| Show RESULT OF A QUARREL One a Snlcldjs While Tern porari Insane TiE OrilFR JUX DSlrrEllS And Cajnot B ouodt Strange and nibble Orenrrtcce A strange affair hippened near Ogden yesterday afternoon the circumstances cir-cumstances of which a given a follows For two years past there has existed some trouble between two neighbors living I Mound Fort named Gustnf Peterson and Charles Grandin concerning apiece a-piece of school laud which Peterson had sold t the other man They had tolled t ttttlu the dispute until quite recently since which time nothing unpleasant had transpired It sceenu however that on Saturday Sat-urday lost Grandlnd chickens got upon Petersons strawberry patch which caused the latter whic cUete later annoyance I I stated that although Peterson was In fearof Grandinhe went over toblm abut the chlcicn Some angry words eollont least I such I I the statement I made by Petersons freDds and Grandin struck at tbe other with a shovel Peterson dodged and ran away whereupon Granuln picked up some rocks and threw after hm One of them struck Peterson in the ltenn side breaking two of iiisrils Seeing that Grandin was getting Under Die fence as K follow Him and fearing that he might do him further Injury Peterson began lo halloa and at the same time drew a penknife rum his etie Upon thin Grandln I halted and Peterson proceeded homeward Late the same iilght Grandin was arrested on a charge of asau It and taken t the police station where he epen Sunday and oh Monday morning he came home having been allowed to go by joying the regular line esterday tho deceased was somewhat some-what better but very weak c Petenoii started t town about I am but on the way down heard somethliiK which she thought sounded like a pistol shoe Imbued with the fears which the last assault had caused he Immediately re turned under the Impression that Gramilu had been to the hOI cor that something fearful had occurred she learned that what die bal heard was only the dumping of the wheel scrapers which teeru workIng work-ing on the hill as she found her husband in bed as she had left him She talked over her fears and incidentally anl dentally mentioned that the thought had struck her that he might have done himself someinjury Hethlded her for such belief and expressed a belle that the Lord would not Ir nut him t eo far lose 1 hU right uihnl as t commit a deed for Jikh he hell such horror Quieted In her fears she let the house and went to town leaving a Mrs Luudttrorn with Instructions to call in now and then anj see that he a all right r IundMrom fulfilled ful-filled her mission all went to the house during lie wifes absence three times twice looking in at the window and seeing him I and the third time she heard that he was up but thought nothing ol i It At fIu last time she saw Mrs I Peterson returning I from the city and eret down the hill to en I her They turned and r Peter sou entered the liouv Her husband hus-band was missing A search wan instituted and she found llra in the rrlbr with the death rattle in his throat She failed to realize the nulul truth and asked why lie was lying in that position and ought to l 11II 4 raise Mm up She then discovered bloudand ralle In Mr Lund trom and thenelghlwrs On examination he was found t Ii lylngon hbfacc a pistol between hU legs and a bullet hole in his right tempe Coroner arklii and the city marshal mar-shal an well as lr Condon were Immediately called for Peteron never regained con clousncsy and died 1 little twforu four ocloek The evidence a taken by the coroner from all who knew anything about I ustalned the supposition of I suicide while in a frenzy of pain I I and fever or 111 other words tem I jorarly insane TIe pistol hid lain I unused in the house for tle ho years though lode and when found hoe one chamber discharged While they were summing up their evicence word came oer from I Grandlns that he had lef and that he had said would not beiecu again The reporter Immediately Inter veiwed Mrs Grandin From lterptti I I fultatement It was learned that she hal lived In couotanl misery since the trouble about the laud started and that slm had rejoiced when It was setlled When tIle came home on Saturday and learned of the new trouble she Income almost frantic and upbraided her husband because he failed t control hU temper In the middle of the night she stated whilu elm was so sick that when the ofllctr came site swooned to tie floor hew he-w as takeu from home and the wan left stone with four little children When he returned on Monday she acaln upbraided him for having brought them Into such a predicament lh TJ lbyl ment unit misery He by this time repentant asked her If amid the trouble lie had caused their novelty and the manner In which he was beset by other matters Itt known to themselvtv he had not enough t male him feel miserable without with-out Iflng force t brai her complaint About noon he kIssed the ehlldreii goodbye who having ing a presentiment that something some-thing awful to them WAS about to transpire cried IouUlyfor him not t go away He then spoke to his wife 0 he went out raying WellmotherI guess Ill go now and it Is doubtful If you ever se me again This If Grandin says a before IVtersonH death and JB has not been her ofnlnceuShe fears thathcliasmrde away with himself him-self Notwithstanding the fact that some of Peterson folks bad Ktu over to Grandins house and toM of the dentil Mrs Gran din was under tho Impression that the wound mac on Saturday Satur-day had caused hN death Ugh told ly the reporter that he hal shot himself she thought that her husbands hus-bands temier had caused him t I become murderer The Grandin live In al ject poverty Grandinhad taken all the money with him and left but twenty cent t his fjmly Unties help L extended there appears ap-pears but little else than starvation left for the family I was a most touching and pitiful story told by l Grandin who was almost burred al-most heartbroken at what had I Peterson was 53 years of age and came from Westmanland Sweden in laTd Jast evening the sorrow stricken wife was bemoaning her fate and the wbolu scene was of such a sad and woful nature as t eon be unbearable t a sympathetic jwr |