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Lehigh man dies in snowmobile accident | News, Sports, Jobs

kwingert@messengernews.net LEHIGH A Lehigh man is dead after his snowmobile crashed into a building and utility pole near Lehigh early Sunday morning. According to Webster County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Tony Walter, Noah Ferguson, 31, was riding his snowmobile around 2:14 a.m. on Sunday when he collided with the side of a building and into a utility pole. Ferguson was pronounced dead at the scene. Walter said it is unclear what caused Ferguson to crash. The incident remains under investigation by the Webster County Sheriff’s Office and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. Newsletter I m interested in (please check all that apply)

Rollover crash reported Friday | News, Sports, Jobs

One rollover crash was reported Friday morning east of Fort Dodge. According to Sgt. Tony Walter, of the Webster County Sheriff’s Office, the crash occurred in the 2800 mile of 190th Street when a Dodge Ram rolled over. It was reported at 7:06 a.m. Walter said minor injuries were reported from the crash. He said no accidents were reported in the afternoon. “The roads have been pretty good,” he said. Walter was concerned Friday night that it could be icy once the snow and water refroze. Newsletter I m interested in (please check all that apply) Daily Newsletter

Why Do We See Dead People? | The Walrus

Familial and fraternal hauntings have long been central to the stories we tell, from Enkidu’s ghost in The Epic of Gilgamesh to Odysseus conferring with his slain brother-in-arms Achilles to Banquo’s discarnate presence in Macbeth to Wuthering Heights’s sorrowful Catherine. More recently, there’s erratic detective John River, who confers with his newly dead partner, Stevie, in the television series River. In the nineteenth century, such fictive imaginings were often based on real losses as infectious disease swept through families. Harriet Beecher Stowe, for example, watched her toddler, Charley, die in a Cincinnati cholera outbreak during the summer of 1849. She began to read, as she described it, “of visions, of heavenly voices, of mysterious sympathies and transmissions of knowledge from heart to heart without the intervention of the senses, or what Quakers call being ‘baptized into the spirit’ of those who are distant.” Her husband, theologian Calvin Sto

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