IS on the jpridirun. alU '! bra wU J -""1 aams cJsV tad. a IiUi I -C00 srsalltie. bft Tt-. t ssawHswswsj. : T - MAKE IX FACT. AS TX NAME. NEBRASKA'S MOTTO: "EQUALITY BEFORE THE LAW. 1 Tfc cows iWoihait - ..f h AftMi -"i: sunra ojarssOv ajtHakTassfcswijgezBsssssssiBateaja) FREEMEN! HO! HEAD I READ ! ! BEAD ! ! ! Liberty and Juutico aak a Fair Hearing. "Will tho-o who thought so arnestly, worked n constantly and sacrificed so much for negro freedom, givo the subject of the freedom of mother, sister, Wife and dnugliter consideration ? Will nil others do tho same who believe thnt th-ir mothers, their Maters, thoir wiv,, their duughter, are ks much enti tled to freedom m was tho negro? Kead this pupor read it all through I If you agree with it sentiments nil right, if you do not, all the more enure why you should rend our reasons, and you will if u take i-oumel of your own heart and manhood I lave your family read it; don't refuM) them this boon and then Miy "They don't want to vote." .Justice to ywrolf I'tid family will induce 3011 to read and fairly consider of the truth herein con tained. Ke.nd and think with intent to do right. Kight never Miflem n wrong to any Itememher that in November you, men, will be culled upon to vote upon this question, that our state motto, "EQUAL ITY IlKFOItKTIIK LAW," shall apply to tin: mother, wife, daughter and sifter, is well sis to the father, husband, son aad brother. "We know that many of you who think differently from us, conscienti ously believe that it U best for woman, 111J for the race, that she should, hold her pnaent inferior arid circumscribed posi tion. But you may conclude differently if j-ou will only UK AD ! HEAD! I READ 1 1 The Constitutional Amcndmont. A joint resolution was adopted by the .egUInture of Nebraska in February. 1881, ind approved by the governor, proposing an amendment to the constitution of the state, bo a to drop the word "male" out of tho sutlrnge qualification, thereby confer ring upon tho women of Nebraska the right to vote at all election. That part of the constitution, if amended, would read: Section 1. Kvory person of tihLgo of twenty-one year or upwards, belonging t either of tho following classes, who shall have resided in this state six months, and in the county, precinct or ward for the term provided by law, shall bo an. elector. Firft. Citizens of the United States. .Second. Persons of foreign birth, who (hull have declared their intention to be come citizen conformably to the laws of tho United Slates on the subject of natu ralization, at least thirty days prior to an election." Said proposed amendment will be sub mitted to tho qualified votors of this state, for rutidcation or rejection, at tho gen oral election to be held on tho 7th day of No vember, 18S2. OUB CLAIMS. First. "What is suffrage f Webster says: "The formal expression of an opin 011 ; a voice given in deciding a contro verted question, or in the choice of a man lor an olEce or truU" We claim that suffrage is a right, and as inherent in woman as in man ; to deny which is to repudiate the principles of tho declaration of independence, tiTo national (institution and our bill of rights. "Gov cinmeuU derive their just powers from tho tonsent of the governed" women aro governed. "Taxation without representa tion is tyranny'' women are taxed and aro not represented. "Political power inheres hi tho people" women are people. We claim that women are as capable of forming opinions, have as decidO opinions, r.nd aro as capable of expressing opinions as are men. Therefore, the power to vote the medium by which an opinion is expressed, a controverted question decided, positions of trust filled should bo conceded women and as freely exercised by them ai by men. SEASONS WHY WOMEN SHOULD VOTE. Woman suffrage is essential to the trM republic, the basts of which is the natural equality of human beings. Until wonwi are put ou au equal looting with men this is not a republic . "The object of the repablie," an Sena tor Hoar, "is the aggregate worth of the people. It is personal, aot material. You value vour 'neighbor not for al monev, not for hi physical strength, aat for his genius, lut for" the qualities ' courage, generosity," 'lore, 'honor,' truth jsaaamsssj.r 5 AHwf LeTcring, snvt qn rarasOTA AAA tJL-KfiWTBtat- m i--Jww.----y-CT..-vtt.. J - - WstMsa swtatsT-iaTB7ssraewm a:v.