"! J .x j sr , -w u.M.twk. tjsrsfaisunte j (?H.- tit - - n1 'Wl "-iuTaflE SaKiiraar1"''- i i y i' '!b H ' I. ! r CONDUCT? oooooooooooooooooooooooooo 8EVERE JUDGMENT OF REV. DR. HAYWOOD. SAY without hesitation that the New York worn of today 19 dragging down moral standards, not only for the next generation of her own 0 6ex, hut for the men among whom 5 Bhe moves and whom she endenv- orn to attract by means to which A her mother and her grandmother would never have stooped. If her Influence did not extend beyond the confines of Manhattan Is- g land the situation would be less 6 appalling; but, alasl she is se lected as a model by women all over the country women wno see her In her own environment or as a guest In their home towns or who read of her eccen tricities, her attractiveness, her daring In the public press and periodicals of all sorts. Indirect ly, as well as directly, she thus bccomoB a source of contamina tion. oooooooooooooooooooooooooo INCH more tho New York Ol woman Is arraigned at the 1 bar of social opinion. And 1111 uecauHU in 11 recent sermon lie v. Oscar Hay wood, pastor of tho Col legiate linptlst Church of thu Covenant in West Thirty-third street laid tho downtown tendency of Now York clty'8 morals at hor door, says tho Now York World. Following this sermon with a direct statement to tho Sunday World, Dr. Haywood says: "I nay without hesitation that tho Now York woman of to-day is drag King down moral standards, not only for tho next generation of her own ncx, hut for tho men among whom sho moves nnd whom she endeavors to at tract by means to which her mother and her grandmother would never Imvo stooped. If her Inlluenco did not extond beyond the confines of Manhattan Island tho situation would bo less appalling, but, alas, sho is selected as a model by women all over the country, women who boo her In her environment or as a guest In their home towns or who read of hor eccentricities, her attractiveness, her daring, In the public press and period icals of all sorts. Indirectly as well aB directly she thus becomes a source of contamination. "New York may woll bo termed a Uabylon. It Is poisoning the very .loununllon or our national social health by drawing women of other cities to Itseir and nway from the wholesome standards, forms and hab its or generations past, "Tho wonion or tho household are responsible for the moral slough of Now York. Take the single question of where tho family of tho typlcnl Now Yorker shall live. For the sake of his children tho husband ami fn thor would be uulto willing to live In tho suburbs, enduring all the Incon veniences of commuting. Hut his wife will not bury herself in tho "deadly dullness" of a quiet suburb. Sho wants to bo whero she can see nun Do soon. She demands excite ment, the social life ami tho night life peculiar to this city. She Insists. In fact, on bolng in tho swim, and being In tho bwIiii In Now Yoik she Imagines menus Indulging In all sorts of dlFslpatlon, not only in private, hut In public, so that all who come may seo that she knows Just whnt "smart" women are doing. "Concerning the modern habits of wonion, let us flint consider smoking I hold that smoking, especially cigar cts, loads women to a far lower point 01 aegraunuon man drinking Many a man or woman who drinks h not mornlly bad, but tho average man or 04'oman addicted to clgnret smoking betrays a moral standard that Is ap palling, strikes n criminal note that Is shocking and shows a decided ten dency toward degeneracy. And llg urea go to show thnt nioro women aro nmoklng clgarots In New York today than they over have 'icforo. "Drinking follows clgaret smoking, and tho combination Is tearful. Wom en who Indulgo In these two habits can wreck a community's mornls, for, remomber, the old generation Is dis appearing, nnd tho oncoming genera tion will look to tho woman of to day, not of yesterday, for Its example. "And what sort of an examplo does Bho Bet, In dress, for Instnnce? in tho ballroom at tho th enter, on the Btreet, tho New York woman leaves nothing to the imagination. The country youth, watching hor pass, blushes at the vision of oxposed ankles, clinging, suggest I vo skirls, 'low-cut necka boncath open furs, the hat crushed down over tho eyes us it to half-veil the Invitation to admire. , "Look At this woman nnd ask, if i i 8 e (if: ik you rnn, why luunornllty among children Is on tho Increase, why chiv alry is on the decline, why family life Is disintegrating, nnd why, till over America, there Ih a tendency to nbun don tlio spiritual for lite sensual, why mnrltnl Infidelity Is on the IncroiiKC mitl lawlessness Is forgiven so long iih It goes undiscovered! "The New York woinnn, with her loose linliltM, will have munh to an swer for, to her nation anil to her Lord." The foregoing statement was Hliown to many prominent Now York women who ngiuod that many of Dr. Hay wood's statements were only too true. On the eatiBeB of existing conditions they did not agree, however, and their coinineiitH as here set forth are Hulllclently Interesting to challengo the attention of every thinking Now Yorker. By Mrs. E. L. Fernandez. Vlcc-PieaMeiit l'rorrssloiml Womnn'H J.rfiKtli.'