Evening Star Newspaper, August 18, 1883, Page 2

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Beri. Sale CITY AND DISTRICT. AWAY “DOWN EAST.” rp Presiden Tino, and ba n 8 LETTER FROM CAPE MAY. 4 LOUD GROWL FROM LURAY. LETTER FROM NANTUCKET. Surplus Revenuc of the ited States. | Dr. Rankin and Party Cruising Upon 2 ews has reached a friend of Mra. W. T. Car- | ane try’s Visit—Th ec Camp A Trip to the Cave—What I Saw and | “out of the Madding Crowd"—A Place ‘To the Editor of Tue Eventye Star: the Maine Coast—A Visit to Mount roll eed fp meen ae Hnestea pl — gorsp wich linden Ete, a Did Not See—Wreck-reation and Gen-| Where Nebedy is ina Hurry—Charies A suggestion in the heading of anexceedingly | Desert—The Perils of a Buck Board wiciereiee pad Srimnate former! as - oe os eral Observations, ©@’Conner’s Catholic interesting and instructive articlein the Evesivc | Hide—The Season at Bar Harbor—A usband. They teresthi Personals — Hotel Specint- | had been married: ive or thirteen years, dur- | Correspondence of Tax Evexre Stam. aS Bran of the ith inst., relating to surplus gov-| Merry Stage Conch Party—Hetarn to| ffror"n, " ing which they hag resided altogether in Eu- Care May, August17, 1888. | O"Mondenee of the Rvaxree Sram. ernment revenue, that the partial distribution | ‘te Quiet Enjoyments of Deer Isle. —o Foe, belng ynost of the time at “his ancestral | Everybody and everything about Congress Wasursctox, D. C., Angust 16, 1883. st — ai 8 nt of Tur E ‘Sr: om in a 3 ral La - to the states, under the act of 1836, produced eons op ies -psrebmnnomegeessonase been Bek. Vienna, fiad'no children, so her Interest | Hlall is in active preparation for the arrival of | I had recently read with much interest a pam Nawrvoxer, August 13, 1888, 4n injurious effect upon the states, is. perhaps, | C™FsPonden: Evermn Rrowrma Srntxos, N. Y., August 17, 1886. | Vienna. | Thi ly ends with her husband's | the Light Infantry of your city, and by the time | Phlet issued by the Shenandoah Valley railroad | santncket is decidedly one of the mort de not sustained by the article itself, and certainly Steamer Lewiston, August 1, 1883. This is one of the few watering places which | Teath, and lpi coe aa ae at ee, Husband's ch aun te potent ds deg company, and also one issued by 8.Z. Ammen, |, N@ntucl She REEaS wane eee not by the history of the times. Itis not easy| We are just off for aday at Mount Desert. | wag really crowded in July, and it 1s still very | be with hen, omens! in Washington. She has | and hie eo seis salt Papegs we foore | AM. in 1882, giving most glowing descriptions | 'ehtful egy anon Moe m mroyd Cee ten rut the ior | The day is autumnal in its clearness and cool-’| fall, though Richfleld and Saratoga seem to | never been tines nines shortly after her last | sume, repre ees Pseads thet" | of Luray Cave, 80 on the 15th instant, alittie | ™eFsojoura. It is av Heard Aug cen ee ne 7 = yuriou: : J |ness. This staunch vessel is just about as full | “ride and tie.” so to speak, being patronized by | marriage. _ aus Je pe, ee eet ere me party of us, from Silver Spring and Washington, | ‘™® ave dee oe _ : The situation therein so graphically de- | ®* Sle can be: the hardy, bronzed face of Capt. | many of the same people, so that when one is OTHER VISITORS. mage we concinded to engage seats for one of the regular | £*" herd, for this charming Island is twenty-two scribed, the extravazant spirit of speculation, | Deering on the upper deck, the smiling faces ot | fail the other is comparatively empty. Those | EX-Senator Conkling’s wife and thelr daugh- | Celve them. These arrangements leave nothing excursions given by the B. and 0. company each | ™!l¢s from the mainland, and too much off the the “wild cat” banks and other causes which | Steward Warner and Purser Freeman at the | who come here for July often go there for Au- | ter, Mrs. Oakman, have not yet made their an- | to be wished for in the way of further prepara- Wednesday. The train starts from Baltimore, | !"¢ for that greatest of all summer abomina- produced the panic of 1837, all existed before | gangway. Our party consists of nine persons, gust and vice versa. Others now here purpose | 2ual visit to Richfleld. They ate both at the | tion for the comfort, pleasure and entertain- i ‘ th ft thi Th sed, fi and leaves Washington at 8:30. m., and it is tions, an “excursion” crowd. Both here and he passage of this act. They were caused, in - i t 8 1.» at“ » el pony gol kone by the Teal or ne de- | ll but three of them citizens of Washington, | spending part of September there. This place | family residence in Utica now, for Mrs. Conk- | ™ment of the men. The corps arrive about 8 a. Sconset,” the greater number of summer sr ' . ‘ and all of them, at present, members of our 1,700 feet | ling returned on Friday with her husband from | m. on Sunday next, and the camp on Congress | SUPPosed to reach Luray in five hours—at halt | residents live in cottages, smalr almost all, of Poa, in 85, to local sttte beaks, ti citerent | household. Tn alalf hour aller leaving Deer abore tds water, ‘The ground ost greamany {éhete trip tol the Yellowstone, ‘Me Gonktng | awn; oomsiing of fury hoepltal tent, habeing Oar re ne ae rare ao Passengers On | them are, but then privacy ts one great polnt parts of the country. It was the increase of | Isle we glide up to the dock at Sedgwick, | ail the way from Albany here. The atmosphere | Went on to New York. six men each, will be ready to receive them. | until bagi ti San gained, and taking meals at a hotel gives one 80 many millions to these banks and the in- | thronged with waitin ngers. Wagons af , Mr. George Tichnor Curtis, whose Life of | The Wilson Post Band, of Baltimore, will accom- | Luray after half-past three p. m.—t00 | the pleasure of a house with none of the bother Scace of teabtna tates tied conned or pewacieed toy ceentsees SPN aprinkled sous the roadeide, | 18 also strongly impregnated with sulphur, for Biickaaan thas lately Zs "is at Richfield, | pany the command, and furnish the choicest of | much wreck-reation, car off track, &c.—and the of catering. Modern bi rol be anid to Buch disastrous results. and there stands the old-time staxe coach, in- | the spring which Is situated in theSpring House | where he has already spent several weeks | music. In honor of Gen. Sewell, one of the | train usually leaves there to return at 4 o'clock | thr i. a aed President Jackson. jin his message of De- | scribed with the names of adjoining towns on | grove sends forth an odor which is noticed per- | quietly in a cottage. He is not absolutely rest~ | bravest of Jersey's soldiers, and one of NewJer. | © m., and is expected to be in Washington by | ‘rive on an island where the town crier is an Cember, 1836, says that in two years there was | the mainland, to which it is driven. bi: stant. Tinsel | ing, however, for he says he would not be | Sey’s United States Senators, the camp will be| p.m. We did’ not get back to Silver Spring | !™portant and necessary institution, and where an increase of the banking capital of ovér| After a pascageot twoh da half, during | roam sate age often a ee. qintel | nappy nless’ her wicked three one Rows | named “Camp William J. Sewell until 11 p.m. In order to insure promptness | frequently in winter news from the great outside $50,000,000; and of $40,000,000 or one third of | which we fall ta with tonthce et eee ng, | ornaments aro often blackened here merely by daily. The conversation chancing toturn on| The surroundings will be very attractive, for | im \g meals us soon aa the tralh serinee at | World cannot be obtained for a week thepaper currency ina year and a half. This | vacation, aman who has been in the habit of | the sulphur in the atmosphere, without being | (itYarg connected with the slavery discussion | the camp will overlook the sea, the town and | Luray, the proprietor of the hotel and restau.| The Hon. <eearian Oeener tine enki “Ba ay Immense expansion ot the credit system, he | coming to this region for twenty-three years; | taken close to the spring. just before the war, he mentioned that he be- | the hotel, with the Windsor bounding the view | rant sends his agent through the train to see all | Opinion, between June and September, Nan- says, “Is believed to have been produced, | discussing various topics—sometimes theology, | A pecullarity of this white sulphar spring, | licved that-since the death of Hon. Montgomery | 00 one side, and the new Columblaon the other. | those passengers who desire meals, to get them | tucket has no equal in the world for a cool and chiefly by numerous incorporations of new | sometimes piscatolozy—we reach the Southwest | which I have never noticed anywhere else, is Health Mecort—Ihe Fisher Village of Scomect. Correspondence of Tax Evextre Sra. Blair. ex-Justice Campbell, of the Supreme |The dining hall, with all the gayety and musio | to buy meal tickets, so as to secure a real good | healthy summer resort, and I shall make it my Pie then porteare fain the ttictions in states.” | Harbor, Mount Desert. There our classical come | that it fs on a natural mound much higher than | Court, Judah Benjamin and himself and the | ofhops and germans. tanks the western portion | dinney-ten keer T° tee eee rete KOO eghoesrpet oe Helens ge ohraemeree Pe He er (Sots coe the consequences likely | panion leaves us. There, too, sounds the wel-| any of the ground immediately around it. | colored messenger who still sits at the door of | ofthe camp, while