Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/169

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

ILLINOIS 155 State. She immediately telephoned to Mrs. Harriette Taylor Treadwell, president of the Chicago Political Equality League, to have letters and telegrams sent at once to Springfield and to have people communicate by telephone with the Speaker when he returned to Chicago for the week end. Mrs. Treadwell called upon the suffragists and thousands of letters and telegrams were sent. She also organized a telephone brigade by means of which he was called up every fifteen minutes by men as well as women, both at his home and his office, from early Saturday morning until late Monday night the clays he spent in Chicago. She was assisted in this work by Mrs. James W. Morrisson, secretary of the Chicago Equal Suffrage Association; Mrs. George Bass, president of the Chicago Woman's Club; Mrs. Jean Wallace Butler, a well-known business woman ; Mrs. Edward L. Stillman, an active suffragist in the Rogers Park Woman's Club; Miss Florence King, a prominent patent lawyer and president of the Chicago Woman's Association of Commerce; Miss Mary Miller, another Chicago lawyer and president of the Chicago Human Rights Association; Mrs. Charlotte Rhodus, president of the Woman Suffrage Party of Cook County and other influential women. Mrs. Trout telephoned Miss Margaret Dobyne, press chairman of the association, to send out the call for help over the- State, which she did with the assistance of Miss Jennie F. W. Johnson, the treasurer, and Mrs. J. W. McGraw, the auditor. A deluge of letters and telegrams from every section of Illinois awaitt-d the Speaker when he arrived in Springfield Tuesday Ing, He needed no further proof and announced that the bill would be called up for final action June u. The women in charge of it immediately he^an to marshal their forces for the last stru^lc. Messages were sent to each friend of the in the House, uri'jni; him to be present without fail. 1 < >n the eventful morning there was much excitement at the ol. The "captains," previously requested to be on hand arm-UK tli Mirnislic.l uiMi a li-.t

wa hi* <lulv .. -rr th.-it the men on it wci < HI their seat* wli'iuv. r tlx- hill

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Wilson. Rri-nliluaii-.; .l"hn I' ' -Miam nison, Democrat*; Roy 1,11 Mi-<-..nni.k an.l I Ila. Progressive*; Seymour Stcdman. Sr