Newspaper Page Text
2
By MRS. MARY L. M'LENDON.
President of Georgia Woman Suffrage
Association,
Women have no form of suffrage in
Georgia. You ask: “Then why write
about it?” We answer: To show you
what we are trying to do, although
#adly handicapped because we are
disfranchised
The Georgia Woman Suffrage As
soclation wag organized in July, 1890,
by Miss H. Augusta Howard, of Co
lumbus, Ga., who was the first presi
dent. Her mother and sisters were in
thorough sympathy with her from the
beginning, Not so .were the men of
her family, but then that is not out of
the ordinary way of men The en
franchisement of women doeg not ap
peal ta men as a general thing.
She Attends a Convention.
Tn 1864 Miss H. Augusia Howard
and her two sisters, Mrs, Maxwell and
Mrs. Dußose, attended the convenr
tion of the National American Woms#
an Suffrage Association, which was
held in Washington, D. C., in Febru
arv of that vear. It was decided that
the national convention should be
held every other year in Washington
and the iniervening years some other
place should be chosen, so that every
body would have a chance to attend
At one time or another. The three
(deorgia suffragists invited the con
vention to hold the convention-of 1895
in Atlanta, Ga The invitation wuas
readily accepted, and a new and
strong impetus was thus given to the
woman suffrage movement launched
fn 1890, |
We would be derelict if we failed|
to honor the brave little woman who
organized the Georgia Woman Suf
frage Association and stood by it un
flinchingiv ontii she had proved be
vond peradventure that many Georgia
women were ready to work for cqual
rights,
In the fall of 1805 Miss Howard re
signed, and Mrs. Frances Cater Swift
wus elected president of the Georgia|
Woman Suffrage Association Then
followed Mrs Manry .. McLendon,
Mrs, Gertrude (', Thomas, Mrs Kath
ervine Koch., Mrs, MeLendon was
elected president .at the last State
convention, held July 9% and 10, 1913,
in Atlanta I
The first local organization was the
Atllanta Eaual Suffrage Association,
organized March 21, 1894 Then the
Demorest, the Waynesboro, the Fitz
gerald, the Athens, the Macon and
the DeKalb Woman Suffrage Associa
tions, all auxiliary to the Georgia
Woman Suffrage Association. ].fl'("l'!
the Atlanta Foual Suffrage Associa
tion changed the name to Atlanta|
Civie League, thinking by that nu-mml
tn get more members The faithfun
few kept the beacon Iflht burning nn«l
lil the suffrage wave came over the
entire country, and members of this
Civie League went to Wasghington to
march in the suffragesparade the day
hefore Woodrow Wilson was inaugu
ruted President of the United States,
March 4, 1913
The First State Convention.
The first gonvention of the Georgia
Woman Suffrage Association was held
in Atlanta November 28 and 29, 1889,
four yvears after the National Ameri
i Woman Sufirage Association's
e e O SAT AR 1 PSSR S Tet
Stone’s delicious wrapped
Cakes are so appetizing that
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Red Suapper 21
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1 pound Rumford’s 21
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Betler Bread is baked in our
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by white help only. Sales
| increasing every day. Have
you tried it? 31
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Just recerved 10,000 pounds
cood Head Rice. 6
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£ix pounds 30c, 10 pounds
48¢, 20 pounds 95c.
No. 10 Compound 93
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Re Umberta, the king of all
Olive Oils, full quart 79
tins, $1 va1ue...... c
Ridgway's Teas at all the
Rogers stores.
