicians blessed them. One of those who will undoubtedly play an important part in the new institution is Mile.

Marie Decca, She is a soprano and accompanied the Marine band on its recent tour. Mile. Dtcca was a pupil of Mme, Marchesi. She was the only one of a class of sixteen who took the four years' course and graduated. She studied abroad for mm BIGXOR MAD? A.

awhile and then appeared at Covent Garden, Londou, under the management of Colonel Mapleson. Her first part was that of Queen of Night in the "Magic Flute." Her success was Immediate and substantial. During the two years she was with Mapleson she made tours of England and Ireland. She talks entertainingly of her experiences in the latter country. Irishmen and Irishwomen, she declares, are severely critical in musical matters.

They criticize with judgment, too, she says. At the iirst performance in Dublin the students of Trinity college, whose verdict is unquestioningly accepted as final by the musical public there, assembled in the gallery. The knowledge of the presence of these austere critics made Miss Decca rather nervous. But as they gave no indication of disapproval in the first few moments after her appearance, she quickly became confident and sang with such fine effect that when she made her exit MME. MArSA.

galleries gave a loud whoop, and demands for cheers for "the blue eyed darlin in the white frock" were responded to lustily. Miss Decca is a member of the Marine corps and the insignia of the corps, an elaborate decoration of gold and silver. The court train belonging to one bf Miss Decca's costumes is of great value intrinsically and also historically. The British museum offered $3,000 for it. It is of spun Silver and belonged to the aunt of the old JCmperor William of Germany.

In former days it was the custom for the bridesmaids to divide the silver train of the royal bride in half, one part being given to some cathedral for an altar cloth and the other kept in the family as. an heirloom. The family half of this particular train was Kented to Miss Decca during her stay in ndon. The other half is in the Hohen-aollern museum. The Americans in Paris presented her with a pin, the design of Which is a musio staff cf gold.

On the lines of the staff are five large diamonds, representing in music notes the letters of her name. There have been many fables related concerning the origin of Miss Decca's nom de theatre. One says it is derived from two Italian words, decantere and can to re. wmcn interpreted mean "a lmng song ot praise," This is pretty, but it isn't true. The real story is less poetical.

During her early life this songstress was known in Washington as Mary Johnston. After she went to Paris and was engaged by Colonel Mapleson, that gentleman thought it necessary for her to have a stage name. Ohio, the name of her native state, was sug jested, but that seemed too much like an imitation of Nevada, who at that time was rery popular. While' searching for a name 0 cailerasi to Miss John? tea an- mm ffl Despite His Tears, He Is Still a Bright and Vigorous Man. Patriotic citizens of Ohio are congratulating themselves over the completion of a history of their state, which in its method, arrangement and conditions of authorship i3 one of the most noteworthy books ever issued.

Its author, Henry Howe, was born in New Haven, Oct. 11, 1S18. The son of the first publisher of Webster's Dictionary, and bred in an atmosphere of books under the shadow of Yale college, it was but natural he should take to authorship and publishing. His first work was "Memoirs of Eminent Mechanics," issued by the Harpers in 1839. In 1840 he traveled over the state of New York in association with John W.

Barber, making drawings and collecting material for an historical work on that state, which waa issued in 1841. Two years later was Issued by them "Historical Collections of New Jersey." In 1S43-4 Mr. Howe singly made a tour over Virginia, largely pedestrian, and iu 1845 published "Historical Collections cf Virginia." These state works New York, New Jersey and Virginia are scarce and out of print. The term "old gold" has been applied to them by admirers as books thumbed in youth which they in vain attempt to find in old age. In 1846 Mr.

Howe went out over the mountains to Ohio, passing successively through every county in it on the back of an old, slow going horse, named, in irony. Pomp. Much of the state was then a wil derness. He made drawings of the his torical points and county seats, talked with the pioneers and eminent men of the com monwealth and gathered its history from those who laid the foundations. In 1847 be published the "Historical Collections of Ohio," a work of 600 pages, with 177.

engravings from his pencil sketches. It was immensely popular and had a greater sale than any state work even to this day issued. On its publication he settled in Cincinnati, where for some thirty years he has resided, engaged in writing and publishing books, mainly historical, which were sold by subscription all over the country. In 1877 he returned to New Haven, and after some literary ventures there, in the fall of 1S85, on entering his seventieth year, again went to Ohio to make a second tour of the state for a new edition of his work. This, after about six years of close application, he accomplished by its issue in three large volumes.

