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I r I ' 1 8 :h examined and 8 cssary treatment 8 ;•: i 1 you suffer the 8 qiroperly mastica -8 tilv perfect teeth 8 .nly fill and treat 8 : atisfactory man- B t difficult bridge B well. All work I B .<• satisfactory.— j B you wish to lie 8 undergoing a pain-j 8 t the same time | B -factory work and i ■ are open every ■ v and Saturday. I , I I iNNAPOLIS I! iNSiIIIJIIUII I ■! Stkkkt. 8 11. , v • (Sunday** and I Iduys excepted) I NT, to 3 P M I (Legal Holidays I fi <rn 9 A M, I P'ranklm I \I STKKKT >4- ■ Hine.si -o 1 ; ,0 C'rolee | I * ptl I Nuts. d&O 1 ) > ioj t.i ic'aiijj. I t i Shoulders and I if nn t Willow I C*laS‘> a .id ■ ' irpe.Ue-s’' I ii\ .mixed .vire { I • •‘•he- Agii- I .i • ments of aH I Mu • lla'nens .H*. - I A IK NTS PON I • n,v Vlartmez I vlixeti Paints I Marine Railway I It V\ 1- VOUH I Boat Overhauled I Painted by I !Sebastian Miller, I Weems* Creek, I \ . i Scv ■ i nJKivcr I iuiit. Repaired I v or hauled, I Painted, &c, I 'led and Overhauled I :c < Nl-: om v: ELDER I .sACTiCAI, * Paper-Hanger Winter.. j s H tnished. I Prices. I Attention. I Ouarantevti > vOLL STREET! | j one 496-m lIM. mi d Avenue 1 iRBLE 1 ■*, Nj j i iTITE - cry Work. I * I <-ding Cemetery I > kind will find I .vantage to call I a going eise- I Ae a specialty I civ work. O') \ invited. My L ri ~ 1 : iunieudation. A.Jblturic Kailiood tftt-ldy Ttrais.i lutlM nil -* *• a M *a with,“ 1)0 Hi; Bittmorf oa Washington. (WuhlDiton n •: r, chan •< Academy Junction) i ■ Annapolis. Wit K,Station' OB lO.'lß SO, 6*o. 16-80. ♦7.20. *7.80 -20. 9-20, 10 *O. til.to A. M.. 12.20. 120. 2.20. 13.20. 4.20. 14.50. 18 20. 18.20, 7 00. 8.20. 10-20. 11.20 P. M G*te 10 mlnat*-. (W .M’n 1 !! 1 ' Hoiw station Bladen St and Colie*** Are . 7 minute* i*t„ r heave Rftltimor*. 6*8.7 35,8 35 8 38,110 35. 11-38.A | M- 12 35. 1.35. 2.35. 3 35. 14 05. 4 35 *5 05, 5.33, 6,35. 7 SB. 9 38. 11 35 P M-, 12.35 A M. All trains receive or dl>c-a&rae oaen !g"J2 ir** , p 2 lnu at Tags™ Acad * ,n r laretlon anrt Untblsom on alg.-iai. i/ear- Washington . a JO.'B 45. 8 05. 9.05. 10 05. 11.05 A M. 12 05.105, 2 05. 3 05. 330 4 05. j 4 30. 5.05 805 7.05 9.05. It.O P. M . 12-05 A M ipallj eicept Snndar j ff.onnectsnt Olontonwtn R It K and at Annapolis I jnctlou with H. A <). k H ■ onnctat *defton with P. K it leal VnnapolH to Baltimore. Vor tickets aud Information appiy ~ our elty ticket office,: West St. Station ! . H° aie Station. College Avenue and Bialen Street. Carrel Hall, r Kent I G l? ea K Boesse’ i(H<5 ir H.. N- A for | ;uh"^ra.A $ ca& a ‘ 1 —You— i can do without the re finements of civiliza tion, doubtless, but is it desirable? When yoli must ar range for a funeral you want the best service— quiet, dignified and ef ficient, and at reason able price*. We strive to nuet these requireinentss • r member this when.ln need of such services. B. L. HOPPING 0 CO.. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS Olfice, 118 Cathedral Si., Phone 727 Residence, 157 West St., Phone 966 FOR SALE. DARK BAY’ HORSE, good driver and in saddle, can be driven by any lady without fear, not afraid of automobiles or electric cars Will sell cheap. Phone 83-m. Annapolis, Md’ m£kf Aiivertlgo In The Capital A & P. Pure F *od Bulletin For •, Week Commencing June 2T st. . • a week of Bargains ! Just read our prices and you will be convinced. Uneeda Biscuit, pkg\, ... 4c Needs No Comment. Gold Dust, pkg., Reduced to . . 16c ; Large Package lona Tomatoes, 2 cans ... 15c Large No. 3 can. Specially packed for us. Oven Fresh Pretzels, worth 10c., lb., 7c Sultana Baked Beans, 3 cans, . 25e Packed for our exclusive use. Others get 10c to 11c foi this quality IONA LIMA TASTY ARGO BEANS SHRIMP STABCH A can, 7 c A can 10c. A lb., 4c Worth 10c. Delicious for Salad. Special this week. NEW GRASS JL. f)O A BUTTER Mm - - 00C MORE REDUCTIONS Sultana Peaches, can . . I4c Grandmother s Oats, pkg ~7* (lothes Pins, 100 for . 