Newspaper Page Text
i M 1 AUY
\. ;s Find Him a Hard Cus
~ tomer to Deal With,
"SOME SURPRISING ADVENTURES.
‘A Caollection of Entertaining Tales illns
trative of Bruin’s Sagacity and Ferocity.
An Adventure In the Arctics How &
Bear Fancier Came to Grief.
' Oneafternoon when lying off Bear island
#vo boats’ crews left the New Bedford
whaler Menkar for the shore, looking for
bears, walruses or whatever might turn up
and furnish the men with something out of
the ordinary, since there had been no
whales sighted for some time and life on
shipboard was getting monotonous. One
of she boats was commanded by the mate.
Immediately after landing the crew of
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¢ ; OVERSHOT THE MARK. ¥
‘this beat saw a number of white bears on a.
slight, snowclad eminence. They paid no
attention to the approach of the men. Cen
spicuous in the party wasa powerful old
- ghe bear and her cub. E 2
With foolhardy and crne*'reck‘lessness
the mate advanced and planged his lance
into the body of the cub.’ With a roar of
_ rage the old bear rushed at’ the nearest of
‘the men, who happened to'be a nephew of
the captain, named Pease. The latter fled
precipitately, with bruin at his heels and
his shipmates following as closely as possi
ble and trying to divert the bear’s atten
tion. As they had no firearms or other
long range weapons, their endeavors In this
direction were in vain. The race was a hot
one. .Occasionally the bear would stop a
moment and try to_strike Pease with his
-paw, and these brief interruptions of bruin’s
‘pace enabled the young man to. maintain
‘his ledd. G & !
- Thefr'course led them to theé verge of a
-precipice some 60 feet in height, and asthey
“neared it and eould see the water below the
mate eaught sight of the captain’s boat
“with geveral men in her but ashort distance
.away., In his despair be called upon the
men in the boat to shoot, but they seemed
‘bewildered and did nothing.
The next moment the two were at the
-edge of the precipice. The youth halted for
.a moment and then made the leap. The
bear followed without hesitation. Pease
landed on a projection about 20 feet down.
.sinking up to his armpits in the snow, while
bruin passed directly over him and struck
the water. The bear was speedily dispatch
-ed by the men in the boat, and young Pease
was rescued from his position, feeling nooe¢
‘the worse for his adventure,
. Lively Encounter With a Grizzly.
““The amount of lead agrizzly will take
into his anatomy without serious results is
-simply wonderful: I have seen an old: a 1
low-tairly filled with-lead-andstill bevin
, fighting trim,” said Jim. Long, an old set
“tler, of .New Mexico, to aChicago Record
cotrespondent. ‘‘A few yedrs ago,” he con
tinued, ¥F had a bunch of cattle over in the
Gila country. During our first two months
there we heard frofif vatious parties who!
had cattle near u& vhat bears were very i
plentiful and that one old grizzly had run
4hree jor four outfits; all of them having,
!nfi:?i to ki(fi her, althiough they had shot
hei)sévégm tipes,. ‘1 L
“One day | started out alone in guest of |
this grizzly. “l+was riding slowly along
v::gn 1 salg down’”aslittle grade four bgat;
feeding i ‘g gé a’:! dy % ‘g\mt\
thra.shing:fi * gy g?égae l her
ing thesnuts that ‘i,}]ey had not seem me.
My buisewa) an' 6 hunter, stéady as’a
rdets and. I, knew jthére was no|dahgep of|
his leaving me. Two large‘old fellows were ‘
feeding . close’ togéther | Slipping 'gently
from my horse, 1 let drive at one of t,.hem,w
aiming‘g{r thobupt ot hisgaf, ringi%g back]{ |
All this wasof course in less fime than
-can tell it. gyal b b o 2
“When the bear received my shot, which
was unfortunately tootow; striking-hinm in
the shoulder, he evidently thought for a
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rREfOwERE TrrisiAG ARobsD dATir- -
ING NUTS.
moient that the other bear had struck
hirw, for he hauled off and gave it a most
terrific blow, knocking it some 20 or 30 feet.
