Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

mdsa_sc3410_1_81-0963

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Maryland State Archives
Jeffersonian, Towson, Maryland

mdsa_sc3410_1_81-0963

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Page 2—Saturday, May 10, 1924. THE JEFFERSONIAN, TOWSON, MARYLAND YOUTH HURT BY AUTOMOBILE. Struck by an automobile on the Belafr road, Fullerton, Edward J. Barker received cuts and bruises on his body. The automobile, according to Barker and the police, failed to stop after the accident. Barker is 18 years old and lives at Belair road and Fowler avenue, Fullerton. The accident occurred on Belair road near Delight avenue, about five squares from Barkers' home. Patrolman Charles D. Mayes of the Fullerton Station, tried to overtake the automobile, bat it turned into a side road. He then took Barker to the office of Dr. Gustav A. Fritz, Overlea, where his injuries were dressea. I Pimlico I Spring Meeting May 1 to 13 FIRST RACE 2.30 P. M. Admission, including tax, $1.65 Steeplechase and Valuable / Stakes Daily. $223,200 Added in 11 Days. Over-Night Purses: $1300, $1500, $2000. The Preakness $50,000 added. The Dixie $25,000 added. Green Spring Valley Steeplechase $5,000. I Spring Specials! f 25-Year White Gold Watch Bracelets | 15-Jewel Guaranteed Lever Move- y v ment ??? | $10.50 ? x ?*? ?]? Latest shapes in cases, in- £ eluding above and many others *l* Same Style Watch, Elgin Move- £ X ment, in Solid 14-Kt. White X Gold Case ? $40.00 | x 4 $ Other Elgins $25.00 Up. X i & **? Rosaries, Bookmarks and £ X many other suitable gifts for X t; Easter. | WM. J. MILLER | X 28 East Baltimore Street X i ?% All out-doors invites your Kodak And our Kodak counter helps you accept the invitation with Kodaks, Kodak Film, and quality finishing. Autographic Kodaks $6.50 up HERGENRATHER'S DRUG CO., 401 York Road, Towson - Maryland MAN FALLS FROM MOTOR TRUCK. ohn F. Lotman, 43 years old, was seriously hurt while returning from a Maying party. He was riding on the rear of a truck on Eastern avenue road when the breeze carried his hat away. He attempted to 'catch it and fell off the truck. At Bay View Hospital doctors said he had received internal injuries. ----------o---------- "HATCHET BURIED." UNITED TAKES OVER BELAIR ELECTRIC LINE. Carroll E. Stansbury, head of the Baltimore County Police Department and Lieut Wm. B. Dorsey have "buried the hatchet." Dorsey, who tossed his equipment on the desk before the chief after he had been called to account for not reporting a hold-up, quickly reconsidered his rashness and resumed his duties. ----------o---------- INSPECTOR OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES, REMOVER OF GARBAGE AND CONSTABLES APPOINTED BY COMMISSIONERS. R. Calvert Steuart was re-appointed inspector of weights and measures for Baltimore county, and Elisha W. Davis remover of garbage for Chesaco Park. Constables named to examine licenses are as follows: First district—Geo. E. McDonald. Second district—Bremen Trail. Third district—J. Murray Patterson. Fourth district—Hanson Rutter. Fifth district—Edwin Fowble. Sixth district—Harvey Hare. Seventh district—J. Elmer Rosier. Eighth district—J. W. Hoffman. Ninth district—Samuel C. Grason. Tenth district—John Hitter. Eleventh district—Walter C. Mowbray. Twelfth district—John Eckes. Thirteenth district—C. Brown. Fourteenth district—M. Kinlein. Fifteenth district— J. W. Hughes. ----------o-------— WETS GIVE ENDORSEMENT TO SIMPSON'S CANDIDACY. The candidacy of E. Ridgely Simpson, of Ruxton, for the Republican nomination for Congress from the Second Congressional District, was endorsed by the executive committee of the Maryland Division of the Association Against Prohibition. The committee stated Mr. Simpson was 100 per cent wet, while his opponent in the primary contest, Lloyd Wilkinson, is bone dry. ----------o---------- SEEK MEN HERE TO HUNT RUM RUNNERS. To check the flow of liquor into Ijthe port of Baltimore and other Atlantic coast cities the United States Coast Guard is now enlisting men to serve on a fleet of destroyers being fitted up in the Philadelphia Navy Yard. The speedy boats will be ready Avithin a short time when they will be assigned to cruise the coast and inland waters on 'the lookout for hooch smugglers. Men to man the boats are being sought in Baltimore county. They will be sent to Philadelphia which will be the operating base of the destroyers. The pay is from $36 to $126 monthly with allowances for subsistence and uniforms. The Coast Guard is now operating several fast launches in Maryland waters but they are used chiefly for boarding incoming boats in routine work. The new destroyers will devote