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at NF . ; t ‘ay i EFLELT 4 Visitors from the Provinces Every Styles on View There and Women as the Low-Backed Car of Song and Story Is Being Remodelled. By William P. MoLoughiin. ; on, hla iar Wapteta! Correspondence of The Evening if an Am ‘World establish p. any of the con; tory of a hat factory, Yor inate ii would be undoubtediy'a profitable’ as te, Labor ‘@ plentiful, and the calibre of the present generation of young Irlah distrfoution ena capitalist should rested dle- SECOND ARTICLE. DUBLIN, Ireland, June %—Here in capital city of Ireland is more ap- past than anywhere else the change é men and women available fo: the conditions, both material and rork is of unusual Intelligence, agian ul om, it throughout material would bea great songiderae @ptimism that one finds working to the ton In the results to be aocomplifed. | Giitface cast, west, north and south 18| mayer ng’ wie sat, sorte are being | Fadected in its most agreeable form In| velop the laco-~making, croahet, ‘enitting vate seomns to bes lank of ropes imebeals young Irish man or woman in SP astestion ahd thlomelt moto. Provinces casts longing eyes in the| ay [ am informed, to , due entirely, of “ear old Dublin.” It 1s the} veloping funds, the deed of de- pe of the boys and girls} Factories conducted on modern i Fran “ERIN PROSPERITY » The Beautiful Irish Capital the Magnet | “'That Draws Thousands of Happy; © Smart as Those ia New York—Even| CHE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 2, 1906 SCENE IN FRONT OF HANNAH ELIAS'S HOME AT LONG BRANCH, WHERE SHE IS SUMMERING.| Kk *k HANNAR ELIAS W SECLUSI Negress Accused of Getting a Fortune from Old Man Plat Living Quietly at Long Branch t GOMPES HERE ~ TOLEAD STAKE President of the Federation of Labor Arrives to Direct “Open Shops” Fight of the Garment- Workers. Four Pages in Colors Devoted to 4th of July Features by Famous Contributors. Special Music Supplement. A Patriotic Song Written for the Sunday World. Among the Contributors to the 4th of July Supplement Mrs. CHAS. W. Mayor GEO. FAIRBANKS. B. McCLELLAN. “Women’s Share in Devel the Land of the Free and the Home of the What the Nation Owes to New York City.’ Brave,” When you get your Sunday World to-morrow, be sure that it includes the Special Fourth of July Supplement. Will Be: Sec’y of War WM. H. TAFT: Historian JOHN BACH McMASTER. school that ome day they may be| ciples for the manufacture of with Her Baby, aa to visit the capital of thelr nation,| tionapiy, be auscessfu, ts thet Siem Presifent Samuel Gompers, of the “The Next Step in the Development of “A Thumbnail History of the United ‘as it is by the traditions that) growing demand for those fabrice American Federation of Labor, to-day the United States,” States,” their forefathers in days when | Which the present somewhate-soattered| Hannah Ellas's baby got an alring arrived from Washington and took the * deeds of war, strains of en- iene Se a ee mane, supply. | yesterday on the big lawn in front of helm in the garmeat-workers’ strike pedling music and phrases of patriotio| of endeavor, v 06 Cther Bass | her cottage at Long Branch, which she against the “open shop” on the lower ‘atirred men’s souls, Irteh-at ries the Rage. has rented furnished for the summer east side, Mr, Gompers hastened to the for $1,000, It waa the first time that Long Branch had an opportunity of seeing that famous baby, and Long Branch necks stretched and eyes bulged until the Elias woman, not at all pleased over the sengation her baby was cre- ating, summoned Kato and instructed him to take the baby indoors, hye The baby was in @ cane pushcart, muffied to the eyes im a silk rug. A flowered satin-covered parasol shielded (ita eyes from the auniignt. The nurae, Bible House headquarters and went Into executive conference with ex-President Charles F. Reichers and members of the Executive Counci! of the United Garment-Workers of America. The conference dealt largely with matters of finance, as the garment- workers have appealed to President Gompers for funds with which to pay atrike benefits, Benefits to Begin Tuesday. The strike benefits will not begin is that the trains coming corners of the island bear ing city each day in this thousands of visitors at the historic sights. in the splendid martes to ask of the great hich are famed in the big t Cities, They come to make trips to the many charming re- that abound on every side—Rath- 6, Rathgar, Bray, Kingstown, the Rev. THOS. R. SLICER. “What the Declaration