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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 11, {6e¢—TRIPLE SHEET. a respect er to those less holy than themselves, In apostolic hands | 80clety needed. He had hear 8 person say— Mra. tbe inte Ae nether tied ee Suen, hiean teen eetiot event wan Gane eeuantéied & desecration, would Jen lake rons Mearns gene wifo and walk | to ride on the Batform. of ¢ invaisble blink. salt we alt-calely fold our arms, | Henos, when a Tyng, Beecher or a Cheever, who were | down oon sl apg fA to take who had made the former remark loudly sharing ike te Pion ofl, hank ak We aan | mem Ms on nine he poy of arts | Joe sdf Poumon enna ico et | ay them and them to ’ no! Itis * your “any and. mine ‘and our iniarest (oo, t6 open new | Or urge men to Carry thélr religion into politics, the secu- Perey eld aha toe ell dant Penns “ght | airy “Awruou rose to address. the convention on avenues for work and wages to this class of women, for | lar press raps them om the head, and bids them go a 4 through thered sea unhurt. ( — subject of the resolution calling of oy o ‘Sapping the very foundation of national virtue | prepare sinners for heaven; ag if politicians were | Sud he would ywes tnaiee Cetin OD tiog je meer of the society. She avd strength. We may neglect them, but their sins will | not siners and justice the opening wedge to hea- | ¢Y politics of ita —— ‘hey might put on as for a change in 4 “WOMAN'S RIGHTS. GEORGE PEABDDY AT HOME. His Retirement for = Season to His Country Home— Description of His House im Georgetown, Mass. — Quiet Habits of the Great Millionaire, do. OUR GEORGETOWN, MASS., CORRESPONDENCE. i 4 a H 3 g a LA i ; é 4 i : | HA Eleventh National Convention of the bo avenged on us and our children to the third and | ven. As to the ho its sovere! ocoupy they pleased still thero would be | Woman's t@ Association, and to take tho: mame of ol es. 14 singularly anomalous ion, in an ideal world of puri. | ™&By inspectors as they vides Guonastows, Mass., May 9, 1 strong Minded Females. fear arn Mi the Talc Satay | fMfagsence an wea airman anhe wore | ue gn, Tay eh ag leas ee | "a omnthtnataaventoy a Wak coe | | Mary fright gy Me George Peaboty inde im pe hot to deatroy life Lut tesave it. I would have men and | 1fe—objects smply for admiration, worship or love— | After th bub a mother, a | constitution "1s to ‘be mented; ‘The first work | the United States, andavolding all display and, indeod, w, onstom ~ | if there’ were present at the pola, a wife, Women pepocinied. togeltet oe test SA fe obama: Shore douled equally oven with men, aschizenn tare Alster hat would bring, peas whore, there, was which this Equal Rights Association proposes t@ eutet OB | simost rejecting the offers e” common courtesy from his sioned, uniformed and paid by the State, to the | bot not repent ee nnees, subject to catch die are : riccui, now since comproinises wore | throughout the entire State until the ath old acquaintances, he sought the scenes of his childhood youth’ of the nation, With star on her brow | Sipe i worshippers in the tenole bat must not obey | coming into vogue, would they aot make & compromise? Decomes revolutionized and our Legislature shall becom | to recuperate from tho fatizues of a tollsomo journey and a socptre a her, hand, would, pos Lo ar prea ringed ia pte, Ut east not cacky, | It was said that woman euzht toleave voting ber hus- alle to, sinha, aah Seana : aeentoala ot ig. | and enliven his mind by surrounding himself with ‘the rol our street al “ , , | band, wd that stay me was associations of the past. : Biel tt ort she now "dong, ‘dependent | The fatal consequenoes tm thus divareing the wave, ano | band, father or brosben, sot 140 Wha nts enndia tame a fejublcan govecumehh all tho eck of a gabu. | *"ieatody ince ast Thursday bas been living with on the will And tous ty ok sean a Sg hh or | Ore ea ie Aa are tl foxy Se pd that gave bim all the light tha he requ ee pl gece perenne rrr cata bis sister, Mes, Daniels, sho ‘Foaldns ia this village. over my sul *, , ol od Gogtaas - | woman was so much of God's neans of sp) good Georgetown is situated hortheast of Boston, a distance whole moral being. Yes, I would have arenpieed com tar rellgiogs as gs no ene oF, seteece that her light should appear everywhere. Some people the details of oe proposed PRR, She, penne of taeaty-<ighs miles, and on the Boston and Maine panies of women to abate drunkenness, gambiing, licen- | towar a! PO ll lence the best ot evi, | Seemed to chink that ‘iecoman. ot votes she would do | that have n put to 1e + qi | Railroad, The village ts small, probably containing nob Housness; to watch and wara the young, the woik, the | of mind, thowe accustomed io the examination of evi. | Doing but strut out with a brndle of tracts, discussing | those to whom the ork, Js to bo entrusted ‘will | over a thousand inhabitants. Mra. Daniols’ resid ence 1s ignorant; to counsel and comfort the cr minal and the toe unditineal be cea. 6 little toward Peper 6 | ali kinds of tions. He did 10t belleve tuat would be be found well ~ ‘ Fd the Soak fe, bave ‘a medium sized double frame house, painted white, with unforwunato; to look at-r the order and sleapliness of | te tteae rales ie che their age, On the other | ‘tho regult, It was aald that it would destroy woman's | Pad lessons onongh oo uiing, | ton, We | green shutters, and stands back about twelve feet from our tenement houses, streets and ns; and thus make beeeh hee es church ignore grave questions of D4 | aoliesey if sho eutered into politics, Yes, it would, if ve women in the Lancer lation who