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PROreRTY TRANSFERS IN CITY AND COUNTY I RECORDED IN COURT Fron William E Johnson and wife! to Anton Szafronek and wife, tract' of land in the Third district, contain-^ Ing 60 acres. From Charles F. Lee and wife and others to Lnvinia A. Sale and others,! • lot of ground on Munroe Court, West atreut, thin city. From Daniel R. Randall, attorney ; to Alice Parker, tract of land in the First district, containing 85 acres. j From Charles K. Lee and others! to William A. Conrad and wife, lot of ground in the Second district. From Winson O. Gott and others, executors, to Glenn N. Webb, 3 tracts of land at Friendship, in tho Eighth district, containing in the aggregate 110 acres. From The Workman's Co-Operative, Realty, Company, Inc., to Roberta E j Blizzard, 2 lots of ground at Glen ( iiurnie Heights, Third district. From Thomas Hurling Hull, attor-' ney, to The Brooklyn Building and Supply Company, lot of ground in thta county, containing 1 acre. From Elizabeth Pegee to Howard Jennings and wife, tract of land in the Third district, containing 10 9-10 acres. From E. Wilbur Stoll and wife to Joseph .VI. Stoll, 2 lots if ground at Hill Crest. Fifth district. From Aladdin Realty and Home IluikTern, Inc., to Alexander Howie, 2 lots of ground at Colonial Park, in this county. > > From John A. Wright and wife to Samuel Q. Harden and wife, lot of ground at Hill Crest, Fifth district. From Howard M. Pumphrey and others to V. Russell Riley, 2 lotH of ground at Riviera Beach, in this county. From The Workman's Co-Operative Realty Company, Inc., to George Wil -11 ain Schneider, 2 lots of ground in Third district. From Andrew Krause and wife to John F. Martin and wife, lot of ground on Steele avenue, Annapolis. From The Workman’s Co-Operative Reulty Company, Inc., to Lilly L Oroßsnlcklh, four lots of ground at Glen .JJprftie Heights. Third district. Frhtk Eugene l*. Childs, Trustee, to Hardesty, tract of, land in KightjiMlstHuf. Froth Thomas K Beyer iind wife to Fred L. l*feffer ami wife, lot of ground in this county, containing 3.36 acres Froni ( Trh>‘lna] heal Estate Com- A sute, safe . way to end CORNS In one minute you c*n end the pin of corn* with Dr. Scholl't Zino-p*di. They remove the rame—friction-pretture. *nj heal the irritation. Thu* you avoid in fection from cutting your corns or uaingcor rtwiveacida. Thin: antiteptic; waterproof. Sura tor corna, cillouirt, bunion*. Get a bot today at your diuggut'a or shoe dealer'!. Dl Scholl's 'Lino-pads Made in tie l.shoratoeies of The Scholl Mfg. Co., makers of Dr. Scholl's Foot Comfort Appliances, Arch Supports, etc. Put one on—the pain is gonel 4 ... Our Motto: Quality and Service. WOODLYN FARM DAIRY O. KIIIOt'T. JK.. Prop. TUBERCULIN TESTED JERSEY HERD Phone 180S-F-SI for Trial Sample. ServlcT: .V4.X A. M.. West Anna polis; 6:00. Annapolis; Hast port. Health Department Permit No. 19. in” ♦—— ——..— 4 Square Deal Garage AU IVOHK CI’AKAXTRKn! 15. P, (Irlahl Motdon, Prop. GENERAL REPAIRS, STORAGE AND WELDING Cornliill nl Fleet Sta., Antiapolin, Mil. Telephone S 5. in 10 j BE W. BROOKS & CO.] CHAB. NELSON BROOKS PAINTING DECORATING PAPER HANGING —it— ■•Smllii Cbeerfolly FornUked. —t Color orhemea for furniture potnttoc*. tpheliUrlng and Gold f.tne Work lH PEAN ST, PHONE Mt Mr. C. W. Tucker & Son ROOFERS Spooling. Sheet Metal and Slate Work. (Movo ond Furnace Repairing. PHONE 42-J. '[ pany to Annapolis Public Utilities Company, lot of ground in Annapolis , From Richard T. Ford and wife to j Charles Bange and wife, tract of luad in Fifth district, containing 2 5-id acres. From Dr. Henry M. Fitzhugh, Trus- I t*. to Eugene O. league and wife 1 two lots of ground at West Annapolis I Second district. From Dr. Henry M. Fitzhugh. Trus tee, to Vinton W. Phillips andL wife two lots of ground at West Annapolis From Anna Schmidt to Joseph | Kuehtra and wife, taro lots of ground at Germantown. Second district. From Kate Johnson and others to Henry Herndon and wife and others, tract of land at Camp Parole, Second district. From Joseph Hoffman Jacobs and i wife to Benedict W. Jacobs, lot of ground at Creston Park, Third dis trict. From Anton Teel and wife to Marue Klima, tract of land in Fourth dls trict, containing 3 acres. Ffroin W. G. Gischel and Sons. Inc., to W. G. Gischel and wife, lot of ground at Roland Terrace, this ! county. From Grover C. Shipley to J. Mil ' lard Arnold and wife, tract of land in ! Fifth district. ! From The Workman’s Co-Operative Realty Company, Inc., to Harry G Wise, lot of ground in Third district From Fernando W. Weems and wife and others to County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County, strip of land in Eighth district. From Flora Ethel Andrews and others to Albert L. Peters and wife, lot of ground at Shady Side, Eighth cl Ist rict. From The Farnham Real Estate Company to Abrahum J. Good and wife, tract of land on the Magothv river, Third district. Hergdoll Reported Seen’ LOS ANGELES, CALIF., Apr. 27. Reports that Grover Cleveland Berg doll, sought by Federal authorities as a draft evader, is in the northern part < f lower California and spends his time between Ensenada and Tiaju ana, were brought to Los Angeles to day by private individuals. i ■■■ ■ 1 ■ - 11 —■ ' “My Patients Get Well Ask Them” You have this same op portanity because I)r. Goodman will not accept f any case he does not feel j confident chiropractic will i |P*l_ help. \ . People who do not know A Jki'V : ap|v fjjii * call chiropractors a fake— v yet they do more for their \ patients than many others \ At have done. They G,et Them \ V Well. Let a. Chiropractor judge what your chances are for recovery. He alone knows k|[ - there ;ir" hits of dis -our- aged cli runic sufferers in I Annapolis who have spent 80 much money on th”ir " health without relief, that they will not Invest one cent more. They consider their cases hopeless. These are just the peo ple Dr. Goodman invites to a Free Consultation and examina tion. He wants to prove to them there is still hope. Remember there is no charge made this week for a Spinal Analysis, and if Dr. Goodman cannot help you he will tell you so. DR. A. J. GOODMAN Chiropractor PALMER SCHOOL GRADUATE Phones: HAYS BUILDING. Office, 7 80. 15 School Street. Residence, 901-J. Annapolis, Md. Hours: 10 M. to 12 Noon, 2tosP. M. Evenings: Monday, IVcdncsday, Friday — 7-8 P. M. RESIDENT CHIROPRACTOR OF ANNAPOLIS theatre ★ I Today and Tomorrow Vodavil Show! GIBSON TRIO & CO. FEATURING : LITTLE BABY CORRINE Special Added Attraction: FRIDAY Round No. 4, “Leather Pushers” Century Comedy F SATU KDAY LON CHANEY “NIGHT ROSE” rm evening cawtaz, KNWAKfcis. Maryland. Friday, April 27.1023. VICKERS FINDS SEED OYSTERS ARE LAWFUL <1 uiillnonl From Put 1.) Ia regard to the claim made by Capt. \V. C. Willing, an cysterman of Shady Side. Md., that the aoats of the tongers in West river are not inspect ed frequently, Mr. Vickers said he doubted whether this was so. “The deputy commanders may occa sionally miss a boatload of oysters be cause they have so much territory to > rover, but 1 doubt wrhether it happens J often.” he stated. He expressed the belief that his suggestion that the State take over all oyster shells for replanting is the cause of considerable criticism of biai department by ovstermen who now! sell the shells for 6 to 8 cents a • bushel. Shell Planting Opposed “It will have to be done, however.! unless the State will appropriate money to buy shells,” the commis- ! sioner declared. “Shell planting is the most effective way of building up I the oyster i eds. Transplanting oys- j f ters from places where they do not de- i veiop to more favorable areas would. ' I of course, bring a more immediate in crease in production, but would be ex pensive aud would not really solve the conservation problem. “The small oysters would be plant ed one year and taken out the next j and the beds would be r*o better o.T than before.” J In support of his theme for shell planting he pointed out that in beds where shells were planted two years ago marketable oysters will be pro duced this year. On College Diamonds At College Park —North Carolina 1 State, 3 ; Maryland University, 2. At New Windsor, Mi —Lebanon Valley. 13; Blue Ridge, 4. i At New Haven, Conn. Tufts, 15; : Yale, 9. At Charlottesville, Va.—Lynchburg, j 8; University of Virginia, 7. ■j At South Bend, Ind.—Notre Dame, 12: Northwestern, 2. Great Benefits Anticipated From The Alaskan Railroad rnmm ""I- 1 " (By Th AiMirlatfd Press.) WASHINGTON. Apr. 27 —With the I addition of a few last touches on a large steel l ridge over the Tanana River at Xenana. Alaska, the govern ment will practically complete the! second largest construction job it has ( ever undertaken. This is the Alaska , Railroad, which has cost approxi ! niatelv $56,000,600, was eight years! * in building, and which runs 467 miles into the heart of the territory from Seward, on Resurrection Bay, to Fairbanks, on the Tanana. By the lead of June the construction force i will lay down tools for the last time, i Trains are running the entire length | * of the road, and have been for about ; j 18 months. What the road will mean to Alaska and its people, government officials' •hesitate to say. The returns will be immense. The development of the I territory’s mineral resources and ag r.cultural possibilities resulting from completion of a successful artery connecting with the outside