The new work contains all of the old; in it are the portraits and histories of Ohio's eminent characters for the last hundred HENRY HOWE. years; local and general information, legend and story, geography and antiquities; indeed, everything pertaining to Ohio and Ohio history. Throughout the work is contrasted the Ohio of today with that of nearly fifty years ago. On his tours he kept "Travel ing Notes," which he has introduced into his chapters regardless of the dignity of history or art. 1 hese have a literary bon homie that gives an agreeable individuality to his chapters.

He js exceedingly bright and entertaining, varied in anecdote, kind ly in sympathy and pervaded by a rare spirit of humor. It is indeed a remarkable work, and Ohio is fortunate in the possession of such a historian. The general assembly of the state has given official indorsement of its worth by purchasing 1,200 sets for public libraries and other institutions. Otterbein university has conferred the degree of LL. D.

upon Mr. Howe, and he has been elected to honorary membership in many historical societies both within and out of the state. He now resides in Columbus, where he publishes his work in connection with his son. No one in looking upon his slight frame and snowy locks of age would suppose that he had the physical vigor anc mental power to have accomplished such a great work. They Must Respect the Kaiser.

It isn't safe to discuss the emperor of Germany in his own realm save with laudatory phrase. Not long ago a young American got into serious trouble because he carelessly said to a companion in a Berlin cafe, "I cough at the kaiser." The police had him locked up almost before he could catch his breath. The latest sufferer is a Roman Catholic priest, who recently remon strated with the bead of a household for hanging Emperor William's portrait between the pictures of two saints, remarking that a mere Protestant sovereign ought not to be placed so near the holy ones of the Catholic church. His words were reported, and the priest was brought before a neighboring tribunal and condemned to four months' imprisonment in a fortress for treason. Density of Population In Cities.

According td a recent census bulletin the density of population per acre in the large cities of the United States ranges from 4 in St. Paul, 5 ia Minneapolis, 9 in Omaha, 10 in New Orleans and Buffalo, 11 in Chicago and Denver; 12 in St. Ijouis, to 59 in New York, 43 in Brooklyn, 31 in Washington and 30 in San Francisco. For other cities the figures for population per acre are, in round numbers. Baltimore, 24; Boston 20; Cincinnati and Milwaukee, 19 each; Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis and Newark, 16 each; Nashville, 14; Rochester and Phila deiphia, 13 each.

He Will Cross the Black Water. Caste prejudice is lesseningamong Indian princes since many of them hare visited Europe. Toa rigid Hindoo "crossing the black water" metns a grave fin, and so the maharajah of Mysore one of the richest and most powerful nttje rulers has been much perplexed between hia wish to accept the queen's invitation to England and his dread of iafrinziog the rales of Lis faith. Finally he called a council cf eminent Hindoo prjesl's to solve the difficulty, and with their sanction he will journey to England in the autumn. Dr.

Salvador de Mendonca, who has just left his Washington for a visit home to is the riehestof the foreign represent! ves at that capital. Tarqooise In Lare Quantities. Turqaowe is found in targe quantities in New Mexico, and in Arizona, Nevada and Colorado. It quarried out of the through which it runs in bine veins, Vith dow ntA tSen convnion called nmt-gets which scraeiimM afford stoats of value Mount Calchibaiil, twenty Kiiles from Santa is largely undermined wuh ancient Indian workings for this mioenu. Washington Str.

will slowly so that the other might have an op- portunity to be generous. The woman who was nearest the conductor fished a cent out of her pocketbook and placed it in his hand with the request that he would "wait a minute." Two more cents fol-! lowed the first one and then two very bat- tered looking coppers. The conductor had I shifted uneasily from one foot to the other during this proceeding and looked bored, There was a twinkle of satisfaction in the woman's eye. She had disposed of some I oins that Were not worth thp snara thav i occupied in her pocketbook. It pleased the other passengers, too, because the conductor represented a big monopoly and was therefore fair game.

The woman's friend had been watching the little comedy with a smile, and when the conductor held out his other hand for her fare she dropped a ten cent piece into it. The conductor's opportunity to make a "mean thing" of himself had come, and he dropped his five ill assorted coins into the second woman's hand and walked out to the rear platform much pleased with himself. The passengers smiled. The victim of the coins looked reproachfully at her friend. Then both women concluded that they didn't want to ride any further.

New York Sun. HE'S POPULAR IN PARIS. The Giant American Dentist Who Is Jait Now the Kage. The biggest man in Paris outside of a show is Dr. G.

