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A, | } | TALLY SHOT WOMAN, THEN TRIED SUICIDE \Wohn Cavanagh, an Insurance Agent, Fired Four Times at Mrs. French. (LONG ANNOYED HER Cavanagh, a Married Man With Three Children, Is Now Under Arrest. (Special to The Drening World.) WATERBURY, Nov. 17.—John Cavanagh, an insurance agent, shot and | Mortally wounded Mrs. Edward L, French on the street here to-day and then attempted sulcide. The billet he fired at himeelf inflicted only a slight wound, and he !s now under arrest. Invasion ot Fields Conn., THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER Why Should Women Flatter Men by to Imitate Them? Madame Ferrero Asks 24e— ‘Feminist, or “New Woman,” the Most | Abject in World, Declares Lom- broso’s Daughter, Herseit a World Famous Sociologist and Economist. EXCEL ONLY IN CONSTANCY, | NOT IN INTENSITY OF LOVE. of Sterner Sex Un- fits Woman for Her Naturat Sphere, the Home—Men the Greater Criminals, Says Wife of Mrs. Fr h is the wife of an em-| ployee of the Naugatuck Gas Company B li Hi . tnd Cavanagh is a married man with rulliant Historian. three children. According to Mrs. French, the insurance agent had been annoying her with his attentions for| > ATTY, Weeks. He met her yesterday, and she BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. taineraca nay Sannin a bang) Do men love more or less than women? cavanaeh weltea iw euelei ane wear | Are they more or less sensitive than women to physical suffer Mrs, French's home to-day and waylaid ing? her as she was returning from a visit to the house of a relative. She ran co the street car track and screame attract the attention of the crew and This, in brief, is the catechism OTE of an approaching troile ahi io dea) ca dio dees Oye qnagh fired at her from the sidewalk. | have made an exhauative atudy of ae sey mist Nit Theaagy, ithe condition of women, particularly in Hdn ih Hl ‘the United States," Madame Ferrero the right hand ed anoth : bullet at bh ssile simply |@a!d, in reply to my firet question. “‘I cut a mark across his forehead made a condensation of my father's food, this time) the curjhad’ reached! iloilgreat work (on (criminals, for popular fied. He was arrested an hour jater in I have written treatises on various @ saloon FORCED 10 Li DOWN AND REST TER EXRTICN. = L New York Woman Is Finally subjects bearing on the economic and social relations of men and women.” Has Great Grasp on Economics. All very big subjects, suri for a tiny Httle woman who loo! ked like a miniature edition of Eleonora Duse as she sat before the open fireplace in the home of George Haven Putnam, 355 West Eighty-sixth street, (quick nervous gestures of two very fine Italian hands, tore my card to pieces as she talked. But none too big for Madame Ferrero, who, I discovered, has a grasp of social and ecenomic conditions the worid ov that may well put our political econo- mists of the clubrooms and the woman suffrage platform to shame. Why should women seek to Relieved from Condition imitate men?” she asked me, gravely. “Why pay men that That Had Become compliment? Deplorable. “Tam not in sympathy with the feminiest ‘or New Woman) movement at all The fer s are really the Among the 1 persons living in Most abject of all women in their atti- k who hay ade tude toward man, because they put him statements for publication with refer- up on a pedestal and try to be } » the Coope emedies ts Mrs, bim. Levelley, of 414 Amsterdam ave- “Woman is not the equal of nue, New York, who gives the. follow-| man. Man is not the equal of dnemacceunt OFS leniennenence woman. Their roles are different “Having but recently recovered from a ee line of iilness, due to stomach | and their faculties are different and liver trouble, I esteem it a pleasure | “But there can be no question of fas well as a duty to speak a few words | Superiority between them, The fines of praise for that best of all medicines, Woman can never be anything but & Cooper's New Discovery second rate man. Why should she seek “For more than three years I scarcely to imitate him at all? J, for one, would (had a well day. My stomach hurt me not flatter him to that extent nearly all the time. My petite was Mental Processes Differ. very poor and food distressed me. I “I assure you 7 do not think myself was weak and extremely nervous—could tnferlor io my