Ida M. Tarbell, The Business of Being a Woman. ($1.25; The Macmillan Company, New York.) The book which best expresses the anti-suffrage view of woman's place in modern society. See also Miss Tarbell's The Ways Of Woman; (The Macmillan Company,) and The Book Of Woman's Power. ($1.25; do).
J. Lionel Tayler, The Nature of Woman. ($1.25; E. P. Dutton & Company, N. Y.) The best treatment of biology and sex in their relation to the question.
E. S. Martin, The Unrest of Women. (D. Appleton & Company, New York.) A good-natured, but shrewd, analysis of manifestations of feminism in Miss Thomas, Mrs. Belmont, Miss Millholland, etc., by the genial editor of Life.
Ernest Bernbaum and George R. Conroy, The Case Against Woman Suffrage, (Anti-Suffrage Association, 687 Boylston Street, Boston.) This pamphlet of fifty small pages, which briefly covers all the chief points of the anti-suffrage case, was widely distributed during the 1915 campaign.
PERIODICALS
Anti-Suffrage Notes. Issued every other week, sometimes weekly; $1 a year. (Subscriptions should be sent to Mrs. George Sheffield, 33 Brewster Street, Cambridge.)
The Woman's Protest. Monthly. The organ of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. $1 a year. (37 West 39th Street, New York City.)
The Remonstrance. Quarterly. The organ of the Massachusetts Anti-Suffrage Association. 25c a year. (Mrs. James M. Codman, Walnut Street, Brookline.)