incarnate te sata natalie yes > “gr o bs * wie li EEE a a aa tee . 4 te tbat at ta sa cil ah . & ¢ - + - . ' ern aes MO a. a hy SP ais is ty tet ec eh — parry getter eer. aioe seen ss ‘ them. - saces brighteued THE WAR-TRAIL! CHA PTER LXX.—(Continvep.) Under other circumstances, | might have stayed to regard such a_ scene, thongh not to admire it. On that inter- minable waste, there was naught to be admired, nor even sublimity; but no spectacle however sublime, howeve1 beautiful, could have won from me a thought at that moment. The trackers had already out, and were advancing, half concealed by the cloud of black ** stoor” flung up from the heels of their horses. For some distanee they moved straight on without looking for the tracks of the steed. Betore meeting the fire, they had gone beyond the edge ot the ( hapar- ral; after a while, I observed them moving more slowly, with their eyes upon the ground as if looking for the) trail, I had doubts of their being able | either to find follow it now. ‘The shallow hoof-prints would be filled w ith | the debris of the burnt herbage—sure'y | they could no longer be traced ? By myself, they conld not, by “a common man; but seemed that to the eyes of those keen hunters. the trail was as conspicuons as ever. Isaw that after searchivg a few seconds, they had taken it up, and were | once more movirg along, guided by the) tracks. Some slight hollows [| could) perceive, distributed here and ther 3 the ground, and scarcely distipguishab e| from the surrounding level. Certainly, | without having been told where they | were, I should not have known where | they were, I should uot have known | them to be the tracks of a horse. | It proved a wide prairie, and we seem- ed to be crossing its central part. The fire had spread far. At one place, nearly midway, where | the trail was faint, aud difficult to make | out, we stopped for a short while to give} the trackers time. A mementary curi-| osity induced me to gaze around. Awful) was the scene—awful without sublimity Even the thorny chaparral no longer relieved the eye; the outline of its low shrabbery had suuk below the horizon, and on all sides stretched the charred plain up to the rim of the leaden canopy, black—black~—-illimitable. Had I been alone, I might easily have yielded to the fancy, that the world was dead. Gazing over this vast opacity, I for a moment forgot my companions, and fell | into a sort of lethargic stupor. I fancied that I, too, was dead or dreaming—I fancied that I was io hell—the Averous of the ancients. In my youth, I had the misfortune to be well schooled in ciassic lore, to the neglect of studies that are useful ; and often in life have the poeti- cal absurdities of Greek aud Latin my- thology intruded themselves upon my spirit—both asleep and -awake. I fan- cied, therefore, that some well-meaning Auchises had introduced ms to the reg- ions below and that black plain betore me was some landscape in the Kingdom of Pluto. Reflection—had | been cana- ble of that—would have convinced me of my error. No part of that mon- arch’s domivious can be so thin'y peo- pled. I was summoned to reason again by the voices of my followers. ‘The lost trail had been found, and they were moving on. ridden far or nor |} it there over —_——_ CHAPTER LXXI. THE TALK OF THE TRACKERS. I spurReD after, and soon overtook Regardless of the dust, I rode close in the rear of the trackers, and listened to what they were sayin. These “men of the mountains”—as they prided to call themselves—were peculiar, While engaged in a duty, such as the present, they would searce disclose their thoughts, even to me; mnch less were they communicative with the rest of my followiag, whom they were accus- tomed to regard as “ greeuhorus’—their tavorite appellation for all men who have not made the tour of the grand prairies. Notwithstanding that Standfield and Black were backwoodsmen and hunters by profession, Quackenboss a_ splendid shot, Le Blanc a regular “voyageur,” and the others more or less ekilied in wood- craft, all Were greeuhorus in the opirion of the trappers. . To be otherwisz, a man must have starved upon a ‘‘sage prairie” —‘‘run” buffalo by the Yellowstone or Platte—fought “ Injan,” and shot Indian —have well-nigh lost scalp or ears— Spent a winter in Pierre’s Hole upon Green River—or camped amid the snows of the Rocky Mountains? Some one of all these feats must needs have been per- formed ere the * greenhorn’ can matric- culate and take rank as a ‘mountain man.” I of all my party was the only one who, in the eyes of Rube and Garey, was Dot a greevhorn, and even {—gentleman amateur that I was—was hardly up either in their confidence or their “craft.” It is jadeed true—with all classic ac- complishments, with my fine words, my fine horse, and my fine clothes—so long as we were withia the limits of prairie- land, I acknowledged these men as my superiors, They were my guides, my lustructors, my masters. Since overtaking them on the trail, I had not asked them to give any opinion. Idreaded a direct auswer—far 1 had noticed something like a despairing look in the eyes of both. As I followed them over the black plain, however, I thonght that their | , Now, | bleezin’, a little, and appeared DRE EAR a das eB eT Cm TH DA: heels, and eager. ught up ev that was passin |was speaking \ “ ge i oy ach ! teontoieve eoRit |possyble no-i.ow-so-ever. “ | ; wur sot atire- other wavs for rt. : Oh rt Gs bleezin 0’ i ‘ Slarti ty NOt ;: i “Wal—thur wi , a : oncest at bents 4 Id SOre, UO ci ' he ust t a or take; ee al Ib weecs : , " a. et an’ spreading thé paper— w! el he sitesi ' oy jest like thet ur Daten rubbed ont, 7 ’ | Navach ( al, this , he us’t to talk t’other; ‘ 7 ’hout a thive the! way cal v y ’ and } ’ yy UOT. ; } } yai, th 6} a paraira mout anybody what : thet ui b'lieve, n show. hehtpin’ som: itself; and its only » OX] that the punk; but I s! kud kindle f like to know.” “JT don’t Garey. bade} Rel elie. |, ss Pes &,; cat e hee i wa Gd baud cee fs io Se: , eee, ©. Neuralgia, Sc Beckachs, Sore Gout, Quinsy, Sore 3 ings and Sprai © .. a BSkie ss & . . . witne “aa f aging Git No Preparation on cai GS a Suse, BUTE, St Remedy «A tral trifling outlay ef 69 Ue ; with pain cama have cheap aD. claims. Directions in El BOLD BY ALL P A. ential TTA Pe gmery TT Le wy & % ww oo om bo eesti © " SALE,— 171 Ingots Tin, 20 PD ; ” Tt 33 Pigs Lei a3 j } Aine’ Youths bO}S , j id J lids Coats, Pants, Veste Ripa TWraya DLGwWoli ; TY x — 5 £% a eo r Betty dindie. vie 27 @ ‘ Paper Hangings feoaner AT PRICE Agricultural, Garden and Flower Se EF. gePsce & Ce e BiG WGs @ 4% Having commenced the Auction i COD twelve months from this date,” - A McLL&AN, kek, a ee a 2 © “ AnocrTAPr hires To Lo QD OLY WIV WD rb int ira ti ’ ih. oO} 1 ii | | | } ti ub} t | i “me sift het | ii oprayn ; 5 it | 30%. OE ctl j ? } LKRe } a ied Charlottetown, April 3, 1882. mu TE woxx_A Mo / Christy’s Paris Silk Eats, Christy’s Hard fur “ Christy’s Soft =“ a Christy’s Hard Felt “ && nN jats for J} co en, Es0ys, Ladies, 6s TOGETHER WITH A } Stoek of Canadian and American Felt Hats! CHEAP FOR CASE! G. DAVIES & CO. LONDON HOUSE, F | -Osses er Tee NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE auyae H BRITIS i Fire and Life Insurance Company, Ge EBINBURGH AND LONDON, | | ESTABLISHED IN 1809. —_— eo | Subscribed Capital . - - - $ 9.733.332.00 | Paid Up Capital - - - “ . 1,216.666.06 | TRANSAOTS EVERY DESCRIPTION OF E, LIFE AND ANNUITY BUSINESS Reserved Fonds (Irrespective of Paid up Gapital) over ON THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. With Promptitude ninth nme FIRE DEPARTHRIENT. seliled aud Liberality. $5,000,900. 00 Insurances effected at the Lowest Current Rates, 0: LIE DEPARTMENT. Accumulated Tunds (irrespective of Paid up Capital) over - - $12,000,000.00 Or tenraie Nine-tenths ef the whole Profits of tie Life Branch beleng to the Assured. Cio | Profits of previous Quinquennium divided among Policy Holders, $1,158,500.00 opetenmener 5Q) 3 New and Reduced Premiums fer the Dominion of Canada. Copies of the Annual Report, Prospectuses, and every information, may be obtained at the PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BRANCH, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. GEORGE W. DeBLOIS, GENERAL AGENT PEAK { & CO, March 7,’82—-3aw eimh) BIE es aT e las fe a.” : Pav eds me Dcince tard j | fi ‘S L o . By: S 7 > ‘ a -* Sire” Rothe. We is ba 3 W" the good will and interest of OWEN CONNOLLY, Esq., in the Dry Goods business heretofore carried on by him at Charlottetown. beg to anncunce to the public that we have purchased mos Ve invite an inspection of our large and varied Stock, ee, | especially in the following Departments: Dress Goods, Silks, Velveis, Shawls, Gillinery,Hosiery, Gloves, v.