Women of Ohio; a record of their achievements in the history of the state, Volume IV, Part 17

Author: Neely, Ruth, ed; Ohio Newspaper Women's Association
Publication date: 1900
Publisher: [Springfield, Ill.] S. J. Clarke Publishing Company
Number of Pages: 316


USA > Ohio > Women of Ohio; a record of their achievements in the history of the state, Volume IV > Part 17


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Governor George White in 1934 appointed Dr. Peirce the only woman member of the Ohio relief commission and said, "I consider her an outstanding leader in women's activities in the state. At the time I appointed her I found she had the support of a remarkable num- ber of women's groups. As a member of the commission, she has brought an able and experienced point of view and has worked in excellent harmony with the other members," while General Frank D. Henderson, executive director of the commission, wrote of Dr. Peirce: "She has an alert mind, quick to grasp problems and details. She has excellent busi- ness judgment and a sense of social responsibility, which eminently qualify her for the position." It was in 1934 that Dr. Peirce was also made a member of the Ohio Citizens Library Commission. She was a trustee of the Ohio Public Health Association from 1918 to 1928, and trustee of the Ohio Mental Hygiene Association from 1931 to 1933. She filled the position of chairman of child welfare of the Ohio Congress of Parents and Teachers in 1917-1918 and she was organizer and the first


1505


WOMEN OF OHIO


president of the Osteopathic Women's National Association from 1920 until 1922. She is in touch with the trend of modern progressive thought in connection with the uplift of the individual and the advancement of public standards and without invidious distinction Dr. Josephine L. Peirce may well be called one of Ohio's most prominent, esteemed and honored women.


1506


WOMEN OF OHIO


IONIA C. TWITCHELL


IONIA C. TWITCHELL, osteopathic physician, who for nineteen years successfully engaged in practice in Morristown, Tennessee, is now living at Brimfield, Portage County. She still practices to some extent in the area between Kent and Akron and is also serving as justice of the peace, an office which has at various times been filled by other members of her family. Born at Brimfield, Dr. Twitchell is a daughter of Morris and Viola A. (Ross) Chapman. One of her great-great-great-great- grandfathers served for twenty years as justice of the peace, according to early records, while Constant Chapman, one of her ancestors in direct line, was a Revolutionary War soldier and was buried in the local ceme- tery. Her father, Morris Chapman, a native of Ohio, owned a farm in Portage County but followed a kind of legal business and was a justice of the peace for many years, his long incumbency in the office proving the efficiency and loyalty with which he served. His death occurred when he had reached the age of seventy-two, and his wife, who was born in Portage County, passed away at the advanced age of eighty- eight.


Dr. Twitchell attended the grade and high school of her home locality and afterward entered the American School of Osteopathy at Kirksville, Missouri, where she won the degree of Doctor of Osteopathy in 1914. She began practice in Morristown, Tennessee, where she con- tinued for nineteen years, being there accorded a liberal patronage, and in her office there the first meeting was held in which Marvin Kroger broached the subject and secured the data which resulted in the erection of a monument at Jonesboro, Virginia, to Dr. Andrew T. Still, founder of osteopathy, who was born in Jonesboro. After leaving Morristown, Dr. Twitchell practiced for a time in Greenville, South Carolina, and


1507


WOMEN OF OHIO


then retired in 1928, returning to her native place, where she has built an attractive little cottage and resides with her daughter, Viola Louise. She had always engaged in general practice and she took post-graduate work in Boston, Massachusetts, under Dr. Richard Cabot. She worked hard in her profession and had a lucrative practice but returned to the old home neighborhood to take care of her aged mother and get away from the heavy professional duties which she was carrying.


The Doctor became the wife of Bertrand Gilmere Twitchell, who was employed by the Erie Railroad Company as a coach builder, and from his work his wife got the idea of building the new cottage which she now occupies, with its special feature the conservation of space. This she has achieved, for the cottage, though small, is well arranged and most convenient. That Dr. Twitchell belongs to one of the oldest American families is indicated in the fact that she is a direct descendant of Robert Chapman and his wife, Anna (Bliss) Chapman, he having come from England in 1635, at which time he established his home at Westbrook, Connecticut. Like others of her forbears she is a justice of the peace, serving for the second year, having first been appointed to the office, while at the close of the year she was elected to the position. While the duties of justice require sternness at times she endeavors always to be fair and impartial and never fails to give advice that is sound and helpful, her course in office proving most satisfactory to the general public. She is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution and is eligible to membership with the Colonial Dames, being qualified from the fact that "an ancestor must be a civil office holder, a military office holder or a landowner."


