The evening world. Newspaper, February 18, 1914, Page 5

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SPRING STYLES Thursday, Feb. 19 Grocers and Del Per Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St.,N. Y. ‘DIDNT LOOK THE PART. . FALLS TO TRACK Mandeome Man Deceribed in Court 4 moved the Celebrated Hats On Sale Tomorrow NEW YORK | Agencies in All Principal Cities js the Sauce That Is Favored by the Millions. Bottle......... Half an Hour. For haif an hour this morning traffic was suspended on the sputh- bound tracks of the Sixth avenue ele- vated line while a wrecking crew re- to be Salvatore Rugani, who was killed by a train at Bleecker street. 1 Only one passtnger was waiting for the train, according to the ticket seller and gate tender. Motorman J. |W. McShatfery says the man toppled ein the platform to the tracks as {the train was running in with ite! !power shut off. Two trucks of the/| first car passed over the body. The jtrain’s whistling summoned Police- man Dolger and the transit com- pany’s emergency crew was called. After the car had been jacked up, the body was disentangled and removed to the Mercer street station. Leiters indicate that the man was @ waiter and lived at No, 203 Hast Forty-fifth street. DR. SCHONEY, BIOLOGIST, FRIEND OF LINCOLN, DEAD Chicago Philadelphia ||surgeon in the Civil War and Author of Several Authorita- Dr. Lazarus Schoney, one of the best known of the older generation of New York physicians, an authority | on biology and pathology and friend | of President Lincoln, died to-day at his home at No, 2899 West Eighth stree., Coney Island. He was eighty- six years old. | Dr. Schoney was born in Budapest in 1828, He came to America as a boy. He was a surgeon in the civil ‘war, most of the time with headquar- | lica~ ters in the Senate Chamber, He was tessen Stores Sell i] Oc at the battle of Gettysburg. He trav- elied extensively and wrete several books considered authoritative on juch pain that Siena ly of @ man belleved tive Books. ~ Dr. Mra. Theodosia Mowler Schoney, also a physician, who was the aged Gap 99 | man’s pupil in a Local medical achool | § tt y and married him after a brief court. | } ne ship, Is the only surviving relative in | a he s 1 | America. ‘ bay ony ae Schoney’s body will be cre. ated. IS KILLED BY TRAIN} +! Body of Man Crushed Under S . Graeter called an j@ntly, then rub ‘Wipe off all the Kings County Hospi- ‘alle dese net " mt. Trucks Blocks Traffic |eoune san Your eat Maharey | |SuPES Seabee eet clara * at Ms ‘s50 after § o'clock tig merning and were fear Draanist's. Bonwit TELLER&CO. Advance Announcement Most Extraordinary Sale. Fur Coats, \Scarfs, Muffs Ever Held in New York will take place Commencing Friday Morning Full details and prices will be published in Thursday evening papers. This sale represents a Purchase from New York’s, foremost maker of high class furs. Entire Collection will be sold at about 1g of regular prices. ‘ Fifth Avenue at 38th Street ONFnI-A Shopping Centre Co Sixth Avenue, 20th, 21st and 22d Streets - An Adventure “Well, well! And how’s the ol old bachelor?” laughed : a as she and Husband Bobby ‘shook:-hands with Kennedy. -, “Thought I’d come up and «look you turtle doves over. What ,sort of entertainment can you “offer a poor old bachelor? I’m “pretty fussy, you know,” chuckled eaiody. i “Your entertainer is awaiting ou,” said Myra with’ a smile. stp introduce you. Mr. Ken- nedy, I want you to meet The Autopiano . tJ Kennedy seated himself at the player piano and started a music roll (which happened to be a “‘So- Jostyle” rendition of Mendels- -sohn’s “Spring Song’). As the “beauty of the music caught his } “@titical ear and the ease with = which he was actually making it beautiful dawned on him, his face lighted up. He played on and on to theend. Swinging around, he exclaimed: in Contentment “By Jove, Myra! that’s no ordinary player piano! That’s a ‘hired entertainer’ for sure. Some instrument!” | “Not hired, Ben,” explained Myra. ‘Bought and paid: for at O'’Neill-Adams’s.. Isn’t it a wonder, Ben? “You see, after the honeymoon and new furniture and new house and all, Bobby and I were hard up. We are still. No more opera, few theatres and concerts for us just now. But we both simply crave music, \ . “One day while at @’Neill- rd $25 first payment and $10 per Adams’s I happened into their piano department. I, heard an AUTOPIANO —I dragged poor Bobby to hear it. 7 appropriated $25 and had this $475.00 AUTOPIANO sent home. We had the privilege of trying it for 30 days and returning it if we were dissatisfied and getting all we had paid. But, gracious! the only way any one could get that A PIANO now is to steal it. We are paying $10 a month on it, and it’s no effort at all. “We bought $10 worth of Music Rolls also at O’Neill’s and through the convenience of their Music Roll Library we have ex- changed them dozens of times. It costs but 5 cents a roll to exchange. “Bobby enjoys the AUTO- PIANO every evening. Ve calls it his ‘after dinner sag aN a give a tango party every Saturday night. And since it is a splendid pane for hand playing 1 have ept up my music in fine shape. In fact, the music roll is the best and most inspiring teacher I ever had. I am playing more and better music all the time. “So, while we are tuitle doves, “Ben, we are extremely musical ones,” “Myra,” said Kennedy soberly, “this AUTOPIANO is what | have been trying to find for a long time, both in results and price. O'Neill’s will sell me one next week,” * at the reasonable price of $475 to $610 (Art Nouveau, $1,060), Terma a> low an fir t s month, NO EXTRARB TO PAY. Send for a Beautiful Book « E SAY WHAT PEOPL concerning the Autopiano’—ill strated with engravings and 6 letters trom rhert, Lae Totrer Victor Hi . Pope Xs. Mary, Celebrities, Address Piano Department, GNelll- Adame o., New ¥1 rden and other ‘ork. unique Mandarin Room. Express elevators on the 39th Street ide open into a beautiful foyer of French Caen stone, with a ceiling richly in the wondrous blues, golds and reds of the Roman Renais- sance. Directly opposite stretches a lovely vista, through the oval-shaped ledgewood Room, to a at open at the other side. The room with daylight through a lofty and fini in soft, artistic i Wedge- i { i The “Loggia” at the left of the foyer is a long vaulted, stinny room on the ifth Avenue front, with walls and floors of the famous Travertine and French Caen stones. Its gently pee com is delicately ornamented in rehef Seon sades after the manner of the oman villas, 7 The Mandarin Room, occupying the octagonal corner of the floor, will delight lovers of Oriental art. Its walls are pa- neled in antique mahogany, with scenes “a ee ‘ith __._ WAY) ian The Mandarin Room The Wedgewood Room Far above the busy, colorful life of Fifth Avenue, on the spacious, airy tenth floor of the new building, a dainty luncheon or chatty afternoon tea may be enjoyed in the stately Wedgewood Room, the sunny “Loggia”. or the in gilded relief in the Chinese Chi dale si illustrating Ga: avillon Sur little under the direct management of the new recipes, which will tion to those who delight in the discovery of new ies. The Lord & Taylor Luncheon and Tea Service is for only, or for men accompanying women. The new Lord & Taylor store will be of Tuesday, Fe twenly- Sourll Lord & Taylor Founded 1826 The “‘Wedgeweed - Reom''—Tenth Fleer “La P ‘loor, partially Te

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