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THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, LINER RAMI INTHE NIGHT 8 pig SCHOON The San Giovanni Has Nar- | fow Escape While on Way ! to Port. PASSENGERS IN Frantic as Gear Vessel Sweeps Deck of Steamship. @y the narrow margin of a tew M@mohes the Italian steamship San Gio- vannl, of the Sioula-American Line, from Faples and Palermo, with 0 passen- wers on board, escaped being sunk by @ schooner shortly after dark last evening while miles east of Bandy Hook on the way to this port As it happened the schooner that she poked boom vver the duly steamship, and, the deck mtruck a boat davit and snapped off about ten feet from the tip, and was till lying on the steamer'e deck when she docked at Pier 6, North River. this morning. twelve flying Jit of the ploughed along close her ke as it carrying away the fron rail, Nearly all of the passengers were on deck at the time, and when the nose and sails of the big sailing ship ap- peared in such close proximity, and they heard the of the tron work as the boom sn ned cries that t up trom ail s! of the liveliest: character ‘As goon as the damage was found bs the officers to be comparatively triffing an effort was made to calm the frenzied passengers. The steamsiip put where the schooner had anc the crash to arn damage to her and it required te ined, and was dec kind alth t was long a of the San Glo- ng Watch at the eave the following impact e occ ce to an Even- who boarded the his morning We were ding at our usual peed during tle early evening and saw @ four ed schooner of about 1,80 tons sa our dir tion and well off headed a lit darkness I was a litt see no ligite shouted our starboard dow toward our course as ap: Sudden Red light vight off our port beam.’ Passengers in Frenzy, "Thad sc ely time. ty give an order to shift the reat when the schooners aine tearing through the well aft, and tore along a stanchion supporting the after house and the boat davit The two iron supports held the boom until * tt snapped. We had on board ers and about 24 passens pandemontum at steerage pase senwers lito a frightened frenzy, and our officers and crew had the greatest n keeping some of them into tie sea. When it became Mt that our hul ot dam there was was aged, something mbling calm was Yestored, and we back and found the schooner was anchored in about 2 fathoms of ‘Capt, Romano ca ler skipper and asked if she wanted us to stand water 4 to Uy, Dut was told that she was ail r and our name reply x as we could make t Was the Frederick, but did no: where she was bound, or whence she the offver declared, was eos hooner's diness jn get- ng out her side lights after darkness nat in, a i es and [told him 1 dlanie thle rete et tae Pag ad ote TO TURN DOWN GILCHRIST ieee cron meenilegieditera antral comamicxcomes (oitinrn Senator Alfred J. Gilchrist, of Brook: the Pink Pajama Girl in London, That| “2 have been very lucky,” Miss Chase lyn, one of the Republican Senators was in 1s, I appeared in Edna May's Concluded, modestly. “But T have Who voted for the passage of | ve any for awhile, ‘Then for two, worked very hard, too. This is really | ck Anti-Betting bill, is to by years | was the first twin in ‘Peter the first vacation I have had long down for renomination by the Pa In that part 1 did a piilow @Mough to come back to America—as I can organization of bis » dance in pink pajamas, Then came the "ave Wanted to do ever since I went Tenth, If he is set asite portunity to play Peter Pan, away. The English have been very friends declare ie will run as an Inde- “L have played it nearly 300 times nice to me, but, of course, I love my pendent, and that the anti-race track now, and I believe I would love to be OWN People best. And I am, ob, #0 element among the otiers of the district. Peter Pan tii! Tam an old, old lady of Blad to be here!” will re-elect. him, Gait vio ieesuld heuer gavatiesd se ine pote late rer BANKER ACCUSED OF THEFT, Good Things One Sees ‘Zotti'n Clients Say Money Was Not Vorwarded to Europe, When One Looks Closely PANIC, of Sailing same £0 big back to hored after the extent of the assistance was ner, to London to make + +-+______ ‘Yet She'd Never Advise Other Young Girls to Go on the Stage Where