xt70rx937t9n_473 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. Suffragette text Suffragette 2020 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/46m4/Box_16/Folder_22/Multipage20553.pdf 1913 1913 1913 section false xt70rx937t9n_473 xt70rx937t9n “Tile Szzflmga’te,” Se’fn’ember 5, [913.

'::..; ‘~

The Official Organ of the
Edited by Christabel Pankhurst. . Women’s Social and Political Union.

 

 

No. 47—Vol. l. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1913. Price 1d, Weekly (Posféiree)

THE NEW - CHIVALRY.

a“

. . , u‘ , _ -. .- -~— ».r-....-~.--.« w: ; -v,.. .. -;.«. —.:n.-gtt l .3 5“,); :.- . a - -. ~ _. n ‘ "v. .; 4-,. _-.4.~ m .-_- ,.-.. .
“-5.2%'(E'éh‘:ae-..-.?;5¢‘.‘=-:.t£f& sakxabud-s fififs,’§-%’ufif:x1_ww- =14“ ”u...»-.~ L {“1}... , .. , . .e :- . , 4 4~ - u . . . . ,, 5 x, “.4 ,. .x .A

 

 

 

' ASQUITH (Guardian of Law and Order) to Mr. Bonar Law and Sir Edward Carson: ,

“ As for you. sirs! Your sex protects you."

 

 THE SUFFRAGETTE

. - r.

 

 

 

To Our Reade rs.

N order to make THE SUFFRAGETTE a

7 profitable coacern, and a financial sirengzh

to the Suiirage movement, you are urged

to induce all the lu .iness firms with which
you deal to advertise in it. Get from ea:h
firm a promise to advertise, and then wire ".0
*the advertisement maria, e' at Lincoln’s Inn
House, Kingsway, V7.C., reporting the

success of your negotiations.

To obtain new advertisements is not enough.
Advertisers must be kept. The way to keep
them is to give them the preference over rival
firms who do not advertise in \

The S uffragette

Readers are asked, either when making
an individual purchase or when opening an
account with'anv firm, to inform the manager
ment in writing that their custom is given in
consequence of the advertisement in THE
SUFFRAGETTE.

The advertisers in the paper shou‘d he
regarded as friends and. allies, and in exchange
for their support Suffragists should give them
the benefit of their custom. This is the
simplest of all ways in which to help the
cause, and means the addition of a very
large sum of money to- the funds oi. the

" WosépoU’ l;

 

“ma‘ ‘3‘»

Te'eplione :
5761 CHI TRAL.

ALL PRICES ARE
QUOTED FOR
ORDINARY
SHADES.
PALE OR GREY
EXTRA.

Piver, Houbigant, &c.

by

 

 

 

 

colour,

 

 

 

 

‘—

Gui e.

l A Busy Buyers":

Bathing Requisites—.
DEBENHAM & FREEBODY,
OHN HARRIES, Westbourne Grove, W.
ARSHALL & SNELGROVE, Oxford St, W.

Goals——
WESTBOURNE PARK COAL & IRON Co;,
Mileage Station, N.
Corsets—

MCLELLAN (“Everywoman”), 3 I 5,,Finchley
Road, N.

Furniture—-
HEAL & SON, Tottenham. Court Rd, W. C.
WARING 8: GILLOW, Oxford Street, W.
E. J. CARPENTER, Douglas St., Vauxhall
Bridge Road, SW.

Florists——
ROBERT GREEN, 28, Crawford Street, W.

General Stores—
ARTHUR’S STORES, 114—120, \Nestbourne
Grove,,W.
Hairdressers—~
ROBERT, 22 5, Regent Street, W.

Linen Goods—~—
JOHN HARRIES, Westbourne Grove, W.

Luncheon 5’ Tea Rooms——
“THISTLE,” 33—34, Hayrnarket, \V.
SPIERS 8: POND, Queen Victoria St, EC.