C. Daboll. who went there from Buffalo. He is seven feet high and well proportioned, except that his shoulders are too broad even for a seven footer. His beard excites amazement, being so very thick and black and long, crowds often gather around him in the street to gaze at it and him.

But it is as a dentist he enjoys the highest reputation. When he located in Paris a French nobleman a owned to a nervous horror of dentist work submitted his mouth to Dr. Daboll, and though he had to lie back with it fastened open for five hours, while the doctor bored and tunneled among the molars, he slept more than half the time. Dr. Daboll's hands are anaesthetic in their DR.

G. C. DABOLL. touch, and the nobleman declared that the buzz of the boring machine sounded in his head like the humming of bees in a June garden. The doctor's fortune was made.

Every nervous Frenchman who could afford it wanted Dr. Daboll for a dentist, and many declare that they never enjoyed a rest more refreshing than that taken while he was digging out the cavities and jamming in the gold. The doctor recently sailed for the United States to attend the annual meeting of the American dentists, and to get some new instruments of kinds which he thinks are made better in his native land than in Europe. Sioux City's October Jubilee. The Sioux City corn palace opens Its fifth annual festival on Oct.

1 and con tinues for seventeen days. Great preoara- tions are being made for the festival, which promises to be one of the most nota ble events ever celebrated in Iowa. The palace building will be 380 feet long and 200 feet to the top of the dome. The great arch in the center completely spans Pierce street. One wing of the building will contain an auditorium with a seating capacity of 2,000 people.

The Mexican National band from the City of Mexico has been engaged for the entire season, and will give two concerts daily. This band is composed of fifty-six skilled musicians, unde.r the leadership of Senor E. Payen, who directed the Mexican band at the cotton centennial at New Orleans in 1SS-W BIOITX CITY'S CORS PALACR. In another wing of the palace will be found an exhibit from Central and South America, which will include over forty Tarieties of fine woods, such as mahogany, rosewood, oilwood, coffee bushes, growing and loaded down with coffee; pineapples just as they are transplanted; oocoanuts on a section of the tree; india rubber plants and india rubber in the crude and manufactured state; banana plants and a score of other varieties of tropical plants; Indian relics and souvenirs; views of country and city life, etc. In the space devoted to this unique exhibit will be erected of cane or bamboo, with thatched roof, a characteristic Central American hut, which will be presided over by a family of natives clothed in their own peculiar costumes.

It is estimated that the palace will be visited by 150,000 people this falL There will be a number of special excursions from New England, as also from Virginia, North Carolina and other eastern and southern states. A Splendid Field for Antiquarians. Now that the British have taken full possession of Manipur, th ene of the latest East India massacre, ntiqnari-ans are full of eagerness to explore the soil of the capital. It said to be full of relics of earlier ages of mankind, of whom no other trace than their bee shaped dwellings has been found. In other parts of the valley these give place to monoliths, the me-; mortals of another ancient race.

The people still preserve curious ancient superstitions, such as dragon worship. For instance, the blood of the late European victims was smeared on the two huge dragon idols before the palace. Most of these superstitions and ceremonies can be traced back to the Nagas, who, in distant years, are supposed to have intermarried with some sn peri or race of invading Aryans, and so become the progenitors df the modern ManipurL Col.ec ting a Debt. A Gardiner nian collected a bill of $2.10 the other day and feels well over his success. He rode ten miles into the country and found his debtor in the hay field just about to pitch on a load of hay.

"The money 13 np to the house," explained the farmer, "and 111 get it just as soon as I get in this load of hay. Da you mind getting on and building the load? The Gardiner, man got on and when he reached the barn he found the lady of the house, who had charge of the money, out blueberryin. So he stayed and built another load and then got his money. Some folks think he had earned it. Kennebec (:ie.i Reporter.

Mliac or lhYi TfWfc nf hpr CLAIRBTTE SOAP MannGictuK4 only by FAIRBIMaca, Capital Stock, 9100,003. xopewa. the laws of Kansas and authorized to rrom your home to Chicago and return! mm mmi rmnrn J5UI liM DCD1. Miss Canan of THE STANDARD SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND hai adopted the Premier after an extended correspondence with eastern and western schools using it. She has not one unfavorable report on the ma cnine.

Write for particulars. Carry Challenge Eylet Prwset-" Ribbons for all machines, Mitneo erraDhs. Reed CoDTbolders. eta AND RETAIL. EI price, I ISO STew 149 crfe.

