Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

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Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

mdsa_sc3410_1_63-0040

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January 31, 1920—Page 8 THE JEFFERSONIAN, TOWSON, MARYLAND. Local Correspondence (Continued from Page T.) GARRISON. Miss Mary Jones, of Pleasant Hill, was injured last week when she lost control of a sled while coasting, and crashed into a wagon. Master David Warfel, Jr., was injured while sledding last Thursday, when he ran into a barbed wire fence, which tore his lips, and scratched him up pretty badly. Due to the slippery condition of the roads there was no Sunday school last Sunday at St. Thomas'., Miss Craddock, who has been ill with a heavy cold, is able to be out again. -----------0----------- JACKSONVILLE. Rev. J. N. Hauser, Miss Gussie Duval and Miss Marie Chaney, of Baltimore, spent Sunday with friends in this vicinity. They enjoyed themselves by sledding and skating. We regret to lose our neighbor, Mr. John Dorn, who has disposed of his farm and will move to Phoenix. Miss Mary Trapp, who has been ill for some time, is slowly improving. Mrs. Henry Zinkhan and son, Carl, were the guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Troyer, of White Hall. TOWSON AT A GLANCE (Continued from Page 1.) —Mr. Harry Van Horn, of Washington, and Mr. John Van Horn, of Alexandria, Va., are spending some time at their home here. —We are glad to note that the condition of Mrs. Prank Phipps, who is suffering from pneumonia, is reported as being' much improved. —Rev. J. David Clark, pastor of Cal-tiurrf heri . i v - his 11-i ted lecture "Ben Hur" at Grace M. P. Church, Chestnut Ridge. —Miss Catherine Rawiings, who is in training for a nurse at the Union Pro-it Infirmary. Baltimore, is now a nt there suffering with the "Flu." ie Parks has associated ith the Black v or- ganization. Havin . ties in one of the offices on Monday hist. —Alleging abandonment. Mrs. P. S. in ted a divorce bv Judge Dunccan in the Circuit Court here this - from George P. Naylor, of tergt< —Mr. John Mays Little is on an extended business trip to Oklahoma. We trust none of the "bad men" of the west or the Indians will do John bod- —Invitations have been sent out for the twenty-first birthday party of Mr. Thorn ler, which will take place at the residence of his aunt, in Baltimore city. —M 1a Ellis has severed her office of the Court Stenog ,md has assumed her new duties in the office of the Children's —The annual report of the County r will be placed in the hands of the printer on Monday and will be ready for distribution on March 1st next. —Quite a number of the younger set of Towson have received invitations to a dance to be given by Mr. and Mrs. J. Emory.Cockey, in honor of their niece Miss Mabel Swem. —A load of hay on an auto truck created quite a bit of interest at Hotel Towson on Tuesday last, due to its excessive weight. It was packed tight and weighed 6 tons 550 pounds. .-. Sargent, who has for' a number of years been connected with the Sheppard-Pratt Hospital here, has acquired the old Aigburth Mansion, and will operate a private sanatorium there. —Mrs. I.appincott, probation officer of the Juvenile Court, is spending the end with Miss Katherine Kirwan, of the Baltimore County Children's Aid Society, at her apartment, Washington and Alleghany avenues. —For breaking jail, Frank H. Butler was sentenced to 60 days, by Judge Duncan one day this week, and 00 days in "the cut" on a larceny charge. Butler is one of the men who made a "get away" from the jail here in July. —Mrs. C. Rebecca Bowen spent Wednesday in Westminster, returning with mother-in-law, Mrs. William S. Bowen, who is the mother of Mr. C. L. Van Horn, who isi seriously ill at his here. ¦—Dame Rumor has it that Miss Ida Held has purchased from Mr. George C. Tracey the dwelling with a store front, on the York road, now occupied by Mr. Tracey. The consideration is said to be $8,000. —An automobile owned by Harry T. Campbell & Son, of Towson, and driven by Mr. Harry B. C. Green, collided with another machine in Baltimore on Thursday. The driver of the other car being arrested for not giving the Campbell machine the right of way. —On Monday next, the County Agricultural office here, will begin receiving soil from Baltimore county farmers which will be tested at the Maryland Experiment Station. After the examination farmers submitting specimens will be directed how to treat it without charge. _. —Mr. James Shea, of Towson, had the misfortune of having his new Davis Six touring car damaged when he was attending