wmmiwmi mMN9Wv MtKWwiim - 5'"' PICTURE PORTRAYAL OF POTTSTO WN - THE TOWN, THE HILL SCHOOL AND WAR J3AM 6 r; ft n 1 ut & xk-- X ' "vlv ' '' '7, .' 4 il IHHBBWSfiAV-:', .., ...:. -. .' , - - . -Aii . " " . .. iA ' b.,wte .rM.Nil'l -f -" .tAAyirf4' BBIWSi8iS :! &r?sSfc' POTTSTOWN IS KNOWN EDUCATIONALLY AS THE HOME OF THE HILL SCHOOL The ivy-mantled structure is the main hall of the school. In the curriculum of the Hill School is in cluded a splendid course in the rudiments of military training. Ui 71ySiHlHBk -NX A, s'l- i ',v. : mm -:: ,v- Vt't t A"?4 4 i POTTSTOWN PRIDES ITSELF ON ITS INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITIES The photograph shows the Eastern Steel Works, where hundreds of men find unbroken employment in these days of mammoth war orders. A RELIC OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY Here lived General Arthur St. Clair, whom students of American his tory will recall as a presiding officer of the Continental Congress. The building stands at the intersection of High and Hanover streets. MWw """"""" - Mpi WW""'""1 ' I..WI...IIUHIIIIIIIII wim mmm mmmmtmmmmmm i m w, l a i 1 i A CAMERA VIEW OVER THE ROOFTOPS REVEALS THE NATURAL BEAUTY OF POTTSTOWN The hilly nature of the city and its environs is indicated by the highway .ascending quite abruptly in the middle background of the photograph and the fringe of wooded hilltops on tho horizon. A HEADQUARTERS FOR BRAVE FIRE LADDIES As is everywhere the case, the members of Philadelphia Fire Com pany, No. 1, of Pottstown, bear an undying interest in the welfare of their native city I i w ' s - i;i ajjg1sft MllCf "J , N? f ,x V-lJSs ' .r iA- MILITARY ENCAMPMENT AT THE HILL SCHOOL i Um rammer mtfbt'jnot hlortiii thaw times of the nation' dire seed for-trained .' summer: m)l 'v y - f eiSflH j t. . 77. '"' j.:4cw ,jwi.m " i" a i . kvw -u A 4 M? rfl If um m m 4 ' '" . , ;iLlk.bclU !rfjmWm2?yfti BiWeMmw.aayikaBlBmwliifM ifi fliii iHHHWhWI lllWI riiB l1 n i imn H n t nil i TIP I ff i1 t. , . -L ? "-' "
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers