USA > Kansas > Shawnee County > Topeka > Radge's Topeka city directory : Shawnee County taxpayers and an official list of the post-offices of Kansas, 1880 > Part 2
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Topeka was born of poor but honest parents ( Giles and Holli- day); and she sets upon the banks of the Kaw, the empress of that or any other navigable water that leaves the soil of Kansas. She
30
RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
commands the whole internal maritime trade of our State. Her future is secure, as the judge said when he sentenced the man to the penitentiary for life. Lawrence has recently stolen a bridge from Babcock, and its citizens are rapidly wearing it out in travel- ing over it and trying to get through their noggins the spirit of public enterprise which spans our turbulent currents with mag- nificent structures, free to all. We have a free bridge at Topeka that was paid for. We also have a lunatic asylum. Here resides the Governor: and also his recently-appointed military staff: as, also, their new clothes; AND WHICH are ornamented with more genuine metal. distributed around promiscuous like. than a brass kettle. Here they investigate our Senators. Here was where Senator Vance told his stories, and here in Topeka Senator Sauls- bury went for a hackman on account of an overcharge, and which canie mighty near exhausting the appropriation. The investiga- tion only ended with the expenditure of the appropriation, and it now,rests into the vest pockets of our tavern and saloon keepers.
Atchison has published the statement that it has built six hun- dred houses the last year. Thank fortune, it is our last say. We have had a thousand built if we have had one; and our opportuni- ties and resources for counting, in that number, newly weather- boarded cabins on the Missouri bottoms, are vastly inferior to that of our neighbor. Atchison fumigated the stinks that came from its Missouri slaughter house about the same time we did its Senator. The federal court house is in process of erection, at a cost none of us can guess at or approximate or wish to limit. It will be sand- wiched between one-dollar-a-day hotels for the especial convenience of Elevenworth patronage. "What have you to oppose Sherman's march to the sea?" inquires Davis of Bragg. "Five proclamations and a brigade of Georgia militia," responds Braxton. "What hast you for a town, oh Atchison?" The telegraph groans under the reply, "A thousand intermingling, separate and undefinable smells from a non-resident slaughter house, five ravines, two gullies, and some sidewalk which we expect to build." And thou, oh Lawrence? "A shirt factory, the University, Babcock's bridge, and the Hon. Sidney Clarke, who served six years in the lower house." And what has Elevenworth? "A fight over the post office and Joe Tay- lor's bill, and a row of empty houses." And how about Topeka? She has stores until you get tired of looking at them, and custom- ers to buy everything they have got. She has the capitol. She has the Legislature, or did last winter, on the capitol appropriation. She has the Santa Fe railroad, the big boss thing of the West. She will have in the next two years direct communication with
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RADGES' TOPERA DIRECTORY.
Popocatapetl and Chimborazo. She has the Lunatic Asylum. Hotels without number. where you pay for all you get. It will have the State Fair next year, at which, if there are any fast horses, they will be under the surveillance of Brother Monjeau, and who will make that feature so unobjectionable that even the puritans of Lawrence will visit it. We have machine shops railroad shops, and the finest printing offices in the West.
We have the scarletina, typhoid and other game in its season; and can point with pride to a derrick at the government building that is constantly falling down without hurting anybody. It could never raise stone for a railroad company with that measure of im- punity. We have the Capital Guards, the escort de honeur to the President, and who give dress balls and wear spike-tail coats which scarcely cover the disintegrated pantaloons. We have two shows, first-class, moral entertainments, stopping over with us this winter. We have, in connection therewith, a full menagerie, lions, bears, hippotamuses, rhinocerouses, jackasses, hyenas, the what is it, and the what not else, all under one canvas and at one price, and which will be, we hope, a greater source of profit to our people than an equally moral political investigation. We have a straw lumber manufactory, where was made the first lumber out of straw that was ever produced. We have the huge, monstrous rolling mills yet waiting for work. We have also some fellows here who would like to get us to put our foot into it and vote for street horse cars, to disfigure our boulevards and avenues, and crowd and hamper our already overburdened streets. We have a gem of a library that no citizen should fail to foster and patronize. We have some mem- bers in the City Council who stood against the appropriation to make it free, who deserve and will receive, we hope and pray, a speedy retiracy at the hands of their constituency. We have a half dozen loan offices which, in the aggregate, loan $3,000,000 yearly, and through whose humane and philanthropic endeavors each flaw in every title to real estate in Kansas will be ascertained and made known. We have Pond's Commercial College, where lectures on law, human and divine, by Professors Brown and Knox, are thrown in gratis. We have Bethany College, where hun- dreds and hundreds of fair-haired, beautiful girls are becoming fitted for their stations as the coming women of Kansas. We have Washburn College; and, goodness alive, the free public schools! They are on this corner and on that; they are here, and there and everywhere! And then the children! A beehive struck with a club is not half so numerous. They are our only natural sour- ces of increase; other than them, we are largely compelled to