not sit down | frevrain street, on which it fronts, Here Mr, Peabody the mother, the wife, the sister, the daughter, the omni- ie RS pd overiend the lar government, whatever | 51.4" entered into partnership with politics, (Ap- after the fashion spoken : by Mr. Phillfps, leaving the proposes to ‘6 his home during the summer. Bvery- psa il fom are mora ni eae | NaN anh eee weve MT | pone) ‘ol Groyne hn voms ft | Gules aaased haan ete Sars aad | Mies anace Haas cheng et tage jonger slay: ‘I 5 et a tics 18} € sy 8 3 shoshould be queen, This is no Utop'a, ‘but a vision to | buke the Sing of their own fay ‘and gen ration, while the | Another sort of instruments In | Polls ond Vow | purpose in forming the Equal Rights tion to oop | mak ng thie bse chob igs oes shevsedues Of gm imtoo falad.”"fuoy who ar ebm ie wna | socerega fhe Rome cng bah wate aad chur 8 | Eveagh borate buaband of beter ena toough | the due ant the rene OS cecteaniny | ts Se Phases know ts needs and temptations; and one #9 | Syalem; hence blindly eri all progress in other, ‘lus | em any more than agon? And if you could form 6 | TAM none yn (Applause.) The ist is impaereet as | On tho early train this, morning Mr. Posey aetnoe EO Pacatke Bays Wick re tee iue debris | we give each of thoes Pomesided, education, a | Stgumeut to show why the girl should not use ber right Dut It'we gona the election of. officers now Boston to attend to some business requiring his presenes, ere ey Te a ae tne aes | ieee onte ot mo Sram 8 one lucation, | {orvote as well as the boy, and if every mother, grand. | Jet te fe now we can | Ho will return hero, it is expected, this evening oF to- of sewers have been found to possess those | false code of morals, and a narrow range of thought and | 1 ther and eldest daughter were to be voted tor by the afterwards tothe number as it may be deemed ex- | vow. Ho” closely ‘abstains from all Senge the chemical qualities that can alone restore the worn | action, bogibear Pipe odpm siete pelea forone | father or by the husband, or by the oldest son, why Ppedient, present, fte the numerous requesisto get up a formal out lands in the Old World, so from the very dregs of so- | cannot do the dutics in either department unlegs he under- | 5) ou14 not the children. be voted for, in complete family MR. 8. 8. FOSTER PROPOSES ADJOURNMENT. nie rr says he wishes several weeks’ rest, The ciety, through poverty and suffering, shall come the | stands the demands of all; asin individual tifo the laws | relation, by the patriarch, for the government of the Mr. Foster procoeded to address the convention on the | peonie of the villace, much to their praise, have nt grandest virtues of self-sacrifice und heroism that can | of spirit, mind and matter must be all observed to | Yioie ta iy? It wassaid that woman was of so excita. | subject Of voting for » committes''to draw up the new | Dressed the subject further. , alone doom the race” Yes, while man dofends Us fro | eee ea the fase Wena tet nostated ons | ble anature that she would introduce #o much aenmony, | POISON tht at yy tho eloguence ofr. Begeber, = y Q not belie g . me the fif.een million votes of the women of this coun- | pressions of individual growth, subject to the samo law. eteotge dre pies a urate! be aie) nok eallere | erated led by the eloquence of | Mr. Bester, | Spirit of the Franco-American wish try and it would be no Herculean task to cleanse these | of life, to me2t the responsibilities of either we must | would leave them without a sense of personal conduct, | truths of , and that the bright picture’ he 7 DICAL PLAN OF RECONSTRUCTION. Styg’an pools of vice and crime and ignorance from their | have a knowlodge of all. Hence we claim for the wel- | 1.6 would give up the ament, He would | placed before us of the ultimate result of; our ‘The Courrier des Ktate Unis has an article on this sud- lowest depths, and from this multitude of fallen angels | faro of the nation that zis women havea broader, decper, | Mevait women were excitable. Ho would add that poll- | efforts is a possible thing to atiain and’ accom. | ioc in which, after quoting Mr. Stovens’ declaration organize an army to war on, the very vices that dragged | more sclentific educaiton than in. Knowledge of he | tics needed no more excitement, Af woman would bring | pllsh, it we Bal, oe, Say Se Ae ee | ee nia pe ated Orthos at tamer Bead then have already placed woman by the sde of man io sll y of church and state, and the {amily and thelr | Gyewoment into. politics the two would neutralize ouch | Bald, what we have effected, Aho work we have already pees ave y placed womdn by tte mceat. Han inal: | Speyer peace °O& os purity. | Sitoe and the probability was that there would be a | accomplished, 1s a source of pride, and should be a.sub- | those that propose the constitutional amendment could his amusements, vices and crimes, oft draggin him to | She may understand the law hy eee higher ex- grand 2. Women had yet to experience the influ- | ject of thanksgiving to God, who aided us in the great | 4. consulted as to ite validity, it sayn:— the lowest depths ot degradation. In the full blaze of | cellence pay be attained, and thus learn that she holds | §.04 being thinkers on public affairs, and the excite- | work the society had asgymed. Re herd we = f iy is i civilization, let us then demand that she be with him in | a place and power in the grand march of civilization. | rent che would bri into thom would result in thelr pve ates things now , before us ¢! pal not After all suc thant uid: hot astonish Dai Avery. uctiget ones aah eaeaeotayan | Pom ae Caney einige | dai tect a coven | el, et Wg ea nae | RE Ge Get ae nn eee : y on it ref aul 2 oe, dynasty of foree, sho perishes ‘alike, for bread and | of blind sentiments and passons the olds alae postin, Tae a en ane ony Natmoraivinstinets, “He | never have been agcomplishod had not God formabio, moreover, (0 the pretension, put titward. by ¢ gage ve, love one Ge ‘ou > Fe 6 potent | a ‘o cA 1 ae, - ye - rend ly niece i ae if, | wished they had a ttle more of that power. It. was | blessed our uni and persevering effort; For Pog ro ern tf eo pen Stokes 10 longer form EE a ee ee aot eee aealoty cxclusive, religion bigoted and government aristo, | Said that if women voted they might take office. Why | the purpose of -givide & mow impeips | fo this | Oo ae arent manjorite 4 tly 3p9 e=soutive ower, and behind an endless war of solfsh competition, of weakness with | society exclusive, religion bigoted and government tisto- | nor “Women make good postmistresees, Women had | movement, and for puiding It on, the raliroed frack of | © in frees majority oF uo people, think differently. Tt br SM ae Ag ak hace ln cared tovexe i te xegpog adi Bent rte devo intin, | been tried in every position from the throne | future progres, I think 1 necessary to havea more | will be reco) rig) ‘nat Mr. in his quality of Seo- Bist woman did foe siceeed Qian ace a ee tee | arene i yte she piirevie ree down, ‘and when ‘had they been found wanting? | perfect organization thin we can hope for by electing a | retary of Stats, waited util the dmondment abolishing pitals and on the baitle-field she may do. for the wos | Ge ei ORtr of aaslfonltare thet has no practical out, | Some offiogs had been found for men who made them an | Committes this morning, and I would therefore susgest | slavery, Be been ratiied by two Legislatures of the presen dling be en | eee WC: tetek wan ag no Practical Out; | excuse for leaving their familios. He was told, women | whether wo ought not now adjourn and holdsanother | South, trsfore declaring that it was acoptod and made tin on vel beg couches, ‘ee in purple and fine rorkings, but i 1 imply as ad. ai win their | aid not do thelr work well, but they might d upon | session for the appointment of the proposed mittee. orth an integral part of the constitution, What- nen, and faring sumptuously every day, tell us they do | power to attract and rule who come will their | ‘¢ that the education they’ would receive ald quality I now move that this meeting adjourn to meet again at | Ver they do the radicals will always cncounter this not care to vole? They have all the rights. 0, cribbed | sphere. Woman loves power, and wields it this hour | them for it. ‘They had tried “old women’? Jn office, but | four o’elock, and, that the convention then take suoh | Precedent, and narrow slaves of juxury and selfishness, the circum- | with terrible influence against the very idea that our | i: would be agrent deal dott have real women. | measures and action as mav be deemed expedient. REPUBLICAN TOLRaTION. ference of whose oe takes - none but themselves! young nation has sirgady qwice baptized a Digod. (Laughter.} Give him a just, coms true, straizu 5 LUORBTIA MOT? BEFORE ‘Fae coho a The Messager Pranco-Americaine, referring to the oo- Sppon ou hae al the ita You want look oper | aie cag bare no, the dpi ot ates | Lind, nono aohe lotsa women ho had been | Mim Leeman Moe, the oo, woman siqueat then | ut yezepion given to Me Bulowak, the envoy ofthe ce, into the wilderness beyond, where immortal | They are opposed to the genius of republican institu- able in the fear of God to bring up her children and settle | came forward: and addressed the Convention. I think alte to the [aoe are fading fast, and no gentle hands or lovi tie ‘a government of equality, anda religion. of | them in the world, and sho could be Premdent of the | this Convention might con!inue here ‘and gon with tho | European republicans, in Washingtoti, au bern Resste are there to raile thaht Grvopiig bead or panrihos, Nor we this ete] ay ahead “all below Mar | United States. (Choors ) He protested, in the name of his ed work without adjournment. Many heredesire | meeting proposed to be got up for him in Now York, of bliss to come. Su; “you have all the rights | son and Dixon’s line; for in the North we often hear | CoUntrymen, against the notion that woman were not fit to Tocieave, aud ir they: leave they: perhaps cannot come | makes these very sensible observations: aida roar wait? ores Rctlon ta tho. sol “the | Gaataied itae | ‘ar | hold oilice of public trust. Would it not bring out the | again. { ‘make the suggestion so. that it may ry ne Tallent tte outraged:ot "your sex? Obi if rights’were | Great Britain above our a aoe ee eect sor | groatost enthusiasm among them if ho mentioned the | be seem which course is most ngreeablo to | | We would seo with pleasare a demonstration of | this jransferab! and { ofuld have the votes of aif who failure and deplore the Independence of our laboring | ame of Quoen Viotoria? (Themontion of Queen Viclo- | tho meeting. | But I would Sia av | Meaiectations ofises., Behe ip ip sid these tied {oo selfish or apathetic to ask for them or ose thee classes, and 8i b for the heeeasiot aking and rare toria’s name was received with cheers.) Whoever mon- | as we. are together, {t seems to me that i one of 1868. . Buti ip ie aald bes the would gladly. apte all day tor secure to every woman | Atthe’ South tho principle of caste and dass bas beon | HOUed her namo mentioned it with respect. ‘The rev. | wo might goon and. perfect the work as tar as it | States, which rotuson te interfere, in the