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— ‘ an Veer as, | shee hh eas AMELIP CHARGE 2° <5 Re care ee cee cote ee id tty BURIED. Y FOES OF DRAFT Sore INGENSES COURT Lawyer for Four on Trial as eat down, eas eae ncaa tata wo taco tite War serves » Plotters Rebuked for At- tack on Prosecutor, man’s Meeting as Slackers, ix Saloon Keepers Charged With Gelling Intoxicants to Men Stranz, No, 204 River Street; R. min, No, 206 River Street; R. Meyei 210 River Street; Barney Jacobs, No. 214 River Street, and Charles Serventl, to enforce the new Federal | No. 88 Newark Street. law which forbids the sale of intox-| Director of Public Safety McFeely and Chief of Police Hayes for the last few days have been particularly active along River Street where, in a space of four blocks, from Newark Street to Fourth Street, there are nearly forty Tho first Hobokenite to lose his life interpreter. latration cards, Prosecutor Content announced that! ‘The meeting was at No 10 West One|'™ ‘he service of the country sinoe the the case againat Kramer for veertnapitn n entry of the United States into the to register will be tried y |organiena by avery (group of bie| World war was buried in Flower Hill after the close of the present trial. nol call emselves the| Cemetery at Hoboken. He wae Corpl. Postponed the trial of | “Collesi Liar Lawrence Ryan of the Fourth Regi- hed fimealt ‘eo - ment, N. G. N. J., who was killed at LS indrede of nolay atreots for blocks Bound Brook while tn performance of dents, to next Monday mo’ THE AEOLIAN COMPANY AEOLIAN HALL: In BROOKLYN AEOLIAN HALL: In THE BRONX 11 Flatbush Ave., Nevins St. Sub. Station 367 East 149 St, West of Third Ave. AEOLIAN HALL: In MANHATTAN, 29 West gand Street | Before @ courtroom crowded with Anarchists, Socialists and opponents of military service the trial of Louls Kramer, Morris Becker, Joseph Walk- er and Louis Sternberg, arrested May 81 for anti-registration activities, was resumed before Judge Mayer in Fed- eral Court to-day. Attorney Harry Weinberger, for the Girls! Use Lemon Juice! Make This Beauty Cream _ . The lemon Juice massage indulged] cloth the juice of two fresh ers of Emma Goldman, provoked the In once or twice each day means a lit-| into « bottle containing abou three | censure of the Court when he called tle time and trouble, girls, but what he Md ae white, then shake Assistant United States Prossoutor ot the splendid results? A skin| Pint of skin and completion lolion at | vars A; Contant to the stand and bleached beautifully white, a complex-| about the cost one usuall pays for 4 spine apd eens! leper a Ml 4 ton with the bloom of a peach, a soft-| small Jar of ordinary cream, ‘trame-up” on the part of the Gov- } .aning of those lines of care; in fact,| sure to strain the Lemon Juice 90 no|¢mmment to odnvict the prisoners, ge ekin Lay aged of nature’s purity and| pulp gets in® the bottle, then this| Weinberger was called to the bar of amas wht soft and full of charm. lotion will remain pure and fresh for| the court and warned that his con- What girl or woman hasn't heard of| months. When massaged daily into| quct was ‘unlawyerlilke. lemon juice to remove tan, freckles|the face, neck, arms and hands it shoutti t the to ; of he +, and sallowness; to bleach the skin and | should naturally help to whiten, clear, |: ll J Messong } to bring out the roses, the freshness | amoothen and beautity the skin. Nidan graeme thihonngihd pons and the hidden beauty? But lemon| Any druggists or tollet counter witt| tent and the Government with “Ale: ¢ alone is acid, therefore ‘irritat-| supply three ounces of orchard white | regarding every consideration of the and should be mixed with orchard | for a few cents and the grocer the ' Constitution and law” in preparing "Then I realized that this anw this way: Strain through a fine | lemons.—Advt. the case against the defendants, When = a) Spee We found these suits in a factory that makes the largest volume of ma- In the New Store for Men, beginning Wednesday Morning 1,309 MEN’S SUITS |’ In-a*War Emergency Sale $11.75, $13.75, $15.75 War conditions sent us out Into the market. from our old manufacturers, suits to sell at these low prices. the interest of our customers we went to new places. We couldn't get, So in years, They give good service—ex- cellent ‘service. The makers of them dik The Phonog “ yrs 4 qrrrextiys t BELIEVE I know why you think you are tired of phonographs, old man”, said Edwardes; “If every time you started out with your car, you had to motor over the same road at exactly the same speed, you would tire of that too, wouldn't you? Well, I have a phonograph which never grows monotonous; which~ has the power to give infinite variety to every record raph of Which ever /ires ment of the kind I have heard”—“and because of this —Graduola"—interrupted Mrs. Edwardes, and she ulled out a little device attached to the Vocalion om a slender black cord. They pret the first verse of “Tommy Lad” sung by Louis Graveure, without the Graduola. These rich, mellifluous tones were no phonograph tones—It was Louis Graveure to the lite! Every word distinct—the definition of every phrase : pent I ; | as clear as the reflection of light and shade in a a is » tate clothing in the United ate 0k gp Mage Pegg agp | I own!