The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1911, Page 12

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i ee EE ELE AS MONE DE BUNS MAY EDIT VC WSPAPERS HERE, Gaynor Tells ( Gasiee Editors Southern Methods Compet the Truth. WHY NOT IN NEW YORK? | Different Here if Ruffians Had to Answer on Street Corner. Editors and editoresves from the rurat districts of Georgia, mah! are in town to-day to see Mayor Gaynor and then Visit Coney Island, During thetr ‘ay tn the Metropolis they wil kept busy seeing the and editoress be are going to take In every interesting phase of New York Ctty if. The programme started to-day with | the visit to the Mayor had already called upon 'y Adamson, who is gave them a few points New York, He also pi Island trip with “Bi wards as a feature, “Big Dill" in to wot as the bell wether for the flock from Georgia, Bo that no member will be Jost he te to take the lead In making the cireult of the island. The slogan wil be vet lost CLAMBAKE FOR THE VISITORS AT THE SEASHORE. All hands will down to a fine shore dinner or bake, which Se retary “Bob” Adam for the delectation of the Georgians, Comprising @ committee of entertain- ment besides Secretary Adamson and ‘Big Bul" are Fire Commisstoner Jos- eph Johnson jr., William Harmon Black, The visitors tvate Seer mi" EA. J. F. Allen, President of the Georgi fociety, and Henry Proctor Wi! ot the Interborough, Among the visitors A. 8, Hardy of the Gainesville Her- Benjamin T. Moseley of the Dan- ville Monitor, Mrs. Maude Bondurant he McDonough Herald, W. 8. Cole- nan of the Cedartown Standard, B. F. Heartville of the Dalton Argus, Miss Corrine stiley, G. 8. Chapman of Sand- erville, J. A. Hall of Calhoun, J, H. Graham of the Canton Advance, H. M. Stanley of the Dublin Courter-Despateh, B, A. Perry of the Careerville Triune, W. F. Bankston of West Potnt the ws, ere Mollie Toole of the Miller eral, Miss Retha Purcell of the Sasmeytie Advance, Mra, J.C. Bryan of the Catoosa Record, M! Minnie Dunlap, 0. F. McRae of the Tel- fair Enterprise and M. N. Dodson of the Bremen Gateway. ‘The visiting editoriai corpa are mem- bers of the Georgia Weekly Press As- sociation, When they were into the presence of the Mayor elty cutive addressed his taking occasion to attack certain news Papers and thelr owners. The Mayor said: PRAISED SOUTHERN PAPERS AND SCORED SOME HER “You have @ well edited pre: South, You tell the truth, Your papers are moderate in tone. 1 sorry to aay that here tn this clty we have some Rewspaper proprietors who are abso- lutely corrupt--there {s no other word to express it—who do not hesitate in saying any falsehood or entering any home or uttering any falsehood with ‘ounty in the regard to those in offic without ecruple, I may say that we have ne: paper rietors here who Me a ts invent what they can nigh ¥ in the way of falsehood next morning. But that does not include the whole ee, here by any means. We have a ety respectable press here tn the city of New’ York. Those whom I have mentioned do not belong to the city of New York, They camo from else- where. “The press here generally is moderate 4m tone. I think in your country they have to be moderate tn tone also, xoaptions, down to haw been drag, the lowest depth ver known on this continent, but are able to outlive it. And, strange to say, the chicftest, OF some of the chieftest, of those who have soandelised or dragged it 4 think they are ft to hold im this country from tay In the the Fulton He tights, for the editors | “tolow Big Hill and you wont} on arranged to-day | had just caidas sind iat ENING WORLD, j, MONDAY, 3 SULY 24, _TO9TY." ‘Ship of Future May Be Any Length, Like Cantilever Bridge, | | | What manner of ship are we to have In the future? Have the big ship bulld- @rs of the world reached thelr capacity in sine? Han the speed limit been a tained? Are there any improvements for comfort or luxury of passengers to be conceived? With the recent