The Western Reserve of Ohio and some of its pioneers, places and women's clubs, Vol. II, Part 20

Author: Rose, Martha Emily (Parmelee) l834-
Publication date: 1914
Publisher: [Cleveland, Press of Euclid Print. Co.]
Number of Pages: 600


USA > Ohio > The Western Reserve of Ohio and some of its pioneers, places and women's clubs, Vol. II > Part 20


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38


book from Miss Wilson, "Evening Thoughts," and another from Miss Ketung; so you see I am well supplied even if ten thousand miles from my own dear ones at home.


Mr. Hobart told me about the picture you sent, but I will get it in the spring; it will lie in Shanghai all winter. I will have the pleasure of anticipation; it will be nice to have it.


We go to Taft's for dinner at half past twelve and to the Gamewell's this evening at half past six; so we will make a day of it. Mrs. Hobart has gone to a Chinese feast now. I will write no more, but wait and see what we will do the rest of the day.


Four o'clock. Have had dinner. This was the bill of fare: Soup, fish, roast duck, potatoes, green peas, green corn, jelly, plum pudding, a dish made of candied grapes with sponge cake covered with whipped cream, candies, etc.


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After dinner we went into the study where there were two tubs full of shavings. In these were hid a great many non- sensical things and toys. Each one of us was blindfolded in turn and searched among the shavings until he found a pack- age. I had a stick of candy done up in a great many wrappings and a big gong such as the Chinese use.


Each one was blindfolded in turn, and searched in the shavings until he found a package.


After this we played games with the children. Then we went down to the swamp and had a ride on the ice. The men drove the ice-boats and it was good sport.


It is rather warm today and the ice is beginning to melt.


It has been a very pleasant Christmas. I thought of you a good deal. You have not commenced your Christmas and are fast asleep in bed yet.


Saturday morning. Now I must finish this and get it off today.


We went to dinner to Mrs. Gamewell's last evening. There were just ten people there.


This was our menu: Soup, turkey, potatoes, corn scal- loped oysters, peach pickles, roast beef with chestnuts, maca- roni with cheese; then plum pudding, mince pie, oranges, pears, grapes and candies, lastly coffee.


It was all served beautifully. On each plate was a lovely card with our names.


In the center of the table was a dish of white chrysanthe- mums.


After dinner we had prayers, then music and some read- ings from "Samantha Among the Brethren." It is a very funny book. Then more music, more readings and then went home about 10 o'clock. It was indeed very pleasant, nothing to mar the pleasure of the day.


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I went down in the afternoon to see the boys; they were all happy and thanked me many times for the pleasant even- ing we had given them.


This evening we are invited to the Ladies' Home to dinner, so we will make a week of it.


Today Dr. Curtis with Mr. Young, Miss Norton and Dr. Sinclair of the Presbyterian Mission are going to walk around on the wall for fifteen miles. They start from the mission and reach here in time for dinner and reach the mission for supper.


It is a lovely day for the walk, not very cold. It is always dry in winter. We have no rain nor snow and it is always sunshiny.


In about two months I will expect a letter about your Christmas. It takes two weeks longer for a letter to come in the winter as it has to come by carrier from Shanghai instead of by steamer.


The Hobarts will be going home in about three months. They have been here more than ten years. It will be a good thing for them to have a rest and change.


Well, my good friends, I must close. Write me as often as possible.


I will send this letter to Brother Theodore Davis at Flint, Michigan. He will send it to Sister Mary Williams at the Social Settlement at Bissell House, Grand Rapids, Mich., and she will send it to Delia.


Now, one more good-bye with a God bless you and warm- est love from


HATTIE DAVIS.


[In seven years Hattie Davis returned with a Miss Cushing who was very low with tuberculosis. She found herself ill with the same disease and after a short visit in Denver, Colo- rado, went to Longmont, and died there within a year. She introduced the kindergarten method in the schools of Peking, and collected from the compound enough to pay its expenses, for she said that it was the only way to reach the Chinese boys of which she was the teacher and for whom she fought the opium habit with great success .- Editor.]


