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CAMMEYER ** STAMP*-O ON A SHO? MIANS ?TANDASO OF MERIT 6th Ave. nt 20th St. Final Reductions Men 's & Women s Low Shoes All Season Now $11. $10. $8.50, $Q.95 $7.50. $6.50. $6 ?m? All Season Now $5.50, $5. $4.50/$ I .95 $4.00 & $3.50 1 JOY IN NAVY YARD AT WORK PROMISE - 2.000 Jobs Hang on Build? ing; of Submarines or Idaho's Engines. The gloom that has pervaded the navy yard during the last two months ' ? ' -ion of a couple of thousand men in the ma- , chinery division was dispelled yester? day afternoon when 'lie officials re? ceived a semi-official notice that either three large submarines or the engines for the California would be construed at the yard. It I build ? Ireadnought by rr -.ict. earned that the. >ui'..; bi ; drive ; ho battle- , in the nr>\ I ned to The ' would mean that would lose After much arpument, the : Secretary finally decided, it is said, to .1.marines to the navy yard or let the ir.i n build the en of the Idaho, which is to be constructed at the Union Iron Works. -,'l of the California wi -.mber ? he hull di- ' i .11 be com- I ?i in coin::. before The building of three submarines i will It ew for the yard work- : lilt the submarines G-l, G-2 and G-3 after, they v. .-.e Torpedo | ? Bridgeport. There a I visitors to the yard ind they were irreati;. Fubmarines In the drj those tied up i arious pi "ater? ?s was al- ' lowed to taki he submers thouirh they had camera ? britainTlans war on grouse Advances Season Seven Days to Kill Off Great Numbers of Birds. London, .' The Twelfth" is to be "tl ? ,;r, for the first t ? "Th- in Kngland means Au-; opens and al ".is year in the i??? '? Chann grown to jch r . . I..- thinned S than ? ' ? fth." A bill ? if Lords, to of 1772, to allow I .?ally a lian men will be elde: mj service, ?. :.ncinj.t the s< . 'or the birds will he young i move so rapidly not n such demand as years. One fine . Ashing and ? |12t? ? beei let for I -? WINE MAYORS IN SING SING Office Now Passed Around to Avoid Politics. So ?much i intrigue re : from ha- : Ie "mayor" ' that bei ?? ? around among thi eutive corn men lile S baseball K?me. The new filan Is to I .-a dirferent comm ? >' !?:' ? ting. . mayors whei sad a perma? nent one foi EXALTS RESULT OF YEAR'S WAR FOR GERMANY Secretary of the Imperial Treasury Reviews Eco? nomics and Finance. SUPPLIES VIRTUALLY ARE INEXHAUSTIBLE Declares Conquered Territory Douhle in Area That of King? dom of Bavaria. Berlin via London), Aus;. 1. Dr. Karl Halfferich, Secretary of the Im? perial Treasury, has prepared for The Bted Press h signed statement on German economic and financial af? fairs as he views them at the end of the first year of war. Hi? statement Mlow s : "The economic ??rid financial features of the fir>t year of the war are, ill my opinion, the following: "Firs! ?The British starvation war has failed. ?>nce and for all it has been proved that our domestic produc? tion of foodstuffs, bread-card system and maximum prices assure even to the poorest the necessary supply of food, and that at prices lower than those prevailing in Great Rritain. "Second Nor can we be 'starved out' in raw material?. The difficulties n the ivay of the importation of raw rt ater?ala, in violation of interna? tional law, are unpleasant for us, but i fatal. We have in our own iv an ample supply of the most important raw materials coal and ?nd of others we have on hand, ? ?facture?) or manufactured, i_-rca' inp] lies which, with the econo iloyment thereof insured by our method? of organization, an tually inexhaustible. M.ire Work than Worker?. "Third The spectre of unemploy? ment has been banished. There is more work than workers. The war has ? ': itself t? be a greater employer of labor than our export trade was. "Fourth So far as finances are con Cfrned, Germany will carry the war . i for an' unlimited time. We produce in our own country practical- . ly everything needed for war. Thus, for war purpo themselves into savings. These . are at I ion, us pay on the war loan? and de] are flowing into the banks ?? more plentifully than in times of peace. The total of ?1? , . after over $3,000,000,000 have been !