Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SNAKES ESCAPE

MONTREAL OWNER BITTEN. [BY CABLE —PRESS ASSN. —COPYRIGHT.] MONTREAL, May 6. Three snakes of a deadly species are believed to be loose somewhere in Montreal to-day while their owner lay dying from a bite from one of them. . . He is Edward Smith, of Louisiana, who came to Montreal to exhibit the reptiles, which he had raised on his southern farm. He had kept twelve poisonous snakes in a cage in a room at an hotel, including an adder, which he attempted to treat for some ailment. The adder bit him and by the time he rushed to the hospital the poison had so far spread through his system that the amputation of his arm. where he was bitten, was of no avail. In fleeing from his hotel room, Smith left the door open, and three of the snakes are believed to have escaped. A municipal chemist, by the application of poison gas, killed the nine snakes in the hdtel room. A panic was caused in the section of the city where the hotel is located, as the police roped off the streets and permitted no pedestrians to approach, and also made a systematic search, for the reptiles that are believed to have escaped.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19360508.2.42

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 8 May 1936, Page 7

Word Count
205

SNAKES ESCAPE Greymouth Evening Star, 8 May 1936, Page 7

SNAKES ESCAPE Greymouth Evening Star, 8 May 1936, Page 7