HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-7-4, Page 7AN . `AWFUL ADVENTURE
Desperate Struggle of a Woman with.
Huge Specimen of the 'Gator„Family,
Maly $ane end, I•
a I wag out lash night •in the orohard, a-belkin
to Mary Jane,
Leanin' over the gate at sundownwhen the
gal happened up the lane.
She kind c' .stopped short when she saw me
—"Good evenin', warm," she said;
While her•oheekstook on a colour like the ap-
ple bioseome overhead.
Tho Monster Saurian Seizes a Utile Gi
and Drugs tier Toward lits Watery Iaie
A family named Lembert, living on Lek
Charlet' Apopka or Taal& lake, as it is 'relied
reperts a very thrilling experience. Th
family is composed of Mr, and Mrs. Lumber
and threephildren, two boys and a girl baby
the boys being 8 and 15 respeotively and th
girl just able to toddle about, They move
there eome two years ago and pre ompted
:homestead on the south side' of the lake, Th
muse is built about 200 feet from the lak
nd on a alight elevation, the•land in fron
• to in down gradually ua 1 to the water
y s edge
At the left, off'eome little distance, in an int
mens saw grass pond.
Near this Mr. Lemberb built an inolosur
for his pigs, one side faoine the lake, an
up to a month ago he had a megnioent to
,of porters. One. night several week
ago he heard a tremendous uproar i
his hog pen, end hurrying out with
his shotgun and lantern, he was. jus
in time to see one of his fine hogu•dieappear
ing in the lake in the mouth of a huge all
gator, while the snores of balls of fire seen”
GLITTERING IN THE nARICNESS
on the lake showed the. presence of others.
From that beginning their inroads were
kept up with great regularity, and though
he killed a dozen or more the pork was too
nice for them . to relir quish 'their feeding.
ground. Lately they have grown so bold as
to crawl into hie yard in daytime and the
predatory raids of these marauders on hie
hogs and fowls have rendered Mr. Ltmbert'e
life a burden.
A recent adventure, however, of two
members of his family with one of these'
dreadful creatures has ao;terrified the farmer
and so alarmed hie entire household that he
is seriously contemplating abandoning his
plane. One Saturday afternoon a short
time ago Mrs. Lambert, who was in .the.
back part of the house, was. attracted by the
screams of her little Girl and frantic oriee
of "Mammal Mamma 1" Hurrying to the.
front of the house she could not at first' lo.
crate the little one's whereabouts, but,her
piercing Gores= continued and'the almost
frantic mother soon discovered the flutter
of her ohild's dress near the lake shore, the
palmetto bushes nearly hiding her from
view.
Snatching up an axe•froni a woodpile she
flew to the water's edge, and as. she rounded
the palmetto patch a sight' burst upon her
that nearly drove her crazy. Oa the edge of
the. b ink, with its body half in the water,
was a huge alligator, its forepaws ont-
'stretohed, raising it from the ground, while
fits tail lashed the water into foam. Just` in
Arent of it and clinging to a palmetto root
with her tiny hands for dear life was the lit.
els girl, her dress being held in the jaws of
the alligator, who was slowly dragging the
,ohild. The alligator's dull eyes gleamed
with anger
.1
e
t
e
r
e
d'
a
e
e
t
e
and
t
s
n
h
t
LTEE RED COLLS Or TIRE,
and when Mrs. Lambert appeared the mons-
ter uttered a hoarse bellow and started baok
ward, tearing loose the ohild'a slight hold.
'T'he,latter's infantile features were, drawn
into an agonized appeal, and as the animal
dragged her down she was too completely
paralyzed with fear to even ory out.
The peril of her baby banished all fear
tram Mrs.,. Lambert and she rushed up and
struck the saurian over the head- with the
ax, and seizing the Child with both h'a'nds
tried to pull her away. The sharp blade
out into the alligator's eye, and, mad tet'
pain he opened hie iiw end • half sprang at
the women. This 'left the child free and
they both fell .backward. Mrs.: Lambert
said afterward w rd thett at this. moment she
never expected to .save her life As she fell
the alligator awang around his tail with a
terrible sounding whisk, but the fortunate
fall of the two just plaoed them outside its
deadly sweep. The alligator advanced as
-far-as it could with its, unwieldy waddle and
Mrs.. Lembert attempted to rise andlesoape.
Her dress caught on.a root and before she
oould get up and free herself the alligator
made a snap ab her and missed, catching
hold of her dress instead,
Finding that it had eecrired something it.
commenced backing towards the water, drag.
