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                  <text>The collection of more than 250 postcards and stamps demonstrates the popularity of this medium and the types of arguments both for and against suffrage. The cards illustrate the perceived threat to traditional gender roles, the growing violence of the suffrage movement primarily in England, and the way in which women were mobilizing to challenge conventional political and social responsibilities. The collection also includes a selection of printed photographic postcards distributed after the March 3, 1913 parade in Washington, D.C., as well as a series of photo cards published by the Women’s Social and Political Union and the Women’s Freedom League to highlight their officers.</text>
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                <text>Postcard : Votes for Women; She's good enough for me! 1915</text>
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Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)</text>
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                <text>This card is part of a series published by the National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company. It features an illustration by artist, Emily Hall Chamberlain, modeled after a cartoon by Homer Davenport, entitled "He's Good Enough for Me."&#13;
&#13;
A young Uncle Sam holds a well-dressed girl and proclaims his approval.</text>
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                <text>New York, N.Y. : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., Inc.&#13;
Elizabethtown NJ : Campbell Art Co.</text>
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                  <text>The collection of more than 250 postcards and stamps demonstrates the popularity of this medium and the types of arguments both for and against suffrage. The cards illustrate the perceived threat to traditional gender roles, the growing violence of the suffrage movement primarily in England, and the way in which women were mobilizing to challenge conventional political and social responsibilities. The collection also includes a selection of printed photographic postcards distributed after the March 3, 1913 parade in Washington, D.C., as well as a series of photo cards published by the Women’s Social and Political Union and the Women’s Freedom League to highlight their officers.</text>
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Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)</text>
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                <text>Part of a twelve-card series of full-color lithographic postcards opposing woman suffrage. &#13;
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              <text>Oh what is the matter with Uncle Sam,&#13;
Oh he's all right you know,&#13;
He knows how to deal with schemes flim-flam,&#13;
Just give him a while to grow;&#13;
Oh who is Uncle Sam, I wonder,&#13;
Now to guess you may try,&#13;
And do not make an awful blunder,&#13;
For he's you and I,&#13;
Whenever you go to a ballot box,&#13;
Just think of Uncle Sam;&#13;
And vote to banish all the rogues,&#13;
Who get up the schemes flim-flam&#13;
He'll own the trust, if we say he must,&#13;
He'll dig the mines, and abolish wines,&#13;
He'll launch the float, for women's vote,&#13;
And We'll think we're up in the nines;&#13;
Whoever we have in the President's chair,&#13;
May run us a race if he choose,&#13;
We've something to gain if we only beware&#13;
For there isn't much more we can lose.&#13;
Just hear that whistle go toot, toot, toot,&#13;
That bell go dingity ding;&#13;
'Tis hammerty smite till Saturday night,&#13;
To the tune of ting-a-ling ling.&#13;
Now ev'ry man should own his home,&#13;
And have enough to spare,&#13;
Should rest each week a day and a half,&#13;
And be free from worry and care&#13;
We'll pull together with Uncle Sam,&#13;
For he's all right you know,&#13;
We'll help him banish the schemes flim-flam,&#13;
And give him a while to grow&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Sheet music. "What's the Matter with Uncle Sam" words and music by Mrs. Chas. H. Toby. 1904</text>
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                <text>Toby, H. Ellen</text>
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                <text>Musical--Excerpts--Vocal scores with piano&#13;
Popular music&#13;
Sheet music&#13;
Songs with piano&#13;
Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)&#13;
Women--Songs and music</text>
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                <text>The cover design is an illustration of Uncle Sam holding a sign that says "Miss Liberty will sing this popular song," standing next to a shovel and pick, and a suitcase printed with the words "Women's Votes." Around the border are vignettes labeled "Women's Votes," "Graft," and "Booze."</text>
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                <text>Dover, New Hampshire : Mrs. Chas. H. Toby</text>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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                <text>Douglass, K.B., Cover illustrator</text>
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