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Electorate, qualities most valuable
in, 4.

England: Education of women in, 38;
method used by women in, to in-
fluence public opinion, 113; mili-
tant suffrage movement in, 111;
position of women in, 111.
English newspapers: American news-
papers, as compared with, 138; ex-
aggerated reports of the doings of
the militants by, 139, 140; ignoring
of women's activities by, 139; oppo-
sition of, toward the suffrage move-
ment, 138-140.

Equal Suffrage: And the family, 35-
37; effect of, upon women, 35; jus-
tice of, 97; meaning of, 99.
EQUAL SUFFRAGE-A PROBLEM OF
POLITICAL JUSTICE. Anna Howard
Shaw, 93-98.

EQUAL SUFFRAGE CAMPAIGN IN PENN-
SYLVANIA, THE. Jennie Bradley
Roessing, 153–160.
Europe: Governmental privileges of
women in, 6-8; physical develop-
ment of women peasants in, 20.

Factory system, effect of, on women,
106.

Family: As affected by women's ac-
tivities, 32, 33; disintegration of,
30; dissolution of, 32; equal suffrage
and the, 35-37; recognition of, as a
social institution, 28; reconstruc-
tion of, constitution of, 28-30; rise
of democracy in, 29.

FAMILY, CHANGED IDEALS AND STATUS

OF THE, AND THE PUBLIC ACTIVI-
TIES OF WOMEN. George Elliott
Howard, 27-37.

Family life, the rising ideal of, 33.
Feminism, definition of, 18.
FEMINISM AND CONVENTIONALITY.
Elsie Clews Parsons, 47-53.
FEMINISM, THE ECONOMIC BASIS OF.
Maurice Parmelee, 18-26.

Feminist, assumptions of extreme
type of, 18.

Feminist movement, trend of, 6.
Fifty-four hour bill, for women work-
ers, 58.

Franchise: Demand for, in Germany
and England, 2; extension of, to
women in Europe, 93, 94; extension
of, to women in United States, 93;
value of, 95.

General Federation of Women's
Clubs, the, 79, 80, 108.
Great Britain, education of women
in, 38.

Hill, Octavia, statement of, 104.
HOWARD, GEORGE ELLIOTT. Changed

Ideals and Status of the Family
and the Public Activities of Women,
27-37.

HUTCHINSON, EMILIE J. The Social-
izing Influence of the Ballot upon
Women, 105-110.

Iceland: Campaign for prohibition in,
149; suffrage movement in, 93.
Idaho, extension of franchise to
women in, 93.

Illinois, accomplishments of women's
clubs in, 83.

Iowa, accomplishments of organized
women in, 81.

Juvenile court: Capacities of women
in, 88; duties of women in, 92; girls
in, 89.
JUVENILE COURT, WOMEN IN THE.
Emily Foote Runge, 88-92.

Kansas, extension of franchise to
women in, 93.

KELLEY, FLORENCE. Women and

Social Legislation in the United
States, 62-70.

Kentucky, accomplishments of club
women in, 82.

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Male suffrage, qualifications for the
right of, 94.

MARTIN, GERTRUDE S. The Educa-
tion of Women and Sex Equality,
38-46.

Maryland, accomplishments of club
women in, 84.

Massachusetts: Accomplishments of
club women in, 84; minimum wage
law in, 132.

Matrimony: And social control, 27-
28; as a profession, 33.
Men: Differences existing between
women and, 53; relation of, to
women, 50.

MILITANT SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT,
THE. Mary Winsor, 134-142.
Militant suffragettes: Exaggerated re-
ports of the doings of, by English
newspapers, 139, 140; the unjust
attitude assumed toward, 136, 137.
Minimum wage commissions, 122.
Minnesota, minimum wage law in,
132.

Missouri, accomplishments of club
women in, 84.

MUNICIPAL ACTIVITIES, WOMEN IN.
Neva R. Deardorff, 71-77.

New Mexico, work of club women in,

83.
New Orleans, work of club women in,
84.

New York, services of women in state
of, 44.

New Zealand: Efforts of women in,
to secure prohibition, 148, 149; ex-
tension of suffrage in, 94.
North, women voters in the, 56.

Ohio, minimum wage law in, 132.
Oregon: Accomplishments of women's

clubs in, 83; campaign for prohibi-
tion in, 148; extension of franchise
to women in, 93; minimum wage
law in, 132.

PARMELEE, MAURICE. The Economic
Basis of Feminism, 18-26.
PARSONS, ELSIE CLEWS. Feminism
and Conventionality, 47-53.
PATTEN, SIMON N. The Evolution of
a New Woman, 111-121.
Pennsylvania, equal suffrage in, 153-
160.