the music of the ever-mur- | to wait come tie fore we could get into the | he has ‘salted down” over sixty thousand dol- to result and whic’ erwards did occur. come dinner bell, and we all put Steward War- | Ev ise the springs I have seen have | the court room when the Supreme Court isin | muring sea will roll up from the silvery beach | dining hall at all. and when we had fi lars in a cottage and library, wnd there the thus described by “James | net's eapacity to! the test~ ong to be remem: | been ln a hollow much, lower than any of the | session, were the’oniy persons iving wars were | at the ust, “The table will be. ail thatan cpl | eang hall af all and ‘when we hu twenty min- | eminent Jurist lives with books for his compan- tat time (June, | bered will be that halibut, fresh from its native | adjacent ground. That is true of all the springs | in that chamber at the time the Dred Scott case | ure could desire, and certainly will satisfy the | utes before we could wet fairly “under weigh,” | ions. Visitors he will not tolerate, and in this The situation Buchanan in.the 1836,) these ban! ‘ot required to pay any | waters, and that blueberry pudding, with its de- | at Sarato; was argued and decided. Mr. Curtis and Mr. | keen appetite of a soldier in camp. And last. | and even then we only had tough, cold roast hermit home the childless lawyer is spending his interest on these deposits. These sccumuis- Iicious sauce, which needed 10 iiquor seasoning| As usoal many invalfds are here drinking the | Montgomery Blair were associated in the argu- | bat by no means least, the gentle fair sex of | beef, boilea potatoes—well soaked with water— last years. He only demands books and soli- tions of public money were loaned eut by them | to make it palatable. waters and taking the prescribed number of | ment in that case, the former having been in- | Congress and the entire island are exceeaingly | canned peas, bread and butter, bad coffee, and —— has plenty of both. He has willed his to individuals, whilst all the profits arising THE WONDERS OF MOUNT DESERT. sulphur baths for the cute of gout or rheumar | vited to assist Mr. Blair, whom he had not pre- | busy in arranging to meet and conquer these | worse tea, and no dessert whatever; so we de- coer d — house to the Catholic priests, to be from such loans went into the pockets of theif! prom tne upper deck. if your hat ls well se- | tism, and few seem to fall to find relief. viously met, just before the case came up for | Sous of Mars by the softer, but equally fatal, am- | serted, and paid fitty cents to get out of the the teetpem st arctrest, On another point of =. stockholders. A wild spirit of speculation was rom the upper deck, if your hat is well se- | Tn are large and conyenlently-arranged | the last time. Mr. Curtis’ brother, Associate | munition of Cupid's stores. Sweet smiles, and | place as soon as ble. ie island, some distance from any habitation, is thus fostered, which threatened to destroy the | Cured, for one of our party has just lost his, you bath-houses, where one soaks a certain length | Justice Curtis, was then on the Supreme Bench. | bright eyes, and soft-toned words will soon dis- poucuiee avec san bAen: a eb ceenrreyreal pee only differing from its regular business of the country and to convert | may trace the wonderfal rock formation of this of time daily in hot water, or, in some cases, | It was on the resignation of Judge Curtis that | arm these disciples of Mars. neighbors in having its grounds jealously fenced our public domain into paper money. The | mountain island. From Deer Isle we look off | every other day, in zinc-lined tubs just large | the late Justice Clifford wasappolnted to be one | The program has been already published in The arrangements to go to the cave were very | in at every point. To this house there come @ a - stant ‘succession of priests, seeking relaxa- enormous evils of this system were palpable. 2 enough to hold a human body at full length, | of the Associate Justices. Tue Star, and this will be carried out to the | inadequate. They had only about 25 convey- | con: The banks were thus inilicting deep incuries | CtStward, and we see what appear to be three | enoug! °, ei letter, together with the thousand and one im- tion from toil in heat-burdened cities. They ‘pon the country by the manner in which’ they | ‘istinet peaks. As you skirt along the tstand’s | Rov foeP, cuonsh for, the water, to cover the Rice Te my) colle oe ‘ho has heard | cromptu amusements which each hour and day Naeee dicss thostecion a daceectblivalers keep apart “from the madding crowd,” being peed their money, and it was every day becom. | edge, youcount scarcely less than fifteen or twen- fully suggestive of future possibilities to le