Page:Zawis and Kunigunde (1895).djvu/323

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
WOMAN, CHURCH AND STATE
3

From a lady Professor in a Pennsylvania College: “The style of your book is clear, the argument conclusive, borne out as it is by authority. It has stirred us all as I wish that the book might stir the entire race of women in every part of the world. One million ought to be distributed and read in our country alone.”

Judge Merrick of the Louisiana Supreme bench declared he had “nothing but unqualified praise for the book.”

A Boston physician wrote, “Allow me to congratulate you. “Woman, Church and State” is the greatest book ever written by a woman and the grandest book ever written in the interests of woman. I mention it to every woman I meet, and all who have read it are pleased, instructed and astonished.”

The “Woman’s Tribune” of Washington. D. C., edited by Mrs. Clara Berwick Colby, commends the book as “especially valuable for study in woman’s clubs.”

A Washington, D. C., lady, a.Christian Scientist, said, “What a wonderful book! I cannot read but a little at a time, for it seems to stir up the old Adam in me, that I thought was buried. Every library in the world ought to have it.”

The “Advance” of Chicago, the leading Congregational weekly of the West, says that the book “shows much research and learning.”

Rev. Dr. Keeling, an Episcopal clergyman of Dakota, says, “It is a most remarkable book and is bound to make a stir among the clergy. I have read it once, shall read it again and mark it, read it a third time and take notes.”

“The Banner of Light, a noted Spiritualistic paper