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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 28

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PACE 28 THE SUN. BALTIMORE, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1959 Bases Of Law Called Blurred and increased work loads for ninny departments. To that Mr, Butler retorted that "the public will scream" if es tising for bids on construction of the new Eastern Police Station, last of the five to be constructed. Bids on the project, estimated to cost about will be re SOME WATER' RATES TO RISE sential services are cut. Since the ceived November 4.

The station court is a Slate agency supported hv the citv added. "1 wouldn't Arc Named Hy Slale In Suit (Continued from Page 40) as premiums on purchases from a Baltimore clothier in 1914. Other attorneys for the State, reporting that many of the deeds were filed in 191(5, said they were told that lots were awarded in a puzzle contest conducted through the mid west in that year. Assateague, stretching down the will be at 1700 Edison highway. Inflation To be surprised if the Legislature steeped in." Nonorof it Institutions ray Full Charges Mr.

Goodman was delecntcd bv the board to investigate the need Woodstock College, delivered the sermon at the traditional Red Mass marking the opening of the fall term of court. The mass was celebrated at the Cathedral, under the sponsorship of the St. Thomas More Society. "What we proximately need is a revival of rationality, a renewal of the rational spirit of the West, as it has expressed itself in its tradition of law and of the philosophy of law," he said. "Today's crisis has been brought upon us largely by a disastrous failure of human reason." The St.

Mary's Seminary Choir, under the direction of the Rev. Eugene Walsh, sung the mass, which was celebrated by the Right Rev. Msgr. George L. Hopkins, chancellor of the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

acquired.by the listed owners. A legislative committee headed by Senator John L. Sanford, Jr. Worcester), currently is studying possible methods of constructing a bridge to the island from the mainland. Mr.

Sanford also is one of the attorneys representing the State in the condemnation case. A vocal exponent of the State development of the undeveloped island has been W. E. Green, a retired heating contractor who lives on the Worcester county mainland. He has accused the State of dragging its feet.

Estimates of cost for park development have varied. The 1959 Legislature included in the capital improvements budget an allowance of $150,000 for initial land acquisition. held until recently under patent a grant of land without known ownership by Leon Ackerman, a real estate promoter who later issued quit claim deed to the Slate. Mr. Norris said yesterday it was unclear how Mr.

Ackerman secured the patent, since the Stale discovered hundreds of listed owners once it began searching. The condemnation suit was tiled by the State on behalf of the Department of Forests and Parks, which would administer the park once it was established and have the chore of stopping beach erosion. Maps of the area sought by the Stata show that several hundred lots fronting on both the Atlantic and the Sinepuxent Bay have been covered with water by erosion, presumably since they were for the year constable and Faced with zooming judgments against the city in damage suits, the board appropriated an additional $17,200 to cover expected report back. By AMPS R. KKAT (Continued from Page 40) An erosion of the inner meaning of the law has taken place in the free world, a professor of theology said yesterday.

The Rev. John Courtney Murray, S.J. told 190 lawyers, judges and court clerk, mostly from Baltimore city, that the important philosophical bases of the law have been blurred in the West, causing a "basic weakness" in the face of communism. The problem has arisen, he said, because of a "profusion of heretical answers" to the question, what is man? Father Murray, a teacher at New Huilding: Atlantic coast below Ocean City now range from 9 cents per 1,000 cubic feet for some hospitals to costs for the remainder of the year. into Virginia, has been a subject of controversy for years.

Attempts Harrison L. Winter, city soli 43 cents for schools ami colleges. Under the new scale they will to subdivide and develop the island, which can be reached only Piracci Construction Company was apparent low bidder, at $2,700,000. on construction of the Lombard Junior High School at Lombard and Caroline streets. The next bid was $2,709,571 by Philip Vizzini it Son, Inc.

The board approved the adver pay the standard rale of $2.50 per 1,000 cubic feet for the first 5,000 by boat, have met with little citor, said his department had already exceeded by $2,200 its allotment of $97,000 to cover these expenses. One pair of cases alone cubic feet in each three-month success thus far. The portion of the island which the State seeks to condemn was cost the city $35,000, he said. period. Both increases were made sub ject to a check of their legality by the city solicitor.