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The Western Reserve of Ohio and Some of


COLLEGES ON THE WESTERN RESERVE


From the report of the Ohio Centennial celebration of 1903, President W. O. Thompson says of some of the colleges on the Western Reserve, "Baldwin University and German Wallace College of Berea, Cuyahoga County, owes its existence to Hon. John Baldwin, who gave the North Ohio Conference, M. E. church, the land, buildings and endowments.


Mr. Baldwin came to Berea a young man without property and located upon land that proved very valuable, owing to the stone quarries which were suitable for grind-stones. A sem- inary from Norwalk was removed to Berea, for Mr. Baldwin offered fifty acres of land including some of the grindstone quarries and promised to erect a building 72 x 36 ft. and have it ready by September, 1845. He also sold 50 lots to be used as an endowment. The quarries made it possible to erect. the buildings of stone. It remains a co-educational institution. In 1858 a German department was added to meet the needs of the German Methodists. It was named German Wallace College in honor of Hon. James Wallace who gave the first building.


Lake Erie College and Seminary was founded in 1847, first at Willoughby on the plan of Mount Holyoke. Its build- ings were destroyed by fire in 1856. A majority of one of the trustees located it in Painesville. They had secured 14 acres of ground a half mile west of the town. The domestic work of the family to be performed by the pupils, all surplus in- come to be cast into the treasury. Bible study was prominent. The education was to be as thorough as any college, nearly four thousand students have enrolled at this college.


Hiram College was founded by the Disciples in 1850. Dr. Alexander Campbell had founded Bethany College at Bethany,


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West Virginia. It was the only college of that denomination. At a third meeting at Ravenna, there were some rival locations; on the thirteenth ballot Hiram was selected. They believed the Bible had been obscured by theological speculations and debates, and advised a simple life based on the Scriptures.


Dr. B. A. Hinsdale said it was first to provide a sound scientific and literary education and to temper and sweeten such education with moral and Scriptural knowledge and to educate young men for the ministry. It is for both sexes and has a conservatory of music. It is located at Hiram, Portage County, Ohio. President Garfield and Almeda Booth were among its Alumni.


Buchtel College, Akron, Ohio, was founded by the Uni- versalists in 1867. It was named in honor of Hon. John R. Buchtel, whose gift made the college possible. Horace Greeley made the principal address at the laying of the corner stone, July 4, 1871. It has fifty-two perpetual scholarships and six endowed professorships. A fire in 1889 destroyed its buildings but six new ones have replaced the old and it is well equipped for instruction and has recently been sold to Akron for a Municipal College.


Ashland University, Ashland County, was founded by the German Baptist, or Dunkard Church. Commercial, prepara- tory, normal, collegiate and musical departments are provided. The faculty numbers fourteen. The students about two hundred.


GENERAL STATEMENT


The problem of co-education has had its solution in Ohio. The first attempt was made at Oberlin and has never been abandoned. Oberlin's experience proved that woman was not a foe to be feared. The Ohio colleges stand as a protest against


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intolerance of every kind. Ohio believes in her children; she has worked for them and built colleges and schools for them, and this spirit has made the alumnus a person of power and adaptability as well as a high-minded citizen. When civil war came the call was heard in every college; it emptied the class rooms. They were also loyal to the locality. The college meant an uplift to the community and whenever the college changed its place there was a decline in the character of the commun- ity. Dr. W. T. Harris said, "Ohio has been the scene of ex- periment, the battle ground for many reforms. The alumni have gone to other places to stand for religion and morality." Three hundred institutions have been organized in Ohio since 1851. It is said there are more papers and magazines and more letters sent on the Western Reserve than in any other equal section in the United States.


Of President Mckinley it was said he drew together the North and the South, effecting a reunited country. When a boy he was converted and attended the weekly prayer meet- ings in the Methodist Church. He always sat in a front seat and took part. His sister remonstrated with him and said, "Why not sit with young people?" He replied, "It does me good to sit where I do and I shall continue to sit there." Presi- dent Mckinley was born at Niles, but lived most of his life in Poland, Ashtabula County, before he entered Alleghany Col- lege at Meadville. We can well claim for him a residence on the Western Reserve, although Canton, Stark County, is not included in it.