Amira of thie work, and wages, and cducation—to stom the fearful tide | taught persistently in or, pulpit and mat the | erend getiomen spoke in terms of peaian of the Duchess | can be done. Wo certainly can resolve to merge this | Coutinent, ought not to intervene In questions of Euro- Of vice that threatens our very existence as a nation. | North loved and glorided, while no class of ‘people have of Sathoriapt snk foe Dachese, of shrayle; earasied’ | Wome Riebe Ocnrestion cimehe Propdtnd conventiod. fees jira peed i ane tle 7 where in France or in ia queon or empress un- cannot seo Wi we cannot on an im as as What to me the coarse and brutal crowd that might sur- | been so revorently courted as the rich and powerfulslave- | wets {n France or fp Auairia had quo.n, Gr tmaprses Om | I cantor boo ty ate aebotation bie oe tom rg eg Cnet onl Meine oat tte aon round the polls? What if my robes were solled, my feet | holders, who represent the id Wherever tu ieee: ie tad nearTone i ad, See | eet ee Siindsdned diswacteds tha chisel cad crament? "It was a coniroveray today between women | tainly pledgo dur dollars and that lee most important =e Bi aes The Ballot for Women, White and Black, the Crowning Right of Civilization. A GREAT WOMAN'S RIGHTS PETITION Phillips, Beecher and Tilton on the Woman’s Rights Question. Spirited Speeches by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Susan B. Anthony and Others. Xe. ae. &. ‘The mental giants among the fomales of this country, ther with a fair proportion of the physically able- eo of their sex, met in convention at Dr. Cheever’s ghurcb, in Union square, yesterday morning. The ap- pointed hour was ten o'clock, and the ladies wore prompt in calling the Convention to order at that hour. The Body of the church was filled, principally by people un- deniably from the interior of New England, where the mental and physical culture of females is attended to more closely than the art of adornment in dress, The galleries, also, were tolerably well filled. An undue pro- portion of full-bearded, carefully-dreased men might have deen noticed in the audience by a person who had ever before attended a gathoring of this kind; but their pre- sence was explained subsequently in the talk of the Convention. Women have secured equal rights—so they interpret new laws—and it entails no discredit upon manly men to associate with them now in gatherings of this kind. ‘The absence of tH® tong-haired beautics of the sterner sex who were wont to adorn the female con- ventions at Utica and elsewhere was gratifying as it was remarkable. The ballot-demanding fomales of this Con- vention shone brighter in contrast with those “thorough- Dreti’”’? men. ‘Upon a carpeted platform in front of Dr. Cheever’s pulpit the dignitaries of the Convention sat, Mrs. Eliza- beth Cady Stanton, Mrs. Lucretia Mott, Martha ©. Wright, Susan B, Anthony, Sarah Hallock, F. E. Watkins Harper and other neatly-dressed ladies foiled ‘the beauty of the fair-haired Theodore Tilton, who ideas Ct Rotter te ca ade ovcpns of | RU wih cantar oka tat | Ate Mgnt tna | foct ron, wee tencag scan prs | Bat we ia nel ign im | So npn te Aer se the ‘organization was being e while Mr. Wendell | ten thousand women from more hellish sights and sounds, | harmonious. But with the realization of this fact | Bolding office of trust. |(Applause.) | the convention bres Op now sali Shat are here. and. | out Of pis | eon mbites yoy od their lives all through from stains that water cannot wash | comes a new order of philosophers, who tell us this | Mrs Antony said, Mr. t dit d not 'be—thi ere Queen of England. She would like to teil the moet that I come before ais scutred fo light? re icp bee ngs cheaply, Fire ed mance fixed ase 3 life co oes and bi - — oe how the Queen had been received when she went dows battles of years in ‘this cause. (Appliauge.) But 1 rajoice through the fiery furnace unscathed, and through | be securedto man. With auch minds as Herbert Spen- 3 cose Narigmnan bond .~ woald: ‘also uke to tell thous in the fact before me—that the yourig ones are coming the Hion’s den tinharmed, so shail those whose lives are | cer, John Stuart Mill, Garth Wilkinson, Victor Hoge, | Coved when it was sont up to Washington where an: | tp lenpe.cxecente sand: jsomtreo 1. fegr po Phillips and Aaron M. Powell conversed cooingly in th vid Ban Lay oon Pulpit, ple col came s aroaat and gloves long’ band! sconted shawls, “4 pple ii on iy PLATFORM. those on, the platform wore Mise Gasan Ernestine L. Rose, Mra, Trancia D. Gage, Ste she not stil! tolerate even on own territory, the disguised insults of /her for enemies? Does she nos ive to all the aposties of the monarchical syatem nse to come and’ susta'n their thesis in her pi Now, her citizens only exercise the simplest i table of rights in expressing their sytepathy § a lnk in the chain of p that binds fui Ruskin and Mazzini ity of man tavthn Daat walk securely: fhrotgh fehe hells ip heaven; | and republican ioaiiations showing ve Rew oraer and | 00d, of preventing it wah a proper speosh, they | to the cause ih which wo, have, struggled 20 Jong for (P= for love and merv; i was coldly presen| apology was (Applause.) This’ is all tho order of | the republicans, revolutionary though they may be, of SPRY Rally Foster, Mrs Winchester and bra. Lucretia | that it has done ao ma AB ate taking her out Potattne Go oman, ‘shall ‘uot woman hereof pot on | 18 appearance, The Was, sont. dom tne | taken Ghat withers ahould dopa ahd “gies: ple | Hurope, soul they go and sid sham it would ooif be Hike SESE ec regen | sunt emene Ne LR a | a ra eee eras ace | Halonen tit wee mee Panetta | Sete emt culm nonce | Shatter crcen teach gata i 4 an 18 e now ; demonstrations ma} are ‘occupied a chair somewhat in the background. cone . ao Noho Seunte und Hause of Hopes. try inthe form of'a convention? se contrary to law nor to iaternational legic, i ‘earn good wages there, and preferred it to the gar. on her conscience? In blotting out one half the | ten read an address ona. TION OF THE CONVENTION, den, the fields or highway. But multitudes | race from all direet influence i practical uses of | eDtatives, setting forth the claims put forward by the | us advocates of equal rights for ‘women from — —-—7 Know not where to lay hair heats “he question pro. | life; i divorcing, sam wed comae eae moycal usen ct | supporters of the Women's Rights saceeonion” Sih oe medias aantontoes gr chr ret sr Spirit of the Gorman Press, ose to you 18 not what advantages you and I who have nation and the family are left in a state of baif orphan. | ‘ocument was fully in accordance with the sentiments | much; but and understand how end eaueation ‘end prftiou shall secure” for “our- | age; in the outer word aera ‘untempered by | ©XPressed by the meeting, and Mra, Axruosy moved its | defined the law, that husband” and wife wero bus one | The Staals Zeitung, tn reply to an attecte of the Cineim- for werk and-wagea. J. say. tipp, allthis tale, aboet ame me af there ea luorant me a Tatrtee su pomeasosdsehtiteets sheemt ietewiont | {cou Da rie oi ly sweet Bek orn prong ste REMARKS BY MR. WENDELL PHILLIPS. that time we commenced to labor to change the law§ and | tion of Congress, says:— women’s and placein ber hand the ballot, which | the young, who be sul Yes, the family | |, Mr. Wexpeit Punsirs sald bo was very glad to anewer | to make it recognize a wite. as» person enjoying civil | cmat the republl (idea fs the key teal ihe le employments, tc oduca- | needs a father's thought and Wisdom, and the nation | ‘hls morning to the roll call If Me. er had left | rights after her union or marriage. As I torn- beret ly Mn he ov od ub op, to ‘civil and political rights: to Tae ee inde. needs a mother's love sud care. .As tffore is just that S2y point unoovered or-siy suggestion unmade, he would ing, appeal made ‘to, the Legislatures of the seen eigenen gi pe albert: nite : nd age quence to, Keep the tah in tho seu the birds in the | to” the proscrvation of | the “yaoe, oO. there | Phillips) watched iat op by tiep, be thought Gea: | answeA@, ‘aad tho law bas is at regard Sommectiont sad the town and cherier.clections im ape eck! Loree’ Mose being’ epesleaed iho: preslds- aves ne Senlie ter in, ie OrbIt, "nor | te just Spiritual "difference necessary to | eral pe covered Bis camp. oF. || spently “changed fer, (Be "better, » Whaat” we Seals yelbsnnsay too Gite tian chanoee on = Mrf, Elizabeth Cady Stanton reed the —s Ponca > she shi ad no | the of thought. Hence, in the oducation and | bis outposts more tact than Mr. Beecher | menced the sagitation we were but without losing their ‘This makes eo Pedh tal ema aan eam | Saag sree Seances er Te ee ne, Same, fr | noe nearemany. Wa,frm.not, the ldo handle | Gitwonce botten tow ta thon nen Sn nn PAUAMBLE AND ausaLyTIONs. va ns, |e "havo fo foars is asking that | hitherto, oo Darren and speculative, becaase not met lowed simple suggestion. thonght thelr friend Mr. in largo rn sud when we come together now, mepaaay wecneney Geta: re Sees onc il aa | ay in npr otters | RLAyare St cs ae | Sateen treet en | mon "Meer at" tm at | covets e weeganeon he Ec ee a eae | Sie Gen eal poratshar eee | oie ann ney eens | Sampras er het pe | Eat ae pam are i ay Are the inharat righ ‘women ia:diaguise,” Yee no reason why worsen should | keys, with every stop rightly, edjsed, “tad Ae | Semtod to thom, “He did balleve, Anat the ecattomal vor | lar Gage cnpreaeed the Year thas: the di which journals, and which of rr) apa or code should be | ‘not more generally be clerks in slores, and printing | louder, lofter strain ‘the ‘march "of civlization wil the ballot would add Wut very’ little tothe tatterted or centu: sheken Miaste baie nih es eee German repsblicen press have these Seat bet pace at offices, and steamers, conductors on our cers and rail- | be jmmeasurably quickened. We are on the threshold | Women. The reason why he was interested in this ques- | meve. ( ) Bat as inthe great movement of gee yig tat gators, and | roads, drivers If fine ladies can | of s new era, when moral ideas are to govern nations, | ou was because be would put recognized power | the An ‘Aasoclation tho most sanguine abo! ee ee et ee 4 vente the Park, with s | and we walt but forthe true mon and women who be- | Where there already wnrecoguized infla- | ist eould not havo anticipated that alav: be tung saye:—~ ig ep Neve i possible to realise » pare religion, © just gov- | omee. He —_ recognized influence was al- robe fe nelly Parmar — J tis could have, hoped. to ‘The debute on the constitutionat amendment as re ee 1 oe oa cekbment aaeat righto a ae, tee | Saleh “war” ConeMien tak a onbly tomeetue guest wove Geos and the wenger dns bat | in pee gy cnr menage renee nine to thet © eatly as lever saw the sunlight on the eastern hills, hable to corruption. It might be said to-day ‘women re Tee al} brought to increased reverence ming it wan clonr’ that, the: poswion of the repebe quarreling | and I feel that woman’s hour bas come, When ‘the | ruled the State. What meade the Southern rebellion? | for fer which bas wrought this work—so in this | licans was sach as we judged it, - courtesies of life everywhcro better | builders of -thie repul realize that Women