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TREN YOO THONG ate bay ramen emeat es ta ree at Es ean a sa THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1917. Ww : i I EANG N [ue ace an ieytour ant tt S| SEPARATE TRIAL DENIED 11 | GREAT MI-CAREME FETE | apd soe ea ON FLAG BURNING CHARGE” aviariow Ww Freanee SUPPORTING WIFE at hi cant Asked If They Are Anarchists or | e had Free Love Advocates. | Falesmen In Bouck White Case | | | ould listen to] him cured of Long-halred men and short-haired yomen sat ge McIntyre's nw to-day at of Bouck t, and ten ne American n the Church non June 1,] 1 just finishe eight months Braman Taking Cure Is Pa-| i, Os." rolled to Complete It— (4 Wife’s $50,000 Gone. ity At his aman be allowed to cure, Magistrate Harris n his father’s custody |“ | n sald she had $50,-| of Whether or not habitual drunken of her marriage | 946 ness excuses a man from supportin: on bd his wife was the question brought fore Magistrate Harris ye Court of Domestic Mrs, Julia Braman al er husband, Kenneth Braman, had |! yt supported her since thelr mar Ae age nine years @ |the Magistr Braman 1s the son of Willard | advant traman, President of the Merchants | her nd Manufacturers’ Finance Com. | | ony, and reputed wealthy. He gave! ing Bernard Raymond, a wey for the eleven, asked that a separate trial be granted each, Thix was dented and | kald she knew. her] the impaneling of a Jury was begun, | mily was very wealthy.| When the first taicsman was called A ant Attorney Rorke asked him t her morc ‘ = © was an advocate of free love| lor opposed to organized government Pardon me r asking you these questions?” Mr. F sald, “but they tter of form, Wife to Blame if Husband Drinks, |" 9 0s 000 Says Druggist Brown of Cleveland)»: 0 8°. #0 81. sions Ave- nue | Who Tells Wife What to Do ~ aL you an anarchist? Are you sweaters. SHIELDS HUSBAND; TO JAIL. Cnba A New Treatment Given Without the Consent or Knowledge of the Drinker. No wile has # rigut Pecaune he drinks, er Acceptx Sentence ninth Street, was se © the pent tary to-da 6, having be dade Mrs CHAS bin inhi young w " after thi MAR SHALL husband, who Jumped a $6,000 bail One of the most notable of the | following his arrost for the allege entertainments planned for Mi- pend hivediletletdie Bale Careme, March 15, will be held that pidrnardiedate night at the Waldorf-Astoria, It will take the form of @ theatrical enter- th Begin with on his breath, but d ir if he has gone from’ bad t MT he is Fum-soaked through Droggiat Brown knows strong drink, because he himne ‘@ victim. We was rescued fron ‘of a drunkard'’s grave by @ ot desapal * unt > whereabouts of her husband, but she Areal man's smoke When Turkish tobacco was first Try a Mecca today. See for yourself brought to this country, smokers why Mecca has becofne the goal of ! thought for a time they had found the all cigarette smokers. tobacco they had been looking for. In the handy slide box, Sc for 10; in But they soon found that Turkish ae 0 for 20 r tobacco lacked something. It had the oval foil package, 100 tar 40, flavor, but it lacked character. entood by On the other hand, straight American ee He Hourrenry Moca tobacco didn’t have quite the flavor we hake § } ' pie smokers wanted. aM et. The Mecca blend solved the ques- tion. It combined the flavor of Turkish tobaccd with the character of American. At last smokers had founda real man’s ciga- rette— Mecca—the goal of all cigarette smokers. i 18,638,871 Votes— were cast at the last election. In 13% work- ing hours enough Mecca cigarettes are made to supply each voter. { \ a ARE er Se Ue... SRR a nea } PTT MMMM MMMM Mm TTT ETA tainment for the benefit of the) American Aviation Corps and the Ambulance Francaise of Pierrefonds, France, Miss Marie Dres: with a company of professionals, and she will sing a song written for the occasion by Miss Frances Marion, the music by A, Baldwin Sloan, The patrons and patronesses in- clude the Duc and Duchesse de Rich- elieu, Mr. and Mrs, Charles B, Alex ander, Mrs. Charles H. Marshall, Mr and Mrs. F r will appear fck H. Allen, 1 Mrs, Edwant s Anne‘ Morgan, | Lady Colebrooke, Col. T. Bently Mott, U. 8. A. Mr Mrs. Anthony J. Drexel jr, Miss Elsie De Wolf, Mr jand Mrs. Jafnes Brown Potter, Mr. and Mrs, George vuld, Mr. and; Mrs. James 1 Putnam, Mrs. ; | James B. Mr. and Mrs. | Alexander § William Jay, Mr. and 3 orge Rose, Mr and Mrs. Robert Bacon, Mr. and’ Mrs | Belmont, Mrs, Williain Disste ‘Coster Wilmerding, ‘Mr. and Mrs. {Myron 'T, Herrick,’ Miss Maude K.