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Buffalo Courier Express from Buffalo, New York • 31

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Buffalo, New York
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31
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4 I i TTl rTl' USTRATri Asdats4Prma4 St New York Surf New Srrkt" PART Nat BUFFALO, N. SUN9AY, OCTOBER 18, 1908. PRICE FIVE Ml spirit of the future, replying te the mis-1 statements ot a far -younger woman THE PATH TO SOME. COMMENT ridually, tn any personal transaction, on a motive so meanly Irrational and dishonest as that which prompted their official action, for the nation, la the who represent the vast. Mrs.

Hum phry Ward has all tn oultar and high dignity of her.uiaetrtoua family, bet N.iLARNED recent arbitrary annexation of Bosnia she Is without that power discovery ad Herzegovina. If one' of them, for COLLEGE WOMEN'S: DAY from all over tho Country and are now a Part, of the National American Woman SuffrigeAssociatioa example, had enjoyed for years the con wrucn made Dr. Arnold of Rugby a noted historian, and Matthew Arnold one of the dlatinguiahed vokce ef prog-res In his see. The Eaxltsa woman trol and use of an estate, adjoining his own, under some agreement which gave impulse plus the suitable influence and action;" and that, finally; "the phenomena of the mind. In actual conditions" "are all either simple or complex states and actions of the material, personal er social Instincts" the study of which Instincts, thus classified, occupies the greater part of the work.

It I have not misunderstood It, thla faintly and roughly outlines the struc Is lost amid the social tendencies of the present The American woman is at home among him no "title of ownership, and there came to him an opportunity for seising the title deeds forcibly, tn violation of the agreement, we should expect that conscience or a sense of shame would An English Suffragette. The Mrs. Park announced one of her THE5UNR1SE Miss" Thorn tiy that Woman has already gone to far she mutt go farther. WHY 'SHFS" AFRAID Realize that jiving her the BaJ-. lot ia only the Symbol of a social Revolution.

A BRITISHFFRAGETTE Confessed that she had never been arrested, though the has spoken from the. Roof of a Cab. 'AHvery "article, which aughite receJvnVlde attention, to contributed to the current Atlantic Monthly by Dr. William H. Allen of the New York of Municipal Research.

By itsvtttl-A NOonl Fund for Efficient rmocfncy--the purpose of the Js aotVnede What -the writer aimio A and doe moat effectively to, first, toa(Mw how Inefficient our democracy is retts practical work-in hw oVmorailxfBjr that Inefficiency l(i, how feebly education and religion are trurgltng against tts so lone as they dd not work to mk tovmBWit efficient; and then he unfold ih remedy, as demonstrated tn lion of the evening, advising the aud DISTINGUISHED WOMEN THEIR LEADERS ience to look intently upon this wonder restrain him from the leisure. Why does neither conscience nor shame have equal Influence over fhe'oonduct of men and if she answered the newspaper ture of Professor March's elaborated theory of the mind. As It stands. It so identifies mind with matter as to de deeoriptlona of siungllh uffrsgetto. int iron 1 or tne piationn ateppea when they are carrying on the business of a state? Of course, It Is because of the fertile Ingenuity with which an 1 '11 1 1 1 he President of Bryn Mawr College, Mrs.

Wolley of Mount HolyoVe Seminary, the Daughter of Sen- -'y. atpr LVxow. imong them. stroy belief In the continued existence of a personal mind after the dissolution of the material body which organized tt It may be questioned, however, L.kcpwiedament of moral principles a tweet-faced, bright- eyed, rosy English girl. Miss Hay CoeteUo ef Oxford, a graduate of Newabaro College, who spek on ISquel Suffrage Among English University Women.

Mia Coetelloe can be dodged by a very tittle shifting of standpoints. But how pitiful an ex hibition of humanity It make I had captured her audience before she started to describe the energetic work College women hsd everything their ful discussion ef th beat means for There ia no conceivable advantage whether the premise of the theory, that the elements of mind and matter are identical in the atom, Is necessary to the subsequent logio of the theory. It the assumption should be only that an own way la Buffalo ywterday; from all furthering the cause of equal suffrage. of Ih English college women. results obtained already from the.pub-lie enlightenment the cltlxen education which the Bureau of Municipal Be search, organised but three years ago in New York, is developing In that city.

The college evening of the 40th. an' that can accrue to a nation from the "I am not really a suffragette, for I Ktporta of tuts Prssldeata. annexing of a resistant population, Dual convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association brought tn a triumphant close a mem The chairman called for reports from ave never been to prtnon. she con-feesed. "but 1 hive stood on the lop of over Ue country they were In attendance at tha meetings held here for the establishment of th College Equal Suffrage League, assembled from fifteen state.