. MAY bo old-fashioned, yet I nm continually engaged In questions of tho day. 1 see and hear things, and participate In affairs that In 1 terest tho public. Hut my old-fashioned views inspire those comments on Dr. Haywood's Interview: Tho tumble with New York women is their Inck of Interest In their homo surroundings. Thuy fool no in terest, whatever In their homos. Homo Is n plnco to Bleop, perhaps oven to eat In when the bnnk account runs low and they cannot spend tho accus tomed amount In public restnurnnts. In many households there Is llttlo lovo of family. Women do not wish to hnvo children. This condition In itself is enough to wreck tho morals of a country, for no matter how bad tho woman If sho has n child tho spark of goodness nnd womanliness still burns. On tho other hand, tho woman who deliberately shuns tho motherly duty becomes hard and had at heart. This lack of homo ties leads to dis sipation. Tho idle wife must bo ninused. Onco she begins to drink sho Is forever restless. The world, holds not'enough to divert her. Sho must go out every night nnd thon to supper and to drink some more. Sho must lunch nnd dine here, thoro and evorywhoro and liquor accompanies ovory meal. Her home bores her. She oscnpes from It as every opportunity. Sho Is off with other men bocauso they In terest her for tho moment and furnish excitement. She begins to regard her husband as a human bnnk account, and resents tho situation when sho finds hho has ovordrawn her nccount. This condition nine times out of ten will end with divorce. Today, oven, divorce In tho ej'B of somo women Is a diversion. It gives them somothlng to do. It furnishes excitement to Jnded sensibilities, Smoking represents exaggerated stimulation of minds and bodies. Vul gatlty In dress Is tho natural result of tho woman's dondened sonso of de cency. Whon a woman drinks sho turns iccklesB. Hor first recklessness may hardly bo apparent oven to herself, but gradually It becomes more marked. As a result sho will say any thing she desires: she will do nnv- thing, no matter how disgusting, that sho wishes to do, and sho will wear tho most outrageous clothes Imagin able, Analyze the nervous, high-strung woman of today, the woman who Haunts hor petty vices In the fnco of Eocioty, nnd you will lind that the word "homo" means nothing to hor. By Mrs. Harriet Johnston Wood. VU'o-l'roHlilent nf tho Womnn'H jejuni i-iuiiriiKO iciiKU. HAT Is the matter with tim W New York woman? Her hus band! ir she has no hnsb.inii tiw.n hei men frionds. For Now York nun are directly responsible for what Now York women aro to-day. Hoes a woman smoko? Then It Is hecnuso her husband demands her companionship even In smoking. Ho may hnvo traveled In countries whero women smoko. Ho has becomo accus tomed to this, and misses It If bis wife does not Join him in a clgarot after tho salad, or with their coffee His Boltlshnoss leads her Into the habit. Does sho drink? Then her husband, or her men friends, have asked her to do so. They go out to dinner to gethor. The first question Sked by tho man Is: "What ROrt of n cock tall?" Or If he has learned her prof oronco the cocktail is ordered before she has drawn off her gloves. She drinks at first not because she likes tho taste of tho cocktail, but because tho man expects her to bo his "good Pil." When sho ilnally learns t0 cravo tho liquor he taught hor to drink tho man condemns her. Does sho wear low-cut gowns or Indulge) In nny extremes of dress? He sure ho has admired them on other women. .Men of today demand that their women folk shall ho In style, regardless thnt styles may ho shameless. A New Yorker will not havu a dowdy for n wife. And whon tho women have tried putting on all the finery they can they begin to strip It off again. Just at present It seems to me that they have tuken off nbout all they dan to satisfy man's desire to parado about with a ninrvolously dressed doll I Why aro ballet girls clad In daring fashion? To please male theatergo ers! Women at home know this, and sacrifice all womanly dignity to com pete with women of the stngo whom their husbands may admire. A woman of leisure must Ho, cajole, ( pot, pamper and please men In order 1 to obtain what she wants or oven necdB Murriago as a trade lias made women what they are. Some day they will wake up. They will cease to pamper and pander to men. By Miss Leonora Macadam. Tom-hor of Drimrtim'iit. W HUN you ask 1110 what Is the matter with New York wom en, t hole manners and tholr habits, I 'see opened up be fore me a inrge and painful subject In soriow I must admit thnt women" are helping to lower moials In New