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HUMAN BLOODHOUNDS.

AUSTRALIAN BLACK TRACKERS. In the police stalfions of the Australian outlands black trackers are employed to I'un down thieves and other Criminals. | According to Mr Norman Duncan, the author of “Australian Byways," it is largely on account of these black fellows that the fear of the law remains alive in the more remote parts of the country. The best trackers are brought straight from the bush from the half—savage tribes on the other side of the frontiers——arriving young, f:(-sh, eager, proud of the distinction and savagely delighted in the prospects of man—llunting_ One tracker led his trooper a remarkable chase after a horse stealer who had escaped from gaol in New South Wales to the north-western wilds. They had no real rest night or day. It was a country of wild and stony ground that took meagre impressions of the passage of a traveller, and confusing rains fell. Occasionally the tracker was almost on the heels of the fugitive. At times he lagged, baffled, a Week and more behind. For days in the ranges the ground was so diflicult for the tracker that he could not make a mile an hour. Wlicii the tracks were lost the black fellow ran the country like a bloodhound until he had picked them up. Once the fugitive himself came to desperate straits for water; the tracker made out that he was lost and exhausted, that he had stumbled, fallen, and scraped moist mud from a dried-up spring with which to' rub himself and cool his skin in that extremity of thirst and weariness. At the end of a chase of 56 days, during which the black ‘fellow had tracked the man every yard of the way, thep captured the fugitive.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAIDT19190826.2.34

Bibliographic details

Taihape Daily Times, 26 August 1919, Page 7

Word Count
289

HUMAN BLOODHOUNDS. Taihape Daily Times, 26 August 1919, Page 7

HUMAN BLOODHOUNDS. Taihape Daily Times, 26 August 1919, Page 7

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