The weekly star. (Douglasville, Ga.) 18??-18??, January 06, 1885, Image 1

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t t * rn m .. „JL_ JBL- i v h. ?ol 71-110, 43, Bouglasville, Georgia, Tuesday, Jafiury 6, 1SS3. Sll *h QPvi* Ss.^ r^issi, Par* iwrii^ y«<’29jBia £ 6a binHu^n DRUiuJESK^SS Vur*d\in ita rterteN* IWt«t Deklrn for stimulants entirely removed Homo treatment. Medicine can be adminis tered without knowl.»*tfjrC of patient, by sim ply placing it, in coffee, tea or any Article of ood. Cures guaranteed. 1 wmw*w*: , m ^esaa^g^esxaiBeffstsm $100 Will be V'c For nnv c<se of drankorineiJR that Golden Specific will not cure. Circular* c/hilHinlns estimonUls and full particulars Bout Tree, Address eoi^«» sPKCttit es. '6&E85ITE8 Css? ^pf ’Kentucky TJuivtrsity, taxing ton, Ky. Bttoctw CD tjcfflu «ny wmOOj m 9*e year. No > 'c.ion. ! Tlaia tu ©empletu the FeII Dlplwna Business Oouroc >**out 10 1 ve*ks. Average Totsd Cost, liiolading Tuition, S»tof Bo ><J6 and • Beard in a family, $S0. Telegraphy a specialty. Literary ^urse ; tree. Ladles rweirefl. 5,000 successful graduates. 0\ -»r 600 pupils las* ve»r fro» lft to «5 roars of ago, from T& State, In- etruetion is praotioalir aad individually imparted by 10 tea«hcrs. Speeial ooarses for Teaohers and Business Men. Univn eity Diploma presented tolta graduatoB. This beautiful city is potod . for its ho3.lthfulr.esa nud eooietr, and 's on leading Kailn ads. ! Fall 3&6«io-n beijm« Svpt. %ih. herein Jars and full particulars, ; sdsh-c^itarrcstteat, WlEBCKB.i , £XTI£, kwelegtaa, £y. i Taj AS W. 1 A Til A, H.ito^siesr ®-t a w FiRBDRN, GKO. G1A. HI practice in ail the Courts 1/Oth State an ! Federal. Special attention given to suits ’ i ainst Railroads and other Corpo- ’ ri lions, ill attend regularly the Superior and other courts of Douglas county. I »|S. iigpNg " ttl 0TO31ACSS 1 Hostetter’s Stomach Bittera is the article for you. It stimulates the failing energies, invigorates the body and cheers the mind. It enables the system to throw off the de bilitating effects of undue fatigue, gives renewed rigor to the organs of digestion, arouses the liver when inactive, renews the jaded apetite, and encourages healthful repose. Its ingredients are safe, and its credentials, which consist in the hearty endorsement of persons of every class of society, are most convicning. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. A GBAUD COMBINATION TT. r W .R.O M.AC03Q1T S'KfU h*"f o antio y to c onsu e rn ? r fy i *s f--vior iiuira tionv- bo ••. i • . * / DP'Ni . :«* ma.-koc' Tit- OR-TogOi* mKhfo.y . i*-- Raijs’>i i rrg ours iv:t t,t> dwetVH t hi :* n o d'u' >, wg won hi requ^Rt tpe pure a -.y?; - to : ir. tbo rad lithograpifad tinctc- nn :ch u A y t:. d:. always port? *>«** -fv?,mi *Z Jt%■ ■ rh. In buying the y:m pay an much for aa inferior article aw t ho genuine co<t.*. Ka CUItfiJ YOU OBTAIN Til E GENUINE. i i ). i [ 1 j ' a 4 .) 1 > ' j L 1 &»1) TIN-TAG FbUG TOBACCO,. iCb« Pineal Stvfcet Navy Ch^wdjv; Tobacco m*. lag Genuine aiwayn be rn a i‘-*d TirTrug rriih our J8" «?£»>•«: The best Political, and Family newspaper in the United States with the beet Agricultural Journal, and a Rood reliable Watch for but fifty cents more than the price of "Watch alone. The Weekly Courier-Jo?:rr?a! end the Beuii-Monthly CToiuc and Farm, for tlie pur pose of adding- lOQjOOO Now {Subscribers to their lists in the next Tour t^wL-tli^rnakethe following- U n PAR A J^IaELE l> OFFER : the two papers one year and the Waterfoiiry Writeb, for only. 84® See the reduction mad©: COMBINATION OFFEIL Watcht for osiiy 84 RTSOUIjAB prices. Courit-'r-fcvmai.... $1 6fl Home and S’arm.... !,<- Waterbury Waich .. 