Dr. Twitchell's college sorority was the Delta Omega. She does not now maintain an office but frequently assists osteopathic physicians in this section of the state and she belongs to the national organization, the American Osteopathic Association, and while in the south was first vice president of the Tennessee Osteopathic Association and for one year a member of the national committee whose duty it was to have the subject of osteopathy presented to high school graduates. She is now president of the local Woman's Christian Temperance Union and her influence has always been a potent force for good wherever she has lived.


1508


WOMEN OF OHIO


CHARLOTTE WEAVER, D.O., F.A.C.N.


One of the most prominent representatives of osteopathy in Ohio is DR. CHARLOTTE WEAVER, Alienist, of Akron, not only by reason of her skill in practice but also by reason of her notable scientific re- search, whereby she has made valuable contribution to the profession. In fact her achievements place her among the outstanding women of the country and have won her mention in some of the leading publica- tions of the country devoted to women, including such works as " Ameri- can Women" and "Leading Women in America." International Blue Book for 1940 also carries her biography.


Born, Malvern, Ohio, April 20, 1884; Father John Weaver; Mother Sarah E. Winger. Happily married 1914. Widowed 1919. No children. Retained own name throughout marriage by hyphenation. Name restored legally following husband's death.


She was graduated from American School of Osteopathy, June 1912, winning not only her degree as Doctor of Osteopathy, but receiv- ing also a special diploma for original work in physiology research. In 1927 the Kirksville College of Osteopathy and Surgery conferred its doctorate degree upon her.


From the onset of her professional career her advancement has been continuous. The research work which she began in her college days she has since continued and it is said that her work on the plastic basicranium is "designated as the greatest single original addition to the science of osteopathy since Dr. Still's own work." She carried her investigation forward along lines of certain heretofore unexplored func- tions of the human central nervous system and as a result of her in- tensive original research, which she not only pursued alone but which she herself sponsored financially through a quarter of a century, she


CHARLOTTE WEAVER


1511


WOMEN OF OHIO


brought to light facts hitherto unknown in relation to the nervous sys- tem and, among other things, has been able to differentiate several nervous and mental diseases which previous analysis had never dis- covered.


While in France for four and a half years Dr. Weaver continued her researches in the library of the Falculté de Medicine of the Sarbonne and the Bibliotheque Internationale and at the Adyar Foundation and at the same time practiced in Paris as an osteopathic alienist. When later she went to Egypt to do research work in the museum at Cairo, she carried credentials to the American ambassador which has been pre- pared for her by the governor of Ohio and which bore the official stamp and seal of this state, for it is frequently necessary to present such cre- dentials to the ambassador of our country when seeking, for the purpose of scientific research, admission to the closely guarded archives of any foreign country.


In London, England, in October, 1933, Dr. Weaver first gave a partial report of her work on certain heretofore unexplored functions of the human central nervous system before the British Osteopathic Asso- ciation, and in July, 1933, she presented her thesis before the board of trustees of the American Osteopathic Association, after which the board appointed a special committee to examine her work in detail. That their committee was most favorably impressed is evidenced in the fact that in the report which the chairman of the committee read into the 1936 record of the board the committee had incorporated the following state- ment: "In summarizing Dr. Weaver's presentation, we would like to say that the committee feels that Dr. Weaver's work merits all the sup- port which the osteopathic profession can give her investigations."


In the three succeeding years the Journal of the American Oste- opathic Association, of which Dr. R. G. Hulbert is editor, published sev- eral series of articles on the subject of her research which Dr. Weaver wrote at his request for the Journal. In 1939 the American College of Neuropsychiatry honored her with a fellowship.


Dr. Weaver has written also for magazines of America, England and India and has lectured widely in Europe as well as in her home country. She is the author of many scientific articles which have awak-


1512


WOMEN OF OHIO


ened wide attention and much favorable comment and she has also written many poems but undoubtedly her outstanding work is that on the plastic basicranium and in this connection she has devised the highly specialized osteopathic orthopedic operative proceedure for the reduction of malrelations of the bones of the base of the skull which have occurred through injury and which if unreduced cause certain definite nervous and mental symptom complexes.


She has membership in the American Osteopathic Association, the Ohio Society of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons, the Kirksville College of Osteopathy Alumni Association, the Osteopathic Women's National Association, the Axis Club, the Institute Metapsychic Inter- nationalé of Paris and the American Association of Sciences.


