The Cedarville Herald, Volume 13, Numbers 1-21

( i t o m m The CedarviUeHerald. BATTLEFIELD. W* BU BLAIB* rwftUfMr. CEDARVILLB. I OHIO. BEING A GIANT. Tlusrs A re Hom t Thing* That U »kn : B ig Man Tired. “ I suppose there i*' also an unpleaa- ant side ip this?” I queried of the smiling' giant who eat cross-legged.on . a platform ip the dime museum. ,•. •Well, being a giant has ita draw­ back. as well' d»"advantagaa,” die re­ plied in a voice which evidently-travel­ ed a long distance before it reached Ilia throat. I’ ’ "What is the most disagreeable thing ■you have to complain of?” “ Little men, sir. Singular as it may seem, little men, especially in the west, take an aversion to mo on sight, and I canuot tell you how tired they make me. I could pick up half a dozen quar­ rels a day if I was a bad-tempered giant It is a good thing fo r some o f these small fry that l am what l am— an-evou-fompered-HMH^ clad contract not to strike anybody." . “ How do thoy bother you?” I asked as he stretched opt an arm and made a .: fis t.about the size of a Wayno county pumpkin. “ They want to fight me,” ho replied; “ S t Paul and S t -Louis are two of the worst places on the circuit It is some* times all ! can do to hold. myself when I getaround to^those towns. There’s a chip in S t Louis I’ve got to reduce to n jelly before I can take, real solid comfort in this world. .Yes; i ’ve g o tto reach out fo r him Borne day, get ahand on either side, and squeeze him as fiat as a rag.” " What ails that particular man?” “ He gets two or three drinks into him and then comes into the museum and stands before me and calls me names and spits ort his hands add dares me. to knock a chip off his shoulder. The more he talks the madder he gets, and the last time I was there ho had his coat off and was about to pitch into me when the policeman put him out Some o f the spectators say he actually did strike me, but I.didn’t feel i t ” “ Then you have sometimes been as­ saulted by these little men??’ “ I suppose sa That is, I have been told that I have, though 1 have no'pbr- sonal knowledge of I t ” . • “ Did you ever strtKo anybody?” I M|ied, as he kindly held mo at arm’s length to get a kink out o f the muscles of his left arm. “ No, not exactly. Thera was a little man who used to hang around the museum at Dayton, (X, which is on tny circuit Bow that little feiler did ache for * row with me. I ’vo seen him feel so bad that he cried like a child. They said that he wav v,e most peace, ful man in that community when I was away, hut the minute he heard I was in town he became cantankerous. Ue’d come into the muue and offer me everything he had on earth to go out­ side the corporation with him. I really used to feel sorry for him. I t waa enough to melt a heart of stone to hear him go on and calt me a liar, coward, horse thief, hypocrite, murderer, per­ jurer, coyote,, hyena, and so forth, and then plead with me by all I held sacred t> go out into the suburbs with' him and give him a show.” “ But you couldn’ t go?” “ No, I am under a contract ^when­ ever I exhibit not to kill anybody. However, one night after the show I went out with a friend for a walk. I had temporarily forgotten all abont the little man, but it seems that he followed us. We were well away from the center of the town wheh he pitched into me.” “ Did yob know it at the time?” “ Only iu a vague sort of way. Wo were talking business, and I just fe lt that something annoyed mo. I got hold o f it and gave it a fling; and thought no more o f it until next day when the- papers reported that the body o f the little man had been found in the top of a shade-tree ina vacant lo t I suppose I am technically to blame for bis death.” “ Such, things are unpleasant” “ Very unpleasant, indeed. But for them a giant’s life would be one long summer day, filled with ice cream, taffy .and quail on toast In yOnr capacity as a newspaper man I wish yon would ap­ peal to the sawed-off men of this coun­ try to either keep away from the dime museum altogether, or to conduct them­ selves in a rational, genteel way when they do come. A year hence, when my contract expires, if forty or fifty o f them want mb to walk out on some farmer’s meadow with them and give them satisfaction I shall be perfectly willing to oblige, but