8 50 @£.50 rsrTfce TWO t PAPERS and t the WATCH 9 for only mune rbereon. / MS .-Ncr ■ ■ *?■* « Wb ' -• ASf f»s " .... -t • v. • • ... . % Ns-» ' 4 ' ' ' M *a*/#'-, rp'- S y; A;' -v ^ i & '3: w-:~ *■ '-x .... A-N ,y'’f; c '<v' . v: J. It ... > N'vi -v v '^ 3 ' " ' " The CoarSer-Jourtml (Henry Wattorson Edi tor in Chief) is; an nncompromieingr enemy of mo nopolies, and the spirit of subsidy as embodied in THAI THSE¥W«G TARIFF!' JtrfsXoo well kiio^vn to render it necessary to apeak of its character as a public news and family journal The Home fund Farm has the largest and moat attractive list of contributors of any agTicui- tural paper in the country. Ita columns are do. voted exclusively to Agricultural and Home Topics. Every ohaso of Farm life depicted and commented on. It id made by farmers for farmers. It treats Household matters extensiyaly, and is in- diagerusablfe to e very housekeeper. The WATHiUiUIty WATCH sells at the manufactory for Sfc&.foO- and isjwidely. known as • the best ever placed bciovo the public. For only Watch ium! live p^persi one year, be sent. Watch to one aciuresH, and paper# to another when so desired. The Watch, under this offer, will cost $1 less than, it can be bought for at the manufactory. Courier* Journal and Home asid Farm, without watch, will be sent one year for @1.50. Sample copies Kent free of charge. Subscriptions can be sent to either W. N. IIALOEMAN, Pres. Courier-Jour nal Co., Louisville, Ky., or B. F. AVERY & fc JNS, Publishers Home and Farm,Louisville,Kyv * y- V v ; ' noi;<y i.J hs?s\«V&& « GA. v-.l ^ LiVti* *iv'< % xhibirhd. j t- k 1 ods tip; Can..,. fee tj o FANCY” ill I )..Htp ; will beabl»f in ivi a-lso runs V,i* ;-x 1 , X> - -:'i, ' <* X t i V .&j» .. X■ > • ifi b iCv:> ; ure -:?r » -mi la • or sti.ior;p, Mia, 8€6 hi tfi wi.uj« .y ou «?; -f . ■ :y* -f • v. Are y.)u disturbc<! :e- uii-hf. and br^'--> - • your res) by a r-cLc .iid Su':!'«‘r,n.j .: , rv j v ’ witii palo ofcui.tiiig r.ee.v.ii? ii 8-.i, «onu',AtolS and get ;t bott-le oi M»>. v\ iuslow's ;s >o 1 h’o^ Syrnp lor ‘"hUdrcii Tee: liing, lu value tsinl ca. cufablft. It. vvitl relieve tie p.»-ir little su - ferei-uumcdmtely. D.peud upon it, methl erf, there Is no mistake about, it. ft cures dy..emery and diurrii.iea, regu-ates the st«m.. sell mid .moUs, cures wjtei eol i.-, soneus til- r-alue- Kletlaniiiisiti-uii, und gives 1 tone a all prtorgy t,.> the whole system. Mrs Wi-us- low s .Sootlii::g S;, ru|.- I,,.-" t . ti.j is pleasuiil. to tha taste, and is ihs'.-rewripti-m of oueofthe old si a».d be. t letau • minw'. «W phy sicuius in the United Huh s, ; , n a ;.,r s-. v. *. diuggikts through.,u. the w, . p,-,e i&,■ji nn.. OKI { v fSTIR, ! /4WN /3p\ . U&c -■Biw* »#I(iUsnUB, «A. TUESDAY MORNING, DEG’R. 30. 1884 THS MAJi.-E'ASBR OF BOSAYPCSIi. 5>vt)curSn^ ' id, by the ■ Iffl (111 m ?S ;sS ' IgL jf&r *° g: S- ml 1 ... m -- ths 2 BESTTOeliSL ? This medietne, combining Iron with purs Yegetfi.blo tonics, quickly and completely Csires Uyrprpsd«<. ? Aw«Ufe-estii^«, WeakH9S«« 2 in i>«re BSood, fi2^Utria»Ciiilia am! I~evora-? K.aui Nc-rKral&d«.o . . «... j t ik an uni ailing remedy for D^easescf tho 2ild?s«ys ami SiWci*. ... It is in valuable for Diaea^es pecuuar 10 Women, ami all who Mad sedentary lives. It doe* no.t iihuro the teeth, cause h mu’ache, or , p’-oduce constipation—other Ivor, wediewe* do. It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates tho apoctitc, aids the asMy.iilation of food, rc- liayeH f-Teartbunr and Belching, and strength ens.