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\ © NotLikely to Be Popular With | gthat’this is far from the truth and { \ will have much to do with Mr. Fol- ~BYBREAKING WILL Suffragists, Who Would Lose $1,000,000. DOUBT OF CONTESTANT | iy Asserts He Is Nephew of Dead Woman, but Niece Says She | Doesn’t Know Him, Maynard D. Follin, « well-to-do man and a former city official of Detroit, Mich., is going to get himself very much disliked by Votes for Women ad- Rarents all over the country. While he tlaims to be a nephew of the late Mrs. Frank Leslie, known as the Bar- oness de Bazus, he was not provided With @ penny in her will, which was filed here yesterday. He is going to try to break the will which, in addition to about $130,000 left to a number of relatt and friends, gives more than $1,000,000 to Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt to further the woman's suffrage move- ment. Bome sensational allegations will be made, it is sald, when Arthur Jones, @ ‘Detroit lawyer representing Mr. Follin, through William J. Grango of tif local law firm of Garvin & Young, files objection to the will on or be- fore Nov. 11. The basis of the con- test will be that Mrs. Leslie was men- tally incompetent when she drew the will. Mr. Grange refused to reveal thé plan of attack, but declared that ‘the question of Mrs. Leslie's age will Play & most important part in the Tegal action. It was believed that ghd was sixty-two years old when ate died, but Mr. Grange intimates Ita’ claim. GREAT FORTUNE IF HE CAN BREAK WILL. Mr. Follin, who is in comfortable Circumstances, does not propose to seek a small bequest, such as the $80,000 trust fund left to Mra. Carrie H, Wrenn, a niece of Mra, Leslie, of No. 62 Pierrepont street, Brooklyn, ‘Who, besides himself, is the only di- rect belr. If the will is broken and Mrs. Lesite is declared to have died thtestate, the two direct heirs would ghare equally and none of the other bequests, including that to Mrs, Catt and all others, would be paid. Under this plan Mr. Follin believes he has more than a half-million dol- lars at stake, and the same would be true of Mrs. Wrenn. The latter was geen by an Evening World reporter to-day, but she refused to discuss the case of the contest. She seemed greats ly.amused over Mr. Follin’s claim. “I nover heard of the man until ater,” she said. “I never knew may aunt had a nephew by that e."* ere is a clause in the will de- claring that any of the beneficiaries wha shall try to contest it shall re- ceive nothing. Mr. sollin’s attorneys say they do not know whether Mrs. Wrenn will join in the action in an effort to gain more tl $500,000 in- stead of $50,000. Theyeadmit, how- ever, that under their plan she would only have to keep silent and inactive and be sure of getting $50,000 and cer- tain of ten times that sum if Mr. lin should win, PEDIGREE OF CONTESTANT IS KNOWN, ttorney Jones sald that Mr. Fol- 's father was always on the best terms with Mrs. Lostle, his sister, and fréquently visited him at his home fm Bacremento, Cal,, before his death six years ago. Ho declared Mrs., Les- 1 hover exhibited any interest in 's suffrage, but hastened to Bad that there is not. the slightest aerial of undue influence on the frien ) EAT LESS AND TAKE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers. The American men and women must constantly against Kidney trouble, ‘we eat too much and all our food ia.zich. Our bjood is filled with uric saeid which the kidne; i out, they weaken from overwork, become it weakens and we your kidneys feel like lumps of lead, your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are to seck relief two or three times if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid hb, or you have rheumatism when weather is bad, get from your phi about four ounces of Jad Salts: ® tablespoonful in a glass of before breakfast for a few ‘our kidneys will then act fine. Wraous salts is made from the acid pes and lemon juice, combined with ‘and hag been used for generations imulate clogged kidneys; » the acids in the urine so it @ source of irritation, thus is inexpensive; cannot @ delightful elfervesce nt make |ttust first have, oun ‘aveving. WORLD,’ tmunapay, oorosan 8, 1014. When Mrs. Cooper's Superwoman Arrives!) SAVESMAILLINER eof “There’s a Mistake Somewhere When a Woman Hasn’t a Beautiful Face,”’ Says Dramatist and Lecturer, Who Predicts Day of Perfect Pulchritude for All Is Coming. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. The superwoman will be beautiful. The superwoman twill have brains. The superwoman will prove herself the best wife and mother the world has ever known. These are just a few of the glowing prophecies of Mrs. Minnie Sabin Cooper, dramatist, philanthropist, associate director of the Pannma-Pacific Exposition and lecturer on “The Conservation of Womanhood.” When Mrs. Cooper re- cently addressed the youthful members of the Vacation Savings Fund on the subject of the American girl, she committed a grave breach of precedent. She didn’t say that the American girl was perfection’s final word. the goal of all feminine evolution. She dared to main- tain that the daughter of Uncle Sam Is after all but a mere candidate for perfection, a traveller along the road ees to superwomanhood. It seemed to me that the American girl and the rest of us might be in- terested in Mrs, Cooper's idea of what the superwoman will really be. The mere name of her terrifies the average man, and so far as I know we haven't any authoritative definition to place beside Bernard Shaw's summary of the superman as “a good-looking phiusopher-athlete.” Therefore I called on Mrs, Cooper. “Whatever shows sub-man, an Imitation of the lecturer declared firm- ly. “For the last fifty yeare @ been trying too hard fect themselves as women. As | see her the superwoman will be ‘woman plus, not woman minus. She will be more beautiful, more brilliant, more noble than the woman of to-day, but ii id of growing away from wifehood and maternity shoe will bring both to a perfection they have not pre- viously known.” When I tell you the real reason for Mrs, Cooper's being at No, $48 Madi- son avenue, Instead of in her San Frapciscan home, you will see that you needn't worry about the domes- Ue qualifications of her superwoman. Tho “real reason” is really two-fold— Mrs. Cooper's two little grand- daughte! each of whom lives close to Now ork, Their grandmot found that she simply couldn't stay on one coast, while they were on the other, even though she made six or seven visits East every year, While she !s here sho will talk before the League for Political Education and other organizations, But the grand- daughters are responsible for her presence. WOMEN WILL NEVER USURP MAN'S PLACE, shan’t have the superwoman,” she continued earnestly, “until we two things clear in our minds: First, that women are exactly as important to the world as men; second, that their importance must be manifested in different ways to achieve its full effectiveness, Some of the most ad- vanced suffragists are busy proclaim- Ing that out of 107 listed occupations women have already taken up 100, and that they're going to take up the other seven right away—the job of steeplejack, for instance, or of load- ing coal on barges. That's nonsense, “The superwoman will have other things to do. I do not believe that .|she can find any accomplishment greater than the marriage it will lle within her power to make. Sho will have such a Wealth to give to her husband and children,” “A man once told me that the wife should be to the husband what the hat after every bout with the world she should be waiting to make hiin comfortable and to encourage him to fresh conflict.” STRONG BODY NECESSARY TO SUPERWOMAN. “Yos, that 1s ideal, only she should be able to provide for his mental and spiritual comfort and courage, not merely his material well-being,” re- plied Mrs, Cooper, “And to give she Sis trainer is to the boxer,” I suggested; | Women are at last beginning to reali: the awful handicap of physical weakness. Once they made it a matter of pride and the fashiona ability to tice a sure sign of breeding lady considered her refinement. By giving her heart and lungs and feet room to move the modern woman takes a long step toward superwomanhood.” tiful?” I pleaded, nd the superwoman will be beau- “Ought she nat to be the answer to the Greek prayer— ‘Give us beauty of the inward soul, and may the outward and the inward man be at one'?” “Yes, the day ins coming when every smilingly averred. take somewhere when a wom: Cooper a mis- a beautiful face, just as there's a mix- take when she has physical loveliness and a soul that doesn't match. “In the superwoman we shall find in flows soureg erhy timidity. ndian poet “The three virt ding in the soul 0 Hay eNaliety b will bud- the woman splendidly expressing superwoman- hood,” the lecturer added. ‘Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high.’ And, of course, to win to this state the mind must be educated, not in the schools alone but through contact with life. woman without brains of the first|/they had sunk one of thelr own ships, order is inconceivable.” CAVE WOMAN ORIGINATED MOV- ING DAY. “And with all this splendid equip- ment you think she'll be willing to children?” I questioned, “It's this: A _super- men. But I do think they know bet- ter what to do with children, cave woman decided that camping in the treetops was too draughty for her So the family moved into a cave. Then she decided that the cave was too damp for the children, and a hut perched up on stukes was the babies, result. “The superwoman will be as far r joved from the modern woman as the latter is from her But for all throe the most important things in life re the mate and the babies, cave progenitor. “The occasional woman to-day who doesn’t want children is an abnor- mality, She is Wsually the daughter of a woman for whom maternity was made a servitude instead of a privi- lege, and her own burdened with younger = thi women say, when I w last me for a lifetime.’ mother, “The superwoman is boun@ to be accompanied by the superman and the finished Mrs. Cooper, superehildren,” childhood was the care of an herself, hasn't The those I've heard ‘I took care of babies a little girl enough to Or else the avowed opponent of children is really longing for them all the time and too proud to admit the fruitless desire, Even now, in our present unevolved state, most of us have a vague feeling that there's something wrong with the woman who doesn't want to be a ~ TREHER HOES Cheer Up, Girls! You'll All Be Beautiful D>. TO. WIN $500,000 Yap is now on the map. Oddities in the War News —— Paris reports Mary Garden as saying she will become a Red Cross nurse with the French troops and may never sing again. ‘ Paris women go into mourning for relatives killed in battle w™ pinning a tricolor rosette to their corsages over black. ‘SEARCHLIGHT BEAM FROM KARLSRUHE) British Ship Warned by Flash as German Cruiser Sweeps Caribbean. GLAD TO ARRIVE HERE. Passengers Tell How They Escaped Net Spread for Them by Foe. ‘The Orotava of the Royal Mail Line, out of London Sept. 8, via Trintdad, - Barbados and other Caribbean ports, got into port to-day after having missed capture by the elusive German cruiser Karferuhe by the thinnest margin, Out of the blackness of a Caribbean night the Karlsruh searchlight suddenly stuck up from the horizon ahead of the British ship like @ sword ready to fall, and the blow was evaded by the smartest kind of seamanship on the part of Capt. W. C. Barrett, the Orotava’s com- mander, Capt. Barrett himself would not re- veal the details of his narrow escape, contenting himself with saying: “I'm here and I'm jolly glad to be here.” But one of two passengers who came all the way from London with the Orotava and was consequently a party to all the secrets of the navi- gating bridge, Mrs. Austin Moore, who was Miss Cordelia Haager, a society girl of Louisville, Ky., told the story of how the Orotava dodged through @ net of wireless queries and finally escaped plumping directly onto the armed German. WITH LIGHTS DOUSED, SLIPPED ALONG LIKE GHosT. “When we got into Trink 14 Mrs. Moore, “we heard of the ‘tnings the German cruisers Karlsruho end Dresden had been doing to British shipping in the Caribbean and South Atlantic, and all of us were pretty nervous, “Then, when we left for Willemstad, Curacao, and northern ports, Capt. Barrett ordered all lights except the fore-light on the mast put out, and A large quantity of fine white linen handkerchiefs sent to the British | we slipped among the islands like a Consulate here for English soldiers will havo to be dyed, as soldiers are| ghost. We picked up a wireless eay- allowed to carry only blue or maroon red handkerchiefs. the enemy. A scientist in confirming reports that an Italian priest had invented a pocket war wireless apparatus sald wireless messages are easily intercepted by simple devices, one of which is two needles fixed in @ potato, When a fifteen-year-old boy of Paris was told he was too small to join the army he replied: “A wound jg like soup, it makes you grow. refuse me I'l] find a way to wriggle to the front ranks.” Figaro says some of the German spy dogs captured by the French are highly educated, and have been taught to rear at the sight of the red trousers of French soldiers. Alarmed at the possibility of not being able to hold Brussels, the Ger- mans are said to have placed mines under the sidewalks of the principal streets. States manufacturers cannot fill all the orders they are receiving. Every man in a German battery fighting the Russians at Augustowo Pp was killed, and cavalrymen were drafted to work the guns, which they did ‘Tagore has a line | until they had only three rounds of ammunition. London {s insuring life and property against Zeppelin bombs. When the French