Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 18, Number 29, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 July 1876 — Page 3
ITTTTTTITT V rnTTDTT?T) I',,n,lki,epsie really about to lo comVVrJuAJLlI IjUUlvlilirL' "'emcd, u ml the eoinplct in Is promised ;. hy the end of 18, M. Keouests for oro-
C. DOANE, Pubiiilier. J A: Pint. INDIANA ITEMS OF INTEREST. fr t I tml I.ltrrary, -Mr. Iti rt llarte's hew nove l, 44 (lal.rirl Coiiioy," is being adversely rctirwed by many of the London papers. -A: tin funeral in lijvtmi of il. ,i;iin seavcr, a disbeliever In any re- 1 i';o, Pryatit's 44 Thanatopsis" was' lon Carlo i tall, handsome, j swaithv 'f complexion, with dark hair, , iii u.-u-hr, ami iv Very small im-;n-lia!. . llie New York Ilcrnil proposes a i:itii'i:il monument to Cieiicrnl Cus'er md Li iil-fatid band, the contribution ;n he the free offering f -f :i generous and i.Iinirit g people. i;-l'nitil St:iU-.s Senator Truman Nnith, xvho read the Declaration of ln.Yiieiitlenenut Lit htield. Conn., on the ' ' ... ... ... . .... v..- ............ V.. w. . ,.- , l uintti i-I -July, I ca.i a at me same place 1' ;.n c irs a'o. - Tret llartcV drama, which is soon I i he placed for the lirt time in Chici'ii, vll huve .lohn Oakhurt, the pro-i.-.Mdiial amlder, for itsiuitral liun-. ( nl. StarliofJ' w 111 be one of the noly .ic( ori-s. --T!ie ir.einleM of (ov. Tildcn's l.ii'M h .! I at Albany are hi-iter, Mrs. Ptlmii. a -id;ite, matronly widow lady; hi r vn. Col. l'elton, ami his wife ami il:w;:l;ter, the letter n little lady of .limine! , who hast lived w ith the (iovernnr since she wan '1 years old. Kate Fiehl means to aeouire all the ;ncn:iipli-hiiient. She is author, Ieeturer, singer and actress. And now he appear in the re of after-dinner speaker, and wins attention and applause where most pakcrs merely product' u weariness and are tolerated as bores. M Abbott, whose non-success in i r.i has already been noted, turns out '
iiiiarri' '1 lady .Mr.t.n ethei t 11 1 riemJs live. wh.iive her pecuniary assistance while J Charles W. Downs, of Wapelhr .he was preparing for the st.ipe are County, Iowa, a farmer, chureh-mem-rojires. nted as hemy indignant at her j l.r, :l V,M.d eitien and kind man, bewatu of candor as to her domestic rt la-1 inv.lve' in debt for his farm, ' 'ill'. ! wlih li Kiivinrii. il him m In iini. it lit
Harriet Martineau wrote fifty-two works, many of which wr" in more han o'.e volume. Her " Kastern Life" n on.- i .f the Ix-st known, and her 44 ltio;niihi.'al Portrait,'' republished from thi' London .V u s, is neof the cleverest :.ri'l nil e-t popular. I loth have been reI'iihhshed here. Mark Kellopjr, the special corre-'pomh-nt of the New ork rn' l, f iuiid tlead on Custer's battlefield, servil in the Army of the l'otomae a.s a Government telerajih operator. He was an experienced electrician. After the war he went West, and took up his riei.b nce in IWsmarck, Dakota. He was conMilercd one of the lcst telegraph "II I S 111 llir .lll ll(Vl. IH'IOII' lie . ; ., ... . , ,. I liiineit t lu i. fil it i. in lu (miiT'it...! in , ... 1 I lawollice, but during his leisure iiours he wrote to different pajvers, and was l cal editor if the Histuarck I'n'-uu'. Hrhool and Chnrrli. Hishop Cheney, of Chicago, has heen elected 1 'residing Ilishop f the Heformed Fidscepal Church. (it'oria ;ave last year to the two Hoards of th Southern llaptist Cinvention inre money than any other State near ?l:!,i'. In the I'nited States their are 1 ,.' Cathfdie theological student, while all the other denominations have only altogether. -Oner.f the students of the Wesley- ' an l'nier.itv at Middletown. Conne.'t-! n ut, who has Taken a prize, pay his way by mending ihwes for hi brother -'.iiilent. In live States 'x-yond the Misms'ipi Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, and NeiiriVska CongTcgatioiialisin has grown in IS years from about l.V) churches to about "), and from less than ;;,(mhi members to nearly oO,im, and its one college has been multiplied ly six. A National Convention of Israelite w is hi id at Was! ington, coinaieiicing "ii the 1 lth. The main object was to found a Hebrew College in Cincinnati, for which siwiij hfs been subscribed. !