-the muscles and nerves. For .in tor hi ill ent Fevers,^ I Jicsituae, uiCii oi Energy, &C., it lias no eqimi. The genuine has above trade marV and ijroKs,td ied' lines on wrapper. Tike no other. 5... • ■ ••"» v ( HKSUCAl. 00., BALTISOFvK, 5»Tv w WiIl the coming- man smoke ?*»■ was set tled by Prof. Fisk in his charming pam phlet. Ho says, moreover, that the rational way to use tobacco is through the pips- All agree that only tho beet tobacco should be used. Which is the best? That to whioh Nature has contributed tho most ex quisite flavocs. Blackwell’s Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco fiii3 the bill completely. Nearly two-thirds of all the tobusoo,grown on. the Golden Tobacco belt oi '-North Caro lina goes into the manufactory <yt Blacli- woil, »t- Dfirhiui. They'.buy the pick of t the ontiro ncction. Hence Blackwell’B Bull Durham ^ Smoking Tobacco is the best of that, tobacco. Don't be deceived when you buy. The Durham Bull trade- I ra&rk is on every genuine liackage. Dlack-'vcirs Gomiifte Bu^Darham ifi tho choioe o? as or ' Smoking Tobacco ! Aooonliag totlieir habits in 1 tfcelr fbod, “%on, are divided, by ! ]>eo.t'le! of India, into three classes. The * j least harmfuiis the ‘’garats-kilter,” who • I lire.? in the hills e-nd dense forests where ; game is .abundant and leads the life of a ; Sold, honest hunter. Be feeds chiefly ; u(.K>n deer and wild-bogs, retreats readily i from man, anfejaA'i** «•“ he remains a i game-killer, he is « rent blessing to the I r yots who have hard work 1 to protect I their crops from the droves of deer and j wild hogs. I The '•oattfo-ilfter” is a big, fat, lazy . I thief, two indotoisb to p,,l! down • fleet | footed wild animals, vho prowls around 1 the Villages aficr nightfall, or the edge j of the jungles where the cattle are I herded, and kills n bullock about every | four or fi ve days. The annual loss to th« cattle owners, wlwnw herds are thus preyed upon by cattle-lifters, is very great, since each tiger destroys, in a J year, cattle worth about four hundred' dollars.,,; __ I But even the most industrious cattle- ! lifter sinks into icsigaificance in tho presence of .the liorce ‘•maw-eater,” the scourge sis! terror oi the timid and de- : U. useless Pftiivos. Until a tiger has ooce : had his fan ip ia human flesh, he baa an i iostmotive fear o- : man, sad unless : brought to bay will nearly always re- i treat from bis pnascitce. i5ut with his | first t«ate of hcrinan iii,«>d that-fear van ishes forever. Hi- u’aiure changes, and be becomes a rmus-rat-r. Tigers who p-< -i;- vy-.m human beings are usually old - ■ . lifters, who, irom long ao'juai»,t<”ioe with • man, hav« ceased to £e«r him, iwvd find him the 'easier t prey to overcome and carry off. J worked A large proportion of the man-eaters are Kiangf, bOifcriu nuat^fc old .tigers or .tigresses /whose teeth fead claws have become blunt from-long! us^e, and who find it too great an exertion to kill and i drag ofv bullocks. ’ Tii auke ».Aly knew "the old man-eater oarne sad toot a man right ou6 ©f Berayposa, and got away with him. Then warn hi® p«tches of thick Jangle aQ whoGfc, asm for all the natives could do the three was s&fo enough. They hadn’t a gun of any kfud that they could have khuod him with. , “I went out three times, I think, with a lot of good trackers and boaters from the villages, and we tried our best to bag the brute, but he was too smart for us. “Yi’eK, things went from'bad to worse, until finally one day a party oi men came up here