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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTO ae FOR RENT—HOUSES. COUNTRY REAL ESTATE, | woman's nicHT TO VOTE. FOR RENT—HOUSES. RENT_DESIRABLE BRICK = se Bok id ragged oath; south, gront; all me Owen 1318 c i 31 -WE HAVE 81 40 new brick Houses, coptaini at et wt Sere e-f : is; So 3 5 BH Ee 2 Ske ay BEE ] iy ones 0 | Pay re tat eeeen ee hapess For a full list apply to WESCO’ B23 1 44 MASS, AVE. NE, i: 50 and reap ly, Two stables in | alley bet. 12th and 13th anc L sts. n. Teaed cL. DUDSO. oR RENT—HOU! F sT. odern improvements ; month. Apply to W. C. JOR RENT—FOUR NEW HOUSES; HAVE NOT Soon coupes rooms and bath; hand- R ii repair: lOUNSON, 718 water rent paid by owner =. store, corner lst and H sta ements: good at SULLIVAN'S: 18 PER MOMTH, 1912 iss this chance. 1443, 1. ey ‘Apply to THEOD. FR house; don't mi 1449 U st. nw. Us. & LIEBERMANN, 1303 F. a 49 F ST. ‘and Pension offices, each ho dasement-Katchen and dining ‘room, parlor and room, rooms, vance: inquire LEON _ 333-30" “HOW, TO BUY A HOME WITH THE pany” offers that chance by mone} atest RRRSRIODD RENT— Iowa Circle, 3-story brick, 13 rooms, all m, table in rear. brick: room briek. m. i FURNISHED. 4 On a prominent ave., 3-stor Storeroom 303 7th and .w. * 4 nd dwg 19th and y brick, 15 rs,,com- ‘urnished, heated by. ce . 3 eat furniture, stable a1 Bs ion of the pro} at office for bull THOS. E. RENT — DESIRAB! ; all mod. imps. ; we ted low rent to desirable tenant. <T—1116 CONNECTICU DW. Bi 20382 Gst. nw. 4 6th st. 40 3oth st. n.w lors (irescoed walls), pantry, close jences, will be rented cvmpletely NT—BY R. O. HOLTZMA: tate aud Insurance Broker, 10th and F sts. nw. D2 434 st. ww. +620 Dat a.w HAVE 84,000 TO LO. n Ft ¥.near 18th st., KY ONEY TO LOAN IN SUMS To 8) estate or local securities. Lowest rates of interest. ADDISON & LAR COMBE, ONEY TO LOAN ON REALESTAT rates of interest; on other approved security. THOS. G. HENSEY & G __ 13500 F st. new. GTON CO-OPERATIVE LOAN lends not part but ALL tie money iy or build homes at Fasments equal to rent only. Gaves deci at once for ever devised. No risk whatever to bo send tor “Prospectus,” to oflices 14 aud iS TO SUIT ON REAL Meo*EX T0 Loan IN, £0 E. C. CUTTER & CO., 1423 Fat. ON REAL ESTATE. THOS. E. WAGGAMAN. ‘ONE ON WASHINGTON CITY real estate at S and 6 per cent. WALKER & WILSi T—2015 Q ST. AND 2012 HILLYER @ rooms, bath, stag i Bie oi Pst nw. = 100 in sums to suit at 5 per cent. $20,000 in sums to suit at 6 per cent. reul estate security. and monthly notes secured on real estate BEALL, BROWN & CO. ONEY TO LOAN ON REAL ESTATE SECURT HLL & JOH 16 rooms, excell: W. & BURFOR PS )K RENT — CONVENIENTLY LOCAT LEE & RUTHERFORD, 1307 JOHN SHERMAN & CO., 1407 F st. VANCED TO BUY HOM long time and no event of death: ROR RENT—UNFURNISHED. H & SIBBALD, 629 F st. n.w. AMOUNTS TO SUIT AT “ign and H sts, 8 TO SUIT. FOR 5, In the ithout further pay- if Incuubs sted Security Life and Trust Co, we Lest ever Cevised to enable par- ties to own their homes for the ordimary cost of rent, F and ful expisuetion. lowest rate ou ap) ia GEO. ih loan is eanceled ‘mon jon th... i RUTHERFORD, 1307 F st. how. M BRICK HOUSE,WITH MOD. 0 Rent to ‘Apply to JOHN F. GREEN, 141, ¥ a Call tor # cireulas om F ‘ON REAL ESTATE 1) THIS DISTRICT. K. O. HOLTZMAN, 10th wud F sts, b.w, ONEY TO LOAN Tn sums to suit, at lowest rates on. security. “Tes Yetay ivan ONEY TO 1OOs ounces REAL ESTATE SECUIITY ‘THUS. J. bie 79 # se! M NEY TO LO. a WASIDN DANENHO! ap24 Successor to DANENHOWEK & SON, SPECIALTIES. LECTRICITY—15 YEARS A SPECI ental Curia wervous aid u sistal disease @12,2-5. Sunday, from 10to2 ie?) JF %00 want AN ovERcoaT AT HLF PRICE LONDON AND Fen Pex rane ON FOTOMAO aye AD Third Day of the Female Suffrage Con- | and sable: car. tion, ae fara every, homes land very | ~ vention. , eee with 10 room, stable snd 1. serew of an Ap° ADDRESSES BY VARIOUS MEMBERS OF THE NA- Jalo-8e* Poe yxandris, Va. TIONAL ASSOCIATON AND BY FREDERICK DOUG- KR SALE—F, 400 ACRES, IN VIRGINIA, LaSS—A CONSTITUTIONAL VIEW—WOMAN ‘SUF- wlan ora satincton by fails wlllecll ses vaien ts kn waer; ato. re owner, eT. 1. X., Btar office. The advocates of woman suffrage met to- Ficimices station fon Band. To alles outa | Sether this morning st the Congregational Guglling with outhuildiugs: suitable for a gentieman | church for the third and last day of the na- “Sqloswasim “FHAMONS BEALL, 223.434t nw. tional convention, ‘The ladies are gratified | aid that, except old English law relative to SALE—RIGHT ACRES, 24 MILES FROM | with the interest shown by the general public | women, and especially married women, was Pie coc the Halle Church road. ‘Thusis one of | in the meetings, and they consider that the | the law to-day. ‘She pointed out the harshness agg ia addresses have been, if possible. more eloquent | and injustice of met of these laws, and said 7 also the range of j- | that this legal status of women under these laws Falla to Fort Wanting: | 8nd convincing then ever before. ‘The andi- | ast tins fegel status of women and negro when D.C.. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1889: CLUBS FOR WOMEN. The Dangers which “Ouida” Thinks She Sees in Them. the Pulse of the People of Western New York. which teaches @ man or woman to be able to be indifferent to the fitful and quickly exhausted pleasures of social life. Those who cannot live without excitement, whether it take the form of parties to meet the Prince of Wales, or of cheap trips to est shrimps at Margate, are unhappy, dependent on others, never independent of fortune. Club life will inevitably teach women to be more Last week it was stated that Gen. Harrison | **3ing is that had sent a trusted messenger to New York to learn the exact condition of the feeling of the masses of the republican party in the state to- ward Messrs, Miller and Platt, who have both been so strongly urged for a cabinet position. That messenger returned to Indianapolis yes- terday and has an appointment with the Presi- dent-elect for to-day. However discreet this Tt is covered with s beautiful of chestm ences have been composed in the main of | siavery existed. She thought that this condi- x ‘age al weld make a ‘tiatirpamed — i ladies who may be said to represent the} tion was no better than very. An equality z ee OE a Teamable Seema. modern progressive women. It would seem | of right in the married relation would do and more intolerant of privacy and monotony. messenger may have been in the performance | wo...) usually like a thing toa dangerously ex- Jal2-30 Ts21 Fst, | that the women of advanced ideas find if no | much. in the opinion of the speaker, #0 make O6rny longer neeessary to demon: Bs fact by rmanent it relation. women i the "TCouPANT odvonce AEE ae ceey AR | absurdities, either in dress or in ideas, There | ballot, she thought that the wrongs complained sary to buy or build a home, city or country, upon s | was nothing in the appearance of the audi- | of would be remedied. It would give women pew plan: be at OEE y devised : payments song aerat | ences at these meetings to indicate that | their liberty, Atlantic Building. “Petue’ 10 oftces 44 and | they were not gatherings in the interest of | Mrs. Clay claimed that women would bring J{OR SAIE OR RENT —A FINE FARM, 61% | Missions or one of the many causes which en- | into politics an elevating influence, and quoted Free ‘Station, Co\, Me; | lists so extensively the sympathy and active | from the statistics of Massachusetts that a much fine pours, and outbuilding.’ Apply to KAKL efforts of women throughout the country. Miss | larger proportion of boys than girls were in the M417 13thet. aw. doll Anthony, inthe absence of the president of | reformatories of that state. There were more O. PETG 3 PUR- | the association, Mrs. Stanton, presided with | men than women in the prisons and many times hades OWN ee eo acting: | her usual tact, and the importance and progress | more men than women in the Hauor business, 7d&k-im* | of the movement was ably presented by nearly | which, she said, was the nurse of pauperism and ‘ON METROPOLI. | #ll the prominent ladies connected with the as- | crime. She denounced the system which classed aan R Branch; erase. grain, fruit, stock, poultry, and oon ot In fact — ge 80 a sa ote sshomplite paupers, aa — — ry} nS; 2 to GO * O35 ot aU an, | Said, and it was so well said, or as Miss An- | claimed that woman was the equal of man an ty homes = LoKe Ta O35 5 *. 80-3" | thony expressed it toa Star reporter, “the | capable of sharing with bim ican the affairs of FOR EaLY? GON SELECTIONS OF FARMS | jadios were so full of the subject” that ' little | the world. 2 S0UN S, ia immediate | {2 1 wieinity of Washington, finely adapted to FARMI NG: time was left for the transaction of the usual WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN WISCONSIN. TRUCE ee out stn fit rau ‘ GROWING. routine business, Judge Casey, of Wyoming, whose name ap- _nzs-3m_—_T.. H. SYPHERD & OPENING PROCEEDINGS TO-DAY. peared on the program, Miss Anthony said, (OR SALE—40 ACRES OF LAND. 3¢ Xf Row Shortly after 10 o'clock this morning Miss | was prevented from being present owing to an dwelling. Forparticularsaddress MANION DUCKETT, | Authony arrived at the church and promptly | important engagement. She regretted his ab- ‘Trustee and Attorney-at-Law, Bladensburg, Md. n9-3m | called the convention to order. She read a| sence but said that Rev. Olympia Brown, of SS | letter from Mrs. Matilda Joslyn Gage, one of | Wisconsin, who lived in a state where women ARCHITECTS. the prominent members of the association, who | could vote on school questions, would fill the a = ———————— | was not able to attend the convention. An ab-| vacancy. Mrs. Brown gave an account of the TANTON M. HOWARD, ARCHIT! ‘MAY e i ‘ * in Wi. ; r i S"huilding, cor. 7th and Este now. Aschitectueal | Sttact of this letter is printed in another | method in Wisconsin of managing the public 14 Mechanical ‘Drawit ‘of e¢ Ti] column, schools, By law women can vote in all elec- Promptly executed dy expert dranghtetsen. jaii-im | — Miss Anthony then introduced Mrs, Virginia | tions relating to whol matters, When it came SS ee ee —— ctl of Missouri, who, several years ago, “heya dap es a by se ieee z rought a suit to test her