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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 31

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
31
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 eve-M tcwnfmHf Utvu)fi' PAGE 31 THE SUN, BALTIMORE, TUESDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 22. 11 start the fire, a flammable liquid such as gasoline." he said. He added that the fire was set; "deliberately," but the judges or Digests of Corporate Earnings Reports (Compiled from inre dispatches of the Associated Press end the Dow Jones Neics Service) spends 76.9 per cent of the School Board's appropriations for instruction. This is the highest of any count' in the State.

On the other hand, Anne Arundel's cost per pupil is second lowest in the State. MOUNT ROYAL STATION SOLD Maryland Institute' Buys 0. Landmark FATAL BLAZE GALLED SET Arson Investigator Testifies At Sutton Trial SCHOOLTAX SEEN LACKING Arundel Aide Says Increase Is Needed dered the word stricken from the record as a result of an objection by Douglas G. Bottom, court- Dr. Jenkins urged the principals appointed defense counsel.

and parents at the meeting to get Other witnesses yesterday in Dividends Announced behind his budget and support it in the upcoming hearings before Allied Graphic Arts. Inc. mot July 31 14 1J A share 41 45 Net income 1231,950 American Photocopy Equipment Co. cluded two volunteer nremen from the Lutherville company the commissioners. With the approval of an apparent and David II.

Bernstein, 23, who By Sun Staff Correspondent Annapolis, Sept. 21 The Anne Aut. 31 164 l3 Pr- Slk. rmd Rerartf abl BT A. DAVIS r.RASMFRS, JR.

A Baltimore county arson investigator testified yesterday the fire in which four children of Mr. nt 01 3 A snre Su'es majority of the audience of approximately 100, Dr. Jenkins cut off was a guest at the Poland residence at the time of the fire. Niche's .13 Arundel county school superintendent tonight predicted that a two- 11! 12-1 Net income in- 12-1 questions from George E. Hall Robert Haddauav? 7 SRI U7 17 470 32 006 8 VJ The firemen 100 7 i57K 157 31 164 tl.9ii4.355 cent increase in the school tax I'M 9 president of the county council of and Mrs.

Sidney Poland lost their irx-1 Frn1 RlmL-fnrH u-fr nskpr! Sales 7 ll- ST1W Bniter NMU I Soc McCa.1 Corp lor EXTRA lUtah ContrMni I KKGrl.AR Net income would be necessary to support the parent-teacher organizations. by Mr. Bvrd whether the cnarrea t-30 10-12 lives last December 23 was set. Battalion Chief Louis W. Irvin.

Aqua-Chem, Inc. Mr. Hall questioned the interpre proposed $15,424,676 school budget for the first six months of 1965. Aui 31 gasoline can, which Chief lrvin1nm, saiA una found in rtihhlp outside A 1M1 tation of some of the figures which N-M or pf 30 1964 $07 t73.4iS lii fats 417 By FRANK P. L.

SOMERVILLE (Continued from Page 4fi) ter for the city of Baltimore," Mr. Leake said. The transaction as approved by the board includes the sale of the approximately 3 acres on which the old station stands and air rights over the tracks. The grassy slopes surrounding the station on four sides together with a tree-shaded level area to the south containing bench-lined walks are park land owned by the city. "Substantial Donation" Discussing the successful com who has headed the county's arson squad since 1961.

told a Cir DR. ROBERT C. THOMPSON the house, was the one they had Continental Independent Telephone'iif Fruit Dome Mtn reported finding in the playroom, Dr. Jenkins introduced. After Dr.

Jenkins suggested that tonight was not the time for questions which did not help the budg- Corporation lft-3 10-9 9-M 10-IS 9-30 10-12 10-2 10- 9 11- 17 10-1 -K) 9-30 10-1 cuit Court jury be based his opinion on "a definite pattern of 1'Olanas Ol Al iriJI Smo.June30 IH4 163 111 10-23 10- 1 11- 13 10- 30 11- 1 10- 31 11- 2 12- 11 10- 11 11- 2 11-2 10-20 10-12 ID DR. THOMPSON 21 Mr. Haddaway said he could hum Al "I'll tell you right here and now that this budget cannot be supported by the present $2.07 school tax rate," Dr. David S. Jenkins told a gathering of school principals and parent-teacher association officials from throughout the county.

S10 07.4.'!S"l!"o. runn" -ri not identify the can introduced 'ncom' 9 burning" which indicated a flammable substance was used to spur ets acceptance, and alter one member said that he was "embarrassed" by the apparent intent of questions, there were no more in nrrator( Am pf 2 InvTr Ulh CoiutrftMnt 20 DUE TO RETIRE into evidence, but Mr. Blankford mn, Au, Vxm told the prosecutor, "It lwkcd the blaze. Chief Irvin testified during the. like the one you have here.

