The evening world. Newspaper, March 20, 1912, Page 6

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THE EVENING w6RLp, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 20, ies. Best & Co, OLYMPIC PAID $25,000 sible to secure ‘fuel for the trip. The CasterYovelties for the Little Ones , Caste : 6 | ‘li ire, ° ife, 1“ ire’’ D MRS. E.R. THOMAS ot io ts Named in Suit as Divorce Coreepondent ADVANCE TO GET COAL. sailinis have been cancelled on ace the strike were emptied into the + " ‘ On » a 1 at more than % a Big Liner Had Hard Time Securing on oeae bought for the trip. It > au | , . 4 55 ss = os Fuel Owing to Strike mated that It ont the ship owners 825 The seriousness of the coal strike in England was made manifest to the of- ficera of the White Star liner Olympte, |p . reached he i . ; which arrived to-day after many di but owing to the dens | FROM OUR bunkers of two American liners who feuldes in securing suffident steaming Sith anchored and did coal for the voyage. his ship up to her pi umil after 1 The Olymple brought 1,686 passengers, | o'clock this afternoo: of whom only 136 were in the first cabin, though her usual complement of cabin passengers is more than three hundred, (From the Boston Transertit.) ident im jo ut = e — . + * . ‘ Ae accatnted e delay te aay pate | meyers (oomplainingly)—You never praise! PANCY BASKETS filled with Kaster Novelties, ine Rabbits, Chicks, etc......-+.-..-+ ing date, and moat of those who had Hub—!I don't, eh? You should hear ‘ tee sees 25, 50c. 75c. 1.00 to 5.00 each booked on her came on the Lueltania, me describe you at the intelligence of- The coal strike made it almost tmpos-| fice when I'm trying to hire a cook. | FANCY EASTER EGGS filled with Easter Novelties... . | PYUTELIREL TEER ERLE ee 50c. to 3.00 PARIS FOR DIVORCE She Named “Teddy” Gerard, | Known in French Capital | as “La Belle Theo.” Coy Department luding + penn emael | “THE VAMPIRE DANCER.” | Thomas Missing From White! Lights and Notice Will Be | Served by Publication. A YOU WILL FIND at the Queen ty e Quality Boot Shop a most fascinating a of “Agpoyt Mar peaat Boots and Shoes, the tops being of various appropriate N (o) be es fabrics. ae Seupaniiceain Guienia Peat are the new models in Colonial Pumps Madame rae Vea ha batt ices tad ° jis XV. and Cuban heels. Louise Fur Rabbits with ribbon bows, Yaturatl Ducklings, Hying Pigeon and Crane on spiral wire. Chickens with candy box attachment. Hand-painted | Postal Cards, also a Full Line of Gaster Cards, Rooklets and Postal Cards and a Most Complete Line of Goys. | he ENE | | Qwer on the Italian Riviera Edward | Russell Thomas, Broadway ae | | vardier, bank president, stock broker, horseman, financier, theatrical angel! and of an affectionate disposition, | learned to-day of the sult for divorce) filea yesterday by his wife, formerly! Linda Lee of Louisville | Mrs. Thomas, who now lives at No. 2 | East Forty-seventh street, names “Teddy” Gerard, a young woman of | theatrical persuasion, better known In | Paria as “The Bello Theo,” speaks of | the summer of 1910, and avers that ee er, Ot Par gone” uve! SILVER LAKE MURDER earn : a breadth to her petition by charging her | IS DEEP MYSTERY. if Nen ut ot th Ke tree under which {he was lying. TO ACCOMPANY CLOTH SUITS of Serge, Ratine, Cheviot, Linen, etc., soft Russia Leather Boots and Oxfords will be in general use. These may also be had in delightful variety. ALL QUEEN QUALITY {SHOES are distinguished from ordinary shoes in one important respect—their extreme hsitand with misconduct with “divers| . are ie one has been found eran and lightness. They never meer worntn.” -re. | Florist Winckler Killed and Robbed es need “breaking in.” a eae tas initetace, sebie'gs'| © Blsewhere'ta'THeory of- | D.. L. & W. HEAVILY FINED ee Fifth Ave. at Thirty-Fifth St. ing abroad and interesting Paris with the Police. | UNDER THE HEPBURN ACT. CONSIDERING THIS very important - her “Vampire Dance” she was an inti- mate of Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, who was! Many pera: | aleo in Mr. Thomas's good graces, so| Morgue in at Brighton, Staten, Is- | much so that ‘several years ago the| and, in an offort to identify the body notorious model and Thomas were in- | of the young man found last night in vited to leave the Hotel Knickerbocker, | the Silver Lake woods, back of Staple- where they were dining. ton. The police believe him to be Ar- Thomas ts the son of Gen, Samuel! thur W. Winckler, an expert florist of | os Themen, wao installed him es Prea-| Hampton, Bagland. His pockets con.