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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C. WEDT\;ESDAY. MARCH 13. 1929. SUBURBAN "SUBURBAN NEWS.” TAXFUND SOUGHT] TO MAINTAIN PARKS NEWS Again Heads Schools Prince Georges Commission- ers Authorize Board to Legislation Would Permit| Acquiring Rock Creek | = . = & term of office she treated thousands of at 4:30 o'clock every morning. For Sis- REAI]Y 'm ENFURBE HEIR TO ESTATE SOUGHT. |Sister Louise Ends 27 Years in Charity & 3 Several years ago & group of volun- |hour later and from then uniil late [ $30,000 Awaits Acceptance of Mas- teer woman workers was organized un- | the evening she worked among her pa- , ‘Work Here to Take Up Duties in Lowell |t romnn vorkers was erganized un- |t € 3 s the homes of poor patients. of Union Station this morning and sald | For many years an annual card party| New Bomber Is Flown Here. | dress was Lawrence, Mass., will be given | ity work here, and known as_the|™ o 0. 15uice came to Washi workers under Sister Louise to raise|LB-7 Army y ; ; ity w ’ > : aaktgton| | LB-7 Army bombers now under con- 30,000, the estats of Mrs. Bertha Pled- | Apostle of Mercy’ at Providence Hos- SINGLON | fnds for work among the poor, and | struction at the Keystone plant, Bristol, John's Hospital, Lowell, Mass., and im- | Infant Asylum. For 16 years she cared | generously to her annual call for finan- | tol by Lieut. Williai sylum. years she y - y Lieut. m C. Kingsbury. en Champlain, who ran away at the age mediately left for her new post. |,nr the youngest of the infants there. | cial aid, | route to Rockwell Field, Calif. T of have worked with Sister Louise organ- b vearm o iaiarcn 4, Jeav e Bkt g : « ) °d [cent years were so fatiguing that her | Field and probably will be “ferried” b li g her entire fortune | ized and impromptu farewell party to|to Providence Hospital and placed in |superiors slightly modified the rule of |out to the West Coast togecner, ieave patients. ter Louise, the rising hour was set an s : sachusetts Man. feers performed follow-up Work, visiting | | LOS ANGELES, March 13 (#).—Fd-| gister M. Louise of the Sisters of | ward Champlain, whose last known ad- | Charity, for 27 years engaged in char-|goodby to her friends. and dance was held by the volunteer — The fourth of & series of 35 new typé ackaty Huls PAGLHER, /L1 006, Sanite ot pital, today was transferred to St.|[in 1902 and was assigned to St. Ann's merchants of Washington always gave Pa. was flown here yesterday from Bris~ of 18, 1s now 4) years old. His mother |, Surkeons. nurses and women who | " oo e Sy Bl Ty nsterred | SiSter Iquise’s charity labors in re-|the big bombers now are at Bolling the nun as she stood at the train gates charge of the free clinic. and Sligo Areas. BY WILLIAM J. WHEATLEY, Stalt Correspondent of The Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md, March 13.—Au- thority to spend for maintenance a cer- tain portion of the 7 cent tax for park development in Montgomery County woyld very likely result in the prompt development of the Rock Creek and Sligo Creek park extensions, without the purchase of the land. it was indl cated in the report of the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission, presented to the Maryland General Assembly today by Irvin Ow- ings, chairman. ‘Amendment of the act in this respect 18 sought in & draft of a bill which ac- companied the report. and which will be presented in the House by Speaker E. Brooke Lee of Silver Spring. This amendment, together with others, were discussed in detail at a conference at the State House between Maj. Lee. J Bond Smith, general counsel of the commission, and Mr. Owings. Other Amendments. Other amendments to the act shown the two years it lude oné giving to the Prince Georges County commis- sioners certain appellate jurisdiction in Yegard to the condemnation of prop- erty under the provisions of the act: authority for the commission to rf fees for the approval of subdivis plate: requiring persons requesting changes in the zoning ordinances to v the cost of publication: a provision to require all building permits within the metropolitan district to be approved as to zoning requirements by the com- mission, and an amendment to pay the Prince Georges County commissioners | $200 a vear each for their work in connection with the act. Park development, the commission reported. was one of the urgent prob- Jems on which it started to work, and it points out that it was confined prin- cipally to Montgomery County because in that county the tax of 7 cents on each $100 has been levied for park ac-| quisition purposes, whereas the law making the matter of such a levy in| Prince Georges County is optional with the county commissioners, who have not yet exercised it. As a result of this, in Montgomery County general design plans have been prepared for the ex- tension of Rock Creek Park from the District of Columbia to Garrett Park, a distance of 6 miles, and including an ares of 700 acres. A similar design plan has been prepared for the Sligo Creck Valley from Takoma Park to the Coles- ville road, a distance of approximately 3 miles,. The further extension of the Rock Creek Valley and the Sligo Valley plans, as well as a park plan for Cabin John Creek Valley, the commis- sion reports, will receive early consider- ation. Need for Change Explained. In explaining the need for a change in the law so as to allow a fixed sum for maintenance of parks, the commis- sion says that it “arises from the fact that it now appears likely that the com- mission will be able to secure a consid- erable