THE BEARS 



119 



fruits, attract its attention. The black bear is then seen wandering through the woods to gather 

 this harvest, not forgetting to rob every tree which it comes across." 



THE INDIAN SLOTH-BEAR. 



Few people would believe that this awkward and ugly beast is so formidable as it is. It is 

 the commonest Indian species, seldom eats flesh, prefers sucking up the contents of a white ants' 

 nest to any other meal, and is not very large ; from 200 Ibs. to 300 Ibs. is the weight of a male. 

 Hut the skull and jaws are very strong, and the claws long and curved. As they are used almost 

 like a pickaxe when the bear wishes to dig in the hardest soil, their effect upon the human body 

 can be imagined. 



Sir Samuel Baker says that there are more accidents to natives of India and Ceylon from 

 this species than from any other animal. 



Mr. Watts Jones writes an interesting account of his sensations while being bitten by one 



Phett by C. Reid] 



, N.B. 



A BROWN BEAR IN SEARCH OF INSECTS 



The photograph shows a bear feeding on insects, possibly large ants, which he licks up from the ground, after scratching them out with his claws 



of these bears : " I was following up a bear which I had wounded, and rashly went to the mouth 

 of a cave to which it had got. It charged. I shot, but failed to stop it. I do not know exactly 

 what happened next, neither does my hunter who was with me ; but I believe, from the marks 

 in the snow, that in his rush the bear knocked me over backwards in fact, knocked me three or 

 four feet away. When next I remembered anything, the bear's weight was on me, and he was bi- 

 ting my leg. He bit two or three times. I felt the flesh crush, but I felt no pain at all. It was 

 rather like having a tooth out with gas. I felt no particular terror, though I thought the bear 

 had got me ; but in a hazy sort of way I wondered when he would kill me, and thought what a 

 fool I was to get killed by a stupid beast like a bear. The shikari then very pluckily came up 

 and fired a shot into the bear, and he left me. I felt the weight lift off me, and got up. I did 

 not think I was much hurt. . . . The main wound was a flap of flesh torn out of the inside of 

 my left thigh and left hanging. It was fairly deep, and I could see all the muscles working under- 

 neath when I lifted it up to clean the wound." This anecdote was sent to Mr. J. Crowther Hirst 