while I am situ­ ated as I am they ought t> letme atone. Will you appeal to them in my behalf?” “ I Will.” “ Just Say that until the present con­ tract expires the giant hopes the sawed- off public w ill hate the kindness not to make him tired. That Will be about lb and l fll he wholly (seven feet four inches high an ! th<ee hundred pounds o f meat) obliged. "—Detroit Free Press. —Armellini, the banker, a notorious miser, entered the offioe and very esre- in l y went through all the work done W his youngest clerk. He was par* fectly Satisfied, and saidi to the young than; “ What salary do you get from my firm?” “ Up to the present, noth­ ing. signor!” “ Very good. From the first of t ext month I w ill sea that it la fcouhlcd.”—Pop.do Romance DEATH'S BITTER F0E. A Nobl* Woman Nurwd Union Soldier* In ■ /!-, 7 - .War Tin**, • There lives in Russell county, Kan, one o f the most remarkable women o f the age. Work has alwaya been her life, and although she is long past the age When most of'us are glad to rest she still feels that she should “ be up and doing.” / , Air*. Alary A. Bickerdyke, or Mother Bickerdyke, as hundreds o f thousands o f soldier* call. jber. .probably baa .no European reputation and there may still be veterans o f tlie east who never heard of her. Yet she was one of the inOstwonderful, unlque'and forcible'of women. Plain and matronly' in ap­ pearance, with little education, an ene­ my to army authority and regulations when they Interfered with the comfort of her “ boys,” she boldly opposed her­ self to medical officers and command­ ing generals, and by the force o f good sense she made liertelf valuable to the armies of the west, / .do_Gea. Sherman and his corps, and not only followed his army to Atlanta, accom­ plishing sanitary wonders without hos­ pital appliances, but when she was sb fortunate as to bo assigned to station-; ary duties she immediately set to work to reform the administration which she found; in power. As an agent, in the field, of the Chicago branch o f the sani­ tary commission, she' took particular^ delight in tracing arty neglect or ras­ cality in the distribution o f supplies. Soldiers who returned home on fur­ loughs often complained bitterly of the Way in which comfort* and- dainties were appropriated by (He nurses and surgeons. When Mother Blckerdyke was not cooking food and dressing wotthds upon the battlefield the'Was in­ vestigating these things and sending her complaints to headquarters for the discharge o f the offenders. Often she did not wait for such authority but, having abundant proof of the justice o f the cause, ordered surgeons o f the army to remove their straps and report to their superiors. . One such delinquent came to Gen. Sherman with a loud story of injustice. “ Who made the charge?” asked Gen. Sherman./ “ Why—why,” stammered the man, ‘T suppose it was that1 spiteful ol4 woman, Mrs. Blckerdyke.” *•0, well, then, if it was she,” re­ plied the general. “ I can’ t help you Sits ranks me.” . “ That spiteful old Woman,” clad us­ ually in * calico gown and shawl, with a Shaker bonnet upon her head, had authority, however, for all. her. actions, hot so sure was she of her ground that she seldom thought it necessary to state from whom she derived it When the war first opened Mother Blckerdyke had not everi an official connection with the sanitary commis­ sion. She worked in the hospitals of Cairo, S t Louis and Louisville, super­ intending diet kitchens, disciplining careless and culpable nurses and sur­ geons, and distributing supplies which were sent to her. When the battle o f Fort Donaldson was fought she im­ mediately set out for the battle-ground. She superintended the loading o f re­ lief boats with beds, tea, coffee, soup, gruel, milk punch and everything which could bo needed. At length one night when she had made four trips and her boat was ready to return to the hospital on its fifth journey Mother Blckerdyke was missed, The commanding officer. also saw a light slowly flickering over the desert­ ed battle-field. He sent a man to in­ vestigate, and there was Mother Bick­ erdyke found, lantern in hand, rever­ ently examining the faces of the dead, lest some poor fellow, not beyond help, should be left upon the field comfort­ less and alone. Even for such