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The Record Of Crime

The Record Of Crime image
Parent Issue
Day
27
Month
January
Year
1888
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

THE RECORD OF CRIME.

At Cincinnati Friday, Otto Sander fatally shot his wife, to whom he had been married but three months. They had been living apart.

The bodies of a boy and girl about 12 and 13 years of age, supposed to be brother and sister, were found floating in the river near Huntington, Miss. It is though they were murdered.

It is hardly worth mentioning, but Cashier Charles O'Brien and Bookkeeper E. E. Morse, of the Auburn, N.Y. , First National bank, can not be found. Neither can $10,000 of the bank's money, and there is a suspicion that the embezzlement will reach a much higher figure. 

Dan Driscoll, a murderer and criminal desperado, was hanged in New York Monday. 

William Murdock, an old resident of Pittsburg, was victimized by a bunko man out of $10,000. He was met by a man who had just drawn $20,000 in a lottery and got a certificate cashed. 

A gang of tramps being refused permission to stay all night at the house of Thomas Morris, near Carmi, Ills., bound Morris and set his house on fire. Morris got out in time to save his life, but his house was destroyed. 

J.S. Brown, a colored preacher of Helena, Ark., has been given a three years' sentence for stealing a Bible from one of his flock.

Nathan Smith has been arrested at Peoria, Ill., for the murder of Allie Bemrose, who was found dead in that place Monday. The arrest is on suspicion. 

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Argus