-i smb. aar iar MmmmMkm9rjmwwmwmwmmatmmri who- i W-tr J r T 1 fill Willi n I ft 1 ntt'fl i i frrWi r u i n lir and you value your state jmt so far a it is an aggregate of jTon joesi.g these qualitie. and just so far as it i the means in promote and increase them. It is womnn on whom we depend to Mutate and ftr the moral qualities of children, and who pot-s the faculty of fostering and educating children to largely that it i admitted that it is rarely that a child who lose its mother In early life, grows up jmse.ing them. Will anylfody deny that the is equally capable with tho husband and father in determining what measures and what policy in the state will result in the increase and promotion of these qualiticn in the ag'gregate of families and individuals that go to make up the repub lic?" Tho capacity to judgo of character ii peculiar to woman. Senator Hoar says: "How often doe it hamx. that tne nus band receives his woru of wacning from the wife, or a brother from a sistr, in re gard to the character of a person in whom he is likelv to place undue confidence. And, says Rufus Chonte, one of the closest observer! of our time: "Men talk and think of measures; of creeds in jfolitics; of availability; of strength to carry tho vole of this "or that state. Through all this woman's eve seeks the moral, pruden tial, social mid mental character of the man himself and she finds it." "The eternal and ineradicable distinc tion of uir," lays H. I). Hlackwell, "ii one principal reason why women, in a rep reentalivt government, should be directly represented', sinco they constitute- one en tire half of the Udy Hlitie. If lawyers alone can not- safely be trmted to make laws for mechanic, "if merchants alone can not legiidnte justly for farmers, if white men alone can hot do justice to the ne groes, if every well defined rlai In society Is entitled to its own authoritative ex pressionsurely women, y who are tho wives and sisters and mothers of men, should give expression to the domestic interest from the feminine point of view. If mere differences of education, habit, ruco and interest make cla legislation dangerous, how much more partinl and imperfect must bo the legislation of one half tho community, where tho other hair, in addition to such differences, differs or ganically also." War is tho groat scourge that afHicts humanity. It was to prevent private war that government was first instituted. So long a suffrage "was exercised only by fighting uvwi, war was the rule and eaco the exception. And long as men ulono vote, the belligerent oloment will continue to prejKuulerato. Fourteen out of every fifteen dollars of tho duties and taxes col lected by the general government are spent indefrayitig ast and present war expenses. "When men and women voto all citizens will bo represented, and tho true balance of human nature will be re stored. Woman sutfrugo means perma nent peace between individuals and nations. Intemperance and licentiousness aro, next to war, the chief curse of civilized society. But, HMiop Simpson has well wdd tliat tho vicas of our great cities can never l controlled until women vote. Temperance statistics assert that one-half of ail meu occasionally use intoxicating liquor as a leverage, but that only one woman in forty usos liquor. Tho worst evils of iutemperance fall upon the wives andrchildren of inebriate. The drunk ard's wife will not vote with tho drunkard. Woman suffrage may not mean prohibi tion, but it certainly does mean a higher respect lor temperance and sobriety. Women arc vitally interested in tho per manenco and sanctity of marriage. Unless utterly abandoned they recoil from sen suaiity. The womon of St. Louis, after a long and arduous struggle have procured the repeal of tho iufamous city ordinaucu enacted by men alone, which licensed houses of prostitution. Whca women voto these dens of infamy will everywhere be broken up. Woman suffrage means social .purity. lloing inferior to men In muscular strength, womon find it more difficult to earn money. They are, therefore, neces sarily more economical in their expendi ture. The low wages of women are the result of unjust legislation, but voting will not wholly do away with this dispar ity of earnings, or with woman's conse quent habit of economy. Therefore wo man suffrage means financial retrench muntand a more economical scale of state and national expenditures. Women aro more Influenced by moral and religious consideration than are men. In the state prison of Nebraska there are 'JG5 male convicts; no female con victs. Even the comparatively few crimes committed by women are usually such as affect themselves most directly; those com mitted. by men are usually crimes of vio lence, which most directly affect the lives and property of others. More than two thirds of all the church members of America are women. This higher aver age standard of religion and morals is pre cisely what is needed in politics. We are told that politics are filthy and degrading. What are politics? Webster defines as the "science of government; that part of ethics which has to do with the regulation and government of a nation or 6tate, the preservation of its safety peace and prosperity; the defense of its existence and righu against foreign con trol or conquest; tho augmentation of its strength and resource, and the protection of its citizens 4n their rights, with the preservation and improvement of their moral?