| eo SCMAAURS dent of the Geventh National Bank after | tained several lotters ao addressed, most | —_ dias putting up nearly « millon dollars to| of them in German, but one in French, pull that inctiution.out of a hole, Later! The body was found by Patrick Scal- young Thomas took flyers in the broker- | lon among wnderbush in a spot which age business and the newapaper game. | few persons Apparently the man He acquired a string of race horses,| had been di about two days, His . 1, paying 990,000 for Hermis, and at an-|ekull was fractured by a blow on the|recommending Arthur W. W other time fancied W. K. Vanderbilt | forehead, another blow had crushed his|®%, expert florist, age " No houses are within a milo of where| feeding mules in the mines. #.'9 “White Ghos{” car and bought it. | nose and his neck was broken. the body was discovered, but the police| Counsel for the defendant announced Several tragedies attended his automo: | The man seemed to have been about | believe the young man was killed some-|that an appeal would be taken to the dile career. are old, had dark: hair| where on the waterfront and his body|Supreme Court to test the constitu. At one period he was associated with and of medium] was carried to the lonely spot. An-|tionality of the penal feature of the Charles W. Moray and F, Augustus) height. His brown sack sult and rain- other theory Im that he might have commodities clause. Heinse, and biased along Broadway as @ high-roller who paid $45,000 a year for his Hotel &. Regis suite. pent thousands of dollars on stage pretegees, and is now said to be reduced | to a beggarly $10,000 a year. | Mr. and Mrs, Thomas have had little! in eommon for some years, although she - od _ Invariably denied phat she would seek a | separation. Her aMdavit was filed by feature and the fact that the assortment of styles is by far the largest in the City, it is not hard to understand why this exclusive women’s shop has become so popular. And of still more importance are the moderate prices—83.50 to $5.00. to-day visited Connell's (SSS S]2]2=2=555 5h Registered ¥ Trade Mark | Transported Hay to Feed Mules in Its Mines Free of Freight Charges. BUFFALO, N. Y¥., March 2.—The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad was yesterday found gullty in ——|the United States District Court of vio- coat were made in London and were lating the cammoidities clause of the Hepburn act and was fined $2,000. The |company was indicted on twenty counts and faced a maximum penalty lof $100,000, the charge being that it inckler a#/shipped free from Buffalo to Scranton, Pa, @ quantity of hay to be used in Established - Half a Century BN : Madeira Hand-Embroidered Handkerchiefs Boot Shop 32 West 34th Street At Half Price We have been fortunate in securing a manu- facturer's stock of about 3,500 dozen beautifully Hand-embroidered Madeira Handkerchiefs in a great variety of characteristic designs. None of these goods have eve. been sold here- tofore at less than 50c. For the remainder of the week, or until sold, we shall offer these at Give Us Your Order for this Couch now and you can have it for 1 John G, Milburn, and Justice Gavegan + permitted '-..omas (@ be served “by pubs | ication,” his exact address not being known. This is a Bostan Leather Couch with a heavy, solid quartered oak frame; sanitary construction; a couch that would cost you about 25c Each Like all “The Linen Store” Handkerchiefs, they are pure Linen and perfect in every way. Our stock of Handkerchiefs for Ladies and Gentlemen is particularly full and attractive at this time. Many Easter Novelties are already on display. ’ James McCutcheon & Co., n pA p. x ¢ ih ee ee ES Sth Ave. and 34th St., wader Astoria | $25 elsewhere an: $20 HE RETURNED SECRETLY TO : NEW YORK FOR A GALA NIGHT. ‘Thomas went abroad two years ago | amé now is said to be in Nice, France. * Few of his friends know that two ) Months ago he