12c A&P Apricots, can . . 16c Evaporated Pears, lb, . 15c Spinach, 3 cans ... 25c /CEO TEA There is no more cooling and healthful beverage than Iced Tea and we have a blend which is the result ol 50 years of experience in Tea Blending This Tea is THEA-NECTAR, try it, lb., 60c Main St. 44 Warmer; Shower*. VlfASdiNiiTON, Junj. 2i. li.JW A M For Maryland Partly cloudy and warmer tonight; lrobably showers west portion. Tuetday shower* Chief of Wtatber Bureau. JUNE 21, ils N 1 Sun Rise* 440a m j I Sun Set* 736 p to moth 1 Moon Rise* 12.05 p.m ” I Mo* South 708 p. m SNAP-SHl)Ti>. •—Summer —Swraming —Sw it the fly Harvest is next. —Commencement agai-v —Some real we the’', this —The ic.- man is : n the job. —Soda fountains are kej t busy Get ready for the g'oiion | Fourth —Even bdv keepitg i n rhe shad, side. —O’d Sol’s up to all his old tricks agiin. —Drowning fatalities bo,eg announced daily. * o HELP THE KIDNEYS. Annapolis Readers Are Learning the Way. It’a the little kidney ills The lame, weak or aching back — | . The unnoticed urinary disorders That may lead to dropsy and Bright V 1 disease. When the kidneys are weak, Help them with Doan's Kidnev j i Fills, A remedy especially for weak kid- ’ , ncys. Doan’s have been used in kidney troubles for 50 years. Endorsed by 30,000 people— en dorsed at home. Proof in an Annapolis woman's state ment. Mrs. John Cox, 22 Madison St., An napolis, says: ‘‘One of my family suffered greatly from pains in the back and kidneys. The kidney secre tons were irregular in passage. Doan’s Kidney Pills soon brought relief.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get ■ Doan’s Kidney Pills —the same that I Mrs. Cox recommends. Foster-Mil- j burn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. o “All-Stars Capture Both. Yesterday the All-Stars journeyed to Gambrills and captured a double header from the Millersville A. C. bj the scors of 6-0 and 7-0. The pitching of F. Taylor in the first game featured, allowing two hits and not a man reach ed second base. The fielding of Lorea in the outfield and the hatting of H. Wilson and N. Phipps also stood out prominently. Jones pitched a no-hit game in the second. The lineup of the All Stars follow : N. Phipps, 1. f.; A. Lorea, c. f.; J. 1 Connell, r. E-lb.; H. Wilson, 3b;. E. Sherlock, s.s.-r.f.; J.Muhlmeister,2b.; R. Jones, p.-lb.; P. Macaluso, c.; F. Taylor, p. IHE EVENING GAPiTAL ANNAPOLIS MD . JUNE 21, 1915. THE CIADAS ARE HERE 17-YEAR LOCUSTS ARRIVE Dr. Jennings, of Hopkins, Reports That They Are Arriving. PREFECTLY HARMLESS.HE SAYS. Different From the Species That Causes Havoc On the Western Farms and in Nicaragua. Mr. and Mis. Cicada and all that vast ! family of little cicadas that for seven teen years have been buried in the soil | of Maryland^waiting their moment of \ freedom, are scheduled to come ' swarming into the State next month. For this is the year of the seventeen- ’ year locusts. Already a few of them | have been emancipated, for their spe cies have been found in various sec- i tions of the suburbs. Dr. Herbert S. ! Jennlngs.director of the zoological lab , oratory, at Johns Hopkins. Baltimore is among those who have discovered , the seventeen-year visitors. The lo- ; cust was found under e tree on his home at Roland Park. | “In several weeks’ time there will probably be thousands of them in the • State." said lr. Jennings. They art not to be dreaded, though, for they im perfectly harmless, except perhaps,for ; • the noise they make. They wll bore their way through the ground where they have been lying for seventeen ■ I years, climb up the trunks of tree.