Democratic Sentinel, Volume 17, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 October 1893 — Overflow of News. [ARTICLE]
Overflow of News.
A fatal case of cholera has occurred at Gravesend, England. Two new cases of yellow fever are reported at Brunswick, Ga. Thomas Hawksley, the noted English civil engineer, is dead. It is stated that the hostile feeling between Bismarck and the Emperor is at an end. Mrs. Eva Blackman is the Populist nominee for coroner of Leavenworth County, I<&3. Mgr. Satolli will send to Rome a detailed report of his observations on the recent trip. Wm. Vottoehoemer, a farmer near St. Libary, 111., fell from his porch, breaking his neck. Prohibition Republicans in lowa have issued another appeal for funds tp carry on thV campaign. Six men are under arrest at Scranton, Pa., charged with fatally assaulting 16-year-old Nellie Hammell. Masked robbers held up the stage between Fort Gibson and Tallequah, I. T., and robbed the mail pouch. Two men were burned to death and several others badly hurt at a fire in Mrs. Lindsay’s house at Cheney, Wash. Affairs in Europe are said to be unfavorable to thej>reservation of peace. Nations are preparing for possible war. Secretary Carlisle says the Treasury will pay as far as possible for deporting the Chinese under the Geary law. At Hachiogic, in the silk-growing district of Japan, nearly 5,000 houses have been destroyed by the recent fires. Two armed men robbed the Carlton County Bank of Carlton, Minn., in daylight. They secured only S7O in silver. The vigilants may reorganize at San Francisco to protect ships and shippers against outrages by union seamen. Sentenced to death at Birmingham, Ala., for murder, William Bell has succeeded in establishing his innocence. Nineteen men have been arrested in Barcelona, Spain, for complicity in the plot to kill Captain General de Campos. Fearing a riot, the authorities of St. Paul refused to permit an advertised lecture by Thomas E. Leyden, an ex-priest. In imitating Buffalo Bill’s “Wild West,” Stephen Doyle shot and killed Gerald Griffon. The boys lived at Scranton, Pa.