I he convention alsoconsi.lero.yhe pro- :' lo eomc. i rictv of en cting a female seminary Our hoy Swipes is a reguiar atfor forwarding practical knowledge of ten latitat Sunday-school. Last Sunwoman's duties. tlay his teacher was explaining a chapAt the bite session of the National j tcr to the class in the biH.k of Kings. IMuca'it.iial Association in Thiladelphia, After delivering herself of what she; l'rof. Harris,-of St. honis, presented a j thought to be a yery entertaining dis-; " port on course; of study from primary j course, she asked the class 44 What is a s hi.id lo uitfvtysitv, which suggests j king?" This was a poser to the class. : that children In the North could be sent ' Finally our loy Swie, who is the I to schml at live years, while those at j ride tf the Sunday-school, held up hi I the Smrtli should not he '"tnt before ix liand. This made his teacher smile lie-'
"r sevui jeau. TI.A..41I i im P,T lll,?-h.0 it i 1 1 til I 'i I'f1 ! ir in l 114 inn niiniirff.il ' and seventy-sixth, annirersary recently. The Swedes came to what was nfterward the colony of Pennsylvania in 1'-I, under the patronage of (iustavus Adolphtis. The first place of worship, ;n the site f the present church, was finished in lb77, so that next year the two hundredth anniversary of the first '"Undatioti will be celebrated. . ri - rlnr and Imluatrf. CaliforntH has pnt up" il cam t.f strawberries this year. IX),(KX) -1 he Russians nre experimenting ' hrigland with a gun that throw;, a ! ":dl weighing l,r,tf pounds, and conMiniesr.!,!. pounds of powder at each niscn;i rrc. f A britl.
across a
the Hudson ct
1 have been sent to contra tor.
A missionary in India has sent an order to New Haven for a vehicle which can be traveled in r dav. slant in night, ami preached tvum ut any time. j It will ! furuihi with cooking utenv, tU, bedding atnl books, and nix oxen w ill Ir:iw it. j Frame exported, last year, false hair, beautifully cotton no in tblfyrt nt I shapes.to the. amount of I.JO tons, worth ! nearly two million francs. Nearly ' whole of this went to F.ngland n ind i America. The Paris chiffoniers now ' I'-yefully eulleot all small paper parcels i with hair combings, which ladies and servant daily throw out of the windows, and obtain lives francs per kilogram for the combing. To the list of substances capable of furnishing illuminating gas of good quality, cork is now to be adh'd. lxpei imeiiti made in France with this article h ive, it appears, given results both economical and satisfactory, liud the , . , . . it l" . 1 ,,u ' , I ! 1 1: in i n .it I. n . WiiI-Lj f. .r l.mi uuc ., ,rL- ... ... . , , . ' . . . " ... .....in......,.. ii i il t.iifiniii-i, I lie fi abluents, principally waste left after ij.t:ing bottle stopper, are distilled in a close retort. The iVmi" obtained i stated to be whiter u:d more brilliadt thau that of coul -.'.is, while the blue zone is much smaller and the density considerably gi cater. II. ami 1llia. W. C. McDonald, a bookkeeper, of Pittsburgh, Pa., had an altercation with his wife, timing win h he shot her and then shot himself both fatally. A ."J-ycar-oM daughter of .lohn He Vries, I.di, lleren County, N. .h, was accidentally shot through the head by her mothrr, who was playing with a jdstoi. Mrs. l'rentiee, wife of a l'rofessor in Wcxleyan Collejrc, Middletown, Conn., slipped and ftdl over a precipice (o leei iii'Oi ai uilon, in mat M.lle She was picked up alive, but cau not reason and he cut his throat. At South lleml, Int!.,a (Jennan girl named Kat; l-'ieck drowned herself in the rier, together with a 7-nionths'-old babe of h;r dead sister, which she fastened to her Im fore taking the fatal plunge. There i no reasonable explanation for her act except insanity. I'orrlga olrt. An