-' Surely nothing filthy or degrad ing about all this. On the contrary, vhat should be more cleanly and elevating? "If the making and administering of Inw has becone to corrupt," says George Wil liam Curtis, "s to justify" oallinsTpolitics filthy, may wo not Tinscrr "remember, as we bejrjaoyttjsrork of nuriacatjor-tkat.po... tie have "been wholly maaaced "by men ? How can we purify taeai ? If we "sat in a chamber with cleae! wia4ew aatll the air became thick and td, akould waaat be fcn, L we broagat. ia jeeanriaew if we sprinkled chloride of liBMaad .auraed aafatida, while we disctiaed taa'rreai purifier?' If we woald 4teBe ' the- foul .1 vK .-,. iSlBlSSli Sdmrr t bv aar ux'anrtaS fpB a ws-rinata ? iaasf tn chamber we should throw th windows wide opn, and the sw-et summer air would swoop all impurity away and fill our lunfjs with frcihcr life. If we would purge politics let us turn upon them the I grfnl stream of the purest liuman influ- enoe w know." Women's prence at the pollt and polit ical meetings will greatly tund t preserve ordnr and decorum and to insure a "free ballot aid a fair count." Neither bayonets nor deputy sheriffs will be neJed where wives and motbtr are. The licentiousness of our citi U largely due to the starvation pay of women de pMidwnt upon their own work for bread; or by the death or misfortune of father, brother or hubond, are thrown suddenly ujon the world without the training need ful to earn bread. The ballot means better witges for women; will induce women, in days of troserity, to fit themselves for souw business or profession, thus lessening the social evil. Aristocratic castes, which have been de stroyed by universal suffrage among men, still exist among women. The woman who goes out of some few resjiected em ployments is deemed to have destroyed her social standing. Young" women are made to fel if they enter domestic service they degrade themselves and lose their chance to wed well. Housekeepers suffer for want of god household help. When women voto honest Industry among women will be respected as it it among men. Divorces are largely due to unloving wedlock into whicli thousands of women 4iter yearly from force of circum stances. The enfranchisement of women will bring altoiit a projer social stato, and divorces will be seldom known. Assaults and other crimes against women would be far less frequent and attack on their reputation more rare if women jos sessed political power. Disfranchisement breeds contempt aud contempt breeds abuse. Wife beating and other cruelties toward women are frequent among men of the brutal sort, which go unpunished. Wero women voters a large political influence would be exertnl for their protection. Laws designed for women's protection are oft administered to their suffering and loss. (For examples see Mrs. ,1. W. Stywe's work on the working of probate courts regarding the property of widows). Had women a voice in choosing the officers of Uie law mahuiministering of such laws would be scarce. .Many laws on our statute books are un just and ono-sided towards women. Theso would be corrected if women were voters. The laws of Nebraska give into tho hands of tW father tho entire guardianship of tho children. You, mothers, have no legal right to your own babies; you havo no legal control, no authority over them, only such delegated jower as tho father may choose to allow. During tho lifo of the father the law gives their guardianship to him alone aud give him the right to will away your little ones, into the hands of strangers, even tho unborn babe ho shall never behold. Do you doubt it? Think vou such an outrage to all sense of right 1 cannot, surely cannot be o? Read for 'yourselves what the law has to say: "Kerry father may, by hit last will in writ- ' inp, apjKilnt a tpiardtan for any of Am children, chethrrborn at the time of maktng the will or afimenrdt, to continue during the minority of the child, ur for any less time, etc." Statutes of 1SS1, Chapter 52, See. J.) Inhuman 1 What a stigma upon our statuto books. How long, think you, would it remain there had women a voico in law making? "Curtey," the old common law rule which gives tho husbaud a lifo estate in all his wife's real projierty, and "dower," a-hich gives tho wife only tho use of one Atriof the husband's real "property, would be amonded so as to give both the same interests in