,ging along the prostrate woman, who now
*fully realized her peril and filled the air with
cher ories for help. She frantically clutched
at the roots as she was dragged over them,
but her dress was of stout material and the
alligator's strength soon overcame her feeble
)resistance." Suddenly with a heavy sink-
, Ling of the heart she felt that her foot was
in the water and that if no help came she
was
boomer) •r0 A TERRIBLE pEd.TII,
The horror gave her strength for a ihoriteil '
and she made another frantic effort' to free
/herself,' but it was in )vain and she felt her-
self drawn into the water.
•Suddenly her hands, which were nervous•
11 Clutching at everything andanything
that seemed to promise Supp )rb, passed over
the ax handle. With the ` swiftness of
+thought and with superhuman energy she
seized the helve and scrambled up and, how
she can not say, she mtnaged to deal the
'gator a heavy blow with the blade. With
rare good'fortune it struck his other eye and
'crashed into the head. The maddened and
wounded reptile opened its jaws with a roar
•of pain and rage and. Mrs. Lsmbert's dress
'slipped off its huge teeth. ' Scrambling up
she seized her baby girl and flew wildly to
the houee and fell on the porch in a dead
tfalnt. .
fler'husband on returning home at night
found her there unconscious, with the child
patting her mother's cheek, 'trying in her
baby way to arouse her..
,How Livingstone Conquered the African
RaOea.
A newspaper the other day, referring to
Stanley's fights with the natives of Africa,
said that Livingstone never used firearms to
;attain his ends, but that his goodness and
'unselfishness won the cot Hence of the tribes
e and smoothed his pathway. This is , nob
,quite accurate. ' When Livingstone's work.
was nearly over and he was approaching the
spot where be died, he was greatly tried
by Matipa, a chief living on an island in
lLeke Bangweolo who, endeavoured to.
prevent ,the further advance of 'the great
' explorer. Af ter vain expostulations with the
'.chief, the,great traveller", suddenly drew a
tpietol,end:fired ib in close proximity to that
'worthy's person, ,'Tae nativee of Bangweolo
'were•not then acquainted with firearms,
fraud therbadly . frightened chief was glad to
tiet:Livingetone goon his way.
But:Livingstone never shodthe bloodof
a.n
•ativ'e,which-hi mere than, o',an`bo said of
,his carriers after death, who, though' they
' followed hili fortunes f r tome ears;
had£ w � .. ,., � .., .
could net emulate his patience.. Vt bile they
woro beering hie body to the sea they stormed
several nelghboringvrllagos that gave them
trouible,irilled a+n'inuber of ppooplts,IMO, woe,
an early victoy toith;'sheaf Beet nes
Mary Jane's my nexb neighbour's daughter ;
she's powerful set on my Joe;
I haven't got much agin 'her—she's a good
enough gal as gale go,
Bub she can't make a shirt if you paid her,
and her butter's none o' the bast;
Fd been stiff, Town—never said so, but I
think she somehow guessed,
So she blushed and stammered a little when
she founde h
a
m there at the gate
'Stead o' Joe. I felt ugly, forgetting that
every young thing seeks its mate.
She's on one side and T on t'obher, with a
river o' years between—
I was nine and forty last birthday, and Mary
Jane its nineteen.
And we stood and looked ab each ther and
couldn't find mush to say.
Joe's my youngest—the feelina' o' twenty
years can't take second plane in a day,
So the best I oould do was—nothin bub keep
tongue and tt mper still ; >
Till suddenly out fron the thicket there
started a whip -poor -will.
Suddent and loud and throbbl&, and a lump
riz up in my throat,
As it all Dame back in a minute how I'd
heerd that selfsame note
The night Rube kissed me and asked me,
and I c idn't tell him no—
Oh, my heart 1 how well I remember it all,
though it's thirty year ago.
Tee long day of hard work and hard livin'
And the evenin' when I could slip
To the turn of the road and get hill pay in
the touch of my Reuben's lip,
And the heavy sooldin' borne cheerful,' be-
cause 'twee for; Renben's esker
Ib'e a lovely dream -oh, the pity that the
daylight comes and we wake l
And afterwards, when together we fought
for our daily, bread
On the little rough farm on the hillside, in a
home scarce more than a shed.
What did Reuben oare for my sewin', if I
never had set a stitch 7
And we'd eaten dry bread for ever if we'd
had to pert to be rich.
