The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1915, Page 5

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WLL END AN OF WA START GREATEST ALY. REALTY BOOM? Sehereiies reper Prepare for Huge Flood of Immigrants and Money From Europe. } FLEE OLD WORLD TAXES. | masses atong the lines of least eco- | Millions Are Expected to Desert] WHY STAY AT HOME AND PAY Exhausted Countries and : Enormous Debts. Real estate operators are preparing for a great boom as a result of the war. Investigations show that New York is in a position to attract vast wealth. It has passed London in population, becoming the largest city in the world. Its financial supremacy has been es~ tablished firmly by the disruption in other big motiey centres and the hue maas of international credits that has been accumulating here. Its realty, according to experts, ts sure to reflect Ste new prestige. But the coming boom is predicated Bpon two main factors in the inte-- Mational § situation—first, enormous Sraigration from all parts of Europe; POSITIVE Liquidation Sale Imgerstiy because of the nece: closing out existing iatareate TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 15th, AT 7.30 Y. M, IN THE Brooklyn Academy of Music A Between & Fiatbush Ave Located on New Utrecht, 14th, 15th, 16th & 17th Aves, 41st St. to Gist St., Inclusive sans “Shale RARE? oR PS & hol opulation of 10,000sca city within a clty, Included in the Sale are Two One Family Houses a & 1189 44th St., nr. 12th Ave. jote are adapted ding upon Two FAMILY and APARTMENT HOUSES and STORES One Family Houses (Attached or Detached’ Lots may be patd for tn MONTHLY INSTALMENTS araded to term! 1 66 2-3% ma; r taland and wetting orf nt following stations: 44th Ke. Bath St. H&th SE. oF the property: or by taxis op ring to 16th Ave. trolley passes through the property, PROPERTY REACHED BY 3 DIFFERENT ROUTES OF DUAL SUBWAY SYSTEM. Hend or telephone at once for titue trated imap which tells all about It. Jere —— Jr. Co. New York. nat 12s For $50 at the sale of the 779 of the esta at the Exchange Sale For particulars, apply to Josep YOU may be able to buy LOTS IN N. Y. CITY within a few blocks of the new Directly on the Line of the of Bradish Johnson, Inc.; and of Martin Schrenkeisen, Westchester Ave., Clason Pt. Rd., White Plains Rd., ‘and adjacent avenues and streets, to be SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION no matter what price they bring TUES, and WED., JUNE 29th and 30th J. Clarence Davies, 149th St. & 3rd Ave. second, @ record-breaking flood of capital to this centre. ‘ mentary, The larger the war, the larger has beén the emigration. A onl ie ten war oe the largest in t! tant emi- nin wi wenn ‘to be in proportion. Hard times in war exhausted coun- Lg rad attributed as a genoral rea- the heavi emigration. Pamiies that have been unable to leave during the struggle seek the firat opportunities after it is over. A more scientific reason is found in ris- ing taxation. Wars leave staggering debdta which must be paid by the people. The burden falls upon all of the inhabitants, but the poor suffer most, and this literally drives them in nomic resistance to places where liv- ing ts easier. BIG WAR BILL8? All Europe will be oppressed with enormous debts a result of this war, The peo of each country will bo taxed in every possible manner to, carry the burden, Neither rich nor poor can escape if they stay at home. Here is the big argument: Why should they stay at home to suffer under the crushing load of tax- ation? Why should they not start life anew in America? Many will be too patriotic to adopt this line of reasoning, but to thou- sands—perhaps to millions—it will Appeal, They will swell the immigrant tide to the land where there are n> war taxes to be paid. All of these immigrants must be | supplied with homes, They will enter business and add to the wealth of their new country. Statistics show that every immigrant is worth $900 to the country, In New York the value is averaged above $1,000, Not alone will the people come here to avoid taxation. Capital also will Le Mea f the war billr all forms of capital must carry increased taxes. 