$3.50 post free per annum to any part of the United States
"The Englishwoman" is intended to reach the cultured public and bring before it, in a convincing and moderate form, the case for the Enfranchis.e.m.e.nt of Women. No support will be given to any particular party in politics.
The magazine will be inspired from the first page to the last by one continuous policy, which is to further the Enfranchis.e.m.e.nt of Women.
It will try to do so, first by securing the sympathy and holding the attention of that public which is interested in letters, art and culture generally. and by an impartial statement of facts. Its chief features will be:
Articles dealing with the Women"s Movement in England and other countries.
Notes on parliamentary bills as affecting women and children.
Articles on Women"s Work in Professions and Trades.
Sociological questions and their influence on the status of women.
Stories, poems, scientific articles, and short plays.
Criticisms of music, painting, sculpture, and current literature.
Editorial Offices: 11 Haymarket, London, S.W., England.
Publishers: Messrs. SIDGWICK & JACKSON.
3 Adam Street, Adelphi, London, W.C., England.
Every American woman interested in the suffrage should read
THE ENGLISHWOMAN
The Common Cause
WHAT IS IT?
There are in England something like twenty-five National Societies for promoting the enfranchis.e.m.e.nt of women. The oldest of these is the National Union of Women"s Suffrage Societies, which was started in 1861 and whose President is Mrs. Fawcett, LL.D. The National Union has over two hundred branches in Great Britain, and a total membership of about 20,000. It is the only British Woman"s Suffrage Society affiliated to the International Woman Suffrage Alliance.
The Common Cause Is the Organ of the National Union.
It contains leaders and articles on political, social, legal and industrial matters affecting women, and is a complete record or the work done by the National Union for the enfranchis.e.m.e.nt of women in England.
The Common Cause Is the Paper of Thinking Women.
Subscriptions should be sent to
64 DEANSCATE ARCADE, MANCHESTER, ENGLAND
3 months, post free --- 1 shilling 9 pence 6 months, post free --- 3 shillings 3 pence 12 months, post free --- 6 shillings 6 pence
Every Thursday, 1 Penny
The Progressive Woman
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
Edited and Pubilshed by JOSEPHINE CONGER-KANEKO at Girard, Kansas, U.S.A.
Price, 50 cents a year.
The Progressive Woman stands for a better race through the political and economic freedom of womankind. Its contributors are among the cleverest of the more advanced thinkers, and its readers endeavor to keep up with its writers.
This is the great charm about The Progressive Woman--it does not stand still: it leads.
Send to-day for sample copy.
Woman"s Era
The New Magazine of Inspiration for the American Woman.
A World-wide Review With Original Articles on
ECONOMICS, ETHICS, CIVICS, ARTS AND CRAFTS, MUSIC, LITERATURE, CLUB WORK, Etc.
SPECIAL ARTS AND CRAFTS NUMBER FOR SEPTEMBER.
Sample copy . . . 10 cents 6 months . . . 75 cents 12 months . . . $1.50
(Worth a good deal more)
Address,
WOMAN"S ERA New Orleans, La.
Up the Divide
A MONTHLY PERIODICAL
Asking: Why not see Social and Religious Things from Higher Alt.i.tudes?
EDITED BY
DUREN J. H. WARD, A.M. (Harvard), Ph.D. (Leipsig) and WM. THURSTON BROWN, A.B. (Yale).
IT IS A KIND BY ITSELF UNIQUE IN EVERY WAY A BRAND NEW THING IN MAGAZINES
SECOND YEAR