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, STORER CALLS) NG THEODORE” LEADER OF FOOLS, peers Enkee “ty Dear Maria” Renews At- , tack on Roosevelt In Vitri- olic-Letter to Public, "A. MENACE TO COUNTRY’ y ie Is “Stirring Up Knaves to Sedition,” She Cries in Tirade { ‘Against His Candidacy. ‘Mrs. Bellamy Storer, who a fow years @Bo wee called “My dear Maria” by Theodore Roosevelt, has returned to her attacks on him as a politician and @ leader of tho people. Reviving her Qmarges of four years ago thac Mr. Roogevelt instructed her husband, then Minister to Austria and Hungary, to in- tereede with Pope Pius X. for a Cardin~ tate for Archbishop Ireland and then Feputiated the order and recalled Mr. Storer to America for meddling in church politics,” Mrs. Storer has writ- tem a pubic letter, first published tn the Evening Post, yesterday. In it she asserts Roosevelt is unsate as a leader ané perilous as Chief Executive of this nation. Mire. Btorer in her appeal for votes a@efest Roosevelt calls on all Roman to search their polltical con- Dy the Mylt of their religion allowing themselves to be caught e Roosevelt sweep of emotional She writes, sho says in #0 many words, “ns a Catholic. ‘Phe only reply of Mr, Roosevelt to t&e new Storer letter, when he was in- formed of its contents, was: ‘The inol- dent was closed four years ago. The lettor in full follows: “There can be no doubt that if Theo- Gere Roosevelt be nominated at Chicago, Bo fried of President Taft (and no friend of law, order and authority, whether Democrat or Republican) can vote €or the Republican candidate. All party Mines and divisions are thrown own in this political conflict, and the stvugsle for domination {8 and will be, mot between Roosevelt and Taft or Beosevelt and the Lemocracy, but be- tween Gictatorahip and freedom, Theo- | Gore Roosevelt's liberty is license—not @erernmest by the people, but mob wale, with himself as the Mob Ruler. “KING THEODORE” 18 “LEADING FOOLS CAPTIVE,” SHE SAYS. Wheofore Roosevelt has been com- pared 40 a French monarch, but the oyieh boast, ‘Lietat, c'est moi,’ of the young Louls XIV, meant really very lit- tle, Louis XIV. was no tyrant, and he had no power in comparison with this ‘King Theodore,” a man who h tatingly broken his pledge y is guilty of all the misdemeanors ich he has falsty accused an hon- just and upright President, but ading fools captive, stirring up to sedition, and blinding the ‘ef some fow honest men who still whim a leader and a hero, #peak as a Catholic, when I say tethe new political party of the which shall ibe organized if Roosevelt be nonfinated, must support of every Catholie \worthy of his faith. “The Catholic Church throughout all the world stands for law, order and authority. President Taft has said that it fe one of the strongest bulwarks against anarchy and disorder in the modern world; and President Taft, both in the Philippines and in the Usited States, has carried out the dec- Jaration of our Constitution which guar Antees justice to all oltizens whatever thelr religion may be “Theodore Roosevelt's campaign of ealumny has tried to make use of every Gespicabie weapon. It has attempted to stir up an antl-Catholle enmity against the President, accusing Mr Tatt of sending poor Major Butt o special mission to the Pope, and a \ ing that Major Butt carried messages’ to and from the Vaticen. “This, if you please, from Theodore Roosevelt, who when it suited his pur- pose (and he gained a big Catholic vote fm the Northwest thereby), asked per- eonal favors of Pope Pius X., and when fee feared anti-Catholic wrath denied what he had done and tried to support hs denial by an open affront to the game Pope Pius X. on the occasion of Mr. Roosevelt's proposed visit to the n. NTRY MAY a erte et i | STILL BE ’ D,” IF T. R. 1S DEFEATED. ith regard to this tnckient a non- ie pa the Chicago B! Jetin (of sald: ‘In his cont 8 he has gone a , has clashed with a man known