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Show - B3SSK35533Ee 1- WOMAN'S EX PON E NT. 34 - -- of d r speech: - art a z ak t? ze. m - -- WEKA. well as women scientists, both here in America andin England, leuspf oiio ty- , 1 WOMAN It is now IN MEDICINE. - : j ; : ; to-da- v - r v suffraVi? - f is auxiliary to the .,- ' Ajnerican . '. A husband advertised in tho Sheffield "Daily Telegraph," England, that he, Thomas Ar would no longer be ans werable' for tlie debts incurred by his wife.. The wife retorted: "This is to certify that I, Elizabeth A- -, am able to pay my own debts, now that I have got shut of Tommy." :r -- - It that Queen Victoria, at Balmoral receives about forty telegrams in a day. She sits up until one o'clock in the morning, is said ;readihiheraand.23ro ', y, o'clock resumes. her ..daily duties. The Queen is never idle; her example tor industry might well be imitated by those in thexordinarv walks of life. - ' m " Victor Hugo has a daughter, Adele, in a private insane asylum near Paris. " "She is about. 50 years old and i3 said to resemble the portrait of Madame Hugo, by Johannot. r She is very proud of her father's feme,and repeats .his. network of wires; revolutionizing trae73conJ merce, exchange and all our methods of doing business. Instead of waitinsr nine or1 -- ten .months for an answer to the letter , to our cor misfor- respondent in Calcu tta, we-- canvero with - h i m L poems from Jnemory.Xhe tory-ofbune is, sne marriea a young- navai omcer wita-ou- t almost as easy as with the customers- - in our d the consent of her father; he, deserted her countin?rooms. Tromtn. and left her ieuuile3 and without, proof of the Yebsterrjn that magnificent passage tlescrip-tiv- e Prom America, the movement has extended of the power of England, said,-"legality of her juarriage. to Europe, and the medical sehools of the Unipower which has dotted over the whole surface of the versity of Zurich, of Paris, and lately of LonWomen should understand that no beauty globe with her possessions and military ports, don and of Dublin, graduate women students has any charms but the inward one of the whose morning drumbeat following the sun and on the same terms as men. Thus opportunities mind, and that a gracefulness in the manners keeping company with tho hours, circles the to test the willingness of women to study, and is.much.nioro engaging than that of their earth with one continuous . strain of- in - this branch their canaci tv for practice . . that meekliess and modesty are the true of the martial airs of England." science, are increasing everywhere. Still oppoand Not only does her "drumbeat follow tho sun lasting ornaments; for she that has these w9 sition awaits those engaged in the profession, - qualified as she ought to. bo ? ior - the maaage-men- t and keep company with the hours," but, to- both a3 teachers and practitionersthe pioneer of a family, for the education of her chiday, the long roll that calls her battalions to worlc is not yet done-a- nd 1 can only express the field on the plains of India, or her sailonr ldren, for an affection for her husband, and the wish that an opposition may continue to to their gun3 before the forts - of Alexandria, submitting to a prudent way of living. These exist for at least sixty years longer. ha3 hardly ceased before its vibrations are only are the charms that render wives amiable, It i3 only by overcoming obstacles, by pene-- . heard the world around, and every newspaper and give them the best title to respect. -7 tratingand f embving difficulties, that this rein the land heralds on it3 bulletins the details form will prove itself to be grounded on a In his lecture recently delivered in Xew 1: of the fight before the smoke cnltf? frtlinrlfl f inn ?r 4li o rP rrmmnn ha3 York, in connection with the. silk exhibition, passed away. And all this has been accomand will lose its social phenomenal character, Mr. Herman Itockc pointed out plished in less than a quarter of a century, acAll womankind ought to congratulate them- silk culture in this country, Bfo re the leof within - selves,-- that the help ri a decade from the tually single: has men not layin given by g cture the guests visited the tables covered with ' of the first cable. Who will venture to prebeen more general;, that what has thus far been silk worms in all stages of life, from the ege to e what dict tho next reshall twenty-fivhas been don e years accomplished, chiefly by women the butterflywhile a Japanese boy was reeling : ' veal in the in opposition to men application of thi3 vionderfal, . "off the silk from the cocoonj and the- - weaving, J.- andAncompTehermhleQYik If Women shall succeed in holding their po' process was going on at the loom. Since the C. P., in The Waich7mnr Boston.