Committed Suicide Adolph BORZEE, a Frenchman living at Sturgeon, last Saturday afternoon about 3 o'clock committed suicide by throwing himself under the engine of a rapidly moving coal train on the Panhandle railroad. He was cut to pieces. A short time before he had tried to kill himself by cutting his throat twice with a razor. The wounds inflicted in his neck did not reach the jugular vein and it is thought he lost courage to end his existence that way. Tieing (sic) a towel around his neck, he went to the railroad, and when the train came along threw himself in front of it. The remains were placed on a train and taken to the undertaking establishment of J. STEEL at Carnegie. Late that evening friends notified the undertaker they would take charge of the remains. BORZEE was 55 years old and single. He had one brother in this country. He worked in the Laurel Hill mine of the Pittsburg Coal Company. He is said to have been drinking hard and it is thought he was suffering from temporary insanity.