4 that capital in the warring countries may be levied upon for as much as 26 per cent. In Aus- tria already the savings banks are being forced to place 26 per cent. of their deposits in Government bon: This pursuit of capital by the tax collectors will tend to drive it out of | bed country. It will seck a haven; the burdens are lighter. And | this country, with New York as the world's financial centre, will offer the most tempting fields, ~— Financial students say that this movement of capital toward New York is already under wa. EUROP' MONEY AND PEOPLE TO SEEK NEW WORLD. There are the major factors in the consideration of realty operators who | are finding it easy to obtain big loans from the new inflow of money. They say that realty is the favorite form! of investment for such capital, Stock: and bonds and business enterprises) generally are sure to be nervous and erratic & result of war unsettle. ments, and conservative capital will seek realty as the most stable place. This movement has appeared in Lon- don and Paris, where the halt in in- dustrial business has led to great ac- cumulation of idle money. Loans for real estate are plentiful there, and the buying of medium class properties has shown a notable increase, "We are facing the most important movement in the history of New York said Robert E. Simon, wt of the Henry Morgenthau Company, yesterday, “It seems im- probable that the war can last beyond and with the first real signs pence our metropolitan en! ment should begin. We | immigration of fully 1,500,000 persuns |a year for several years. In the past, nearly 20 per cent. of the immigrants through Ellis Island have made homes in our metropolitan district. It will mean the greatest real estate devolop- ment that we have ever seon. _ Sightseeing Car Smanhen Auto, It is estim of ce Skidding on the wet pavement on its way back from Coney Island early to- day @ sightseeing car containing jozen passengers smashed an auto be- longing to Isaac Lipensky of No. 145 Floyd street, in front of No, 1143 Oc Javenue, Brooklyn, and wrecked it. The signtseeing car, which belonged to the Secandaga Auto Car Company of No, 38 reet, was only slightly dam- AT AUCTION, a. « $100 «= SUBWAY STATION City’s Growth LOTS sroom, 14 Vesey Street look for an| ew EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1915. 1915 Bathing Girl Is Picturesque; _Individuality Key of Latest Modes Idea That Sailo Sailor Collar and Straight Skirt Are Essentials of Swim- ming Suit Is Banished —Quiet Colore Prefer- able— Beauty Lies in Style. Corrects ew York venine Works The bathing suit this pon jon has had a hard time to keep up with Dame Fashion, for to be conteur with the low neck or adopt the high colla: to stop with a short skirt, or permit of trousers, has been a problem all its own, At any rate, the 1915 bath- ing girl ls bound to be more picture esque than she has appeared for sev- eral seasons, Somehow or other we used to feel that our bathing suit must have @ sailor collar, a blouse waist and a atraight skirt. I sup- pose that this almost gonventional style of costume originated from a desire to be modestly inconspicuous, But a flame red collar and tie on a blue suit or a black and white striped one was surely no less conspicuous because it was of a conventional style. 1 do not approve of attractive bathing costumes or “beach dresses.” A dark blue or black satin suit is always the most becoming, but this can hold certain style tendencies of the mode and yet be inconspicuous, Without doubt these dark colors are more practical too, for all the light or bright colors fade, while in blue, black or brown one can get @ “bathing satin” which Is sun-fast and water- proof. Of course taffe new supple quality, devel fled style of suit with charming ef- fect, but it undoubtedly will not stand the test of water like satin does. For the girl of slight build, a bath- ing suit with five ruffles to form the skirt ‘ould be quite a la mode. The of short puff sleeves that in her afternoon frock would complete a plain full waist part which finishes in an upstanding rutfle at a round neck and a sash of the same dark blue color and material should tie in the back. pinta ie DESCRIPTION OF SUIT. For my sketch to-day, however, 1 have designed a costume or an entire. ly different style which only reminds one of how varied is the mode. A basque” waist with tiny sleeves is of | black and white striped silk or else black striped with white braid, A black has its bottom ‘edge turned up jin a hem and fastened securely with three buttons and eyelets, that the stripes of the basque may be plainly geon running round the waist lino, | thereof,” so the over waist stops at the armholes and n Visible, The very short skirt has been di- vided and gathered into two wide bands of the striped goods from under which close-fitting “nicks” are plainly seen, In making this sult, as in making any other bathing suit, 1 would like to give just a bit of advice. Be sura to stitch all seams by machine, rot by hand, and do not use cotton thread by any means, Silk thread is much stronger and possesses an elasticity which will stand the strain of bathing suit wear. Lesides, cotton thread will fade and give a worn-out appearance to the garment Jong before its time, 80 there Is no economy in using it. I am sure, with the suggestions I have given, ‘that any clever girl can make a bathing suit at home which will not only be more satisfactory, but one-third as expensive as a similar one bought from the shop: es at ITALIAN SHIP BRINGS