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| | THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1908. Antics of the Suf fragettes Are Making American Women Ridicuicus ! How Long Shali They Continue? Asks Mrs. James Henry Hargreave es “VOTING BOOTH WOMEN The English Doormat Wife Has a Real | Grievance, She Admits, But Asserts | That Her Cause is Not Ours. ||) WEAR i UR byt ( FEW AMERICAN WOMEN REALLY WANT TO VOIE EEO PEACHINE! FOR THE Those Who Do Woud Require Ferfumed Batiots Made Like Dance Frogrammes ’ and Poiling Piaces Like Boudoirs, The Evening World herey from a woman reader, ridiculing the woman suffrage movement an ith presents a remarkable letter h some English agitators now visiting New York are en- deavoring to promote. Her thrusts are Hi ing. een, her irony unspar- Hh ah Miss Nixola Greeley-Smith rephe fo the Editor of The Evening World; How long ure you going to sufter the antics of 4 i Hi American women ridiculous in your columns? | I read the other day in The Evening World an iniv.s.e. ici Mrs. &y Bor:man Wells, an Lng! Woman, in which she said American women @re just waking up to the fact that men make the laws for them. ‘ean THAT DOWDY) h| 44) FRUMP BE DOING ih c IN THERE THESE \ THREE Hours ? ' Simultancously with this appeared a notice of a street parade to| LEZ be held by the women s of New York on Feb. 16. Women of all profession said, will morch in battalions from the Battery to Union| A WOMAN’S VOTING BOOTH, ACCORDING TO MRS, HARGREAVE. Square in order to demonstrate to New York men that New York women eee Gem Te Tafa i i Saal # ‘want to vote | 5 Peete cod: n't believe that this parade will ever take place. TW p T RS ave 1VES ig t to Tiecan women—even Anicrican women agitators— e too much sense j to be led into such a ridicwovs exhibition by the example of a few howl-| ing dervishes of the Englisn suffrage d movement, English Women's Czuse N Shirk Just Because | WILLS PROBAT irs.| who gave trading stamps would walk! i ate| Way with the fem vote. , A who But even with all these radical f ii a t | x oting s Unpieasant? i deny tha — oe. changes vubt if a permanent inter- i s could be aroused i en, | that politics 1s too high a topic je intellects to grasp, as the would have us infer me: Quite the contrary. It ts, : asse 5 ents | Sueur cae Hain on| Surrogate Passes Testaments of “Tredwell Gris,” Once moved from our intere js and ideals. Society Leaders. term the en- Emancipa‘ton of Sex Sure to Come, Nix-| ola Greeley-Smith Argues, But as an _| Effect, Not as a Cause. belteve. her nation for than becaus, Tam not an old fashioned woman ® eewing circle woman, not a ma Gend, not a boarding house wife, Bhank heaven! a ms to me t voting. even for & man, 1s a disagreeable task accom-| pushed under most disagreeable candi- s. I would no more think of be-| Bot want to vote, and I confess I allow Sfudsing tt to him SF wanting to help my husband to vote for me exactly as im do ft than I would insist on helping J allow him to put on my rubbers or do| #!™ start the furnace or mow the lawn, not, n, Yet 1 do|t lub w By Nicola Greeley--Smith. “Pu influence ty 1s not a fleld where undue flourtshes.”’ WOMANS L! SVED BY MAN CLOTHES UN Falls from Fifth-Story Win- dow, but Is Caught in Tangled Rope. A network of clothesiines spread out This letter from a woman reader of The Evening World attacking the Suffragi is, in some respects, a remarkable document. dismissing the Lenox Thedw wilis of twoo ¢ his four made ont ¥ ago, each other three, Qnything else that !s uninteresting andy Few Women Would Care to Vote. @isagreeable and that he ts gallant’ women who haven't enough to wish to save me from. And fathers or brothers may Zam just as grateful to him for one as|on their own mn, for the other. |the harsher dat If the majority of American women|I don't see w were not like me we would have the! add to their trou tions of s husbands or ve to put bbers and perform all les men relieve us of.) they should want to| by voting, but even Ratiot: Nich bo an Ca well worn arguments against giving Even the suffragettes must admit that claim a vote because they couldn't get women the ballot in such a manner fm a republican country the majority/ men to vote for them. t ke thi ouglit to rule, and so long Gr G0 eae tyne Suftaettes make the mistake ef Sarah K., Phoche, Gertrude wea a it make them appear almost of women don’t wish to vote, the] thinking they have to convert american!