Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 67, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 March 1913 — SURREY. [ARTICLE]

SURREY.

MtTigg is here looking after his farm. ; J Dan Morrissey spent Thursday at Surrey. - ' . : Tom Lonergan is suffering with an attack of La Grippe Little Jay Thornton and Luella Zacker are on the sick list. ’ Mr. and Sirs. Levi Chupp were Rensselaer- goers Monday. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Thomas attended ehurch in Rensselaer Sunday. Walter Brown spent Sunday with Arthur and Lona Thornton. Misses Bertha and Anna Zacker spent Sunday with the Lang girls. Edward Lane attended a big dance at Hegeswisch, 111, Saturday night. Misses Ethel and Alice Hammerton visited the Surrey school Monday. Harry Thomas and John Reed spent Sunday evening in Rensselaer. Mrs. Charles Parks and children spent Thursday with Mrs. Nathan Chupp. Floyd Amsler got the watch that was given away at the Surrey store Friday. Simon Chupp went to Rensselaer Monday night on business, returning Tuesday. Miss Josephine Thomas spent Saturday night with Miss Luella Harmon, of Rensselaer. Mr. and Mrs. Zickman, of Chicago, are spending the week with Mrs. Zickman and family. Mr. and Mrs. James Price and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Starrs and family. Joe Halligan, of Rensselaer, was out looking after his farming interests at Surrey Friday. Miss Lona Thornton, who is attending school In Rensselaer, spent Sunday with home folks.

The high wind of Friday afternoon blew over the elevator at Surrey, damaging it somewhat. Little Everett McFadden, of Chicago, is here visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Zacker. Clint Brown, Tom Lang, Frank Zacker and Mr. and Mrs. Jim JPrice were Rensselaer goers Saturday. Jack Lonergan and Joe Thomas, Jr., attended the wrestling match In Rensselaer Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. George Hammerton and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Rowen, of Parr, ate Sunday dinner with Mr; and Mrs. Nathan Chupp, George Lonergan, Earl Price, Lennie Lang and Harriett Harmon, the Surrey eighth grade, took the examination in Rensselaer Saturday. The Misses Harriett Harmon, Lennie Lang and Maude Price spent Friday night and Saturday with Miss Elizabeth Luers, of Rensselaer. Monon mine No. 3, at Shelburn, broke all former records' when it hoisted 1,440 tons of cbal in 'seven and one-half hours, the former record being 1,360 tons.

The directors of the Pennsylvania railroad, at a meeting Wednesday in Philadelphia, voted to establish an electric system for suburban passenger train service on the main line between Broad street station, Philadelphia, and Paoli, Pa., a distance of twenty miles. Dispatches from Washington, D. 0., state that within the next few days Postmaster General Burleson !s expected to present for the presiden’s consideration a plan which will open to democrats the 35,000 third and fourth class postmasterships put into civil service recently by Mr. Taft. Twenty-five surgeons and several nurses vaccinated employes of the army and na v y departments in the state, war and navy building, in Washington, D. where about 3,000 persons work daily. Two cases of smallpox had developed. Secretary Garrison was the first to bare his arm to the vaccinators. The commerce court Wednesday held that congress had no power to make all pipe lines common carriers and that the amendment to the interstate commerce law to this end was invalid. Preliminary injunctions restraining the interstate commerce commission’s orders regulating pipe lines were issued by the court The styles of twenty years agQtight eoats, tight trousers and tight vesta— will be revived for the modish young man for the season of 1913, according to dictates of the Chicago Society of Merchant Tailors at their spring dinner in the Hotel LaSalle Tuesday night. The clothes will be tighter than ever before and the coats will be shorter. Thirteen persons are reported to have been killed and property valued at several hundred thousand dollars destroyed by a wind and rain storm which swept portions of Louisiana, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee Thursday. A deluge of rain extended over a more extensive area and practically demoralized telegraph and telephone service for several hours. Mrs. Irene Rina, aged 44, and her 4-year-old daughter, Elisabeth, were instantly killed by an interurban car on the Northern Indiana Traction line two miles west of Elkhart Sunday evening. The motorman did not see the flame from a newspaper which had been lighted as a signal to stop. The child -dashed in front of the car, and the mother was killed in trying to save her. Three other waiting passengers witnessed the accident, u: '