PHASE of the inevitable readjust-' ment of ALL THE RELATIONS of men and women now taking place all over the wgrld. Feminism demands the removal of ALL DISQUALIFICATIONS based upon SEX. It asks for a single stand i 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 no 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 for 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 thakHER 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 toian, the things that he forbade' her fre 'now tfie things she forbids fier-elfl The "feminist wjlf -not desQsnd to the level r of "men's" moral standard; she says'tcvmenv "Corne'dwell -with me on the mountain'top uVthe purity ofta vir gin love," Anb" the ycymg men' the generajjonboriv of. awakened tmoth ers havVheardLand answered her! WE CAN. HEAR THEM COMING! LO o BUMPER XRQRS FOP 1914, SAYS ' EARL'ING Albert J. Earlir Milwaukee, Wis. "Prosperity is on. the way,' announces 'A. J. Earling, president of the Chipago, Milwaukee & St. P,aul Railroad, who has just re turned 'from a tour of northwestern wheat fields. "The Northwest will yield av bumpercrop 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 ten'der 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. (Doot use a "spoon to sllf'the 'beans as it breaks the Beans.) Serve hot fe.(frftiiErtfcjW.ilWi