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3 STATE JOURNAL, TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 23, 1S94. IX SOCIETY CHICLES. R 3 rival of tita Old Assembly Dancing Club. THE IMPERIAL CLUB EE01G1IIZES. Ot!i?r Morial and I'praonal Xew oT .Nute About the City. Jlust iq:n Vour aiue. lVrson sending pur-amass ami not; lees of so-c-. -.. events to tue.iOt K.VAL are requested to ai.'ii tii-tir name ami address la order to secure It is very probable that Topeka will boast of two dancing clubs this winter, beiiie tho Oxford club which is com posed exclusively of the "younger set." The young married people have clam ored lor a revival of the Assembly club, Unit was so 'successful and enjoyable several winters uto, and Messrs. W. J. iilick, A. ji. Cuiuturi, Ed Horner and J. 1. King as a eoninxdtee, have aouuded the tt-nainents of the married men, the bachelors and the exclusive society yuung i tie a in town on the subject and t!i result is an organization of tifty-live members, that will give parties at inter vals of several wee -td in Library hall, the hrst on .November U. The young' mar ried people will take the lead and at each party a committee of ladies will be in vited to superintend the decorating of the hail and the serving of light refresh ments. fii Imperial club members have ex pressed some dissatisfaction at the organ ization of the new dub and have made au effort to combino the two clubs under the name of the Imperial-Assembly club. This made a membership of un wiuMy size, so the Imperial club mem bers will meet tomorrow to elect new of lieers and till the places of those who have joined the other club. Parties will be given every two weeks at Library hull, as they were last winter. Mr. Frank 1. Edsun is president of the club at present. A. 'ew Whist Club. The following yo lag men have organ ized a club, without rules, without offi cers, and with but a single purpose mental discipline obtained by faithful devotion to whist 01 Monday evening of each week: Messrs. George Crawford, Theodore Hammatt. Harry Weaver, C. 11 and O. M. Merriain, Walter Noble, Dana Mc Vicar, Will Alexander and Charles 1' hum as. Children's Masquerade. Mr. and .Mrs. Groves of 018 Lane street, gave a masquerade party in celebration of their daughter Lulu's fourteenth birthday on Saturday evening. The cos tunics were very pratty and made identi ti -ation difficult, so the evening passed very pleasantly. Those present were: Evan Scheuk, Mabel and Ethel Grubbs, l.-'tha and Arthur Wistinan,, Mary Iliack, Jennie Bates, Fannie and Bessie Creamer, Myrtle Hughes.Rhoda Knowles, K.ito Hudhmore, Mtttie and Ida Sprayer, Ernei McLaughlin, Ethel DaObert, Edna G : ..ves, IJaiph Tuttle, 3Iarion Van Sant, Ciariie Laue, Oral Ridings and Arthur r"i '; her. GEXF.KALSdCIAL NOTES. . of Interest About Topeka People and Visitors in Town. Mis. Lou Neeiy of Leavenworth, is i tending a few days with her father, I :: r 1 states Marshal Neely at the Ho iel Throop. A v ;ry attractive young- woman who has spent the past sunime in the city, will be marriedin December to a wealthy young man in Pennsylvania. Mjss Laura Cook of Chicago, is the truest of Miss Helen Scott. Mgss Cook is a cousin of Mr. George D. Coois, former ly of this city. ,ir. Lester Brewer of Denver, is visit ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer, on Western avenue. Mrs. Fred McDonald returned today from Lexington, Mi, where she visited her daughter, Bernice. A If.te afternoon t-j that will continue into the evening-, and to which the men will be invited, U oa the tapis for next month. Mis Nelie Peffer and Mrs. Harry No ble and daughter wont to Holton yester iay to spend several days with Miss Broderick. Misses Helen Wilson and Eleanor ?mitu have issued invitations to a party m Mr. J. C. Wilcoc's home on Friday e veu ing. Meosrs. C. M. Merriam and Ned Os born spent Sunday in Leavenworth. Mr?. George Chase and two sons de parted Sunday for . Washington, D. G., to join Mr. Chase and reside. Mr. W. II. Kossinjton and daughters, Theresa and Alice, tpent Sunday in Kan Baa City, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hochstetlor, who have just re turned from Europe, Miss Nellie Pelfir will go to Leaven worth on Thursday to spend a week with Miss Mime Atchison. An informal subtcription-masquerade party in Wetherell'a hall is being plan ned by several young married society ladies for the latter part of this week. Miss Carrie Clarksoa ia visiting Miss llattie Lakin, in Emporia. Mrs. E. II. Crosby and Mrs. Walter Horner, have returned from a several weeks visit with their parents in St. Louis. Mrs, Fred Dobs an of Ottawa, formerly Miss Bella Sinclair, ia the guest of Judge ana .urs. is. J:, uanay, having come for the Ash by-Far ns worth wedding-. up Miss Helen Weber, of Lawrence, ar rived today to visit Miss Jessie Edson. MISS FAKXSUOKTH'S TEA. Tlie Bridal I'iirf y J-Jntertaiued at an l lalior itn Tea. Miss Kuth Farnsworth entertained her bridal party at a very elaborate tea last evening. Her's is to be a "chrysanthe mum wedding," and decorations were exclusively chrysanthemums. Miss Clara Francis of Colony, Kan., the maid of honor; Misses Fann.e Purely of Chicago, Margaret Dudley, Kate and Clara Thacher, bridesmaids; Mr. Albert Ashby 1' Philadelphia, ?ro.M israau, and Messrs. Chas. Thomas, Ned Henderson, Chas. lough of Lincoln, Neb., It Ii. Peterson, ushers, and Mr. aad Mrs. P. L. Soper were the guests. NOT ELS OF A. PESSOSAL XA1 IKE. V hat the Society I'olk of Topeka are Miss Lizzie Yandervort of Tiskilwa, I!L, is visiting her sister, Mrs. M. J. Mercer, and will s pend the winter in Topeka. Miss Laura Davia of Newton, who has been visiting Miss Minnie Davis, re turned noma today. MUi XiULeth'Ialvatie cf Chicago is visiting her brother Dr. G. J. Mulvane. Mr. and Mrs. Fraak Wear have leased Mrs. C. F. Kendall's handsome home on Topeka avenue for two years and are moving in today. Mr. and Mrs. Theo dore Wear will occupy their home in Potwin after the 19i.li of November. Mrs. J. Weiss is visiting in Omaha. Fred Gordon came up from Baldwin yesterday to attend the Ashby-Farns-worth wedding. The Ashby-Farnsworth wedding to night is the subject of all conversation and attention in fashionable society, and the preparations are very elaborate. At the bridal tea last evening the loving cup was passed around and a health drunk to the bride-elect, and Miss Clara Francis delivered a very pretty toast ia rayme. Miss Farns worth's present to each brides maid was an enameled wreath stick pin set with pearls. The Pansy club young ladies will meet for their winter campaign of pleasure and charitable work on Thursday after noon with Miss Franc-Littleliel i. An in novation thi3 year will be the serving--of light refreshment at the afternoon meetings.' Miss Julia Street will occupy Miss Florence Greer's place in the club. William Burr, ex-mayor of Blue Rapids, Marshall county, Kansas, spent Sunday with his daughter, Mrs. St. John, 101 a (uincy street. Mr. Burr starts to day for Florida on account of poor health. Mr. J. B. Hayden has just received a line of novelties in brie a brae that has never been equaled in this city. Dres den banquet lamps with Dresden china globes, and exquisits colored glass lamps decorated in gold, range in price from $20 to $30. Lizard and seal pocket books and chatelaines are a new fad and he has a complete line of them. New lorgnette chains and silver collarettes that have never before been seen in To peka will attract the women. The Johnsjn-Nebel Confectionery Co., always enterprising, has opened a cafe, that is receiving the liberal patronage of the young people of this city. Oysters are served in every style, coffee, tea, cocoa and chocolate, with roils, bread and milk, wailles, pancakes and otuer things in season are to be found ou the bill of fare. This is the only cafe of the kind in town and it i3 bound to be a suc cess. Judging from her latest photographs Mrs. Grover Cleveland is more attractive thin ever. Like other good housekeep ers Mrs. Cleveland rejoices in the results achieved by Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder. FARCE C031ED1' TONIGHT. "4-11-4 4" at the Grand The Doubt Fam ily and Other Attractions. The patrons of the Grand opera house tonight will have a chance to laugh at the specialties that always accompany a farce comedy. "4-11-44" will hold the boards there tonight A good many of the people that will appear ia it have been here before, it is said, with such at tractions as Frank Daniels, '-The Daz zier," "Two Old Cronies" and the Prim rose & West minstrels. Tus company is said to have some good singers and dancers. Among the pretty girls are Iiheta Mann and Norma Wills. E nil Hensel in German comedy, Monte C ol lins in a medley of characters, and Win. J. Maxwell as the dignified professor, hold up the male end of the comedy. The house will be dark again tomorrow night. The Musical Doubt i'amity. For three nights beginning Friday night at the Crawford theater, the Doubt family will appear in musical specialties', both vocai and instrumental. Members of the family will also give dramatic readings. This family lives at Beatrice, Nebraska, and has been very successful in its former tours. Frank K. Davis is managing the company. TO KILL W'7k7 AN BE K BiLT A Crank With a Revolver Who Was Wait ing for a Chance. New York, Oct. A mau named Reilly who says he is a marble cutter and that he has been living with his sis ter, Mrs. George McKnight, in Newark, has been arrested there. He was seen with the crowd of striking cloak makers who went from Newartc to attack the house of a man named Gellard, where work is being done for his New York factory. He was seen later sitting on the side of the gully road in the northern part of the city, handling a revolver and soaae cartridges. He had taken the weapon apart when Captain McManus and a squad of police accidently came upon him and took him to the second precinct station. In his pocket were letters ad dressed to Mrs. Wm. K. Vanderbilt, Chauncey M. Depew, George Gould and Superintendent Byrnes. He intended to mail them today. He said the one to Byrnes was simply a query as to whether he had received a letter from Reilly about a recent myste rious murder, in which a description of the murderer was given. The others were of a rambling nature, halt begging and half threatening. Ho told the police that he would do anything to help strikers and down capitalists, and that the last few days he had pat ruled the avenue near Vauderl ilt's home watching for an opportunity to kill some of the family. Reilly says that he has written several letters to President Cleveland. Grouse Thrive In Soot and Smoke. One is always accustomed to cut; wet that admirable fowl, the grouse, -with heather, yet it is a curious fact that hen) h tr is by no means the best thing for him. The finest moors in the world, from the sportsmun's point of view, are undoubted ly tho.se of the west riding of Yorkshire, and on some of the very bc.-t of these, such as the famous " Blubherhouse, ' there is hardly any heather ut all. Its place is taken by the bilberry, on which the grot' so grow fat and well likiny and irer -a-e in numbers to an almost incredible extent. Another curious fact about wtt riding grouse, which we do not remember to have seen mentioned anywhere before, ii thai they do not seem to sutler from the scot and smoke of the m !iiifa-.-ti;r:: 4 towns which border on the moors. For instance, the grouse which are shot on the racers around Bradford are often simply .'a :k with soot, yet they are perfectly hc-u; thy, and, as a rule, rather absve the average size. Apparently, however, tlie queer conditions, which suit the red grouse, are uncongenial to the black game, which, though they aSwund in mar.y parts r.f Cumberland, are hardly ever found on the moors of the west rutin 2 and never in tho manufacturing districts. Loud a Globe. Silver Leaf vinegar remains in the front. It is the best table and pickling vinegar. Ask your grocer for it and take no other. It is the cheapest. B0 UN IX THE ARCTICS. A Bright and. Healthy Child, of the Frozen ! orth. BABY PEARY IS IMMORTALIZED My the Accident of Birth Her Jr'lrat 3eisrht Four 31 oil the Lous. Marie Ahmigito Peary is a little lady born to fame, and she can never escape it. Like Sarah Rappalje, first white child born on Long Island; Virginia Dare, the first in Virginia; the little one born on the Mayflower and a few others immortalized Tjy accident, the Peary baby will live in history, for shs was born Sept. 13, 1893, away up in ths arctic regions, and her first long nighl lasted four months. The doctor of the expedition -was almost positive a whit ohild could not -live without sunlight and proved it somehow by science, but the baby, as babies so often do, upset the science, thrived amazingly and en tered her first summer an unusually large and strong child. Everybody has read of Lieutenant Peary's heroic wife and how she went into the arctic regions to winter with him and take charge of the station and base of supplies while he explored far ther north. She is a tall and slendei woman, with fair skin, dark blue eyes and an expressive head crowned with hair approaching to golden in color. She is soft spoken and gentle in man ner, but br.ve and resolute. This lady passed the bette;r part of a year at Bow doin bay of Inglcrield gulf, 011 the west coast 01 Greenland, m latitude 77 de- -s. -' Of. 1 I - feu 1 1 " BABY PEART ATD 7URSK PILL. Irees and 40 minutes north, and it was there the baby was born, as aforesaid. At that time the weather was still quite mild and the days some 15 hours long, but they shortened rapidly, and winter t ame, as it does in the far north, with amazing suddenness. For 112 days the sun never