Elections
Racey, Arthur George, 1870-1941
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
Voting
Women--Suffrage--Canada
Wylie, Barbara Fanny, c.1862-1954)]]>

"When The Women Vote" by Paul Plaschke shows a woman approaching a small house on wheels, decorated with bows and signs that say: "Ladies-Register here for School Trustee Election" and "A Pink Certificate with Each Registration" used as a way to attract women voters.

"The Political Pannier" by James North depicts Theodore Roosevelt during his bid for president during the 1912 election. The illustration features a crudly drawn Roosevelt, wearing a long dress, gloves, and an apron with the slogan "Votes for Women Vote for Me."

"Wisdom" by Arthur George Racey shows a woman standing at the entrance to Canada, wearing a hat labeled "Militant Suffragette" and carrying supplies, including "assorted bricks, hatchets, and other missils" and "kerosene for incendiary purposes." The guard prevents her from entering. The cartoon is a reference to Barbara Wylie, member of the Women's Social and Political Union in England who went to Canada for a suffrage speaking tour in 1912.]]>
Plaschke, Paul, 1880-1954
Racey, Arthur George, 1870-1941]]>
Racey, Arthur George, 1870-1941
Women--Suffrage--Canada
Women--Suffrage--England
Wylie, Barbara Fanny, c.1862-1954)]]>

As viewed in Canada. Canadian woman, "Why all this unnecessary and unasked fro fuss on my behalf. If I wish for suffrage in my country, all I have to do is ask for it." The cartoon shows a woman, labeled Miss Wylie (British suffragist Barbara Wylie), speaking to a well-dressed Canadian woman.

Barbara Wylie was an active member of the Women's Social and Political Union in England from 1909 until 1912 when she left for Canada to do a suffrage speaking tour. She was arrested during a protest outside of His Majesty's Theatre in London on May 22, 1914. ]]>