"IT SEEMS TO ME I CAN NEVER OUTLIVE THIS MOMENT OF JOYOUS WELCOME."
| A Woman for Mayor A Novel of To-day By Helen M. Winslow Author of "Literary Boston of Today," etc. Former Editor of "The Club Woman" Frontispiece by Walter Dean Goldbeck THE REILLY & BRITTON CO. CHICAGO |
Copyright 1909
by
The Reilly & Britton Co.
All rights reserved
Published June, 1909
LIST OF CHAPTERS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | ||
| I | An Unprecedented Proposal | [11] | |
| II | A Perplexed Reformer | [23] | |
| III | Learning the Ropes | [35] | |
| IV | Practical Politics | [55] | |
| V | The Opposition Candidate | [65] | |
| VI | A Political Trick | [77] | |
| VII | An Unusual Ride | [90] | |
| VIII | Modern Journalism | [102] | |
| IX | Election Day | [112] | |
| X | The New Mayor's Policy | [125] | |
| XI | At Work | [140] | |
| XII | Skirmishing | [152] | |
| XIII | An Important Appointment | [166] | |
| XIV | Graft | [177] | |
| XV | Setting the Trap | [191] | |
| XVI | Divided Interests | [207] | |
| XVII | A Dumbfounded Populace | [220] | |
| XVIII | A Futile Search | [230] | |
| XIX | The Boodlers Score | [240] | |
| XX | An Enforced Vacation | [247] | |
| XXI | Word From the Missing | [261] | |
| XXII | A Daring Escape | [273] | |
| XXIII | The Hearts of the People | [284] | |
| XXIV | An Honest Confession | [295] | |
| XXV | The Old, Old Story | [310] | |
| XXVI | Retrospect and Prophecy | [326] | |
| XXVII | A Heart's Awakening | [338] |
FOREWORD
"Chimerical!" the average man will exclaim when he reads the title of this book.
"But why not?" his wife will answer.
"Worth trying," the reformers and philanthropists will add.
"One of us," the suffragette will conclude.
And there may be a grain of truth in every answer. But the idea is not absolutely new. At this writing, there is a woman-mayor in one of the smaller cities of the middle states in America; while over in England there are, I believe, two women doing good work in the municipal chair.
And again, "Why not?" Housekeeping is a woman's business. It is the primeval instinct at the bottom of every woman's heart. The average American and English home is a clean, sweet, sanitary and well-governed institution,—made and kept so by some woman. God made women to be wives, mothers and home-makers; and if our modern conditions have sent some of us out into the world to earn our own living and perhaps to support somebody else, the instinct remains—as witness the thousands of tiny flats or cottages where these women dwell and maintain a home, "be it ever so humble." And so, if we are the natural housekeepers, the conservators of health and morals and civic pride, why not a woman at the head of municipal affairs?
The suffragette, the reformer, the philanthropist, the average wife are right, too. As for the average man—let him read the story of Roma's woman-mayor and think it over. And if he does not decide to vote for a woman as mayor, perhaps he will come to see that woman's housekeeping instinct and newly awakened civic sense, added to a revival of public honesty among men, might well combine to make a model city.
If "it is not good for man to live alone," perhaps it is not well for him to manage his City Hall alone. After all, is it "chimerical?"
H. M. W.
Cambridge, Mass.
May, 1909.