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Show GENERAL. ! .Social Science OIHcIuIh. ; Boston, 11. At a meeting of the ; Social Science Association to-day, George William Curtis declinrd a re- . election, and Theodore D. Woobey, i of New Haven, was elected President. Among tho vice-presidents areGeorge 1 Davidson, of tian Francisco, and I). O. Oilman, ot Oakland, Cal. Woman Suffragists. Detroit, 14. The Woman Suffrage Association to-day, adopted resolutions resolu-tions thanking tho tweniy-two United Uni-ted States Senators who voted and t paired for woman's suffrage, and re-: joicing in the submission of that question to the people in Michigan I and Iowa; and rejoicing at the re cent endorsement of the movement by the conferences of Iowa and other religious bodies; expressing sympathy with temperance lodges and grangers; and protesting against the taxation of unrepreeented women. Letters of sympathy were read from eminent men and women. The following were elected offi cers for the ensuing en-suing year: President, Bishop Gilbert Haven, D.D. ; Vice-Presidents at Large, T. W. Higginson, of Rhode Island; Julia Ward Howe, Hon. H. Wilson, Washington, D.C. ; Mary A. Livermore, Hon. Geo. Wm. Curtis, New York; Mrs. D.Hall, Missouri; Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Hon. A. A. Sargent, California; Chairman of the Executive Committee, Lucy Stone, of Massichusetts; Foreign Correspondent Corres-pondent Secretary, Kate X. Dogget1;, of Illinois; Corresponding Secretary, Henry B. Black well. |