A stroke from a full -grown grizzly’s paw,
let me tell you, is po joke either, as a.griz
zly can a&xmmz&éfi.sflmu ‘ni A sd%gle’-
sweep of hi Wi Lh yscrambled to;
his feet inhfi%mxn;add‘? Jes him h:&‘ it
again as he rose, beeaking his neck ' (111
“The other, which was an old she bear,
started for me, and I opened on her. My
rifle % a 46, with chilled ball. With re
loaded shells, ns mine were, I used 65 grains
of powder, but I let her have it three times
4n the throat and once in the mouth with-
out stopping ner, and Sne was wirmn su
feet of me when I heard a noise to my left.
Glancing out of the corner of my eye, I saw
that one of the other heirs wis coming for
me from that side. There was no time for
thought. What was to be done must be
done instantly. .
“At dismounting I had dropped old Char
lie'srein. In an instant I gathered it up
and slipped into my saddle. Old Charlie
must have made about 20 feet at the first
lunge. J gathered myself together, and as
the horse circled around the last one I put
three bullets into him at short range, gut
did not knock him down. The old she bear
was following me up, grunting like an en
raged boar. I took another shot at her,
putting 8 bullet. right through ber heart,
but she still eame on, with the bloody foam
flying out of her mouth and the blood spurt
ing in a stream from her last wound at ev
ery step.
“I shoved in some fresh cartridges, the
horse keeping some distance ahead of ber
at a little canter. I could but notice the
expression of her great blocky face as she
followed me. It was fuil of a dumb rage
that was sickening to see, and her small,’
knowing eyes, now almost red, had a glint
in them that meant death. '
“She followed me fully 200 yards, grow
ing visibly weaker at every shamble, I had:
in the meantime taken a couple of shots at’
her over the horse’s tail. At the last she
stopped- and - lay down, too sick togo far
ther, but ready to fight still if the way she
looked toward me was any indication.
4 “Seeing it'was all up with her, I began to
look round for the second éne I had shot.
He bad dragged himself off up the slope,
leaving gwmbefigl him. Isoon
overtook him, and- a_shot, 1 ehind ¢he fore
leg settled his ma.“?‘fla&,fl t lay where he’
dmppd‘qng.a déad. Wheitl examined the
old she bear, I m&%@p § fan a dozen old
‘bulleg waq‘acg m&zyus&s doubtless the
‘oneé that had been the texrorof the country.”
. ANight In a Tree.
George Reese, an old trapperof the upper
Yellowstone valley, relates the following
as one of the closest calls that he ever had:
“] went out with my cayuse one day to see if
I cudn’t skeer out a deer. Didn’t have eny
luck at tall, so I wuz a-sittin down chawin
away on my bite o grub when all "twunst
I heerd Buster—that’s the scayuse—giv’ a
neigh and a snortlike, and he cum runnin
toward me zif sumthin wuz up, and when I
tried to stop him he jist rushed past like a
streak and wadn’t be ketched at all. Waal,
I didn’t ‘run arter him, but .made up my
min thet thar might be a b'ar‘or somethin
else lo’fin roun, and so I slipped up toward
a passel of bushes to fin ont what in the
livin natur’ the racket meant.