the property of tho other. The nost unjust distinction in favor of men is made in our divorce laws. There should be no difference. Laws for womea's protection require women's experience and their share in drafting ana execution to insure success. Women, as the weaker sex, need all tho means of self-defense and protection they can have. Possession of the ballot is such a means. Good will of rulers is a Terv weak guarantee of justice. Possession of power is lar saier. Women's opportunities will be o widened by enfranchisements that they will have inducements to study far greater than now, and hence will become better edu cated and more skilled and intelligent. Republican institutions depend for safety on tho political intelligence of the people. To insure the steady growth of this intelligence the mothers of the state should be well informed and able to in struct their children on public affairs. This enlightenment their possession of tho ballot will secure. Meddling, gossip, slander, scolding, etc., will be much less among certain classes of women, when those women are free to share in and discuss great public topics in stead of the small matters whereto their thoughts and talk are mostly confined. Gossip, when turned to canvassing the merits of public measures and men, will bo very useful and enlightening, instead of the plague it now too often is. Our county poor houses and like institu tions are in many cases badly kept, waste ful and immoral. Had our housekeepers votes, they would oversee and correct the public housekeeping. These and many other reasons there are why women should vote. WHETHER WOMEN WISH TO VOTE, AND WHETHER THEY GEN ERALLY WILL VOTE, ARE OF NO CONSEQUENCE. The fact that theycxs toie if they cAxvc, ictlt bring these pr&nd result. Trail, "I a-wl fmt ol asSfsTwstft rlf vhrtTii wsialrV aaTWrliiTiii a?sitiP?iirilttt' . a.i--1-. ii-?,-riresi-ssvSXSa. siasiavamwsesiti . t"t".R1wBsasm-ji:'-r:p 'OX H"TW WOMAN SUFFRAGE A POLITI CAL REFORM. Extract from n Addrts &v Ho. H. B. ' lilacklt All admit that some chanze in our po litical system It needed. The crowmc corruption of public lifts is admitted aid deplored by both parties Low as Is the avernge standard of private morals, the standard of ;ioliiica! ethics Is confessedly far lower. Every year matters eru to grow worse. Our laws and our law-makers do not fairly represent the public sen timent of the community Now what shall we do about it? How shall we cope with these stern facts? How shall wu redeem the future of the great republic? Only by enlisting all the virtue, all the intelllgfn'ce, all the patriotism of the na tion in a struggle with the vice, and ignorance and selfishness of the nation. In short, only by enlisting the interest of the whole American people in political ! questions to a greater extent than ever b ore. We must somehow arouse the com munity to habitual thought and action on jtolitical tonics. Fortunately it is the permanent Interest of most peoplo to have good laws, economical administration, and honest public servants. When otllco hold ers steal, their constituents have Ut fool tho bills. To secure a just verdict wo must first secure an impartial jury. Such a jury, onlv an extended suffrage can sup ply. " And tho greatest of all political problems is how beat U enlist public inter est in the intelligent criticism of public affairs. "The price of liberty Is eternal vigi lance." While absorbed In a struggle with southern slavery wu havo become ourselves insensibly enslaved. To-day our government is republican only In form. In every ward, in overy town, we are governed by cliques of trading piliti cians through the machinery of parties. The nominations are made by les than five per cent, of tho voters, assembled In the primary meetings. Now who are the men that compose these primaries? Go and see. The "managers" are there; men who have axes to irnnd. Their followers are there; men who are "slaves of the ring." The floating population aro there; men who lounge ou sidewalks and haunt saloons and "dron in " a a pastime. When tho meeting is called to order, a ticket, usually distributed on printed slips, is nominated by acclamation. In Urn minutes the cau cus is adjourned, inis ticket was care fully prepared, in advance of tho caucus, by a little, self-constituted clique of politi cians, in a private parlor or saloon, from which the public are jealously excluded. Half a dozen men, known only to thoir immediate followers, have settled the nominations for 6,000 voters. It may be said that if our present politi cal evils are so largely the result of male ignorance manipulated by cunning, the addition of an equal number of still more ignorant femalo voters will only make bad