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Lucknow Sentinel, 1890-10-24, Page 7..AMBUSHED AND SLAIN. • A Stranthroy Banister Done to Death in Arizona. • THE OBIME CHARGED TO INDIANA. A. few Fears ago Robert Hardie, a native of Ontario and son of a widely=known Methodist minister, entered Victoria Uni- versity, and four years later gradnated with honors. After completing hie arta eeee eeee.,deee,-aeeatee t eeeydy of law bein silarketed to the A7iti ister3e T�eiTa--7Q1.:de Gt dl� Owing to ill -health he did not praottae his profeeeion here, bat retired to Strathroy,' in Middlesex comity, to the home of his Water, Mrs. Frank Saxton, who still lives at that plane. He remained there for two years. At the expiration of that time hie physioianc advised a change of climate, and the young barrister removed to the Pacific) Coast in April, 1885, and opened a law office in Los -Angeles. Hie health soon began to improve, and before he ing excellent health an a uorative praotioe. In May, 1888, a family named Haynes, from Philadelphia, arrived in the city. dr. Hardie b name acquainted with the Hayneaee, a d they engaged him to handle all t law affairs. In that way Mr. Hardie very noon became friendly with each member of the Haynes family, bat more especially with the younger daughter, Florence, to whom he was subsequently married in February, 1889. At that time the only relatives Mr. Hardie had were one brother, who is the principal of a Methodist college at Tokio, -Japan, and one sister, Mre. Frank Saxton. At her brother's request Mrs. Saxton went to Los Angeles to be present at the wedding. She was taken by her brother to a hotel there, where ehe remained till February 9th, the day of the wedding,when ebe went to the Haynes residence. Her brother was married to Florence Heynea, and the same evening they left for a two weeks' trip. Mre. Saxton says that it ap- peared to her that the whole ceremony . was being . gond oted under a cloud and with a • feer of attraoting attention. STRANGE TREATMENT. Mre. Sexton remained with the Haynesee after the wedding. The family treated her with oourtesy until a few days after Mr. Hardie and his bride departed, when a letter was received from Florence. After that she thought their attitude oompletely ohenged, and she was treat° in a cold, incliff€rent-mariner- She st es that she • was not mentioned beoanee ehe bad pre- sumed to inquire ,bent the way her brother met hie death. Mre.Moorehoase again wrote to Mr. Banning and asked him to see Dr. Goodfellow and ascertain for her whether there bad been any further examination of Mr. Hardie's body then following the oouree of. the bullet, and if go, what the examination revealed as to the state of his health at the time, of the murder. Mr. Banning replied that Dr. Goodfellow had requested him to allow, the letter to be cent to Gen. Miles, commander of the troops at San Francisco, and that he had consented, and ° that Dr. Goodfellow oma a?iaw ewer her ueetions him- Lao -simile of the letter sent to Mre. Saxton and did not tonoh on the post-mortem. Mrs. Moorehonee wrote egain, and this time snooeaded in getting an answer to the effect that there was no farther examina- tion than to follow the immediate comae of the ballet. WHY SUCH eti lament? About three weeks later Mre. Saxon wrote to Dr. Frank Haynes and said thas now he had had time to look over her bro- FOR THia CHIME OF ANOtHER. Strange Death of an Innocent Man on the Gt>zllowo, One hears of the lawyer,' " dusty and ninety tonnes," but as a matter of faot the records of the law oourt make a librart of as outdone and exciting stories as can be found in, the hole range of action. There is the Baxwell ogee in 1841, for instance A reepeotable merchant named eJemee Baxwell, born at London, had removed in early lite to Gibraltar. For many years he carried on a anaconda' traffio in all the articles of British manufacture' introduced in all the principal houses o exchange int Europe. He had an only daughter, a bean- tifnl girl of 17, who loved and was loved in return by William Katt, a young English- man who hadfirat Been Elezia at mass in the Oatholio church. At last Katt presented himself to the merchant and said : " I am, like yourself, an Englishman. I am of respectable family and character, young and wealthy. Give me your daughter—we love each L1NCOLL4'f3 BIEL sNU$OLX. gmnimmilso His Sympathetic Nature and His Early Mlafortunea. Those who caw muoh of Abraham Lincoln during the later years of his lite were greatly impressed with the expression of profgand melancholy hie faoealways wore in repose. Mr. Linobin wax of a peculiarly Byrn- pathetic and kindly nature. These strong characteristics influenced, very happily, as it proved, hie entire political career. They woald not -seem, at first glance, to be efficient aide to political success ; but in the peculiar emergenoy whioh Lincoln, in the encs o , A THEATRICAL SUICIDE. 