their entire time to hunting rum runners. The maritime liquor sleuths will co-operate with the local enforce^ ment agents but will be under the direction of the Coast Guard authorities. • Purchase of the Baltimore and Belair Electric Railway, known as the "Carney Line," by the United Railways has been completed. Negotiations looking toward the ac-quisition= of the line by the United have been under way, for about a year. The purchase price was $75,-000. L. H. Palmer, general manager of the United, announced that the second fare zone that has existed heretofore on the Carney line between Carney and Joppa Road will be abolished. The Carney L(ine connects .with the United's No. 19 line at Hamilton. MOUNT CARMEL M. E. SUNDAY SCHOOL REORGANIZED. HELD FOR BEATING MAN. David Thomas, thirty-eight, was arrested at a shore on Colgate Creek by police on a charge of assaulting William H. Eiler, forty-seven, 118 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, with whom Thomas formerly boarded. Eiler was knocked down and left unconscious. ----------o---------- „ PIKESVILLE DISTILLERY FOR* SALE AS JUNK. The Sunday school of the Mount Carmel M. E. Church was reorganized on last Sunday. The officers are: Superintendent, Harry V. Miller; assistant superintendent, Samuel A. Brooks; secretary, Wm. S. Thompson; treasurer, Miss Mary Zenker; librarians, Edward Shaffer; and Milton Lloyd. The Sunday school is held at 2 P. M. ----------o—------- OSCAR B. COBLENTZ APPOINTED TO COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. A commission for Oscar B. Cob-lentz, of Catonsville, who has been appointed a member of the Baltimore County Board of Education, has been received at the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court at Tow-son. ----------o---------- CHILDREN'S SERVICES AT TRENTON JUNE 8TH. On June 8th Children's Day services will be held at Trenton Lutheran Church. ----------o---------- WASHINGTON WOMAN GUEST OF "UPPER END" RELATIVE. Mr. Herbert Martin, of Trenton, has had as his recent guest his sister, Mrs. George Langley, of Washington. ----------o---------- SHAKE DUST OF TRENTON FROM THEIR FEET. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland Morfoot have moved from Trenton to Reis-terstown. ----------o---------- STORK VISITS COUPLE. The stork paid a visit to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Waysom Armacost, at Trenton, leaving a dandy baby girl. The famous old Pikesville Distillery has given up the ghost. Where a few years ago was a great whiskey plant, four warehouses, bottling houses and other buildings today remains only one warehouse, and it is being dismantled. The other buildings have been reduced to piles of lumber and stacks of fittings and equipment. An ad in a newspaper announces that all is for sale to be put to such uses as do not conflict with the law whi^h dealt the death blow to the industry founded in 1886 under the name of the L. C. Winand Bros. & Co., and reorganized in 1911 with M. C. Winand of Pikesville as president. Four of the great sypresss vats have been sold for use at homes in the Green Spring Valley—of all things—as water tanks. Nine other tanks await purchasers. Their capacities range from 2000 to 6000 gallons. The plant of the Pikesville Distillery Company was purchased in February, 1921, by Robert J. Ayl-ward, of Philadelphia. He sold it and the machinery was dismantled and put on the market. Sylvester Marshall of Reisters-town, now has come into possession of it and is completing the work of ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^% Don't Envy Wealth Go After It Yourself. The first step is to get your Savings Account started with this bank. The second : to SAVE and deposit weekly. Thousands of wealthy people got their start from small savings, and so can you. 4% Interest allowed on Savings Accounts. The Second National Bank Of Towson, Md. o- ¦o »?»?»¦» »«»?<»»»»»»<»«»» » -J Ask for it at your nearest store or phone & 60N Elisor St. Cor. Forrest | BALTIMORE, MD. Without Question-The Biggest Lighting Plant Value $249.00 32 Volt With Batteries Operates 11 Hours On 1 Gallon Gasoline You no longer can afford to do without Electric Light and Power, when you can bu>r this -wonderful Direct Connected Upco Plant for half what you expected to pay. It will light \18-20 watt Lamps for one hour at a cost of two cents. A Plant of sufficient capacity to supply the average need: A Quality of Material and Workmanship, that stand unsurpassed. An operating cost so low that by comparison the buying and trimming of Lamp Wicks becomes a luxury. •--•^B *»»*«**•* a ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER PLANTS A price about one-half of what other direct connected Plants of similar capacity, using a 4 cycle Engine, with the same equipment would cost. ; ,^ So Simple that an3^one old enough to read the instructions can operate it. P^** So Dependable that it will run day in and day out without any other attention than supply Fuel and Lubricating Oil. And So Durable that it will give years of Service with practically no Expense. 