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THJ2 PACIFIC COOtEEClAX, ADVJBKTISEK: HOXOIiUX.IT, Al'IlII, 30, 1804. HANDSOME ANB GOOD. A BOUQUET OF PRETTY NEW GIRLS IN WASHINGTON. They Come From All Orer the Country. Additions to Society at the Nation's Cap ital The AsAi.tt&nts at Fashionable Func tion. Copyright. 1!4. by American Presa Associa tion. There are ever so many pretty new girls in "Washington this season, coming trora all over the country north, south, east and west and I will try to catch a few of them on the wing as they fly about "just too busy for anything" with luncheons, teas, balls and the endless round of calls. Minneapolis send3 us a lovely and very attractive girl, MLs3 "Birdie' Abbott, sif ter of Mrs. Lochren, wife of the commis sioner of xensions, with whom she has lived ever since she wa3 a little girl. Judge and Mrs. Lochren are devoted to her and have taken her about with them pretty much all over this country and Europe, and everywhere she has been greatly admired. She 1 tall and well shaped, with fine dark brown eyes fair complexion and brown hair. She has been carefully educated speaks French and German well, is more than an aver age performer upon the piano, a grace ful dancer end exceedingly interesting in conversation. A charming member of the attorney general's family thi3 season is Miss Mary Thomas. Her father, Mr. William Thoma3, a prominent lawyer of San Francisco, is Mrs. Olney's brother. Miss Thomas came east last year for a finish- Art MISS ABBOTT. 3ILSS UHL. ing term at a Boston school and is now enjoying her first winter in society and helping others to enjoy it. She is tall and fair, has light brown hair and dark blue eyes, is fond of outdoor exercise "walking, swimming and tennis and looks healthy, mentally and physically. Another tall, fair girl i3 Miss Julia Murphy, daughter of Senator Murphy of New York. Everybody says at first sight, "Isn't she lovely 7 and this impres sion is deepened at subsequent meetings. She reminds me of a tall, fair lily, and I think of her as blond until I remember that her hair is dark brown though there is a hint of gold in it and her eyes dark gray.but her complexion l? very fair, and faint rose tints come and go in her face as she talks. She has not long been out of school, and this is, I fancy, her first season in society. Miss Marion Semple Lindsay, daugh ter of Senator Lindsay of Kentucky, is tall, slender and of graceful bearing, "with very dark brown liair and eyes, good features, perfect" teeth, a sweet smile and bright expression. She has Ix-en carefully educated, talks well, is an accomplished horsewoman and graceful dancer, as a Kentucky girl should be, and altogether very charming. A pretty and very popular girl is Miss "Winifred Reed, sister of Mrs. Eckels, wife of the comptroller of the currency. She is of average height, with slender fig ure, fair complexion, wavy golden brown hair and blue gray eyes, which light up with the sweet smile which reveals white and perfect teeth and sets the dimples a-playing in her cheeks. She was born and brought np in Ottawa, Ills., and is a good example of the best type of the west ern girl bright and breezy, like her na tive prairies, and sweet and modest, like the flowers dotting their surface, as I remember them in my childhood days. Mis3 Reed has beera well educated, is rather musical and decidedly clever with her needle. Another western girl who is enjoying her first season is Miss Cora Perkins, daughter of ex-Senator Perkins of Kan sas. She has lived here most of her life, however, and graduated last fall with high honors at a Baltimore institute. She is tall and well shaped, with regular features, very dark hair and blue eyes. She has decided views upon many sub jects and a pretty way of expressing them. Miss Gertrude Caffery, daughter of the new senator from Louisiana, is a well rounded little maiden, rather below me dium height, with brown hair and eyes, rosy cheeks and pleasant expression. She looks healthy and happy, is fond of danc- if, ir - ' MISS GRAY, MISS REED. ing, walking and outdoor amusements and seems to be enjoying her first season very much, though doing double duty, as her mother is not strong enough to go out much. Senator Gray of Delaware has two daughters "out." Tho eldest a tall, fair and accomplished girl came out last year, I think. Her sister Emilj-, ju.st emancipated from school, has been hav ing a delightful time going about and "assisting"' at various functions. She u of medium height and slender figure, with fair complexion, light brown hair, blue eyes, dimpled cheeks and a very bright, happy expression. Miss Mabel Money, daughter of RejH reseutatiyell. D. S. Money of Mississippi., is tall and fair, with easy and pleasing manners, better read than most girls of her age and a clever violinist. She en joys going about and is, I imagine, a r;tther keen observer. Her sister Lillian is a brunette, still