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L Bhaie B2 N — ¥ News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 T ‘wwo) ‘lfl;g';l- “188Q "JAPV 4ARIGIT 9YWIS IRINIUOD RUETHER AND HAINES ARE | RIVAL HURLERS TODAY AS YANKEES INVADE ST. LOUIS Crowd of 38,000 Excit- ed Fans Crowd Every| Available Spot on Cardinals’ Playing Field—Southworth, in First Inning, Ham- mers Out First Saiei Bingle of Game But /... Neither Side Scores. EXTRA HERALD TODAY o Immediately after today’s game the Herald will publish a sports extra containing a play by play account of ths contest and a com- plete box score. Sportsmans Park, St, Louls, Oct. 5 (P—After a threat of rain proved | only a passing shower, the third game of the World Series was start- ed hero this afternoon With a battle | in prospect between a southpaw and | NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, OCTOBER " BRITAIN HERALD Average Daily Circulation Fm: 13,661 Week Ending Oct. 2nd .... 5, 1926.—TWENTY-FOUR PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS ‘PEACHES’ QUITS RICH HUSBAND FOR MOTHER| Her Dreams Never Came| True, Says “Cinderella Man’s” Child-Wife. New York, Oct. 5 — (P — “Peaches” Browning has “gone | home to mother” leaving behind her | a millionaire husband, 35 years her | and “a lot of dreams that | never came true | Edward L. Browning, 51 vear old | realty operator, declared that the separation from his 16-year-ola | | bride of six months, is only tempo- however. She left him Sun- | “Mrs. Browning has gone away | for a few days with her mother,” he | said in a statement given out by his‘\ been no quarrcl. We have | agreed to scparate for a few days, but there is nothing definits about | our being apart. We've given up our | apartment at Kew Gardens for the | } time bein | Browning has moved from his| Long Island apartment into a New | York hotel for a few days, but re. righthander. Manager Miller Huggins sent the | veteran Dutch Ruether to the mound | says Mrs for the Yanks while Rogers Horns- | by, leader of the Cardinals, depend- | Je ed on the stalwarf Jesse Haines. An| early afternoon shower failed to keep the enthusiastic fans away, and long before game time every inch of | him to say also how fused to name the hotel. The New York Herald-Tribune | Browning’s mother took | her to stay with friends in Ne y because she feared publicity. | The reason for our scparation will have to come from Mr. Brown- | ing,” Peaches declared. ‘It is for | long it shall | space was occupied by a crowd esti- | be d at 35,000, a wildly cheering cross section of frenzied St. Louis tandom. : The Yanks and Cards resumed the | battie here, deadlocked at 2 to 1 2nd the Cards evened the series Sunday | 6to 2 Toda game stretch of warfare in St. Lo s contest opened a thro_e-‘ s. | papers. Hornsby's selection of Haines, a|drecam. There were Later Mrs. Katherine Heenan,| mother of the girl bride, was asked it her daughter had “given up t magniicent Long Island home Mr. Browning bought for her. “Oh, that is one of the things that | | never came true,” said Mrs. Heenan. That was good on paper and in the 1 guess it was somebody's lots of things fast ball pitcher, came as something | that never happened and the palace of a surprise to veteran baseball men who had figured the Cards would re-| ; southpaw, Arthur Rein- | s m’f\tf‘slrag:\mr,t} mates as “Peaches,” quit the Textile against them in | High school here to marr inning of the first game | ing last April 10. The socie | prevention of cruelty to rt. Haines had a br! the Yanks, pitching + h clouds had drifted off | and sunshine med the enclosure | as the game started. | very section of the stadium, in-| ing extensions from the lower grand stands as far as the outfleld lines, was jammed by game time with thousands still clamoring out- side the park. gates to the unreserved cher seats had besn closed an hour before the call of play ball. First Inning: Yankees:—The band played the Star Spangle Banner and the Car- dinals ran out upon the field. The big crowd welcomed the home boys | with a mighty cheer. Haines threw | up a few from the pitching slab and after the umpires had taken their | positions the ball was