area of park lands by dedication. ‘The donors of such land, however, wish to be assured that the lands if given to the commission for park purposes will be maintained and developed and not | sllowed to remain in their present con- | dition. These park areas include much of the territory in the proposed Rock Creek and Sligo Park territory, and if a in portion of the park funds of the commission is made available for the development and maintenance of these parks, dedication of land for this purpose will be encouraged.” While the commission reported that its zoning efforts had been met with much favor, and subdividers of property have appreciated the work of the com- mission, it did find fault with the lack of co-operation of building inspectors in areas over which the county building inspector, who does co-operate, has no power. It was for this reason that the amendment to the law giving it power to approve all building permits in the metropolitan district as to zoning is sought. amendment is imperative if zoning 1s o continue to be applied and enforced with respect to buildings in municipali- ties and special taxing areas. Although the act requires the com- mission to report recommendations to the present legislature as to transpor- tation facilities, co-ordination thereof on the highways, roads, bridges, rail- roads, street railways and other arteries of traffic, among other things, that body reported to the Legislature that it has 0. L. EMERICK. Of Purcellville was re-elected division ! | superintendent of schools of Loudoun | County for a term of four years by the | | county school board at its meetiag here. {Mr. Emerick had previousiy served 12 | yea He is a graduate of Eastern | Colleze and attended the University of Virginia two years. Before becoming superintendent, Mr. Emerick taught in the high schools of Loudoun four years and one vear in { Rockbridge. He was also in the Phil- ippine lslands for three years doing {land survey. BILL TO REGULATE SIGNS INTRODUCED Measure Would Prevent Mar- ring Roadside Beauty in Maryland. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md., March 13.—Regu- lation and control of billboards and signboards in the State of Maryland is! sought in a bill introduced in the House | of Delegates yesterday by Kent R. Mul- likin of Laurel. The bill provides for licensing by the commissioner of motor | vehicles of all such signs, permits to be issued only after written application, giving the proposed location, size, dis- tance from a grade crossing, if withinl 300 feet, material to be used and dll-I tance from the highway. The license fee is fixed in the measure at 25 cents a square yard, measured around the outside edge, and the fee is to be an annual one, Issuance of the | license is made mandatory, unless it is deemed to be a hazard to traffic. If after the erection of a sign, com- plaint is. made that it is & hazard to traffic, the bill provides for a public hearing, and if the hazard is found to exist, notice must be given the owner to remove it. Failure to act within 10 days would then permit the State au- thorities to move the sign. Mr. Mullikin has had the bill under consideration for some time, and sent it | to Baltimore lawyers for review prior to its submission to the Legislature. Representatives of the signboard or- ganizations, he said, approached him in an effort to stop the proposed legis- lation, pointing out that they were themselves eliminating dangerous signs. ROBBERS TAKE $59 FROM POST OFFICE SUBSTATION | Intruders Force Open Door of Vir- ginia Highlands Store ‘With Iron Bar. VIRGINIA HIGHLANDS, Va., March | 13 (Special) —Forcing open the rear | door of G. W. McCoy’s store and post office substation here last night burglars stole $5 in currency from the stamp drawer, $4 in change from the cash register and merchandise valued at ap- The commission said that this | proximately $50. The lock was forced open and an iron bar near the bottom of the door released by boring holes in the door panels and | lifting the bar. The burglars also at- tempted to open the rear door of the Sanitary Grocery Co.'s siore adjoining McCoy's by the same method, but abandoned the effort when he found the door boarded on. the inside. Finger prints were found on the door of McCoy's store and also gn the stamp drawer, cash register and. other fixtures. been forced to devote almost its entire | Two wrenches, reported stolen from & attention to other matters even more steam shovel of the Washington Brick pressing from a public standpoint, such | Co., near here, were found on the back as the preparation of a zoning plan and | steps. ordinance, park study, preliminary and| A similar attempt was made to rob yecord subdivision plat approvals and|the Sanitary Grocery Co.’s store at street profile approvals. The commis- sion, the report said, discovered early North Rosemont Station, Alexandria, Sunday, but, after boring holes in the in the administration of the act, that i back door and attempting to pry off the these questions were more vital to the public welfare than a study of the|—— transportation service within the district. ¥ 1t points out that traffic studies have | been made by the National Capital Park | and Planning Commission, and for the Maryland commission to have under- taken it, it not only would have resuit-| ed in a duplication of effort, but it and facilities i would have resulted in more pressing matters being neglected. lock with a pick, the burglar left. changing needs of the several com- munities may require. In the mean- time, the whole area is afforded the undoubted benefit