Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

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Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

mdsa_sc3410_1_81-0862

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THE JE^FERSONIAN Baltimore County's Only Sunday Newspaper TOWSON, MARYLAND Maryland Journal, Established 1865 Baltimore County Democrat, Est. 1885 The 31 ew Era, Established.......1913 Consolidated with THE JEFFERSONIAN Published Every Week By The Jefflersonian Printing & Publishing Co., Inc. Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Post Office, Baltimore, Md. Subscription $1.50 Per Year. In Advance. Payable Single Copies, 5 Cents, For Sale At The Following Newsdealers In Baltiomore, County. Court Drug Co. - - Towson Bergenrather's Drug Store - Towson C. H. Michael's - - Reisterstown Henry Crumlich - - Dundalk Mrs. Davis', P. O. Building, Pikesville A. C. Davis - - Catonsville Rudolph Deihlman's Store, Catonsville H. T. Cooper's Store - Owings Mills Frank Zlto's Store - Pikesville SAT., JANUARY 19, 1924 ?SOMETHING ROTTEN IN DENMARK." To the average citizen it seems impossible that a human tiger, such as Jack Hart has proven himself to be, with- -*¦ record for crime nationwide, should have the opportunity, so to speak, to walk from a life-term in the Maryland Penitentiary, to liberty. There have been too many escapes from the Penitentiary in the last few years, and the public has ample grounds for asking whether or not the time has arrived for a new order of things at the "Pen." Explanations at this time are farfetched—as for Hart, there was nothing in his long record of crime or while behind prison walls, to even suggest that he would not bear close watching, and his recent previous attempt to escape should have been a warning to Penitentiary officials to "sit up and take notice." Not heeding this, nor looking at the fact squarely in the face that in recent years there have been at least half a dozen escapes and near escapes, Hart and the convict who escaped with him "broke out" with no interference whatever. Administration of prisons should not be hampered by the reform humanitarian movement, which hajf sought to make angels of hard-boiled crooks and desperadoes. Officials entrusted with the custody of such characters, whose imprisonment is necessary for the safety of society, should realize that men like Hart have powerful friends outside, and can command men, money and assistance, hence there should be no let-up in the vigilance to hold them. The whole affair casts a stain upon the State of Maryland, and we cannot help but say that "there is something rotten in Denmark." their children in these habits of spending are their very worst enemies and the time will come when the children will realize it and censure them for it. The minds of little children are tender and impressionable and if parents will take them in time and show them the benefits of thrift and the evil consequences of extravagances, they would have no difficulty in the great majority of cases in directing them in the right direction, but the great trouble is with the parents; they do not take the time or they haven't the patience, and they just permit their children to drift—and the drift in such cases is always in the wrong direction and to the detriment of the child and his future. Teach the child to save; open a bank account for them, add a little to it from time to time yourself and show them how it grows, and they will early begin to see the importance of saving and you will have no further difficulty. We have never, known a child who once started a savings bank account and who had the proper encouragement at home who ever drew it out, but on the contrary was always anxious to add to it. Instruct them, that a dime a day saved, means $36.50 at the end of the year and that a dime a day spent for things that do them no good, means nothing at the end of the year—and what a difference? Parents, you have a great responsibility; the future of your children depends upon the careful training you give them in their impressionable years. Do you feel that you have done your full duty? If not, start at once, and when they arrive at maturity, they will honor and respect you the more for it, but for goodness sake don't permit them to drift. hundreds were drowned, for before he had reached Johnstown some 15 miles away, the dam had broken and a great flood of water was thundering down the canyon carrying everything before it. There is an anology between this incident and the manner in which socialism is trying* to gain a foothold in this country. Government ownership of the banks, of the railroads, of public utilities, insurance, coal mines and oil lands, sponsored as "reforms" by a certain class of politicians masked behind a party name so commonized as to allay suspicion and attract support, is nothing short of unadulterated socialism. These exploiters of public credulity proceed on the theory that like the little children making mud pies, the people, unconscious of the danger, will take no notice of what is really the object of these "reform" movements, will not, like the trained engineer, comprehend the danger, but will fall blindly into the trap. This is a dark-lantern method of which