sterling 4 jes and, kindly n discourt greatest ch the te woes, and has offered front to hundreds of th —_—_—XSXuhrlrzwoo p 1, 1910), Are Disappearing in New York City and nowhere. and wo: are realizing that they accomplish this 0 easily by siinply ve HAY'S HAIR H—the beat 1 only really satis. ory preparation for restort to ite na ay hair red Gompart of W, 148th St 4 Now York City, writes 5 ago 1 had a bald spot on the very ton of my head an ii os the pam of my hand, In about weeks’ iiine, using HAY'S HAIR Mia TH co } batrs started to ari, Diiey or ast on the th %. or $1.00 bottle at your 4 ¥] He will refund your vomit you're not satisfied, OT ———e ee A nme eee ota Gray Hairs and Bald Heads a eer cen mene THE EVENING WORLD, Leelinminnigtis Nixola By Honeymoon Horoscopes 38 creticy-smith NAERRTN AARRAMNID RARITIES RRR KARAM TI RE Third of a New Series of Articles. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World.) | i 2. Senne [pre “mv PROFESSOR TOLD ME TO TAKE THIS ONE” How the Modern Paris Must Solve the Problem When Eugenic System Forces Choice Between Physical, Mental and Moral Affinities—A Suggestion for Inventors. The shepherd Paris, facing three rival goddesses, each begging the award of the golden apple inscribed “To the Fairest,” did not confront a more dificult dilemma than, that which any young man of to-day may meet. For suppose the willing young disciple of the advocates of scientific marriage deduces from the three separate charts of his physical, mental and moral characteristics and requirements that three separate young ladies constitute respectively his phy- sical, mental and moral affinities? Suppose the mod- ern young woman who wishes to mate according to the most advanced principles of eugenics discovers that to guarantee the physical perfection of the next generation she myst wed a victor in the Olympic games, while to produce @ moral heavyweight she should marry a Methodist clergyman, or to insure intellectual brilliancy a Gilbert Ches- terton or a Bernard Shaw? Rarely in the history of the human| follow the example of John Newcom). race have the solid virtues and spectac- | Ina truly actentific spirit he enumerated ular talents been assembled in the same|on paper the qualities which he pos- sessed; placed opposite them the quall- THE ADDING MACHINE COULD BE USED IN COURTS HIPS children, and quartered in each of your grandchildren, Why should not the fu- ture bo at least as brilliant as your own generation?” HERE'S A CHANCE FOR INVENT- TUESDAY, RUTGERS STRIKE PLANNED UNLESS BAN 1S LIFTED - Students Will Walk Out If 49, Suspended Seniors Are Not Reinstated. BEER PARTY CAUSED IT. Classes Combine and Give President Demarest a ‘‘Si- lence” With Ultimatum. (Apeclal to The Brening World). WHEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., May ®—| fessing The four hundred students of Rutgers College will walk out on strike Thur: Gay unlere the Faculty decides at ita cention of specialists th mental dl e Sleaso all over the city, was discharged : apectal meeting to-morrow to reinstate | from Tella tant night bY SALE AT ALL THREE STORES the forty-nine seniors who ware aus-| PF Crexory wed to go to her 3 Fifty-fourth street, Sepees Fosteniey tee Dene eae She had no far recovered pated in a “beer bust’ last Friday ry that she could recall every night at Landing Bridge on the banks of the Raritan River. | ‘The juntor, sophomoro and freshman | classes held meetings to-day at which | a strike vote was taken. ‘There was not fo if Prexy Demarest | A dissenting vote, falls to lift the ban that has been put upon all the college heroes and upon | the presidents of the Y. M. C. A. and be no other Prohibition League there will commencement exercises or any function to wind up the college year. As evidence of the unanimous senti- ment against the action of President Demarest in suspending all but sixteen members of the senior class the entire student body subjected him to a al of