appeared i.bove the horizon, and the temperature ranged from 20 to 40 below zero and occasionally rnueh lower, but there was the usual supply of moonlight, and it was indescribably brilliant, for of all the beauties of nature none is more daz- idingly beautiful than the night sky of the far north. The natives winter in ice huts, but the Pe-arys had a good sized double house, which the lieuten ant took with him, all prepared to set up, and their oil fuel made it comfort ably warm throughout. Besides nursing the baby partook freely of condensed milk and other infant food and soon developed such air appetite that she took heavier food and at 7 months ate just what the rest did. At 10 months she weighed 25 pounds. "Tho Eskimo," says Mrs. Peary, "do not make particularly good serv ants. Bill, the little native nurse I brought, is rather more intelligent than the average and is very fond of baby, a sentiment that Marie fully recipro cates. I did not intend to bring her with me, but she begged so hard to come, and her father was so anxious to have her do so, that I consented. She is the first Eskimo from that part of Greenland to journey south, and when she returns next fall with baby and me she will be a great heroine. I didn't want to come back at all, on account of leaving my husband, but Dr. Vincent was return ing, and I was afraid to stay with baby and no physician during the teething time. Of course the life there was very monotonous, but I was too busy caring for my small family to have much time to indulge homesickness. I had my pic tures and books and read a great deal In the long winter evenings. "We have in Greenland a summer of nearly four months, during which the temperature is sometimes as high as 00 degrees and the vegetation is very luxuriant. The grass grows often a foot high over the old 'igloos, ' or huts, and is plentifully sprinkled with bright yel low poppies, polentillas, bluebells and rhododendrons, but there are no trees worthy the name. During the mild sea sou the skies and waters are beautifully blue, and the air is wonderfully soft and clear. "I dressed there outwardly exactly as I do here. Of course I had to wear very heavy underclothing, and in win ter deerskin stockings, with the fur turned in, reaching above the knee, and sealskin boots. The latter were rather clumsy, but very warm and comforta ble. When I went sledging, I wore a long fur coat, which enveloped me from head to foot. " The Peary party was very well sup plied with canned vegetables of many kinds, and the hunters brought in abun dance of deer meet. The cooking and heating were done with oil. There was none of that trouble of keeping things which ia ever on the minds of house keepers in warmer lands, and vegetables went direct from the can and fresh meat from its frozen state into the hoc water. But, for all that, life in the arc tic regions is hard and nature, to pre serve a human race there, is obliged to deaden its nervous sensibilities and load it with fat. Mrs. Peary and little Marie Ahraigito will try it again, however. I AN AFTERNOON AND BORDERS FOR DOILIES. Some New lesig;ns Which Are Artistic and Easily Made. The accompanying illustrations are designed for borders to be worked upon doilies, tray cloths, tidies or any of their near relatives, in outline stitch with wash silk of any desirable shade. Very little explanation is needed, as the illustrations speak quite plainly for themselves. The little pansies and daisies are conventional in design, but it will add greatly to their artistic ef fect if thej- are not all "twins," but are made to vary in some slight de tails. The pansy faces may nod toward each other a little in one case and turn away from each other further on in the border, thus relieving the '-setness' of any absolutely conventional pattern. It takes but a little taste and skill to make this variation, and the effect gained will more than repay one's work. In the case of the daisies, a petal or two twisted here and there relieves the stiff ness very greatly. The intertwining stems form a beautiful in side finish to the border. The fancy stitching on the outside edge may vary almost indefinitely, the illustrations - XKW DESIGN'S FOR EMBROIIIKRT. suggesting two styles. Of course, if one has not the "gift" of making one's pencil obey one's fancies the little va riations in the border can be omitted, and it can be .ade simply a repetition throughout of one little daisy blossom or pansy face. The design is sketched or stamped upon the linen with colored crayon or a soft pencil. American Ag riculturist. STEAMING THE FACE. How