ejuetrian statue of I'hilip Aurrustus is to be erected in l'aris. It w ill be finished in 17H. Father Hyacinth and his wife have recently been the quests of Dean Stanley, in lomlon. A (Jrnnan surgeon has discovert t , 1 , , , 1 , 1 , I . that tilt cheek bones of tne .Japanese ... . ' are doutile in many cases. News has ln-en received from th (lerinan North Asiatic Kxpedilion.w hich has arrived as far as Seniipalatinsk, in Siberia. Amy Koselle, one of the prettiest I and most charming actresses in ImI tloii, is about to marry an Imflsh nobletnan, said to be very talented, rich, i and charitable. j The new Sultan, on taking possession, found I,'."1' cooks in the palace, J but for certain t Iriental reasons confined his diet to (toiled t-jrs until he reorgan- ' ized the kitchen bureau. There Is a machine in Machinery l the C l, tlia m anufae-! ,lir"' MM' polishes it, and sets it in a composing sut k. iui as u can i jeti ; for the l'npiids, or swear at the stranger who come into the composing-room to jiractice whistling, it is eonsidered a failuii; as a type-setting machine. llau li ye. -4,Ah," aid the worthy old Mrs.1 stubhs, as sh-stood staring at a placard on whit h was inscribed 44 Youth want- j ed" 44 yes, I dessay. Most on us who; have got a bit oldish, as you may pay, 1 might carry a ticket about with Youth wanted' printed on it. Hut what with oM Father. Time, and what with troubles 21,1,1 trii,1 m,,it on us will have to go " 1!l ulh wanted,' I expecK for nignly, for she was proud to see him so ready with an answer, so she said: 'Well. Swie..wh is a king?" . . 44 Well, miss, you see, when you get in . the king row and put a checker tin him why then he's a king, and when some i body leads Jack ami another fellow plays a queen in petlro, you can make j liis eves hangout by taking 'em both i with the king." Solano lUublian. I Ottd and I'.nd. i A Chicago observer says nothing develops the latent speed in a man as! vigorously as a Texas steer. j They went fishing. She looked lanrriiiiilv At liim nml "Iwishthn! ,,(, woul,l bite at your hook. If I was a fah I would." And he said : 44 If you 1 were a gold fish I'd haul you in." ! A 3W!lM,M cmM of Mr r i. . 4. ... . J ..I fort nvne. Im . n-hi n ivinir around the house, came across a plate I
of tly-poison anddraiik a large quantity, causing death in a few hours. Col. (ieorge Ionglcy, of the ISritish armj', while drunk, whipped the manag'T and assistant manager of the Argyll 1 looms, London, and i therefore likely to lose his commission. There . has been a great deal of money hist and won on the Jmglish races, this year. 1ord Dudley lost ? I x,(MiOon I'etrarch at the Ascot. A profevsioual bonk maker cleared JI'Jhsj, ami another made I'J.O'HJ in one day. A treasure of great value has jut been washed ashore on the coast of ihittany. A boy found a box on the beach; it was too heavy to carry, and so he called his parents, w ho broke it open and found that it contained 1,.Vh,M.o francs. Klia Armour, of Newburg, N. Y., to cure rheumatism wrapped herself in garments saturated with kerosene, which took lire and sh" burned todeath. A daughter of Mrs. Armour in tring tosaxeher mother's life was fatally burned. Dolly Cranse, aged l.'i.of lirie, Fa., wanted to go West to free her brother. Her father would not give her money. She then upon drew a check f..r 17.", and forged her father's name to it. The crime was discovered, and the girl went out in a lot and cut her throat. Hubert Ciunmison, a farmer living live iniies south of Fort Wav in, Ind., !e-( ended bis well for the purpose of Letting a bucket that had fallen in. When about ten feet down he was overpowered ty damp, and fell to the bottom, 1 rca!:irg hi.