Life and light for woman . Sheldon, Miss M. E., 249. ,Sibiey, Mrs. Minnie C, 170. Smith, Miss Laura C, 407. Smith, Mrs. Emily M., 154. Spencer, Miss C. D.,454. Stanford, Mrs. Jennie P., 85. Stanley, Mrs. Ursula, 445. Stapleton, Mrs. Ida S., 363. Stillson, Miss Alice F., 72. Stimson, Mrs. M. L., 95, 230. Stockbridge, Miss Annie C, 407. Stover, Mrs. Bertha D., 95, 361. Swift, Miss Eva M., 264, 492. Talcott, Miss Eliza, 421, 455. Tewksbury, Mrs. E. G., 309, 454. Thom, Mrs. Helen L., 505. Thompson, Mrs. D. Etta, 71. Tracy, Mrs. Myra P., 59, 335, 526. Trowbridge, Miss E. M.,398, 407. Webb, Miss Ann
Life and light for woman . Sheldon, Miss M. E., 249. ,Sibiey, Mrs. Minnie C, 170. Smith, Miss Laura C, 407. Smith, Mrs. Emily M., 154. Spencer, Miss C. D.,454. Stanford, Mrs. Jennie P., 85. Stanley, Mrs. Ursula, 445. Stapleton, Mrs. Ida S., 363. Stillson, Miss Alice F., 72. Stimson, Mrs. M. L., 95, 230. Stockbridge, Miss Annie C, 407. Stover, Mrs. Bertha D., 95, 361. Swift, Miss Eva M., 264, 492. Talcott, Miss Eliza, 421, 455. Tewksbury, Mrs. E. G., 309, 454. Thom, Mrs. Helen L., 505. Thompson, Mrs. D. Etta, 71. Tracy, Mrs. Myra P., 59, 335, 526. Trowbridge, Miss E. M.,398, 407. Webb, Miss Anna F., 298. Webster, Mrs. M. M., 95. Willard, Miss C. R., 53, 239. Willcox, Miss G. M., 239,528. Wilson, Miss Louise E., 184, 230, 27S, 449. Winsor, Mrs. Mary C, 9, 14S, 455, 559, 561. Woodhull, Dr. Kate C.,410. Woodside, Mrs. T. W., 455. Wyckoff, The Misses, 71, 190. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from Boston Library Consortium IVIember Libraries J- f %itc anb Xigbt for ^oman. Vol. XXIX. JANUARY, 1S99 No. i. BY REV. L. S. CRAWFORD. Aged Smyrna! thou hast heard the busy treadOf buried millions, where the caravanNow wends its tinkling way by Meles stream ;Where rainparts moulder in the moonlight beam. Two hundred thousand souls ! Nearly half of them Greeks ! The Turks?come next in aumber; and then Armenians, Hebrews, Europeans, andLevantines, fill the homes and the oriental markets, the modern warehouses,tlie shops and stores, and crowd around the custom house and the quay ofthat busy oriental-occidental city. The Turks call it Giao?ir/smir {i\de\Smyrna), for, unlike most cities and provinces of the Sultans domains,the prevailing language and influences are Greek and European, latherthan Turkish. To reach this busy city, we leave the blue ^Elgean betweenMitylene and Scios, and steam quite forty miles up into the bav, at whosehead sits Smyrna, the lovely, the crown of Ionia, and the ornament ofA
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectcongregationalchurch