: ; 4 i f Fel AAR. ne i i agp eRe. =”, ee file WaR-TRAIL! CHAPTER XLIL | chase was THE CABALBLADA,. Tt was nearly a quarter of am hour | before the cloud moved away ; and then, to my surprise, | saw a clump of horses —wuut horsemeu—upon the prairie, and scircely half a mile distant from che " Not one of them was it was a drove of mesa mounted. and, to all appearance wild horses that had galloped up during the interval of darkness, and were now | standing silent and motiovless. [ strained my eyes upon the distant prairie, but the dim were longer to be horsemen BO They have réddea off beyo.ud the range of secu must | vision ? I was about to seek communicate to him what had passed my comrade and whew. On rising to my feet, | found bim standing by my side. He had been! all around the sumrait without seeing aught, and had returued to satisfy himself that the guerrilla was still quiet * Hillow!” he exclaimed, as his eyes THE different might have been their fate. | Mouvted and ready for flight, most of them would prob.bly get clear. (he moment we saw the direction the | about to take, Garey and 1} | rusced across the summit to that side. | ss . he .s From the brow of the precipice, oar | view was perfect, and we could see both aloug its base} in | parties as they passed Both were ridiag straggling clumps, and searcely two hue | directly below us. dred paces separated the rearmast of the | pursued from the herdmost of the pur- The latter still uttered their war-ery, while the former vow rode iu : breath bound, aud their the deathlike stillness suers sileuce-—their voices hushed in of terror. All at once a cry arose from the guer- rila—short, quick, and despairing—the voice of some new consteruatiou ; at the | same moment, the whole troop was seen to pull up. We looked forthe cause of this extra- ordinary conduct: our eyes and our ears | both guided us to the explanation. From | the opposite direction, and = sarcely three hundred yards distant, appeared a band of horsemen coming up ata gallop They : : ‘ fell upon the caballada; ** What the} were right in the moon's eye, dirna iou's youder, a drove o’ wild| aud we could see glancing arms, | ‘ : ae, f hosses? I's mighty strange them vig-|8Ud hear loud voices. The — hoofs} : ne » eter- | could be heard pounding the prairie, | gers domt notice ‘em, By the eter-) “ poseee I p pall cell aud my companion and I recoge | { know not what Garey meant to have said. drowned by the wild yell that beoke simultaneously from the Mexican line; and the next moment the whole troop were seev springing to their saddies, and put themselves iu motion, We. of course, supposed they had just diseovered the caballada of wild horses, and it was that that Was produciug this sudden tampede. What was our astoo- ishment ou perceiving that we ourselves were the cause of the for the guerrilleros, instead of frontiag to the plain, rode closer up to the cliff, and screaming wildly, fired their carbines at us} Among the rest we could discover the great gua of E! Zorro. and the hiss of | its Teatlen bullet, as it paxsed close to our ears ! We were puzzied at first to know how they had discovered us. A glance ex- plaiued that the moon had risen higher | iu the heaveus, aud the shadow cast by the mound had been foreshor.ened. While gazing out at the caballada, we had ineau'iously kept our feet, aod our figures, magaified to gigautic proportions, were threwn forward upon the plain directly under the eves of our enemies. They had but to look up to see us where we stood. His words were alarm } Instantly we.knelt down among|aiuratly and inevitably. As diges- the bushes, clutching our rifles |4en goes on the stomach begins to The surprise oceasioved by our| ©™pty. A siagle feldin it will mike appearauce upen the cliff. seemed} te little sleeper restless; two will to have deprived our enemies, for the moment, of their habitual prudence, as several of them rode boldly within rauge. Perhaps they were some of the late ar- rivals. lLuthe dark shadow we could not make out their forma; bat ove had the mi<fortune to be mounted on a white horse, aud that guided the trapper’s aim I saw him glancing along his barrel, and heard the sharp crack. I fancied I heard a stifled groan from below, and the next moment the white horse was seen gallop- iug ont into the mounlight, but the rider was 00 louger upon his back. Another cloud passed over tne moon, and the plain was again shrouded from | our sight. Garey was proceeding to re- load, whe: a ery arose amidst the dark- ness, that caused him to pause aud listen. The cry was again repeated, and then uttered continuousiy with that wild in- tovation which cau alone proceed from the throat of the savage. It net | the guerilla that was uttering that yell: it was the yell of the Iudiau warrior. ** Comanche war whoop!” eried Garey, after listening a momeat. ‘ Comaache was war-whoop ! by the eternal! Llooraw ! the [njuns are upon ’em !”’ Amidst the cries, we could hear the rapid trampling of horses, and the ground appeared to vibrate under the quick heavy tread. Each moment the strekes sounded nearer The savages were charging the guerrilia! The moou shot forth from the cloud. There was no longer a doubt. The wild- horses were mounted; each carried au Indian naked to the waist, his painted body glariug red in the moon-light, aud terrible to behold. By this time the Mexicans had all mounted aud faced towards this unex- pected foe, but with evideut sigos of irresolution in their ranks. They wou'd never stand the charge—no, never. So said Garey, and he was right. The savages had advanced within less thau a hundred paces ef the Mexican line, when they were observed to pull suddenly up. It was but a momentary halt~just time enough to enable them to mark the formation of their foes, apd seod a flight of arrows ivto their midst. That done, they dashed onward, uttering their wild yells and braudishing their long spears. The guerilleros only waited to dis- charge their carbines aud escopeties ; they did not think of reloading. Most of them flung away their guus as soon as they had fired, and the retreat began. The whole troop tarned its back upon the evemy, and s,urring their horses to a gallop, came sweeping round the base of the mesa in headlong flight. The Indians, uttering their demoniac yells, followed as fast. They were ren- pered more furious that their hated foe was likely to escape them The latier | were indebted to vs for having | put them upou the alert. Bat for that! circumsauce, the Jndiaus would bere charged thera while tivmrouared, and far ‘Tne brute creation resent ail ¢@:x them to sucha vielation of the juws ef nature. The lion roars ia th: forest until he has found his prey, nized the heavy tread of the American | horse Still more certain were we about that hoarse “hurrah.” Neither Indiao or Mexican could have uttered that well. | kuown shout (TO BE CONTINUED). Bating Before S:eeping. Min ts the only animal that can be tuusht to sleep on an empty stemech. etiort te and when he devours it he sleep- until he seeds another meal, Tire horse will paw all nightin the stabie ind the pig will squexl in the pen, re- fusing to rest or sleep until they are ted. The animals whieh chew the cud huve their Own provisions for a late “upper just before dropping of te thei nighily siumbers, Man can train him- self to the habit of sleeping withent a preceeiiug meal, but only after lon years of practice. As he comes ints tve world nature iste strong for him, snd he must be fed before be A child’s stomach is small, ‘nd when perfeetly filled and whea no sickness disturbs it, sleep follew- will sleep. weken it, and hushed again to