on | her husband, will return from Europe next | Will develop and start intolife. It will be, with- yagh,hilly,stony | suficlent unto themselves, and ape in turn snc. ¢ More and more uncertain whether they would ok Pritemate Summits. Delightfal drives have been | one's back in anything like @ coffin and smell | month. ‘They have been there about two years, | Ut doubt, “the happiest time of all the year” to | FAd, so that they were obliged to go over and ar cutie har tear oee kee be able to meet the demands of the goygrnment | built from peak to peak, and from harbor to | strong sulphur ut the same time. t e the Infantry. back three times with the teams to carry all of the | who as quietly play their part in the drama of ‘When called upon for this purpose.” Thede are the | harbor. It'was on one of these excursions from nis ine cde Gee caer Temainitg (ott Scied there Laat: | eee cy of entertalmmant uring the week passengers, and it was after half-past 5 p.m. | life on this «pot of earth. S Teasons he gave for having supported tne bill | the Southwest Harbor to Bar Harbor that Miss has be indeed all sum- ek Ce there has been nothing worthy of special men- | when our party reached the cave. There were HOW ** NAN-TOOK-IT. Which required the deposit of the surplus reve- | Mabel Case, a voung lady of queenly presence | Richfield has been very gay indeed all TEL SPEC 8. tion, The hops and germanshave been asbright | oniy six guides for the entire party of 450 peo.| The beautiful Indian legends concerning nue with the states, and it will be observed | and beauty, lately lost her life. The king bolt | Mer, and is sfillso. There have been “phantom | The hotels here have some very pleasing speci- | and gay as ever, the bathing as full of life and | 7 that ta each th % Nantucket have been supplanted by a story that he is deseribing the situation as it existed | of the buckboard, on which a party of nine were | parties,” ‘‘Jarley wax works,” tournaments and | alties not found at ail other resorts. A Pictur- | zest and the fishing really superb. Pe, 90 each section there were 7% per- worthy of a century 40 practical that its children ' Before the passage of the act of 1836. riding down the mountain, gave way, and.while | no end of excursions. There are hops alternate- | esque feature at the “New American” is a huge | The first fatal accident by drowning occurred | Sons. Hence, only a tew persons could see the John C, Calhou id ia the Senate December | others were seriously wounded, she was almost ‘Qt, 1836: “That the f the money, in prefer the «reat and leadi foundation of the D : on Monday, George Thomas, of Baltimore, | guide or hear anything he saldafter the aection | FePudiate Santa Clans and demand proofs of instantly killed. ‘The buckboard is the favorite | V ®t the Spring House andthe “New Amert ee ire ye In the central hall, Pi here Im- | waiter at the Hotel Lafayette, belng the victim | had started” as they aif went single file most of | Cinderella's life. This tconoclastic tale Is to the od of locomotion here. Tt is wonderfully } CAB” In the evenings, from 9 to 11, and in the | mense logs of wood blaze upon large brass and- | of his own rashness. He Jumped from the pier, | the way. andthe track was very winding. Then, | effect that a white settler hundreds of years ago but. in turning out for other vehicles, you | mornings the band, which is supported Jointly | irons, protected by a very high brass fender. and was not -een again until hauled into shore. | one section of the party often had to wait ten | gave as a dowry to his eldest daughter. Marth, pn Act | sometimes feel as though you were going over; | by the two hotels named, gives a concert daily | Over the center of the iire-piace depends a| Miss Eva Mills and Miss Mary Cake have re- — red ess minutes or more in some of the chambers for | the land now known as “Martha's Vineyard;” to that would forever distinguish the 24th Con- | and, last year, we ourselves were let down to at each, alternately. Other concerts are also | CT", on which hangs a big Iron tea kettle. Mr. | turned to Washington. another section to come back and get out of the | his sons other acres, and to one capedl gress—an act which will go down with honor to | terra firnia by the giving out of a king bolt. of frequent occurrence, as many of the best mu-| Welch, who keeps this hotel, is from the St, SITTER FROM DAKOTA. way, 80 that another one could pass along. The | grace the island of Puckernuck, Gostesity. as ie had obtained the atenont meaate WOW Ginw Cooke Gime, siclans in the country regularly visit Richfield | Nicholas hotel in New York, and is a relative of LETTER F DAKOT. Consequence of all these delays and bad man-| bread;” so when Nan, the youngest daughter, mo