At this meeting the organisa element of mind and an element of mat made hostile and rebellious by the com-. pulsory union. It weakens every ele the Stat presidents, ladlsna, Iowa. a London cab and shouted for the bal orable week In Buffalo and the big audi Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Mary- lot." Then she told of the small way tn which the suffrage movement started ter reside together In' the atom, and that they are necessarily associated in all the fusions by which higher and higher units of each are created, all the torlum of the Central Presbyterian Church was none too large to accommodate alt who wished to hear the college tion was nationalised and Is now a part of the National American Woman Suf land, Massachusetts, Minnesota. Missouri, Mississippi responding.

The een test of some ot these report baa been the English universities and of how ment of strength, politically and militarily, in the state. Compared with the gains of every sort that a country derives from friendly neighbors. Its fruits are of tho grossest folly. And frage Araorlailon. women speak and extend a welcome to It was growing, both among the preeent students and the university graduate.

The call for this council was signed anticipated by addresses at previous meetings, but others covered a sew field. reasoning that, follows might possibly the Reverend Anna Howard Hhaw. She contrasted tho methods of the Eng A study in contracts was afforded by by six of the foremost women, In the College Kqual Suffrage League. All are showing distinct progress In the suf what national pride or glorification can the little group upon the pulpit plat' frage work, it lish girls with those of the militant suf fragettes, saying that aa a rule the cot It minister to, beyond the seeing of a form. Miss Shaw opened the meeting remain valid; and that might leave it possible to fmd reasons for believing that mind arrives at last at an inde-pende: organisation of personality, which will not vanish when the mater representative in a high sense, not only of Amerlcsn college women, but ef the lege girts believed more in quiet than What lew has dons t.

Eleanor Gordon, president, reported and announced as the chairman Mr. national movement for equal right boisterous methods. Maude May Wood Park of Boston, Theso signers are Miss M. Carey graduate of Redcliffe and founder of President Thomas of Bryn Mswr. ial organism to Thomas, rh.D..

LL.D., president of larger splash of color on the map, stamped with the print of the national name? Is there anything more puerile In the history of mankind than the easy excitement of this senseless craving of governments for more dominion, the College Equal Suffrage League, that the most Important work the lews, Bqual Sufrrsg Association hss dons this year is tha prosecution of tha Injunction suit against the city ot Pes Last, hut by no means least on the His final purpose Is tj plead for the great national fund, that would establish a central foundation for the extending and organizing- of similar educational work throughout the country at largo. The simple object of the New York Bureau of Municipal Research has been to make and to keep the public acquainted with the working of things in Its government; to make and keep it attentive to the facts of efficiency or inefficiency in that working, which proves to be the kind of political education that hears the most practical fruits. The aim of the bureau, says Dr. Allen, has been "educative, not detective. Infinitely more Interested In pointing out what Is needed than what is wrong.

It realises that the great problem of democracy is not the control of the officer, but the education of the rttlsen. It began, not by laying down principles of government or discussing Bryn Mawr College, representing Peon Mrs. Park began With a brief history sytvaata; Mary Uarrett of Baltimore. remarkable programme last evening was Miss M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr.

A storm of applause who gave $300,000 to the endowment of Last week I commented slightly on an attempt of the London Nation to ac of the league, tts growth and development and the causes that led up to the formation of the national council yes- Moines. Tha olty refused te allow the women to vote on a tax question. Orace where no proflt but much trouble and Johns Hopkins Medical School when It greeted her as she stepped forward. By count for the extraordinary number of was opened to women students, repre disadvantage to them from It to Inevit request, Miss Thomas set forth some of terdayr It la the purpeee of the leaue, she explained, to work largely through senting Maryland; M. Q.

Wolley. exceptionally distinguished men and Bauantyne wae attorney for the worn- -en. In January the district, eoart made an adverse decision. The ease was ap able the arguments In favor of equal suf Lift. L.H.PL president of Mount women who were Irving, and already fa the college and the college graduate.

frage and she summed them up tn such Holyoke College, representing mous. In the eighth decade, of last She quoted this from the History of pealed to tha Supremo Court and a temporary Injunction wss steered in masterly way that she would almost chusetts; Miss Caroline Lexow of New century 1870-71. The question is an Public Schools by Secretary George H. BOY MAKES convince an unbeliever. She spoke with Tork, daughter of Senator Lexow of March.