the public should beware. with ybb- mi® TO83 Still? &L®KIg= THE ADVANTAGES OP AMERICA. SPEAKING OP TRAMPS. ARE WE SPOILING OUR CHILDREN? ARE AVE MAKING THEM SPENDTHRIFTS? This is a serious question; are we, by example and precept, training our children into habits of thrift and economy, or are we permitting them to drift into wastefulness and extravagance. The signs of the times are not at all favorable, and we fear that the coming generations will look upon thrift as a thing of the past, that they have outgrown. A half century ago, a nickel was a lot of money to a child, and if it was spent, it went a penny at a time and covered as large a space of time as possible. Today a child in like circumstances expects, as a matter of course, enough each day to purchase an ice cream cone and admit them to the movies, and they have, as a rule, no inclination to save. As they grow older their wants will increase, and if they are encouraged in their wasteful habits There used to be a time, and not so long ago either, that a tramp or hobo as the "adventurer of the road" might be termed, stopped in to get his "hand out," but since the war there have been but few to show their faces in Baltimore County. In a recent book by Nels Anderson called "The Hobo," the author answers the question "What is a tramp?" He makes this distinction : "Well, now that you've asked me I'll tell you. The hobo works and wanders, the tramp dreams, and the bum drinks and wanders." The book is an interesting and illuminating study of the "homeless man," and asserts some facts that throw light upon the life of these wanderers. "The great majority of homeless men in this country are native-born Americans. "They are extensive readers. Jack London is their favorite novelist. "As a companion piece to the immortal 'Why Girls Leave Home,' here are the reasons why men leave home: seasonal work and unemployment; industrial inadequacy; defects of personality; crises in the life of the person; racial or national discrimination, and wanderlust. "The occupations that select out of the foot-loose males in our population the most restless types are: agricultural or crop-moving, building and construction work, fishing, sheep-shearing, ice-harvesting, and lumbering." Hoboism is intelligently treated as a national problem, which it undoubtedly is; but the element iof circumstance that enters into the tramp's life reveals the fact that in part he is a product of social and economic conditions, and by no means entirely responsible for the life into which he has drifted. He has a praiseworthy side to his life, and the author gives him due credit for his deserts. "The American hobo has been a great pioneer. New mining camps, oil booms, the building of a town in a few weeks ,or any mushroom development utilizes a great many transcient workers. After a flood, a fire, or an earthquake, there is a great demand for labor. The migratory worker is always ready to respond. It is his life, in which he finds variety and experience, and, last but not least, something to talk about." The one thing above all others that has given modern conveniences to the common everyday American citizen has been the character of our government which encouraged the individual of enterprise to go ahead and develop industries unhampered by stifling interference and official control such as experienced in other nations. The following facts speak for themselves and are a testimonial as to the advantage of the American system contrasted with methods which discourage private initiative. The use of manufactured gas in Great Britain, where the industry was born a century and a quarter ago, is steadily increasing and last year totaled 232,600,000,000 cubic feet, or 5524 cubic feet per capita on a population basis of 42,000,000. New York State alone, where first manufactured gas company was established in 1823, has developed a per capita use of gas nearly double this amount, with an estimated production this year of approximately 90 billion cubic feet. The production of electrical energy in Great Britain last year reached (By D. F.) "QUESTIONS." Where can a man buy a cap for his knee? Or a key for a lock of "his hair? Can hi seyes be called an academy Because there are pupils there? In the crown of hi shead what gems are set? Who travels the bridge of his nose? Can he use when shingling the roof of his mouth The nails on the end of his toes? What does he raise from the slip of hi stongue? Who plays on the drums of his ears? And who can tell the cut and style Of the coat his stomach wears? Can the crook of his elbow be sent to jail? And if so, what did it do? How does he sharpen his shoulder blades? I'll be hanged if Iknow—do you? "ANSWERS" He can go to the Capitol t obuy his cap, To Key West to buy a key; His eyes would not be an academy, For there are two of them, you see. Brains are the gems his crown contains, Sweat travels the bridge of his nose; They won't do to shingle the roof of his mouth, For there are no heads on the nails of his toes. The Devil is raised by the slip of his tongue, His ear drums his wife plays in pairs; His hospital bill tells the style and cut Of the coat his stomach wears. Of course, the crook can be sent to jail, Because it raised el with bow; His shoulder blades are sharpened with wit We loan to him, you know. 