to Perform Thi9 Youth and Health Imparting; Operation. Have the teakettle boiling- for 3-ou at a certain hour. Take a newspaper, fold down the middle; pin two of the ends behind and put it over your head like a big hood, letting it come well over your face in front. Rub your face thoroughly with any good cold cream, sit down by the kitchen range, your paper bug- over your head and your nose as close to the spout of the boiling kettle as you dare to. Don't tempt fate too far, or you may burn your face. Keep turning first one cheek and then the other, so that all parts of the faee may be steamed equally. Keep this up for fifteen or twenty minutes or until you have perspired freely. Now don't rub this grease and perspiration off with a towel, but take a silver-bluded knife and gently scrape the debris away, even as a mau serapes whiskers from his features. After every bit is removed bathe the face with warm water in which a few drops of sweet-scented benzoin have been poured. If you are going-outdoors dash the face with cold water to prevent chapping, but if you are going to remain at home rub a little cold cream under the eyes, over the eye brows and behind the ears, for these are the quarters in which the telltale wrinkles iirst begin to come. Then go lie down and take a nap and waken re freshed and as glowing as a sixteen-year-old girl. Health. "Hitch your chariot to a star" was Emerson's" advice. The star of all the baking powders is Dr. Price's. HOUBELTa 'POOlTEblTOK. Sad Setjuel to An Onion J'resentation in Itusii l ounty. From the Kusii ('enter Standard. ) Judge A. 11. Morris Wednesday morn ing brought this otSce two very handsome onions which he raised in bis garden by irrigation this summer, one measured fourteen inches in circumference and weighed fifteen ounces and the other about twelve inches and weighed thir teen ounces. Iheseare the finest speci mens we have ever seen and they speak loudar and more emphatic to our people than words, of what irrigation will do for them, if they will only give it a trial. Later Some rascal has deliberatedly stolen one of the above described onions from our office. .m 4 'lit ti ', r--r AN AT-HOME GOWN. MRS. PINKEYE. Thev had been very, very happy during th-? few swiftly passing months of their wedded life, and in spite of the memory of business reverses and of a week of con tinual struggle to meet her payments Airs. Pinkeye smiled a smile of i'-.effable contentment as her brougham stopped be fore the door of the handsome house that had been her mother's marriage gift, and she thought of her dear Horace waiting for her in his boudoir dear Horace, whose lips in a few short moments would be pressed to hers. Even the frightful possi bility of financial ruin, that awful specter that, ever since her return from their hon eymoon to find that a trusted employee had proved unfaithful, had haunted her almost ceaselessly day and night, vanished from her presence in the beatific anticipa tion of her husband's kiss. "What is this you tell me, Alexis?" she was saying two minutes later to her hus band's valet as she carelessly threw her hat into a chair. "Mr. Pinkeye gone out? And has ho left no word fur me?" "He he went out about 3 o'clock," fal tered the man, "and and ho said ho would be back by 5. He" "Alexis," s;dd the lady in the tone of one accustomed to command, "you are keeping something from me. Wit ! whom did my husband go out, and has ho bade you conceal aught from me?" The frightened servant, awed by tho sternness of the woman's voice and over come by the inherent weakness of his sex, us last blurted out that a lady whom ho did not know had called for his mastci soon after luncheon and had taken him away in a hansom. His master had bidden him say nothing to his mistress about tho matter and had been careful to conceal his departure from the other servants. Ho had gone out with the same woman every afternoon for a week, but had always re turned in time for dinner before. Upon further questioning Alexis admitted that lie hail once seen the strange lady kiss his master. Maud Pinkeye staggered slightly, as if she had received a blow, but recovered herself in a moment. "Von may go, Alexis,' o said quietly. With Strang',: unnatural calm she lighted a cigar and sat down before her library table. So it had coiiiU at last, and so soon! What was there J left in life for her if she 110 longer had i faith in man? And if she could not longer ' trust her Horace if Horace were uni'aith- ful great God! She could not allow her self to think of it. The overwhelming des olation of that possibility