the suspended seniors were pres: as they were put under the ban at chapel yesterday, The three lower classes were on hand in full force, as well aa the sixteen seniors who had failed to march to Landing Bridge and participate in the sixteen gal ot beer contained in two quarter kegs. PRESIDENT HAD TO SING HYMN AS A SOLO. It 1s the custom for President Démur- est to open the chapel exercises with a hymn. He did so this morning, but he sang the hymn as a solo, Even the Y. M. Cc. A. and Prohibition League went back on him, and it was the same with the recitation of the Lon’'s prayer From tho moment the students filed Into chapel until the exercises over their lips were sealed. Prexy De- parest might as well have been off by maelf on an uninhabited flo. The regular faculty meeting scheduled for Friday, but the Rut Lehigh baseball game is programm for Thursday at South Niehem, With A, L, Gladding, ts individual, In faot, I don't recall & single instance of such a union, Then| ‘les in which he was lacking; and then ORS TO GET BUSY. do? Must the| £et Out to find the woman who should what is a poor girl to do? There are many sctentists and soclolo- supply his deficiencies. HOW NEWCOMB PROVED THEO. RY OF EUGENICS, “When he had located his future help- meet, playing hyn tunes on an organ in @ Ilttle red school house, and upon further acquaintance, had assured him- self that she really possessed the needed young man confronted by a triplex of affinities deliver another Judwnfent of Paris by the simple process of counting em out one by*one—the last one to be gists who, less bold than Prof. Nearing, do not hold that Mendel’s law, do-| duced from experiment In the growing | of sweet peas, may apply to human heredity. But granting that it may possibly be true of the human race, why does not | some ploneer Inventor make the ca ing of the honeymoon horoscope an ex. “Eente, meente, minie, mo! My pro- fessor told me to take this one!” And must the girl follow a similar pro- gramme? Not at all. She who seeks | qualities, he married her, with the de- ce by developing an affinity |tradition, ‘The banquet at th her eugentc mate may eliminate all par- termination that hele frst child should | ry; Hugo Munsterburg has an !n-| Mansion House preceded the Jjollification tia! affinities by cold reasoning, thus: dade ade th mien Their Grst| rauible test for lars, Recently, when Lat the historic spot where eo Washe | REASON TO AID IN ELIMINATINGK NG Was Simon Newcomb, ono of the | interviewed Thomas A. Edison, he said | ington crossed the Raritan in his retreat jeading astronomers of the nineteenth] nat he has a machine In his laboratory | from New Jersey. Ha rane PARTIAL APEINITIEO hari which measures a man’s talent, | ak. : rt . .| ‘Mohn Newcomb was a vill 6 7 lent, hon-|and a modicum of bubble water ws It 1 choose the physical aM@inity, my f Nillage school-) @<ty and vocational ability, It should | served at the banquet, ‘Then a wasson firstborn may be @ baseball player. | aster and his wito a village maiden, | ye possible for young men and wom on | was commandeered and two quarter-| Now, the percentage of baseball playery | Put In thelr choles they coubined two} contemplating matrimony to drop aos hoisted upon it and forty-nine that attain the major leagues {s small, sets of qualities whicn would mmevitably | penny into an per machine Which | young men marched a joyous lockstop | and among those who succeed few aro presi: s aap Lec abe Aepeumy would sive thet correct mate, euxente | tg Landing Bris les wi stify tr one OS | fortune and play @ tune at the sam eee Sin Vie pan BRIS With nought of the future] time, |PROHIBS WENT ALONG TO men are not usually endowed with ex- pceraver 8 Mis milnd, Until enthuslasts of eugenics perfect | COUNSEL RESTRAINT. ceptional physta Nelther are brill- PR tcp as et the men of parts| such an invention, it may be diteult| In this happy adolescent throng we fant mon apt to be Sandows, I