Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, August 25, 1910, Image 7

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L\I TAKE WEEKLY BATHS ,
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_ ; Citizens of Aurora Startled by
: Health Department Orders.
-
. Hulo Will Be Strictly Enforced and
Violations ) Will Invite Prosecu-
tions to Fullest Extent of Law
- -Ban on Flies Excites.
Aurora , 111. - Take a bath once a
week.
Do not spit on the floors , even of
- your own house.
-i Sinks , wash bowls , etc. , must be
kept strictly clean.
1 Keep out the flies.
_ _ _ _ j
Sweep the floors thoroughly each
0 day and scrub them at least once each
; week.
No more than two persons may
jsleep in a small room and not more
{ than five In a room of moderate
size.
t- . size.All
: All rooms , especially sleeping rooms ,
must be kept clean and well
- ven
c. tilated.
Windows must be kept open In all
I bedrooms.
- ' Bed clothing must be thoroughly
. aired at least once a week.
- . Yards must be kept free from dis
ease breeding rubbish and refuse.
- . Place garbage in regulation cans
L and set them out on day of collec
. tion.
-
Publication of the above rules by
Aurora's board of health was ac
" companied by a notice from Dr. A.
1 R. Reder , health officer , that they
would be strictly enforced , and that
I - violations would invite prosecution "to
the fullest extent of the law. " MoreI I
over , Frank Mitchell , chief of police ,
signed his name below Dr. Reder's as
- a warning that seekers _ for leniency
need not look to him.
"Those rules go , " said the police (
I. . chief , grimly. "
"Every one must take
.his bath and do the
- rest of the stunts. o
I And I want to
say right now that we p
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ATE INK NUTS BY MISTAKE
. . ong Island Folk Thought They Were
Mushrooms-All Seized With
t Nausea and Delirium.
Hempstead , L. Gathering In Gar-
fdev City park what looked like mush
; , rooms , but proved to be ink nuts , re
sulted in serious illness to more than
S
: a dozen persons here the other day.
Mrs. F. A. Sawyer and her daughter ,
Mrs. Keith Trask , one of the trio of
fasters , with their maid , were all
seized with acute nausea and delirium
directly after eating the nuts at lun-
cheon.
Dr. Charles D. Cleghorn and R. Do
' . Grimmer were summoned and strong
salts were administered with other .
remedies. Mrs. Sawyer was delirious
for six hours and In a critical condi-
tion. Mrs. Trask and the maid re
sponded more quickly to the treat-
ment , but It took three days for them
to regain their normal condition.
S
, . . Members of E. D. W. Blecker's and
\ ' ' ) Qr. Joseph O'Connor's families also
\11 a similar experience after eating
i\k nuts. These nuts have slim stems
and ; straight leaves turning up , all of
which are reverse characteristics of
the umbrella edible
mushrooms , ap
pearing : only in the autumn on the
"Hempstead plains.
Drives Goats Across Continent.
\Vashington.-Having driven a team
of ) Angora goats a distance of more
than 4,000 miles as the result of a
wager , Captain V. Edwards , a ranch
owner of San Diego , Cal. , arrived here
from San Diego today.
Pellagra Victim.
Providence , R. I. - The dreaded dis '
.ease pellagra has claimed its first vic
tim in this state In the death the
other day of William Riley , aged fiftya
. live , an inmate of the state almsI I
iiouse. I
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are not working In the Interest of the
bathtub trust , either. "
Dr. Reder further announces that
he or some other attache of the health
department would visit every res I-
dence each week to see that the new
rules were being obsrved.
As soon as the new health laws be
came known there was trouble In Au
rora. Former Senator A. J. Hopkins
said he thought the regulations were
"sane and conservative , " but there
were others who wondered how Dr.
Reder would be able to satisfy him
self on his inspection tours , whether
the once a week bath had been taken
as required.
"That may be a puzzler occasional
ly , " said the doctor , "but If I should
hale the wrong man , woman or child
Into I court , wouldn't it be a matter of
evidence ? The wise ones will have
their alibis - I mean they will be able , .
to show that they took their dip
or
soak or whatever the variety was.