did not make it. Without the extraordinary oqually Ymportant werk of ours for the sbohiion of the ‘as such a life might seom to us who | element in friendship of women on that side it could not have beon | enslavement of though not equal in dogradation | _ Te Dewokrat reviews the new Tax bill. About the , it would bea step | man as co-worker, then shall the temple of made. ‘That scorer iofluence bed the Southern | to that of the or Mack sare, we ad © to Bee the | Income tax it saya:— to health, virtue and in. ee ee ee was doing any. | work 2 T nevor liked to use If this tax had been honestly ! Dy all, the same What a change there would be in all SEMIRES Of “TERODORE STLTON. ‘women could vote thay would pet the evap cr country, bo Fag a yen Free ea ee te a ase dirty strects and dingy offices down town if women | , ,Mf-,THT0x next addressed the convention. He sald— | thie wh ia stop't $ Wr continues tobe wach, oe LB nwa n-ne ina partners in busin es—merchante, bankers, lawyers, cee any or eae (ae on ‘with Mra, Stanton, However Gap! ie whe wa open “thing, the Lactaieere wen 14 Stipuwel oy Ba AES : — coer os ~~ fore 31,000; — editors, or in the ten thousand offices mere sinecures Lm if large power, money was a large power; and why did | Church this morning was an indication of that, for its jnctior received from se fnaoae If Governor Andrew sent seven P not women’ make money? They had faeult ce when we entered was ae = MMT a oe ons iCotnot nae a he i a “7 y ox rs appearan: 4 Coney ; a ooh of ox is, ty the committes, p oes a we ion, nered round his wealth a certaim force. Why sbould ; I would add:because theig deeds are evil—(innghter)—bu' quite ors We bell from: obworvations: rea arder, beat care. pane srontan worth $10,000,000: would iy ovis crertes t'| allthens thinge Tssy> prove: shed eqretation ie hoch. | ancy that three mile the mario of te ve ont of that buay life. ae to tine mature books "They could not be legislated inte aay, | women have held in the past. Sut the fuldimont ee at hover go, into any of thoes editorial sanctums without pam mg thing, ‘They could not do anything at Albany to Of the Seriptures ts bafore ue ia the glad UUdings of 10: New Yorker Journal, in speaking: stout the anat- fy desecration such men as rca ordeual them. cer ten Salat Smetical petee gatued & inege Joy, whieh Je oopning epee ee fo ane beginning te vVorsaries and the religious societies by whom they are retscotiny of nation, | 15, that same? WWiy andthe net clutch thane aoa og ee re gprsmey copay Ne such gloomy dene. | S24, support the griatest prises? It every woman eid whedehe os | cornest that the’ time sme wien the whole | ,,7hi# '®, the season of the anniversaries of those so Those who have thought and written moet wisely on | BOver,, Ft extreme peril that she would only take ald at | Work shall be Cieties education demand that the sexes be trained —— sister's band, did they think there was college that | lesson that ou; ‘We ask for the ballot as the key to all our colleges of fot ts the would siut the doors of its opportunities against | women of France law, medicine, science and theology. Women of pro- women’? No, not for one hour. If women’s deci- | and asked that pony have been taxed to build all these instit and tend wie sive opinion were pronounced, the groggeries of New | order of things, Mathern omcre: | Task youis it manly now to close them to the tors | wise and York would be closed quicker than the metropolitan. | ened statesmen ‘cruel Injustice to | Sf the State! | In a recent conversation I asked ry Just govern: could close them. The great difficulty was wo- | that France did 0 vorn Bi a roatitay He sa'd Mats koa atadee 40 ek. toshing which but ptt deny ihe brood that Ig p = . y was ry VOTED AGAINST eal Sdhr age or @ boy re Seni more than es ia n Seg A thas one-half ¢ bt of etl: | ‘Twelfth street school, able to pass the mecessary poe tho bearing and wisdom @ivitizaton as s law book. Pg ee Fy Sareneesiel te ‘silo 14 | ¢xamination, to enter principal walks. 1 aero vane onthe citadel, and those were the winds that set | (Applause) Th ‘sentimental F prettalled also t, of the Law school, | 14 dent it im medion. But five or six times in the history of ‘Upon women ‘ballot and dl why he did not adi for a class of girls, He oa Franoe when the fashion of the salons had not abolished wal re dianited and | asked me, in return, if I thought girls had brains J i Madame de Stael's power influence was ; making their mark worthy to lay | enough to’ study law! The Professor must have been | Be white man, to the merchant, to | felt ane acknowlodyed by to te vice | Places with men in bile tn Justice and dqaality. | taking a Rip Van Winkle Bap, not to Know that women the lawytr, the churchman or the editor, to no particu. | out of New York, they might as well whisper It at Nie- have revising the statuto laws for the lant twenty mon, bat simply and to the Weould net be’ lepslated out Of the strocts of tbe motion years, and that every suggestion they have mado has ee 1 trast faded is not distant | New Ywk. Give ninety men ont of every hundred honest be en of the seve- | been adopted. Whon the legislators of the Empire State no longer g> ee ea lie | wages and they ‘would diedain to steal. Open MOGPITAL S§1P—THE STEAMSHIP RELEASED PROM zeqinigturesto take the necessary | have by thelr action admitted that women were better a goveminest hich forte tak crust {ies | dae te women, and ive them facie for honest bor, Qvanantiw smithout distinction of rite, | MAges of law than Coxe, Blackstone, Story and Kent, it fazeos of is citizens, white aud man | S04 701 draw back vice