-i ivck by th" f:t!! t'.r.d causing instant death. A woman writes that 44 a man can hold his age much better than he can hold his youth." To which a man might add" that a woman t an hold her age much better than she can hold her mouth but a respect for our hair prevents us from making the remark. XurriAtmrn ILruld. It was rather annoying, to say the hat, when the new clerk of a Iloston merchant, w ho had just been initiated into the mteries of the trade mark, inquired in a loud voi"c a a customer demurred to the price, 44 What shall I sell this for? It is maiked four dollars and a half, and cost fifty cents." 44 You needn't take down any more g'lod.s," she said to the weary-looking clerk, who was half submerged in his wares, 44 1 don't want to buy any, but m husband's sister's niece is going to New York, and she said she'd buy me what 1 needed there if the prices were enough lower thar here to make it worth while." i.'hvajo Jourwil. 44l5anji Hen," an intemperate and half-cray negro, attempted to walk a small half-inch working cable used in the construction of the new suspension bridge at Minneapolis, Minn. When feet out, and within I'd feet of tjie edge of the river, he fell a distance of l2o feet, striking the rocky ground, and was killed instantly. In a land case, now being tried in the Diitrict Court, the jury having been dispensed with, his Honor, .Judge Noonan, acts as judge and jury both. To have a single man acting for twelve seems very simple, hut it is bewildering to Deputy Sheriff McCall, who has been attending juries for a long time. Yesterday morning, for instauce, he looked fixedly ut his Honor, and, after counting him several times, inquired : "Where is the rest of you ?" When Court adjourned, McCall said, rather sternly, we thought, to his Honor : 44 Now, don't you go talking about this case among yourselves, and all of you boys be on hand promptly, or I'll hunt some of you up in a wav that you wont like." n Aht'mio (7Vz.) ILrall. .lohn Collins, a tainted Iondon pick-pocket, took an active part in the Moody and Sankey meetings, and after the departure of the evangelist became a popular singer and exhorter. His piety was not questioned by his fellow-workers, and his friends among the taves did not expose him. Thus he was en iblcd to pick pockets with great facility, often taking the watches and pocket-books of men and women while praving at their sides, or while explaining to them the w ay of salvation. Continued success, perhaps, made him careb s. for, while taking part in the exercises of the laving of the corner stone for a church in I xbridg", lie was cauirht stealing a watch from a woman who wis sharing a hymn book with him during the singing. II" was arrested, and then a great number of robberies were traced to him. .
Onr of Andy Johnson's Coals. The Nashville Arm riran says that the President ' the Historical Society of Tennessee, residing at Mecklenburg Place, Knoxville, in a letter to the society a few days ago, states that he has received for the institution the military coat or uniform of the former llrigade Major Robert Henry llynds, in a gixxl state of preservation. The coat in all its make-up and appendage is now antique and curious, but shows the mechanical skill, taste and excellent w orkm tnship of the maker, the late Andrew Johnson, President of the I'nited States. It is presented to the society through Dr. Uamsey by Major llynds, son of Alexander llynds, of Danbridge, Tennessee, who informs Dr. Kamsey that Mr. .Johnson afterwards, while Covernor of the State, commissioned his former customer, Major Hynd, as Circuit Judge in his judicial "circuit. He also received hi commission as llrigade Major from the same source. Other contributions are promised to Dr. Uamsey by parties in iOast and West Tennessee.
SKVKX MK. KIII.FI.
Tit Mark fill Tlirrr Tlillhorn llmt Itera, f Vr.tli, . J. I fir Kill lour Jim ail Hound Im to licra T tt i Ir Own Mraafc-r Talc. Ir mm tit- Nrw X rk II. r:l 1, July II.) Since the South Street tragedy, which swept to his final account in a most shocking manner the renown-! lien. "Pet" Halsted, the city of Newark has known no such excitement as that which stirred it yesterday to its tenter. This excitement was cau-ed by a tragedy, the thrilling ami extraordinary character of which is sometimes equaled, but rarely, if ever, excelled by accounts of deadly rtnronlrtx in Western journals. It was a tragedy complete in one chapt r, a tragedy which ended immediately after it began, leaving no opportunity for Jersey justice to vindicate itself through the medium of the gallows, or for a bundling she riff or his stiil more bungling deputies to furnish a dNgusting spectacle, us in the case of the w ret'-hed I.tisigii t'ii, atMorristo'wn, a few years ago. The one act witness?! the beginning and the ending, the slaying of several inoffensive fit iz-us, and the immediate (daughter of their three murders. TIIK 1'I.TAII.s run as follows : About thrv years ago tlicte was employed at Thomas H. Dawson's patent leather f tctoiy, corner of Kivt-r and Madison Street, a man named Albert Thilhorn, a peaceable, well-dis-po-ed workman. Soon he was joined by two brothers, Charles and Adolph. I hee proved decidedly h-ss quiet and tractable. They brought with tuem s. !;. ie vli -f H "Oisill et:tte left them by their parents. The pos. session of this money seems to have made them exceedingly overbearing and disposed to take umbrage at every slight. They went to w-oi k at Dawson's w ilh Albert. The old hands called the new comers 44 greenhorns " in a joking manner. This annoyed Charles and Adolph so that in about two weeks they, together with Albert, the elder brother, hft the factory. Some say they were discharged, but this the foreman at Dawson's denies. While employed in the factory the brothers loaned a man named Weitzel some ?7. After their departure tiny earned for themselv es a pretty bad name, Albert even having changed his eaceab!e disposition to that of a rowdy. One day the two stopped Mr. Charles W. Meyer, Dawson's foreman, and in an angry, menacing manner demanded the money borrowed by Weit.el. Of that he knew nothing, hut told them he would see Weit.el about it. He did so, and the result was that the money was all paid over in installments. Meanwhile the brothers led a eiy loose life. They sought no employment and spent their time in beer drinking, smoking and carousing. They hired rootus at No. lul Jackson Street, from Peter Miller and lived there, keeping bachelor's hall in a rude, uncouth way. One day, as if Weitel had not paid them a cent, Charley, the youngest of the brothers, waylaid the former on the canal bridge, near the factory, and demanded more money from him. Weitzel refused and Charles assaulted him atrociously, ltut for a tin dinner can, which Weitzel carried, he would have leen sTAItliKl TO THE IIKART. As it was he was wounded. The result of this was the arrest of all three of the brothers. Charles was sent for six months to State Prison. This was alxnit a year or eighteen months ago. Then it was that the brothers vowed vengeance n Weitzel and every one w ho had been in any way instrumental in consigning Charles to the doom of a convict. That this threat was no idle one is proven by the fads of the dreadful slaughter yesterday, and by the additional fact that a target, well riddled witn pistol shots, was found in the rooms occupied by the Thilhorns. Of late they have been in many ways preath disturbing certain workmen in Dawson's factory, Mr. Charles ". Meyer being their special ivir. Threatening letter-) they wrote him in great numbers. It seems that they were equally troublesome to Mr. Moffat, a ward taxcollector. Whenever he appeared at the place for arrears of taxes they would SK.I.K A kaoi: and begin sharpening it, and acting in such a manner a to almost frighten the life out of the poor offi ial and start him ort w ithout his taxes. M.datt and Meyer held counsel, and together they went to the Police Court on Wednesday andlolgeda complaint of disorderly conduct against the brothers. Myers was the complainant and Moffat the witness. A warrant was iued by Justice Jessnp for the arrest of the Thilhorns. It was placed for execution in the hands of Officer Itenjamin F.isden, one d the newest :ppoiut'-eson the police force. Yestenlay about one o' 1 x k, accompanied by Ollicer Albert Dickerson, one of the few colored policemen of Newark, he proceeded to execute the warrant. They arrived at the hou-c where the Thilhorns resided between j one and two o'clock. Di kt rson posted himself in the alley near the house, while Klsden entered it. Ho first ascertained from the people who own the house and reside on the grmmd floor that the men were in. The brave ofllsprang up the stairs and knwked at the door of the Thilhorns' apartments. Who's there r" said a voice from within. A friend ; open the door," said the officer. The door was opened and the officer bowed his warrant. Instantly the d-nr was shut in his face. He demanded it reopening in the name of the law, and called for Die kt-rson to assist him. Hefore Hickerson had time to respond the j door was opened, and as soon a the ' officer entered closed a second time.
He fore the gallant fellow could look about him iu the room he fell In the floor nor iin.oi on tiik iieaut.