'
The 42 Rogers' Stores
9 N. Broad 72 Whitenhall
11 Ponders 114 Capito!
109 Peachtree 183 W. Mitchel
32 Wiltiams 9 E. Georg
116 E. Pine 213 8. Pryor
121 Edgewood 236 Capitol
122 W. P'tree 280 Oak
132 Forrest 356 §. Pryor
248 Houston 369 Boulevard
161 Peachtree 427 Grant
276 N. Bouiev'd 439 Whitehall
00 Hemphill 453 Stewart
309 P'ce Del Leon 464 §, Pryor
347 Peachtree 466 Woodward
961 Euclid 31 B§, Pryor
380 Marietta Out-of-Town
402 Luckie Stores!
412 Spring Marletta, Ga
671 Mighland Newnan, Ga.
812 Peachtres East Point, Ga
33 Gordon Decatur, Ga
Shop at the Nearest Rogers Store
y
i convention held in Atlanta. The wom
en who came to this first State con
vention to speak for suffrage were
Mrs. Virginia . Young, president of
the South Carolina Suffrage Asgsocla
tion; Miss Frances: E. Griffin, presi
lcant of the Alabama Suffrage As
lsm‘-éafion, and Mrs, Claudla Howard
Maxwel!l, Mrs, Gertrude C. Thomas
]nnd Mrs. 1. W, Parks, of Georgia, and
the '‘meeting was held in the hall of
’ the House of Representatives, al
though the Governor had refused to
| permit the officers of the National
| American Woman Suffrage Associa
i tion to hold a meeting In its sacred
| precints, because, he declared, “it
would be unconstitutionall”
‘ Four years afterward Utah and
| Idaho women had been enfran
’vhi:-mi, and Kansas women had
municipal suffrage rights, and
things looked different. Hon. Martin
V. Calvin, of Richmond Courity, with
out any trouble, had a resolution car
ried which gave the Georgia Woman
[ Suffrage Association the use of that
same hall.
“Nothing Succeeds Like Success.”
State conventions were held, some
times with the lielp of the Rev. Anua
| Howard Shaw, Mrs, Carrie Chapm un
Catt and Miss Laura Clay-—the ldst
,onv in 1912, and the speakers were al’
Georgia women. 1L {8 no trouble for
the program committees to get ni
‘l!vc—ern men and women to speagd
out in fav.r of woman suffrage now
adays, and they are flocking In to join
the greatest movement for the uplift
of humanity that hasx been known in
)!hn nineteenth and twentieth cen
turies, '
The first effoMt made by the Georgla
Woman Suffrage Association for thni
enfranchisement of women was in
1895, Mr. Charles A. Read, a member
of the Atlanta 12qual Suffrage Asso
ciation, auxillary to the Georgia
- Woman Suffrage Assoclation, formu
ated a bill asking that the word male
be eliminated from the (‘onsfltution.l
It was presented by the State presi
‘dent and members of the Atlanta
Fqual Suffrage Association. Nothing
}\ms ever heard from it, and in 1808-99
gimilar attempts were made, but sig
nally failed, 18 no man could be found
to father the bill.
~ In 1908 Hon. Clande Pavton, of
Worth (County, Georgla, introduced
the bhill in the House to add “and fe
male” after the word “male,” but it
pever left the committee room. In
1911-1912 Mr. Peyton again offered a
bill to the same effect, but it became
the butt of ridicuie with the commii
tee to which it was referred and nev
er appeared for a second reading. No
ot'#>r man has made an effort to help
th+ women to get where they can
help themselves, Tn 1804 the W, (.
T. 1., with the suffragists of Ab)antu,
with petitions appeared befor (hal
City Council of Atlanta and asked
that the department of police matron
be created with appropriate salarv.
Thisg reaquest was never complied with
until 18908, Then the State Euffrage
Association sent a petition to the
Legislature asking for a police ma
tron in every city in Georgia of 13,000
or more inhabitants, This petition
wag ignored by the Legislature be
cause the netitioners were all womes.