of Independence Would Contain if It Were Written To Day.” WM. C. HUNT. Tt must be borne in mind in this con. nection that the reawakeni: national spirit in favor of in language and literature hes brought with it a patriotic desire to wear only Irish-made fabrics, so that the demand which exists to-day is certain to con- tinue when the boys and girla who are hool will be Failure to properly advert! fa centres the Irish wares for ave had considerable influence in tarding the frowth of the demand tro abro It Ta quite noticeable that t Bishop HENRY C. POTTER. “Americans of To-Day and To-Mor- row.” bi ranufacturer, brewer or dtattiior loa not as much money jn thi direction ax his English ‘otch com- petitor, and th: paren’ i found tp om on Hroadway, N ork, abundant sup. piles f fuidehook handsomely mapped nd Hiustrated, Phas attention to the utles of th th lochs and moun ins, the English lakes and castles, the allurements of the Riviera, the ancient splendors of Romo and Venice, the Mountains and the other mar- ‘Desutiful places that attract @¥@ and gladden the heart of the after that which Is the finished of Nature at her best, (\ De ao Thriving Business. _ Tile pilgrimage of visitors brings in #8 train a store of shining gold sov- @feigns, some of which arg expended . the purchase of up-to-date cloth-| magnificence and ¢ vety of Paris, Vi- ] 4 for women. Much of pothing to Gahan 9nd periin, aut , rous ‘lake, ‘the money t for jewelry and bric-! Mountain and coast ‘of Ire. home to the litte /and~this country that Where await the exe (yan Bi turgraue. and’ romantie eaoria hope sometime to visit ‘ously enough, I find plenty of Irish ves, beng book: and INustrated lets At ia not surprising, therefore, that | wanted Meh fe eeney are. not the millinery, drapery, jewelry and that very few. {rom the wrest pernahs rio-a-brac shops in the neatly kept American tourists that invades Burove @treets of Dyblin every year find their way to Ireland, that the thoroughfa: Viewn Not Optimistic, ing to the hoofbgats of hun.|, A Well-known Irishman, more blessed q ay had been sayly equipped jaunting cars| of the changes wiowaht in that’ the American made electric , years in I |, asked me if I wi Ks are crowded inside and out on | ‘Aking too optimistic @ view of the alt- trip with well-dressed, cheerful! Ho ‘said: “Emi, ation 00, Qnd intelligent men and women, the tow @ crowded with tale me And having mentioned the far-famed ona women fAaer for but unable to ob- Jaunting car let me send forth a) facts with your general deductions of good cheer to those whose) I told him that even in America, in “ tions of jt were of a char. | Hf, Wonderful era inde et Wile Geter that aroused suspicion as to iis and women. the t tha utility as a public conveyance, 1) Continues is sad, but the conditions now bel! a . heard a man say that the jaunt-| Net fol tele Cee ees er ie RRB car was the most ingenivus instru-| one to the observation of a cheering ent of torture ever invented. ‘This! {24 & general Improvement throughout untry, Particular objector declared that on ac-| Then I drew his attention to this con- @Ount of the absence of a support fur |Gition of affairs in the retrograding cities of England described by ®aret Polson Murray, an EngWahwom- an, In @ recent Issue of the Westmina- ter Review: “The English artisan, the backbone of the country, Is In a sorry plight, for In jaddition to his general ignorance, his Tarrow horlzon, his antiquated tools ;and methods, his unalteralbe convic- tion that he has nothing to learn, he must meet the brunt of the warfare handicapped by his intemperance. “and, wor: f all, we are in very actual posses: of twelve miliiona, fhe beck of the rider a journey of miles on @ jaunting car bad the @¢ almost woubling up ones +} speedy ie sweep 4 sharp turn those off side would have to cling to or to whatever part of the was handiest, to keep themselves being hurled off at a eaennt, as boys or girls are cast adr ft in the , Hho Whip’, The: Yrequent’ wruing ot |7eut one tn cur of our population, ’ ‘ almost as bad as an attack fh ~ are in abject poverty, too incapa- for anything, ven for anarchy; men and women why streets of our large dred thousand, bold black-eyed, sinful, dishonest debauched, never sober excent by ac: cident, incapable of self-respect, and content to dwell in filth and rags inde- serthable.”