Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 166, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 July 1910 — St. Paul Cadets Enjoying Camp on College Campus. [ARTICLE]
St. Paul Cadets Enjoying Camp on College Campus.
About twenty young men in uniform are encamped on the college campus at St. Joseph’s. They are a part of a club of working boys in Chicago known as the St. Paul Cadets, that being the parish formerly held by father George Heldman, whose proteges these boys are. It is expected that several more will arrive from Chicago this evening. A baseball game will be played with the religious students Sunday afternoon and the camp will break that evening. The organization is military and daily drills are held.
Mrs. Milly Hubbard, aged 91 years, the oldest resident of Goshen, and for seventy-eight years a resident of Elkhart couty, died Monday night. Isaac Kendrick, aged 65, a prisoner at Michigan City for thirty years, was pardoned Tuesday by Governor Marshall. Kendrick was sentenced in Vigo county for wife murder.
Striking clay workers at Brazil, Ind., Tuesday voted to return to work Wednesday. The strike has been on two months. The operators succeeded in maintaining an open shop, the strikers getting an advance in wages. Judge J. G. Leffler, of Delaware county, will decide whether one bath in eight years is enough. - Mrs. Mary Schull, wife of Mallen Schull, of Muncie, applying for divorce, says her spouse went without a bath from year to year.
Mayor H. M. Ferguson, of Clinton, has issued an ordinance that all dogs be muzzled after July sth, the action being taken as a precaution against rabies. The police are instructed to kill all dogs unmuzzled after the date specified.
The Rev. Benneville Sawyer, a retired Methodist Episcopal clergyman of Ft. Wayne, has been nominated for congress by the prohibitionists of the Twelfth district. The Rev. Mr. Sawyer, is at present prohibition county chairman in Allen county.
The Jeffries-Johnson prize fight pictures will not be shown in Indianapolis. This decision was reached Wednesday after Mayor Shanks held a conference with the city officials. The mayor instructed the chief of police io preveht the pictures being shown.
Uncle Sam has purchased all the electric bulbs needed to supply the government for the next year. The contract is for one million lamps to cost $170,000, which is less by almost $30,000 than the cost when the departments made their purchases separately. The republicans of Spencer, Warrick and Vanderburg counties met at Evansville Tuesday and nominated W. P. Eigemann, of Rockport, Ind., for senator. The various speakers praised President Taft and the Payne-Aldrich tariff law and failed to mention the name of Senator Beveridge. The African Methodist Episcopal Ministerial association of Chicago and vicinity Monday adopted a resolution condemning "the presentation of any exhibition of the brutalities of the prize fighter, whether it be in the ring itself or by moving picture reproductions,” and requiring the mayor of the city to prohibit the fight pictures of the Jeffries-Johnson contest.
The announcement is made at Ann Arbor that the yofingest person ever to take a degree from the University of Michigan, and possibly from any university of the United States, is Miss Dorothea Jones, of Hari*isburg, Pa. She was seventeen years old when she passed her examinations at Ann Arbor recently. Previous to going to Ann Arbor, Miss Jones was a college student to Carlisle, Pa.
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