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STAR—FRIDAY, DEC 17, 1915, PAGE 9. THE BO Gift Special tor Women Sizes 5% to 7, for $1.00 Pair efally good values—-nice for Chri mas gifts, Made with 1 clasp trasting stitching on backs—wht Floor, Full collaps!bi steel enameled | Ured wheels, back; Upholetered In leather cloth $3.95 Kestner Baby Dolls at $3.39 Fr. sireng: rue Wash Kid Gloves Women's Wash Kid Gloves—spe- the wrist, pique sewn, with con- sand, putty and tan.—-Upper Main re SAO |, sesies weirs hood, reclining that stand 19 pure gum bladder oll Go-Carts with Inches tall; made ber. | with beautiful Diaque head ep $2.00 Soccer | N MARCHE Will Be O pen Until 9 o’Cloc little ones on Christmas Eve. re $1.75 Kestner wa $2.00 Boxing | Gloves: $1.69 | 1th Hox te, | | Jointed Dolls $1. 29 of $2.75 Ing Gloves of wine | colored tanned | leather, fitted with COE Ing eyes, laughing mouth, pretty sewed wig, and each Doll dressed In fancy stock tn: shows and che prieed at Balls $1.69 Soccer Footballs leather, with | 79 kuaranteed pure | en Goat Lea Some of t! and goat leath silks and fittec TO AID THE POOR Curtis Publishing Company's} Salesmen Will Buy Them Shoes LOOK FOR THEIR TAGS) Announcement that the 250 juvenile salesmen of the Curtis publications — the Saturday Evening Post, Ladies’ Home Journal and Country Gentieman —in Seattle are to donate the entire proceeds of this week's sales to the purchase of shoes for needy children here, isn’t the only interesting thing in connection with those boys. They are part of an army of 50,000 young salesmen in the employ of the big Philadelphia publishing house. And as they are making money from week to week, they are also being thoroly drilled in the ground work of salesmanship by a regular course of study, furnished by the Curtis people The boys carry tags on their coat lapels. These tags are in the shape of a shoe, and {nform the purchaser | of the disposal of the sales money.| The Charity Organization society will superintend disposal of the mon- all of the new E | H, d B | Christmas Gifts, Bar Pins, Waist Pins, Cuff Links nvelope Hand Bags @4),95 | 2227. ee cont eta er sii Soeeiis Gu tapen Newest Shapes, Each‘ $3.50 GOKD RINGS REDUCED TO $1.75 EACH | [Mer Brown at Home Made of Genuine Pin Seal—Crepe Seal—Morocco | and Patent Leather—Silk Lined | Kum bladder | 4.2 ab D* pohteratent = $2.00 Striking Bags $1.69 Hockey Skates of best fret suwrenthe Cele $4.95 Baby Dolls $3.45 | $7.95 Handears $6.50 Each | ‘ be 8 | Soot —cinespuashitton teak oy Grown maka wink Crown make Baby Dolls with sleep- | Karavan ball. os pala, pany 1 beads. PS Sry ec at, “Cursed” linus: | belctieed whesio’ | teed bladder ax sioaping ayes aot aia, make dandy gifts for hoys-—cprice #020, 32 pe Footballs $1.00 Attached ft od - . * . Ion. with, eurved $1.95 Jointed Dolls $1.50 | Joldammith Htogby Footballs, made ot | ‘* ShOM# a Dretesd in Jointed Doll . | O Erector 50c—~Accessory Sets With t4inch Steel Wheel $1.75 | bee ail leather: regular size with Free. Chemtse. hen tall oe, sewed wig, | 1 Erector $1.00—No. 0A Set 50c | With ‘16-inch Steel Wheel $2.00 | ?! adder; § alue on sale bas Dressed ia chemiee, siockings and | 2 Erector $2.00—No. 1A Set $1.00 With 20-inch Steel Wheel $2.50 | | slippers. 3€ tor $3.00—No, 2A Bet $1.00 With 24inch Stee! Wheel $3.00 Sharpening $1.50 Pansy Dolls 31. 25 | Baby Dolls $1.00 4 Erector $5.00—No. 3A Set $2.00 | With 14in. Rubber Tired Wheel $3.50 8. 50 Dell Go-Carts $1.95 sac ee tigen en am Mneue $1.50 : y, rapt ecg .5 Erector $7.50—No. 4A Set $2.50 | With 16-in, Rubber Tired Wheel $3.95 | “arts for the little of Skates cada, sleeping eves, eyelashes, sew es Pretty Baby Dolls, made by the cele 6 Erector $10.0D-—-No. 5A Set $2.50 | With 20.in, Rubber Tired Wheet $450 | 3 Art made of Teed Ee Sa Can eee ee fee ers a ieclvee (at 2 7 Erector $15,00-—No, 6A Set $5.00 | With 24:in, Rubber Tired Wheel $5.00 | Shh ful be " aie esas — Fourth Flenh + e Special Sale of Leather Hand Bags Solid ( old | BRING es LISTS STRAIGHT TO CHRISTMAS BOOK SHOP . Genuine | Books for Children, | Christmas Books at Pin Seal and 50 | ter and Bags “| Jewelry for Mother Story est shapes—made of genuine pin seal | ib Nurwery, Rhy er, lined with figured and plain corded | i { with coin purses and mirrors —Upper Main Floor, | j Ever so many pretty Jewelry Noveities—suitable for Series 50c a Copy Anderson's Fairy Tale Tige = | $250 GOLD BAR PINS REDUCED To $1.25 EACH Brown the Funmaker. 