>aid on war loans, is higher than ' at the outbreak of the war. The gold reserve ??: the Beiehahanfc has almost doubled since the war began. Note? und deposita in the Reichsbank eov? ered by gold are 33H per rent, as compared with 26.7 per cent in the Bank of France and 21.1 in the Bank ?and. Faith in Financial Strength. "Fifth The confidence of the Ger? man people in our financial strength is as unbounded as their confidence in our military superiority. After twelve months of war Imperial 3s are at 70, which is eight points be? low the a.uotation in March, H?14; the minimum price of British consols, <55, I ?1 11 per cent below the quotation in March, 1914; 8 per cent French r? I, are 1'.' per cent below March, 191 ; "Work, skill, discipline, organiza? tion, economy and, last, hut not least, the categorical imperative of patriot? ism, have upheld Germany in the first year against world enemies, and will help us further to win the war." The Oversea? News Agency to-day out the following: "Reviewing the tirst year of the war the Iierlin newspapers point out that ? . of the central pow ftee from inv i p| for .-mal'. '? ., while thi kilometres, inelud Belgium and the moat valuable part of France. In addition to tl the Austro-German Allie cupy 160,000 square kilometres in the including complete the govern of Courland, Kovno, s . Lomsa, Flock, Kalicz, Piotrkow, Kadom and Kielce, as well as large part-- of of Warsaw and Lub? lin. The total coniiuered territory il the area of the Kingdom of Ba 1 varia." a ARMENIANS SEND APPEAL TO WILSON : Again Urge ?U. S. to Protest Against Massacres and Violent Removals. Tiflis, Transcaucasia (via Petrograd I to London1. Aug. 2. The up?-: print a second telegram which the Katolikos, heal of the Armenian | Church, has sent to President Wi'son, iling to the American na! "Armenian massacres ?.ml th< removal of Armenians : from Constantinople and Cilicia to Komeh and Meaopoi ? doomed to perish." Vacation Clothes At Half Their Worth Remnant Sale?suit-ends?12'-> to 150 mitei To measure oni.. Your suit?>our choice of materials? irude tur you?$iS. Sew ends added daily. Coat & Trousers, $16 Broadway CBb 9th St. Arnhtim 1% Per MONTH ON PLEDGE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY [HE PROVIDENT LOAN SOCIETY OF NEW YORK HA.MI W I \S ?BOP \ fourth Avenue, COI 25th Street. Courtlaudt Av.. cor. 148lh St. dge St., cor. Rivington SI , ... c ?wooel?si . .? . _. Sim h St.. COL LiviiiKSton St. Seventh Ave., bet. -ti-atn ?v 49th St*. Lexington Av., cor. 124th St. Grand St., cor. Clinton St. E. 72d Si., bet. Lexington & 3d Avs. UM Houston St.. cor. tsscx St. Graham Av., cor. Dehevoiie St. fi v , coi Rockaway Av. 1 y PI K i.i N i. CHARG1 .- ' ?S ??%*? LOANS KhPAIii WITHIN y emt I WO WILKS 1 ROM DATE. NEW DESIGNS APPROV Bids Asked for Six Dostroy for the American Navy. I :.- l'.r i M Unfall 1 Washington, Aug 1 Secretary I lall approved to-day ?he d< V the si\ new torpedo boat dratro lad for in the hm\h1 appro ationa bill of Maren -i, ls'ia A cite has been laeued uniting compet? bids from all ship builders who I planta adeqnata ro? batldlag <-r?fi thll . ol t In designing these vessels sp? effort has been made to utilize the of the European war. The ?ign marks a distinct departure many reap? ? from that of prcrci; classes. Special conaideratlon ha? h j."< i ii to minimizing the tendency the vessels to roll and pitch in he nd to provide the maximum comfort for the crew consistent w sped ?nd efficiency. FIRST AUTOS ENTER YELLOWSTONE PAI Thousands in Procession Tr Celebrates Privilege. IHv Ttifgrapl. I? Um ft 18?ail I Cody, Wyo., Aug. 1. Automoh | driven by private eltiXBM were for fir>t time admitted to the Yellowst ' National Park this morning. They Papa Kit and Holm Lodge, at the pi ern or Cod) gateway of the worn j land, and entered the scenic sect ! in one long procession. Thousands of autos which have b gathering at Codj. for more thsr ! week from all parts of the coun' i were in hue. There was speechmak i and the taking of motion pictures. Colonel W. F Cody i Buffalo Bl who ha? bean the pricipal worker getting the scenic road built from C< : to the eastern gateway of the juik, i ' in getting the national park opened ; automobile traffic is the central tig' ? of the fastivities. a ? STICKER FOR JERSEY H0( Garbage Ordinance Threate Pork Industry, Dealers Say Caldwel!. N. J., Aug. 1. The p? .- industry of Caldwell is thre ened, and those engaged in it i Dg the legal proceedings in I ? our? of Comn of E?! County. The proceedings constitute attack on the borough ordinance wh would hurt the pork raisers. The or nance prohibits carting garbage thron the streets of < aldwell. If thll cam be ?lone the business of raising p will be placed on a basis of dlminiahj profits, husbandmen say. A fine of $20 imposed for a viol?t] Of the ordinance is what started t difficulty. John Smith has appealed t The ordinance say- that garba muat b? tad in proper wagoi which must be driven out of the h? ough by the ?horteal route. BLACK BEARlT?o DISGUIS St. Louis Passenger Accuse as He Kisses Wife. Charlea W, Wolf, wearing a hla? beard, was observed yesterday by D tectivea Mallon and Leeaon as he wi about to come ashore from the Amei can liner St.vI.ou?s from Liverpool. Wolf's wife met him. Thev kiss? and embraced, and then Leeaon ar .calked up to Wolf and asked he had not been here before. He sa Then Leeaon said: "You can here on your last trip without a bear did you not?" Wolf assented. "Yoi name at tha* time was Ilarcroft, wasn it?" Again Wolf answered in tl affirmative. Charges of swindling were check? arrainst Wolf, the detectives said, an he was ordered to Filis Island for hearing. WANT NEW HUSBANI EVERY THREE YEAR! Boston Woman. Thrice Marriec Doesn't Believe in Living Long with One Man. !B> T. ?trapfe l? Th? Trtbao? 1 Boston, Aug. 1. "Three years ar plenty long enongh to live with an man. The >,? era re wife knows dow deep in her heart she would welcome rce that she longs to try her lue as a homemaker of another," declare Mis. Norman Blight, of Boston. Mrs. Blight, who is twenty-eigh old, has been married thre times and twice divorced. With he hu.-band, Henry A. Krebs, sh lived three years; with her secon husband, John S. Thompson, she live three year about three year ?he manied her present husbanc She counts her former husband? amon her beat frienda. "Under I am not a ma ?." Mrs. Blight went on. "I hav married t; ; If I shoul divorce Mr. Blight I ?hould marr again. I don't believe in marriaga, fo hing. This world would be muc better it that legal ceremony we cal marriage had never been. But ina? ! much as present society regards thi 1 view in horror, inasmuch as conventioi continues to In- to a ? man what string is ",o a kite, any woman is a foo to sacrifice her good name for an; man." a-1 JERSEY FIRE LIGHTS CIT\ Elaze in Hay Warehouse Visi ble in Manhattan. Shortly after 11 o'clock last night a th? machine shops of the Weat Shore Railroad, at ?iranton, in the North Bergen section of New on the Hackenaack Hiver. ? blaze could be .een for miles around, and wus plainly visible from Manhattan, Newark, J? 8] I rv and othei 'its. The : the hay storage ware? house of John Ii Murray, at New Dur and ?1 ii estimated the damage ? ..mount to about 1100.000. The building contained about two hundred earloa Ii oi hay. SOUTHAMPTON GAY ON TORRID SUNDAY Season's Largest Crowd Flocks to Beach Golf and Tennis Watches?Ocean Tepid. ' - Miaja? ) Southampton. Long Island, Aug. 1, To-dav waa the warmest Sunday ampton has had this season, and es at the Episcopal Church on tne Dunes the bathing ua- croa I? '. of the sea?on and the bi . " was the com? ment of the ha'hing pavilion. The temperature of the lallj high, ? i day, hundreds aoughl lie heat in the Both th. - and National ted to-day. ?uated on the hill? betweei I Shinnecock and Become bavs. there i hich made it \ er;, COB . ? heon an the m randas. VOTE FOR PEACE. OF GERMAN TYPE National Grange to Ask Presi. dent to Stop Arms Shipments, and "All Contraband." Iff"!? Th? Tribun? "4iir?iu | Washington, Aur. 1. The 'national I'esce Congress which has be.