|On Oct 8, iow, euray te new, but it does so without that es, like any othe! jority, | men to the idea of wome: : {2 , 1905, Sara : u : id acquiesce in the will of tie|don't. ‘They need towered ee cues | there, and Phoebe E. Tredwell was Inid blind violence which usually char- t American men have ng to give American women anything! Mey want. “The moment. they realize, that their mothers and wives want to| ‘always been wiliz| 2éside her tn Trinity months later, tng trude and Julla in x fyater number. &! Woman in the Voting Booth. ladies have ever Cemetery a few the Misses Ger- acterizes the efforts of the paras’ | woman fighting for her right to @ ancient man- It not only exploits some of the | ‘trom the rear of No, 92 Orchard street saved the life of Mrs, Esther Spizc sixty years oid, in her five-story plunge had stumbled through an open window. She 1 not get off unscathed, however, and rneur Hospital euf through space to-day after she fering n leg and many bruises. Mrs. Spiza lves at No. 103 Hester strect and went to the Orchard street tene o r friend, Mrs. Becky Shipi ves on the fifth floor. Her eyesight has been falling for some ne and in groping for the door of the Shipinsky flat she stumbled out the MM wonder if these vote that moment yome: T 0 5 = ehought what the practical resulta of/#ufruge, | AU eevelwomenyttie fork PON omer fapae laa cling. indow ealeaan en the ballot would be. ir mothers and wives don't) Bes Biot . it Two stories down a web of clothes Siwonder if they resilse that In order| anth ', Gud if, any feelings may bel A broth Lenox ‘'redweit Nevertheless, the main objection] ney was stretched out from the house de slize Uh en as indication, they are very! c: " " . See 2 Y Hy ast CO Cl @0 make voting booths habitable to the| red of hearing about it, and having ft) oreested the willy first of Sarah K. which this reader voices to woman's 'to a pole. She broke through them, the who was seve: exploted at the expense of thelr i mE RA UG a ah y years old when she| F i fy with pier mirrors, be equipped with |. JAMES HENRY HARGREAVE. | undue intl ind it di ° powders, curling tongs and cosmetics, ew York, Feb, 2 on ue fan uences in each ca, women would find it disagreeable to | naa le raMnavertine ———— he tr the first contest was held| @i=qttaenenemra Ono | tra ain Attn pNGraecttatt ‘| MESSENGER BOY petoee ate Surrogate | Fr “E:) RIXOUA GREGORY seerrer, vote. Z i | eut the female vote. | ntimated by his dead, I will not attempt to dispute this. Few men find the casting of a These things ‘ould be necessary in! order to get the woman into the booti, ___ GOOD SLEUTH. |#*:" for ballot an agreeable task. They regard it, as women later may come to| Once she Was there sie Would leisurciy/Saw Bates of Stk Transferred | jai! .. "4 regard it, as a necessary duty. | vemover her hat,"o her hair up over From Waxgo: ac |tingham H. N Filte waien sam she le e sband vote for her, just as she| Win, powder her nose, manicure he ore eee meee who drew The wife who says she lets her husband J | | Fi 5 das, chang shirt waist, perhaps, | Caer ee Wa then, made nervous by the execrat- outside, es exactly by which to the ot m. W Sterling, her, secretary of — th nch of tne Union Paciti jets him put on her rubbers, should ask herself whether, in exchange for both these amenities, she does not too often, in a mental and sp ual sense, put his rubbers on for him. Husby, a driver for James Fitzgerald, a six merchant, at.Spring | roting and calling her na 1 2y do vulside a siveping cur dress- hom. | Skidmore, a ; > | the world as a whole—nor even of | Moin’ to-day,| walk out withuuUleven Grand street, and | bt, OF “the ‘Tread: Have Wives a Right to Shirk? | Wen as a whole, It would be" ike horealiee | Benjamin Vaa Arsdale, of No, 289 Grand | He Witness, cae I have, no quarrel ath ay 1€ she! introducing a lot of new pupils Into a Sea PN reot, were arrested to-day by Police-| Six ot uwais little will pa: 8. The impulse of love ts @ ol th b o ! ie } . K s us le will pa lass a month or so before graduation suas Would Have to oe Changed. jinn Cotiny and Culligan at Varick ana| People are dead, but one of humble service. Lut has she! gay and making the advance scholars | Ur course, tie bullot would have to be! Vandam