live in w the example of the brililant pro-! for some of us to decide just w 4 Stephen Parsons Smith, president of t fessor who married a ‘so buttority.” an age when physical perfection is at a j eugente affingy is, And of course, hav. ‘Why In the world di n A | ‘ound him, there would be still th discount, ‘Therefore I eliminate the r ing found him, t e d friend, ‘Oh, well,’ answe ved prob ff how to phystea uty, And now there are but | &? ol unsolved p of how to convince ie al amnity, Au 8 professor, ‘I felt that I had | nim that he ts “1 Shoufa for eugenie affinities? this problem of breaking the news to enough for both.’ “True, professor, but according to the Mendelian law of heredity, those brains a general x tq choose, the moral Which of the two tq cho We will take up paragon or the intellectual skyrocket, ould ink, be left to the personal eae a the ind sividual, AG ‘any | of yours will be halved in each of your him, or her, to-morrow, kegs for the subline 1 rate, I don't lot of in- - - —_—_———— r Class and crack shortstop, W jer, manager of the team, a kame unless the faculty Thuraday. ‘That little affair at Landing hold the student body of Ruts: time-honored custom ac Br a College Prohibition Ls Suler, President of the Y. M,C. ald Rosa, Vi lent of th D, Auchte all seniors young gentlemen x} they had followed dignant morall letters of prote: choloe, But {t will be seen that a eugente choice is very different from a real or unsclentific cholce. Hor, left to our own devices, most of us wed our physical or “nancial affinity, Professor Nearing cites the case of a man Who chose his wife eugenically, as follows: “How obvious !# this statement, yet how haphazard has been the production | of greatness, Only once In a generation | does a man, In his choice of @ wife, so I can’t indicate a } ONE who are devout! h.! raft is renominated all} alics should vote for of order ore riwhtmnine him as the thority. chosen in € Jand ‘has to demand of the! right moeratic party a candidate who will} a table to them, as one ‘with| ce toward none and with charity to all’ in regard to the religion of all the people af the United States, “With such a leader @ true successor daily from Young Shop to one of our greatest Presidents, and not a base metal countentatt present- ment,’ the country may still be saved, h whatever calamity may overwhelm the no chances. Chicago Convention,” I amy Btorer and his wife sailed for e to-day, @ day ahead of the time they had intended and without giving out a second attack on Roosevelt, which they had intimated was coming, Panamas and Bangkoks at Popular Prices. $2, $3 and $4 A ~- ri coe 0. SerTee Fp inne A cataract of cool comfort in straw hats pours — s. If you are on the brink of indecision, choose a Young and take STORES CLOSED ON DECORATION DAY. i Erich L, Bertram Dead. ary . i way sh Leopold’ Bertram,. night city | $0 Bromway 6 Broadway. jtor of the New Yorker Staate-Zele 605 Broadway 37 Nassau St. tung, died yesterday at the German] 849 Broadway, A Hospital in Brooklyn, He had been} 903 Broadway. Only Brooklyn Store: operated on for appendicitis ® week| 4497 Broadway Saran ago, At his deathbed were his wife, . A SURO Be Mrs, Anna Bertram, and his mother, | 50 Fifth Ave. HONE B Opposite Chey Hall. ‘Auguste Bertram, Mr. Bertram ETTER MADE Mrs, was born at Magdeburg, lence in chapel to-day, Of course, none | MAY 28, Dexter Witte, cantatt of the. arm To-Morrow, Wednesday feami G. W. Martin, editor of the CAN You I GINE. arg, (ho College pane; M. C. Monee MA\ & more appro- Arthue Nevrone “he beat acléere’ aad priate or iful dress for the gay | Fred Mf. Fountain, captain of the ten holiday festivities than a charming, niw team, All President Demarent would say to- coo! lingerie yown? And it would be day was that ho hoped that the faculty impossible to find a more ci and, | her unusual mental ailment and he by . ho were | ——— MISS SHAW RECOVERS | | MEMORY IN BELLEVUE | Girl Who