From the Globe & Mail, Friday Nov. 28, 1913, page 8-
FREDERICK PENNY KILLED AT LAMBTON YARDS- was coupling cars; formerly worked in Allandale for G.T.R. and went over to C.P.R during strike. Crushed between two freight cars at Lambton, Frederick Penny, a C.P.R. foreman, was so seriously injured internally yesterday afternoon that he died within a few minutes after the accident.
Mr. Penny was engaged in coupling the cars of a freight train in the yards a short distance from the Lambton Station, when in some manner his foot slipped and he was pitched between the buffers as the cars came together. When taken from between the cars he was unconscious. Dr. G.W. Clendenan was hurriedly summoned, but before his arrival the unfortunate man had died.
The deceased was forty years of age, and leaves a wife and children to morn him at 55 Osler Ave. He had been a railroad man for many years and left the employ of the G.T.R. during the last strike.