right to vote, which | the speaker said that the views of the men os NOTARIES | _PUBLIC. = was decided =e her by the Supreme Court | Seemed to be hazy. Many men. however, ex- \OMMIoSIONER OF DEEDS FOR EVERY STATE | of the United States. Instead of making a | pressed the opinion that it would be ; iit Rois Se UB gCommissiouer, | speech Mrs, Minor read a paper on 7 A TRICK ON THE PART OF THE WOMEN wd p.m nl7 THE LAW OF FEDERAL SUFFRAGE, to attempt to vote at the general state election, —_—__ — = ——— which was prepared by her husband, Fréiitiv} when the state school superintendent was tobe THINGS ARE NOT WHATTHEYSEEM | Minor. In this paper Mr. Minor says: elected, and at the county elections, when the As aoe “You are again in session for the purpose of | county superintendent of schools was to be Taking a Stuffed Club to Some of the | renewing your appeal to Congress to. propose | elected. ‘The women, however, thought that Romances of Life. an amendment to the Constitution which shall | the law meant what it said and ‘that they had forbid the denial of your right to vote on ac- | the right to vote. So at the next state election From the San Francisco Chronicle. count of sex. Twenty-one years have elapsed | thousands of women throughout the state It was quite aromance. It might have made | since you first made application for this pur- | voted, and in many cases their votes were taken & sweet, pretty, tearful novel. only it didn't. | pose. yet success seems as distant as ever. For | and received. ‘The fear was then expressed thiut But it was quite a romance. She was a pretty | "bis reason some members of the association | women would attempt to vote for President of irl, just about twenty, and, of het are considering the propriety of bringing the | the United States at the next election, and so = '¥, and, of course, she Was | matter before the Supreme Court, with the | the speaker stated test cases were brought to charming. She had had a very serious illness. | view of securing, if possible, a reversal of the | obtain an interpretation of the law. Several For some time they did not think she would | decision in the case of Minor vs. Happersett, | judicial decisions were obtained which ruled get well, but she had a strong constitution and | and I have eager to aan sree oo that the Sa of Sete sede confined 3 ‘ it | $fOuncs upon which such an application must | to county elections and to school questions ae cig Popaheadige see “opens it| rest. There is no impropriety or inconsist-| alone. ‘The women thought that under. these easily. She got well enough to be angry with | ency in ine both methods at the same | rulings the right of women to vote at all would the doctor and accuse him of deceiving,her be- | time. It will be necessary to state a few} soon be taken away entirely, and so they cause he did not tell her she was going to die | general propositions, * * ~* An appeal to | brought when she was so ill. ey as she was con- pepreryers ae Patan te Abetrighge) A TEST CASE valescing the doctor told her he had a youn, oe _ - tl ely 1 this latter move was man, ingeresting. «stranger patient, living ex: | Sufirage in already established in the fedgral | Hem™selves, ‘The result of this latter move was actly opposite. She immediately became wild | Constitution, and is an essential privilege of | tha goes we ree cages 4 to be allowed to get tothe windowand ses Linc | all American citizens. It is not cenferred in | legal, but that there was no election to which But the doctor forbade her for several days, | ‘¢?™s. upon any person or class of persons, but | it a plied, and so the speaker said the women At last he said she might get out of bed, and— | imheres in and attaches to a status or condi- | of Wisconsin had the right to vote if they could well, well, just to think of it, When the sun | tion of being which is expressed in the single | only have an election. The speaker attributed was shining and the world was all so fair, the | Word citizenship. Admittance to national citi-| this decision to the fear of the republican first thing she wanted to see was the interesting | 2¢nship endues the person with the right of | supreme court that if the women were allowed young male invalid opposite. She saw him, | Sufrage; cobipeteorclts depeeg by law. * * *| to vote they would vote with the prohibition and he waved a worn hand to her, for he had | The right was so established in section two of | party, and so it was deemed wise to postpone been told about her. Then there came over | #ticle one of the Constitution in these words: | their voting until after the presidential elec little bunches of flowers, and she would wear | “The House of Representatives shall be com-| tion, She thought that at an early day the them in her wrapper, and he would smile a | Po8ed of members chosen every second year by | supreme court would so modify their decision wan smile of pleasure. They did not send any | the people of the several states, and the elec- | as to give women the right to vote at all elec- other communication, but every morning they | tors in each state shall have the qualifications | tions pertaining to school