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Show AUTOGRAPHS OF NOTED WOMEN. How Personality is Expressed in One's Chirograpliy. The following list of autographs comprise a group of representative women of different professions and different characters. idPPk&z^z^&^tyL. ^ 3 < ^ ^ < S ^ 5 ^ * ^ » ^ T _ _ _. SUSAN B. ANTHONY. Miss Anthony signs her name with the unmistakable strength and plainness that mark her conduct and speech. LTJCY M. HAYES. Mrs. Ex-President Hayes makes no splurge in signing herself. Her chirography, as well as her name, makes one think of the good girls in the early novels. <Se^A-~~AdC P^e*_^s>*£k JE?£m-«. EAEI 1ST BEECHER STOWE. Mrs. Stov.-fe's penmanship, hke herself, S& entirely without omateness or flourish, the tetters all bowing gracefully before an imaginary breeze from the left side of the paper. 1ULIA WARD HOWE. Mrs. Howe's is a most beautiful and individual style of handwriting, clear and without affectation. >Z^r-*t^< €^k^fp. FRANK LESLIE. Mrs. Leslie's signature iw of a piews W.z&hw usual penmanship, which is so large that never more than four words get on one lint! FANNY DAVENPOR'l, Miss TJaveEtport is as willowy and graceful aye, even as dramatic, >.>n paper as on the stage. ANNA E. DICKINSON. Miss Dickinson wields a strong though graceful "Den. Her autograph is as clear cut and individual as herself. s&r £&Afr£l CLARA MORRIS. Miss Morris dabs dov, a her name with the firmness of a hoof track. LoriA Lotta makes an " L " t h a t rivals Sarony's famous " S ." Miss Faithful goes in for the l aw of ci>IJ trast. .Being an extraordinarily large wemai. she writes in a curious, crooked, burned and smallish style of penmanship. ELIZABETH CADY STANTON. Mrs. Stanton, who takes the entire space across a sheet of commercial note paper to write her dignified name, writes like she talks and acts-without uncertainty. |