repoxe the nap will be sbort, and three joid pat an end to the = slumber. Paragoric or other narcotic may Close its eyes again, for wiibout eithe: (oud or some stuperfying drug it wilt not sleep, no matter hew healthy it may be. Not even aa angel whe lear- ned the art of ministrelsey in a celes- tial Choir can sing 4 babe to sleep on an empty stomach. We use an oft- quoted illustration, “sleeping ar quietly as an infant;’ because thi: siumber of a child tollows immediately after its slemach is completely filled with wholesome tood. The sleep which comes to adults long hours afte: fued, and when the stomach is empty is not after the type of intantile repese. between sleep and refreshment and the sleep of exbaustion. To sleep well the blood that swells the veins in ou head during the busy hours muat flew back, leaving a greatly diminished quantity behind the brow that lately throbbed with such vehemence, To digest well the bleod is needed at the stomach and searer the fountains ‘ot life. Itisa fact established beyond a po-sibility of contradiction thit sleep aids digestion and that the processe- of digestion is conductive to refresh- ing sieep. It needs no argument to convince us of this matural relation. The drowsiness which always tollowr the well-ordered meal is itselt a testi- mony of mature to this dependence, the Bilue-Eyed Lassie. In the course of his perambulation-~ Burns was occasionally « welcome Visiter at the hospitable manse of the ‘tev. Mr. Jeffrey, the worthy minister of the parish of Leckmarben. One of the daughters of this good man, named Jean, happened to do the honors ef the tea tabie upon the poet’s first visit. Jvannie was just seventeen, of sweet, Winning manners, with waving goldes tresses and rossy Cheeks, but above all, ipaurroft laughing blue eyes, Burns was charmed with her artless mapners, and particularly with her ‘* twa sweet een;” his suscepitable heart was fired wih admiration for the daughter of his hest. The next morning after breakfast be presented her with the song which he little dreamed was to give her immor- tality. [t was ths seng of the * Blues eyed Lassie.” * * * The blue- eved lassie bloomed into womanhoo:l. DATES There is all the difference in the world! ani cuptivating the heart of James R owick, a young merchant from the | New York, who chasced to be in Beot-| iund on business, she married him and | s0en removed from that old marse at | Leckmarben to take up her re-'dence| in ihut city, where her hasbana became | a prominent me:clast of the i. gh st. respectability, “ place to ves your “riaia C4 EXRMINER PRINTING ROOMS oe ene Meurcigia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, . . _ ° 7 Cout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Svel!- ings and Sprains, Burna and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, 2 ’ .. a Toot’, Ear and Hoadache, Frested . ‘ hn Feet cod Ears, and all ether Pains and Wo Preparation on earth equals . os a aafe, sure, stenple sud cheap Exteriual Remedy A trial entails but tle compamtiv: trifing outlay of 50 Cents, and every one om ferin| with pain can bave cheap and positive proof of i ciaims Directions in Dleren Lancusges. GOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS TH MEDIOIRE, A. VOGELER &..Ca&., Bailsimere, Ma., OT. 8. A. MORE LIGHT | Brhne HGiICS. St. Jreata Ors 2 “ i ‘Shirts. Collars, Searfs, Ties, ; FX_A MINER, | | \ { } Ts Ubarlottetowa Gas Light Company | have imported some of “ Buay's U NgEkS,” which they will supply and fit on | Gas Brackets, etc, at a moderate cost to) | Montreal, January 17, i>82—Im copsumers, These Burners are reported to be the best Fiat Flame Burner yet produced, and wili give a far greater amount of light tban any other Burner with the same consumption of Gas, Dr. Wallace, F. R. 5. E., F. C. 8. Gas Examiner to the City of