Winkworth, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen,
friends of peace, their hospitality, [330].
Wolcott, Mrs. Henrietta L. T.,
her talk on waifs, [392];
helps Mrs. Howe with the woman's department of a fair in Boston in 1882, [394].
Woman suffrage,
championed by Wendell Phillips, [157], [158];
by John Weiss, [289];
meeting in favor of, in Boston,[ 375];
other efforts, [376];
workers for it, [378];
urged in Vermont, [380];
legislative hearings upon, [381]-[384].
Wood, Mrs.,
sings in New York: her voice, [15].
Woods, Rev. Leonard,
invites Mrs. Howe to contribute to the "Theological Review," [44].
"Words for the Hour,"
Mrs. Howe's second publication, [230].
Wordsworth, William,
the poet,
the Howes' visit to, [115], [116].
"World's Own, The,"
a drama by Mrs. Howe, [230].
Yerrington, James B., [156].
Zénaïde, Princess, [202].