actions she hsd no authority from the govern­ ment of the United States or the state of Illinois. Then the battle o f Shiloh was fought Mother Blckerdyke arrived upon the scene o f carnage far ahead of the relief boats of the government Her fires were blazing, kettles up, and and She, dressed in a confederate overcoat and * soft, slouch hat,- was ladling out soup, whisky, water, tea, and coffee before a government agent was in sight In g o ­ ing the rounds a surgeon stopped before her booth in admiration and curiosity. “ Madam,” he said, in an official tone o f voice, “ under whose authority are you here?” ' Never stopping in her labors or look­ up from her work she replied: “ I have ,received my authority from the Lord God Almighty. Have yon anything that ranks higher than that?” From this time, when Mother Blckerdyke took Charge o f the hospitals at Savannah, she was one of the agents of the sani­ tary cotntniailon ln the field, After the war Mother Blckerdyke was the housekeeper for the Chicago Home o f the Friendless, but the work was too light for her. Neither mind or hand was occupied. Then she opened a small hotel in Kansas. She went west with thousands of soldiers to take up land, but the enterprise was a finan­ cial failure. When the locusts swept over the land and devastated the crops and the fires o f Northern Michigan and Wisconsin devoured forests and vil­ lages—then Mother Blckerdyke was in her element. Shs begged Med for the farmers and rood fo r the hungry, look­ ing after their Just distribution. Final­ ly, after many years, the government granted her a (fenSioq o f twenty-five dollars a month, and sb* was given a position in the San FraOelseo mint. ~ The death o f her daughter at Coving­ ton, K y „ called Mother Blckerdyke away from San Francisco. Afterward «he returned as’ far west as Russell County, Kas., when* at last acpnnts she was residing with a son—her years more than three score and ten—her once brown hair sprinkled with w h it* —Chicago Tribune. THJP BLUE AND THE GRAY- A Curious story or tits War Which Ha* , Jaap It* Denouement in Topeka. In the fall o f 180:1, First Sergeant Henry J, Miller, o f Co, A, Ninth OhMi Volunteer cavalry, was with his regl- tnent in East Tennessee;, his company' was sentOut to search fo r arms in what hod‘been a Methodist preachorV'farm* * house, then deserted. A confederate officer’s trunk was found to contain clothing, books, etc., ,Ope o f the.books and' a pipe ' fell ‘ into the1 hands Of‘Ser­ geant Miller, who, took them home with him at the close o f the war, he having served the entire fourypars. ^ Years after one o f the- bobki waa given his daughter, Lillian. A., fo r * keepsake. It was a book o f .“ Common Prayer,” elegantly bound" in Russia, with illuminated frontispiece and gilt edge. On the" fly :leaf was written “Charles Hungarland, Yazoo ■City, Miss.;" also “May God bless and pro­ tect you is the prayer of your brother A.” . '■:< In January, 1837, Miss- Miller mar­ ried Mr. O. E. Williams; of. Topeka, who became very much interested ' in the book and.' finally, in November, 1801, wrote, the postmaster in Yazoo City to learn if Charles Ilungarland or his heirs still lived in that vicinity; the letter Was" forwarded to Louisville, Ky., where Air. Hungarland had re­ cently moved, and was answered by him in person. Quite a correspondence ensued, in the course of which Mr. Ilungarland was enabled-to establish his claim to the hook. The latter was sent him on Decem­ ber SO, 1891, and in the letter acknowl­ edging receipt o f same, Mr. Ifungar- lsnd expressed great delight at having in his possession again tliebpok given him by his brother, and whichhad been lost for nearly thirty year* Mr. Hungarland served the entire four years in the eon federate army. Company ,D, Eighteenth Mississippi regiment, two years of which were 'spsfit'in prison nt~Ft."Delaware. The brother who presented- the book was killed in battle early in tho war, so that the book will have a special value for that reason. I t is a singular coincidence that Ser­ geant Miller, who found the hook, and Charles Hungarland, the original owner of it, should both be living and welt at the present time. The former lives at Marietta, O,, where he baa lived for many years; the latter only recently moved to Louisville, Ky., all his oarly life having been spent at Yazoo City, Misa ' Though they fought against each other for four years, no spirit o f ani­ mosity now pervades their breasts; on the contrary, one of brotherly love and good will, as they exchange greeting over the recovery o f the little “ Prayer Book.” —Topeka (Kan.) Capital. ODD BITS FOR VETERANS. P r e s e r v e d as a memento at the Adams house, Boston, is a box contain­ ing a few cigars which belonged to Gen. Grant at the time his illness compelled him to give up smoking.