(i cue W fm H iY a PA TV PA W MICH., Fill DA F, SEPTEMBER 1, IS 71. WHOLE NO 1011 POX. A A . JTO, 26. , Pr Cnir Morthcrntrf Is I'i'busuki) Kvebv FnniAY. il S. T. COKWAY. Carries OOMOn Kai aauaoo ''' v- v : naaTs. tfhms of srns;iurTioy, 1.50 A Yeak. - j" AaYAMCE. PAW PAW RAiEiMeAD. Train from l'aw Paw connect with the MM j 2i t,.,. on the Michigan Ctntr! Kmiroad tUwton.uoiiik'eaM HnU wi-M. I u- l V 1 U PAW twti a. w.. return from Lawton at a. m. k m.. Mat) Train, cast. . .. h m.. Va.l west, and Way Kretgn cih. h:W i m. Kalamazoo awj"""-'"- -ri , , Traini return to t'aw rnw vF... , mm. T T..lfd fr.iTTl l.lUtlll v-im'" JOHN IhLING BmpM WllllliW tvnlral Railroad. ; aiS 3- e 9 "TT . 77, ... .. r- 1 i i i ..f aistitOSj 5 I S I z H --c III I i 3 : I LI 1 jA84 - - - l K i ! !W' s : : si r tutus i J "P fi 1 ;'' gga s SS" j k "1 .r 4 & ! u'- m i H m ' - douiii LMwtMoa, l,, ,fe Kalaraa.'.oo Way Pratght, 7:00 Mall. 3:46 p. m. Arrive at fkuth Ubtm al Iffrio a. m.. mm i,ve" South Haven Mall, 1:80 a. n War PretgaiTKu p. m Arriv.- at Kalamajcoa at Wrau a. at., and ft;46 p. m. ioiiu: Weft . pa- Boble' at b:a6 a. ni. and 4:50 p m. Goiiu: Butt, paM Ooblaa at MO a. m. and 4:10 . TP.. z r- m w H....n.M i III! auo naxt Kail R(ad. UtlNG BFFBCT BABCB 1Mb, IM I Nterii laivixiion. tmaim wet. tbain aaai JZ "3 Il E B S& 7 b ' S STATION'S. g S r. x. a m. , rv c :t 7 g 17 46. 7 00- - G6 f aw tS oof " a-. : al Bep.l Arr. v, , LansiiiL' 4 I . MUletCt . Scva-topol If 4 os ' putterville ' 4 00 Charlotte go Moore's i &s Olivet , a so1 Inoiicvue . a an P. M. 15 00 ti .15 Ii -Jl i 15 5 67 5 40 I 2") 18 4 31 n -jti' I 001 i ii ukiN ii a. .!Madisona i i is tJ - i& fi ao BaaUe Creak dl 30 t1 J Ml .. w i e is I iacilaaax 13 lo Arr' M 0 36 Moott't ! 114 j t W .'0 Indian Lakcj 11 W fJr'n liauidr Kalamazoo I 15 7 10 ftM OOlftl 05 Vicki-huri; dll 00 alo III !l 4.". ; I os! 30; I 12 i i , i: IK 10 :xj I 05 j Schoolcraft .. flh " H ; ' S an n, dll ! - Man t'.'ur 11 :ni 11 47 II ol u a 1 OS 1 1 B0 - -2 It ' :', J. 6 a oj I -7 o 4. : 57 , 4 Oo P j'ljVollnia y & (Jamestown id iBCaaaopolli il oojBdwardab'g n luSMlsbawaka i.. Hnnth Itrnrl s 05 1 7 45' 7 OS ti 1 : r. m . J Bl j M 1 :U 1 H ; 00 a 80 12 6c Crum,i Pol'l a. m I H 8 BO H 11O 7 BO 12 II 1 1 .A) r ipii ummm 1 ,-3 Htlllwell 2 -jo Kingsbury j 4S (Jalon Mill- . 10 llapkell's m Malone a no Valparaiso P FW M J. til 31 1131 ISM W W 11 M M 7 10 1 8 88 11 81 6 15 11 12 6 001 11 08 11 00 7 M i- x. Chicasro v. at. ! '.'0 Trains do nut stop. Traini da BOl ItOf except upon Signal. Mail and Express Train East makes direct connections at Eunsiug with Jackson, Lansing A Saginaw R. R. for Lay City, Sainaw and Owoeso ; and with Detroit, Lansing A Lake Michigan R. R. mr (ireenvillc, Ionia. Howell nnd Dattolt. Baggage Checked Through to Chicago and all poinU on D. L. A L. M. R. R. FURNITURE The attention of the public is respectfully called to my Large Stock OF FURNJTUE onsisting ot everything uatueahle in the F11 rn it 11 re laHlMNf lid REPAlatllfijI done promptly. PTJCKs REASONABLE, AND BATtaWAO TICN OUAEAHTUD IN EVERY INSTANCE. n . i . IL is 1; , HaIB Sthh.i, I'aw 1'a w MONEY TO LOAN in Bums of 1 1000 and over, on good improved inmnmbered Fami. 1004 tf A. SHFRMAN. Ant pAw PAW DIRECTORY. aVBBfff tfnrbs. id door east of Nlles Street. iwiw , OANS Man-UTFD on Improved rninonm- 1 i '00k. TMChtf Of PUno.OffM, Voice j Culture, ThorougbMi aad HOTW " an hVloundith i wUmm oa Pas PawBtreat. nB.jico. H. t LAKH, Hons I 1 111(eoMT Avery's store. K.OKO. H. t LAB.. Homeopathic Fnysleian. Snrvevor. Paw Paw, Van t R MONAKIL Eclectic lMuian and i V?" omre iV v,Ur V. ..rk. nrt -; r;.V. ,.,, h,,uc. uu-stalr. 'w raw. V. . .