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PHASE of the inevitable readjust
ment of ALL THE RELATIONS of
men and women now taking place all
over the world.
Feminism demands the removal of
ALL DISQUALIFICATIONS basqd
upon SEX. It asks for a single stand
ard of BRAINS and MORALS as well
as of votes. It includes suffragism,
of course, but the woman who is a
suffragist without being a feminist
can see ho further than the end of
nose and it's a very insignificant lit
tle nose!
The ''antis" dwell with extraor
dinary insistence on our demand f6r
a single moral standard. They as
sume that men and women CAN'T
have the same moral standard and
have any morals at all! I should hate
to think so poorly of men as those
women do who consider themselves
unfit for political equality but "who
nevertheless regard moral equality as
a menace to their chastity!
They have said that feminists de
mand an equal right with men to
"sow their wild oats." Why, if every
prohibition of morals and conven
tion were suddenly removed from wo
man and she were to receive by gen
eral consent the oat-sowing privilege,
the world would find that she would
sow not oats, but laurels, and savory
sage and mint, all garden herbs that
minister to the menu of a strictly
monogamous family's Sunday din
ner! There is no use in pretending that
woman's nature is or could be as un
restrained as man's in any sex re
lation. Woman's passions have been
In cold storage for so long that it is
idle, to speculate as to what they were
before she was made to realize BY
MAN that HER livelihood and honor,
the legitimacy and protection of
HER children, depended upon HER
SELF-RESTRAINT!
The prohibitions of man have be
come today the inhibitions of wo
man, the things that he forbade her
are now the things she forbids herself!
The 'feminist will not "descend to
the level of men's" moral -standard;
she saysto men
"Comfej dyvell with' me on the
mountairpD,vin the purity of'a vir
gin love.',tAnd the"young men. the
generation, born of awakened moth
ers have "heatd and answered her!
WE CAW "BEAR THEM COMING!
. o o
BUMPER CROPS FOR 1914, SAYS
, EARLING
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Albert J. Earing
Milwaukee, Wis. "Prosperity is on
the way," announces A. J. Earling,
president of the Chicago, Milwaukee
& St. Paul Railroad, who has just re
turned from a tour of northwestern
wheat fields. "The Northwest will
yield a bumper crop this year," is
Earling's perdiction, "and good crops
means more demand for labor and
business prosperity generally."
o o
String Beans French Method.
String 2 quarts of beans. Wash and
boil until tender in salted water. When
tender, drain, and put in stew pan
and shake pan over the fire until all
moisture has disappeared. Add 4 ta
blespoons of butter, 5 drops of onion
juice and the juice of 1 large lemon.
Keep moving the stew pan. (Do not
use a spoon to stir the beans as. it
breaks the beans.) Serve hot,
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