husband, my father or not sleep, felt tired and worn out all the my brother, but I recognize that my time. My housework became drudgery, mental processes are not the same. | and after a little exertion I would be “I know men very wel. I studied for compelled to Ne down and rest. ten years at the University of Turin, “My vitality was at low ebb and my and {t was very curious to observe the jevetem completely run down. 1 tried different mental processes of men and numerous remedies without benefit; in women, often equally brilliant, Unques- fact, nothing Helped at until 1 | Uonably women learn faster than men faking Cooper's New Discovery, : i 4 ening yecovers, which But men retain what they learn more Jed 10, try (after by friends who had . “After taking fet few weeks, I began to easily and more exactly. “Another curious thing is that women can study five or six different subjects efited by It, per medicine a much stronger nerves were uieted and my stomaca this 1s extraordinarily difficult. A ipavemne it ne Nhe, tegubles A full woman student does not object to pass- ipletely restored me, and I gained six |1n6 five or six different examinations in ‘and one-half pounds while taking it. 1 | totally different studies tn one day. To wleep like a child and awake if the | a mon this is very emba sing. morning feeling refreshed and invigor- ated. ‘I have “Men greater criminals than wome continued Mme. Ferrero, “Crim- inality among women is almost unquestionably are gained steadily ever since and My appetite is good and | food agrees with me. I can scarcely press my thankfulness for the ood this Cooper medicine has done Quite.a number of persons of my feel splendid. a guaintanoe have used Cooper's New entirely limited to women of the covery with satisfactory results, and ae 5 m glad to be able to recommend a | "der world, Maternity holds medicine that has proved to be so gen-| woman back from ertme, Matern: erally helpful. . . L. T, Cooper or his assistants can be ity 48, of course, woman's great ween at any time at Riker's New Drug Store, No. 2 West Fourteenth street, | just off Fifth avenue, New York, where a demonstration of the Cooper medi- eines is in daily progress, The Cooper jremedies are on sale at all the Riker | |gtores, and can be obtained at any other role, It is what has made her so much better morally than man.” “And will she always remain so? inquired. ‘Will an equal moral stand- ard for both sexes never prevail?’ Men Never so Moral as Women, “Never,” replied Madame Porrero ‘amilingly, “4f you expect to make men as moral as women, Of course, to re- |duce women to the moral status of men would not be impossible, but it would drug store. A | be disastrous { | ‘Nature does not require morality ae IC e we understand it from man,'' Madame @ || Ferrero went on, “Paternity is not his rol maternity is woman's, His role in the scheme of nature 1s supplemen- tary; woman {s the guardian of the peciaes—ban is merely an incident in {ts preservation. To-day he devotes | himself to malcing outside conditions the What? Lost Articles. When? Every Day. By Whom? By Readers of World “Lost & Found” Advertisements, \ best for the mother and her family. “It is my opinion that woman's may be best for the individual wife to work. She is freer, more independent, but it i# bad for so- | clety ae a whole. |not exercie preserving care over her |household, She doew not see the hole in the curtain, the break in the chetr— lr id have them attended to, consequent- | | work should be in the home. It | “The wife who works outside does (hese tings axe throws eway, and! at No.) and with | Are they superior. equal or inferior to women mentally, and will they ever be equal to women morally? } I put this morning to Mme. Ferrero, wife of the noted Italian historian now in New York, daughter of Cesare Lombrose, the world famous criminologist, and, in her own country, well known as a writer on sociology and economics. [that means social waste—a loss to Soclety, even though the individual wife earns money for new curtains and chairs, “Men love more intensely than women,” promptly answered Mme. Ferrero, when I led her by @ question from the chill heights of economics into the warmer valley of the heart. “Oh, much more intenselu—for a time! Woman's love is more constant. It is a tranquil name. | Once a woman loves and has a child, she