Newspaper Page Text
BRrnweiiTßowdie & Co. || Foremost—Oldest—Best—Busy Store I Large Shipments of Women's Suits and Coats Just Received tiful Garments For This Sale Which is Now Going On ide great preparation for this Coat and Suit Sale—not only will >mers have the advantage of selecting a Suit or Coat to meet j uirements from the best selected assortment in Cambridge, but mtiful garments are marked at reasonable prices to hasten their We have never shown such a beautiful assortment of Suits • ;s as we now have ready in our Suit Department—Come let us i the fashionable new Russian Greens, Plums, Blues and uits in the New Models-We have also provided many conser ves for elderly ladies, made for stout persons we are sure of you come see for yourself compare with Suits and Coat 8 e in Cambridge—and you’ll be convinced—as we are—that our e the most complete to be found in this city Room-Size Rugs, Linoleums, Window Sha es, Druggetts and Mattings Largest Assortments a doubt we have the best values in 9x12 Rugs—see our Tapes Axministers and Velvet Rugs—Bought before the advance— already higher—but not here—we are proud of our Floor Cov- Jrussels Rugs as low as , #lO Jl2, some as low as $2.45 Bowdle & Co. - ■■■ •■oooooeeooooeoooooeoooooooccooQoccccoccGonooocrsccoo rot ‘SIrTHEHOMSOFa®* ||j£ A AUDITORIUM IF IT’S WORTH SHOWING, WE SHOW IT. John Bunny Tonight, The Irresistible Bunny. When The West Was Young A two-reel Western drama by Cyrus Townsend Brady. Bessie Eyton and Wheeler Oakman, in an appealing Western drama, beau- tiful in thought and story. fr ' ! Pigs Is Pigs || I 0 John Bunny, as the express- I ‘ man. In Ellis Parker Butler’s 11 j famous comedy. You have t| ! seen pigs, but never such pigs i i as these. Two of them become S | eight hundred pigs so rapidly, t| I they set Bunny daffy and al- Si most ruin the express business. | Slippery Slim, Sophie Clutts |1 j and Mustang Pete, in a typical Western comedy. Slim’s effort IfSMN RUN —f— ■ —t jto take the fair Sophie horse- {i 1. 1 Bill" ~■ ■ I back riding is a scream. All For Love |i Romaine Fielding in a Lubin Western comedy. t * She Wanted To Know i Frances NeMoyer and George Welch, showing how a woman's L curiosity was satisfied. ? I 5 cents Admission 5 cents I Tomorrow, Saturday, Matinee & Niht i OVER NIAGARA FALLS SATURDAY, MATINEE AND NIGHT, the big spectacular four- s | reel drama of thrills, “OVER NIAGARA FALLS.” Niagara, with l| | its beauty and grandeur, is considered to be one of the greatest (i wonders of the world. We believe this to be for thrills, punches and 5 heart interest, one of the greatest wonders of the moving picture in- J dustry, surpassing all in big sensations. See it Saturday, matinee { and night, for sc. Other photoplays, including a Vitagraph drama, V Lov*' Thp ( IhjvoyHn t Maurice Costello and Mary Charleston, in an exceptional Vitagraph i drama. J | •“I' Rad j [ Sam Johnson and Mattie Washington have a smashing time. In i i which the razors break up the “crap” game. I | T*uh • u* k it Billy Bowers and the Ne Moyer Sisters, in a Lubin comedy of fun. ] I SPECIAL EXTRA AT THE MATINEE i i i The Clidpci K*d 11 Edison two-reel comedy. You read about this feature in the ] | Motion Picture Magazine. See the picture extra of the above show t at the matinee only. I | Admission 5 cents to either Show I—PODPWOPPPOOQOOOOOOOOOOOmOQOOCOOCCOCCCOOOOCOOQOOCJ r THE DAILY BANNER i c Except Sunday CAMBRIDGE, MD„ NOV. 6. 1914 | Brief Locals | AudUortum tonight. Elsewhere in this issue will be found the statement of the National Bank of Cambridge, at the close of 1 business Saturday, Oct. 31. K Mr. J. A. Normjie, general travel- H er for W. W. Kimball Plano Co., of ■ Chicago, is spending a few days with he local factory distributor, Mi. J. E. Groff. “When the West Was Young,” a big two-reel Western drama, by Cy rus Townsend Brady, with Bessie Eyton and Wheeler Oakman in the s cast, and John Bunny as the ex -1 pressman, in “Pigs is Pigs,” at the Auditorium tonight. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Partridge and family, of Chatham, Va., arrived in town this morning, and will make . their future home in this county, on = the “Old Mitchell Farm,” in Neck district, which Mr. Partridge recent ly purchased from Mr. Edw. S. Phil lips. Edward Faulkner, Jr., died last night, at 8.45 o’clock, at the home of his parents, 100 Franklin street, at the age of 2 years and 10 months. Funeral services over the body will be held tomorrow at 10 o’clock,from the home, with interment in Steele’s Neck burying ground. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Harrington entertained the members of the 500 Club last night at their home at the corner of Mill and Church streets The honors were carried off by Mrs. ! W. Irving Mace and Mr. T. Carter R. | Hughlett. After the playing a deli i cious supper was served. Whatever you do, don’t miss the | I special double reel Keystone comedy, i “Zuzu, The Band Leader,” at Grand Opera House tonight. Such players as Mabel Normand, Ford Sterling, Mack Sennett, and an all-star cast, will make you laugh long and loud. King Baggot, assisted by Graham- White, the daredevil aviator, in the 3-reel Imp feature, “Across the At lantic,” a play such as you will not see again, and little Mary Pickford.in one of the most charming plays,“Tne Baby.” All these big star players on the screen at Opera House tonight. Admission, 5 and 10c. o Glerni-liortn Wedding. Miss Amy LeCompte North and Mr. Herman A. Glenn, of Roanoke, Va., were married yesterdav. at half past four o’clock, at Beckwith M. F. Church, which was the scene of the weddings of many of the bride’s an cestors, her mother, grandmother and great-grandmother having been maried in this church. Rev. J. T. Price, pastor of the church at Burrs vllle, Md., who Is a brother-in-law of the bride, performed the ceremony, and was assisted by Rev. E. L. Hub r bara. ine usners were Messrs. E. Earl Hearn, John Hooper, Emil Parks and Bartie Wall. The bride was given In marriage by her step-father, Mr. J. L. iviacKiu, and was attended by Miss Edith Wherrette, who wore a suit of Hun ter green, with Bulgarian trimmings. Miss North was attired in a suit of green broadcloth, trimmed with Bul garian silk, and wore hat and gloves and carried white chrysanthemums. The church, which had been attrac tively decorated, under the supervi sion of Mrs. James M. Richardson, presented a pleasing appearance.with its scores of chrysanthemums, aut umn leaves, ferns and roses. Mr. Jas. M. Richardson was best man. The wedding music consisted of marches from Lohengrin and Mendelssohn, and “O, Promise Me,” rendered by Miss Alethia Mitchell. Following the ceremony, supper was served at the home of the bride's mother, at Lloyds. The wedding tour, which will extend over a fort night, will be a trip through the South, via Atlantic Coast Line, after j which Mr. and Mrs. Glenn will live at 629 Salem avenue, Roanoke, Va fMr. Glenn is senior member of the Glenn, Minnich Clothing Company.of i that city. I The wedding presents w r ere valu able and ornate. The groom’s gift :to the bride was a ring, set with 1 diamonds and pearls. Mrs. Glenn’s father was the late William A.North, i of Dorchester county. o CHURCH LOCALS. —Mass next Sunday in St. Mary’s Church, at 8 o’clock. Mass at Gol den Hill at 11 o’clock. The mission is now going on at St. Mary’s Church. The Rev. Father Norbert, C. P., Is conducting the exercises. The pub lic is cordially invited to attend. —“The Making of a Woman” Is the subject upon wffiich Dr. H. M. Wharton, of Baltimore, will lecture at the Auditorium Friday night, Nov. 13. Dr. Wharton has been here upon previous occasions, and has never failed to please the large crowds which have heard him upon every occasion. o Scavenger Notice. Arrangements have been made with Mr. Richard Hughlett, Jr.,(tele phone 434) to take care of the scav enger w r ork, and in future all calls for this work must be made to him direct, and not to the office of the Commissioners. By order of Commissioners of Cambridge.