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Della Mae Dreamer

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Della Mae Dreamer

Birth
Wilson County, Kansas, USA
Death
19 Jul 1901 (aged 12)
Carthage, Jasper County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Carthage, Jasper County, Missouri, USA GPS-Latitude: 37.171546, Longitude: -94.3288388
Plot
Bl 14 Lot 15 Sp 4
Memorial ID
View Source
Note: there is a discrepancy the way the name is spelled on the stone and the way her name was spelled in the newspaper. Her parents grave markers are also spelled Dreamer rather than Dreemer.

Another discrepancy was brought to my attention by Jane Ostrander
".
Alice Isaacs Dreamer isn't Della's mother. Alice and Robert Dreamer were not married till about 1905. Ida Carl was Della's mother"

Jane reports all she can find is the 1895 Kansas State census and the 1900 census but Alice would have been just over 6 and half years old when Della was born. As far as Ida goes after 1900 there is nothing. Robert and Ida's other daughter, Dimples Marie, doesn't appear again until her marriage in 1917.
__________

CARTHAGE EVENING PRESS
JULY 19, 1901

TWO 11-YEAR OLD CHILDREN DROWNED
BOY HERO DIED THIS MORNING TRYING TO SAVE THE GIRL
__________

LITTLE DELLA DREAMER AND CARL JOHNSON
The Girl Holding Hands of Her Companions, Took a Dare and Waded Over a Step-Off at the Water Works, 75 Feet Below Main Street Bridge

__________

Carl Johnson and Della Dreamer, two eleven-year old children of North Main Street, were drowned this morning at 11 o'clock in Spring River, 75 feet below the Main Street bridge, and just over the riffle below the water works in-take. The boy lives at the water works pump station, his father, A. P. Johnson, being resident engineer there, working from midnight to noon. Little Misses Ethel Orr and Della Sigler stayed with Carl's sister, little Miss Ella Johnson last night, and being joined this morning by Della Dreamer, all four put on old dresses and went wading on the riffle below the water works. Carl was playing somewhere about the bank below the pump house.
Immediately below the riffle, or water works dam, is a very deep hole along one side of which is a steep step-off. Some brush from up river had lodged on the riffle, the butts becoming embedded in the gravel and the ends extending out over the deeper water. Holding onto the brush ends and hand in hand, the Dreamer girl being on the lower end of the line, the girls waded into the water. A small colored youth named King stood on the bank, chaffed the girls about being afraid, and dared them to wade "just a little farther - and a little farther."
Suddenly little Della, on the end of the line, went over the step-off, and in her sudden consternation the next girl to her, Ethel Orr, let go her hold, all being thrown down into the water. The three girls next to the brush could scramble out, but Della Dreamer began to sink and scream.

BOY GOES TO THE RESCUE
There was not a man in sight or hearing, and Carl Johnson, less than the drowning girl in size, rushed to her rescue like the true little hero that he proved himself to be. Priding himself on his swimming, he was at her side in an instant, but in her terror the girl did the usual and worst thing possible. Grabbing him frantically about the neck and arms, she retarded his swimming, and both went down together.
Terrified, the other girls ran to the pump house across the river. Engineer Johnson was at work there and was soon on the scene, an intensely excited man. Ernest Roberts, a small boy, ran up Main street and spread he alarm. A few minutes later eight or ten men were wading through the water looking for the bodies.
J. V. Pearman, notified by the Roberts boy, ran from his planing mill three blocks to the river and plunged in. The water was nearly six feet deep and came up to his neck. A cattleman named French came in from the north and joined the search. The water was of good expanse and it was about fifteen minutes before, feeling about with his feet, Mr. French found and brought out the girl. A full quarter of an hour after that Mr. Pearman brought out the boy. The were found ten feet apart. Both bodies were promptly laid on the hot gravel, rolled and worked with in every way suggested, but the life had departed from each forever. Dr. Ketcham was on hand to direct the work.
The dead little hero was carried into his home adjoining the pump house, clad simply in his little red sweater and knee pants. The girl was taken to the home of L. R. Roberts adjoining her own home on Main Street opposite the woolen mill. The mother had been summoned in distress to the river during the search and returned prostrated with her sudden grief a little later. The father, Robert Dreamer is a tank and pump repairer on the Frisco, and was in Fall River, Kansas this morning. He will be home immediately, and the little boy's sister will be home from Kansas City tonight.
Many people called at the two stricken homes immediately after the sad accident. Among them were the church friends. The little Johnson children attended the Congregational Sunday school. The boy was of excellent character, perfect in manners and disposition. A. Hughes was going to take him on a fishing trip this afternoon. The little Dreamer girl was a member of Mrs. Roy Rohm's class at the Baptist Sunday school.
Henry Briggs, the colored fisherman was at the house when a PRESS reporter arrived. "I taught him to swim," said Briggs. "And if I hadn't stopped to get shaved on the way down here they never would have drowned. It is all man can do to save a drowning child - let alone weight for weight."
Mrs. George Brown, of Dixon, Missouri was camping on the river and saw the children drowning but was sick and "just turned her head away." Her husband was not on hand at the time.
Arrangements have been made to hold the funeral of the little boy tomorrow at 4 p.m. at the residence of his father near the water works. Rev. J. B. Toomay will be in charge.
The date for the girl's funeral can not be fixed until the father is located. Telegrams failing to find him at Fall River this afternoon.
It is not considered necessary to hold inquests, but Dr. Thomas was called this afternoon to look at the bodies and testify as to the cause of their death.

