xt70rx937t9n_110 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/mets.xml https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/46m4.dao.xml unknown 13.63 Cubic Feet 34 boxes, 2 folders, 3 items In safe - drawer 3 archival material 46m4 English University of Kentucky The physical rights to the materials in this collection are held by the University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center. Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Laura Clay papers Temperance. Women -- Political activity -- Kentucky. Women's rights -- Kentucky. Women's rights -- United States -- History. Women -- Suffrage -- Kentucky. Women -- Suffrage -- United States. Laura Clay correspondence with Harriet Taylor Upton text Laura Clay correspondence with Harriet Taylor Upton 2020 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/46m4/Box_6/Folder_7/Multipage4855.pdf 1919-1923, undated 1923 1919-1923, undated section false xt70rx937t9n_110 xt70rx937t9n {fl/“fax; / 1/‘A1Mfl fl L, i/UVA/L) ALA\,/1-/A\/(/\'\/ I; ‘ OZ y'fH/V/ '/’\f?/;J {MN '3 {IL EAJ/"x/j )l/VV’fl/L" (2" y/v v 7 M ~-~ FOR LOCAL FILE The 0M0 Votes for W amen Fellowship Non-dues Paying It is said: “Women will get the vote when the majority want it.” Be one of that majority. If you believe in Votes for Women sign this slip. The top part is to be retained by your local leader. Be sure that she gets it. Name Address Town or City. St ................................. No ............. Do you belong to a suffrage organization? Give name of organization. THESE SLIPS ARE TO BE SIGNED ONLY BY WOMEN. OHIO WOMAN SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION HONORARY PRESIDENT, FRANCES M. CASEMENT. PAINESVILLE PRESIDENT HARRIET TAYLOR UPTON Warren FIRST VICE PRESIDENT ZARA du PONT 1814 East 89th St., Cleveland SECOND VICE PRESIDENT DORA SANDOE BACHMAN 505 Grand Theatre Bldg. Columbus THIRD VICE PRESIDENT ANNA B. JOHNSON Springfield HEADQUARTERS: MASONIC BLDG, -w ’L‘i’s the release deed you h$ve of 30088 note to me as soon poasibla. she released. _1__ 1 U 3 fine mortgage for you at 7% if you wanfi no loan was to Oora Tummer,lanfi Mr. ROOEO. / anfi \ \z‘q .‘ J.:'_‘T,‘ RECORDING SECRETARY MARGARET J. BRANDENBURG Oxford CORRESPONDING SECRETARY MRS. EDITH M. HUGHES 1231 Lakewood Ave., Lima TREASURER ZELL HART DEMING Warren MEMBER NATIONAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MRS. O. F. DAVISSON 307 Central Ave., Dayton WARREN, OHIO J51 ‘f‘ D l l q l 9 J. I ’ o— in the mo 1‘1; gauge ,1 t}15§t ”er the original 3'." €17.10 :1 married fiaSti§£%va;:1& dyé;3/me CA¢OfiQZQ you / bdflfi? Earriet @. 331311311 fiflm’tgagea emit 1110mm Warren, whim a; -' " m. "1 mlSS Lau1a u av, 3'! 189 Hill Sfi., LexingtOfl. 37.. Dear “is S 0127;- “10220 si5:n 1 You rememner that I hafl 728 212717 20089 mortgage from anfl would not aénly in? of fhe 707*“975. 2na {he o‘her tW 10-88 Attend to this as bromttW , the mone7 is :7in2 in fi%e h~nrn fieonle ”rat to have the $7223 action 3:: D (3 FJ (D H (D .1, 2.te f0} 12 zulll,y (+70 H3313 3' S 0 Z ‘ 1—1-0 H 7: <1 F4. 536’) pa 189 N.Jillv?t.. Iexington, 3y. Pebr.lath, 1919. jy dear ErS.Upton, have 311st received yours Lith toe Qoose mort- gage enol Bed. I am returning it with the release signed. Do you know I am greatly relieved that the tenets did not pass the flnthony Amendment? It is a misnomer to call it a suffrage amendment if it coEveys the idea that granting woman suffrage is its most exten- ive polit cal effect. In fact, ite provision for Federal supervieion elections is the provis io nwhich will extend to all the whilst it does not touch the gr out of squr nge in the fifteen -etes ; e which nave it in their constitutions; it only fills out nar- tial suffrage already outfoxeof in M 3nLv—two other states, and initi— attes suffrage merely f, o. a? ~Sw'de ”‘ i s ’ntnony sterte movement in 1878 the Qua .:. 