returned to New York | in the most secret sort of way. | He cane hi ia Boston and kept | strictly off Broadway, where he was ev well known, e one night when the ure was too strong, Then he gave 4! dinner to a few nelect men and women | |} friends in the Cafe Martin, and later the | }} Buests and Thomas © driven to ‘] Churchill's, where the gayety continued uati! the morning hours. These friends who enjoyed Thomas's | hospitality were sworn to secrecy and | he left the city as quietly as he had | come here. One report is that he sailed for Europe from Montreal, but another |* wes to the effect that ne had sailed | f only smal | = by deposit, balance on easyweekly oe monthy 7 oan : payments. ng we are featuring great bargains in BUFFETS, CHINA CLOSI DI TABLES, DINING CHAIKS and ROCKERS, Look to us always for the bes: values in high grade furniture, and you will never be disappointed. Prices marked in plain figures. linkenbergs _ from Philadelphia. While in New York Thomas, who was! ny \f injured in an automobiie accident at! & Long Branch on Aug. 18, 1908, and for | ‘AMP a ed HOMES COMPLETELY FURNISHED. S. E. Cor. 124th St. and ‘3d Ave., New York two years was in danger of losing his) leg, walked with a cane. He hi decided limp and will be @ cripple for } fe. _ The Thom: with Thomas's mother, went abroa fall of 19 and took | a trip on the Nile, but on thele return ‘} to Paria they drifted apart, again. In spite of the fact that asi then was | on eter] he ig a familiar figure in E R ee san The First $250 Piano Ever Recommended Last June Mrs. Thomas made a quick trip to Paris and, shortly af herd By Famous Musical Authorities rival there, it became known |] purpose of ‘her visit was to procure ai absolute divorce from Thomas tn the ia aire’ Seaue ares ‘tet Here is at last a really good, low-priced piano. For SURETY 100 Sramrs i At All 200 Inc. James Butler Grocery Stores with this special combination offer: however—over there, but it is significant that the date of hr trp ie bout the the first time in the history of the Piano business, you can buy me N ecapades in Parle and. Lon: for $250, a splendid upright piano, endorsed and recommended iP ~ ——_—__ without reserve by leading musical authorities. If you, like many others, have searched patiently for be ieeee \ st Tea........ 25¢| aul Five for f Pate a low-priced piano that would be entirely worthy of your home, Ay! Be Coffee 35¢| | Bote wha: eth you can have it now in the new Stroud, and your greatest Pia ied S eva 19 | | BAND. GETS $10,000 GIFT. source of satisfaction, in addition to its reasonable price, will 3!-1ps. Granulaied Sugar Ci Cc sh. ber\cisdlion Given. Veine be, that your beautiful, deep-toned Stroud has been recognized | Package Corn Starch. . 10¢) able Musical Library by as a real musician's piano by famous composers, concert pianists, 1 Package Farina tie rivvon 1)e i muneenir . musical educators and orchestra conductors, ies Lee a. Ricsts Qhteues tl ater ge Susie’ Mecca Temple of are Four y f ful i k and : “Fie Re ere ih tity, eae weal ee r years of careful experiment work and the skill of 9 «i eee eres err se babe. Bove the experts who make the well-known Weber, Steck, Wheelock , O Neill -Adams Co. : comes and Stuyvesant Pianos, went into the Stroud before this model 6th Aye., 20th Phe « Uity, (hus getting vd $250 piano was finally produced. Now that it is on the mpl Land market, the Stroud creates an entirely new standard in low- end pcasess cost pianos. Come to Aeolian Hall and hear the Stroud Piano. You can buy this erst instrument almost on your own terms. A $2.50 in Goods FREE You may select anything (except Groceries and Meats) at their regularly advertised prices, and will often receive at special sales as high as $5, $7.50 and even $10 value for one filled book of Surety Stamps. 16*PAGE very small down payment and a few dollars monthly will Joke bring this handsome, full size piano Into your home, B ook FREE | | THE AEOLIAN COMPANY inhi 3? oF . , | THE LARGEST MANUFACTURERS OF MUSICAL ANSTRUMENTS IN THE WORLD \ 4 4 IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED—A ; SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” AD, WILL GO GET 1%.

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