He had been twice shot at besides. .Two young vvo;iien, Mrs. Yanderhoof j and Mrs. (ieorgianna Key nobis, sisters, and daughters of the owner of the 'house, Mr. Miller, sat in the room underneath where this. tragedy occurred. They hearJ the heavy fall on the lloor above of the slaughtered policeman, ' and were frightened almost to death. : Mrs. Yanderhoof darted out into the ; yard, while her sister, Mrs. Heynolds, remained in the house, paraly zed with fear. Presently down stairs dashed tme of the Thilhorns, and through the lower apartments. He seemed craed, and levelled his great navy revolver at the defenseless female, lie lire!, but fortunately the ball only grazed lo r head. Out into the street the ruliim n-? darted, f-Kt lowed by his brothers. Dickerson, the black policeman, !b-d before them. They shot him in tie- hack, the ball entering the left side of the backIxme, glancing upward through the lungs. The villains i cxt shot and seriously wounded a Mr. John Cahill, tesiding next door, who ran out from his dim cr to see what the tioie was about. C.iLi l had not raised a finger t r spoken a Word to the rutlians. All this occurred in a great deal le.-s time than it takes to narrate the bare facts. The desperadoes appeared to be regularly pos sessed w i;h A Ml'IM'Ll: M'.VIL. i Down Jackson Street they dashed live a trio f savages, a crowd after thfiii, kcepm;-, however, a reieetful distance from the revolver-armed madmen. It was close to twoo'clock when they sprang across the canal bridge anl up into the second floor of Dawson's factory. They sung out for Meyers, hut "before a reply could be 1 given they began to make gad havoc aimmg the workmen nearest them, j Charies F "ischer, assistant foreman, and ! one of their assumed enemies, was the nearest to them. Thri-e they shot at him. One ball pierced Fischer's heart, and he fell dead instantly. They next i shot John Abers, a young workman, , son-iti-iaw of Meyers. lie h.s -hoi in the head, lungs and arm. He lived only a few hours. Meyers, fortunately, was in a far off part of the factory, so 1 that although they shot at Lir repeatj edly they did not hit him. They made i a dash for the workmen up stairs in the I third floor, but by this time and it was ; but a few minutes subsequent to their i entrance the workmen rallied with ; knives and stones and drove the murj dertrs down into the street. Albert, ' the eldest Thilhorn, had a revolver in I each hand; the other two one each. At j the foot of the atairs they shot a workman named Frederick Slutz, and struck i him, but his wound was only a scalpscrape. Then ensued ! A Tit Kl I.LIN. SCENE. The workmen in the factory, to the number of about thirty, mad iened at the spectacle of the dead F ischer and the dying Albers, seized long knives used in their business and charged the murderous trio. On they drove them along ltiver Street, between the Morris and Kssex Canal and the Passaic Iliver, the Thilhorns turning everv now and then in their tlight to tire a volley into I the crowd of pursuers. The latter were too far behind to be hurt, l-mally the murderers were forced into a corner the fence against llalback's place and a great bank of oyster shells, together with the approaching workmen forming an inclosure from which there was no escape except by the river. The brothers waited till the workmen were nearly upon them, and then were driven into the river. As he was going overboard, Charley, the youngest, leveled and tired his revolver at John Weis. The ball missed Weiss. Not so the knife of Weiss, which nearly severed Charley's right hand. The three were then literally stoned to tleath in the water. I'p to five o'clock the only body found was that of Cha. Thilhorn. It presented a ghastly spectacle, an ugly wound on the head, showing that lie had been stoned as well as knifed. The body was taken to Comptain's morgue. It lav there not far from that of the inuro'ere. white policeman KNdcn the murdered almost alongside his murderer. It was a ghastly, a horrible sight. Fischer's body was taken t ) his late home. Dickerson was removed to St. Michael's hospital, where he died during the evening. John Allien aN j died, so that the follow irg is the I.I-T OF THE l'FAK AMI woimf.i: Ilenjamin F.l-den, dead. Augustus Di -kerson, dead. Ch.irl s Fischer, dead. John Alber. tlead. The three Thilhorn, dead. John Cahill, wounded. Frederick Slutz, Wounded. The Thilhorn were native of Magdeburg, Prussia, and were about from 5 to 40 years of age. They would probably have been lynched had they not met the fate described, so bitter and intense was the feeling against them. Officer F.isden leave a wife and a large family. He ha ben but about two months on the force, having previously been out of employment for about a year. Fischer wa alout thirty-f've year of age. He also leaves a large family. Dickerson leaves a wife and baby. Alters ws married about a year. His widow will soon be a mother, if she survives yestenlay' terrible blow. The Thilhorns leave no relatives, except a sister. The kangaroo has been introduced into several large estates in F'rance, and is now being hunted.