matters. Perhaps would greet one another from the window. | reduisite for electors of the most numerous | this would be delayed until after the transia- She was well first, and the doctor could hardly | branch of the state legislature.” This section | tion of some of the present judges; but she keep the young man patient in his room, he | C°®Sists of two clauses. ‘The first relates to the thought the time was not for distant, was so mad and wild to get out; and so be- | Tight of ey or the right to choose, vest- WOMAN'S RIGHTS IN THE TERRITORIES, tween these two interesting young people there | '28 the right im the’ people of the several) 7 ts represent a state where women vote sprang up a sympathetic feeling that seemed | states. The Constitution affords still aimee to grow stronger every day. They both got | further proof of the existence of this right.]on school questions,” observed the next well. Ab, was’ it not “romentic? “Picture'to | The fifteenth amendment, ado} ted eighty years | speaker, Mrs. Abigail Scott Duniway, of Ore- yourself what came out of this strange and | S¥bsequent to the original establishment of the | gon. She then went on to speak of what was touching acquaintance, Can you not seo the | Tight, declares that “the rights of citizens of | Gone for the women in Washington territory, two meeting after their illness? Can you not | the United States to vote shall not be denied or | and the efforts made to have a clause giving hear the gentle voice that congratulates Lim, | bridged by the United States, or any state, on | women the privilege of voting inserted in the and the earnest tone in which he replies? Well, | 8¢count of race, or color, or previous condition | Gmnibus bill. pending before Congress, She he got well, and twelve hours afterward the | of servitude.” “Thus expressly, and in terms | said that this clause was returned by the Sen- doctor called and told her he had gone east. embracing all citizens, the right of suffrage is | ate, but was dropped out in the House. She I tell you, there would be a great many more | Tecognized as an existing right. The sixteenth expressed the belief that ultimately the women romances if they did not end in such a matter- | #mendment that you ask for is couched in the | of the territory of Washington would be recog- of-fact way. Fate is with people's lives like the | ®¢me language, except that in place of race or | nized, A similar clause, the speaker said, had young woman who begins to write a story. It | Color the word sex is used. Now it is clearly | }eon added to the bill admitting the territory seems to go a certain way with them and then Ups fart to deny or abridge a right that does | of Idaho. it drops them, or else it suddenly becomes | 2°t exist, and if the right of suffrage is not an FREDERICK DOUGLASS FAVORS THE CAUSE. practical and makes everything prosaic. Ro- | ¢xisting right then the fifteenth amendment is} 45 Frederick Douglass who was in the audi- mance does not last. You go toa picnic and | #2 absurd abuse of language. In construing : you meet a lovely girl, and you have just the | this and the other recent amendments the Su- | €nce was called upon to say a few words, and sweetest time in the world under the trees and|Preme Court adds its testimony to the | after a committee of the ladies had gone from by the brookside. And you are in a kind of | fact of the existence of this right. * * *| the platform to where he was seated his reluct- poetic dream until it seems time to go home, | The Constitution does not lay down any general | ance was overcome and he made his appeai and when you get to the ferry you make a | Tule applicable to all the states, nor undertake | ance before the audience. . Douglass said fea foe Som jl ae Rg hungry: to to prescribe the qualifications for the federal | that he had come to listen, not to speak. He ink Its be poetic. The human stomach, come to ¢ elector. It was considered best to require him | said that he was convinced of the justness, wis- of it, is a sad destroyer of your romance. to conform to such as exist in the several states | dom and ex diency of conferring upon wo- rosaic call is 0 recurrent and so imperative. for state electors, But this requirement by no | men the right of suffrage. He spoke of his Piton't like to think of the shepherds and shep- | ™eans_confers upon the states any power or | early connection with this movement, and said herdesses of Arc: sitting down to a meal of | 8uthority over the right of the federal elector. | he remembered with gratitude that women bread and buttermilk; there may be poetry | Least of all does it authorize the states to de-| were largely instrumental in bringing about compatible with eating grapes, le even | feat the right by imposing conditions with | the freedom of his own race. Before the ne- pears, and apples, and oranges are only | Which the federal elector cannot comply. Yet; | gro had the ballot he thought the colored peo- oetical when they are part of the landscape, | im point of fact, thev have unlawfully disfran- | ple needed the ballot more than the women. nee people can eat oranges and feel comfort- | ®hised one-half