Net tnrome S2 g7R 549 tl.9h2.7i3 Four Star Television Van Waters Rogers, Inc. quiries from the audience. The School Board budget, along: en- nnemnff session ot the trial of Mr. Hernstem. who was 9 mo auk.

31 1964 13 1964 pletion of negotiations with the jjnner To Honor State Chief faui nicnara Milton, 17, tne lastis 111 "'u ua 81,11 miiru-A ar. 19J 44 22 29.1,501 cat u. yesieraay, air. leaKe saia Of Rehabilitation Unit ot three riKesviue youtns to lace Net lnss ti.s5i the value of the station site even 1 T-l i 1 I IE I ng nernsiein, acscruieu uie iue court action as a result of the alncome General Mills, Inc. 3 mm Aut.

31 JM4 13 A jhare IS 49 discovery and efforts to save the A share. $1 SI el 'S Sairs i80 14fi.0fl0 177.771.000 Net tnrome iM 1.000 it. 003. 000 Winchell Donut House 12 mo June 30 Jf 13 A share il 38 i 29 Salrs $413.302 i3 74 it, Net inrome io4J.413 i368.00O Wonietro Knterprises, Inc. 12 mm Sept.

19S4 1S3 A share 27 (Confirmed from Page 46) children. Neither of the victims fire that destroyed a wing of the Poland residence off Old Court road near Green Spring avenue. 6 Men, 6 Women On Jury J.T.D., Jr. Policemen Catcb Man With 4 Women's Suit Central district policemen last night chased down a 23-year-old man who ran out of a downtown store with four women's suits. The officers were in a patrol car when they heard someone shouting for police outside the Robert "income oiro S4 oog Kansas ity rower i.iRni i o.

appeared for the trial, and coun gram in his home state. He came to Maryland and its new service in 1929, after a year of graduate with a $5,747,358 budget for the operation of the county, will be submitted to the county commissioners this week. The budget now under consideration will only be for the period from January 1 to June 30, since the county is adopting a fiscal year ralher than a calendar year budget system beginning July 1, 1965. The school budget is for 60 per cent of the school year, although it is only for 50 per cent of the calendary year, since schools are in session almost the entire 12 mos Aut. 31 4 163 sel stipulated to what their testi- 04 Net income t40 0.8 i470.K0 A hre 2 24 Sutton, accused of arson, bur 193 1964 9 mo Sept.

$1 1 06S.1H6 7 0d mnnv unnld havo boon if SS0.T3R.307 i77.T4l.3HO monv woiuu nae ottn im iNf( lncome 104274 ii2.9n9.6j5 were present. Kansas City Southern Railroad A share Net imome glary and four counts of murder work at the University of Chicago Rehabilitation programs for vet Mr. Rernstein. of ip 2f00 mos au. 31 ns3 is being tried in Towson before Judges John Grason Turnbull Revenues erans were "fairly for block West Belvedere avenue civilians "fairly difficult." Herman, store in the 200 i.

ana lesier earreu ana a u. nj Set income 7 142.0.(0 I8.4H1.21S1! King-Seeley Thermos Company I 13 Moa July 31 164 193 A an.tr S4 4R $3 2 of six men and six women. gone to the Poland house, where Dr. Thompson recalled that patriotism provided a responsive she was living at the time, about; Wome TiiW 'Si 12.30 A.M. after looking at an Lakey Foundry Corp.

climate for assistance to the vic inc a 9 July 31 1964 19SJ SET JUST ONE CONTROL i $1A S49 $0 til). 201 apartment snack. loss 1138.385 i7ii.24i! Net With This Alf-New National Gas Oil Corp. 7 mos July 31 1964 1963 A share 92 97 Discovered Blaze had been there about 20 first six months of the year. Of the total school request, $6,741,273 will come from county funds and $6,727,203 from the State, and $999,600 from the Federal Government.

The balance will come from surpluses and other small sources such as tuition from community college students. Thev minutes when they heard a "fT 'YTu "like someone taking a dish off. Pacific lnterniountain Express Co. a pile of dishes," he said. 31 o- S.

'ft mmw 9Bj, 7" block North Eutaw street. They chased the fleeing suspect and caught him at Paca and Clay streets. Safe Hammered Open And $750 Is Taken Thieves used a sledge-hammer, a crowbar and a screwdriver to open a safe in a service station in the 300 block Rossitter avenue sometime early yesterday or late Sunday night. They got away with $750 in cash. Police said the break-in was between 10 P.M.