0 A Russian Professor Takes Poison wadi Dies in the Presence of his Class. An extraordinary story.. ie telegraphed from. Bt. Petereburg. It is probable no romancer has ever imagined a more drama - do incident. A young profeeeor of medi- cine, Konoheraky, closed hie lecture on poisonoaa:acids to. his sines in the labor,,- tory of the university by pouring into a gimme some drops of one df the poisons, Baying as he drank them, " In two minutes you are going to gee a man die before. your eyes. Gentlemen, I bid you farewell." The students .rushed up and,tried to rev'd of was called to meet no administer an antidote, but it was power- ±74.r.," ower- b�.o a ani E 1i !l?f%tl1Ae �•t rnr, ^�. �'4.t.�ci .,,, '� _ , � +1 g%'7�t"F'c•`?S become the " chosen of the Lord.' Thoee acquainted with him from boy- hood knew that early grief's tinged hie whole life with esdneae. His partner in the grooery business at Salem was " Uncle " Billy Green; of While, Ill., who used at night, when the onetomere were few, to' hold the grammer while Lincoln recited his lessons. It was to his eympathetio ear Lincoln told the etory of his love for sweet Ann d he in return, offered what fixed, Konohereky wase corpse. There tit great exoitement in St. Petersburg over , this tragic incident. It is generally believed the professor bad gone suddenly mad, for no motive for the aot, so far as known, °aidted. He leaves a wife, of whom he was very fond, and two little children. He will be buried with great pomp at the expense of the State. es The Gothenburg System. atements of the various desired- to do for her she hoped they would respect his wiahe's. The reply was, " We found Robert Hardie'' affairs in a very unsatisfactory condition, and as Mre. Hardie's ohild is desperately ill she does not wish any oorreepondenoe with you at present." Mrs. (Dr.) Moorehonee; who is taking a deep interest. in the cam, is at present in Toronto. She 'tutee that she is in communication with a lawyer in Tomb- stone, Arizona, in reference to instituting further inquiries into the death of the brother of her friend, Mrs. Saxton. Mre. Moorehonee, when epeaking of Dr. Haynes' adventure with the Indians, remarked that Mrs. Saxton told her that the doctor who has a deformed foot, had gone to Col. Gray's with her brother for his (the' doo- tor's) health. not permitted to meet a faint y name Brydges from London, Ont., only a few miles from her own home, but for what reason she could not conceive. Her brother and -sister-in-law returned home from their honarters in the mime home with the Hamoon and took y eenfamily. She peroeived that the couple were far from happy. Soon atter this she decided to return to Canada. Afterher arrival at Strathroy Mrs. Saxton and her brother corresponded frequently, and in one of his lettere he intimated that his wife was not You belong to the denominant religion cif England by which my fathers suffered so muoh and so long. Yon are a Lutheran and my daughter is a Catholic. Satoh a anion could not be happy, nor will I ever give my consent to it. Elezia shall never beTThe daughter, informed of this deolara- tion,.threw herself at the feet of, her father, and endeavored to move him from his pur- pose. Her lover did the same. Bat the father remained obdurate, and a violent scene took plane. Tho blood of the fiery South coursed in the daughter's veins, and she declared, that she would marry the object of her choice, despite all oppo- sition. Baxwell, on the other hand, deolared that he would sooner kill her with his own hands than permit the union. , Katt, who was present at the scene, kept silence. Two days efterward an alarming noise was heard by the neighbors to isene from a Dave immediately adjoining the merohant'e house, and used by him for domestic pur- poses. The noise consisted, at first of load cries, which gradually became