thrown out| and play was begun. The crowd | accorded Southworth a hearty ova- | tion when he came out into right | field Combs up. Ball 1, Inside. Ball 2, inside. Haines was using a fast ball | which he kept close to the batter. Strike 1, called. Hafey took Coombs’ fly after misjudging it in the sun. Koenig up. Foul, strike 1. Strike 2, called. Ball 1, high. Two fouls. Haines used the rosin bag. Koenig| struck out, swinging for a third | strike. | Ruth up. He was greeted with mingles of cheers and hooes. The Babe laughed. Ball 1, outside | Haines fed Ruth a slow one. Ball 2 outside. This was another slow ball. Hornsby took Ruth's roller and threw him out. No runs, no hits, no errors. | Cardinals—Douthit up, ball 1, low | and inside. Ball 2, inside. Ball 3| inside. Strike 1, called. This pitch was on the outside corner. Strike 2, called. Douthit sent a high fly to Meusel in left field. | Southworth up. Southworth | singled sharply to center, hitting the | first ball pitched. Hornsby up. There was a big | demonstration when Hornsby came ] to the plate. Ball 1, low, outside. Foul, strike 1. The hit and run play | was on. Hornsby lined out to Laz- | zerl and Southworth had to race to get back to the bag. Bottomley up. Ball 1, inside. Ball 2, low. Lazzeri threw out Bottom- | ley at first. No runs, one hit, no errors. it | St. Louls, Oct. 5 (P—With the world serles starting all over here | today, the managers of the contend- ing Cardinals and YanWMees were giving serious thought to pitching | selections. The pitchers proved the most imnortant players in the first two games. Battle of Giants Subject to the possible last min- ute changes, Rogers Hornsby was | expected to call on Jess Haines, big right hander with Miller Huggins prepared to nominate “Dutch” Rue- ther, left hander but almost as big as Haines. s The first game of the serles in New York brought a sterling pitch- ing test between Pennock and Sher- del, the Yankee sharpshooter get- ting a 2 to 1 decislon. The clash of right hancers gave the Cardinals an opportunity to even the series when Alexander stopped the Ameri- {lef[ Mr. Browning's apartment while on Long Island was just one of | them.” | Frances, known to her school children tried unsuccessfully to prevent the marriage. | The millionaire realty man took | his bride to Cold Springs, Lake | George, Atlantic City, and other re- sorts on pleasure trips, and then they settled down at Kew Garden, on Long Island. He gave her an ex- | pensive blue automobile which | Browning’s secretary says she did| not take with her to New Jersey. Browning, sometimes called the | “Cinderella man” and his first wit were divorced in Paris several year: ago. He got into the limelight by | | advertising for a companion for an adopted child known as Dorothy | Sunshine. Mary Spas, who answered the advertisement and was accepted by Browning was disclosed to be older than Browning had specificd, and was sent back to her parents after a week of shopping on Fifth avenue. 1 Shortly after he met Frances | Heenan someone thréw acid in her face, the act Dbeing attributed by | Browning to jealousy. Not lons aft- | erward the wedding took place. Browning does not know where “Peaches” has gone, his secretary said today. | The wealthy real estate man could | not be reached, but his secretary ad- | mitted Mrs. Browning had left their | Long Island apartment Saturday and | that no word has since been receiv- ed from her. The sccretary sald Mrs. Brown- ing, with her mother, Mrs. Kather-| ine Heenan, who had resided with | the Brownings since - the wedding, he was in New York at his office. The secretary insisted there had been no quarrel between Mr. Brown- | ing and his young wife and said the| “Cinderella man” would gladly take | his wife back should she return. BOY HURT IN COLLISION FILES SUIT FOR $10,00 Rider of Motorcycle Claims Driver | | | | of Truck Was Negligent | and Reckless. Edvgrd Juchnlewicz, ased 13| through his father, Ludwig Ju- chniewicz, has brought suit for $10,000 against Louis Cielakiewicz, alleging that the latter's reckles ness, negligence and carelessness caused a collision between his truck and the plaintiff's motorcycle at Broad