A committee was appointed to find
out what proportion of the taxes of
the State was levied on the properties
of the women of Georgla,
The committee found 1t to be 70
per cent. RBills and resolutions were
pressed on the attention of the Legis
latore in 1888: To exempt the prop
erty of women from taxation until
they are permitted to vote, claiming
that “taxation without representation
fs tyranny” in 1898 as it was con
ceded to be in 1776; also (o raise the
age of consent from 10 years to 18:
and again a bill for police matrons
in citles of 10,000 or more inhabitants,
We have asked continually that the
University of Georgia be opened to
women, -
We have asked continuously that
women become members of @ the
hoards of «ducation; that women
be placed on the staff of physicians
|of the State Lunatic Ayslum; that
| wonien he made eligible to the office
{nf president of the Georgia Normal
and Industrial College. We have
begged that women be permitted lo}
practice law in Georgia; that mothers
be made co-guardians with their
‘ husbands of their minor childven; that
women he permitted to be notaries
public: that girls of 18 be permitted
to enter the textile department of the
State Technological School.
We have begged time and again for
a decent child labor law and a com
pulsory education law in Georxla.‘
which would take the children from
milis, factories, mines and stores, and
the streets, and put them in the
schioolhoure, and all these things have
been refused to the women who have
only the right of petition in Georgia,
except that & woman physiclan has
been admitted as a member of the
l»lnfl‘ of physicians in the State Lu
natic Asylum, and last year mothers
were made co-guardians with their
hushands of their minor children.
Women can now serve as notaries
publie,
The age of protection bill intro
duced by Representative €. 8. Reid
Docember 15, 1902, was defeated by
71 yeaw) 1T maye. The W. C, 7. Wy
land suffrage women requested Mr,
Reid to move for reconsideration on
November 16, and it resulted in the
bill being voted down by a larger
x‘\n_inri!y than the day hefore, Mr,
+ Reid thought it weil that his blll was
defeated, since it only asked that the
age of congent be raised from 10 to
{l2 vears. The suffragists asked that
1 it be waised to 1R ycars, and the W.
ll'. T, U. %0 21 yesars,
i In 1918 Hon. R. B. Blackburn intro
duced a bill to raise the age of con-
I.unn to 12 years. It was referred to
I\l.\ friends, Representatives Blacks
‘hnl"n and Wright, who were in favor
of raising it t@ 14. The bill to admit
lui‘h of I 8 to the textile department
j of the Technological Sciool was read
twice in the House, but “never again.”
l he bill to admit women to the State
t University was not even considered
‘by the Legislature,
! Until 1857 a hufl\:wll had the right,
given to him by a laW taken from the
statute books of Kngland, to beat his
wife,
In 1857 this law was amended. The
wife can prosecute the husband. In
1866 & law was enucted allowing a
married woman to own property, but
e ——
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they are different and bet.
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Bring us your doctor's
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THIS BALLOT GOOD FOR
IN THE HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN AND
ATLANTA GEORGIAN AUTO AND
PRIZE CONTEST.
EARBe ...oio b i ivispann idEv va
DS ..... . ciaviaeaheeagiililien
BNatHet. . ... 000 B
This Coupon, when neatly clipped out, with name
and address properly filled in and brought or sent to
the Contest Department of The Georgian, will count
as 25 votes.
Not good after March 10.
Le s g sSR
!nnt including any wages she might
| earn.
“The married woman's property
act” was introduced by Hon. Beverly
A. Thornton, of Muscogee County,
Georgia, and it has been a godsend to
the women of this State,
In November, 1885, when Hon, Wil.
llamm H. Ileming was Speaker of the
House of Renresentatives, he offered n
bill which he said “was to complete
the good work begun with the mar
ried woman’'s property act of 1868 by
making a wife's labor, as well as her
acquired property, her own,” It passed
the House hy 9% veas, 29 nays, but
was kllled in the Senate,
As the law now stands, a married
woman in Georgla can control her
earnings only i{f a sole trader, with
her hushand’s consent by notice pub
{ished in the papers for one month, or,
if Hiving separate from him. If a hus
band die intestate leaving a wife and
children, the wife may elect to take
down a life interest in one-third of
the real estate or she may take a
child's share of the whole estate ab
‘solutely, unless the shares exceed
five in number, when she may have
one-fifth. How outrageous!
In December, 1884, Representative
Martin V., Calvin, a believer in the
right and expediency of giving women
the ballot in Georgla, Introduced and
carried through the Legislature, un
der most unfavorable pressure, a bill
to render women eligible to employ
ment in the Statehouse.