Pennybacker, Mrs. Percy V., 78, 79.
Perkins, Frances, 58.

Political equality, results of, for
women, 129-133.

POLITICAL EQUALITY FOR WOMEN AND
WOMEN'S WAGES. S. P. Breckin-
ridge, 122-133.

Prison labor and women's industries,
67.

Probation officers, women as, 88.
Prohibition: Campaign for, in various
states, 148; women as means of es-
tablishing, 145, 146.
PUBLIC ACTIVITIES OF

WOMEN,
CHANGED IDEALS AND STATUS OF
THE FAMILY AND THE. George El-
liott Howard, 27-37.

Public opinion: Dominated by wo-
men, 100; effect of, on child leg-
islation, 103; influence of women
on, 103; regarding women, in male
suffrage states, 102; women's
method of influencing, in England,
113.

Pure food laws, influence of women
in passage of, 56.

Electorate, qualities most valuable
in, 4.

England: Education of women in, 38;
method used by women in, to in-
fluence public opinion, 113; mili-
tant suffrage movement in, 111;
position of women in, 111.
English newspapers: American news-
papers, as compared with, 138; ex-
aggerated reports of the doings of
the militants by, 139, 140; ignoring
of women's activities by, 139; oppo-
sition of, toward the suffrage move-
ment, 138-140.

Equal Suffrage: And the family, 35–
37; effect of, upon women, 35; jus-
tice of, 97; meaning of, 99.
EQUAL SUFFRAGE-A PROBLEM OF
POLITICAL JUSTICE. Anna Howard
Shaw, 93-98.

EQUAL SUFFRAGE CAMPAIGN IN PENN-
SYLVANIA, THE. Jennie Bradley
Roessing, 153–160.
Europe: Governmental privileges of
women in, 6-8; physical develop-
ment of women peasants in, 20.

Factory system, effect of, on women,
106.

Family: As affected by women's ac-
tivities, 32, 33; disintegration of,
30; dissolution of, 32; equal suffrage
and the, 35-37; recognition of, as a
social institution, 28; reconstruc-
tion of, constitution of, 28-30; rise
of democracy in, 29.

FAMILY, CHANGED IDEALS AND STATUS

OF THE, AND THE PUBLIC ACTIVI-
TIES OF WOMEN. George Elliott
Howard, 27-37.

Family life, the rising ideal of, 33.
Feminism, definition of, 18.

FEMINISM AND CONVENTIONALITY.

Elsie Clews Parsons, 47-53.

FEMINISM, THE ECONOMIC BASIS OF.
Maurice Parmelee, 18-26.

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ns in the
£8-49; dis-
pared with
3, 129; dis-
ry by prison
ion of, with
tion of public
conomic inde-
ucation of, 38;
n of, 107; edu-
7; effect of, upon
f civil service on
74; effect of eco-
cal reform upon,
franchisement on,
of equal suffrage
ect of male gallan-
nomic independence
franchisement of, in
s, 62; enthusiasm of,
ive experience, 107-
e of, into government,
hary progress in Amer-
xceptions to the charac-
ndency of, 49, 50; exemp-
from political responsi-
1; experience of, in growth
1 nature, 106; extension of
0,55; fitness of, for present-
litical tasks, 35; freedom of,
responsibility for European
62; governmental privileges
European and Asiatic coun-
6-8; grievances of, in Eng-

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Suffrage movement: History of the,
in Pennsylvania, 153–155; in Eng-
land, 111; in the United States, as
compared with that in England,
135; initiation of the, in Pennsyl-
vania, 153; men responsible for
the conduct of the, 135; opposition
of English newspapers toward the,
138-140.

SUFFRAGE Movement, the Militant.
Mary Winsor, 134-142.

Suffrage problems, statement of, 114.
Suffragettes, in England, grounds of,
for revolt, 134, 135.
Suffragists: Efforts of the, in Penn-
sylvania, to secure action in men's
political parties, 156; services ren-
dered by, to the world, 137.

Taft, William H., on woman suffrage,
100.

Teachers in country schools, 78, 79.

Utah: Extension of franchise to
women in, 93; minimum wage law
in, 132.

"Votes-for-women" movement, as-
pects of, 1, 4.

Wage earners: Public opinion regard-

ing women as, 107; women as, 106.
Wages: Effect of woman labor upon,
22; level of, dependent on economic
causes, 124; reports on women's,
122.

WAGES, POLITICAL EQUALITY FOR
WOMEN AND WOMEN'S. S. P.
Breckinridge, 122-133.
Washington: Campaign for prohibi-
tion in, 148; extension of franchise
to women in, 93; minimum wage
law in, 132.

WINSOR, MARY. The Militant Suf-
frage Movement, 134-142.

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