CHILDREN DROWNED
BOY HERO DIES TRYING TO RESCUE A LITTLE GIRL FROM A WATERY GRAVE

Carl Johnson and Della Dreamer, two Twelve Year Old Children, Bathed Once too Often - Negro Boys Told Girls the Water was not Deep. Ethel Orr Missed Same Fate by Hair's Breadth


From Saturday's Daily,
Yesterday morning at 10:30 o'clock two children were drowned in Spring River near the pump house of the Waterworks Co., 100 feet below the North Main street bridge. They had been in the water fifteen minutes and both were dead when taken out.
One was little Carl Johnson son of O. P. Johnson, the pump man at the waterworks, and the other was Della Dreamer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dreamer, who live on North Main Street. Mr. Dreamer is in the employ of the Frisco, and was at Garden City, Kansas when the accident occurred. Both were twelve years old.
It has been the custom of a number of children in the north part of town to go bathing in the river every morning and sometimes in the afternoon.. Yesterday they went down as usual and two of their number for the last time. Ella and Ethel Orr, Dell Sigler, Della Dreamer and Carl Johnson were all there. The two little Orr girls and the Dreamer girl went into the water. They were clad in loose wrappers, which they used for a bathing costume. The Sigler girl and the Johnson boy did not go in. She sat on the bank watching them, and the boy had already been in the water fishing with a small minnow sein. He had been accompanied by some negro boys, and they had grown tired and quit fishing.
As the girls had been in the habit of going down to the water wading and bathing, no fear was felt for them by their parents. Then, too, the water at that point at the deepest place is not more than six feet deep, and that only in one place -- the fatal place.
The negro boys, whom no one knew except the boy, and he was dead when taken out, are severely censured for their action. They were out of the water, and called to the girls to wade out farther, as the water was not deep. They had been in seining , and the girls took them at their word and started out. Della Dreamer and Ethel Orr were wading side by side. The water did not get very deep and they seemed to have plenty of confidence. Suddenly, as the Dreamer girl took a step forward, she sank nearly out of sight. The Orr girl was a little behind her, and missed the step-off into deep water. As the Dreamer girl went down she screamed for help, and the next instant was in deeper water still and sank out of sight.
Heroism was displayed then by the little 12 year old Carl Johnson, who died trying to rescue his companion. Sitting on the bank when the girl went down the first time there was not a moment's hesitation. He had been literally raised on the river, as his father's house was not 200 feet away, and was a strong swimmer and perfect master of a boat. His father had often said he had no fears for the boy for he was as much at home in the water as he was on the land. He was perhaps fifty feet from the girl but he shot across the space like a flash and plunged into the water. At her side in an instant he waited for her to come to the surface. As she did so he reached out and got hold of her dress and started for the bank. At this point the surely fatal thing so dreaded by the bravest and strongest swimmers happened. The girl reached up and tried to get her arm around his neck. He avoided it the first time and was swimming with great power for one so small, but the next instant the girl made another grab for him and this time grasped his neck and down they both went.
There were a number of spectators across the river, people who had camped there, and they were horrified as they saw the two go down together.
They were too far away to reach them in time to render assistance and were almost too horror struck to move until they saw the two children sink together. They screamed to them, but it was too late. The children came up three times and each time it could be seen the boy was locked in a deadly embrace. He struggled, but it was useless and when they went down the third time they were seen no more.
As soon as the Dreamer girl stepped into deep water, Ethel Orr rushed frantically to the pump house up on a high bank 100 feet from the river to tell Mr. Johnson, who is engineer there. She had not spoken three words until he grasped the situation and started for the water. When he reached the scene the water had closed over his boy and the little girl and not a ripple indicated where their bodies lay. Directed as well as the words of the children could indicate he waded into the water and began the search. The agony he suffered was not shown. He worked systematically and with care. James French, who lives in Kendricktown was crossing the bridge when Mr. Johnson called to him for help. There was by this time a crowd of people gathered attracted on the bank by the excitement and all joined in the search for the bodies. James French was wading in the deepest place where he could just touch bottom when his foot struck a body and he dived for it. It was the girl and she was on the bottom close to some brush and driftwood in the stream. She was not tangled up in any way. The body was carried to the bank and laid on a cloth and willing hands did all that could be done to bring back breath to the limp forms but life was extinct.
