Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 2 October 1895 — Page 4

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The Last Resort of Attorney.

During the course of the testimony '•'iVO"'"! I iu 7 ts ell April 4 and 5 a stri!."glo was precipitated }»v JJisir.ct An ruey Barnes, who again challenged the reliability of a rollcall book at Cooper college. The argument resulted in a victory for the defense so l'ar us the question before the court was eoneorwd, as Judge Murphy sustained au objection to a question propounded by himself to tho witness and em- off lie discussion.

The trial began yesterday with a sensation which was quite as unexpected to the prosecution as to the defense. Juror i. ). Truman informed the court", last Thursday during the noon recess of the court that he was approached by H. J. McCoy, general secretary of the Y. ]L C. A., \v.io e:i :eavo:va lo engage liim in conversation on the subject of the trial. "If you don't hang Durant,'' said McCoy to him, "we will hang you."

The court said the offense bordered strongly on a crime and cited McCoy to appear in court Oct. 3 and show cause why he should not be punished for contempt.

R. W. Maitland, the electrician who testified last week witli regard to the construction of the sun burners in Emanuel church, was the first witness called. The testimony was of the same liature as that: given last week and was intended to .-.how the liability of escape of gas under certain conditions.

Then tiie assault on Pawnbroker Oppeuheiin's testimony began. The defense called to the stand four witnesses and by whom it was proposed to test the accuracy of the pawnbroker's memory. Marvin Curtis, William Caivart, P. J. Numann and Leonard Everett, members of the national guard and the corps to which Durant belonged, testified that they had taken various article? of jewelry to Oppenheini's store and attempted to pawn them. They described the manner in which they were dressed at the time. The descriptions in many instances did not correspond with the descriptions given by Oppenheim when he was asked to tell how the men who tried to pawn the article were dressed. .Each of the four witnesses said he had subscribed money to assist in the defense of Durant.

The tei.M!iony was made to impeach the testimony of David Clark, who assisted Attorney Quinlau to fix the dale npoa which h* saw' Lui.un- and Blanche Lamont walking toward Emanuel church. John Patron, Patrick Alulvavey and M. J. Murphy said that Clark's reputation for truth and integrity was bad. On cross-examination Muivaney and Murphy said they were prejudiced against Clark from the fa.-t that they had business troubles with his father. The district, attorney asked that the testimony be stricken out. but the motion was denied by the court.

The building of Durant's alibi in contradiction of the charge made by Pawnbroker Oppenheim was be_rnu with the testimony of Dr. A. W. Haihait, a lecturer at Cooper college. Asked if Duraiit was present at the lecture given on the morning of April 4 the doctor referred to the call book and said that the a a a O cross-examination he said thai, lie had no personal knowledge of Durant's absence or presence. The defense tried to oli'set tins by asking if in could give the name of any one of the 51 students ill the class who attended the lecture on the morning in question. The doctor recalled the names of a dozen students and said lie believed he could remember more if he were given time to think the matter over.

The prosecution next attacked the reliability of the rollcall. Before the district attorney had hardly reached the point of the subject, however, Judge Murphv took a hand in the examination. He asked the witness whether in Lis experience as an instructor at the college lie had known of instances where students had answered at rollcall for other students who were"not present. The defense at once interposed an oojection and the court was placed in the predicament of having to rule on its own question. The judge said that while lie might permit the question to be answered it it should come Irom a proper source, lie would sustain the objection for the present.

Then District Attorney Barnes asked the same question and the defense interposed another objection. Attorney Dickinson argued that while it was possible to call into court every student "who attended die lecture and a*k each .. one if ho had answered at rolicail for

Darant it would be unfair to cast susp.cion on the particular rodeall in question by any practice or custom that might .had occurred at another time.

The court said that it believed the question proper and the evidence t-ought competent, but for the sake of fc./oty lie .- a. taimd the object,on.

With Din*, nt whereabouts on the morning of A[ nI 4 accounted for, the .lefen.se att^mp" ,:d to show where the defendant was ti next day, George A. Merrill, an instructor at the Lick school of mechanical arts, saying that Durant -called upon him at 11 o'clock on the forenoon of April 5, and when Durant .made known the ooject of his call, replied in the affirmative, but was not permitted to tell what. Durant said.

