Maryland State Archives Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland mdsa_sc3410_1_63-0206 Enlarge and print image (6M)      |
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Maryland State Archives Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland mdsa_sc3410_1_63-0206 Enlarge and print image (6M)      |
July 17, 192^Page 4 THE JEFFERSGMAN, TOWSON, MARYLAND. THE JEFERSONIAN TOWSONMBYIiAND. ¦entered a» »eco7cia«» matter at the Poatoffice at tfJn">«» Maryland. Telephoir-Towaon 289, Published eTeryiaturday at Towwn, Baltimore unty, Maryland, by The Baltlm* County Jeffea-sonlan Publishing tmpany, Incorporated. OTICBRS. W. Gill Smith Elmer R. Halle, PresiAt. Secretary. Win. J. Peach, Martin J. O'Hara, Vlce-Presint. Treasurer. BOARI>F DIRECTORS John M. Dennis William J. Peach, Martin J. O'Ha. W. Gill Smith, Carville D. Bei>n, Elmer R. Halle, Kie Bonnett Mr. "Wm. R. Price, secretary of the Taxpayers' League, commenced a "duel of words" with former Judge N. Chas. Burke, pens) being the weapons, the "blood" of ink flowing freely. Mr. Price will learn later on that he has a very able and formidable opponent, although there is quite a difference in ages. ¦¦¦ LOGIE BONNFT. Editor and Manager SATURD/, JULY 17, 1920. ?r President J/ES M. COX. Po Vice-President FRANKIN D. ROOSEVELT. For »ited States Senate JOE: WALTER SMITH. pr Congressman CARILLE D. BENSON. It is easito pick our next president. His name egins with a "C." The Wed boom might have been called a s«.p bubble. Messrs. Commissioners! Where is* that Factry Site Commission? At any ate the predictions of lower prices mice first-class reading. A clue s something a detective finds when hecan't find the criminal. -----------?----------- The taveling expenses of Eugene Debs, tb Socialist candidate for President, vail be extremely light. --------.».-------_ Slippe-y elm planks were used by the buiders of the Republican platform. Wha; the United States needs now is few;r automobile drivers and more wheelbarrow pushers. Harding is good enough for the Republican bosses, Penrose et al—Is he good enough for you? Japan says she intends to take no sides in Siberia. She should take no side except the outside. How can a man run for president if he's locked up? Socialists, are therefore demanding the release of Debs. The officials of the United Railways are as silent on the cobble stone question as a sphinx in the Egyptian desert. Well! Well! The theory that any Republican could be elected President this year will be put to the severest test. We bet the oldest inhabitant in Baltimore county cannot remember when he had to "dig" down so deep for potatoes. "All profiteers will go straight to Hell!" shouts a Baltimore preacher. Look out then for a raise in the price of matches. Speaking of a third party, Hearst, the publisjher of the New York Journal, may become desperate and nominate himself. The Republican Presidential candidate once played a horn in the village band and he hasn't been out, of the band-wagon since It might be true, as William Jennings Bryan says, that Old John Barleycorn is in his coffin, but there seems to be a leak in the coffin The Third Party is deriving quite the same sort of satisfaction from its exclamations as a lunatic who raps his head against a stone wall. The row in the School Board of Baltimore City takes on the aspect of a "tooth and nail" scrap at which Mayor Broening looks* on, snickering. A Baltimore City suffrage leader has warned the new women voters not to accept the crumbs from the political bosses' tables. She slhould show no anxiety. All indications point to the women voters taking charge of the tables themselves, with the boeses nervously waiting to see what they'll grab next. Folks in Baltimore county who have dogs ought to be willing to pay the small license fee. While this is a State-wide measure, the local authorities are going to begin a campaign to enforce it. They are obliged to do so, "without fear or favor." Better pay your one or two dollars than to face a magistrate and have «it five and costs. A million dollar plant cannot be run by an inefficient man. Neither can a man big enough to "hold down the job" as county manager under the new charter form of government be secured for $6500 per year. There will be plenty of applicants however, if the scheme is passed by the voters, but getting the right caliber of man cannot be done for the price. ^^H Those blue prints and working drawings of the new station for Tow-son, which the Md. & Pa. R. R. o. have been talking about for several years must have been burnt up in the fire which didn't do the