Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 185, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 August 1910 — NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS. [ARTICLE]
NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.
In an-effort to kill a rabbit yesterday, Edgar Sebold, of Indianapolis, shb§ his wife and she died shortly after being taken to the hospital. -Mrs. White, age #O, of Warrick county, has the Whooping cough, and owing to her age, her condition is regarded as serious. Charles Barclay, a farmer living near Lynnville, has a violin bearing the date'of 1711. He got the relic in lowa several years ago and has refused a large price for it. Bulletins prohibiting the racing of wrecking trains have been issued by the Lake Shore. The new order confines the speed to from fifty to sixty miles an hour on main tracks and forty to fifty on others. - ■* The twenty-third annual reunion of the Thirty-seventh Indiana Regimental association will be held at “the Old Camp Ground” at Lewrenceburg, Ind., Aug. 25 and 26. The Eighty-third also will meet at the same time and place. Claude Moore, 24 years old, was arrested at Boonville yesterday morning for shooting at State Representative W. E. Williams, his father-in-law. Williams was at breakfast with his family when Moore entered the dining room.
Mayor S. F. Spohn. of Goshen, after bearing an appeal from the ministerial association, statements by the vaudeville managers, and consulting with the city councilmen, has decided to forbid the showing of the JeffriesJohnson fight pictures. * Leo Labadie, of South Bend, and a brother of €. H. meat dealer, of that city, was arrested at Lafayette yesterday for burglary. It is alleged he is a ‘dope’ fiend and that he broke into a dentist’s office to secure a suit of clothes and some cocaine. S. F. Bowser, a Ft. Wayne manufacturer, has offered to equip and give to the city a public playground for the children, provided it is located in Mr. Bowser’s home ward, the tenth. The offer will be accepted by the City Playgrounds association, and. the place will be called the S. F. Bowser playground. The eigth annual reunion of the Moore family, which claims the distinction of being the largest in the state, will be held at Garfield Park, Indianapolis, Aug. 17. There are forty-seven great-grandchildren, 119 great-grandchildren, and 22 great-great-great-grandchildren.
The thirty-second annual commencement festivities of the Central Normal college at Danville, Ind., will begin next Saturday and will continue until Thursday, Aug. 11, when more than 150 students will graduate. State Superintendent Robert J. Aley will deliver the principal address on the evening of Aug. 11. The first term of the new year begins Tuesday, Sept. 16. Mrs. Will A. Harding and sister, Miss Ida Mclntosh, both of Crawfordsville, are among the heirs to the McIntosh estate in Scotland, valued at $20,000,000. In order to establish a claim to their portion of the estate by the Mclntoshes of this country, W. O. Mclntosh, Louisville Ky., is gathering statistics and looking up records of the ancestors of the Mclntoshes in this and adjoining states. The sixteenth annual session of the Fountain Park assembly, situated near Remington, will open August 13 and continue until August 28. H. H. Peters of Eureka, 111., and Charles E. Fisk will have charge of the Bible lectures each morning. Thursday, Augtfst 25, will be Old Settler's day,, and ex-Gov-, ernor Hoch, of Kansas, will deliver a lecture in the afternoon. United States Senator J. P. Dolliver, of lowa, will speak on the afternoon of August 18.