gunboat Zelee was sunk off Tahiti by German cruisers, @ vessel with her was also sent to the bottom. Then the Germans learned the German merchantman Walkurie, which had been taken as a prize by the gunboat. The American Humane Association has protested against sending American horses to be slaughtered on the battleflelds of Europe, when devote her life to one man and his] thousands of dollars are being spent here to prevent even minor injuries it what finer thing could she| to them, Mrs, Cooper wanted to know. “1 don’t think women are better than Passengers and crew aboard the British steamship Consols, here from Buenos Ayres, had to cook their own meals after leaving Trini- dad, Their cook was a German and was taken off by a British warship. BIG DEMAND FOR HORSES. War Give Fine Opportunity. WASHINGTON, Oct. &—The Increased demand in European countries for American horses, caused by the war, pre- sents an excellent opportunity to farmers of the United States, the Department of Agriculture announced to-day. It is stated that this demand may continue for a decade or longer, as, when pt is restored, more horses will be needed for agriculture. It {s emphasized that only horses of high quality may be profitably raised to- lday, Next to Russia, the United States hay more horses than any othor country “They may not como for thousands of end the two together possess 58 per cent. years, but by keeping the vision of | 0! he world supply. oft them well before us we shall hasten |1¥ otimated that one million horses now are their day.” Meanwhile, don't ie pap) mixed Bp with wit! the Berea ‘eaid to 260,00 ithaca & om, spray bas ea engaged in the war, The Ge juires for a complete mobilise tthe super |tion’ 776,000, and Fench ‘army @ figures, ee. If they So much glass has been broken in the European war, even the = over to the eastward and ran Peasants about Antwerp are becoming indifferent to the constant fight- ing, according to correspondents, one of whom writes: everyday work in large numbers among the forts and batteries. play as ever, women kcep the cottages spick and span, quietly on their little little holdings when not digging trench and men work tub and for the military. \What 8 “Grade A” Milk? high you say, there are, big” Uiteredces in anvbe A That ts why HOMERMILK {s used tn 66 Baby Feeding Stations in New York 1 r uld stren baby, ha’ ati wl It is conservative: | milk you can afford White attracts | ing both German cruisers were some- where in the Carribbean, north of us, searching for the Orotava, “We got to Colon without getting near the enemy. We left Colon for Kingston on Sept. 28. On the follow- ing night Capt. Barrett got a wireless from another British merchantman saying that the Karlsruhe was near our position and waiting to intercept us on the way to Kingston. “Capt. Barrett ordered the fore- Hight put out and we travelled in absolute darkness, Suddenly a broad band of light shot up from the horizon about ten miles away and directly in the path of the Orotava. It was shut off in a minute, but that one flash was enough to send chills through all aboard. ‘apt. Barrett altered his courae under forced draught all the rest of the night. Next morning we heard two ships conferring by wireless and Capt. Barrett was sure it was the Karlsruho and the Dresden comparing notes on their inability to find us. We got to Kingston without further scare: Mrs. Moore said that at Barbados an Englishman who called himself “Mr. Grant" boarded the ship, bound for Willemstad. Later he admitted to friends he had made aboard that he was Capt. Guy Gaunt of the navy and was bound to the Dutch port, he said, to investigate a strong suspicion en- tertained by the British Admiralty that the Dutch on Curacao had secretly given coal and provisions to the Karls- ruhe and the Dresden, Capt. Gaunt took his mission serl- ously, saying the chances were good that he would never leave Willemstad alive, ‘This is the Capt. Gaunt who recont- ly was ngval attache of the Brish Embassy at Washington, and whose “They carry sl room at the Hotel Biltmore in this ay city was entered while he was in the rifled of valuable naval » papers. — Dut GRADEA Pasteurised t is ten times. cles standard and saves ‘ ducers of GRADE A HOMER y long oxperlence, and with the nf producing milk that and not harm the weak- brought HOMER’ MILK to f ia y the only o thousands ‘before t 10c, per Quart Twice a Day Deliveries Phone Bryant 147 ry eit? satis" hy, British Liner ‘aribbean by the Karls TAKES 30 SHOTS BY 10 POLICEMEN TOKILL THIS BULL Runaway Leads Merry Chase for Mile and a Half Through Avenue A. street was reached that