3;- .flfll sug' ervis ion of stat; was palliuted by the ‘4 3 “ va' extensive w‘th the grant of and only where women he) *w‘ '_;l 3”,'o Q”. Ly from Lee Lime “yoming 51% W61 the union in 1890 .u m suffrage state, the Federal eupervision of elect one Mann - be the flominant orovieion, anfl has been growing more so with each triumph of moman suffrage until now suffrage gas be» come evidently a secondury effect. I .ave no oatience with mcmen who to other women's voting, since thev need not vote themselves not wish to a0 80. But I think Lhat be th men and Lemon have rioht to object to giving up the right of states to supervise own elections for the sake of giving sni’frofle to women in state their one wg oxen nt is that they either have not public ccnv.otion enougn or are not interested enough in their own enfrancnieement to do the necessary wotk to get it by .thte oonstito.t :nal amendment. The fat \, ‘3 £1. fact that so many of the states nave rrrn ted full or partial suffrage by the vote of the elctors or by legislative action is a refutation of tne claim that any state is insuperably Opgosed to granting suffrage to women, ghen their own peogle fiesire it. I regard Fefieral sugarvi- sion of state electinns as an instrument of tyranny ready to the hand of any section, north, south, east or west, which gets the preponder- ance in (ongress and cares to use the power. Have you observed 39;. Cantrill's remarks about Frimary Q .ge? 36 is u 7y. renresentative, and if primary suffrage turns out to c nstitutiunal with us, i ":Kely Hue ”he Ey.m-E.fi. Till 33x tnat next legislature. am taking the inn. inquirer, an: ; sue all on” snfzxmwn Ohio which is liffljlishod ii "1 ‘ f. .. - ' 2 : tori- .. ' -7. 'l .4. ' 4.. ' 4. ‘_ ‘1- ¢ ‘1‘ . V, - . . , . ' J t . - ~, _‘ fleas; out is tie nest ,wth .2; news fills Side new fork; 1nd these days world events, ; nag“ to know all tie I Efilflfl w L4. YV' .. a" -1. - « —.. Kiri (lOrulétily (knits, Earriet (GI- aaptnn wartgagvs mu‘t iflnang Man-2n, @hiu 71711.01. intere"+ C) L; _» :n r] «5 Le‘ . ~ +fi Lt, (351311?! Few}? rfi - .., fi-‘IUAVL‘ Y torney :!_'1:)2‘}-,.:r_‘t .119 x 1 "x r '7' '9 a”. C L; S =3. turn, éJordjfllly gu.. Lexington, 3y. I919. Lave just received tno Clock for toe fioose note, for onion I tuenk you. I enclose receipt. that do you think of suofiuflififlfiflfififi%i%§%kéfl%$ktho Anthony Amendment an amendment : } r out the ”word male" wherever it occurs in section 'tmo of the Fourteenth amendment? It would have the effect of offering a premium to all the states which grant suffrage to women by state amendment, nave of forcing on t osc which given it to submit to general inspec- stste elections. It will not cost the stetes any more work to get state amendments submitted than it would cost to ratify the Inthony amendment; and toe politicians mould take good care to carry the state amendment without labor or cost to fine women, because they wreld dread to ;ation in Congress out down, rive me your Opinion on this suggestion. It is my impression tnet Kiss lnthony, tage,her with other early suffregists, urged Charles lumncr not to put in the word ”male” in the fourteenth a? mendment, realizing that if it nus left out, it would put pressure on the States to enfrenohise women. flow niss *nthony’s memory could be a. much .1.»- n _>, honorei by heyl o the Vourteenth amendment read as sfle W18 so it as to pass a later amendment, which she was forced to advocate bonuuse one coulé not get the first done. Very cordially yours I need not say that this amendment nonlo not antagonize those VhO believe in States sights. OHIO WOMAN SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION HONORARY PRESIDENT, FRANCES M. CASEMENT, PAINESVILLE PRESIDENT HARRIET TAYLOR UPTON Warren FIRST VICE PRESIDENT ZARA du PONT _ 1814 East 89th St., Cleveland SECOND VICE PRESIDENT DORA SANDOE BACHMAN 505 Grand Theatre Bldg. Columbus THIRD VICE PRESIDENT ANNA B. JOHNSON Springfield Kiss LeNra 189 N. Nil? Lexington, 03' I 0m v” ' swamped w1th Columbus next irw Ootmfl7e11, bu+1 11 after we knew perReol I woio“ HFFTS in usually he “d Convent 1' on 1m? ‘IT‘E‘V‘ Pl '7 A Y": t "‘1' 6; Now, or course, We have got to there are