—Wm. E. Hearn, Clerk. —Adv. 6-3 t. o ..Saturday’s program at the Op era House will Include vaudeville, j “The Million Dollar Mystery,” and the big feature play, “The Master of Death,” in four parts, the hero per forming a wonderful feat in a dan i gerous leap, known as “The Death Curve,” and becomes known as the I “Master of Death.” Matinee prices, adults, 10c.; children under ten, sc. Night prices, 10 and 20 cents. f PAESjDEMI 10 RUH afewH Will Spend Time riajing GHB| I Automobillng. i Washington, Nov. 5. PresH . Wilson wants a few days of . has canceled tomorrow’s re ß|||| I Cabinet meeting and, unless • emergency arises, will see no until next Tuesday. will spend as much time as , playing golf and taking rides. It was generally expected thatfH President would leave Washington for a short vacation following thß election, but up to the present he has made no plans for going away, be lieving that he should remain here because of unsettled conditions in Europe and Mexico. Mr. Wilson soon will begin to give consideration to the five appoint ments he is to make In December to the new trade commission. A num ber of Democratic members of Con gress who failed of re-election want positions on the commission. Representative Palmer, who was defeated for election to the Senate from Pennsylvania, and Commission er of Corporations Davies are promi nently mentioned for the commis sion. no delaTFSco fair. President Moore Writes Governor it Will Open on Schedule Time. Annapolis, Md., Nov. 5. Stirred by reports that the European W 7 ar will have a material effect upon the number of exhibits at the Panama- Pacific Exposition and that the open ing of the exposition will nave to bo postponed, Charles C. Moore, presi dent of the exposition, has written Governor Goldsborough, denying the reports and asking the Maryland Ex ecutive to take measure! to assure the public to that effect. Mr. Moore state 1 that the exposi tion Is 95 per cent, completed and that exhibit space is overappliod for. The loss in exhibits by nations at war will be negligible, ho stated.add ing that the exposition will open on schedule time, Feb. 29, 1915. o “Captain Alvarez” War, with its accompaniment of thrilling episodes, the boom of can non, the rattle of musketry. Its plots and counterplots, staged in a coun try whose wealth cf beautiful scen ery makes every scene a masterpiece, is the setting for “Captain Alvarez/* the now famous Broadway Star Fea ture picture that made the blase pic ture fans in New York city thrill to their finger tips at ev-vy ance when this remarkable fllrß story was shown at the Vitagrapnß Theatre on Broadway, New York.J Telling a war whose henfl '.3 an American by bis darfl ing and action is instrumental in tb9 winning of a cause whoso object is to right tho wrongs of an oppressed people and oust a tyrant, it touches the heart an > makes strong appea* to patriotism. “Captain Alvarea" Is a picture thi.t will live in the mem ory for days and if conceded by pre-s and public to be the most thrilling film story ever shown. It will be the attraction at the Auditorium na.vt ' r u-‘6day. matinee and night. Regular Monthly Meeting. The regular monthly meeting of the Dorchester County Game and Fish Protective Association will be held in the band room, over Miss 311a Moler’s store, this Friday even ng, at 8 o’clock. A full attendance s desired, as business of special im portance will be before the meeting. —E. Lee LeCompte, Pres. —Adv.s-2t r. It. o Bicycle Found. Found, In automobile bus which runs from Cambridge to Sharptown, Orient bicycle. Owner can obtain same at police headquarters, by paying charges.