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Looking Back: Nov. 21, 2012

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The lobby of the Egyptian Theatre in DeKalb, circa 1949. Thanks to the Egyptian Theatre for the photo. (Photo provided)

125 YEARS AGO

November 23, 1887
The main building of Barnum & Bailey’s great circus and menagerie winter quarters at Bridgeport, Conn., was destroyed by fire Sunday. Some of the animals – including 30 elephants, a lion and a hippopotamus – escaped, but most of them have been recaptured.

The star of Bethlehem, which is now visible to the naked eye directly in the eastern sky, is an unusually large and brilliant twinkler. It will be visible from 3 to 5 a.m. for some time, and then will not be seen again for 849 years.

A well-known doctor says that the fumes of kerosene, when a lamp is turned low, are likely to cause diphtheria. The New York Board of Health has decided the prevalence of the disease can be attributed to this more than to any other cause.

The first part of the week was warm, dry and pleasant, as it had been all the fall. Friday the wind commenced blowing, Saturday the ground was covered with snow, which continued falling until Sunday, making travel by teams dangerous and delaying railroad trains.

Engineer Markham and his fireman were attacked by a panther Sunday on the Burlington and Missouri railroad. The men had left the locomotive to repair a wheel when the feline sprang upon them and severely lacerated both before being despatched with a bullet. The animal measured six feet and weighed over 200 pounds.

Mr. A.E. Sprague has gone to Chicago, where he expects to remain. Sycamore young people will miss his genial face.

100 YEARS AGO

November 23, 1912
Last week yeggmen broke into the Belvidere post office and badly damaged the stamp vault with explosives. This week the Sandwich post office was likewise attacked.

It is a great distinction to have the work DeKalb County is doing to increase crop production given some three pages in such a magazine as the Saturday Evening Post, which probably has the largest circulation of any periodical in the world.

Andrew Benson was driving the auto-truck for the Haish Company across the tracks at Ninth Street in DeKalb on Wednesday when a passenger train collided with the truck. The truck was demolished and the driver thrown 50 feet. When Benson saw the train he started to leap from the truck; this probably saved his life.

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