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
obtain the balance of our population from abroad. We spend $10,000 a year for new school books, with four book agents to hear from. There are more babies born in Topeka than any other town in Kansas, and there is more raw bird's eye whittled up in- to diapers, by a thousand yards, than in all of Atchison, Lawrence or Elevenworth. This much for statistics. And in this connec- tion, you may go to almost any portion of the West-Kansas, Colorado or New Mexico -and as you behold the mother applying the corrective slipper to the wayward child, exposed to view, shrouding a part of the infantile form from exposure, there can be seen and read "xxxx best family flour. 50 pounds. Shella- barger, Griswold & Co.," or "Inter Ocean Mills, Topeka, Kansas," evidence at once of the enterprise and extensive trade of our manu- facturers, as well as the close economical views held by the maternal parent. And of this take due notice and be governed accordingly; we have over three hundred bright, blushing widows living within the corporate limits of this city, and suicides on account of unre- quited love are almost unknown or unheard of in its history.
We take a yearly census, and the other bergs do not. We have a free letter carrier system, and which would be busted up in a week if a half dozen fellows who live in the outskirts were to have their mail delivered at their homes. We have a coal oil inspector. We have plenty of churches, and lots of good christians; and it was only in Topeka that a hoss fair was utterly ruined by continuous and apparently effectual prayer for rain, as Vance and John Mar- tin can testify, for they were among the stockholders who had to put up. This much more for statistics. But while we are up to snuff and pride ourselves on being cosmopolitan, we still have our drawbacks and disadvantages. The Hon. L. F. Eggers, of the late house, does not live here. He comes here occasionally, is the best we can put it. We have a haunted house, however, which is some compensation. "God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb." We have heard it intimated that we have no gas works or gas ; but then you know everything has to be taken with some grains of allowance in this country, and as to this last statement, we give the rumor for what it is worth, but denounce it as a malicious fabrication, ema- nating from Lawrence or Atchison. But this we can truthfully say: Whatever lightens up the gloom of Topeka, if it ever suffers from that complaint, it does not in the least resemble what Gough would say of London in a fog, "It looks like illuminated pea soup." We have hospitality and genuine cheer for the stranger who comes within our gates, and the legislator in hunt of a "hashery " during the session. We know the price of corner lots, and in them or or-
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
dinary dry goods can successfully vie with New York. We have the finest opening on the American continent for some one with a hundred thousand dollars to come here and put up small, cozy houses to rent. This is also a good place to run for office. Many of our people do so, in fact make a business of it. We have fifteen thousand people. Our city occupies full four square miles of ground; we have new sidewalks; we set out shade trees; we read the newspapers; we patronize the telephone. If Beecher or any other prevailing epidemic is any where in this region, they give us a call. We have never been visited by the yellow jack or Eli Per- kins, so we consider ourselves on the praying side of eternity yet. The tree pedlar from Missouri does not stop here. Our people do not eat pawpaws. We are divided on the pending constitutional amendment, prohibiting the manufacture or sale of liquor, and were it not that we are twenty-five miles from Bismarck, would be happy. We have no slaughter houses, nor do we pride ourselves on hog offal. We are not Atchison - we do not want to be. We are not Eleavenworth, haunted by the memories of a metropolis that was never in the order of things to exist, nor are we Lawrence, the possessor of a bridge it wrested from private hands, and which gets disgusted occasionally with the town, and the people who traverse it, and floats down toward the Missouri river; it would gladly float the other way -toward Topeka-but we have no way of giving employment to anything or anybody antedating the present century. But we are just a little the best making of -a town that ever took root on the prairies of the west. We are- (to be continued in our next.)
They all want to come to Topeka.
A. M. FULLER, -DEAL.ER IN
Agricultural Implements
SEEDS, ETC. NOTHING BUT FIRST-CLASS GOODS KEPT Call and See Me .- 246 Kansas Ave. TOPEKA, KANSAS.
MRS. E. C. METCALF,
= E = All Work Done in the Best Manner, And at the Lowest Prices.
Orders Attended to on Short Notice.
