Emily Howland
Click to Play or Pause Recording
“Dear fellow members of the W.C.T. U. of Cayuga Co. in Convention assembled.
My report in view of the great need is pitifully near meagre. I am glad that our faithful scribe Mrs. Rhoby H. Sisson can add a valuable supplement to it.
Postals bearing the planned “Stop war – co-operate” have been distributed and tracts scattered far and wide bearing a message that should rouse the most thoughtless to a feeling of responsibility for the continuance of war. When Gen. John F. O’Ryan, Commander of the 27th division of the army tells us that “we can end war in our time if we will get on the job” and Gen. Bliss tells us “that our air raid furnished with Lewisite gas would have wiped out our first American army of one million and a quarter men and every air raid in the next war would consume a city, we see that if we do not end war, war will end us.
When we try to measure the infinite loss our country suffers in the death of its youth, in the wrecked and suffering lives of others and worse than either, the moral ruin of many whose deeds of outlawry, admirable in war, are crimes in peace casting a shadow of fear over every community, and are told by those high in the councils of military affairs that we the people can end all this if we will get on the job, how can we idly drift into a honor more dreadful than that recently endured, we are assured? Now is the time to act.
When the “dogs of war are let loose” we know that even a protest means for us the martyrdom of a prison cell. In its defense day test, the war spirit of the government has challenged the Peace Spirit to vital combat.
Has not woman been enfranchised for this hour? Will she rise to the occasion? Will she follow the vision? “