and Siiver streets on August 14. The plaintiff suffered an v to his knee cap which ne- itated hospital treatment for several weeks and, according to the allegation, will incapacitate him permanently. Cielakiswicz was fined in police court last week, the testimony be- ing that the truck cut the corner short, causing the accident. Judge W. F. Mangan issued the wrlt, which is returnable in the superior court, -SEN. PETTINGREW DIES Sioux Falls, S. D, Oct. 5 (A— Richmond Franklin Pettingrew, for- mer United States senator and an outstanding statesman in the history of the northwest died at his home (Continued on Page 21) today. He was 78 years old. {New Jersey Robbers Also Kill| ! phone pole a few miles north of | p TRAIL OF WRECKS INBANDITS WAKE 'POISONED GAKE THEGRY | DISCARDED BY FAMILY | Fatalities tn Hartford Unaccounted | | for But Another Who Ate | Same Meal Lives. Hartford, Oct. § (A — The Mather street poisoning case which | resulted in the death of a father 4 and the critical illness of | mother, became increasingly a| ery today through a statement | Soweren n 3 David 1. Mairson of Two Desperadoes Murder Autolst! s yoyiiama street, sister of Mrs. Who Refused to Ald Them —|Brooks K. Parker, the mother, who | Man; Shoot His Son | SOUGHT AIR MATL LOOT |is now at Hartford hospital. | Several Machines Wrecked fin| Mrs Mairson said the theory | that there was poison in the cake| Their Mad Race for Freedom. | which the Parker family ate Sat.| New Brunswick, N. J, Oct, 5 (& | irday evening should be discarded | b SR e S 7 0 "las there was a fourth person who | — A trall of wrecked automobiles|ate 5 portion of cake, who left for | today marked the course followed | New Yo soon afterwards and by & pair of bandits who killed a|has returned and who was not Maplewood, N. J., bu: i i Mr. Parker died early yesterday | and probably fatally inj morning. The child, Helena, fiv vear old son in what police be was dead when the poison cases was a desperate racs to re were discovered. While awaiting results of the shipment of registered air m was hemical analysis of organs of the cad man and ghild. further inves- tigation was made teday by Ser- geant Koenig and Medical Exam- | |iner Henry N. Costello at the Parker hom Frank Kearney ela. last night when he refused to give two men on the Stelton road a few miles north of here a ride. H son Robert was shot, and his wi s dragged from their automo- bile. n was glven to the in the kitchen as the been advanced 2 | carbon de gas might have | been the cause of the deaths. The jmedical examiner was disinclined | | to give this possibility much cred- | ence, | Sought Afr Mail Polica believe on thelr way in expensive make load of valuable air delivery at Hadley fiel when their auto SRS e d. Both d, but no one was hurt. | d Nugent of Plainfleld| nes were| | Hartford, Conn., Oct. 5 (P—-The defense in the Capewell case occu- out of his car, looking at t pied another day of the superior tion. The boys called a war him, and he ran away while the boys escaped in another direction. Nugent telephoned Brunswick police from the nearest hous Kea:mey Is Slain Kearney n drove up with his wife and son. The bandits demand- led a lift, which Kearney refused. | They shot and killed him, shot anrl‘sz‘ogn are mortally wounded his son and!treat. Mrs, shot his companion through the | Wood oulder for showing re ance to |fled that she tried to see her broth- re in the crime. Mrs. Kearney er at the close of cou Thursday | vas found later in hysterics but t his lawyers did not pe t The bandits raced toward New | her to talk to him so she him Brunswick in the Kearney automo- |her love and a kiss. Last Friday | bile, but smashed it against a tele- she did see him at Dr. Reynolds’ ce in Woodbury. There was a woman nurse named Kelly of Wa- | terbury with him and another nur: court teday with the witnesses be: ing cross-examined at length by | Capewell’s chief attorney, Clayton | Klein of Waterbury. Frank E. Cape- | well secks release from the Hart- ford re whers he has been an inm e 1922 on ths ground that is sane. attorneys for the re- Harriet Russell of ster of Capewell, testi- | s Stelion, Then they induced L. B. Scherr to