Millinery—
DEBENHAM 8; FREEBODY, Wigmore St, W.
MARSHALL 8: SNELGROVE, Oxford St, W.
MARIE ROCHFORD, 25, Upper Baker St., \N.

Opticians—-
A. E. MCCLEAN, 37, Aldwych, WC.

Surgical Apparatus— _
CORY BROS, 54, Mortimer Street, W.

Travelling Requisites—
JOHN POUND & (:0, 268-270, Oxford St. W.
Toilet Requisites—

THE KRASKA CO., 7, ”Blenheim Street, New
Bond Street.

Woollen Goods?—
JAEGER, _126, Regent Street, W.

VVigmore St, W..

 

FEATHERWEIGHT TRANSFORMATION.
-_.yv_ith side/or centre parting and bandenu, turned
,“Zibgcl: illustration; very becoming, and the
:' best , ntiiralvmflbfl hair lace foundation and
- . -J ’ i. All-Gus. complete.
three uarter Size, 5 Gns. . foup. ““httlltlggg;

2;,- Gns. I“

 

ARTHUR’S STORES, 114.120.
' w‘rsmounur GRGVE, w.

\ GENERAL PROVISIO‘JS and

Trial
Earncslly
Solz‘ciicd.

‘ High-class Con ectionerv.

 

i? s‘,‘-=_'-;~-Ty.~s e‘é’. 3:"- '33" 21.? '1?" i

_ Ring up 2163 Central
NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE.

WILLIAM RODGERs,
high Class Undertaker and
Complete funeral Director.
Distance No Objects Terms Mo ierate.
Artificial Wreaths a. Speciality.

.'-'..r.. .»---'-»:~«‘.,- -»-'.. , c . "1-. 2: . - '- -
,-:-J'_;_.r..‘.'. 351'. reek-”f: t._><- -: . ‘.. 4.’

 

 

Green Box Cigarettes.

THESE CIGARETTES are hand made by skilled
women makers, who work in unusuallv favour-

able conditions.

of each cigarette.

THE TOBACCO AND PAPERS are quite pure
and free from any deleterious substance.

, TURKISH

No. 2, Medium Size. Round
No. 5, Large Size. Flat

VIRGINIA

No. 3, Medium Size, Round [—
NO. 4, Large Size, Rgund [9

HERBERT DUNHILL,
36, Lowlands Rd., Harrow-on—the Hill.

Telephone—HARROW 370.

This is manifested. in the perfection

PRICE
Per 100 Per 50
Box. ox.

3/6 1/10
4/— 2/1

 

 

 

masses:

225, REGENT ST, W.

tOrpnsite Dickius S; Jones)

The Premier House for Hair Work, Tinting, Hair Dressing,
Manicure, and Chiropody. Agent for Dr. Dys’ Paris specialities at Paris prices,
also for Jane Hading’s famous Eau de Jeunesse, and for Roger and Gallet,

in the most natural shades;
dyes, that it does not give those coppery
and lasts longer; is clean and does not rub off.

vegetable, is guaranteed to be a harmless preparation.
in our Saloons by experienced artistes,
vision of Mons. Robert.
£1 55. ; Roots only, 185. 6d.
home use, only requires heating.

Picasc
or
so mplc 0/
when ordering.

Catalogues
Frcc on Applica-
tion.

All Cakes and Pastries made (f the finest ingredients by our own Bakery

Telephcne :
5761 CEN IRAL.

A REMITTANCE
AND
PATTERN OF
HAIR SHOULD
ACCOMPANY
ALL ORDERS.

Face Massage,

New Henna Paste vegetable ha'r colouring, only genuine, 11 ed
the MAISON ROBERT, colours the hair from blondc to blitL‘k

has a great advantage over liquid
and unbecoming shades.
Being purely

Applications
under the peron'i‘. super-
For the entire heid, including the dye,
This preparation, rcaly diluted tor
Sold in bottles, 53., post free.

slulc
semi
Imir

Any Style of
Transformations,
Fringes Pin Curls,
Pompadours, etc.