- i and settle for the twigs. This sort ot ; cicada eats very little, and the twigs j from which they feed will he hurt but l i little by their visit. They are short- j | lived.too not many ol their, living over | | a fe\* weeks " ! Dr. Jennings explained that the sev- i | enteeu-year locusts that visit this! section of the country are very differ i j ent form the sort of locust that leaves ' havoc on the forms of the Western j states. It is this more belligerent sort j that has invaded the Atlantic Coast ol * ! Honduras during the last ten days According to the reports reaching New Orleans from this section, the lo rusts have done millions of dollars worth of damage to the fruit and ce real crops in Nicaragua and are now , ravaging the banana plantations near I Ceiba. Persons from the invaded ' ' countries declare that the swarms of J the pests were so thick that they pass J jed like a cloud before the sun. In t ! spots the ground was covered with | them to a depth of several inehes,und ! they left the trees bare of both leaves and bark. An old superstition has it that the j coming of the seventeen-year locust: presages war, the idea having arisen ' from the verw clearly defined “W ; which is to bo found on the back of j the insect. The coming of the. locust this particular summer, while war and rumors of war are broadcast throughout the world, will probably strengthen this old idea among the superstitious ones. Although the cicada is called harm less by Dr. Jennings, it lias many nat ural enemies, for a number of crea tures look to it for food. Among these are seveial varieties of birds, who, however, have to he swift of flight in order to catch the locust, for it is said to be a wonderfully nimble dodger. Another enemy is the great bald hor net. which first stings the locust to death and tlrer. carries it home for its family to feast upon. Spuirrels are still other relishers of locusts for their meals, and when they are keen enough to distinguish them from the bark of the tree they pick them oft like nuts and eat them. There have been times when per sons of this country have tried to in troduce the locust as a delicious con tent for pie and other eatables, hut the movement to popularize them lias signally failed It is ssid. though, that they are favorite tid-bits among the Arabs, who eat them uncooked when they are swarming the country and dry them for use between seasons. The periodical arrival of the seven j teen year locust has always been a matter of more or less dispute among scientists, some of the authorities claiming tlmt their emancipation from the ground is more or less fortuitous occurring sometimes every thirteen years and sometimes every seventeen years, and others insisting that the seventen year sort is entlrelv distinct from the thirteen-year variety. o FOR A SOCIAL COURSE AT JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY. Dr. J. H. Hollander and Dr. George Ernest Barnett, of Cambridge, to Teach Workers. John Daniels.secretarv of the Social Service Corporation, has sent out let ters to the members of the advisory board of the corpe<ration calling atten tion to courses for social workers at Johns Hopkins University during the se'holastic year 1915-’l6, and asking taht they bo brought ot the notice of the workers. They are to be under the direction of Profs. Jacob H. Hollander anti George E. Barnett, and will include iecturt‘B upon political economy, psy chology. hygiene and education. They will be open to men and wo men and will be given in the after noon from Monday to Friday, and on Saturday forenoon.beginning October 11 and ending May 27. The tuition fee for a two-hour-a week course will be S2O and that for a three-hour-a-week course S3O, with the exception of one course in educa tion, which will be $7. Dr. Edward T. Divine, of New York, delivered a series of public lectures in Baltimore on se>ciai construction last winder, under the auspices of the Sexual Service Corporation, and the latter body wrns encoraged by the re sults to take up with Hopkins the ar rangement now effected. o Another Little Oaksmith. On June 17, at Oakl&wn, West An napolis, a daughter, BEATRICE MAY was born to Mr. and