—But come over to the house a few sunlit po 1! I laid my hand on my friend's shoulder, 4 We purchased them—because they And they are satiafied to grow in pro- | minutes and hear it, won't you? raphe a ee ee } | big pines any gone ees cence | When my friend and neighbor, Frank “Here, take the Graduola and play the second their lowest wholesale price. Edwardes, thus spoke of the pleasure he de- verse as you would like to sing it” said Edwardes. We shall sell them at more than 20 Open at 7.30 \ rived from his phonograph, I realized that Then 4 reseed 4 if per cent. less, because we cut our own ° i ours had been pushed into an inconspicuous pbc naataits: Se gence ful — ae TECUEE DORE for this Sale corner and that I hadn't heard a note from aa eg hn phresin pon ld : Like the Ford Automobile The Men's Corner Store Only it for at least three weeks! as before. But as I moved the Graduola ever so Was Vat etonatin thdeed, Why had we tired of it? ONEDOESN'T ——-EDNY. Sie Cron stor thus imparted ease a shy clothing factory reminds us of One Thing Is Sure TIRE OF SINGING IF HE HAS A new quality of tivingnine <otl apeniaeion. T was ‘ the Ford factory. Everything that & __those suits are better fabric ° VOICE, or of PLAYING THE PIANO varying the details of the interpretation just as the machine can do, it does—does it so 4 well that the finished suit is well- value than any suits we have IF HE HAS THE ABILITY TO PLAY! singer would himself vary it with each performance. , made, eae wel > sinned, been able to find at the prices “Yes, I'll come over and listen to this phenom- A vista of the marvelous possibilities for a new ancy Ra ag See mies We eee She eumatcie ta Tha ae enon of yours, if you like. enigyates in che, paonogrege opened before me. will hold its shape. grein And so we went across the street through the us ap it pags Fy sebcitiey pers of pleasure for me, ' offered as a new service to scented Spring night to his house. As we approached, what of the vast number of other vocal and instru- The Advantage | of machine-making is that it leaves i] more money to go into the fabric. The fabrics in these suits are stronger than can be put into equal grade suits made meet a war emergency which makes it difficult to get any kind of suits at these low prices Edwardes’ wife, who had been sitting on the ver- andah, joined us, and entering the living-roomahead of us, switched on the Jights. In the soft, amber tinted glow of the lamp, the deep grained mahogany mental masterpieces that I loved so much, but or whose stereotyped renditions I had grown tired? Truly my friend was right. Here was a phono- graph of which one could never tire—a phonograph in part by hand. MATERIALS—worsteds, cheviots, casst case of their new phonograph stood out in rich relief. of incomparably better tone, which offers to all the part by hand. meres, tweeds, homespuns, crashes, flafnels eee bi dae thetteatinet © ; And the work of the machines is and unfinished worsteds. You always were a great fellow for appear- means to exercise the instinct for music-expression i standardized. Even the buttons are COLORS—blue, brown, green, gray, fancy which, in some degree, we all possess. sewn on by machine—and they stay on. Not only is nothing lost by this, but i time and labor cost are saved. So it is through all the proc s, from cut- ting to finishing— saving money to give more value in the fabric. No Experiment These suits are not an experiment. They are sold all over the country- have sold all over the country for pencil stripes, plaids, black and cts. MODELS—conservative 2 9 flat lapels and semi-soft rollir patch, slant and slash pos kets, ack, single and double-breasted. d % buttons, lapels, flap, pinch belt We Warrant Each Suit Sale begins tomorrow, Wednesday morning, with extra salesmen and tailors, in the store at the corner of Broadway and Highth Street. We have only one purpose in offering these suits—to be of ser- vice to men whose war-time plans will not permit the expenditure of more than $11.75, $18.75 or $15.75 for a suit of clothes; to give them | the best clothing value at these prices. JOHN WANAMAKER Me ances, Edwardes, I bet you bought that phonograph on acount of its good looking case.” “Well, it isn’t a disadvantage to have an instru- ment add to the appearance of the whole room is it? But that isn’t why I bought it. I bought it because it has the richest, most natural tone of any instru- At the salesrooms of the Aeolian Company, they made a generous allowance on my old phono graph towards a Vocalion. And every record I own has become a new record-—- The Vocalion is the very pulse of our evenings at home. AEOLIAN-VOCALION The phonograph of richer tone—the ONLY phonograph which you can play Prices, $35 to $350 in Conventional Styles; Art Styles to $2000 TERMS AS LOW AS $5 MONTHLY Catalog and complete information sent upon request Broadway at Ninth, New York