Sent

A SEMI-PARTED FRINGE, with three curls on

toxehcnd, made of best natural wavy hair. 17 inches long.
Will keep in curl in (my climate.

Ear to ear, £2 2 0 Temple to temple, 3?. 15 O

"7‘7

 

 

coat .....
54, MORTIMER STREET, LONDON, W.,
supply tnyalid Furniture and Nursing
Requasrtes of every description, including
Rubber, Glass, and Accouchemcnt Sundries.
WOOL, BANDAGES, LINT, ETC.

LOWEST NET PRICES. PROfa/IPT A TTEN TION

Phone: Gen—art 4423.

THE SURGICAL STORES

(Eight dOOrs from (3- cat l‘ort'nnd Street),

54, Mortimer Street, London, W.

 

ANTIQUES.

 

MARY CASEY, 29b, LINCOLN’S INN FIELDS.
Genuine Old English Fur-nature an} Chiim.
Everything at low p ices. Every piece guaranteed,

Specialities X‘Jlllth century chairs and biuc and \\‘li.te put crv .1111

porcelain. '

 

 

The
E'ERFECT LlQLlID

m. ruin

KRASKA gives a high polis'l ' 1'
and rosy tint, protects surface,
strengthen: and makes the
nail firm.
KRASKA is unaffected by
soap and water, or even acid.
see directions for use and testi-

monials enclosed in bottle,

Prices. [5-, 1/5, 2/6.

SOLD EVERYWHERE, gigging-.10.“;

 

THE KRASKA CO.. 7. Blenheim 5L. Bond s:..w.

 

 

 

t._'

 

  

September 5, l9 l 3.

THE SUF F RA GETTE

 

L_, _

The Suffragette.

LINCOLN’S INN HOUSE, KINGSWAY, LONDON.

 

Gill’oreign, Ss. Sd.‘

One Year’s Subs ription, pest free. Gs. 3d. (; H 45. 4d.)

Six Months'

0.
us.
’9

Telephone No.

Telegraphic Address: 2724 HOLBORN-

“WOSPOLU. LONDON." .

CONTENTS.

Cartoon
Review of the \Veck
A Book About a. Doormat

The £250,000 Fund ...

Chastity and the Health of Men, by Christabel
Pankhurst ...

Some Critics Answered, by Christabel Pankhurst
815

.0. can

A New Outlet for \Vomen’s Energy—II.
... 816-17

No Peace Anywhere in the Kingdom
Sufl'ragettes Make Holiday ...
Christian Atrocities
Interesting News

Campaign Throughout the Country

 

 

A Review of the Week.

The Official Labour Party.

The official Labour Party is sinkng' lower
and lower. If Mr. Asquith is thinking to
strengthen his Government by inViting Mr.

vet for them to persuade the public that they are
quite separate by the mere device‘of not. appearing
on each other"s platforms in the constituencies. .
No doubt the official Labour Party will
wince at this statement, which to them may
seem crude, of the plain facts of the situa~
tion.

Mrs. Pankhurst to Visit America.
As Mrs. Pankhurst has broken down her
sentence of three years’ penal servitude by
speaking twice at a public meeting without
being arrested, and as there is to be no
autumn session of Parliament, she has de—
cided to underetake a short lecturing tour in
the United States. The object of her viSit
is to present the case for women‘s en franchise—
ment, with special reference to its connection
with the \Vhite Slave problem and the
scourge of venereal disease. The recent
developments of the militant Suffrage move—
ment in Great Britain will also be explained.
Meetings are to be held in New York,
Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, and other
great cities. A VV.S.P.U. organiserp Miss
Joan \Vickham, sails for New Xork in the
Cedric,” on September 11, for the purpose
of making arrangements for M‘s. Pank—
hurst’s meetings, and conferring with. the
manv American Suffragists who are giving
their co—operaton. On Mrs. Pankhurst’s
return to this country she will address a
mass meeting in London.

weaker sex in the person of his daughter.
The matter has been brought before the
magistrates, and the. trial will not take place
until after his issue is published. Beth Mr
Miss Asquith have bcen cited

Asquith and
as witnesses.
Cherciez la Fm ne.

llad. indeed, were the Government to fan »
into flame the fire of revolt that they found

burning in the hearts of Suffragists when

they took up office. If they had then and

there placated the Suffragettes by giving

them the vote much of the men’s violence,

past, present, and to come, would have been

obviated. To the Suffragette example is

largely due the unrest in India that has

marked the course of Liberal rule. To the

Suffragette example is due the boldness With

which the Unionist Party preaches Violent
revolution in Ulster. To the Sulfragette
example may in large part be attributed the
rioting in South Africa and Dublin. It is
noticeable that on the Rand and in Dublin
women have played a leading, revolutionary
part. And, as the Government surely. know,
women’s participation in a revolt gives to
that revolt a special intensity. It is men who
are prone to compromise—whose revolu-
tionary temper, though easily roused, is
easily quenched. 'Women are more daring, ‘
more persistent, harder to dZZivte. ‘ It? '
Government will keep “Effie-“n0

will have littlegcc'

 

No More “Cat-and-Mouse” To hurel

-l

memorial asking thath,"

 

J, R. MacDonald to a seat in the Cabinet we
can assure him that he Will make 3"“ b. i a;
mistake as was'madt‘i i‘ ' is predecessor, Sir

Wil-Bannerman, when he gave

_, - met , oflice to Mr. John Burns. Mr.
M I. R. MacDonald is losing .the following he
once had, and he will not be found individu—
ally a strength to ilthe Government. The
great opportunity of Mr. I. R. MacDonald’s
life was to force the Government to give
votes to working women. He has not done
this. An interesting confession of the sub—
jection of Mr. MacDonald and his flock to
the Liberal Government is made by Mr.

Philip Snowden, who says in the “ Christian
Commonwealth ” :

Its members sit in Parliament because, in four-
fifths of the cases some understanding or arrange—
ment has been made with the Liberals. Under such
circumstances it is ridiculous to expert, that Labour
members will quarrel seriously with the Party by
whose good Will they hold their seats.

Then why do some Suffragists maintain
that in the Labour Party lies their hope of
bringing pressure to bear upon the Govern-
ment?

“Hand-in-Glove in the Same Operations."

The “W'estminster Gazette,” discussing
the alliance between the Labour Party and
the Government and the sham fight that has
lately taken place between these allies, says :

It, may be very well that Labour and Liberal
should keep their separate oragnisations, but it is
not well that they should behave like conspirators
who are ‘inst—ructed'not to recognise each other in
the streets, though they are liand—in-glovc in the
same operations. There are some efforts which
defeat themselves, and it is really immible for
two Parties to work together as the Liberal and
Labour Parties do in the House of Commons, and

iieved of hp" . i
m - ‘ . sentence of three years

. serVit‘ude, says ;

(penal

Mrs. .Pankhurst is under sentence of three years’
penal servitude for felony, and of that sentence
she has served only nineteen days; and the SecreL
tary of State feels that, unless he received from
her an 'amuranoe that she would for the future
abstain from all crime or incitement to crime, it
is impossible for himto advise His Majesty to
grant her any pardon or remission of sentence.

These are bold words of Mr. McKenna’s,
but they are no disguise of the fact that he
has found himself unable to enforce the sen-
tence ofthree years’ penal servitude upon
Mrs. Pankhurst. When on August 5 and
August II he omitted to arrest Mrs. Pank-
burst and Miss Annie Kenney he cancelled
their sentences and restored them to the posi—
tion of free women. There can be no rearrest
under the “Cat—and—Mouse Act” either of
Mrs. Pankhurst or of Miss Kenney. And as
Mr. McKcnna has abandoned the policy of
“Cat—and—Mouse torture” where these two
prisoners are concerned, he has no right to
torture other Suffragists. This is a matter
which will be fought out in the autumn.

Mr. Asquith’s Education.

Since reason and argument are quite lost
upon Mr. Asquith, who has for a quarter of
a century resisted education by such means,

.two women determined to try means more

drastic. Hence the exciting episode on the
golf links at Lossiemouth. A full account
of the protest appears on page .516. From
this it will be seen that Mr. Asquith dis-
played a terror quite ludicrous, and that
though he does not believe that women are
strong enough to vote, he is vastly afraid
of meeting them in combat, and does not
disdain the protection of a member of the

The Home Secretary, in his reolv “W" “""

. ; ankhurst )e re-

if ‘yfi_4; "

but
i for very

.. . rouble withinen.
. en are in revolt, the men
shame, will not bestill.

A Monstrous Inequality.

It will be interesting to know how the
Government defend the arrest of Mr. Larkin
and others in Dublin considering that they
have not yet ordered the arrest of Sir
_Edward Carson and Mr. Bonar Law. Mr.
Larkin and his friends have avowedl y fol-
lowed the example of Sir Edward Carson.
“\Ve will follow Carson’s example,” says
Mr. Larkin, “ and from to-morrow morning
in all our offices and halls we will enroll,
organise, and arm a volunteer force.” ” Sir
Edward,” says Mr. Larkin again, “has
armed his men with Italian rifles; do you
arm yourselves with Irish weapons—black-
thorns, bottles, and hurleys.” Yet while
Mr. Larkin is arrested Sir Edward Carson
is not. This is the sort of monstrous in-
equality first practised by the Government
at the expense of Suffragettes. A wrong
introduced to deal with women is afterwards

done to the injury of men. Of this we
warned Irien long ago.

Work for Women.

A correspondence has been in progress
in the “Daily Mail” on the subject of the
dearth of suitable employment for women
who have had a university education. This
problem will always be with us until women
obtain the vote and are able to sweep away
the barriers that have been erected by law
and custom. At present they cannot be
lawyers, or ministers of religion, nor, except
in the lower grades, civil servants. High
positions in the business world are, to a large
extent, closed to them. Prejudice and the
law hamper them at every turn. This being
so, it is highly important that women shall
stand by women, and by co—opcration
strengthen the economic position of their sex.
The more employment that women can give
t3 women the better. There is no work,

 

ii“::.'.:‘”-n~ y i h i

  
  

812

THE SUFFRAGET’PE

 

""~———————————-———’::1—::_: ,. 1 .,._,.,.- , , ._.,

 

 

yl’lllCSS it be such as requires sheer brute
Strength that women cannot do as well as,
and perhaps better, than men. Lack of

opportunity has kept them back, but given
oppor unity women show themselves able to
excel in every direction.

“We Were the Last.”

"We were the last but now we must be the

first ” is the burthen of Mr. Winston .
. ,. _ .,
Churchill’s comment on the question oi
aviation. That the men of this country were

so slow to understand the possibilities of
aviation and that they took so small a part
in the risks and glories of the pioneer work
makes women ashamed. lf women had the
training and opportunity that men have our
country would certainly nothave earned the
disgrace of which Mr. Winston Churchill
seems'positively proud. It is, indeed, the
Liberal Government and the Liberal Press
who‘are largely to blame, the Government
having refused to give due encouragement to
experiments and pioneer work in flying,
'and the Liberal newspapers have most igno-
rantly and stupidly discouraged flying
efforts on the plea tnat they were attempts
at the impossible. There is in certain Eng-
1ishmcn a most undesirable tendency to let
.'foreigners do the dangerous and costly work
of discovery and then, at a later stage, to
step in when commercial profit can be made.
'It is. a strong sign of decadence and of the
e of the new spirit that women can

And their competi- i

tion acts as a most healthy stimulus to men. l Mm Ayrton

 

The

 

September 5,‘ l9l 3.

 

£259,900" Fund.

Contributions July 22 to July 31.

——

Already Acknowledged

Mrs. i\'l. (libb
Miss Aim- i1. iiiwiii'
.\li:=.~, B. Vine

£
153,7

1

“ Ulad Birthday.Oileiiirgfsnper Mrs. Griffith'-

Marriott,
l\[l[)i(‘.f{)r(l Member \N.S.l).U.
Aim». llall
ills. \Vliilii‘t'd Smith
Mrs. ileit‘ii 'lyfioii

Eldon Lane l.l1.i’.

Mrs. S. A. Swift,

Anon.

Miss Joeelyne Fry

Mrs. Strcatfeild

“ From llolland ”

Mrs. A. Winter
Sir Johnston Fomes—Robertson
liady Forbis-Robertson
Nahum 1-7

Mrs. Marion Towler

Mns. Langley

Mrs. M. M. Brown

Miss R. E. Bcswiek

Mrs. Montgomery Smith

Miss II. J. Polo

Mrs. W. 11. Outten

Miss M. R. R. Maekcnzm
Miss Florence Hughes -...,
Miss Miriam Levy
Mrs. \V. \Volie

Miss Warsehancr

Mark Verdeii, Esq.

Dr. Annie Heloise Abel

Miss Millctt
Mrs. Bessie M. Rischbieth
Mrs. llope Jones .
Miss 1). Gordon

Miss Mary Houston .
Miss E. .11. Valentino
Mrs. Evans
Gwen, pcr Mrs. . .
Miss Blanee 1]. Powell (for miniatures)
"An Epsom Admirer” . ..
Mrs. Diplock

Penn” Gaskell

 
 
  

‘ ‘ie nation’s life.

h“ '_ .
i“ *hk -.

 

Doormat. *

’

 

“I can't read novels any moro,’ a great many
women are saying in these days, and no wonder
they say it when they are. offered such novels as
Miss M. P. Willcoeks' “ The Power Bctliind ”l A
more sontiiiiontal, artiiicial and. despite certain
surface originalitics, a. more stereotyl’ied produc—
tion has never come our way.

. It is a book about a. Woman—so much concossion
is made to modern i‘cquii‘cinciits. But what a
woman! She is tho sort of person often met in
books who never wants any save a “ man child.”
'And certainly she is not lit to have a woman child.
for she would bring her up to be as silly and
cringing as she is horscll‘. h‘ho has no more notion
of being anything but a l‘omalo than has a barn-
door hcn. Now and again dillOirlH‘I‘ concession to
modern ideas l- she talks of “ working," but never
gets bcyond talking. As for other women she takes
no interest in them and their condition.

Enough has been said to enable the experienced
‘readcr of fiction to understand chctly the sort of
person she is. Alas! wo have met her like over
and over again in novels and generally, we grieve
tosay. in iiovcls written by women. Happily, this
:li'iixtni‘o of pi‘ig and doormat is seldom or never
met in real lifo-at any rate, in these enlightened
times.

There are certain among women novelists who.
if they are to retain their hold upon intelligent
:rcadci's must throw woriiout literary conventions
upon the “scrap heap." Let them gct- back to
life and reality! Let them make fresh observa-
tions of life as it. is being lived. and, above all. of
Women as they really arc. The puppet women
that figure in so many works of modern fiction
inro no more like the womcn of this time than are
iDutch dolls.

.Miss M. P. Willcocks has literary power. lf she
IWill hold the mirror up to nature she will do work
M'llk‘li will command other woincii's rcspcct.

\thn will ono of the present—day novelists give
I15 :1 great woman? Hitherto few of tlicni have
crcatcd a woman who even distantly approaches
GeorgeslSand’s'Consuolo. And this is tlic twentieth
century, and the new woman is already here!

. ' " The Power Behind.”

M. P. Wiilcocka.

  
 
 
 

, - 'A Book about"

11.: '-

Miss W.,l\‘1ayo
Anon.
Anon.
Deptford and Greenwich \V.S.P.U.
B. Mend éson, Esq. .'..
1" 3 Box )thy Carruthers
" ' nl 'l‘ownsliend

 

 

   
  
   

Miss F Coonxwx

Anon.

Miss L. Gilbert Mari-

Miss D. Yardo ...

Mos. Chiles

Cyril and Elsie (lliiles

Miss A. M. (Ililford

Miss M. MeUrcery

Miss Helen Gordon Liddle

Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Jones

Miss L. MacMunn

Mrs. Zoo 'l‘remayne

“ From Switzerland ”

Miss Annie Joncs

Anon.

Anon.

Miss hi. 1. Naylor

Miss Florence \Vhite

Mrs. Nina l‘odinore

Miss Nancy Grant

Miss Underwood

Miss A. l.. Startiip .

Miss Elizabeth Robins

"A Foreign Sympathiser’

"A Sinccro Admircr of the Militants ”

Mius Andrcw and Miss E. (I. Tate

Anon. ..

Anon.

Miss Scull

Dr. Ethel Smyth

Miss Nora Viekerinaiin

(l. L. S.

Miss E. Read

Miss Eva Saundcrson

Miss Unlich

Mm. Bowkcr ,

Transferrwl Missionary Sulmeription

“Two Scots," pcr Mrs. M. L. Allan

Mrs. East . .

h’liss Elaine East (Si). coll.)

Miss Edith Reiidel

Mus. Bridgcn

Mrs. P. E. R. Beninglield

Miss l‘lrskino

Miss Consuclo (laiin

Mrs. Alice Dilks

Mm. E. Jacobs

" Nylevc” .. ..

Miss \Vallacc l’lnnlop

Miss G. MacRae

Miss Lucy E, Brooks (SI). coll.)

Anon.

F. lloiichiii. Est].

Mrs. A. S. May ..

A Friend‘s Subscription (trans. from foreign
missiois) .

S. M. S.

Miss Marjorie Richmond

Miss F. J. Millcry

Mi§ Al. Rissctcr

Mis. Beatrice Scntt

Miss C. Miller

Miss M. Clark

Bliss E. bl. Mclmml

H, Selircll‘cr, Fm].

'l‘ho Misst‘s E. H.

. Sac

  
 
 

?

aiidH‘M. AiHEntliii-istlcm

 

Miss M. Balehin
Miss L. L. Glaulicld
M. J. R.

 
    

t—l .
HOOOHCOHHF—‘HOl—‘NWHU‘OOO

l’Y‘Ib—J

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Miss Jean Oswald
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Miss Isabella Watson (for advertising SUFFRA-

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Miss Isabel Nasrnyth (Caravan Fund)
Mrs. Mitchell ,, ,,
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Lady Parsons . ,, .
Miss A. M. Dawson (tie-making)
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Mrs. E. K. Marshall
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Miss Consuelo Carin

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Ilfraeombo W.S.P.U.

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ffffyszllogy... I have. been consultedbypersoiis who
feared, or who professed to fear, that II the

. . .

become atrophied or that ”17801110 way impotence

might be the result of chastity. rIliere eXists iio
reater error than this, or one more opposed to
physiological truth.

after .
instance of atrophy of the generative organs from

this cause.
plaint : _ .
It, arises in all instances from the exactly oppOSite

caUse—early ab _
and hence atrophy arises. Every year of volun—

tary chastity renders the task easier by the mere
force of habit.

Professor _
“Continence, so far from being harmful, is

not harmful at any age."

tinence. is possible, and not only compatible
with but .conduCive to health.

blished upon reasonable grounds orsupon facts of

physiology
the whole _ _
ment that if marriage cannot, for various reamiis,

be carried out, it is nevertheless necessary

h .
£ii¥312114)i1ld be found is altogether erroneous, and

without foundation.

School, says :

young at all ages: “ I

me . _
No greater he was ever iriiventod.
base invention to cover SUI, and has no foundation

in fact.

Humphrey, M.D., Professor of Surgery at
the University of Cambridge.

September 5, l9 I 5.

THE SUF F RAGETTE

 

 

 

 

CHASTITY AND THE HEALTH OF MEN.

By CHRISTABEL PANKHURST.

In . urging that votes for women and
chastity for men are the double cure for the
sexual disease that is destroying indiViduals
and the race, we are met by the excuse that
chastity for men is dangerous to their health,
and that immorality is necessary to the
preservation of their health. .

This excuse is in direct conflict with the
highest medical opinion.

Medical testimony is that. immorality not
only soils and debilitates a man’s body, but
also contaminates his mind. lntractable
to cure as is the bodily disease caused by
immerality, the brain stains which it pro—
duces are even more difficult to wash away.

But since somany men rank the body
higher than the mind, it is above all things
important to make them understand that
the physical well—being which they think, or
pretend to think they are» achieving by
immorality, is actually being destroyed-

That immorality causes bodily weakness
as well as actual disease is obvious, because
the‘sexual act involves a very great expendi—

-- ,ture of a man’s energy—energy which can, if

it is not expended in that way,be trans-
,formed and expended in other ways, either
physical or mental.

In support of our contention we may point
out that when athletes are in training sexual
intercourse, even in the legitimate relation of
marriageand in moderation, has to be com—
pletely avoided. Considering that a man
goes into training with a view to getting
himSelf into a perfect physical condition the
fact to which we have referred is of the very
greatest significance.

, "And now'we will give one after another,
quotations from medical authorities showing
the desirability from the point of view of

men’s health, of an equal-moral standard.

:for men and women.

The . atter is clearly . e ' . .
following stat‘ - " in the
Acton U" 4 the late,‘j'-'William,

  

 

    

   

. i ’ . 'l i .
i mm iient in favour of incontinence deserves
notice,~ras it~purports~to .be, founded on

 

ris were'n-ot regularly exerCised they would

I may state that I have

many years of experience, never seen an

I ‘have indeed met with the com-
but in what class of cases does it occur?

use; the organs become worn out,

Sir T. C. Allbutt, K.C.B., M.D., Regius
of Physics, Cambridge, says:

.

John Kellock Barton, M.D., says: “Con—

,Lionel S. Beale says:

7‘0, sufficient valid objections have been esta—

and health to living, nay, to passing
life in a'state of celibacy. The argu-

upon
logical grounds that a, substitute of some

Clement Dukes, M.D., Physician of Rugby

1+, is a frequent observation instilled into the
am told it is very bad for
to be continent; my health will stiffer from it.”
It is simply a

 

Very important are the words of G. M.

He says :
“ There are no organs 50 mac/z under con—i

A! w'
, nce or __
.The lower moral. standard of men has
alWays been a cause ofoffcnce to-women,
and:mcn have sought to silence women’s
condemnation by assuring them that cnastity
involves not, only injury to the health'of
men {with this point ‘we have dealt): but
also very great physical distress.
this matter also the doctors have pronmmccd
and in a sense destructive of mcn's preten—
sions.

The doctors inform us that the immorality
to which men resort on the pretext of reliev—
ing physical distress is, on the contrary, the
very cause of that distress.

“Fallen men," says James Foster Scott,
M.D., “by continual stimulation of their
sexual passions with erotic thoughts, sen—
sual conversation and literature, and by the a
rehearsal of lewd stories produce in them-
selves and in others who fall under their
noxious influence an uncontrollable passion."
Ciays this same authority : “ Intercourse with

 

different women is well known morbidly to
increase desire.”

Another important statement made by Dr.
Scott is this:

The proper subjugation of the sexual impulses
and the conservation of the complex seminal fluid,
with its wonderfully invigorating influence, de-
velop all that is best and noblest in men.

“It is the incontinent men," says W. J.
Jacobson, _ p . ..
are subject to this constant irritability of the
Sexual organs, and it is they-who, from
unshunncd exc1tcmcut, must suilcr from an
excess of seminal secretions and its results.
On the other hand it is the strictly crmmmm
men who keep themselves healthily occupied
in mind and body, men who when attacked
by imperious sexual desire simply sally out ii
aiid seek in exchisc a change of surround-
ings; to such as these the secretion o