Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
uno) ‘projueH qdag APV 1qr1 AMS 00{)90UU0) ]iA'W Névn‘ot the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 SENATE WANDERS. IN VAIN EEKING GOOD SOLUTION ON MUSCLE SHOALS ISSUE Underwood Plan Sub-|[INUSUAL TRIBUTE suted For Nortis\" pip g CURTIN Idea And Jones' Pol- icy Also Is Brought Business Suspended for Her Forward Once More.| Funeral, Held This Morning DOWN CHILD AMEND State Senate Unanimous in Yoting Down Proposed Statute ACTION ELSEWHERE SOON Early Decision by Fastern States Not Likely But fn Mil-West 14 States Are Expected to Take Vote Be- fore March 4. a dissenting vote and without debate the South Carolina ecnate today re- s e jected the proposed child labor Foreign Relations Com- THRONGS AT UBSEQUIES :lr::.ndmcnl to the federal constitu- Action In Fast, New York, Jan. 14,—An early de- cision by eastern states on the fed- eral child labor amendment is not generally expected. Although legis- latures in the upper New England group are expected to dispose of the question at forthcoming sessions,. it has not yet gone into official chan- mittee Fails to Act on World Court — Hughes Returns to Wind Up His ‘Affairs. Entire Membership of Chamber of Commerce Attends and Acts as Pall Bearers — Statement ¥rom Oonnecticut Secretaries Association Avenues of busincss were deserted this morning as hundreds flocked to 8t. Joseph’s church to pay their re- spects to Miss Mary E. Curtin, de- ceased secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, for whom funeral serv- ices were held at 10 o'clock. A solemn high mass of requiem was celebrated by Rev. Francis A. Murphy of Newtown, a cousin of Miss Curtin, and the office for the dead was_read by Father Murphy assisted by Rev. Michael F. Keat- ing, assistant pastor of St. Joseph's church. Business Suspended. Washington, Jan. 14.—The Un- | derwood Muscle Shoals private leas- ing blll was substituted for the Norrls government oyen\(mn plan today in the senate. The vote was 46 to 33. Immediately Senator Jones, Wash- ington, the republican whip re-of fered his substitute to refer the problem to a commission, starting the senate again around the circuit In which it wandered all day yes- terday. No World Court Action board. In New York and New, Jersey a referendum on the amendment has been proposed by governors, which if held would be only preliminary to legislative action, Conn, Is Doubtful. Connecticut has heard nothing of- fielal on the subject except that the last governor received from Wash- ington the customary ‘notices relat- setts the amendment was degisively rejected in referendum last Novem- Ot of respect for Miss Curtin | ber, but the vote does not bind the The world court question again |hyusiness was suspended in every | legislature. In Maine, New Hamp- was submerged today before the sen- ate foreign relations committee and consideration of the several pro- posals for American adhesion was postponed until next Wednesday. The committee occupied ftself in- stead with conslderation of treaties | with the Dominican republic and | Rumania, Hughes Returns Secretary Hughes returned to his desk at the state department today for a final seven weeks' period of ap- | plication to pending questions of for- eign policy preparatory to his re- tirement from office on March 4, Returning from Atlanta, where he went to attend an American bar as- sociation meeting Just before his resignation was anounced Saturday Mr. Hughes found awaiting him an officlal report from Paris announcing that the financlal council had eliminated & clause in its agreement which would have restricted the total of American claims to $350,- 000,000, Officiat comment was withheld, but the $350,000,000 figure always was considered here as merely an estimate of what these claims would aggregate when finally ready for presentation. Its elimination is grati-y fylng to the Washington government. G. W. BRYAN ACCUSED OF IRREGULARITIES o Violation of Corrupt Prac- tices Act Set Forth in Charges shire, Vermont and Rhode Island the amendment comes up at present 1 islative sessions, The governor of Pennsylvania sent the amendment to the state senate last week, where it will be re- ferred to commiltee when legisla- ture is organized next weck. When store dffiliated with the Chamber of Commerce and in a number of other shops in the center of the city. Representatives of the city’s busi- ness and manufacturing interests and the professions were present in large numbers as were delegations from the Rotary, Kiwanis and Lions clubs. As secretary of the cham- ber, Miss Curtin had been in close touch with these clubs and exhibited a splendid spirit of cooperation. The funeral services were held at 9:30 o'clock from the home of Miss Curtin's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Curtin of 12 Hawkins street, and at 10 o'clock at St. Jo- seph's churgh. Chamber of Commerce Attends, The ‘entire membership of the Chamber of Commerce headed by President Joseph R. Andrews and ex-President John C. Loomis under whose presidency Miss Curtin be- came secretary, turned out and act- ed as honorary bearers. Chamber members lined both sides of the en- trance to the church as the remains of Miss Curtin were borne into the edifice, and ag the coffin was car- ried out they stoed with heads bowed in a last tribute to the voung woman who gnided the destinies of thelr burean for two years. A sec- tion in the church was reserved for members of the chamber and an- other was occupled by members of the Buelness and Professional Wom- | en's club and Isabella Circle. The seating capacity of the church was taxed and scores stood in the alsles and vestibule. Scores of floral tributes sent to the Curtin home, many of which were carrled in the funeral cortege, attested to the popularity and the esteem in which the deceased young woman executive was held. The officers of the mass were as follows: Celebrant, Rev. Francis Murphy of Newtown, a cousin of the question has not been decided, but Maryland's legislators will act upon it at the next session in 1927, West Virginia's governor submit- ted the amendment to the legisiature today without recommendation as to actlon to be taken, or when, In The Mid-West By The Assoclated Press, Chicago, Jan, 14.—Action on the child labor amendment to the fed- eral constitution by the legislature of 14 midwestern states befor March was the prospect reported from various state capitals today. Tive state bodles have the measure before them. A half dozen othérs are expected to hetoken within the next fortnight whether they favor enactment as the twentieth consti- age of 18, Discussions of possible referen- dums on the proposal were reported from Ohio, Michigan, South Dakota |and Kansas, the governors of the last two states having recommended its submission to the voters. A ref- erendum in Massachusetts disap- proved the amendment. ing before the Oklahoma, South Da- kota, Minnesota, Nebraska and Mis- souri legislatures, Oklahoma May Be First Oklahoma, it was indicated, might be the first to follow either Arkan- sas—the first to ratify-—or Carolina, Georgia and Massachusetts, which e rejected the proposed amendment. Lincoln, Neb, Jan. 14.—Charles W, Bryan, democrat, who last week re- tired as governor, was challenged to- day by George E. Johnson, republi- can, former state engineer to prove his charges of irregularities in the state road departments. Mr. John- son charged the former governor with impropricties before and dur- ing his tenure of office. Tn a letter to the legislature, read this morning, Mr. Johnson called upon the former governor and demo- lature would authcrize a referendum | was uncertain, with some prespects |that actiop® might be delayed. In (Continued in Page 13) stato senate has referred the pro- BOTH GET YEAR N JML Iposal to Governor MeMullen | recommendation. The amendatory proposition is ex- |pected to come up in the legis ‘l\! °s of Illinois, Ohio, Michigan | Wisconsin, Towa, Texas, North Dako- {ta, Indiana and Kan Were on Freight That Crashed Into Train October 24, Caus- cratic vice-presidential nominee to ing Two Deaths. {In the current morth, with some appear before a legislative commit- 3 % o states, among them Indiana, delay- tee with his evidence. He then al- | ”,’;‘“"[“‘- Soung e 1’31' j"?‘_‘::: {ing consideration until February, YegodlATe ) Bryhni Had. violatedll ghe [ ol DAEE LG IeNEINEEE MBI L0BED Ohio Geis Ready el H\mkr, fireman of the freight train state corrupt practices act fn con- Ohio is moving toward considera- nection with the gubernatorial cam- | OV0 lh; N f\la”} ‘:"d . rail- {4400 of the amendment, the federal palgn in 1922 and accused him of |F0a< “' ““‘ “'N{“l“] ‘"Dmfl u‘o‘?: |relations committee of the Onlo a “ v ands of | Senger train at Mechaniceville, - [house having arranged put fEking g sreat many ONRAAC ber 24, causing two deaths, cach | . ged public hear. dollars profit” in the sale of coal by the state to consumers. Hings expctced to he pleaded guilty to manslaughter to- | introduced within a Mr, Johnson recited he had seen | day ‘flnd were given a year In jall i fow weeks, with some talk of a ref- affidavits showing that” Mr. Bryan |bY Superior Court Judge Newell | mn.x-.m violated the corrupt practices act |Jennings. = Farly action also may be taken in and that there was several thonsand | The collision cost the lives of Wil- | Wisconsin and Iowa dollars collected in cash that was not |llam 8. penter, engineer, and | Opposition to rat ation is more Joseph C. Hopman, fireman, of the reported in his campaign statement noticeable in Illinois, Michgan and to the secretary of state” passenger train. | Texas than in some other sfates. FES S Last week the two accused rall- | Farm organizations in Mich =5 road employes pleaded not guilty have pledged themselves against the the farmers taking t position that children might be pre- vented from working on their par- ents’ farms. There is outspoken op- position in Texas. A resolution in- case today. When court opened, however, the accused each changed his plea and without comment on elther side and with merely a state- Ansonia Man Who Assaulted Three Girls in Auto Gets Two to Four ment of the case, the sentence was |troducing the measure in the Miss. ., mposed. ourl legislature urged its rejection o Years, The incldent was that the frelght 'the ground that it would mean sy Waterbury, Jan. 14—Charged with | crew had left its train on a siding |additional army of bureaucrats. acsaulting three Waterbury young| with the adjoining switc set 80 | Fight On In Minois women in an @utomobjle on the|that any through traffic would have | In Illinois, women's orgenizations Rethany road last fall, after a dance |run onto the siding and this was |and labor bodies are advocating T at a tavern on the outskirts ot Der-|what the passenger train from | ratification, while manufacturers and by, John Maroney, 23, of Ansonia,|Worcester did. there having been a |farmers' organ fons are onposi was sentenced to state's prison this| failure to throw.the switch to safety ;cm-h n act as part of the national morning In the swperior court by |for the latter train. There was an |basic la 4 Judge John R. Booth to a term of | inquiry and Coroner Bill held en- | Th e no indications either in | not leas than two or more than four | gineer and fireman to be criminally [Texas, Kansas or North Dakote ¥ years. He pleaded gulity. responsible. {when a ratification resolution will be i His companion, Thomas Gallagher, | feveral persons were hurt in ad- |introduced. The Kentncky ‘legisia- eharged with a similar offense,will be | ditton to the two members of the [ture holds no seseion this year. tried at the next term of court. He | pdssenger train crew who died. {Louistana has postponed considcra- is now recovering fromt an opera- tion of the proposal indefinitely. 3 tion tor agpendicitia. LOS AN In the South SR SR RS s Lakehurst, N. J., Jan. 14.—A fiight | * Atlanta, Jan. 14.—Decision for ap- $100,000 FIRE LOSS. of the dirigible Los Angeles to Bal-| proval or refection of the child labor Chicago, Jan. 14—A fire in the | timore and Chesapeake Bay where| li‘ml”‘l:!»- V.'