OCR Text |
Show rvTi - 4 1 ' i 8 - EVENING NEWS DESERET THURSDAY JANUARY 16 1919 1 rii f i m 3 I' U :J r 5? I t UU ? t!1 c rt 9 WQ VH J T-- ' .? V, ion iSi fie an T" it - ' 12 miTfirm housewives PE I Out of the world's necessity has been bom the answer that ifc electrifying .women the country over. Wherever you are, whoever you are, you cannor escape its contagion.' Greater usefulness to the world, greater well being for the home and family, decreased cost in America! Sixteen million of them able, energetic, eager women doing the work that four million could do. A nd the world is short-handed of workers Shrteen million women cooking,' scrubbing, washing; tending children sixteen million homes. Of living., all day long in '- - ' What If twelve million of them could he re leased for the worlds reconstruction I usvf s' t Charlotte Perkins Gilman , America's sanest and foremost feminist, discusses this burning i subject in Pictorial Review for February. $9,600,000,000, at a conservative estimate, would be released towards the jvorlds shortage of money and labor, by releasing these twelve mfllfawi women for gainful work. Think what that would mean in France, in Belgium, ' in Serbia! J - . 5en&toi And dre: 7 . rHS Already the astounding change is making its ' way into our everyday life. The cooking, the laundry and cleaning, the care of the babies in sixteen million homes how can it be done by four million women? How can individual household drudgery be abolished? ho had at It ti urrent oajue of s plained ;e obJal bjMtJoBi intM In detailed, practical fashion, Mn. Gilman tells. What she has to say about this most S But our homesjfr Our men ? Our m Vnigrb curtail extraordinary development in the world's man or woman can history, no forward-lookin- g babies ? If they must suffer we have no right to change! It is the old,, old cry that has keptjnillions of women the world over srlr Oay , non-gainfu- ' J ru4 ha senator id rets, or afford to miss." Read The Work and Waste itioat, p rtwnV It based of Women" in Pictorial Review for February. jiince H( flraUies t a lea1 'uifh th td bj a ,nt Rll Babies more babies wanted! this issue The rtf be put." ipprtf o a diP itter bo rrvtteti it nali n lore 4 bare ier met nciliatio 4. It tl r tall ba ed rat wmefalij -- a se4 r an ie Who will keep the cradles filled? duty hundred thousand babies in this country unnecessarily every year and the is crying for more babies! -- ' .The appalling waste of it! Think! And what h being done to stop it? .1 TilfREEdie Ugh! Htrw Mattic hated it to be wifely" was to be NOT Jacobs eyes, uasexed, a monstrosity. Jezebel, a Bit to Mattie, ugh! That word wifely stood for so many delightful things, you ad to deny yourself. Movies and soda fountains and The Lack Anther of Mother, Wrapped in Silk - of Geraldine Laird , etc. is The greatest mystery story of the year D' answers this imperative question in Pictorial Review for February. In the same issue, Helen Ring Robinson, first woman state senator, discusses this vital problem. Four years of war have brought home to the world that, more important even than the bearing of babies is the saving of babies. Uncle Sam, too, among the mothers nations has Teamed what" sorrow-stricke- n who sit beside empty cradles knew long agoj that a baby is worth more than a mine, a forest, a municipal building. Just what is being done, what you must begin at . once to do, Mrs. Norris tells you. ' Her article, and Helen Ring Robinsons keen analysis of the issue, are thrilling commentaries on Americas splendid - baby-savin- g achievements and plans up tohe minui 1 What it art tree, re irkeu a KATHLEEN NORRIS frilly dothest .Dishwasher for Jacobs family, thats ah she eras now. And so she rebelled A feminist revolution in Pennsylvania Dutch comm unity and with rich hu mor, Helen R. Martin has told this rare story. - at e Ir our o I Inter It ton other one a -- the figure the . Slowly, cautiously a fire-eaca- came. veiled feminine figure. And in the dead of .night in unrecognizable Washington! The woman py! . . . Which of the two girls was this the two who had eo specn tacularly boarded the ocean liner in from a German submarine? Renle? . Or Rachd? Which? With consummate skill Clarence Kelland has sustained in this second installment the breath-takin- g mystery of his vrrid novel. A regular $1.50 book in three issues. A million and half men and women are foBd'Jriitg fc?tathlessly 'this greatest mystery story of the year. mid-ocea- tal and etsarll k has And thi il not h tnelr tmte opp ouid be fins. Ipt "n to al rich me mama oa comers r. land-'ee- d ace til term meant ough ot porta It it p ftt must :tal love of ,em rificf. i itiecea rreed Bud-ingt- saying" Longer? Shorter? Narrower? Back to frills and frivolities, now the ghastly war is over ? Pictorial Reviews Paris office, never dosed, but now more fully in operation than ever, gives you in this February number a first showing of the most practical and chic notes in spring styles. - Color pages show docent of styles in the . correct advance shades and materials. Birthday cards for the REMARKABLE SERIES OF GREAT WAR PICTURES the February issue. BEGINNING with will publish month after month . a new series of stirring e War Pictures. You would gladly pay $1.00 y of these 7 7 remarkable full color reproductions. the from the brush Taking Guns", masterly, ,,r full-pag- -- for-an- ieWgW f - 'll lh youngsters! Color cut-ou- ts Such amusing ones that the children will love cutting out to little friends. A whole dozen of them. "No wonder the kiddies are enthusiastic over this novelty introduced by Pictorial Review. And there are adorable studiesof the Twelve-tre' babies. sending -- es , of.F. Matania, tells you more graphically than 7 any. words could how the German gun' nests' ' were broken up by our brave boys. - You will to frame this picture and those that are -- to follow for their historic record of the Great U.llTI 7 OlMr R, And Fi IMMOfa ITJw MdJ. I oenr cr J. lor . wtate yc. reWriptioo I, to rwria la WMt SSU Sntt. No, : I Yort Cit,, |