| Muslins, Siirtings, Shestings, Lineus, Lace Curtains, aT) Commission business, w soli ig ments of general merebendize, niture. & Evening Sales of Housebold Goous wil} be | continued at our Store for a few evenings. March 4, ’82~ pat Auctioneer, | — 3 s : eo ~T «* Administration !otigs WUT ULISL ALU ULUU JHE undersigned Administrator of the Estate of Mary Walsh, late of Cherictte.' town, in Queen’s County, widow, dice sed, | hereby gotifies all persens tndeited to the said Estate to make immediate payment to him, and all persons heving “cls or demands againet the said Hetate : hereby required to exhibit such claims and-dim ids duly atteated to him fOr" payment, witsin pe ee Prints, Tickings, Grey and White Cottons, &e, a} . ' = ‘ s Cloths, Worsted, Scotch and Canadian Tweeds, Ready- taade Clothing, Hats, Caps, &e. ‘Carpets, fil Cloiks, Wall Paper, &c., Cotton Warp, Small Warez, xc. We have decided to close some very large lots of these | 4 na i . e e . . Goods at cost to make room for spring importations, and to give bargains in every department. JOHN McPBEER & CO. Charlottetown, March, 1882—wkly In.reference to the above, I do hereby return my sincere a ¥ ie Tt ee thanks to the public for the generous patronage extended to my Dry Goo's business at Charlottetown, and take this oppor- tunity of soliciting the same patronage for the above firm in the ~ 7 3 INHER, APRIL | | | } j } ARB iSLARB ARGHS CONTAINS lore Reading Matter than _ ay other Paper Published | in PE. Island, = j } | | Olt $1, OO TEAR | ! | 5 | LL that tract, piece end parce] land allill | A being the southern half of Town Let | ! | Number Sixty-five in the third hundred of | Town Lots hows, that is ti 'TO be sold by PCBLIC AUCTION TUESDAY, the 30th day of 1 3a A. D. 1682, at . the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, in frant of the Law Courts Building, Charlottetown, May in Charlottetown, bounded ag fol. se). ( TAMencing at Weg Stre et, at the North-west comner of T, 7 own Lot {number fifteen in the third hundr ed of Town ots aforesaid ; thence enst along the ; erp : eighty-four feet or thereabouts to Tow r ; number sixty-six in the said third by boundary of said Town Lot number Town Lots; thence north along the ca co _ buildings, rights, members and app thereunto belonging or in any wive Sona ill Power of Sale contained in an Inde Mortgage dateu the sixteenth day of G¢ | A. |} worthy Earle and Esther Julia Earle his wife | of the one part, end Thomes He ) part, i Heath Haviland, of of lo {fe 27 law till sale} mon PAWVIDEe | Guided by the principies of Truth, | Honor, Moderation, and Fairness, THE} EXAMINER is devoted to the promo- | tion of the interests of this Province | anil this Dominion! The Weekly kxaminer AND ISLAND ARGUS IS A LIVE NEWSPAPER. Made up of the Locals, fTelegrams, Editorials, etc., which from day to day appear in the daily edition, Ib is always full of News AND Aiways up te the Times. The Weekly Kxaminer AND ISLAND ARGUS Is in favor of cutting down the Loeal Legislature, conselidating the Local Civil Service on a sound business busis, instituting a system of rigid economy in the administration of jocal affairs, and applying the moncy thus saved to The Advancement of the Agri- cultural and ladustrial interesis of the Provinee ! THE EXAMINER is in fayor of giving a fair trial to the Union which ensures to us the Institutions, the Laws and Protection of the Mother Country. THE EXAMINER is issued every FRIDAY MORNING, from the oftice of The Examiner Publishing Company, corner Great George and Water Streets SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, ne Dalla @ Y IN ADVANCE. 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