from the food on which it lived. The following. report. from Dr. Bissell contains the Biates which are cecal | 18 too late for a professor to ask if girls have brains Taomenn woman with your approbation wherever she walks “ ns, enough to m0 IW, We claim thet woman ‘should be fragt Sorecment Caak bok gn hows business. (Cheers) The tempter to vice in pees inigreannte Pom anenetion, resol in our law Jook after ‘ stucts of New was not the roué. It the Hoerrra, Suir Fascos, May.0, mag, Foe sannoement ote | het Move ad let fer ba os we ova ain Gana rama, | Bsa Se Ne Saar et Petes pRSeltT scethe sen oa a” hh ty ‘and nods of congratulation and sm: Sem criminal. Shall she be amenable to jaw, imprisoned, ean danat cite” oakes CA women the ballot, and be did ‘bot count pectin Rabat tar Bese May 10, proval by the women preseat hung om tho gallows, while she hee nevor consented to the arta, pol Folge, al bere gn te millennium next day. Christianity had One death has occurred since last ' ADDRESS BY MRS, RLIZABETH CADY STANTON. of tal by 0 jurg.ct hes Sars pobea? Bethe earn toll yor that w oti AF FS ER "Soupoa ee ee, ae Se eens bens battles of ys Mazzin!, have been fought | wotnan fas a place and power. Bishop Simpson, in & arena they” wil drive Peruana | thet obese thovlattnne nie ata vot nn eee ieipial, PE RISSELL. Depaty Health Omees. ferziqnis, wd o& ah ple’ progress ever recent speech in this city, demands the of suffrage out of it. (Applaase and Inugbter.) ‘aterest he did in the question. De Dre woh Siow; bet when ths most fortanate | for woumse ea the highest religious ground. He says: Pea dine nent obs voraet Toouerile tncod the defen of eo tt Tere "a ie a as Sey eee wale quae Sobek pene teeny aii os | abusers fee fet ecterese mire atin at hapa} | oka” heen a caper ase ee mee 3.atrine Thone who would move the world, | nation in moder times sehich called oi ihe shots body of rot the end Fs, tious | he and, who had worked ube movement to aioe milion } ‘Pheatrical. 7 allie teach that tn search of | ‘he people to marshal themeeives, in the gmat ‘win. commencemont of the world. Weeare | th the level of political life Thednfivence of women was | MT. In Marob, 1865, owing to the condition of the THR BUISLAY PROV duties we soonest reach the perfect find poate tor Sod, Meceden, e eninge Aig Lica Spare bat it was | hiddes and irresponsible, He wanted their conduct tobe | %Untry, gold 19 decline. Defendant, being a pur- went wes stature ia aren yo when, we. follow the rine Fate hoaght wee Ch Fe 4 ‘women were not #0 ra sonk 5 ate record, so tbat It could Detmdictad, which It cowld heey therefore sive, his marge. bring insum- Nine members of the§Buislay troupe of gymnasts ang of duti¢s now Gaye by cottom 0nd tar. | T sarsene’ Te tke Ricken tiled tek teehee tae day by Twenty ye Der bit horselt. Sometimes she folded wer Sime ene fold on hand. "Mr: oe ie Sj POSE on: OF Cone eennee yw woifishneds, Considering the Interests of | ia our large cities could never be conquered’ fave talce ono, down to the Of | oallai that religion. Did they think thet the inesrs of a notice of sale waa thi Marea upon bit ‘and in | New Zork on Tussday morning from Sas.Francises, and Bumasity, coustry, family ‘end self in thelr Tolative | wer putein the hands of women. Tanda it | Lang Aken, he decreed It neceeary rn commencing bis | fow iheceand would avall If wemen were determined to March gold to the mmovnt of $43 160 war ald 182%. | Will st once procure » suitable building and open here, importance, end. where we are gow Tostead of | struggle of polities that would fire Tae two. votes | Gught to be treated Ipnlentiy. That a It | worl for Soknt: vind bis 8 popules end good pe amount of was disposed | Mr. H. B. Platt bas the company under engagement. nde ch ier teat adunmetie tak yookioa there jelien” Ie ntac pusiens chien vet sien 1 necoumry 1 apo of women's works in ‘at Seat Cappienen) 4 Wo ive It | ute ammount reer d na rough His stage manager is Mr. Leon Bennesus, formerly held unt to Guty ‘to the | their sone being dra into saloogy ra way, or to review writes more than Shesnanvucateguan niet. “Tpecad ofthe mieaction we now foal w ‘ath ts. | Wrought up, if thee mothers bad {Aa tid dose | wo Teview or entice the works of The of ZUTEECH OF MRS. FRANCES D, Gaon. Papen exept to ge ae my pi ae et mon — of home, we would let our Nee ge forth | them; if sisters had the power, Wray Ra cuter aod, we would on toed the gamete and | S0N6, ABAY te thoes taterns HE ff f i nie tan ip Hi fl ir : ‘You may get men this metropolis, into tbe dens of vice and folly, rity, with virty ‘but I thank God b an ‘of life. fit separate from that ured tn the transactions pent city imstitt tate the jaila, prisons and anywhere, for s wise 4 Uhat fie nara Nicene ra wives He. . We ate to got sid of the ides, which ts Nea had, they aot carried on busi. | bimseit and Mr. Toplta, 7 meer ness would ts there are duties there. For how- | ahd dauahters—are cfiber J) Keates, thet « women Weuss heave’ bo potttieht ‘ago there was nose ‘athe Crigeecense | Counsel for the defence moved form nom-suit on the MELB. VEOEVALE ever beautiful our homes may ve, however puire he. at- ‘The wo ‘true that women In the past and yet age aT So ST ree aes, &, Sates the Union where.