at her lessons, devoted to painting, for which she has much talent. r l W J Two other musical girl3 who pay more attention to their studies than to society are the daughters of Representative Can non of California. One is a violinist, the other devoted to her piano. Lucy Follett Uhl, daughter of the as sistant secretary of state, is a very at tractive girl, tall and slight of figure, with light brown hair and dark brown eyes. She ha3 been carefully educated and spent some time abroad perfecting herself in French and German, which she speaks fluently, and Spanish fairly well. She is very clever as an amateur photographer and a more than average pianist. Juliette M. Babbitt. "Washington. WOMAN'S VORLD IN PARAGRAPHS. How Mis Anthony Laid Up Enough Money For Her Support. "The bravest battle that ever wa fought" is that fought by the woman suffragi3t3. Susan B. Anthony declares that if in the battle now going on for suffrage in New York state the men do not vote as they should, she will come back a3 a spook and haunt them. "I shall certainly return," she says, "and they will find me a troublesome sister." Mis3 Anthony i3 now 74 years old, but looks much the same as she did 20 years ago. In a recent speech at Schen ectady she said she had been in the newspaper business once. In that venture she lost all the money she had saved at schoolteaching and went 110,000 in debt. The paper was The Revolution, a weekly published in New York city f o advocate woman's rights. Mis3 Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stan ton were editors, with Parker Pillabury as editorial contributor. It was able, and brilliant, but for some reason it failed to be a go, and it wa3 abandoned when it had rolled up the $10,000 debt. Susan Anthony, with the pluck and hon esty characteristic of thi3 great woman, resolved that no creditors should suffer loss through her. She undertook the task of paying all the debt herself and did so. Women lecturers were mere cf a rarity 2" year3 ago than they are now, and Susan entered the general lecture field. Lectures, too, were more popular then than they are now, and in six years she had paid every dollar of The Revolution debt. "Then I had a ju bilee.V exclaimed Miss Anthony. She lectured six years more. "I made enough money to live on, and I am living on it yet," she explained. As soon as she had laid up enough to support herself mod estly she turned her back forever on the general lecture field and devoted her life henceforth to working for women. "I can get $50 to $ 100 a night to lecture, but I feel that the cause needs me, and I am devoting my time and energies to that cause." One theme which she is putting before her audiences this winter is the powerlessness of disfranchised classes to make, shape and control their own con ditions moral and industrial as well as political. The secretary of the Nebraska State Farmers Alliance is a woman Mrs. J. M. Kelley. Is it possible that there is any state university so forlorn and so far behind the times as not to admit women? If so, it should change its ways at once or go off and die. If there is a state school anywhere in which the word "male" is not especially specified, then women students have the right, without any further legislation, to attend that school and can sue for damages anybody who tries to keep them out. Miss Emma C. "Whitney is recording clerk in the Ohio house of representa tives. I met that grand friend of women. Judge Noah Davis, at the reception of the New York "Woman's Press club the otner evening. He wished to impress on all women in New York state the neces sity of their working for the suffrage amendment this year. The constitu tional convention takes place in May. If the word "male" is not stricken from the suffrage qualification this year, then New York women will have to wait 20 years more before the subject comes up again. Judge Davis wished all women everywhere to remember this too: There is nothing in any state constitution or in the United States constitution to debar a woman from holding any city, county, state or federal office, from that of presi dent of the United States down, or up, as the case may be. Though women may not vote, they can be voted for for any office whatsoever A woman, for in stance, has a perfect right to be mayor of New York or Chicago or representative or senator. We could havs women con gressmen now, so far as anything to le gally hinder them from holding the of- e goes. Judge oah Davis is one of the most eminent jurists in America, and his opinion may be taken as final. Wo men ought to avail themselves of their right to be oted for and hold office, par ticularly school and municipal offices. Mrs. Yates i3 mayor of Onehunga. New Zealand. The Women's Educational and Indus trial union of Boston has entered on a fresh field of relief work. Realizing that the women out of employment in Bos ton cannot be provided for in the city itself, they