Beauty and Talent Some- times Fail. NGLISH WERE NICE TO HER, BUT LIKES OWN PEOPLE BEST Here to Enjoy First Vacation She Has Had Since 1903, When She Went Abroad and Made a Hit. | By Nixola Greeley-S mith. A little American beauty who, when she left New York in 1903, was known only as Polly Chase, the Pink Pajama Girl of “The Lib- erty Belles” company, came back on the steamship La Touralne last Sunday just to spend a six weeks’ vacation in her own America and to see what Time, which had turned her into a star of the London and Paris stage, had done to the coun- try she had left behind her. Moreover, unlike most American girls who have made a hit in Lon- jon, Miss Chase came back abso- luetly without an English accent or an English lord. Slim as ever, with the same rare Dresden fairness of skin and blue- ness of eye that made her the toast of New York as the Pink Pajama | Girl, she was positively the same little Pauline Chase that had gone her fortune. The same even to the pink pajamas, {which peeped from an embroi: dered pink kimono during our talk, for |the hour of my call at the Hotel Imperial, where Miss Chase is stopping, early, and she had not even had time to remove the filmy of lace and pink ribbons which part You know, | have always pre- rls, and which may have ferred to play boy parts. | Likes Boy Parts, but Glad She's a Girl. “Would you rather be a boy?’ WIOLA. GREELEY“ SMITTL« was vel structu topped her been a nightcap “Broadway Has Grown So Tall.” But not seem the city though Pauline Chase will a bit changed to Naw York ed to her. adway wn so tall that I hardly knew confessed, “I am amazed at the numbor of tall buildings at have sprung up.” Miss Chase had hardly spoken a sen- [tence when I interrupted ner with a | pment. ‘I'm so glad you haven't brought back I said, Al ously, ‘'No,"" she replied; “I'd prefer to play at being a boy, but I would far} Tather be a girl, “T get such lovely dren who have she continued. “They all want me to tel! them how to fly, I answer as many! as I can on some tiny note paper [| have had made for my boy and girl has 2 she letters from chil- | an English accent,’ “There!’ she exclaimed, triumphantly. ‘T knew I had n yet a young man one of the papers insisted that I they must get Sometimes they write again, telling me| they have been to all the drug stores, | but have not been able to find any fairy’ {dust anywhere, I have even some let- fron had." Then M! ss Chase shattered another tradition that has grown around return-| ing stars, I had asked her to tell me something of her remarkable rise, and began it in this way Well, in the beginning I was only a “I who wrote me when I played Peter Pan in Paris recently. reopen in London as Peter Pan Pink Pajama Girl Back Without an English Lord, or Even an Accent, Says Success Is a Matter of Luck, and Admits She’s Been Very Lucky 1908. —~ PAULINE, UST RESCUED, HE APS IN WAT TD SAY Austin Titus and Wife Owe Lives to Bravery of John J. Rorke. Although he drowning only ha a i heen UL saved from few minutes before, when he was selaed with a cramp in John J. the water, Carroll his been wife for Rorke was tus, of No sent home old, a wea Street, | dove off the breakwater at | Beach and saved a man and hie bride Miss Chase pondered the question sert- | from drowning. Rorke, of No, 658 Brooklyn, could swim, Rorke's prompt would undoubtedly have drowned. They and last B: had evening righton Neither the man nor it not action they nme as Peter Pan," |*ank twice before Rorke reached them exhausted when Austin Ti- 666 Carroll street, who had correspondents, I tell them that to tly | him in the work of rescue. a package of fairy dust.’ all attended by Dr. Thomas Lynch and in a carnage, Waker H, Ithy Mems, were the rescued persons. The. twenty-six aterk | Bone to the beach with him, went to aid y were years ‘anch owner of Laredo, ters from IIttle French girls and boys|Tex., and his twenty-two-year-old bride fe was sitting on the beach after he had been pulled out of the water when he saw his bride swept trom the huge wave. Mems and | breakwater by They * poth floundered about In the water call- Rorke ran along the loge of the break- reach them. water chorus girl.’ next Christmas, but I am to appear in| the customary formula 1s: Paris in October as Columbine in Mr. fa) I never was in the Barry's ‘Pantaloon.’ There will be chorus, I don't see how that report French company, and, you remember, | ing tor help, could have st I want you to Con- Columbine doesn’t say anything. It is tradict for me, please.” all pantomime.” Miss Chase, after her refreshing de- on from this variety of patter, con- and tried to Wouldn't Advise Girls to Go on the Rorke dove off the logs Then ind grabbed viat them and thus prevented tinued | Stage. |drowning. Young tus, aa} ee How She Came to Be the Pajama) would you advise other young!| strong swimmer, had by this time Girl. | American girls on the stage to go to| reached the trio, and, striking Mems a A ses London on the chance of making a hit) viow in the face which stunned him, "The Rounders’ first, and yi, Tanved: : m with him ashore, while Rorke Liberty Bo 8 company ‘ " replied Miss Chase, "I wouldn't! brought in the young woman, ; as the Pink Pajama GIF’ aavise a girl to go on the stage at all.| Rorke is ¢ ed with the law de- ao ee een mcr to tat me, Success 18 all go much @ matter of luck, partment of the Public Service Com: BT Gara Re of a night CC. pportunity, Beauty may take her aj miesion in Manhattan, and whan he re- rane ste iagane-saha little way; talent, personality, much} port for duty to-day he wore in the Be Ns further; yet there are girls of groat tal-| bandages over the cuts he received had worn them, consented, 1 alway! | ent in the s who never get out of Frank Zott!, the Italian banker, of} No, 108 Greenwich street, who owned | the immigrant ship Brooklyn, which, he says, was wrecked off the Azores, was igned before Magistrate Corrigan in Tombs Court Jaraeny, Antonio Luzino, of street, said he had given 1,000 kronen to Zotti's bank, tot be forwarded to Vienna and that the money had never reached its destination. Post Office Inspector Kinkead sald numerous complaints had come to the post office from foreigners, who sald that money they had sent to | to-day on a charge of had never been received the con signees, The examination was continued until | to-morrow, Zott! is uty $24,000 ball. SULF STEAMER ON ROCKS, WRECKING TUGS TO AID. oO dal by PORT ARTHUR The World Every Week, Month and Year Than ANY OTHER | lewspaper on Earth al. trom. Fort | the rocks at Passive E ‘night in @ Cog. and forward tanks of the vessel ave full and she lies In a most exposed. posi- Uo Wrecking tugs have gone oul Prints More Want-Fillirg Advertisements | Zotti'ss bank to be forwarded to Europe © while reseu Mr, Mems said he ing the couple. would request that |the young man’s brave act be recog- nized by the Carnegie Life Saving Com- mission, FRIEDA ERHARD ACN IN STREET Sister of New Jersey Murderer Has an Attack of Heart Failure. Siti Frieda EF) hard, harge sixth street eritical condition at the J Hospital crime irl ospital | Broadway sixth st ema on, Faw He called lance. At ie office never: girt await pattan si of A sister of @ murd reart Worry She was ler fa over Miss Eberhard only on Ha lure is believed to have Ker is aun Fber- was n front of She robe aifect recently her way Hundred and Twenty at noon to-day fs ina Hood Wright ‘other's ed the left a from and One Hundred and Twen- * {Hood Wright ambulance reet, where she lives, to her rge's place of work, No, 122 n Fitz, e West One un Hospita a {fifteen 1 s' W hurvied a call for the J A sy ot ire’ persons collected. was very weak when saaeitalie at tention reached ¢hr, FORPAESOENT. KEW PARTY Independents Put Mass achu- ay INFANTS AASTAY AT SEA BR Fifty “Evening World Babies” Among the Two Hundred | Sent To-Day. ON A ‘TEN-DAY OUTING, Mothers and Little Ones Sadly | in Need of Ocean Air | and Good Food. | i} Thera | taken at the lowering skies this morning \ | by the mothers and children due for © |ten-day stay at Sea Breeze, Weet Co- | ney Island, as guests of The Evening | World Sick Babies’ Fund. | hatch of 20 sent to the home to-day by the A fon for Improving the Cons dition the Poor were fifty “EB as they are called When, at 9 o'clock, the threatened rain had failed to materialize, as happy & crowd as could be Imagined boarded | Kast Twenty-third street trolley cars for |the ride to the Greenpoint ferry from ithe United Charities bullding at