J. V. Pearman of the planing mills was in the water with Mr. French and in a few minutes he found the boy's body. It was on the bottom and also close to some driftwood about twelve feet east of the place where the girl lay. He was carried to the shore and Dr. Ketcham, who had arrived by this time, worked with him faithfully but it was of no use. He was dead. They had been in the water perhaps twenty minutes before they were taken out.
A great crowd had gather on the banks of the river by the time the bodies were rescued. Mr. Johnson sat under a tree and great sobs shook his sturdy frame. Mrs. Dreamer was at the Johnson house utterly prostrated.
Both bodies were taken to the Johnson place and later the body of the Dreamer girl was taken to her mother's home. Loving hearts and will hands were there to lend all assistance possible. Mr. Johnson has two daughters, one of whom is in Kansas City, and she was telegraphed for last night. His wife has been dead 10 years and he has raised his two youngest children himself. The one that was drowned was the only boy he had. It was a terrible shock, but he bore up under it bravely. He has been engineer at the pump house ever since the water works were started and has many friends here who sympathize with him in this hour. The undertakers took charge of the body, but as yet no funeral arrangements have been made. The engineer's place at the pump house is filled temporarily by Mat Pringle.
The agony of the father in the death of his only son is in some degree relieved in the knowledge that he died a hero's death. He gave his life in an effort to save his companion from death, a youthful hero whose act of courage is not excelled. He was a bright little fellow and well known about town.
At the little cottage occupied by the Dreamer family, just north of Waddell & Brown's grocery store on north Main street, there was a pitiful sight. The little golden haired girl was brought to her home shortly after the drowning and laid upon a couch in the sitting room and efforts were made to save her. Sympathetic neighboring ladies crowded to the home and used every known and available means to restore her to consciousness. At first it was thought she was still alive, but as one by one the ladies bent over her searching for some little flutter of life in the still, cold remains, they gave up. Meanwhile the grief-stricken mother was entirely prostrated by the awful blow that had fallen upon her household. Upon being brought from the scene of the drowning she was assisted from the buggy and could not stand and had to be held by two ladies to keep her from falling. Then the physician threaded his way between the little awe stricken group to where the child lay. He quickly made a skilful examination and found life extinct. The pitifulness of the scene grew tenser as the sad news was broken to the mother. up to this time she had hoped that there might be some little hope of her child's life but when told that there was none, she sat with drawn face and moaned and wrung her hands in grief. Kind friends were nearby and assisted in soothing her, but the grief was too great and she could be heard mourning the loss of the her child for a block. The father of the little girl is not at home,, being employed in pump station on the Frisco at Golden City, Kansas. He was immediately telegraphed for and arrived on the next train. Della Dreamer was a beautiful child of 12 years age. She was about the size girls usually are at that age and at the time of her death was clad in a short cotton frock of a pinkish color. She has always attended school and was one of the brightest in her class. In the neighborhood of North Main street where she lives she was a favorite among her companions. After all hope she had been given up the undertakers took charge of the remains and prepared them for burial.
The funeral of Carl Johnson will be held this afternoon from the home, and the services will be conducted by Rev. Mr. Toomay. The hour was set on account of arrival of the trains from Kansas City, and it is supposed Miss. Lonie Johnson will arrive in time for the funeral.
The funeral of little Della Dreamer will be held some time this afternoon from the home on North Main Street.
Note: there is a discrepancy the way the name is spelled on the stone and the way her name was spelled in the newspaper. Her parents grave markers are also spelled Dreamer rather than Dreemer.

Another discrepancy was brought to my attention by Jane Ostrander
".
Alice Isaacs Dreamer isn't Della's mother. Alice and Robert Dreamer were not married till about 1905. Ida Carl was Della's mother"

Jane reports all she can find is the 1895 Kansas State census and the 1900 census but Alice would have been just over 6 and half years old when Della was born. As far as Ida goes after 1900 there is nothing. Robert and Ida's other daughter, Dimples Marie, doesn't appear again until her marriage in 1917.
__________

CARTHAGE EVENING PRESS
JULY 19, 1901

TWO 11-YEAR OLD CHILDREN DROWNED
BOY HERO DIED THIS MORNING TRYING TO SAVE THE GIRL
__________

LITTLE DELLA DREAMER AND CARL JOHNSON
The Girl Holding Hands of Her Companions, Took a Dare and Waded Over a Step-Off at the Water Works, 75 Feet Below Main Street Bridge

__________

Carl Johnson and Della Dreamer, two eleven-year old children of North Main Street, were drowned this morning at 11 o'clock in Spring River, 75 feet below the Main Street bridge, and just over the riffle below the water works in-take. The boy lives at the water works pump station, his father, A. P. Johnson, being resident engineer there, working from midnight to noon. Little Misses Ethel Orr and Della Sigler stayed with Carl's sister, little Miss Ella Johnson last night, and being joined this morning by Della Dreamer, all four put on old dresses and went wading on the riffle below the water works. Carl was playing somewhere about the bank below the pump house.
Immediately below the riffle, or water works dam, is a very deep hole along one side of which is a steep step-off. Some brush from up river had lodged on the riffle, the butts becoming embedded in the gravel and the ends extending out over the deeper water. Holding onto the brush ends and hand in hand, the Dreamer girl being on the lower end of the line, the girls waded into the water. A small colored youth named King stood on the bank, chaffed the girls about being afraid, and dared them to wade "just a little farther - and a little farther."
Suddenly little Della, on the end of the line, went over the step-off, and in her sudden consternation the next girl to her, Ethel Orr, let go her hold, all being thrown down into the water. The three girls next to the brush could scramble out, but Della Dreamer began to sink and scream.

BOY GOES TO THE RESCUE
There was not a man in sight or hearing, and Carl Johnson, less than the drowning girl in size, rushed to her rescue like the true little hero that he proved himself to be. Priding himself on his swimming, he was at her side in an instant, but in her terror the girl did the usual and worst thing possible. Grabbing him frantically about the neck and arms, she retarded his swimming, and both went down together.
Terrified, the other girls ran to the pump house across the river. Engineer Johnson was at work there and was soon on the scene, an intensely excited man. Ernest Roberts, a small boy, ran up Main street and spread he alarm. A few minutes later eight or ten men were wading through the water looking for the bodies.
J. V. Pearman, notified by the Roberts boy, ran from his planing mill three blocks to the river and plunged in. The water was nearly six feet deep and came up to his neck. A cattleman named French came in from the north and joined the search. The water was of good expanse and it was about fifteen minutes before, feeling about with his feet, Mr. French found and brought out the girl. A full quarter of an hour after that Mr. Pearman brought out the boy. The were found ten feet apart. Both bodies were promptly laid on the hot gravel, rolled and worked with in every way suggested, but the life had departed from each forever. Dr. Ketcham was on hand to direct the work.
The dead little hero was carried into his home adjoining the pump house, clad simply in his little red sweater and knee pants. The girl was taken to the home of L. R. Roberts adjoining her own home on Main Street opposite the woolen mill. The mother had been summoned in distress to the river during the search and returned prostrated with her sudden grief a little later. The father, Robert Dreamer is a tank and pump repairer on the Frisco, and was in Fall River, Kansas this morning. He will be home immediately, and the little boy's sister will be home from Kansas City tonight.
Many people called at the two stricken homes immediately after the sad accident. Among them were the church friends. The little Johnson children attended the Congregational Sunday school. The boy was of excellent character, perfect in manners and disposition. A. Hughes was going to take him on a fishing trip this afternoon. The little Dreamer girl was a member of Mrs. Roy Rohm's class at the Baptist Sunday school.
Henry Briggs, the colored fisherman was at the house when a PRESS reporter arrived. "I taught him to swim," said Briggs. "And if I hadn't stopped to get shaved on the way down here they never would have drowned. It is all man can do to save a drowning child - let alone weight for weight."
Mrs. George Brown, of Dixon, Missouri was camping on the river and saw the children drowning but was sick and "just turned her head away." Her husband was not on hand at the time.
Arrangements have been made to hold the funeral of the little boy tomorrow at 4 p.m. at the residence of his father near the water works. Rev. J. B. Toomay will be in charge.
The date for the girl's funeral can not be fixed until the father is located. Telegrams failing to find him at Fall River this afternoon.
It is not considered necessary to hold inquests, but Dr. Thomas was called this afternoon to look at the bodies and testify as to the cause of their death.