Before the court adjourned, Attorney '.Dickinson called the attention ol the *coart to the large number of threateu--*ing letters that, were being received by ^himself and Attorney Duprey and asked that the jurors be instructed to turn letters over to the court should -they receive any. The judge has recpivid a great many letters of the same 3uud.

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EITOR'i'3 TO SAVui ills NECK. Women W«je Earning Women. ^tige on Woman's Dress—Profeseionirs.

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Etl'orl I\S id to Kribe a Juror—Proceedings of Another Trial. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct.. 2.—After gathering up a few ragged ends of the testimony left over from last "week the defense in the Duranfc ease yesterday l)egan the building of an alibi for tha young medical student from April 4 to April 12 inclusive. The purpose of the alibi is to impo.ieh tho testimony of Pawnbroker Oppenheim and \V. 1. Phillips, who te.si-iiied that on Api'ii 12 Duraiit tried to pawn Blanche Lament's ring at Oppenheim'.s store.

WOMAN'S WORLD.

A NEW HAMPSHIRE MAIDEN LADY WHO IS NINETY YEARS OF AGE.

A V/ho P"o*""T" (r^^rr'j' \Vgr':

Miss Sarah Ann Sawyer of Wakefield, N. H., was 00 years old" the first day of last June, yet she may be found still busily engaged each day iu the regular duties of the household, smart as many young girls.

She was born in the house where she now lives, and has spent all her life beneath its ample roof, an old time, strongly built and rambling farmhouse.

Her fatla as Timothy Sawyer, born :u Dover, vt. f». 1 T'ifi. Her mother was before m.-triage Sarah Dearborn of Wakefield.

Ker grandfather Dearborn was one of the first settlers of the town of Wakefield, there being but two or three log

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MISS SAKAH ANN SAWYER.

houses when he first came, he and his wife taking up their abode i.u a similar structure.

The subject of tiiis sketch had two sisters and three brothers, but only one sister survives, Lucy M. Sawyer, who is 8(3 years old.

She reads readily with the aid of glasses, and keeps posted on the events of the times through the press.

Sho walks out about the village, and when the correspondent called was found actively engaged in cooking, together with other household duties, while her sister Lucy was just beginning to agitate a churning of cream in an old fashioned dash churn.

The house in which she lives is the oldest in the town, and into it, when new, her father and mother came direct from the marriage altar.

In the coriser of the ample kitchen stands an old fashioned clock, which her father and mother had when beginning life together, which has ticked the hours away through all tho joys and sorrows of the family for more than a century, and which still goes steadily on.

The aged daughter of the family points to a broken oruament on the top of this timepiece and relates, in explanation, how her brother, long since dead, when but a youngster, climbed up the old clck to explore the in lei ior and tipped it over.

She remembers well the visit of Lafayette to this country, and her brother Alvah went to Dover, shook hands with him and dined at the same table.

Sarah .Aim Sawyer was, during her younger days, always considered physically frail, and when betwoen 20 and o0 years it was feared she was going into consumption.

Miss Sawyer is still an expert at fino sewing, and not long since she attended an auction of household goods at Sanborn vi lie, a mile distant, showing all the interest of youth in the occasion.— Boston Globe.

A V/i.o Protests.

I wish to increase tho ranks of the protesters by adding one more recruit. There are those who protest against bloomers for women and others not more unreasonable protest against women leaping from Brooklyn bridge. I protest against 83-year-old grandmothers riding bicycles. The woman in question is Mrs. Margaret White of Port Jervis. She is a new woman at 83. Report says that she was the means of overcoming the prejudices of her granddaughters against the bicycle. Mrs. White leads her youthful associates in three mile rides daily and is having bloomers made to wear.