has attained her aim further one man, She looks no unnatural faithful. Often this larly among worldly women, but it is generally from the force of ctrcum- stances, not in thelr own natures | Love No End for a Man. “Love is not an end for a man a: (is for a woman for her happens, to be un particu- it CASTELLANE 10 ATTACK FORMER “JOY” R PARIS, Seeking MOVE TO PUNISH DERS IN WIFE IN COURT THE CITY'S AUTOS 1t is natural for her to love Princess Sagan Will Have Defend Herself in Fi Children, Paris Hea lo ght for Madame Ferrero said, | @Waiting sit ae ma "9 emotions ) Castellane's for lave more force ian wo. 1 iBT t Panel rae foman's--| three children with the cor “Do you believe women are less sensi- | at It Will prov live than men?” I asked. ieee oan Cen Stns My father thinks so ana has done | {2° Anna Gould, but moenitoirace i | Princess was freed ve it,” Madame Ferrero an- ‘ i swered, “but 1 de The case will be aq iy " n't agree with him.| morrow, at which tl : ‘omen are more accustomed to pain, {inal edil_ “4 ay to quterlue therefore they show it less. Joase wil 1 within nost timid woman would bel Bae ald { In the forthcoming trial the Count ealanael make the fuss on her death-| says he will make serious charges pea ae # man does over a stmple|against lis former wife. The Count ae explains that he refrained fro ing f is Is @ very unimportant question, | the evidence at his command at the however. Why should we argue about | time of the divorce “out of respect for the mental or emotional differences of |the mother of his children.” The pub men and women? Nature intended them | llc, however, believes that whatever re to be different ‘straint he submitted to was wholly for I wrote a treatise, the purpose of effecting 2 canundi teins atise, a atudy of | settlement from the Cou : nature, which proves that,| The Prince and Princess De Sagan ave as far back tn history of plant life ae| Making an outward show of living in we can go, nature sought to produce |Henema necin tacdwe thar inane two distinct different individuals |serious breach between them and tha “¢ . divorce edings would have bee One thing I will say for my | tevun thie were it noteforeene ser,” Mme. Ferrero concluded, “J | Princess's fear that they would serious!y don't blame woman in the least for her attempt to seize man's occupations, | i “His own use of machines has tended | to drive her from her home, but she should haVe fought for her home. She| should have said: ‘I will not go into! the factory or the fields.'!. Whatever| men may feel on the subject of woman's | invesion, they should realize that they have brought it upon themselyes.”’ THRASHED MAN HE SAYS WAS MASHER Beaten One Declares He Was | Hero Protecting Woman From Assailant. struck the | corroboration | An admission that he plaintiff and the strong of that admission furnished by the plaintif'r face resulted in Albert H. Bernatein, a clerk in the Savoy Hotel, | Twenty-ninth street and Sixth avenue, being held in $500 ball to-day in the Yorkville Court by Magistrate Cornell for trial in Speciai Sessions George Schaeffer, of No. ton avenue, the complainant, said he had seen Bernstein strike a woman with whom he was standing at Thirty- | fourth street and Lexington avenue { jearly this morning, He interfered, he said. The woman was Mra, Bernstein, who | |eppeered tn court with her husband |Their story was that they were return- ing from a dance and were waiting for | ® car when Sch e up in a maudiin condition and tried to talk to! Mrs. Bernstein, to which the husband | | 1889 Lexing- | objected Bernstein is quite tall, Schaeffer is hort. Hornstein jchaeffer and has ite ae they appeared in court were In lavor of the tall man a for * Fer qual w Avaleelaleale ‘Seal affect her fight for the retention of her children’s custody. finds that she must efther give If sh up the Prince ov her enildren the choice will be okly de in favor of the latter, her acqiaintances say | Mysterious Forty-first street Mond Evening World “Black Bag.” The Black Bag What is in it? a ¢ mystery And It’s worth your while to solve it Ree 1 8 was arraigned in the | Haylem Court to-day, charged by his} pretty and beautifully pwned wife, Helen, with offering her a revo) and | suggesting that she kill herself wi it Mrs. Wainwright said that they had ayarrelled and had decided to eparate, | When her husband