OCR Text |
Show jjlARRIED TO HER BROTHER. j Outrogeous Story that Comes From the Barge Office. New York, Xov. 2. Among the immi- ('jants landed at the barge oflice yesterday hs a 'German family named Muller, com- ssed of mother, son John, aged 26, and a ! lug'ht'-r, Marguerite, aged 22, besides a son- t i-law and his two children. The family de- llirked from the steamer Prince Bismarck. The daughter was in an interesting slate, yidently near its culmination. When ques- ijusoed by the bureau officials she indicated Jihat her brother John was responsible there- Ifpr. tTtefflcials not knowing of the relation- i(''fin5r between the pair. Marguerite I l JP tuat Hn'e''8 6he ar"i fler betrayer J ip&rried they would both be sent hack 1 fcimany. - Botn parties -expressed a ,'kyTi9Zw to be married. They were o, X, 6c4 to the residence of a minister Ar aud the ceremony per-yf''st per-yf''st After the ceremony it V 'JM that the mother had railroad r 4 'r Elgin, 111. She was jourd. and jfi that her daughter had hteu married. I I exqn-esscd astonishment, demanding to 1 y 1'iv who her new son-in-law w as. Beinsr I S 11, Ee threw up her hands and shrieked": 1 ) f hvjthat is my son. They are brother ffaro Fisrer." Upbraiding and recriminations by the Imotner and sister followed, while the son, ! rother and husband looked on in stolid in-lifference. in-lifference. The girl persisted that John was lie father of her unborn child, while the nother protested that a soldier in Mecklen-erg, Mecklen-erg, Germany, was responsible. John would aakc no statcmen?. The mother succeeded n exciting belief in the German soldier tory and the conclusion was reached i hat the girl had implicated her brother in order, to secure their release from the targe yJkc. I |