Glasgow, in 4 lecture delivered by him, calculated that £150,000 gow by the ose of imperfect fittings. sutject of Gas Burners be says; + Another and as I think @ better Burner is that called Bray’s regulator, & ad es I considerthese the best unier Borners astaipadle at moderate cost, | have selected them for a series of ex- periments, The Keport of the Committee of the British Assoviation of Seiencs to enquire as to the best means forthe developmen: of light irom Coal Gas of different qualitres—com prising Dr. William Wallace, Protessor Dittmar, ond Mr. Tbhonras Wills, YO: Fi, ©. E., showed that Bray’s Burner's yielded the greatest amount ot light of all the two or three scor: of Burners reported upori. which included ail the Burners of repute in the market, In & pamp).Jet upov Light and Heat, pub- lished by RB. B. Taber, A.M, he suys : 4 'Lhe cost of Gas as compared with other iliamtn- autsis much more economical when rightly used, than many stppose, From experiments made for this purpose, the following results have beem obtained, They were made by burning sa eples of Devoe’s Brilliant Onl and ordinary Otis, and testing their illuminating power, It was found that Coal Gas costing one cent at $3 per thousand feet, gave a light «qual to 18 candles, while Devoe’s Brilliant Oil consuming 27.4 grammes Coste ing balfa cent, gave « light equal to 9 candles, “A good Argand or Johnsen’s Burner, the Burner's used in the last experiment, will therefore give the Nght of 2 ordinary Oil Burners in direct comparison, at no greater expense in the cas of the finer and safer gma of Oil. Liguts however, on the auther- ity of scientists, are not to be compared in dirct proportion, but in proportion to the squares of their powers, and such @ com- parison with the case of the ase of Las, its cleanliness, freedom from odor and dangers, renders iff use desirable wherever it can be ntroduced,” As the above experiments were made witb Gos at 93 per 1000 feet, and not consumed through Bray’s Barners, it will readily be seen bow wuch more econemical it is to con- sume Gas instead of Oil, when its price is only $263 per 10.0 feet as now charged bere wheo consumed, more especially through B ay’s Borners. Messts, Goodwin & Co, of Philadelphia, the well-known manufacturers of Scientific in- struments for testing the illuminating power of Coal Gas, etc., say in their Circular to Gag Companies : “Ip presenting the Bray’s Stand- ard Patent Slit Unien Burners and Lanterns, for which we are the sole Agents in the United states, to the attention of the public, we are Convinced that we are filling a want long feit.’ They tartber add; * The yield of light from these Burners is 12 to 20 per cent, greater per cabic foot of Gas consumed than that trom any flat flame Bomer hitherto in- ’ trodneed., [no 4 eod MEDICINE. MACK’S AGCNETIO > Seles : = 4 SS ; 4 a ; - 7 @ z = = “ 5 & Isa. Sure, Prompt and Effectual Remedy tor Ner- vousness in ALL its stayes, Weak Memory, Loss of Brain Power, Sexual Prostration, Night Sweats Supermatorrhea, Seminal Weaicness, and General Loxs of Power. It wepaira Negvous Waste, Rejwven- ates the Jadet Inieliect, Strengthens the Enfeebled Brain and Restores Surprising Tone and Vigor to the Exiausted Generatire Urgans. the experience of thousands proves it an INvVAL@ABLE Remepy, . The Medicine is pleasant to the taste, and euch hex con- tains spfficient for two week's, medication, and is the cheapest aud best, $2 Full particulars “in” our pamphlet, which we desire to mail free toany address, Mack's Magnetic sicdizine is sold by Droz. gisis at SO cts. per box, or 12 boxes for $5, or will be mailed froe of postage, on receipt of the money, by dressing Ms 4 MACK’S MAGNETIC MEDICINE « O., Windsor, Out., Canade. Sold in Charlottetown by Apothecaries’ Hall Go Agesits for Prince Kaward Talend, and