an awful lot of comyl . Lit T felt onr Conventior, rmitter, should de Gide these. The leade 810 ro‘ Hi ling to we it for next Week, and as Lent CCI es was social after next week, of a Corven+ion int I have been having a and I really heven't any "Brain and :Vi‘:3 ' A on, we SO 0 t W0 T have tried as hard as I could Fourteen,h Arendment and The things which Gated in regard to it, but T must confess Maybe it is because I never took pains enough with it, oppositior the impati©1 T—towt I never u always have, Orl lult. "Male" because T was always Amendment. Of CONPSe, Rights, and of course, y much use of our trying to argue they did try not toheve the word Amendment, buf tion was there. . I do not think it matters much Anthony's memory. If she were here us to get SLlffPfl 1ge for women Miss For ory. I suppose t1fis '"hcle Arendment could be ees ily brought 0N1 work for ure\cfl: . St 30 W instructions fxor us Con] d not We have weeks. stenographer at the hs.ve believed in so there in it had to go in becaNse the "Whit.e" quos~ and never ouc-.stien of at the Ft‘ RECORDING SECRETARY MARGARET J. BRANDENBURG Oxford CORRESPONDING SECRETARY MRS. EDITH M. HUGHES 1231 Lakewood Ave, Lima TREASURER ZELL HART DEMING Warren MEMBER NATIONAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MRS. O. F. DAVISSON 307 Central Ave., Dayton F) ."\ February NO, Emer33.r0y C(‘.y'I-§,rr 1”" our our not like to fate of the N8~ 7T j 62 art in on another 23 ions in o politi~ r ncfi, out lfiieouffnre ers in the legis~ longer have much T‘lSl CI‘O’V drill LL}? Asiue rrom the house juice" left. to understand the you always advo— T never have. and to our State's is NOT, I think Fourteenth yes, the about honoril1gg WEE would say mind her mem~ the Fourteenth IJOllj s K” ' 4.3-0 Conver‘: t4) tYat menf W11 To 9y through, Lavr9 tion, 1 more 0? kind 0_ {flhnn T get ’ 019:7 ”‘ 1":11» ' I would have: ’f 'tzzTi (939] 1W y91* Th_ing than I have. Hf [TX UL“: 811§ N99 4. L.- oors 91 P Pid provju9s “cr :1.# 13 tC‘O 1c; *VPY‘ t h<1ug¥h it the would Poceive 9 ' V - . op? , T 9111 try to thi Cow-11 «c1113. ,/ you 599 that som9hody haC 111(1001f — 4 ‘70 “. Y‘KJI ti 9 LU. introlt 9119119t19r of thp ate tc‘ gef 2n1ythist ; 1L 1115110191. . back From th9 COEV9nfion nk abou yours, egro thlS. w h 0 3' 1, n U 9d an amend— W0M9h? t; 11—. i HCL OHIO WOMAN SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION HONORARY PRESIDENT, FRANCES M. CASEMENT, PAINESVILLE PRESIDENT RECORDING SECRETARY HARRIET TAYLOR UPTON MARGARET J. BRANDENBURG Warren Oxford FIRST VICE PRESIDENT CORRESPONDING SECRETARY ZARA du PONT MRS. EDITH M. HUGHES 1814 East 89th St., Cleveland 1231 Lakewood Ave, Lima SECOND VICE PRESIDENT TREASURER DORA SANDOE BACHMAN ZELL HART DEMING 505 Grand Theatre Bldg. Columbus- Warren THIRD VICE PRESIDENT ‘ MEMBER NATIONAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ANNA B. JOHNSON I ' MRS. O. F. DAVISSON Springfield 307 Central Ave, Dayton ““0 April 1, 1919. Miss Laura Clay, Lexington, Ky. Dear Miss Clay:— It was very nice for you to Sign the telegram which was sent to me from St. Louis. I am sure that I would have been of no account in the convention if I had been there because everything was so well planned and was carried.out according to plane, but just the same I like to have the people who were there remem— ber that I was still on Earth and I am.writing to thank you for being one of the group remembering. Mrs. Avery is with me for a few day's Visit and she has been telling me all the ins and ou‘s Of the Convention and I think I have a very good understanding of it. Cordially yours, _. —\,—‘..._..\ Form 1204 CLASS OF SERVICE SYMBOL Telegram Day Letter Blue Night Message Nite CLASS OF SERVICE SYMBOL Telegram Day Letter Blue Night Message Nite Night Letter N L Night Letter N L If none of these three symbols - a - V. . ‘ If none of these three symbols appears after the check (number of .