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A two-column interview in the Chicago Tribune during this tour gives Miss Anthony's views on many public matters, concluding thus: "If men would only think of the question without paying attention to prejudice or precedent, simply as one of political economy, they would soon begin to regard woman, and woman's rights, just as they regard themselves and their own rights," said she.

Come round to the office tomorrow, and I'll give you some pointers. And he fixed up a two-column ad right away. He was afraid I'd round on him, I suppose, if I caught him saying anything more about the immorality of subsidies." "He won't say anything more." "Probably not. Milburn hasn't got much of a political conscience, but he's got a sense of what's silly.

In either case, a double reference becomes necessary, consuming just twice the time, and in a two-column catalogue, three times the time required in a dictionary catalogue.

Anthony to hold himself ready for a two-column opening that will knock the town endways. Just tell him that he must take all measures and precautions for a scoop. Say that Figgis will be over in five minutes with the facts, and that he had better let him write up the story in his private room.

Gowdy took up the Daily Task next morning there were sixteen pages of it the first thing that met his eye was a picture of himself the familiar two-column cut that had not had an airing for more than three months. "Gowdy Gives Us Up," said the head-line. "What now?" wondered the good Doctor. "Or rather, which?"

After you've lived here a year or so you'll understand what I mean. If we should run a story of that sign, with a two-column cut, Milwaukee wouldn't even see the joke."

Also there was a two-column, double-leaded editorial, pointing out how the "Times" had been saying this for thirty years, and not failing to connect up the case with the Goober case, and the Lackman case, and the case of three pacifist clergymen who had been arrested several days before for attempting to read the Sermon on the Mount at a public meeting.

The scheme worked to a charm. Amongst the bogus news was a two-column speech purporting to have been made by William H. Seward in the senate just previous to the breaking out of the war. Mr. Seward's well-known ideas were so closely imitated that their genuineness were not questioned. The rest of the news was made up of dispatches purporting to be from the then excited Southern States.

The "Anti-Slavery Standard," edited by Mr. Oliver Johnson, gave over a column of serious argument and endorsement to the work. Mr. Tilton, of the "Independent," was not to be caught napping. In that journal, under date of February 25, 1864, he devoted a two-column leader to the subject of Miscegenation and the little pamphlet in question. Mr.

The book contains 608 pages, handsomely bound in embossed cloth. Pastor Russell used to publish a two-column sermon in some hundreds of Sunday newspapers, together with a presentment of his features solemn, stiff, white-whiskered, set off with a "choker" and a black broadcloth coat.