* Then my Irish friend looked as it he “I'm glad. at any rate," were ple at in Ireland the vice of yi he sald, inte peran std: out," jaunting car has } i of progressive. ih the the corners. jew York. ow windows of amazing in their eas and neatness of design. But lw not wondered at here by men @ travelled, for they ve points to their Frem New York modistes adapt Parisian styles to their the own :@state man consented, apparently quite unconscious of the at- tention she and her charge were cre- ating, continued to push the baby cart slowly over the spacious lawn In front of the cottage until aroused by Kato's command, (‘Come her he shouted from the porch. A movement of a Ja) anese porch ecreen which shielded a the presence of Hanneh Elias. Ordered Child I "Yes, Kato," she sald, to bring the baby Indoors. Kato and the nuree between them raised the carriage gently and depoatted it on the porch, Then the carr wheeled around the veranda to the op- posite side of the house, The Japanese screen above flapped into postition and Hannah Elias was again hidden from the vulgar gaze, Kato returned into the house, and his place outside was taken fl py the butler, who took turns with the nurse in wheeling the baby carriage up and down the veranda, But while the cunous spectators remained the baby carriage was not again allowed upon the lawn. Seeing, but unseen, Hannah Ellas Branch soclety from behind screen which extends over the two sides of the niche on the second floor veranda or perch, her favorite place of observation and rest, From be- hind the screen she ca her aristo cratic neighbors and the aristocracy of Long Branch as jt passes her cottage door afoot or awheel Has Her Retinue of Ser Two weeks ago Saturday the Elias woman moved into the Long Branch cottage, followed by the faithful Kato and her retinue of servants. It was through Kato the cottage long known to Long Branch residents as the Vanote cottage was secured. Anxious to learn the {dentity of his atsanaatiys tenants, the estate agent asked Kato to name the person for whom he was negotiating the rental of the cotiage. He explained that the cottage was de- sired by a woman of wealth, It was not until Hannah Elias had moved in after the lease waa signed that the real-estate man discovered the true identity of his summer tenant. He pro- tested at first, but when the deputiaed Kato said: "You shall reo $1,000 for the rental of the cottage,” the real- with the under- standing, however, he told Kato, that at the first sign of nulsance threatened or Ing, he would retain the option of slaiming the property at once. The Injunction has had its effect Hannah Elias has not even shown her- self outdoors after dark. She remains go also do the experts here, PRISON TERM CURED and finish and that indeser bable | SE the'maid'whn'sturns one bens’ | Accused Man’s Plea Sincere | ,and Convincing and Judge! Mercifully Suspended Sen-| tenc on Him. result in America js, I am told, that the | department | liners and seamstresses, so after all there is only the difter- Of location. with the same bright- of treatment of the Gaelic Tongue, Instance of the spread of guage due to the revival study in the schools is the num Of store sigrs printed in the old racters that are to be ob-| Fred C. ; come urn pi Rosenthal, who had just | four years term In Au- n for passing a check which rom $20 to $5,000, was brought in Dublin—and be it remembered |from Auburn to-day to be arraigned n has ever been famed ig before Justice Thomas, of the United conservatism. ‘This, taker oa te beam Fidler With the bustling demand Sates Court, Brooklyn, Ao ne tions, te dulent use of the mails. ie ths rondo me “Ot the | Regenthal the Wudge if he Mterature of the ceantry.; Might be allowed to say something Other towns an cities | for himscif when requested to make; 4 West, I notice a nad| Als plea. He sald Vigorous men hung: 1 would plead gullty willingly and take my medicine, but hope clem- ency of His Honor will be used in“my present case. My inearceration has taught me a lesion and I now know that the old adage ‘Honesty is the best Rey is a true one. I am repentent. | ¢ lessons | learned at Auburn have been thorough, Let me go back to my where | may fort of a job that will joing along from @ sad evidence of the establish tndustries employ every idle unobtrusively within doors, the baby and the nurse seemingly being the only occupants of the house who enjoy the} pleasures of a stroll through the gardens or a wheel across the extensive lawn Hannah Elias behind the screened porch sits for pours looking out upon Bath and Sayres avenues at the Intersection of which is located her ‘ze. She is the first to notice the approach of strangers