1.00: Kovt Reo cboss Diaco E'MJfD P0RIO1 At ONE ISSUES A UKASE; THE OTHER CELEBRATES HIS BIRTHDAY. Interesting Sketches of the Czar of All the Basslas and of England's Poet Laureate, Accompanied by the Latent For- i trait of Each. Two prominent men in the Old World have lately become a little more prominent than usual one by a birthday and the other by a ukase. They represent the very extremes of human activity, and the sharp ALEXANDER in. Reproduced from hLs latest photograpV.1 contrast between them, taken with the comments of their admirers, has in it something of the unusual.

They are Lord Tennyson, who has just passed his eighty-second birthday, and Czar Alexander III, who has disturbed the grain markets of the world by forbidding the export of rye. The strange feature of the czar's case is that his chief friends outside of his own dominion, are found in republican France. His royal reception of the French fleet, the fetes at Cronstadt, Peterhof and St. Petersburg in honor of the French naval forces, and the czar's evident willingness to join in humbling Gerifiany, have quite won the hearts of the French. Parisian journals declare that he is the only monarch in the world whose name is cheered there, all of which is a striking illustration of the old saw that politics makes strange bedfellows.

Alexander was born March 10, 1845, the son of Alexander II, who was killed by a nihilist bomb and was the son of Nicholas, who died of chagrin and was the son of Alexander who died a natural death and was the son of Craey Paul, who was murdered by his nobles and was the son of the infamous arine and there the point of uncertai in pedigree is reached. Alexander II vas blown up March 13, 1881, and the present czar at once succeeded to the throne at the age of thirty-six. In 1866 he married Marie Feodorouna, daughter of Christian IX of Denmark, and they have five children. The oldest and prospeotive successor is Nicholas, born in 1S63, the czarowitch who recently had a narrow escape from assassination in Japan. Alfred, now Lord, Tennyson, was born Aug.

0, 1809, at Somerby, in Lincolnshire, his father being a minister ef the established church and his mother the daughter of a minister. He commenced writing verse in boyhood and continued it with tolerable regularity for forty years; but it was not till 1S30, when his 'n Memoriam" appeared, that the world recognized him as a poet. He was made poet laureate Nov. 21, 1850, and in 1855 published "Maud," which was followed soon by "Idyls of the King." This seems to have been the culmination of his genius, but on that point there is naturally great diversity of opinion among critics. Lord Tennyson lives most of the year at his very secluded residence in the Isle of VTight, and that love of privacy which was always his most marked trait has now reached such an extreme that it is almost impossible for strangers to get a glimpse of him, or even of his house and grounds.

Formerly visitors were admitted to some of the walks and drives, but they cut branches from the trees or uprooted ad carried away ferns or other plants, and now they find locked and spiked gates and rces that all trespassers will be severely secutad. V.I ALFRED, LORD TEJOTTSOX. -Reproduced from his latest photograph-1 Tennyson. is unusually vigorous for a man of eighty-two and walks several m'les a day, but Lady Tennyson is a complete invalid. Besides them the family consists of their son and his wife.

Professor John Tyn-dall, the agnostic philosopher, is a neighbor, and he and his family are the only intimates of the Tennysons. It is thought in the vicinity that the poet is also an agnostic. At any rate, he has not entered a church for many years, and though he is quite friendly with the local clergy, the least attempt on their part to draw out his views terminates the interview at once. His prime favorite in that class, however, Is the Rev. P.

Roman Catholic priest, kuown to the islanders a3 Father Peter The very orthodox Duke of Argyll is also a favorite visitorat Lord Tennyson's, and there ends the list. He sees very few people, never writes a letter if it can be helped and will not listen to requests for autographs. Bernhardt' Doss Barred Oat. Even the best known and most influen tial people sometimes fail in their endeavors to have regulations set aside in their favor. Sarah Bernhardt found that out when she first set foot on Australian soil.

The famous French actress had with her several pet dogs, which the authorities at Sydney promptly put in quarantine and kept there until her departure. Neither threats nor entreaties moved the officials, and when Sarah cried they were respectfully sympathetic, but remained obdurate. Foreign dogs are not a Ted to enter the Australian colonies, lest hey should i Hilar hydrophobia. Didn't Want to Ride After That. Some of the women in the car said the conductor was a "mean thing, anyway," but they were forced to admit that hia provocation was great.

When his car stopped at Fourteenth street two handsomely dressed women bustled in and sat down. They had evidently been on a shopping expedition, and as they talked vivaciously about their purchases general con-conversation in, the car ceased. The other passengers inspected them admiring if) MV 7-m Is P. H. FORBES, Ag't, 521 Kan.