At the June term of the Su Martin of the Massachusetts board, of pleasure of tha formation of the Court New Tork. (a recent graduate of Bar education: interesting one, and I shall Ventura to open it for sr little further investigation. 80 far as genius or talent is wakened ell of the College Equal Suffrage Leagrue nard Collegn), representing New Tork; preme Court the verdict ot the district court was reversed and the election set aside. 'While the voters tn town and dis over which she ha been elected to pre ANAIR SHIP Mrs. Herbert Psrsons, wife of Congress side, saying that it was the first publlo man Parsons of New Tork, (chairman Forty-one sew fecal suffrage teafue trict meetings were wrestling with, the question whether girls should be taught st all and were grudgingly giving them ot the Republican county committee), were organised within tho year.

and Inspired or has Its achievements determined, by contemporary Influences, we must surely expect it to be meeting for equal suffrage ever held tn the' United States by college women as men, but by studying the needs of the who Is best remembered as Elsie Clews, Without knowing it, he repro community and Its official acts. It a few crumbs from the boys' table uch and seemed to Indicate that the Warns, of Haass. Th chief thtng.aooempllshed by tho daughter of the New Tork banker snd most susceptible to such influences tn while the more ignorant were derisive would educate democracy In facta about colleges of the United States are no lon a former lecturer on sociology at Cotunr duces one of LUlenthaTs early gliding Machines. the ripening years of life. In other Mains Woman Suffrage Association last year was tho Bald work of Mrs.

Lucy ly asking whsther the girls expected to carry pork to market, that, they ger lu be the homes of loot cause, "like tho English University of Oxford In bia University, representing the District of Columbia, and Miss Florence Oarvtn, daughter of former Governor Oarvtn of wanted to learn arithmetic; and whUe young women who aspired to be' social SAILS ACROSS STREET democracy's acta and methods, democracy's need, and democracy's opportunity." Something of the result achieved to set forth In the following passage: Three years. S1SO.O00. and clentlfto method. Rhode island, representing Rhode I words, if we look back to the date at which, a man of subsequent eminence attained his twentieth year, we may reasonably presume that he wag then entering or passing through the ex Hobsrt' Day, chairman ef tho department of church work In the aatiocai association, during the months ot May, snd Jane. Matthew Arnold's trenchant phrase, but that college women will be ready to bear their part In the stupendous social chsnge of which the demand for woman lsnd.

leader were trimming tho rag ot their ignorance with the passementerie of Constitution and Officers. Jumps from a Sandbank with his Flyer Mrs. Day visited all tho auxiliary ft rage is only the outward symbol, Turveydrop manners. some earnest souls had awakened to-the conviction periences and the current Influence Promptly at 10. o'clock yesterday club, traveled nearly S.0OS mile and Sixty years ago all university studies have aecomBllshtd results surpasslnS all and is nicely carried through the Air.

morning at the Twentieth Century Club, that girls might be more than drudges ilis me of those wee out lined its prosrasuna. poke In eleven eoonUea snd ts cities and towns. which had most effect In preparing him for a notable career. On that presump and all the charmed world of scholarship were a man's world," said she, "In the meeting; of college woman was called er dolls. "Such earnest souls were the irk to order by the chairman pro tern.

Mrs. Be eoarisdag ere these remits that oaleokor wae said tares years ago, "The tiger wtli aerer chaste its strive." are new saying. Washington. D. Oct 17.

Young Maude Wood Pa of Boston. In. old Massachusetts, The Massachusetts Woman Sutrrags tion I have catalogued chronologically nearly a hundred personages1 of latter ers for equal rights and what they ac which women had no share. Now, although only one woman In one thousand gws to college, even in the United America ia not going to be left behind In the race for aeronautic fame. Milton the Reverend Anna Howard Shaw and complished for the higher education- ef Assoclattoa Increased Ua htglslattvs vote -day celebrity, dating them not by their Too could hardly de tin ia clue where the nger mark are ten obvleu." Although assay eh of Bantdpal a4iauntrtton have set vet sen (tedled.

there I hardly aa ob women can hardly be States, Vhere there are more college Miss Alloa Stone BlackwaU being the guels of honor from the national asso Smith has shied his castor Into the ring and bids fair to make the famous continued Mrs. Peck. "In comparison women than In any other country, the birth, but by the twentieth year of their age. The list includes all who were more than 100 per cent over that ot last year, while tho snU-euffrage vote In the Legislature fell oft very eoasideractly. ciation.

Wright brothers look to their laurels. with the date ot the Seneca FaUa con- position of every individual woman In every part of the civilised world. ha A constitution wss adopted and plans uurtng tne recent nights or Orvllie venupn Uow) tne aaies 01 tne opening. mentioned last week's being living and famous In the 70a, with a few. additions.

It has raised tu enrollment to 10,000. It has questioned all the men bars ef the of the first colleges towromen are) wig been changed because this on thou for future work among college. women were discussed. Miss Caroline Lxov niflcant I take them from The Blbilog andth per cent save proved beyond the was the seereUry pro tern, Wright at Port Myer, In the vicinity of Washington, Mrs, Smith one after-, noon took her young son, who to only nine years old, to see the sight. The possibility of question that in intellect Of the former, not one came to the maturity of twenty years before 1816.

I begin the chronology, therefore, at that raphy of the Higher Education of Women, comolled by the Association of Col At 110 In the afternoon, another ex stacle to efadeacr aad'hosesty that ha aot beea eaeoaatsred and overoam by light The real-estate kurau Uiat eladod. graft charge I bctag reorganised to prevent either graft er a hundred par seat, front tor lead said to city at private sale. While tts sua, ooaaliung of three isvesttgatoni is MOT and to the nase of IMS, can at Itself to laeoeeiderahle edeeatioaal work, the bar gang its eosettven, act by whs Its ova staff aoampUsbes, but by what the city's staff of 70.000, sad through than there to no that the accumulated ecutlve session took place, Mrs. Park learning of our great past and of car legiate Alumnae; Oberlln, 1833; Antloch, time. again presiding.

Fifteen states boy had no opportunity to examine tha construction of the Wright but he came home tilled with ambi last Legislature and mere than SOS of tho candidates for th next as to how thy stand on suffrage. Tho tn dorse- roent of woman suffrage has been received from mors than US trads-untons, I Mrs. Maud CL StockweU. president of the Minnesota, Woman SuCrag Association, reportod as follows Mlaneoots suffragists bad bills, Introduced the still greater future to the Intellectual laoerltancVof women, Men have 1853: Kansas, 184: Massachusetts Institute ot Technology, snd Tsssar, represented In the college suffrage work. New Tork, Massachusetts, Pennsylva Cartyle, Keats.

De Qutncey and Bank entered their twentieth year In In IMS: Thiers, Heine, Lyell. admitted women Into tntaUsctnal com Northwestern. Boston and California nia, Maryland, th District ot Columbia, tion to rival the feat of the celebrated aviator. -He new little of airships er radeshln- and the. opinions of eduemted universities, ISO; Michigan.

In 1870: Rhode Island, Minnesota Michigan, the city population of 4.M6,eoO. are eaesM Sohubert, IHT; Comte in Mil: Balsas Syracuse, 1171; Cornell and Wesleyan, aeroplanae, and be knew well that his women can no longer be Ignored by sd' ucaiaA mail. wisoonsm, Illinois, California snd la 173: Wllesly and in jns. braska all having delegates at the v. iiwiHiv mow tmvt impm ssethsr would frown upon aiy attempt is Such a dangerous direottoa; Bo he rn' reel, objection tsvwdtnen suf SSJlZ tn ICt; Maosnhr.MsHktn-xsS lserMes.ld TZmptZZo i Cavw.

Farregut. In ltfl; Victor Hugo, litteal refer, are grrtag way to ssetheds by Kossuth, In 1821; Emerson, Dumas, la The other state sending re-j the Ltglsiaturo which were lost by a got secretly to work to construct some ports were Southern California, Washington, Nebraska and Iowa. There were much MnsJIer majority than any preoed-Ing bills asking for tho tub mission of sn amendment to the constitution which 7S.MS employes mart toil ue uni id: Hawthorne. George Band. Cobden.

thing whereby he could fly over the fence, na he expresses It, With the sol exception of OtxrHe, no one of these colleges wss opert to women before the organised movement tqr woman's suffrage and Oberlln itself was, not open until after the first woman's rights speakers had begun their, public about wast they de when Uy de It, aboatf also reports from the following college Beaconsneld, in 1834; Mesiinl In 18; frgns far deeper tht any argument Giving women the ballot Is the visible sign symbol of a stupendous social, revolution. 'And before It we are afraid. Women are one half of the world; but UU1I a century ago, the world of muslo and painting snd sculpture and litera Hs mads requisition open the lath' Mill In 1821; Longfellow, Whlttler, Gen chapters: Bryn Mawr, university of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Unl- pile of a neighboring carpsntsr and eral Lee, Oeribaldi. Agassis, in 1837; lectures. Within the first quarter cen- procured from his mother's store of verilty of Wisconsin, Barnard College, Peel In 1821; Lincoln, Gladstone, Dar llnen sufficient sheeting te answer his tury after the movement was organised What tbty speed when they sprad it ia clear, iogtble form.