. to the federal c ~r‘>!:"l~ hardwood plant of C. L. Wi she wili be moored to the mobile| tion is likely soon in Tennessce. T Co. in the west side lumber yard d mast of the U. 8 S Patoka to re- | amendment was rejected in the trict caused damage of $400,000 to- n over night, is scheduled to lake SR 1 piage tids afternoon. (Continued on Page 12) day | Columbla, 8. C,, Jan. 14.—Without nels of states farther down the sea- | ing to the amendment, In Massachu- | the Delaware legislature will take up | tutional amendment of the act regu- | lating the labor of minors under the | The proposcd amendment 18 pend- | North | Whether the South Dakota legis- | ENGINEER AND pmmn e S wioter s | for, principally | and the ratification proposal is | 5, CAROLIV TURNs up SSOA E NA ns NEW SIGN WAR DEBT AGREEMENTS THAT GIVE UNITED STATES BEST TERMS BRIDGEPORT FIREMEN | ALLEGED SLAYER OF 3 HURT IN COLLISION| DIES DENYING GUILT |One Hurled Head Foremost ‘Tenn. Governor Refuses Through Plate Glass Clemency Plea at Two Window | 0’Clock This Morning Obtains Share of Dawes Receipts For Damages Without Limit As Well As Its Army Costs. Paris Conference Ends? With General Feeling of | Satisfaction — Rumania’ Italy and Brazil Make Reservations. Nashville, Tenn, Jan. 14.~Ben men were taken to a hospital tod Burchfield, alleged slayer of his wife two of them reported seriously hurt, | and four others at Bristol, Tenn, after a fire truck responding to an | November 26, 1922, was electrocuted |alarm upset in a collision with an-|atthe main prison here at dawn. He | |other automobile. aced death stoically, reiterating his | The apparatus turned over declarations of innocence. | |striking an autmobile operated by| Before departing for the death | ! Arthur Oldroyd, of Fairfield, Old- | chamber, Burchfield shook hands | |royd was later arrested and held in | with the prisoners, telling them good | Gk- | bye and said in true mountaineer | Bridgeport, Jan. 14.—Lour fire after By The Associated Press. Parls, Jan, 14.—Preceded by the honds of $1,000, charged with rc scoring of an eleventh-hour point for less driving, style: {the American delegation, the interna. | ©ne fireman, Willlam P. Walters, | “Mother’s up yander, and I'm go- | tlonal finial conference closed today | Was tossed head foremost through & | ing to meet her.” wth the signing of the agreement for | Plate s door of ant's drug| Burchfield lost his last plea for | | distribution among the various pow- Store, his head striking a.stool in|life at 2 o'clock this morning when, | lers of tho reparation amnuities re. | (Tt of the soda fountain inside | after sixteen hours devoted to & re- ceived from Germany under the |the store. The three others injured | view of his case, listening to the | Dawes plz | were tossed against the eide of the | pleadings of relatives and attorneys, 8. Wins Its Point. | drug store. and a death cell interview with the | At almost the last moment the| Lhe injured are: | quintuple murderer, Governor Austin | Hoscman Willlam P. Walters an | peay declined to interfire with the | X-Ray examination showing his in- ing his electrocution set for tod puries as a possible fractlire of the | «No human being can ever know | |Americans obtained the .-nmhnuum |from the text of the clause limiting | [to $350,000,000 the amount of the | American war damage clnlms to he‘m‘:‘w{, ~:\1m;(;" ;1‘111‘>;J{ ”‘z?a proidiand ; how 1 have suffered under this re- | | ; Fes I X anc 2l e sponsibility,” said a statement issued e eylsed toxvistandniethe L"“"'l\wounnh-, injuries to back and legs. | g States will receive its 2 1-4 per cent lof the annunities until claims are paid. The agreement as signed consti- tutes a mass of detail which gathe Hoseman Timothy J. Mulloy and | | Archibald McMullen, contusions and | sprains, The fire was at No. 477 Colorado its entire with the sentence of the courts in | this case. | Burchfield was convicted as Bris- tol for the murder of his wife, Della, |avenue, where Dr. Alexander A.| ... e harl s W up the scattered ends of the back |irving and family, including tour | °, 1% fOSter-son, C":‘;‘”E, '1;‘.