fainter and fainter, and at length died away altogether. Those who heard it looked at euoh other with amazement,. and many were their conjeotnree. A solation of the mystery was not long in suggesting itself, for Elezia had e disap- neared and after many low murmurs had Mixed Marriages. La Sentaine Religieuse, of Quebec, pub- lishes the following in regard to mixed marriages : It is aeoertained that mixed marriages— that is marriages between Catholics and Protestants—have deplorable consequences almost everywhere. At the time of mar- riage the Protestant husband or wife prom- isee all that is demanded by the church, namely, the Catholic ednoation of their children. Bat these promises' are hardly ever kept.•Either through negligence or bad faith on the part of the parties, these mixed marriages generally end in the -- otestantednost n-olethe .oan; family. Such examples are not mane even in' our own oonntry. There is but one remedy to the danger of mixed marriages—that is more severe matrimonial legislation, and it is not improbable that we may have it ere long. Rome has asked all the bishops to give the exact. number of.mixed marriages in their diocese,, whioh leads us to believe that the matter is under consideration. Nowadays neither the energy of pareote nor the good faith of married couples oan be relied neon. The moment parents know that their children oan no longer be allied, iv--Proteatant�ainilieei without apostatiz- ing, they will be more vigil-alit-and-more- cautions. igilant and--more- cautione. It is probable that a few will not heed this, but the majority will submit to the ecclesiastical law, and thereby pre- serve the Catholic faith of many children. , extremely hap , d -that -Mehra er-in- law, Frank Haynes, was " A CUNNING AND DEEP MAN." `.For a year after this Mr. Hardie, hie wife and her family continued to live in the same house. In April last Mre. Saxton wrote to her brother, saying that her fam- ily affairs were unpleasant, and that she thought she would have toaoaept his offer and go and live with him. Be reoeived the letter, glanced it over, and thrusting it into a drawer proceeded to the court house on professional bueineSe. When he returned • he want to the drawer for the letter and found it had disappeared. About M 18th Mre. Saxton received a reply to her atter, dated Tombstone, Ariz. Mr. Heidi said that he gone there unexpectedly and only at the urgent solioitationof his brother•in•law, Dr. Frank Haynes, who was ill. He also said that the dootor had agreed to defray • all of the expense° and give him a 'good time. He said that he could hardly under- stand why the doctor should want his com- pany, as they never had very muoh affection for each other. He intimated in this letter that he was tolerably well off. AAD NEWS. co- - Lincoln's great heart nearly broke. "After Ann died," says, "Unole" Billy, " on stormy nights, when the wind ' blew the rain against the roof,' Abe would set thar in the grooery, his elbows on his knees, his fade ,in his bands, and the tears rennin through his fingers. I hated to see him feel bad, an' I'd say, ` Abe don't cry' ; an' he'd look up an' gay ' I can't help it, Bill, the rain's a fallin' on her.' " sympathize There are many who oan with this overpowering grief, as they think of a loet loved one, when " the rain's a fallin' on her." What adds poignancy to the grief eometimee is the thought that the lost one might have been saved. Fortneate, indeed, is William Johnson, of Corona, L. I., a builder, who writes June 28th, 1890: " Last February, en returning from church one night, my daughter com- plained of having a pain in her ankle. The pain gradually extended until her entire limb wee swollen and very painful to the toaoh. We called a physician, who after careful examination, pronounced it disease of the kidneys of long standing. se All . we could do, did not em to benefit her until we tried Warner's Safe Cure ; from the first she commenced to improve. When ehe oommenoed taking it she could not turn over in bed, and weld just move her hands a little, but to -day she is as well as she ever was. I believe I owe the re- covery of my daughter to its nee." y circulated the father wee interrogated—zee- was speoting his daughter. He said that ehe was missing, certainly but whither ehe had gone he knew not. , This explanation was not satisfactory. The whisper went abroad