Tanunaay officiate. wha Interested, ssske excellent collaborator. The eoauutoor el soeosnts, for ysan, through reform sad Tommaoy aemislatrktloiia sake, a whitewashing body tost otaiieaed sad gloased ever wasteful and corrupt act, hT bacons, 'as a diraot ronilt of the Bureau' work, a great education! University of Nebraska and University of Chicago ture and sum science was purpose. Thin he hunted ground on- women were admitted to the colleges win, George Eliot Poe, Dr. a man's world.

The werld of trades and Officers, were elected as follows: Pres Holmes, Walt Whitman, Mendelssohn, Chopin, In 18M; Asa Gray, Schumann, til he found aa old soap box that would that I have mentioned, and doubtless to fill tho specification ot the aerial others not Included in the list vehicle that be had conceived. I "Such facts as these help us to under- ident, Miss M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr College; vice presidents, De Musset, In 1830; Thackeray, John For several days thereafter he worked stand the service which the leaders of professions and work of alt kinds wss a world. Women lived a twilight life, a half Ufe apart, and looked out Snd- saw men aa shadows walking. Now women havewon the right to higher education and to economic Inde Bright, Llsrt, in 1831; Browning, Dick hard and secretly at his machine, and "the suffrage movement performed for Miss Sophonlsa P.

Breckenrldge, assistant denn of Junior women's college at the, University of Chicago; Mr, 8. ens. In 1832; Wagner, Verdi. Bessemer, at length brought forth an aeroplane college women. It, therefore, seems fit in 1833; Millet in 1832; Bismarck.

Trol Woodward, edvlser to women at the ting that college women as such should make public recognition of their debt granting full suffrage to women. Congressional A round-table eonferenoe 'on methods and mn wag conducted, after which Miss Emma M. Gillette of Washington, an attorney-ai-law, presented the congressional which was, In part, as follows: At svmy Cesgreu of tke UsIUd State sloe lie), th wen have appiared Vear emmitttM it CensmM ts for ad ameae-mm th Oentiltutlea preiertlag wBa la their right te vet. Steves raeeit hv ha id, tv ef which were sy a najeruy ef cemaitt. At th heariag last Mtiek, Stostor Owes Oklshosis vu th prtaelpet sahr seem the- islklarr cemmiua th lieuse tad mm Asee U.

Shsw Wtor lb BeeaU eemsMttee mi mfrm Mr. 0thn Chassua Catt ef Htm. Yec. pretideot ef the iBtaraaUeaal Sugr Ajm-claUw, sppwreS bar hath OMiaUtta. resert va Biade by (hr eaatwltta.

si-thMgh It earsMtly srgeS that he gletB nn if Srr. A Jakn the )u4ielary eemaltt I uHrs for lope, in 1835; Charlotte Bronte In 1834 which if It does hot achieve the feat of flying' over the fence can at least enable him to perform soma remarkable feats in gliding- from the ten-foot bank of the University ot Wisconsin; Miss Fannie W. McLean -of Berkeley, Cat; Mrs. It was with this idea of responsibility for Turgenieff in 1838; Buskin, pendence. The right to become cltlsens of the state Is the next and Inevitable consequence of education and work outside the home.

Ws have gone so far we must go further. Why are we afraid? Maude Wood Park of Boston. secretary. Miss Caroline Lexow of New Klngsley, in 1839; Spencer, Tyndall, General Sherman, la 140; Helmbolts. Vlrchow.

In 1841; Pasteur, Wallace, benefits received thst the first branch of the league was organised. The college women are they who have reaped in fullest measure the harvest of the past Those of who have Joined thla new ward around his horns snd carry him tor a distance hanging seven feet or eight feet In midair. agency. A Theory of Mind, Just published by Professor John Lewis Mat ot Union College, may prove to be one of the books that turn great currents of thought into a new course. What reception It will have In the critical circles of the psychologists will be something Interesting; to watch.

The theory 11 grounded on the doctrine known' as Monism, whloh identifies mind with matter, elementally; but Professor March has worked vu the Identification with an elaborateness of logicality and consistency not given to it heretofore. York; treasurer. Dr. Msrgaret Long, Denver, CoL General Grant, Matthew Arnold, In The remarkable feature of this boy's It Is the next step forward on the path toward the sunrise and the sun to rising over a new heaven Snd a new earth." lS42f Kenan In 1843; brd Kelvin, machine is that It to constructed in association realise that the best way to How the League started. Mrs.