Proof will lie with members of the
family , you know , or receipts at the
barber shop. "
Every portable bathtub In Aurora
was bought up within an hour after
Dr. Reeder's proclamation was made.
Dealers in plumbing supplies all , sent
in I rush orders for bathroom equip )
mentand m hot water attachments for
kitchen stoves. The towel depart
ment of the dry goods stores did a
rushing business. Drug stores made
record sales of shower apparatus. I
Next to the bathing regulations , the
ban on flies most excited Auroraites. ;
Although Dr. Reder told inquirers he
"did not intend to be unreasonable , "
he wouldn't say how many flies to the
cubic yard would be allowed without
a. penalty.
However , less blue bottle flies than :
o f the oi inary or garden variety will ,
b : e permitted. He suggested that par- ]
nts : offer rewards of say five cents c
i hundred to stimulate the activity :
) f their children with wadded news s
apers. I
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PAY $500 FOR RARE PRINT
"Bloody Massacre In King Street , Bos
ton , " Is Sold at Auction in
New York.
New York.-The rare Paul Revere
print , "The Bloody Massacre In King
street , Boston , on March 5 , 1770 , by a
party of the "
Twenty-ninth regiment ,
brought $500 , the highest price at the
Edwin Babcock Holden sale in the
American art galleries.
An even rarer print , the contem-
porary piracy of the Revere engrav-
. ing , published at New Bury Port , sold
for $150 ; a collection of portraits by
St. Memin and others , made by St.
Memin's son and bound in a quarto
volume , $310 ; "Battle of Bunker Hill"
and "Death of Montgomery , " Indorsed
by Colonel John Trumbull , $160 ; two
original colored copies of the battle
between the British ship Shannon and
tl ! ) United States frigate Chesapeake ,
$162 ; the victory of the United States
frigate Constitution over . the British
frigate Guerriere , $160 ; explosion of
the British frigate Guerriere , $131.
The capture of the British frigate
Java by the Constitution brought $114 ;
battle between the British frigate
Endymion and the United States ship
President , $170 ; capture of the Brit- -
ish i sloop of war Frolic by the United
States sloop of war Wasp , $135 ; the
American ketch Intrepid , commanded
by Decatur , boarding and burning the
Tripolitan frigate ( late the Philadel- -
phia ) in the harbor of Tripoli , $117 ;
a mezzotint of Lord Cornwallis , $115 ,
and mezzotints of Louis XVI. and
Marie Antoinette $48.
Urges More Child Spanking.
Greeley , Col.-American children
are not sufficiently spanked , declared
Dr. G. Stanley Hall , president of Clark I
university , Worcester , Mass. , in an ad t
dress here the other day. g
" 1 do not believe in too mUclJ : flog-
ging , but it should not be abolished , "
tie asserted. "Americans protect their
children : too much , and it makes them p
precocious and disrespectful. A little b
lapping now and then reinforce the $
noral purposes of the child. "
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RIDES A BUCKING PORPOISE. - . : hw hs
Too Big to Land by hook and Line
Sea . Denizen Gives Fisherman
Startling Experience.
New York. - Captain Charles Penny ,
Glanders , L. I. , is probably the first
man who has , , successfully ridden a
bucking porpoise.
The porpoise was a big bull , head of
a herd ot twenty , which had Interfered
with the fishing of Penny and his asso-
ciates. They decided to shoot him and
did wound him. Then they found they
had no boathook to land their prize.
"Wait a minute , boys ; I'm goingto
have that fellow , " said Penny. With-
out removing shoes , clothes or hat , he
leaped l overboard , landed astride of the
broad back of the fish , twisted his feet
around his body and his arms around
the neck and hung on.
The fish found a new spark of life
when this unlooked for enemy landed
on his upper deck. He gave a snort
and dived for the bottom of Peconic
bay.
bay.This ,
.
This did not frighten Penny , for he
is about as much at home in the water
as the porpoise , and , as to speed , he
had attempted some of that on land in
running an automobile. He knew , too ,
that the fish would have to come to
the surface very quickly to blow , for
he was three-quarters dead before the
excursion started. So he held on.
When the porpoise did come up , a
minute or so later , Penny was a long
way from his boat , but still astride the
porpoise. So he reached around the
porpoise's head with one arm and
rammed a big fish hook into its nose.
The fish made another feeble effort to
get away , but it was no use.
"Hey ! you fellows ! Come over here
ind get your fish ! " shouted Penny to
lis fellow-fishermen.
The combined strength of the men I
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could. not lift the fish to
the boat , so u.
Mr. Porp was towed
-Riverhead , r
where it took seven men to pull him : r
out on the dock.
. A.
The fish measured 91 > feet and
weighed more than five hundred
pounds. His body is nearly as large d :
as a flour barrel.
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NEW YORKER ASKS NEW COIN
Banker Declares Nation Needs Two ei
and One-Half Cent Piece for eno
Small Change. ma
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New York.-The coinage of a two
and one-half cent piece by the United
States government is urged in a state- of
ment given out here by ofm
William H. mil
Short , a New York banker , who de wit
clares that the use of such a coin to
would mean a saving of $39,000,000 iuc :
yearly to consumers.
"The absence of such coinage , " he
says , "has resulted in the universal fal
custom of the sellers taking the half
gro
cent whenever a transaction
does not tei
result in even money. I
suppose it ! piI
would be a safe estimate to
say that les
each family loses the half
cent on an
average of ten times a week , resulting J I
in their paying $2.60 a year above the
tr
trj
price of articles purchased.
dis
"There are about 15,000.000 families
th :
in the United States , exclusive of the fat
merchants , and figuring on the basis rai
mentioned , they are losers yearly fro
this cause the approximate sum
$39,000,000. " A
1
er
the
War Machine Trade. pla
Berlin. - German gun factories are neg
fairly swamped with orders , according reg
to the military expert of the Taegliche
Rundschau. U
much
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. , . HISTORY OF CHESTER TOLD IN PAGEANTRY . of LL gla _
sr-tDLLOWING the example of many other ancient towns
FOLLOWING , the old city of Chester has been giving a
. . . A living representation of its history in the form of a
great pageant The affair lasted a week and was di
vided up into an introduction , eight episodes and a finale.
The episodes were as follows : I. - Agricola returns to De-
va after defeating the Ordovices , A. D. 78. II. - King Ed-
gar on his imperial progress , with Queen Elfrida , receives
the homage of Tributary Princes , A. D. 973. III. - Hugh
U Lupus , with St. Anselm , founds the Abbey of St. Werburgh ,
A. D. 1093. IV. Archbishop Baldwin preaches the Cru
sade at Chester , A. D. 1189. V.-Prince Edward , first
Royal Earl of Chester , and Princess Eleanor , visit Chester ,
A. D. 1256. VI. - Richard II. Is brought a prisoner to Chos-
ter by Henry Bolingbroke , A. D. 1399. VII.-King James I.
visits Chester , Introducing the Midsummer Revels , A. D
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1617. VII. - Siege of Chester , Visit of King Charles A. D.
1645.
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YVOTES lffi
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Plenty of shade is essential
- Keep the peppers picked clean at
l east every other day.
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A few trees in the sheep pasture
will turn It into a paradise.
Cement or concrete silos , when well
ouilt are practically everlasting.
Allowing weeds to go to seed now
tneans : increased labor next season.
The best method to determine if
your hens are good layers is the trap
nest
A strong swarm of bees will furnish
a ! hundred pounds of honey aside from
what they themselves consume.
If you grow late-maturing crops in
: he orchard they will keep the wood
rowing ; too late to make them safe for
inter.
Cowpea vine .hay has a feeding value
iractically equal to that of wheat
> ran , which is worth now more than
30 per ton.