The Latest and Most Fashionable Styles. ـد 0
Millinery « Fancy GOO S 239 Kansas Ave., TOPEKA, KANSAS.
A. M. EIDSON, M. D. P. I. MULVANE, M. D.
Drs. EIDSON & MULVANE, OF THE
Topeka Medical& Surgical Institute
HAVE ADDED ROOMS FOR MEDICATED BATHING,
And introduced one of Dr. Brown's celebrated VAPOR, ELECTRO.VA" POR. and MEDICATED BATH APPARATUS, the most complete of any knowu to the profession, which they are using with great satisfaction and wonderful success, in assisting theui to make more easy and speedy cures J. MANZ-CHI. of chronic (as well as some acute) diseases; but inore especially those of a rheumatic and neuralgie nature, blood and kidney diseases, and diseases of women. Many ailments that have defied the skill of the profession by ordinary medication, readily yield to treat- ment by the sanitary assistance of these MEDICATED BATHS. With these baths they can give all the medical virtues so largely claimed for the celebrated Hot Springs of Arkansas, with the powerful ret gentle ageut. ELECTRICITY, added, to be used in any form while in a bath, saving to patrous the time and great expense of a journey and treatment there. For further information, call ou or addess,
34 Drs. EIDSON & MULVANE, Topeka, Kan.
RADGES' TOPEKA CITY DIRECTORY 1880.
ABBREVIATIONS.
agr'l .. agricultural
n. w.
northwest
agt ..
Pres't. President
prop'r.
proprietor
ave
.avenue
Rev.
Reverend
bds ..
.boards
res. residence bet between s. e. southeast
col'd. .colored st ... .. street
.corner
cor ..
S. W.
southwest
Sec'y
.Secretary
n ℮
Sup't Superintendent N. T. North Topeka
A complete post office directory of the State, ward boundaries and street and avenue guide will be found in the city register, following the business directory, together with other useful information.
Names inserted in CAPITAL LETTERS are those of the advertising patrons of this work.
A.
Abbott, James, clerk, res. 114 Sixth avenue east.
Abbott, Robinson F., engineer, res. 55 Van Buren street.
Abbott, R. W., merchant tailor, 128 Kansas avenue, res. w. side Kansas avenue bet. Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets.
Abbs, Wm., laborer, bds. Topeka House. Abrans, A. R., teamster, res. 20 Monroe street.
Abrans, Mrs. Caroline ( widow ), res. 20 Monroe street.
Acker, J. A., veterinary surgeon, bds. Burriss House.
Acker, J. E., horse trainer, bds. Burriss House.
Adair, W. F., clerk, bds. Harvey House.
Adams, -, machinist, res. 146 Jefferson street.
Adams, A. W., clerk, res. 7 Tenth avenue west.
.. agent
asst
assistant
impl'ts implements
northeast
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
Adams, Ben. ( col'd ), laborer, res. 21 e. Madison street.
Adams, C. H., agent patent medicines, res. 81 Monroe street, N. T. Adams, Mrs. Daniel M. ( widow ), bds. Palace Hotel.
Adams, Edward, laborer, res. 132 Kansas avenue.
Adams, Ephriam ( col'd ), laborer, res. 46 Kansas avenue north. Adams, Frank, bookkeeper, res. s. side Tenth avenue, bet. Topeka avenue and Tyler street.
Adams, F. G., Sec'y State Historical Society, res. West street, near Sixth avenue.
Adams, Fred., res. 79 Sixth avenue east.
Adams, Harry, ( col'd ), porter, Tefft House, res. same.
Adams, Harry, (col'd ), laborer, res. 63 Madison street.
ADAMS HOUSE (Washburn & Ruggles), prop'rs, cor. Railroad st. and Kansas avenue.
Adams, Miss Jennie, res. 46 Sixth avenue east.
Adams, John, marble worker, res. 192 Buchanan street.
Adams, Lewis (col'd), teamster, res. 136 Tenth avenue east.
Adams, Mrs. O. S. (widow), res. 354 Polk street.
Adams, R. E., printer, res. 354 Polk street.
Adams, T. M., trav. agt. Daily Capital, res. 217 Lawrence street. Addey, Mrs. Kate, res. 200 Monroe street.
Addie, James, blacksmith, res. 24 Monroe street.
Ages, Will (col'd), laborer, res. 443 Monroe street. Ahrens, Fred, saloon and billiard hall, 57 Kan ave. N. T., res. same. Aiken, James, printer, res. 240 Clay street. Aiken, Mrs. Mary F. (widow), res. 240 Clay street.