A VISIT TO CANAAN MOUNTAIN


When on the cars from Richland Springs to Boston, Mr. Rose gave his wife a ticket and eighty dollars, saying, "You ought to go now to Toronto to the annual meeting of the Asso-


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ciation for the Advancement of Women, but do as you please." "She replied, "It is yet two weeks to the convention. I know no one but Lillian Massey. I think I had better go from Boston." He left the car and she thought of something else to say and followed him to the door. The car was moving and when again in her seat she could not find the small pocket- book that contained the money. She looked everywhere. A lady on the opposite side of the aisle asked, "Have you lost some- thing?" "Yes, all my money, but I have my ticket." "What is that by the leg of the seat?" "Oh, that is my money. The roll was so large I could not close my porte-monnaie." Soon the con- ductor went through the car saying, "Canaan! Canaan!" She said to him, "Is this Canaan, Connecticut?" "No, this is Canaan, New York. Do you want to go to Canaan, Connecti- cut?" "Yes, I have wanted to go there for twenty years." "You must get off at the second stop from here. It is about 37 miles away."


She pondered: Now is my opportunity; for once when we were going from New York to Boston, to spend the holidays with our two sons at college there I wanted to stop at Bridge- port and go and see Canaan Mountain and my husband said, "These hills are all alike; just imagine one of them is Canaan mountain." "How ridiculous," she replied.


Soon the conductor called out, "All aboard for Canaan, Connecticut." She grabbed her grip-sack and umbrella and staggered toward the door laughing to herself. Is it possible I shall now see Canaan Mountain that my mother and grand- mother spoke of so often. As he helped her down from the car she said, "Where is the train?" "On the other side of the depot. It is waiting for you." "Waiting for me? Oh, watch and see if I get into the car. I do not want to be left here."


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He waited. She entered the coach nearest the engine and sat down in a seat by a young lady and leaned her head on the next seat and laughed immoderately. Soon they called out the town, "Lee." Oh, I must see it; my neighbors in Oberlin came from Lee. When they called Stockbridge she could see no town. She asked the young lady, who replied, "The railroad runs in a valley. The town is two miles from the depot." Then they called "Lenox." Her grandfather, Captain William Wells, was buried there. "I must see Lenox." The young lady said : "You take an omnibus to Lenox; it is two and one-half miles from the depot and now I leave you. This is Great Barrington." A number of girls came in from the factories. It was near five o'clock and almost dark. The conductor came to take their tickets and she told him she wished to get off at Canaan. "Which Canaan? There is North Canaan, South Canaan, and Canaan Falls." She said, "I did not know there was more than one. I will get off at the first one." "That is North Canaan." It seemed a long way, but when she alighted she said, "Which is the best hotel?" He said, "There is but one. There it is across the rail-road tracks." She hurried across the tracks, walked up several steps of a porch and opened a door into a long hall. There was a recess in it where a man sat at his desk. She asked if he was the land- lord, to which he nodded an affirmative. "Can I have supper and stay until Monday? I am on my way to Boston, where my sons are at college, and have stopped here to see the native place of my mother. I would like to visit the cemetery and see Canaan Mountain." "Supper is not served after six-thirty. It is now seven-thirty," he replied. "Will you give me a room and take to it a cup of tea and some bread and butter?" He said, "Step into the parlor and I will soon show you to a room."


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The parlor had a stove, which gave a feeble light and several ladies were seated there. She told them her reasons for coming to Canaan. No one said a word and one by one they left the room. The landlord came with a tray of food and a small lamp. She followed him up a flight of stairs through a long hall and he opened the door into a pretty little room with all white fur .. nishings, white bedstead, wash-stand, table, chairs, and cur- tains of dotted white muslin at the windows. The door had no key, so she placed the wash-stand in front of it and ate her supper. She could see nothing from her windows, but the next morning when the sun shone in she found they opened on a road to the barn. At the breakfast table, at seven o'clock. there were but two men. It was Sunday morning. She asked the landlord if any of the ladies would go with me to the ceme- tery, "No, you can take no one. I have given you a pony cart, and my son of twelve will act as driver." She looked at the outfit as it stood by the porch door and a well-dressed boy touched his cap and bade her "Good morning." She asked the landlord if she could also go to Goshen Center, her father's native place. "That is twelve miles from here, it would cost you four dollars extra." She took out a five dollar bill and said, "Let us go to Goshen." "You must then take a lunch for yourself, my son, and the pony." He brought out two tin boxes and a bag of oats. They rode through North Canaan, a summer resort for Californians, who had spent their youth here. There were two beautiful modern-built churches and some fine looking residences. The old cemetery had but few grave stones. The one nearest the entrance was that of Clar- inda Ensign. This was her cousin. After much search, the boy said, "A Mr. Ensign lives in that house on the hill." "We will go and see him." It was a story and a half house with