world the entire year round, is beyond com pute. Annual revenues from freight and passengers already exceed $339,000, end as traffic increases with comple tion engineers see a revenue of al most a million dollars annually. While Alaska is casually thought of as a land of gold and ice, its min eral production has been only a por tion of its resources. Coal also is found extensively, as well as the slightly less valuable lignite; gas and oil have been discovered, and devel opment has started only recently, i The railroad penetrates these lields. REPUBLIC THEATRE Today - Double Bill! Tomorrow | The Beloved American Actress: x LAURETTE TAYLOR | “Peg o’My Heart” I In a phptopl ay version of her greatest stage success. The play* by, J. Hartley Manners, has been performed m6re t lan V&flQCl times. BUSTtR KEATON | ( ‘" ft. • ... •• “My Wife’s Relations ” A Very Amusing Comedy. What is a mile to gasoline? j . TN frontier days a mile was the radius cf a family’s activi ties. Then came roads and carriages, pushing the horizon hack a few miles. The next generation discovered the possi bilities of the internal combustion motor carried on pneu matic tires. The Chinese wall that shut out so many alluring vistas of the land beyond the hill disappeared. Man had conquered distance. This year 180,000,000 barrels of gasoline will drive trucks, tractors, launches, planes and motor cars. Every drop that is not converted into power is waste —a loss that cannot be recovered. This company, the pioneer in perfecting petro* ; leum products, offers “Standard” Motor Gasoline as the eventual motor fuel quick, powerful, uniform • and complete-burning . \ STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey) J| I and not only provides the rest of Alaska with fuel cheaper than can be imported, but may some day make them an important source for the na tion. The fisheries, timl er industry and I homesteading in Alaska's rich agri cultural districts will all be l enefitted j through better transportation and cheaper rates on food and clothing. While the interior has heretofore been locked in tightly in winter ex cept to sleds, the railroad will pro vide a ready exit to open water to the south during the entire year. While the climate was one of the most formidable obstacles to con | struetion, others as difficult were met and overcome. Even the winter freez i ing of the rivers was put to advant age to facilitate bridge construction. ; The thick ice was utilized to Lear much of the false werk. Three long bridges were tuiit. The first, across the Susitna River at Gold Creek. Is a 500 feet span that cost approximately $943,000. The Hurri cane Gulch bridge, buttressed against the rocky canyon walls, is 300 feet ,I above the stream and has a span of 380 feet. The Nonana bridge, which is just being completed, spans the Tanana at that town over a 700 foot rHILDREHS COLDS B _ should not be “dcsuO." Treat 'V them externally with—* ; VSCHS V Vaporub Over 17 Million Jan Uted YecHg bridge which, with trestle approaches, is 1,300 feet in over-ail length. No channel piers were used in these bridges tecause of the danger of the spring ice break-up. Broad Pass, the highest point of the road, where it crosses the Alaska Range, is 2.400 feet above sea level. SMfiLLGfIRS'wiLTfIUN IN INDIANAPOLIS RACE (By The An*'lted Vre.) INDIANAPOLIS. Apr. 27. Eleven cars have 1 eon entered in the inter national five hundred mile automobile race to be held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway May 30, according to T. E. Meyers, manager of the track. Six drivers have sent in their en tries. They are Tommy Milton, 1921 champion; Cliff Durant, Ralph De Palma, Joe Boyer, Harry Hartz and Eddie Hearne. Milton will drive a car he has built for himself. Durant* finn 17 PLAYHOU?! I lIVLLL NOW PLAYiN( Frid. y-Sc.turcay, April 27-28 :: E;V. j YOU SEE F.B O/s LATEST KNOCKOUT THE H.CW9TWER-COSMOPOLITAN MAGATiNE j PERFECTrMi Of A STORY # .„ STARRING JOHNNIE mKb: Other Attractions: HA ROM) LLOYD COMEDY / aJ jit AEBOP’S FABLE* comk<; —j^Nd MONDAY - TIESDAY fc FILffTtNl . “Who Are My Parents J '' WEDNKKO.WI . Tttt UMMV * POLA NEGRI,IN “MAD LOVE.” - j also will pilot rnc ( ,f ~ chines he has const > and Bover will h t > > of two of three r. r- ■ built on the p* and Hartz will team Louis Chevrolet , here on three speeds!, ; tions on eight promitu > The race this year hi, having a piston di-p more than 122 ml i. chines in most ins:. , gle seaters. E.nh n with a reflector s i > may see another <v. t-ehind. They will b< way than previous , >. engines will 1 e small ;• :; lest motors used f r , pleasure purposes n • Child —Mother, nt;n ; water to christen ; . Mother—No, dear Child—Then mav i to waxinate her? !., •