This is a historically significant 1902 postal card, a single-piece mailing from the Women's University Club of New York, bearing a crisp New York, N.Y. postmark dated NOV 17 7:30 PM 1902. The verso is a standard-issue United States postal card of the era, featuring the national eagle emblem and a prominent memorial imprint for President William McKinley, who served from 1897 until his assassination in 1901, noting his birth and death years 1843 - MCKINLEY - 1901. It is addressed in period handwriting to Mrs. Hartley C. Gaje at 364 West 121st Street in New York City, a location in the Manhattan borough. The recto is entirely printed text, functioning as an official club announcement rather than a pictorial view. It details two upcoming events at the clubhouse at 13 East 24th Street. The first is a talk on Settlement Work in the Mountains of Kentucky to be given on Friday, November 28th, 1902, by notable social reformers Miss May Stone and Miss Katharine Pettit, founders of the Hindman Settlement School in Knott County, Kentucky. This is followed by an invitation for tea. The second notice calls for the Annual Business Meeting and Election of Managers on Tuesday, December 2nd, 1902, specifying that only resident members are entitled to vote. The card is signed by the club's Secretary, Harriet M. Jenckes. This artifact provides a tangible link to the Progressive Era and the women's club movement, documenting the intellectual and philanthropic activities of educated women in early 20th-century New York. The card's condition shows expected age-related toning and handling, with clear, fully legible print and a distinct circular date stamp providing precise ephemera provenance.