streets after they had attempt-| decided that men of such e1 the right to inflict the greeabl | Ne the el vd, too, Women would not care) €d (© pass several bolts of silk valued | @cter would not have been parties to BUS sO er OE Ss eM them { {unm back to the beginning of all the janged, too, ; Ket attairs| 2b,342, trom Husby’s wagon to an-| the willis had their been y impro Jes upon her husband—to shirk th mM) school books and go all over the same to handle the unwieldy blunket altalrs} other vehicle, priety, legal or otherwise, in it. | |for herself? mistakes till the new recruits had in use to-day al bo aymadey tke Lua! told to drive the silk to| > Sth eRTHNG ay t is notmens| Undoubtedly men will give women {caught up with them. ance programmes, with Uny individual) tHe Wharf, of the Star Unton NER Con hE a nl THEN ballotawheniewomentwislitevand New wi H | Ms Arties are er No. North Hiver, Instead, onec eithe ae |New . Done eA Ne UN K cord, would! Grove to Varlelke and. Vandain streets | Beckett says, the have deme ated their fitness for it emaniileeds|CalliNotiofi sex have to be provia y might have) that they and he were n but of Race Movements. Where he was me the other three ‘ar from di the possession of | vrms, for Samuel Lend | colbeypertulned. F | nlert messonger boy saw the | Visited Te platens. bat tric a superior woman, the| Perhaps the introduction of Mrs, Lil- Bed ate ous jooktumes would mayer iceman, ones anes Cela years) American man halls anything that Me Devereux Blake, Mrs. Cobden Saun- ee Gh Sd aby, ieee eH| in the W®oilesale district s en Jhors like real intelligence in her with|derson, &c., into Senator Platt's Sun nnets’ we created by miiliners, nd} fis of a si:nila Kt Aart athetic de day-school clas: for insta 5 High tn th more aicenstul, have deen commen ot DASHED BABY'S BRAINS sion pate eth) | ay-achoot “clas tor netance, "meh | fate. s quite true that the Su F i yety | a seca ok UN, OUT ON THE STREET, |,,1,'* ate true that the Suftrasists) coriais, And the plcture of thase Indies BONWIT, HARRIS & CO. . nae lel 2180 Racer neeistal sharing the book with Platt or Murphy | -— MONCTY B., Feb. 4.—In an woman of to-day, before affiliating hae ee ees SS Rue IE bern ans, | Accordi*g to recent announcements| Sane frenzy Mrs. Thomas V. Fouc self with the suffrage movement, asks} oy man gaye: aay sa8i 5S000 Ae 3 Moin Ae ¥. preaident of Oppenhelm, two-year-old child from|iorself whether by so ¢ she we eeiic ponies sation at af fuel Port Clothing House, ‘Brondway and Fifth|@nd dashed Its brains out on the fey | sidiary detail and ignore the mass, a8! pie in pollties would be retarded he avenue, at Twenty-first street, ground, Rushing back into the house| women are undoubtedly prone to do. p uid be retarded by just so much, To those who have been observers of I heard the other day that the dean She picked up another ‘of her children | the remarkable progress made by the and started out wi but was dis-|Woman Suffrage Will Come as an “qn Flammed ? ft, restrained ‘aR med concern under I. D, Levy's| covered | and before she : ‘ of the woma ri in th elty isiied’a sWants” are known every- | seneralship, this announcement. is| reached the door. Effect, Not as a Cause aA Le Nt a eS Hae| ea sea Y- | cquivaient ‘to an assurance that Bos.| The woman was at one time an tn-| No reasoning being o the f ply to a suggestion | Bat in onortay Standard of domestic | wit, Harris & Co. are to be'a distinct|mate of an insane asylum, WAM Se tee rar that she try to get the young women} try to be absolute tisements, They ctor In the clothing trade of New| supposed. to have recovered But to me woman's interested: | no undue agitation in + gorary eithe) York, mania, ler husband 15 >| oO on ! Uiputiewardonttcwantic | MAL eirolel th ODT ALY, u In the matter of choosing dress| workshops of the Interco |merely a verx small ts ‘t want young people in values gv Greater New and wome 1 and men are essentially alike, | here. Besides the child whom she killed | with many graver and more important | {8 Movement! We want mature women | spite of the F the majority of both sexes being quick | to-day she has seven other children, SE eae eere erate! portan' | trom titty to seventy ‘ eens the pubs ‘OR A POS! to olsnoveraw he HR cape) of oo es Movement for industrial or so-| 1 thought then that nothing would je country. 