have undertaken to find work in the country for such as are willing to engage in domestic service. They are conducting correspondence with farm ers wives and other xersons in the rural districts, and as fast as a place is found on a farm where help is needed in the housework tho young woman who will go is sent thither. It is a fact that the girl who does housework is better treated on the farm than anywhere else. Often she is made one of the family and shares the home as if she were a daughter of the house. Household help is more need ed by the hardworked farm wives than by almost any one else, and the girl who would enter the rural domestic service would be a godsend to them. Bat it will be interesting, it really will, to see how many of the unemployed women of Boston will be willing to go to a farm and do housework. Eliza Aechard Conner. After -13 years' occupancy of the edi torial chair of an English periodical Charlotte M. xonng has been retired. BY AUTH0E1TY RE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION'. To All Oualifiel Voters in the Second Precinct, Fourth District of Ho nolulu, Island of Oahu. .Notice is hereby given thj.t for the purpose cf publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the ii-t of names of all persons who have registered according ;o iaw and are entitled to vn:e, the In- f-ptctcrs of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the Bell Tcwr ia Union Square,. Honolulu, on SEXT WED- J.ESDAY, April 5th acd MONDAY, April cOth, 1SS4, between the Lours cf 7 ::0 and 9 in the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. HENKY SMITH, Chairman. Honolulu, April 23, 1S04 . 3670-tf In re Constitutional Convention. To allCQualified Voters JinJ the Second Precinct, Second ' District, fof Ho nolulu, Iiland of Oahu. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the list cf names of all persons who have registered according to law, and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of 'the said Precinct will hold two meetings at tfce Kauluwela School- house, in Honolulu, on next Wednesday, A.pril 2Zlh, and Mcr.dny, April SOth, 1894, between the houis cf 7 :00 and 9 :00 in the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. J. S. MARTIN, Chairman. Honolulu, April 24, 1S91. 3671-5t In re Constitutional Convention. To all Qualified Voters in the Second Precinct, -Third District of Hono lulu, Island of Oahu. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the Water Works office in the Kapuaiwa Building, Honolulu on Friday, April 27th and Monday, April 30th, 1894, between the hours of 7.-00 and 9 :C0 in the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. J. A. LYLE, Chairman. Hunolnlu, April 24, 1S94. 3G71-td In re Constitutional Convention. To all Qualified Voters in the First Trecinct, Second District of Hono lulu, Island of Oahu. Notice is hereby given that for the purrose of publishing, posting and cor recting 'errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according o law, and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the Gate House, at the ower Nuuanu reservoir, in Honolulu, on next Wednesday, April 25th, and Mon day, April SOth, 1S94, between the hours of 7 end 9 in the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. W. H. HOGGS, ' Chairman. J. D. HOLT, THEO. P. SEVERIN, Inspectors. Honolulu., April 23, 1S94. iG71-5c In re Constitutional Convention. To A11J Qualified VotersJ iujjtue Secend Precinct, FirstJDistrictXef Honolulu, I si a mi 'of Oahu.J Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law, and are'entitled to vote, the In sectors of the said Precirct will hold two meetings at the Beretania Street Schoolhouse, in Honolulu, as follows : on Friday, April 27th, and Monday, April SOth, 1S34, between the hours cf 7:C0 and 9 :00 p. m. of each day. By the Inspectors. J ALFRED MAGOON, Chairman. Honolulu, April 23, 1S94. 3672-tf In re Constitutional Conventior. To All; Qualified Voters iu the First Precinct, First District of Honolulu, Island of Oahu. Notic3 ia hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, osting and cor recting errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law, and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said PrecincS will hold two meetings at the Government Nur April 27th and Monday, April SOth 1S94, between the hours of 7 :00 and 9 :00 m the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. W. L. HOWARD, Chairman. A. C. FE3TAN0, JOHN KEA, Inspectors. Honolulu, April 24. 1S94. SG72-td In re Constitutional Convention. To All Qualified Voters in the First Precinct, Third District of Honolulu, Island of Oahu. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law, and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the Royal School, Hono lulu, Thursday, April 26th and Monday, April 30th 1S94. between the hours of 7 :30 and 9 in the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. N. B. EMERSON, Chairman. Honolulu, April 25, 1894. 