RUNAWAY ELEPHANT.
CHARGES A MOTOR CAR
A wandering elephant is a novelty in any city in the world, and may well inspire some interest and a little trepidation, especially when it emits unearthly noises and charges headlong at a motor car. -So there is some excuse for the excitement which prevailed for about half an hour in one of the quieter streets of Adelaide one afternoon a day or two ago. A travelling circus was visiting the city. How its favourite elephant managed to stroll out for the afternoon unperceived is a mystery. All that matters to those concerned is that it did so, and some hours later, as though by some instinct seeking the propinquity of its kind, it astonished passers-by and some few students at an adjacent school of mines, whose attention had strayed from their lectures to the pleasant afternoon prospect out of doors, by plodding and snorting along a street that abuts the Zoo. f°r a while people took merely a mild interest in the leisurely progress of the immense beast, believing that it had some association with the Zoo, and that its keepers were probablv not far °“ •. But events moved quickly. For their own good reasons no one ventured to molest the stroller, but one lecturer at the school of mines decided to ring up the director of the Zoo, Mr Minchin. He had just got into communication with that gentleman when a °! lc i cry a i' ose from the street and must have reached the director’s ear Bushing from the telephone to ascertain the cause, the lecturer was just m time to see the ungainly mass in a state ot supreme animation, charging across the road at a swerving motor car. It appears that Mr Minchin’s son, all unaware of what was abroad, was driving rapidly from the Zoo, and came suddenly upon the elephant. Something about the car, possibly fear that it was something about to attack it, roused the elephant to violent excitement, and in a moment the docile mountain of flesh was plunging towards the motor car with its° huge trunk raised as though readv to strike down and crush all before it. By a skilful swerve Mr Minchin 'avoided his i l ,. Vei ’ ,sar y, which went thundering blindly on till brought up on the opposite side of . the road. Well used to handling wild animals, Mr Minchin soon pulled up his car and ran back to where the elephant had turned and was standing snorting and lashing its trunk about with little eves flashing menacingly from its huge head. Fear! lesslv Mr Minchin walked straight up to the beast, which seemed to well understand this play of authority, and ottered no resistance! Ml- Minchin then seized hold of one of the elephant’s great flapping ears, and the creature was reduced onc-e again to complete subjection, and consented, without any further show of anger to be led off to the Zoo, where it was placed in safe keeping until its proprietors were ascertained.
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Bibliographic details
Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 11 September 1924, Page 7
Word Count
504RUNAWAY ELEPHANT. Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 11 September 1924, Page 7
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