Page Four Notice! ssLast™^ Opportunity ....0F... Max Snyder’s Big Shoe Sale 57 West St j This is our last Saturday of Merchandise and Shoes with the public. We give those that didn’t attend the sale a chance of the last Saturday of MAX SNYDER’S great sale. We also thank those very much who attended the sale and appreciate those that will take advantage of the oppor tunity of the LAST DAY of the SALE which is SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 14th, that will start i at 9 A. M. Special offer to the public which will be something extra. Oxfords and Pumps, all sizes, in black and tan, regular price, $5.00; sale price— sl.9B $6 Oxfords, Pumps and Shoes— s2.9B Special bargains of Children’s shoes, regular price, $2.50; sale price— sl.47 ! Wc also have a full line of Rubbers of all kinds and sizes at low prices. Full line of spring OXFORDS AND PUMPS at re duced prices BE SURE TO ATTEND THE LAST DAY OF BIG SHOE SALE AT ■ ——■■■ Max Snyder’s 57 West St. j _ . THE EVENING CAPITAL AND MARYLAND GAZETTE. ANNAPOLIS. MARYLAND. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 13. I^° FOR LOCAL BRANCH ORDER OF REINDEER A new fraternal organization soon will be established in Annapolis. It will he that of the ‘ Fraternal Order of Reindeer,"., which according to lit ers ure that is now being circulated 'is known a* Americas drear Frater nal Order. I’. B. Lythgoe. Deputy supreme or ganizer from the home office of the order at 1 hoenixville. Pa., was in Annupolis today, and launched the preliminary plans looking to the or ganization of the Annapolis lodge. J Philip Guienof. has been appointed as local organizer Persons signifying now their in ention of joining the or der may do so by depositing •$5, as i: is stipulated after the Charter is closed, the entrance fee will he $2", ‘Protection, Kraternul isrn. Brotherhood and Sociability,” furnishes the motto of the order. The promoters hope to start the local or der with a membership of more than 200. The creed of the Reindeer is: ‘‘May you always brighten the lives of oth ers and lead a good, clean life your self. If we have any suffering or needy Brother-, let ns help them to day. for there is no tomorrow. Who knows but what we shall be next ” Mr Lythgoe is now engaged in mak ing a canvass of the iarg< r cities in Maryland and formation of branches a! the order is now under at | Klkton. Frederick. Hagerstown, and I other cities. JOHN M. DENNIS AGAIN TREASURER OF STATE John M. Dennis, of Baltimore coun ty. who is president of the Fnion Trust Company of Baltimore, i.s State Treas ure re again. He filled the office in the tirst half of the Harrington ad | ministration, but gave way to William P. Jackson, Republican, two years ago. The oath was administered yester day by Governor Ritchie, in the pres jence of a group who happened to be in the executive offices. In the group were Comptroller Lee and Speaker Tydings. The Governor read the path to Mr. Dennis so impressively that it was remarked that the Governor would make a good" marrying bishop.” Mr. Dennis filed his bond for $25,000, | which the Governor approved. The actual transfer of the office will take place Monday, when the outgoing and incoming Treasurers, the Gover nor and the Comptroller will meet in Baltimore ultd count the State’s se curities. PERPETfiAIT NAMES OF CUM LINERS (correspondence Associated Press.> Liverpool, Jan. 2>. —-Names of sev • eral large Cunard ocean liners sunk ( by enemy submarines during the war I are to be perpetuated in new ves sels now under construction, it is an nounced by the Cunard Company. The company lias nearly 500.000 tons of passenger ships now building. ; Of the vessels whose names are I given none w ill approach the size of the Mauretania or Aquitania, but they will he bijt liners of intermediate type, ranging from 520 to 600 feet in length. (They will have spacious accommoda tions for passengers, and will also be able to carry large quantities of j cargo. There are four ships of the 600-foot j class, the Franconia, the Laconia, the | Scythia, and the Samaria. There is i only one vessel under const ruction in j the 550-foot class, the Tiburnia. a : name which appears for the first time among tlie company’s ships. The 520- foot class comprises seven vessels, the Alaunia, Ardania, Aurania, Ausonia, Asearia. Albania, and Antonia. Of these the first five are the names of vessels lost in the war, and the An tonia appears for the first time. Married At The Manse Yesterday the Rev. Dr S. K Per sons/ pastor of the Presbyterian ! Church, performed the marriage cere | many uniting Harry M. Garney and Sarah Evans, both of FJorena. Pa. Tilt ceremony was performed at the Man e on Duke of Gloucester street. Mem bers of Dr. Persons’ family witnessed the ceremony. KIDDIE'S GROUP MUST BE^ CHECKED Dr. King’s New Discovery will do that very thing, easy and quickly DON'T say, “Poor little young p’er—l wish I knew what to Jhi for you!” Just give a It:De fr. King’s New Discovery as directed and the eroupy-cough won’t linger, , A Is not to be fooled with. Get after it at once. Loosen the congestion, the phlegm-stuffiness, ; n1.20 a bottle—all druggists. Bowels on Schedule Time —the Idle flowing freely, the fer ment ing body poisons eliminated lr. King’s New Life Pills make the bowels function regularly and keep lhe system dciinsisl of gaseous im purities. tk>e. a bottle, uii druggists. i NO DECIDED CHANGE IN “FLO” SITUATION There was no decided change today in the “flu” and pneumonia situation in and about Annapolis. Phy.-irian continue to maintain that the malady has reached its peak, and that the worst they will have to com! at now will he pneumonia, as it is felt many cases of this will develop from the flu." A number of persons already are ill from this dangerous disease One dea'it from pneumonia was re ported today, that of Mrs. Laura V Evans, which occurred yesterday at Ute home of her daughter near West Annapolis. Charles F. Lee, real estate opera tor. who has been confined to his resi dence. corner of Gloucester and Con duit streets for the last two weeks .suffering from an attack of grip. i.~ ible to 1 e out again. State Senator A. Theodore Brady who had been confined to his resi deuce on Hanover street by a like illness and for a like period of time has resumed his duties in the upper house of the General Assembly Mrs. S. K. Holliday, wife of Lieu tenant-Commander Holliday, I\ S. .V. is confined to her home on King George street by illness. Tlie entire family of Commander W. B. Howe. C S. X., has been ill of flu." The little son. “Billy." was des ' perately ill of bronchial pneumonia Mrs. Howe's mother. Mrs. Norris, ot 1 Baltimore, is seriously ill at the home of her other daughter, Mrs. Ware wife of Commander Bruce Ware, Up shur Row, Naval Academy. < Fred. W. Shaw, Jr., is out again at' ter an attack of grip. “Flu" Mortality In Nation The mortality rate due to the in Huenza epidemic this year was abou 1 half of that in 1 !*1 S. says a statement issued by the Public Health Service 1 announcing that the present epidemic apparently has reached its peak. “A comparison,” the statement said “of the excess mortality rate per 100. 000 of population for the respective peak weeks of PJIB and P'2o shows: * Chicago, 1,886, compared with 4,620 it: 1020; Milwaukee, 1.484, as compared 1 with 1,015; Washington, 2072, as com pared with 0.780. ’ “These rates may be taken as a fair indication of conditions through ’ out the country. With the exception of some cities in Massachusetts am’ * New York State, exclusive of New > York City, practically all of the re ports indicate a decline.” I M AUTO VIOLATIONS FOR WEEK BRING S4OO FINES The coffers of the office of State Automobile Commissioner E. Austin 1 Baughman were enriched to the e.x --k tent of S4OO during the week ending yesterday, as the result of fines col lected from persons in the State for violations of the State motor vehicle laws. As is generally the case, most ‘ of the offenders are residents of Bal timore city. No owners or drivers it: Anne Arundel county went afoul of the