- ’ appeare after the check (number of words) this is a telegram. Other- * worde) this IS a telegr'am. Other- mse Its character IS indicated bythe i e'tscharaoterislndicatedb the . , ‘ gyrsntml appearing after the chyeck. NEWCOMB CARLTON. PRESIDENT GEORGE w. E. ATKINS. FIRST VICE~PRESIDENT symbol appearing after the check. RECEIVED AT WARE N emse—- iliBAM 4-22-1919 LAURA CLAY " 13,1 189 NORTH MiLL ST LEXN KY RELEASE WILLIAMS MORTGAGE AND NOTE AND SEND T9 ME lMMEDiATELY \H’ MRS IET T LIPTON 1122AM~« fiarriei (GI. gilptnn flufigages mth 7111121115 aliarrcn, (91m: April 22, 1919 Miss Laura Clay, 189 N. Mill St., Lexington, Ky., Dear Miss Clay: The Real Estate Board has bought the Williams property and they want you to release the mortgage. As it will be due soon anyway and as you would have no objections to releasing it I have said you would do this. I therefore telegraphed you this morning to release the mortgage and the note and to send them to me immediately. I am hOping you will want me to re—invest this money either in a mortgage drawing 7% or in my real estate busi- ness drawing 10% or 12% maybe more. There is no possibility at all of your losing your principal. However you will know whether you want to re-invest it and you will know how you want to re~1nvest it. If you only want to re-invest part of it that is all flight. I could take the Whole thousand or e500.00. Hastily yours, HTU/B 189 N.Mill St., Lexington, Ky. April 25rd, I919. My dear Mrs.Upton, I received your telegram about the “Williams mortgage, this afternoon, too late to go to fiiohmond, where I have my lock box. But I am going on the first train tomorrow morning, and expect to send you the papers by the afternoon train. I am writing in Lexington to save time; so you will understand why the post—mark is fiiehmonfi, instead of Terington. I shall stay in ’ichmond for a flay or two; so if you have written to me I shall not receive the letter till I come back. "or? cordially yours, TfiQ T.Mill ”+., Lexington Vy. April 26th, I919. My aear "rs.”pton, ' On my return yesterday from fiichmond where I went to send you the ”illiams mortgage I found your letter explaining your tel- egram. Yes, I was quite willing to have the note paid; for before T re- oeived your telegram I had appliefl for some of the Victory liberty bonds, intendins to new for them on the instalment olen; and T has hesiées made some oledges, including one for repairs to our church. 80 that I mes quite relieved at tee orosneot of having readv cash to meet these expenan, Ehempt rayment of these obligations is more attractive to me than the larger interest 7 would obtain by re-investing in warren; so please send the «one? when you collect it. It certainly has been a great help to me to have you invest this money in the first place; and I went to than? you for the assistance you have been,and are, to me. T suppose the liberty loans are taking up a greet fleel of money which once was free for real estate. Whey anneal to patriotism. Hove not our recent suffrage victories been greet? Tennessee's victory is especiallv fine, as it includes municieal suffrage. I am confidently looking for presidential suffrage in a large majority of the qtotes, including Kentucky, before the onmneian of 1920/ Very cordially y0urs, gfiarriet EL gflptmt gfiflnrtgages arch 3110mm Warren, (9116;: Miss Laura Cl« 189 N, Mills Lexington, Ky. Earriet (7L flaptnn fiantgages anh 11mins Marten. (Elfin Miss Laura Clay, 189 N. Mills St., Lexingtor, Ky. Pear Miss Clayz~ Your cancelled mortgage came promptly and I took it to the bank and they paid the mortgage without waiting to get Miss Peilly'e note. I therefore put the principle and the interoot into my account and am sending you your £3 interest — 37.96. T have had to do part of my stenographio work at home of late and have been so rushed in the office that between them I wrote you in regard to your principle and made a Nietake about it. I thought you had $1000.00 in this loan and Miss Reilly $500.00. It seems it was the other way, so when I said that I could reinvest your $1000.00 or your $500.00 if youxwanted me to I was in- error, but of course, you knew that. I Wil. await your instructions in regard to your principle. Cordially yours, r 189 fl.Jill :3., Lexington, Ly. :7 <-} “if,“ <‘ Gabi, .L.".Lu' _ 4.4 J— eyaunt “Lau T . ~‘r‘-s ' * k V ‘ _. - ' -.