*n in ses? sion here for two days, with a complete paraphernalia of delegate* without credentials, officers without members, and preis ?gents without conscience, adjourned to-night after adopting an apparently innocuous resolution hp pointing a committee to memorialize the various branches of the govern? ment, executive, legislative and judicial. The joker in th? resolutions, which were finally put over on the unsuspect? ing delegates of the National (JrHiige, is the power ?riven the commi'tee to 'tske ?,uch action as will carry out the( intent" of the congress, which is to promo??, the interests of peace by slop ping thS shipment of ifm* and "ul contraband" to the belligerent ? I.iibor's National Pence Council prominent nm..ng whose members an ex Congrei man H. Roben Fowler, oi Illinois, und Heur-. H. Martin, associ? ate of the "Wolf of Wall Street," Da? vid I.nni.it. in tho Anti-Trust League, is an organisation of which little is known beyond the fact that names of Teutonic etymology dominate among its officers. This organization is re? sponsible for the National Peace Con? gress. Through the efforts of Ex-Congress? man Fowler, Mr Martin and others, the N'stional (?range was induced to s<-nd delegates to the Congrues. When they arrived here, without knowing the pur pose for which they were called, an iittcnifit wit ?nade to lure them into indorsing the platform of Labor's Na? tional I'eace Council. They demurred, and demurred so persistently that the meetimr strayed far from the paths of peace. To-dnv's session, however, found most of the grangers so out of pa tience with thf sweltering heat of Washington thst they were glad to sub scribe to anything if they might only ! be spared the torture of more oratory; in German-American English. ? 6,000,000" MILES HIS RECORD AFLOAT St. Louis Purser to Retire at Ent of Next Trip, His 2,000th, Across Atlantic. Six million miles or more on the Atlantic highway without shipwreck is the record of Howarii Ernest Hinsley, purser of the Americsn liner St. Louis, which arrived here yesterday from Liverpool. When the vessel docks in the Mersey again In about a fortnight Mr Hinsley will have ended his 1.000th round trip between ports of the Old Worl and the New, and, incidentally, his career on the ne?. He is now at the retiring age of sixty and wants t>> quit, as he expressed it, while the quit? ting is good. His sea mileage is more than six1 million miles, but he is content to reckon his trsvel on the hssis of 1,000 round trips out of New York. His first call to the deep wss in 18(17, when he embarked as a mate's boy on the Inman liner City of Bslti? j more. A year later he went to the steamship Cjty of Antwerp and s' after served for two years with 'r royal navy. Later he Joined the Awe Kan Line, and has been a purser i that service for twenty-three years. Mr. Hinsley looks no older thap for* and declares he feels younger ths that age. Fresh air, regular hours an regular me?|?. are responsible, he say) for his robust condition. He has little farm up near Dumfries, Scotland and will end his days there unies this country or Great Britain need his services. The retiring purse served through the Spanish-Americai War as a paymaster on the Amerirsr liner New York, which was then re named the Harvard. .$ MISS M'CALL ENGAGED Daughter of P. S. 0. Head Will Wed W. R. Maloney. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Everett MeCtll announce the engagement of 'h^nr daughter, Miss Ella Gaynor MeCall, to Willam rSaywood Maloney, of this city. Miss Mcf'al] is a favorite in the F.i.st Hampton colony, and is no' ? strong and daring canoeist. Mr. Maloney was graduated from ?WW-Wi ?* REDUCED RATES FOR SUMMER WORK Orrlar. ? I a ' ! ???V for laten.?r Kurniihinla and |l?o<irilir.rii will b? a?. ??Otad at prlcaa that m- an ATTRACTIVE SAVINf.g Est?males Furnitbed j| tend for ??? of oar .killed ** d?eoratovi- Tbia ioauri ?? oblila'ioa Yale in 1900 and is I adjutant of Squadron A ai of the Cniversi' . aoron A clubs. The date for the ? r.o* been set. nes from your Record that you never heard before IPs?.-'- '4*1 ? ' ' * ?la? ?1 '/^r //.