Rensselaer Union, Volume 7, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 November 1874 — HAPS AND MISHAPS. [ARTICLE]
HAPS AND MISHAPS.
—'fliMnfliilKw oHfttcwaft'- 8 Bill, near X«i», entangled •loWf nHil'hinery’flrmr tv ft# so nadlv Injured that he died shortly after the acci dent. —A wood train on the Dayton & Michigan Railroad recently ran into a drove of cattle near Lima, ()hio, throwing several cars oti the track, killing two men and seriously injuring six others. —Joli Dp«h,4k'aAchdl)pi®giido’(im a large trfc nnfr TMlplws, Ohio!, tjpe other afternoon, 4rn| to« ftshepr Bid fell upon hi*, eless mass and killing him instantly. —Laura Collins, of Clifton, Ohio, was instantly filled at school, a few days ago, by a call striking her in the stomach. The boys were throwing the ball and the little jgiri aoUnkthc vj«y. f —y4un| flollteth, of S|t*u*fe|i,,§ ouml a Jtaakage oon t ainfng a pound and a half m powder uponthe pantry shelf and playfully jfhrew -*t into the fire. The boy was so badly injured that he died in a few hours —E. H. Drake, one of Detroit’s prominent physicians, was called to Ypsilanti to consult in a critical case, and when about to take the cars for home was struck by an engine and so seriously injured that lie died in ten minutes. —While Sfmtonßowmanand wife were reUindqg f noil 4 church, In Kmitlivilk-, Otaio.lwevenor M'nmg/tbvfr horse took fright, rpn away, and, piking a tree, fartiwoed tha carfUgi';-fell feting iuju- '» Bov*iu»* sejiis that e survived out half an hour. —A son of Emory Evans, of Victory, Mich., lately seriously wounded his brother with a revolver which he had snapped a number of times, and, supposing it would not go oil', playfully pointed it at his brother and shot him in the groin. —X man named JuliusrV«in>f, residing-; in Jackson, Ind , a Life enga|r<-d in digging a els.;ern Taie'y, nhis itctlek uQ tlia head bv a brick, which fell from above. Re took no -not toe of the hurt for a t imer but soon complaiaad of being unwell and exnpgtiijeing si-ierc pfibunithtf bend. 'lld-fflrpir&rmiffetly afterward. —Hugh -\lf Eh'vy, of Ad.-!, Ohio, was fn9laht!ji>J;iifed Mfcibther tiornlng unihy the ~ following cnYunrstances : While xai*4g I tiAveiling-housu on ins farm be got iurati the building to adjust the blocks, when they ga|o way, letting the whole of the building upon him, crushing ms body to a shapeless mass. —rtfuion, IJichfet, mn Indianajiolis brhkcnijfn, recently fell from his train while passing over the ludianapolis A St. Louis Raid road I'ltdge, “Striking his tiead against the crosslimbers and sustaining terrible injuries to the skull, the bones being driven in on to the brain. The hurts were fatal.