sppecesion C the present ae. The! The frst glimpse of the many-pinnacled set- | each summer. Mine. Schiller, the very accom- we Erosion, the young proprietor of the Spring <a a mievomns agement was, we were only able to gee about | was about to become a blushing bride, there e inspired the country with new : very 5 penschoed =~ : tome It had been beheld abroad asa, matter | tlenientat Bay Harbor, isquiteimposing. Here | Plished pianist, who is also a vgry handsome one-half of the usual objects shown. was Only this island left for her; but, nothing A SUGGESTION OR TWO. oe 3 sconptae i om b sobs descendants Much of the delay in the caye could be | have kept it isday. To offset this tale is avoided, if the company would only put up neat | the fact of deed dated 1659, from Mayhew & | ‘The Spring house makes @ specialty of the | Prospects—Persenal v-ossip—Some Ob- of wonder; a phenomenon in the fiscal world, | are sixteen hotels it's pile, painted in brilliant | Grog” gan sees thee Deere thao. Stil | adornment of grounds, plazzasand parlors. In| servationeby @ Washington Hoy om rah Ae could have sprung out of no institutions | colors, with flags fiying, and as fresh as though | fied ‘the visitors by a concert at @he Spring | tHe £Tove are numerons rustic seats and open| Bin Travels. Pe ccive nad which went ina powerful and im) the work of asingle day's magic. The harbor is | House. That last Saturday. overiing was speck. | *U™Mer houses, with rustic roofs, and one group ome Son, of London, giving “the island of Nantucket, ive nessuer ta Utvetvate the cenit er Coe ; s of seats 1s, by an immense Chinese uin: boards, ‘painted white, with black letters, be- | “ government." ° Tee ce ee ee eae tai | Sv mune’ evcahag’ there aad ce |peaaiio brella, with the janer surtuce painted, thus | Spel Coreepondenoo of Tux Evernea Gris. \ fore each object of Interest in the cave, briefly | chasers,” witoe names are called wee, war In the elaborate discussion npon the questions oe : Jr r i Spri Sagi ped Canopy) Over: heads nAEE, at 14th, 188 describing it; the stant There is an old distich that ‘‘by the Tre, Pol, and ofthe repeal of the act and the postponement of | animals as the porcupine, and resembling them, Hone a carer te MERE, Patior jaf the SPTIDE | of those using the, seats. August 14th, 1888. a a 1 Pen, you may ki i a é , On the palconigs of this hotel are a great| When I wroteTax Sar last great paucity and stupidity of the guides much more =e « hose | __ 0! great prepara- 2 fall of 1837, no one took the that the | soon as the Lewiston is fastened to the wharf, Tes EOLA ans Mine Bes Ry bate Variety of the mast comfortable chairs, all of | tions were making for the assembling of the eae agen waiter to about 40 persons is ier ee tae by EL Roberta wwiioon father beck the | Eaggment in one of the church choirs in New | *Poted king, ‘Theye are also sofas and tables of | This movement looking to the organization ofa- | stomach and on the waiter also. ar 5. the payment of the fourth instalment, in the | too, weirdly lift themselves at your right. As os a stzanaer, ge ot one to the 5 5 manor born; for these names are Aulmvgumeme tae Crouadioa: old Agamont House in 1855. and whose brother | ‘The Spring House had a fancy dress and mas- ene the one PE ees aro i at Seer Ore ONT en praia tee ny de wana Sapbiaett eostd oe rome Tayi names of the island, numbering their owners by =m Keeps the Newport, a hotel right opposite. | querade ball two weeks ago, which was pro- seats Turkish rugs placed. to | veloped into something tangible. At first there | 0! rele tes att Was som ana jive, | the hundreds. I was shown the house, near the ‘To the Editor of Tue Evexrxe Star: These houses are both moderate in expense, $10 | ductive of much pleasure to all concerned, and | Protect dainty slippered feet from the floor of | was considerable dissatisfaction expressed by a A regalat Lhd tifing that some of car | Shefburn Hotel, where the present Secretary of — ~ [tis surpassing strange that the scientific | a week, or $2 per day. We found the table of | on the 15th there was one ‘at the New Ameri- | PoFches. Another specialty of the same hotel is | class of men familiar to every community that is rat bale, reed osu pe Seoagelgendcd pred the Treasury, Charlies J. Folger, first opened his World has not promulgated the simple fact | the Rockaway all that we needed, and so of the | can, at which some Surpasnitsly tieh costumes io prevent (eee Sete Ghee sibering with one Interest harmonious action | Pave and go back, and the perspiration stecd ie | Cee Upon this world of gladness and Treasury SeRlet bee ctered think mankinul fa the fave | oo yeon uewig palleedl Gux lace, laos Pome | re om eh ame from New -ork | ious repakt 10 lest oe a dys journey. No