Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 April 1896 — Told in a Few Lines. [ARTICLE]

Told in a Few Lines.

A parade of the Salvation Army at Malden, Mass., almost precipitated a riot Frederick Gruby was killed and his son fatally hurt under a building which collapsed. Birchwell’s warehouse at Chester, Pu.. containing 10,000 bales of cotton, burned Loss, $55,000. The body of Mrs. Jennie R. Kimball, the opera manager who died in St. Paul, was taken to Boston for burial. While kindling a fire with oil at Bingham, 111., Mrs. Ewing Seaton w\as burned to death. She was alone in the house at the time. ■ ; William Rose, of Frankfort, Ind., while suffering from the grip, escaped from his home and was found dead in a neighboring creek. \ Alfred L. Avery, clerk for Messmore, Garrett & Co., of St. Louis, who embezzled $30,000,. pleaded guilty. Judge Harvey reserved sentence. E. O. Hopkins and James H. Wilson were removed as receivers of the Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis Road and George T. Jarvis appointed single receiver. Kearan Reed, a retired manufacturer of New York, aged 8? years, committed suicide at his apartments. Mr. Reed was possessed of a competency, but disease and old age madd his life unbearable. The principal evidence furnished in the attempt of the prosecution at London to prove that the Transvaal prisoners had violated the foreign enlistment act related to the cutting of the telegraph wires The examination was adjourned unfit April 28 to give time for the arrival in England of witnesses from Soath Africa