~“About the fust I know’d a hull gang of
big b’ars cum tarin out of the brush and
started lickettysplit rite toward ‘me, and I
hadn’t even time to shoot, fur they wuz
cumin in a mity big hurry, as zif a cyclone
wuz pushin ’em along: If Istuck to my
gun, 1 know’d they'd ketch me, g 0 1 jist
dropped the shootin _’g’eepun and. dug out
fur life. Ez luck wud hev it, thar wuz a
pretty fair sized tree near by, z I made
lightnin tracks to reach it, and when I got
thar I jamped and - ketehed hold of a pro
jectin lim’ and swung myself upin a bur
Iy, but the next minute them b’ars—five in
all—wuz agrowlin and snarlin and snappin
roun thet *ar tree 'nuff: to beat a hull men
agerie. B
“They believed they’d got me, sure, and
they looked up wicked like, as zif they felt
mity sartin; - Anyone o*the yarmints wuz
big 'nuff.to hév.chawed me plum to pleces
in asecont or two and bin fitein.mad ecawz
thar wuzn’t more. I got up in the forks o’
the tree; *bout 15 feet from the groun, and
thar I einehed -myself to wait thar comino
up. Them b'arsclim’d an clim’d till they’d
nearly git me, and then they’'d shake and
shake till ‘they rattled me so thet I e’en
a'most tho’t I'd hev to drop down among
‘em. But I contincod te hang thar and
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| STHOTGHT THEY?D GOT WE, S¥RE. | )
ho %Qn in ; i& of ’em till 1 really b’leelv;e
blans the'tel, wa witefast to the
i Iy gnaid e
they war bilin over with mad and didn’t
| want o give upithejob.) Sipobeif ¥ hedn’t
give them thar b’ars; <ome mity smart raps
on ‘the ‘snouts with ' & 'stick thet Pd ent off
the tree they might ey gotime anyhow fox
sartin. But jist as they’d git up to mie I'd
gi\ygiem sme powerful whacks on their
smiellers,sahd then they’d drop back and
wait awhile to rest their hloody nos
) "mfil.imn‘: &ir(ifldh- ym?l b’ieevlé ig,tthem
_thar_garnal bars kept me up thet tree all
the biggest heft of the afternoon, the huli
Bjghty and Htill pl ylights yl -__,qixt
or’] . &fli‘? Qaz 1 Yy en & )| ev
chz& biled] J;E‘gm %h 3 :tm
ont o’ sight T krocked césmn i foun )
} gun and took the ni’ ‘shute fur home.”
0,014 10l sty Lioe thw |
: ~_ Color.and Warmth. & 1
D Y& color bf 'matérials - has rome in-
Hfluence lon (thé warmtiiaf. the clothizg.
Black and blpg absqrh heat freely, fr'dm
; gfihofit. bg)t‘:jhifi q’nflrk}?ight shgtks(?)lf
Vellow, et “aré 'fur less’'abdorberit.
Thisdifferenve can bedemonstrated by
experiment. The sgxge.[m'ater‘ial,, whert
;fi)fid, vgittlrgiife're:pf colors, wik absérh
diffepént @mounts of -heat.' In hot coun
_tries white coverings are universally
worn, and sailors and others wear white
clothing. i lgt:r athdr. 17 )
Er’,x k’ho r, to(he*f\gi
off" from the bod colar of the ma
terials used ¢ idibifga makes little it
suy difference. * Red; flapnel, is, pppu
‘xé’fiymggfiaféa %Ay hlfcfdéfi)gt is
‘o’ bétter i ’t‘gfl cet- than similar
materials of eghal subspancy, but white
cr gray in color. Daikclothing is best
‘for eold weather, because it more freely
absorbs any heat that is ob:xnable.-
Foftnightly Review -
THE OLD VALENTINE, -
A souvenir of the bygone vears,
Breathing old odors faint as wn-k
Which roses spill in dew and du k;
Tts blazoned pazes dulled by tears;
Its faded Cupid drooping low, {
With broken wing and rusty bow;
A leaf of life turned old and sear,
Yet still she holds it sweet and dear,
For love embalms each simple line
Of that old, faded valentine. ®
She pores upon the cherished page—
.l A'lily past her morning glow,
But fair as in the long ago.
To such as she what matters age,
Whose love is ageless, and’'whose truth
Makes in her soul eternal youth? ¢
Still unforgotten kisses thrill
' 'With rapture her swift pulses; still
She cries: “How bright this world would be
Could you, O Love, come back to me,
As once my own and only mine,
My bonny knight and valentiue!