old shed now standing for a station at Towson too much harm to be patched up. Let it be known, that if the officials of the railroad are not ashamed of the Tow-son station the residents here are. The appointment of Dr. Henry S. West as Superintendent of the Public Schools of Baltimore is a promotion well deserved. Dr. West has been a citizen of Towson for three years, during which time he has been head of the Maryland State Normal School. We have had every opportunity to study the man, and in his removal to the city, feel that the community will lose a valuable citizen, and the Normal School an excellent principal. Nevertheless, as the old saying goes, "What is one man's gain is another.s loss," the school system of Baltimore will be benefited. WHY NOT GIVE THE WOMEN REPRESENTATION ON THE SCHOOL BOARD? Announcement was made yesterday that Mrs. Howard T. Schwartz would probably be appointed a member of the Baltimore City School Board to succeed Mrs. Harry E. Parkhurst, and Mrs. Schwarz in an interview published at the same time said: "I think that two women should be the minimum representation of women on the School Board, and I should like to see even more." . Would it not be a good plan to have one or two women on the Baltimore County School Board? In making this query we do not mean to cast the slightest reflection upon the estimable gentlemen who now constitute the County School Board, but as a vast majority of the public school instructors are women it doesi seem reasonable that they should be represented on the administrative boa,rd. Mothers as a rule take a greater interest in the education of their children than fathers, especially in the younger children, who are dependant upon the public school for their primary education. And who can question the general fitness of women to manage the details of a child's education? The national enfranchisement of -women is coming. It will not be long before in every State in the Union they will exercise their influence at the polls, on an equal footing with the men. Whether their influence as voters will be for the weal or woe of the State remains to be seen, but wo are inclined to think they will make good, as they have in most every other vocation in life. may be the panacea for all the ail-jnents that a *ct the body politic. At the risk of tiring you I cannot bring this letter to a close wihout a word about, our trip. No one of average intelligence can travel from the Atlantic to the Pacific without receiving impressions of the most lasiting and beneficial character: No amount of reading and research, no previously acqquired informaion of any character will enable one to anticipate by way of imagination anything- approaching the magnitude and grandeur of this, country which we call our own. All decriptions of it are either futile or inadequate. One feels without consequence on the prairies and on the bleak, barren deserts and when you behold the rockiesj, serried chains of unbroken ranges, peak rising on peak, and many of them covered with perpetual snow, silent but. enduring sentinels of a region greater than Europe, you feel that you are one\nf the most inconspicuous atoms in the universe. And yet ma*n has crossed the desert and* conquered the mighty mountains and one of the things that impressed us most was the engineering skill which has brought these trans-continental railroadsi up and over the mountain ranges. The statement has often been made, and it is probably true, that the ma' terial resources of this country have as yet scarcely been touched and are practically inexhaustible, and the thought has often been expressed by members! of the party that could the Ex-Kaiser have made a tour of our country and looked about a bit he most assuredly would not have insisted upon mixing it up with us in the late war. However, both the war and the convention are now over and the country seems to look just about the same and as the hour is* late I will close and tell you more about the trip when I see you. Sincerely yours, _ EDW. J. dOLGAN JR. SERVED 45 YEARS. Oldest Mail In Marine Corps Will Retire Aug. 30. Has Been Government Employee 65 Years. After 65 years of continuous Government service, regarded by officials here as a record never before equalled, H. J. Wylie, clerk in the Quartermaster's Department of the U. S. Marine Corps, will retire on August 20 with an annuity. Mr. Wylie has served the Marine Corps! for 45 years in the same department. f Mr. Wylie entered the Gevernment service in the Post Office in Pittsfield, Mass., when 17 years old. In 1861 he enlisted in the Army and saw service