eR, see ene nen oO Teams Five Dottans a Yaar. —— eee NEN W SF RIES —_—- TuE D AILY eaten IS IS8URD EVERY EVENING, By roe Exawivner Pousursyine CoMPaNy, FROM THRIR Orrick, Conner oF WaTkR aN}. GREaT GEORGE sTREETs, Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. Rates oF Syescrirtion : Six Months, . $2 50 Three Months, - . - 1 25 One Month, - : 0 50 par Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on speseetien. . ‘Prineg Kdward Island ALATA. TIME TABLE NO. WINTER ARRANGE MENT. Ts take effect on om the ist Dec., 1881. TRAINS OUTWARD. MIXED. | STATIONS, MIXBD. MIXED. Ch'town ..|Dp 8. 5am Dp 3. ae Dp 2 -30pm | Reyalty Je een &, 2.53 * N Wiltsh’e, ‘* 9.29 **| * 1B e Munter R’r, “ 9.45 “| ** 4.30 “ Bradalba’e | ‘10.23 “| ** 5.05 “| Co’ty Line.| ‘10.33 “ ; ** 5.18 “| Freetown «a... seo > Boe Keusingt’n! ‘11.10 “| “* 5.55 * Arll.45 ** Ar 6.30 ** Dp 1.45 pm) | = °° 2.37 ae Pert Yujl..| “ 3.22 « Samm’ side | Q’ Leary.. ro “444 i Wellin Bloomfield 5.08 * Albertoa. | ‘‘ 5.48 «§ | 7 | | | Tignish ...; Ar 6.45 «+ | Royalty Je| at ‘Dp 2.53pm in os | S30: te Bedford. . * 320 * Mt. Ss , (Ar 4.05 "_ wwe \Op 4.15 * | Cardigan .. i | * 5 oe seorget’n.. Ar 6.00 “ Mt. Stew’t \Dp 4.15pm Morell. ... | |S 4.55 * | Bt. Peter's. 25 * Bear River! oe Souris... .| f Ar 7.00 ** “TRAINS wEWARD: STATIONS, | MIXeD. {| MIXED. MIXED, adh | Yh’tewn ..' Ar 5. 30pm) Arll l5am| Arll.45am Royalty Je Dp 5.07 ** | Dp10.52 ** | Dp11.22"* | N Wiltsh’e| «* 4.15 «| «10.00 «! } ' } ; } ' i ' i 8 gee ene eee = = - + Hunter R’rj ** 4.00 **, ** 9.45 * Bradalba’e | ** 3.24 “| ** 909 “| Co’ty Line.| ** 3.14 “‘| ** 8.59 **| Freotown..} ‘‘ 2.59 “| ** 844 « Kemsingt’n| “‘ 2.35 “ | “ €99 * 7 "See 1 Tae Summ'side 4511. 30am) Wellingt’ n Dpl0.38 ** Port Hill..| “* 9.53 “| O'Leary...! “ 8.31 a Bloomfield | ** 8.08 * | Alberton ..| ‘ 7.25 mi Tignish ...| “ « 6.30 is Royalty Je ‘Dpli. am | an. ., | | “11.05 * Bedford. . . **10.45 ** _ ' | **19.10 * Mé. Stew’t Arl0.00 ‘6 Cardigan .. Dp 8.40 ** Georget’n . - Gee Mt. Stew! | Ar10.00am | Morell.... \Dp 9.20 ** St. Peter's - Oe *¢ Bear River | | “'o@0 “ Souris .... ‘thet ~ Jee L. B. ARCHIBALD, Superintende nt Railway Office, Charlottetown, Nov. 29, 1881 [¢i, wkly] Prince Edward Island Railway NTIL FURTHER NOTICE a Passenger Train for Georgetown, to connect with | steamer “ Northern Light,’ will leave Char-' m. daily, Sundays ex-} lottetown at 4.50 p. cepted, A Passenger Train will also leave George. tewn for Charlottetown daily, Sunday’s ex- cepted, on arrival of the ‘‘ Northern Light.’ L. B. ARCHIBALD, Supt. Railway Offices, Ch’town, Dee 15, 1881—tf LOBSIER FACTORY FOR SALE. HE undersigned offers for sale the LOBS- TER FACTORY and PLANT, TRAPS, BOATS. &c, AT DESA®LE, lately the property of Juseph Boats and Donald K. Currie, of that place. This Factory was erected last spring and is in good condition. If not disposed of before the lst March next, it will then be sold at Public Auction. Further particulars may be had on applica- tion to the undersigned. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Trustees ef the Estate of Joseph Boats and D. K, Currje. ; Ch’ town, Oct. 8, 81—oaw tf For Sale or to Let. ‘a AT Freehold Property, with a front ot eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty- four feet on Sydney Street, the House con- taining 16 large rooms aud two Kitchens. Can be turned into one Dwelling by unlock- ing adoor. Apply on = _— to S, BOSWALL Marob 12, 18$]-~t# | Se — The Baily £xXamine “ This is true Liberty, when Free- ‘Sinai Men fen havin to abeiee the Public, may niga free.’’—Evuxipetgs. oo & CHARL OTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, en TO OUR OLD STAND, AND WILL OPEN ON FRIDAY, THE 16th INST. SHEWING THE Largest Stock Ever Imported by us. W. E. DAWSON & CO. Charlottetown, Dec. 14, 1881. WE INVITE ALL! WHO MAY Favor us with a Call, TO AN INSPECTION OF OUR STOCK OF GROCERIES FOR FALL & WINTER, WHICH IS NOW CONPLETE, and which we offer at Bargains to Cash Buyers. ‘| Everything warranted as represented or no sale. Remember the plaee—“ Sian or tuk Crown,” South Side Market. ROBERTSON & CAMERON. — ar Dec, 13, 1881—im eod | MARINE! LIFE! HORACE HASZARD. General Insurance Agent, ——REPRESENTING— Commercial Union Fire Assurance Company, of London, Eng,, CAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. Western Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Ont, CAPITAL, $809,000.00, British America Fire Assurance Uompany, of Toronto, Qut., CAPITAL, $500,000.00. Sun Mutual Life & Accident