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L] ESTABLISHED 1870 PRESIDENT PROBABLY WILL FflRHAN BOUND OVER SEND RECOMMENDATIONS T[] SUPERIOR COURT TO CONGRESS TOMORROW Waivs Exaniaton When Ao Likely to ' Ask That Both)| DR At Tone]] cwed of Embezzoment of urs House and Senate Give | - Opposes French | {Sovey o cOUPLATNAN . Their Ruhr Activity ) Approval Without Much 10 [ ot DOlly s T S-chime Purrior, Must Ao . ‘ at Governor Bimeon B, Daldwin, 3 years, young and as active an March Term—=Woman Fined' $150 F ever in studying world problems L - Committee Favors Measure T w .fl lN ' ' Through Attarney Jacob Goodhart Restric ew Immigr tion to Half of What it is, ting in front of his fireplace de- clared himseif in opposition to the advance of the French army into the ‘Ruhr valley, giving It police court this morning waived ex- as his -opinion that from an amination in charges of embezslement othical and religious standpoint of furs to the value of $1,200 from of view ‘the action of the hd:.'urd ah}nhk;'.n of “'l:l flly.A:'ml on N . Sl ward motion o rosccuting orney TRSAGH 116 Byp. baokard, Joseph G, Woods he was bound over to the March term of the superior court in bonds of $1,500, The Forman hearing had promised today on his birthday and sit- of New Haven, Samuel B, Forman in Washington, ¥eb, 5, — President Harding today prepared a statement to congress asking for approval of the British debt funding settlement negotiated by the American and Brit- ish debt commissions, It was indi- cated that be probably would submit his recomméndations to the senate and. house tomorrow with an urgent request that approval be given with- out delay, Meantime congressional leaders con- tinued in eonferénce over the most acceptable way to iInsure passage of the authorizing legislation before congress adjourns on March 4. The| measure is expected to be Lrought be- fore both senate and house hefore the end of the week, with all the driving force of administration influence be- hind it. Numerous Conferences, There also were a number of White House conferences regarding the pros- pects for legislative action and it was evident the president was preparing to act only after he had informed | himself fully as to the state of con- gressional opinion on the subject, Iarly callers at the executive offices included Senator Watson, republican, Indiana, and Representative Mondell of Wyoming, the republican floor leader’ of the house, with both of whom the president is understéod to have discussed what form of author- izing legislation would be least likely to encounter serious opposition. Many ot the senate and house leaders would prefer to sce a general amendment of the present funding law, broad cnough to enable the debt commission to negotiate settlements with all the debtor nations on terms unalogous to those embraced in the British agreement. battle, Prosecutor Woods. had pre- pared a 15 page brief on the law of * . ®s Federal Distributor Shows e . 36 Million Tons in Stor- in his case being fixed at $150, The George and Forman cases were not tons as compared with 22,000,000 tons eriad 4 s Ll dnbad s more, and that he disposed of the furs cn November 1, according to F. It, in New York city contrary to agree-, Consumption of bituminous coal is ¢ tioned George and was invited to make roximately 9,000,000 £ op | aph Lol BouN . et a search of the suspect’s home at 399 Aiding Friend Rewarded | was told “in New Britain, from boys | Bridgeport, Feb. 5.—The widow of [and from trappers.” The sergeant took American 1he Stamping Co., plant|the detective bureau, according to the were burned to death at the same | sergeant, said he bought all from NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923, —~TWELVE PAGES 4 BELIEVED DEAD, 30 Average Daily Cirenlation Week Ending '088 February drd THRES SAAR VALLEY MINERS QUIT; FRENCH TAKE NEW TOWNS; STRIKES FAR FROM BROKEN If You Trade With Bootleggers, You're a Traitor, Bulwp Says Melbodlut Prelate Makes, * Sweeping Charge Against | Friends of Rum—l)lfl-‘ cusses Divorce, Ruhr and Turk. German Agents in Occu- pied Regions Reported Succeeding in Stiffening Resistance to Occupa- pubie