No. 108 | East Twenty-second street. Spectally chartered cars were waiting on the other side and the gleeful party reached Gea | Breeze well before noon [| Mothers and children began to gather association's rooms before & o'clock, ‘There were some families as large as eignt or ten, ranging In age from Intants 19 arms to boys and girls there of ning World babies,” Tat the PAuLINe CHASE, PINK. of oleven. For the most part, however, "PAJAMA. the chiliren were wee bables, Whose GIRG pinched faces and wide staring eyes showed tho need of the ocean alr and good food of Sea Breeze, ‘The fifty “Evening World babies” haa * been selected with great care, and each Lone of them was either ill or poorly nourished. Before recelving the cov- eted ticket, which entitled the bearer ” Setts Foe of Standard Oil at Head of Ticket. QMAPERTE WILL OPEN NEW WAR ON STHNDARD CHICAGO, July — After what! threatened to be an all-night session, | the Independence party early to-day nominated Thomas L. His-| gen, for President, | and John Temple Graves, of Georgia, for Vice-President. Hisgen was nominated on the thira| 2%, In convention | of Massachusetts, ballot. Howard, of Alabama, and Ly-! ons, of New York, divided the votes Attorney-General Announces! with the Massachusetts man on the first Pe ¢ i two ballots, and then New york! He Will Fight Reversal of vitched from Lyon to Hisgen, and ves was withdrawn to take the nom- $29,000,000. Fine, {nation for the second place on the| ticket. j The convention concluded Its work |,.ENOX, Mass, July 2.—Attorney- only after a most stormy session, @ Tot! 4.4141 Bonaparte and other prosecut- heing started by John I. Shepard, a 2 delegate from Kansas, who atteripted a ing officers of the Government, with tle stampede for Bryan. Shepard was assistance of several lenders in. the | thrown from the platform, his badge! motive of Jaw, inclading Senator | torn from him, and a policeman led him frank B, Kellogs, of Minnesota, took out of the convention and to a hotel. 15 tne consideration to-day of the q Half a dogen other boisterous and in-! tin whether she criminal quit again sistent Bryan rooters were coralled bY 1,5 standard Os Company for alleged the police and taken to the lock-up, The robating and other violations of the ention was in an uproar for nearly interstate commerce laws shall be fur, an hour, {ther pressed in the courts, The as Shepard had attempted, In deflance of ,.niiy, besides Mr, Bonaparte, eld the platform. to present the name of | 04 gajleitar-General Henry M. Hoyt, of | Mr. Bryan as a candidate for the Presi- dency. After he had left the hall he was expelled from the National Com- mittee of the Independence party and | hie name struck from the roll of dele- | twin M mms, of Chi- a4 States District-Attorney District of Ilinots; Ais James H. Wilkerson, of Washi cago: Un for the North first pssistant, >on ga hicago, and Senator Kellogg. One of Mr. Hisgen's name was preseited by | the parlors of the hotel Aspinwall has Rev, Roland D. Sawyer of Massaciy. | ben set apart as a meoting place set A great mass of legal Iterature in © old parties” he declared, connection with the trial of the sult fave demonstrated, the fact that against the Standard Ol Company at they will not grant any real re. Chicago, some fi munths ago, was Natl ccroniex Rinemeccney anh aaa ght on from W ashington and Chi- omie, social or political, We see gro: , together with the text of the de- tate pe eaegrtae a as a cision of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Lan- power, stifling trads and contrailing W& in imposing the $29,00,00 fine upon sf any, as well 8 the latest doc- lopislation until for the people there is » decision of the nothing, The men they elect to office |! i ‘ become tha servants of the corpora. lied States Court of Appeals setting tlons, No relief can be obtained from aside Judge Lan¢ decision and his them, We are confronted the task fi three hours spent in discussing of selecting a man who will tatement represent the fea that this ni stands for, Massachusetts hae made t had un- man and deems it an } f animousy de to take steps imme- his name. He das proved a yea iret ae le) nf r ila for predatory wealth, He stands for pany. ; : everything that John D, Rockefeller