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se Z pat ‘i Fy rae f ‘aula he Evening World Daily The efeiisity Misti. ‘The Day of Rest rst. SOD BY JOSEPH PULITZER, | Parlishea Daily Vxeont Sunday by the Preece Publishing Company, Nos, 62% - 63 )ark Row, New York OR, President, 6) Park Row, | Md ‘Treasurer, 63 Park \ Row, oa ZER,' Jr, Secretary, @ Park Row, ,YOU OUGHT Not To DAY o ition at Ere Geond-Clans Matter, © CUT THIS GRASS >. DEARIE. eons “Evening| For England and the Continent and) nln pe (A ALC BAGGED ouT. 9 United States All Countries in the International 1AM GOING 16 THE BEACH ohio ale icrd Ms, Wl (THINK A DIP IN THESEA, Bad Witt REST HE * Cadel ate aa ae alee J pha eae See ee eS oj Magazine, Monday; The Love Stories Of Great Americans By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright 1014, br the Drew Pobliaung Co, The New York Evening World.) XXII.—ALEXANDER HAMILTON’S COURTSHIP. 66 ‘OU have no conception of how sweet a girl she is, She has a | lovely form and a still more lovely mind: She {4 all goodness, | the gentlest, the dearest, the tenderest of her sex. Ah, Betsy. how I love her!" we saris on, By Maurice Ketten (The New York Rrening World) + $8.50/One Year. : O1One Month. sevescees NO, 19,326 THE B. R. T. SUNDAY SCHOOL. | The man who wrote this quaint love letter in 1779 was a twenty-twoe | year-old soldier of fortune, private secretary Gen, Washington and a VERY Sunday in the summer time the Brooklyn Rapid Transit ‘ | S, } EN GT ator be ee IAVIRF wea Cent aia : Ls PA TR gp " 2 1 6 girl about whom he wrote was Elizabeth Schuyler, younge " Company gives a public but not free lesson concerning what N daughter of the great land owner and patriot, Gen. Philip Schuyler of > befalls a people who either do not know their rights or do | Albany. f Bot dare maintain them. Discomfort always and disaster frequently Hamilton was not only writing about Elizabeth, but also to Ellsabeth. wm is the lot accorded to those that take the teaching, Moreovor these, Wt te. (] | He delighted, in his letters to his sweotheart, to speak of ber as though h r ‘Will continue until the enfferers have learned to apply in reason what eae ee CY she Whats dii staad ee - © |} %, they have learned in unreason and set themselves to the task of ob- = S cing and romance about his birth—oa mystery and romance that would Wath ‘a /* taining reform and redress. ” 7 well into a complete love story on its own account. Fatherless, he drifted | \ a3 _ Back of all the abominations of the inadequate service is the! : ~ —— i TAY BE HE Got La ey stadetng mastetts: Teer uc the aa anes uae collie ‘at aa Ty B. RB. T. management, back of the management is the Public Service | SRI PONT ay Week Now | a Seowces” (at he See ats awe eHse MEA aoGh backne Wi O i ; rang Ne * 2 ashington’s notice a mi cretary. a stew 7 of the Commission is the area back of the, in NT GETING DINNER IAT S REE PING / Getting + MAM 4970 be wan sent (© Alvany en @ diplomatic mission to Gen, Gates, ‘Saale J Legislature is the people with power to elect Legislators pledged to Tr WORRIED nan, rr bagi “a , lke hundreds of other strangers who chanced to vielt » the old Dutch city, he invited to call on Gen. A Wartime } Schuyler. Wooing. 3 The Schuylers were enormously rich and influen- tial. They had a palace of a home and counties slaves. Gruff old Gen. Schuyler “kept open house,” throughout the Revolu- tion; and he made welcome the dapper little colonel-secretary who bore letters of Introduction to him from Washington. Tt was on his first visit to the Schuyler home that Hamilton met Elisa- beth, who was just his own age. He fell in love with her, but he found her hard to win. For one reason, she had an army of suitors, For another. Tlamititon was penniless, nameless and without prospects, while she was on- of the richest girls in America, Tilchman thus described her: “Bhe ts a brunette with the most good-natured, dark, lovely eyes I eve: waw. © © © The finest tempered irl in the world.” But, poor as he was, Hamilton was handsome and fascinating—ae more than one woman had already learned, and as many another in years to came was to learn. And