Insurance Company, of Montreal, CAPITAL, $500,000.00, MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFECTED. :0:———- Risks taken on all descriptions of Property at LOWEST RATES :0: Office—Corner of Queen and Lower Water Streets. Charlottetown, April 4, 1881—tf “CANADIAN PACIFIC 0 RAILWAY OUMPANY., eee YHE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY offer ‘| Lands in the FERTILE BELT of Manitoba and the North- west Territory for sale at $2.50 PER ACRE. Payment te be made ene-sixth at time ef purchase, and the balanee in five anpual iastalments, with interest at six per cent, A REBATE OF $1.25 PER ACRE ether improvements certain cultivation and THE LAND GRANT BONDS of the Company, which can be procured at all the Agencies of the Bank of Montreal, snd other Banking Institutions throughout the country, will be RECBIVED AT TEN PER CENT. PREWIUNM on their par value, with interest accrued, on account of andin payment of the purchase money, thus further reducing the price of the land tothe purchaser, Special arrangements made with Emigration ani Land Companies. For full particulars, apply to the Compauy’s Land Commissioner, s0ny MoTAVISH, Winnipeg ; or to the undersigned, By order of the Board, CHARLES DRIANKWATER, Secretary. | Mentreal, Decomber Lst,1881. [de 17 hy oa eing allewed, en conditions, for ‘Oh’ town, Dec. 2 St. ettincs Hotel. Wi ARE REMBSVING ' réfurnished in the best style. |situated and within three minutes walk of ‘the Railway Depot and Steamboats, it offers fFNHE above Hotel is now RE-OPENED, having been thoroughly repainted and Being centrally inducements to the travelling public. Permanent and Transient Boarders acco- |modation unsu:passed by any other Hotel in i city, WM. E, HiCKSY Proprietor —_-— STEAM! STEAM! To the Front! "The Mayflower Mills Have been thoroughly overhsuled, and @ first-class Steam Engire put in, making it seccad to nene on the island. Parties from a distance can receive their grists at shorteat notice. H. 8. GATES, West Royalty, Dec. 20—4i inn yaaie 2m CITIZENS’ INSURANCE C0., OF CANADA. SIR HUGH ALLAN.... OR ek eretilshestdsss patonccis > _— 188,000 Deposited with Dominion Goy’t.. 142,::00 eeoee PRESIDENT. Fire, Life, Accident and Guarantee. Risks taken in the above Company at moderate rates. (Farm Property and Isolated Dwellings @ speciality.) Policies issued in office at Charlottetown, Losses settled J | coon and liberally. A. 8. URQUHART, General Agent for P. E, I mates) Dec 9, 188i—1l.a FI IRE! HORTHERN J ASSURANCE C0., 1 Moorgate Street, Loudon. Capital, £5, 000,000 stg. Every description of property insured at current rates, in town and country. FRED. W, HYNDMAN. Corner Queen and Water streets. Ch'town, Dec. 6, ’8'—tf Professional Card. To undersigned have this day entere. into Partnership as Attorneys-at- Law Office—South side of Queen Squaie, op posite the Post Uffice, A. B. WARBURTON, F. J. CONROY, Charlottetown, Dec. 3, 1881—¢w 2aw Queen Insurance Co’y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - TWO MILLIONS STERLING. Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Ageut for Priuce Edward Island Ju’77] ALFRED A. BOWN, AUCTIONEER —AND— General Commission Merchant ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. Solicits consignments of all kinds of Produce Butter, Eggs, Vegetables, etc., etc. Prempt returns guaranteed, ences on application, W.C. BISHOP, : See ae LN GF —AND— FORWARDING ACENT, Marine Insurance Broker, —AND — General Commission Agent, 80 BEDFORD ROW, P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. ABRTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon, Halls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first- class offices at most favorable rates Cousignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. Nev. 14, 1881—lyr Good refer- [ju 17 6m oaw track ” 1 UBSCKIBE for the DAILY KAAMi*4#), the Cheayest «nd most Neway | aper Published in the Provinces. rancheria, ‘follow back my own Stncie Cortes Two CErxTs. _YOL 10.