MARVELLOUS FEATS PERFORMED BY THE DEAD.
A recent American newspaper tells of an express train, carrying scores of passengers, running for miles with the cold hand of the dead engineei gripping the throttle. Like many other true incidents, tht story is more weird than any fiction. The engineer was at his post on nil side of the cab, his head out of tfce window, his hand on the throttle. The fireman was attending to his duties, tossing coal into the furnace, and now and then giving a blast on the whistle. Once or twice he spoke to the engineer and got no answer* but he supposed his mate was not in a talkative mood. As the train approached a station where it was wont to stop the fireman, gave a long blast on the whistle the signal that a halt was to be made. But the train sped on with unslackened speed. Not until it had gone past the station did the fireman's suspicions become aroused. "What's the matter, Bill ?" he asked. "We ought to have stopped there." There was no response, and the now frightened fireman placed his hand on the engineer's shoulder. He withdrew it with a yell when he found the man's body stiff in death. With a presence of mind born of a life of danger, the fireman quickly reversed the lever and brought the train to a stop. How long the engineer had been dead is not known, but it was probably half an:hour or more. A weak heart, a slight convulsive movement unnoticed by the busy fireman, and the engineer was dead at his post, while death's hand held the throttle. MARRIED TO A DEAD BRIDE. Several years ago a Russian cemetery was the scene of a weird wedding. A young woman who had been betrothed died suddenly on the eve of her marriage. Great preparations had been made for the wedding, and the bridegroom and his friends determined that the intervening hand ol death should not interfere with th« ceremony. The funeral cortege then became a bridal party. The bridegroom walked beside the coffin containing the body of his fiancee as it was borne to the cemetery. At the grave the marriage ceremony was performed, after which the body of the bride, clad in her wedding garments, was lowered into the grave. SPECTRE OF THE SEA.
The story of the Phantom Ship or the Flying Duchman, who for blasphemy was condemned to try in vain to beat round • Cape Horn until the Day of Judgment, has its modern example in the fate of the ship General Siglin, about ten years ago. The General Siglin sailed from San Francisco for Alaska, but never reached her destination. Months later the sealing schooner 'Arietis was cruising about 200 miles off the coast of British Columbia when she sighted a ship. The iArietis signalled the schooner, but 'got no answer. Running closer to the vessel, the crew of the Arietis made out the figure of a man at the helm, grasping the wheel his gaze apparently fixed intentlj ahead. The man at the wheel was hailed, but returned no answer. The story of the ship's fate car only be conjectured, ais none of hei crew i were ever seen alive. It is supposed that the vessel was caught it a storm and began to leak badly, and the crew deserted her, the cap, tain refusing to leave his vessel. A LIFELESS WINNER.
Not many years. ago a valuable cup Wfi,s won in a bicycle race in Australia by a man who 'was dead when, he passed the winning-post. The race took place before a crowd jstiniated at 10,000 persons. The betting was lively and the contest clo/se, and the spectators wers worked, up to a high pitch of excitement. L'j the last lap James Somerville, one of the riders, forged ahead and got such a lead that victory was assured. When within twenty-five yards of the finish those nearest to him saw him relax his hold on the handle-bars and lose his footing on the pedals. Amid the frantic cheers of the spectators he sped past the goal, winning the race by a few yards, and pitched forward from his machine. When he was picked up he was dead, and doctors declare the spark of life left his. body when he was seen to lose his grip on the handle-bars. It was a lifeless body that had crossed the line a winner. —"Tit-Bits."
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King Country Chronicle, Volume VI, Issue 453, 3 April 1912, Page 6
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746MARVELLOUS FEATS PERFORMED BY THE DEAD. King Country Chronicle, Volume VI, Issue 453, 3 April 1912, Page 6
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