taany 10 ||| Ctom e conferenes : treaty oeeu- HURT IN KANSAS HIIE Getto Bulldlnl. One of Landmarks of Wichita, Destroyed —— Wichita, Kas, Feb, Wants Harding to Call Conference To Change Treaty | Neotlegging, contempt for establish o ed law, the divorce evil, the invasion Now of the Rhur distriet and the situation ||| = ks |in the Near Bast—these were a fow gy At least .,,,lal the topics discussed at Trinity persons were injured, some of them | Méthedist church last evening by Bishop William A, Anderson of Ohio, #0 seriously that they were not peeted to live and four others arc be-| He called bootleggers traitors, said | leved dead in an early morning blage | the marriage contract is too lightly today which wiped out the Getto|held, scored the lawless, endorsed the bullding, one of Wichita's landmarks. | action of France In sending her sol Obtain Control of Rail- Mames were first discovered short. | dlers into the Iubr and lared that Iy after 3 a, m, and escape by stair-|the Turk ix drunk with power, He ways was Impomsiblo, Many of the|also criticized the press for featuring ways on Right Bank of occupants of the burning building slid | stories of crimes and other incidents| 3 s down ropes to safety, | whieh do not tend to elevate the mind | Rhine River. Thirty-six apartments composed the | and said that the laboring classes | === Y Feb, b,+The Bleu America has York oLy of asked President resolution call a second to revise the and to taks pation of Ituhr The resolutior ernment proval France made o Versuilles tion on the by the French urged the gov its disap. taken by Claim France Is Secking te to indicate of the aetion (By Associated Press) the Saar valley which |.n.‘m<-~ ton# of woul an- nually \\-hl on strike this morning. The government was informed that men 1o 'pl & com- of their demands that their wages be doubled and now want the cquivalent in buying power of thelr pre-war Wages, The original demands we ed to M. Le Trocquer, minister of pub= lic works, last Wednesday by M., Rault, president of the Saar Valley governing commission. The mines in the valley were takgn over by the i'rench government under the treaty of Versallles for compensation for the destruction of the coal mines in the north of IPrance during the war, Paris, Feb, § The the fused to & promis present- 25 of Take Two More Towns, Duesseldorf, Feb. 5. (By Assoclated I'ress)— Extension of the French oc- cupation to Offenbu and Appen- change over the eral industrial to be a lengthy one as several wit- |nesses had been summoned both by the state and by the defense, and in embezziement, George Also Bound Over, Abraham George, charged with the thert of furs to the value of $150, from age on January 1 ——— connected in the evidence, Washington, I'eb. 6.—8tocks of soft |,,::I-‘d l(hh(:mllr::mt::krma ll‘:l;';-n':nlnn:c: coal in storage in the 1'nited Slnwu;or',‘m,o representing to Meshken that Wadleigh, federal fuel distributor, “ : | who declured today the condition in- ;:‘p:;d“:oh ;‘_‘o:”:_k:n" ":’dl:lh“)n £aeY dicated that the bituminous coal | AC BPARPETR M T MONS crisis created by last year's strike had |, " 2Fp0 CaEm, Fariuncs Jeitye testified that in the investigation of a week, Mr. Wadleigh estimated, while average weekly production is amount. Chestnut street. In the course of the ing to 11,000,000 tons. investigation the sergeant found a R S AR | number of skins and linings and a | quantity of thread. He inquired as Joseph Ieher was today granted com- | the stuff with George's permision to pensation of $4,703 by Commissioner | MeshRen's store se the complainant E. T. Buckingham, while the claim | might examine the goods. of atives of Antonio Mezs was As a result of Meshken's claim of time. Mezes it is claimed, caused [ Meshken. the fire by smoking in violation of the In reply to questions of Defense The Weher claim | Covnsel P. 17, McDonough, the sers as his iife was los = A ‘nnnrllmllon of a hard fought legal ENDED; GOVT. MAN SAYS | Meshken, was also bound over, bonds January 1 amounted to 36,000,000 he had prospective buyers in Balti- definitely passed. | complaint of money theft he Gies- Wife of Mafi Who Died