- -‘-\- . «x- '- ' A -»-’ r‘ .- .7 ~~~~;~‘ 3‘-‘.UL ~ s ‘4 ,i.L ,. 1, .. ‘ LX:¢<:.1I§(¢CL41142,?! s arrangenents A .~- . Ln Victor: Lot‘s. I hepe ohia Cart 3‘ Renal .M ', W the Victory‘loan. chingicn and Fayette Co. have gone a .L x; g”, but I believe the stat lagging. liarriet m- QFIptmt flurtgagez mth fifiuans man-2n. " @hiu p Miss Laura Clay, Lexington, Ky. Dear Mis. Clay: Have been out in the field hence you did not get your check. I am enclosing it. Hope you did not worry about it. You see the girls in the office attend strictly to suffrage business and nobody knows any- thing about my private affairs. Hence the check was delayed. ’ Cordially yours, 2 , . / A ’ {' I; v” , ilkkfiVw/féé?fiVy/ “1 {I {I} .4 "J! 7". ‘I .1. , n6 0. .= z ; . 5‘1121 e of racial Pyma 4d t we“ tyb 1.. v s. 1‘ l .A. (»., {i [If of axflu Hfi .‘ finiu’l' of it toluwe your in: e r S h. t equal !’\ «nix, ’a K I 4,. ‘- b v: 1 'n - (1.1 -_ m; . 71“" at} e I l , ‘4 y st 4 de en. t x . ,‘Y t, which I believe £13 A @tude ae pa 'ion 'ner mafia“ 1'er -:~ $ (.3 SW -.Ol’1. a report of m 1 (a x T U \7‘." J . ’J 1 er. ,1 c- 1* LL u Ira ke 1 JL ‘. , ~ ‘13: fl .1"! 9;; ‘ .Lll 1 I I a v n,“ J. iét t 1 l n l D‘N: a ma ‘x1un, '11te men objected to st 3 n 0 W17 -IJ. ‘ .:-. A P 11 uned a,ain t of the gre aL9 '1 .LJ'; ‘\ - 4C 4‘ .J ’ ~ J.. ‘J‘ L) V 01 1; $1; hi V»! . I". J ~ I g. l ,x v 7) VI ' +l‘\ D. J .L L/ , ndxnen m ‘ :‘Y‘fl‘ gentucky. .-,. -1fi W places a 69 a .0 00- «I . M e l 0.. .U 5 Hr J G P. ) id :n.c 1N 'f’. r‘ J L t nony fhat 1 70* it; ¢tsié 1 ‘1 ,&~ , I time S 0.. a place in t 111: d.ofi l U. Dc U Q T. 3.. mm. C ”J .3 wavwrvy~ '\ ‘5 .0 1 I o 11 ch. "inee ‘ ()1; 1'1 »\ A. C; ,. C‘ ”oTHXI the Afit t a Very cord _ 113's \11 . (Us '9." I .' .- C obna in try .J P fine? "1 I Xhfixfifiifififlgx&%fi E3. ‘ cu , L) t 1 r‘ ‘v I n U 3 CI}. .f (“i {1. a. Do Ax K {'vmr\ ' \Juaun ‘ 1T, "" 4.513. a '1 \ u keep 4 {9611 plnzon ticu t 8.. V‘: 0 an: en in; ‘ _“ k. «3 . t. r: r. t. QC 5; 9 air: 11.4 "In :1 . .‘l. 'enxel what 1 d. 1 t. I ( I". We, -: A.\l L! LY' to is *4 nstrL' 7 n h“. .L 6 give ‘1 J. l, 1, (.~ E .L .‘afi‘, ,.. 71?: 4* U stvtas ,n v; _. 3’7 ‘v f) ‘ 'I.‘ Z". .1153, ".A‘. v5. Via, k . at" my i any .Tzit a ‘fi 3 -'K")6‘S THE. .10 C "I- \ ' (7' .l (‘4 x; L _n1 7‘: II. t.‘ “ hi! .13 :1") z 1. , fiarriet (TL 31111011 gflfiurtgages uni! Ellnaus marten. @[fin "WE SHALL FIGHT FOR THE THINGS WHICH WE HAVE ALWAYS CARRIED NEAREST OUR HEARTS—FOR DEMOCRACY. FOR THE RIGHT OF THOSE WHO SUBMIT TO AUTHORITY To HAVE A VOICE IN THEIR OWN GOVERNMENT." OHIO WOMAN SUFFRAOE ASSOCIATION STATE HEADQUARTERS PRESIDENT TREASURER HARRIET TAYLOR UPTON WARREN. OHIO ZELL HART DEMING WARREN. ‘NAPRHN STATE FINANCE COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN. MRS. EDWARD S. JORDAN. 3128 LINCOLN BLVD. CLEVELAND VICE-CHAIRMAN. MRS. MALCOLM L. McBRIDE,1583 MISTLETOE DRIVE, CLEVELAND MRS. JAMES A. RICE. CANTON MRS. W. N. GATES. ELYRIA MRS. S. O. CUMMINS. BELLAIRE MRS. H. H. HAINES. HAMILTON MRS. W. H. MERRIAM. CLEVELAND MISS MARY LOUISE RICE. WARREN MRS. M. B. SHARP DAVIES. MRS. WM. A. FEATHER. CLEVELAND FINANC’AL SECREH‘W WASH'NGTON COURT HOUSE MRS. SINCLAIR ELLIOT. ZANESVILLE twang}? a 3 May 15, 1919 Diet. May 14. Miss Laura Clay, 189 Mill St., Lexington, Ky., Dear Miss Clay: I have just re—read your letter of May 9. I had not filed it after I referred to it in my last letter. ’ Of course you know I believe in the National amend- ments. That is a part of our training. You have a Southern leaning and I have a Northern and the same Spirit as the States Rights and National Rights exists today as existed then. We can't argue it out. As I look back on it I think it was pro- bably a mistake to enfranchise the negro. I think it is pro- bably a mistake now to disenfranchise them. I realize it is very easy for me to say this when I