Now, really, is there not a slight incongruity here? The world has been accustomed always to dear, mild faced aged grandmothers, who interested themselves unobtrusively in the affairs of the young and hopeful and indulged in quaint and curious reminiscence effectively on occasions when they lent an artistic valuo to the situation. They have looked after the darning arid knitted mittens and chided willful grandchildren in gentle tones with virtuous stories of how grandmother did when she was young. Grandmothers have always been satisfied to be reposeful persons, who could prophesy about the weather and keep up -with the changes of the moon and remember dates and remedies, and altogether fit into a corner of tho family where sho belonged find adorn that, corner. Sho was a sort of animated credential of respectability and equal to a whole gallery of ancestors on canvas. But now, if sho is to turn her back upon Iter sphere and whisk about on bicycles—well, there are .situations in which words fail.

I have noticed a tendency on the part of my sex to object to being called "grandmamma" when a relative position in family life warranted it. "How to grow old" might prove a fruitful theme for discussion in a woman's club.—Haryot Holt Cahoon in New York Recorder.

Original Work of Women. Concerning tho want of originality in woman's contributions to the world's fund of knowledge, Mr. John Tetlow, hoad master of tho Boston Girls 'High and Latin school, had this to say in his recent address at the Plymouth School

of E-Jiics GO. "The Education of Women For the Learned Professions:" At the recent commencement exercises cf Radcliixe college President Eliot said I —not in a spirit of derogatory criticism, but rather with a note of interrogation I —that weirc-r have yet peeved their ability only to loan* from touchers ai«l to practice whr.t thevy have been taught that rb°v hrve not yet, r.t Toast in any coreifirafr.irr.brr, .-'.err*"., r,-.vor to originate, aud he illustrated this conservative tendency of women by the Scriptural quotation, "Mary kept all these things and pondered them in her heart."

Eis remarks, as I listened to them, brought to my mind a criticism which I read a few months ago in The Classical Review, written by Jane Harrison, the archaeologist, on the published thesis of a woman candidate for the degree of Ph. D. at one of our American universities. The thesis, she said, showed that the candidate had made herself familiar with all that had been done by others in tho department of investigation covered by it, but it added nothing to the sum of existing knowledge. Iu other words, it was a highly creditable compilation, but not an original contribution.

I suppose that the warmest friends of the higher education of women will lfave to acknowledge the justice of this criticism at the present timo and will have to content themselves with the retort that but. very few men make original additions to the world's acquired knowledge. But that ultimately, with equal leisure and opportunity for research, they will make j.s valuable original contributions as men I cannot for a moment doubt. Tho woman's cause is mail's they rise or sink Together, dwarfed or podlike, bond or free. For ,«h' tb'it or.t of "Lethe genlon vr'th nan Tlie shining steps of nature shares with mr.n His night -, his days, moves with him to ox:e

Seal.

If she he small, slight natured, miserable, How shail men grow? As far as in us lies We two will clear a\v:iy the parasitic forms That seem to keep her up, but drag her down Will leave her space to burgeon out. of all Within her—let her make herself her own To give or keep, to live and learn, and be All that not harms distinctive womanhood.

Wage Earning: English Women. The Courier lately printed statistics of the employment of women in the United States. They show, it will be remembered, that the number of wage earners among women has increased marvelously since 1880. And now we have the gist of a report lately made to the British board of trade presenting corresponding statistics for England and Wales. The conservatism which goes from top to bottom there is pretty clearly proved in the returns, which show that only a slight increase in the employment of women took place in the interval between the census of 1881 and that of 1891. In 1881 out of every 1,000 girls and women above 10 years of age in England and Wales there were 840.5 employed. In 1891 there were 344.2. The number of boys and men returned as employed shows a decrease of 1 per 1,000.

Another interesting fact is that girls and women in England keep the old, settled lines of employment for their sex, having no inclination apparently to copy after their more venturesome cousins in America. Thus, while tho census report gives 349 headings, representing as many different occupations, more than four-fifths of the girls and women returned as employed in 1891, or 27? out of the 044.2 in every 1,000 in the population, are enumerated under 18 of these headings.

The census taker notes that there h.'s been a marked increase in tho employment of girls under 15, but that there is some decrease in tho number of married women employed in textile and clothing trades, in the factory districts there being a considerable diminution in the number, of -working married women between 20 and 25 years of age.—Buffalo Courier.