to where eGorge secured them and denie Iloth men, employes at the | ownership, George was arrested and in (Continued on Tenth Page) Immigration Bill, The number of immigrants ecligibte to admission to the Unfted —States| company's rules, under ‘the existing restriction act § uncontested, would be reduced by more than half .un nfrurt to save M(-ms. fom bl poroea oty i oo | COLLAPSE OF LAUSANNE DOES NOT MEAN RENEWAL OF NEAR EAST WAR; NEITHER SIDE DESIRES STRUGGLE Admissions under the proposed n(:L1 would be limited to two per cent. of | the number of foreign born indi-| viduals of any nationality resident in| the United States as determined by the census of 1890. 'The present re- striction is* three per cent. as de- termined by the census of 1910, Members of the committee esti-| mate that under the new restrictior clause the total of immigrants enter- ing the United States in any one| year would not exceed 168,837, Ad-| missions under the existing law total | 358,023, yearly. New Blockade Likely, A possibiilty that the Lenroot-An- derson-Capper farm credits program may be blocked in congress uniess FACES MURDER CHARGE lTulks Agree on All Terms| B J Negro Accused of Slaying Two Ml:n ut Capltulatlon and. tant 1as| Economic Clauges — Mu- dania Agreement Still Effective. at Cromwell Saturday Hearing Today. Cromwell, Feb. 5.—The hearing to| be given this afternoon by W. C. Noble to Julius Land, the negro who there is some assurance of action on|Shot and killed Walter Thorell and the administration shipping bill was| Arthur E. Swanson in the Cromwell |ondon,. FFeb, — (By Amsociatéd trolley station Saturday night is ex-| press)—Until Lord Curzon returns to foreseen in some quarters today after 4 A a series of conferences to discuss the|pected to be brief. It is anticipated jondon from l.ausanne, no authorita- without bonds for!tive indication of the British govern- legislative outlook for the remaining|he will be held t the Middlesex 8u- ment's view of the Near Kast confer- four weeks of the 67th congress. the next term of After a talk with President Hard-| perior eriminal court, and then|cnce collapse is expected. ing, Kepresentative Mondell of Wyo-|locked up in Haddam jail. FFrom the first comments on the sit- ming, republican leader of the house,| l.and says that he had been 1ol yation, which appear in most of the declared there were so many “diffi-| Middletown to buy a pair of "radlo morning newspapers, it is cvident ~ulties” in the way of an agreement, boots” for his sweetheart and in tak-|(hat although a majority condemn that it was entirely possible the farm|ing a trolley car to return to New-|7Turkish “recklessness” in rejecting the credits measures could not be finally | field he got on the one running to ierms, the idea of foreibly imposing written into law before March 4, de- | this town. ' He had an argument with ' {orms is nowhere entertained, and ex- spite the fact that legislation on the SWwanson in trying to get off the car, ccpt ip the event of the Turks attack- subject had passed both the senate| there was an exchange of blows and jng British forces, war is not regarded and house, immediately after the shooting of a5 a probable solution of the difficulty. — Thorell who was standing by. Swan- Mail Attacks Curzon 1] son was shot and killed while he was An exception to the almost univer- THE JOKES ON HIM running after Land. sal chorus of press condemndtion of e The negro was apprehended as he | the allies stand is afforded by the N was running along the tracks into j)uily Mail which recast a late edition Stamford Man Who Sent Blackhana Mid'"*’lo“'nhhr officers sent out 10|10 Jaunch a vehement cditorial attack » search for him. upon Lord Curzon, defending the Letter For Fun Now Held in Gt s e |Turks. The article says that the con- $5.000 Bonds. Stamford, Feb. 5.