get out of bed and drive them to New Brunswick, but as|Rebecca Huntington of Woodbury, soon as v ted, pitched | Mrs. Russell said her brother had Scheer out of his machine and er hé had cried and felt very drove it off. | for Langdon Capewell when he Beat Train to Crossing 4 Langdon had fainted in court. They crashed through a railroad | Mr. Klein asked Mrs. Russell wheth- gate in Stelton a few seconds|er she knew her brother had made | ahead of a Pennsylvania express|a Will just befors he was taken to| train. They abandoned the ma-|the Hartford retreat in which he chine in Newark, where a search|Mmade her the sole beneficiary. She was started for the men as eoon |Said she did not know it but admit- as it was found. [ted Frank had told her in 1322 he Robert Kearney, the injured boy, | had made such a will. She said th was taken to St. Joseph's hospital |if he dies and such a will is in e; here. - ence she will make no claim under {it on account of his mental co LYNN SALLIES 0 MEET ~ |oo miewe “Fraas™ac "Laneron Capewell's in Windsor and that her chauf- eur, took her to Woodbury in Frank Capewell's automobile. She said | Stuart had told her that the River- | sida Trust company, conservator of | | Capewell's estate, had told her it | |would be all right. She was asked Deroy | whether there was vthing when Lynn, Mas: 5 (& t saw him that indicated her barred from meceting in th s brain was not working all by an order of the mayor which has |Fight and replic ¢ been sustained by a lower court de-| Vice-President Edward T. Garvin | cision, the Salvation Army in L of the Riverside Trust compa lr5~‘ will continue to hold public services. | tified that the company accepted the | In the ure meetings will be | conservatorship at request of held in Lynn depot yard of the | Judge Walter Clark of the pro-| Boston and Maine railroad. |bate court here and that accounts The railroad has no objection to|Of a prior conservator, one of Cape- the holding of th s on its| 's brothers, showed an estate of 00 but that there appeared to ‘e been a shrinkage of $37,000 | | before the Riverside Trust took hold. | I inventory showed twenty-three | automobiles which were appraised Ly Harry Starkie and another ex- ort at practically no value. FATAL AUTO CRASH Barred From Street Corner Services, They Move On To the Oct $180, after a conference br! Mayor Abuer, Boston and Ma land of the Lyn ran vation Army. | P The street meetings were sto a month ago a perse for obstruc been ignored. Comm land was summoned int fined $5. He appealed. OLD SOL BLAMED FOR | Critical Condition After Accident In Holyole. cal condition as the result of a head- fon in an automobile with V2 e Susplel on co! Wax Along House Creates Suspicion st a telegraph - pole That Incendiary Plotted |Jose Gomes Prudencia was _killed, | Inis wife, Mary and Mrs. Edward Evil Deed Garido, are not expected to live, while Edward Garido, Mary Ar and Anthony Numas, driver of the also are in a hospital here with All of the party | t an at-| t fire to Investigating a report tempt had been made to the home of Charles Frisbie, at 445 45 | serious injuries. Park street, Detective Sergeant El- 2ol 088 Ml O o ) linger found that a number of|prygencta and his wite were leav- strings covered with paraftin had ;o0 FR0G0n t6 gail thence to | been tucked under clapboards and|poyygal, and had been visiting with | when the sun struck them, it caused | ¢ {ande of the city with the other the paraffin to run along the boards |yembers of the par The car got | giving the impression that someone | ot of control on a curve and cr. was planning to touch a match toeq into a pole 18 inches in diameter. the soaked surface. The strings Shevvirada were also found in the chicken coop. | N Sergeant Ellinger found that the THE WEATHER ! strings were used by linemen wor il New Britain and vicinity: | | ing at the corner of Park and Stan-| | For tonight 'and Wednesday, | | ley strects, and it Is believed that| | threatening and increasing | mischievous boys took advantage of | cloudiness. Showers tomor- | the temporary absence of the men| | row. and took the strings. | * |fled that Morrone had prov that | . |representing