50 GOLD BROOCHES REDUCED TO $3.25 EACH | ate j 3.50 GOLD SCARF PINS REDUCED TO $1.75 EACH | Muster and Tige Here Again. | 2.50 GOLD CUFF LINKS, REOUCED TO $1.25 PAIR 6.50 GOLD CUFF LINKS REDUCED TO $3.25 PAIR 3.98 GOLD TIE CLIPS REOUCED TO $1.99 EACH | How to Dress a Doll, by Mary |" » e —Upper Main Floor. | H. Morgan, 0c 1 > for many, and this line at $2.95 offers » “NE W AME RIC AN F ICTION —THE BEST OF THE YEAR remarkably good Bags—all new and pop } The Harbor, Ernest Poole Michael O'Halloran, Gene Strat- | Pollyanna Grows Up, Eleanor and fitted with strap handles and outside pockets, $1.40. ton Porter, $1.35. H. Porter, $1.25. i : ae : The Lost Prince, Frances with gold and silver finished frames, complete with Far Country, Winst The Story of Julia Page, Hodgson Burnett, $1.35. five fittings. Special $2.95 each Pine Street—Sée0nd Avenve--Unien Street Chure $1.50. Katoleen Norris, $1.35. —Fourth Floor. \Santa Claus Is Waiting at the: Bon Marché Toy Shop|{. a ises Waiting for you to come and pick out what Toys, Games and Dolls you want him to bring your Worth $3.50, Priced . Better come Saturday and select the things you want him to put on your Christmas tree $2.75 Ka. $3.50 Paris Wagons Series 35¢ Mother Santa Cleus Stories Cc Mother Nursery Rhym * om the Old Testament “Buster Brown One Syllable Books 25c The Inside of the Cup, Winston Churchil! k on n Saturday Evening Men’s Bath Robes What man would not appreciate one of these heavy blanket bath a Christmas gift?) And ilee-looking, too—in blue, era wn, tan and green, with fancy and self colored figures —Second Floor, Men's Gift Shop. and Shoes Combined "0.00 Men's Ice Skating Shoes, made of ealf in black or tan color, reinforced h strap—and Barney & Rerry Puck Hockey Skates or Becurity Hockey I gia.ekSudishy Vicésce'#aaso' kee, eo the’ combination tor bese | $13.50 Swinging Horses $10.50 Each | Women’s Ice Skates$ 6 00 | $15.95 Swinging Horses $12.50 Each | and Shoes Combined $18.50 Swinging Horses $13.95 Each Swinging Jee Skates—Shoes of viel and Tale These are the best of the new popular coprights, Books that will be appreciated by any one fond of reading Once to Every Mon, Larry Evans The Heart of the Hills, John Fox, Jr. “ The iron Trail, Rex Beach. Desert Gold, Zane ¢ The Harvester, Gene Stratton The Southerner, Thomas Dixon Porter. Laddie, Gene Stratton Porter on a WwW. B Under Cover, Roi Cooper Me-| The Devil's Garden, inca Maxwell. The W ward of & Peg 0’ My Heart, J. Hartley The Judgment House, Gilbert Ad- Manners Parker. ™** | A Son of the Hills, Harriet T. | The Eagle's Mate, by Anna 1 Comstock | Alice Chapin. No. 2—I then selected a posi ie 3 Saadenty = tion near the place where be — on! rs sae I heard them coming on! enty relent ay “wry OTODE WILD MOUNTAIN BATTLE! LAUGHTER ENDQ IN No. 1—Once, in the mountains, I saw two scouting parties wandering among the hills! I immediately filled a score of my toy balloons with THERES A PLACE FER ey te A HICKORY sett! hack, to the sales-| a ol daeaig cares. The Curtis EEE SOLDIERS . < / (sy TO MAKE \ JACKSON'S pany sends out text books, contain- ing elementary instructions on sales- | manship to ts young salesmen. | When the boy applies for a selling | agency, the company has him take an examdnation, thru his regular school teacher, and then begins his instruction. It fite him to take a position as an actual salesman of big things after he leaves school and outgrows the paper-selling position. So sure is the company of its, salesmanship course that it guaran-| es positions to all its “master alesmen” when they leave school. | If you are confronted