in three of the great battles of the Civil War. At the close of the war he was appointed clerk in the Washington navy yard. He left the navy yard to join the clerical force of the Marine Corps' in 1875. During his service in the Marine Corps, Mr. Wylie has administered the oath of office to the following commandants of the corps: Major Generals Heywood, Elliott, Biddle, Barnett and Lejeune. Mr. Wylie, a few years ago, visited friends in Towson. "' EGYPTIAN BEADS MOVE BED L ATF Sparks Grange Votes To Send Display To Timonium This Season. The Sparks Grange' held its regular monthly meeting Tuesday evening, July 13, at Sparks High School. The meeting was very well attended and also very entertaining. After completing the regular order of business, Mr. Louis McL. Merryman, President of the Maryland State Fair, gave a complete idea of what the fair at Timonium was going to do this fall. One of the very valuable as/sets to the Maryland farmer, Mr. Merryman stated, is the fact that the board of directors appropriated $13,000 to be expended at the fair toward the advence-ment of Agriculture in Maryland. Dr. ^^^^^^^T>f the Remarkable Manifestations Said 1* Have Been Made by Ancient Neck* lace in Edinburgh. Some remarkable manifestations, states the Scotsman, have occurred in Edinburgh in association with an ancient Egyptian necklace. The present owner of the necklace, who lives in the west end of Edinburgh, received it from Cairo at the end of 1913. Recently she decided to get rid of it and threw it into a waste paper basket. That night when near the basket she was startled by the distinct feeling of a hand clutching at her wrist. She afterward heard sounds from the basket as a mouse moving. Examination revealed only waste paper and the glass beads. She gave the beads to her brother, who on going to bed placed them on the'pillow near his head. The necklace seemed to be moved on the pillow during the night by some unseen agency. A night or two later he again put the beads on his bed. He was roused from his sleep by the bed being- moved from side to side. He afterward heard the necklace producing a rustling movement. The follow- TATTOOING AS A FINE ART It Reached Its Highest Development in the Marquesas Islands of the South Seas. Tattooing is an art so old that its origin is lost to historical records, having been practiced when the cavemen went out to club their fellows. In the Marquesas islands, the most distant and most mysterious of South sea archipelagos, tattooing reached its highest development and there it was the most beautiful form of art known. For a man in the Marquesas to lack the tattoed stars of terror upon his face and to have a bare countenance upon his face was to be a poltroon and clespisecTby the whole tribe. Frederick O'Brien says in the Century that to achieve a fairly complete picture on one's body meant many months of intense suffering and the expenditure of much wealth. When white men were cast by shipwreck in the islands of the far Pacific or fled from duty on whalers or warships and sought to stay among the Marquesans they acceded to the honored customs of their hosts and adopted their facial adornment. Once the curious ink of the t^ftooer has gotten into the skin it is there "forever and can never be erased, like the pits of-smallpox. The white men, therefore, of Europe and America never again returned to their old homes after settling among these Marquesans and having their faces tattooed. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Charter No. 9469 Federal Reserve District No. 5 REPORT OP THE CONDITION OF The White Hall National Bank, AT WHITE HALL, In the State of Maryland at the close of business on June 30, 1920. RESOURCES. Loans and discounts, including rediscounts ..........$446,009.64 Overdrafts, unsecured ..... 617.77 U. S. Government Securities owned: Deposited to secure Thomas B. Symons, director ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Maryland State Extension Service, has | ing night he slept soundly with the been given charge of this work, and under his jurisdiction the agricultural exhibits are sure to be very complete in all details. Mr. Merryman urged that the Sparks Grange enter the "booth display" at the fair. It has been understood that quite a few clubs in other parts of the county anticipate entering the booth contest, or it was voted unanimously that Sparks Grange enter the contest. Worthy Master D. S. Pearce was appointed as chairman to take charge of the booth display. Mr. W. B. Kemp, secretary of the fair, spoke on the Cattle and Horticul tural exhibits;, and asked that