—Chas. G. Pritchett, Chief of Police.—Adv. 11-6-tf. o —— Aluminum Demonstration. Phillips Hardware Co. will have a special demonstration of “Wear- Ever” aluminum cooking ware, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 9, 10 and 11. During this dem onstration they will sell a regular $1 stewing pan for 33c., only one to a person. You will see beef roasted, muffins cooked and various other op erations showing the use of this ware.—Adv. 6-2 t. o Notice to The Public. My business has been taken over by the United Stores Company.where I may be found, and where I shall be in a better position to furnish butter, eggs, and chickens than I have been heretofore. I thank the public for Its liberal patronage In the past, and trust to continue to be favored with a large portion of busi ness in the future.—Smith, the Egg Man. —Adv, 10-22-tf. Mortgsge Sale ol deal Estate. By virtue of a power of sale In a mortgage made by W. Walter Hack ett and May E. Hackett, his wife, now of record in Liber W. L. R., No. 4, folio 298, mortgage record book of Dorches ter county, the undersigned will sell ( at public sale, at the Court House *. door, in the town of Cambridge. Mary- j land, on { TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1914 j between the hours of 2 and 3 o’clock >1 p. m„ all that house and lot of ground, situate, lying and being on the South side of Pleasant street, in the town of , Cambridge, in said county, said lot | of ground fronting on said street 30 feet, and running back with even wid- j th 90 feet.being the same property that 1 James E. Thomas and ife conveyed j to the said W. Walter Hackett. bear- | ing date of the 3rd day of June, 19X3, 1 and now of record among the land records of said county. This property | is improved by a good dwelling and outhouses, all in go>* condition. . TERMS: Cash on day of sale; deeuf at expense of purchaser. 1 JAMES W. WADDELL* I AUorosjr Named la Mortgage.* l f HURLEY & WILLIAMS (the LARGEST AND LEADING DRV GOODS STCBB I A visit to this store will convince that, as in other lines, this store Leads in Suits and Coats ver before in the history of this well estahl shed sto'e havp a big season on Suits and coats T>erp h a re*ton. jusMirofc in and look at our line, you will see for y< urself . last Rprirg and in the early Summer, we sold a great many Suits the Jwket of which was short aud cut-a-way, but the style has great y changed for the New Fall and Winter Styles The Jacket to the Fall fend Winter stvles are princrpaMy of the full 45 inch length, a- d are square cut. and otherwise q die differ ent and most att active as the demar d has proven. The separate coat, know as the “CoPege Coat,” ’s verv popu lar th s season, as well as the regular leng h, and for v hich th-n is a big demand. It Will Pay Ton To VISIT EVERY GEPARTNIENT cl Tdls Ely Store f Hurley & Williams* - ; ***TW <, rw<?fKWft^ > ! ,w r wwl * OTWW> * ww rvy>nrwyafaraao | aoeeeoe>aeccoi 10 Let Us Show You Our v tock of ij Room Size Rugs | Brussels Rugs, Seamless 9x12 for SIO.OO NATHAN’S Furniture Store i wooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooaoooooogoooocooooo* t (I >Grand Opera House< NEVER ANYTHING LIKE THIS TONIGHT. IBWWWi King Bjtgg&t, siztool bjwml,—JkuvJ Storing. A B night of All-Star Players. u r The biggest and best show you ever saw. Featuring tonight t , Ford Sterling and the popular Mabel Normand, in the biggest come -1 dy scream of the year. Zuzu, The Band Leader *ln two reels of side-splitting comedy, con- I taining more laughs to the foot of film than any ever screened. Mabel Normand alone on the screen