The blue book of Iowa women; a history of contemporary women;, Part 19

Author: Reeves, Winona Evans, 1871- ed
Publication date: 1914
Publisher: [Mexico, Mo., Press of the Missouri Printing and Publishing Company]
Number of Pages: 316


USA > Iowa > The blue book of Iowa women; a history of contemporary women; > Part 19


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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286


The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MISS FLORENCE ELIZABETH WARD


Miss Florence Elizabeth Ward, head of the kinder- garten department, Iowa State Teachers' College, was born in Wisconsin and is the daughter of Lemuel J. Ward and Elizabeth Herrington. She is a graduate of the Chicago Kindergarten College in the class of 1903. She is one of the foremost kindergartners in this coun- try. When the American Civic Association sent a com- mission to Great Britain and Europe to study primary schools, Miss Ward was appointed on the commission. In 1912 she went to Rome to study the Montessori method first hand. Since her return she has written a book, "Ten Practical Talks on the Montessori Method for Home, Kindergarten and Primary School," which was published by the MacMillan Co. of New York, and is considered one of the clearest expositions of the Montessori method yet publishd. She has delivered many lectures on primary and kindergarten subjects. child study, etc., before chautauquas, and teachers' as- sociations, as well as before city audiences. She is a member of the Congregational church, is a member of the Propagation Committee of the International Kin- dergarten Union, member of the educational com- mittee of the I. F. W. C., of the educational com- mittee of the Iowa Society, D. A. R., is chairman of the educational committee, Iowa Congress of Mothers, chairman of the Iowa Department of school patrons of the National Educational Association, member of the educational committee of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. She is a member of the Waterloo Woman's Club and is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. She has contributed to many school journals and other school publications.


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MRS. ELBERT W. ROCKWOOD


Laura Clarke Rockwood, writer and lecturer, was born in Iowa City, which is still her home. She is a daughter of Charles Franklin Clarke and Julia Brown. Her father is a direct descendant of a brother of Ben- jamin Franklin. She is a graduate of the State Uni- versity of Iowa, with the degrees B. Ph. and M. A .; a member of Phi Beta Kappa. She took post graduate work at Yale, Stoute Institute, and in Leipzig Uni- versity, and was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. On March 21, 1894, she was married to Dr. Elbert W. Rockwood, professor of chemistry and toxicology of the State Univeristy of Iowa. They have two children, -Paul Redd Rockwood, and Alan Clarke Rockwood. She is a member of the Congregational church, is President of the N. N. Club, a local organization, ac- tive in the college sorority, Phi Beta Kappa, and presi- dent of the King's Daughters. She is special advisor of the household economics committee of the I. F. W. C., and is chairman of the state social service committee of King's Daughters. She is the author of "Food Preparation and its Relation to the Develop- ment of Efficient Personality in the Home," "Dignified Drudgery," and has contributed numerous articles on household topics to leading magazines and periodicals. She believes in the justice of equal suffrage but does not believe it is expedient. She is fond of society, music, and of everything out of doors. She is one of the exceptionally well educated women of Iowa, hav- ing had unusual advantages in this country and abroad, and having spent her life in the atmosphere of a university town.


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MRS. LEONARD MATLESS


Josephine Ingalls Matless was born in Keokuk, but in early childhood moved with her parents to Ft. Mad- ison, where she lived until her marriage returning then to Keokuk which is her home. Her father, Charles John Ingalls, was descended from Edmund Ingalls, who came to Lynn, Mass., from Lincolnshire, Eng., in 1629. In early manhood Charles J. Ingalls was a pro- fessor of music in Boston where he was a director of choral societies and orchestras. Her mother was Lo- vinna Saxe, granddaughter of Jacob Saxe, of Saxe- Coburg, a hero of the Revolutionary war. Mrs. Matless received her early education in the schools of Ft. Madison. She studied vocal and instrumental music in Chicago and dramatic art from one of the leading teachers of Boston. For several years she taught school in Ft. Madison, at the same time keep- ing up her musical studies. On Jany. 9, 1894, she was married to Leonard Matless, of Keokuk, secretary of the Huiskamp Bros, Co. manufacturers of shoes. He is the son of Leonard and Matilda Gobel Matless, natives of England who came to Keokuk in 1853, and belongs to one of the oldest families in Keokuk. They have two children. Leonard Ingalls Matless and Ruth Ingalls Matless. Among Mrs. Matless' distinguished relatives are John J. Ingalls, the statesman and John G. Saxe the poet, lecturer and journalist, however, "Greatness is not an affair of station or birth or abil- ity; its secret is service for the common good. The inventors, the statesmen, the thinkers, the discoverers, the writers whose names are among the immortals made their talents count for humanity's good." She fills a peculiar niche in Keokuk having a specially


