| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I | THE TEACUP CLUB IS FORMED | [9] |
| II | THE CLUB DISCUSSES WOMAN IN POLITICS | [39] |
| III | MAN’S REAL ATTITUDE TOWARD THE PROGRESS OF WOMAN | [65] |
| IV | CONCERNING THE HEROINE OF TO-DAY | [89] |
| V | THE CLUB SETTLES SOME CURRENCY PROBLEMS | [112] |
| VI | THE PIONEER NEW WOMAN | [136] |
| VII | WOMAN IN LEGISLATION | [159] |
| VIII | AN EXECUTIVE MEETING | [185] |
| IX | ON THE USE AND ABUSE OF POLITICAL POWER | [210] |
| X | WOMAN AS A PARLIAMENTARIAN | [236] |
| XI | THE CLUB INVESTIGATES THEOSOPHY | [261] |
| XII | A DISCUSSION AND A SURPRISE | [285] |
Chapter I
The Teacup Club is Formed
“You can never be sure of pleasing a man,” sighed the blue-eyed girl, who was calling on her dearest friend; “that is, if you try to please him,” she added reflectively.
“I suppose not,” replied the girl with the dimple in her chin, “unless you succeed in concealing from him the fact that you are trying to please him.”
“H’m; yes, I suppose there is something in that. However, we ought not to be hard on the poor things. The whole truth with the sterner sex is that they are never really practical. They—”
“How clever you are!” cried the girl with the dimple in her chin, admiringly. “Sometimes it does seem a pity that you are to marry Jack, instead of studying law, or—theosophy or something like that. Really, a very little study would fit you for the bar, but of course Jack—”
“I don’t intend to marry Jack,” said the blue-eyed girl, calmly.
“O, my goodness, does he know that?”