-urgeon Uuwi n- Ur B. HAWKISH, Broker, Notary run ic : .mi . Conveyancer. OflUse over LoagweR va Drag Mora, row Paw, Mifh- 7i AMl'l'L. H01.HKS. Omi 'v ,,-rk. Notary N Public and Conveyancer. Deed. Mortgage. Contracts and an Unas oj Con waucw drawu on the shortest notice, mid at the usual rat.. Office la the Court Boaaa, raw Paw, atv a. DtrvMAl hoi T. M LowaU, Prop'toi "VnV li. h Btaealeelyforaou h Havm. Uwrcace, Hartfer, Bt iaavltla U' MIT!.'. 1 K. tl.t.KN.-Maiiufuctnrer anl I Dealer in C N.Tl E W'INBB. Pa Muh- I f P Al-I K. dealei in Furniture. door eaut ol me i onv - - Hi Vn pi i xw ratbiooable Boj ai I Shoe m JJf Lad i, Gi nte and v Bopta, BhoeVaVdOalteTi mad. to ordar la tra t . daaa itrle. Repairing done oa reaaonable terau mm d "t .hort notice. Shop tirtdoor north t Nobtii aaxaa Office. ioui Mill, i ai ntonaoio j ; ' ' , . ' r. V aredfochnMkhuh: of work l theto tyla. SnopoverT. L. H atora, raw iaw. tKOBOK W. l.tWTOX. Attorney, i i raMelM ( ritLw Sotarj Public and Pi ' fWftaSS Cotin at Pa- Paw on Mondav if MCl " eek. IMItsl NATIONAL BASK, of Pa P Office FnoVthtldeoi Man reetj 5 i - waat of Kalnmazoo. riaifn a. MiBBMAN, rnaa. o. a, caaai m. DICB&BM a iiuim m. i3FJ ktZ' K Office ever Flral National Bank, Paw HIXCKLB1 BBOTHEB8 Liverr Btabla,Paw Paw Michigan l" tbelargetl and beat autMMdo any In tne county. Plae bqtm t. new an. elegant carriaaaa to tt. Office and otablei north-eaal ol DvctaSan HonSe. north aldoof Oak .treat. rrjfOWLBBB WLAHB, Attornaya taw K and Boliclton in Chancery. AgMta mr Hertford and other n.ur.nc. Ogmm ifea. ff ce Man. itreet, Brat door - aal ol the Uotui n" VZk" O.W. HOWI.AM-. H8. TAi ko a OLIBBEH, Attorttayaand Couatel- JAcS Office North ide Of Maln re . m-cjih doorwel ol Port office. Paw Paw, MleMgaa. aw nlilLII I KIT! II. Attorney. Conn--lor and C"vi!itor r Office oppoalte the Court Boaaa, PBW Paw, Mich. ii- it HiTIWlY. M. !., Phyaiciaa and Hur " V 1 ",V Li .V;;.,.i,'iu nromntlr attend ad. office al hla Realdenae, on bTiiamaaoo Street. Paw Paw, Mich mbblk. H. Bm Phyaiciaa and Bargaoa t K. BIBBLE, M. H.. Pbyaicl Li effice in Granger Block. I AXBBBW8. B. 1.. 1'hvician and Buravon. JofflworerKllburnHudaon'i itora, Paw Paw. Mic! DECATUR DIRECTORY. pBgbttM (f uriis. FmrTEB A BEBBE, Attorneys and Counselori 5 ) iw and soiie itorr In Chancery. Office In riwt wS7oaa?B?S BaMlag, ap sufra, Daeatar, f 1T0 A BBBBMAK, Attorneys at Law, f o- lJ lienors in chancery and ,Notarlea Public. Office 01 Circuit Court Comm'r for Van Buren c untv Loans necotlated and Collections at tended to wUhprernttnass. Town Hail Building, OHN'n.'fltN. ,0N,.-..KnMAS. DU B 1. klMi.-Si m.i.ov Dfnti-t . Office Besldence oa Delaware Street, one door wer.t 01 AbbotCs Btore, Decatur Midi, a s. now l. General Dealer In Pamilj Groceries, linn ', " 1 ' ' ,, ,,, 1 mekwv. -tc Teas made M K laity. I h- .ps 1 - ... , 1 (erect . Decatur. Alien. 1 rl'KCOBB BOl'RE, Decatur, Michigan, W. H. 1 1 CawotL, Proprietor. LAWRENCE DIRECTORY. Business Tnus. 17 k. a 1 . n. CBABWIGB, dealer In Dry ajt Qooda, Clothlac, Milliaary Goods, Boots I and shoes, Grocerlee, Hats and Caps, Qaaaaa" uMir. ! IlNML Mich. J7 B. CLETBLAB IK X. H , Phyaiciaa and Bar ij ircdii. Uiw reiice, M i h. UriliLIAB 11. GLAT, Blga and Ornamental Painter, Lawrence Mich. Ronae, Blgn. and Carriage Fainting, Oraining. Fapering and Kalsomlna dona to order. SBBWB. dealer la Drugs, Bediclnea, station. . cry, Groceries, Biu-hcs, Perfumery, etc Pret riptions carefully prepared, LaajrfBM MISCELLANEOUS. Bnsintss 3aris. MMiMl, I'hysiclan and Surgeon. Office . near Adamsr Mills, Fine Grove. Will at tend promptly all professional order-. Special attention given to Surgery and the diseases of Women and Children. 7. A. WHIT MA A, PRAL.RR 15 VWflMRt tSfe Italians MARBLE T, HEAD-STONE, Tablets, Etc., I'AW PAW, - - MICH. I adopt this mode of advert icing my business instead of employing agenfp. My object is, to reduce the expense of the business as much as possible, ho bv purchasing of me you pay no agent fees. V on can also save the expense of delivering the work if you chooae ; besides von can select the Marble yourself.and see the lytla ot it. as it will be, so there is no posaible chance for being demived or being disappointed. Hy taking this course, there ih a saving ot from twenty to thirty percent accurding to how far the purchaser comes. Von can read: t see that the mnnev I nave, by j not keeping agents goes, to tle purchaser in ! stead ot the agent. Agents claim that they can furnish work I cheaper. That cannot be done, unlets done by I Apprentice. I furnish no work of that claaa as I employ no Apprentices. My work and material cannot be questioned. Fatronie borne, if vo 1 can. and save 1 monev bv o doing. wl't MMMlimaft WARD, DENTISTS, I'erform all operation on the Ieeth and iunir-. in a thorough and akillftil manner. NitrouM oxide i.an, Ether or Chloroform, judiciously administered when desired. office over Sherman Seilick'e, Comer or Main and Kalamazoo Streets, Paw Paw, Mich. Hefer by j)ermusaion to the uudertsigned don- tiete of Jackaou. Mich. J. A. HOBINBON, D. D. a GEO. H. MOSHER, V.l). . Dr. W. II. DOKRANVK. l)n. D. W. SMITH. ; looc D&. l. l. n.w & W. B. XSZXTXTE -HAS THE- OK FINE JEWELRY, SOLID SILVER WARE, Etc., Etc., I THIS COUNTY. AMERICAN WATCHES, Kev and tem wind. LADIES ELGIN WATCHES in fine Gold caao. NecklaceH, Charm, Opora and Matinee Charms. A lino assortment ui' AMFTirVST and rOPAZ RINGS. I also invite attention to mv iai;e stock of FINK PLATED WARE, Manufactured hy Simson, Hall, Miller fc Co., from a superior quality of White Metal, and heavily plated with Pure Silver ; a part of which I have contracted to furnish the Van lluren Co AGRICULTURAL. SOCIETY to distribute as At the Fair thin Fall, and will exhibit them at my Btore until that time. Call and see them. VIOLIN STRINGS The best in Town. BRACKETS A fine assortment of Wall Brack ets in stock ; unique patters. EN(. RAVIN.. All goods purchased of me are engraved in the most artistic manner, without charge. RepairinK promptly and neatly done. I make Spectacles a specialty, being the sole Agent for Paw Paw, of the celebrated Diamond Spectacles. These Lenses are manufactured from minute Crystal Pohbles. united by fusion and derive their name Diamond, on account of their hardness and brilliancy. . B. KIWE. 10061y Opposite I ourt House. GEO. H. 0C0B0CK, DBALBB IN Family Groceries, Farmer's Produce. AND BEST FAMILY FLOUR. TTTTTTTT TT TT TT TTTT OF A VKRY BUPEKIOB tiRADK. Af V. LOW PRICES AS ANY PLACE IN TOWN. Cash Paid For Country Prodnce TRY MY 1X0 BLLBNT TEAS, WHICfl I AM SKLLING VERY CHEAP. Goods Delivered in the Cor poration FREE OF CHARGE. 0 ALL AND GET OUR PRICES Geo. 5. Ocobock. AT BUDDIE'S OLD STAND, ON KALA II 00 STREET. Dated, Paw Paw, March 1 j. ys'.ly FOR SALE CHEAP Or will exchange for other property, one WALTER A. WOOD IRON FRAME MOWER. ALSO A M RUSSELL" SELF-RAKE HUPIR AND MOWER CoMRINED. Both in good order and nearly a- good ns new . Almena. June IS, 171. 1003tf B, W. FISK. REMOVAL HODGES' PICTURE GALLERY, Haviug bought the Gallery formerly owned by nr. ? AMES 11. Pit a ti:r. K a 1 21 ma 00 Street . 1 would be pleased to have everybody call and aaa me, whether they wish Pictures or not. Don't I orr t to Hring the Habie. 