Zealortigyi Murder, Suicide. Mad the Cleveland Herald of Frlday:„l -- , One of .the .most terrible occurrences upon reeord—involving the murder of a wife .by: an old .man of sixty ; and his suicide afterward—took place in rthe township of Rockport, on Wedneiday night or yesterd4 morning. Frederick Odell, a German aged sixty yeari, lived with his Wife, aged fifty,-five; on his place on the Lorain street road; about four miles from the city, and at the west end of what is known as the Gel man settlement. TlLiy had five qhild ren, three girls and two boys, the oldest twenty, and the youngest sixteen years of age. Oden was a well-to-do gardener and market-man and had saved con , _ siderable money, with which he pro; poled to build a new house shortly. - For years—from her earliest recollec tion, one of the girls testified—Oden and his wife had quarreled. The cause of disagreement was always the same, his jealousy. He had frequently charged her with inconstancy. A quarrel • upon this subjectoccurred between them on Thurs day night of last week. On "Wednesday night, about twelve - o'clock, she thinks, one of the daugh- Jers, Adelaide, who, slept in a chamber, was awakened by hearing her father walking about on the floor beneath. Her father and mother had quareled on Wednesday and in the evening, and the daughter, remembering this,went to the stairway and called to the old man. He 'made some answer which the girl' did t, understand, and she returned'to her _bed. Soon after she heard her father leave the house, and becoming anxious, got up, and with a light went down to ' her parents' bedroom. Here she found her mother lying by her bedside, on the floor,, dead. Frantic with fright, she rushed from the house, and by her cries gave the alarm. Michael, Teigert, who lives on the same road, and opposite Oden's house, heard