Campaign literature
Elections--Virginia
Governors--Virginia
Republican Party (Va.)]]>
Newspaper--Letters to the editor
Stone, Lucy, 1818-1893
Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870)
Women--Suffrage--Canada
Women--Suffrage--Kansas
Women--Suffrage--Massachusetts
Women--Suffrage--Wyoming]]>
On back is a form letter entitled "Municipal Suffrage for Women."]]> DOCU-1890-02.02]]>
Campaign Literature
Constitutional amendments
Elections
New Jersey Woman Suffrage Association
Women--Suffrage--New Jersey]]>

The presence of the imprint of the National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company indicates that the National American Woman Suffrage Association distributed the broadside and the New Jersey Woman Suffrage Association reprinted it for the 1915 referendum campaign in New Jersey.]]>
Campaign literature
Constitutional amendments
Elections--Corrupt practices
Michigan Equal Suffrage Association
Women--Suffrage--Michigan]]>

Woman suffrage was defeated again in the 1913 election. Michigan women were granted the right to vote in presidential elections in 1917 and in 1918, Michigan voters approved the state constitutional amendment granting suffrage to Michigan women.]]>
Congress of Industrial Organizations (U.S.). Political Action Committee
United States--Politics and government--1940-1950
Voting]]>

The Congress of Industrial Organizations was founded in 1928 as a federation of unions that organized workers in industrial unions in the United States and Canada. The CIO merged with the American Federation of Labor to form the AFL-CIO in 1955. The CIO PAC was established in 1942.]]>
Campaign literature
Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870)
Women--Political activity--United States
Women--Suffrage--Periodicals]]>

Written by Alice Stone Blackwell, this list was reprinted numerous times in a variety of formats. Blackwell outlines the reasons why women want the right to vote. These include having a voice in making the laws; educating and broadening women's minds; influencing public affairs; electing better men to office; protecting women's business interests; correcting the corruption that existed in politics; and creating laws that adequately represented women's interests.]]>
Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870)]]>