‘ nite s accounts among the allies, llquidates | small children, were driven from | UnCie James W. Smith, 52; his wife's the Ruhr occupation, limits the fu- |their home. The blaze started in | 2400 Mrs. Mary B. Smith, 39, and ture outlay for the military oceupa- |t} Property damage was|'Lree vear old daughter of the| !tion of the Rhineland, fixes the run- | less than $2,000. iuicne; They, pergiilicd dn Moyem ning expenses of the reparation or- | ber, 1922, while Burchfield was estranged from his wife, Burchfield pleaded not guilty in the eriminal court and,” while his case was on appeal, entered a plea CHILI'S CLOTHES BURN OFF IN BRISTOL HOME s it sanity was not considered. Recently the state prison warden, | ganizations, including the Dawes plan commission, and determines the proportion of Germany's payments | ecach and all are entitied to under the Dawes arrangement, besides ad- | mitting tht United States to partici- pation and assuring the payment of its war damage claims as well as the i Q . | physictan and chaplain decided Z‘.’ffi;}flffl] occupation of the Coblenz | Stanley Boloski, Aged 5,| Burchticld was insane, but a com- " Nest Two Years, | mission found him sane. Governor Rushed to Hospital, Dies | Peoy in his early morning statement | asserted his final interview at the prison with Burchfield had con- | vinced him the condemned man was sane. Burchfield's father and sisler were During the next twe years the al-! |lles will be allowed a maximum of 160,000,000 gold marks (£40,000,000) for the maintenance of their troops | on the Rhine. "The reparation com- | (Spectal to The Herald.) | mission, which was allowed 9,250, Bristol, Jan. 14.—Stanley Boloski, | ? mitte e night wil 000 gold marks (ahout $2,300,000) |aged five years, child of Mr. and | ntrmt' d to spend the night with for 1925 will have to cut down its | Mrs, Daniel Boloski, was burned to | 1 3 | outlays to 7,500,000 gold marks (81,- §75,00) in the following year, at the death this noon at the on Stafford avenue. famtly home prden, Tennis Champ, |same time providing from that total Y lock, Mrs, Boloski | Signs Movie (‘ontract a sum running up as a maximum to |stepped out of the house. Retu New York, Jan. 14.—Willlam 13,700,000 gold marks ($925,000) for |ing a short time later, she found th o, 11, of Philadelphia, na mn.n | {the Dawes plan organizations. child writhing in agony on the floor | tannis champion, will start upon a For the Rhineland commission |with its clothes burned of motion picture career next Wednes- 110,000,000 gold marks (22,500,000) {3 | little boy was rushed to the Bris day, it became known today when {allowed, and to tho military control {hospital but died half an hour later. it was announced he had signed a | | commission in Germany for the en-| It is thought that during Mrs. | contr: Tilden's first picture plov | suing year the sum of 8,000,000 gold Doloski's absence from the house, |ws tion ain more | marks (52,000,000). The occu; |of the Rhincland will come up |in September for revision ones | with reference to future | The Wadsworth agre little Stanley secured posse the family supply of matches ar his clothes on fire, |Backfire Sets \Io‘m on- of d set | tennis. peeding Auto Kills Tw 0, Then Escapes in Boston ment for the payment of the American army costs PBoston, Jan. 14—Two workmen being abrogated, pavment of those | BUS Aflame; Loss $12,000 | cngazed in digzing a trench for the costs will begin in September, 1926, | Oneco, Conn., Jan, 14.- passen- | Boston Consolidate Gas company {at the rate of 55,000,0 gold marks | ger motor bus of the lue Ribbon | were killed early today when | (813,750.000) annually line on the route | speeding automobile ran them down U. & Retains Interest. and Provide was on a west end street, The police be- In the sale of any railroad or in- | cast of he ight gan a scarch for the car and its | dustrial obligations issued under t was attributed driver. The dead are John Doherty Dawes plan the United States will | vehic of the Charlestown district and have the same proportionate interest | insured Thomas Deeley of Roxbury. | (Continued on Pags 11) ! YACHT FOUND. \ STEAMER IN DISTRESS. ! ES Jan. 14—| London, Jan. 14.