by a small boy bearing a shoe-shaped paste- hoard tag, buy a Post, or Journal, or Country Gentleman, and help put shoes on come little feet. FELL DEAD AT GRAVE | JEANNETTE, Pa. Dec. 17. While acting as a pallbearer at the funeral of Mrs. Frank Mathias, of this place, Andrew Walt, aged 67,| fell dead just after helping to low-) er the casket {nto the grave. If his companions had not caught him he would have fallen into the grave. | Jt first was thought he had fainted and he was carried to his home near the cemetery. He was dead) when they arrived there. | ALONE IN THE WORLD! IT WASN'T THAT KIND. NEW LONDON, Conn., Dec, 16 One of six prize roosters peck ed a $100 diamond from the shirt- front of Lloyd Hollenbeck, poultry | judge. He can't identify the thief, and, together, the roosters are| worth more than the stone. HAD No Ls : al? ; (A HUT OVER TENTS! Sime | Be ; Pp j AND YELLS— W-A=J=,NO,- W-A-G- -E -THAT AINT RIGHT, You'Lt HAVE T' - i Now You KIDS TELL Hl He "{ R-NCH—No,- see \ co NOW You CHILOREN ME WHAT You wANT HE TAINT SPELT _[RUN OFF AND GEGIN} AN’ LL WRITE IT H THAT WAY— You MAKING OUT YouR [| fa. | ODOWN— WHAT Do i i" |CHOOSE SOMETHIN’ CHOOSE AGIN, USTS FOR*SANTA } YOU WANT, SLIM ? i i ELSE, SLIM! CLAUS CHRISTMAS | 4: 7 aun at nae 1 ISN'T VERY FAR AWAY }! -(OR, SAVED TLET ME /GIT UP S GOSH, How'LL pate, ten You terra ROOM seer NELLIE 15 | + Wie 20 IT? GETS A’ | ; ROTTEN DEAL FROM BEAU, GETS HER THE NOTE SHE BROP STED- PA! E pRops ENEMIES TALK ‘WAR IN SALONICA: | Bill Shepherd Des Describes Queer Life in eh da Seaport BY WILLIAM G, SHEPHERD | (United Press Staff Correspondent SALONICA, Nov. 25.—(By Ma! |The sun goes down like an plosion in a paint factory in this. | part of the world. a" All the mixtures of tongues and | uniforms and ships and flags of the. _ | various armies and navies centers” | {ng in Salonica are not in greater” | contrast than the melange of color, | which fll the evening skies as sun sinks nightly behind the | of Olympus, where the Greek soda | lived and played, Even greater than the variety of | color in the city or the sky is thé variety of opinion in the cafes when the thousands of men of many races gather with the lighting of the evening lamps to talk over what | the future holds. — —— There are Geri CONE put OF didn't move aw: HELLO, OLD {CONE pat oN DAY armies came. HAVE A Daim” an ally headquarters as the head- quarters in France, but the Ger- mans haven't departed because Greece is neutral, The Germans are sure that, sweeping past us, 400 miles to the. north, the German hordes are pour+ jing thru Serbia toward Turkey. Some of them think that the time is not far distant when the Ger mans will be in Salonica, too. Then what will these British and K-0-0- | {act i French do? Where will they ran x EE to? O-A~,NO,—SLIM hh | But you don’t hear Germans talke You GoTTA AsT ing this way, loudly, wy among themselves they say such things, in SANTY FER A their own cafes, Englishmen are divided. Most of them are glad the allies came to Greece, others say it was a mis- take. Turks, in their red fezzes, sit in | the same cafes in Salonica with English officers fresh from the | Tureo-British fighting in the Dard anelles. Two weeks ago the Englishman was popping away with his rifle at | every fez he saw. Today he passes them as placidly as if peace had been declared. Indeed, it is a sort of peace that you see in Salonica, a peace of shooting but not thinking. Bullets don’t fly, but opinions do, All the different opinions held in every corner of the world regard- ing the world war may be found here in this city of 185,000 persons, and every evening after the gun IN ONE WAY has set the pace with his riot of color in the Olympian sky, the oc« jcupants of the old Greek city filly | with their riot of opinion, the Sas j lonican cafes 4 Thru it all there's a tension in the atmosphere, Will that cyclone sweep past Greece and leave it unharmed? Or will the Germans come down t Salonica? And if they come, s! we people of the city flee as the Serbians have done? re 9