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The Fayette County Union West Union, Fayette Co., Iowa 06
Jun 1918 Page 7 column one and two |
HEROIC WOMEN OF FRANCE
They Have Even Stepped Into the Place of Work Animals
By
DR. ALONZO TAYLOR
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My words are not powerful enough to do even scanty justice to the
most heroic figure in the modern world, and of ages past -- the women
of France. Of the healthy men who are engaged in the military service
in France, practically all are engaged either in transportation or in
the manufacture of munitions, leaving the agriculture absolutely to the
women. Not only this, but they have stepped into the place of
work animals; you can go into any section of France today and see women
of magnificent, noble womanhood hitched to the plow and cultivating
the soil. All of the agriculture rests upon their shoulders. The home,
always an extremely efficient home, maintains a few old men, the
wounded and the tubercular. Uncomplaining, with high devotion, with an
attitude that amounts almost to religious exaltation, the woman of
France bears the burden.
Now, conditions being as they are, does
it lie within the heart of the American people to preserve and hold to
every convenience of our life at the expense of adding an additional
burden to the woman hood of France? That is the exact question that is
involved in our substitution of other cereals in place of wheat.
The women of France must be enabled to hold up the morale of the
French soldier until next spring. The morale of the house decides the
morale of the soldier in the fighting line. We can do this by giving to
them the greatest possible freedom in their food supply, and of this,
wheat is the chief factor. |
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transcribed and submitted by
Judith Schmitz for
Iowa in the Great War |
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