the automobiles caught up with the 4 In the mieantime the fugitive BAM demolished a pusheart laden melons and knocked down a at Soventy-first street, The womem — scurried into a tenement and FY lcemen who saw the wccidant Coaae -¥ not find her, 7 Keatiig, who was a crack marke man in the militia before he became ® cavalryman, directed the pursult — when the bull was overtaken. First an effort was made to surround tha — animal with automobiles and take tg him alive, but the bull showed no hesitation about charging a Be car and the attempt was aband: Keating then headed the fugitive in Beventy-fAfth street. Up to that time the crowd in me avenue bad made shooting danger’ — ous, but Seventy-ftth street was practically Geserted, and Keating opened fire. The other policemen tole lowed suit and the bull, faltering aaa bellowing, began to took for Me b Eight automobiles, ten policemen, half a dozen cattle herders and butchers, hundreds of citizens and thousands of small boys chased a big black bull a mile and a half up First avenue to-day, he policemen had their revolvers drawn throughout the chase, but did not get a chance to use them until the bull was tiring and almost at the end of his powers of endurance. Thon they opened fire and pumped at least thirty bullets {nto the exhausted animal. At Sev- enty-fifth street and Avenue A a well- directed shot reached the bull's brain and he dropped dead at tho curb, The chase bogan at Forty-fitth atroet and First avenue when the bull, @ handsome fellow with short horns, the teemnet at aan enna broke out of @ pen in the Sulzberger fifth street and broke the pieap ete house, bowled over a couple|in the upper part. Three childreé erders, turned north and headed tried for freedom. Apparently the animal] tv morro ‘the deey wad anon n : had anticipated hia fate, for Police-| girth wap too event and se 3 man Thomas Kelly; who was piloting out and headed pe phe: i peck school children across First avenue and face were bleeding poll pathy at Fifty-first street, said tho bull was| ricted by the broken glass. frantic with fear at that point and It was while the animal was eteck was running faster than a@ horee,|in the door that the policemen @i holding @ course between the street| the greatest execution with thelr te car tracks, volvers, Their quarry was Kelly commandeered an automobile| ing as he flee again, It turned and started in pursuit. At every wae only a few poe, to Avenue and the end of the chase. y bea crossing up the avenue more policemen joined in the chase. Trail-| ‘The carcass was ini truck ing the automobile selzed by Kelly] and taken back en ihe sleeeter was a car from the packing house,| house from which the beter his courageous escape. loaded with he: ‘3 and butchers. At Fifty-sixth street and Jirst av: Police inquiry along the ne eoahe nue the bull encountered opposition. pursuit failed to reveal ahy one whe Patrolman Warren ¥. Keating, on| had been injured by the fleeing ea, duty there, struck the animal actoss| mai or the army that followed him, the neck with @ broom as he went a ARR eka. itis aE 5 by. Then Keating commandeered a TED." big touring car in which a woman STOREKEEPERS ARRES was riding as a passenger and start- od after the bull. This car picked up — other policemen farther north and the woman appeared to take the keenest delight in tho excitement, | nd arraignment in the Harlem The tangle of tramMo at the Pitty. | Court to-day of ais men, propeietens « ninth street entrance of the Queena. | *tationery stores, bag, % oH « boro Bridge confused the bull, He| erating lotteries, boards covered with numbers, slackened speed, tossed his head and t ten cents, About then charged directly for the public fa une Rundree ‘won prisan te market, The screams of women and shouts of men frightened him, for he held changed his course again, heading up| for trial in First avenue once more. Passing un-| the manufacturers tnd der the bridge approach at Sixtieth | boards. strect, he bowled over a young man,| non! ym tssemen, Meer Touts, who rolled half way across the street,|man, all of West One Hundred Jumped up and ran south more rap-|sprty-fifth street, at No. 240, 328 \dly than the bull was proceeding! West One Hundred and “Thirty-t Rapes street; Max Kergman, No. 2191 Seventh Tt was not until Seventy-fitth [avenue nt 798° Cash No 428 E By an Fi Accuses Sellers of Runaing Lotteries: Anthony Comstock caused thi The Solace of the Busy Mind GOOD CIGARS These are PARK & TILFORD’S now famous MI FAVORITA All made in Bond , Key West Havana Cigars .. In all sizes from $4.50 to $17 for Bold by firet class dealers and in Park &