a funeral at St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Texas, on Monday last. Mr. Shea left his car standing on the road and while he was) in the cemetery the hearse passing skidded and crashed into his machine. —Mr. W. Gill Smith took a compulsory vacation when the sleet was on the ground and after four days absence from his office, "mustered up" nerve enough to be pulled to Towson behind a mule, but he only came that way, returning- on the little electric car to Lutherville. There is every indication that he is "sleet shy." —Because of the unfavorable weather conditions and the lack of the supply of oysters, due to the freezing up of* the bay, the oyster supper that was npHIS Close Belt Connected ¦*• outfit consists of an engine, generator and regulator panel compactly assembled on a unit base. It is easy to run, is reliable and can be counted upon to give dependable service. It has the automatic regulator device which fully controls the charging process and Makes, the Battery Last Longer. This is an advantage found only in Western Electric Power and Light Outfits - For details of installation and further information write or call. ELECTRICAL C0N= STRUCTI0N CO., 351 N. Calvert Street \ BALTIMORE, MARYLAND l g pup in The way to find out how well this car will meet your requirements is to test it out yourself. We're ready any time. HOLBROOK AUTO CORPORATION Salesroom, 810 N. Charles Street Phone, Mt. Vernon 5648 Service Station, 318 W. Biddle Street Phone, Mt. Vernon 2869 FACTORY: COLUMBUS, OHIO SURE AS DEATH THE INCOME TAX LAW. Prepare now for your 1920 Returns by using The Liberty Income and Income Tax Record The Perfect Record for the Farmer, Merchant, Manufacturer or Professional Man. Endorsed by leading authorities. By Mail postpaid upon receipt of $5.00 Money refunded if not satisfactory. Descriptive Circular upon request. DEY, MYERS & QUINN, Distributors, Box 392 BALTIMORE, MD. to be held at the Towson M. E. Church on Wednesday and Thursday nights ot this week was/ postponed. Those who hold tickets can use them when the supper is held or their money will be refunded. —In the Circuit Court at Towson on Monday last, before Judge Frank I. Duncan, the will of George Miller, of Arcadia, this county, was .sustained. The bulk ot" Mr. Miller's estate was bequeathed in trust for the children of the testator's nephew, David M. Bucker. A caveat to the will was filed by Ruth Ann Gardiner, a sister and Jacob Miller, a brother of the deceased. —A marriage license was issued On Monday here to Roy W. Richards, of Winchester, Va., and upon this comes a shit docketed by Bernheimer Brosi, claiming damages of $750 tq an auto truck alleged to have been caused by a machine driven by the prospective bride-groom. The collision occuring on the 17-Mile hill, on the Frederick road, this county. Mr. Richard's bride, according to the license, will be Miss Lolita G. Dalcour, of near Ellicott City. —To be sure this isf leap year, and little Dan Cupid is getting behind some of the old bachelirs in the Court House. The latest "victim" is Mr. Moore Jenifer, for this week we are advised from a most reliable source that he received a little card from one of the fair sex, which read as follows* Moore your hair is turning gray, Will you a bachelor forever stay, Can't you see my heart's grieving dear, For you'll be never mine I fear. Out on the lonely farm you stay, Feeding the cattle and loading hay, My, as your wife, I could help you so, But dear! you're so deucedly slow. } But lo! this is leap year And it Alls my heart with cheer. I'll throw a rope around your neck, And drag you to some preacher wreck. Then when you're mine, you won't be such a lark, I'll slap your face right in the dark. And make you jump through hoops and things, Then you'll feel love's bitter stings. F Items Relating To Happenings In Nearly All Quarters Of The Globe. ra. :Especially Wanteds PRIME, SOUND MILLING WHEAT 0 We have urgent demand 19 for CHOICE WHEAT. ¦ B We are paying- $7.50 per barrel for both White and Yellow Ear Corn. As a result of an infection due to his teeth, Senator R. M. LaFollette is in a hospital at Rochester, Minn. A gift of $212,688 from the estate ot Mrs. Laura S. Rokefeller has been made to the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, New York City. Prohibition against use of liquors on foreign vessels in American ports has been lifted pending determination of the law by the attorney general. A band of international swindlers were arested at Lindau, Switzerland, while selling small blocks of alleged platinum of 250,000 marks per block. Some 70. airplanes, including two* giant