post-haste to bring me word that the night before the man- eater had actually carried off the grow’tt- up daughter of the headman,, ci ■ little village close to Dorayjxire. She waa seized on her ow n door-step, Just after dark, and carried off rigid; before he* mother’s eves. The headman begged l*w*»^«s»y-irwgiwr XaVv. rars, nlOUttt' WfTtlid &c#M. t® fep&Ah# freofy. At la«4'vi%'»nare KM t» I &wvr.j.J him Inn tita aa<»B«Srt be kft tb® thsdket, wwl when be ws» withm forty yards of *«, I aimed at his cheat to make urn's, m»d fired. Down he went in an instant, roaring a«d growling horribly, biting and claw ing in every direction. Quick as pos sible I gave him the second barrel, and tried to reload. I could scarcely man age it, for by that time my hands shook, as though I had the palsy, and I trem- j ekcsitwrncsnt. I was bled all over wit! «: I only a youngater thou i Theobald, with, an apt j “Well, another si-.oi i and then you shpulo r j citement and joy, as ! came running - up, un5 ■ know,” said •logctlc smile, ended ;,.e brutey ,.-.ve scon the ex-, the whole gang gathered around, nearly tickled to. I never saw men so death as those 'fellows were. They - , . , —. crowded around that , dead tiger, and me to come down andtry once more to , abused him fr i ffh tfuUv in the most ab- Vi CM, of course I dropped gurd wfty8 , d ! r , in his mouth,. kill tho brute. everything, got my rifle ready—1 bad only doe good one than—and went down to Dor&vpore. “The villagers had marked him down as closely as they dared in expectation of my coming, and they knew' very nearly where he was, so early the nest morning with a dozen of the "host trackers, and about fifty beaters, wo net out. I heard afterwards that all tee ! rest of the villagers went to their tern* {. plbs that day to ask their gods to give us 'I good luck." ■ perpel •<Tho trackers soon led ns to a largs ; Thev t piutreg beating him with their English sportemon, end improved liPHirais, man-eating tigers arc now -rare compared with wft&t. their miml.'era once weap. It is not po.ri;!4>j r.oryfor c single tigress to otsue«rthe.desertion of.-thirteen villages ti*d :hr.■-.••• ^i.(.-u:t;v.u.:oa a tract of country SB ,v i; X' -* "i jsyaercypi once oc- c«r£<)4; b«h' '<y *;u>v; ihrcsl and ■ r - -jsfcy e- ■r to kill one bun- ■ p-a-soHs before -B-n, H t&vr'.-nrv $ I %0 i ‘ i If 1 m t&£>* IfS a^r^i- ■ V li. .VV i,i LCianaiid'Sn Cf F EGTAL r\\ Ufii oni-: F- S ] V4, li on giv <‘ii ile tr.-ubles. '•fit m-p - i Lj£i l « ■' O’-OH . YEA^S a is tzMt 'Airt'-r-:aniV.-w—rei Tho Greatest Kegical YriapipU of the Ago! ■ SYM?ISsSC? A TGKF1D LITER. t«K ef avoetltw S*w*l» eoetivw rirtah the vritti a. dull seosatloo in tlie b^.ej[ jKtrt, l*aSa *nd<!T sh® ofcosliev* bS&dffl, STalineBS after eatiae, with &di»- Inc»ts;,-it{i3» to exoriiaE of Sio;Jr pr4ilnd, In'slej.ii 1 ity ©Ifcieipef, Lew as-5rttisi, wtik L fcclfc.e«t'hr,vi*tf nee’eatoa «o*uo fhs*v, "Wd'2itr5s&€5«s» Uific»S'acfi®* X?lKSt©i*ffisr zs-t liznru hvUii'Vthe 07-1-3, Kon^ncSio Gvar the rlarfct ey® 9 2S.-efttU'3S»0»s^ witfe Bifnl JrcKsr.s, Hlzhly C'Avrsil &*&■ TVTT’S viiVJLare m^ecipXlf a^arited to such cfi-sc^., on-©, -doe© ©ttect r> such & o'-vv ' ' fA pNvfv^citW' C6U3Q the 1/V-r b>'T;i(h- on V F'-FO-- > iB.lv- ft© *•'0'0. la byihoir ^e^.o Mrtiop. on tho Stufestive I'todur".d. 'Price 55Cp«Co -4-^ M'riwa.r Kv.-.H • at q III I ill, GRAT Haik or WmSKZBQ changed to a GION;NT Black by a sing!© application of this DTE* It imparto aniiEarai. color, acts instantaneously. Sold _ by Druggists, or sent by oxprc&s on receipt of $n.