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Show A FOUL MURDER. A Tonne; hitrdlih Woman Hicaed to ritts bT htr Would-be Lorer. DOUBLE HANCINC IN SOUTH CAROLINA. A Xewfpaper Corropondf nt Ttlh or Horrible CroelUei la a TnrkUh Prison. INTERESTING NEWS FROM BERLIN. An Elopcmrnt and Its Surround loci. Hott Busilin Prison. crj are ierrtd. Bj Telerrapn lalba.Mwl) AWH'L CIUBC A Tonne Woman CraellyJlnnlereU In Coaneelleul. MillX)nr, Conn, Aug. 2. An atroUounmurJeroi ayouDs nomau wm ftt-rpetratcd ln-m t-arly this tnoroiiig ty u 8wedu namttl An-ilren An-ilren UorJeuMO. Ho climUnJ Into Uu! room occupktl y tils sweetheart, sweet-heart, Emma Anderson, by means of an open window, at three o'clock. While the girl wa asleep he plunged a largejack -knife into her throat. Before his victim voulil make any outcry be sever eo I her heau almwt comilelely from her body. The room bore evidences ofa mnstdesperatestruggle for life on the part of the girl. The floor, walls and celling were covered ith blood, and from lie petition of the body lt la thought the murderer, alter (tabbing the girl in tied, dragged drag-ged her to a chair and too'- her de-liberaleyacros de-liberaleyacros his Inpand DnMied his fiendish ork ' v haggling her head alniort from ner body. Mi-s Anderson was a young and finely-built finely-built Swede and It as no easy ta't to overcome her. SnE CAME TO AMERICA In March and has rince been employed em-ployed us a servaut girl at the houoe of J. Itucklngham, who is a near neighbor to Mr. lteecher, for nhom Uorjenen worked. Mrs. Buckingham, Bucking-ham, whose room isdlrettly under that of the murdered girl, heard a noise overhead in her room about three 4,'cluck this morning. She heard no outcry or spoken word, ut soundsof ascufile. the awoke her husband, who ran outdoors to inve&tlgah. Jut as he came in sight of the girl's beuroom window he faw a man leap from it and alight on the roof of a shed. Buckingham Buck-ingham asked him what he was doing do-ing there. Borjemen, who was evidently very much excited, cried "I am here, I am here," and leaped to the ground and e-caped. Going upstairs Buckingham found the. girl already dead. A posse was at once organized, w hich, after a fearch of the woods for several hour-, found the murderer. mur-derer. It seems that the murder was the outcome of jealouy of Borjinsen toward the uirl with whom he was 1)ES1 LKATELY IN LOVE. He has been in tills country three ear", but last spring be went back t. SweJen and induced his brother and Mifcs Audercm to return with him. The girl met him fur the flrt time during that vi!t. He told lur he would pay her tossnge to America as a friend, simply lend bir the mouiy until she could work hero and jay him. She had been anxious to come to America for a long time and was glad of the opportunity to do so. When Barjenen had taken the girl two hundred miles from home he changed his tactic, and told lur that If she would not consent to marry him he would not give lur a cent, but Icavo her destitute among stranger. Under the circumstances the girl was forced to give a sort of promise t-i marry llorjenen. although al-though -ho did notlovehlm. When they landed in America Borjemtn procured Miss Anderson a place in the household of Buckingham, and all went well for several months. HOKJK.SH.N not lung ago began to drink, and soon the girl told him that she could not marry a drinking man lie promised to reform. He did not keep his promise, however, and two weeks ago she gave him his flnnl dlrmlssal and paid tlio $00 for hir passage. The murderer appears veryecol and untouctrned as he sits In his cell, and tonight whin an order was presented to him, authorizing his brother to take S.V) of the money that was due him for the dead girl's burial, he signed the paper without the slightest show of emotion. The murdered girl wa twenty -five years uld, and ber only relative iu this country is a sister In Montana. Bor-Jenen's Bor-Jenen's brother and sister hae Lceu arrested as accessories to the crime. It being claimed that the murder was the rcult of their advice. |