Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 253, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 October 1910 — NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS. [ARTICLE]
NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.
Otto Hunt, of Kirklin, Ind., 27 years old, was seriously injured internally in a game of football at Wabash Thursday with the Wabash Athletic club. Ethel Taylor, aged 19, at Terre Haute Thursday tried to cut out a pain in her Wad with a hatchet. A commission has been appointed to inquire into her sanity. The population of the state of Arizona is 204,354 according to statistics of the thirteenth census made public Thursday. This is an increase of 81,423 or 66.2 per cent over the 1900 census. The stork has left a baby at the residence of Henry Blakely, of Marlon, 111., a Chicago & Eastern Illinois railroad conductor, which weighs scarcely a pound and a quarter. The infant appears to be in perfect health and is expected to live. John Mullendore, of Franklin, Ind., lias filed suit against his mother-in-law, Mrs. Laura Cutsinger, demanding judgment in the sum of SIO,OOO, charging her with alienating the affections of his wife, Willie May, who recently sued him for divorce. Floyd Richardson, assistant roa.l foreman of engines on the Panhandle, tells of a fast run by passenger train No. 19 between Logansport and Chicago.* The train, composed of nine standard coaches, attained seventytwo miles an hour rrom North Judson to Kouts, Sheriff White and Court Bailiff John Hayes, of Noblesville, emptied 5,000 bottles of beer into White river, near that city, Thursday. This stock was the accumulation --of raids on the houses of Harry Calvert and William Franklin at Sheridan. The men are now serving sentences in jail The fly is destroying thousands of acres of wheat in northern Indiana counties. Dispatches state that reports received from the northern tier of counties indicate that the crop will be a total failure the coming year, the destruction being complete unless there is a cold wave within a few days to destroy the eggs. Seventy-seven men heroically gave theif lives in their efforts to subdue the disastrous forest fires which raged in the west during the latter part of August. A fund is being raised by the members of the forfsst service for the purpose of providing the graves, upon forest administration sites, with permanent memorials. The announcement received Thursday morning that the recent census gives Columbus, Ind., but 8,813 inhabitants met with much disfavor and charges are made that the enumeration was not thoroughly taken. So dissatisfied are many of -the residents that arrangements are already going forward for a recount. It is believed that the city has 10,000 population. Our Classified Column Will sell.’buy, find, rent, or exchange it. Phone- 3.8.