matters worse. But in the first place our female population is much moro largely native American, and to that extent is more generally educated. To prove this we need only "refer to the statistics of im migration, which show a very great ana constant preonderance of male immi grants. This prcjMjuderance reaches its maximum in the case of the-Chineso who are, almost without exception, males. In the second placo the grossly ignorant and vicious class are everywhere in the minor ity. If, by woman suffrage, we would doublo the votes of this class, we should also double tho votes of the intelligent majori ty and thoreby largely diminish the rel ative political Mwer of' ignorance, and largely increase tho relative political powor of intelligence. Thus if 2,000 out of 6,000 voters are ignorant, there is only an intelligent majority of 1,000; but ii 4,000 out of 10,000 voters are ignorant, there is an intelligent majority of 2,000. and the danger is reduced one-half. And in the third place our chief danger has been shown to lie not in ignorance but in indifference, and this indifference will be vastly lessened when political ideas and interests are brought into the domestic circle and made a subject of family con sideration. To call our present system "a govern ment of the people" is absurd. Tne only remedy is to attract the attention of the peoplo to the primary meetings in sufficient numbers to check" and overawe the "rings." To reform politics wo must first reform the caucuses. To-day. the men of intellect and character do not, as a rule, attend them. Such men are too bnsy and too much absorbed in social engagements. They go with their wives and sisters to church meetings, concerts, lectures and social parties. They associate with ladiV, at home and abroad. These women ex pect their society and would feel disap pointed at their absence. The presence of such men in .political meetings can be se cured in only one way, viz: by enlisting the social sympathy and co-operation of women in sucn meetings, u hen the wo men go the men will go. Men of refine ment will take little interest in the prac tical work of politics so long as women are excluded. Because, society is civilized, while politics arc still semi-barbarous. Women are ia society; women are the life of our churches and schools, of oar charities and reforms ; they should be the life of our politics also. " What God has joined let no man put asunder." But un til men and women go together to the primary meetings these meetings will con tinue email in numbers, sordid in tone, poor in character and corrupt in nanage--aient. Real political reform must bein by a reform in our caucus system. And in order to reform the caucus we must open its doors to men and women. In impartial suffrage irrespective of sex lie the only salvation of Americas politics. Mjlxt good, true women seam somehow to have imbibed the idea that it is unwom anly to walk up to an inoffensive littlt square ballot box and there deposit a sim ple expression 01 opinion, yes or no, on questions that snay perhaps alTect her family ' of boys and girl through all eternity.. " t Upon Men complain -f thr ,gn rn-", frivolity and apathy in ti.ecr,qu-stlonsof ibrdsy inwn; wonvn, and use th very fact as I an objection against gtrixsg then, suffrage. True, but their position fat. made them . Whst incrntitf I i anv wumn t Ir.temt herself in jiolitical subjects. In k c'no mv, or in the great question of tins day, when the prfoundt thought, the rnt Logical reaoningfor the raot able meth.!s, If emanating from a woman's brain, aro considered no better than the ravings of a snanlao, or any more to be comiderwl than the criminal's mutlrd oath, for at the ballot box, the only place where thought and reasoning can be crysulired for the nation's itod, she is uncounted unnotio-d and politically clatd with idiou, lunatics, paiiM'rs and criminals. Equal suffrage will lift her out of this Ignorance and frivolity, and instead of It bing denied on that ground, that Is the greaU-it argument why it should be givnn. Disfranchisement hi the caiim of this ignorance and devotion to dre and fashion, and suffrage will be the cure. A century ago men drerued an foolishly, a injuriously as women do now. We are all familiar with the court dress of a hundred years ago. The absurd flowing powdered, faUo wigs, tho wido lace ruffle at the throat and wriiU, tho gay colored, eipnuve waisl-coaU, vests and knee breeches, the silk stockings, and silver buckles at knees and shoes. The meu of thoe days devoted untold wealth, time and thought to their toilets, Ju-t as women do now. Hut as the duttro, retponsibilitit and nt;hu of ritUenship grew upon them, as intellectual develop ment became