- Title transcribed from item.
- Summary: Photograph of five National Woman's Party members demonstrating, with banners, in front of the Lafayette Statue. Lucy Branham, center, is burning President Wilson's words.
- Cropped version of the photograph published in The Suffragist, 6, no. 36 (Sept. 28, 1918): cover. Caption: The Suffrage Demonstration, Sept. 16, 1918, in Front of the White House.
Illustration shows a torch-bearing female labeled "Votes for Women", symbolizing the awakening of the nation's women to the desire for suffrage, striding across the western states, where women already had the right to vote, toward the east where women are reaching out to her. Printed below the cartoon is a poem by Alice Duer Miller.
- Manuscript note of title page "I think this little book is valuable, as giving a description of the first of the first Convention of the of the kind that was ever held. Rhoda J. Palmer" Rhoda Palmer, who had accompanied her father to the 1848 convention, outlived both the Millers.
- This copy is a rare, duodecimo first printing of the Report, which includes the proceeding, resolutions, declaration of sentiments and a list of the signatories; note that the 32 men are listed as "in favor of the movement" rather than signatories to the declaration
- Weekly
- Began in 1912; ceased in 1920.
- Archived issues are available in digital format from the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
- Description based on: Vol. 1, no. 34 (Nov. 23, 1912).
- Maryland women’s news (DLC) 2019251000 (OCoLC)1097680231