ter-Ml’Ston i pelay.ear?ve-onrch,ter-svasandoftheSu-ied,ork4rs.Irs.onIrs.an-ms.earne,tingrre-ald’,’en-I?D. en-the ura Urinal t is me ^er, ing i oat Its is Its me, Mr. in-iny ory •lie, alljea-hlleNEWS FROM THEFROM OVER THE RIVERRev. George H. Means Writes *a Card| Exonerating Pastor Kolin, .R. J. WALSH’S RESIGNATIONHe Intended to Present It to the Newport School Bowd, but Belented—John Leap’s Death in a Pond.The following card has a bearing on the Kolin case, which was reported in yesterday's Commercial Gazette:To ithe Editor of the Commercial Gazette:An axKlcle from your Covington correspondent concerning Rev. C. F. Kolin and his wife, needs correction.Mrs. Kolin was judged insane by the Courts, and ordered to the asylum at Anchorage, and not Lexington, as was stated.She was judged insane on the testimony of two prominent physicians of Covington, Drs. Dulaney and Stuart, and also on the testimony of her friends and neighbors. /She is not only a lunatic, but a dangerous one; often threatening her own life and the lives of her friends. She sees departed spirits, and holds communication with them. She often destroys her clothes, and complains of a storm in her head. She hears the thunder and rain, sees the lightning, c.Whilst under the influence of chloral she appears to be perfectly sane, and talks rationally on all subjects, but as soon as the medicine dies out she is as mad as a March hare. She was accompanied to the Asylum by two Deputy Sheriffs. Her husband went as far as Walton, where he got off the train. At Walton he was met by Rev. Mr. Cooper, pastor of the Methodist Church at that place, and staid a few hours at his house until the next train Mr. Cooper was with Mr. Kolin the whole time he was in Walton. Mr. Kolin is not acquainted with any one, man or woman, in Walton except Mr. Cooper. Mrs. Ivolin’s story is the creation of a diseased brain, and she Is famous for this among those who know her, for in her lucid moments she can deceive any one.Even after the Court ordered her to an asylum Mr.\ Kolin, seeing how quiet and reasonable she was under the influence of medicine prescribed by Dr. Dulaney, went to the Sheriff and asked him to wait a few days and see if her improvement was not permanent, hoping to keep her with him if he could. But as soon as the influence of the medicine died out she was worse than ever before. The powder Mr. Kolin gave his wife on the train was one prepared by Dr. Dulaney to quiet her, and she took it.Mrs. Kolin is not only a lunatic, but a dangerous lunatic, and that is the end of it. This is. only one of the many persecutions to which Mr. Kolin has been subjected.GEO. H. MEANS, Pastor Scott Street M. E. Church.—At the meetirtg of the Board of Fire and Police Commissioners yesterday considerable