CHILDREN DROWNED
BOY HERO DIES TRYING TO RESCUE A LITTLE GIRL FROM A WATERY GRAVE

Carl Johnson and Della Dreamer, two Twelve Year Old Children, Bathed Once too Often - Negro Boys Told Girls the Water was not Deep. Ethel Orr Missed Same Fate by Hair's Breadth


From Saturday's Daily,
Yesterday morning at 10:30 o'clock two children were drowned in Spring River near the pump house of the Waterworks Co., 100 feet below the North Main street bridge. They had been in the water fifteen minutes and both were dead when taken out.
One was little Carl Johnson son of O. P. Johnson, the pump man at the waterworks, and the other was Della Dreamer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dreamer, who live on North Main Street. Mr. Dreamer is in the employ of the Frisco, and was at Garden City, Kansas when the accident occurred. Both were twelve years old.
It has been the custom of a number of children in the north part of town to go bathing in the river every morning and sometimes in the afternoon.. Yesterday they went down as usual and two of their number for the last time. Ella and Ethel Orr, Dell Sigler, Della Dreamer and Carl Johnson were all there. The two little Orr girls and the Dreamer girl went into the water. They were clad in loose wrappers, which they used for a bathing costume. The Sigler girl and the Johnson boy did not go in. She sat on the bank watching them, and the boy had already been in the water fishing with a small minnow sein. He had been accompanied by some negro boys, and they had grown tired and quit fishing.
As the girls had been in the habit of going down to the water wading and bathing, no fear was felt for them by their parents. Then, too, the water at that point at the deepest place is not more than six feet deep, and that only in one place -- the fatal place.
The negro boys, whom no one knew except the boy, and he was dead when taken out, are severely censured for their action. They were out of the water, and called to the girls to wade out farther, as the water was not deep. They had been in seining , and the girls took them at their word and started out. Della Dreamer and Ethel Orr were wading side by side. The water did not get very deep and they seemed to have plenty of confidence. Suddenly, as the Dreamer girl took a step forward, she sank nearly out of sight. The Orr girl was a little behind her, and missed the step-off into deep water. As the Dreamer girl went down she screamed for help, and the next instant was in deeper water still and sank out of sight.
Heroism was displayed then by the little 12 year old Carl Johnson, who died trying to rescue his companion. Sitting on the bank when the girl went down the first time there was not a moment's hesitation. He had been literally raised on the river, as his father's house was not 200 feet away, and was a strong swimmer and perfect master of a boat. His father had often said he had no fears for the boy for he was as much at home in the water as he was on the land. He was perhaps fifty feet from the girl but he shot across the space like a flash and plunged into the water. At her side in an instant he waited for her to come to the surface. As she did so he reached out and got hold of her dress and started for the bank. At this point the surely fatal thing so dreaded by the bravest and strongest swimmers happened. The girl reached up and tried to get her arm around his neck. He avoided it the first time and was swimming with great power for one so small, but the next instant the girl made another grab for him and this time grasped his neck and down they both went.
There were a number of spectators across the river, people who had camped there, and they were horrified as they saw the two go down together.
They were too far away to reach them in time to render assistance and were almost too horror struck to move until they saw the two children sink together. They screamed to them, but it was too late. The children came up three times and each time it could be seen the boy was locked in a deadly embrace. He struggled, but it was useless and when they went down the third time they were seen no more.
As soon as the Dreamer girl stepped into deep water, Ethel Orr rushed frantically to the pump house up on a high bank 100 feet from the river to tell Mr. Johnson, who is engineer there. She had not spoken three words until he grasped the situation and started for the water. When he reached the scene the water had closed over his boy and the little girl and not a ripple indicated where their bodies lay. Directed as well as the words of the children could indicate he waded into the water and began the search. The agony he suffered was not shown. He worked systematically and with care. James French, who lives in Kendricktown was crossing the bridge when Mr. Johnson called to him for help. There was by this time a crowd of people gathered attracted on the bank by the excitement and all joined in the search for the bodies. James French was wading in the deepest place where he could just touch bottom when his foot struck a body and he dived for it. It was the girl and she was on the bottom close to some brush and driftwood in the stream. She was not tangled up in any way. The body was carried to the bank and laid on a cloth and willing hands did all that could be done to bring back breath to the limp forms but life was extinct.