It's all over -I'm widowed this ten year. The
best farm in the country's my own ;
.And I wished . I was baok on ten acres as I
leaned on that gate—alone.
It's all over --but still I've been happy, as
maybe I shouldn't complain.
Then the thought shivered thro' me 'like
lightnin'-ought I grudge .it to Mary
Jane
Life Domes pretty hard on most of us, and
it's none too sweet at the best;
Ain't it rather a shame when our own - it
spoiled to wish the same by the rest ?
My Joe ie his father's born ditto—can the
gal help herlikes more than me ?
She's nineteen; and a rosebud—Joe's twenty-
one ;
wentyone; what hinders the lad to see?
Can I.keep the, dews from fallin', or forbid
the growth of the pine ?
Judas soon as stop young folks from Iovin'
because I'm forty-nine 1.
Can I blame 'em for likin the freshoup that
only young folks can taste
When I'd. give all I've got for that one June
night with Reuben's arm round my
waist
So the whippoor-will taught me.a lesson, I.
choked down the jealous spite,
And I ofin a soft eh smile for
g my reward m' shysmile,
1 kissed Mary Jane good night,
Though I: swallowed a sob as I turned away
when Joe Dame over the hill.
Well, it's hardly ;likely they'll ever know
what they owe to that whip -poor -will.
ANNIE BOTHWELL,
Kingston, May 20, 1889."
Amusements of Royalty.
Near the palatial home of the Montezumas
were many edifices erected solely' for the
pleasure of the reigning monarch; prominent
was an aviary, in which birds of splendid
plumage were gathered--
"Creatures
athered—'Creatures of wondrous tint, delightsome he
the eye,
And some, full•throated, pouring ons
Their gladsome songs,"
Three hundred attendants had oharge of
this rare con penyof plumy people; to feed
vnem, give Lam a daily bath, collect' scat-
tering plumage, especially in moulting sea:
eon, thne furnishing materials for Aztec,
painters, waft the alI engrossing oare.
Somewhat farther away birds of prey were
luxuriously domioiled—vultures and eagles
and other "villianous-eyed; desperadoes ";'
for these, too, much thought was given, their
usual bill of fare (a daily allowance) inoluded
among other dainties five hundredplump and
toothsome turkeys.
And still beyond, strongly barricade
were cages for wild animals,leptiles, and
serpents; the slimy, coiling, head•erecting
creatures held high carnival in long cages
lined with down or feathers; or, if they
needed recreation, troughs of mud and water
were at their service.
To all theee prisoners of state were given.
apartments both light and airy, ampleenough
as well, in which to move untrammelled;
such were imperial orders,;' and keepers of
strength' and fearlessness were devoted to
their comfort and oleanlinett.
"Extensive gardens surrounded these build-
ings, full of fragrant shrubs and flowers, and.
many medicinal plants were cultivated; and.
fountains' of pure water threw up sparkling
jets."
Ten large tanks well ' stocked with fish
afforded sport for the lazy angler, and water-
fowl could here disporb the live -long day.
A pavement of tesselated marble enclosed
the ample basins, which were overhung by
light and fanciful pavilions, admitting the
perfumed breezes of the garden°, and offering
grateful shelter to the monarch and hie
friends in sultry summer heats.
Thie..wee in the reign of Montezuma Seo.
ond, early in the sixteenth century.
Those who live on vanity must, not un-
reasonably, expect to die of mortification;'
One hiltdred end nine new lawyers were
ad nittiel to the bar in Now York State last
week. Every farmer should get a double
strap for hie wallet -- -Burlington 1fr eft
Preas.
E'toh one has dome talen'Viiii1?
mo• "roborence.
Let him work in that,lihe if', ° osefble • but,
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While a ems lf,lu„ ,, , A • ,am
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otherdace;of lifeaghall round 'Dnd.'tnahe
P P
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e ao'conplex
thy we aro net making the most of or
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iT
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THE
OF• ,*'' '
+EXETER
i��TIMES
A FAMOUS INDIAN TIGRESS.
Shot. Atter Playing a Fearful Game with
Her Cubs.
The notorious Jounear rt -eating tigress
at Calcutta: has at last been killedby a young
forest officer: ` This tigress has been the
scourge of the neighborhood of Chakrata for
the lash ten years, and, her victims have been
innumerable. On one : occasion she seized
one of a numberof foresters who were sleep.
in together in a hut, carried him off, and
deliberately made him over to her cubs to
play with, while sheprotected' their inno•
oent gambols from being disturbed. His
companions were eventually forced to take
refuge in a tree from her savage• attacks.
Here they witnessed' the following ghastly
tragedy
The tigress went back and stood over the
prostrate •form of her victim and purred in a
catlike and self -complacent way: to her cube,
who were romping 'about and.rolling over
the apparently lifeless body. She then lay
downs few yards off, and with blinking
eyes watched the gambols of her young pro-
geny. In a few moments the man eat up
and tried to beat the young brutes off• Taey
were too young to held -him down, eo he
made a desperate attempt to shake himself
free, and ebarted•off at a run:; but before he -
had
gone twenty asids the tigress' bounded
out and brought him back to her cubs. Once
more the doomede
wr soh had to defend
f dI
himself overagain
from their playful.: at -
tanks. He made renewed attempts to regain
his freedom, but was seized by the old tigress
and brought baok each time before he had
gone many yards. His groans and cries for
hel h t d' b td knhim
men ons e
It was this formidable beaet that the
young.Coopers's Hill officer and a student
attacked on foot. They-. were working up
her trail, fifteen yards apart, when suddenly
Mr. Osmaston heard his younger oompanion
groan, and turning round saw him borne to
the ground by the tigress. Mr. Osmaston
fortunately succeeded in shooting her through
the spine, and a seoond ball stopped her in
mid spring. Meantime a his companion rolled
over the hill, and was eventually
discovered
ins, '-i fee a few feet away from hie terrible.
assai..ei. He is terribly mauled, . and now
lies at the Chakrata Station Hospital, where,
hopee of his recovery are entert tined.
Think -Skinned Animals.
The whale, which belonge to the man-
malia, no doubt holds the palm for thickness
of skin. At some parts of the body the skin
is only two inches thick, but in many places
its pelt in fully two feet in thickness. The
skin of the; whale is the subttanoe usual-
ly known as blubber, and in a large speci-
men will weigh altogether more than thirty,
bon, The distinction of being the thickest.
skinned quadruped belonge to the Indian
rhinoceros, whose hide has a knotty or
granulated surface, and is so impenetrable
se to resist the claws of the lion or tiger,
the sword, or the, balls of the old•fashioned
musket. So stiff and hard is this skin that
were it not divided by creases or folds the
animal imprisoned in its armour could
scarcely move. I6 is manufactured into
leather of great strength and durability, and
targets and shields are made of it that are
absolutely proof against darts or . sword.
strokes. The skin of the hippopotamus runs
that of the rhinoceros very closely air re-,'
gards ihicknesel. When. dried It is also
used, for shields, which are highly prized by
the natives,
Wanted a :Netto Man.
'1 arts 13el1 11 -laiden—Ye
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Cuttin, • Toronto
I
BISSETT BROS.,Sole Agents, Exeter.
QUEEN CITY OIL WORKS
PE}JOUILLESS
Toronto. Every Barrel Guaranteed. This Oil was need on ell machinery duringthe
Exhibition. It bat been awarded NINE GOLD MEDALS during the last three year
Seo that you get Peerless. It is only made by
iloldO Ink ono bah to vitae
at Odds paper At ono llting
ItOCV11.8 c% 00,, TMELON '140
FOR SALE BY JAS. PICKARD.
en, Penholder
and liikatiand
Qin iii one.
PEN AY
[Tees ypee kind of iit0ftib }.. o critng
$slooubherifeedcfstel ,8i1
Writing;
GQntitoib-eketaf s111notleak tfinely Mafia
3ohedinlckelPlata o11poriorto,
ii_g tylogra liereirgad
well dPah,:Sa'ks, riodtPaid,laza abate(
5 Pons, $1 bill. P, 0,,Stam i teken, but sliver reforrod.'
p p
it 1000 Picture Book sunt FREE, Soaks tf,is paper. ,
XINI73 ', X• aarmbuth, N.
A SUE1s CURE
Fon BILIOUSNESS, CONsTt PATION,
INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS,SSICK
HEADACHE, AND DiogAsas OF THE
STOMACH,LIVEN AND DOWELS. '
THEY Aux MILD,THOROIIGH AND PROMPT
1N ACTION, AN 11 FOAM A VALUA0I.E AID
TO BURDOCK tit.000 h11-ress IN THE
TIWATIHENT ANO, sunt or CHiiONIC
ANI7t,OBsITINAT,C 11G0ASES0,