Sunday and 7.30 A.M. yesterday. They were unable to determine exactly how the thieves broke in. The safe was in the front office. Invest patincr he said thev Total re iM 42H S4i ibi 72s jrivlMIfedLllli, lie Jiu, Income tl.fi.iJ.Bh8 11 8K2 9h9 In his opening statement, Richard D.

Byrd, assistant State's attorney, who is prosecuting the case along with A. Gordon Boone, also an assistant prosecutor, contended gasoline from a five-gallon can that was on a porch was splashed on a playroom wall below the children's bedrooms before the fire was ignited. "Sutton came to burglarize the house, and these deaths, the result of a felony, are his responsibility," Mr. Byrd told the jury. Chief Irvin said the fire originated in a two-piece sectional sofa along the east wall of the playroom, and spread rapidly.

"An accelerant was used to walked toward the breakfast tims of the war. For the civilian program in Maryland, not only was this emotional impetus lacking, but also there was the terrible competition of the economic depression. "This rehabilitation was always considered a good thing," he said, "But it was only that a good thing. The economic soundness of it was hard for people to realize." To Educate State The first job was to educate the State about the new program. Dr.

Thompson found Marylanders to be interested in what would bene The county commissioners will consider the budget for the next five weeks, and will hold several without the building "far exceeds the purchase price" and, for this reason, the railroad "has made a substantial donation to the institute." The price paid for the badly vandalized property is $50,000 less than the cost of building the station just before the turn of the century. When it opened its doors September 1, 1896, it was considered the most elegant station in the country used by a single railroad. The rocking chairs in its waiting room and the huge illuminated clock faces on its square tower, by which generations of Balti-moreans have set their watches, became local institutions. Historic Landmark "We are pleased," Mr. Leake said yesterday, "that our purchase of the Mount Royal Station insures the continued existence of one of Baltimore's most historic landmarks as it has become increasingly important to preserve our beautiful, well-constructed older buildings." The proposed inclusion of the station in the expansion plans of the Maryland Institute had been supported by the Mount Royal Improvement Association.

The O. closed the station in 1961, and the passenger service that had been provided there for 65 years was concentrated at Camden Station farther downtown. The railroad allowed the Maryland Institute to use the building for art classes during the 1961-1962 academic year, but the property has been for sale ever since. Nearly Every Pane Broken Screen Gems, Inc. 12 mos, June 27 1964 1 963 A share SI.

29 1 20 Revenues i4.377,0no Net inrome S4.082 000 iJ. 800.000 Syntex Corp. 12 mos July 31 1964 1963 A share I Rt S4 public sessions. The budget must be completed by November 1. One of the major changes in the school budget will be an increase iifriiti i.

room from the living room, when Mrs. Bernstein, who was a few steps ahead, spotted the fire. The witness said his wife ran to awaken Mr. and Mrs. Poland and a daughter, Stacy.

12, who were in another part of the house, while he continued toward the playroom. Howard N. Carter Sons, Inc of $1,692,000 in teachers' salaries Plumbing Heating Pales t26 4Rn.2MS il. 340 101 Net Income 8 447.fi 0 i.3.779 5lj I'niversal Automated Industries 9 mos July 31 1964 1963 A share 01 i Ifi Sales 17.02R 00S Nel inrome Jlis.S.iJ MS 7300 N. Point Sparrows for the first half of 1965.

Dr. Jenkins pointed out that the county 477 fit people, the program grew slowly, (an annual budget of less that $100,000 a year for 16 years) but it did grow. Now Dr. Thompson has a staff of 74 professional workers and 50 clerks, a budget of $1,900,000 ot which 56 per cent comes from the Federal Government, and completed plans for a new service to mentally retarded patients in Rosewood Hospital. Dr.

Thompson's files spill over with pictures of self-sufficient While the station has stood un citizens who needed help but once used, nearly every pane of glass from the State: lab technicians, watch repairmen, typists and drill every press operators unhindered by their blindness; an overseas missionary, unhindered by paralysis. Prayer Over Desk For 35 years these people's problems, and later, the reports of their success, have passed over the desk where Mr. Thompson keeps the prayer: of its many windows and of the shelters extending out over the tracks from the central building have been smashed by vandals. The red tile roofs have deteriorated badly. The park land around the station has been poorly maintained by the city in recent years, and the brick pavements, both roads and sidewalks, have been allowed to crumble.

