<P> After the amendment for the women's right to vote was passed, the publication was discontinued by the National Woman's Party and succeeded in 1923 by Equal Rights . Published until 1954, Equal Rights began as a weekly newsletter and evolved into a bi-monthly release aimed at keeping NWP members informed about developments related to the ERA and legislative issues . It included field reports, legislation updates and features about the activities of the NWP and featured writing from contributors including Crystal Eastman, Zona Gale, Ruth Hale and Inez Haynes Irwin . Josephine Casey appeared on the cover of the publication in April 1931 as a result of her recurring column about the labour conditions of female textile workers in Georgia . </P> <Ul> <Li> Nina E. Allender </Li> <Li> Caroline Lexow Babcock </Li> <Li> Abby Scott Baker </Li> <Li> Mary Ritter Beard </Li> <Li> Harriot Stanton Blatch </Li> <Li> Alva Belmont </Li> <Li> Lucy Burns </Li> <Li> Marion Cothren </Li> <Li> Rheta Childe Dorr </Li> <Li> Crystal Eastman </Li> <Li> Sara Bard Field </Li> <Li> Phoebe Hearst </Li> <Li> Alison Turnbull Hopkins </Li> <Li> Inez Haynes Irwin </Li> <Li> Edna Buckman Kearns </Li> <Li> Anne Martin </Li> <Li> Inez Milholland </Li> <Li> Vida Milholland </Li> <Li> Alice Paul </Li> <Li> Doris Stevens </Li> <Li> Caroline Spencer </Li> <Li> Mabel Vernon </Li> <Li> Amelia Earhart </Li> <Li> Maud Younger </Li> </Ul> <Li> Nina E. Allender </Li> <Li> Caroline Lexow Babcock </Li>

Who was a populist party spokesperson who advance the cause of women’s suffrage