Women are weary of begging.
Sometimes they succeed in getting
what thoy want, but more often they
do not succeed, and are made to fe>l
their inferfor position, classed as they
are with the disfranchised lunaties,
eriminals, idiots, minors, aliens and
paupers. Until 1889 the solons of
Georglia did not consider the girlg of
this State worthy of a college estab
lished and sustained by the State,
The State Normal School and the
North QGeorgla Agriculiural Collag®
(both white), the Georgia State In
dustrial College (colored) and the At~
lanta Unjversity (white and colorer)
are co-educational, and there is no
trouble that 1 have heard of. Be
cause the women can not enter the
State !'ni\'ershy upon any terms, they
are deprived of the highest educatpn
al facilities the State affords. They
can not study law in the university,
but they can go to some other State
university or they ~an take a two
vears' course in the law school of
Georgia, but thev are deprived of the
privilege of making their living by
practicing law in Georgia. The same
objections were made to women phv
siciana, but that has been overcome,
although it required a lang time to do
it. The thing to do is to give the
women the ballot, and in that way
put them on an equality before the
law with men, and all these inequali
ties will disapnear like mist before the
sun,
1f women had votes this inequality
would not exist. Tt is the pleasure
and the business of the woman suf
fragist to bring these matters to the
attention of the men and women of
to-day. We are delighted that Mr.
Hearst has given this issue, March 3,
to the suffragiste for this purpose.
The whole State is alive and anxious
to see women have an even chance
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TH® ATLANIA ULUMLIAN AN NEWS.
with men in pursuit of life, liberty
and happiness, which is said to be
guaranteed to every citizen of the
United States of America. I stated
in the beginning that women have no
form of suffrage in Georgla, and it
does seem, judging by the past, that
it is useless to ask the men of Geor
gia to remove the consuming outrage
and indignity of disfranchisement
which has been placed upon the wom
en of the Empire State of the South
since she entered the sisterhood of
States,
The men of Georgia valued the bal
lot and all that it brought to them in
the past, and when they were dis
franchised, after the close of the Civil
War between the States, they were
willing to give to the negro men, once
their slaves, the elective franchise
which they had enjoyved exclusively
for so many vears before they de
cided to go to war to try to keep the
negro a slave always, If it is not a
disgrace to ve disfranchised as men.
tell me when I complain of my 84d
condition, why did men in~ 1889,
Sonthern men ai thaf, why 4id they
“make haste quickly” to ratify the
fifteenth amendment to the Constitu
tion of the Unlted States and force
the ballot on the negro man who had
never even asked for it? The answer
is easy to the women of the Bouth
who lived in those troublous times.
Our poor brothers just could not get
along without the ballot, the right
preservative of all rights. They had
lerded it over the white women and
the negro men and women until it
had become second nature with them,
and they could not exist without ft—
at least, it looked that way to us
women who hadn’'t known anything
but disfranchisement all the days of
our lives, alopg with the negro men
and women and the luna?ca, erimi
nalg, idiots, minors and aliens. Why
did they not do like the men of Wy
oming, who refused to have statehood
if the woman suffrage plank could
not remain in the Constitution of
Wyoming? That happened in 1869
also, and for 44 years the women of
Wyoming have been voting and hold- |
ing office.
“Without Suffrage
Nation Is Oligarchy.”
By MRS, SUSAN W. FITZGERALD,
Recording Secretary of the National
Woman's Suffrage Association,
What is a democracy? A democs
racy is a form of government where
the final power rests in the people,
Not a part of the people—that makes
an oligarchy or a monarchy-—but
where it rests in the whole people.
Are the men of this country the
whole people? No! But as long as
the men alone are the 'source of pow
er of the government It is not a gov
ernment for the people by the people;
it is not a dewmocracy.
This is the day of progress. A
country must progress or it will fall
behind and another will take its place.
A democracy can not progress un
leks its people are growing in intel
‘ligence and moral force. We who
believe in democracy claim that the
use of the ballot is the chief means/
of developing in the citizens this in
telligence and moral force. The wo
men are deprived of this great means
of development and, therefore, must
fall behind. Can the race advance
and develop as it should when one
half hangs like a millstone about the
neck of the other half? Give women
the vote and let them grow with the
men.
Southern Leader
Sees Victory Ahead.
By MRS, DESKA BRECKINRIDGE,
Second Vice President National
Woman Suffrage Association.
The Supreme €ourt has asknowl
edged that women are citizens; the
Supreme Court of Canada has ac
knowledged that women are people,
and the men of this nation are be
ginning to realize that we do consti
tute a part of the human family.
I believe that constitutional amend=-
ment granting suffrage to women
would be of advantage to my State
and also to the other Southern States,
The State of Kentucky has an hon
orable record in the matter of
democracy, When we wrote our first
constitution we threw off the tradi
tions of Virgiria. We did not believe
that citizenship should be dependent
upen any acrodent of birth or inheri
rance of wzalth or cducational oppor
tunity, we based suffrage on man
hood alone. In the same way thie men
of my State when they wrote the first
school law in 1838 made the first step
‘of any KEnglish-speaking people in
the modern movement for the eman
cipation of women; yet, {1 have to ad
‘mite that 4#he men of my State are
~lassing the women legally and po
litically with idiots and criminals.
They are awakening to the fact,
however, that i nmany ways they
need the help of their women. I be
lieve that Kentucky and all of the
FSouthern States need tremendously
the help of their women.
Indiana Women Push
Battle for Ballot.
By ANNA DUNN NOLAND,
President Indiana Equal Suffrage
Association.
Indiana has never given women
even limited suffrage. This is not be-
A ————— - ————————
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cause the women of the Hosier State
are indifferent to “Votes for Women."”
Tor vears they have besieged their
Legislature and thousands of men
and women are advocating equal suf
frage. -
The uncertainty of Indiuna’s poli
tics always has made her lawmalkers
conservative. But the need of wom
an's hand in the public affairs is be
ing felt keenly in Indiana as it is
everywhere that woman is disfran
chised.
The woman suffrage Sentiment is
growing so rapidly and the workers
are so determined that the time is
not far off when we will lift the blot
from our escutcheon and become one
of the free States.
“Votes for Women” Chocolates
The Story of Crane’s Most
Celebrated Brand of Dainty
Chocolates
“Votes for Women’’ Choco
lates. The official package goes
on sale at our two stores to-day.
Beautifully boxed in packages
carrying out the colors of'the
association and filled with the
Crane Chocolates. We have the
unique distinetion of making‘
the first window display of the
goods outside of New York
City. Mr. Crane, who has the
necessary qualifications along
chocolate lines to be the con
fectioner for Marshall Field &
Co., Lord & Taylor, of New
York, and others, was in Atlan
ta last week and told us how
the ‘““Votes for Women’’ hap
pened. He was passing their
headquarters on Thirty-tourth
street, in New York, and no
ticed their window placarded
with emblems and arguments
of the cause. Down in one cor
ner was a little sign which
read, ‘‘Fudge Imside.”” The
idea struck him—if the ladies
wanted to sell candy, why not
sell the best candy. Why not
give the society the commis
sion on the selling cost and let
them sell it?
To-day the ‘“Votes for Wo
men’’ Chocolates are on sale
in hundreds of leading estab
lishments. The selling cost of
o¢ per pound goes to the la
dies. The customer gets
Crane’s Chocolates, which is a
guarantee that the product is
the very best obtainable.
Catech up with the times.
Crane’s “Votes for Women”’
Chocolates are IT.
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S SEES St a s
S
Daintiest of Chocolates
For the Appreciative
Made by America’s Master
Candy Maker, and dedicated
to the cause of ‘“Votes for
Women.” :
Look for the name on the beauti
ful package. Boxes of 1 ib., 15 Ib,,
4 Ib., at $l.OO, 50c and 25c.