of the people by the use of the | Now he thinks the time of woman has abs ihow «fa er-bowl. When you come | Word male, to think of it everything in life seems to con- | FoR THE PURPOSE OF CONTESTING THE MaTTER, | Wrecked it would be due to spire against poetry. It's al well to fancy your | and of making demand for the right, a white THE INTRODUCTION OF PARTY POLITICS. sweetheart laid on her snow white ‘couch | woman, citizen of the United States, holding | Suffrage should be the all-important and dreaming of you, or standing in a gauzy cos- P ” a . a 3 ns tume by the window looking at the moon and | t##t her citizenship ought to avail to place her | commanding object of these meetings. While apostrophizing you as Romeo. But then you | at least upon the level of the negro, applied to | he was a dyed-in-the-wool republican, he did know that she has to take her boots off and | the Supreme Court to protect her against dis~ | not want to hear of the republican party in this take the hairpins out of her hair, and whenher | franchisement, and was refused, the court de-| convention, He thought that ‘Gougar dainty little feet touch the cold floor you know | Claring that “the United States has no voters of | had said too much about the prohibition part: that she screams «Ouch! how cold it is!” and in | its own creation.” This decision is so mani-| jn ber speech yesterday. He was a prohibi- that single instant poetry is dashed to pieces, | festly in conflict with the Constitution, as well | tionist, but he did not want to hear about it in And you! Well. you have lots of poetry inter- | @8 with the court’s own ruling just quoted, that | this convention. nally, I don’t doubt, but you are not tic | it is likely if the matter were again presented | After Miss Anthony made the usual announce- in a robe de nuit; you know poate not. I know | the court would recede from its last decision. | ments the convention adjourned. a fellow who reduced everything to the prosaic, | | “The first century of our national life under THE CLOSING SReGtON, We walked up Market street one afternoon. A | the Constitution is about to close. To women This afte ecaal meeting will be held pretty girl was coming down. There are plenty | it has been a century of injustice, since no | This afternoon a sp meeting will be he! ‘of them. wrong can compare with that of disfranchise- | in the church, and at that time reports will be “What a pretty girl,” I said. ment, and while we are singing pwons in honor | made by the vice-presidents from the various “Yes.” of the greut instrument it is well to remember | states show ing the progress of the work “That is as pretty afoot as I have seen in a | that women had a share in the work. At that | throughout the country. long time.” date women voted in New Jersey at all elec-| “ ‘The final session of the convention will be “Yes. What a pity such a lovely angel as that | tions upon terms of equality with men. They | held this evening. Clara B. Colby, of Ne- to cut her corns. Voted for members of the constitutional con-| praska; Helen M. Gougar, of Indiana; Rev. 0,” said the melancholy old fellow. “You | vention from that state. They voted for the | Olympia Brown aid Mrs. Isabella Beecher can’t tell about those things. I used to be very | ratification of the Constitution when submitted. | Hooker and others will make addresses, sentimental when I was young, but I got it all a Bier oS ae teeys oe aan ea aia 2 ncaa knocked out of me. ought the act residents of fhe Unite es. e who played pretty, tearful. parts se eoenaeen | iiak weoematk voted in olie of tha otstAl wad, Well James’ Startling Statement. true, gentle, sentimental women. I went once | known to those who framed the constitution, | HE SAYS THE BRITISH HAVE SENT ONE MILLION to hear a young lady give recitations, and they | and we must construe the instrument aq} DOLLARS BRIBE-MONEY TO WASHINGTON. were sweet, tender things such as touched me; | they left it. As before said, neither men/nof |” A dispatch from Pittsburg, January 22, to and she vee pretty, with oth Ieesningtal eyes pierre) cok apes = The Seti the New York Sun says: Edward James, of the and a sad expression about the mouth. I f ishing suffrage led as to exclade, i i in love with her and I got introduced to her, | neither, but to include both. So that whether | Je epppacore splices agers mph, 1 asked her to come out to supper with me after | You succeed through the courts or through | England, who is now here, says that “‘thou- her reading one night. I wes r; but I had | Congress it will ke due to the fact of your | sands and thousands of pounds sterling have massed all I had to give her a dainty, ethereal | citizenship. For the purpose you have in view | been contributed by English tin plate manu- supper to wake up all the poetry in’ her, so to | that word is to you the most important word in | facturers and. merchants to defeat the clause speak. I thought that sad mouth must be a | the language. “Jn hoc signo vinces, You should | in the Senate tariff bill imposing a duty on tin portal for only dainty food, and we went to the | Place it on your badges, and adopt it asa} plate, and