Jones "the box", the local funeral
director and his trusted assistant were called to a remote Welsh hill
farm in the depths of a bad winter to collect the body of Evan, the
deceased farmer.
Failing to break through the snow drifts on the
lower slopes, Jones, fueled by a sense of duty, instructed his aide to
unload the coffin.
Attaching ropes to the handles, together they
pushed on through the worsening weather, towing the coffin behind.
At the farm they placed the defunct Evan in the
coffin and set off to haul him back to the vehicle.
Disaster struck when Jones lost his footing on
the wind blown hill side and fell backward onto the coffin lid.
Evan, in the box and Jones on top, set off at
great speed down the hill, pursued frantically by the assistant.
Together, the three arrived at the outer wall of
the village pub with a resounding thud.
"Well" said Jones, a pragmatist at the
best of times, brushing himself down and looking not a little shaken,
"If Evan is so determined to call in for a
last pint, who are we to disagree then?"
And there they
stayed...until the storm subsided.
Jones "the box" inside and Evan,
outside, in his box.
John and Patrick were passing through the
cemetery when Patrick paused to read a particularly ornate headstone.
"It says here", he read aloud,
"here lies an honest man and a lawyer." Turning to John with
a puzzled expression, Patrick asked,
"Now why would they bury two men together
like that?"
Her husband, having passed away, Alice, ever a
thrifty Scot, called on the local carpenter and arranged to have a
coffin made up from old packing cases.
She next visited the draper, MacDougal, and
asked for a length of material, suitable for sewing into a shroud.
When the gentleman stated his price, Alice threw
up her hands in horror.
"Why, I can buy a similar cloth down the
road for half that amount" she said.
"Och, aye, that you can" replied
MacDougal, "But the stuff is so poor quality that it'll wear
through at the knees within a week............"
The older brother, having left the farm many
years ago had become a huge success in the city. He was dismayed when
he received a letter from his long forgotten younger brother,
informing him of the death of their father.
Racked by guilt and just a little grief, he told
his brother that he would cover all funeral costs, to get the best of
everything and that all bills were to be sent to him for payment.
His instructions were carried out and he later
got a very large bill from the funeral director which he duly paid.
The next month he got a further account which he
also paid, thinking it was for extra items.
When this happened again the next month, he paid
but made a note to check on it.
The arrival of a third account proved the last
straw and he telephoned his brother to find out what was going on.
"Well," said his sibling, "When
you told me to get the best for Daddy I did, I went right out and
hired him a tux.............."
The keen golfer, never known to have missed a
match, paused as a funeral cortege drove past the green. He removed
his cap and stood solemnly until it was out of sight before taking his
shot. His partner was really impressed and exclaimed.
"Why I think that was a wonderful gesture
of respect that you just showed."
"Yes, well" said the golfer with a
smile, "She was always a good wife to me......... "
An Argentine woman suffered a nervous breakdown
at the funeral of her son.
When a man was killed accidentally by a pistol
he was holding, his mother erroneously identified the corpse in the
local morgue.
When her son later 'phoned to tell her he was alive, she
thought it was someone playing a sick joke.
So he came to the funeral.......
The brash and successful young businessman
returned to his small hometown for a family funeral. Rapidly bored
with family gossip he wandered off and eventually found himself at the
town cemetery.
Working in the bottom of a new grave was the
ancient town grave digger.
"Hey!" called the young man, "Is
that you Tom?"
Pausing in his labours to peer up at the fresh
young face above, the old man wiped the sweat from his brow before
responding.
"Ayup, surely is"
"Amazing" muttered the youngster to
himself, "How old are you anyway, Tom?"
Unperturbed by the rude arrogance of the youth,
old Tom pondered the question before squinting up to the daylight
again.
"Oh must be all of seventy-five by now,
ayup" he said happily.
Turning on his heel and striding off the
businessman threw back over his shoulder,
"Hardly seems worth your while climbing
back out of that one then does it?"
