Magazine covers--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Voting--1890-1900
Women--Civil rights--1890-1900
Women--Clothing & dress--1890-1900
Women's suffrage--1890-1900]]>

Caption: How can she vote, when the fashions are so wide, and the voting booths are so narrow?

Illustration shows a tall woman wearing a very wide dress and hat, who is denied the opportunity to vote because she cannot fit in the narrow booths. On the doors to the voting booths are signs: "Ballots Must Be Prepared In These Booths." A policeman is standing on the left, and, in the background, election officials are standing over the ballot box for "Election District No. 13".

On the reverse, is an article about the women's suffrage movement entitled "Concerning an unmanly fad."]]>
Magazine covers--1890-1900
Men--Domestic life--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Women--Clothing & dress--1890-1900
Women--Social life--1890-1900
Women in men's clothing]]>

Illustration shows a poorly dressed woman, "Dusty Maude," addressing a man, the "Timid Househusband,"who is wearing an apron and holding an infant, standing at the front door of his home. In the background, a dog with its tail between its legs, enters a doghouse to hide.

Caption:
Dusty Maude: Is dere any lady-folks about de house?
Timid Househusband: No-o - no, ma'am; - they have all gone to a primary meeting.
Dusty Maude: Den set out de best dere is in de pantry, an' don't do any screamin', or I'll clip yer whiskers!]]>
Magazine covers--1890-1900
Men--Domestic life--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Women--Clothing & dress--1890-1900
Women--Social life--1890-1900
Women in men's clothing]]>

Illustration shows a woman standing in front of a mirror tying her necktie. In the background, her husband stands at the open door looking on.

Caption: Nowadays. "My dear Susan, I wish you would keep your trowsers on your own side of the closet."]]>
Men--Domestic life--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Women--Social life--1890-1900]]>

Illustration shows a a woman seated in a room where many other women are gathered, reading a piece of paper as a young woman looks on. The seated woman's husband is standing at the door with three children.

Caption: At the Emancipated Women's Club.

Page: "Your husband wants to see you, Mum. He says the baby's tooth is through at last, and he had to come and show it to you, Mum!". ]]>
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Women--Clothing & dress--1890-1900
Women--Societies and clubs]]>

Illustration shows six scenes. A group of women are seated next to one another, addressed by "Prof. Brayneford" who has written a paper on "Burning Questions of Reform for Women." In each scene, one woman leaves the meeting after being insulted by the speaker's assertions that they are each unattractive or objectionable in some way due to their physical appearance. The president of the organization, crying, is the only one left in the room with the speaker by the end.

Each scene contains an individual caption.]]>
Men--Domestic life--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Social role
Role reversal]]>
Caricatures and cartoons--Periodicals
England--London
Picketing
Women--Suffrage--England
Women--Suffrage--United States]]>

A Suggestion for London by H.W. Webster. The cartoon shows a woman who has just dropped her "Votes for Women" banner and is running away from a group of women who are dropping bottles of oil and acid on the street as a police officer looks on from behind a sign.

Two ways of doing it. The English Suffragette Way. The American Suffragist Way. Two vignettes show the perceived differences between the English and the American suffrage movements.]]>
Webster, Harold Tucker, 1885-1952]]>
Fox, Fontaine T. (Fontaine Talbott), 1836-
Parades & processions--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920
Windsor, H. H. (Henry Haven), 1859-1924
Women's suffrage--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920]]>

The illustration shows a procession of women carrying Votes for Women signs and holding cats on leashes, surrounded by crowds on both sides.

The cartoon depicts the National American Woman Suffrage Association's March 3, 1913 parade held in Washington, D.C. the day before President Woodrow Wilson's inauguration.

The reverse contains three cartoons with suffrage-related content.]]>
Cartoons (Commentary)--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons]]>
Cartoons (Commentary)--1900-1910
Mother and child
Periodical illustrations --1900-1910
Smoking--1900-1910
Women--Clothing & dress--1900-1910
Women--Civil rights--1900-1910
Women--Social life--1900-1910]]>

Caption: "For the benefit of those ladies who ask the right to smoke in public."

Illustration shows a crowd of women in the "Mrs. P.J. Gilligan" bar smoking and drinking. Two children are standing by one table where a woman (their mother) is smoking.

One of the signs on the wall beside the bar reads: "Women sometimes: Ladies never spit on the floor./ Ladies will please refrain from throwing cigar butts in the free lunch./ No scrapping allowed on the premises."]]>