—Indianapolis News. G em . M e ig s wrote a hand so unread­ able that Gen. Sherman is said to have once indorsed an official paper from him to this effect: “ I concur in these recom­ mendations, but I don’ t know what they are.” t Allis. G. M. H a r r is , an American] woman, who for many years has re* j sided in Venice, is one of the gentle i heroines who is still remembered with [ grateful affections by survivors of our civil war. In no less than forty-nine battles this sweet woman found op­ portunity to wait skillfully upon- Wonnded soldiers, in camp and on the field an angel of mercy, while in many a hospital she cared impartially fo i1the suffering on both sides, even washing the weary feet of the dust-grimed and pain-stricken fellows. A dmiuai * W ordex , one of the thirty- seven rear-admirals o f the United States on the retired list, commanded the.Monitor in her encounter with the Aferrimac in Hampton Roads. Ills nerves are said never to have been just the same since that memorable day, when in the course of (he cannonade a shot struck the turret in which he sat directing the battle and knocked him blinded and bruised to the floor. The dauntless old sea dog didn’ t mind it much, hut his nerves never recovered from the shock. C a i * t , F rank D. B aldwin , o f the Fifth infantry, who was decorated the other day in Chicago j>y Gen. Miles with a medal awarded by congress for conspicuous gallantry at the battle o f ; PeaCh-Trce Creek, Os., July 80, 1864, where he led a desperate assault on the confederate lines and captured tho flag o f a confederate regiment, has. since' the war distinguished himself in campaigns against the Cheyennes, Arapahoe* and ComanChes. On one Occasion Capt, Baldwin and three com­ panions withstood the onslaught' o f one hundred Indians, killing twelve of them, Baldwin in One o f the most modest and retiesnt o f men, and was unable to find Words to express his thanks when Gen, Miles pinned the tfccorat on on lik bretut IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. WOMAN’S PLACE IN NATURE. U*r First Duty into Get * U tl> ( m 4 Then V*e U Well. ■, * . The Boeder women realize,the truth o f their position as a theory and bodily act upon it, the better it w ill be for them, ■ They do indeed act upon it, and have alwaya been obliged to do ao, na­ ture being quite a sexual tyrant and giving no heed to trivial differences, Natural laws starve women aa indiffer­ ently as they do men, and find it no. more harm, The recognition o f wom­ an’s place in nature as being primarily that .of a female' animal, whose first hUsiues* it i# to get a living, pnd whose .second ta got * good living, ■woulddo much to sweep off the cobwebs of bdr- ren sentiment and unproductive rhetoric which pass current for reasoning on their social status. When ' women at large are aroused to the fact' that this is. their actual status in nature—the mere hard unquestiona ble faet p f existence, the alleviation o f their lot in general w ill become rapid. Industrial emancipation is in truth the only emancipation there is for either man o r woman, since the development of such'industries as make living easier and fuller produces the only relief from degraded poverty or continuous toil which,the nature o f things permits us to find. We may call it a coarse-neces- sity—a wretched condition, a. hard-' drudging .tyranny, but with all our rail­ ing we can notrail out of existence, since' it is o f nature, which is deaf, and' ,blind. < to praise'-' and blame aliice. i ‘N o yjodividual, ,bq class, no- nation - has ever . risen’ in the world except it first succeeded ,in wresting the assurance of a good regular living from nature, and none ever with Thosevivhd bpply tbsociety for it w ill not get i