| | Wetmore, Dr. and Mrs. Preston P. | Satterwhite, Miss Elisab arbury and Mr. and Mra, W. Parmely Her- | rick -_——-—— | | Notes ih Society [ Mrs, Edw Breitung of No. 16 East Sev xth Street is ar |ranging a professional entertainment for the fund for the main ican aviators and the lin France, It wi {March 16 The F Class hi wing and Knitting nd meeting of the season t ne of Miss Annie leary, No, 1032 Fifth Avenue, yester day, Mrs. Lyman B, Park Avenue will guests at din afterward take ve to the theatre, Mrs. Hamilton McK. Twombly gave a luncheon yesterday at No. 684 Fifth venue Mra. Douglas Robinson gave one of a series of receptions yesterday after noon at No. 9 East Sixty-third Street The Bachelors will hold one of their | series of dances to-night at the Van derbilt. Among those who will enter- tain guests are Mra, William K. Van- | derbilt jr, Mrs. Herbert M, Harriman, Mr. and Mrs. Angier B. Duke, and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Drexel Biddle jr |. Mrs. Henry H. Morgan and her daughters are booked to sail to-day on | the Alfonso XI. for Spain. In Madrid | they expect to meet Mr. Morgan, who | until recently was our Consul Ge neral | at Hamburg, Germany, | || Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont, | have been spending the winter in | York, went yesterday to their h Washington, where they will entertain | friends at the inauguration time. | | | Miss Catherine Dunscomb Colt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Richa Colt of No, 480 Park married on May 12 Dickey jr, son of a Charles ‘D. Dickey of No. 37 Fifty-first Street. Th take place at Curry summer home in’ C tel |Samuel Sloan was a grandfather of | Miss Colt, Auxiliary No, 1 of the New York} Diet Kitchen Association will give a| MI-Careme supper dance on the | ning of March 10 tn the Della Re jroom of the Vanderbilt Hotel. | proceeds will be devoted to the sup- |port of milk ions, Among | Mesdames t H. Choate, Alb« Davison, +t Courtenay Allen Bi. | and John Ames Mitchell, On |the Junior Committee are the Misses Helen Bacon, Dorothy Darrell, Vfola |Flannery, Martha Reynolds, Cather- | Jine Parsons, Ma Honor Henry, A | Riordan, Juliet of the Interna. | League a series dening will be fternoons this For the be tional Child Wel of three talks on given on Thurs {month in the Club by Mrs, being fesued by | Blashfield and Mrs, | St. David's lety Dines, Soclety held ita linner Jast night z sald W Americans but Welsh blood in our velny. 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Our immense purchasing power—Our saving by eliminating the middleman—our economy of rent by selling ony in upstairs shops—enables us to provide more quality in fabric and work- manship at $15 than goes into any other clothes at that price in the United States. 70,000 New Yorkers found it paid them to wear Monroe Clothes last year. Your first Monroe suit or overcoat will make you, too, a loyal Monroe Clothes follower. You can’t get away from the quality. Come up to-day. Suits—Overcoats—Evening Clothes—$15 Monroe 28 Clothes America's Largest Upstairs Clothiers SATISFACTION GUARANTEED) |/_ 7) REFUNDED] MANHATTAN BRONX | Bergen Ave., 149th St. Nassau St., Cor. Frankfort BROOKLYN Fulton St., “ Bway 34th Street, “ Bway aaa 1 “Bway 59th “ & Col’bus Circle 125th ‘“ “ 7th Ave. Court & Montague Sts, Fulton & Hoyt Sts. NEWARK 151 Market Street JERSEY CITY Newark Ave., at Bay St. upstairs: TRIBUNE BEAVICE [OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P. M—SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P. M. NO ALTERATION CHARGES. | ; Red the T H E W A N D E R EK R serial’ png Wi mt Ay Pugs From the Play Now at the Manhattan Opera House : + + ¢ On Page 17