advent of the mar moth Olympic of the White Star Line | thie question tx being propounded | marino experts and thousands of tran’ atlantic travellers who cross the “bix pond” annually. If the » hips of the future In- 4 tn sive at the same ratio that in the pani, then tn ano! short decade we mua! have a marine monster a full quarier of a mile in| length, equal to five of our city blocks, running north and south, or as far as you could ride for a dime in a taxicab The pioneer of ocean steamships, the old Cunarder Britannia, built in 181, | measured 207 feet from taff rail to Stem and was considered the marvel of Fifty, liner | a Paul from the yards of the Cramps in Philadelphia, measuring 685 feet over all. During all those years a gain of | only @ trifle more than 300 feet. Now, | later, we have | hole In the water just ches long—an Addition of almost 860 feet in much less than half the time. Probably no man ving Is better quall- fled to give an intelligent answer to the} | above queries than the official head of the largest ship building concern in the} world. He te the Right Honorable Lord Pirrie, Chairman of the Harland & Wolff Co, (Ltd.) of Belfast. Lord Pirrie ts spending & week ashore here recetvink | a few social attentions while making | the round trip on the Olympic, now In port loading for the return passage next ‘Wednesday. HARBOR FACILITI WILL OE. CIDE QUESTION, Lord Pirrie Is @ stockily bullt man of | medium height whose hair and short cropped beard trimmed a la Richard) Croker are rapidly becoming a ai jwhite, Although sixty-four yea: he is bristling with energy the Irish gentleman type—affable, cour- teous and witty An Evening World reporter found! “My Lord” this morning atrolling about the plers of the International Mercan- | ile Marine with P. A. 8. Franklin, Vice- President of (he organization, who was showing how the big ships are handled in port on this side of t r. “Have we reached the of ship- bullding in size?” he r ed in re sponre to @ query, “There ts the solu- tion of that problem,” and he waved his | arm toward the broad Hudson and the ae |Only Limitations as to Size Are Docking Facilities, Says Head of Biggest Ship Building Concern— Long Ship Is as Safe as Short One. y|}am told that we ha will have to have escalators tnt rage and moving platforms for the ew to go back and forth, but you see r 1 has not been so very great \for such features yet; #0 we'll watt unti! We have to face ) problems."* *. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought a; FT P Wet wins; LOBRRIE: shores of Jersey. “Harbor facilities are | What we must have in order to launch | bigger vessels, Ax it is, I am afraid) the size limit haw been reached in the | White star boats, Olympic and Titante, | and, of course, the big Hamburg-Amer- {can Iner, Imperator, now butlding, but | which is only a few feet longer than our creations, But we cannot go into Liverpool with any larger ships, and I about reached the mit in this harbor. “But can you increase the length with safety? When are they going to amidships?” he was asked. Julld any length!’ came the quick retort. “Give us the docking facilities and the demand and we'll build the sas long as you want them. Why, present manner of joining makes a ship of any length as safe as a canti- lover bridge; in fact, the principle ts much the same. | ANY SHIP WILL BREAK IF IT : GOES ON ROCKS. “Tam speaking, of cou of when ahe is afloat. Any ship can be ‘hogged on the rocks, A yaw! would break in two !f it lifted on to a reef. But the |4dea that a long ship would fall apart jin a heavy sea is simply ridiculous. Why, in the first place, a vessel the size of the Olympic rides about three big seas, 0 that the strain is pretty evenly divided. “Aa to speed, well, that is another question. 