Aside from professional lines Dr. Weaver has membership in the American Women's Club of Paris, the American Red Cross, is an hon- orary life member of Methodist Episcopal Women's Foreign Missionary Society, and has membership in the National Aeronautic Association and the Akron Chamber of Commerce. She says that her hobbies are Cyclopean ruins, women's fashions, all religions, philosophies, mythol- ogies and science, and street sounds the world over; and she finds recrea- tional interests in nature trails, in symphony orchestras and travel- all of which indicates her broad mind, her liberal culture and ready response to all that is mentally stimulating and which touches the gen- eral interests of society to its benefit and uplift, while in the scientific field she has trod many new paths, pioneering along lines that others are now profitably following.


Dentistry And Nursing (Continued from Page 637)


1514


WOMEN OF OHIO


MARY ELIZABETH YAGER


MARY ELIZABETH YAGER, superintendent of the Women's and Children's Hospital of Toledo, has devoted her entire life to nursing service in which she had made continuous advancement until she has reached a high point of efficiency. A native of New York, she was born in Dellwood, near Buffalo, a daughter of John and Elizabeth Yager, the former a native of New York City, while the mother was born in Germany. Mary E. Yager attended the public schools of Buf- falo, passing through consecutive grades to the high school, and later entered the Genessee School of Nursing at Rochester, New York. After completing her training there she became operating room supervisor and next went to Worcester, Massachusetts, where she was made as- sistant superintendent of nursing in the Worcester Memorial Hospital. She spent several years there and then became assistant superintendent of the Niagara Falls Memorial Hospital at Niagara Falls, New York. Her next assignment placed her in the position of teaching supervisor of the City Hospital of Indianapolis, Indiana, her salary being paid by the University of Indiana. When leaving that position several years later she went to Latrobe, Pennsylvania, where she was superintendent of the Latrobe Hospital.


Each change Miss Yager has made in her professional connection has brought her a wider outlook and broader opportunities and she has met the various requirements with a skill and understanding that has grown with the passing years and her added experience. From Pennsyl- vania she went to Omaha, Nebraska, where she was superintendent of the Presbyterian Hospital and while there she took some special work at the University of Nebraska. Returning eastward, she became super-


1515


WOMEN OF OHIO


intendent of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital at New London, Con- necticut, and in 1920 she accepted a call to Toledo as superintendent of the Women's and Children's Hospital, which has since been the field of her labors. She has raised its standards and introduced various mod- ern and improved methods and the fact that she has remained at this institution for almost two decades is proof of her most satisfactory service.


Miss Yager belongs to the Genessee Hospital Alumni Association and the Ohio Hospital Association, of which she was a member of the Board of Trustees for several years and president for one year. She is also a life member of the American Hospital Association and has mem- bership in the Ohio State Nurses Association, serving for two years as president of its ninth district, representing the Toledo group of the American Nurses Association. She is a charter Fellow of the American College of Hospital Administrators and second vice president of the Board of Trustees. She became an American Red Cross nurse, when the work was organized in 1905. She is secretary of the Hospital Service Association of Toledo, which was organized in 1938 largely through her efforts, and for a number of years she was a member of the Children's Bureau of Toledo.


Miss Yager belongs to the Quota Club International and is a charter member of the Toledo branch and one of its past presidents, while at the present time she is district governor of District No. 6, which includes all of Ohio, western New York and a part of Canada.


ELIZA MARIA PAINE CHESNEY


ELIZA MARIA PAINE CHESNEY was born in Parkman, Ohio, May 28, 1818, and died in Painesville, Ohio, December 5, 1901.


She was the granddaughter of General Edward Paine, the earliest permanent settler of Painesville, and the one for whom the city was


1516


WOMEN OF OHIO


named. She married Benjamin D. Chesney in 1836 and lived all of her life in Painesville.


She was a leader in civic affairs, a temperance worker, an advocate of equal rights for women and president of the Soldier's Aid Society during the Civil War. One of her seven children was of age to enlist at the time and when he was wounded she received a commission from Gov. Todd to act as nurse in the war zone. Her work during the Civil War period was recognized at the time by the citizens of Painesville and the local Tent of the Daughters of Union Veterans as named for her. In honor of her earlier war work she was made honorary President of the organization for the aid of soldiers during the Spanish War.


She was a woman of strong and independent character, a clear thinker, a great reader and marked by her ability to manage without irritating. Her active work and her influence held a part in the life of Painesville over a long period of time.


