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DEATH AT THE WHEEL

TAXI DRIVER'S COLLAPSE,

LONDON, September 17

Miss Beverly Jackson, of Melbourne, who was a debutante at his Majesty’s Court last year, was the heroine of a tragic “West End taxi cab drama. While Miss Jackson was taking her truints to a steamer the driver of the taxi cab fell dead at the wheel in a busy steet crowded with traffic. With superb courage, Miss Jackson climbed out on to the running board, grasped the brake, and slowed down the taxi, averting, what might have been a very serious accident. Miss Jackson’s statement was read at tne inquest, and the coroner paid a tribute to ‘'this competent young woman who nut on the brakes instead of shrieking and fainting, as people did half a century ago.” “I am not given to fainting and shrieking” said Miss Jackson, in an interview: ‘‘l did the only reasonable thing.” “I. was taking my trunks to the steamer, when 1 saw the driver fall sideways. The vehicle, travelling at 15 miles an hour, was heading for a tree. I climbed on the off-side running board while the taxi was zigzagging across the road, put up my hand, slopping an omnibus, grasped the brake, and slowed down. A messenger hoy jumped on the other side and steered to the side of the road. “I was not frightened, hut I was disgusted by the morbid way people crowded round 1o look at the (lead driver. His death shocked me; T had never seen anybody dead before.” Miss Jackson, who has been educated in Europe, is leaving for Australia this week with her mother and stepfather, Major C. S. Cunningham.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19291002.2.64

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 2 October 1929, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
276

DEATH AT THE WHEEL Hokitika Guardian, 2 October 1929, Page 7

DEATH AT THE WHEEL Hokitika Guardian, 2 October 1929, Page 7

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