<. ji/j/ time from a phonograph, you hear majestic deep-voicedinstruments?the basses of the orchestral choir." ES, it is true that the Acolian-Vocalion voices new music beauties from your records ? beauties you never knew they possessed ! Put a record in this Aeolian-Vocalion?this "tonal phonograph whose voice is Art." Let us take Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody, interpreted by many instruments. It will be a difficult test. Soft, deep, profoundly mystic, the sombre traceries of tone wave forth. And as they unfold from the ?Aeolian-, Vocalion you feel a strange solemnity. You recognize new, fresh-born, living qualities of tone. Now the bass tuba sounds?so low that you hear,it phono graphically reproduced for the first time. Now the wistful flutes throat unmis? takably their purities of clear wood-tone ? that "woody" quality before unut tercd by a phonograph. Never have you heard such delicate distinction be? tween instrument and instrument upon a phonograph?never such subtle tonal tints. The long-dumb beauties in your records are finding utterance at lust ? through the Aeolian-Vocalion! "THE PHONOGRAPH THAT CALLS FORTH HIDDEN BEAUTIES FROM YOUR RECORDS" Its Sound Box, which helps to record so majestic s \fange of tone, is but one more. The very Gradu?la device itself which shades with? out smothering tone ? which you play, but play only when you do not prefer the Vocalion to "play itself"? is but one more. It is the whole of these units meeting in one great unit?the Aeolian-Vocalion?which has made the dumb tones of all records speak a new language of tonal beauty never voiced from record before. REMEMBER that, in spite of their manifest superiority, Aeolian Vocalions are no more expensive than arc many grades of other phonographs. They range in price from $90 to $375 (special art designs from $400 up) and you can purchase one for a very small initial payment and terms as low as $5 a month. Remember, too, that all "Voca BUT there is yet even a stranger "miracle of sound." Under your simple pressure of the Gradu?la device ?a part of every ?-\eolian-Vocalion?a remarkable effect occurs. To the exact proportion of your pressure the music softens. You find you are actually shading sour music to your mood. You are literally pressing your feeling into it with the spontaneity with which you "hum an air.". Notes, phrases, passages, melt at your will into softened, liquid ecstasies of sound. You are bringing unexpected color, inspiring variety into a record that you thought was "jff/" What is the secret of this modern "miracle of sound?"' Not one invention ? many. Thus the Symphonetic Horn, whose use is to pre? serve even the subtlest character of instrumental tones, is but one characteristic of the Aeolian-Vocalion. lions" have an artistic beauty of form and finish which suggests that a phono? graph at last can be a beautiful and decorative element in a room. And all grades are alike in the actual quality of tone. A visit to Aeolian Hall may suggest an exchange arrangement for your present instrument. AN INVITATION We are anxious that all music lovers shall know by personal ex? p?rience what the Vocalion can do. We cannot translate into words its tonal qualities. We therefore in? vite you and your friends to visit Aeolian Ha!! between nine A. M. and five P. M. Hear, in a private room, any records you desire?to be played for you. If convenient, we suggest fbat you bring with you one or two of your oun familiar records. Perhaps play the Aeolian-Voca? lion yourself. Hear how sweetly it brings out the buried btauttts that records were not known to possess. You need not feel the slightest obligation for this I amazing experience. Consider it rather a favor granted us, in spread? ing the knowledge of the Aeolian Vocalion among music lovers. Drop in to Aeolian Hau when? ever you mav happen to be near. You will be welcome any day. Informal demonstrations dails at 11 ana at 3 in the Voculien Sal?n. ??mission Free. Illustrated Book let sent upon request. THE AEOLIAN COMPANY AEOLIAN HALL, 29 WEST 42nd STREET, BETWEEN FIFTH AND SIXTH AVENURS The Vocation ts made only by The Aeolian Company, maker, also of the Stetnuay, Steck, Wheeleck, Stuytesant, Stroud, ana famous IVeber Pianolas?largest manufacturen of musical instruments tn the world.