Suffered Strange Lapse | Goes Home Aftera Week's | Treatment, - Miss Eva Bimira Shaw, the attractive 1912. ing restraint upon hose of thelr “get stewed. @ dear boys did Horrors, no! They wondrously 40 who downed the frowt created w the are idoln of indergraduato Jimmy Alver+ he football team: If and J. FF. contain of Soudder, mitnaKer the $ $798 could adjust the matter at to-morrow s stunning array of these dainty dresses than in the Bedell Stores. Cne Style Iiustrated All-Over Eyelet Embroidery The dainty model shown is of all-over Swiss eyelet embroidery, richly cluny lace trimmed; others are successfully modelled in silky batistes and embroid- meeting young woman who approached a pollo ered voiles. Some have the new peplum man at Thirty-fifth street and Mre and tunic effects, and all are elaborately Way last Wednesday afternoon, ¢ embroide: trimmed. that she did not know her lace and ry name or where she ilved and whose unusual form of hysteria attracted the Alterations FREE event In her life except what trans pired between the time she took a Third avenue train at the Thirty-third street station on Tyestoy night and the hour on Wednastay when she wep. vealed to the polle Nn. Dr, Gregory sald to-day that he con- Fulton Street—Brookl, 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, Ned: sidered Miss Shaw practically cured of Heved that th no rence of the singular japse of memory which had put her in the hospital with her mind a blank, Miss Shaw, he add- showed full mental strenath except in the one regard of the lost memory. Wedding Gifts of Silver and Jewelry HERE is nothing the bride cherishes more than her gifts of sterling—to be found here in supreme beauty and variety—and at prices to meet every taste. Also a superb collection of gems and gold jewelry in a wide range of designs. Thirty-fourth St., West. For Week-ends and Holidays For the GOLFING GIRL we have a LINEN SHIRT WAIST that is de- signed to meet the particu- Pa. | President of the | en, captain of the baseball team, | first baseman, a star southpaw and a jim dandy centreflelger, under suapen- sion, it will be impossible to play the! before | lar needs of the golfer, allowing free and easy mo: tions for the swing The girl who plays TEN NIS desires a sii that is at once end cool comfortable. A SHIRT OF WHITE CHINA SILK IS For RIDING we have a specially designed SHIRT WAIST that has won its way to a deserved popu: larity. Its price is WASHABLE CORDU ROY SKIRTS, just the thing for outdoor sports, ” REED & B BARTON Co. Jewelers and Silversmiths FIFTH AVE. and 32d ST. 4 MAIDEN LANE 4.00 4.50 Health and Beauty Answers BY MRS, MAE MARTYN Wil! shampoo | ngs with powder or ereasy creams, wi Ment a int are of in white and 5 spurmax in YY THE FORSYTHE COLLEGE SWEATER, « t necessity for wear er exerciee, 1p 5.00 ENGLISH BLAZ to spot or atrent My COATS, on which Dam ams aS ee Fashion ha placed her equently advi the use stamp of approval tr be she fered at the v orsyt with as fi obtained 5 The: be the city. are | Mail Orders Promptly Filled, JOHN FORSYTHE 22 to 26 34th St., West Just dimsolve in West of the Waldorf, % drops iv ts that not in experienced, flesh firm and is so nventer akin inburn, ‘This pie aimoxoin rts diceet sand Roaster middleman ghtly appl ing youtl to which te added 2° erlney Martyn's book, “Beauty, jeen rotuile Other prices as oe as Re 32h Mail Ordore Filled and Deliveret ©, 0. D: Callor write for complet whed LMM GIL LIES COFFEE | co. em before the W edding It’s a Wonder! ‘That's what they all say—all who see the almost magic domonstrations heing held in New York Department It’s Voltite that instantly plates any metal article with either nickel, pure silver or real gold. Easy, cheap, instan- taneous. Base- Abraham & Straus, Basement. Send for Literature. the demonstration any day at Macy ment, 35th St. side American Voltite Co., 225 West 39th St., New York. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS Sea