6 *■ ■ ••+•»»»♦» MMMMM »»»<»♦»»»#»»♦»»»»»#» »#*••#••##<>• +»<>♦+»»-> f Shoe Store J 217--MARKET STREET--217L Peni a. j | | A Great Clearance of Women's I Colonials, Pumps & Oxfords jj | Actually Reduced Qeg 05 The Season's Newest •• I From $2.50, ?3 & $4 v gStyles ol Smart J Ciean-t'p PAIR Low Shoes X Summer's newest models in pumps, colonials, sandals, oxfords, etc. Patent, dull, white, X X bronze, gray, champagne, etc. All sizes. z ! Women's $2 to $4 SI.OO Women's White $1 ca| J/\ Low Shoes 1= Pumps & Oxfords 9 | JX I Pretty whlto canvas * J Vw Another lot of I wu™ rubber" * ° ,tord yVl^V-\ X X i lonlals. pump a. i a pair. Not odd 3 Former $3.50 X * 1 and ends, but this to $3 values. / X " season's beat I — ■■■■ ■■ I ■ -■■■» ■■ .■ .■■ ■■ mm J V—. II i mm'tj ♦ I White Oxfords\ | jX i Good white canvas tops Men's fine grade oxfords ♦ ♦ —rubber soles. Ideal for in the best summer styles i 1 ft i outing. All siacs. Si val- P® tom ,nd X | 51.50 HezuLar SI J <» I Outing Shoes Sft.4s i Jx tops, leather saddle straps. ZZZZZ X ♦ All sizes. sl.St» 98c ' % I [ GIRLS ' ! HITE , SHOE LI clean-up specials I B °r: I | ' ?£?<£?£* *°S?SO QO ty TAX SCOTERS X I * ' 98c Girls' and Boys - Tan Scoffer $1.50 values QQ _ « X oxfords with elkskin leather A I< GIRLS' LOW SHOES """ "' 98c «<>ys' ores® s/. oes - | T TEWIS OXFORDS X X Mary Jane pumps and button For men. women chil- S7>OU ♦ X shoes. Patent and dull. All dren. Black aud white canvas High-grrade makes I ♦ sizes to 2. Former $1.50 to $2 with rubber soles ....... /J Q _ in patent and dull B 1 X X values. Special at "17C leather; lace or A & f _______ (f 4 fl ft CHTLDREX'S WHITE PUMPS models: all / *»/ J X I" '" \ I 1111 White canvas uppers with Icfual"t <■ I ■=-" 4) l-UU leather soles; Mary Jane 4Q r values at" fld?/* ♦ I Bt > les - Sizes Ito 5 f \ TRAVELETTE By NIKSAH SALONIKI > As a pawn in the game of empires be ing played across the water, Saloniki has attracted & great deal of attention lately. As a quaint and unusual citv It has hardly gotten the attention that la it* due. You are told of Saloniki's strategic value, ar.-i the defenses that th» allies are throwing up in the plains around Tou are shown pictures taker, from military aeroplanes gliding over the white houses, but no one has seen fit to mention tnat Salcniki is really a Spanish city in the Orient. The lan- S"uage of two-thirds of the people and the one understood by ai!. is a form of Spanish, and it is commonly printed in Bringing V P Father (ft ® ® By McMcnul HERE COME«> LORD "1 i ( . HELPOt)- HE ANNOYS <, ° ,N ' ,N I ' THlN *< NOT- I NOTICED THAT A OH'. I KNOW THAT- "\ ME. MORE TH*N THE ' Th E WATER I'M NOT IN THE CAFE - PERFECT THE HOTEL "CLERK. 1 MOSQUITOES r .COONT? FOND OF THE J s^SS&-355SSS555S55SSSS5SS^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^=g August Victor Records on Sale Here To-morrow VIC T ROLA A Summer Necessity OUTFITS Victrola VI, oak $25.00 Victrola XI, cabinet size SIOO.OO and 6 double-faced records, and 8 double-faced records, 12 selections, your choice... . 4.50 16 selections, your choice.. . 6.00 Terms, $5 cash, $3 monthly.. $29.50 Terms, $6 cash; $6 monthly, $106.00 ... . , , . c»e-rk Victrola XIV, cabinet size $150.00 \ictrola Mil, oak or mahogany, $50.00 . v ....... b . v and 10 double-faced records, and 6 double-faced records, -« , • . . _ 12 selec.ions, your choice.... 4.50 20 select,ons, your choice... 7.50 Terms. $5 cash; $4 monthly. . $54.50 Terms, $8 c.sh; $8 mon.hly $157.50 Victrola XVI, cabinet size $200.00 Victrola IX, cabinet size $75.00 and 12 double-faced rec and 6 double-faced records, ords, 24 selections, your 12 selections, your choice...., 4.50 choice, 9.00 Terms, $5 cash; $5 m^ithly. . $79.50 Terms, slocash; $lO monthly $209.00 YVeek-End Sale of Used Pianos Stuyvesant, rosewood SS6 Hensel. mahogany, $lB5 Dunham, mahogany, $145 Stieff, like new, $225 Wessel, mahogany, $155 Kimball, mahogany $225 Kimbali, ebony $l6B Poale, nearly new .$290 Hinzie, walnut $175 Hardman, mahogany $320 Any of the Above Pianos on Terms to Suit You J. H. TROUP MUSIC HOUSE TROUP BUILDING 15 So. Market Square Store Closes Daily at 6 P.M., Friday at Noon, Open Saturday Until 10 P.M. == I tions that there is no such demand ' in the present war ror vessels of the battle cruiser type as would exist in a war on the Atlantic or Pacific, nor! is there any opportunity for these ships to give evidence of their value in the primary role for which they are intended. This role I attempted to de fine before the Naval Committee is as follows: • The second respect in which the. navy as it exists to-day is hampered, 1 or would be hamperfd, in the event of war is that it has no battle cruis ers and no scout cruisers. In other words, we have no means of gaining information as to the location or the movement of an enemy force or of denying to the enemy information as I to our own location or movements. Our fleet, if it were sent to sea to- . JULY 28, 1916. ' morrow to defend our Atlantic coast i from Eastport, Maine, to the Panama : Canal, would go out with the com- i I mander-in-chief and everybody under his command practically blindfolded. ; I am sure you all know that the very thing that the commander of an army or fleet needs is information of the , enemy, his whereabouts, his move ments. the constitution of his force, 1 and. if possible, information as to his plans. ! ' Value of Cruisers The Admiral here called attention to a sketch he had submitted to the N'aval Committee showing the dilem ma in which a commander without fast scouts would find himself should he receive word that an enemy fleet had left the English Channel on a given date and disappeared behind a 1 fog. The only thing that could be ! • done, said the Admiral, would be to i | remain in an "intermediate position," l probably between New \ ork and I Hampton Roads; and the next news to reach the commander might be that the enemy had attacked the New | England coast or was approaching | the Panama Canal. The letter sums up the value of the | cruisers as follows: I "They are ideal, first, because their i very high speed enables them to ! search out an enemy force and g°t | 'nformatinn back *vlth regard to that ' force, and, second, because if they ! meet an enemy force they have great i power of resistance, if the force is one which they can properly resist, and great power of avoidance if the force which they meet is one which calls for avoidance. The characteristic of ; a battle cruiser Is that it has very : high speed associated with very great | gun power, and especially very long I range gun power."