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a side entrance. A lady came to the door and as Mrs. Rose began to tell of her father and mother who visited there in 1833, she said, "Wait, I will call my husband." He soon came, and said, "I remember it very well. I was a boy then. You had better go to Henry Norton of Goshen Centre. He and his father have written the records of most of the prominent fam- ilies of the county. One was sent to you in 1843." They then rode toward Goshen and stopped on a hill to eat their lunch, which was of doughnuts, chicken sandwiches, and apples, also to give oats to the pony. At the bottom of the hill, which leads to Goshen Centre, there was a stream of water where horses were drinking, and she asked the men with them which house was Henry Norton's. "The third house on the left-hand side." It was a two-story, white house with green shutters, like those in Tallmadge, a colony from Litchfield county. Mrs. Norton greeted her at the door and listened to her story. She was just home from church, and said her husband would soon be here-some business detained him. He came, and said, "We have the records of many families. You and I have the same great grandmother, Mary Stanly. I will show you the church and 'Whist Pond' near your father's home, but first I want you to see my large collection of corals and shells. I got them in Nassau, and other places. My brother's son is a professor at Harvard College. I am glad that your son, William Kent, took that course. It is a great help to a man in his life work." They went to the church and she took down the names of pew- holders hung in the vestibule. Not one was a Parmelee or Stan- ly. She saw the roofs of buildings near to "Whist Pond." It was three miles there, and the boy said, "We cannot go so far and get home before dark." They bade the Nortons good- bye and went toward Canaan. Soon a man was seen standing


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in the road and waving his hands. The boy said, "That is Mr. Ensign." He said, "I was so surprised this morning to meet you, I did not say all I wanted to, but my wife will now go with you to Grassy Hills Cemetery, where Rev. Charles Prentice is buried, and his wife and son." Mrs. Ensign and son, a young man, waved their hands to us and drove rapidly towards Canaan Falls. The cemetery is on a hill near by and has many fine monuments. The graves of the Prentice family were enclosed by an iron fence. The head-stone of the Rev. Chas. Prentice stated that he was for thirty years the pastor of South Canaan Presbyterian Church and a graduate of Yale College in its second year. His successor was his son, Rev. Charles Prentice, Jr., who married a Miss Ensign. "It was here we wished to have removed the grave of his first wife, Clarinda Ensign," she said also, "The Ensigns of Cleveland often came here. I will show you their graves and on our return we can go a shorter route, by three miles, and it will lead us to South Canaan near Mr. Prentice's church and par- sonage which still stand; also you will pass by Canaan Moun- tain, which is opposite the Hobson home. He bought it of Elijah Holcomb's sister, a Mrs. Boardman." They saw the church of Rev. Prentice. It is very like the one in Goshen and the one in Tallmadge; also saw the parsonage. It faced a meadow on a side street. They bade good-bye to Mrs. Ensign and son; later sent them an illustrated booklet-Gray's Elegy of the Country Graveyard. When in front of the Hobson house a lady came to the door to call off a dog that barked furiously. When she heard our story she said, "That hill opposite has been called Canaan Mountain. It is the highest elevation of these hills. It has wintergreen and huckleberries on it, and is a favorite resort of children." The carriage-house in front