and gives her commands accordingly from her oyrie The cottage is one of the finest In the Ioeality and stands in the centre of a large plot of ground hundred feet from her new In the rear of the cottage man’s use and an automobile but Hannah Elias has not as yet oro- vided herself with an automobile Kato's Bleyelo Arrives, Kato's bicycle was delivered from the Central Park West residence at the cottage to-day, and Hannah Ellas’s victoria was expected, but did not ar- rive, When the team and the carriage reach Long Branch Hannah Flias will be a figure on the driveways, for driv ing is ler only recreation they say a the house. She has never left hee home even for a drive unless her face wus yelled, and few at Long Branch will recognize the woman to whom old corner of the veranda above revealed HANNAH ELIA8. Branch and through the neighboring centres of aristocracy, Hannah Fllas’s black vell will be quite as Impenetrable at Long Branch as in Central Park West, Before the woman arrived at her summer cotiage it was known among the r nts that she had hired the Vanote cottage and was coming among the fashionables of Long Branch to be a neighbor, At firet indignation waa expressed. Members of wom and associations In Long B: Jared that the presence of Hannah a would not be tolerated, but this spasm of Indignatton has Worn off, The woman's neighbors say they have no complaint | to Diagonally across from the BE ‘ottage Is the handsome and stately residence of Mry. >» oN, Wiley, an aristocratic Ithy woman who ls known to eve person in Long Branch. Front- cottage is the summer Manning, and stretching to the south along Bath avenue are the cottages of many millionaire: none {s within two hundred feet of the Elias summer residence, Partly hidden maples | {nal plot of ground, and flowered, stand 8 cot- tage, and except when the baby Is being rolled ') tts carriage on the lawn |and then only when few are passing, and when t servants are seen enter- ine and leaving the cottage, no sign of life The grocery and meat received at the rear en- ate from the strect, and the nan ig never al within the portals of even t¢ nm on- trance h Han- nah coming and going of all callers. but the neighbors ay that thus far she has received no Visitors, black or white | Nelther Mra, Wiley nor Col has any fault to find beca love proximity of woman from Ithe trades people e: |to receiving any from Hannah Bilas. amores and Manning se of the for supplies bays in cash © mone to the ‘Ault to find,” was said ley’s residence. “The woman keeps to herself and is too far away from any of us to be objectionable Bo long as she conducts her affairs quietly, }@s she has begun, we apprehend that there will be no revolt on the part of her neighbors, We would not have known that the woman was really in possession of the cottage were it not for t i r-carrier who delivers mail at her door, When he circ lated the ) story of her presence it was a twenty. ft hours’ wonder, end we have by this quite forgo about the woman. 8) is certainly discreetly q and silent" HONORS FOR LORD CURZON. Ned Warden of the c Ports with Quaint Ceremonial, DOVER, England, July Lord Curaon, of Kedleston, Viceroy of India was in to-day as a Lord Warden of the ¢ Ports with all the cus- temary pleturenque ceremonial. Dover was elaborately decorated with flags in honor of the ocdasion and great crowds flocked in to witness the quaint and in- teresting proceedings. Lord Curzon first made a triumphant tour of the town and then proceeded to Dover Caatle whioh he was welcomed by the Barons of the Cinque Ports, In gorgeous robes, A procession was formed, headed by the mace bearers and bands and ac- companied by all the locals notabilities, and proceeded along a troopelin route through the town to the college greounds, where the installation cere- mony, which dates from the reas wes Cs) get, The re and) 5 but! 9 surrounding | gia. ‘ed| Justice Kelly, In Brooklyn, add a para- until next Tuesday, as under the oon- stitution of the cutters’ and taflors’ or- gantsations they must be out for two weeks before financial relief 1s forth- coming from thelr organizations, The cutters will get @ benefit of $10 and $12, respectively, for single and married members, while the tallors are entitled to % and #7. “Our treasury holds sufficient funds to run us for six weeks,’ said ex-Presl- dent Reichers, to an Evening World reporter, “After then we wish to gt outside support. The organization has @ total membership of 98,000, and, while we can levy @ strike benefit, and