Maud May Wood Park of Bos every detail on Identically the same plan pay our debt to the noble women who George W. Curtis, In 1844; Huxley, Woolner, In 1845; Lister, 1847; Tolstoi, rt ,1,1 1 a as the glider made by the celebrated toiled and suffered, wno 00 re naicuie, ton, a graduate of RadoUffe College, Insult snd privation for us Is In our Ibsen, Rosetti. Meredith. 1848; Gen-, scientist Otto Lillenthal, of Germany, founded the College Equal Suffrage turn to sow the seed or future League six yeara her associates tn eral Sheridan In 1851: Professor Crookes sae eitpese trt se BMttar rather who' fifteen years ago attracted the attention of th world by his feats in V. eluding Mrs.

Rufus It was an 1 IHhtir. Th wpr have ttrihiits hi In 1852; William Morris in 1854; Mark addreu by Mis Susan B. Anthony that: gLm' imitating the soaring of a bird with the 1 mMtM llii ViaA bllfTt. Dean of Chicago University, His conception of. tha mind resolve it Twain in 1856i 8wlnbume, HoweUs, 1 first Inspired Mrs.

Psrk to, undertake Th atiMeth asa4oMat sHsemgb eaneS a AERONAUTS ARE DROWNED Milling German Balloon found at Ses, but there was no Sign of th Aviators. Yarmouth, Oct. 17. The German balloon Hergesell has been picked 1867; Hardy. Daudet, Tschaikovsky, in original lM.r now hun In tha in miroauuJHB ni uwaci, bin Into elements which are Identical with the elements of matter.

That ia to say, this work, which ha grown sUU by I cwnn. ha oed ye. In Ih. .1. n.111 ha A (lltMBlh JB4BIat, glvlag IB ttW 1800; Koch, Grieg, II.

James, In 1863; National Museum at Washington, and sopnronisoa r. tirecaennage, m. right. weuM be esly eee (srtaw nt that TAiinf -Milton tne junior women uuwia ui Edison, Bell, In 1867; Saint Gaudens In I the atom, or whatever may be the numbers thousand of graduates and, Smith, who ha never been to ue 1 university 01 uuntm primal unit of matter. Is also the primal undergraduate In colleges throughout 1868.

and nrobablr never heard of ed no Uttle amusement by reading all the country. up in- the North There was no sign- passing down tbisUst it to notice-. In tfas Afternoon. "Thsitmrsndjuinaosxim New Tork led la prayer ot tho open T.ivuVK.t -hi followed aisistw tn the tor Miss Breckenrldge's -tHles. nut the Mrs.

Park, A.R.-Radollflre, was grad of the two aeronauts; wm are believed ti have perished. footsteps of that aeronaut latter said that she wasn't sshamed of all her titles, and that her experience unit of mind. The main postulates of "the theory are these: That the Impulse In aa atom to fuse with certain other atoms is the primary operation of what appears In the ultimate organisations ing of the afternoon meeting. Miss The machine consists of two vanes or uated wltt highest honors from that college In tt, having previously won optima (gold medalist) st Saint Ag The Hergesell was found floating-, I wings covering an area of twenty-odd abe that an Increasing proportion of the youths who approached maturity in the successive years rose afterward to celebrity in science and invention; that the fields of art gave fame to another increasing number, though the rate of had been thst when a woman did good work in a college the faculty was very ready to put another hood over her and nes, Albany. bait deflated, 100 miles northwest of Heligoland by the Norwegian steamer Kaddod, and brought in here.

Mrs. Park, declares that th College of mind as Instincts, likes, desires, ln cllnations. Interests, eta That the pro; give her the degree she bad earned. square feet. These wings are fastened to a body frame, which the boy made from the soap box and are securely braced by guy ropes to the lower pert of the frame to Insure the rigidity of the Equal Buff rage League will bring before all college women their duty to increase is much less; that much the The balloon races that were started Miss Breckenrtdge said that she was net prepared to make an argumentative cess of the fusion, of simple units to form units of higher complexity to ono greater number of those who rose to address showing the thousands of suf In which the individuality of the com tgk a positive stand In favor of woman suffrage and that to press this important question upon the attention of pre-fesilonal women throughout the United flclent reasons why women should vote.

ponent units to submerged, and the for she felt that such action presuppos at Berlin on Sunday and Monday of this week have been characterised by a series of accidents and mishaps, but the Hergesell Is the only airship of th SO thst started to end It flight with death to it pilots. Lieutenant Foertsch high jenown "politics or war came to manhood 'before 1860; and that literature continued to be quite even handed in Its distribution through the whole wings against the upward air pressure. He fastens the body frame tightly up against his armpits, takes a run of a few feet, leaps confidently from the ten-foot bank and glides airily over to the middle of the adjacent roadway. product is 'not an aggregation, but a Xate M. Gordon In the chair.