1 don't think we shall see Any speedier boats built than we have now for many a long day to come. Wireless telegraphy has done away with the necesslty for fast’ ships, When travellers can communicate at almost any hour with friends ashore, if nei sary, what ts the need for hurry, Com- fort and regularity 1s what the travel- | ling public ts looking for now, and that is what we have tried to give them in the latest boats, Of course, there are always a few who want to rush things or have hurry business calle, but they are tn the great minority, and the loss of cargo carrying capacity necessary tn | creating fine lines doos not produce the | ype of vesse! which we think 1s profit- | What will the future ship be Ike as | regards interlor Mttings? Well, now, | my lad, 'm not an Edward Bellamy oF | a Jules Ve Find out what the 1 ventor is going to give Us and answer that question. We have placed everything In the Olympic conducive to comfort and entertainment that could be conceived from the Turkish bath to the tennis court, and now We must | wait for new invention | "On golf links," and Lord Pirrle rtily. “I guess we can take ¢ that feature when we bulld our quarter mile boat we might put on an automobile track, Of course, And Lord Pirrie’s bright eyes twinkled, Over Thirty Years WAWAY STREET, NEW VORA OITY, Te coke © in Na Cy) HAS EeELE ER eh ena gl ig a Om. Coad 3 a Vs ome corsa 58, GETS MAN FREED A grateful man's plea for the man who once saved his Iife and later robbed him brought a suspended sentence and an opportunity for reform to Henry Plattezean of No. 60 Conselyea street, Brooklyn, to-day, when he was ar- raigned before Judge Dike in the County Court. Plattezean pleaded guilty to a charge of burglary, He admitted having br ken into the Jewelry shop of Selig Hoch- elsen of Coney Isiand and stealing twelve cheap watches. He had been employed by Hochelsen as a peddler. The latter stepped forward before Judge Dike could speak. “Your Honor,” he sald, "so I have iost a fot more should have to @o to Jail. oner would than Henry When I told the policaman about the watches I did! not think that Henry had taken them. Did I know it then sooner would I have dropped dead than I would have sald anything. “Henry saved my Iife in Long Branch 1 was in swimming, 1 the undertow took me out and I sas almost drowning when Henry ewims out and brings me back to shore, He had no money then and I gave him a ob, “I didn’t think he would rob me, but the police they got him with the goods on, and I amgorry. Give him a chance, Judge, and 1 will take him back dnd give him a job again. A fellow cai forget a thing like Henry did for m Judge Dike was so impressed with Hochelsen's evident sincerity and with Henry's apparent contrition that he suspended sentence. ‘The confessed burglar and the man whom he rob! went out of the court room toget! GEORGES’ Semi-Annual HALF-PRICE SALE, SPECIAL! VA Silk Lined Serge Suits Bee, | $15.00 Us, Mention these because they re. much &atuperb earl rt BISS"tor ‘Mgh-olacs Erensenss”s CPONS MOHAIR SUITS (Priestly Orevenetted), $10, $12 and $15. The new featherweight summer attire of fashion, Many mart and quiet pat This Hattie Sale means, that tom Merchant tailors’ products are these earings — $15.00, Now $7.50, and s on up to the highest priced $45.00, Now $22.50. Brething is included . three-pleee * burg this ale, po exchanges, no re hothing sent ©. 0. or op necessary alterations Charaet for at cost Oven Evenings for Your Copventence, 44 W est 34thSt. ay & Sth Ave Listas) PROVIDENCE, BOT Main St, S00 Westminster St, GAVERESCUER OB, ‘WAS THEN ROBBED anne mere din With Golf Links, it They’ re Desired, Declares Lord Pirrie SAYS THE MAYOR iemacron osoer’ OLYMPIC. 