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Show UETI IMPALED Ofj PIC!(ET FENCES Huntsville Boy Writes ot Some of the Barbarities Practiced by Huns. Special to The Tribune. OGDEX, Oct. 4. How he had seen little lit-tle children impaled on the pickets of fences is told in a letter to Mrs. D. D. ll.-Kay of lluntsville by her brother, Alexander T. McLean, who is fighting in his fourth year with the Australian troops in France. The writer in telling of hav-int: hav-int: been -wounded. and sent to the hospital hos-pital three limes, says that he is eager to pet l ack to the trenches, even though the" hospital seems like heaven and the muses like angels. He writes: ''o I don't want any leave until we -Tt through, if you had seen some of the 'things I did vou would say, 'Keep going, l and give them all they deserve.' Why, in one dace we took the parents had been kl lcd or driven off to work in German!) and the little children were hanging on the pi. diets still alive. Why, every man among us and we have been here four vtars vowed we would never leave until ilormany was licked. Of course, I may get licked so bad I'll have to lay off, but that will be the only reason." .. ' s ft- It f 1 v -j y ' Filer Belle, No. 549882, two-year-old sow, weight 750 pounds, grand Cham- ; pion Duroc Jersey sow at Utah and Idaho state fairs, 1918. This company also exhibited the grand champion hoar and junior champion sow. They exhibited ex-hibited 31 head of Dtirocs, winning at Idaho state fair last week 27 premiums, pre-miums, and at Utah state fair this week 12 firsts, 8 seconds and 4 thirds. Exhibited Ex-hibited by the Richards Livestock company, Breeders of Duroc Jersey Hogs, Virginia Idaho. |