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


helpful influence in the club, social and religious life of the young people. For several years she was su .. perintendent of the Girls' Missionary society of the First Westminster Presbyterian church, to which she belongs. She is one of the assistant superintendents of the Bible school and has charge of all the special programs given during the year in the school. She teaches a class of young girls and supervises the music of the school. For several years she has been sponsor of the student's auxiliary of the Monday Music club and has planned their yearly programs. When a committee was appointed by a mass meeting of citizens to plan for the establishment of supervised public playgrounds, Mrs. Matless was the only woman appointed on the committee, being the representative of the Civic League. She is deeply interested in the welfare of the public schools and is secretary of the Parent Teachers' Association. In 1913, when because of a ward feeling which had been aroused on the question of the erection of public school buildings in Keokuk, a school bond election failed to carry and it seemed impossible to secure public consent for the erection of much needed school buildings, Mrs. Mat- less with remarkable generalship secured the neces- sary petition signatures and organized and command- ed the campaign that was conducted in support of the bond issue, which was successfully carried. Mrs. Matless sang in the Presbyterian choir for many years, was president of the Woman's Home Missionary so- ciety and has contributed to missionary magazines. She is a member of the board of directors of the Y. W. C. A., a member of the Civic League, Current Events Club, Country Club, and a director of the Mon- day Music club. She has written a number of cantattas


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


and plays which have been presented in Keokuk and elsewhere to audiences appreciative of their excellence but unconscious of their origin. Among her most prized possessions is a Cremona violin made in 1690 by Andreas Amati, a violin which has been played by the great artists, in many capitals of Europe. It is one of the few violins of that period in this country. Another possession is a fine old English harp which is a family heirloom.


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MRS. J. C. SANDERS


Laura Snider Sanders is doing a unique service for this state, in aiding her husband in his work of mak- ing men over, of changing the lives and the view-point of the hundreds of men whom the laws of Iowa give into his charge because they have violated those laws. She is the wife of the warden of the Iowa penitenti- ary at Ft. Madison who was the first man to try the honor system in a penitentiary. It had been tried to a limited degree in the reformatories and juvenile courts. That the plan has justified itself is proven by the prisoners who almost never break their faith with the warden; and by the records of the men who have left the prison by pardon or expiration of sentence ; of these by far the larger per cent are leading straight and honorable lives. They have gone out with a dif- ferent conception of duty and citizenship than they had before meeting warden Sanders and his wife.


Prison experts from all parts of the U. S. and some from abroad come to study warden Sanders' methods, and so prisoners everywhere are benefitting from his ideas and ideals. He began by making the prison itself more sanitary. He asked his wife to look into the housekeeping and to the food given the prisoners. Under her supervision many changes were made, the men now eat supper in the dining room instead of a bite in their hand taken to the cell. All that soap and water can do for the place was ordered and now it is clean and wholesome. She planned meals of good and well-cooked food. The kitchen dietary daily will excel any we ever scanned for so large a number of persons.


Fifty men were interviewed and found stolid and


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


stupid and wellnigh forgetting how to speak and think; they were gloomy and had many of them lost their identity. He ordered the men called by their names. To reawaken the minds of many of the men, who were somewhat competent, he organized a debat- ing and literary society which meets regularly each week and has proven a great factor in keeping up the mental life of the prisoners. A regular Lyceum Iec- ture course was established, this Iowa prison being the first penal institution in the world to have a full lecture course of platform speakers and entertainers. Saturday afternoon after the labor hours of the week are over the men are allowed a game of base ball. This alone goes a long way in the matter of good dis- cipline as only those who have a clean record for the week are entitled to the privilege of the yard games.


