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80-Year-Old Veteran’s Conscience Hurt Because He Stole Chicken
During Civil War
“Forget It,” Advises The Judge
NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., Sept. 18.--AP--Conscience
stricken because he had stolen chickens during the Civil War and
desiring to square accounts, before it is too late, “Tim” Crook,
80-year-old war veteran who lives in the hill country near
Minersville, Neb., went before Dist. Judge Begley here and asked
to be allowed to “plead guilty.”
Judge Begley just smiled and told him to forget about it.
“You see when I was in company A of the Tenth Kansas
infantry,” the grizzled veteran said, “we did not get to eat but
every once in a while and a stray goat or chicken was our meal. I
guess I shot and stole from the big plantations as many as the
next one. They say that all is fair in love and war and we were
lots and eating little and may be it was all right, but I ain’t
felt right about it ever since. When this bread and water sentence
business at Tekamah came up, I decided that if they was going to
be that rough on poor fellows violating the liquor laws in other
parts of the state that may be I had done wrong.
Ironton Sunday Tribune, 19 September 1926, Sunday, Page 1
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