t Society has no surplus large enough to provide them with,it, even if it would. Nature.alone: has the resources sufficient And the application to nature must be made througli work. Work is the only prayer she heeds. When, then, all women come to that as some are now doing,, their position in the world w ill bo no more in question than is man’s position at the present moment The' positiO'n o f indepondeuce is always beyond ques­ tion everywhere, and earning one’s own living is a position o f independence compared with getting it by depend­ ence, from somowhere eke. It is a curious example of the dimness with which one sees through a social environment that women are always discussed, as if for them at least it were better to get no living and so perish rather than to “ unsex themselves" as the cant goes, by working for a living. As if no existence were preferable to one .with some drawbacks to maintain it. The position is quite absurd; as on that basis, man might also reject life because o f its.toils First get a living, then use it well, is the true principle.— Social Economist WOMEN PHYSICIANS. The Effort* That Are ltelng Pot Forth In Their llehslf It* the South. A recent number of the Philadelphia Ledger's “ household” ' column is de­ voted to the southern woman students, particularly the medical students. She is pictured in “ her gray serge gown, Tam O* Shanter cap o f dark cloth, and daintily gloved and shod: With her soft voice and the winning manners so na­ tive to her.” Efforts throughout the southern states are being put forth to make obligatory that the position of physician in charge shall be held by women only in hospitals where insane women are sent for treatment Vir­ ginia has passed such a law. The southern states were behind those o f the north and west in making the move toward a medical education for women, as the records o f the Pennsylvania woman’s medical college, which they generally select w ill show. In 1888 this college graduated one south­ ern woman, Dr, Cailis Lee Haynes, of South Carolina. This year there are twenty-five In the college. Dr. Haynes has for the past two years served as resident physician in the insane asylum at Stanton, Vo. Five of the students at the present time in the Pennsylvania college plan to go as medical mission- airies to work in foreign lands. The rest expeefto return south and take up genetat practice. The “ Household” maintains “ that there is not a Bryn Majrr college or other strong institution of learning, not a woman’s club, or a woman’s art class, or a woman student in the university law school, to say nothing of the bio* logical, chemical and other special stu­ dents, or a college woman’s annex, btit owes its existence, its toleration, or its triumphs to the position gained by the women who would study medicine here in 1850, and others elsewhere about that time.” And further: “ There is not a diploma granted at Barnard col­ lege, or a certificate o f proficiency at Harvard, hut Is owed, in the first place, to the courage for forty years o f the women students and graduates in this single profession, to Emily nrtd Eliza­ beth Blackwell o f England and New York, and to Ann Preston, Emelin* Cleveland and Harriet fiat-tain o f Phila­ delphia, . . . . . . . . , A R*pi<tW*rk«r. , Miss Ada M, Crawford, forewoman o f tha directory publishing firm of Howe,in Philadciphi*,bolds the world's championship for rapidity In address­ ing, sealing and stamping envelopes, film can stamp 8,*90 letter* an hear, and mpistens each stamp with her tongue. Using a sponge, site can only sump 2,000 an hour. MISS FLORENCE ROUTLEDGE. Ta* a m * iM M lp r o f ta* Woman'* Trad* ltelon x**g**> o f JLondoa. Mis* Florence Rputkdge, daughter of fhe late George Routlegde, the well- known publisher, has for. .two years • ably filled the post o f honorable secre­ tary to theWoman’sTrade Union League o f L^lpdon. In this capacity she has worked faithfully in organizing meet­ ings and unions and in acquainting her-' self with the various condition^ of woman’ s employment, until she has be­ come authority on the subject Aiks Routledge lias -traveled extensively, and only recently delivered an explan­ atory lecture on the work of the Eng­ lish league,before the Societc d'Etudes ■ Soq/jales et politiques