Thirsty boy stuck in chimney trying to get drink

  • Welcome to "The New" Wrestling Smarks Forum!

    I see that you are not currently registered on our forum. It only takes a second, and you can even login with your Facebook! If you would like to register now, pease click here: Register

    Once registered please introduce yourself in our introduction thread which can be found here: Introduction Board


PeepShow

Guest
Christian Cage Sig. Request!!!

I think its time to have a custom made one since I stole my current one off of photobucket. LOL. Anyways:

*Theme: Christian Cage of course!
*Colours: doesnt matter, associate it w/ Christian though
*Person(s):Christian
*Text:Instant Classic
*Size:200x200

just make it look cool peeps!!! I will Rep!!
 

No More Sorrow

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 28, 2011
Messages
8,942
Reaction score
41
Points
48
Age
34
Location
Connecticut
WEST VALLEY CITY, Utah (AP) - An 8-year-old boy desperate for a drink tried to get into a neighbor's home by sliding down the chimney, but got stuck for more than four hours, authorities said.

West Valley City police Sgt. Robert Hamilton said the thristy boy climbed a tree to get onto the home's roof, then slid down the chimney feet first on Friday. The boy made it 30 feet down the chimney before he became wedged between the basement and main floor.

Hamilton said the boy, who lives several blocks away, recently had been in the house for a play date with a grandchild visiting the family who lives there. The family, who had gone out to dinner, returned home to hear a boy crying in the chimney, Hamilton told the Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret News.

"I was haunted by the fact we had this child in our chimney," said the homeowner, Richard Draper.

Because of the narrowness of the chimney, as well as its twists and turns, rescuers could not pull out the child with a rope, Hamilton said. They cut an 8-by-5-foot hole in a wall to free the boy, who escaped with little more than scrapes and bruises.

The boy "was surprisingly very calm on scene. His only worry was he was still thirsty when we got there," Hamilton said. The boy was able to move his arms, so rescuers dropped water to him.

A firefighter carried the soot-covered boy to his mother, who reported him missing earlier.

Hamilton said he didn't know who would end pay to repair the hole in the home