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SLACKERS IN SKIRTS.

PLAIN WORDS TO SOME GIRLS. In ail article denouncing "slackers in skirts," a Johannesburg paper says: The '( Johannesburg girl who likes to think i she is in that soulless circle known as i the ''smart set" may enter for a war .] fund tennis tournament in the hope of ! picking up a prize, or <jo to a war fund i dance in the hope of doing the same with ; a husband, but there her war activities . cease. : A street collection is much too tiring, ; and must be left to married women and r school girls. Helping witn a refreshment buffet for soldiers, or doing some other humble task upon which no limelight shines isn't smart enough. And. of course, she can't nurse, because it never struck her to try to...learn; and besides, the uniform wouldn't go with the present color of her hair. So month after month !>lie talks dress, plays tennis, goes to dances and theatres, and experiments with her complexion as though there wasn't a war within a million miles. The men who are fighting frr her may languish and die because there are not enough nurses and hospital assistants. The wives* and children left behind may suffer in silence for the lack of a helping hand. A dozen national needs may be only half supplied because there are not sufficient voluntary workers. But the smart girl set doesn't worry. Probably she doesn't even know. She's too busy studying fashion plates, and wondering whether Madame Cleopatra's fatless face. . cream at a guinea a pot is really all it is cracked up to be. Jf. this terrible war ever crosses her mind at all (which is doubtful), it excites nothing more than a romantic desire to take a hand- j some and slightly-wounded officer out j for a drive. (N.B. —Xohody under the : rank of captain need apply). 1 There are exceptions to this appalling mixture of folly and indifference found j in the Wealthy homes of the Rand— j thank heaven for them. But they are j not numerous. A distressing amount of j intelligence and energy which could be | usefully employed in war time, is wasted j oil a lap-dog sort of existence, which is ! bad enough in peace time, but which in j a period when the very existence of the ! \(ar is at stake is nothing short of ft j crime against the State. j

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19170323.2.40

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, 23 March 1917, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
402

SLACKERS IN SKIRTS. Taranaki Daily News, 23 March 1917, Page 6

SLACKERS IN SKIRTS. Taranaki Daily News, 23 March 1917, Page 6

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