this sum has been placed in the swell restaurant. motto. . nds of lobbyists for that purpose.” «What shall I order, sir?’ said the waiter. MISS ANTHONY ON THE LAW OF THE CASE. “How much money do you ee has been “They don’t often say ‘sir’ now, but those} Before introducing the next speaker Miss | Contributed?” Mr. James was asked. were days of politeness. ikadisoug nliegly Commune’ upon th a- | ,. {It is over $1,000,000,” said he. “There are ‘We will have—' I began. oe : pon the amend | rally 100,000 men employed in the tin plate in- “For me,’ she broke in, with her deep mean- | ments to the Constitution, and explained the | dustry in the old country, principally in South ingful eyes and the same sad expression about | appearance of the word “male” in the four- | Wales, and if the duty the Senate the mouth, ‘I want a,beefsteak and a bottle of | teenth amendment to the fear on the part of | bill is placed on tin plates it will kill the indus- English porter. I find that suits me best after | Congress that black women would be given the | try across the water and open it up in this a night's recitation,’ right to vote. She added that Senator Sumner | country.” Mr. James has come to this city to “It saved me money, but oh, how it burst up | had said that even this amendment did not j open a tin plate manufactory. 4 my dream of happiness.” sprites the right = vbr grog Hryeng = ——-e«-__-__ creer e women ase ei ig! ‘is “ ld li Armed men are searching the vieinity of | privilege upon this amendment. “which pro- cory halon Bigice eres ue spas SRT Jemison, Shelby county, Ala., for W. R. Ken- | hibits the abridging or denying of the rights | ““Old Timer_-“"No, sir; i nedy, a white man, who brutally beat and then | of citizens. If such rights were not civil rights, | could never learn to F outraged a young lady named Ellen Gray. His|as the courts claimed, then they | jite.”—Mr. vietim will probabl die, must be political rights. But as in Officer Kelly (who is getting the aftermath of dinner, 4 Harriet Coftin, the admirer of Actor ‘le | her own case and that of Mrs, Mino. Bellew, was pronounced insane by Drs. roe the Supreme Court had excluded women oad io moo cad “phot < ae Fitch and Douglass, at Bellevue tal yee- | these privileges, In the Minor case it was de- | BY mistake)— Kindo’ grapes terday, and she was removed to Mic town in- | clared that the United States had no voters, ‘The 4 Girl— " sane asylum. and that this question was one that belonged; ObeSecond Girl Thim kem from uailey.”. In the Nebraska republican legislative can-| to the states. She thought thut in the con- | , sicer, Kelly They thin, cas last night it was decided to support the | struction by the Supreme Court of these amend. | Bitioss ‘ed Te eta a ' resolution o! submission of a ments as affec negroes women, ~via | tr TEACHING WOMEN POLITICS. as he used to me?” Mrs. Eliza Archard Conner, of this city, the f next speaker, predicted that before many caught in the years there would be women as members of around by the Ske spoke of her ex; in New crushed aly York, where she started classes to teach In Patrick Bradley, a married ; something about itics and man, who was arrested last week charged with | She said axsaulting little girls, was yesterday convicted what . and sentenced to wenty-nine and eight montbs in the Eastern penit fs Major H. T. Botts, one of the best known in- surance men in the south, died at Savannah it i il >ess HF i BE a re ( : EE of his task he certainly unburdened himself very freely to the correspondents last night. All the specials sent out interviews with him, some quoting him at Jength and others giving the substance of hisconversation, All unite in | change of societ representing him as saying, after canvassing the western part of the state very thoroughly, he is convinced that the politicians want Platt, but that the great mass of the re desire Miller, quotes this messenger as follows: THE NEW YORK SITUATION. “I went to New York perfectly unprejadiced, h no other object than to find out the trath, in accordance with the instructions which Gen. First I went to Buffalo, where the American Poultry association w: holding a convention. There I saw # good many of just the kind of people whose s ments Gen. Harrison wanted to know—business men and farmers, I talked with politicians, too, although Gen. Harrison had heard all From Buffalo I went to Rochester, Syracuse, and towns of that char- I did not go to Albany nor to New York city. Gen, Harrison had heard both sides from | New York city, and at Albany the politicians | more are in force on account of the session of the legislature. Wherever I went I can say that I fairly sensed the feelings of the average repub- 0 voter about Platt and Miller. of the towns to which I went I transacted busi- ness and I talked with the business men with- out their having the slightest idea that I was | ‘pumping’ them. The; ndiana man, and they Harrison, and that naturally led to the cabinet talk. The situation can be summed up ac- curately in these wor Miller and the politici find one business man who was for Platt, and I hardly found a politician who was not for him. The