The 1918-1919 flu was unusual in its ability to kill young adults.
Once inside the older enforcers kill three adults but a child runs out of the house.
This was not the case for the 1918 pandemic, which killed predominantly healthy young adults.
In 1966, a slag-heap fell down there, killing 28 adults and 116 children.
They drove south twenty miles, killed four adults on the bus, including the driver, then vanished.
After a siege of several days, the police firebombed the house, killing six adults and five children.
The firing killed 9 adults and 2 unknown children.
In 1736, an epidemic of throat distemper killed 47 children and nine adults.
While air bags have saved the lives of 3,800 Americans over the last decade, they have killed 125 children and short adults.
Spread quickly through contaminated water, cholera kills adults within hours.