Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

mdsa_sc3410_1_81-0074

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Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

mdsa_sc3410_1_81-0074

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THE JEFFERSONIAN, TOWSON, MARYLAND Saturday, July 26, 1924^-Page 3 JOHN HURWIG BURIED IX OAK-LAWN CEMETERY. Funeral services for John Hur-~wig, seventy-eight, of Overlea, who died at his home, 14 West Maple avenue, were held. Burial was in Oaklawn Cemetery. V Y T Y T t X 20^ OFF on White Shoes & Sandals Also on Some Specials (July 28-29-30-31 only) I at I The Boot Shop WM. F. ORTH 529 York Road ?*? Opposite Towson Hotel TOWSON, MD. I DRESS SHOES i WORK SHOES Y RUBBERS, Etc. FUNERAL OF DROWNING VICTIM HELD. Funeral services for James E. Heinzenerger, thirty-one, 334 South Fulton avenue, Baltimore city, who was drowned while bathing in Stony Creek, were conducted from his residence by the Rev. John C. Bowers, of Salem Lutheran Church, Ca-tonsville. Burial • was in Western Cemetery. Mr, Heinzenberger is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Heingenberger; three brothers, L. A., Charles H. and Arthur E. Heinzenberger, and two sisters, Mrs. Katherine Turner and Miss Lulu M. Heinzenberger. Get the "g-as" or oil you like best at Bevans Service Station. We carry every well-known make sold. SEVAN'S Service Station York Road c Washington Av. TOWSON, MD. Buy where you get SERVICE. +***+****«***********«+*44 «************************< TROOPERS MAY GO TO CAMP MINUS "NAGS," FOR "TRANSPORT" HAS NO ROOM FOR THEM Cavalry And Artillery Units Will Embark For Virginia Beach August Second—Will No Doubt Maneuvre With Hired "Plugs." Whether to give their own horses an ocean trip or to make war horses of the livery stable nags down in Virginia, now is worrying Generals, Colonels, Majors, Captains and Lieutenants of the calvary and artillery units with headquarters at Pikesville before they embark for their summer camp at Virginia Beach. In the military stables of Maryland a score or more of gallant steeds now chew their hay hoping, if horses ever hoped, soon to taste the sweet salt breezes of the bay and the visit the unknown lands around Cape Charles. It will cost the State only $10 each to take them down to Virginia Beach and bring them back on the steamer, while if the officers who must have horses hire them in Virginia, it will cost $2.50 per day per horse for about two weeks. Sincere Service When Death Visits Your Home Let Us Relieve You Of All The Details of The Funeral. JOHN BURNS' SONS TOWSON, MD. MACCAR 1 to 5 Tons The Truck of Continuous Service For reference we will refer you to a few people with a reputation, such as Dennis Carter, H. T. Campbell & Son, Miles Carroll, E. F. Murray, W. W. Boyce, H. G. Pocock, R. M. Lee, Walter Ford, John Lyneh, Morris Ward, Frank Harr, Kenny & Zink. MACCAR MOTOR TRUCK CO., JAMES RITTENHOUSE, Jr., President 20-26 S. Paca Street, Baltimore, Md. FOX'K OLD STABLES BHHH&fBni «¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ "DON'T RUN PHONE THE HERGENRATHER STORES Hergenrather Drug Co. Towson 39 Your Prescription Store Your prescriptions carefully filled by Registered Pharmacists Hergenrather's GIFT STORE Towson 202 - 427 Going to the Seaside ? BATHING SUITS Bathing Caps and Slippers Sporting Goods and Sweaters For Your Vacation Needs Delicious Sodas and Sundaes What Is Vacation Without Good Books? The Latest Popular Copyrights 75 Cents. KODAKS AND FILMS, WHITMAN'S CANDY Telephone us your needs, we deliver the goods «+*+*******++***********?* THINK Something more is expected from you than to just carry INSURANCE. You must consider the trouble your loved ones are going to have to collect it without worry or delay. This Company has established a reputation, during its forty years of business as being THE PROMPT PAYING COMPANY. The Home Friendly Insurance Co. 1056-28 LINDEN AVENUE Baltimore, Md. 2500 TONS Galvanized Flat and Corrugated Sheets For Garages and Barns WM. A. CONWAY 620-628 Forrest Street Cheapest House In Baltimort PHONE VERNON 2751-1999 We Deliver Everywhere 1 m m m m m m m m m m m m u * Announcing The Appointment ... of... The Automotive Service Company As distributors in this territory for the Service Motors, Inc., Wabash, Ind., manufacturers of Service Trucks. Service Trucks are designed with a thorough understanding of truck-operating conditions. They are built to do the work you will require of them with the minimum of attention or care. They are designed for continuous service under the most exacting conditions. All the valuable features of truck design that our twelve years of specialization in truck-building have developed are embodied in the Service Trucks of today. Experimental construction is rigidly excluded until it is unquestionably perfected and proved. Service Trucks, while not the highest priced trucks made, are not sold at a low price. If they were, they could not be good, but they are positively the lowest price and cheapest truck in the end, by reason of their long life, comparatively light upkeep expense and reasonable price on repair parts, and their ability to give the greatest ton mileage for the least cost. MODELS: li/4-Ton, iy2-Ton, 2-Ton, 3-Ton, 4-Ton, 5-Ton. The Automotive Service Company Distributors CENTRE STREET AT FALLSWAY A Full Line Of Parts In Stock. Repairs At Moderate Prices. VErnon 4587 ¦ a m MOTOR TRUCKS m •.¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦^¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦^¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦(¦¦»ai! Thus it would seem certain that the Baltimore war horses soon will be bragging about how they didn't get seasick. But there is one drawback. This is the fact, that there won't be room for them on Maryland's "war transport." The transport will leave from the Old Bay Line docks August 2 and 3, and each time it can carry only 750 men. j Not another man or horse can be permitted aboard; this is the limit permitted by the steamboat inspectors, who are taking no chances on another "Three Rivers" disaster. So it looks as though the fighting nags of Maryland are out of luck. Incidentally, the famous Finne-gan who was "off again" and "on again" so often will seem like a stationary washtub compared to the Maryland guardsmen by the time they have made the trip to camp and back again. The Frederick men in Company A, First Regiment, for instance, will take their equipment and go by trucks to the depot in Frederick to take the train for Baltimore. In Baltimore they will debark at Camden Station, unload equipment and take trucks to the Old Bay Line dock, get aboard the steamer, unload at Norfolk, get aboard more trucks to the trains that go to Virginia Beach, unload at Virginia Beach, and get aboard more trucks to get to the camp site. Coming home they must do it all over again;* By the time they reach home again they will have loaded and unloaded themselves and their equipment 20 times to and from trucks, boats and trains. It is expected to be one of the most enjoyable camps in the history of the Maryland National Guard. Brigade Headquarters, with Adjt.-Gen. Milton A. Reckord, Major Thos. F. McNicholas and other staff officers, will embark August 1. Next day the First Regiment men from Western Maryland will sail from Baltimore, and the following day the Fifth Regiment and other units from Baltimore will go. This will be the first time in many years the guardsmen have traveled to camp by water. It will be a small imitation of the embarkation for France, without its dangers. NEGRO MISCALCULATES HIS PLEETNESS OF FOOT. Floyd Harvey, colored, of Towson, miscaalculated his fleetness of foot when he struck Constable Samuel C. Grason, of Towson, on last Saturday and attempted to escape after having been placed under arrest on the charge of assault. Mr. Grason called on him to stop, and when he did not do so, fired his pistol twice, and Harvey was wounded in the left leg. The negro was take nto Providence Hospital. He was charged with assaulting Cora Custic, colored. MISS HELEN ADAMS WEDS JAMES K. CULLEN. SPEEDER FINED $10 AND COSTS. Mervin Hawkins, of Cockeysville, was fineed $10 and costs at the Ca-tonsville Police Station on the charge of speeding. RITES FOR MRS. E. P. BELL HELD. Funeral services for Mrs. E. P. Bell, 73, widow of Samuel J. Bell, who died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Andrew I. Grabus, Belair road and Kolb avenue, Raspeburg, were held. Burial was in Baltimore Cemetery. ISHIDA, JAP MURDERER, MUST STAY IN ASYLUM, SAYS RITCHIE. Dr. Norboru Ishida, under a life sentence for the murder of Dr. Geo. B. Wolff at the Sheppard-Pratt Hospital, Towson, five years ago, and for whom a pardon has been asked, will remain at Spring Grove State Hospital for the Insane, Catonsville, another six months, Gov. Ritchie announced. Miss Helen Margaret Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Adams, East Green street, Connells-ville, Pa., and James K. Cullen, Baltimore attorney, son of Mrs. Hor-tense Cullen and the late Dr. James K. Cullen, of Catonsville, were married at the personage of Second Presbyterian Church, Washington, Pa., according to announcement. The bride is a graduate of Con-nellsville High School; Lasell Seminary, Auburndale, Mass., and Randolph-Macon College, Lynchburg, Va. Mr. Cullen is a graduate of Baltimore City College. Johns Hopkins University and Harvard Law School. HARRISONVILLE WOMAN FALLS FROM BED—BREAKS SHOULDER. HER Her left shoulder fractured when she fell whil standing on a bed at her home on the McDonogh road near Harrisonville, Mrs. Francis X. Jenkins was taken to Mercy Hospital, Baltimore. The accident occurred as she was lifting her grandson to reach a trapdoor leading to an attic. CRANE'S Is The Place To Go. 2151E. Baltimore'St. BALTIMORE, MD. >H,KwKMKH>M>4HK^'>