was more than even she, strong as she wari, could bear. And yet sho must think of it! Oh, why had fato been so cruel? What, a paltry thing the possible loss of her fortune seemed by comparison with tho dread ca lamity that had overtaken her! Sho crushed in one hand an enameled brass inkstand that was on the tabic before her, so that its contents were forced through the poi-s of the tortured me.lal. Five minutes later she found herself, she knew not how, in her husband's bou doir. An opened book lay on the table. It was "The Lives of Eminent Washerwo men," by Dr. Clara Huxley, Ph. 11., and it was open at the story of the f.iith and devotion of a husband who had helped his wife at a financial crisis with money that he had made crocheting doormats for a livery stable while she had supposed him to be idling at home. Mechanically .Maud Pinkeye read a few pages and groaned aloud at the parallel the tu!o suggested. Then the doorbell rang, aiui a moment later she heard her husband's voire in tho hall inquiring anxiously if i-li had yet come in. The moment had an -ved She wondered that she was able to control her self thus as she. strode down tho stairs. Then she knew that her beta t was dctul yes, dead! Horace Pinkeye tripped liih.lv t.v to his wife and held up hisiush red lips fori kiss. "Darling," he said, "did you wonder j why I was away? Ami e you lone- j some without me? Say you were, dar- j ling'" I Maud turned away her head r.-'.'T, fold ing her arms, drew herself t,p to iitr itiil height. ''Traitor!" sho hissed. "Traitor! Tell me who is tho woman with whom you have been spending jour afteruoou.i for the last week!" To her surprise her husband did not f'inch beneath her gaze. lie laughed a nervous laugh, but said without a suspi cion of the consciousness of guilt iu his voice: "Has that nasty Alexis been tc!!ir.g you things? If he has, I shad ship him real hard, right on ids face too." ! "Who was the woman?" Maud demand- i ed sternly. j Her husband burst into tears and threw himself into her arms. She knew then 1 that he was guiltless of any wrong against j her, and she held his head to her bosom j while he told the story that made her a I happy woman again. "it it was my sister Ethel," Horace sobbed. ''You know she is the business manager of the Toxicological Medical .Sup ply company, and, dearest, I I hatl heard that you were in in financial trouble, and and I had been reading about how a husband had once earned some money 1 r.r his wife, and I I made Ethel give iro some work at the factory. And so for tho last week I have spent three hours -very afternoon punching the holes in the pr--Gus plasters. I was late today lx;cause it was pay day, and, darling, hero are my earn ings, $1.59, all for you! Will you forgive me. darling, for deceiving yon ?" As Maud Pinkeye strained her husband to her throbbing bosom she vowed in her heart of hearts that, como what might, she would never for a moment mistrust him again. New York World. thot when you buy f'cot t i ; - Ision you are not getting a secret mixture containing worthless or harmful drugs. Scott's Emulsion cannot be se cret for an analysis reveals nil there is in it. Consequent ly the endorsement of the medic-si world tnrans some t 'lit' ,-. . j 0K q .T " - overcomes Wast i rig t promotvs the making of Solid J'lesh, and gwts Vital Strength. It lias no equal as a cure for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lwnsrs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, Ema ciation, and Wasting Diseases of CftiMrcit. Scott&Bowne, N. Y. Ail Druggists. 63c. andjl. jiiii.v i;oii.v.-'. r l'r;htro" .' 1 I'ti'iiili.l I I 11, ! 10 lv .!. r o c l-y- m ! r4 4 CJ o 7! a in o to L 4 X 1 ; v ROGK PRICES ON. Painting, mrnismim Paper , Hanginoi AT. t -f : !-t'1 r -'-r" J r" h.LTRgriP.- Top f3 . Kc s. A liemarkable Aehicvpniciit I ! i "- 'i-i-oad A r Was the running of the E.po-iti n the famous twenty hour trai l I Sl 1 Chicago and New York, via th L.ikj Shore route, in service during tb Wm! ', fair. A handsome lilho-water-coior (, this train may be secured by sen if, t 1 cents iu silver to '. K. Will-t-r, . I'assenger Agent, Chicago. The Statb Journal's V.'a-it a:; i : cellaneous colutiins reach ear U wwtV, , day in the week more tiia 1 tin many Topeka people as cin l. j v . hrough aay otuer paper. 'I iiu u a One word describes it erf.-f ti . 1. We refer to De Witt's Witrh Ji o--l .- ,. cures obstinate sores, burn, skin d. ' anil is a well known euro far pd--i. J u. Jones. We put on new neckbands on ehirM. Peerless Steam Laundry, 114 mad ii Wiat Eighth BtreeU .... .-j ,;-'-. c,- --