It Is folly to raise hogs , feed them
igh-priced : feeds , get them in good )
hape and then let them die on their
ray to market
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Early potato blight is liable to at-
ick the potato crop at any time from :
une until the crop is ripe , but is
lost seriously destructive in July and
ugust
A heifer becomes a cow after she
rops her first calf and begins giv-
ing mi - no matter at what age , and
she remains a heifer until these ma-
jrnal ! obligations are assumed.
.
In dairying , there are special breeds
lough and reliable information
I
lough , so there is no excuse for a
I
an who goes it blind and blames I
ck and the weather for his failure.
With dairying , as with other lines t
farming , the dairyman should f acan
iliarize himself' as much as possible "
ith every fact which can be brought IJ
bear upon the quality of his pr 0asy
ct
Bacon is only the intermingling of of
t and lean meat , and if the meat is i b ,
own along rapidly it will be more h
ider and palatable than if it is i to <
iched until the lean is dry and tast 5rziir :
s.
[ n all those
portions of the cou amus
' where dairying is a leading and ti
tinctive : feature , and other grains d
in corn are used as a growing and c :
tening ration the bacon hogs can be Vi
sed to advantage and profit. ii
Is the days wax warmer and waI m- :
one's efforts are apt to relax , but m
young fowls destined to take their a
ces in the show room must not be Ie
fleeted. They must have their feed as
ularly , and water in abundance. pi
_ the
Jpon the horse-collar depends
ch more than appears at first
nee. The day-in-and-out efficiency er
the team , its labor service , its ' leWi
iftiness depend very largely upon : Wi
proper kind and fitting of the do
lars used. this
_ _ rate
'he man with a silo will be in a de
ition to congratulate himself this ,
ter and we urge every farmer to
sider the erection of a silo this hen :
. ter
No other means will provide
much palatable and ' nutritious good
1 from an acre of land. work
down
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ultivation as the plants develop re- iy
es not only care and skill , bu t earn
thought also. If they
heavy rains have
: en the soil into a hard mass and
3 . water soaked it may be neces- . If
to go as . rail ]
deeply as
possible with- .
injuring the Ltask
roots in
order to asI
te the ground properly. cult. .
soi ]
-
int (
ice the calf is well started
toward
wel !
early and profitable marketable
urity : by liberal feeding and good : produ
er
at this season of the
year , there
and :
: tle need of advising with
regard
no
us future feeding care , as the
r's good sense _ will tell him that
ill pay . to continue to feed and Th '
for him well. , durin ;
three
-
the
wls will lay occasionally in
win- or i
they are not cared for
, other than : cut
19 a few scoopfuls of corn tossed ( . by th
jm in a filthy house but
, they will 1 its i
a profit over and above the feed itsel ]
lousing if they are well sheltered ing
ed a : variety of clean "
n
and" whole Droi
grains and have a bit of green tarily ]
Ip.d.c . " t bone . every day. The day hapj
epiig"chickens ; _ in the haphazard I i bee
about ! ' J ' " ' ?
s aboutover' j but
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Fowls dislike a filthy house.
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Give flower plants lots of room.
The British highway Is far superior
to the American.
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It Is quite possible to get a fair crop
of cane after early oats.
Remove the suckers from frul'
trees as fast as they appear.
Light shining on potatoes colors
them and injures the flavor.
To retain soil moisture a loose
mulch of between two or three Inche
is necessary.
Underfeeding and overfeeding are
both wasteful as is also feeding one
article of dIet.
A pig can be raised by the hand
method as easily as a calf , If the same
pains are taken with It.
Pounds of meat or amount and qual
ity of other products that an animal I
will provide are what count.
If a sow proves a good breeder , there
is no reason why she should not be
kopt as long as she produces strong
pigs. :
To the Intelligent corn grower a
weedy field spells a shiftless farmer
who is fooling with his chances of suc
cess.
Do not allow any fruit to ripen on
berry plants set this season. Prema
ture fruit-bearing stunts the growth of r
the plants.
The man who raises pigs ought to
have a field of peas into which theyI I
can be turned just before the peas
become hard.