1007 JOHN SODOB8. CiriWaJll i i) Li n C A L BTAT1 oonveetioe. The Convention was called to order at 11 a. m. by S. D. Finghatn. Chairnaan of the Htate Cen tral Commitiee, v bo nominated F. M. Cutchcon of Manistee as Temporary bairman, who on taking tlK d.air spoke as follows: Republican of Michigan : We stand to-day at the threshold of the third decade of the Re pubacau party of Michigan. For one-fifth of a century tbis partv has held the reuis of power in the Peninsular State. And, etanding as we do to-day, and looking back over the record of the past, we need not apologize for the record, but oar proudly invite the criticism of the world, and a comparison o! the Republican par ty and its principles and acts with the princi ples aad acts of the opposition. Springing into existence twenty years ago ! this summer, it threw itself like a living wall I before the advanco of American slavery, de claring that the virgin c,oi of the Territories should be forever free. Standing at first upon that issue, from that hour up to the present time 1 ho Republican party of the United states has been the party of liberty, the party of prog ress, the ;arty of reform : it has been in one ! word the patty of the Republic. In times past it has devoted itself With entire and royal devotion to tbo development and ad vancement of all the great mental, material, in dustrial, and politic ! Intaraatl of the republic. With au eye "ingle to the upbuililing of the, 'present, and laying the foundation of a grand and perpetual future. Ibis Republican party !has gone stendilv forward, never taking one step backward. Wo have written upon our banner the motto of Hampden, the English j revolutionist . ' We take no Htep lis ikward.1 In time of rebellion, tins grand Republican party, which lias arisen with a patriotism, mag nanimity, and determined devotiou, absolutely with out a peer ia aneient or modern timen. , actually drove back and crushed the foes of I the Republic and banished treason from the 'land. During the trying and perplexing hours of ' the Reconstruction period, that taxed to the , utmost the resources of Amoncan statesman j ship, it proved itself competent for the task, and led us through this -tormv sea until we rode serenely and securely in the harbor of 1 peace once more. And we stand here to challenge a comparison herween the record of thin party during all this time and toe record of the parties which have been opposed to us. While we have been the party of progress, our opponents hare been the party of reaction, the party of destruction tear ing down nearly as fast as we could build up. Rut on every noiut we have borne our banners through the thickest of the fight, to victory and and final success. We stand Mere to-day to give to the people an aa onnt of our stewardship, and we ask no in dulgence. While we admit that in the trying ! hours of tbe reconstruction period, and in the raoro tryim' opening hours of the rebellion, we may have made mistakes, we offer no apolo Igies, ask no pardon, but in vita a candid and ! fair criticism and comparison. When we first planted ourselves on the plat jform of tho non-extension of Blavery. and the I Democratic party withstood us face to face and steel to steel, we met and vanquished them, j Then came on the times of rebellion, and we 1 crushed out treason : but the Democratic par ! tj, through four long years of bloody war loud ' ly cried, " No coercion." it opposed tha Eman cipation Proclamation, opposed all legislation on civil rights, and all hboral amendments to tba Constitution. Two years ago that great party laid down tho banners it had carried for almost half a century, and made an unconditional surrender of all tho principles for which it had contended, by plac ing at the head of its column one of tbe fath ers of too republican party. Thereby it is said to uh. "in all the years past ..u have been right and we have been wrong. And now, atanuing here to-day, at the end of ' two decades, and looking over the past ,we ask by what Tarrant does tbe Democratic party ra ti ai e tho Republican party to hand over to ! it the affairs of ( lovemment t P.v its surrender I two years ago it declared its incompetency, and