more popular, they found ai women will find that they had not timn for both, and so they abandoned the false hair, the lave rutlle. tho gay silk, un and vel vet coats, vests ami pants, the llk stock ings, and the silver buckle., and adopted the scniiblo cottumu which Is worn to-day. Women will do the same. Even now the time is coming when a woman to mingU in gin! society must bo intellectual She inut be able to dicu wisely theiiurlIons of the day, and as this demand broadens and lengthens, a colleges and universities graduate moro and more women, and especially as the duties and privileges of citizenship arc thrown upon their shoul ders, will they find that either the Intel lectual life which they are grasping so eagerly, the affairs of our repubhe which they love so rapturously, or fashion mutt be given up. Dimis anyone doubt whicli will be surrendered ? They will do as their brothers have done, adopt a costume, easy, convenient and healthful, and give their brain and time to the terfecting and puri fying of the individual, the home, the state and humanity. Tho ballot will develop in women intense study and interest in all questions which concern our beloved land, and can anyone doubt that this study and thought will be barren of result? As with the negro so with them. The very right to vote is awakening them out of their sleep of ignorance and servitude, and developing all the qualities of citizenship. Tho same results, only in a shorter time and immeas urably more beneficial to the republic, will follow woaian suffrage. For already they arc educated thinkers, and the ballot is the only incentive they need for the concentra tion of thought upon the great needs of our republic. I plead with you my brother, for the sake of the influences upon women themselves, lifting them out of frivolity up into the grandeur of intellectual equals. Grant us suffrage in 18S2. MadaKi CHARLTOlt Edbolu, in LintxAn Journal. WOMAIffl CAUSE IS HAH'8. No statement could better define this movement than Tennyson's beautiful stanzas: The woman's cause ts man's; they sink or rise Togethar. dwarfed or cod-like, bond or free. If she be small slight-natured. miserable. How shall man jrrowT The woman ts not undeveloped man. But diverse. Yet In the lonr rears, liter nnst they crow : The maa Ur taone of woman, ie of man ; He fain In sweetness and In moral hehtht rne taenia, oreaum. And so thea twain, upon the skirt of tiase. Ml side by side, lull-uncased in all Utcir powers, JSelf-reverent each, and rrTerenclnt; each; UUUnct in ludlTidunUUea. Hut like each other, a are thone that love. Then comes the tatellcr Eden bark to man , Then retn the world's irrast bridals, chaste and calm ; Then tprinsa the crownras; race of human kind. Wnxaa " breathes the man with soul to dead " as to deny this proposition : " Freedom freedom intellectual, freedom moral, freedom civil, freedom political is as truly the natural ponsion of woman as it is of man, and it is as necessary to her highest and Lest development as it is to his." WnxT a -cculiar thing is humanltvl Someof the-se peop!c(espce!a!!y ourTeutonie friends) who rail out loudest against woman suffrage, because participation in equal political rights is, in their opinion, "out of woman's sphere," have no hesitancy in taking them out of their home "sphere' Vt work in the harvest field. OPINIONS OF EMINENT If EN. Abraham Liscolx: "I go for all sharing the privileges of the government who assist In bearing its burdens, by no means excluding worsen." In WVI: "After this great struggle for the union' ?n ... - women win vote. Ja.hi A. GAEvrtLD "Laugli -. we mar, put it aside as a jest if we will, keep it out of congress and political campaigns, still the woman question is rising in our political horizon larger than the siza of a man's hand ; and tome solution, ere lonr. that qutatico must fiad." tX- IC PRXSIDZ5T WlLWC "AI! I have done for negro suffrage I will do fori woauut saffrage." Saucojt P. Caisr In . vn J cause will triampa. It is a question of ' -. iw,w UW.W William . SawaaDr .fuj:ice U oa the side of weeaaa -icare. .! -a; .:-;. -XJ The Influonce of Suffrage Wotncu Thomaelrea. m.MwmmmKrwBwmrr HiMior StMr v ! tstv tlt ii Tier is Hir Urge HiJe w U Rrtvr l -quered UtlUI te t!uH ia put itU th hand of mowmjv Kir JAMt'i.tUi)rGLiKis- ! da not think our :-o-.Uo wilt ! waat Uv ought to b till wvacn aro IetiUurs aad voter "' (ilOdt Wtttisw Cibti Wasssa hare quite at MiKSt iatert-tt la C"4 ernmeat as men, and I have never heard or read of aay taUtfartorv rrasn (or ex cluding lliom from t- bal.etbox , 1 hasa no more duU vt their aiueli..ratiaj influ ence upon politics than I hcteef the tnfiu enre they exert everywhere ele llcKHEttT ,rx.M xa "lKweTer