at Brussels. In $l»ls talk shg sSmply astounded the Bel­ gians, .who had not yet learned that there were such things as Women's trade unions and that societies existed . for their promotion,, They were Still * further surprised, too, to learn that there should.be a lady capable of elab­ orating the most advanced theories on ’ the- subject, and, most astounding of all,, that she should be prepared to face the perils ,of a solitary journey from . England via Brussels to Brindisi, ip or­ der to thU them what her country­ women were doing. I f any pioneer wompn who stanchly believes in “ the cause” wishes just for once to see her- self-from.a foreign' pqin.tof view, she. can not do better than read the descrip- ‘ tion o f Miss Routledge -and her paper .given in L'independence BelgC, The writer is gallattt, respectful, admiring, ; but lits principal emotion is one o f blank astonishment “ Evert. heS* quiet dress' and deineanqr ra*de him,marvel;.lie a]> parently? expected her tdHWear a cap of, liberty and’ brandish a-tricolor flag, at / the least!—Chicago Post . . OWE i t TO,INVENTIONS. 7* Mechnnicnt Appliances (lave Placed « , HIgli Valn'e Ppert'W'oniiih’* Work. ; : A very respectable but. very square- jawed set ofj people still shake their heads and kndt their brows^oVer wom­ an's alleged breaking away from the halter to jump the hedge into the wide, wide world, “ She should stay at home and take, care o f her children,” is their - stern utterance. Probably it would be useless to assure these determined'ones . that it is an incident in the evolution of the raco that there are startling numbers o f single women .upon whom business opportunities are thrust, also that Those Wiid take care o f children'- may do more- than that as well as their grandmothers did. Sixteen hours a day>' are required by ap intelligent woman to attend to the proper bringing up of her family. The fact is yet to dawn upon many * that a Roman's timo.has o r should have a value which if not measured In dollars and cents is felt in the educa-. tional impulse imparted to her sons and daughters resulting from h^/r wise use o f'it Gainful occupations for women, as.a consequence o f the adoption o f me­ chanical inventions, are placing a value upon h,er work, which without these, would require untold ages to accord.— Margaret N. Wishard, in Chautnuquaa An RnKlIshman’* View*. 1i The duke o f Marlborough is like j Alax O’Rcll, a great admirer'of the ' American women, and. says that “ she has a natural quickness for appreciat- . ing tho characters o f the men around her, and she takes infinitely more pains, and in some respects greater trouble all around, than the English woman displays. . A fter marriage the bright, cherry girl remains the gay, carefully dressed married woman who is always trying to show herself off quietly to the ‘ best advantage, and she understands the art perfectly among all classes of people.” ■_________________ A 7f*\v RcnelU Clnb. That Denver. Col., is not far behind in practical social science, is shown by its recent organization o f a “ Girls' Mutual Benefit club,” which all giris arc invited to join. The rooms are open every evening and teachers have volunteered to give instructions in plaiii and fancy cooking, dressmaking, stenography and mnsic. The charge of five cents per week is so low as not to exclude anyone really desirous o f be­ ing helped. WOMEN IN THE WORLD’S WORK* Alls* S karis O i o f New Orleans, who is described as a young and charming woman, is conductor o f a large or­ chestra. T he prize for the design fo r a seal for the board o f managers o f the Colum­ bian exposition has been awarded to Miss Sarah Eodtker. A t Lexington, Misa, Miss Dixie Cole is the express agent, Miss Emily Wright ' is the postmistress, and Miss Mollis Hoskins has charge o f the telegraph office. T he World's fair interest Is being actively looked after In Oregon by oue o f the women appointed on the board of “ lady” manager*, fihe has been ex­ tended the courtesy o f the Southern Pa­ cific railroad. In one of h e r tour* in Southern Oregon, khe found a woman who has been a stone-cutter for twenty years Miss O rack D odo *, who includes herself in the term “ we girls of the club,” dresses in tb# simplest manner. A t her regular recaptions during the