Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 204, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 August 1910 — NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS. [ARTICLE]
NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.
William Edwards, president of the Elwood tin plate workers, has announced that the strike that went into effect July 1, 1908, had been declared off. The majority of the strikers will return to work Monday. The Gary Clearing House association, with seven banks of Gary as members, is now in operation. A. B. Keller, cashier of the Gary State bank, is at the head of the executive committee of the clearing house. Rear Admiral Ross of the Great Likes Naval Training Station yesterday ioncluded the closing exercises of Culver Summer Schools and mustered out of service the cadets of the Second Naval Batalion of Indiana. John Kleisner, an interlock machinist, employed by the Vandalia, was killed in East St. Louis by a train when he stepped out of the way of another one. He was fifty-two years old and leaves a widow and two sons in Terre Haute. Word has been received in Terre Haute of the accidental killing of Leo Sears, aged 28, a railroad man of that city, by his brother-in-law while they were hunting near Los Angeles, where Sears was visiting. Sears will be buried in Los Angeles, according to the dispatch. Joseph Wess Moore, a paroled convict who left California to escape reincarceration, dropped dead Wednesday night in the traction terminal station in Indianapolis, as he was about to board a car for Greenfield, Ind. Heart failure is said to have been the cause of his death. Moore was about 65 years of age. 4 cat’s head examined in the pathological department of the state board of health Wednesday gave conclusive evidence of a case of hydrophobia. It was sent in by Charles McCord of Anderson. The cat scratched one child and bit another. Only a few cases of rabies among felines have been recorded this season. Owing to the increased danger of hydrophobia throughout South Bend. Mayor Goetz has authorized immediate action in the destruction of all unmuzzled dogs running at large Members of the police department were ordered to drive all over the city in the patrol wagon, searching for unmuzzled dogs and shooting all found. While walking through his corfleld Wednesday Charles Knaub found seven cased of whisky and two cases of Syrup of Figs. The police investigated and found that the goods bad been stolen from a box car recently and carried to the field. The railroad company had an officer watch the goods all night and yesterday the liquor was loaded into a car and sent on to Denver. , The fight of River Park citizens to prevent annexation of Mishawaka Is waxing hot and a mass meeting is being held. The city of Mishawaka early this week adopted an ordinance extending the limits of the city to South Bend, and thus taking in River Park. The latter town desires annexation to South Bend and. the attempted grab by Mishawaka is bitterly resented. The construction work on the Pennsylvania railroad between Richmond and Knightstown, Ind., is one of the greatest engineering feats the> company has undertaken west of the Allegheny mountains. The cuts in some places are sixty feet deep, and in some places the fills are as great. It involves an expenditure of millions of dollars. The cement arches whlch_ span Blue river, near Knigatstow-', have been erected at a cost of $60,000 • k ____ My loan company ia still making *arm loans at 5 per cent. If you are .toing to need a loan make application no - aa some other companies are already refusing to loan. John A. Danlap, I. O. O. F. Bldg.