During the period the station has been closed and boarded up, however, the railroad has continued to light the clock on the 150-foot tower at night. "Now, Baltimoreans will not only know what time it is," Mr. "Help us, Lord, to remem ber how often men do wrong through want of thought, rather than from lack of love." Liquor Store Robbed By 2 Hooded Bandits Two teen-aged bandits escaped with an unknown amount of money Leake commented, "they will also know that their lovely old station last night from Ben's Liquors in is humming with a new kind of activity as our current generation of art students learns its the 1600 block East Oliver street. Brandishing long-bladed knives and wearing stockings over their faces, the two walked in about craft there and as the city itself 9.15 P.M. and ordered Mrs.

Frieda Wasserman, wife of the propri- is invited back inside the sturdy walls for the enjoyment of the arts." Cites 0. "Cooperation" The station is constructed of Port Deposit granite and its many arches are trimmed with Indiana limestone. Mr. Leake hailed the purchase, which he said was "made pos ator, to hand over the money." Just as they came in, Benjamin Wasserman, the owner, started to walk through a doorway from the back of the store. They told him to stand still.

After Mrs. Wasserman handed them the money, they ran out and disappeared. Maxine Gross Is Due Retrial October 5 sible only through the cooperation," as a major step in the institute downtown expansion program. As recommended by the Phil adelphia planning form of Wal lace-McHarg Associates, which Maxine Gross, former night club dancer, will be retried October 5 before Judge Charles D. Harris on a charge of murdering a Filipino physician, Dr.

DeoGracias DeLeon also recently completed the proposals for Baltimore's innter-har-bor area, the Maryland Institute envisions a southward extension 29, at a Charles street hotel. Miss Gross, 21, who danced pro of its campus from the mam school building at 1300 Mount fessionally under the name of Vicki Storm, won a new trial in Royal avenue. This enlarged campus would in the Maryland Court of Appeals clude a building on Dolphin which only last week denied the street, between Mount Royal ave State move for reargument. Wool blankets are unsurpassed for serviceability and ease of care. Many of today's newest wool blankets are machine-washable? Wool blankets are permanently moth-proof.

And their safety is built-in. Only wool has a natural resistance to flaming. Wool is unmatched for pure luxury, for lasting color beauty, for healthful comfort and deep-napped warmth, for long-term value, for serviceability, and for safety. What else can you ask of a blanket? Why even consider any other kind, just for a small saving the day you buy it. A blanket is to dream under.

In the pleasure of slumber, why dream of petty economy? Synthetic blankets are produced from chemicals.Wool is made in heaven. Pure wool blankets have every thing. Wool sets the standards for luxurious warmth, enduring beauty, and performance. Wool is unmatched for comfort and lofty elegance. Wool's full-bodied, vibrant texture can't be imitated in the mushy feel of synthetics.

While other blankets may look like wool in the store, they don't keep their fullness and deep nap as wool does. Unlike other blankets, which mat down and pill, wool is revitalized by washing. Its thick-ness and nap are reborn. Wool blankets are a long-term investment in quality. They are styled to last-often from one generation to another.Their rich colors and tasteful designs transcend the passing fads of less durable blankets.

The high court ruled that certain nue and Howard street, which re cently was renovated bv the in evidence had been seized illegally, as contended by her counsel, Nel stitute for classroom and studio son R. Kandel. use. Arundel Sues To End Park Limit 9 Build Sewage Plant By DEWITT BLISS ISunpapert Staff Correspondent would build Annapolis, Sept. 21 The Annei The commission and operate the plant, to serve the area between the Severn and Seuth rivers.

It would be a companion to another plant in the vicinity of Sandy Point which would serve an area north of the Severn. The County Commissioners have not developed the Thomas Point property for recreational use and such development has been op Wool was not invented, it was created for you. Arundel County Commissioners today asked the Circuit Court to void restrictions in the deeds to 23.51 acres at Thomas Point so that they could be used for a sewage disposal plant. According to the suit filed today, the restrictions will only allow the land to be used for recreation and conservation and related civic or community purposes. Donors Now Live In Florida The land was given to the county during 1961 and 1962 by Mr.

and Mrs. Ferdinand C. Lee, now living in Florida, the suit says. the County Sanitary Commis-ion has voted to ask the court to allow it to intervene as a plaintiff should such a suit be filed. posed by some residents of the area.

The suit says that the restric THE WOOL BUREAU, INC, 360 Lexington Avenue, New York.17, N.Y. 'Look for the Dylaniie tridemark on all leading brandt. tions raise the possibility that the property might revert to Mr. and Mrs. Lee, who were named as defendants, if the county should try to turn it over to the Sanitary Commission for the treatment plant..

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