last two months she has invariably worn the sama dress—a dark green cashmere, velvet-trimmed, with a white vast in the waist,which any assistant in a dressmaking establishment could du­ plicate for $i>X HQUSE —Coooanutj half cup* o f i one-half cup 4 half cup o f i o f baking Home. —-fscallopeti the potaioesi baking dish q salt, pepper j these a iny<| seasoning. fa.hen pour ov o f milk to iqq oven and bat Detroit Free I —Clear Soil beefsteak le fl o f roast, fu ttl may be on ha simmer fo r ' sliced onion, white pepper, celery seed,! onion are bof serve with stj in butter. —l —To Prevel - saturated w if into trunks j year w ill ' them, free f| clothing, slxij three days. a length of brushed and | turpentine: • the clothing.l —S.ometiml remedies a r l drugs. A c* catarrhal coil fections in a| . hale the fun Scatter the 11 stove lid ad which w ill a| it w ill brie family refers ered*in the lfl the Shaker; any druggist] —Cheese two ounces i (any kind),| flour, add .mace, cayenl ly and form] eggs. R o ll' as possible, strips or at* and not mot and stamp. < s a inch in <]| and rings oi: bake fo r oven until] ' When doue each ring aid. —Potato easiest o f si potatoes o] layer o f p i add/alayer j have plenty not. Make! spread over! you wish, added. I t i salad, and < ^some pota( jltuffed po< otato puffI leaked pota| potatoes, skins. Tiuj nished wltk times diistfl times brusf in most ca| to heat anq is well to t*to befor stand in tb Budget TA'j C m It Two| That tb strengthen tion o f r many won reserve tl selves nad Muscular] less vigorq and lo ite l the bIood | Best labo may be hygienic of a pent with fevt ping as a 1 tmong h i] he scrub] ship-boar] that had f is also were o f fortune own dor them a double they had] health—/ restored 1 tion. j Not nil or mdep] did oue] *kdy suf •uiKsmia, fashions doctor, l ffet Well] finesllorf he; “fo^ ly,” T j as folic, . ‘ ’On* honsaw in Pop* ICE ROUTLI wr tb* w o m m ’ i * f«. Of London. lontlsdge, ding! Routldgde, the |r, has fo r two *t Of honorable I’sTradoUnion] |this capacity si in organizing Jirid in acquaintii ■various conditi, fment, until she/ i.on the subject travelad extar •delivered an i the work o f t l te the.Societc d’ jtiques at Brussc Jply astounded t not yet learar Eli tilings as, ,w |l that societies ution. They we: jed, too, to lehi la lady capable o ht advanced tlie< most astouhi tuld be prepared ' solitary journe ussels to Brindis em what her c Idoing. I f any |anchiy bclioves Ijust for (mqj to ! eign point o f vi eir than read the1 buUedge ’and hoi lepcndence Belg It, respectful, ad l l emdtion is one < i ' Evert he¥ 'quit Vnqde.him, marvel Jrted her to<Weah; Indisli a tricolor pago Post -‘-J. ■ . r o iN t/ C N T lb f l>li«nceti f l im 1 teta bio but Very |people still aha,l : their brows ?oV reaking away 1 >the hedge into t I'She should stay lo f her children,! |e. Probably it v Ire. these determil ] incident in the e ^hat there are i agle women’ upi srttinlties nrethi ao take care of than that as well ] did. Sixteen" hot by an intelligcn [ie proper bring] yet to daWn up |n’s timo .has oi >hich if not mea |mta is fe lt in tl imparted to her Imlting from hqr lupatlons fo r won Jof the adoption Intions, are placir pk, which withoi untold ages to llVisbnrd, in Chav |nalith>nnn'* View* o f Marlborougl great admin jimen, and says I quickness fo r < Biers o f the mo ikes infinitely m respects greste Ithan the Englis |ftnr marriage t l emains the gay, tried woman who dw herself off qui tge, and she ml lectly among all | n « w llcneflt CUb. ter, Col., is not i social science, is (organization o f liefil club,” whlcl to join, The sveningrtnd toSC to give Instru »ncy cooking, drt and mnsic. T (per week is so (nyone really desi THEWQ iRLO ttsO, of New Or as a young aiu conductor o f * for the design td pf managers o f lition hss bkeili i ' Eodtker. |igton, Afiss., Miss ess sgent, Miss En (tmistress, and 1 is charge o f thf Irld's fair intore* 5ked after in Ore ken appointed on hiansgers, fihe h ■courtesy o f the £k ■ad* In one o f ! )regon, she fount: saa stone-cutter H ack .Dopfife w l 1the tern “ we f ts in the sknpl .star reosgtiou* iortth* she bse -easae dn »s—*■ fvelvet-triuntted, s :waist,which Mky king estahlkhttiet

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