“The fault was mine—oh, hapless fatel—
To learn our needs and blame too late,
When prayer's and tears cannot atone
For wrong and sorrow dealt our own!”
But, 10, a tread of eager feet
Presages something strange and sweet!
He comes, forgiven, to forgive!
< “Sweetheart, to love that is to live, '
And love like ours can never die,”
Nor need to voice her heart’s reply!
More eloguent the dumb, dear sign
Of that long treasured valentine.
—New York Ledg~™.
! An Acrobatic Shine,
The man was tall and lank, with keen
bltie eyes, looking over a nose like a par
rot’s beak, A shaggy growth of uneven
whiskers sprouted in patches from hi:
face, and he wore a long. drab ulster
which partly covered a huge pair of muc.
covered topboots, into which were stuffec
the ends of a varicolored pair of overalls
With a badly worn carpet gripsick in
his hand he leancd against the wire fenct
beside the regisver’s office and called ¢
bootblack. ; .
"Two Italians responded, and each
claimed the customer, After a volley of
Mulberry street expletives each grabbed
a foot and set to’'work. The man eyed
them closely and elutched his grip a lit
tle tighter. In a moment the bootblack:
renewed their dispute, and in their ange
yanked the man’'s feet in the air. Fora
moment he poised, balanced on the wire,
and then with a whoop fell backward
upon the withered grass plot. A crowd
collected, and the Italians scampered off.
Their victim, with one bootshined anc
the other muddy, picked himself up
slowly.
“Gosh,” he muttered, “maybe them
‘ere fellers knowed I kep! bills in my
boots, or else they were durned hard up
fer worz.”
He ascended the steps to the bridge
and was soon swallowed in the crowd.--
New York World.
Must Pass In Hard Tack.
' In examining men desirous of join:
‘ing the royal marines recruiting offi
cers are directed to pay special atten
tion to the condition of the teeth of a
‘candidate. Seven .defective teeth, or
even less if ' they impair the biting or
grinding capacity, will render a candi
-1 date ineligible, and theexamining med:
ical officer is directed to take into spe
cial consideration the probability of the
teeth lasting.—London Court Journal,
‘ ; Overdone. 3
'A correspondent writes to a medical
review to claim that most of man’s
diseases are due to the clothing he
wears, There may be something in
that. The ballet girls never die.—Chi
cago Dispatch.
: Buckien’s Arnica Salve, a
| The Best Salve in the world: for
Cuts, B uises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Rbeuvw, Fever Sores. Tetter, Chapped
gHaan;’L‘hmhhin's; Corns and all
Skin ' Evrptions, and positively eure
Piles or 5o pay required. It is guar.
anteed to give perrect satistaction or
mouney refunded. Pilee 25 cents per
e e A
| "For '%ale hy T. D Sale. Drugris.
. /I -COMPANY b‘r;ggv,vqan" i
| RICHARD A. MCQURDY, PRESIDENT
For, the. year ending Devember :31, 11893
s 0e Hiw alare2gl 3FY rpstd aIE ac
'! {BlaattO A ‘lpcome YO D9l Y 8
| Recetved for Premiums < = $38,504,857 98"
|From all other sources - = 8,368,807 30
- $41,953,145 68~
'; Disbursemefits |
To Polleyßelders 7 < U 1 Tgoo,seb 14 40!