—Charles Sabino, arrested on the charge of sending a blackmailing letter, today said in his own defense that he sent the letter | ference failed because the allied dele- INYENTORIES FILED ‘Jgatvs refused to recognize the reason- able Ottoman demands. bicker- “as a joke.” The recipient was Isa- dore Shapiro dealer in second hand | clothing who received it Thursday. | “Lord Curzon has haggled, Graham Estate, $5,591.09; Norton Ap-|cd, hectored and domineered,” the | Sabino was held in $5,000 bonds by the city court for trial in the superior newspaper continues “and through his praisal, $2,562.63, court. The letter to Shapiro demand- error of judgment Great Brifain has Valuation $1,000. ed that he leave $600 necar the Stam- thrown away a great opportunity of bringing peace to eastern Europe and western Asia. x X x The Turks seem #to have behaved with prudence and restraint and to have made concession ford High school and if he did not obey one of his children would be taken away. Shapiro turned the let- ter over to a carrier who gave it to Postmaster Whittaker. after concession, They were only Thomas Swain, Aged 70, adamant upon the single question of | capitulations, “No sane person would dream of talking war over this question and the collapse on the conference upon such a point is ridieulous. x x The Brit- |ish negotiators are returning under the cloud of a humiliating blunder."” Dies at Home of Son * Thomas Swain, aged 70 years, of 19 Turks Want Decision Barnett street, died at 6:30 o'clock Lausanne, Ieb, 5.—(By Associated this morning. He made his home with his son, George T. Swain, having lived in this city for the past 16 years. He formerly resided in East Berlin He leaves besides his son, a brother, George Swain, and a half-sister, Mrs. Edith Young. The funeral, will be held tomorrow afternoon af 2 o'clock | P'ress)—The Turkish de agation to the Mrs‘ Dol.o'l‘y HornkOhl | Near st conference announced to- from the B, C. Porter Co.. undertak- ing rooms on Court street, Rev, Henry Dies in New York City |aay that it wouid ask the powers Justus and August Hornkohl of | whether they considered the negotia- this city received word Saturday of [tions officially at an end. the death of their mother, Mrs, Doro-| The impression prevailed among the thy Hornkoh! of New York city. Mrs, |conference delegates today that Tur- Hornkohl was 84 years of age and key would not he informed officially W. Maier of the First Congregational church officiating. Burial will be in Wilcox cemetery, East Berlin, 4 HURT IN GAS EXPLOSION, 'Inl $1,000 a day since the 1923 biils Providence, Fely 5.—Four mm.mrc sent out last week. Collector were hurt in an explosion of a gas!Dernadotte lLoomis said this after- formerly lived in NewsBritain. of the termination of the negotiations ¢ |inasmuch as it was generally desired Personal Tax Collections tank at Pomham Light in Narragan-4noon The Saturday collections were sett Bay today. unusuatly heavy this year. is and Kalauska ‘ An inventory in the estate of the late Clara J. Graham, filed today in probate court, shows an estate of $5 591.09, the greater part of which js represented in deposits in the Ber and New Britain Savings banks. | The estate of C. W. Norton has been inventoried at § .63, composed mainly of stock holdings. Included in the inventory are 3,000 shares of New England Zinc & Lead stock, listed as “no value.” The estate of Clara Kajauska been appraised at $1,000. | has |to contintie the Mudania armistice i Averaging $1,000 Daily thus avoiding the possible renewal of Personal tax collections are averag- Refuses Allied Terms Ismet Pasha, after yesterday's flnnl1 session at which the Turks refused to accept the allied terms, said he would (Continued on Sixth Page) . Prrarrar did not iive there with him, |ia, lway workers bonus in an ef- on upper three stories of the building. |#houl® thank God for the changed at- In these apartments a majority of the|titude of capita Tl] filvE UP AMERICAN dwellers wore reported to be aged,| Pays Respeet to Radical Thoyght some of them feeble, Business firms “A warfare s being made upon the were Jocated on the main floor. right of private ownership today,"” Four persons helieved missing were | sald Bishop Anderson “There Is o RIE"TS Tfl fiET TITLE seen to appear at windows, it is re-|radical spirit coming from Kurope ported and then disappear, which ;|Il~lllvn| .lh:n right of prm'm PRSI Y P —————— {ownership. There is but one cure for A5 2 e rARRAR,s ELA'MS MAY 1’1. the Christianizing of all these Son of British Heir Who | forces. - 4 | “hishop Anderson said that a mark-| Died Today Announces od change has come about in the at- 2.8 BE HEARI] IN P”BI‘IGMIHM of capital toward labor in the Decision to Return past yvears. When laboring men 2% used to go on strike the reply of capi- tal used to be, “Let them do their Washington, Feb., b.