BERRY, Norah J. Kirkpatrick. This is Nora Jane Clark who married Thomas W. Kirkpatrick and later married a Berry, but I don't know his first name. This is from Kime article #13: "Such a time came to Kime in 1904 when the people, terribly shaken by the news, learned the good times were over for Thomas W. Kirkpatrick and Andrew J. Seabaugh, young men with families prominent in the community whose lives came to a calamitous ending after taking a load of cattle to market in St. Louis by rail. The story is told by family members the two of them and John Cattron (1858-1927) partied while in the big town, where the World's Fair was in progress, and were overcome by lethal fumes after one of them, woozy with alcohol at bedtime, blew out the gas light at their hotel instead of turning it off. Mr. Kirpatrick died on Oct. 28, 1904; Mr. Seabaugh on Nov. 3, 1904. But the story recalled does not correspond with a report Oct. 27, 1904 in the Greenville Sun, which stated it was late in the night when the three of them arrived in the city and about midnight when they got their stock cared for and themselves to a hotel. “About noon the next day the hotel porter in passing their room discovered a strong odor of gas. He burst into the room and found the three men almost in the throes of death by asphixiation. They were taken at once to a hospital...It was thought at first that the men blew the gas light out insead of turning it out, but Mr. Cattron says he turned it off. Had they been discovered a half hour later all three men would have been dead.” It was first reported Mr. Cattron and Mr. Kirkpatrick soon revived and booth were expected to survive. The loss came as a great shock to the people of Kime where they were held in high regard. H. Y. Mabrey made a note about the return of the body of Mr. Kirpatrick to the Kime community. He was the son of Wallis and Nellie Kirkpatrick. Tributes to the two men appeared in the Greenville Sun." From Kime Article #13.