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DOMESTIC. At Mishawaka. Ind., on the day following his marriage to Edith Marsh, while hunting, Louis Hall received a gunshot wound which resulted in his death from lockjaw. The Warner Silver Manufacturing company of Dixon, III., was forced into involuntary bankruptcy, the liabilities being estimated at $25,000 and the assets at $10,000. The National Commission company of Indianapolis suspended business, notifying its customers that the failure is due to the sustained bull movement An affiliated company will pay in full. Engineer M. Shearwood and Fire man F. J. Lewis, both of Trenton, Mo., were probably fatally scalded in a collision between a Rock Island passenger train and a gravel train near Clio, Iowa. At St. Paul the final attack of Dr. T. E. W. Villiers Appleby on his wife's will in an effort to break the trust clause giving the entire $3,000,000 estate to the Wilder charity for the worthy poor of St. Paul began. Pyramided profits and paper values in stocks are scattered by an almost record-breaking slump in Wall street, in which Amalgamated copper was the chief loser. Lawson gloats over the crash, but bankers and brokers see only good in it. F. A. Roath, who recently inherited $250,000 from the $1,000,000 estate left by his uncle, Stephen Roath of Chicago, has bought Pinehurst, the estate of the late E. N. Gibbs, near Norwich, Conn. It is understood the purchase price was $50,000. By the bursting of a steam pipe aboard the British steamer Murica bound from New Orleans for Br stol, England. shortly after sailing from Baltimore, Md., the fireman and en gineer were severely scalded. the formr's injuries being probably fatal. The war department has directed that Recruit Stephen Putney, Jr., who disappeared while visiting the world's fair and was found at JeΓ±erson Parracks. Mo., be discharged without honor from the army on the ground that he enlisted under false pretenses. A petition for the appointment or a receiver of the bankrupt Elkhorn Valley bank of O'Neill, Neb., was filed and the sheriff of Holt county offered a reward of $800 for the arrest of President Bernard McGreevy and Cashier Patrick Haggerty, who disappeared at the time of the failure. After ten days of courtship, Miss Mabel D. Everett, a Boston millionaire heiress, and T. E. Walton, clerk for an insurance agent, were married at Golden, Colo. The bride is an orphan and is a granddaughter of a member of the Eastabrook firm of bankers. Her relatives opposed the match. At an adjourned hearing in the matter of the bankruptcy of the Dixon and New Liberty, Iowa, banks Cashier Arnold Beauthieu, who had just been arraigned and pleaded not guilty on a charge of embezzling $95,000 of the funds, asked for further time before giving testimony as to the bankruptey, and it was granted. The suit against Thomas W. Law. son for $350,000 for alleged failure to accept stock for which he had subscribed, brought by Paul Fuller and F. R Coudert of New York, was entered in the Massachusetts supreme court, the papers showing that Mr. Lawson's place at Scituate, Mass., has been attached for $350,000. Theodore Kraut, a traveling sales man of Karleruhe, Germany, who claims he has traveled 4,000 miles and spent $500 in search of his child. began habeas corpus proceedings al Detroit to recover his 9-year-old daughter Marie, from her grandmother. Mrs. Mary Scholl, who, he alleges, "absconded" with her from Germany. FORSICN