at last he won the day. After two years of stren- uous wartime courtship he gained Elizabeth's consent to marry him. Ané— | what spoke far more eloquently for his powers of fascination—he wen hei father’s reluctant consent to the match. Elisabeth and Hamilton were married on Dec. 14, 1780, and moved tu New York, where they set up housekeeping tn a cottage on Wall street. FAGGED Our 5 later changing their abode to the Hamilton Grange house. Hamiiton left COME RIGHT "HERE the army and studied law. His father-in-law’s wealth and influence made = KOHN 4 the young man’s path smooth and kept the wolf from the door. Hamilton's own genius did the rest. His rise was swift, Elizabeth's tact and cleverness hetping him aloni at every step, He became the first Secretary of the Treasury and he established on a firm rock our wab- Romance bling national credit. and Tragedy. He and Elizabeth had seven children. Their eldes mnmeneenneerr? gon, a lad of nineteen, wan killed In a duel on Weehaw- HIM HE'S BEEN S investigate the conduct of public utilities. The approaching primaries! will afford to every voter a chance to do his share in obtaining such \ Pledges from Legislative candidates. ‘That is the present and perti-| t nent moral of the B. R. T.’s Sunday lesson. He that would have the Wesson changed must act upon the moral. ——-+-— THE COMING OF SHAMROCK IV. HAMROCK IV. is crossing the ocean under her own sails, in secord with the rules upon which the America’s Cup is to be competed for. She is not coming, however, in the shape in which she is going to make the race. She carries neither her racing rig, racing sails nor racing mast, nor will she have at any one time) fore than half her racing crew aboard. Moreovershe will be attended | all the way by a steam yacht to look after her in case of storm or eccident. These facts illustrate the changes that steam and mechanism and ingenuity have wrought in sea craft since the first America crossed the seas to compete in a match for genuine ocean going sailing yachts. The deep sea cruising yacht under sail alone is virtually obsolete. ved modern racing yacht is a different thing altogether. We are ing to held a ninetecnth century math saRaR lean tlalhy’aan te ton Heights, in 1801, on exactly the same spot where his father, three years conditions. The challenger comes like a mediraval knight with ah = {eee ceacarn outed cpanritaae tai k baiace ee half a century, devoting @rmor packed on the back of a mule, not to be put on until the lists h* Ghe eetabiished the fret orphan are open. It is the best we can do, however, so long as we insist She established the first orphan asylum in New York, by the way, and as a very old woman, she attended the asylum's semi-centennial, upon applying bygone regulations to new born issues. ——4—— J THE REFRESHMENT OF GRASS. aa First Stamp Licked Seventy-four Years Ago. { EVENTY-FOUR years ago an Eng.) and he was the first to suggest tha iS Hehman whose name is unknown | Prepayment of postage might be ie 7 | but who deserves Immortality, | nifled by “using a bit of paper ie HE eweltering heats of July give a double warmth to the wel- Heked the first postage stamp, placed | enough to bear the «amp and cover ye 3 come accorded by nearly all classes of people to the action oie Soe eee fy appivisg & Taueareainere nate * of Park Commissioner Ward in opening new areas of lawn Coie teed cite acd pn dauam terion dd Reet ari lira. dar ‘ and park to the use of those that wish to repose on the grass in the hade of the trees, “° With all its amplitude of riverside and ocean beach and wooded | / parks New York has not enough to meet the needs of its growing | stamps, a8 well as of cheap postage. | When penny postage was adopted an | Bir Rowland Hill was the author of the | put Into effect on Jan. 10, 189, the fire ‘echeme for reducing the postage rate | postage stamps were placed on sal: OOFOOD “ ” rf population when summer time does its worst in swift alternations of Heart-to-Heart” Talks Are Apt to Rasy. get hramidity and aridity. On such occasions every new permiasion of | § OF A Lead to Lip-to-Lip Silences. , dbcess to the refreshment that