i icknowledged that the Republican party was tho party of ideas and progress. Gentlemen of the Convention. I congratulate you upon this happy anniversary, and I pre dict ' at twenty years more of power and con trol awaits ua, if we conduct oursolva with that magnificent discresion and wisdom which has led and guided ub in the past. Mr. Childs, on taking the chair as President ot the Convention, spoke as follows 1 Fellow Citizens, I never had until tbis mo ment an intimation of tbe action of your com mittee in inviting me to preside over your de liberations. I nave not words to express my surprise, or my sense of honor and gratitude for tbis mark of your esteem and confidence in choosing me to preside over this, tbe largest in 1 numbers of any Republican Convention ever ! convened in the State of Michigan. I will not tako up much of your precious time by making extended remarks ; but allow me to say that I believe w ith you that tbo glorious and impor tant mission of the Hepubiican party is not yet ended. I believe tbe same Irovidence which railed it into being has vet farther use for it : and I may sa. perhapB. that there are greater responsibilities to meet than uny it has previ ously borne. ' nder the administration of that party, questions vital to tho very existence of our Government havo been settled forever, j The dark cloud of disunion, which hovered over ! i the horizon, has been bani-I.ed from our polit-1 ical skies, never again to return. Tho exist-1 8MB Of Hm I mon is settled and indissoluble. I Every great M'lest ion wMct 1 amc up has been successfully settled by this party. In that glo rious past record, to which we joint with pride, is read the demand for a future continuance in power of the Republican party. And there are questions now agitating tbo public mind, of vital importance to us, upon which perhaps I partiea are not settled : and to no narty can our country so safely commit then, unsettled ques tions a to the Republican party. In the no very distant future this nation, with its 10,000,- M usi rics. entitled The id State Road. Mai iHM) inhabitant, will have 100,000,060 and the I illustrated by Sheppard. gr9at questions in relation to capital and labor, The Mysterious ItlanO and Katharine Earlc transportation, thf industrial interests of our 1 are continued, and there are poem- bf H. ii , country, and other great issues now beginning .Mary E. Bradley, aud Nelly M. HiKlunson. to agitate the public mind, all devolve upon jl innabar fity by James T. McKay, is a thonght this R epubhean party for a glorious so'ution. ful story of western life. Dr. Holland wntos I believe to-day with you, fellow . itizens, of ' harlos Sumner, I'rof. wing, and The. ""trug tbat we have met to put before the people of 1 gle for Wealth, and The Old Cabinet is entitled the State of Michigan a ticket that will be borne , With Malice toward none, with CharVy for all. triumphantly tlirough the canvass to the close. Tbe other departments have the usual nterest May wisdom guid vou in you" deliberations' and variety. and success crown vour effortB in this State. - GOV. RAGLE Y 'S SPEECH. Mr. ( bairman and Fellow Republicans 1 I served my time at the bu-iness m which I now am engaged with an old Puritan, a man of the old school, riid in discipline. I gave him (as most bovs I proanmo give their employers) a great deal of trouble, and it seemed a pleas- " , ' , , . ure to him to tell me that I gave him trouble. He used to scold, and no doubt I deserved it ; hut I rmmher well after I ha 1 bad a week of but I remember won, alter 1 na 1 had a ween or pretty severe scolding, that I said to him one dav, " Coionel. do I 0tMf do am thing riRht m VVhv, of course vou do," be replied : " if you ' , , , , . , Lt-a. did not, I should