:
The richest color of the cream is I
when it first rises to the surface , and I : .
if churned in that condition the butter :
will be yellow. I
You will have to spray with kero ( .
sene emulsion to reach the cabbage (
lice. Be sure to get it on the under
side of the leaves.
Corn has become a good crop , c
whether hogs are high or low , but it is ; C
not a good plan to plant * more corn r ( J
than can be well tended.
Cocks should not S
be allowed to run I
with the hens during moulting , so that 0 ,
as the number of hens not moulting D
lecreases : they should be confined with : S
the cocks. a
s
Anyone who will knowingly sell milk h
"rom a diseased cow well deserves
l.he : epithet of criminal , for his act is :
lothing short of crime. To sell filthy
nilk or butter is scarcely less repre- t1 I ]
lensible. a
_ 0
The trouble with a great many poul- 0r <
try keepers is that they think they ti
can fly before they are really able to 4 tltl
valk. . Take time to learn the busitl
less.iy and by the flying will come by ;
asy enough. alA
_ A
There IS some difference in the cost cl I
f corn whether it is "hogged down" : inai
by sheep and lambs in the field , or ai
high priced help husks it and hauls it : YE
3 the station , and high priced
: i1roads ship it to feeding yards.
It is a law of nature that all plants st
lust have a season of rest from ac- Wiw
ive growth. In the tropics this is WiWI <
one in the dry season. No plant WI
can be forced into continual growth tion
without weakening it and finally kill' Ja
ing it. sh .
ers
du
The cockerels which are to be
larketed should , of course , be fed
mal
more fattening ration than the pul- - . . '
the
lets , and those which are to be used
3 : ; breeders should be kept from the are , . ,
to'
allets until about six weeks before ,
tr
te eggs are wanted for hatching.
As soon as the cockerels get old
lough to pay attention to the pulwork
we
ts they begin fighting and the
fal
eaker birds are crowded out and
da
don't get their share of feed. For daug
Robi
is reason the sexes should be sepaunde
unde
ted so as to allow full _ ana rapid
ivelopment toppl
bega : ;
-
little
rhere Is better
no to
way warm a
ciclen
. . . .
n up in the - morning than to scat-
.
some warm wheat around In a
od : clean layer of straw and let them
rk hard for . it. They will get right ]
. . unde
tvn to business as soon as it is fair-
light and stick to it till they have Alfre
-ned their breakfast. By that time High
iy : are as warm as a toast. recor
f you do not cultivate soon after a
n has hardened the surface your I
k will be ever so much more dim- soi
t. The tendency of a hard baked by
I under cultivation is to break up yard :
3 clods , especially if it has not been and
.1 worked previously. This does beenrifled not
duce the necessary mulch but rath- 47wa
tends to dry out the soil further , watc
, in fact , is frequently worse than fore
cultivation at all. platf
- - the i
he average life of a worker bee swi
ing the summer time is not ovei
> months and .
e during the height ol
clover bloom perhaps not E
over si :
"
ei child
eight weeks. Its life is probably .
short dur die
s during the summer months .
he wearing out of its wings. Whenmg
time comes it will crawl away by eft
If where it can die without hinder.
the work of the rising generation.
aes , if they are not put in vol un. r
[ y out of the way , may live per. was :
3 : ; three or four months. The queer yea
is very seldom killed by violence Rol
usually lives to a good old age. cru
tim
beii
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AH OVER NEBRASKA
Death of Pioneers.
Burt County-Death has taken
away sixty-nine of the Burt county
pioneers and old settlers in less than
one year. Several of them have lived
elsewhere , but all have died since
their annual reunion held last August
Election Official Drops Dead.
Platte County-E. O. Rector , an old *
resident and prominent G. A. R. ot-
Columbus dropped dead at his home.
He was serving on the election board
in his ward and had gone home to
supper in a carriage. At the gate .
he fell over and expired almost in.
stantly.