ever favoring the division of the terstory and | W'OPsonour faces. Tthink weshouldhaveturned | P&X°%: Baker preaches at the Congregational £0 long, but which for some unaccountable rea-| juyt uponthe sea.” Gress Sener os Setorahnad. The tiniee, extra charge 1s made tor basket or lunch. Japat- | the admission of that section into the sisterhood inte petrided stalagmites or columns if we had | church, and delivers a zood sermon, too; she gets fon has not been put into practice by even this “Tie most fashionable and expensive houses, | tions for tile lst coeete mene ere gotten up | CS@ Paper papkins are always put in these | ofstatesembracesa handsome majority, including | St@! mas Ihe ped hy ‘all of the war bot | $300 a year, aud earns her salary for the wear same thinking portion of humanity—or if so, at | as The Rodick, where we found President Mc- | in very handsome style. being engraved on the | baskets. Miss GRuNpY. the most intelligent and influential men, not only ois ‘coe all rch aay, ma eof bey eine * and | 20d tear upon her nerves preaching to the sum- sereee Kauai Bortion of it—that the human | Tore Treaident Arthas was entertained, ered | eee, chute note. paper in pale gold. As an-| LETTER PROM THE HUDSON. | 19 South Dakota, but in allparts ofthe Territory | {hey were. all muddy, wet and sli ll: where | Cacrioriana errata ct renee at scourges known as cholera, yellow fever and where President Arthur was entertained, charge nounced on the invitations guests were expect- E " THE OUTCOME OF THE CONVENTION HELD AT | yon conld sit down to Test. The wi ole extent Christians, must be something that no male some 34 a day, and as high as $40 a week, ac- | ed to appear either in “full dress, fancy cos- = << HURON, of the cave now open to the publicis about three preacher can appreciate. cording to accommodations. There are few pri- | tume, or en masque,” e Legend of Nyack—Interesting Fea- one of the leading towns of South Dakota, was ii A CLUB WITHOUT A DUDE. . wate boarding-h ae heard of one catted DRESS NOT THE RULE. tures of the Pince—A Hebrew Hotel— ‘The sweil club here does not have one dude of a sea cee where the ponte Dress is far less of an obligation here than at on its list, and its building could not hold » custom originated with the ay, and from =8 to 12a week. | most fashionable resorts, and while one sees parallel forty-six assembled and resolved. The | having read carefully the glowing descriptions | Tushlight to Newport's casino, but it is Jolly all time of te introduction of Christianity, and for 8 present dimensions was built | many pretty, fresh, becoming toilets, none | correspondence of Tax Evewixo STan. question of statehood was discussed in all its | referred to above, and after having seen the | the same. It is composed of aged citizens, re- tide and sanitary mode ofdie, | Letrige thet Met ey 8 famly of brothers | which are motloen ple ciety ormuse ot thelr NYAcK oy THE Hupsos, August, 1833. _| details, and the eloquence displayed on the occa- | beautiful cuts in the pamphlets, was decidedly | tired captains of fishing vessels, and some few ng of dead animal bodies (of course ineiud-| 400 guests, being the largest hotel in Maine. | estimated cost are observed."“Diamonds afe sel- |" pe township ot Nyack is in Rock!ang countg,-}-siqn-excellad much of that reading matter found | unfavorable—having supposed from them that wegen lefradeyriate gor7s eye pric apteseennd Fasces When noe hallow taeda. and these | The Rodick family are old settlers, having a | dom seen except as ent dvops, or: &t in modest | near Rockland Jake, and in every way has na, | 10 the alleged Congressional Record. Since that many of the stalactites and stalagmites were | Of, Summers here te.be identided Sg dom ture been kind In touching mountain, river and | time every small town capable of supporting @ | almost white, like alabaster, whereas it Is Just the with = lives since the introduction of “Christian” eustom of burying the d the surface of the earth. 1 Jay Gould’s Castle—Washington Ire | satisfactory beyond expectations. Over three ving’s * Sunnyside”? Home. hundred delegates from the counties south of THE PLAIN FACTS ABOUT THE CAVE. The first impressions produced on me, after plagues which now follow the ‘ of human | farm across the bar, which gives Bar harbor its | breast pins and rings. “Twenty thousand dol- wars and devastate regions whose : room, decorated with a small table and'stove Im sphere | name. There are some fifty cottages on the isi- | lar necklaces” are not likely to appear here, and | land office and a groggery has been agitating . de i Bsuperlaten with the eMlavia arising trom | and. "The frst onewas built in 1868, by Alpheus | the scandal connected with suclt seems equally | Valley with the wand of magical beauty, and | tne question. Now all eyes are turned towards | Teverse. They are so impregnated with the | the center of the apartment; chairs are pushed je-tields and cemeteries were unknown. T| Hi o f 4 tifly against the wall, and the inevitable sand- AjSof Boston, and could not have coat known as being enacted here. By the way, endowing the people with a keen appreciation | Sioux Falls, where, pursuant to an order of the | Oxide of iron, and ‘ulso nearly all of the ceiling | ®' Ps = only want, now, to draw attention to this one y thousand Soilaen Miss Bowler, of some- | in the eleven years that I have visited Sara: | of their blessing, which haa induced them to ald | “-vallant 300,” delegates will assemble on Sep- | of the cave generally, that the prevailing color se = —— Ss epee egvtorees4 ye grerwheiming arzument in favor of cremation. | where in the west, is erecting one which is to | toga, all put together, I have never heard as | nature by the harmony of art in making their | tember 4th and frame a constitution and trans- | is a rusty brown or yellowish brick color on most | ing ne ¥ x “ » " e ‘There are many others: but It is not the theory | cost over 100,000. Andthe heights are crowned many scandals discussed there, the principal | homes attractive and pleasing. The legend of | #¢t Such business as is appropriate for the | of the objects, and it is only occasionally, here | “Yarns.” | But these hardy old salts reef th of cremation so much that I am calling atten-| and the woods dotted with them at every point | actors in which were pointed out at the time as formation of a state. and there, that you see a real handsome white | Conversational sails when a Washington man ig. cies ; eoune ls the place is well authenticated. The chief of | 2 ih : begins an anecdote, and religiously believe all Prejudiced, natura! thought; and if there are Notwithstandin: the ils of the buckboard THE ATTRACTIONS HERE. rel—not of money, but whisky—to a Dutch set- | demand admission into the Union. In the firat | and the hel from Gk. hellsso, or air, as the jail in - ougt ; is , E Is } bracing air, years has held thocry that cremation te Ge aes tore tae | we chartered one, carrying nine persons, tures | ‘Therefined clam of peoplo always to be found | Her whose descondauts are stil legion an the Bee CHAE go TAs on PoeelnOn Lercuaerion | are Fiey Latereatine aad oeaoET Tan an ent | Bbniooeay, ad the Aaa ioe ae nc damice spoken of Tam ready to mace there, | on accat at 93 aa teaeeand started at once | at Richneld is a great attraction to the place. | Hudson. Manhattan sold his island for twenty- | South Dakota possesses the requisite numbers | that the line of growth is frequently horisonta | the Selectmen that unless they adopted some Ueemeriee ee Ren through a beautifully ‘wild. forest road for | Some of these have beet coming here for many | four dollars. These tranactions lead one to {ty entitle her to admission. 4 survey of the | for gome distance, and then often upwards, but | measures to keep the, sheep Song aac eee iat uipeay Woda xia Schooner Head, Spouting Horn, Devil’s Oven, | successive seasons, and will nat go-to places | believe Indians had little knowledge of the |coantry and an Inquiry among the “settlers | seldom downwards, they som to Hoty the low orn- 7 f % ing! As Nantucket is the station, the mitauain da iceNe ain: and Anemone Cave. After ride of four miles | where there is a mixed crowd, atractod by big | value of money or whisky. NFRLrictes tn | tural tor whist ants beriey Gaemiornaniatten | « few of the siatactins bates Cathedral Organ | mall is carried to Soonset, a distance of 8 I In Tue Stak of the 11th instant I observe a| We dismounted and climbed and clambered ) gambling houses, pool selling on races, &c. ae ver proprietor, still ocen- | thousands hither who have located upon nearly | are wonderful, inasmuch as there appears to be gator gine Des(mangone a eommunication from “F.” upon the subject of util we ee ee recat wom There have been races of some kind at the pled by lineal descendants of the astute ances- | every quarter section oriahi sastct ti ares pad oe ——— wi Gre fata ed al spends ni Kiss I tl cae. ‘edo not intend to write them down—for, i 2 y river; the class of men who have thus settled musi in; a : : = water-roaches. and requesting information for | Nature has done her best, we say let her live. oot ari on We eke lace Sonic: ‘Satu, Eo Gay = een eariae y ‘Washington, Dakota are men of pluck and energy and have | giving only dull, thuddy sounds, without vibra- | Scouset, palgepgiome awalaed sce exterminating them by traps. Let me suggest | And, Perhaps, they will grow aaron us In mem: | day, the bicycle riders have competed there. | mating