laws during the period, but there were several offenses in Frederick and f Washington counties. ' AT THE REPUBLIC TODAY AND TOMORROW Miriam Cooper, the well-known ■ leading woman of the screen, who ■ will be seen at the Republic Theatre ■ today and tomorrow in the title role 1 of the William Fox super-production f of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's im mortal poem, "Evangeline.” is well fit ted by ability and by training to give ■ a beautifully sensitive interpretation ' of the role of the unhappy heroine of 1 ;he great love epic. 1 Miss Cooper is a Baltimore girl Site was educated at the New York Art School, but her career as an ar ' tist was interrupted by the call of * the screen. Miss Cooper's ability soon brought her to the front rank of screen ac cesses. She was firmly established as a leading woman by her prominent part in “The Birth of a Nation.” Miss Cooper followed this part with :t long line of important roles in Fox successes, including “The Honor Sys e:n." “The Silent Lie.” "The Innocent Sinner " and ‘ Betrayed." Though Miss Cooper's art covers a wide range of characters, she is at her best in a Madonna-like role in which her lustrous eyes and appeal ing beauty are seen to exceptional ad vantage The part of Evangeline if hist as the heroine is rated among be best acting ever preserved to pos terity by motion picture photogqpphy -THE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS” The widely read story of the Ozarks has been tilmatized under the direc ;ion of Harold Bell Wright its author. \s a novel this story has attained a popularity which has not been equall ed by any other book in As a play the success of this work was phenomenal and as a pietttrization under the direction of Mr. Wright the story bids fair to mark an epoch ii: he art of the silent drama. The pictures have been taken in the heart of the Ozark Mountains and ir. 'alifornia. Mr. Wright and his asso ciates have been engaged for months in this great work. No expense has been spared. No detail overlooked. The countless millions who are fa miliar with Mr. Wright's style and iescriptive ability; those who under stand in even a limited way the soope iess possibilities of the moton-picture camera can readily realize that the great word-pictures of this author should in the world of reel pictures J indeed be works of art. “SLEEPING SICKNESS” PUZZLING LONDON fCorresjwmlence l*n*ss. 1 London, Jan. 2*.- Eight or nine cases of what appears to be a new phase of the deadly “sleeping sick ness" are puzzling the Londan Hos pital doctors. The disease to which the name en cephalitis lethargia has been given presents many id the symptons of tin- African sleeping sickness, but so lar tire tryanasoma hitherto thought to bej responsible for the sleeping sickness, common to the Congo natives, ha- n<\ | been found in the blood of patients at ' the hospital. A representative medical committee is nvestleating the new disease. The house surgeon states it is toe, ■arly to make > definite s'atennr.’. So. far no common factor, save the over-; powering dts.re to sleep, has bet . found in cases under notice, nor has ,• been possible yet to trace the origin o. each There is >aid to be no cause i r alarm as to the possible spread of the ; disease. Wonder how those folks who have' been seeing red whenever England ; was mentioned are now praising Lord Grey! —Milwaukee Journal. ,ADY HELEN CHOCOLATE FRUITS and MTS WITH CREAM ne a fine selection of lus uits and fresh cracked nuts, coated with soft delicious | cream and then covered with rich chocolate of 2 the finest grade. You will find walnuts and cherries from dear old France The finest Almonds from Spain—Bahama Pineapple and New York State Strawberries, all specially pre pared for this wonderful box of goodness. SI.OO per pound would not be too much to ask for this package. Our price this week Gsc. the fuil pound. M. J. HANTSKE Annapolis, j wSh" U-J> The ioay to reach her heart m time If you'd beat Cupid to it * And make her your true Valentine — 7>v