by all Drugyists rerywhera fia TUR? wkly WANTED. A F, the JUNK STORE, Head Pownal 4 Wuarf, old Copper, Brass, Iron, Lead, Zi ¢, Rope and Canvass, Horse Hair, Rays, «ec tor the highest price wi oe pad, , Oh tow vied Toy ey in spree i ss 7 | for Painting and Drawing in all their different ($650,000) a vear, are thrown sway in Glas- | On the | WHOLE . i E DRY GOODS SAGE. ; am prepared to disjose of the whole of i my Stock of i DRY COODS=, — CONSISTING OF — Readymade Clothing. HATS AND CAPS, | —AND— | Gents’ Furnishings Generally, &o. | ] wij! sell the Stock in lots. to suit purcha- sers, Or ip one lot, —ALSO— The Lease, for three years, of the PRE-| MI-ES at present occupied by me, CHABLES I. MORRISON. Ch’iown, Feb, 2, 1882. NOLICK | ‘SHE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY | OF CANADA Will apply tothe Parlia ment of Canada at its next session for amend- ments to its Act of iacerporation,43rd Vic. ch. 6°, whereby the Company shall be em-~ powered to issue. Bonds, for the purposes stated in the s-¢ond section of said Act, in surps of not less than $25 each, and to manu- facture besides the articles referred to in such second geetion, such other articles or things as tie Company may deem advisable, also to frinsmit messages by telegraph as well ag by telephong, also to purchase telegraph as well as telephone lines, and whereby it sha!! | alse be declared that the Company shail have | power tocrxtend its telegraph and telephone lines from any one toany other of the Pro- vinces in the Dominioa. and whereby also it shall be declared that said Act of Incorpora- tion and its amendments apd the works | thereunder authorized are for the general ad- vantage of Canada | BETHUNE & FETHUNE, | Solicitors fer said (Company | } | Removed. \ RS. W. W. IRVING begs to notify be i trends and the public generally that she has opened ber Fall aud Winter Classes branches, For terms, etc,, apply at her Studio —resi- dence of Mr. Peebles, Senth Side of King Square - fan 29 ef Prince Rdward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE’ NO. 7. WINTER ARRANGEMENT, fo take effect on the 1st Bee.., 1881. ~ TRAINS GUTWARD. STATIONS, { MIXED. MIXED, | MIXED. i vis ENS te Patric ~—--| Ch'town ..{Dp 8. 15am Dp 3.00pm Dp 2.30pm | foyaity Jel * 9.48 “| 3.23 «© 253° N Wiltsh’e ** 9.29 **1.4* 4,15 ¢, Hunter R’r * 9.45 ** |] ** 4.30 * | Bradalba’e | 10 23 “1 ** 5.05 **! $+ }@ 35 «4 “es tig &8 Ue'ty Line. | 5.18 **} Frectown | ‘10.45 e533 «| Keusingt’n! “11.1Q 46) ** 5.55 |. /Ar 6.30 i p 1.45 pm} Wellingt’n ** 2,37 * Arl 1.45 ** Summ’ side 1 Pous Mill: 1*""S 28 & U'Leary,..| “ 444 Bloonitield | ‘* 5.08 ** | Alberton, | ** 6.48 a Tignish..., Ar 6.45 ** | ew } Royalty Je! i aes |Dp 2.53pm Eg a Bedford. . . 390 *: oe, Ar dh Cardigan | oe teorget’n.. ‘Ar 6.00 * Mt. Stew’t | | | sat an | | Morell... +: ** 4.55 St. Peter's.| | ** 5.25 Bear River! i or Souris ....! \Ar 7.00 ‘ TRAINS INWARD. errr deleted Macraeiente stallions. | MIXeEp, MIXED. MIXED. ~~ a we . Ro cia z Jn'tewn .. Ar 5.30 pm) Ar lL L5am| Ar11.45am Noyalty Je Dp 5.07 ** | Dp10.52 * | Dp11.22 e N Wiltsh’e 415 “| «19.00 « Hunter R’r| ** 4.00 «©, «*§ 9 45 « Bradalba’e | ** Co’ty Line. Freetown.. aT * i.* $6 244 ss | es 859 «* ‘ F 2.59 «| + > } © f . 8.44 * Kensingt “ “2.25 “i * Ge * . a ‘es 2 06 ““ ae 7.45 Sete eH ST Bees Wellingt’n Dp10.38 * Port Hill. ‘| “ Daa * Q Leary .." 8 31 Bloomfield | “ 8.08 ** | Alberton ..j ** 7,25 + Tignish...} ** 6.30 * Royalt¥ Je} a Bedford. ., Mt. Stew’t Dp) 1, 22am “11,06 %* **10.45 ee “i iG * ‘ \Arto 60 9 Cardigan ob ‘Dp 8.40 Georget’n . i ae us a i Ar 10.00am Morell... «1 Dp 9.20 * St. Peter’s} i * 850 * Rear River “ 8.00 '* Souris...,! +6. 915 <6 L. B. ARCHIBALD, ' Supetinicnd nt Railway Office, Charlottetown, Nov, 29, 1-81 [4i, wkly] ‘FLOUR. 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