—The Italian | | The missir the object | ptrar T I r | PRISONERS BURNED 0UT et s sen ey L | here tod 1 safe. | sea. | | Nearly 500 Made Temporarily Home- Three New Britain Investors | Des- | less When Reformatory is troyed At Hutchinson, Kansas, F B k F ol e Claim $6'575 rom Brokers Firm vy 600 prisoners were n tem- | o e | y ess in a fire that early ! ol ananiiteiadmin G ‘}j;”‘_ 4 Involuntary Petition in| FINEFOR EATING OESTERS e e e Bkt S e L e isa i A ¢ ] ereafter Partaking of This Food | the ,\]1 Against N. A. Sargent| wm cou Chicago Corpora- |t ainme | & Co. of Hartford. ton Counsel Rules, trades buildir a deta ted. Ttalian Free \hsom Decides ln DI\\()I\C Italy, manual under guard of { Only one was Ch hicago, arr fetor 1y pre he newspaper Dor nted by ni. T Roamin: Royalists Are Assailed by LaGuardia derstood only d master cf Lo ¢ i n were is I. Peisner ain his post in or foud ot ( 3 S ‘ x EanatL ) )‘ ooy Apos New | plication of i n regulations Masonic counci $10,000: Richard F. Dos-United § the e * | otis ¥. Pre New Britain THE WEATHER K —o Several of the creditors o ! | Hartford, Jan. 11—Forecast Sergent company went the offic || for New Britain and vicinity: of Attc to. Drove e ' Fair and continued cold to- || their s York, b o0 night and Thursday. Other are Herman Mill o e { Fred Hill, $1 ¥ he is likely to become & —— . _#and Wlllam B. Hill, $6,000 charge upon the publie. AT T || War Hero Vowed He'd 1| Engtish, did not feel “‘authorized to interfere | CITY OFFICIALS IN CLASH | | | “We have no legal right to stop ! cold, they sald. When she regained them from building, but we're do- ! consclousness after fainting they md it under a pretemse,” Wesler z.d-" asked her address with the intention | mitted, | of taking her home. They were still :| ‘The investigation and favorable ! inclined to doubt her story after she 1 to have nothing to do with | Average Daily Circulation For Nk iine 11,2901 HAVEN MOTHER SLASHES THROAT OF 7 YEAR OLD SON, THEN CONFESSES T0 POLICE Tells of Kissing Dying Boy Whom She Killed, Note Says, Because Never Work and Goes To Jail as Vagrant e New York, Jan, 18.—~After fighting for his native land in the world war, Margin Kolesa_re- || He Looked Like H turned to his home at Kal, e e e Her. rbit, a thero, decorated for C———e valor, With the conflict ended, he took a solemn vow that he never would do another stroke of Slayer Believed Mentally work. Yesterday Kolega was ar- ; raigned in Yorkville court, Deranged—Another Son, charged with begging and said t . Magistrate McQuade, elght times Who Resembles Father, and in eight languages, including “I won't work."” Fidelity to his pledge, Kolgea told the magistrate, had caused him to wander through several countries and to pass time in Jalls in France, England and Germany, Magistrate McQuade added to the record by sending him to the workhouse for thirty day’s, ALMIT ERRORS IN PERNIT ISSUANCE {Refusals Made on Pretense Wex- ler Tells Councilmen pared by Woman—Note Explains Act: New Hayen, Jan. 14.—Mrs. Jennie Zarzyckl, wife of Telicks Zarzyeki, a blacksmith, killed her son, Edward, aged 7 years, by cutting his throat with a razor at her home, 201 Chapel street early this forenoon. Runs to Tell Police After cutting the child’s throat the ‘woman hurried to the Grand avenue police station where she fell in a faint as she faced the desk sergeant, Upon being revived she told the police that she had killed her son and showed them a razor, which she had in her pocketbook, with which she said she had cut the child's throat. She added that she kissed the boy before he died. Police hur- ried to the home where the body of the lad with blood still flowing from a long cut in the throat was found on a bed. The woman was locked up and the coroner and police i began an investigation of the mur- der, When asked why she committed | the murder, the woman, according to the police declared her husband id not love her any more.” Zarzycki, who is employed at the plant of the American Steel and Wire Co. was notified while at his work., He had'left the house for work some time before the killing of his son, police sald. He will be ex- amined by the coroner. Murder Not Intended | Police said that the woman indi g i cated in her statement Jaier that she the oftice of Mayor A.| ya4 not intended to kill her son, but and after a heated dis- | had thought that in wounding him. cussion Chairman I. Wexler of the ; she might restore the lost affection | building commission admitted cer-| of her husband in some Wway. tain permits had been refused when When the woman came inte the the commission had no legal right police station the officers at first to take such action thought she had fainted from the Councilman Nair Charges Favoritism In Investigation of Connections | Between City's Zoning and Build- | ing Departments An informal investigation into al- | leged interference in the issuance of | building permits by the zoning com- misslon was instituted last night at of common cuun'cll_I { |a gathering members at | M. Paonessa action on a protest against the fare, | told of the murder until confirma- tlon of her declaration was obfained by a visit to the home, Killed as He Slept Investigation by the police re- vealed the fact that the woman had left a note in the house for her hus- schedule and fare zones of the Con- company’s I Hartford-New | | necticut | Britain bus lin ters before the neil meeting, Mayor Starts Ball Rolling Mayor Paonessa opened the re the only mat- dis- | | cussion. He told the councll mem- ! band, declaring that she killed her | bers the building commission is ex- ' son because he resembled her. The | periencing much trouble in the is- ' child had been killed as he slept, ac. suance of permits, since it is mak- ; cording to the police, ing an effort to keep two and thre Another younger son, Alexander, family houses and stores out of cer-! aged b, was found by the police in tain districts. A few ago _another bedroom of the home. The | when the commission had no irdi- . mother had removed him from the | nance with which to stop this type hed of his brother, hefore the killg of huilding there was trouble, and ing. The note said that as he re- v that such an or ce 1S in gembled the father, she would do existence there is more troubl m no harm. ever, the mayor said. He of Father Becomes Violent case of ex-Alderman Cha who has been given two hearings on application for a store on Shuttle Zarzycki, who was home by the poiice, house shrieking taken to the ran about the attempting to |an jow avenue and now that he smash some of the furniture, when ot secure a permit threatens suit | 1o was shown the body of his dead azainst the city. The mayor asked gon, Efforts of several policemen expressions of opinion as to whether | were nee t him present ordinance giving the | police expressed the belief that lding commission discretionary ' the woman is mentally deranged. powers should be continued or not. | She was taken befer Coroner Mis Alderman Cornelius Dehm of | jater this afternoon for examination the first ward said he opposed nmi Mrs. Zarzycki is 26 years of age ordinance whe came before the | ana he and 33 —— ‘, They had been married 11 years (Continued on Page 12) | Police said they learned that there Two W a(e\ burv ‘\Ien Held OnW !mc \la\e Charges betwec n Zarzycki hd his wife for several years, It ted that the woman had at was st ide by taking poison W . 14.—Antor mL ieo tri, 1 S— slaVery., The two w arreste location of T MR AND MRS PARKER alnut Street Residents Married 50 Years Ago in Vermont \ -t | | Expect to Refloat Sub f Sometime This Afternoon o « . Mass., Jan. 14.—Shert 1 wedding yes t . married in Per \ vary 13, 1878 T ral hours late ftnally arriving y with the news that ¢ in Ludlow, Vi. had burned down that morning. Mr ker was born in Ludlow, spring- from a line of early settlers, the of whom is known to have in this country before 1630. of his ancestors was the famous n Parker who fought at the ittle of Lexingt Mrs, Parker, who was Ha ary before her IS WRECKED. be e On VESSEL H e 3 S ar.Cl K ge, also came from a prom- A One body has| i family, her father being a 1 The fclose assoclate of Horace Greeley: (Continued on Page 13.)