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of it with its cupola reached half way up its height. She took some stones as souvenirs and leaves from old apple trees; both of these were there fifty years ago when her mother was there in 1813. It was now quite dark and they rode silently up the hill to North Canaan. The ladies were in the parlor to hear the result of her ride. One said, "There is a Mrs. Holcomb up-stairs who is ninety years old. She is deaf and almost blind." But Mrs. Rose had come to see places, not people. The next morning at the depot there were many young people going away to various schools. One bought a ticket to Lenox where Captain William Wells lived with his four daughters. Hannah Wells, his grand-daughter, had then married Elijah Holcomb. The omnibus to Lenox, from the depot, had but one other pas- senger, a colored woman. Mrs. Rose said to her, "I wonder if you knew Dr. Adams' family of Stockbridge? His wife was Eliza Prentice, my cousin." "I think I do. I washed for them for more than twenty years. Dr. Adams and Mrs. Adams went to St. Paul, Minn., to live with their married daughter, Mrs. Savage, who was regent of the first D. A. R. of Minnesota." At Lenox hotel she left her satchel at the desk and went first to the cemetery. The grave of Jonathan Ed- wards was covered with a marble slab on pedestals like a table. It had a quaint epitaph like all the others of the 17th cen- tury. She wrote them down and they would now be inserted here only they have been mislaid. She saw the Stokes' summer home. Lenox is on a hill surrounded by a deep ravine. It is separated from many hills which were then covered with bril- liant tints of autumn foliage. A floral festival was held the day previous and many vehicles stood at the road-side with wheels covered with flowers and vines. In the parlor of the hotel ladies were discussing the etiquette of some New Yorkers. One, who accepted an invitation to dinner when her husband was out of town. What could we do with her? So, even the highest circles have their troubles. At two p. m. she took the train to Pittsfield, found her trunk at the Boston depot and with an expense of ten dollars had seen not only Canaan Moun- tain, but Goshen Centre, where Rev. Lyman Beecher had a school to prepare young men for the ministry and where the members of the D. A. R. have marked many graves of the sol- diers of the War of the Revolution.


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CLEVELAND SOROSIS OFFICIAL ORGANIZATION 1893-94


President MRS. WILLIAM G. ROSE Vice-Presidents


1st-Mrs. N. Coe Stewart 3rd-Mrs. C. E. Wyman


2nd-Mrs. H. E. Hammond 4th-Mrs. L. A. Benton 5th-Mrs. S. E. Stockwell Executive Board Mrs. J. M. P. Phelps, Chairman


Mrs. T. D. Crocker


Mrs. C. W. Loomis


Mrs. C. C. Burnett


Mrs. J. H. Paine


Mrs. E. J. Blandin


Mrs. Mary B. Ingham


Mrs. Arthur E. Hatch Mrs. W. S. Kerruish


Mrs. A. T. Anderson


The President, Recording and Corresponding Secretaries, and Treasurer, ex-officio members.


Recording Secretary MRS. S. P. CHURCHILL Corresponding Secretary MRS. GEORGE A. ROBERTSON Treasurer


MRS. C. S. SELOVER


Auditor MRS. M. A. REILLY


Chairmen of Departments and Standing Committees


Suffrage. Mrs. S. M. Perkins


Philanthropy Mrs. C. E. Wyman Science. Mrs. A. D. Davidson and Mrs. E. M. Avery Physical Culture and Dress Reform


Mrs. M. J. Caton Ceramic Art. Mrs. B. D. Babcock


Business Women Mrs. Mary B. Ingham Drama. Mrs. Anna P. Tucker


Home Making as a Profession Mrs. N. Coe Stewart


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Literature. Mrs. Sidney H. Short


Temperance.


Mrs. D. W. Gage


Parliamentary Law Mrs. H. E. Hammond


House and Home Mrs. J. M. P. Phelps


Music.


. Mrs. S. P. Churchill


Art.


Miss Georgia Norton


Annual and Printing Mrs. James H. Paine


Custodians


Mrs. C. H. Seymour, Chairman; Mrs. X. X. Crumb, Mrs. Arthur E. Hatch, Mrs. Rose M. Anderson, Mrs. J. M. Wilcox, Mrs. E. W. Doan, Mrs. C. E. Wyman, Mrs. J. K. Hord, Mrs. J. H. Paine, Mrs. N. Coe Stewart, Mrs. C. S. Selover, Mrs. W. H. Barrett, Mrs. M. A. Reilley, Mrs. C. E. Tillinghast.