most strenuous advocates of Platt are the politicians who were offic | aggerated extent when they like itatall, Itis if they once acquire a taste i become impatient of any it quid novi¥ the . se » the mimicry of liberties, and the case with which their per- sonal te are supplied, will all become Pleasures which will grow on them, Women’s clubs will, I repeat, never be much needed b: women of the world who already that such clubs would offer them in more sat- isfactory forms; but they wilt become a dan- Serous attraction to those classes of women, unbappily so much upon the increase, who, not mistresses of any home where they cam reign, educated enough to be restless and vain, owning or earning competence enough to af. ford them leisure but not luxury, sterile and unnatural indifference ions and affections of men, charlatanism, science, THEIR SEARCH FOR EXCITEMENT. These women, meeting only other women, will mcrease their own discontent and innocu- late with it the contented. The society of wor d, in agreat degree, for woman, he mind of a woman mach dangerously than ninety-nine men out of “Beware of female intimacies,” wise diplomatist to his daught ce was sound. Women’s clubs be hotbeds of such intimacies. The jealous | dislike with which men regard the attachment in a female friend of the woman they love is well founded. To the friend are coutided the Qearest secrets and the most dangerous coufi- dences, and in her the lover or the husband almost always possesses his greatest and most almost certain that i for club life they wi other; the constan blican party Cervespendent Harrison gave me. who plunge inte or polities, in cared to from them. men is not goo Women will h one hundred. id knew that I was an ked me about Gen. 5 ¥ few women are thoroughly loyal. All influence which has a tendency to estrange women from men is bad, bad in itself and bad in its results, Men are not as virtuous as women would like them to be, nor are they often as clever as they imagine themselves to be, but, such as they are, they are indefinitely better objects of women’s affections than women thems: and the mental atmosphere whic olders under past in administrations and who want to get back into office again.” 48 TO COMPROMISE. He says that there is more talk of compro- mise by the Platt men than by those who favor The former will be seticfied with W. H, Seward, the son of Mr. Lincoln's Secretary of State, while the latter would p: lius N. Bliss, the chairman of the republican | due to the fact that the for | surrounded by an ever-cha It | which me: about | and the h they bring a ¢ robust and invigorating; whilst their views are, on the whole. juster and MORE SENSIBLE ABOUT MOST MATTERS Why women of the world are wiser in their judgments than women of the bourgeoisie is ‘mer is constantly nging society of mare the most numerous members most intimate in association with her; the latter is, on the contrary, thrown for her © associatesa@lmost entirely upon female companions, The man is, perhaps, the strong- est and best man who lives little with women, but the woman who lives most among women is by no means the sweetest or the wisest woman. There is an inclination among women in the present days to deify themselves, which is fraught with immeasurable vanity, egotism, | and woe for themselves and others, Women's clubs will be the nucleus of this, undesirable self-adoration now so general in the weaker There is in women a hostility toward men, a jealousy of their powers, an envy of their pursuits and their awards, which is PREGNANT WITH EXTREME MISCHIEF, and needs no encouragement from external circumstance. There are too many, far too many, women numerically; masses of these women are well educated and unemployed; hey are being taught to believe that their sal- vation lies in forcing themselves into careers already overstocked by men: and the inevitable result will be a deadly hostility between many classes of the two sexes. Clubs will largely in- crease that class of women who are already antagonistic to men, who are restless and un- comfortable in their homes, who have a passion for physical science because they hope to satisfy through it their unwholesome curiosi- ties, and who possess neither the qualities which can attain a brilliant position nor the | resignation which can ac | The women’s clubs, those alone, will almost certainly be chiefly confined to the middle classes. Women of fashion will neither need nor care for them. Their mem- bers will be almost entirely recruited from the large class of tolerably clever, infinitely dis- contented women who are often deciassees, al~ ways discontented and ill at ease, and who pass miserably from the fruitless restlessness of youth to an unloved and unlovely maturity. 