'For all other accounts - - 9,484,567 47
| $30,370,039 87
i é,
United States Bondssnd oth
R
oo S Y et | (T i) il e
Hoal AN Bt - T= 4 1 g"""
Cash in_Bawks id Trust Come = . Tl
[ i pan ‘.,.." - i‘:’ L.* S r 1.8
7 ) ";.i-«';i mgza“ ,8 % 89
' | " “*—"'éz %'l2
Reserve for Policiés -
Resgre e oo SRR, e
) | Surglat-v B ';.”»;,”s; lEO%s o 1
} =L T oY ¥ - ™ 2 ‘: Y q
‘lnsurance pnd Aljfijltfisf LAY
) | mnmeg a 3 renswed | §708,698,552 40
'Thfi’o'nzt—l ince mersly writt? is discarded from ufill:s
ment as whelly % only iasurance
R e
i e ———e ok
* I ki refully examined the, yinzrState
it SRR oy raiße
% AL v‘CHi,f_S A. PreLLER; Auditor
) | From e Serplep 5. Firions L iyampsionnd
§ GRS AT
WaLTER R GILLETTE - General Manager
Isang, F. Lcwvmd.,) ok W
| epERIC CrROM . £
Rore i o b A"
R, F, SHEDDEN, Geueral Agent,
- Atlanta®* Ga. ‘
LT JOHNSON'S
i w MAGNETIC OIL:
3 e Instant Kitler of Pain.
E%9 %=1 Internal and External,
. A Cures RHEUMATISM, NEURA).,
Lrw¥e OPWONNY GIA, Lame Back, Sprains, Bruises,
R e Shellicgs, Sue ;rlsint%hc?mc and
N N P MPS instantly. -
\\ : g) 8/ bus, Crnup,l)lpthg,rla, Soxmz
(. s g Ll EADACHE, as if by magic,
THE HORSE BRAND, E:pscialy prepared for
I
themoet Powerful and Penetrating Linimenttoflfiafi
or Beast in existence. Large $1 size 75¢., 60¢. size 4lc.
JOHNSON'S ORIENTAL SOAP,
Medicated and Toilet. The Great Skin Cure and
Face Beautifier. Ladies will find it the mMost
delicate and highly perfumed Toilet Soap on
the market. Itis absolutely pure. Makes the
¢kin soft and velvety and restores the 10st coms
?t'.éxlla?n ;it!:h;‘n]ux}lergn fggr ttl{l > aalth m(i. o
Vs . r, ¢ S BC
the growth of hale, Prioedo,. Farealoby o o
SALE-DAVIS DRUG CO., ‘
Dawson, Ga,
(a stamp) any reader of
THE _NEws can have a
sample copy of the South
ern Magazine by drcp
ping a line to its publish- .
ersat Columbia Building, ‘
Louisville, Ky, and ‘can |
obtain a club rate on the
_magazine and this paper.
by addressing the publish
er THE NEws. i 1
e e bt
| J
CAVEATS, TRADE MARKs
COPYRIGHTS.
A BTAIN A PATENT ? a
rgmfilg alnseer and an honest opinion, wrfi‘g to
RI UNN & Co.,who have had nearl&fltty years’
experience in the patent business; Communicae
tions strictly éonfidential. A Handbook of Ine
formation concerning Patents and how to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechans
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Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notic,e_ixllthe scientific American, and
tm are brought widely before the public withe
out cost to the inventor. This splendid fmme'r.
issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has b{ ar the
largest eirculation of an¥ scientific work in the
world. %3 a year, Sample ogyies sent free.
Building Editlonbxgontmy, 50 & year. . Single
cofpies, 275 cents. ery number c¢ontains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and ghotogruphs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to. show the
latest designs and secure contracts, Address
MUNN gn CO., NEW :ORK, 361 BROADWAY.
s . |
Notice to the Public!
.THE TAILOR,
Will make suits to order from $2O
ap. Pants from 85 up. My fitting
and work can bé compared with any
in the state. ‘
CUTTING,. CLEA’N’ING,‘
AND DYEING
Done on short ‘notice, ' Please come
and trv me. :
1. MINDER, The Teilor.
Cpp. J. W. Wooten’s Bunk,
e Dawson, Ga.
Columbus Southern railway.
Time Table No. 17 Effective Oct. 5, 1803.
