Article clipped from Winona Republican Herald

neIt-anen-nsire*ry-ate’sviltsyiatiscidiC-lesofiSS■e-he$3,500 cottage, and vice versa, The first neighbor wanted to recover his house, and the second insisted that shice.it was on his property it belonged to him.After another storm the family rooster of some Oklahomans was hissing. They presently heard the bird crow with a peculiar booming intonation, and after a search the fowl was discovered — blown into a five-gallon * jug. The. jug had to be broken to release the rooster which was unhurt.A Kansas farmer had a crib full of unshelled corn. When a tornado had passed, he found his crib still standing, but all the corn Inside It was shelled. He found a knot hole through which the ears had been passed by the twister, leaving the grains inside. Outside he discovered the cobs all neatly piled in the lee of the crib.But we desist. It is stories like the last that shake one’s faith in human veracity. We could go on like this all day, but we believe the terrors of the tornado season already are aptly illustrated.
Newspaper Details

Winona Republican Herald

Winona, Minnesota, US

Mon, Apr 28, 1941

Page 8

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