mush the giving of o!ilicat power l women may disagree with our notluni of propriety wo conclude, that, being rrquirtd by that first prerequisite to greater nappiae, th law uf equal freed. -m, lUch a conception l unquestionably right and good Plato "In the administration of a slat, neither a woman, a a woman, nor a man, a a man, has any eclal function, but tho gifts are rqualfy difiud in both sain. Thr same opportunity for elf-developnnt which makes a man a ! guardian will make a woman a good guardian, for their original nature it the aama." HiMiorG1t.11CKrH.srtx "In view ef the terrible corruption of our pollilu. People ask, 'can wo maintain universal suffrage" I say no, not without women The only lir garden In our community l the town meeting am! thecancus, Why it thl " Hecatlte thiwn are the only place at wbich women are not present. Iiuu: ''It ms to 11m that every wit man who opJMJx-J woman tufftae, uppvacs br own growth, opjet the bt interest Of the state, and op'KMea the -rrfectlan of the home " Rev Jo-r.ri Coos: "Woman's role will be to the vice dej-endlng on itilem eranr what the lightning is to the oak." Kkt I)EVnT Talwaok "(iIto ws man tho liallot and sho will toon Ull4 the .Mormon aud teuij-cranco questions." 1'HcatDK.HT KLMrr, or If taitot'ai Uai vxKairr "If my totimonv in favor of the movement hat any weight, I with to give It all the heartiness of steadily In creasing cortvirtion. In my opinion. Ills the great question of the day, as etaanci aUon wat tweuty-five yi-ars ago, and is bo uud to obtain a like solution. The in. tenets of the temperance, reform, of social fiurity and of education are all deeply n vol red in it. Woman has a vital and (ersonal conenrn in the preservation of good order and peace, and In the suppre. lion of all forms of vice. Her assistant is imperatively nevled to turn the scale In favor of the right." PaeaiPKiST Rabcok, or Wioo5st UsuvatuJiTT: "A full fellowship in civil duties and privileges once conceded to woman, in fewer months than the ttrusrglo has already consumed of years, It will be in astonishment to all that society was ver otherwise ordered." U. 8. Skwatok HoAa, or Mamachl srrra: "A man could not argue against woman suffrage five minutes without re pudiating the principles upon which the government is founded." U. S. "Sk.xator Latham, or Nw York : "1 hope that woman will yet b accorded her rights." Ret. T. W. n.oitxsox "Woman neoda the ballot for self respect ami self protection." Joil.v G WiiTTlEa "The great t.tal and political reform is tlowlr, but steadily and surely moving on to its consummation, when woman, without losing any of th true grace of her sex, shall u, dr1o; and enioy all the faculties which God ha given her." ScncTLKR CoLrar' "Sine I left public life I have examined both tides id the woman suffrage question coolly and impartially, and have made up my mind that it mut come and ought to come, per haps br degree, but surelr. It caanot fail to promote all reformatory and hu manitarian movements." WaxuKLL PiiiLLtra: "Everyone who wishes and works for a purer civilization is on your side. Everyone who longs for the permanxnee of republican Institutions it on your side. Kvery lover of fair play and equality Is with "you. The narrow, the timid, those faithless to the principles which underlie our civilization, the Igno rant and evil minded are youropponents.' Rali-ii Walpo Emer-ox, ix IfyT.2: "On the questions that are Important, whether the government thai! b In one person, or whether representative, or whether democratic; whether the unlim ited sale of cheap liqoort shall be allowed, women would give, I suppose, u Intelli. rent a vol as the Irish vnWt of Boston, New York and Philadelphia. As for the untexing and costaraination, that only accuses our politics, shows bow barbaroti we are that our politics are so crooked, made up of things that are not to t tpokea, to Ul a&derstood only by a wink and nudge ; this man is to be coaxed aad that roan to be bought, and that other to be duped." Got. Lo50,or Mas-achcsettj: "B caase suffrage is a right and not a grace, it should br extended to woassra who btwr their share ef the public ctsl, aad who have the same interest that I have ia Use selection of its oSdals, and the making of its laws which affect their lives, tier property and their happiness." Got. CoKjraxL. or New Yoar ? "Wo man Toting at the school elections fa Kw York, has lncrmsd the proideacy of the schools, aad added to their satellite," Got. St. Johx, or Kaa: uT hop women will soon have ta right to Tots far those who are to gsvera fStsa." Got. Poetee. or Ixmata- f -- pose to do mil I can for the ea!tsrEat of woman's rigkis wail? I ma covcratjr of I: ti ep ' '-a- ' 4t ajuis m tSSvv