J. V. Pearman of the planing mills was in the water with Mr. French and in a few minutes he found the boy's body. It was on the bottom and also close to some driftwood about twelve feet east of the place where the girl lay. He was carried to the shore and Dr. Ketcham, who had arrived by this time, worked with him faithfully but it was of no use. He was dead. They had been in the water perhaps twenty minutes before they were taken out.
A great crowd had gather on the banks of the river by the time the bodies were rescued. Mr. Johnson sat under a tree and great sobs shook his sturdy frame. Mrs. Dreamer was at the Johnson house utterly prostrated.
Both bodies were taken to the Johnson place and later the body of the Dreamer girl was taken to her mother's home. Loving hearts and will hands were there to lend all assistance possible. Mr. Johnson has two daughters, one of whom is in Kansas City, and she was telegraphed for last night. His wife has been dead 10 years and he has raised his two youngest children himself. The one that was drowned was the only boy he had. It was a terrible shock, but he bore up under it bravely. He has been engineer at the pump house ever since the water works were started and has many friends here who sympathize with him in this hour. The undertakers took charge of the body, but as yet no funeral arrangements have been made. The engineer's place at the pump house is filled temporarily by Mat Pringle.
The agony of the father in the death of his only son is in some degree relieved in the knowledge that he died a hero's death. He gave his life in an effort to save his companion from death, a youthful hero whose act of courage is not excelled. He was a bright little fellow and well known about town.
At the little cottage occupied by the Dreamer family, just north of Waddell & Brown's grocery store on north Main street, there was a pitiful sight. The little golden haired girl was brought to her home shortly after the drowning and laid upon a couch in the sitting room and efforts were made to save her. Sympathetic neighboring ladies crowded to the home and used every known and available means to restore her to consciousness. At first it was thought she was still alive, but as one by one the ladies bent over her searching for some little flutter of life in the still, cold remains, they gave up. Meanwhile the grief-stricken mother was entirely prostrated by the awful blow that had fallen upon her household. Upon being brought from the scene of the drowning she was assisted from the buggy and could not stand and had to be held by two ladies to keep her from falling. Then the physician threaded his way between the little awe stricken group to where the child lay. He quickly made a skilful examination and found life extinct. The pitifulness of the scene grew tenser as the sad news was broken to the mother. up to this time she had hoped that there might be some little hope of her child's life but when told that there was none, she sat with drawn face and moaned and wrung her hands in grief. Kind friends were nearby and assisted in soothing her, but the grief was too great and she could be heard mourning the loss of the her child for a block. The father of the little girl is not at home,, being employed in pump station on the Frisco at Golden City, Kansas. He was immediately telegraphed for and arrived on the next train. Della Dreamer was a beautiful child of 12 years age. She was about the size girls usually are at that age and at the time of her death was clad in a short cotton frock of a pinkish color. She has always attended school and was one of the brightest in her class. In the neighborhood of North Main street where she lives she was a favorite among her companions. After all hope she had been given up the undertakers took charge of the remains and prepared them for burial.
The funeral of Carl Johnson will be held this afternoon from the home, and the services will be conducted by Rev. Mr. Toomay. The hour was set on account of arrival of the trains from Kansas City, and it is supposed Miss. Lonie Johnson will arrive in time for the funeral.
The funeral of little Della Dreamer will be held some time this afternoon from the home on North Main Street.


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