that Baxwell had assassinated his daughter to prevent her marriage with Katt, and after a few days he was arrested. The dwelling of the merchant was examined, but nothing criminatory was found. The Dave! the gave is the place!" oried some of the crowd. The magistrates then desoended into the Dave, and there, on lifting some loose stones, `dies 1onnd--a portion of Elezia', dress sprinkled all over with blood. They discovered a small quantity of hair, clotted with gore, and that hair was reoognized by many as having been taken from the head of Elezia. Baxwell protested his inno- cence. Bet the evidence seemed etrong against him, and he was convicted and condemned to death. When he was led out to the scaffold, he saw among others Katt, who, as it should have been Haid be- fore, was :the most important witness againet him at the trial, having repeated to the court the threat of.assaseinstion whioh Bexwelhhed uttered against Elezia in his preeenee. When the doomed man saw Katt, he exclaimed: " My friend, in one minute I shall be in eternity. I wish to die in peace with all men. Give me your hand—I pardon you freely for the in- jury your evidence has done to me. Baxwell said this with some composure, but the effect of his worde -upon Katt was very striking. The letter became pale as death, and could not conceal the depth of his agitation. Baxwell mounted the steps of the gallows slowly, and gave himself up to the hands of the executioner, to undergo death by the rope. The blank cap was drawn over his head, and the last fatal step in the prooeee was about to be taken, When suddenly a load ory shrieked up from the side of the soaffold : " It is I *ho am guilty—I alone ?" The ory Dame from' Wm: Katt. The magistrate, in attendance instantly had him brought forward, and he then avowed that he had carried off Elezia, with her ooneent, to be hie wife, and that she was now residing , not far off, in -conceal- ment. He stated further that he had never communicated to her the other measures he had taken, chiefly to revenge himself for the scorn of her father. He had contrived to out off a portion of her hair while she slept. Ie had clotted it with the blood of a lamb, and had also sprinkled in the same way a part of Elezia'a dress, whioh he had purloined. These articles he had placed in the cave, and there ,.also he had himself emitted the oriee whioh at the trial had borne Bo heavily 'against the merchant. The generous pardon whioh the merchant had bestowed on him at the eoaffold had awakened remorse in his breast, and compelled him to avow the truth. Thiel contention was made partly at the scaffold and partly afterward. When Katt cried out his guilt, the exe- outioner turned to Baxwell to take from him the insignia of death. The nn - fortunate man had .sunk down into a sit- ting posture. The black cap was drawn off by the executioner. But Baxwell was dead 1 No exertions had the slightest effect in awakening in him the epark of life. Katt Vail punished Eby imprisonment, and Elezia retired to a convent. Very Much Married. This is the toughest case yet, and we take it not with a pinch- of salt, but a whole aao. Awoman in the State whioh William Penn founded sued her husband for deser- tion. The poor fellow went to court and took with him seven other men whom the woman had married at various times. The Judge looked throughhis epeotaoles, then over them, and then robbed his eyes. , Ali the husbands will stand up and re- main standing until they are counted,��be oried in amazement, and the whole eight stood shoulder to shoulder in the brother- hood of. misery. Smart woman, that ---too smart to get caught, for ehe atrao a for the State line before the ease was called.—New York Herald. The next communication that Mrs: Saxton received was a telegram on the evening of May 26th, which read as follows : " Robert died suddenly." The despatoh was from Tombstone, Ariz., and. signed Frank Haytips. Three days atter the funeral Dr. Wm. Haynes wrote a long letter to Mrs. Saxton, giving details of her brother's death. the a000n of the murder of Mr. Hardie, almost an et oopy of whioh appeared in the Los Angelbe Express,stated that Dr. Frank Haynes and Mr. Hardie were the guests of Col. Gray, near Rnoker's Canyon, and regularly every day went out for horse- bank exercise. • THE DOCTOR'S STORY. 