not keep you. I said to him, " Wbv don't y.u sav bo then ;-" Well," be replied M it vour dutv to do right, and vou r " . . ,. daaarn do praaaafof tt And you. my fellow RapobUoatM ol ibis grand old State fir Michigan, although rt critic- , . . , . . . . al of my faults and errors, yet bow much move genei(us you have 1'een to me to-day ! And neel I sa- how kindlv, hov deeply, bow heart 1- , , j , 1 1 ly appreciate vour kind words and treatmont! .'have just returned from a tnp across and aioundthis State of Mrbigau. Leaving : - troit. with its hundred manufactui Ing naa pieiciug the sky ; passing through the moat, rich agricultural district of Centtul .:ti i -m;ui.-ern Michigan : ciossmg tbe fruit belt of tbe Mate, and see.ng upon tie great lakai a hun dred veBsels, owned by our own paopll 1 .oss- ing the groat pmo belt and entering tbo great , " " HL . 1 , ... . .. lelt of hardwood timber, and then into Oie I.ke Superior region, with its mines or n, copper, quarries of slate and sandstone, thence 1 hum. ,..uvoCU.ub ''"""".''. rtch of Lake Huron and the Saginaws, the thought came to me every day, on that grip, with every revolution of the wheels of the locon. Jtive and the steamboat, of the great aud varied interests of M ichigan, and what a noble empire had been entrusted to us. The thought came to me, how closely allied are all these imerests one to an(Jiuer. anu now me prosperny 01 outs is iu prosperity of alL aud that a disaster to one in terest is a disaster to all. And 1 could not but think, during that tnp, of these mighty aud valuable interests, which had been intrusted to you. my fellow citiaens, and through you to me. to help foster, protect, encourage, and develop. These thing- make me appreciate most heartily the honor and dig nity of the position which you have once con ferred upon me, and which J suppose. od willing, you propose to do again. I have but very little to say 01 the past, nor have I many promises to make for the future : but as I look upon the whole past hiBtory of this State and its government, and the devel opment and growth of our educational and charitable institutions, I cannot but feel what a grand, good, blessed, glorious oldState Michi gan is, and bow well throwing out the past two years it has neon governed, with not a stain upon the eaeutcbeon of the State. We have reduced its indebtedness ; we have reduced its taxation ; we have given a hearty support to almost every chari table institution of which the human imagination could con ceive : we havo cared for the deaf, the dumb, and the blind, the insane, the unfortunate, the criminal, the pauper, aud last of all, WN have reached out tho great hand of the State to the little childieu, whom we thought, irom their circumstances and surroundings, were going in the road that leads all the way down lull. Wo have done all this with decreasing taxa tion and decreasing debt. Within the last two years we have paid $784,000 of the debt of the Stato of Michigan. There are some latter-day prophets who tell j us we have got too much monev mthe Treas ury. It is tho first time I havo hoard tbe charge made as u fault in any State or its attal ; . w h u"r Kei out ov 1 M wayw but it is well to remember, whother this charge hud abfc8e bitu' )mt 1 guess he ll nnd be got orr comes from friend or foe, or from those who i t0P ov that ar Hame animal 'hat re know nothing about it, that all the money in j buk0(1 the Balni, and boecber and the Treasury of Michigan comes there through Eltertoh w,n ome e- f;on'L tl,A A.