ONLY OLD TO AMERICA the stripea aro -|Young Men Kept for Army, Pas- sengers Say, in Telling of Fervor for War. The Dante Aligheri, the first Italian Passenger steamship to leave that country for New York after the decia- ration of war against Austria, reached port to-day with whom 248 were in the steerage. These steerage passengers were eld men, en and children coming to rela- in this country, Italy is holding young men for her armies. ‘The cabin passengers reported that Italy is solidly back of the war and that the enthusiasm attending the outbreak of hostilities was nation- wide, Italiana have great confidence in the wizardry of Marconi, inve: of the wireless legraph, and expect him to perf appliances which will confound the enemy, Already Italy is full of stories of a Wireless apparatus invented by Marconi which will draw enemy aeroplanes for fifty miles and dash them to pieces against special aerial obstructions, Among the passengers was Mra, Mary Mollosi, the wife of the Italian Royal Commissioner attached to the Italian Consulate in this city. She is a Brooklyn woman, and went to Italy to visit her husband's relatives four months ago. Mrs, Mollosi is a blonde, and was one of ten taken for a Ger- man and hissed jn the streets of Home during the weeks before begin- ning of the war. (Special to The Evening World.) HACKENSACK, N. J, June 12.~ Robert McDowell, Superintendent of tho Brookside Cemetery ut Englewood, was fatally injured by a Hudson robably River Lrolley car near the cemetery to- day. One foot was cut off and It tn feared the other leg will have to be amputated. Mr, McDowell Is in the Englewood Hospital, TATE FOR SALE— h P. Day, 31 Nassau St., N. Y. City, RICHMOND, _ BUNG. NGALOW PLOTS, $1 siisben tarna, ry oes Ry ee Pa way, straight hanging over waist of plain| “sufficient unto the need is the ra WRECKED MOTOR BOAT MAY HAVE BEEN USED BY ESCAPED CONVICT a Craft Found at Dobbs Ferry May Have Helped Spence Get Away. (Rpecial to The Frening World.) TARRYTOWN, N. Y., June 12.—A 25-foot launch owned by the Rev, Arthur T. Brooks, pastor of John D, Rockefellers church, was stolen from its mooring in front of the Tarrytown Boat Club some time during the night, Mr. Brooks said this morning he be- Meved that the boat was stolen by Fred Spence, member of the Mutual Welfare League of Bing Sing Prison, who escaped from the prison after a vaudeville entertainment Wednesday night, Mr. Brooks said that his boat was safe at anchor at 9 o'clock last night, When informed this morning that it was missing he made inquiries and learned that it was at Dobbs Ferry in a badly damaged condition. It had been seen floating down the river by the night watchman at the station and he rowed out and brought it ashore. Mr. Brooks, after seeing the boat, said that the engine was out of gear and that it was flooded with gasoline, showing that whoever stole it did not know how to operate it and finally gave it up. Mr. Brooks belléves that Spence took the boat, hoping to got away by the river route rather than taking a chance along the railroad or the country roads. ONE KILLED, 4 INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENT Party on Way to Yale-Princeton Game When Touring Car Turned Turtle, (Special to The Evening Worl ) NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., June 13.~A touring car, carrying five pas- sengers, turned turtle on Turnpike Road, near Kingston, at § o'clock this morning, killing one and injuring four, The party was on its way to the Yale-Princeton baseball game at Princeton. One passenger, a student living near Kingston, ran away after the accident The man killed is believed to be Francis Speir, a Princeton student, of No, 216 Ridgewood Road, South Orange. STEINWAY TUBE TRAINS TO BE RUN TO-MORROW, BUT NOT FOR PUBLIC Will Carry No Passengers Un- til Formal Opening of Traf- fic on June 22, Trains will be run in the Steinway Tunnel between Forty-second Street, Manhattan, and Long Island City to- morrow, but the public will not ride, After experimental operation the tun- nel will be opened to the public, the Interborough informed the Publte Service Commiasion yesterday, June 2. The party which will oMfcially open the tunnel will leave the present ter- minus, Jackson and Vernon Avenues, Long Island City, at 11 o’clock, vee 22. A celebration will occur Manbuattan end, details of which hare not been arranged. The collection of fares will begin at noon. Until connections with the Manhat- tan subway and with the Queens elevated lines are made, three trains of four cars each will be operated in the tube on about five minutes’ head- way during the day. It ie believed this will accommodate traffic for the time. Transfers will be issued to the subway, but passengers temporaril; will bave to walk more than a bloc! through Forty-second Street to make the change. The cara