Topeka. Kansas State AssoeiatioD SCHOOL. OF Drawing, Painting, MECHANICAL DRAWING ad CHINA PAINTING. OSSAR KRTTTZSCH. A musician of prominence in Washington is Oskar Krutzsch, who until recently lived in Boston, where he was educated in the musical conservatory.

He also studied four years with W. II. Sherwood, of New York. Mr. Krutzsch is popular both as a teacher and a performer upon the piano.

Among his recent compositions are, "The Heart and Hand," gavotte, a contralto Eong entitled, "My Heart's a Lute," and a march called "Le Regiment qui Passe." He is of German ancestry, but a Virginian by birth. Mrs. E. AL Webber, a soprano, is also from Boston. She has been in Washington since last fall.

Her voice is a clear, high soprano, and it has won for her a great amount of applause in the capital city. She was a pupil of Alexander Guil-mette, of Boston. She also studied for some time with Carlotta Patti in Paris. Tenor Herndon Morsell i3 a native of Washington. Fairlamb taught him and for some time he sang in Washington churches.

Then he went to Milan and studied with Lamberti. After a concert season of six months in London he came to America and joined the Boston Ideals, remaining with them until they disbanded. He then went with the McCaull company MRS. E. M.

WEBBER, and later with the Duff company. Hereafter he will sing only in concert. Mr. Morsell has composed a number of songs of much merit. Mrs.

Annie Roemer-Kaspar was born In Darmstadt, Germany. She came to America when a little girl and began her musical education in Baltimore, completing it in Germany and then returning to Baltimore, where she made her debut. Besides her own pupils Mrs. Kaspar teaches in Mrs. Somers' school, a position she has held for ten years.

She is also the soprano in the Street Baptist church. As a concert singer she is in much demand. Washington is proud of Mrs. Annie Louise Powell, widow of Lieutenant Powell, of the army. During a western tour of the Boston Syrajiiiony orchestra, Mrs.

Powell's fine contralto blended with the soprano of Mme. Fursch-Madi." Mrs. Powell also sang with Emma Thursby on her last southern tour. She also is a pupil of the great Milan teacher, Lara berti. But before going abroad to study she was taught by Signor Agra-rconte in New York, and while with him HERXDOJT MOKSEIX.

was the contralto soloist in St James' Episcopal church. She wrote a lullaby last winter and secured the everlasting gratitude of the administration by dedicating it to Baby McKee. Margaret Maxtoh. a. neuue that Failed He (in the boat, excitedly) What can I do to help you? She (in the water, calmly) Stay in the r-cat.

Mnnsey's Weekly. -Professor Sample is giving an exhibition in London of horse taming by Bteam. A horse, said, to be vicious, i securely fastened in a box. which is rapidly revolveVl until the horse is dazed and dizzy. When taken out the vicious animal appears quite docile, MX yi3y i -j.

sr 6th Season, 1891-2. The School will re-open on Monday, Sept. 21, 1891, in tho Crawford Jackson and 5th Topeka, Kansas. NEW EQUIPMENT. ADDITIONAL.

Special rates to pupils who come to the school from outside of Shawnee countji PROF. GEO. E. HOPKINS, Princiial, Crawford Building, FOR CIRCULARS OB INFORMATION, APPLY TO PROF. HOPK1AS.

SEYMOUR DAVIS, Architect, Instructor i Mechanical Drawing, MISS LOU MATTOON and MISS KATHARINE WHITING Assistants, MISS KATHARINE EVANS, Instructor in China Painting WHOLESALE IE FU1IT ISetrvreen tH snd Stto Everything Reduced to Wholesale Prices for This Month, EEE THE FOLLOWING QUOTATIONS: HarCwood ft3t HlFhback Chain, at $5.00 to $13 per dozen. turn lours MisK-s" Scroll Ann Kocker, cane teat and back 1M urge's Cane Seat and Hack Rocker Sarsn'f Cane eat end Lack Brace-arm Rocker Cane Seat uminit Chair at The Vergeti Mze Scroll Arm race Beat and Back Rockera t.04 Cane Seat Polished Chairs l.fj holid Oak Bedroom Suites 115.00 to 1171 je; (QLkespeare Tables, solid cak Cylinder Office Desks, oak, at Our fall line of Baby Carriage going at cost, also a large aaeortmtstof HcJ Art Furniture, including Parlor Good at correspondingly low prices. Hail crsrs promptly filled and good packed a. TEIEPIICfcVJEJ 468. I Tt.

Chichester English. MM tn..

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About The Topeka Daily Capital Archive

Pages Available:
145,229
Years Available:
1879-1922