Mrs. Sanders is a firm believer in the open policy, as it is called, at the Iowa prison. It came about in this way: One day the warden was in the hospital and said to an inmate there who had a pretty bad record, "What would you do, James, if I gave you a job outside the walls?" "I'd run like hell, warden," This was a disappointing reply, to the man who had wished for months that he dared try putting men on their honor outside the walls. At the end of the week the prisoner left the hospital, but asked the privilege of speaking to the warden, and said, "I have been thinking over the answer that I gave you a few days ago, warden; of course I know you did not mean to give me a job outside, but I want to tell you now, that if you trusted me enough to give me a job out- side the walls, and without a guard, I'll cut off my right hand before I'll do you dirt, in trying to run away." So he experimented with this man, and let


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


him take the cow to a pasture two miles away, every day, and to care for the lawn around the warden's house. The man never for a moment broke faith. This led to the full persuasion to give other prisoners the same chance. Picking his men carefully he ap- plied the honor system to one and another until now on many a day there are from 150 to 200 men work- ing outside the walls with guards or overseers, who go unarmed. The prisoners cultivate 700 acres of land. All of this has been brought about in six years.


The warden and his wife have thus earned the con- fidence of the State Board of Control, and of the thinking citizens of the state, and the respect and de- votion of the prisoners in their care.


Mrs. Sanders was born in Kilbourne City, Wis., near the dells of the Wisconsin river, the daughter of Henry Randolph and Eliza Christy Snider. Since her marriage she has liven in Iowa. In the church and social life of every city, where they have liven until coming to the warden's position, she has been a real factor and a great help. As a family they are church people, being communicants of the Presbyterian church in Ft. Madison. She is a prominent member of the P. E. O. sisterhood, and a past matron of the Eastern Star order; besides at other times identified with the Federated Woman's Clubs of the state. Her inspiration, encouragement and faith have entered into all the work which has been done by that very unusual man, her husband.


294


The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MRS. FRANK WALCOTT WEBSTER


Mrs. Louise Rhine Webster was born in Hartford, lowa, daughter of Joshua Wilson Rhine and Malinda Wilson. Her grandfather, John Rhine, was one of Washington's life guards. She was educated in the Indianola schools, at Ackworth Academy and in Drake University. For several years she taught in the public schools of Des Moines. On March 31, 1891 she was married in Des Moines to Frank Walcott Webster, a descendant of Henry Walcott, through Wm. Bradford to the Rev. John Walcott, colonial governor of Connecticut. They have three children, Frank Rhine Walcott Webster, Louise Walcott Web- ster, and Theodore Walcott Webster. Mrs. Webster belongs to the Disciples' church, University Place, to the Des Moines Women's Club, a member of the board of management and chairman of the art committee, to Abigail Adams Chapter D. A. R., of which she has been vice-regent and secretary. She organ- ized the Beacon Hill Chapter, Children of the Ameri- can Revolution, having fifty members and was the president two years. She has served as chairman of state D. A. R. committees, is a member of the Mississ- ippi Valley Historical Society, Des Moines Musical Association, Unity Circle, Equal Suffrage League, was president of the Des Moines Federation of Women's Clubs, 1913-14. She is now chairman of the school of methods for the Iowa Suffrage Association and has made many addresses in the state along this line. She has contributed to periodicals and magazines, for some time being a department editor. She is the author of many verses which have been published, some of which have been set to music. She is a woman of much ability and many talents.


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MRS. GRACE WILBUR TROUT


Mrs. Grace Wilbur Trout, the woman who is said to have done more to bring equal suffrage to Illinois than any other woman in that state, was born in Iowa, edu- cated in the schools of Iowa and lived here until after her marriage. Her public work having been for the greater part done since moving to Chicago, her name is associated with the activities of Illinois women. She was born in Maquoketa and attended the public schools there. She was married in Maquoketa to George W. Trout and lived there for several years after their marriage. She is the mother of three sons, the youngest of whom died in 1912, at the age of twenty-one. A number of years ago she made a study of Mormonism, in its religious, social and political phases and as a result of that study wrote a book "A Mormon Wife." She is a lecturer of marked ability and has lectured in eight different states on the chautauqua platform and before clubs and city au- diences. Her best known lectures are Suffrage from an American Woman's Standpoint and The English Novel as a Social Protest. She is state president of the Illinois Equal Suffrage Association and led the campaign in Springfield which brought equal suffrage to Illinois in 1913. She is president of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Ashland Club of Chicago, a member of the West End Woman's Club, of the Chicago Woman's Club, of the Chicago chapter D. A. R., and was president of the Chicago Political Equality League 1911-12. Her home is at 434 Forest Ave, 'Oak Park, Chicago.