machines, which, were lying in hangars at Warneniuende Mecklen-burg-Schwerin, were destroyed by fire. Because of an unprecedented shortage of cars for flour shipment, Minneapolis millers shut down their mill activities! to less than 50 per cent, of normal. The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland has offered a reward of 10,000 pounds for information leading to the conviction of any persons for the murder of 14 police officials. Samuel F: Flansbaun, George M. Goldsmith and A. M. Collins, all of Boston, officers of the F, G. Collins Shoe Company, were each fined $1,000 on the charges of profiteering. The National Council of Administration of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, at a meeting in New York, adopted resolutions against the removal of the American soldier dead from France. The trial of United States Senator Truman H. Newberry and 134 others charged with conspiracy, fraud and corruption in rthe senatorial election of 1918, opened, in Grand Rapids Court this week. The American Relief Administration announced that 800 banks throughout the country already are co-operating in the sale of food drafts for the relief of famine-threatened s/ections of South, Central and Eastern Europe. Federal Judge Mayer, in New York, granted the Commercial-Pacific Cable Company an injunction restraining the Philippino National Bank, of Manila, from filing private dispatches for itself or its customers as government messages. Assemblyman Theodore Roosevelt and Mrs. Douglas Robinson delivered addresses at the inaugural meeting of the Roosevelt church in New York city, which ia, to commemorate the mourning stars of gold in America's service flag. Driven 1,500 miles off her course by a cyclonic blizzard which raged for four days while on a trip from New York to St. Johns)' N. F., the Norwegian steamer Puna arrived at New York on her return trip, minus one member of the crew, who was washed overboard. TEEMS EXPIRE SOrfS Fifteen-Year Period Of Judges Burke And Duncan On Bench Here End This Year. The fifteen year term upon the bench in Baltimore county of Chief Judge N. Charles Burke and Associate Judge Frank I. Duncan will expire this year, and under the constitution their successors cannot be elected until the general election of 1921. In lieu of this fact the Governor of Maryland, Albert C. Ritchie, will have to name the THROUGH A VERY CLOSE INSPECTION AND MECHANICAL AID WE FIND THE LITTLE Modle 4 Overland Willys-Night and Dixie Flyer TO BE THE MOST DURABLE AND SERVIC" ABLE CARS ON THE MARKET SALES AND SERVICE STATION NATIONAL GARAGE 17-Mile House York Road, SPARKS, MD. We pay highest Market Prices for all Grains— good or poor. We make Canton Dairy n Stock Feed, the best Milk Producing Feed on the market for the money. ¦! H! We will be pleased to buy your Grain at anjT time. ¦ MOST SANITARY STORE IN BALTIMORE LEXINGTON MEAT 126 North Paca Street CO. ¦ B The Gambril! Grain ¦ Produce Company e 2121-2123 Aliceanna Street J Phone, Wolfe 4352 ¦ We Sell Wheat Bran, Middlings, Ground B Alfalfa and Other Feeds, Burr Ground V4 Corn Meal, High Grade Flour, Etc. ¦¦¦¦MiiiiiiiiiBinii For Job Printing THAT CATCHES THE EYE Phone, Towson 289 THE JEFFERSONIANOFFICE. ••••••••••••••«••¦ ..<>..•..«..«..,..,..,.. miiimiiiiiiii Boiling Beef...................... Liver, Pudding .................... Chuck Roast...................... Hamburg Steak ........... • • •..... Smoked Sausage................... Bologna Sausage ........:......... Rib Roast........................ Rump Roast...................... Roast Veal ....................... Picnic Ham ...................... . hJPork Shoulder ... .^.......... Three Cornered Roast.............. Fresh Sausage .,................... Compound (used as lard)........... Sir Loin Steak..................... Round Steak...................... Pure Lard........................ Pork Loin for Roasting............. P8 Telephone; St. Paul 497 12% . .18 . .18 . . .20 . . .20 . . .20 . . .22 . . . 221 . . .22 . . . 23 . . . 23 . . . 23 . . . 25 . . . 