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II v D I I V I TULSA DAILY WORLD, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1918. OE OOOl 30130 O fol XI II 11 " I II II it M OPINIONS OF PATRIOTS AGAINST WOMAN SUFFRAG E Note It Will Be Observed That These Men Are Out of Politics and That Their Views Are, Not Influenced Either by Fear of the Women's Vote or by Lively Expectations of Favors to Come From the Women's Vote. STATESMEN. THOMAS JEFFEIISON: "All the world la now politically mad. Men. women and children talk nothing ele, and yon that naturally they talk ranch, load and long. Society Is polled by It But our rood ladies, I trust, are too wise to wrinkle their foreheads with politics. American women have the food sense to value domestic happiness above all other, and to cultivate It beyond all other." GROVER CLEVELAND: "I am willing to admit that it was only after a mora thorough appreciation of what female suffrage really means that I became fully con vinced that Its inauguration would vastly Increase the unhappy Imper fections and shortcomings of our present man -voting suffrage. Its especial susceptibility to bad leader ship and other hurtful Influences would constitute It another menacing condition to those which already vex and disturb the deliberate and In telligent expression of the popular will. ' ELnrU ROOT: "I am opposed to the granting of suffrage to women because I believe that it wonld be a loss to women, to all women and to very woman, and because I believe it would be an Injury to the state and to every maa and every woman in the state. The time will never come when this line of demarkation be tween the function of the two sexes win be broken. I believe that It Is an attempt to turn backward upon the line of social development, and that If the step ever be taken, we go centuries back-ward on the march to ward a higher, nobler and purer cfvU ration, which must be founded not In the confusion, but in the higher differentiation of the sexes." WHJJAM HOWARD TAFT: "If In any of the states now acting on the question I were called upon to vote, I would vote against Riving the suffrage, because I think to force it on an unwilling or Indiffer ent majority is to add to the electorate an element that will not improve Its governing capacity." cnrncnMEN. JAilES, CARDINAL GIBBONS: "I regard woman's rights, women and the leaders of the new school of fe male progress as the worst enemies of the female sex. I wish I could Impress on American women the dangers that would attach to such innovation. I wish I could show them the ultimate result of partici pating In public life. It has but one end the abandonment, or at least the neglect of the home." RABBI JOSEPH SILVERMAN: "There Is no difference between woman suffrage, socialism and the present feminist movement. The one means the other and, no matter which cause wins first, disaster to matrimony and the home will fol low. At all hazards we must oppose these movements; they are subver sive to the best interests of the child and will destroy all that God and man have In the past years built up. I rail upon you to rise in your might, to use every means at command to grapple with this, the greatest enemy we have today, and sweep It from the face of the earth." BISHOP JOHN H. VINCENT (Founder of Chautauqua): "When about thirty years of age I accepted for a time the doctrine of woman suffrage and publicly defended it. Tears of wide and careful observa tion have convinced me that the de mand for woman suffrage In Amer ica is without foundation in equity, and, if successful, must prove harm ful to society. The Instinct of motherhood Is against it The basis conviction of our best manhood is against It The movement is at root a protest against the representative relations and functions by virtue of which each sex depends upon and Is exalted by the other. This theory and policy, tending to the subver sion of the natural and divine order, must make man leas a man, and women less a woman. 0 QErrnanr nnanr-?- mr-tni rrn mi rnr-rpi -mi r I II J 11 II I I I I 1 I I I I I ffltllllffllllIlVl V. N. II W in Who IS Agitating the Woman Not the Mothers of America. The rt re . - r . . 1 Eight National Suffrage Leaders Suffrage MOVement? Are Childless Women Who Woilld Vote if Woman Not the Mothers, they are too busy o e e . s-i 5 to engage in politics, and oUIirage Liamer they seldom vote What Women Hold Office Under Woman Suffrage? Not the Mothers, but those women who have been characterized as the "third sex" i WhO ProfitS Under Woman Not the Mother', nor the state, but f f (S ? those corrupt political influences Ulirt3,C which manipulate the controlled vote What Is the Suffrage Attitude ' JSKnr?,-to( Toward the Mother? Become a Pro- says Mrs. Pank- hurst, and Socialism adds that the State shall care for the Child. 66 Protect the Family and Vote No" on the Woman Suffrage Amendment Oklahoma Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. Address: Skirvin Hotel, Oklahoma City O D o o D o D o o D o o D o o D u o D o D o D o Yi o n 01301 (onoooi :oezxo to