Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/854

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

838 HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE Need of Women; Miss Rosika Schwirnmer, The Hungarian Out- look; H. Y. Stanger, M. P., The Prospect of Franchise Reform; Dr. Kathe Schirmacher, Woman Suffrage. On the Sunday afternoon preceding the convention the Rev. Anna Howard Shaw preached for a Men's Meeting at White- field's, Tottenham Court Road, the most of the large and interested audience hearing for the first time a sermon by a woman. On the Sunday following the convention she preached in the morning for the West London Ethical Society in the Kensington Town Hall and in the evening at the King's Weigh House Chapel, Duke Street, Grosvenor Square. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon the Rev. Canon Scott Holland gave a sermon in St. Paul's Cathedral, the national church, on the Religious Aspect of Women's Suffrage, with two hundred seats reserved for the delegates, and they felt a deep thrill of rejoicing at hearing within those ancient walls a strong plea for the enfranchisement of women. They were invited to attend the next evening a sym- posium by the Shakespeare League at King's College on What Shakespeare Thought of Women. SIXTH CONFERENCE OF THE ALLIANCE. The Sixth Conference and Congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance took place in the banquet hall of the Grand Hotel, Stockholm, June 12-17, 1911. The coming of Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the Alliance, had been widely heralded. She had been received in Copenhagen with national honors by cabinet ministers and foreign legations; the American flag run up for her wherever she went and the Danish colors dipped and there was almost a public ovation. In Chris- tiania she was met with a greeting from a former Prime Minister and an official address of welcome from the Government and was received by King Haakon. At Stockholm she was met by deputations with flowers and speeches. Dinners, receptions and concerts followed. The American and Swedish flags waved to- gether. The whole city knew that something important was going to happen. In the midst of it all the woman suffrage bill came up for discussion in both Houses of the Parliament. The inter-