-tinn of tbo ortranic law. the Constitu-1 "ThatarSt. boms man thinks w.nnn sint- tion. -which ties up (thank dod, forever!) the specific taxes of the state for certain pur poees. I remember very well Wm. A. How ard saying, in his address at the laving of tbe corner-stone of the new Cupitc1, that it waB to the credit ot tbe State of Michigan that the impious hand or no Governor nor no par ty had ever reached for the trust funds of this State. I want to say to you that I shall not he the first Governor to put my hands upon tbo trust funds of the State of Michigan. If you do not want Hub money in tbe Treasury, yon must change the Constitution ; but just ao long as your Constitution stand s as it does to day, these funds will remain untouched by ev ery boneet man. I thank you for your cordial friendship dis played to mo to-day. by the hearty unanimity with which you have given me the second nom ination for the office of chief Er.ecntivo of this State. Tht. paper m Scribner's for August which will probably Iks most widely read is entitled Recollections af Cha. los Sumner, and is the fiMt of a series by Mr. A. R. 'ohnson, who was long and intimately connected with Mr. FABBftMf H(omacb to indignashnn. and you g.st tell bub as his private secietarv. nother timely urti- (o drink Bme catnip tea and goto hod and cle is Kate Field's sketch of tho manuscript of ne. fC6, iter abont it in tho momin '." "Oui Mutual Friend," recently sold Iff this An(, fefiing reassured bv I Deo odi . em country. WHHBBl Henry Goodvear advances mfg a-siii-nce that woman's snfDago was all some original theories Bl regard to Piaja arch- 1 a,d my pen aside and went on my way iteoture in a fully illustrated article entitled pgjgjp A Lost Art. Mt. BffCe gives n-Some Epigrams . . of Martial Mr Stoddard priuts his see .n l par IffffM months since i BWBBtOt Wm KarU of per on the ancestry of Some British Authors, Marshall, was the uotmiof sunstroke, and at and there is a sketch of Wlutelnw Reid. w.tb a last his brain became weakened. IJ wan at jK the Rattle Creek Water Cure for a time, but Mr. King's Great south inBtlllJmou deals with without benefit. Yesterday Dr. Bammn went Tbe Cotton States, chiefly .eorgia, and the il- down and it was decided to send Earl to nala lustrations reflect the life of that reg.on. Mr. mazoo. be having bffBBJBM Impeipwsly nsaiio. P.. F. Tavlor has another M ON Hro .Taokaon Pat riot. Iht U'mmtn Baafl raise n it. .. What was left alive of this figment of a sen timent before the eruption of tbe Reecher L'ilton scandal now lies dead before the elderly enthusiasts who worried it into existen. o. v bat ever may have been urged in deb u 0 tbe woman's stiff rage movemen. before, bv men wl' wee constantly reminded that they had SXSL flCtffiffl th W t riuddli in which we find such women as 1 hza- ueth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and others inextricably mixed, strips the question at once of "8 "0lectaljility and its vitality. .heM women Me reHpectable .n the.r sphere ( aODO ))y tueir unimpeachable character sur- rounded the impossible because impracticable 1 of won .n's right e and woman s equal- Hy with a glamour 01 propriety. The thorough nastinesa of the iilton-Heecher axpoae has. however, pricked the bubble, and ,t hangaat rbe end of the dirtiest imbroglio th. New York world has ever known. lb0 freo iove ..rocii.itiesof an Am parti to the Plymouth Church trans-, t.cn rare fa- miharly known to these womoi u n ngo. - Kn.iWu 01 and discussed: rot erred tr floubt- ovor tca.ubl(1,. antl ana)vt: . 1 thoso higher law n 1 ioni ajbteh aro Boppoaad to Kovera and glorifv the illicit short-i omings of higher law terrestrial-. 