Dr. Rosalie Slaughter Morton, delegated representative from the American Bo- clety for Canitary and Moral Frophy-Uxl. was Introduced and spoke for half Sn hoar upon Social Prophylaxis. It was difficult subject for woman to handle and Dr. Morton realising this, steered clear 'of either pnidlsanesa or coarseness.

The Reverend Aoj a Car- lin Spsneer followed her, discussing tho white slave raffia that has grown up -between this country end ports, snd declared that a report Is be-Ing prepared for submission to the tn. migration authorities at Washington. revealing the great money Interest la traffic, sufficient to buy which hss bought "people high In the government of several countries." ed ignorance on the part of her audi' ence. Anti-suffrage she classified as 1 State Is the primary object of the society under the new national constitution, stone wail of prejudice. It was not her new unit, having qualities and powers 0 Its own.

That there are four such true fusions in the building of matter period to I860, and no longer. and his assistant purpose to preach the doctrine of equal In telling the story of the founding of At about the ending of the first third of the "nineteenth century, the great Chaminaf.e, foremost living and mind, namely, (1) that of the atom female Composer, visits us. (if it to composed of simpler units); (2) th league, Mr. Park ald: "After hearing Mis Anthony ipeak I cam to realise what her life had been, the heroism of her service not for herself but for stimulation ot all activity in the world MARRIED HIS STEP-SISTER rights, but rather to mske confession of her creed. One of the younger Recruits.

Miss Caroline Lexow of Nyack. a graduate of Barnard and president of New York, Oct, 17 (Sun Special). which came from railway Invention (soon followed by the discoveries which She wss 40, with eight Children; he the sex. and so for the whole human Mme. Ceclle Louise Stephanie Chamin-ade-CarboneL better known to a good brought electricity Into practical use) the New Tork branch or tne college that of the molecule, composed of atoms; (2) that in which molecules are united to form on, one side the crystal, on another side the cell and the unicellular plants and animals; (4) that which produces multicellular plants and animals.

That "the essence of life' opened an immense enlargement of the "wss eighteen Say he wsi intoxicated. Ktw York Sub pecil te Th Expre. many thousands of Americans as Chs- guffng xcag-oe, was next Introduced race. When I felt that dearly I felt the obligation of service for the cause for which Mis Anthony and her noble 1 associates bad sacrificed so much and scientific flejd. Of twenty scientific mlnaae, got into uu uum tha audience with her airl on tho French liner La Savoto to make and with the tribute I promised myself then that I would a comparatively oner, eoncen lour celebrities tn the list only four came to manhood-prior to 1810.

At the same time, the political reactions that cams paid to the women who more than half try to make more women see these Wllkes-Barre, Claiming that while he was lntoxlated he 'was coerced by his father into wedding his step-sistor by marriage, a woman ot Dr. Morton led in the after discussion and one of the other ipeakeiVwas Mrs, Florence alley of New Tork. secretary ot the Consumers' League, who has Just arrived. Mrs, Charlotte Oilman's speech on the subject was one ot the most eloquent and forceful of the afternoon and the meeting was adjourned to allqw tho women to attend the reception at tho after the French Revolution were end which appears when the cell ia formed, "Is an impulse which cannot be perfectly a that it "is a constant 'hunger a constant setting free of 40, who in the mother of eight children. the principal dues of the countries.

Though a good many music critics credit Mme. Chsmlnade with being th best living female composer, if not the only on-t)f-4he first rank, she has sever croweef'the AOantic before. ed, and those movements which dem things a I have seen them. College women should realise their debt to the pioneers who have made our education and competence poeaible. They should be made to feel the obligation of their W'llllom Loss, an elgl teen year-ok.

