Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 285, Decatur, Adams County, 4 December 1958 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
IOUR I SSO to SSOO tJiA.jP A loan p^an t 0 yOU * “ ... a payment plan to fit you I rSU^WiKSZEIH budget. Cash for ever} S orthy purpose on Signa I I ture only, auto or furniture I 157 So. 2nd St. i Special “Pay Day” Loans SSO For 2 Weeks—7oc | PHONE 3-3333 BRING THE KIDDIES TO FRIDAY, DEC. sth f JL from 3 to 5 P. M. SATURDAY, DEC. 6th from 10 till Noon. santa bJU Will Be Here To Visit With All Good Little /'gWfc /W/w Girls and Boys. |g|* 7 im V Santa Will Have A iJMWM ■ Surprise For All Children. WK Wp «IS So. 2nd Street—Phone 3-3333
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I Hopes For Ban On Nuclear Tests Fade I , Russians To Insist On Right Os Veto GENEVA (UPI) — Hopes for I an effective ban on nuclear testI ing faded today when the RusI sians announced they will insist I on the right to veto decisions of I the organization set up to police I the ban. Radio Moscow, violating a I pledge of secrecy, broadcast a I detailed account of Soviet proposI als to the nuclear-test conference I here revealing for the first time I that Russia will not accept ma- | jority rule in the control group. I The broadcast reaffirmed the I Russian demand that tests must I be banned “for all time,” but at I the same time expressed "strong objections” to the idea of setting up permanent inspection teams to police it. The combined effect of the Soviet declarations probably will be to doom the conference on testing to failure. At the same time, Radio Moscow served thinly-veiled notice on the United States and Britain that Russia reserves the right to resume testing at any time and to continue it until agreement on a ban is reached. The stated goal of the prospective resumption cf Soviet nuclear tests was to “match the total number of U.S. and British explosions since March 31, 1958”— when the Russians announced they were suspending tests. The Kremlin resumed its test program just before the nuclear conference here began. At least two nuclear explosions in Soviet territory have been detected since the conference got under way. Driver Is Arrested Following Accident An accident occurring at the intersection of 10th and Monroe streets Wednesday evening, resulted in the arrest of one driver for failure to yield the right of way to another vehicle. A car driven by K. Richard Peterson, 28, Decatur, was struck by a car driven by Leo Wayne Beard, 28, Decatur, while headed west on Monrod’street at 6:40 p.m. Beard was headed north on 10th street and struck the left side of the Peterson vehicle at the intersection. Beard was arrested for failure to yield and is scheduled to appear in justice of the peace court Saturday at 7 o’clock to the charge. The city police department estimatled the damages to the Peterson [car at $450 and $390 to the Beard
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, JNDTANA
Two-Month-Old Girl Is Choked To Death LAFAYETTE. Ind. (UP!)—Two-month-old Katherine Richmond, daughter of Purdue University students Elvin T. Richmond, was dead on arrival at a hospital here Wednesday, and authorities said she apparently choked when 'an object was lodged in her throat. Missile Launching Ship Commissoned NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) -'The U. S. Navy commissions its first Polaris missile launching ship today. The vessel, the USS' Observation Island, will have the same navigation system used by nuclear submarines so that positions can be precisely determined at all times. Stream Os Colder Weather Delayed Weather Forecast Revised In State United Press International A stream of colder air which had threatened to drop temperatures in Indiana as low as five above zerb tonight has been delayed enroute. The weatherman said today that an outlook issued near noon Wednesday which indicated lows of 5 to 15 above tonight and highs of 15 to PC rbove on Friday would not be fulfilled. Instead, rows tonight will range from the low 20s to near 30 and highs Friday from near 30 to the mid 30s. Forecasters said the cold air was not dissipated but merely delayed. The outlook for Saturday was “mostly cloudy and cold” with “snow flurries near Lake Michigan.” The change in temperature indications and the precipitation pattern lessened the likelihood of hazardous driving conditions as the weekend approached. Occasonal light rain was due in the north and a chance of snow! flurries near Lake Michigan by; late tonight. But light rain was expected to end in the central and southern portions this morning, with only the southwest area expected to get rain or snow Friday Temperatures reached highs ranging from 37 at South Bend to 49 at Evansville Wednesday and dropped to lows during the night ranging from 30 at Lafayette to 34 at Evansvile. drizzle barely made its mark oh rain gauges. Trade in a good town — Decatm
Modernizing Os Tax Mapping Is Proposed Says Property Tax Records Outmoded INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—A proposition that Indiana invest approxj imately five million dollars in modernized state tax mapping records with the likelihood of recovering most of it through en* larged tax inccme was made Wednesday. The nitch csme from A.S. Kulis, president or American Air Surveys, Inc., Pittsburgh, at a meeting of the Commission on State Tax and Financing Policy. Members of the commission heard Kulis report that in a preliminary survey of 20 northern Indiana counties he found present property tax records badly in need of new; tax mapping. He said some counties “didn’t even have plat books” and others had deed books which had been written in pencil and become illegible. Kulis said that on the basis of what his survey teams found in the 20 counties he thought a statewide tax mapping would be an economical undertaking because the cost could be the additional money obtained through addition of property and improvements now now showing on the records. No Cost Estimate He was hesitant to estimate the probable cost of such a survey, which involves the platting of all property from aerial surveys and the setting up of a permanent system for tax assessment. However, he and Robert J. Pitchell, resident director of the commission, said a “rough guess" would be $1.25 per person, based on the fact that there is about one parcel of land for each four persons. Pitchell said that the Wednesday meeting of the Commission was to hear Kulis give his report, and that at the next meeting, set tentatively for Dec. 19, the members would consider whether to recommend to the 1959 General ■ Assembly that such a major undertaking be approved. Kulis said that he found in his preliminary check of the present permanent tax records in northern Indiana that “Kosciusko has ohe of the worst. Lake also was bad. Allen County probably is one of the best." Pitchell said the modernized tax records system would bring “scientific foolproof methods into the assessing process and eliminate inequities.” Provide Permanent Record In addition to the added tax revenues, Pitchell and Kulis said the plan would provide a permanent, accurate record showing what property is where, who owns it and what has been done to improve it. They said whole new additions are missing from the tax records in some cases. The survey also would provide duplicate records in the event of fire which might destroy a Courthouse, they added. “Too much of your Indiana assessment data is now in the memory of old timers” Kulis charged. “They know where everything is, but what will happen when they die?” If you nave something to sell or rooms lor rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1958