Morrone, presented two | on September 7, in the evening, and | valued at $62; Edward W. Broder and J. Gilbert |7 | were missing, however, and on Sept. | a dash into a dri y and for!ers markets here today as low as| |several minutes he led the ser-| o5 cents a bushel with little or no geant a merry chase through back-| dgemand even at that price which | vards, over fences and under|is the lowest on record. | clothes lines. | The crop is late this vear and With freedom in sight, and ost housewives have dor | extion, the boy got one leg ALIBI PLEA FAILS TOTMPRESS COURT Rlleged Auto Reoessory TI]]IGIEYO““‘ Collapses in Theater | Held in 31’000 Bond Short Time After Quaf-J fing Paint at Hunter IAWYERS IN WORD DUEL! Road Home. J John Morrone, Waterbury Quick action by members of the Accused of Stealing and Stripping | police department Dr. Edward Cur- Auto Held for Superior Court | 73% and internes and others at New Britain General hospital probably | Trial saved the life of Lawrence Durbar | An attempt to prove an alibi of 19 Hunter Road, who drank an falled in the case of John Morrone, aged 24, of Waterbury, wh arraigned in police court t - rge of theft of auto- sories, Judge B. ¥W. marking that !3lmost deadly poison last night. Lawrence was picked up in the Lyceum theater by ce, taken to e police station and then to th unconscious condi k of red he was and whom he was with at red E of September 7 g it the theft was committed but It 17th birthday anniv d had | taken a small qu maroon | paint to his home on Hunter Road | where his father St law Durbar | on the in and | thought it was i cen before and after th He found probabls cause nd Morrone over to the De- ber term of superior court in “There is a possibil- has committed an of- ch he may be sent to use. Another friend cam seeing the paint, fense for v prison for 15 years'” the wine and poured out two g 'S explaining his decision ark that they would to send the case to the higher court k to Lawrence's birthday. - rather than disposing of it in po- says he never lics cour , he took one glass of Attorney Thomas F. McDonough, the supposed w and drank two large swallows, before he real: he had gotten somet than what he expect: nesses who were with Morrone in his appeal for a discharge, he ' did not drink any. - |made the claim that Morrone and | Later Lawrence went to the [ S e the witnesses told the truth, re- | theater and, according to his story, R et s T'LL ls UEST"]NEB gardless of Prosecuting Atto when he sat down everything went Lotk ‘:‘d s ‘;"d AT Al Woods' characterization of t black. He got up and tried to Hananms seree, €0 | o stories as inaccurate. He stagger out and fell over uncon- | bounle ;”‘;fi) i | charged the prosecuting attorney |scious. Thinking he was intoxi- | e ‘Haltfmd Retreat Seeks to ‘wvx':\wx:‘x'nf?;;x-\:;sJ»\v"::‘:‘.;l..ih“tta o leioh}': theater officials no,)fi,n‘ Two Cars Cr: | K r B e i B o ne o] Wit | eep Wealthy ) on or about September T7th en to the police station in | They met thelr chance acquaint-| » thy Man | The warrant charged Morrone the police ambulancs, officials there | Gl RGOl BT Gy an Inmate | with theft of four tubes tires found the trouble was something other than intoxication and Police The one battery valued at $18; one horn, $5, a total of $85, Surgcon Curran . was called the property of Frank Bordonero of sick boy recovered into a sort of 1102 Stanley str When the | semi-consciousness for a few case was called this morning, At- onds, long enough to state that torney McDonough informed the had drunk some red lead on birthday. Again unconsclous he was taken to the hospital where Dr. Curran, two hospital internes, Miss Dunn the night supervisor and two orderlies gave him emergency treat- ment, working strenuously for a most an hour to save his life, Dur- | ing the treatment he revived for a few minutes while tha police were there but refused to tell his name court that Morrone had started from Waterbury in an automobile but trouble developed and he was ed to return to Waterbury and make the trip by train, arriving at Rather than continue the case again, Judge Alling ordered a o'clock. recess until 10:45 lasted until 1 featured by clashes