live in a community where there are few negros. I am sure I would not like to be ruled by a negro government as I would to be if I were in some of the black pits in the south but I really would not mind being ruled by a negro any more than I would mind being ruled by an ignorant man of any nationality. The color does not effect me. Previous servitude does not affect me. In other words my angle and yours are entirely different but I have thought it does not make any difference what you believe or what I believe, it would not make any difference if the beliefs were reversed, the National amend— ment is going to pass Congress, it is going to pass early and whether it will be passed in time for us to vote in 1920 remains to be seen. I am much more of the belief that it will than are most peOple. The Democratic Party had a chance in the last Con- gress to make great political capital, President Wilson is a splendid politician, he saw this, he knew it, he tried to make his people see it but the Southern senators with the States Rights doctrine and the northern senators reactionarydtbwthe core made that passage impossible. Now the men who opposed it in the north were reactionary Republicans, those who opposed it in the south were reactionary Democrats. Now however the Republican Party has a very good chance to succeed at the next election and it is bound to secure the woman vote. The woman vote really belongs to it because the women of the west have been enfranchised a long time and the women of the west as a rule are Republicans, that is the states go Republican so the Republicans have everything to gain and nothing to lose. They know if they get this vote they must push it nuickly through Congress and I think there are some states where the legislature is not now in session, where #2. Miss Laura Clay. they will be able to call a special session for the ratification. Anyway I can't help but think that we will be through in 1920 probably in time to vote. Shortly thereafter anyway so there is no use of arguing what we could do because we are not going to have to do it. Mr. McAdoo spoke with me at the great Cincinnati meeting or rather I talked a few minutes on his pro- gram, and he said that if that amendment which was prOposed at the last session had been preposed earlier it would have passed d told him that I did not think he was right, he wa.s counting tgatI all of the Republicans would vote just as they did and we //wou1d get a number of Democratic southerners. I told him that he ' whad miscaloulated because the men of the north were just as much N0pposed to that sort of legislation as the men of the south were i\ the other time and he said he could not understand why and I said, / "That is because you were born in the south". J/” Now as to your question about the "white male” in our Constitution. When an amendment enfranchising the negros was brought to the State of Ohio for ratification the legislature refused to ratify it the first time. Now whether this was the 14th or 15th amendment I do not know but I think it was the 14th. It could easily be looked up but it does not matter. Later they did ratify. however the words "white male" were in the Constit— ution and although the National action nullified the State Con- stitution as National action always does it did it in reality and not in fact because the words "white male" still stand in the Constitution. Vhen we had our Constitutional Convention in 1912 and voted to strike out the words "white male" and frame our amendment providing for the striking out of the words "white male" the politicians feared we would get the ne rro vote. They need not have had any such fears because the negro does not vote for us. It is a historical fact that the peonle who are newlyS enfranchised always eppose the enfranchisement of the next cla below them. I am sneakinq now politically. Occasionally educated neeros are f_or us and sees ak for us but the rank and file of the negro men do not believe in any vomen voting. Howeqer the