Mr*. Henry Oaksmith. Both mother and baby are doing nicely. MOVING PICTURE ATTRACTIONS. U the Colonial Tonight. I ietro Donnetti, a handsome young gondolier with an exceedingly sunny nature, is in love with Annette Aucel lo.daughter of Trudo Aucello. Roberto Gallia, the wealthy merchant of the > city, is also in love with Annette. (The merchant ife a dilapidated old dandy at whom Annette laughs. Annette's father, however, gives Pietro a year in which to make good and furnish An nette with If at the end of that time h e has not fulfilled condi tions, Annette's hand is to be awarded . to Gallia j Gallia, in order to be rid of Pietro, ! tells him of America and the wonder ful advantages there, and fired with j the spirit of ambition, Pietro sails for America. He sets up a bootblack , stand in New York and before the year •is out sends for Annette. Annette comes to America and on landing is i unable to make the officials understand she is to be taken eare of, and is sent to E lis Island, where, aft r a great deal of trouble Pietro finds her, and they are immediately married. In time a baby boy is born, whose coming Pietro has awaited with great eagerness. A gesture of the baby's, similar to that of his own, doubly en dears the child to Pie ro. During the intense heat wave which sweeps over New York, Pietro’s baby is t.ix n id ami the doctor said it must have pas teurized milk, or die. Pietro is ab e to buy this milk for a time, but his t scant funds are soon lowered. He is ‘ on his way to the milk station when he ' is set upon and robbed of his few nickels. He puts up a fight and is ar ! rested. He appeals to the ward boss, ' telling him his baby’s life depends on J his getting home with the milk The t boss, Corrigan, however, repulses him j brutally, and he is sent to jail for five t days. When he gets out his baby is I dead. Over the empty cradle Pietro swears [to be avenged on Corrigan, whom he holds responsible. His chance comes. Corrigan’s child is taken sick with brain fever and its life hangs in the balance. Absolute quiet is neeces sary and the slightest disturbance will be fatal to the little one Pietro enters the house disguised as a peddler i and makes his way to the sick room. He gets in during the absence of the J nurse, and is about to dash a heavy lamp shade upon the child’s head when j the sick baby puts its arm under its | chin, in a manner identical with ! Pietro's babv. This softens Pietro’s ; heart and he leaves the place. | This is a splendid picture, don't miss it. Another reel will complete this j show To morrow, " Buckshot John,” : featuring Hobart Bosworth. At the Palace Tonight. Are you fond of ghost stories? j There are mighty few people who are not, and that is the reason Kali in's two-act drama, “The Haunted House of Wild Isle,” is sure to delight the patrons of the Palace tonight. At stated intervals, a ghostly figure appears it the window of a house on Wild Isle. The fear-stricken people of the little village never venture to in vestigate. Warren Kent, a young author, visits the town and learns of the ghostly vis itor. It excite* his curiosity. As the result,a remarkable tale of villainy is unfolded and the village’s most re spected citizen is unmasked as a scoun drel. Harry Millarde and Ansa Nil son are the principal characters in this production. Don’t fail to see it. -‘The First Piano in Camp”, is a Biograph comedy-drama and the con cluding picture is a George Ade Fable of “A Night Given Over to Revelry.” All in all a good program. At the Lyric Tonight. Francis Ford and Grace Canard in “Nabbed.” —This two reel police drama contains sensational scenes showing the interior of many houses of ill-repute known to the police. Daughter of Chief of Police kidnapped and forced into a house which is raid ed by her own father. Saved by an unfortunate girl, police chief’s daugh ter later gies her benefactor a chance to start a new life. In “Nabbed,” one of the chief difficulties encountered by the new chief of police, is the Red Light Abatement Act and a bunch of so-called “reformers,” who make things lively for the new’ chief. The chief orders the Red Eight dis trict closed The act brings the new chief in conflict with one of the big ward bosses, who controls the Red Light district. Another ward boss aiso calls and the two make things pretty warm for the new officer. During the controversy, the new chief loses his patience and knocks down the ward bos who controls theßedLight district The chief plans a raid of the places in order to show that he is doing his duty. The plan gets’to the ear of the ward boss. He gets hold of the chief’s daughter and takes her by stealth to the house that is to be raided. The raid is pulled off according to sched ule but the chief’s daughter is be friended by Nan Cooper, an inmate of the house and hidden. The prisoners are brought in and great is the ward boss’s discomfiture when the girl is not found among the others, etc. Two other reels will go to com plete our usual good program. SIOO REWARD slod The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease,requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the systm.thereby destroy ing tb foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting na ture in doing its work. The proprie tors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address—F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O Sold by all druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for Con sumption (“THE GODDESS!” By Charles Goddard and Gonvern.-tir .Morris. i j ■ i i. Novelized from the photoplay of the same name produced by the VITA GRAPH COMPANY. (Copyrighted. 1915, by The Star Co. NOTE -“THE GODDESS" will l e publisher, vs a -erial story in THE EVENING CAPITAL. The pictures wHI be shown at THE PALACE THE ATRE every Friuvv. The picture shewn will be for the installment published the preceedimr week and ending Thursday, the night before. (Continued from Saturday'*! Capital.) A shadow fell upon Tommy, and tie found himself looking into the 1m raense, thick-rimn; d glasses of Pro fessor StilHter. Intuitively the boy and the man disliked each other Pro fessor StilHter ' world nave rather asked almost any other small boy if that was the Amesbury house. Tommy would have preferred to tell almost any other man that it was. Processor StiHiter, his question answered, movmi energetically upon the house and from the maid who answered the b< tl in quired for the latest bulletin of Mrs. Amesburv. He stepped forward as if to enter the house, atid the servant* made the least show in the world of shutting the door in his face. Pro fessor Stilliter turned reluctantly away and hoard the closing of the* door At that moment a buggy, driven furiously, stopped at tho front gate, and, thanks to his glasses, which gave his helpless eyes an almost hawklike vision, Professor StilHter recognized Doctor Wainwright, an old acquaint ance, if not a friend. Glad to see you,’ said Professor StilHter. “Are you in charge here?’’ "Yes,’ said Doctor Wainwright. "Then you can help me, and nobody else can 1 nsver knew Amesbury. I don’t know h!s wife, but as a eugonist f was immensely interested in their marriage, and 1 have a deep scientific interest in seeing tho daughter. Now at such a time as this I could not very well force myself upon tho household, but If you could slip me In with you as a consulting physician I will be Im mensely obliged to you, and there will * bo no talk of splitting fees.” Doctor Wainwright qpHled and nod ded Tho object of Professor Stllllter’s interest was not hard to find. She was seated, forlorn and disconsolate, upon tho bottom step of the front stair. Doctor Wainwright picked her up in his arms and kissed her. Ho made her shako hands with Professor StilHter. Professor StilHter could not conceal the fact that tho