T7 The new rates for the Anne Arundel cotintians were established to match the charges levied imp to yn In the same section of the county by the Anne Arundel Sanitary Commission, which also supplies water in that area. Iieroy V. Schucrholz, city water engineer, explained that the new scale would equalize charges paid for the same amount of water by neighbors who happen to receive it from different sources. In general, the new scale will affect those Anne Arundel coun-tians who pay their water bills directly to the city. Others use city water but are charged for It by the county.

Mr. Schuerholz estimated that the city, would gain $142,000 in water revenues from the new rate schedule. Water rates vary widely depending on amount of consumption and size of installation Under the standard city scale the smallest consumers pay a minimum charge of $2.50 each three months. For each 1,000 cubic feet of water used in that period the rate is also $2.50. Over 5,000 cubic feet the rate drope to $1.50 per 1,000 cubic feet and'over 50.000 it falls to $1.

For larger installations the minimum rate ranges up to $731.25 for each three months, The new scale for the Anne Arundel cotintians affected will boost the minimum charge to $4.50 a quarter and will charge them the same amount for each 1,000 cubic feet up to 5,000. Between 5,000 cubic feet and 50,000 Cubic feet, the charge will be $2.25 per 1,000 feet, and over 50,000 feet the rale will drop to $1.50 per 1,000. Yield Slatrd The increase for the charitable Institutions, to the standard city scale, would yield $188,000 a year on water bills plus $04,000 in sewer service charges, which are 50 per cent of water fees. The Mayor's Tax Advisory Committee, which included these charges in its search for new revenues, said 706 institutions pay the nominal rate. Hospitals would have to pay an additional $178,000 a year, educational institutions another and churches an added 553, the tax survey estimated.

Kconomy Squeeze The board got a sample of the nowls from department heads it will hear if the planned budget Cuts for next year are effected J. Jerome Butler, chief con stable of the People's Court, protested a decision against hiring to replacement for a constable who retired. Under the job freeze instituted several years ao, the board must approve the filling of all vacancies. Mr. Butler said the work load of the Peoples Court has increased fourfold since it was established jvhile his staff has grown only about 50 per cent.

The judgements of the court must be served with-jn a limited time, he said, and he does not have enough men to do the work. Philip If. Goodman, president of the City Council, told Mr. Butler that the tight budget for next year will mean fewer employees Parking Lois i Licenses Eyed A proposed ordinance to impose license fees on shopping center and similar parking lots might yield $400,000 for the city, the councilman who introduced it esti mated yesterday. James J.

Duffy First), sponsor of the bill, said it was directed at open 'parking lots for high filtration Parliament is one of the few cigarettes rated as having a truly high-filtration filter. But only Parliament, of all leading cigarettes, goes one big step further. Only Parliament recesses its filter recesses it the most important inch in smoking today. Trapped nicotine and tars cannot possibly feed back onto your lips and tongue. Someday all filters will probably be made this better way.

for clear, clean flavor It's easy to see why Parliament's Va inch recess makes these fine tobaccos taste even better. Because your lips and tongue never touch the filter never taste what's been filtered out. All you taste with Parliament is the clear, clean flavor of the best tobaccos in the business. Yes, indeed tobacco tastes best when the filter's recessed. Smoke Parliament.

Now with arliament which are maintained for convenience of customers of businesses or offices. The ordinance, if passed, could cost large shopping centers in the city several thousand dollars a year. It would impose on them the same annual license fee of $2.50 for each 100 square feet of parking area now paid by commercial lots which rent their space to motorists. Mr. Duffy's bill would extend the license fee to all lots with space for four or more cars which are "miantained and available for the use and convenience of the owner's commercial patrons or customers." Open lots maintained by doctors cr business men for their patients or clients, some office building lots and the facilities of some apartment houses would also be subject to the license, Mr.

Duffy said. No firm estimates were available yesterday on the total acreage of such parking lots in the city. Since most cars take up rnwe than 100 square feet, the charge would work out to more than $3 for each parking space, 1 1 new high-porosity Flavor-Flow Paper. Popular Price-Soft Pack or Box NX TP lam HIGH FILTRATION OCTOBER REPORT Only Parliament combines high filtration and recessed protection of pure tobacco flavor. (Based on October analysis of all leading cigarettes by United States Testing one of the world's leading independent testing laboratories.) SLIT 21,.

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Years Available:
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