'BLUE BIRDS" IN SCHOOL—EDUCATIONAL "SHACKS" MADE ATTRACTIVE. PROFANITY. The truck driver was indulging in a fit of temper in which he indulged in language that shocks a lady passing by. She regarded him high total of 5,738,V00,000 kilo-()repr0vingly as she demanded: My man, where did you learn such language?" "Where did I learn it?" he replied. "I didn't learn it; it's a gift." watt hours, whereas New York State this year will use approximately 9,-000,000,000 kilowatt hours, or nearly 800 kilowatt hours fo reach person in the State, as against 134 kilowatt hours for each of the 42,000,-000 persons in Great Britain. When it comes to telephones, there is one for every 13 people in the nation, something unheard of in any other country in the world. Congress may be deadlocked, but it isn't lockjawed. The reason swelled heads never burst is because that kind have thick skulls. Separating whisky and politics doesn't seem to have improved either of them. The Soviet regime may be losing some of its redness, but it's still far from the pink of perfection. ANOTHER ARMY CONTRACTOR. There are two things better than working for yourrself. Dodging work altogether, and having somebody else do it for you. The advance of a division under fire in th enone-too-late war had been halted and orders were given to dig in. Earth began to fly ex-(cept at one point where, behind a natural mound, the top of a doughboy's head was to be seen, while cig-aret smoke curled lazily upward. "Dig in! Dig in!" yelled a lieutenant on a tour of inspection. "Hush," replied the (soldier reproachfully. "Don't disturb my contractor." Peering over the edge of the mound, the Lieutenant saw a German soldier digging away as if his life depended on it—which it did— only a few inches from the end of the doughboy's rifle. Evidently there's something behind the belligerent attitude of Premier Poincare. Possibly it's France. THE JOHNSTOWN FLOOD AND SOCIALISM. It is recalled of the Johnstown flood, which some years ago wiped out a Pennsylvania city almost in the twinkling of an eye, that children attending a picnic near by unconscious of the danger were amusing themselves, using the stream trickling from a crevice in the dam impounding the water ,to make "mud pies." A civil engineer passing by observed the leak in the dam and turned pale. His trained mind quickly comprehended the danger. Mounting a horse he rode the peril-there can be but one ending, thesis trail through the gorge warning people to flee for their life. Many heeded the warning and escaped, but pitiful life of a spendthrift. Parents who passively encourage The check boy may seem a pirate, but just think what it will cost those whose hats are in the ring! Thus far we have failed to discover the parts of the world that the meek have inherited. This must be a pretty good country when it is only the minorities that are kicking. HOW ABOUT THIS? There are 3 65 days in the year. You sleep eight hours per day, which makes 122 days, subtract 122 from 365, equals 243. You have eight hours recreation each day, which makes 122 days. Subtract from 243 equals 121. There are 52 Sundays that .you don't work, which leaves a balance of 6 9 days. You have 52 Saturday afternoons off, or 26 days subtracted from 69, equals 43. You have one hour for lunch each day, or 16 days from 43 days, equals 27 days . Then you have two weeks vacation, or fourteen days from 27, equals 13. Now deduct the 12 holidays, that leaves one day, and that's Armistice day and you don't work. It is almost impossible for Congress to keep its nose on the grindstone while keeping its ear on the ground. We have a liberal party in America. He is the gentleman who handles the expenditure of the public's money. It is suggested that Oklahoma be given back to the Indians, but that won't do. We are trying to civilize the Indians. Scientists now say the next war will be fought with electricity, which bears out the popular belief that it will be the most shocking of all. A news story says Germany is bordering on insanity, but doesn't tell whether it is her Eastern or Western border. A census of the motor-cars in Switzerland, shows an increase of four thousand since last year. The High Alps, however are still comparatively safe for pedestrians. A CAUS EPOR ALARM. Dear little Johnnie's Aunt Emma, a lady of most generous build, had come for a visit and dear little Johnnie had been gazing at her raptly for some minutes. Finally he could stand it no longer. "Mamma," he cried, "does Santa Claus fill everybody's stocking?" "Of course, dear," replied his mother in some surprise. "Grown-up people's too?" "Yes, dear." "Well," returned Johnnie doubtfully, but as one clings to a shred hope, "I hope he gets to mine first." THE REAL QUESTION. "Do you know that you havn't kissed me for six weeks?" Prof. (who is absent-minded) — "Good heavens, who have I been kissing then?" AUTO CONFISCATED. (Continued from Page 1) of them, he says, drove the car he had, which was the property of Abe Egoin, 20 North Chester street, Baltimore City, South on the Philadelphia road. The third man jumped into the car of the bandits and followed the stolen machine. Barrett, dazed by the attack, was picked up by Simon Flaxman, Baltimore City, and taken to his home. The machine has not been recovered. (Continued from Page 1) plished there. Going to Ohio, I began inquiring at Chillicothe: "What is in Greenfield?" I said. "Well, principally," the young man whom I asked replied, "there is the school." This was the answer of the various people I accosted on the train and in the little town itself. A man of 60, who sold me my breakfast in Greenfield, said, "Ed McClain built the school because he thinks folks ought to have a good time, without going to the devil for it. That's Ed. I knew him when he was a bey working in his father's harness shop. All the big rise in the world he's got ain't spoiled him none. He likes folks as much as ever he did. He says to me "come on in; let's have a talk," just as he always used to. After I had gone through the Greenfield school from top to bottom, I hunted up "Ed" MoClain, and was told "come on in; let's have a talk." I put up to him squarely the question, "Who asked you to give this school?" "Nobody." "How'd you happen to think of it?" "I wanted to give our folks something for a happy life. I thought of a church, a park, a library, a Y. M. C. A., and I concluded that a school would bring most happiness to the largest number for the greatest length of time." For hours I had been within the walls of the institution which is this citizen's idea of a contribution to happiness. I had purposely gone there first to get impressions unfavored by any suggestion as to what the school was intended to do. The happy atmosphere is there. You can't escape it. All the things which the State of Ohio says a public school should do are being done. Around them and in then is an influence of enjoyment, refinement, courtesy, and cheer that makes one want to linger. Think of an art gallery of 165 master masterpieces in a public school in a town of 5,000, every picture and sculpture with an artistic label under it. Think of the remarkable intelligence that decorates the woodshop, the forge-room, the laboratories, with paintings related to the activities going on there: Walter Shirlaw's 'Chemistry,' and 'Physics,' 'Abbey's Spirit of Vulcan,' and 'Science,' Taylor's 'Village Blacksmith.' In the cafeteria is Gutman's 'The Breakfast' and Fosberry's 'Supper.' Mrs. McClain told Harris, the school superintendent, she wanted the rooms 'brightened and adorned with the best." They called in Theodore Dillaway, director of art in the public schools of Boston. The result is a collection so chosen and so distributed as to insinuate the influence of art everywhere. Duckworth, the principal, says they use the different pictures as themes for the children to write about. Also the school gives weekly receptions .to the public at which motion-picture shows, musical programs, recitals on the pipe-organ, lectures, debates, and other entertainments are offered, so that the influence of the art collection reaches a hundred times as far as if it were in a separate institution. The are motive does not end with this collection. The grounds disclose it as do the greeneries in the corridors, the decorated tiles at the drinking-fountains, the beautiful motto panels on the outside walls. The silent tuition of beauty has been secured everywhere. Harris, the school superintendent, says this was the idea of the donor, McClain. McClain says Harris is responsible for it. Duckworth says both of them and Mrs. McClain did it." An amazing thing is the condition of the plant today. "For eight years continued use of it. You would think it was opened yesterday. Not a scratch is visible on the furniture. You could eat off the floor. The school head said: "Everybody mentions it. I knew these children would take care of what you give them. Some cautious people feared it was wrong to surround our youth with what they called luxuries. We decorate lavishly our Court-houses, where lawyers and criminals go; we make very elegant capitols for our lawmakers; why not put beauty around those who are more plastic and susceptible to its influence? Don't you know how clever the Devil is to draw youth to his resorts with music, light, and beautiful surroundings? Why should the schoolmaster be expected to lure our boys and girls to the cold comfort pf study in a barn? If you believe in America, put your belief into shape. If the Fourth of July orations about education being, as Lincoln said, the first consideration of the American people, mean anything, let's show it. Let's not have the movie theatre and the dance-hall the handsomest houses in the town, let's not put all our beauty into the bank building; houses in the town, let's no tput all but let's make the church and the school the handsomest, happiest assets we have. You say you found our children remarkably courteous and very careful of the building. They are more than that; the influence of their surroundings gets into their minds and awakens their powers. They walk away with the State prizes in writing, in speaking, and in athletics. Name me any excellence you think public schools ought to produce, and you'll find you'll get more of it from a school beautifully housed than from the same school in a dreary barrack. Don't you make any mistake about that." The return which may be expected on the investment