* > , cm6o* 44. Murray St, 9 pw Yom- AYEE’S Sarsaparilla Is r highly ceti'e'.'mrnt'.*-'- estmet of Sarsaparilla sell other bloo<5-pnrtiying roots, comhiaod with. I-.etUi.? of Hotas- slum and Ir®3i, aad Is the safest, most reli able, and most econcjniral blood-pnrlfior tiiat can be used. It invunChly expels all fciood I>o!sons from tfce spsleai, anriohes and renews the blood, and restore* Its vltuihdue powe». It is the best known remedy for Scrofula end all Scrofulous Complaiats, Erysip elas, Effiosaj, Bingworin, Blotches, Eeros, Boise, Turn:ora, and Eruptions of tlio Skin, as also for all di&OTders caused by a thin end Impoverished, or eumipted, eonditicuof fas blood, mob as E&eatuatisni • Ifeuraigla, Kheamatie Goat, Gsrsera® Bobaity, esad Sorofulou3 Catarirb., ..- IfifSapsistoF? tematlsi Coni “Ayku’s Sabbapabh.ua has cured me of .the Inflammatory Ithesunatism, with vvliich I have suffered for many years. W. H. MOOSE.f Durham, la., March 2,1882. PBBTABBD 1!V Dr J.C. Ayer&Co(, Lowell, Mass* Sold by all Druggists; ®1, six bottles for §5, b.jtkh sporfomcn and brcRch-loed- rifica, tire n‘ce.ti-ew».-iv still devour WS? cm ® Jpg over eigbi ht-.nctrcd human beings in fcdia ever}' yeer. It its but BJ-Uural that in the tiger country one shofihi near mwny very in- teittsttag tiger stories. It once hap- poj.M>i tiuit at the does of a glorious day’s bittoii-shooting on the Animullai HiHe with my old friend, Theobald, we sat before a cheerful camp-fire in the jungle over our chocolate and svveot- nxwfcs, -«ith our native followers ali atioiit as, • ditsucsing the events of tfbeT da}-'. i *Dtd.l>ou mm kUl & man-e»ter. Tiuco- patch of thick, matted jungle in which the tiger was thought "to be lyiiig. W« posted several men uj.- ,u trees to watch the tiger whenever he ran and mark him down. After.getting, up a little, low, scrubby tree with two trackers, close to a the point where we thought the tiger would break cover, we gave tho signal to the beaters at the upper end of the if thicket and the beat began. The men along slowly, keeping well together for safety, not making too much noise, but quite enough to scare any tiger. The beaters worked along the edges of the pr.tch, and before they had gone more that half Way down, the man-eater skulked out of the bushes at the lower end. .1 expected him to coma close to my tree, and he did start for the nearest cover which was beyond us, just as we thought, he would, but before be got within anything like, fair range, he "suddenly changed his course, and made- off rapidly i-i am uhe*- direction: He twigged us, you , and d >rop..,.;od to give'its a good wide run-th. 1'dvew tip ami blazed away at him as he ran—just for luck—one barrel after another, but taking all disadvantages together, I missed both times, and tins brute boitod off at a lively spit, growling as us until he disappearou. “After that we had to track him, and it was nearly three hours before wo filially lodged him is another jungle patch. It was about the hottest part of like to move, but This irecfeelv where wo sticks, augi call ing him by all the bad names they could think of. “After they had relieved their ings in sn<eh ways, they made a lifl poles, put the carcass., upon it, a- started for Do-ray poye. ;It umphtil march. ,. The pe<jpl^t!ohked out of the vil-iages we pas.