Mrs. Sago on Women's Dress. "If woman will follow the pursuits of man, will become an equal in work and ambitions, she must havo a practical costume. Sho cannot wait to grasp her skirts if she must grasp a particular car railing. She cannot wait for her skirts if she must be at the office in time to begin work with her brother. The woman of leisure need take no irt in the demand for reform dress, only inasmuch as she chooses to assist her working sister.

So says Mrs. Russell Sage, whose opinion is not only valuable because she is Mrs. Sage, but equally so as coming from a woman who is a careful reasonor, a sympathizing sister and one capable of expressing her views in a manner attractive aud logical. "That clock is 75 years old. It was my mother's," said Mrs. Sage, pointing to a pretty hanging clock in the drawing room. "I wind it always myself, and to do so must step upon that fable. In this effort I find my skirts dangerous as well as inconvenient. Yet I consider woman can only afford to sacrifice the grace of slcrts at the altar of necessity. A woman's dinner party would be as ordinary as: a club luncheon without tho added charm of variety ol! costume. But I as a street or walking dress we necd\n uniform whh-h can bo worn till worn I out on every outdoor occasion. This I need not embraco coat, vest, necktie, I etc., but should essentially i-ontain all —but only all—it calls for, a comforiable, practical walking coslumo, whether bloomer, divided skirt or pa ii-i!et, with any feminine variation of which it, will I reasonably admit. On a bicycle, of.I courso, I cannot see how a woman will attempt to ride without the bloomer. —New York Herald.

Professional Marketer*.

Ono of the most novel aud valuable employments for women in some cities is that of professional marketer. There cau be no doubt that hero is a genuino opening for a woman who is thoroughly dapablo of fulfilling tho requirements of the position, for this work is no siDe3ure. To bccome a successful marketer a woman ought to have a thorough knowledge of markets and know when

vavions articles are in season and the best qualities to buy for various purposes. She must know when it will do to use an inferior brand, and, in short, she must have a scientific knowledge of cooking as well as of markets. She must know v.'l.nu i.uo season o" is at its height and what is in sc-ubon at any particular time.

A v.oiii.ii. vho Las riiis bli^ili. sin e-r,--

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adelpliia. She is a graduate of the Philadelphia Cocking school. She issues in connection with her business a small Inonthly bulletin of the markets, which contains a price list of meats, fish, poultry, butter, eggs and game, as well as of vegetables and fruits. Her bulletin also contains a week's menus, with suggestions for dainty meals from most seasonable supplies of the market. This young lady not only purchases supplies for private families, but for hotels and boarding houses, and she has undertaken in one case to purchase all the supplies for a large school and engage the servants. It would seem as though the latter service was an outside matter, which would be likely to interfere with the proper performance of the chief business in hand, which, if successful, would require the closest attention.—New York Tribune.

Crave Dr. Cartwrigrht.

During tiie recent heavy rains in tho west the arid region of western Kansas was literally under water. Dry rivers and creeks overflowed their banks, bridges wro washed and fie Ms in the bottom lands were transformed into lakes. Just before the flood had reached its height. Dr. Mary Cartwright of Garden City was called to the little town of Santa Fe, 25 miles away, en professional business. While on her journey across the country the rain began to fall in torrents and she crossed tho usually waterless rivers with difficulty. She continued bravely on her way, aud after completing her business in Santa Fe started on the return trip.

As she was approaching Garden City she found that the bridge on the main road had been carried away, the banks overflowed and the bottoms covered with water for a distance of over 3,000 feet. It was impossible to drive across, but it was absolutely necessary that she should reach home as soon as possible, for several very sick patients were in immediate need of her services.

She quickly decided her course. Leaving her horse and buggy with a farmer with instructions to drive to Garden City around the Pierceville road, she plunged into tho water, determined to wade home. She found it from one to three feet deep for more than half a mile, and when she reached the arroyo that had been spanned by a small bridge, she went in beyond her depth and was compelled to swim a distance of 100 feet before her feet again touched solid ground. She reached home safely, and that evening her usual visits to the bodsides of the sick were made.—St. Louis Republic.