_ _ _
Boone Corn Crop is Good. ,
Boone County ; - While Boone county
has had no general rains this season
and some portions of the county has
suffered for want of rain , yet nothing
but an early frost will prevent the
county from having a heavy corn
crop. Oats and wheat are both much
better than was anticipated before
harvest.
_ _
Good Crops in Cheyenne County.
T'leyenne " County-Threshing of the
finest : crop of small grain ever grown
is well under way. The yield in many
instances is exceeding all expecta-
tions. This community has been
favored with ample rainfall through-
out the summer , the fine rain recent-
ly assuring the corn and puttis
Cheyenne on the map for a bumper
crop.
Bar on Transient Ad Schemes.
Gage CountY-The Commercial club
of Beatrice has adopted a resolution
protecting Beatrice merchants from
worthless advertising schemes , such
as time cards , hotel registers , desk
cards and other similar schemes that
are : usually gotten up by transient "
solici : ; tors. A committee on advertis-
ing has been appointed whose duty it
shall be to approve or disapprove all
schemes ; for advertising that may be
jffered to merchants.
Good Crop of Apples.
Johnson County - While Johnson
: ounty will not have an average yield
of apples , there -nevertheless , lots
of orchards filled with the fruit in the
count y. The fruit is especially good
he dry season being favorable to
praying and the fighting of scab. One
irchardist near Tecumseh , who had
no : apples at all last year , will have
everal thousand bushels this year : ,
and his fruit is very fine. Hft will
hip eight barrels to Lincoln to ex
hibit at the state fair.
Orphan's Home Children Treated.
Phelps County-Children's day at
the Holdrege chautauqua was largely
ttended. The children from the
Orph an's home , just north of Hold-
rege , were brought in at the invita-
tion of the Commercial club who gave I
them an auto trip from their home to
le city. They were given a dinner
Y the ladies of the Woman's club ,
ijout eighty children partaking it.
program of special interest to the _
lildren of the county was given and
( the neighborhood of four hundred
id fifty children under fourteen
years of age were present.
.
Nuckolis County Institute.
Nuckolls County-The county in-
itute here was a success in every
way. Practical up-to-date instructors
were in charge of every department.
Drking : vigorously under the direc- - ;
.
m of County Superintendent Mary' ; : " " :
Jane George. Much interest was
.own in Nelson and among the teach- . . .
s of the county in the subject of in-
istrial [ education. The Board of
lucation has decided to place nor-
al training and domestic science in
e Nelson schools and many pupils !
e planning to attend from othei
wns and from rural schools , at
icted by the advantages offered.
Little Girl Killed.
Dawes County - While watching ' !
> rkmen move a barn near her
fathe : r's home , Pauline , aged 3 years ,
ughter of Mr. and Mrs. George
binson of Chadrorf ; was crushed
der one of the heavy pilings , which.
jpled from its place when the barn
gan to tip. The child lived only a
tie over an hour following the ao
Sent .
V
Champion Swimmer.
Dodge CountY-Swimming 129 feet
fler water in the Y. M. C. A. plunge ,
'red Fowler , a 16-year-gid Fremont
gh school boy , claims the state
: ord for such a performance.
Ground to Death. . . '
Douglas County-James T. Peter-
i , a plasterer , was ground to death
a locomotive in the Burlington
-ds , opposite the depot in Omaha
1 in full view of a number of hor-
ed spectators. Peterson , who was _
years of age , went to the depot to -ti
ten the trains come in. Just be-
e the accident he left the depot - " - -
tform and started to run across
tracks , being run down by" ; a . . .j
itching engine. .
. -s > ,
- . . , ' .
Fatal Drink of Lye.
Srown County - A 13-months-oId
Id of Elder and Mrs. B. H. Shaw
d twenty-eight hours after drink-
concentrated lye , which , had been.
; within its reach.
Child Crushed Under Building.
> awes County - While E. D. Thomas
3 moving a barn , Pauline , the 3-
r-old child of Mr. and Mrs. George
jineon of Chadron was fatally
shed while playing around the ,
bers upon which tne building was
16
ag rolled.
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