Postcard : This is pretty heavy work, But I'll never, never shirk. [Circa 1909-1915]
Cupids
Demonstration
Voting
Series of cards with Cupid as the central figure. This card features a black and white illustration of Cupid wearing a "Woman Suffrage" sash and holding a sign that reads: "Isn't your wife intelligent enough to vote? Mine is."
C.E. Perry
[Circa 1909-1915]
Postcard : I hear that everyone of note, Soon will cast the suffrage vote. [Circa 1909-1915]
Cupids
Voting
Series of cards with Cupid as the central figure. This card features a black and white illustration of Cupid seated, on the telephone.
C.E. Perry
[Circa 1909-1915]
Postcard : I think we'll get them if we try. And we shall try until we die. [Circa 1909-1915]
Cupids
Series of cards with Cupid as the central figure. This card features a black and white illustration of Cupid painting the words "Equal Rights" onto the wall.
C.E. Perry
[Circa 1909-1915]
Postcard : I'm going to make a suffrage speech to all the folks whom I can reach. [Circa 1909-1915]
Cupids
Speech
Series of cards with Cupid as the central figure. This card features a black and white illustration of Cupid standing on a platform, wearing a "We want the vote" sash, holding a gavel.
C.E. Perry
[Circa 1909-1915]
Postcard : The Suffragette. [Circa 1913-1915]
Children in advertising
Cupids (Art)
Satire
Valentine's Day
Postcard with a Valentine's Day theme, also known as a "penny dreadful," created to ridicule the suffrage movement
Woman wearing a sash with the word "Suffragette" and holding up a "Suffragette" pennant with one hand while she firmly squashes with the other a little Cupid, whose bow and arrow fly out of his hands. She is standing on a heart.
Made in the United States of America
[Circa 1913-1915]
1 p.
English
DOCU.1000.34
Bridge tally card : Votes for Women, and Hearts forever! 1906
Advertising, Political--United States
Bridge (Game)
Card games
Votes for Women
Rectangular tally card for the game of Bridge containing two panels tied together with light gold string with an orange tassel through a punched hold along the top. The cover panel is an embossed illustration of a cupid-like figure carrying a heart-shaped sign that reads: "Votes for Women, and Hearts forever!"
It is marked "Germany" at the bottom left corner. The card is lined with a thin piece of paper between the two panels. The second panel is the tally card.
Cincinnati, O.H. : The U.S. Playing Card Co.
1906
English
MEMR.1906.01