creates more laughter than any other actress, but when playing in connection with the great laugh producer, Ford Sterling, you can look for a lot of wholesome fun tonight. Staged and directed by the peer of all comedy photo play directors, the famous Mack Sennett, who Ford Sterling produces more laughs from the films than any fUNfyERNAp o her director. | j Across The Atlantic Don’t miss the great treat In store for you tonight. King Baggot, assisted by Claude Gra ham-White, the great aviator. A grand three t reel Imp feature, with King Baggot, the popular player, and Claude Graham-White and Gustave | Hamnell, the famous aviators, featured in aer- m n|| ial flights. In releasing this sensational play the Universal feels that it Is offering a rare treat. A picture that one rarely sees. A grip- x® If W ping dramatic story, containing educational vir tues and a punch in sensational developments Kln^^^ 80 * and incidents. One of the best plays you have QjNyyppmY ever had a chance to see. JOKER COMEDY AND ANIMATED WEEKLY. THE BABY Mary Pickford, In one of her most charming plays. Don’t Miss the Best You W T ill Ever See Tonight. ADMISSION, sc. A FEW RESERVED, 10c. STOVES It Would be to your advantage to look our stock over before buying Cook Stoves, Ranges, Coal Stoves, Wood Stoves, Double Hea'ers, Oil Stoves and Boat ] Stoves || Coles Hot-Blast Ranges and Heaters I gives you more comfort, with Iss fuel and atten- I tion than others. You should exam.ne this great 11 line * 1 THE UNITED STORES COMPANY ■ CAMBRIDGE, MARYLAND I ' ■ ■■■——>IIIMHir—TWI|IWTWf I——— [~>!—■—Til I HARRINGTON & BAYLY CAMBRIDGE’S BIGGEST, BEST STORE Wom°n whi are “Stvle-wise*' will appreciate the coats ard suits we are offering this season. Every garment represents the best efforts of the coun try’s leading make s, an 1 y-u will notice that whi e each one embodies the late-t style features, it assures the wearer individual distinction.. We’ve carefully avoiled dup’ieations and freak designi and re u *ed ihe selec:’.oa of your Winter apparel to a genu ine pleasure. P er ty of models from which to choose—from the meat conservative serge and poplin taiior-mide to the newest Red ingote. Come in and see how becoming they are 4-4, 5-4, 6-4 and 8-4 Oil Cloth Squares Drnggrtts in Bru*=els. Axmini-ter, Velvet and Fibre, Crex and M ittinsr; $2 5), $6 00. $7 00, $lO, $12.50, sls, S2O, $22.50, $25.00, $.7.50 Our present stock of Blar.kets is the most complete we have ever carried And our present prices are lower than they have ever been at this season of the year. Th ; s is you” opportunity to get any kind of Blanket you want below Blanket prices. We are showing everything in Blankets - double and single, in plain Cjlora and plaids the newest designs and col or combinations Pick Out Your Bhnketa Today. HARRINGTON & BAYLY ■ ; .in ... i i i .. i i i ■ i Sait rages and Buckwheat Cakes or breakfast would almost make your ancestors come back to life. Yum Yam you H'iii svty wien-yua sniTfure sHvoiy rf.tvai ui r oui ifei’iciottsCJUiltTysaasaget or fresh corn and milk fed country pork. Our pork pro luots of all kinds are the best to be procured from the best dairy farms in the country. Henlz Smi kraut a Specialty J. ALLEN WALLACE & CO. Phone 303 Corner Choptank Ave. and Church St, HARRINGTON & WALLER Dry Good , Notions, Ladies' Su ’s a d Coats. Shape-Retaining Coats and Suits Cost No More Why experiment with clothes tbit may wrinkle ard look “shoddy” in a hort tim. ? La Vogue garments are within the reich of any purse. La Vogue suits ar d coats keep their good looks till the last day of service Your well dressed neighbor probably wears a La Vogue garment. The next time you are in the store ask to s-e the smart new styles. Agents For Nemo Corsets New Dress Goods Just Arrived Today Harrington & Waller ’PHONE 279