grass gives to body and to mind is a a seoeseesoos hoon to be thankful for. ra to give it up,” but she never does until the last drop in the cup of youth It may be the grass is injured to some extent, but grass is not is drained and Time has turned out the love-light. hitman. It recovers with the first rainfall. Like truth, if crushed a. it will rise again. Moreover, it is a poor turf that cannot tl @0 he It's @ poor wife who can't trust her husband better than her own eyes, e weight of a resti i ar 8 sting mother or the play ote prankeome child. By WELEN RO NV ILZNINI De: A woman seldom has time to join a “Don’t Worry” club unless ehe eH po) iS Cuctaccrede areeea Wonk has a hard-working husband somewhere downtown to do the worrying 5 NO CURE FOR BRIDGE. | ARRIAGB 1s like a book by Bernard Shaw; the preface is often the| for her. CCORDING to a consensus of alienists and neurologists in IM most interesting and delightful thing about it, E conference at Chicago all psychic aberrations are due to “A book of verses underneath the bough, a jug of wine, a loaf of bread,|® wife has to use HIS corset cove T that can be mad with sleeves one that will be appr: | elated by @ great mar [a women. It is absolute simple in cut, betr made in Japanese atyl: and can be closed : either the front or th i back. It is simple tm tt extreme and means on! Of course nobody believes in a personal devil nowadays, but sometimes | lot of mental science in order to persuade herself that net oF silk a» | " sitp or from je’ ab. physical causes manifested physiologically by an excess of /@nd thou——” may bé Paradine; but to make it perfect, the modern man she didn’t marry one. im, ia linet "Thre | red corpuscles in the blood. The secondary causes are many and, would, a3) "Not always'the same! ‘thou oh: Lard, Got elways the same eer Ge ioveaiokness With “taentallavanesiioh” Hing "in wich hese } ‘arpa the chief in our country being alcoholism, crime, vagabondage aaa by merely suggesting to him that the girl 1s trying to marry him. fe hintahed with ‘and bridge. ae. = oa == niaed wi x4 . * The best way to celebrate your marriage is to forget it--and preten | =, Being of physical origin, they are subject to physical remedy, | that seh rant ni fove: ‘The-kind of man who“tties to kiss every pretty girl he meets at a ply fin’ Uttle beading and eda i and not know it from a % Farm labor will cure alcoholism. Improved prisons will cure crimi- summer resort would cheerfully smoke a cabbage ' “ ir we ex nelity. Exciting occupation will cure vagabondage. We are told Flirting is to a coquette what wine 1s to a toper; she is always “going Havana. { a a ae 7 || Sree ate de % oe ak. i however, that no member of the conference could recommend @ cure er ich! earmen ta, hal Sor bridge. } | _ A Freak Meteor. Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy Porch Patter. } ‘bine apa eu tout Here is a call for governmental experts, or for those of some bol taaea wie) eh ee 1 9 isdo an By Alma Woodward. Heed end One ewe an q highly endowed institution for original research, to apply to high examined by Prof. Stanley and —(By Famous Authors)—— Coveright 1834, tbe Prom Pylalabine Co, could ‘be obtained with \ society the investigations eo often tried upon denizens of the slums, We* found to consist almost entirely Be is | edattes eee eae | Aphysical eure for bridge should he discovered if for no other cause Of DicKeltren, alloy. and te trewitn|NQ. 32.—THE EMIGRATION OF THE PILGRIM FATHERS. ene Frater, Seether am . A classed as a ; " ‘etwes than that of increasing the sum of human knowledge, Tango has a skin of magnetic oxide exhibiting By Edward Everett. et Jone ee ves, It we mofem dee been tried, but is only partially suecessfn! Snffragetto parading is, {iow lines and shows numerous “thumb ETHINKS 1 see tt now, that one politary, adventurous vessel, the |i, that bour petwege bie tetas ne the ‘corset, cover wit equally inadequate. Dishwashing is out of the question, 1, masks” An ansiyticel: Investigation Mayflower of « forlorn hope, freighted with the prospects of | fury "Suu alg pe mad yaa of maton BE Le | : ret question. Ts there too shows