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Show FOR THE LADIES. Forty-four thousand women are employed em-ployed as out-door laborers in Kng-land. Kng-land. A woman's answer to Mrs. Stanton's Stan-ton's "Why not lecture?" Oh, because be-cause ! Woman is an csray on grace, in one volume, elegantly bound. Every man should have a cojiy. An Akron woman married one of her lovers in the morning and eloped with another in the afternoon. An exchange Fays Fanny Fern is a "butterfly writer, floating among the fringes of thought." The Springfield Republican thinks the course of woman suffrage is soon to be the winning side in Massachusetts. Massachu-setts. The Christian ladies of Chicago have reformed and provided situations for 2,350 abandoned females during the past year. Mr. J. Brown, an Indiana man, shot and killed himself, because his wife wouldn't consent to move to Kansas. Mrs. Brown was right Ristori, who is at present residing at Naples with her family, is said to contemplate con-template a professional vist to California, Cali-fornia, before retiring from the stage. A wicked little lady in New York has a collection of eighty-four vanquished van-quished and jilted masculines, which she calls her "noble army of martyrs." A lady exhibited at the District Fair, held in Des Moines, Iowa, two implements of her own manufacture an improved wood-sawing machine and a space-saving clothes mangel. A writer in Harpers Bazar proposes pro-poses tho establishment of "training colleges," wherein young women may be taught how to rear iulants according to the latest lights of medical and social so-cial science. A negro woman attempted to burgle a rag factory in Columbus, Ga., by descending the chimney. She got stuck halfway down, and they had to tear the chimney to pieces before they could take her to jail. Christine Nilsson and Adelaide Phillips, Phil-lips, at a social gathering, sang so much to each other's satisfaction, that they rushed 'to arms and kissed each other, though there were plenty of gentlemen present. Juliet Porter tells us about a wealthy New England lady who has made a singular institution of her parlor and kitchen. She will have no servants in her house who are not intelligent and rufined. When her maid servants have finished their work for the day, they put on their pretty clothes and go into the parlor to entertain and be entertained. enter-tained. They sit at the same table with their mistress, and are treated in every respect as her equals. If this example could be generally followed, thousands of educated girls would accept ac-cept domestic situations. |