boy a eentnry ago sowed the seeds which had yielded so rich a harvest for tthe women of today. "Sixty years ago such a meeting as tiis would have been impossible," she said, "for years ago there were no college women." Contrasting the conditions then and now, sb said that the of Haxleton told such a etoi to Judge Ferris todsy that asistant District At, Lopportunlties and to understand that ocratised most of the government of Western Europe, and then accomplished long needed unifications of nation ality, filled the history of the middle decades of the century; while our own torney John Danda was ordered to have the marriage annulled, if the -boy's "I4ntendedTo do It long before this," she said this afternoon, "but different thhn Kavn prevented me. the illness itory Is proved to be correct or death of persons dear to me, the 1 The boy wss brought before Judge force a constant struggle." That "as jftn as the unit approaches its goal It 1 gives off force and experiences pleas-I ure; as often aa It loses ground it ab-1 sorbs force and (eels displeasure or 1 pain." That' we have "In the cell the elementary forms of all the senses of Ithe fully developed animal." But that "impulses are quite blind until sensa- country passed througa the crisis ot the conflict with slavery. These circum Ferris on a charge of desertion and new council of tne league offered its service tn a humble way, feeling Its Inexperience and Its youth, but brought tts mite in loving gratitude to the women of IMS. "who tolled that me might non-support, preferred by hi wife.

The stances afforded exceptional opporta great age of my mower ana sum things." Mme. Chaminedu is 47 years old. She Is perhaps a trifle under the medium heleht- Her figure in very alight, her boy said that hi father. Theodore Loss, nity for distinction In politics and war. was married for the third time last reap the harvest" and sufficiently account for the showing tn those fields, where the exceptional April snd that a daughter of this third wife Is the woman be married.

He said iter nair is snort. shoulders eloping. opportunity was closed in the decade of a pleasant brown shade and Just ln- never had any desire to marry the nun nas maae inera aeuniie; ana no I impulse can be associated Vita any object except through memory" which to one of the ways to pay that debt is to fight (he battle for suffrage now In he quarter of the field la which it Is unwon." Affairs of the Morning, I Business was hurried through at a high rate of peed yenterday at tha morning session of the Nstlonal American Suffrage Association. ins. Shaw, the president, and Mis Blackwell, the recording secretary, were at the college omen's conference, so the presiding officer at the T.M.CA.

building was Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton, tho treasurer, Miss Jean Gordon of Louisiana acting as secretary. A conference on Increase of member-hlp was- conducted by-Miss' Laura Oregg of Kansan, bo has made a study of organisation work, many members of the association taking part ia a Ma- Twentieth Century Club. Mass Meeting this Afternoon, This afternoon at o'clock In lb Star Theater there win be an Industrial mass meeting under the ausplcee of the suf-frage association, at which the principal speakers will be Miss Jean M. Gor don of Loustana, Mrs.

Harriet Stanton Blatch of giew York, and Mrs. Florenoa -Keltey of New Tork. the Reverend An- na II. Shaw, presiding. Evening Meetings st Central Church.

Be large has been the attendance at the evening meetings of the National Am erica "Voman Suffrage AsHOrUtiesj that larger quarter than Perkins Halt have been found Beginning tomorrow the remaining evening sneet- ing during the eonvenltaii will be btd 1 In the Central Presbyterian hurch 4 woman and would never have done so the "70a, or thereabout. But why th dined to curl. higher prises of fame in literature have The roipo8er. who upeaxs no tsngiun. "the power to revive sensations after the ctual sensations ara east." That been so scantily won.

as they seem to wwugm bad he known what he was doing. He was intoxicated, he claims, when th wedding took place last May. Judg Ferrl directed tke discharge of the about that same vY" have since "conaciousnees, and Indeed all thought. Professor of English. The next speaker.

Mrs. Frances Squire Potter, professor ot English in the University of Minnesota, started the applause when she opened her witty and convincing addres 1 by saying: "A spectacle has lately presented itself to the Kn gl ih-epeaxln world which doubtless has been made the text of more than one speech in this I mean the spectacle of Jujia Ward Howe unbowed by the burden of tour-scors resist (4 fuj) accord. wiy the 1 mad nn nt wimMnlMHMi anMnn period, is still to bo explained. done very nine onguuu nw "Tou sec," she said, "I tost myhua-hnmt i im nearly two years ago boy. 1 It is, not probable thst the Emperor I u.

f-haminado'a husband was'M. so called really satisfactions and dls- taUsfactfcma) and other satisfactions snd That "an' im- I Irerr kind ef seek sad Job prtotiaf the The Kxyrm tlx knt trie at of Austria and those of hi court and Carbon rl. who the chief owner ef Tee Oeaulaia Ptna." lb lewwt sneaa aim kook-Useiag setag the large muc selling house la Mar ministry who control the Austrian gov Pulte plua such a memory la thereafter ssd slsik ataaatt. seilles. Bha has no cjuiorsa.

tanas. ernment would be wilUpa; to act lnd deslre.H That aa "instinct" ia "the.

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About Buffalo Courier Express Archive

Pages Available:
785,215
Years Available:
1846-1963