Akeroyd, Edward, laborer, res. 47 Laurent street.
Akers, Robert, Capital Foundry, res. 216 Monroe street.
Alden, D. R., photographer, res. 287 Topeka avenue. Alden, Hiram, clerk Fifth Avenue Hotel, res. same.
Aldridge, Wm. L., dental student, rooms 110 Sixth avenue east.
Alexander, Charles, fireman, res. 81 Monroe street. Alexander, E., farmer, res. 70 Harrison street.
Alexander, George (col'd), laborer, res. 385 Buchanan street.
Alexander, Joseph, fireman, boards Burriss House.
Alexander, W. D., res. 208 Jefferson street.
Alkire, Miss Ora, res. 50 Eighth avenue east. Alleanme, Albert, confectionery, 121 Kansas avenue, res. same. Allee, J. F., fireman, res. 208 east Third street.
Allen, Ezeriah ( col'd ), porter, res. 136 Tenth avenue east.
Allen, Frank, hackman, res. 202 Adams street.
Allen, H. S., carpenter, res. 154 Filmore street. Allen, John S., res. Tyler street, near Laurent street.
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
Allen, Mrs. Louisa ( widow ), res. Tyler street, near Laurent street. Allen, Miss Lulu, res 154 Fillmore street.
Allen, Mrs. Margaret ( widow ), res. 291 Quincy street.
Alleson, Net., stone cutter, bds. Planters House.
Alleson, Mrs. Mary, (col'd, widow ), res. Curtis street, near Tyler st. Alleson, Reuben ( col'd ), laborer, res. Curtis street, near Tyler st. Allison, Miss Belle, res. 83 Seventh street east.
Altmeier, Charles, tailor, bds. Topeka House.
Ambrose, Mrs. Lucy ( col'd ), widow. res. 103 Walnut street.
American Bible Society, central depository, Seventh street, near Kansas avenue.
American Express Company (C. L. Traver, agent), office 102 Sixth avenue east.
American Young Folks (Hudson & Ewing, publishers), office 209 Kansas avenue.
Ammen, H., bookkeeper, rooms west side Monroe street, bet. Sixth avenue and Seventh street.
Ammish, Charles, moulder, res. 95 Jefferson street.
Ammish, George, moulder, res. 95 Jefferson street.
Ancient Order of United Workingmen, hall 239 Kansas avenue.
Anderson, A. (col'd), laborer, res. 87 Walnut street.
Anderson, Arthur, wiper, res. 376 Sixth avenue east.
Anderson, A., blacksmith, bds. Topeka House.
Anderson, Alfred, blacksmith, bds. 195 Monroe street.
Anderson, Mrs. C. ( widow), res 182 Crane street.
Anderson, Mrs. Carrie ( widow ), res. 195 Harrison street.
Anderson, David, stone cutter, res. 353 Kansas avenue. Anderson, Miss Eva, res. 122 Topeka avenue.
Anderson, J. Frank, mail carrier, res. 6 Central avenue.
Anderson, George, laborer, res. cor. Van Buren and Norris streets. Anderson, George ( col'd ), cook, Palace Hotel, res. same.
Anderson, Geo. D., chief clerk C. F. Kendall's, res. e. side Monroe street, bet. Seventh street and Eighth avenue.
Anderson, G. W., bookbinder, res. Chandler street, near Tenth ave. Anderson, James, teamster, res. cor. Gordon and Jefferson streets. Anderson, J. S., real estate agent, res. Chandler st., near Tenth ave. Anderson, John, fireman, res. 376 Sixth avenue east.
Anderson, J. P., tailor, res. 38 Tyler street.
Anderson, Mrs. K. ( widow ), res. 74 Western avenue.
Anderson, Mrs. Mary ( widow), res. 376 Sixth avenue east.
Anderson, Oscar S., butcher, res. Chandler street, bet. Tenth ave- nue and Eleventh street.
Anderson, Pink, teacher, bds. n. e. cor. Tenth ave. and Quincy st.
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
Anderson, R., clerk A. T. & S. F. R. R., res. 367 Van Buren st. Anderson, R. L. (Wood & Anderson,) res. near corner Jackson and
Laurent streets.
Anderson, Sidney (col'd), laborer, res. 123 Fourth street.
Anderson, Thomas, engineer, boards Enterprise Hotel.
Anderson, T. J., Gen'l Agt. at Kansas City for A. T. & S. F. R. R., res. 19 Tenth avenue east.
