Jasper County Democrat, Volume 6, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 May 1903 — BOY’S BODY IN A SACK. [ARTICLE]
BOY’S BODY IN A SACK.
Covered with Burlap, Corpse la In* terred in the Wood a. Tied securely in a burlap sack, buried four inches under the surface of the ground, the body of 6-year-old Paul Paszkowski, who had been missing for a week, was found in the woods at Grand and North Sixty-third avenues, Chicago. A bullet wound in the left temple told the cause of death, but mystery surrounds the cause or motive. Suspecting murder, the police arrested two boys who were- seen in company with young Paszkowski the morning of his disappearance. The prisoners are Julias Wiltrax and William Black, each 11 years old. Both lived near the locality where the body was found. The grewsome discovery was made by Game Warden Klupka and Alexander Schreiber, who live at Grand and Fiftyeighth avenues. They were passing through the woods with two dogs. ' One of the animals scratching in the earth disclosed the body and after a little digging the men brought it to light. The policy were then notified. The youthful prisoners denied any connection with the shooting, but were detained by the police and sent to the juvenile home. Because he had been threatened with ejectment from a rented bouse in Brookline, Hartwell Stafford entered the office of the Edison Electric Light Company in Boston and twice shot Stillman Bishop, a bookkeeper. The victim Is Stafford’s landlord. His injuries may prove fatal. At Columbus, Ohio, the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers adopted the report of the wage committee as far as it appertains to bar and twelve-inch miHs and guide mills, which Is practically the same as last year.