~Henry K¢ Referee Sees No Reason for worst” Thers has heen progress in|ward Pellew, who last August inher- that line for which all should be|ited the right to assume the title Secrecy in Famous* |0 rul. The attitude of the capital- | sixth Viscount of Exmouth, died at i 1 {istic faction is now one of more con-| his home here jast night at the age Dlvorce Action sideration’ and sympathy, “The lab- of 94, still an American citizen, He B 1N oring classes should thank God for the | had made plans to return to England the divorce suit of Geraldine Farrar, change and take advantage of n.";nunl assume his peerages The title against Lou Tellegen today caused said the speaker. | ow. passes to a son, Charles Ernest postponement of the hearing. The ‘““We are comins to see that life is| Pellew, formerly a professor in chem- newspapermen sent Referee Thomas interpreted in measures of service, istry at ( qlum)q:z university and 10w .o 1o towns near Baden is believ- H. Mahony a plea for \ admittance That feeling is coming to possess all| Ihlng in New Yor! ed to have been decided upon as & which s0 moved him that he an- classes” he declared. : penalty an interference with nounced the hearings would be con- Bootlegging “Rotten Game,” Washington, .. 5.—Charles Ern-|{ service between ducted publicly unless Supreme Jus- “Bootlegging—There is a rotten | est Pellew, only surviving son ¢ Paris and Prague. tice Cohalan, who referred the case, game. There is no person playing the Henry Edward Pellew, who died here ~ 1, Gorman quarters, it is declared ruled otherwise. He then postpoped rotten game today with more disgrace|last night, announced today he would |y1.¢ this latest move of the French the hearing so attorneys for the to himself than the bootlegger.” I renounce his American citizenship .4 gs its real goal the Kehl bridge- stage celebrities could put the ques- a person does not like a law he can!and return soon to F and to sit in 1ssburg, This would tion of secrecy up to the court. work for its repeal. It is the part of [ the house of lords as sount of give the Prench control of the rail- The referee said he knew of no rea- every man to respect the laws. This| mouth, a titie inherited last .\m,usll“d). along the right bank of the son why the hearing should be pri- country is one in which the majority|by his father. | Rhine. vate but that he would entertain a rules, | Mr. Pellew who is years old | om Freiburg come reports that motion for privacy if counsel desired “It is claimed by the friends of | was born in England, but came to this|{pe arrival of the Irench in Baden to make one. Karrar's lawyer im- prohibition*that already 75 per cent! country as a youlh with his father, territory caused great excitement mediately made such & motion de- of the people are in favor of it said|serving as a captain of volunteers|among the civillans who were advised claring the ease already had ln»pn Bishop Anderson. He added that that| during the Spanish-American war.|to remain calm “aired. too much in the newspapers"” —_— {He was for many years a profes: in There was little ‘uml that both sides d»slrvtl to avoid (Continued on Ninth Page) }()\(<:ni{0Ir)' at Columbia universi rov | week-end . in - tite | publicity. e O Ve A siding’ since his retirement in New gitpation. The Referee Mahony put the case over York. Hjs wife w Miss Margaret | peing offered until tomorrow advisipg the lawyers WATGH TAKEN FROM GIRL | Chandler of New York. fort to revive fhe com- to consult Justice Cohalan and com- Henry Edward Pellew was 04 vears | munists, the other hand, are ac- mcnung SENT BAGK FROM SWEDEN old when he inherited the DBritish|tively countering such rmoves with » “So far I see nothing in thh case title through the death of a great!declarations that the