Rensselaer Republican, Volume 18, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 June 1886 — THE NEWS CONDENBED. [ARTICLE]

THE NEWS CONDENBED.

THE EAST. Charles A. Budoenslek. of New York, the builder of mud houses. has joined JaehiM, Ferdinand Ward, etal. in Sing Sing, on a ten years’ aentenee. The wealthy contractor, who gained his riches by erecting rotten tenements for the poor, regardless of life and limb, and who reached his limit by the death of a workman in the falling walls of a half-finished structure, has been brought up with a round turn... Harry Dunham, aged 18, residing in the family of Austin Waite, about four miles south of Oswego, N. Y., shot Mrs. Waite in the head, inflicting a dangerous wound, and then shot himself dead The “white mill” of the Wasren Woolen Company at Stafford's Spring. Conn., was burned. Loss, SGS,000; insurance, $35,000. At Reading, Pa., Frank and Charles Seabel, brothers, quarreled about some money affairs and a young woman, when the former drew a revolver and fired three shots at Charles. Two balls took effect in the stomach and another iu the region of the heart. Frank then fired two shots into his own body; one taking effect in his lungs and the other iu his head. Both are expected to die.... The works of the Pennsylvania Bolt and Nut Company, the largest of the kind in the country, were burned at Lebanon, Pa. The loss is about $150,000, and is covered by insurance. About three hundred and fifty men are thrown out of work... .The funeral of John Kelly occurred at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, New York. Mass was celebrated by Archbishop Corrigan, and the sermon was preached by Monseigneur Preston. The attendance was very large, and Judge Hilton and August Belmont were among the pall-bearers.