insisted 4 her planola out of the house. + sted, | whereupon he had passed re: | ‘volver, saying: "You had better kill ‘Ourself with it ‘The young husband von was | this hey had quarrelle scratched and pummeiled | upon he had offered her the revolver, | with the suggestion that as she was \trying to kil! him she had botter make | ‘rane belleved the wife’ however, and held t when he to cours i ) batl for further exan n of @ florist predicament out. who, came “ha GhauffeursArrested! in) aljnes2, wneerens Test Case—But Magistrate Res erves Dec 10n, Tt te up und w itomobtles es and mate: Magistrate was to await trial t employed automob: ner of Brown and tou priated th ered ry fines to Magistrate Higginbotham, ho ne to ile nk would stand Attorney said But, declare ing up of the lene. ne replaced, ‘onstituted petit larce Accordingly Comm er of Accounts Magher decided to establish a test case by proceeding erimir against Doyle and Brown. He took this action | because so much scandal has already attached to the private use by city offi- lals as well as chit elty- owned bubble wa Only a few nights ago the May own auto was ashed iy collision with a trolley car @ the chauffeur and “a friend’ were taking ar Accordingly the two chauffeurs were arrested and Commissioner of Accounts Gallagher appeared aga them to day Jn the Adams Court, Assist- nt Distriet-Attorney White appeare to night ¢ pn oin tl the t foner of the br intl the ea ounts, and n turning woman Every day In the Mouths of Millions— Grape-Nuts Brain We ‘Kers know the Value “There's a Reason” ot 1K, eara morning hours ne Assistant Dis White made out what he alae cut prima facie the two Pa 4 INVITED HIS WIFE 0 Sikes Bek | | WOMAN SHOOTS ANOTHER, About Her! —— Mary MeM un negre of | No. 4M Kast One t ed and Tw Offered Her Revolver After iyefourti& wan taken to the dur Quarrel, Mrs, Helen Wain- |et_woun st wright Says in Court. eatin Jay W. Wainwright, @ good-looking wary Meat young man of thirty, who has been liv her } ing at No, 10 West One Hundred and she went | this great of 17, 1908. ONLY A WOMAN, UT MANAGES. 400,000 HOTEL Hoffman House Goes on Sue- cessfully With Miss Cad- dagan at Its Head. Woman Who Manages Great Hotel and Employs 500 Servants HIRES 500 But After Office She Forgets Hotel and Takes up Things Feminine. Hours do you think of a woman who runs a $4,000,000 hotel, empl 0) Ker and fu fully caters to the nts of more t a thousand guests. Such a woman ts now managing the ew Hoffman House, which long has n the gathoring place of distin- ed horsemen, statesmen and ational headquarters party and since the Fittn Avenue Hot e@ new home of the publican Amen Corner st invasion of women {nto a eld of labor be he ds of e a is d Ss smplished by Miss Anna it! Kofi dver‘everse detan Ge the bine | COUNTESS SZECHENYI'S t shn P, | Bess. make it my polley to be fami! i/aister of! the)late John mi / Barn mala tiny polley to)he families BABY GIRL BAPTIZED. who in succeeding her broth | Kitchen to office, and to Interest and be presidentiand nager of the hos-|interested in my employees, I have |_| Ge 4 been especially fortunate in having effi- | Bishop Officiates CG a telry has proven herself as keen in busi- nt help in’my work, for every one | Bishop Officiates at sould and ness as any ma: Ine manager of a/seems to take a personal interest in the Names Her Cor 1 and prosperous hotel. (res avnen Git) o'clock comnts I leave mi G2 : A Aa le nis office and become a real woman, Ale ‘andi tee the Hoffman House has heen | who joys feminine things as much as Ale andr a Nandine. 1 in the capable hands of Miss any member of our sex, To music Tam | yyy 5 Slntantvaautles addagan affairs h run just as , a or years have been an aes coven i mean taBieTaay nt opera- ‘ome muale ts the | ter of tess Szchenyi, who was born y as in t a vena profitable days | m zat ceva ng influence in life and the Oct 8 zed at her Stokes and Caddagan manage- | greatest pleasure of my leisure hours, her's home, Ormezo Castle. Thi ete Pe Gait ‘But you mustn't give me all the | Mothers fy ane! Ae 2 oe Paine tothe responsi: | credit for the success of the hotel? Miss ceremony was performed by the Bishop GSD dehy eA enol ys ter, Miss of Raab, the Right Rey. Nicolay keeper In America Miss Caddagan had | Margaret T., te office. |szecheny!, and Sel m: (all the detafls of the business, | \\argaret