Anderson, Thomas H., teamster, res. cor. Gordon and Jefferson sts. Anderson, W. M. (H. I. Cook & Co.,) rooms n. e. corner Sixth and Kansas avenues.
Andreas, C., shoemaker, res. w. side Quincy st., bet. Sixth and Seventh. Andrews & Bryan (A. J. Andrews and E. G. K. Bryan), contractors
and builders, s. e. corner Sixth avenue and Monroe street.
Andrews, A. J. (Andrews & Bryan), res. 215 Adams street.
Andrews, Chas. J., laborer, res. Laurent st., near VanBuren st.
Andrews, E. B., stonemason, res. 118 Sixth avenue east.
Andrews, Frank, laborer, res. 8 Monroe street.
Andrews, John, carpenter, res. 37 Monroe street.
Andrus, Randolph, carpenter, res. 392 Topeka avenue.
Angel, Isaac, civil engineer, res. Quincy street, near Crane street.
Angel, R., fireman, rooms city building.
Angille, Mrs. A. (widow), res. 160 Taylor street.
Angle, C. H., engineer, res. 17 Norris street.
Angle, C. W., res. 17 Norris street.
Angle, W. N., druggist, 42 Kansas ave., N. T., res. 17 Norris st.
Antser, Alvis, laborer, res. Jackson st., N. T., near limits.
Archer, Thomas, attorney at law, 183 Kansas avenue, res. n. w. cor. Eighth avenue and VanBuren street.
Archer, Wm., civil engineer, res. s. w. cor. Ninth and Madison sts. Armor, Miss C. M., dressmaker, 71 Kansas avenue, N. T., res. same. Armstrong, G., masher at distillery, rooms cor. Tyler and Curtis sts. Armstrong, H., bookbinder, boards Poppendick House.
Armstrong, James, machinist, res. Topeka ave., near Gordon st. Armstrong, Mrs. James (widow), res. 81 Quincy street.
Armstrong, Jasper, Sup't water service A. T. & S. F. R. R., res. 203 Jefferson street.
Armstrong, John, Street Commissioner, res. 137 Quincy street.
Arnott, Alfred A., agricultural implements, res. 350 Tyler street. Arnold, A. J., druggist, 59 Kansas avenue, N. T., res. same.
Arnold, N. B., attorney at law, 38 Kansas avenue, N. T., res. 236 Jackson street, N. T.
Ashbaugh, A., residence 65 Sixth avenue east.
Ashbaugh, J. E., livery stable, cor. Sixth ave. and Jackson st., res. same.
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
Ashburn, Miss Ella, sculpturess, 108 Kansas avenue, res. same. Ashton, -, carpenter, bds. 271 Harrison street.
Ashton, John A., laborer, res. Chandler st., near Sixth avenue.
A. T. & S. F. R. R. Depot, E. H. Davis, agent, cor. Fourth street and Washington avenue.
A. T. & S. F. R. R. LAND DEPARTMENT, A. S. Johnson, Com- missioner, n. w. cor. Sixth and Kansas avenues. See card on inside of back cover.
A. T. & S. F. R. R. POTTAWATOMIE LAND DEPARTMENT, W. G. Dickinson, Commissioner, n. w. cor. Sixth and Kansas aves. See card.
A. T. & S. F. R. R. GENERAL OFFICES, n. w. cor. Sixth and Kan- sas avenues. See special cards.
Atkins, Thomas (col'd), laborer, res. 81 Monroe street.
Atkinson, O. W. (col'd), janitor, res. 144 Fifth street west.
Aushman, A. B., teamster, bds. 23 Madison street.
Austin, Edwin A., attorney at law, 161 Kansas ave., res. n. w. cor. Seventh and Quincy streets.
Austin, James S., traveling agent, res. 292 Quincy street.
Auter, A. V., stock dealer, res. 147 Monroe street.
Avery. J. E., brakeman, res. 161 Jefferson street.
Aye, William M., harness maker, res. 126 Van Buren street.
B
Babcock, Ed. E., engineer Babcock fire-engine rooms, fire depart- ment, city building.
Babcock, Fred. E. ( Babcock & Sage ). res. 211 Topeka ave., N. T. Babcock, Joseph G., bookkeeper J. W. Farnsworth, res. 196 Fil- more street.
Bachelor, Charles, watchman distillery, res. Topeka avenue, near Curtis street.
Backus, Charles, brakeman, res. 325 Sixth avenue east.
Backus, Mrs. Margaret, res. 47 Sixth avenue west.