every one exhibit something in one or more of the various contests, and try to make this a banner year for the fair. Mr. Paul Goodwin, Mastter of the Baltimore County Pomona Grange, was present and spoke on the Grange work in the State, and told us that when the Pomona meets at Sparks August 12, we could expect at least one hundred visitors from the different Granges in the county OLD DINGBAT SEZ necklace in the room. At four o'clock next morning he was wakened by the bed again shaking. Other persons say they had similar experiences with the beads. Merely a Good Story. Wars produce many stories of fiction, some of which the oftener they are told the more they are believed to be true. The Civil war was no ex- v\ It is being reported around that | THE JEFFERSONIAN has but 50O subscribers, and those who .are .circulating .such -a statement claim that the fact was made known at a recent meeting of the board of directors of THE JEFFERSONIAN. No such statement was made. The report handed the directors ¦was compiled by an auditing company, and there was no mention of subscriptions other than the amount collected for the past six months. Those who are heralding the circulation of THE JEFFERSONIAN as being only 500 do so with malicious intent. If they desire to ascertain the correct number of subscribers it may be well that they refer to the established national newspaper direc-tories^ where they will And our sworn statement as to circulation. , The circulation of THE JEFFERSONIAN by far exceeds that of any other paper published in Baltimore County. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. QUERNSEY COW and CALF Also MILK SEPARATOR FOR SALE_________ ception to this rule, and the Story Of , Anyone wishing- A No. 1 COW entitle to the apple tree is one of these fictions j register, and a Cow Calf by a $5000 Bull will ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^™ do well by addressing ^^^^ The Taxpayers' League, with the aid of the new charter, has long since left this earth in quest of its "air castles" of perfect government. Figure it out for yourself. You will jthen find out that the new Charter form of government to be voted on this fall will be far more expensive. Senator Harding has promised that there will *be no one-man rule if he wins. How could there be with the Republican bosses "behind the throne?" It has been conclusively proven that Prohibition does, not prohibit. What we need is a temperance law with "teeth in it" instead of the drastic dry amendments. A Baltimore county farmer has boasted of raising lettuce with leaves two yards wide. Poor Eve would have scorned dress material of such unfashionable spread. It is ' doubtful if Senator Harding-will be as surprised on being officially notified of his nomination by the Republicans as many folks were on his selection at Chicago. Dame rumor has it that Albert A. Blakeney, the Republican candidate for Congress/ from the Second District, is a "dry" as an asbestos, cat after a frolic in "the hot place." The great war certainly started the ball of misfortune rolling. Now a coal shortage faces us. Life is just one d— thing after another and love two d— things after each other. Towson is the only place in the United States that Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, the draft evader, has not been seen since his escape from the military authorities some months ago. DESCRIBES-CONVENTION. based on a slight foundation of fact. There was, indeed, an apple orchard on one side of the hill occupied by the Confederate forces. Running diagonally up the hill was a wagon road, which, at one point, ran very near one of the trees, so that the wheels of the vehicles had on that side cut off the roots of the tree, leaving a little embankment. General Babcock, of my staff, reported to me that when he first met General Lee he was sitting on this embankment, with his feet in the road below, and his back resting against the tree. The story had no other foundation than that. Like many other good stories, it would be very good if it was only true.—Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant 7-17-lt Box X. Y. Z. Jeffersonian Office. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. THIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE, That the subscriber has obtained from the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County letters of Administration c. t. a. ancil-liary on the estate of FREDERICK A. O. SCHWARZ, late of said county, deceased. All persons having claims against the said estate are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, On or before the 19th day of January, 1921; they may otherwise by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate. Those indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment. Given under *n-y hand this) 16th day of July, 1920. WILLIAM MOORE, 7-17-5t* Administrator c. t. a. circulation Pledged as collateral for State or other deposits or bills payable . . Owned, unpledged. $25,000.00 9,000.00 1,710.00 Bonds and securities (other than U. S. securities pledged as collateral for State or other deposits (postal excluded) or bills payable $ 43,000.00 Securities, other than U. S. bonds (not including stocks), owned and unpledged . 155,672.27 Collateral trust and other notes of corporations issued for not less than one year nor more than three years' time 11,000.00 35,710.00 209,672.27 Stock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 per cent, of subscription) .................. Value of Banking House, owned and unincumbered. Furniture and Fixtures..... Real estate owned other than banking house ........... Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank ..'.....'... 26,927.71 Cash in vault and net amts. due from national banks. Net amounts due from banks, bankers, and trust companies in the United States. . Checks on banks located outside of city or town of reporting bank and other cash items ............... Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due from U. S. Treasurer ............. 1,250.00 1,500.00 8.200.00 800.00 1,400.00 8,710.90 2,452.93 2.13 Total..............'..$743,253.3S LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in........$ 25,000.00 Surplus Fund .....'......... 30,000.00 Undivided profits - 19,322.58 Less current expenses, interest and taxes paid ..... 18,200.53 1,122.05 1,000.00 9,000.00 12.00 358.87 Amount reserA'ed for all in terest accrued ........... Circulating notes outstanding ..................... 24,200.00 Net amount due to banks, bankers:, and trust companies in the United States Certified checks outstanding. Cashier's checks on own bank outstanding ........ Individual deposits subject to check....................154,668.77 Dividends unpaid .........' 750.00 Certificates of deposit (other than money borrowed)----- 338,829.43 Other time deposits ......'.. 126,312.26 Bills payable, other than with Federal Reserve Bank (including all obligations representing money borrowed other than »ediscounts . . . 25,000.00 Bills payable with Federal Reserve Bank ........... 7,000.00 Bills payable, other than with Federal Reserve Bnk 25,000.00 Bills payable with Federal Reserve Bank ............ 7,000.00 Total ...............$743,253.3? State of Maryland, County of Baltimore, ss: I, C. Evans Wiley, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. C. BV-A.NS WILEY, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 10th day of July, 1920. WILLIAM R. HTPKINS, Notary Public. Correct—Attest: W. P. WRIGHT, A. L. ANDERSON, THO'S. L. PARRISH, Directors. pOR SALE-TWO LATROBE STOVES In A. No. 1 Condition. Also one KITCHEN RANGE, in Ecellent Shape. Apply 11 Pennsylvania Ave., Towson, Md. ccoscosaooscoccacosoosccosccoocoosc^^ Judging from the number er ole straw hats on ther streets, ther guy -with er new one must feel gol durn uncomfortable. Howard & Lexington Streets NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Tilden Kelbaugh, Attorney-at-Law, Baltimore, Md. ORDER NISI. EUNICE D. SMITH, ET AL, vs. CHARLES CHENOWETH, ET AL. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY, IN EQUITY. TEWART&1 fa Connection With James McCreery'&i Co^New York. Baltimore, Maryland James M. Cox, the Detnocratic nominee for President, is not the same Cox which led Cox's Army to Washington some years ago, but in November he will head the Democratic Army on its march to Washington. (Continued from Page 1) were insructed for other candidates. This sentiment manifested itself later on when it became evident that Mc-Adoo could not be nominated and from then on the sentiment for Cox was undisguised. The great turning-point arrived when Congressman Carlin, of Virginia, withdrew the Palmer candidacy and the only question then was, where the Palmer vote would go. The Cox peoples claim that it would come to Cox was verified, and thereafter it was a Scramble between different delegations to see which could climb upon the band wagon first. Maryland's contribution tn Cox's success was conspicuous and important. From the fourth ballot, on which she gave him eight and one-half votes, until the final poll these eight and one-half stood firmly by and their allegiance never wavered. Their attitude unquestionably