00 Lord Randolph Churchill’s Manner. From the National Review. Seated on the front bench below the gamg- way, he is visible, when he rises to speak, from every part of the house. His figure, below the middle height, is far from ungracefal, but his countenance is not handsome. head, a short, retrousse nose, and large promi- nent eyes, lend his face a singularly audacious —some people say brazen—expression, compiexion is pale and somewhat leaden. A fair heavy mustache with pointed curled en dark hair brushed close to the scalpand by a line which is already widening, this physiognomy. If you met him in you might take him for a cavalry officer in civ- ilian’s attire, perhaps for one ‘of those who study the Vie Parisienne more assiduously tham Theorie, His attitude ws by no means im- posing; his gestures are monotonous, mechani- cal, sometimes Indicrous. | buttons or ver wong his gern: jacket or } frock coat, During an entire speec! umpe his rizht fist down on the palm of his left hand for this statement is that it would injure the | with the regularity of a steam-worked tilt ham- republican party, as I think that it would bring about dissensions all through the party both north and south. I believe that within ears the colored race will be e President's cabinet. The | race will then be entitled to a cabinet by reason of wealth, standing. and m would be asking too much at present to want the President to appoint a colored man in bis cabinet. I would prefer Richard T. Greener to all others asa cabinet officer. him one of the brainiest men around.” MURAT HALSTEAD'S OPINION. AChicago special to the N. Y. Times says: “Murat Halstead was in the city for a few hours to-day, ‘I do not know very much about Harrison's cabinet,’ said he, ‘and what I do know I can’t tell.’ “The conversation drifted to the Miller-Platt fight in New York, and Mr. Halstead somewhat surprised his hearers by emphatically declar- ing that neither Miller nor Pi t Mr. Biaine will be the state committee. Upon this subject the York Commercial Advertiser said yesterda: is ramored to-day that th to make a determined effort to secure Seward’s appointment. Another Indianapolis pilgrim- This time the ambassador age is talked of. to be, so the story goes, of Auburn, who is a close frieud of both Piatt and Seward. and not unfriendly to Warner Mil- ler, A bargain is said to be an adjunct of the | If the reports be true Gen K to get, asm recompense for his serv chairmanship of the republi mittee, from which Cornelius en, John N. Knapp, n state com- be ALLISON AND WANAMAKER, The statementzis again sent out that the only | two names yet determined upon for the cabinet | are Allison and Wauamaker. former the Herald spe Senator Ailison hesit: In regard to the The fact that 3 about accepting the Treasury portfolio is causing Gen. Huerrison | When Senators Allison in December Mr. but as yet he President-elect of his He recently wrote Gen. Harrison, however, to the effect that he would consent ersonal reasons if it was his de- ‘rom this it is evident that Mr. Allison would prefer toretain his seat in the Senate spresent Iowa in the cabinet. The prevailing opinion bere, how- ever, is that Harrison will insist upon Allison The western politicians who have been here are unanimous in their desire that the Treasury portfolio shall be given to a west- ern man, and Gen. Harrison is understood to have ail along been in harmony with this view. Itis said that ex-Gov. Swne, of Iowa, who was one of Gen. Harrison’ was intrusted by him with a message to Senator Allison, presumably upon the cabinet ques- considerable anxiety. and Spooner were here ear! Allison was offered this plac has not informed the and let Mr. Clarkson isitors yesterday, In this connection, it may be stated that a ‘ial to the New York Times Vanamaker left here this morn- A friend of the gentle- man said toa reporter this evening that he went by invitation and not of his own volition. THE INAUGURAL ADDRESS, The Herald correspondent says: Gen, Harri- son bas authorized a denial of alleged extracts that have been printed of his inaugural ad- dress. He says that he has not yet written with reference to the southern ques- eis not sufficiently subject as yet, and that it will be the last thing he will treat of. He has only heard what the whites have to say, and he has invited several prominent colored men of the south to come and offer such suggestions as they may wish, Next week delegations of colored men are ex- a and Mississippi, and says Mr. John ing for Indianapolis. informed on that a ers will follow. COLORED MEN IN THE CABINET. A Charleston, 8. C., special to the Philadel- phia Press quotes ex-Cadet Whittaker, who is -now a lending colored lawyer in that city, as saying: “The time has not come yet for a col- ored man to be in that position. When speaking be He inserts notes in the int his hand thus laden with spectators of a windmill. gests a conjuror or a signalman in the act of ition | stopping a train. The voice is strong and werful; its volume is as unexpected; but it ollow, harsh, dry, and unmodulated. The nervous emotion that struck a Gibbon or a Stuart Mill dumb in the ment, and which, on vil the next twenty To others he sug- represented in nee of parlia~ occasions, on the of a weighty speech, lends to the me acertain special vil tion, is absolutely unknown to Lord i i e of mind is of so free voice of a G tions that visited him d hanged by the visited Key West. One of the note- bilitie’ of the island was Uncle Sandie, an old 1 ! f lil i | £ | i ! i i ff | i et FF! cel Pr