Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1892 — The News Aftermath. [ARTICLE]

The News Aftermath.

Count Eugene de Hartiges Is dead at Paris. The President has pardoned eleven convicted polygamists. Vlce Admibad Deinhabd, stationed at Wllhelmshaven, died of paralysis. Boies City, Idaho, will be supplied with hot water from a natural geyser. Widbiam Linoodn, a bank teller, died of hydrophobia In New York City. Serious floods are reported la Italy. The lower part of Genoa is Inundated, W. H. Johnston, a printer, Injured in the street-car aooident at Cincinnati, is dead. The Omaha Road has lnauguara|ed a dally through train between Duluth and Chicago. Twedve thousand quail were killed In Bartholomew County, Indiana, on Saturday. The business portion of Johnstown, Licking County, Ky., was almost destroyed by fire. The Dominion government will maintain separate Catholic schools at the expense of the State. Rosooe Marble, colored, was hanged at Lafayette, Ga., for killing Rev. Nohemiah Witt. The steamer Butcher Boy struck a snag in the Coos River, Ore. The passengers barely escaped.

Homebeekebs are crowding into the Crow reservation, which has been thrown open to settlers. John McEwen, ox-superintendent of the Albany penitentiary, died of asthma of the heart, aged lit) years. The eltizens of Kokomo, Tnd., are being supplied with free fuel and lights by rival gas companies. The public schools of Hamburg are opened, and direct communication with Heligoland has been resumed. John Evans, a convict at the Lincoln (Neb.) penitentiary, was fatally shot while attempting to escape. The cruiser Charleston, while entering the harbor at Han Diego, Cal., struck bottom, but received no serious Injury. The Derhorn mine in the Cripple Creek district has been fold to T. F. Walsh and associates, of Denver, for $400,000 cash. FotJB hundbed bales of cotton in the hold of the steamer Hpringwell, at New Orleans, were damaged by Are. The ship was uninjured. Heinbich Daniels, supposed to be a resident of Toronto, Ont., committed suicide on a railroad train near Binghamton, N. Y., by shooting himself. The Briggs heresy prosecution has resulted in the Union Theological Seminary withdrawing from the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church. Trustees Yotjnghhsband and Fontaine, of the Iron Hall, were overlooked in the recent prosecutions, and their cases will be taken up when the Graud Jury meets again. Pleasant McCov, a member of the McCoy faction of the famous HatfteldMcCoy feud, was convicted of murder In Pike County, Ky., and sentenced to life imprisonment. Bobebt P. Wilson, one of Buffalo’s distinguished lawyers, died after an illness extending over several weeks which baffled the skill of eipert physicians. He was 52 years old. Pbof. E. B. Andbews, of Brown University, Providence, K. 1., has been appointed delegate to the International Monetary Conference, vice F. A. Walker, who was compelled, to resign. A pbematcre explosion of fireworks at a Democratic rally in Bt. Louis, Mo., fatally injured Michael Batchford, a candidate for the legislature, ana Fritz Mar quart other 3 were painfully hurt. Two Keeley cure hospitalshave been destroyed by fire at Aspen, Col., within a short period. The proprietor of the last institution was notified that he would be assassinated if he reopened it. Col. Thomas Mclntybe, Sergeant-at-arms of the Louisiana House of Bepresentatives since 1879, and a veteran of the Confederacy, died of paralysis at his residence in New Orleans. He was 63 years old, a native of County Cavan, Ireland. A wall fell on a gang of men at the Gleason & Bailey mill, Beneca Falls, N, Y., killing George Ziegfried, aged 67, Michael Mansell, aged 65; Michael Conroy, aged 52; Patrick Martin and Patrick Conroy. Ail five of the men who were killed leave large families.