is dividends in the shape of young men and women better prepared to do an American's duty to his country and to maintain a clean, honest, industrious, happy community. But Greenfield is not the only community so constituted for happiness. In Denver, William Smiley told me they are giving the coming citi- zen a concrete lesson in the duty of happiness by teaching the school school children how the beauty of that city grew because of the vision and labor of its Mayor, Robert Speer. The school libraries feature a famous address by him: "Give while you live." You may hear a youngster repeating the words of their late citizen: "Future monuments will be erected to men for keeping their fellows out of war, not for leading them into battle; nor lifting burdens, not for gathering gold; not for inciting conquests for gain and greed, but for starting waves of happiness. "Chicago, for twenty-nine years, has had a Public School Art Society of between 500 and 600 members, spending from a thousand to four thousand dollars a year, depending on contributions, for the purpose of putting pictures in schools. ({This association has titlted at least one ancient stupidity. In 1301 old men grew conscious of a desire for broken sculpture and for pictures of ruins. By 1890 this taste had so penetrated the schoolmaster that when any one gave him money for school decoration he went out and bought an armless statue or a picture of a crumbling colosseum. In 1894 the census taken by the Chicago women showed that the total amount of school children voluntarily looking at these objects was 0. They set about buying artistic representations of life, story, and history, with color and action. They buy and present a hundred or so framed pictures a year. They own fifty pictures which they lend for stated periods. They negotiate the placing of ten loan collections belonging to generous Chicagoans. They encourage the location of mural paintings in schools. Miss Lucy Silk told me the plain purpose of the club is the promotion of happiness. "You can accomplish this in your town. All you have to do is to make yourself into a committee and borrow from this citizen and that the use of a framed picture to hang for a time in a school-room. Nine out of every ten men are glad to have some one see their pictures. Nine out of ten agree that schools should be made alluring. You can do this in Neodesha, Kansas, or in Lowell, Massachusetts. You do not have to have a Mrs. E. H. Harriman, who decorated the Washington Irving High School. You do need to let some of the spirit which is in you as well as in her manifest itself in helping a school make the pursuit of happiness a business. Eugene Nolen, thirty-six years a teacher in Fitchburg, gives $1,000 to buy ob-ects of artistic beauty for the happiness of the school children. A thousand dollars from a public school teacher is more from him than several millions from some American fortunates." NEW ADVERTISEMENT Noah E. Offutt, Attorney-at-Lav^ son, Maryland. ORDER OP PUBLICATION. CARRIE M. LARKS, CHARLES LARKS, her husband; SAMUEL WINDER, MARY M. WINDER, hil wife; ALICE E. LEE, ZACK LEE, her husband; ELLA SMITH, JOHN O. SMITH, her husband; MART L. DAVENPORT, OSCAR DAVENPORT, her husband. vs. BENJAMIN H. WINDER, MARY WINDER, his wife; AMANDA E. FOOTE infant; MORRIS FOOT, her husband; JANIE WATERS, JOHN WATERS, her husband; JOHN J. WINDER, GERTRUDE WINDER, his wife. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY, IN EQUITY. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS William B. Smith and G. Clem Graetzel, Attorneys, Baltimore, Md. ORDER NISI. THERESA M. BUCHER, vs. GEORGE JANSSEN. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY, IN EQUITY. ORDERED, By the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, this 17th day of January, 1924, that the sale made and reported by William B. Smith and G. Clem Graetzel, trustees, for the sale of the property described in the proceedings in the above entitled cause )e ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown, On or before the 11th day of February, 1924, Provided a copy of this Order be in-,erted in some newspaper printed and published in Baltimore County, once in each of three successive weeks before the said 11th day of February, 1924. The report states the amount of sale to be $5,111.11. WILLIAM P. COLE, Clerk. True Copy—Test: WILLIAM P. COLE, Clerk. Jan. 19-26-Feg. 2-9 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. THIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE, That the subscribers have obtained from the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County ters of Administration on the estate of CHARLES OWEN BURTON, 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 subscribers, On or before the 27th day of July, 1924, 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 our hands this 16th day of January, 1924. C. WALTER BURTON, RAYMOND H. BURTON, Administrators. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2-9* The object of this suit is to procure a decree for the sale of certain real estate lying in Baltimore County, in the State of Maryland, of which Carrie B. Winder, late of Baltimore County, was seized and possessed, at the time of her death. The bill states that Carrie B. Winder, late of Baltimore County, was in her life-time, and at the time of her death seized and possessed, in fee simple, of a tract of land located at Foote's Hill, and which is more particularly described in a deed from John L. Foote and Alberta Foote, his wife, to Carrie B. Winder, dated May 12th, 1906, and recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore County, in Liber W. P. C. No. 298, folio 183, etc., the original deed being filed with said bill. That being so seized, the said Carrie B. Winder, departed this life intestate, on the .... day of November, 1922, leaving no husband surviving her, and the following children: Benjamin H. Winder, whose wife is Mary Winder; Ella Smith, whose husband is John O. Smith; Samuel H. Winder, whose wife is Mary M. Winder; Carrie M. Larks, whose husband is Charles M. Larks; Mary Lula Davenport, whose husband is Oscar Davenport; Alice Lee, whose husband is Zack Lee; Amanda L. Foote, a minor, whose husband is Morris Foote, all of whom except Amanda L. Foote, are of full age, and reside in Baltimore County, State of Maryland. John J. Winder, whose wife is Gertrude Winder, both of whom are of full age and reside in Baltimore City. And Janie Waters, whose husband is John Waters, both of whom are of full age, are non-residents, and reside in Philadelphia, State of Pennsylvania. That the personal estate is more than sufficient to pay all debt of said deceased. That a partition of said real estate, in kind, cannot be made without loss or injury to those entitled thereto. That a decree may be passed by this Honorable Court, appointing a Trustee or Trustees, to make sale of the said property, in order that a distribution may be made among those entitled thereto. It is thereupon this 17th day of January, 1924, ordered by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in Equity, that the Plaintiffs, by causing a copy of this order, to be inserted in some newspaper published in Baltimore County, once in each of four successive weeks before the 18th day of February, 1924, give notice to the said absent Defendants of the object and substance of this bill, warning them to be, and appear in this Court, in person or by Solicitor, On or before the 4th day of March, 1924, next, to show cause, if any they have, why a decree ought not be passed as prayed. WILLIAM P. COLE, Clerk. True Copy—Test: WILLIAM P. COLE, Clerk. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2-9-16 Gwynn Nelson, Attorney-at-Law, Towson, Maryland. 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. on the estate of RUTH ANN WARFIELD, late of said county, jfleceaseR. AH persons having claim's against thte said estate are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, On or before the 27th day of July, 1924, 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 14th day of January, 1924. BEULAH D. SELLMAN, Administratrix, c. t. a., Randallstown, Md. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2-9 Gwynn Nelson, Attorney-at-Law, Towson, Maryland. 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 EMILY GOSNELL, late of said county, deceased. All per- ' 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 27th day of July, 1924, 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 14th day of January, 1924. BERNARD GO'S NE Li Admi W. Herbert Mellor, Attorney-at-Law, Ellicott City, Md. 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 | ARTHUR B. GRAHAM, 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 27th day of July, 1924, 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 15th day of January, 1924. NELLIE L. GRAHAM, Administratrix, V Ellicott City, Md. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2-9* Tolle, Attorney, 'S!i Street, Baltimore, Md. WANTED. TRAINED MAIL POINTER DOG. Address Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2 BOX 1901, Care Jeffersonian, Towson, Md. FOR SALE. Valley Farm, 175 acres, in high state of cultivation, well watered and suited for dairy farm. Must be sold to settle estate. Located near Butler, within % mile of Falls Road. G. WILMER ENSOR, Reisterstown, Md. Phone Cockeysville 32-F-31. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2 WOOD FOR SALE. SAWED STOVE LENGTH. HARRY E. MORRIS, 1 Tast Joppa Road, Towson, Md. Phone, Towson 336-J. Jan. 12-19-26-Feb. 2 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. THIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE, That the subscribers have obtained from the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County letters Testamentary on the estate of WILLIAM E. BABIKOW, 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 subscribers, On or before the 27th day of July, 1924, they may otherwise by law be excluded f-rom all benefit of said estate. Those indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment. Given under our hands this 17th day of Januai y, 1924. HARRY C. BABIKOW, MILTON TOLLE, Executors, 216 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2-9* MORE PROFIT. Increase your poultry profits this season by raising more chicks with less trouble and expense. Brooding satisfaction assured with a "National." Made for Coal, Oil and Gas. Sold by CHAS. W. K. ARNOLD, P. O. Box 1, Glyndon, Md. Reisterstown 48-J. Jan. 19-26-Feb. 2-9