1 On the 24th day of May, about 3.30 in the afternoon, they were riding quietly along, Mr. Hardiee about ten feet in the lead, when suddenly a volley of shote were fired, apparently from a clump of thickets about ten feet away. Mr. Hardie fellfrom his horse with a groan. Dr. Haynes die- mounted and rushed to him, but found him dead. Then he realized that . it meet be efnnbUBhed aeeaseine. If accidental it - would only have been one shot. He leaped on to b horse and immediately a bullet tstruck th hen took to hie hekilling ran, it i,runninder g zge zag to escape the shots that were fired after him. He looked back and saw an Indian dressed iri beads and war paint within 50 feet of him acid taking aim. He dodged into a thioket, the bullet whizzing past his, ear. Terror lent new Strength to hie lege. He rushed on and saw Mr. Hardie's horse on the trail in front of him. He caught it and made as smell a target of himself as he could, and rode home to Col. Gray's ranch to tell of his narrow escape and thrilling adventure. The Vagaries of Fortune. " If you please, madam," said a tattered tramp, " I would like some cold vi:Anale." " I suppose you are a flood sufferer," replied the housewife earcaeticelly._ " Worse than that, madam. One year ago I was rolling in wealth. To -day I am worse than penniless. " Indeed! What is your misfortune ?" " I am a stockholder in a baseball club.' spea portant international temperance congress now assembled at Christiania it appears that the famous Gothenburg system, now mainly adopted throughout Norway, Sweden and Denmark, conetittites practic- ally an effective check upon the evils of drink. Norway has reduced he coneufp- , tion per head of intoxicants by more. than one-half and thereby effected a vast reduc- tion in crime. Sweden, cursed for about half a century with 17,000 domestic • stills, has suppressed household distillation 'and given ouch local optionto town and country municipalities as enables the Gothenburg town council to take over the drink shops, suppress one-half of them, enact Sunday- oloeing and early week -day olosing-7 or 8 p.m., according to season. The- trade is now carried on through what is called a " Boleg," which has to apply all Burping profits to education and like publio object'. In some plasma it is admitted, the propor- tion'of drunkenness still equals that of English towns, bat in a number of districts the •councils have exercised their local option to the full and suppressed all drink. shops.—London Daily News. A Mean Trick. In 1882 David R. Paige, Demoorat, ran for Congress spinet Captain A. S. McClure, Republican, in a Republican district in Ohio, which included the " iron wards of the city of Cleveland. A trusted lieutenant of Mr. Paige, the eeoond night before 'the. election, found a man who in height, form, features, and voice strongly 'resembled Captain MoOlure. He dressed this man to personate the captain and took him into the iron wards, where many of the men were frequenters of saloons. A man known among the iron -workers was hired to intro- duce this-oonnterfeitin the saloons as Mr. McClure. At each place visite a aim lator, atter `being introduced as Capt. Mc- Clure, asked in. spread-eagle style the vot- ers present to vote for him, made some fulsome promises, walked up to the bar and called for 'two glasses of beer, which he and the master of ceremonies drank. Not a voter present was treated to a drop.. The howls of derision and indignation which went up from -each saloon atter the depar- ture of the pretender and his guide oan be imagined. The next night David R. Paige covered the same ground, and, not.to go , too mnoh into `detail, the contrast was so great that,Capt. McClure lost enough votes MANY ministers—Homo of them live in this interest in olitioel affairs, but they are r—take a ather ethershy of publicly allying themselvea with the party whioh they favor lest it should offend some mem- ber(' of their oongregatione who may hold SEBIRING• INFORMATION. Mra, (Dr,) Moorehonee, of London, Ont., a friend of Mrs. Saxton, wrote to Mr. A. A. Banning, formerly of Newberry, Ont., now living et Tombstone, Ariz., for the fade in oonnr etipn with the poet mortem that examinatio. His reply r. Gtoodfellow, an intimate friend of Dr. ked -held the poet mortem And Glad of It. Texas Siftings : Miss Flora, 45, homely and unmarried—Oh, Mr. Blunt, I had such. a strange dream last night. Mr. Blunt—What was it, Mies