have done so in New York among the work- ing cutters and taliors, we do not In- tend be caught short of relief funds and seek to get the financial support of the American Federation of Labor. Want Gompers’s Moral Support. “Then, we also desire the moral port of President Gompers, We are a {national organization which haa been attacked oy the ‘Oj shop’ heresy promulgated by David M. Parry, of In- dianapolis, and it rests with sistes or- ganizations to ald us in our stand @gainat further spreading of the so- called American plen, which means noth jess than @ return to the old hop the clothing ad has been erroneously stated that all of the union cut end tailors in w York are on strike. Only one-third mployed directly or in- rectly by ¢ forty clothing firms | which are affiliated with the Manufao- turers’ Association which posted the pen shop” notices in their shops—in all, 1,200 cutters and $4,000 miscellaneous garment workers. Dig Advertising Outlay, the garment workers should seek rt is not surprisi system in organiza' jin advertising | streot cara and at every public waiting house in the Unite Then the organization, sin jthe Rochester cutte b trike last Octo- , has had upward of thirty agents on the road, each with a big daily e: pense, spreading the boycott against the | Clothiers’ Exchange of the Flower City, General Secretary Harry White, Whose absence from the garment work- ers’ headquarters since the New York strike began has been widely comment- ed upon, appeared at the conference with President Gompers, It was re- ported that the situation In Philadel- | phla, where the cutters were locked out v the manufacturers, showed signs of improvement, and that the employe were weakenin, ———— INO CANTEEN FOR JERSEY MILITIA Selling of Thirst Quenchers at Sea Girt State Camp Prohib- ited This Year by Gen, Gil- more, in Command. TRENTON, N. J., July 2.—The new National Guard edict has gone forth, and for this year at least the canteen will be abotished at Sea Girt. The fol- lowing order has been sent out by Brig.- Gen. Gilmore: “During the coming organization of this brigade the establishment of the oted solely to the . wines or other is prohibited.” ia the result of the abuse of the custom of having @ stock of thirst-quenching stuff on hand for the acoor tion of the officers and those who visit them during the encampment, —— Unger, Braaf's Attorney, In the report of the unique request of Mra, Emma Braaf-Steinbach to have graph to her decree of divorce from Charles Braaf, compelling him to sup- JOHN R. SPEARS. Historian of the Navy, on “The Story of the Stars and Stripes,” Chief Statistician of the Census, on “Footprints of Uncle Sam Told by the Census.” Special Song Supplement. “In the Folds of the aa! Flag,” written and composed especially for the Sunday wee by VICTOR HERBERT and PAUL WEST. C. P. AUSTIN. Chief of the Bureau of Statistics, on “Milestones of Finance and Commerce.” # MAGAZINE FEATURES -* The Jilted Man Who Turned. The Man With the Magic Touch. A Death Chair Mystery. The strange case of Albert Koepping, who made a “con- fession” in the shadow of death. Was he a hero or a scoundrel? A puzzle that will set you thinking. Elmer Oliver, who sues a girl for $5,000 because she proved fickle. The precedent established by him — will other men follow it? A remarkable healer who can neither read nor write, yet cures people by the laying on of hands. A mystery to phy- sicians, The Strange , Case of the Lunn Sisters. Two aged sisters who have always been greatly re- spected, now under serious charg¢s. “The Stroke of 12.” By Alexander Black, How Love Reopened a Feud. An Indiana romance that reads like fiction, yet is ab- solutely true. A thrilling story of a duel on the Fourth of July, written especially for the Sunday World, Two New York || How $100 Boys’ Bear Changed “‘Jack’’ Hunt. McGinnis’ Luck. A trip to the Rockies and The story of a check given what happened, An interest- by ex-Sheriff Buttling and ing account of a hunt for ‘ big game.” how it altered a man’s career, Can a Woman Artist Win in New York ? The story of Miss Florence Estelle Sheffield’s struggle and how it has turned out. Senator Morgan || The Summer “4th of July” as Seen by Girl's Eyebrows || in the Kate Carew. and Lashes. “Funny Side.” bs bark statesman wr Margaret Hubbard Ayer’s “The Kid,” Panhandle Pete, ap weekly valuable instruction |} Lady Bountiful and all the poses for sketches by the Sun- day World’s clever woman to girls who wish to improve Funmakers in various amus- their appearance.