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Show Since the advent of the so-called so-called "new woman" no one has been more constant in opoosing her masculine tendencies than Cardinal Gibbons. As a man of wide experience, with oppor-! tunities for studying human na- i ture as varied and numerous as ' they are unusual, he has been1 able to investigate this phase of I modern life under the most fa-1 vorable circumstances. His' views of the question, from a'" thoroughly secular standpoint I " til be presented in an earlv!Pr number of The Ladies' Home!"? Journal under the suggestive I ca title of "The Restless Woman " w |