SOUTHBOUND. *No. 1, | §No. 3. tNo. 8. ,‘
Lv Columbus| 600 pm| 7 45'pm| 6 30am’
Lv Richland | 729pm| 925 am| 9 10am"
Lv Dawson | 8:30pm|10 38 am|{ll 25 am
Ar Albany. 9 20 pmill.3o amy I.oopm-
Ar Thos'ville | 5 35:pn| 6;35 amg Q;S&gm;!
At Bruns'k 3 735%m| 735pmy 7 35am,
A% Jackvillé | 7 85° m| 7’35 pm| 7 35 am |
NORTHBOUND.| *No. 5 §fio4‘7 fi‘ o. _3’ ‘
Ly Jack'ville | 620 praf 6 20 pmaj 6 20 pm |
Lv Brunswick/..6 20 pm{, 6,20.pmj 6 20 pm
'Lv Thos'ville | 8 15am/ 8 15 am|.B I 5 zpm}
‘Lv Albany . [ll 35am| 3 15 pm| 2 43 pm;
Lv Dawson ' ' [1295 am} 4'lopm| 420 pm
Lw Richland [*l2Bpm| s'lspth 61&‘§‘r§'
Ar Golumbusi 3.00 pm}): 6:35 pw|'B 80 pm’
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| open the entire year—-griduates assisted N
~ For full ulars write to 10 positions. g
: , ~ WYATT & MARTIN,
{ Macon, Ga., or Montgomery, Ala,
Give Me a Call
! WHEN YOU WANT °
l Fine Cigars and Tobace .
’And Everythin Carried .n
‘ First-Classs Grocery Store.
I egrnestly ask a share of your pat
rovage, and pron.ise fair srd squar
‘dezling to all who favor ‘ne with
call,
Lewli
C.G.Lewis.
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i After the i
Qri 5
Jrippe -t
4 ~eig-Over
l If you wouldiescape the injurion. !
L effects that linger in the system and b
M restored to the full vigor of joyous i:
N health pleasantly, promptly and safely, '}g
use Ey ‘ E’
Royal Germetuer;
It is as pleasant to take as lemonade, n
harmless always and Cures when »
K all else Fails. - g
n $l.OO per bottle, 6 forss.oo. . All Druggists.
Manufactured aonly by
:a:KING'S ROYAL GERMETUER CO., Attanta, Ga,
L Roy&l Germetuer Cures La&rlpp;.x nnj
—SBSOLD BY— :
Farrar & Farrar
Dawson, Georgia.
IN ONE.
il BUSINESS, PCLITICAL
and FAMILY NEWSPAPER.
DON'T BE SELFISH! '
If you take a pewspaper it should
‘he one that mot only ‘you, but all
your folks will find pleasure in reads
ing. ot 3 L
s IEN LR
‘The Savannah |
Morning News
is that kind of d journal. s
It gives more real reading and news
matter than any other paperiin the
south. It is not the orgam of politi
cal crhnks or personal favorites, but
of pure democracy; ot low tariff and
sound currency, and of the economi~
cal administration of the state and
federal ‘governments, LR
It is independent in 211 things, and -
does not change its views"throug;fi fear
‘ot losing a tew subscribers by advoca
ting- what it knows:to be right, "
- Daily, every day-in' the year (365
pape_¢£), $lO, 6 months $5, 3 months
$2.50, 1 month $l, 1 week 25, cents,|
Daily, without Sunday News, 1 year:
£9.00, 6 months $4,00, 3 months
8225, "‘Stinday News glove, 1 year,
w: (. LI A ARIA 'l.“ 1,wj,.;,.."y’
. Weekly News, containifig’.’tbse.afé‘éfi{
of ithe Daily,:l year 125, b =l}
- We send the daily any thréadaya
in the week for half yearly rates. v /it
E .Ad o Yo auditAnsih 1 W el
b col T” L MJ,%N'.INQIGNEW&)M'i'&i“'
| R ' Savannaby G@a o 1
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B L Qaicie pnigiee o
3 ‘ Preo OANK rT
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