child’s appearance de lighted him, and that his appearanco did not furnish her with tho same do light affected him no more than a duck’s back is affected by water. She had been too well brought up, and car rled her three or four years with too much dignity to run from him and hide, as her Instincts prompted her. She did not resist when he lifted her from the floor, asked her age and said, “My, how heavy she was!” She winced a little and flinched a little when he prodded her arms and chest and fell , with evident admiration the firm and 1 chubby calves of her legs, and when : he made her open her mouth and looked in and murmured, “Colossal." But when he asked wouldn’t she show him the pretty house in which she ; lived, she did so gladly, for it seemed I to put an end to being handled. For his Immediate purpose Profes- | sor Stilliter did not need to penetrate beyond tho cheerful living room, for here his oyes at once singled out from many three photographs, in which justice had pretty nearly been done, not only to hi 3 small companion, but to her famous father and her mother. “What Is that funny thing on tho piano?” asked Professor Stilliter. Tho little girl looked In the direction In dicated, and told him that it was a Chinese “ephelent.* - During the moment in which he had succeeded in diverting her attention the young man had slipped the three photographs in their folded leather frame Into one of his capacious pock ets. His mission in the house fin ished, he asked her If she would give him a kiss. This was a thing which, It seemed to her, she could neither ac cord nor refuse. She simply burst Into tears. The professor shrugged hla great shoulders, grunted like a pig and abruptly took bis departure Still weeping, the little girl found her way to a piazza that opened off the living room and a few moments later Tommy Steele, still lingering about the premises, traced the infantile wai!= tViAtr source The sight of hi® RICHaRDGTcHANEY’S SOUTHERN MARYLAND’S LEADING HIRING LIVERY, SALE AND EX. HANG SiAfcLES - ■ s TtlE FIRM OF RG. CIIAN£/ known by it* cart jl seiecti n of experienced and reli&b'e emplojeea 'iearns of & l studs for hire, also fine saddle horses baggage transferred and checked to any point from residences of patrons. Autoono ile Garage for storage, Storage war? nouse for the storage of rurnlture and pianos rurniture packed an > delivered to a l parts of the world Carnages for weddings and funerais. Repairing ana horseshoeing, Automo biles for hire by the day or boar. Office aad Stables, 159 West Street, Annapoiis, Md.—Rhoue 270 sympathetic face above the veranda railing, across which he had thrown | one Teg, started tears again, for he was , her best friend in the world, and sho The Abduction of the Child. wished to tell him all about tho wicked man with tho black rimmed spectacles. Tommy took her on his knee and listened and ga\ e comfort. Presently ho took from his pocket a little rag doll, and, very shjly, for now that ho looked at it again, it seemed a poor gift, he ofl\ red it to her. 1 Continued.) City s)ruo Store l f I 1.n.M1-VKHKo iAi \1 VIN s I,K i>• i ,rc „ iit . *.h * PATEN i’ MiiGK iN.v* OF \U KIMO* T lxperh • Pl < * JiStVi !‘j {'t('N , \ j\ i ron.NiT \fn<’!,>- fc'-’ji - • and |, Rubber J ir s 0 A K '■< f A G h.N WAGONS, GO. Specia' 1 tt iition it, New ;:mJ R (Jp -r i W ork | SHAW’S j 100 Comp*o- 1 t. i-s. j There is nothing that is so thoroughly re ish a> g<< il in i ream You w jil h < h* re tin. genuine ie cream of qua iiy—tin kind tiiiit i rtlishe by j>to,/i i o know tlie varying deg,css of x celKnce in -ce t ream D n i for get you can eat it t- r , or vie wil delivt r )t to yotu hon, We make a specialt of provide g ice <r am and Ices f r var ions social fundi . n.s fVi and n p h r or i \ ers* tiledioiic' • Parloi t‘4 it r. • Jl- GET Wilbur C Brown kltctricai Contractor Bicyc e Supplies and Repaired 129 Y i.. St PL... r 617 ip