I want to die the
same way my grandfather did, peacefully in his sleep. Not like his
passengers, screaming and shouting to the end.....
Elmer McCurdy, drifter, cowboy and part-time
badman arrived in Cuthrie, Oklahoma in the late 1900s. Born in
Maine, Elmer had wandered from one job to another and one bungled
crime after another.
When attempting to rob a bank safe, Elmer used
so much nitro' that the silver bullion inside was blasted into one
useless lump
He did succeed in robbing a train. But it was
the wrong one, at the wrong time and on the wrong track! Elmer got
away with a few dollars and a considerable quantity of whisky. Which
he drank.
The sheriff and his posse caught up with Elmer
at his employer's farm and his boss went in to the barn to talk the
tipsy bandit out. Strangely, he took in a jug of whisky and shared it
with Elmer.
Well, after a while the, by now, thoroughly
soused bandit sent his boss out to tell the sheriff that he was coming
out fighting (Is it any wonder?).
The resulting barrage was heard from far away as
Elmer was violently taken from this mortal coil and yet another outlaw
was "brought to justice".
The defunct Elmer was taken to the town
undertaker who did right by the body - embalming him and placing him
on display, fully clothed, in a corner of his office to await
collection.
As time went by and no relatives claimed Elmer,
he became something of a minor celebrity. Local children would
occasionally strap skates on the deceased and whisk him up and down
the highway - making him something of a street entertainer!
A few years later and some "relatives"
arrived to collect the long lost corpse. Unfortunately for poor Elmer
these gentlemen turned out to be from some sort of carnival and had
definite new career ideas for the Oklahoma outlaw.
As the years rolled by the mummified remains of
the badman from Maine were displayed as a cautionary sign of the
effects of drink, heroin, opium, lust and probably a few other sinful
pleasures as well.
Elmer appeared in posters, advertisements, stage
productions and even managed a little film work on the side.
The cadaverous career was brought to an end when
Elmer was discovered hanging by the neck and covered in luminous paint
in a tunnel of love (!) during a break in filming an episode of a 70's
tv show. The ensuing panic resulted in a full autopsy and the final
identification of the corpse of Elmer McCurdy.
Elmer was found to have eaten a last meal, back
in 1911, of beans, bacon and a large amount of whisky. Cause of death
was assumed to have been as a direct result of the large number of
bullet holes.
The poor bandit was returned to a cemetery in
Oklahoma and interred with full "cowboy" ceremony. They also
poured in a few feet of cement afterwards to ensure the wanderer
drifted no more!
His tombstone reads:
"Elmer McCurdy,
shot by sheriff's posse in Osage Hills on Oct. 7. 1911 returned to
Cuthrie Oklahoma from Los Angeles County California for burial, Apr.
22. 1977"
When
his .38-calibre revolver failed to fire at its intended victim during
a hold-up in Long Beach, California,robber James Elliot did something
that can only inspire wonder: he peered down the barrel and tried the
trigger again, this time it worked...
In
Bermuda in 1975 a man on a motor scooter was knocked down and killed
by a taxi. Exactly a year earlier the same driver in the same taxi,
carrying the same passenger, had knocked down and killed the
motor-scooter rider's brother, on the same street, riding the same
scooter.
In
Bermuda in 1975 a man on a motor scooter was knocked down and killed
by a taxi. Exactly a year earlier the same driver in the same taxi,
carrying the same passenger, had knocked down and killed the
motor-scooter rider's brother, on the same street, riding the same
scooter.
An
American tourist in South America had the decidedly grave misfortune
to be attacked by killer bees as he stood on the bank of the Amazon.
Seeking refuge, he leaped into the river - and was devoured by piranha
fish.
A man who shovelled
snow for an hour to clear a space for his car during a blizzard in
Chicago returned with his vehicle to find a woman had taken the space.
Understandably, he shot her dead..
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