the presence of iron, nickel, all- future state and bound across the unknown wea. I behold it pur- | These particular fre doing the former, ‘ae, 96 or 44 tm wiae wy much red blood in bridge players for any cure to reach? licon, sulphur, carbon, phosphorus, suing with a thousand misgivings the uncertain, the tedious RS, A—Is this the firat summer hou Fie wars { ’ near aluminum, matnesium, platinum and voyage. Suns rise and sect and weeks and months pass and that you've spent at the Inn, wide, with 14 ya. 0 chlorine, the bulk of the meteorite be-| winter surprises them in the deep, but brings them not the sight of the M Mra, Bt facil aeaan'ier| read ing composed of Iron. wished-for shore. 3, B—No, indee cor ; } | be 4 T see them now acantily supplied with provisions, crowded almost to! every aummer. Let's sec—I've been Pattern 8,950-—Kimono Under Waist or Corset Cover, thre L etters Fr om th e P cop le ane soconspanied Uy an ets suffocation in their ill-stored priser, delayed by calms, pursuing a clr-| coming here seven yoara now. | Sali aa cn ak’ Meclumn a8 oF a Lara af | distance, and which was followed by cultous route, and now driven in fury before the raging tempest on the 441. 4 (mirted)—Of course it's all 42 44 Bust. awful voice of the storm hoots through the or Fr 'y Rates, You are touching on one of the most | the sight of the rapidly moving body,| high and giddy waves, right for one summer, But every ferries? Tam not sure that it bindalof metal or slate roofs aa against | neighbors’ children. in the case of the Weehawken ferries. eo bap ieee ap gree —¥es, | from the scene.) Mrs, 1. (suddenly) Was it the winter's and find the parallel of this, orm beating upon the houseless hi Do you Uke ‘To the Balitor of The Breving World ory psec > by a spiral trail of smoke | rigging. The laboring masts seem straining from their buse, the dismal | ' Cal! at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION Some days ago T saw. an articlo| “Safety Tiemte? Thee ue he Hine of Reco ow, hisain crackling noise. A| sound of the pumpe la heard, tho ship leaps, as it were, madly from billow /"ummer omen dew! BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo- about the Weehawken ferry authori-| 1 think, that tho fire at Malem, native woman narrowly escaped be-|to billow: the ocean creaks and settles with engulfing floods over the : a Se es F Maeplng around te Gimbel Bros.), cornor Fixth avenue and Tiirty-seconé street, ; might have been much less destruc. | ine struck by the missile, floating deck and beats with deadening welght against the staggered vessel. | On! New York, or sent by mall on receipt of ten cania in coin er tlés saying that the de ive had the roofs been metal covered, aii T eee them escaped from these perils, pursuing thelr all but desperate |*rom place to place, just for excite- stampa for each pattern ordered, Court about the Fort Lee | or even alate. Some cities throuxhout °, Wi undertaking and landed at last on the ice clad rocks of Plymouth—weak |ment. I'm on the go all winter— IMPORTANT.-Write your address plainly and alwase specify Soe a ER aE Mate which ee’ eeaed ordinances! Hits From Sharp Wits. ina weary trom the voyage, poorly armed, depending upon the charity of | terribly sony social dutien are pe ise wanted, Add two cents for letter postage If In « hurry. een true when ferries were orirt-| shingles, although not requiring the a shipmaaster for a draught of beer on board, drinking nothing but the| pressing. And when summer com: | an - nally built for railroads ouly, and|\se of any other roofing as a aubsti.| A lot of the ‘milk of human ktnd-| water on store, without shelter, without means, surrounded by hostile |I need Wier. It. back)--Well Py —- mere the convenience and use of) th With the appalling amount of{neas” has been pretty closely|tribes, Shut now the volume of history and tell me on any principle of| | Mra. A. foonncing It, ae as ell, my dear, The summer betire, tas wrandfatherly interest . bert ented barred ie saree jie i, ent year through de- skimmed.