Backus, Dr. T. L., physician and surgeon, office and residence 47 Sixth avenue west.
Bacon, Joseph, clerk, res. 47 Tenth avenue west.
Bader, Nick, night clerk Poppendick House, res. same.
Badgley, Mrs. C. ( widow ), res. n. w. cor. Fourth and Van Buren sts. Bailey, Asa, speculator, res. 28 Topeka avenue.
Bailey, Edward, painter, res. 411 Sixth avenue east.
Baird, John M., tinner, res. 95 Kansas avenue, N. T. Baird, Bobert J., carpenter, res. 239 Filmore street.
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RADGES' TOPEKA DIRECTORY.
BAKER, F. & BRO. ( Furman Baker and Frank Baker ), coal deal- ers, office s. e. corner Sixth and Kansas avenues. See card. BAKER, F. P. & SONS ( Floyd P. Baker, Nestor R. Baker, Clifford C. Baker, and Isaac N. Baker ), publishers of Commonwealth, office 240 Jackson street. See card.
Baker, Allen, res. 174 Eighth avenue east.
Baker, August, laborer, res. 174 Kansas avenue.
BAKER, CLIFFORD C. ( F. P. Baker & Sons ), city editor of Com- mon wealth, res. 277 Monroe street.
Baker, C. M., carpenter, res. 84 Van Buren street.
Baker; C. P., lightning rods, res. 230 Sixth avenue west.
Baker, Charles S., sewing machines, Seventh street, near Kansas avenue, res. 382 Polk street.
Baker, Dick (col'd ), laborer, res. Curtis street, near Tyler street. Baker, E. P., traveling agent, res. cor. Laurent and Jackson streets. BAKER, F. P. ( F. P. Baker & Sons ), editor of the Commonwealth, res. 277 Monroe street.
BAKER, FRANK (F. Baker & Bro.,) bds. Gordon House.
BAKER, FURMAN (F. Baker & Bro.,) bds. Fifth Avenue Hotel.
BAKER, ISAAC N. (F. P. Baker & Sons), supt. Commonwealth job rooms, res. 277 Monroe street.
BAKER, NESTOR R. (F) P. Baker & Sons), .book-keeper Common- wealth, res. 135' Tenth avenue east.
Baker, O. H., watchmaker and jeweler, 201 Kansas avenue, boards Tefft House.
Baker, Mrs. Phobe {widow), res. 230 Sixth avenue west.
Baker, P. F., painter, res. 353 Kansas avenue.
Baker, Reuben (col'd), laborer, res. Curtis street, near Polk street.
Baker, Robert (col'd), laborer, res. 415 Buchanan street.
Baker, Mrs. R. E. (widow), res: 131 Eighth avenue east.
Baker, Theodore, coppersmith, boards 83 Monroe street.
Baker, Wm., pattern maker, res. 174 Eighth avenue east.
Baker, Dr. Wm. S., physician, 109 Tenth avenue west, res. same. Baldwin, Elias, laborer, res. 242 Hancock street.
Baldwin, E. A., laborer, res. Quincy street, near Morse street.
Baldwin, George, engineer, bds. 118 Sixth avenue east.
Baldwin, John, carpenter, res. 43 Gordon street.
Baldwin, Joseph E., attorney at law, 183 Kansas ave., res. same. BALDWIN, W. J., manufacturer boots and shoes, 163 Kansas ave., res. n. w. cor. Fourth and Tyler streets. See card.
Ball, H. E., book-keeper (A. Prescott & Co.), bds. Crawford's Eu- ropean Hotel.
Ball, Lemuel (col'd), laborer, res. 432 Lane street.
OLDEST DRY GOODS HOUSE IN THE CITY.
C. F. KENDALL
Wholesale and Retail
DRY GOODS
BEAVERS, DOESKINS
DRY GOODS
ORY GOODS
C.F.KENDALL.
BERNSTEIN-CO.
CLOTHS, CASSIMERES.
LADIES' AND GENTS'
Furnishing Goods CARPETS, NOTIONS, ETC., 157 KANSAS AVENUE.
COLLEGE -OF THE. Sisters of Bethany TOPEKA, KANSAS.
-FOR-
GIRLS AND YOUNG LADIES EXCLUSIVELY.
Under Care of the PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH, For Boarding and Day Pupils.
From eight to ten Teachers in the Family. All branches taught -Primary, Intermediate, Grammar and College, French, German, the Classics, Instrumental and Vocal Music, Drawing, Painting, etc.
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