CLEVELAND SOROSIS


OFFICIAL ORGANIZATION 1894-95


President MRS. N. COE STEWART Vice-Presidents


1st-Mrs. C. E. Wyman 2nd-Mrs. H. E. Hammond 3rd-Mrs. J. M. P. Phelps Executive Board Mrs. J. K. Hord, Chairman


Mrs. J. H. Paine


Mrs. Frank Houghton


Mrs. A. B. Foster


Mrs. J. H. Thomas


Mrs. Rose M. Anderson


Mrs. M. C. Hickman


Mrs. E. W. Doan


Mrs. S. P. Churchill


Mrs. E. J. Blandin Mrs. Geo. A. Robertson


The President, Recording and Corresponding Secrtaries and Treasurer, ex-officio members. Recording Secretary MRS. M. J. CATON


Corresponding Secretary MRS. W. G. ROSE


Treasurer MRS. C. S. SELOVER


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Auditor MRS. M. A. REILLY


Chairmen of Departments and Standing Committees


Suffrage. Mrs. S. M. Perkins


Philanthropy .


. Mrs. H. L. Tobien


Science. Mrs. S. M. Crossley


Physical Culture Mrs. Anna P. Tucker


Business Women


Mrs. Mary B. Ingham


Drama . Mrs. Lee Caldwell


Education


Mrs. H. L. Ambler


Home Making as a Profession


Mrs. N. Coe Stewart


Literature. Mrs. Sidney H. Short


Temperance.


. Mrs. H. E. Hammond


Parliamentary Law


Mrs. Rose M. Anderson


House and Home


. Mrs. X. X. Crum


Music. Mrs. John Eisenman


Art. Mrs. B. F. Taylor


Annual and Printing Mrs. James H. Paine


Custodians


Mrs. Arthur E. Hatch, Chairman; Mrs. M. A. Reilly, Mrs. J. M. Wilcox, Mrs. John F. Sipe, Mrs. Walter C. Ong, Mrs. Charles J. Seabrook, Mrs. R. E. Burdick, Mrs. Charles Gill, Mrs. J. L. Malone, Mrs. James W. Chesnut, Miss Gay Stewart.


LIST OF MEMBERS


Austen, Mrs. Walter, 55 Arlington Street Adams, Mrs. Arthur, 150 Cedar Avenue


Anderson, Mrs. A. T., 702 E. Prospect Street Atkinson, Mrs. T. H., Lake View Flats Arthur, Mrs. P. M., 1340 Euclid Avenue Avery, Mrs. E. M., 567 Woodland Hills Avenue Arter, Mrs. F. A., 39 Sibley Street Ambler, Mrs. H. L., 1088 E. Madison Avenue Anderson, Mrs. Rose M., 51 Fourth Avenue Alliand, Mrs. M., 984 Pearl Street


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Baker, Mrs. Dr., 344 Franklin Avenue Baker, Mrs. G. W., Edgewood Place Barrett, Mrs. H. M., 1115 Euclid Avenue Blandin, Mrs. E. J., 180 Kennard Street Benton, Mrs. L. A., 16 Chestnut Street Browne, Mrs. Myron G., 1304 Willson Avenue Brown, Miss Ida, 268 Sibley Street Barrett, Mrs., 909 S. Logan Avenue Boggs, Dr. Jessie, 1220 Euclid Avenue Bangs, Mrs. F. C., 85 Seymour Avenue Babcock, Mrs. B. D., American House Barber, Mrs. G. M., 421 Sibley Street Brightman, Mrs. Deborah, 74 Bush Street Bender, Mrs. Charles, 387 Pearl Street Barnes, Mrs. Sophia A., 630 Castle Avenue Boone, Mrs. H. G., 32 Hough Avenue Bradley, Mrs. Walter H., 450 Kennard Street Burrows, Mrs. S. W., 49 Hough Avenue Burrows, Mrs. F. A., 102 Bond Street Burrows, Mrs. R. M., 102 Crawford Road Brewer, Mrs. N. C., 803 Detroit Road Brewer, Miss Nellie, 803 Detroit Road Beckwith, Mrs. Jennie, 81 Clinton Street Brainard, Mrs. Bertha, 221 Clinton Street Brown, Mrs. E. H., 332 Jefferson Street Body, Mrs. Richard, 241 Perry Street Bowler, Mrs. Wm., 1097 Prospect Street Burdick, Mrs. R. E., 968 E. Madison Avenue Bragg, Mrs. C. P., 75 Ansel Avenue Burnett, Mrs. C. C., 801 Euclid Avenue Bruot, Miss Marie L., 51 Fourth Avenue




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