82) Mau REVTANTA TET! ith UU MAO BAe caer Dit) Lr G wf (BRIT FANN iA e400” 207" sansa». + 2 MONTHS IN IL FOR STEPMOTHER | Wil ABUSED GAL Judge Dike of the Brooklyn aa Court to-day sentenced Mrs. Annie Mor- Hudson street, Brooklyn, to two months | in the penitentiary for ill-treating and beating her twelve-year old step-daugh- ter, Loretta. Mrs. Morris pleaded guilty to a charge of assault In the third degree, The little | girl had been examined by the Grand Jury and Judge Dike was informed that her body was covered with bruises. “I cannot condone this crime,” @aid |he. “You have two ohildren of your own and your present husband has two others. I suppose your proper place is at home looking ‘ter them, but you do not seem capable of doing that and my duty to soclety demands that 1 23rd Street SILK DEPARTMENTS. Second wide 23rd Street HIS SOLIO BRASS BED OPENS AN ACCOUNT ris, thirty-six years of age, of No. 477| ff | | | COTTON DRESS GOODS. YOUR CHOICE OF ANY OF THESE S ARTICLES WITH #100 PURCHASE OF O-on ‘PIT - 3°AVE ay IRE x OPEN EVERY EVENING “UNTIL sentence you to a prison term. The facts show that you brutally rl with the back of & ith a do a ve any or th tnst nets oe real motherhood. It does not matter that this child {x not your own, You undertook to look her when you married your trest your senten prove rib be a lesson to other stepmoth- be ers who think they have some sort of a God-given right to brutally abuse thelr, nusband’s children ‘by another CURE THLEAD SILK “ st the larg: pelt Shoed id JAIWES McCREERY & CO. 34th Street On Tuesday and Wednesday, July the 25th and 26th. In Both Stores, “McCreery Silks” Famous over half a Century. 5,000 yards, Washable Spot Proof Habutai Silk, in white or black. 37 inches wide. 75¢ per yard value 1.00 In Both Stores, Floor. 5,000 yards of Blouse Linen, Irish manu- facture, pure flax, Natural color. 36 inches 19¢ per yard value 30¢ 34th Street 9 Secacie JAMES McGREERY & CO. 23rd Street 34th Street RUG DEPARTMENTS. Oriental Rugs, unusual values. Commencing Tuesday, July the 25th. Mosul, Kurdistan and Kazak Rugs in rich Antique colors. Sizes range from 3x6 ft. to 4x7 ft. 6 in. 15.00 and 19.50 sai usual prices 25.00 and 30.00 Persian Serapi Rugs, rich colors. Sizes range from 9x12 ft. to 13x10 ft. 150.00 usual price 225.00 All Summer Rugs at reduced prices. In Both Stores. ° FURNITURE DEP'TS. 1m Both Stores. SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. All Furniture from 1o to 50% less than usual prices. On Tuesday, July the 25th. Craftsman and Quaint Oak Furniture. Dining Room Suite includes Side- board, China Closet, Extension Table, four Dining Chairs and two Dining Arm Chairs, upholstered in leather. 95.00, 125.00 and 150.0 former prices 135.00, 172.00 and 216.00 Morris Chairs and Bookcases. . 19.00 and 22.00 former prices 28.50 and 30.00 irs, Armchairs and Rockers........... 3.00 and 5.50 former prices 4.75 and 8.50 15.00 and 20.00 former prices 20.00 and 28.00 Tea and Lunch Tables... .2.50, 3.00 and 5.00 former prices 3.75, 4.75 and 6.78 .8.50, 9.50 and 11.50 former prices 12.00, 42.50 and 15.00 22.00, 25.00 and 35.00 former prices 29.00, 32.50 and 46.00 20.00, 22.50 and 32.00 former prices 27.00, 29.50 and 42.50 Dinirg Chairs and Armchairs, rush seats.... 3-75 and 7. Re former prices 5.00 and 1050 JAMES McCREERY & GO. 23rd Street 34th Street Side Writing Desks........ Library Tables Sideboards. . China Closets..... JAMES McGREERY & CO. 23rd Street 34th Street On Tuesday, July the 25th CORSET DEPARTMENTS. Im Both Stores. Sale of Regis Corsets. Model with low bust and long hips and back. 5c 9 value 4.50 STAMPED PATTERNS. In Both Stores. Waists on Marquisette, Voile, Batiste and Lawn, at reduced prices. Linen, Night Robes, on Fine Nainsook. +e §8C Chemises ae 06 0 38C Corset Covers Pe TOILET ARTICLES. mm Both Stores, Tdeal MAI BCUSHOR: ois c yc everson sence - tae Bath Sprays, red rubber.............+...65¢ a pray: re Down Powder Pnffs........ see TSC and vetoes 2$¢ and Wool Face Puffs....... ...§¢, 8c and rac vehuest0c, 10 and tc Violet and Lilac Talcum Powder....... roc wahoo 180 Eau de Cologne (4 0z. wicker bottle)...... wale . box 5 cals, age Castile Soap.... Witch Hazel..... Pete ee eee eee e tens ROL ralve tc JAMES McGREERY & CO. 23rd Street 84th Street

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