Fire Bomber - DYNAMITE EXPLOSION MACROSS DYNAMITE 7 - Opening Theme
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Fire Bomber - DYNAMITE EXPLOSION MACROSS DYNAMITE 7 - Opening Theme
"THREW DYNAMITE AGAINST CAR WHERE ELEPHANTS WERE," Toronto Star. June 5, 1912. Page 6. --- An Unknown Person Wrecked Part of Circus Train at St. Catharines. ---- NO ARRESTS MADE YET ---- Special to The Star. St. Catharines, June 5. - As the Hagg circus was preparing to leave the city early this morning, some person threw a stick of dynamite against the car in which the elephants were housed. A very loud explosion followed, in which almost the entire side of the car was torn off, and one of the elephants was seriously injured, and all were more or less hurt.
There was great commotion about the station for some time after, but eventually the train pulled out with the damaged car and the disabled elephants. No arrests have been made, as there was nothing to point towards the guilty party.
That's it kids, have fun figuring it all out-
"The explosion of 350 tons of dynamite on the steamer Alum Chine at Baltimore, when 54 lives were lost, hurled debris for five miles. The wireless room on the steamer Jason, a mile distant, was wrecked, as shown above."
- from the Toronto Star. March 11, 1913. Page 14.
"INJURED IN DYNAMITE EXPLOSION," Cobalt Daily Nugget. February 8, 1912. Page 1. --- John Novack Hurt on Claims in Deloro --- SKULL FRACTURED, CHIN BLOWN OFF ---- Injured Man in Precarious Condition in Porcupine Hospital ---- PORCUPINE, Feb. 7. - John Nevack is in the hospital as a result injuries received while working on his claims in Deloro yesterday afternoon. Novack was sinking shaft and the supposition is that his pick struck a piece of unexploded dynamite. In the explosion following Novack's skull was fractured by flying rock and his scalp, hands and legs were lacerated, both eyes injured, his nose cut and a portion of his chin blown off. Drs. MeLean and Rogers went out to the property last night and returned this morning with the injured man whose condition is precarious.
"Release Suspect In Timmins Blast," Windsor Star. January 12, 1943. Page 10. ---- TIMMINS, Jan. 12. - One man was detained yesterday, but later released in connection with a police investigation into a dynamite blast that wrecked part of the wall of a house and an adjacent garage late Sunday night. The house was occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Galica, who have no children.
The couple were asleep when a terrific blast shattered the outside wall of their bedroom, the main force of the explosion just missing the bottom of the bed by inches and breaking the door of a clothes closet. Had the powder been placed a few feet more toward the point where the bed is located the couple might have suffered serious injury.
"SEVEN ARE KILLED IN SKIFF ON LAKE," Kingston Whig-Standard. May 22, 1933. Page 1. ----- Stick of Dynamite Explodes - Six Others in Boat Rescued ---- QUEBEC, May 22 - Seven men were killed, one was injured, and five escaped unhurt when a stick of dynamite exploded in a log-drivers' skiff on Lac Creux, about sixty miles from Quebec.
The dead: Georges Aube, 22, St. Marie de Bathurst, N.B.; Joseph Imbault, 39, Quebec: Emmanuel Touchet, 20, St. Fereol, Que: Edouard Gagnon, 23 Ste. Sabine, Que.; Jules Bilodeau. 23, Ste. Justine, Que.: Henry Bilodeau, 20, Ste. Justine, Que.; Henri Turgeon, 19, Quebec.
The accident occurred Saturday in a 28-foot skiff in which thirteen men were crossing Lac Creux. Aube, the foreman, is said accidentally to have touched off one of the fifty sticks of dynamite carried in the skiff's prow.
The men were thrown in all directions by the force of the explosion, and the skiff was completely wrecked, Lorenzo Bureau, Lake Saint John. Que., suffered a gashed eye, and physicians stated they might be forced to remove it.
“Five Escape Death In Dynamite Plot,” Toronto Star. May 12, 1930. Page 1. --- Niagara Shaken by Blast in Restaurant --- Special to The Star Niagara Falls, Ont., May 12. - An attempt to blow up the house and restaurant of James Bryant, Ferry and Ellen Sts., at 2 a.m. to-day failed partially when three sticks of dynamite, part of the charge, did not explode.
The rest of the charge, consisting police believe, of a bomb made from nitroglycerine, went off with a detonation which shook the whole city. Damage to the building was estimated at a thousand dollars.
The explosives were placed on the roof of the kitchen at the rear of the restaurant. Bryant was in the front of the restaurant when the blast occurred and Mrs. Bryant and their three small children were asleep in the house adjoining. Their room was only a few yards from where the explosives were placed. No one was hurt. Police found the unexploded dynamite in a stove pipe on the roof.