- sition, as practitioners and scientists, for the opening of the exhibition there has been added next fifty years, as they have done for the past a large number of the various kinds of worms, thirty-thre- e Tears, then it ivilt be proved that " ; and the hall has been decorated with Japanese A girl who can put a square patch on a pair it lies in a woman's nature, just as much as in of pictures representing the silk culture in that may not be so accompliihed as a man's to educate whatp-voft?nltip! tn At. - onepantaloons who can work a green worsted country. The object of the exhibition, the le,1 on a .1 trpTnTi TvTmf ofinto oTidog cturer said, was to show what could bo done in i3 of more real-valyellow ground, but-shin with. For all I demand as the right of woman - the communitv. "silk culture in this country. . .The vast sum3.ot , is free play for doing what i3 in her nature to money lea vingtthis country : could :all be kept Mo; and it she icels she cannot apply herself to What a blessing to the household is a here. There were mulberryjrees enough that -cheerful womanone whose spirits are merry, anything; else but the study and practice of not afwould give food to the worms sufficiently to 'medicine, .all I ask is pleuty'of opportunity to fected by wet days and little" wort, needed. It was-easdisappointments, produce all the-silfit herself through education, for that purpose, and whose milk of human kindness; does not . the speaker added, for- the; children to take nnd afterwards a chance to try her capacity as sour i the sunshine of human" " and watching over intheft parr in,7 by feeding -. Suca a ffeman. in the' darkest hours,prosperity. practitioner. At. ' .worms, lie said tnat trance was aoie, brightens So far, women have develojdwell in every h,0Mf li:e piece'of sunshiny- weather. de gree, to pay her great debt, incurred l Se large . Drancn or medical 1 he children tne science, and compete with go to school with" a sense of some-- : the Franco-Prussia- n war, through the part men in general practice, in obstetrics, and in thing great to be achieved; husband goes out children took in the silk culture.. ; In conclusurgery- - .We can show you a3" excellent -- -- lata n a conqueror's Ko matsion, he predicted a Jarge growtkin silkworffl r women surgeons as there are men surgeons, and : ter how he is annoyed abroad, atspirit. home he is culture and sUk manufacturing in this country we:are beginning to have alsairood writers as : sure to find rest. within a few yeatt.zStomfw fiepubltew- -- -- -- er 8 sixu-3n- A j ; - and-unbroke- . . i)er-son- n s; - rf - - -- , : rAnr-itntnii- of-battl- a e the-possibiliti- " ; - -- - cn r - nr ue . . -- y k - - . - . -- . - the-worl- . d -- . 7 - , ouecv, vuiumuuis, u.y on - v eauesdav, August 2d, for the purpose of organizing the Woman! Suffrage Association.-oOhio, which Auuu- whole habitable globe is linked together by a fbi-W- omen .O Murphy-Tabernac- le ; paper'paragraph -- t '.y. A mass meetinir of woman' Ohio will be held in- - the The transmifsion of tho first message over the wires between Baltimore ' and , Washington : was an achievement so wonderful that it was heralded around the globe. The laying of the ; first cable across tho Atlantic, in 1858, laughed at and derided by wise men as impracticable and impossible, was accomplished. And after our Chief Magistrate and the Queen of Eng- land had" exchanged " congratulations over the" great achievement, the cable parted, and there were sad faces, and cioakers said, "I told you so." 13ut. those who were engaged in the enterprise did not lose courage; the broken end, were recovered from the ocean's bed and rethe laying of a cable across united, and, the oceans and the seas excites a simple news in America, having similar views and plans, and soon became connected with her. movement,' 'thus I can claim to be ono of the pio' neer physicians of America. Dr. Blackwell'scourse excited greatinterest all dverthd"worldand inThiladeiphia a Medical School for Women was started at once; that is thirty-tw- o years ago. It : received aid Ichieflylfrom the .Quakers, whQabolafew years later started a hospital. ,. The Kew York Infirmary for Indigent Women was chartered by Dr. Blackwell twenty-nine years ago, and has opened since a good "medical college fpr women. J The ChicagoHo3pitaL (MedieallSchool added) is sixteen years subsequently ' ' old. The University of . lichigaa, Ann" Arbor," opened its i doore to women medical students aoout ten years ago. In some of . the other States," also, the medical schools now admit , of the State that it looks as tliQugh they would succeed in giving to woman equal politir:. cal rights. - v v " - 3"'' awakened such a positive interest in'all parts - commenced. . . '" .... t We read in the morning papers of Tuesday, the telegraphic news, that "Admiral - Seymour opened fire upon the forts at Alexandria at 9 - o'clock this morning" whichrcalculating the difference in time,wa3 actually put to press by every morning ;paperin every city iiu this country in two hours after the bombardment diploma as doctor of:mediMnw.givetoa2 woman; Elizabeth Blackwell having conceived the idea of competing with men in .the care of - the sick as a physician, succeeding after isome years of struggle, in being admitted into a regular medical college for men, in Geneva, New York, from which she graduated in 1849: ' Through the favor of some prominent physicians, she had opportunity for practical observation in Europe, and in 1851 she returned -- ; Q 4 jdVome!v - MODERN ELECTRICITY. years since the first thirty-thre- e M : - NOTES AND NEWS. |