the "spirit of the time" in
deed & actions. With Mrs. Tobin
you may also speak regarding Miss
Julia Pease.
Perhaps you see Mrs. Eglehard,
who is very enthusiastic for womans
work, and equality. I suppose you
came across her very interesting
work on "Mexico."
My young friend Mrs. Miller,
wife of my lawyer Clarence Miller,
([the] mother of her is in Laredo [and is] Superintendent
of a school for Mexicans) is on
our side, but I do not know —
outspoken as she is — if she can
be actively engaged in the movement.
See also my dear friend Mrs. Huddle,
the painter, whose studio is over the
Brackenridge bank. If she does
feel able to meet such publicity,
Elizabet Ney to Mariana Folsom, December 3, 1898, Erminia Thompson Folsom Papers, Archives and Information Services Division, Texas State Library and Archives Commission.