CORRESPONDENCE.
I >ear Editor, If any of your readers want to read a story of well-applied common sense, niay I recommend them to read “What I K'unemVr,” by Millicent Garrett Fawcett, if they have not already done so? All through her Suffrage work she kept a “level head,” and her work in connection with the South African War and the Concentration Camps Commission (pages 119 to 174), show a wonderful power of receiving impressions and making some use of them. If we women of the W.C.T.I in this dominion would only us*' the facts and impressions which w*> are constantly receiving in connection with the Liquor Trade, it would not l*e very long before the Trade was tottering on its “last legs” and we would t** preparing to give it midnight burial. “What I Hememlx*r" is in our own library, together with many other fine Ixioks, which tell what women have don*. What one sanctified, determined woman could do In connection with suffrage work, the sanctified, determined women of the W.C.T.l T . can do for the cleansing of their country. Vours faithfully, “LIBRARY READER.’’
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Bibliographic details
White Ribbon, Volume 40, Issue 474, 18 March 1935, Page 4
Word Count
184CORRESPONDENCE. White Ribbon, Volume 40, Issue 474, 18 March 1935, Page 4
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