it, you'll never rue it— “ Say it toil It Flowers!" line! Don't stop to think —just do it \\c can plan a floral-Valentine for you from a simple ex quisite hunch of \ iulets. a more elaborate corsage bou juet, a large cluster or group of cut flowers. And wc will deliver your floral Valentine to any part ol the United States or Canada the same day you order. THE KAISER COMPANY 100 COLLEGE AVENUE auto movies _ / OUR fair prices tell your auto expenses to back up. As a matter of fact it will be of consider able aid to your exchequer to have us do your repairing. And you are sure of getting prompt serv ice. ! BUDGET PROVIDES FOR / TWO FERRY LINES II Governor Ritchie, in his budget, fol-j|l lowed the lead of former Governor | - Harrington in supporting the ferry -H proposition. He not only marie a*luv\- j| anee for the Annapolis - Claiborne ' 1 ferry, but put in 828.000 for the Benin- ■ sula fi rry, whit h plans to operate be j tween Baltimore and Love Point. The allowance is based upon the I ‘average cost of maintaining a mile of j jtt.ite road, as the State treats the; ferries as connecting links between; | the roads on the Eastern and Western! Shores. The Governor said that he had been advised that the Peninsula ferry/ while not yet in operation, had ae-j quired its terminals, and gone ahead j with it - plans to the extent that it had! ; determined upon its boat All that is needed, it seems, is to complete the j sale of stock, and to have assurance of j mmiev from the Stic. By getting the, | latter it probably will be able to more! (quickly complete the former. The Lusitania, so the experts report, j must he left where she lies. But his-1 tory lias marked her place. Boston! H raid. 1 PALACE; THEATRE Today And Tomorrow j MATINEE TODAY 2 P. M. “The Shepherd f *-> ,> H*l!l M I 11L i By Harold Beit w right j SCENARIO WRITTEN and DSREC (T.D < e AUTHOR HIMSELI : ; ■ i A Delightful Story of I the Ozarks j PORTRAYING THE LIVES OF J.l i.i!. I HARDY MOUNTAINEERS WHO AIM As CLEAN CUT AND UNAFFECTED iiY Fill V NEER OF CIVILIZATION AS THE POCK BOUND HILLS IN WHICH THEY I IV! Also A Two Reel Comedy ! I’lione lit All I* r|, i.iiHfi ii I ANNAPOLIS TIRE REPAIR CO. 100 WEST STREET Mow I'ntler New Management J. T. McHAHON, I'rop. Vulcanizing—Tire Repairing— Retreasing Ilouenty ECliienry Courteny Free Air Service Auto irmn-rin TlßES—Miller, Goodrich, Firestone, Sheri ,n QUALITY OCR WATCHWORD MAX SCHIFF ...HAS OPENED... Shoe Repair Shop At 85 Main St. Even body knows lion hit'll shot's are Max Sell iff fan niakf old shots like no tv shot's don’t waste jour hoots, bring them to me. Don’t Mistake the Number 85 MAIN STREET. SPECIALTY TO i:ASTPORT PEOPLE. All Work Satisfactorily and Promptly Done. o mmm v SIGN PAINTING SAMUEL W. BROOKS & CO. CHAS. NKI.SON ISKOOKS Painters, Decorators and Paper - Hangers Relief Decorations for Parlors, Hails and Bathrooms Church Decoration a Specialty Fresco Painting No. DEAN STREET Ftimate* Cheerfully Furnluhed Telephone 344-VV L— J WALTER C. MUNROE CIVIL ENGINEER % Surreylng, Plat*. Estimate*. Mnnlclpa. I vnd Suburban Water Syateua and Sewagt Disposal. Savings Bank Building AnaspoHs. Md. ( j The exhibit is made in ten reels with incidental music written ajxl se-; Sleeted especially, and will be shown) 'at the Palace Theatre Friday and Sat-j | urday. For Colds Or Intluen/a and as a -Preventive, take LAXA TIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Look for E. W. GROVE'S signature on the! j box. 30c.—(Adv.) } :|REPUBUC| Today And Tomorrow “Evangeline’ The immortal dramatic poem by i Henrv Wadsworth 1 1 LEAIHERBIRy IP W® Contracting Carptc* AND JOB WORK 127 Prince Geor>;e Sir*- PHONE 1^ | NO T ICE ; ♦j Hats Made to <>: ■ ' • ‘ ; and JJetriiiiniffl 1" 5 ’ ‘ ! iP I.ikiiitf ; ~ MISS BESSIE j 1194 WcJt St. Phone GO. .f. tsststm W. N. French &- c " 25 Francis Street PIP'M ■ ’ ; ttlWl'^ AGENTS HU: TH. ‘ f,lL U;"*t *** 6 . I Htudebnhcr. \riilrr-i>i .. .t r " ; *-K; Krpiihlh Vri! " 1 Isi si f l>n O |,| I.IV I KD ' , . 1 |, In* j t Swinrhart lire-, ti * '"' trucU lire. U,r ' '