—Phil delphia Inquirer, human probability what shall be the fate of this handful of adventurers. TL gnem, pabody a on mm oe one ee ET TM eae | ae B. (breathlessly)--You don’ teaffic of which the railroad had the ction of buildings from fire, any Tell me, man of military science, in how many months were they swept | moras hardly tgh! s at! —_ P . . cata “ = vo; me’ : y a night sees us at! fore Mra, @. (scornful Sur r A a A re Sera ape try as Nona #8 S| nusbende are lending we tnereone. [Of HY the wavage tribes enumerated within the early limite of New| nome, It it isn't the opera, or a Mrs, C. (with cruel instauntion— poor thing spends all he: spare tim railroad terminals which hava been| tiles and metal shingles, &&., are man- | Deseret News, England. theatre party, it’s a dinner, or gance, | Isn't it funny you're so hard to sult? in winter making inc 5 abou | bullt on a place where a certain| Ufactured by y concerns all over oe ‘Tell me, politician, how long did this shadow of a colony, on which your| Why, I danced through—Hteral ¥| Mra, A, (hot off the bat)—Perhaps pincos where they acc date oni, | amount of traffic was ulready in ex-|the country, There is no monopoly| It's @ wonder nobody has started @| conventions and treaties had not amiled, languish on the distant coast. THROUGH—seven paire of slippers i'm a trifle more hartioular Bian child MIddie-aged Couples or wr Iatence to make a sure income for the] or one price posible. ‘Tha added cost | movement for the special reform of| Student of history, compare for me the baffled projects, the abandoned | last winter, | ay, some people, (She rises and stalks preserved apinaters | thone of wood is not so great but it's outrageous the way the cheaper Mrs, B, (gigsling) ‘That got her her? js of women | sort of dancing slipper gives out in| goat all right. But, f tance, if yumipaby | Many — think! oper edt | haracteristic of the nelf-made Mra, C.—Me? I hate the sight o: ec lneemave. If une CoBshahy auld doen ne property opera mee ena. Thee ybody | and Sarat, was it hard labor and spare meals, was it EAR, ve it] one wearing. Mrs. C. (atage whiaper)—-You know | her! ig! the Fourteenth street ferry, Hoboken, a * ought to admire the job.—Toledo| the tomahawk, was it the deep malady of a blighted hope, a ruined enter-| Mrs, A. (firing up)—I per, &/ the secret of it, don't you? | Mra B. (mystoriously)—I have s or the Fort Lee Forry now, could it} ANNA MASSON, Rrooklyn—The| Blade. prise and a broken heart aching tn {ta last moments at the recollection | pair for my slippers—if you vall tha Mra. B. (moving very much closer) | niece, seventson, a dream of beauty me any price it liked to, read-| 8PT4y that you Inclone is «enuli . 2 2 of the lo ed and left beyond the sea—was it some or all of these unite1| cheap! —No! Tell me. I'm going to have her down for twe fu? What do lawmakers think about| #amrock. ‘The Irish emblem {s| Some persons need troubles of their) that hurried this forsaken company to thelr melancholy fate? Mrs. B. (shedding pt par bere) nel —W By, you know, hea hun-| weeke! j 7 * Weehawken, N. J. seery 1 Fagorninade It Is a clearly! own to divert snare Eom worrying And !. tt possible that neither of these causes, that not all combined, were you Inst summa: ore AT | Bee egal oranns F oe earl | Fae nea aot you 4 1 if ees wane Utell, eromia on 8 vine about the troubles of others, were able to blast this bud of hope? Is it possible that from a beginning | 14 er we were in the Adirondacks. of man who gets every young girl in| and fruitful ates On tees ,, foil, doce not prow In tho tive rote: | such complaint 19 made in yain|#© feeble, 80 frail, 80 worthy not so much of admiration as of duty, there i The swnmer| the place to gail him “addy Ana | eet mio cane m8 Hater, ‘ Clover is found in many countries,’ because it isn't made at the right ha# gone forth a progress so qteady, & growth ao wonderful, @ reglity #0 1M- | before w t down on Long|the Board of Consorahip passes ‘all after two weeks? My ‘ sbamrock only in Ireland, | place,—Albany Journal, ft, @ promise yet to be Waagiled eo glorious? ae Island—a overestimated place,| his high-fiying under guise of vacation begins 4 ‘ i ‘ gi os LM a hia id enh aan emeptpieipeevestamtey y nha |