27 . . .28 . ,.28 . . .29 . .29 ¦19-19 x:r-v :L-B I^Jr==ji=Jr=Jr=^r=Jr=Jr=irs^rSr^r^ Maccar Motor Trucks E fl fl fl n fl fl 1! fl fl 11 11 1 fl fl fl fl fl fl fl fl 11 fl__________ g|i=ir=Ji=ir=if=Ji \\ Ton, 2\ Ton, 31 Ton, 5£ Ton Worm Drive and Demountable Power Plant While simplicity is paramount in Maccar construction, nothing necessary to strength and durability is sacrificed. A glance at either the front or rear of the Maccar Chassis is sufficient to impress the observer with its rugged and sturdy appearance, but it is only by close inspection that the real importance of Maccar construction is revealed. All units are arranged so as to work in perfect harmony, and no part performs more than the function for which it was originally intended. This is the basic essential which has made the Maccar the super-truck of today. We Also Handle THE WESTCOTT, The Lighter Six. The Car With A Longer Life. MACCAR MOTOR TRUCK CO. JAMES RITTENHOUSE, Jr., Sales Mgr. 1010 W. North Avenue, Cor. Madison Avenue Phone, Madison 3639 BALTIMORE, MD. fl fl I fl I! fl 11 11 1 fl I fl 11 I fl 11 r==Jfn:=ii^^r==iJr=^r==^r===Jr==^r==^r=^r==^r==Jr=^ persons to fill the vacancies, until the election and there is no doubt he will designate both Judge Burke and Judge Duncan. The term of Judge William H. Harlan, another member of the Circuit Court which comprises both Baltimore and Harford counties, will not expire until 1926, but he will .^oon reach the age limit of 70 years, and under the state constitution will be compelled to retire then, unless continued in office by the General Assembly, rumor has it that a petition is now being circulated to be signed by members of the bar and will be presented to the legislators aslking that Judge Harlan be allowed to remain upon the bench until the expiration of his term. Judge Allan McLane's term does not expire until 1929, he having been the one most recently elected. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS H. Courtenay Jenifer, Attorney, Tow-sou, Maryland. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Columbus could not have discovered America in these days, as the sailors would have held up the expedition for time and a half for overtime. THIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE, That the subscriber has obtained from the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County, letters Testamentary on the estate of HENRY GERSTMYER, late of said courty, deceased. All per-s )iis having claims against the said estate are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber. On or l»efore the 5th day of August, 1»20, they may otherwise by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate. Those indebted to s|aid estate are requested to makeJjnmediate payment. Given under my hand this 29th day of January. 1920. CATHERINE GERSTMYER, Executrix, l-31-4t Towson, Md. AUTO MOVie /^By F.B. & M.L.PORTS Maxwell Motor Car Distributors TO THE SCRAP HEAP ZEE TO VULCAN ZM J '•»?r-r»u \». MANY a tire has g;oiie to the scrap heap that ought to have gone back on the road. Many a tire has gone into the hands of a receiver that should have been put on its business feet again by our expert vulcanizers. IF YOU LIVE IN BALTIMORE COUNTY BANK WITH THE BALTIMORE COUNTY BANK YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MD. The Most Conveniently Located Bank In Baltimore County. BRAINS vs. B R A W N . Brains were formerly at a premium, until those who wished easier jobs in stores and offices so overcrowded those places that the law of supply and demand left the ranks of "Brawn" depleted, so that the wages of those so employed increased by leaps and bounds). Yet however much their incomes increase it is necessary to use BRAINS to hold that which they make. OUT OF E.VCH PAY, RESERVE SOMETHING TO PLACE IN THE BANK. Whether a rainy day or a good investment, is will always be better in bank than spent. Start at once. UNNECESSARY ACTION. Angry Woman—My husband attempted to strike me. want to have him arrested for abusje. Police Captain—All right! Where will we find him. Angry Woman—In the emergency hispital. DIRECTORS. D. H. RICE, President M. J. O'HARA, Viee-Pres. P. I. DUNCAN. WILTON GREENWAY, DIXON CONNOLLY, H. W. HOOK, 2-28-19 E. C. HATCH, J. P. HUDSON, CHAS. E. WEAKLEY, L. M. BACON, JR., ELMER R. HAILE, WM. C. KENNET, Cashier The Towson National Bank Oldest and Strongest Bank in Baltimore County. The Bank on the Court House Square with the Big Town dock Capital, $50,000 Surplus and Piofits, Over $100,000 Our Motto: STRENGTH-SECURITY-SERVICE A Good Bank To Do Business With IT'S EASY WHEN YOU ACQUIRE THE HABIT. Saving money is a good habit no harder to fall into than the spending habit—try it and see. All you need is a definite object to save for and a little will power. When you see your bank account grow and grow, you will ne„ver want to waste money again. Start at this bank today— now. $1.00 is enough. » Officers DUANE H. RICE, President W. CLARENCE CRAUMBR, ERNEST C. HATCH, Cashier Vice-President MARTIN R. SCHUSTER, Assistant CajMer Director* Duane H. Rice J. Prank Hudson Ernest C. Hatch Duncan S. Black Lewis M. Bacon Albert S. Cook Wilton Green way N. Bosley Merryman, Jr Martin J. O'Hara Judge Prank I. Duncan John S. Biddison