INDEX


A


Abbott, Arletta Maria 234


Ackerman, Isabelle K. 739


Acknowledgments 11


Acton, Mrs. C. J. 431


Adams, Jean 1225


Adams, Louise H.


676


Adams, Mary Taylor


810


Adams, Maude 487


Addams, Jane


1085


Adelaide, Sister


539


Adolphine, Sister 468


Adventure and Travel, Women in 1127


Agnes, Mother Mary 547


Akeley, Mary L. Jobe 1127


Alacoque, Sister Mary 536


Albray, Sarah A. 88


Albrecht, Mother Maria Anna 480, 561


Albrecht, Sister Rosa 480, 561


Albright, Jane 213


Alburn, Mrs. Cary 1011


540


Allen, Mrs. Alfred 1010


Allen, Clara 728


Allen, Florence Ellinwood


9, 11, 641


portrait of


640


Allen, Mrs. Francis K.


937


Allen, Harriett Collins


381


Allen, Margaret


384


Allen, Maria Storts


363


Allen, Nancy Grimes


1146


portrait of


6


Allen, Phoebe


276


Allen, Ruth Collins


384


Alley, Alice Rush


1248


Allison, Henry


41


Allison, Dr. Richard 41


Allman, Margaret 1032


Allyn, Helen 1143, 1146


portrait of 7


Alma, Sister


590


Aloysi, Sister


523


Aloysia, Mother 532


Alter, Bishop Karl J. 614


Amadeus, Mother 571, 588


Amann, Katherine R.


290


American Mother of 1939


947


Amidon, Dr. Vivien Millar 395


Amos, Katherine 1146


Amos, Sally 1146


Anderson, Mrs. C. V. 433


Anderson, Druzilla 93


Anderson, Harriet Ludlow 41


Anderson, Margaret Ellen 235


Anderson, Dr. Mary Elizabeth 395


Andrew, Ellen B. 119


Andrews, Flora 89


Andrews, Margaret St. John 938


Andrews, Mary Pyle 213, 235


Andriessen, Cora 353


Angela, Mother 556


Angela, Sister Mary 523


Anna, Mother 566


Annunciation, Mother Mary 583


Anspach, C. L. 213


Antoinette, Sister Lillian 595


Antonio, Sister Maria 509


Apgar, Genevieve 236


236


Armstrong, Louise M. 88


41


Arps, Alice 91


Art, Women in 901


Ashbolt, Gertrude 625


Ashby, Jennie Denman 41


212


Ashland Plan


213


Assisi, Sister Mary Francis of


536


Atkins, Dorothy


1279


Atwood, Jane K.


236


Auch, Anita


1144


Aug, Edna


920


August, Elizabeth


624


Aull, Mrs. John


1009


Austin, Elsie P.


644


portrait of


645


Austin, Mary Louise


119


Austin, Mother


582


Austin, Sara Macduff 1144, 1149


Auten, Dr. Mary 213


Aviation, Women in 1110


B


Babione, M. Teresa 594


Bachman, Dora Sandoe 91


Backus, Emma S. 765


Bailey, Allan M. 11


Bailey, Cora Jenkens 1367


Bailey, Greenbright 33


Bailey, Mrs. Greenbright 33


Bailey, James F. 33


Bailey, Mad Ann


24


Bailey, Marguerite Perry


813


Bailey, Reason


33


Baird, Dr. Julia March


395


Baker, Imogene 676


Baker, Mary Mahoney 1301


Baker, May Allread 765


i


Arlitt, Ada Hart


Armstrong, Nathaniel Shepherd


Ashland College


Alexis, Sister


ii


WOMEN OF OHIO


Baker, Sarah Ohl


291


Bernet, Mrs. John J. 602


Baldwin, Lida F.