German cap! to _distinguish it from thousands of nephew and declined to return to I2ng- |ists, whose refusal to fulfill the other cases that are tried in the {land because of his advanced age, demar has led to the entire ssitua- court day after day. Unless it ap- I'olice Recover Timepicce Which For-| serving his rights an 3y ould suffer confiscation of their pears that thg reason held by the | citizen. He was married justice who referred it was to avoid Elizabeth Jay, granddaughter of Jnhll publicity, the hearing will be pub- Jay, first chief justice of the United | lle.” L States and upon her death was,mar-l Duesseldort, 17eb. 5. Associated Mr. Mahony ried to her sister, Miss Augusta Jay.!press)—New orders from Berlin to as he had not yet ruled the case He whs the grandson of Edward Pel-|the railroad men in the Rhineland and clbsed, the proceedings were as|case may take, the police, it possible,|lew, first vistount of Exmouth and |the Ruhr had the effect today of stif- though they had occurred in open|solve it, was indicated today. Last|successor to lLord Nelson as vice-ad: |fening the strike against the French court, and subsequently the official|fall, Sergeant William P. McCue re-}miral of England. Mr. Pellew h :\‘,,M dispelled hopes of a settlement stenographer permitted the test taken|ceived a complaint from a local youns|pesided in this country almost con-|that have heefd prevalent during the at the first day of the hearing last| woman, that h riend” had leit]tinuously since 1871. He will be|jast few days. week to become public. [town after she had loaned him a goid | huried her By individual interviews, the distri- The record shows that three wit-|wateh. After making inquiries, she P e O, | bution of money, by promises and N. Y. BROKER ARRESTED nesses had been examined so far—|lLecame convineed that he went bacl warning: the German government in re- propx rty. getful Admirer Took With Him on His Return to Lurope. Germans Unchanged. That the arm of the law is far- reaching and no matter how long a later announced that| John Bogardus, a restaurant keeper at | to his native land, Sweden. She com- agents are declared in authoritative Long Beach; August Larsen, a deputy | hunicated these facts to Sergeant Mc quarters here to be doing their utmost sheriff at the Long Island resort and C‘ue, who took the matter up with| to encourage the resistance which had Mrs. Marjorie Kettrick Schuler of Chief Willinm ', Hart. After seve A, begun to weaken among the local New York, who described herseif as|confercnces, the head of the dep: functionaries and state employes. Miss Farrar's secretary and advance ment and the chief of the detective There has been no fresh extension agent, | bureau decided to communicate with| .. s q " f . strike but instead of improving Bogardus testificd that Tellegen | authorities in Sweden. i TR SR L .1 :‘l:: Fffi.‘m-n had hoped the situation had lived in a cottage on Long Island Information was transmitted to "'lwi 1.os Angelc I'eb. H.—Austin remains unchanged. in the summer of 1921; that Miss| Kronelansman for Marks Harad Ior Montgome former New York stock cordon around the valley to whose office is similar to thdt of [hroker was arrested by county and prevent coal shipments to unoccupied but that a “Spanish type” girl occu- | the state's attorney in this country. federal oficers here for New York Germany remains unbroken., Some at- pied the bungalow with the actor.|The Swedish official conducted an in- authoritics on charges of stock frauds | tempts have been made through the She, the witness said, was supposed | vestigation and located the former|aggregating more than Of- | use of the private inter-mine tracks to be Tellegen's step-sister. | New Britain man, who has since mar- | ynouncing the arrest said to-!to send coal through the French bar- Larsen corroborated this testimony |ried. The man admitted t had that Montgomery admitted his but these were frustrated. and then Mrs. Schuler was shown a|taken the watch and readily surrend- itity and said he would waive ex- » Qarter, director of the West- picture of the cast of *“The Blind|ered it. The timepiece has heen re- | tradition and return, at to New j¢ state mines and a commercial IPool" a play in which Tellegen star-|ceived at the police headquarters, and | york to face the indictments. <cotor for Stinnes interests is red here and in which he is now ap-|will be turned over to its rightful s among the latest functionaries expell- pearing in the west, lowner. ed fro: he Ruhr. She was asked to name those in the | Miracle Spalcs the and S ',',_.