of zoning protec- tion."” \ The commission reported that its control of subdivisions has been very | important, and has entailed much work on the personnel as indicated by the fact that it has considered and acted Zoning Plan Urged. {on 49 preliminary subdivision plats, 38- “The most urgent problem which the | commizsion found confronting it.” the report continued, “was the imperative need in this rapidly developing sub- vecord plats and 224 street profile | plans. While it might be supposed that vest- ing somewhat drastic powers of subdivi- urban area of 141 square miles for a|sion control in the commission would comprehensive zoning plan. mission thus found at the outset that if the character of the area included in Greater Washington was to be prescrved sgainst objectionable and unwarranted encroachment from commercial and in- dustrial enterprises, zoning should be put into effect with the least possible delay. The commission furiher found that without exception the municipali- ties, special tax areas and communities in general located within the Maryland- Washington metropolitan district were aiso keenly alive to the necessity for adequate zoning protection, and the commission acknovledges with appre- ciation the enlightened and - effective co-operation extended to it by the various communities with which it necessarily consulted in the preparation and adoption of the zoning pian for the district. “The commission's 7oning plan was eompieted early in the current year and in accordance with the require- ments of the act the commission thereupon recommended the plan, in-!{ cluding a comprehensive zoning ordi- nance and zoning maps showing the uses of property, to the respective boards of county commissioners of Montgomery and Prince Georges coun- ties who under the act are the Dis- trict Councils or legislative bodies wit in the respective portions of the Mar. land-Washington metropolitan district located in each county. “After the publication of the pr posed zoning ordinance and the p: ing of the zoning maps required by the act, hearings were conducted by both boards of county commissioners sitting separately, and the commission The com- | result in some cases at least in disagree- { ment with the owners or subdividers of | property, the report says further, this !'has not actually proved to be the case. On the contrary, the commission is pleased to report, the document says, that not only have the owners and sub- dividers shown a helpful co- { attitude, but that they actually come and appreciate the services ren- dered by the commission, Highway Conditions Studied. ‘The commission says that it has been impossible to develop the general re- gional plan as called for by the act, but adds that considerable work has been done on it. Thus. it says, a tentative | study is being made of the radials and inf the connections and by-pass routes in a proposed regional highway system which will ultimately be included in the general regional plan when finally | adopted. This preliminary study, it says, serves necessarily as a subdivision guide in connection with this form of | development. It is necessary. of course, ! that, the layout of streets within a pro- | posed subdivision conform as required { by Jaw as nearly as may be to the street | layout shown on the general plan which may be adopted But the commission accompanies its | { report with a plat showing three zones of transportation accessibility, the first | being within 30 minutes of the heart of the National Capital, the second be- tween 30 and 45 minutes and the third | in excess of 45, district in both counties is within the 45-minute zone, it extending in Mont- gomery Coun Four Corners, and in Prince Georges as 1s gratified to report {hat very few pro-| far as Beltsvile and Lanham. Most of tests were presented at such hearings. Little Opposition Found. *“Therefore. the commission adds on this point: ‘It appears sufficient to say that zoning has been put into effect with practically no opposition amended under the provisions of the act as the public | the developed sections of the two coun- ties are well within the 45-minute zone, including in Montgomery County, Cabin John, Edgemoor. Bethesda, Kensington, Forest Glen, Woodside, Silver Spring and Takoma Park, and in Prince Georges County, Hyattsville. Riverdale, Elandensburg, ‘Mount Rainier, College Park and Capitol Hejghts. had fallen into the ditches, that the holes filled with water, causing a con- stant danger to school children, and often hindered the fire apparatus. It shows that quite a | lot of territory within the metropoiitan | been completed by City Engineer E. C. to Rockville, Olney and | agreement between the council and rail- Begin Functioning. BY GEORGE PORTER, Staft Cocrespondent of The Star, UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March 13. —Having last month settled their points of disagreement with the Maryland-Na- tional Capital Park and Planning Com- mission and agreed to admini the zoning _ordinance previously adopted, the Prince Georges County commissioners yesterday paved the way for the full functioning of the zoning laws by authorizing the Board of Zoning Appeal of Prince Georges County to begin functioning and dis- ‘The Board of Zoning Appeal was ects arising in the county. Last July. when the county commissioners declined to administer the zoning ordinance for fear of civil liability, they ordered the Board of Zoning Appeal not to hear or dispose of any more cases. Cases Ready for Hearing. At that time two cases were ready for decision and have been pending up to the present