Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/548

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

53 2 HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE National Board sent Mrs. Mary K. Maule in April and Misses Alice Curtis and Doris Long in June. One of the requirements by the National Association if financial assistance were given was that States in campaign should secure signatures of women on petitions. At the meeting in January officers of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union agreed to take entire charge of this work but later decided that it might injure the chances for national prohibition. Its president, how- ever, Mrs. Abbie Hillerman of Sapulpa, served as an advisory member of the Campaign Committee and with other members rendered valuable assistance. Under the direction of Miss Curtis 58,687 signatures were obtained. In the meantime the Oklahoma City organization, which had for officers a group of young women, was dissolved and their headquarters given up. Money was needed to maintain State headquarters, which were an absolute necessity. In June Mrs. Henley, the chairman, sent a financial plan to all county chairmen, asking for a certain sum from each county based on population, wealth, etc. Some county chairmen resigned, which was a dis- couragement to Mrs. Henley and to the national workers. Early in July Mrs. Henley telegraphed her resignation to the National Board, stating that the campaign must go by default unless it would assume all financial obligation. Mrs. Catt, the national president, wrote urging her not to resign and stating that the National Association would pay salary and expenses of all national organizers then in the field and would send other workers as needed, providing Oklahoma would finance its State head- quarters and speakers' bureau and meet the pledge made in April to pay salary and expenses of two workers. Mrs. Henley remained chairman; Mary Parke London and Sally Fanny Gleaton were sent by the board in July; Alma Sasse in August and Isabella Sanders as headquarters secretary on September i. Mrs. Shuler returned from New York and took over the campaign for the final two months, with headquarters in Oklahoma City. All of the prominent suffragists in the State were doing war work. . . . There was a depleted treasury. The Campaign Com- mittee was not able to pay for any workers in the field. Money was needed for rent, postage, telegrams, stenographers' salaries,