Kelley Florence Speech

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1.
To admit to the privileges of a citizen and especially to the right of suffrage
2.
Low-rise apartment buildings, typically with cramped spaces and poor living conditions
3.
Any of various small round devices on which threads are wound for working handmade lace
4.
A formal written request made to an authority or organized body
5.
One such example in Kelley's speech is, "Would the New Jersey Legislature have passed that shameful repeal bill enabling girls of fourteen years to work all night, if the mothers in New Jersey were enfranchised?"
6.
One such example in Kelley's speech is, "...pitiful privilege..."
7.
Rhetorical appeal Kelley uses in the sentence, "We do not wish this."
8.
Rhetorical appeal Kelley uses in describing the maximum number of hours children could work
9.
Rhetorical choice Kelley uses in describing the work the children do in paragraph 4