Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/567

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

PENNSYLVANIA 55! 7. A report on the canvassing of one ward of Philadelphia, the loth, showed 55 per cent, of the women in favor. Leaflets were sent to 2,184 schools during the year and a prize offered for the best essay on woman suffrage by a pupil. On December 5 the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends organized an Equal Rights Association. A report on the canvass of the I5th ward, undertaken by the county society, the largest and most active auxiliary, was given at the annual convention held in Philadelphia, Nov. 7, 1903, and showed that of the 4,839 women interviewed nearly one-half were favorable, less than a third opposed and the rest were in- different. This year the State Grange and the city Labor Union endorsed woman suffrage. A banquet in honor of Miss Susan B. Anthony and the other national officers took place at the New Century Club, the guests including Mayor Samuel Ashbridge and his wife. His progressiveness contrasts strongly with the fact that sixteen years later the suffragists were unable to persuade Mayor Thomas B. Smith to welcome their Fiftieth Annual Con- vention to the city. Kaston was the place of the convention, Nov. 3-5, 1904, where it was reported that the result of sending fraternal delegates to thirty-seven State gatherings was the adoption of woman suf- < resolutions by nineteen. The convention of 1905 was held in Philadelphia, November 1.4, and all auxiliaries reported large gains in membership. This year suffragists bad ably assisted the City Party in a reform campaign and advanced their own cause. Kennett Square entertained the convention Nov. 6-8, i< io<>. An increase <>f 1,182 in membership had been made during the year. In i<)r>7 the State convention was held in the western part of the State, taking place in Pittsburgh. November h-S. A resolu- tion was projM.M-d for the first time to ask the political parties to put woman suffrage planks in their State platforms by Miss Charlotte Jones' but it was voted down as impracticable. The . Letter Carrie- -nation and State Woman's Christian Temperance Ciiion adopted suffrage resolutions during A junior snt ixiliary of 400 Pittsburgh girls and boys was repre Mrs. Rachel Foster Avery succeeded Mrs. Blankenburg as