94


portrait of


95


Best, Susie 767


portrait of 769


Bettman, Iphigene Molony 940


Bexley, Mrs. Thomas Vogel


648


Bara, Theda


921


Beyer, Ruth Kessler


1225


Beyer, Ruth L. 236


Beyerman, Mrs. Fred 1144


Bidwell, Mary Beach 293


Bihn, Rev. Joseph 535


Bilby, Sarah H. 729


Billiart, Julie 506, 511


Binder, Sara E. 1250


Bing, Lucia Johnson 373, 941


Bingham, Mary Payne 944


Birkenkamp, Louise Ann 678


Birkenkamp, Mrs. Will 1341


Birstrup, Marguerite Butler 125


Bisonnette, Catherine 567, 582


Bisonnette, Elizabeth 582


Bixler, Mrs. Paul 1144


Black, Anna McNaughton Smith 941


Blackford, Florence 1151


Blaine, James G. 693, 1052


901


Blake, Mary 86


Blake, Theodora M. 1302


41


Beck, Mrs. Loren


921


Becker, Ann Buntin


620


Becker, Augusta


91


Becker, Louise


1249


Beckert, Marie


623


Beckett, Mary Milliken


500


Beckman, Louisa


598


Beckmann, Ruth Spencer


1033


Boardman, Mabel Thorpe


1033


Beebe, Mayme Bennett


11


Beecher, Catherine


763


Beecher, Lyman


763


Bolton, Mrs. Chester C.


944, 1027


Beecher, Susan Gillespie 516


Bonholzer, Gertrude Marie


648


Beer, Dorcas 94, 840


Beer, Kathryn


840


Beer, Mary Elizabeth


840


Bonnell, Mrs. E. Julian


41


Beez, Freda 594


Bonnell, Lewis


41


Beggs, Laura 1009


Bell, Mrs. Albert James 840


Bell, Ophelia Nesbit


97


Belpre


25,


41


Benham, Mrs. Miles


843


portrait of


845


Benham, Mrs. Wallace C.


601


Bentley, Louise E.


121


Bentley, M. Julia


123


Berger, Grace A. 647


Berger, Mary 761, 1150


Berger, Rebekah Collidge


766


Bergeron, Mildred Pack


647


Bernard, Florence Scott


766


Bernard, Mother


571, 588


Bernardine, Mother 567


Berne, Lucile Kroger 940


Best, Clara 86


Bamber, Betsy


576


Bancroft, Corinne


624


Bancroft, Harriett E.


97


Barbour, Mrs. George B.


433


Barnes, Helen Florence


430


Barnette, Mary R.


120


Barone, Ruth Agnes


292


Barr, Sarah Elizabeth Chandler 292


Barrett, Thomas 41


Bashor-Yinger, Mary


1493


Bateman, Mary H.


677


Bates, Mary


678


Battelle, Mrs. John Gordon


1027


Bauman, Frances


86


Baumgardner, Edith


728


Baur, Bertha portrait of


841


Baur, Clara


839


Bear, Elizabeth


93


Beardsley, Isabel


940


Beattie, Anna


1143


Beatty, Robert 1011


Beaumont, Mary 583


Bebout, Esther Marquita 1495


Bechtel, Elizabeth


728


Blakemore, Abbie May


Blennerhassett Island 55


Blennerhassett, Margarett 55


Blicke, Mrs. William A. 293


Bloch, Blanche Frohman 942


Blossom, Mrs. Dudley 944


Boals, Mrs. David 942


Boardman, Alice 743


Boian, Mrs. Harold 1144


902


Bonnell, Abigail 41


Bonnell, Ann R. 41


Boring, Alice Kemper


43


Boswell, Florence 1112


Boswell, Helen 1144


Boudinot, Elias 31


Bowen, Margaret Davis 125


Bower, Mrs. Edward 294


Bowles, Eva M. 433


Bowne, Angela 1144


Boyd, Emma 126


Boyd, Marian


237


Boyle, Maria 473, 516


Boyle, Mrs. Stephen 492, 554


Bradbury, Electa P. 97


Bradford, Alice Davis 294


Bradford, Mrs. Lawrence J. 40


Bradley, Carolyn Gertrude 902


839


Blair, Dorothy Lilian


Bole, Roberta Holden


Bookman, Ethel Metz 9, 373


iii


WOMEN OF OHIO


Bradley, Catherine


41


Buckley, Maria D. 86


Bradley, Daniel


41


Buckner, Elizabeth Irwin Harrison 41


Bradley, Helen


41, 127


Buckner, Laura 284


portrait of


129


Bullock, Mrs. A. D.


431


Bradstreet, Mary Dietrich 1144, 1151


Bullock, May E.


430, 449


Bumbach, Elizabeth


594


Brainard, Lydia Sutliff


433


Burke, Alma


387


Brandon, Mary Edwards


844


Burke, Madame Ryan


608


Brannan, Mrs. B. F. 431


Burnet, Gwendolyn


42


Brant, Mary B. 212


Burnet, Jacob


38,


41


Bray, Matilda 88


Breen, Katherine Beckman


598


Burnet, Mary Coleman


41


Breisch, Ernestine Elma


648


Burr, Aaron


56


Bremer, Helen


367


Brenner, Louisa M. Dietz


295


Burton, Katherine K. 771


Brewster, Mrs. H.


378


Bush, Mrs. W. M. 431


Bushea, Frances Fanning 1431


Bricker, Governor John W.


1034


Bricker, Laura King


1037


Brinkman, Mrs. Robert


433


Brite, Mary D.


811


Buxton, Edith 41


Buxton, Edmund 33,


41


Brockerman, Mary Elizabeth


1226


Buxton, Fannie E. 41


Byerley, Helen M.


606


Byrne, Alice Hill 239


Byrne, Minnie 1409


C


Cable, Mrs. Peter 1144


Cable, Rhea Watson 849


Cadwallader, Mrs. Pierce J. 43


Cahen, Lillian 771


Caldwell, Lorena G. 1433


Calhoun, John C. 518


Calhoun, Mrs. John C. 599


Callaghan, Janet 41


Cameron, Jessie L. 729


Camp Mary Orton 999


Camp Wheeler 999


Campbell, Elizabeth 396


Campbell, Lilian 1143


Campbell, Lily B.


771


Campbell, Loneta


624


Brown, Mrs. Robert


431


Campbell, Louise L.


98


Campbell, M. Edith 131,


235


Brucker, Mrs. Edward F. 603, 612


297


Brulois, Louise


567


Brumbaugh, Edna Dickes 1252


Carboy, Margaret


87


Cares, Christine Wilson


681


Brunner, Maria Anna 562


87


Carlson, Mrs. C. Arthur


366


Brush, Mrs. Edmund C. 298


Carmichael, Gertrude


1144


Bryant, Mary 131


Bryant, Rebecca 87


Carothers, Edith Seymour 1011


Buchwalter, Mrs. Edward L. 287


Carpenter, Julia 431


Carpenter, Norma 365


Buckingham, Sarah 98


Buckley, Catherine 624


91


Brown, Josephine B.


743


Brown, Katharine Kennedy


9, 11, 1025, 1037


portrait of


1024


Brown, Mabelle


131


Brown, Marie K.


747


Brown, Mattie Mcclellan


274, 278


Brown, Maude Bass


296


Brown, Olymphia


379


Browne, Mabel


40


Campus, Martius portrait of


21


Canfield, Mrs. James H.


299


Brunner, Father 562


Carey, Rev. Jane


449


Bruscup, Mary


Carlisle, Annine M. 606


20


Brucker, Jessica A.


237


Broderick, Muriel 52


Brogan, Marion B. 11, 680


Brogden, Dr. Helen Sidner


396


Bronson, Mrs. Budd


596


Broomhall, Mrs. Addison F. 287


Brouse, Clara F. 1037


Brown, Anne Amos 1146, 1152


Brown, Antoinette 226, 227


Brown, Eleanor Gertrude 131


Bushnell, Governor Asa S. 1055


Bushnell, Mrs. Charles J. 944


Business and Industry, Women in 675


Butler, Luah Miller 1254


Brocker, Esther Helena 649


1034


Bricker, Harriet Day portrait of


1035


Burnet, Margaretta


88


Breen, Mary Louise 1144


Burns, Bertha C.


1144


Burr, Celia C. 378


Brockman, Jessie Willis


Brown, Hallie Quinn 237, 284


Brown, Mrs. John W.


Carnell, Mrs. Harrie Gardner 838, 902


Buck, Kathryn 847


Carr, Alice G. 625


Brady, May Daly 604


iv


WOMEN OF OHIO


Carran, Ada Myrtle Oakley 300


Carren, Mary E. 606


Carroll, Beulah 1256


Carroll, Margaret Mary 1303


Carroll, Rose 598


Carstens, Minna D. 681


Carter, Helen A. 595


Carter, Mrs. Leslie


838, 921


Carter, Lorenzo


45, 82


Carter, Rebecca


45


Carvin, May Brown 1257


Cary, Alice 288, 771


Cary, Phoebe 288, 771


Casement, Frances Jennings


384


Casemont, Frances M.


379


Cashborn, Grace Keeler


41


Catherine, Sister Mary


505, 595, 605


Catherwood, Mary Hartwell


773


Catholic Collegiate Association 492


Catholic Daughters of America 604


Catholic Medical Missionaries 590


Catholic Women of Ohio


463, 1299


Catt, Carrie Chapman 782


Chamberlin, Elizabeth Lamson 946




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