Family searches feces of cash-eating dog

MENOMONIE, Wis. – Debbie Hulleman’s dog Pepper has been known to gnaw on lipstick, munch on shampoo bottles and chew on toothpaste. But Pepper got Hulleman into a real mess after gobbling nearly $750.

“This is probably the worst,” Hulleman said Thursday, recalling how she poked through vomit and dog piles left in the yard to recover the cash.

Pepper, an 8-year-old black Labrador-German shorthair, got into a purse belonging to her mother’s friend and chewed the cash from an envelope.

Hulleman’s mother recovered some of the money that Pepper spit out, thinking she had it all. But when Hulleman returned from the trip and went to clean up her dogs’ mess outside, she noticed a $50 bill hanging from one pile.

The chore of sorting through dog feces netted about $400, the 50-year-old dog lover said. Between that and other bills that Pepper had either vomited or simply chewed on, the family recovered $647.

“We have a $100 bill that can’t be recovered because you need three-fourths of a bill and it is only half of a bill,” Hulleman said.

The family swapped the soiled money for fresh currency at a bank.

“It wasn’t that bad. I soaked it and strained it and rinsed it. I just kept rinsing it and rinsing it. I had rubber gloves on of course,” Hulleman said.

“Everyone said, ‘I can’t believe you did that.’ Well, for $400, yeah, I would do that,” she said.

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Collecting garbage is one of the most dangerous jobs in Baghdad.

Nearly 500 garbage collectors have been killed since the Iraq war began. Many are young. Some are just teenagers.

They don’t empty garbage cans. Instead, they shovel loose trash and debris into garbage trucks. All the unbundled, discarded refuse wreaks havoc on Baghdad’s sewage system, clogging pipes and creating putrid pools of raw sewage on the streets, even in more affluent neighborhoods.

Garbage was one of the most vexing problems facing Capt. Tom Deierlein and his fellow soldiers.

In Adhamiya — a neighborhood that recently made headlines when a U.S. military brigade began building a 3-mile-long concrete wall around it — garbage workers faced such great danger that many wouldn’t go there at all. They could be shot by extremists for uncovering roadside bombs hidden in the piles of garbage, or simply for receiving their paychecks from U.S.-led forces.

“Garbage was six or seven feet high in some places,” recalled Capt. Drew Corbin, Deierlein’s friend. “It was as if New York had gone on strike.”

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The Online Paper Airplane Museum

Welcome to The Online Paper Airplane Museum! Feel Free to browse around, check out all the FREE paper airplane designs that talented people and placed on the web for your enjoyment! Welcome to the Museum! The Mission of the Museum is to Inspire everyone to greater heights, No matter what they choose. If this much variation and grace can come from a simple piece of paper, imagine what you can do!

Right now we are only on line, but perhaps one day in the future, we will have a little place of our own!

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