234- f^CALHOUf^ STREET HEATItfG-PUWBlNQ- ELECTRIC and POWER ENGINEERS Phone Gilmor 3831 scattering the buildings which once manufactured the beverage that has become of the past. The contents of the warehouses— 161 barrels and 114 cases, or 33,-5 68 quarts of whisky—were.removed in March, 1923, to the Government concentration warehouse on North Holiday street, Baltimore. ;---------------O--------------- COUNTY MAN MISSING SEVEN MONTHS FOUND IN PITTSBURGH. Thomas F. Molloy, of Ten Hills, missing from his home for seven months, was located in Pittsburgh. 1BHI He mysteriously disappeared from a New York Hotel after cashing a check for $700. It is the assumption of the police that Mr. Molloy was sand bagged by bandits, and his mind has been a blank since. VISITS RELATIVES IN "UPPER END." Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wiley and son, Willard, were recent guests of Mrs. Wiley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Gibson, of near Gorsuch Mills. lllllllllllllBIIIMIIIIillllllllllllllllll 5 Buy Direct From Mill s \ The ATLANTIC WAY j FREE PLANS FREE DELIVERY DURANT and STAR CARS COURT GARAGE, Towson, Md. . iBRHBMB»BSltBHBIIRflB«|H B EVERING'S SUPERIOR QUALITY DAY OLD CHICKS From hig-h-producing- hens that I have personally selected and mated, and they carry with them the results of my 17 years' experience in producing quality day-old chicks. Six popular breeds. Beautiful Catalog Tree. It tells of the quality of our chicks and the breeds we raise; it shows views of our modern sanitary equipment. A postcard or phone call bring-s it to you. We also do custom hatching-. BIG HATCH EVERY WEEK, Member International Baby Chick Asso. EVERING'S Poultry Farms JOHN W. EVERING, Prop. Summer's Run, Md. Paana Back River 7-W fl ¦ B B fl ¦ ¦ flflfl Lumber, Mill-Work, Hardware, Roofing, Glass and Glazing, Cement, Plaster, Lath Before you build or buy, get our estimate and save money We deliver Everywhere FREE PLANS FREE SERVICE Atlantic Mill & Lumber Co. Foot of Caroline Street ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 9 fl ¦ fl fl FIVE PHONES-Wolfe 89, 88, 87, 86, 85 | fl ¦¦¦¦HflflHflflaflHHHflflflflEflflflflEAflflH^flHflflflfla MOSES KAHN OF OLD TOWN "The Good Maker of Kahn's Good Klothes." COR. GAY and EAST STREETS "Your Good Money's Worth Or Your Good Money Back" "MoseY' Big "May Day" Sale The "Good Son" Is Going To Give His "Boys" the Biggest Values In New Spring Suits And Topcoats And Trousers That They Ever Got in Their Born Lives Before. "MOSE" WAS BORN IN MAY AND HE'S GLAD OP IT. «jyiOSE" has been on this *• * corner—Gay and East Streets—selling clothing for about 30 years—and in all that time he has never had what they call an Anniversary Sale. This sale is not intended to be an Anniversary of the birth of his business—but of the birth of the man himself— "Moses Kahn of Old Town— The Good Maker of Kahn's Good Klothes" — who came here on a May day some years ago and who was just as welcome by his mother as the flowers in May. "Mose" didn't arrive in full dress and it was a long time before he had any dress at all fit to appear in society—for there was no such thing as ready-made clothes in those days an dcustom tailors were expensive, just as they are in this day. It was that as much as anything that inclined "Mose" to the tailoring business. He told his mother he would make a suit for himself and he did it, and he made a successs of it for thousands of others besides Extraordinary Suit Values Men's Round Sack Blue Serge Suits; nicely tailored; good trimmings; always inCl^ftft Men's and Young Men's Single-Breasted 3-Ilutton Blue Serge Sack Suits; quar- fflQ (\f\ ter lined; piped seams ..............«pXO.v7U Men's Regular and Stout Pin Striped Blue and Brown Worsted Suits; full cut; CO A f\f\ excellent value ...................J>4\J.\J\J Young Men's Latest-Cut 3-Button Fancy Cas-simere Suits; quarter lined; piped (JOB f\f\ seams.............................^>jL/D.\J\J Men's Regular and Stout Best Quality Hard-faced "Worsted Suits; browns, blues and grays; with stripes and checks and neat her- (CQfi Oft ringbone patterns; best tailoring . . . •p*J\J.\J\J Young Men"s Latest Single and Double-Breasted Model Fine Quality English Worsted Suits; all the new light blue, tan and gray Spring Shades; quarter lined; piped