A College For Housewives. There is a college for housewives at Yvalthanstan, England, where young women may learn all the branches of domestic work, including cookery, needlework, laundry work and household superintendence. Tho name of the college I is, appropriately, St. Martha's. Only ten pupils are received at a time, in or- I der that c:.rh may serve lic-r turn as housekeeper, chambermaid, laundress, etc. As tho cor.iro of ii '"Iruction in- I eludes every household function, from building fires and cleaning lamps to I giving dinner parties, tho graduate is equally fitted fur a housemaid or a house mistress.

Mrs. f'miie E. MIicus.

Mrs. Sadie E. Likens, who for many years has been police matron at Denver, has resigned her position to accept the superintcndency of State Industrial School For Incorrigible Girls, a new institution. Tho police board passed resolutions complimentary to Mrs. Likens' discharge of the duties of police matron and appointed Mrs. Louise Lavelle in her place.

Glove Buttons.

No street glovo with any claim to distinction is fastened nowadays with the small pearl button once in form. The smallest one allowable is a well cut pearl or bono one approaching an old fashioned 3 cent piece in size. They range from this to sizes a little larger than a dime. They are colored to match the kid to a certain degree.

Tlio Ideal Club.

"The ideal club," .says Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, "will be one which has an idea and follows it. Its motto will be 'Not as though already attained.' Ideals unfold before us and lead us on to things more be-intiful, and yet there aro greater th'mgs which we have not yet reached. V, must go on to perpetual growth and at u.iameuts."

Xot So Very Tie v.-.

The new woman is not so very new, after all.

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'.o federal census of 18'JO

shows that t:: :o were 51) women blacksmiths, U2 w.': en choppers, 121) women butcher*, 1 i?l w\ aion carpenters and '3-' women t'lidert-alii. t'.-t of that benighted period in our n.: 'onal history. —San Frahoi. eo 1 a'.'iet in.

Women officers will inn booths at. .November election iu Lexington when oivjhfc .school trusiecs are to chofun.

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Miss Helen (4'.vihl has just founded two .scholarships in Now York university of $5,01)0 each, to yield $250 unnu1*11 v.

Among the new fancies for table setting is a green linen table center, with a bordering of palo yellow poppies.

There is a college for dentistry at St. Petersburg and ono at Wilna, at which most of the students aro women.

One-half the monoy deposited daily in the various banks iu Chicago is placed there by -women.

The author of ''Helen's Babies," lias written a number of other tales that are quite as eood as that

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of them

Fair warmer southwest winds.

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»V delightful short story which ill be published in

ns paper.

Other

Splendid

Stories by Famous Writers In Preparation

weather increasing

TELEGRAPH.C TAPS.

Condensed News by Wiro I1 rain Different I'arts of th« Globe. The condition of Governor Morrill of Kansas is much improved.

Tho Rev. William II. Milburn, tho bliud chaplain of the United States senate, is preaching to large crowds in London.

Frank J. Deveraux, ai^ed 27, and W. Porter Hunt, aged ±J, two newspaper correspondents living at Oneida, X. Y., were drowned ir. Oneida lake, off North Bay, Oneida county.

Nathaniel Doyle of Queenstown, Pa., died from a gunshot wound accidentally inflicted by his son. They had beeu gunning. and the son mistook his father for a fox in the bushes.

State Veterinarian Quicrley pronounces the disease that is killimr catt le in Cattaraugus county, N. V., Texas lever. The milk from these afiheted cat tle is said to have caused the death of several infants.

A serious diphtheria epidemic is raging in the town of Thornton, It. 1., and the schools hove been closed. Five deaths have been reported in a few clays, and many patients are in a precarious condition.

A Japanese syndieate is soon lo put on a steamship line beiween Japan and some (•oast, iind

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point (.iu S"attle is 'i the Amerie here.

MH't to have line located

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Thomas 21 ii\V. \'a., I'oaiHi unknown man. Tin man eseaj shot iu ho rinht surrendered.

iff Otter, with an to snoot.

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There is a contest between .Justice O. 13. Kiliiore and Justice William Springer of the supreme eourt of Indian Territory over which shall he chief justice of that

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court in placi cently resigned. The Kev. C. Edward versalist church of Ou formerly pastor of the I at Akron. O.. has accepted tl of Lombard university, at

Stewart, wno re-

Nasli of the Uni-

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A menioral to commemorate the spot on which Captain Allies Standish lirst. landed on the mainland of New England has been erected Ht Squantuin, Mass., by the Daughters of the Uevolutionof Massachusetts. the Quincy Historical and Boston societies. The cornerstone was laid by the Hon. Charles Francis Adams.