jg stivenes Ge parte annout against; 1 us agathst cue metnoug tat he would avd to inake or Jou D, Rocketeiler. He is respecteu {Ut stte t its of the con- as agate Than WHO stunds for hee ference y The mention. of Fy. Peat Miulf\s.t80% HARRIMAN AND GOULD by dae oct id Vr"! CONFER ON BIG NOTE ISSUE Massachusetts dei for their candida as did son . Hisgen eat Liseti sat \ conference was lield to-day between H. Harriman, George J. Gould and firms of Blair Co. in regard E eared to t ed wi the Wheel a and Se i Er $8.0000,000 note issue rds to fo which matures on Aug. 1 The Kind You Have Always Bought. HIS is the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that has been manufactured under the Corer ision of Chas, H. Fletcher for over 30 years—the genuine Castoria. Wo respectfully call the attention of fathors and mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears his signature in black. When the wrapper is removed the samo signature ap- pears on both sides of the bottle in red, Parents who have used Castoria for their iittle ones in the past years need no warning against counterfeits and imitations, but our present duty is to call the attention of the younger gener- ation to the great danger of introducing into their famil ies spurious med Tt is to be regret aeferious business of putting should mors properly be only for adults, but wor on the mother to scrutinize closely what 8! that for themselves, but the child has to rely on the mother’s watchfulness, , Genuine Castoria always bears the signature oe y hdd | ® 3 her child, a oe | to a stay at Sea Breeze, the children | had to pass the watchful eye of Dr, proper treatment they would be allowed to join another party in a few weeks. and children and throughout the season . atty ng World babies will be , n Man\ Who Set It in Olds Fifth) sowevtmes cere the acboieten con: | duet Breese, Avenue Hotel Probably ducts a day excursion to Sea Breese. | Peter Irving. Several had to be sent | home, hut with assurances that with | Fach Wednesday the association | sends out about two hundred mothers ‘ included. It Is expected that about 5 + In all will be sent by this newspaper, Last year 26,959 mothers and children © = Were entertained at the home, not Fatally Huse, one tot was lost or injured. —_._-— MIDSHIPMAN DISMISSER, A premature blast In the cellar of the| OYSTER BAY, July %—The Pres old Fifth Avenue Hotel caused pante | dent has approved an order for the : to-day in the vicinity of Madison fquare| diamisnal CO EE eae, a and probably fatally injured James Gii-| second class of the United biog Nay roy, a workman, of No. 2 Seventh ave- | pircarelt age t an mila 2 ‘rea a the navy, and his dismi: mended. by the ‘superintendent, re = Naval Academy, nue ‘The blast was set to dislodge the con. | crete in the cellar, and Gilroy was mov- |= ing away when the explosion shook che! Drives Mosquitoes and Flies learth and sent rocks flying through the | Away. Kills Disease Germs, jair, One of the rocks atruck him in the All back of the neck, fracturing his skull. Drug The among the women shoppers in Twenty- | third street, many of whom dodged into , Stores (ly the doorways of the shops. Gilroy was ‘WEST DISINFECTINGCO, (Ine) j taken to the New York Hospital. explosion caused excitement Last Week Midsummer Sale Of Brill Clothes Save 30 to 50% now on a vacation suit. Save 30 to 50% now on a suit for early Fall wear, Save 30 to 50% now on a suit for wear next season, If you don’t find it good style next season, return it and get a new suit free. Included in this sale are all Brill suits, Included are all the new tan, brown, olive and smoke shades, as well as smart grays, neat mixtures sand blacks, Included are 80 different fabric < , cut on 30 dif. ferent two and three piece models, many very extreme, Included are: Best £20 Blue Serge Suits in America, $18, $20 and $22.50 tan, brown and £18, $20 and $22.50 Crash, Homespur 20 and $22.50 Black Worsted and Thibet its and broken sizes naat mixture Suits Any One of These $18, $20 or $22.50 Vaine Suits Now Riis FOUR CONVENIENT STORES: 9 BROADWAY, n, Chambers St, 125tn STREET, cor, 3d Avenue, MON SQUARE, 14th Sten. B’way., 47 COKTLANDT, nr, Greenwich, Suits Flannel Suits. Suits was many an anztous fool { In the’