had a great deal to do with the final outcome. Her unfailing and unvarying response was always greeted with cheers and aided largely in maintaining the Cox morall and had a corresponding counter effect upon the opposition. Many states would come to Cox for a ballot or two and then go away, but the eight and one-half never for a moment faltered. The members of this group are very proud of their stand, and the considerable local fame which it brought them and are now organizing, and on our return -will incorporate the "Eight and One-Half Club." There isl undoubtedly a strong sentiment for -Cox. We picked it up all the way along ou our way out and are finding it intensified on our return. Without doubt the ticket is very strong and if the campaign is properly conducted should win. Cox is a strong, vigorous man, and is a great fighter, of the "never say die kind," and is capable nf making a hard j continuous fight. The three outstanding features of the convention as I saw them were: First—the complete triumph of the Wilsonian policies. Secondly—the defeat of Bryan in the rejection of every amendment offered to the platform. Bryan undoubtedly still has a hold upon the imaginations of many people, but it was impossible for him to secure recognition of his dictrines in this convention. Thirdly—the undeniable strength and tremendous power exerted by the women. This, probably, was the most striking feature of the convention. Whether the 19th amendment is ratified or not the women, as a powerful factor in American politics are here to stay and must be reckoned with. In bowing to what seems the inevitable let us hope that they will not disappoint the high expectations, which their proponents have held of | them and that, after all, equal suffrage Ther queen er Rumania sese, ter be er successful queen yer got ter smile all ther time. Gol durn it, so must er chorus gal; so queens Is not so peculiar in this yer smiling game. Them there cobble stones ain't been moved yit by ther Junited Railways and Electrical Con-t ran shun, and they's still down in between ther street car tracks on ther York Road, wedged in, in durn line shape, nit! See by ther papers that ther Junited Railways made more money during May than they ever did. Right yer in Towson-town they bin spend some of it ter give ther town er decent pavement between ther pesky ole car tracks. Towsontown folks thought they'd git er new station -when ther gol durn henhouse along ther Ma & Pa tracks done cought lire, but they ain't no gech good luck. Blame it ther dinky railroad 'fiscials didn't patch ther ole piano box up ter do fer :i couple dozen more years; Somebody se« they thought I was some kin ter yer Uncle Jake 'cause we done looked so much 'like. It's er durn insult. I ain't got no medals fer looks, but my, ain't Uncle Jake er homely buzzard! Clearance Sale of Men's Suits Summer Weights Also Spring Weights Greatly Reduced Ther ancient and quiet willage er Pikesville, "what was made famous er couple years ago by the Pikesville Whiskey what was made there, has got er traffic officer on ther Sabbath. If Pat Scott don't git runned over it'll be er surprise ter me. WHO IS THE MAN WHO WOULD ACCEPT THE MANAGEMENT OF BALTIMORE COUNTY, UNDER THE NEW CHARTER, AND BE SUBJECT TO REMOVAL AT ANY TIME BY THE FIFTEEN $150 A YEAR COUNCILMEN WANTED. Reliable Woman, white or colored, for General Housework. Apply in person. T. J. HOOVER, Riverbank Farm, 7-17-2t Loch Raven, Md. $ 21 ORDERED, By the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, this 16th day of July, 1920, that the sale made and reported by T. Tilden Kelbaugh, Trustee, for the sale of the property described in the proceedings in the above entitled cause be ratified and confirmed unless caus(e to the contrary thereof be shown Out or before the 9th day of August, 1920. Provided a copy nf this Order be inserted in some newspaper printed and published in Baltimore County, once in each of three successive weeks before the a'aid 9th day of August, 1920. The report states the amount of sale to be $2700.00. True Copy—Test: WILLIAM P. COLE, Clerk. True Copy—Test: ¦¦ Lawrence E. Ensor, Attorney-at-Law, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. THIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE, That "the subscriber has obtained from the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County, letters of Administration on the estate of KATE T. DOYLE, late of said county, deceased. All pex-sons having claims against the said estate are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, On or before the 19th day of January, 