York. First, too much liberty Is given to the young woman. I do not mean that she should be Immured in a con vent until she comes out socially, but I bellevo thnt she should bo taught how to conduct herself properly In public and In private before sho goes forth Into the world. Today this Is done only in rare cases. The modern mother thereforo is to blame for tho conduct of the now generation of young women. Sho Is not content with the sweet manners of n modest girl. She demands that worldly dash In her daughter which causes comment, yes, but which Is so often the hnllmark of vulgarity. Tho mother does not recognize this as such. To hor it Is stylo, fashion, something sparkling and altogether to be desired In her daughter. From this scorn of sweetness and modesty in young girls opilng looso ness and carelessness among women In public. The young woman of to day thinks nothing of drinking In pub lic; in fnct, she awaits eagerly the time when sho may go Into a rcstau rnnt nnd order her cocktail. Smoking In public Is becoming too common. To see a woman, beauti fully gowned, Hmoking In her motor Is most offensive, yet walk down Broadway or Fifth avenue nny eve ning and you will seo that very thing. This all comes from familiarity with tho llfo of tho "woman In tho half world. U Is a dlfllcult thing today to tell 0110 class from the other. In dross. In habit. In mnnner, they are tho same. Their walk Is filled with suggestlveness. Their clothes aro designed to attract the attention of men. Here Is the great trouble with women of all classes in New York They think only or attracting men. They do not consider that gentleness or manner and dignity will Interest the desirable class or men. Until maternnl censorship Is exer cised over tho dress and tho habits or the girls who have tho wroiirt standard or manners nnd dress the moral tono or the city through worn en will gradually decline. By Mrs. Belle de Rivera. PrcHldoni of tho City Federation of Wom en's Clubi. THEUK Is a vnst difference be' tween lowering morals and ol fending good taste. Many wom en In New York do both, but, on 1 tho other hand, thero aro thousands of other women In this samo city who remain untainted, delightful and charming. When It comes to smoking In public I do not bellevo In It. I do not smoke, but I do not object to other women smoking if they choose, so long as they do not Indulgo tho habit In pub lic, whero It offends the more con servative element and defies the cus toms of our nation. It Is decidedly bad tnsto, but not Immoral. 1 nuifet say right hero that I cannot seo how a woman's smoking would Iiavo any specific or direct effect on tho moral drift of n community unless she carried tho habit to excess and through that 'excess became Irrespon sible. Di Inking Is an entirely different matter, and I must condemn It with out reservation. I have soen a great deal of drinking ninong women, and when you ask me what Is tho mntter with them, why do thoy do It, 1 would again say that It Is a matter of cus tom, nnd custom Is tho Now York womnn's greatest foo. Hoforo drinking In restaurants he canio a custom among women you saw little or it. No wthat It Is cur toniary you seo a great deal. Tho New Yoik woman is a slao of cus tom, nnd when sho breaks from this taskmaster and does somo Independ ent thinking alio will gain much. I do not bellovo thnt tho older Now York woman Is leading tho younger woman Into bad habits. Tho young er woman now leads her oldors. For Instance, n mlddle-nged woman goes Into a restaurant; sho has never drunk anything In such n plnco; sho secB It going on about her among the young wonion; It seems to bo tho cus tom; sho followB tho custom bocauso bho does not want to appear behind tho times. Tho dashing young woman In scurch of new sensations sets the daring examplo and warns her elders thnt they must follow or bo counted as "bus-boons." Women Explain the Tendencies Deplored by Dr. Haywood 4 1 1 ; m , ' ',y$& , w ? ,3Smm i "! ' .. V '-- y'k' sQrataig f ww) 3m HHaKHfHIMKBFiHpr Radical and Careless Mothers Are to Blame. Lack of Home-Making Is to Blame. fcNWVM VP Rich Women, by Bad Examplo, Aro to Blame. 1 fn n f ivlfvr li Sm fArS .Ul 7ji-HH Husbands Are to Blame. Ji &t t . !1J Logged, Burned STOCKMEN throughout the west will be gratified to loam that Uncle Sam is studying means for using sheep to re generate overgrazed ranges. Unique experiments now be ing conducted by the United States forest service at tho experiment sta tion within the Wallowa national for est, in northeastern Oregon demon strato that tho grazing of sheep un der proper restrictions is an impor tant factor in tho work of reseedlng overgrazed ranges. The problem being studied Is that of restoring to depleted ranges their orlglnul covering of mountain bunch grass, tho sclentlllc name of which is Festuca vlriduln. This grass is one of the most important of tho summer forage plants