Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 181, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 August 1911 — Girl Walks in Her Sleep [ARTICLE]
Girl Walks in Her Sleep
Young Woman Anxious Over Result of Brother's Examination Wakes Up at Home of Teacher.
Pittsburg, Pa.—lmbued with the spirit of the eyenlng when the probable results of the school examinations were the burden of expectant anxiety throughout Pittsburg, Miss Fronla Jennings, aged nineteen, daughter of E- C.. Jennings of 320 Sycamore street, business manager of the South Hills News, carried her impressions through dreamland and woke up the other morning in a neighbor’s house after a perilous sleep walk.
Miss Jennings had taken much interest in the fortunes of her brother Paul, aged thirteen, a pupil at the Mount Washington school, who betrayed much unrest the other evening because of the uncertainty of passing his “exam” for high school promotion. The family had discussed the subject freely during the evening and retired to await the newq of the morning. Bat their slumbers were disturbed shortly after midnight by a message from the horns of Miss Grace Hawk of 48 Natchez street, who is teacher in the Mount Washington school, saying Miss Jennings had reached there and had been carefully put to bed. ~ Miss Jennings had arrived at the Hawk home about 1 a. m., still traveling in Slumberland, clad only in her night robes. Her first inquiry at the Hawk horns waai “Did Paul pass?"
Miss Jennings' journey was not altogether roseate. She traveled about eight squares in her bare feet over a rugged path, twice crossing the tracks of the Mount Washington Tunnel car line, but says she feels no 111 effects and was happy in the knowledge that “Paul passed.”