1921; they may otherwise by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate. Those indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment. Given under my hand this 16th day of July, 1920. CECILIA A. DOYLE, Administratrix, 7-17-5t* Texas, Md. James Kelley, Attorney-at-Law, Towson, Md. Willis E. Myers, Attorney-at-Law, Baltimore, Md. William P. Cole, Jr., Attorney-at-Law, Towson, Md. ¦§ TRUSTEES' SALE ^^^^_H —OF— B^^^^^ COUNTRY HOME CONSISTING OF ONE ACRE AND TWENTY-THREE SQUARE PERCHES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS, AND A TWO-STORY FRAME DWELL- ¦ ING WITH IMPROVEMENTS. ON PLEASANT HILL ROAD, ABOUT 1% MILES WEST OF THE REIS- TERSTOWN PIKE, FOURTH ELECTION DISTRICT OF BALTIMORE COUNTY. The undersigned Trustees, by virtue of a decree of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, will offer for sale upon the premises, On Monday, July 26, 1920, At 2 o'clock P. M., ALL THAT PIECE OR PARCEL OF GROUND, for many years the residence of the late John Shray, and fronting on the Pleasant Hill Road, lVs miles west of Reisterstown Turnpike Road, adjoining the lands of William Lutz, Wm. J. Hoffman and James M. Easter, and containing- ONE ACRE AND TWENTY-THREE SQUARE PERCHES OFLAND MORE OR LESS, which is in a high state of cultivation. The improvel consiS'ting4MjM|Mriji|i^UaT<">i-! v itbuildings. ^PB^^^^''^ This property as a wh i^^ff^ i ideal country residence, being the most desirable and attractive section of Baltimore County, and being within, ready and close access to street cars and steam railroad, via of a county road in splendid shape. ,. TERMS—All of the purchase price to be paid upon the ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, and the execution of a deed therefor, simultaneous with the date of ratification. Adjustment of taxes and expeenses to be made to date of sale. A deposit of $200.00 at the time f sale will be required. Premises are open for inspection and possession can be given upon transfer. The property being in close proximity of Owings Mills Postottice, conveyances will be available at Pleasant Hill at 1 P. M. to meet those desiring to attend the s(ale. JAMES KELLEY, WILLIS E. MYERS, WILLIAMP. COLE, JR., ^MMMM Trustees. BUTLER, Auctioneer. WILLIAM P-g*-NOTICE—The above is the same in the property incorrectly advertised in the publication of this paper on July 3rd and 10th, as being located on Soldiers Delight Road Frank Zouck. 7-3-lt _^ and near the farm of Watson E. Sherwood, Attorney-at-Law .Continental Building, Baltimore. ORDER NISI. .50 FRANCIS D. REESE, ET AL, vs. JOHN B. REESE, ET AL. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BAL-8 j TIMORE COUNTY, IN EQUITY. O! ORDERED, By the Crcuit Court for V Baltimore County, this 29th day of 18 June, 1920, that the sale made and X' reported by Francis D. Reese and 8" Charles A. Reese, Trustee, for the sale of the property described in the proceedings in the above entitled cause be ratified and confirmed, unless cause »to the contrary thereof be shown On or before the 26th day of July, ^M 1920. Provided a copy of this order be inserted in some newspaper printed and published in Baltimore County, once in each of three successive weeks before the said 26th day of July, 1920. The report states the amount of sale to be $3,160.00. WILLIAM P. COLE, Clerk. Smart models fer young men and plain models for their more conservative brothers; large selection of materials. Thosej [who 1 choose^ earlyjvvill choose wisely [while^thei choosing! is? gccd.lB M. ___^-^*L... «¦ *—¦* a*'. Masai a».tf T '(SecondlFloor, [Stewart&[Co.) Ct£fcr» True Copy-Test ^am r ^^ clerk> 7-3-4t John G. Rogers, Attorney-at-Law, EUicott City, Md. > ORPHANS' COURT NISI ORDER. IN THE ORPHANS' COURT OF BALTIMORE COUNTY, ORDERED, By the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County, this 30th day of June, 1920, that the sale of the Real Estate of Mary M. Kolder, deceased, made by Mary E. McDonald, Executrix of the last will and testament of the said deceased, and this day reported to this Court by the said Executrix be ratified and confirmed, unless cause be shown to the contrary On or before the 26th day of July, 1920. Provided a copy of this order be inserted in some weekly newspaper, printed and published in Baltimore County, once in each of three successive weeks, before the said 26th day of July, 1920. The report states the amount of sales to be $3,000.00. True Copy—Test: WILLIAM J. PEACH, Register of Wills for Baltimore County. JAMES B. BENTZ, JOHN HOFF, LUTHER M. B. WILLIAMS, 7-3-4t. Judges. , «r ryland State Archives mdsa_sc3410_1_63-0206.jpg |