In tho higher ranges of tho northwest and Its rapid dlBap pearanco from the ranges by reason of overstocking could only be regard ed ns n direct economic loss to the stockmen. Special attention has therefore been given to the restora tion of the grasB by tho plant ecolo gist of tho forest servico nnd his hit est report shows that a thorough re seeding has been secured upon the areas to which a protectlvo grazing system has been applied. In the Initial stages three different methods of reseedlng were used. Upon one area tho seed was nlloweu to S'teep Grazing on drop to tho ground without treatment. The seed was briiBhed In with n brush drag or harrow on tho second tract nnd upnn"tho third a band of sheep wns passed over tho area in n com pact body twico. This summer it has been found thnt tho area not treated has tho lightest stand of seedlings, whllo tho resulting seedling stand on the other two areas showed but little variation In density, but later, during tho period of drought, the seedlings on tho area brushed over died out badly, while on tho area upon which the sheep harrowed la tho seed thero was very llttlo loss. Closer examination developed tho fnct that the root systems of tho seed which had been tramped In wero one half to one Inch deeper In tho soil than tho root systems of tho seed which had been brushed In, this con dition being duo to tho fnct that tho seed was ground Into tho soil more deeply by the sheep thnn by the brush harrow. So far as tho Investigation hns been carried It Indicates that n dens er nnd more drought-resistant stand of bunch grass can bo secured where tho sheep nro allowed on an area after tho plants ha"o seeded and dropped the seed than whero they aro excluded throughout tho entire Benson. TIiIb discovery Is n confirma tion of tho practicability of the plan to ubo ranges during nlternnte spring and lall periods so that a thorough reseedlng may bo eecured by natural means Tho stockmen grazing their cattle on the national forests In tho south west, csptcinlly In Colorado and New Metlco, have suffered seilous tosses and Grazed Slope. during the present summer through the cattle eating oak leaves. In (hat section of the country tho season hns been unusunlly dry and grass extremely scnice. To eke out tho scanty forage supply the cnttlo have browsed heavily on the scrub oak which covers largo portions of tho range. Ordinarily tho stock does not browse on the oak and tho llttlo they do get, taken with the other food, Is not Injurious, hut when, as In tho present season, the oak browse furnishes a largo proportion of tho dally food of tho cattlo tho results nre serious. The oak leaves and sprouts contain a lnrge percentage of tannic ncld. Thu action of this acid on the stomach Is extremely Injurious nnd tho losses have been unusunlly severe. The symptoms of the dlsenso are staring eyes, feverish and blistered lips nnd noso, the animal ceases to grazo or seek for food, and the hnlr is nil turned tho wrong way, as In caso of loco poisoning. The animal does not chew Us cud nnd In a comparatively short time It becomes too wenk to re main on Its feet nnd death rapidly follows. So far as is known the only avail ablo remedy for this troublo is Un seed oil given us a drench In amounts from ono to two quarts. Tho oil np pears to overcome the Injurious ef- an Inferior Range. fects of the tannic ncld and If tho dls enso Is not advanced too far and tho animal can bo furnished sutllclont lood so It will not bo forced to oat tho oak It will generally recovor. Thero aro emergencies in which the government must depnrt from tho usual policy of conserving the timber, and disposing of It by well regulated sales. It Is somo times necessary to destroy bodies of timber of consider able extent, or nt least to cut the trees nnd leave tho logs lying In tho woods, whero they may, or may not, becomo useful before decny sets In. Such apparent wastefulness Is mndo necessary most frequently by attacks of tho Ulnck Hills beetles upon the western yellow c Hock Mountain pine. The destruction of beetle-Infested trees Is in reality no more waste ful than would bo tho destructive ac tion necessary to stamp out an Infec tious dlsenso among cattle, horses or sheep. Trees which havo been at tacked by tho niack Hills pine beotlo aro harboring tho dangerous pest for almost a year after tho attack Is made. Aftor that period, tho beetles Inning left them, they aro no moro a menace than nro tho blenched boneB of n steer scattered upon tho pralrlo. Tho Black Hills beotlo hnB long since passed beyond tho confines of the region which gives It nnnmo. Lnst winter the Insect wns discovered In menacing numbers upon tho San Isa bel national forest In southern Colo rado. Ab tho result of 1908 depreda tions, nearly TOO yellow plno trees, practically In a solid body, wero dying. Only peoplo who agroo with you listen to reason. -.wcmawiniHf'i !!' Li .