#_ leh in Bad Train \\ reck togmp)\ was shown for the purpose ' Finance Board to Open of identification and would be used l\nnual Heanngs Tomght SR MR e dukrEara MEDotts. hve: oharactories it brcatitian, BUIE again in the ca 3 | The board of finance and taxatiorn {making up the new budget tonight at the office of Mayor A. M. Paonessa The consolidated school district will Mayor of Woston Urges Adoption of | be heard at § o'clock; Ithe public amusements Program Avold Labor| will be given an opportunity Disputes This Year. 1. Montgomery Arrested Los Angeles on Charges of Frauds The 0,000, rier, ouce b.—Chicago, ton ead that no one was killeq | Toledo Youth, today when threc No. 42 Billings, were derailed at as a “mirach or injured carly rear cars of train Mont,, to St. Louis, Mullea, Neb. A broken ru sponsible, Have Fallen From Window of Dor- mitory—Was Near Sighted. 1 was re The body 0, a university, was the sidewalk be- his room n nitories by the PProvide , Toiedo, to ex- That Will Brown Hospital§ an;lfi.laile Filled During Llec(l(m Montreal, Feb, 5—] sault and fraud attended the balioting today in the eral elections. noor sons, charged with were in jail and a n were in hospitals. at §:45 o'clock plain its needs and at 9:15 o'clock the commission city hali commission will be heard il the open wind foting Boston, I'eb. 5.—Mayor James M.| Curley in his annual address to the| city council today urged that Boston be made “a strikeless city “The adoption of a program fof a strikeless city” he said, through the!fines of service as arbitrator of municipal or| 142 fire insu county officials, is extremely desirable | formerly op in view of the enormous huilding pro- | which now ¢ gram arranged for 1928." lalleged vio trust law, were reduced to an aggre- At 32 bhe Is Planmng gate of less than $1,000,000 today To Marry for Third Time through a decision of the state Joseph 1. Arbour, aged 24, of 255/ . e supreme court. Cherry street, and Marie E. Boutin, y Bd Mre. D. 8. Starring, knows No e i | PROBATE HEARING SHOWS FORMER . ..:i.'. o i & R " Y NEW BRITAIN MAN HAD BEEN WED [ ol toioe s 21 YEARS BUT XEPT IT A SECRET pyguian premicr 1s granted a marriage license at the l‘a1 gel m Bomh Thrower Fines Cut Down From 8 To One Million Dollars Jackson, Miss., Ieb, 5.--Total $8,000,000 assessed against ance companies which ted in Mississippi and being prosecuted for tion of the state anti- pajamas showed evi- ised. The r-sighted and the wine At ario “GAST UP IN CHICAGO Chicago, 1'eb An one cent in the tank w gasoline, _due lo ree advar producers, was today by inm Standard Oil ndiana price Valuable Antique House F ulmlm'e Is Destroyed furniture Aame Mr. as Antigue ed or of office of the town clerk. ) | TH (By the As- o8 8 mb was thrown [ Yon in the dir f ier Stamboui- a4 in a box St ast night with No one was The bomb WEATHER —0- Hartford, Feb. 5.-—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity: Becoming unsettled followed by snow late tonight or Tuesday with slowly rising temperatire and increasing northeast winds, [, New Haven Feb. ~Mrs, Anna it was learned that the deceased was Bonfanti of New Britain was removed | married | as administratrix of her brother's es- [ widow and | tate by the probate today. The brother | N. Y. Thecourt said Salvatore Itoncaiole was killed by a|clined g fall from a truck here in June. His|undertaker had applied estate was set at over $7,000 and it| for Mrs. Bo 1 was claimed the sister and a brother | It was claimed that the marris in Italy were the heirs at law. Today | not known. years four children in that he ury but as was in cha per ) ot 46 9 A the explosion o lentity is said to Pe authorities escaped. ' he would own to the RIS, SNBSS, *.