Flora? Mies Flora—I dreamed that we were married and on our wedding tour. Did ve ave euoh a dream ? energetics—No iadeedJ- different politioel views from them. Rev. Dr. Howard Crosby, of New York, showed in a sermon last Sti',nday on " Christians vs. Tammany," that he is not troubled with any auoh eoreples. He deolared that The man who refrains.from casting hie' vote is guilty of a sin againet God. It is not merely a matter of convenience. Oftentimes it is a ques- tion of morality against immorality or between right and wrong. Then there comes the ques- tion, Is it sufficient for the Christian to cast his vote? Is that the extent of the power which isit nnot. ,God hasred givenom yvoice.i hold [ know that a great public wrong is to ba perpetrated closed. I have no richt to keep my li If friends are to be alienated by my taking euoh a course, let them be alienated, If the roughs of this oitywill be led to attack mo let them do Bo. God is on my side. After a man hoe voted and spoken on the subject of politics does that end his responsibility ? One of our first duties is to try and have a quiet city and a quiet life. Our ar- third duty, is a plain truth to be watchful iniall this the de- partments of our city government there are dreadful customs. The day will- o in your me when it will not bo safe for yen to n houses. Christians should go into politics and should take part in the primaries. I have often presided s,t primaries myself, and when e, minister presides the meeting is orderly enough. 'A man who gots, through lire and is not spoken against is not a friend of the Lord's. We must expect a certain amount of vituperation. As far in the oChurch by taking is deemp own n polities. The baker hen ono qualification -for a statesman ; he knotee what -hie - oouatry Frank Haynes, examination end would send full portion- Ange Lars to Mre. Saxton. A letter wee received me, Edwin ? Edwin --Oh, you're too good from Dr. Goodfellow, but The examination ' to be true. Mr. Blunt, energe i y , 1: never had the nightmare in my life 1 Hal Pointer, the great a pacer, made two world -records at Terre Haute on Thnraday■ first beating the fastest time in America ever made in a race by going a mile in 2.091, and the breaking of the record held by Little Brown Jug for the three fastest consecutive heats by winning. the three: heats in 2.09-, 2.121 and 2.13. THe following table of United States tariff averages has been published. Per cent in Cleveland to defeat him by a very a majority. New York, Sun. Did Not Know Her Whereabouts. An amusing incident occurred at the Albany term of the United States Court, Judge Coxe presiding, a few weeks ago. 'A queer -looking, solemn little man had been called by the defence to establish an alibi. He had testified that the defendant bad been at his house during the time the offence ream committed, and that others were present also, among them a Mrs. Robinson, when the following examination ensued : " Was 'Mrs. Robinson 'a neighbor of yours ?" "Yes." " is ehe here ?" "No." " Do yon know where ehe is ?" " No." " Is she dead ?" " Yes."—Albany Argus. A Ridiculous Question. San Francisco Call: She wax a real n • kneads. Ed n ,And you'll always bo trne to 1110, 1' ? A.ngeline—why do you doubt Ambiguous. Young Whipper—I would like to. have your daughter for my wife. Old Snapper—Indeed ; and what does your wife want of her ?—Puck. A good man bas started bueinese in Lon- don as a " ballot girl evangelist," and devotee himself to awaking the mol sense who of the airy•ooetumed corypb80 pirouette about the stage to the delight of the bald-headed oontinglent in the front rOWs. From 1791 to 1812.........• •�- ___�_�_ From 1812,to 1817:.... 32.73 From 1817 to 1825...... 26.58From 1825 to 1829 From 1829 to 1832 From 1832 to 1834 From 1831 to 1813..........., From 1843 to 1817... ...............» From 1847 to 1858... From 1858 to 1862 From 1862 to 1884 From 1884 to 1890 From 1890 to -- Widower—Will you share my; lot? Widow—No—it's full. I was up in this cemetery looking at it yesterday. • DUN L. 43, 00. 1....47,17 47.81. 28.99 19.25 26.954 23.2 10.66 34.16 45.50 about 60.00 Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the. Best. Easiest to Use and Cheapest. i Sold by druggists or sent by mall, 50e, E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa., U S. A. 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