polit— icians got the leaders of the negros ioqether and asVed them 1. they wanted to have their amendment brouzht about through the aflkucapron strings of women and of course the narros fell for this and put in their own amendment to the constitution striking out the word ”white". ‘hen the politicians did by the negro what they do by us, deserted them and their amendment so they lost and the words ”white male" still stand in the Constitution and the negros in Ohio d0 vote. OW J’E/ u/‘WL’ WJJ 5M )rLL//:/ (/4; (/\(j/:/ é/Vi/W/Lfl/L f/vadi %9 ~Ud qi/AJkfl\ Cordially yours, ,4‘ lf/“K/ BTU/B /7\\_ f: :37; , J1 A I (I (UL/j / ,/ M\( \ 7/], 1' i ()7, Z” (/ a; v' f \‘ . -' J: K, 1 ll: 4 / J'VLA/“Vv r// r / , z .1 Jy flenr L S.Upton, intare t for which T - am very for negrses t.ue thG coa%t-tu then tne Ifitm much obliged the State amnnam -mt thfi "white ” fnom from I8VD, that v.hite man got monstiuw (E3, criwination” of fr $1936 two fa 1176\13 '1‘ LAW/13p 9 negrOes C {1.1 'L-. ~. 'V'vOmefl; $0382 Keg 03 e 3.11 4303? ,3 EAL' rv.‘ 2.6:?) “L3 Neal. E, “ GS t0 write nufi the he3rc :umetime J 4;; ‘1‘“ .. ‘1»! s (1‘ aimmigr 1e {-1 i '75 C .ty for its baa :min3‘an 4rr1t.tln .1 .. ~ "V v , .JAD, '.. T‘- \ an :1 1 "3"" My“. ankk)’ fi1rou 3h tne Eefigrnl “3?? ‘fnth ny amu.fim V S l .L 126‘: .4; 37' O 21.1355 ‘14 HA '7 ‘ J‘ n vou a Te CC! ‘Lfl g ,aner .LluLL: nemen ;19+Po*m t?edge uni flora \oc~V-ev‘ decj ded. mat to {i tC flail: 'PC'I' ‘edq‘x‘pl WE'VE?! *L"1171n54u0 ‘nthony amen ment, r-w v ILLLQ ‘11 Line mtg =15, L. h hu 1 l.‘l‘ L'J. ’ L‘ 3 “ha 1.“; T ’3 unwilling to strike on? Very cerdié$ly yours, ? ‘I’L’hl tu ‘9' ynolican '1 ~x "« saw- an ,.A ..t ffiu‘y '=. v w . _ nLin3 you for your letter, the tflrou . L‘ I' C‘! " 'V r. :2 .11.; -- "Ll: -, 7‘ :3- ?,L.L..‘ U nflvents ‘7 ‘ ‘:7 11.x. la..- g! 5.53 .,| ‘1 .(1. "1"?) \ L . (.1 . ‘.A ..~' 4 z | .' ’ sqrty. . a "" .4. ." 11‘4“: ~:‘ If+ ‘- "‘7' L 7'7 r‘. a... . v ": u 11': K; 1 f,“ ‘ I _f31? I5u 3L . ‘ fl V)}a 37,.QMV 4L. ._‘ . .‘ ~ 5 -L: warfarenca (3:177:35; L ,L Eh; 8;ng of the ac r3 {"5 RV E? I}. 5} '1 rat to vote bv .0. . u()ne)r€" 4.1L"; wly one prO» anrl lunar LLOl‘d w, L. :5 ng hit struck Ga wmthond ~ umenament I 'I 1— a . 7-7- .316.» h (an *ch more diffiault with state - -pp- ,- .4. 30” ”4.183 13.16: PO?“ ,, c: r‘ .L’ “ennefiy :50th word .. 2156'!“ at 1133151013 h the state ..‘ . , a... n th m L.v 1‘3; {7? F)- l E (i w "‘ fiifference Eu§fi_i;-at ‘fi'h i t e 7'? .4 V will had r3331! m Lent Sig-34:58 by a 1 .LL) emocrats 3‘75] I:'I.L.fi "‘"rléhlum 16?"."3 GVGI‘V agtion; there , 11r01‘ 6: 1y firawn 4.1138 t) wdfild‘ fl. ... J‘I I Iv ticn of a 60 reneem. {Staite may it7 of tqe next legé$ (Gnomess uou 601nm'éo ;ction; and t0- so far, is nfiimx ‘ G? J “WE SHALL FIGHT FOR THE THINGS WHICH WE HAVE ALWAYS CARRIED NEAREST OUR HEARTS~FOR DEMOCRACY. FOR THE RIGHT OF THOSE WHO SUBMIT To AUTHORITY To HAVE A VOICE IN THEIR OWN GOVERNMENT." OHIG WOMAN SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION STATE HEADQUARTERS PRESIDENT HARRIET TAYLOR UPTON WARREN. OHIO WARREN. TREASURER ZELL HAm DI-zMING WARREN STATE FINANCE COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN. MRS. EDWARD 5. JORDAN. 3128 LINCOLN BLVD. CLEVELAND VICE-CHAIRMAN. MRS. MALCOLM L. MCBRIDE. 1583 MISTLETOE DRIVE. CLEVELAND MRS. JAMES A. RICE. CANTON MRS. W. N. GATES. ELYRIA MRS. H. H. HAINEs. HAMILTON MRS. W. H. MERRIAM. CLEVELAND MRS. M. B. SHARP DAVIES. MRS WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE MRS. S. O. CUMMINS. EELLAIRE MISS MARY LOUISE RICE. \NARREN . WM. A. FEATHER. CLEVELAND FINANCIAL SECRETARY . SINCLAIR ELLIOT. ZANESVILLE May 21, 1919 Miss Laura Clay, 189 Mill Street, Lexington, Ky., Dear Miss Clay: I think it is nerfectly useless to write this letter because by the time you have read it the gational amendment may have passed Congress. Then too, knowing your tenacity of thought and all that I know that nothing I eculd say would change your Opinion and I do not know as I would want to. I have said arveys if I lived in the south I undoubtedly