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


MISS JULIA E. OFFICER


Julia E. Officer, musician, was born in Council Bluffs, the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Mills Pusey Officer, who came to Iowa in 1856, both descend- ed from pioneer Pennsylvania families. She was graduated from the college for women at Rockford, Ill., with the degree B. A. She was also graduated from the musical department of that college with the degree B. M. She took post-graduate work in music in Boston and Chicago. She has appeared as concert pianist in many cities. She was a teacher of piano in Chicago, Omaha and Council Bluffs, having also been pipe organist in prominent churches of these cities. During her residence in Chicago she was a member of the Apollo Musical Club. During the Trans- Mississippi Exposition in Omaha, she was manager of the musical features of the exposition, and of the musical festival. For three years she was director of the choir in the First Presbyterian church of Council Bluffs. She is interetsed in athletics for boys and girls. She was prominent in promoting public super- vised playgrounds. At her own expense she brought a number of celebrated speakers to lecture on the sub- ject. She has made a valuable collection of historical pictures of pioneer days of Council Bluffs, which she presented to the public library. One is a picture of Abraham Lincoln in 1859 on his visit to Council Bluffs, when he determined that that city should be the eastern terminus of the U. P. R. R. She is a char- ter member of the first literary woman's club of Coun- cil Bluffs, president of the first woman's musical club of Omaha and Council Bluffs.


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The Blue Book of Iowa Women


REV. MARION MURDOCH


Marion Murdock, Unitarian minister, was born in Granaville, Iowa, Oct. 9, 1853. She is the daughter of Samuel and Eliza Pach Murdock, Iowa pioneers. She received her classical education in the Boston Uni- versity. She studied for the ministry at the Mead- ville Theological school, from which she was gradu- ated with the degree B. D. She took post-graduate


work at the Oxford University. For five years she was minister of the Unitarian church at Humboldt and exerted a marked influence on the schools and social life of that town. For six years she was pastor of a church in Cleveland, O. At the end of her ministry in Cleveland she became a supply and missionary minis- ter, in that capacity she has visited all parts of the United States. She spent a year in Europe studying art, and has been an art and literature leader and teacher in clubs and classes in various cities. She is a writer of both prose and poetry and has contributed to many periodicals. She is president of the League of Women in the Ministry, is a member of the Drama League of America. She was one of the speakers at the Parliament of Religions held in Chicago during the World's Columbian Exposition, the subject of her address was "What Did Phoebe Do?" and was pub- lished in Dr. Barrow's book on the parliament. She is an arts and crafts worker and is a specialist in bird study. Her home is at 9 Warland Str., Cambridge, Mass.


INDEX


Page


Page


Dedication


5 Miss Elizabeth W. Dunlap 57


Preface -


7 Mrs. Ed. E. Egan -


58


Mrs. Geo. W. Clarke


9 Miss Alice French -


59


Mrs. W. L. Harding


10 Mrs. Hazen I. Sawyer - 60


Mrs. A. J. Barkley


11 Mrs. F. S. Burberry - 61


62


Mrs. Helen R. Andrew 14 Mrs. Geo. H. France 63


· Mrs. Alice Bird Babb 15 Mrs. D. A. Collier 65


, Dr. Margaret Clark 17 Mrs. Chauncey P. Colegrove


67


Mrs. Matilda A. Arp 18 Mrs. Helen M. Comstock


68


Mrs. Lucius Andrew -


19 Mrs. Julia Ellen Rogers - 69


Mrs. David C. Brockman


20 Mrs. Geo. W. Delaplain 70


Mrs. Drayton W. Bushnell 21 Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt


71


Mrs. W. E. Blake 23 Mrs. A. H. Fortune


72


Dr. Kate Stevens Harpel 24 Miss Susan Glaspell


73


Mrs. Annie T. Wittenmyer 25 Miss Ruthana Paxson -


74


Mrs. E. F. Brockway -


26 Miss Harriet Solomon 76


77


Mrs. Addie B. Billington 28


Miss Jennie Coulter


78


Mrs. William A. Brownell 29 Mrs. Hiram J. Chittenden


79


Mrs. Johnathan P. Dolliver 30 Miss Emma Kate Corkhill 80


Mrs. Randolph S. Beall


Mrs. A. E. Connable


81


Mrs. Edward R. Burkhalter 35


Mrs. John H. Cole


84


Mrs. John A. Berry 36


Mrs. John Butler 37


Mrs. Julia Chapin Grinnell 86


88


Miss Flora Dunlap 39


Mrs. F. F. Faville 89


Mrs. Belle Hanson 90


Mrs. Dell P. Glazier 91


Mrs. E. D. Chassill 93


Mrs. Geo. P. Grinnell 94


Mrs. Wm. E. Stewart 95


Miss Anne B. Davis 46 Dr. Jennie Grist 96


Mrs. James S. Bellamy - 48


Miss Margaret Gay Dolliver 49


Mrs. Julia Clark Hallam 98


Mrs. Thomas Goss - 99


Dr. Ella R. Gilmour - 100


Miss Josephine Babcock 52 Mrs. A. D. Howard 101


Mrs. Lillian West Brown


Buck - 53


Mrs. Edward L. Butler 54


Mrs. I. A. Sawyer - 104 -


Mrs. Horace Barnes 55


Mrs. Maria Purdy Peck 105


Mrs. W. H. Baily


56


Mrs. A. S. Hazleton - 107


82


Mrs. Roger N. Cresap


83


Dr. Carrie B. Collier


85


Mrs. Eugene S. Baker 38


Mrs. Chas. P. Frantz


Mrs. Dixie C. Gebhardt 41


Miss Florence Brinkman - 42


Mrs. Margaret Warner Mor- ley 43


Mrs. W. D. Evans 44


Mrs. D. B. Hamill 97


Mrs. A. R. Dewey - 50


Miss M. Margaret Baker 51


Mrs. Frederic P. Hartsook 102 Mrs. F. M. Hopkins 103


Mrs. Cynthia W. Alden


13 Mrs. Eleanor Hoyt Brainard


Miss Eleanor Brown 27 Mrs. Victor G. Coe


Miss Helen Manville Hen- shaw 32


Mrs. D. N. Cooley


Page


Mrs. E. W. Gardner


108


Mrs. Mary H. S. Johnston 170


Mrs. Eugene Henley -


109 Mrs. Samuel Younker -


171


Miss Florence Armstrong 110 Mrs. L. F. Andrews -


172


Miss Nannie P. Fulton -


112 Miss Mary Osmond -


173


Mrs. Sherman I. Pool - 175


Mrs. Mary T. Watts 115


Miss Harriet Lake 118


Mrs. Elizabeth S. Norris


119


Mrs. Charles E. Perkins


121


Mrs. Charles A. Gibbs


123


Mrs. William Logan


124


Mrs. W. H. Cowles 182


Mrs. W. R. Law


127


Mrs. Howard Tedford -


184


Mrs. B. B. Griffith


128


Mrs. Clara R. Titus 185


Mrs. Henry J. Howe


129


Mrs. Mary B. Price 187


Mrs. Henry Goss 130


Miss Maisy B. Schreiner 131


Rev. Eleanor Gordon 132


Mrs. Susie M. B. Healey


134


Mrs. J. J. Seerley - 190


Miss Nellie V. Walker - 191


Mrs. H. L. Waterman - 19:


Mrs. Geo. H. Johnson 137


138


Mrs. Geo. D. Rand


195


Mrs. Roger S. Galer


140


Miss Nann Clark Barr 198


Rev. Effie McCollum Jones


142


Mrs. James B. Diver


143


Mrs. Albert Myron Price


201


Mrs. E. J. Keller -


147


Mrs. George Harpel


148


149


ton 203


Miss Edith Prouty 204


Mrs. Frank Price 206


Mrs. J. B. Morrison -


153


Mrs. Francis D. Reid


207


Mrs. Max Mayer


155


Miss Grace Roberts


208


Mrs. G. B. McIntosh


156


Mrs. Effie H. Rogers 209


Mrs. Belle A. Mansfield


157


Mrs. Geo. W. Randle


211


Mrs. Thomas Metcalf


159


Dr. Alice Turner 212


Mrs. Arthur W. Mann -


160


Mrs. Julla B. Mckibben


161


Mrs. Alice S. Miller -


162


Mrs. Samuel K. Stephenson 215


Mrs. Anson Marsten -


163


Mrs. T. D. Stockman -


217


Mrs. La Verne Noyes


164 Miss May Rogers -


-


218


Mrs. Ola B. Miller


167


Miss Katherine H. Scott 220


Mrs. Walter McHenry 168


Mrs. Alta H. Sullivan 221


Mrs. Geo. W. Needles - 169


Mrs. H. B. Scott


222


Miss Margaret Preble - 188 Miss Emily Calkins Steb- bins - 189


Mrs. J. G. Hutchison


135


Mrs. H. R. Howell 136


Mrs. Jane B. Ringland - 194


Mrs. H. E. Jewell


141


Miss Stella M. Porter 199


Mrs. L. F. Parker 200


Miss Annie E. Packer 202 Mrs. Chas. Wilson Pinker-


Mrs. Charles W. Mullan


Miss S. Elizabeth Matheney


151


Mrs. Dorothy C. Ketcham


152


179 Mrs. Benj. F. Shambaugh 180 Mrs. Ada Langworthy Col- lier 181


Mrs. Nora Babbitt Harsh 113


Mrs. Adaline M. Payne - 178


Miss Cora Ellen Porter


Mrs. F. M. Hubbell -


126 Mrs. Fred Townsend 183


Mrs. James B. Howell


Page


Mrs. E. E. Sherman 213


Mrs. Geo. P. Sanford 214


Page


Mrs. Prince E. Sawyer


223


Mrs. Jacob B. Stern


224


Mrs. Henry A. Schlick - 224


Miss Emma Schwenker - 226


Mrs. Theodore P. Shontz 227


Mrs. Eleanor J. Hawk - 229


Mrs. J. L. Sawyers 230


Mrs. F. May Tuttle


Miss Ida Van Hon


232 Mrs. James Callanan 272


Mrs. O. R. Yaeger 233 Rev. Mary A. Safford 273


Mrs. J. M. Earle 234


Mrs. Clara P. Sheldon 235


Miss Lottie E. Granger 275


Mrs. Austin Adams - 277


Mrs. G. W. Sturdivant -


Mrs. W. G. Blood - -


239


Mrs. Harriett A. Ketchem 280


Miss Gulielma Zollinger 241 Mrs. Amella Jenks Bloomer 181 Mrs. Frank Travers 242 Mrs. Margaret McD. Stan- ton - - 282


Mrs. Albert C. Zaiser 243


Mrs. George A. Young


244


Mrs. Wm. Oglesby Griffith 283


Mrs. Rachel J. Wilson Al- bright 284


247 Mrs. Elizabeth Martin - 285


Miss Florence Elizabeth Ward 286


Mrs. Elbert W. Rockwood 287 Mrs. Leonard Matless - 288 Mrs. J. C. Sanders 291


Mrs. Frank Walcott Web-


Mrs. William S. Ivins - 256 ster - 294


Mrs. Drusilla Allen Stod- dard -


- 258


Mrs. Annice Baldwin Tracy 259


Mrs. Joseph J. Ayres - 260


Mrs. Catharine Beattle Cox 262 Mrs. Geo. Erskine KII-


bourne 264


Mrs. S. F. Prouty - 267


Mrs. J. K. Macomber 268


Mrs. James G. Berryhill 269


Miss Carrie Harrison - 270


231 Mrs. Myron D. Smith 271


Mrs. Cate Gilbert Wells 278


Mrs. Roma Wheeler Woods 245


Mrs. Thomas S. Wells -


246


Miss Mamie E. Weller -


Mrs. Francis E. Whitley 248


Mrs. S. O. Thomas 250


Mrs. Horace M. Towner 251


Mrs. F. P. Webber 252


Mrs. Helen Lusk Evans -


253


Miss Elizabeth G. Ivins - 255


Mrs. Grace Wilbur Trout 295 Miss Julla Officer - 296 Rev. Marion Murdock - 297 -


Page


Mrs. Rebecca H. S. Pollard 236


238


Mrs. Ada E. Worth 274


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