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<br />page 14 <br /> <br />, <br /> <br />bridges across Pawnee creek were washed out. Irrigation <br />flumes were destroyed. The approaches to the Burlington <br />bridge at Logan were washed away and service on this line <br />will not be restored until the fore part of next week. <br />Other Bodies Found <br />The third body was found this morning about 10 0 I clocl <br />on the Thomas Veyerka place, ten miles southwest of' Sterling, <br />by Henry Warren, a brother-in-law of Mr. Davis. The child <br />was Carrol Davis, 4 years old. The body of Madeline Davis, <br />6 years old, was found about 7 o' clock this morning a mile <br />south of the home. It lay about a quart.er of a mile froll1 <br />Pawnee Creek and was almost. entirely covered with earth. <br />The body had not arrived at Sterling at 4 o'clock t.his <br />aft. ernoon . <br />Mrs. Davis was about 28 years old and the baby, Doris <br />Maxine, was ten months old. <br />The catastrophe at the Davis home forms a sad and <br />tragis story. <br />The house was built on low ground near the junction of <br />two dry creek beds. It extended about five feet below the <br />ground. The family awoke in the night to hear the waters <br />beating upon the house. Mr. Davis succeeded in lifting his <br />wife and children out of a window in the second story of the <br />house. Taking a child by the hand on one side, and holding <br />the hand of his wife, who carried the baby, and with another <br />child on his back, he rushed to,<ard higher ground. But the <br />wall of water struck the little group and bore awa:{ Mrs. Davis, <br />one of the little girls and the baby. Mr. Davis struggled on <br />and clung to a post. Another g:t'eat wave came, tore the child <br />from his back and swept him into the flood. When he rega:ined <br />morning he found himself fast in a wire fence. He excaped, <br />badly torn by the wire, and went to the home of J~nes Craig\ <br />a neighbor. The search for the missing was started immediately. <br />Practically all of the water in the road from Atwood to <br />Sterling, which Friday was a long lake, the water being <br />dammed by the railroad tracks, had drained out this morning.: <br />The Sterling ditch No.1, about 5 o'clock Friday was filled <br />to its capacity and had there been a larger volume of water <br />it might have swept on into parts of Sterling. Hundreds of <br />people drove to the road to see the flood during the'afternoon <br />and evening. ' <br />Crews of men Friday afternoon beg&l repair of the railroad <br />tracks at Atwood, working from both ends of the damaged portion. <br />The flood waters are said to have come from Spring and <br />Cotton creeks. Residents of western Logan and eastern Weld <br />counties say that water in these creeks was never seen so <br />high before. Great bodies of ice, appa.rently formed by hail, <br />were carried in the streams. <br />Henry Warren, brother-in-law of Mr. Davis, who this after- <br />noon Was in Sterling, stated that a foot of water fell at his <br />house, two miles south of the Davis place, Thursday night. <br />Great hail stones and a wind that approaced the vE,locity and <br />strength of a tornado, accompanied the storm, he said. <br />A heavy rain fell at Peetz Friday and was continuing <br />today. No damage was reported, however, and crop prospects <br />in the district are said to be excellent. <br />