-cit-fo see th® dead man-eater,land urwrfd.ve the sahib for his grand ■kill. / ti«d above ail. to make sure the tigoj; tiiO\ -had So long 'lived iq tual feitr of,-Giyas' really dead, y said that T was their father, theit Taafeod i»K5*swtly. it, trauH roof" rest. “Had he> mber rightly, si brute in his day! heu.un toe ufty, anu til- time he came out thought Iwj wouktn beaters finally drove him out. mid being cicar iuothar. lord bf tho earth, and don’t know what all else. “I cut off the head of the tiger, and stuffed it to keep as a trophy; it is still (it my brother’s bungalow in Madras, The Government reward I claimed, nud gave to the widow of the poor herds man whose death, enabled us to slay hi* slayer, and so that was the end of th« Doraypore man-eater.”—William X% JiotTMday, in Youth's (k/Mpanioa. We be?an hand tug!'., ri. • existence ;i few months a^->. .. i- hear'l r wo, d of tlissafisl\»ction Liti ve toUs inevitp, but ha^e h extra.vagan.liy praised by f.'ii->s HOiv\ r .\.K i mm nioii tbs :.s‘ p. om- K^T¥fT? V- *> h ■ v f ; kif , S» te i ichi iS ; J~ • 1 .ike perspiracu s •.i-rf.u?fti-njr 1 m-is \v -re craw bn-j. oiea.iiiiit, si;.e . •• •* v •>* **■» dt »is w r e ; intense itching worse by’ : ni^bt, seems if pi,!- .vorviis >'v:tiub .- Ui.itn,. lit’ is a > r sifsikbav i. i.nll 1 ot-airbig t.’fra Dvr"siouiciK«s»d sbrir ad«r?n«, ;• iidvftfiTBEe. I ’ i< not ft trv.Wh., I'-ui'l artj >'hyilstr. i\ >- tI49 fell tihoVf, saki I, with hungry interest. tcm*f people to. aeoon.nt for?” '•TVn-S&an, if I remombe; Ah, he was a farnd They called hir-.; the ‘Man-eater of Dor- aypowt' That wai. several years. ago, Bad 1 war; quite a youngster then,” lie added, with a- Smile, as '■ - ytrekto t,i s king, jet-’oiack beard. “Do you r(tally want to hear all about it?” ' Yes, evervtliing you eaa wimb- ber.” Well, tlie Doraypore man-eater was the terror of a little village of that mate, and several other villages, too, for that matter, light down below here, not fas from the £ oofof this very range. W@ had a small tfc&fffer depot there onee, and I used to rim down, to it every two or three weeks for a day or so at a time. The re'were plenty of cattle int ers about and ever eo many cattle killed, but they were cheap and nobody' made any great fuss about tigers until one fiKe-t&VSMfi"d5" tShrifrutes mad© a mistake and earrfbd off ft herd-boy iu- stead of a bullock. “Then there v. as a great scare. It wasn't so much the loss of the herd-boy that the people cared for, for ow Mtttim more or lose don’t fi;alter nusn-n. belt you know wi-icii a, tiger onc-c borons to e«t mco, somehow fcd never stops until ixi gets a dose of cold lead. “feure euougig it wasn’t long after that until two or t);rcc wood-cutters were picked off at the edge of the jungle; and then the iirnte got bolder, came out nearer tho villages, and carried off two or three wotyen. “Mind you, all this wasn’t done to any one neighborhood, but in half a dozer different localities, sometimes miles Rpa.it. One evfeaiug the brute might be seen near a certain village, and perhaps before the next morning he would poutfte upon some pioor wretch, five or six miles off*. “When the people sesw what a reat- ie« and hungry brute that fellow was, vou have*no Idea-how badly scared thoy were. Why. it whs -ft perfect'reign of terror in half a dozen villages cr more nobody felt ftdtt for ft single day. Most of the cattle-herders refused to take their' ctittle into the jungle, anymore either for love or money, ami the poor brutes nearly starved. No wood-cut ter dared go into the jungle either,- lor ! would be Jiterally walking into tho laws'of death. Men did not dare to set foot into tini jungib except in pai - t.c3 of 8dozen w more./ “Of course the people stopped going -i-t after night, bur the. first thing ary: out of our roiufli, he skulked off without