0 | rtness and ah 'Y are most larg em! ine Lal Wor laalithevdecrenit PXENBUTER, SELLER, essfully combined with ‘moderate| WARMED PIGEONS ON ROOF. | cia! emancipation would carry the better emphasize the decrepitude of the ps EMENT, HOME, &C., IN ANY | fina ‘Co, has always eon attributed norulaWandlconseauent yy cuel pol NlcAll iw Aace A eauWtn sironaren a eae Fe Price NEWSPAPER THAN THE to the accuracy with hich that house In an attempt to thaw out some half/ emancipation of woman ai & with it The really new women—the young WORLD YOU ARE USING NOTHING | 's accustomed to giuge the tastes ‘and | frozen pigeons in a coop on the roof of |as a matter of course. When it comes,| _ooe Timid, Lam eal the | young OU ARE USING NOTHI demands of this. discriminatin, Beer a : os Title Rp Ala ea LSA pe he art seaic BUT A “SUBSTITUTE” FOR THE J the public: In other words, to the un. | the Ave-story “cnement house at No. 121) it will come as An efiiet, Hot & cali |trades—it they have wakened to poilt- GENUINE” OR A “JUST-AS-GOOD” | erring: judgment of Mr. Levy’ tn com: {Clinton strect to-day several boys upset | Womar can have arrel with | cal tases at all, heed the cail of the THAT WILL MAKE YOU PAY “EX- | dining fashton-valuo and ‘money-value | the heating apparatus Of stove—| man. She can win no battle against | {arger worll movementy cant ure foe ae in al] the concern’s productions jand set the roof 0.1 4 }nim. But she can help him fight his|for man or woman alone but for the PERIENCE MONEY” BEFORE THE STORY IS HALF TOLD. The World printed 1,405,032 Sep- arate Advertisements in 1907— 202,747 more than the Herald or any other newspaper anywhere. Sergt. Ross, of the traMe squad, turn- Bonwit, Harris & Co, are 4 i Pace ie hare are! Wie olothing and furnishings: eRe | through one story before the firemen | she always has shared them when he heat merchandise for the Inast money" |C uid check It, “Tho damage will be/ prings them to her. 0 dopted b ._ Ley; abou h “ity . a slogan adopt y Mr. Levy for the fost of the pigeons were thaw-| One of the frults of victory must ul ¢ Oppenheim, Coil! A ; catia Fi HLhetiteanabaticheninnn nena camortae those that weren't will not have | timately be the right of suffrage for Will be attuned. Operating under the ut the cold. | her In any equitable social readjustment > | race. ———.—_ SONS OF WEST VIRGINIA. West Virginians Mving in New York | will meet next Thursday at 7 P. M. at ne Hotel Manhattan for the purpose of tangled ends Winding about her legs and neck. Lower down she struck some more, wiich wound avout her ahd broke er f. and by the time she passed toe first floor she was wound from head to foot tn lines, that she failed to ch stone flagging of the yard, vended several feet t pa su me of the Je wound t and another n » x Cohen, ot > cut her free. Surg pital, found thi ouverneur Hos- had a simple trac- ture of the , but assured her friends that she would recover. COUNT OT ON THE KAISER. Mrs, W. K. Vanderbilt Satie in Sulte Suid to Have Been Reserved, K. Vanderbilt, sr, and her Mra, W. shter, Miss Rutherford urope on the Kal it ts engaged for the er husband. yelleved was 0 Coontess Szecie Etateroom sulte N und, Vanderbiit and are now Kalserin Au- The former and her Hungart ex To the woman who bakes, Royal is the greatest of time and labor savers, Makes home baking easy, a pleasure and a profit. Baking Powder The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar ‘With minimum trouble and cost bis cuit, cake and pastry are made fresh, clean and greatly superior to the ready~ 5 fi sume management. they are equipped ————_— which shall result from the injustices | forming a State society. The meet Don't Be Cajoled—Use World Ads. | to""Surpls Mie clorniig. Aeas"'ot ail] pu cured im @ to 14 days, Faz0,Out. [and the ilacriea of to-day. Coren OS Sy) Eas meting —— <= Sim’ to, dress with distinction and scam | 2ett i Euarantend fo cure Any case of Tich~) To give women the ballot now would [\harestown. W.Va. Sectety, at which omy, St a Se Te Shae eo tantes rattled “bos: “ae | probably not advance the interests of ‘wil apeake en reiniana made, dry, found-in-the-shop variety. — | | STOPTHATPAIN OC With a Lambert Snyder Vibrator. There 1s only one diseazse—Congestion. There is only one cure—Circulation. 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