prosecuting attorney and or give any information. Later dur- fense counsel. ing another brief semi-cc pe- Auto Stripped of Accossories riod he teld his and ad- Sergeant O that on | dress. | Sept. 7 about 1 e D Bor- | This morning he had pa y re- donero reported the theft of his car |covered from the effects of the from East Main street. A few days | poisoning and scemed a fair way later Constable Fuller of Farming- |to complete and speedy recover: ton notitied the local police of the | Durbar is employed at the § finding of the car. The accessories | ley Works as a die maker. an- Bordonero identified his batte! in an East Main street battery sta- tion and an invesitgation was start- ed. The tires were on Morrone's car and when Morrone was confronted WOMEN OFFER AID IN FIGHT AGAINST G. 0. P.. (Continued on Page 11} | Willing to Canvass Fourth! HEATEN BY A l‘Efi IN ; Ward in Democracy’s | RACE WITH DETECTIVE Interest ! SRR | Louts Horwitz, leader of the in- | Youth Fails to Outsmart surzent wing of the republican party | fourth ward, announced to- and Outrun Sergeant mittae of women vis 0O’'Mara ght and offered its contemplated can- he district in the Interests Sergeant P. J. O'Mara's quaintance with the boys city whose misdemeanors oc ally bring them into police ¢ stood him in good stead y is recognized as act- | ing chairman of the fourth ward by | forces, today ex- | 1 satisfaction at the progress | he clique sponsoring a | ac-| of the ation afternoon when he saw a lad with | driv st e a group on Grove street and did for 2 R :‘h‘ C;“.Tn:-‘ not recall ever having seen him (Ing: that hard work in the interests| of the G. O. P. last spring falled to | win recognition from the Weld ad- | stration In tha shape of ap- before. The boy, who appeared to! be about 16 years of age, said his name was John Smith, but e e | serseant doubted mm}v?;u,; KO0 e insurgent chiet has recefved | him where he lived. iven was 64 Oak street, and th sergeant asked him where Oal is. Then the fun beg no peace overtures from the town | expressed regrot | he satd, it leaves open political | e bu s C;"c‘t:.“ ”rm-, don't you?" The women's (-c,,.n,‘,‘“,"e'{ fitse odoN oiig 1o o R SR e 2 ) out whether - you, do. or not,* sald “with numerous cars | Rt | "’\\“‘rg 1!“= just like that,”” the | e sespeant thousht 1t aavisa. | Peaches at 25 Cents a f Bushel and No Demand Buffalo, Oct. 5 (B — Peaches ere offered for sale on the farm- ble to bring him to the police sta- | tion for questioning, and as they| were walking along, the boy made pursuer rapidly tiring from t canning with earlier fruit at much higher prices. board fence and was about to| | drop out of sight when the s | geant scized him by one leg. For | what seemed an eternity to both, | from $2 to $3 per bushel. the boy hung face downward on . one side, and the sergeant hung | VETERAN CONDUCTOR DIES on to his foot with one hand.| Westfield, Ma Oct. 5 (B — “John Smith" weighs about 150 | Patrick Mahoney, 77, conductor pounds and the sergeant's strength | for the New York, New Haven and was taxed to the limit, but he held | Hartford railroad and for 40 years on grimly until, working with one|in the employ of the road, died hand free, he scaled the fence and|last night in Noble hospital of in- the lad's attempted escape was a| juries suffered wher he fell from flat failure. a locomotive recently. At the police station, the boy said he had been in an orphanage in Manchester, N. H, and had| Washington, Oct. 5 (A — Pres- come to New Britain a few days|dent and Mrs. Coolidge will be ago. He and another boy intended | hosts to Queen Marie of Rumania to “go south” but the other lad|at a dinner at the White House changed his plans. Probation Offi-|Tuesday, October 19. Invitations cer Connolly is taking charge of |were sent to officlal Washington TO DINE MARIE OCT. 19 Drinks Red Lead, Thinking It Wine, And Nea_rly Loses Life | British Autoist Who Killed FUNDS VOTED FOR WORLD WAR SHAFT {Present Memorial Could Be Re- produced at Less Cost John Brown’s Daughter Dies at Age of 87 Yrs. Cal, Oct. 5—P— Mrs. Annie Brown Adams, 87, only surviving daughter of John Brown of Harper's Ferry fame died today at home of daughter