say even firing at him. “He led us & Sa@ chaste th* rest of tbsst day unfcii iafce in tii© afiernoon. drtsi-sg we W6T© talUag shout giving %%> hsusi for that day, and gsa-ng hsow, ovm oi the mc.rkor* in & tad Uvw nearest th© Wife got terribly excited about mk© thiag, and began to wave his arms aborts like a maniac, and yelksd out to ua, pointing toward the jungle in the direo- tiou the° tiger had gone. Presently w« saw a cloud of dust oil tlsat way, aad a little later a herd of cattle, rushing I wildly along a road leading from the jungle toward Doraypore. We supposed the cattle had met the tiger, and st““- p®ded oa ffeo spot. As quickly as ho could, the marker slid down out of his tree, and came running toward as at tlie top of his speed. He earue up panting and perspiring, and what do you think had happened?” “I haven't the least idea.” “Well, sir, he saw that brute of a tiger actually kill the herdsman, who was driving that herd of cattle, and carry him into a little patch of jungle dose to tiie road! The marker said we could surround the thicket the tiger was in if we could get there before he loft it for the. continuous jungle, and we eagerly caught at that last chance. I picked out about twenty men, and we j started across the open country on a I dead run. When we got within sight of S the thicket, we saw it was of about three acres in extent. After giving directions to our little handful of beaters I took four of the trackers who were armed with spears, and made a detour to get into the belt of jungle without;, being seen from the thicket. Once in, tvs worked rapidly down to the point oppo site the thicket. At the edge there waa nothing but low bushes about seven or eight feet high, no tree half large enough for us to have climbed into to shoot from. “It was a foolish thing to do, I sup pose, but I determined to stand right there, and for once get a good, fair shot. Tho Hikers thought it very risky, but they promised to stand by me, whatever happened. So I took rnype* eition in .the tdge of the bushes, posted the trackers close behind me, gave tho signal, and the-beat began. “Fighting tigers on foot Is amfious business, and I had hard work to keep my hands steady while we watched lint we had not- long to wait. ifvo minutes after the beat, began, By. bow trie tiger's face peenng cautiously out of the bushes at tuc end of tse toieket opposite us- He saw the men in the trees, and felt that he could safely ptwe between tl>o-;u. lie walked out of ©over, | and skulking low amongst the stunted ! bushes, at a swift trot made stiaigbt for 1 where we were standing. He got over rvoor..; ViM-.v V- te-to -■ - ■- - We have been hantUiiijt B. B. B. on months and twite jolnas^re in saying -ersediiiii all other Blood B-erriedies, wo!i, gives our c.ustoniers entire -ati and we cheerfully vecoiiuaead it -; eiiceto* iuiyobor Blao.u Pursier. ■vdiliidh X U ■.• UjZ^ Dn. B- d i u M ANN 9B PI. A B.1M A OY Atlant a, Jane 10,, lstti. :i nc . I have began handling the B. 13. B«. wbieii is about tinveor font* mouth i it grows so mud:, in pe-prdarH;. ^ and its sales in cr ed so much, that 1 nave to buy it in grosf lots* H s : i - (i u ; ra-ij: ,. t o p. i ; a ^*p i-P xae ino^t popular Weekly news* J . paper devoted to science, mechanics, en* . gineerinir, discoveries, inventions and patents- p. j &vor published. Every number illustrated with splendid » nzravinc\s. This publication, furnishes. . a most valuable encyclopedia of information which- ' - do ; ' rt should be without. 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