2672-4t In re Constitutional Convention. To All Qualified Voters in the Second Precinct, Fifth District of Honolulu, Island of Oahn. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the Reform School- house, Honolulu, on next Friday, April 27th and Monday, April 30th, between the hours of 7:30 and 9 in the evening, each day. By the Inspectors. W. L. WILCOX, Chairman. Honolulu, April 23, 1S94. 3672-4t In re Constitutional Convention. To all Qualified Voters in the First Precinct, Fourth District of Hono lulu, Island of Oahu. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of publishing, posting and cor recting errors in the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the China Engine House, Honolulu, on Saturday, April 2Sth, and Monday, April 30th, 1S94, from 7 to 9 P. m. By the Inspectors. C. E. WILLIAMS, Chairman. Honolulu, April 26, 1894. 3673-td In re Constitutional Convention. To all Qualified Voters in the First Precinct, Fifth District of Hono lulu, Island of Oahu. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose cf publishing, posting and cor recting errors m the list of names of all persons who have registered according to law, and are entitled to vote, the In spectors of the said Precinct will hold two meetings at the Hawaiian Tramways Stable, in Honolulu, as follows : on Fri day April 27th and Monday, April SOth, 1S94, between the hours of 7 :30 and 9 p. jr. of each day:" By the Inspectors. ' L. C. LYMAN, Chairman. Honolulu, April 23, 1S94. 3673-3t 1' A '.Newspaper Artist, Late of tbe San Francisco Evening Post Is prepared to make illus trations for newspaper ad vertisements, or for book and job work at short notice. Cuts of buildings, portraits?, real estate maps, etc., made at Coast rates. Fine pen work for labels and photograving. Music copied. Address care of the Adver tiser office. 3636-tf m HARK ROBERTS I JJL tL : DEDICATED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION Provisional A MOST ELABORATE AND HAWAII FROM JANUARY, 1893, UNTIL ' THE PRESENT! EXQUISITELY ILLUSTRATED BY THE NEW AXD Beautiful "Crisp H Fit tTr !S.ft1 f' J ' r jAz&j!z?i till.'? 1 r.5??ftiv; The Volume Will Contain Half Tone Portraits of All the Leading- People Connected With This Memorable Epoch. Including an Account of the INDUSTRIAL -:- ADVANCE -:- OF -:- HONOLULU In Fact an Historical, Statistical and Descriptive Review of the Material Development and Advancement of the Islands, WITH AN APENDIX CONTAINIJfU A SERIES OF Comprehensive -i Sketches -: of -: Representative -: Citizens Mr. Wellesley A. Parker, -whoue success throughout the world in art matters, is well known ha3 been specially employed to superintend the pictorial department of this work. Ot the Crisp process, which i3 to be used, the following extract from a well known paper speaks well for it. The Albany, N. Y. Evening Journal says : .New Printing Ieoce.s. People unacquainted with the wonderful strides that have been made in Australia in printing, and the general depicting of nature in its most beautiful moods, have little idea of the complimentary and deserving success that Messrs. F. W. Niven and Co. of Ballarat, Australia have attained iu their new "Crisp Photo" Process. We have been shown by Mr. Wellesley Parker, who is visiting us, samples of this new firm's beautiful process The book that has lately run into three editions, of 5000 each, of "Syracuse Illustrated" is beyond compare the most exquisite series of views ever appearing in the direction of printing. Episodes of the old days, and scenes .f the beauties of the gardens of the city, are scattered throughout, interested with pictures of well-known citizens, that for fidelity rival any photograph that is at present produced. Every credit is due to Australia, who has taken the lead in this innovation. Interspersed through the book will be pages devoted to the estaonsnmenis or leading wholesale and 1 etail merchants. Sot only will the exteriors of the build ings be shown, but the interiors, will come out with great fidelity, showing every branch of the business in actual working order, thus giving to many a glimpse be hind tha scenes of the various details involved in producing the articles that they purchase in the showroom or at the counter. The first issue of "The Hawaiiaa Involution'' is to be 5000. The principal industries ana business Parker, who is now in this city, on behalf of the Publishers, and arrangenvent3 made by which the actual details of the various branches of the businesses will be represented pictorially. In addition, it is completeness of the work by prevailing residences or grounds, to arrange with Mr. 2X-PUBLISHED BY THE HAWAIIAN TO THE Government EXTENSIVE HISTORY OF Photo" ProceiS establishments will be visited by Jlr. the desire of the Publishers to add to the upon the citizens who have handsome Parker for their appearance in itspaxes. GAZETTE CO.