at vely, Hum. county. Mrs. Adams was the only member of the family of *n to witness the hang- f her father in 1859. Eight Eureka, | (. T. KTHBALL DISAPPROYES |Admits Arch and Court of Honoe Could Be Made Permanent But Disllkes Veneer of Stone Om Frame of Steel | Statements apparently contradie« :tcry of the war memorial commite FILIAL DEVOTION WINS 52 vrs o momoria comme of finance and taxation last night IN DISPUTE wlTH LAw | when its membars wers informed that the temporary arch and Gourt | of Honor at Walnut Hill park could . D | be perpetuated and at a cost lower Persistent Children Suc-|than the proposed shatt now fav ored. ceed in Bringing When the committes was first ap Mother to U. S. | pointed strong sentiment for making |permanent the present design was expressed. Discussing this phase of the work, the committas Teported to Left alone in her native home in [the common council last month: Cologne, Germany, Mrs. Wilhelmine “It is welll at this point to call te ¢ s 3 your attention that when - e ¢ st : your com. 'ah 08 years old, walted hopefully; ttye was orfginally foriienEaER e her six ren In this coun-considered the perpetuation of the y Were strug g with obstacles to | present temporary memorial in Wal« bring her to the family fireside, nut Hill park but was confronted by Not familiar with the immigration | | construction difficulties of such a SR e & serious nature as to make them un. rules the famlly appealed to Richard | surmountable except at a cost- 8o prohibitive as to make the naces- ren to this country. [SaTY appropriation beyond the city's | means or its legal power to finance, - PR 5 | Acting on recommendation of the Was Dot accepted. The phyaiclans At | commiitas, tharaomman couneil ap- the consulate said she had anafflic- proved its plans and asked the board tion of the throat, and they advised | of finance and taxation to suggest a he consul not to grant her a pass- |financing plan, under which $165.« port 1000 to include the cost of the monu« After hearing this Mr. Schaefer |ment, architects’ fees and a fund w to the Americanization director | for its upkeep would be provided. and asked his advice on the matter. Searle Questions Kimball It was his understanding that no| Meeting at the call of Chairman law existed which would prevent|Edward F. Hall last night at the of« anyone emigrating to this[fice of Mayor Weld, the commission. country pecause of her ailment. The [ers were in session but a moment directer agreed with him and agreed | when Commissioner Frederick A. to write to the American consul at | Searle directed a series of questions Cologne regarding her case. The first | at George T. Kimball, member of the' obstacle was overcome when she was | memorial committee, and Architeet allowed another hearing. The protest { H. Van Buren Magonigls, its design« was granted and she sailed for this|er. Mr. Searle asked if it was Pos< country. /| sible to perpetuate the present teme Upon her arrival she was detained | porary memorial by building a steel at Ellis Island, New York, when the |frame arch with a vencer of stone, authorities were skeptical as to heriand placing the individual pests in means of support, and once again |the same fashion as In cemeteries, Mr. Schaefer was called upon. He| Mr. Kimhball replied that a the eldest son, Hermann, ap- | veneered monument was not suitable ed before the emigration com- |for permanency, and that individual mission and explained the cause /monuments would be required to yesterday. |sink to a great depth to avold tip- She was granted a release and ar- |ping. He also warned of the danger this city last night to join |of killing off trees. The steel frame time in might “give” and since stone will |not “give” cracks might make fre- |Quent repalrs necessary, he asserted. o | Asked directly it a. frame arch aTEAMER AHRE BUT |with stone veneer and tndtvidual |monuments set as in cemeteries might be erected and at a cost less than the shaft now proposed, Mr. |Kimball replied affirmatively, = re. | peating his warning of the danger of cracks. Designer Outlines Cost Architect Magonigle placed the approximate cost of the monument at $140,000 and this figure might |be bettered on bids. Granite would |cost at least $50,000 more and would |not be practicable, he advised the committee. Items entering into the construc- tion costs, he enumerated as follows: |Masonry, stone, granite bass and |shatt, '$104,000; bronze, $11,027; reached port today with a menac- |carving and modeling, $10,800: ax- ing fire in her afterhold, which cavations and concrete, $10,5003 spread after it was belleved under |electrical work, $1,500. Total, $138,- control. 