would feel just as you feel. I remember a long long time ago Miss Gordon and I had suite a discussion about this question and she felt rather hurt about some things which were said. I asked her if she did not think in the last analysis we would get woman suffrage by National amend- ment and she said we would not. I think you probably have felt we would not. Technically women may be in the same boat with black men but really nobody will know about it excent somebody with a lawyer‘s head as yours is. The truth will remain that women are enfranchised and the circrmstences of their enfranchisement will not be parallel at all with the negro because the white women will be allowed to vote everywhere and anywhere. I see that the cases are similar, in fact, but they are not really so in practice. You ask why the white men were not willing to allow the word "white" to be struck out of the Constitution. It was not that they were not willing but we are only allowed a Constitutional Convention every twenty years. We had a Constitution adOpted in 1850. We were never able to get any other constitution adOpted until 1912 and that simply amounted to the amending of the old constitution. The reason the anendment to strike out "white male” was not adopted was because it was really a dead letter, nobody took any interest in it and did not vote for it. Nobody cared one way or the other because they never had had the side presented to them which the south presents. Black men have always voted in the State of Ohio since the 14th and 15th amendments were passed so what was the use of bothering about it. I think you are wrong in your statement that the passage of the federal amendment by a Republican Congress will not react to the benefit of the Republican Farty. Mr. Wilson, Mr. MeAdoo. #2. Miss Laura Clay. Mr. aker and that class of Democratssaw that suffrage was coming and as the Democratic Party had never been units as favorable t0» wards the granting of further suffrage to any class as the Repub— lican Party they saw it was their chance to get solid with the new woman voter. Nobody knew that as much as Hr. Wilson. Thether he is a statesman or a politician I have never been able to make up my mind but that he sees, either himself or through advisement what the political issues mean is perfectly sure. His enemies say that he is the greatest politician that has ever been in the White House. His friends say, his very closest friends, two of whom have told me, one by direct asertion and another by inference that he believed this to be a good niece of politics. Now then the fact that the southern senators voted against the amendment largely for the reasons we both know and that the northern reactionary Republicans like Wadsworth, Lodge etc., voted against it, defeated it. If it had not been for the negro question entering in or rather for the states rights question entering in it of course would have carried in the Senate. Now then it will carry in the Senate and the Republican Party will certainly have the gratitude of a great group of women in the United States because the first thing they did in the new Congress was to put over the amend— ment. I believe you will find that almost anybody you talk to will give you this same information. The women of the western states are naturally Republican because that is a Republican section of country but they did vote for Tilson because they thought he was going to keep us out of war. Now the fact that the fiepublicans really en- franchised the women of the middlewest will add force of course to their party. I think now I have answered your letter in every way. I would not care how we were enfranchised, whether it was by Aational amendment or by State action but I know that the women of Ohio could not be enfranchised by State action for years and years because of the antipathy of the wet and vicious organizations. We tried it under the most favorable circumstances. we even now are afraid to introduce a presidential suffrage bill in a legislat