ane ra eether ANd | Cornelia Mar I guide and teacher—whom the new | sponsibilities very heavy, James ©. | go anageress of the Hoffman House en-|Clancy I have also appointed my | and the godmoth thusiastica calls “the most wonder- Ganlat nt manager, jennabaca une: ot my Szechenyl eG sa | bro nderful example and teach-| — 11 hotel man in world” and to/ ing to make a success of the | Counte whom she modestly gives credit for the | hotel, though I never expect to be able | Gladys Vanderbil miccess which has attended her suc-|t half fl the place he has left va-| was married to Con 4 > cant.’ in New York Jan cession to his piace—was John P. Cad- BRIDAL SOUVENIRS lis been associated in business, ave prepared a very attractive assortment of articles Not All for Business. Miss Caddagan, though holding bust which would stagger many a man, is herself the most fem- inine of women, and when her business hours—from 9 to I—are over 1s vitally We h interested in things feminine. In ap- 23 Beatanca tai warren c hotel mmndgsn te which have the double value of both utility and beauty and tell and commanding, with brilliant which are particularly adapted for gifts and mementos. black eyes, soft black hatr, and a vivid peraonallty which Is apparent in her BARRETTES in simple gold eae _$3 up; decorated very handclasp, Gowned in a modified with pearls and semi-precious stones 37.7 directoire gown of deep dull black, with halr brushed in large soft waves away HANDY SETS, consisting of veil pin, — n and two SEs re SRS handy pins, $10. With pearls, sapphires and amends @ 110. einihond shuei ce neniegeh yes SLEEVE LINKS and SCARF PINS, matched ing World reporter to-day, presented set, with jade and enamel, $18. Other sets from $4.25. TIE CLIPS and SCARF HOLDERS, $2.50 up. A-FRANKFIELD &CO JEWELERS, AND LMPORTPRS 38 west 34” stRepn chic an app ‘ance as any lady of leis. ure who has nothing more important to do than chose a winter wardrobe. TI am so afraid of reporiers," Miss Cad ‘an first admitted when she had settled herself in a large and business | like revolving chair in front of her | roller top desk. “I know it seems odd | when I meet so 1 y men through busi ness and am forced to be, in a way, a public woman, but though I am a hotel manager, I don't like publict You} see, I was brought up in a convent, though 1 left eight years ago when I came here to help my brother and learn his busines It was the St. Elizabeth Co at] sheny, N and when I left there | didn't believe T could be happy in| But since I have come phase of this business— taken eight years of con- there vent Al i London Smoke Suede Boots For Women to know ever nd it has apt suity. Tan go intereniet ana ae. If Our assortment of Women’s Boots again be content to ve on iaie woman ff in London Smoke, the new shade of A Wonderful Business. | is the most wonderful gray, now so widely worn,is such as “Hotelkeeping business woman can fnter 4, ad to meet every demand. Latest and it erstand why this line of . Fe awa AN |g moet attractive Models, woman secs wot A escape a mania London Smoke eal | b Pa an ead So naa dhs ree , pearl buttons Pinetop nue seat But todgh Tarn to match .... ....6. .6......... $8,00 hotel-keeper first I am a woman, too, and do not nd all my tuls desk From nine to one Solid Gold Eyeglasses $1.00 a Pair Generally Sold at $5.00. Rar This Week, sy time tled to London Smoke uppers, buttons tom -tch, patent leather foxing $7.00 Black Buck Boots........ $8.00 Black Castor Boots....... $5.00 Alexander SIXTH AVENUE AND NINETEENTH STREET I am here receiving nals ay because ah reunite jelan of van thilet ne with widespread Y tor ablity and correctness: ans that yout! not get a : Dolla) solid gold eyoglasars tor Ome Dollar, but that these glasses will be No Charge: for Ocul! t's Services 1 buy gage and guaranteed right in of me or not 108 F 93d StWY, Near 4th 541i ionSt B'klyn Kalb ay W. L, DOUGLAS $3.50 SHOES inch One of Our Many Specialized Styles at $28.00 Colored and Blac models Models sy u ee : na Atrialwillconvince a oraughly ou Shes W LDoug: 2 pipe as $3.50 shoes are $ 8 00 manehip ° thehestinthe world Stores in Greater New York $3 Hroadway, cor. Howard 165 Broadw fst Se be HE ai war. ¢ 1 t a Hest lets Beonlivay, out, 68 All Sizes, fa Tuts treuue #7 Third A Venue, be a en ities ae JOHN FORSYTHE, Br and 18th St adway O rieme ti: cata eee fe