727, These figures are on bona fide Two city fire boats were ordered [bids. to her side at the Quarantine sta-| The architect's fee will be 10 per tion and pumped tons of water cent or approximately $14.000. into the burning cargo. It is the architect's wish that the Officials of the line assured hun- |contracts be signed without delay se dreds of anxious callers that there |limestone contracts may be placed, s no danger to the passengers|the materlal quarried before winter and that no one had been injured. ¢t in and cut during the winter A number of tugs and a police | MONths. Eighteen months is the time |estimated for the work. en for the first ear. about a Liner Byron With 397 Pas- | sengers on Board Ar- rives in New York New York, Oct. 5 (A — The liner Byron of the National Greek line, with 397 passengers aboard, launch were standing by and no . attempt was made to remove the| TH® Comimittes vated . to. racoms 3 |mend the appropriation of $165,000 Passengers. ~Apparently there was ... o¢ tavation, the:costs to be d No panic ‘aboard, the DRENENEerS |iiiiii.g over s peridd of Nve Yasve being observed on the decks watch- |1y tnq entire bill was to be met in ing the fire boats. |one vear an increase of one and one- Officials expressed the bellet that [quarter mills in the tax-rate would the liner would be able to dock at be required. The proposed acheme her Breoklyn pier during the day. makes necessary addition of ' om Later the fire boat John Purroy |quarter of one mill for each of the Mitchell returned to fits pier and |five years. the fira was reported under con-| e trol, with the passengers stil M g passengers <tiit on | Mrs, Rhinelander Returns From Trip to Europe I New York, Oct. 5 (A — Mrs, MENAGE ON HIGHWAYS 5. Sonime: oo o oo o8 | successfully to have his marriage | annulled because his wife was of Man | alleged negro blood, returned on Says He Was “Blinded by In- Hngamiemc from a trip to Europs oday. fatuation” for Girl | She was accompanied by rek ) | mother, Mrs. George Jones. Thes staple, Eng., Oct. 3. | declined to answer all querles of Lovesick motorists are a greater | newspapermen and left at once for menace to the public than drunken | thelr home in New Rochells, g testimony of Dr. Co- | hu;n Anderson may bs believed. | Thompsonville Tobacco . Anderson, driving lis car on | W. ed the wrong side’ of the road, ran | VWarehouse Is Destroyed <. down a motorcyclist and killed him. | Thompsonville, Oct. 5 P—A to- In his defense he said he was go in- |bacco wirehouse holding about 100 fatuated with a young girl in North |cases of tobacco which was the Devon that he had not besn able to |crop from twenty acres, in the Wey- eat or ;II(‘“I;‘ r:r days and his mind |mouth district, three miles from was a blank because of the infatu- hers, belonging to Seth H. Phelps, ation. | was burned early today. The bufld- The house keeper of the young ing was 50 feet square and two doctor corroborated Anderson's |stories in height and was outside the testimony. “Since he concelved this fire district and neighbors formed a love passion six weeks ago,” she bucket brigade from a brook and said, “he has talked of practically |saved the dwelling. nothing else, he did not eat or sleep. | The bullding was well equipped He walked about the house all dur- |with sorting machinery and had twe | ing the night.” |sweatrooms. The tobacco was own- The coroner's jury accepted An- ed by six growers. The loss.on the derson’s story and a verdict was |bullding was $15,000 and on .the rendered that he drove negligently, |contents a like amount with enly the case for further investigation. |today from the White House. but not to the extent of criminality. |small’ insurance.