1.v:hk in tho dei al B rea,m Qf hfitZ plane. Whatever thee was oi" resoLctabihty in thin woniau's right's movcracnt wan vested in Mm Sti iton aim iub leaner or won m one rpeci ability follow ad tlicni i'heir mi-' ruble e,ni,ieitioo v it Ii tb. Bl oi. lyn scandal has lolled it. It must ahoot cverv body. I: oii'ht to she -n evnrvbodv ' locks at the sacrednees of tha marnago relation and dei ,s all those beautiful Hnagonaa which inrround hour- nd tha lllllo ties of husband. " "J , ' , ,im'r . ircn-a.i. IT para thought ot snob 3 svstem. covered up, nPtvat- , ed as it were bv a daily interchange of the most . intimate courtesies of iocial life, is bo revolting that we recoil from pursuing tho thread if tho imnmotil n ,u liun..l ... ..Il OA T - I -- wm ruvm, wuw. o. IJUUII no- 1 pubnean. i Fdi?ob Xstn Noathehnkk :-Veeterday the above artido waH imM me witu a requeHt ,,u j road an(1 anBw0r u aild aB j M fakinK noteH of wLat ptfe(.t it m,ght have u,)0n woaiau'-sutlrage , t, tbe po),9 thiH fa and 0OKitatulg wbar roply , and teeylDi, oatwlial disheartened j withal (hP venorahe hea(1 of , n,,e M i6(jpod slily over my shoidder, ani. with eyes sparkling with unusual intelligence, be said. " 7ha' must have been a tremendous shock that, cracked that ar St. Fonts man so, now. Didn't he know afore this time that the wimuiin all the way up from the mornin' ov time and creaCiOi don't know ennvthing ov themselves, only what men tell 'em.' '.eniseajind St. Paul tello 'em to obey their hnsl uda, and if they'd -earn eny thing, to learn ov their husbands to hoia, and to keep silent in the churches. Altai ' boil to it in this agt v reason that it is unreasonable to think woman a reasonable being, when--he's been taught sn h things from her babyhood up wards. Aud Mi Baaabaf -a-. aaaa ax Bttaa buth Tilton. yei hava confidence in mv pidg in' nt. aint yer ? ' and 9he says, says aha, . e Mr. Reecher I have. Ye'r my paster M d sptnt -ual sjuide. and I'm yer sheep.' And Ml Hee.-ber says, says he, ' I look upon her as . h.ld.' And it don't stand to reason that Fn. abaftfe ,s to blame in the I'rooklin Bcandia. and I don t. behove she is neither, nor I don't behove I aaoE" er is neither. 1 he lieecher and liltou muddle is just, like that ar awful tiagedh.d affair at Washington of Key ami Sickles. NekltathOQfM that Key was 'eit.ug higher up in tho perh'.icle sky nor he was, and readin' in the Sari tor that 'ho that cxalteth himself shall be abased,' be thought he'd perform t Ootip afclflf Mhl get Mgttar not Key was, and to aLaso him, ha shot him through his own '.. and killed em both poor, inercent things; and it is git' ihBaMM with Tilton : ba want 10 vault higher n. ' 'weeh er is, and he g ot awf ul mu at him beianse he would not lend him any more money, and no's a frcoloverite. and he'd foun 1 bis i n 1 .11 that ar Woodhull. and to make room foi he in hir own house he throws his wife. E.i.ahnM,, at- bis eakle. Don't he know tha' when men pot a chaiu round woman's neek. and ba n ber to the ground, the other end ov that iraMBB ham is securely fastened round their own i.e'kar' And when men put their heel on t woman's brain, and crush and grind it into the enribal) the way frum the fust day ov NBgaM I I now, and then ask her to manifest as great ao amount ov mind, the d get disappoint 3d ev'jy ime? Rut I gues if men will take their heel or, and give 'em room, and open the way u em to give an exabition, he'll find h s motbo' snows enough now to give him a sound spanking, (tbe St. Louis man I meant." And -aid Dn"o .'oeb, ' Vinne. that Mrs. Stanton and vnf.bouy are all right. God blesH 'em! And now don't you feel down in the mouth, nor worked Bp abou it. Thatar above piece is only a MMBI harm less thunderbolt, and 't wont bust. no. s attei nobody. nd that ar St. lxwis man that. tiso sbo -kod and smashed up will nnd thai it wim mm s suffrage is dead and bumod m I Bl Erookl n hot-' t-d Bf Tiltou-W. odhnll-treo-love-afhnitvism, it snh ph i nix on eleishm. day Fin a man, Vinne, and I've experiment!- knowl edge ov man's intricacies : and I know a BJBf instead ov leligton thru has moved thul ar man's