d large camps of soldiers in lonely places, who were freed from the neighbor's eye: women also were withdr
ny newspaper cuttings which d
WAR, AN
ice Darl
ay, said the harm the war had done to the morals of the
of this country. This had now reached a point that it could be seen in a walk alo
t unhappily it cannot he denied. And a second paragraph, taken from the Daily Telegraph, carries us a stage f
er, after advocating early marriage and urging the necessity for a higher moral stan
ve of sentimental patriotism which had swept over the country. Out of 112 soldiers taken to the Rochester Road I
ans. It is, I know, easy to exaggerate the situation. I have, however, taken pains to gain all possible information on the subject. I find it the opinion of those who are best qualified to know that the most alarming feature of the problem now is the greatly increased danger of spreading the diseases, caused by the shifting of infection from the professional prostitute to young girls out for larks and presents. I was told by one worker in the Police Court Mission, for instance, of a club for girls, aged from fourteen to twenty-six years, among whom there was probably not a single pure girl. A woman re
question is, what it is best to do. The answer is not easy. For while everyone is agreed about the need for action, disagreement as to what form the a