Captain William H. Uulse and Pilot James Allen of the iron steamboat PerBei'M. which on the evenimr of Aug. ran down the yacht Adelaide, aud caused the death of litburr. W. Iiiinan. Jr.. have been indicted at. New 'S ork. lor uiaiif,laughter iu the second degree by the Richmond county grand jury. They gave

MARKET

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JIIOII, .V)cC'-'?l 00: spring lambs, UOv'. I. .'.'.J veal ealves, tutea) X:5. in 1 ti 11:11 i.

Wheat—-tia^lWe. ('oru--1 .'.jc. Cat1 le—Seiecleti bnlchers, 1 7a fair to medium, f- 15 eoninn/U. K' -inuj :i :J5. I logs—Seii eted and prune butchers, $1 -liii -15 packing, -I1 I -!. common to rough, %.'{ 5o(#4 15. hlieep—.fl UOcJl U0. Lambs—sVKy,

Cliieii^o.

Hogs—Selected butchers, $15 S.jc^l 41) packers, Vnm-i -It). Cattle Poor to clioico steers, ~5(ii&5 -40 others, T6(«i 5 10 cows aud hulls, !rl ^.'575. Sheep —$1 5()^'3 50. lambs, $2 .")0ti§-l 75.

New

Cattle—fil 75(ij,'.) lam us, *i 50©5 00.

II iv. Sheep—j.- 0J(^3 25

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Cheap Excursions to the West, Bountiful harvests are reported from all sections of the west aud north-west, and au exceptionally favorable opportunity ior home-seekers and those desiring change of location is offered by the •e'ies vf ie r-vcTirai'V! Lave been arranged by the No^th-Western Line. Tickets for these excursions, with f-.iv.r.ablc lin.•'.«, "A-H ". on .August 2'Jlh, September 10ih and 24th to points in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan North-western Iowa, Western Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and a large number of other points. For full'information apply TO agents of connecting line*, or address A. H. Waggoner, .T. P. A. 7 Jackton I'lace, Indianapolis, Ind.

Tiie Kooky Jlou*itiiins.

Along the line of the Northern Pacific llaiiroa" abound in large game: Moose, dt'i-i-, O'- ar, elk, montaiu lioi s. can ei br found there. The true sportsman is willing to go there for them. A little i»-ok caUed "Natural Game P- fs«rves," by tae Northern P.-CJPC Kail:ui, ill be tent upon receipt, of four ci-nts in stamps by Charles S. Fte. Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. lott

Indianapolis Division.

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•. raoix leave Cninbridije Cit.v nt-17.20 a. i? O'j ni ior KushviUe, Shelbyvi!s\ "aixl !nter:TIft1iate stations. At' v..:--!ri ltfe «'ity T12.30 AUD 16-35 Mwi m, E. \.

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Ills. He will leave lirooklyn about Nov. 1. WoincM.i scored another victory among the Methodists at Klgin, Ills. The Kock river conference by a vote of 14x3 to decided in favor of the admission of women as delegates to the general conterence. Every prominent minister in the conference voted for the women.

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FORD,

Goieral Manager, Gcaeral Fiist.ger A$-.* i'nTsuuKOir, PENN'A. I nu* ca nls, rates of Faro, hrousrh ticket*, cheeks :ovl further information re to-ili'itr the rnnninar of trains apply toaujf: ,.pi'ul.uf toe ^'.)axuvivu£ua

$500.00 GUARANTEE. FIBSOLUTEL'/ HARMLESS. Witt not injure hands orfafric.

No Washoo.ird needed, can use hard wate* sa.ne as soft. Full Directions on every package. At 8-oz. pack.-.fre for 5 rts. or 6 for as c«s.

Sold by retail frrro rs cvcivwhere. Tj "en tho I four H.-.ncS Points to Nine, Have Your Washing on the Lino."

rtiiimJidEUHUimiiiiiiimiiiiiKiiiflbiiiitaiuiitmimuij:

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