---NO, 37, én THE WAR- TRAIL! CHAPTER XX. LOST UPON THE PRAIRIE. I slept sweetly aud soundly. I had po dreams, or only such as were light, and forgotten with the return of con- sciousness. It was late wheu I awoke. A bright sun was mountivg into the blue and cloudless sky. This orb was already many degrees above the horizon. Hunger was the father of my first thought. I had eaten nothing since an early hour of the preceding day, aud then only the light desayuna of sweet cake and chocolate. To one not accus- tomed to long feating, a single day with- out food will give some idea of the pain of hunger; that pain will increase upou the secoud day, and have reached its maximum. Upon the fourth and fifth, the body grows weaker, and the brain becomes deranged; the nerve, however, is less acute, and though the suffering is still intense, hunger is | half their by the third will ' mov degree bring death. gain strength that you know days soon {| mile prairie, and Hunger ad thirst and agony—t!e soover you have not the whe satisfy the one, nor quench che other. Besides, there is in your very lonelivess a feeling of bewilderment, painful to an extreme degree, and from which only the oldest prairie-mec are free. Your lose power, energy is diminished, and your resolves become weak and vacillating. You feel doubiful at each step asto whether you be following the right path,and are ready at every moment to turn into another. Believe me, it is a fearful thing te be alone aud lost upon the prairies ! I felt this keenly enough. I had been on the great plains before, but it was the first time I had the misfortune to wander astray on them,and | was the more terri- fied thai I had already hungered to no com- There was something singu- lar, too, in the circumstances that had brought me into my present situation. The disappearance of the white steed, although accounted for by perfectly patural causes had left upen my mind a strange impression. That he should srewith to senses never harder to endure than upon the second or third days. Of course, these} remarks do not apply to those accustom- ed to long fasts. [ have known men who could endure hunger for six days, ime in have lured me so far, aud then eluded such a way! I help fancying so, | could atrribute suen desiga only to a higher influence— in fact, to could pot aud feel less pain than others under a| fast of iwenty-four hours. !ndians or prairie-huuters were those men, and for-; tunately for them that they possess such | powers of endurance, often driven as they are into circumstances ef the most | dire necessity. Truly “God tempers! the wind to the shorn lamb !” As | have said, my first thought was) of something to eat. I rose to my feet. | and with my eye swept the prairie in every direction : no object, living or| dead, greeted my sight; beast or bird) there was none; my _ horse aloue met my _ glance, quietly browsing} on his trail-rope. I could not help |3 envying him, as | scanned his well-filled | sides. [ thought of the bounty of the! Creator in thus providing for his less in- telligent creatures -giving them the power to live where man would starve. Who does not in this recognize the hand of Providence ? | | I walked forward to the edge of the barranca, and looked over. it was .a} grim abyss, over a hundred feet indepth, and about the same in width. were less precipitous at this point. The escarpment recks had aman on foot might have descended into! its bed, and climbed out on the opposite | side ; but it was aot passable for a horse. Its cliffs were furrewed and uneven ; recks jutted out aud hung over ; aud in| the seams grew cactus plants, bramble, aod small trees of dwarf cedar (Juni-|} perus prostrata. ) I looked into its channel. I had heard. the terrent rolling down ia the} night. I saw traces of the water among) the rocks. A large body must have) passed, aud yet not a cupful could now! have been lifted from its bed! What remained was fast filtering into the sand, or rising back te the heavens upon the heated atmosphere. I had brought with me my rifle, in hopes of espying some living creature ;| but’ after walking for a considerable dis- tance along the edge, I abandoned the! search, No trace of bird or quadruped could be found, aud I turned and weut) back to the place where I had slept. To draw the picket-pin ef my hor-e, and saddle him was the work of a few} miuutes ; this done, I began to bethink me of where I was going. Back to the} of course! That was the’ natural reply to such a question ; but) there was pant far less easily answ er- | ed: How was I to find the way? My design of the previous night—to | trail—was no! louger practical. The rain had effaced the tracks ! 1 remembered that I had passed | over wide stretches of light dusty soil, | where the hoof scarcely impressed itself. I remembered that the rain bad been of that characier kuown as “ planet show-| rs.” with large heavy drops, that, in- such places, must have blotted out every trace of the trail. To follow the * back-| was no longer possible. I had) not before thought of this difficulty ; and | now, that it presented-itself to my mind, it was accompanied by a new feeling of | dread. I| felt that J was lost / As you sit in your easy-chair, you, oe may fancy that this is a mere bagatelle—| a little bewilderment that oue may easily | escape from who has a good horse} between his thighs. It is ouly to strike boldly out and by riding ov in a straight line, you must in time arrive somewbere. | No doubt, that is your idea; but permit me to inform you that this depends very | much upen circumstances. 1 would in- deed be trusting to blind chance. You! might arrive ** somewhere,” and t.at somewhere might be the very point from which you had started! Do you taucy you cav ride ten miles in a direct live over a prairie, without a single object to guide you? Be undeceived, then ; you canvot! The best mounted men have perished under such circumstances. It may take days to escape out of a filty- lhalt and wait a while: ithat before noon I might reach the Its sides} fallen in, and! formed a sort of shelving bank, by which | ‘ 4 5 Pe ‘scanning the plain in order to ‘ernment stating the some supernatural cause! I was again ‘on the edge of superstition. My mind began to give way and yield itself to hideous fancies. I struggled against such thoughts. and succeeded in rousing myself to reflect upon some active measures for my safety. saw that it was of no use to remain where I was. I knew chat I could (make a straight path for a couple of ‘hours at least—the sue was iu the sky, laud that would guide me—until pear the Then I should have to for in that south- eru latitude, and just at that time of the year, the sun at noov is so near the zen- ith that a practised astronomer could not tell vorih frm south. I reflected tim- ber, though that would not insure my safety. Even the naked plain is not ‘more bewildering than the openings of the mezquite groves avd the chapparal that border it. Among these you may © | travel for days without getting tweuty meridian heurs. ; miles from your startivg-point, ad they are often as destitute of the means of life as the desert itself! Such were my reflections as | had saddled and bridled my horse, and stood make up my mind as to the direction [ should | take. TO BE CONTINUED. The Horse in Winter. Founder, a diseuse that is far too commen in horses, is cuused most fre- | quently by driving or working the api- till it is overheated, und more or less exhausted and then allowing him te ceo! off suddenly without rubbiog dry. horse is driven hard for several fe and then hitched to a postin the open airin cold winter weather, and perhups forgotten by the driver, whe muy be telling stories, or smeking a pipe by a warm fire. The next mor- ning, if not sooner, it is noticed shat the animal bas not esten well, and can scarcely move from the stail. The lameness may be chivfly in one limb, or in more than than onc, The first thing w du isto place the horse’s feet in tubs of warm water, then blanket heavily, and get the animal thoroughly warm all over. The lame- ness is eaused by stagnation of the bloed in the feet caused by being ceoled toe rapidly after exhausting labor. The warm water thiws the bload, extends and softens the blood vessels, and favors increased circula- tien. In very bad cases, b'eeding the foot may be necessary, though ordi- harily it may be Stapees ed with. Knowing the cause of founder lit will be seen that it is much easier to prevent than to cure this disease after it becomes established. in the first | lice avoid very severe driving and over | exhenntion: but if abuse of this kind is un: avoidable, see to it that the horse i that has risked his life in the service of his master is not Bey ‘lected at the end of hisjourney. Drive ina warm -hed or barn, free from cold draughts, and }rub vigorously till the animal is dried ‘off, The Chilian Miuieter at Washineton has received a despateh fro m bis Gove ivtter live issued a manifestc, directed to all the powers where Chili is represented by an eovoy, giving the resseus why Chili went to war with Peru, and detivisy iv & mens- ure the Chilian policy in reference to ithe present difficulties, The manifesto ‘has been forwarded to the Mirister by mail eneneneere for seme years has net been such » profitable unde: taking as it used te be. Fer ‘eign competition bus denea great deai to drive the home- made article it not out of the may ket, wt loast to make its muuufucture unpre- titable, Sane ae ROR ean A AO * IR en, mpm i, i