will be like the latest type In the subway—steel throughout, with wide centre doors, In the official party which will make the trip June 22 will be President Shonts and all the directors of the Interborough, the members and moat of the Public Service Commission staff, Mayor Mitchel and heads of city departments, members of the Queens Chamber of Commerce and othors, ‘The residents of Long Island City are planning a celebration of the opening. —_—_e - Daughter of 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ira A. Place of No. 268 West Seventy-seventh Street have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Katherine Place, to James veurcnne Adams, son ot Will- Mins Place we student at Vassar College and ne will be graduated from Princeton thie year, At a very fashioi expensive tellor certain middie-a tomer discovere ficient change to purchase a pal and 1 1 paver f his humble Of Bray, wloves aye fh Boles mi ‘What was the name? demanded the rather di sed tailor In per emptory manner. wa me and | odd ree. "On. th t, air,” exclaimed the tailo mt "Your Wit ote. gir MONGHTHOLDP | OF TRAN 1S EASY. FOR THO BANDITS Masked and Armed, They Go Through Four Coaches, Get Plunder and Escape. LOB ANGELPS, Cal, June 12.— Two masked robbers, with revolvers Grawn, boarded a Southern Pacific train en route from San Francisco to Los Angeles at Chatsworth at mid- night last night, robbed passengers of $565 and escaped. Men and women in the Inst four coaches of the train were compelled to! Give up their money and jewelry. Af- ter collecting their booty, the bandite pulled the signal cord, stopping the train at Howitt and fled. OMotals sald to-day they believed an accom- plice was waiting near the station with an automobile to ald the hold-up men in escaping. Severa) shots were fired at the rob- bers as they swung from the train, and they returned the fire, but no one was hit, Officers throughout this seo- tion began search for the men at day break. —.Wj~—— foot Me “Rovuraine, ave in New Fuk ee vy. mM. rounn $1.00 rar at. ee a SUNDAY TRIPS HORSE THROUGH WINDOW, WOMAN FATALLY HURT Two Men Are Injured When Run- away Swerves Into Big Plate Glass, A runaway horse attached to a ght wagon dashed through the plate glass window of a furniture store at Stanton and Mesex Streets, fatally injuring @ woman and seriously hurt- ing two men. The siren of an auto frightened tne horse as it came along Stanton Street Just before noon and it started away, leaving many overturned pushcarts in ite wake. At Essex Street the driver of another wagon blocked the roadway to stop the horse. The run- away swerved into the windows of the United Furniture Company. ‘The sidewalk was crowded. There was a mad rush, but the woman was swept through the window. The two men, one the driver, were injured in the shower of broken glass, The horse will have to be killed, ‘The woman, whose identity could pot be learned, and the two men, John Glass, snp 0 of No. 182 Fasex Street, the ver, and Vitam Nester, seventeen, of No. 236 Cherry Street, were taken to Gouverneur Hospital. The horse was owned by Louis Tuttle, a horse dealer, of No, 101 Second Street. pe FIRE HIDDEN TWO DAYS. ring Blase Vinally Reaches Apartment Roof on Broadway. A fire which has been smouldering for two days in the wall partitions of story apartment house ex- from No. 1690 to No. Broadway, burst through the roo early this morning, The building ts being renovated and the only occu- pants, the family of Benjamin Vin- ton, were aroused by firemen on their arrival. An explosion of gas, due to a leak- ing pipe, brought the firemen to the piace on’ Thursday, and it ts, belley was due to a eh Pecened, thy the Phat the blaze. to- ‘aay smouldering flame, w firems that ti y had y hundreds of feet of wail ely check it to- me HUDSON es Bunday, ec en a i aura # a. ry ind ae aes rah ‘on fot Pent eon “Str. “Robert "Fulton” hour later service to West Point, Newburgh and Poughkeepsie be- gine Saturday, June 19. Afternoon Boat Went vias, Nerwawh, for ated \ Taiith Rt, 20 Ideal outing’ to boat or by rail Desbrosses St, Pier, tinday. wise Vint, returuing by ‘Tel, 4141 Spring, N.Y Hudson Rives Day Rockaway Beach Sei Somes sete Landing (oily ‘i Str. Clermont jj’ a FALL RIVER LINE MANAGEMENT SAVINGS BANKS BANKe, 315 siontbe, soating oa PER naa oa a 1 a 7 ane Z Bun, peers We) : INNING JU! 13, 2 oy a INFORMATION WANTED, MRE. Me Nouns ae oxpans, oe ee RFA Se Thousands Are Waiting For THE WORLD’S Summer Resort Annual . For 1915 NOW READY For FREE Distribution at All World Offices and by Mail FOR EARLY COPY BY MAIL INCLOSE &c, IN STAMPS TO COVER POSTAGE Presenting Over 2,000 Announcements of Summer Resort Hotels and Boarding Places Address The World, Summer Resort Guide Department, Pulitzer Bldg., Park Row, New York City, N. Y..

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