| crowna that duty was to have the spoctic gold | 8% Anwounced to leave San Francisco for New Yorks om howe’ carefull: wan | Prometheus-like, to the rock of ; baud man mosphere, ver uily goarded our sons and nee. 5 in of ready for and not refer the to his | the hvers now are by our example, advice and the ladies who are here to-day, who present 7 ‘The wife ae Thin was denied 2 ah ies, Catan eerie ee SB PRES Tum econ be transplanted to’ the world wthout= | semes home "ngs fadies of tmp | snaee, and thelr claims efare us, and proseat thems ae he bad ho right 10 ber own | Gy'ine Cours when fc was st up thad ihe ne © very piquant autobiography, dlsecting managers, our fairest: daughters, perchance, to carn their dally naupporied: and asioly carriedon Ube Sanitary and. | SES ‘hom vttsa ty dhe equality tees a andy oad of the State. ‘she ‘could not trans, | ¢e*endent waa the limit of Authors and actors in merciless style, The theatrical read, marts of trade, from hart grind (Commissions, = they After mon, ’#uo {or work and wncos.” Who shalt toll the | Where do you find a nobler type of womanhood than, | hich i thewrundoubeea ee (Appice) Lip a a a mother she hot no isterest 1m plucking tho thorns | in the Quaker Church, where woman is required as. § 5° longer trespass upon Sy thoes on an Siena and from fais wir ther scovg feet so toon may trend? f spiritual teacher, equal with mau? Had woman a vajoe 7 cloavent,ladiee would address om the subject Aber othe ah be te Is fe te te dener his rare plants | in the State the atmosphere even of Washi mighs | Casal rig womem (Applause.) ‘ dem showlt ether a wushine and dew | be purified and both at the and the REMARKS BY REV. MENRY WARD BEECHER. ‘he br oF Dies Led ve aod shade?” Have mothers no | Witte Howse, tis for man to be waa | Rov. Hervey Wane Bescaxn, in the of a Tocideaes in the life of Coltmbus, and tothe interest on the dfinking end gambling saloons so bril- | said in the the experience of lengthened address, said that women shou! plant the “rock, *t om the old liautly lighted on every corner of our streeta, or in the | has proved the: ‘Consequences of this unnateml di- | the duty of citizens an voting, When tan ta Nestea phy ‘and slider, on ten thou om be amusement that may attract their | vorce. The world needs woman, and woman needs the | come? When the cultivated and educated women of vod the wreck 3¢ Cathe. sons and daughters? The outer world nw well as the | world to feed her thoughts, The common ides is that | Amorica said they had aight to the ballot then they * iples they bad home needs women to look after the order and beanty of | the chureh, the state and home should be three dis- | would Dave it. ), The reason that women sate wore, (cheers) waraetniond {te aqmngemnants, the wealth, industry, education and | tinct spheres of If by diferent ordems of | bad not the ballot ‘waafaot that they did not BY HARPER, LORED WOM: WEP S iireos voxes in Le cupal her lalate wil | a. bei — ‘moet, L. = wn 4 Mt, bat becouse ot Sapreseud woh ieah oe Bedieel pemak tes hoses tpealker | eve 07, ‘ should be quiekened In every depart of lif. Wh the | minds, “Wik sald, take ‘e" Os oe po al i ee ire nmerest Ja the pro | the of her life, which abowed that Rovet ‘education, the self-reapect, the dignity that | of state. They control the désting of natious—all that | fesstonal what an wihemieae = ind * fered Y re death ¢ bal tae) woman Would soon explore a iow world | relates to commerce, politienl et wad ji Quence was exercised im society by ie who had died on leaving her one 1d eee Canto kas therightet. fufings, it te hot | worldly, divorces hry limon eek! we worenghy had tho” lastincla of Bury, aad waa fom | (anance tie was obliged to work, ey man " , orlaly, rom ‘for ro- | that should withhold ' their hoarts ot Wo oureelves may enjoy the honors | ligion, they makes men v' from democratic liberty was wot followed out as long as a PReltfte“er “Taranchsedchpee, uy Vint | wf in pale Waance a td. nen tthe Som tt ass, ha raid e eamared | women ware aoe Sanal bone, Ube. ew. They were al the bum! our sex a € ation a chaplain is paid to Thy + | far as the community around it taf, on “ation 4 & virtuoas: op the on. Shall Senators in * while Congressmen ¥ ying. was . Now, we the climax of the revo'ution ontil there was ticle pataces teil us we have, no. need of the ballot when | that direction. A good heart ls very’ well Yor women, oF don: squseg shen thane tO ee Oe teaching hee to petvloged lam, caly” a highly ileged ‘nation, fony thowsaud worsen im tale ey are Tiving at starving | for mien when ia Church of abow ts tec bee sranaice | Suatenge Gnd o0 she, would abe ‘conto’ gmee | Tiverny, ther’ te be to lotviest Prices by the needig? And below these, in lower depths, | heart is the one thing needful in affairs of state. | bim the best ed she could. ‘A,oomas' mie ane tate aia nor hove that dhe white we henge sur area mighty bo ay em whore Pe Gat oes Fy pa Ps eyealiy, are great themes only accustomed to stockings hada very I rm we T nor pes cee id draws the ve nese, sermo! jons, but 2 mead imited | drops exhaled from the aklea If they women, fnexpl cable prebiom stands bardened ot appalled. Here | debates aak nothing tore than party poasintites cat | five teat aellaeaa ta aecice Know if that women wag | vote they would have the good, the bad and the induffer. ere thousands without self. fear, hope or love, | common sense, such as os men in the market | the ‘am of te Of j ent, The good would vote from pasacinle, Who bad from who ait im darkness and gloom, ih these houses of disease if pregadice or pamsiou, and tho erent would go with end despair, waiting for the angel of death, or some | thet lt was conaidered preesy If she were to got into a car ia Phila. ood epirite on earth, to galvanize them into lifo w ties outside herself. — conductor would bar her out io. For acch as inese what can be done? Out- ne anal attairy those pece- een rae tbe paitere worgeticaiy Which | pxolaimed-—"They jo th here,