time. ‘There are also said to be several other cases ready for hearing. The commissioners went over the school budget with the Board of Edu- cation and Supt. of Schools Nicholas Orem, who was asked to explain only those items which showed an increase in the estimates for the coming year. At the conclusion of the meeting it was stated the school budget probably would be approved as submitted. M. Hampton Magruder, counsel to the board, was instructed to call the at- tention of the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission to the provision in its charter requiring it to restore roadway to its original condition after ying a sewer or water main, Citizens Make Protest. ‘This action was taken after hearing & large delegation of citizens from Berwyn and Branchville complain of | the “‘abuses” caused by the laying of water mains and sewers in their streets by the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission. The Berwyn-Branchville delegation appeared before the commissioners yesterday as a result of a mass meet- ing in the Branchville firehouse last Friday night held to endeavor to com- pel the Sanitary Commission to fill in excavations which, it were claimed, ‘were permitted to remain open unrea- sonable lengths of time, endangering’| citizens. ‘Willlam A. Duvall of Branchville was appointed chairman at the mass meet- ing and helped present the citizens' cause’ to the board of commissioners yesterday. Object to Digging Methods. Although emphasizing the fact that they very much desire the water mains installed. spokesmen for the delegation criticized the methods in which the necessary digging was carried out. They contended that the ditches were dug in such a way as to cave in, causing holes In the streets three times as large as necessary. It also was sald the contractors for the Sanitary Com- mission failed to live up to their prom- ise to residents that the individual sec- tions of sewer and water mains would be filled in as soon as completed. It was reported that several persons Sar= Fire Engine Became Mired. One day last week, Mr. Duvall de- clared, the Branchville fire engine be- came mired in one of the ditches while responding to an alarm, with the result that a large barn was completely burn- ed. Another member of the delegation claimed some of the ditches had been lef*. unfilled since last Christmas. ‘The Branchville road, on which is lo- cated the fire house, a school and a church, was particularly complained of as being impassable because of the ditches. ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md.. March 13 (Spe- cial). —Elmer Armstrong was re-elected president of the Laytonsville Community League at the annual meeting of the organization Monday evening, and othér officers chosen were: Vice president, Judge Joseph C. Higgins: secretary, Mrs. Merle T. Haines; treasurer, Mrs. George Plummer. The meeting was conducted by Presi- dent Armstrong and was largely attend- ed. Reports of officers and committees were submitted and other routine busi- ness transacted, after which a music program was given under the direction of Mrs. Edgar Rogers of Washington Grove, teacher of music in the public £chools of the county, and refreshments were served. Albert Young of Washington, who gave his age as 23 and stated he was a Chinese, and Miss, Louise Harrison, 23, also of Washington, were married in Rockville Monday afternoon by Rev. Henry K. Pasma of the Presbyterian Church. i Members of the Montgomery County police force will be called upon to “show their stuff” in the dog-catching line after March 31, it was stated at police headquarters here’ today. The 90- period of grace allowed by law for owners to obtain license tags for their canines expires at midnight on the last day of the month, and the following morning the most fleet-footed members of the police force will, it is stated, be sent forth in an effort to corral all dogs they see that are not carrying 1929 license tags. The equipments provided by Chief Moxley consist of long poles with a looped rope at one end, so that the officers will have to lasso their victims. Heavy fines are provided for fallure to obtain tags within the specified period. The license fees are $1 for each male and $2 for each female, with a special fee for each kennel. Licenses were issued for the marriage of Kyle L. Cockrell, 24, of Vienna, Va. and Miss Margaret B, Wine, 18, of Capitol Heights. Md.; Willlam M. Nevins, 41, of Washington, and Miss Lillian J. Johnson, 30, of Boston, Mass.; Hollis Keith, 26, of Takoma Park, Md.. and Miss Irene Caroline Sherer, 19, of Elizabeth, N. J., and Irvin Smith, 21, and Miss Helen F. Rozer, 18, both of Montgomery County, Md. COUNCIL PARLEY OFF. Alexandria Body's Conference With Rail Officials Is Postponed. ALEXANDRIA, Va., March 13.—The conference scheduled for tomorrow be- tween the city council and officials of the Mount Vernon, Alexandria & Wash- ington Electric Railway Co. to discuss the repaving of six blocks of King street, between Patrick and Royal streets, has been postponed until next week. The day for the conference has not been set. Estimates for the repaving work have Dunn and everything is in shape to proceed with the work as soon as an way can be reached. — Houtzdale Woman Passes Away. CUMBERLAND, Md., March 13 (Special) —Mrs. Mary Dugan, wife of Patrick Dugan, Houtzdale, Pa., yesterday at Allegany Hospital, pose of the cases now pending before it. | created to handle non-conformity proj- |7 SN gde:lbl‘\‘;r huubfl'l‘di 13 &hllhdreruurvh--“ y was en er home, at . 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