tatill tore hetero, "| manifested their intention of citizenship by | tlons. heavy and few, e @ may have occasion to the following, which proved quite successful: | OTy or in dreams. " But, after all we heard ‘k that her pennies have been squandered Last Saturday there was a contest for the cham- z a = erecting good, substantial farm houses. WHERE THE SHINE COMES IN. Hage Take an old tomato can, from whieh the lid, eut | 9f these natural wonders, wewere disappointed. | pionship of the state of New York by tho bien: THE NYACK ROWING ASSOCIATION on trashy epistles. Now, in view of these facts, the people of this | yt also requiresaremarkablestretch ofthe imag- i =o i Aug buckboard, ride was repeated. Then we | clists, and a large crowd was in attendance, the | an approved Institutiqn, a social nucleus, | section have organized themeelves'and, propose . Among the Washingtonians who ere or have Sean entirely pono wags in diameter, has not | had a long ramble down the shore, front of the | cists, and a lange crowd was In atts being filed | where much pleasure and “hightoned” enjoy- | making a demand to Congress for the admission | Matton to see re ee aml gmies wat | een at Bante one ce power a ee (Gan Mk Gad autale O85 entons. ant OG train ti with ladies in pretty toilets, making the scene a | ment isextracted. The boat-house is very hand- | of the south half into the Union. It will be | YoU to see, and expect you to see, too, or two isacesn nad eee tee tee "A. Willard and Feady for setting. Place the canon a sheit | U2 Philosopher, whose head wears a double | very brilliant one. There’ were heat races, @ | mens wah every appointment for receptions, |Temembered that delegated persons made an | (?) as you please. If words were horses, then | 7hombson and wie: ME. Henry A. Willard and where the roaches are “numerous, porting anc oe Jy and prone | dash, a slow rac; and other interesting cbn-| G2neiny and ble entertainments. ‘The | “nea! before the, last Congress for adinission, | everybody could ride; but they are a voor sub- | Wn Halimntyne med nee AL ay ae very thick syrup upon the lower part of the lid, | Nac! We.all ate with a relish and pronounced | texts, : Hane kaa, Bed able nent’: - THe | which was refused. ‘This winter stitute for ideas,—only a faint image at the | gon and family. who have Miss Birdie Fox, and lay two or three sticks a foot long, with |/Ust the thing. | mr,--| _,OHl Saturday of this week gentlemen oers | ee tener cable, and, Dest of all, | 4 peveaarion wait. warr urox coxoness, [tee ent now mtol iste things, The descrip- | daughter of H.-G. Fox, of your city, asa ;uest, one end on the shelf and the other end on the] ctor gunner we viditad thy tree ene [on horseback will have artee under the aus | choice society, make it a charming rendezvous | 4,20 by a state constitution and all the ma-] fo.’ Posse apatite eae the Misses Lottie and. Evia Clark dauchicrs of San. Tes, sticks enable the roaches to gain | | After supper we visited the Indien eneamp-| pices, of Col. Lawrence, Kip, SEO) Harel with | Oh se EETITTer PUR oe arts Soc Tieounse tee | (IRGTy tecoeaaty tothe ramming or! w atute ae F hich ne one edly sleertiant ct | the oupervising architoot of the Gayitol ana 37 frects thet attention. af etsy woabie WS Se | baekets Sows nid aot Gat cee aoe | Buomslons aa pleas are” Say enfoyed. by have. cottages, and the. close proxioaty ty th | ona ema amission. In the face of thelaw | shine” so beautifulls, that water would not | Delmcse, Trimble, of Wachington, have bees Some ian | th si i any political party to antagonize the movement | pric A bought a lot of it, but ne! fe and daughter; John Sherman, the f m =f | gull. Some‘of them had the genuine Indian vl s to business during the season, as trains are con- aaa ighter. person bought a lot of it, but soon ry, Keg a y pied tee Pte a cet of | color. figure and profile. Others were of az Humber or picturesque drives herexbouts: all | sautly woing to and trom the city. Tien tie | Om Solely political grounds. A democratic Con- found it was not at all what it was represented | Tealestate agent, and famlly, and Second Asais- ered that the contents consisted of about one | OHI. Little toddling boys and girls were | over excellent roads, A tally-ho coach runs | Tegular Nyack boat, also the Albany boats, en- | gress admitted Colorado, which gave its elec- | to be; so he berated the manufacturer soundly; | tant Postmaster General Richard A. Elmer and s 5 ° : for the republican | pnt he took the matter very calmly, and merely | Wite. KP. T, ap about the tent doors and in the streets. Begin-j daily to Otsego Jake, where one takes the | able one to select between land or water trips. | toral vote soon afterwards mat ; ery. Iv, ly Ss ben ioe of ender nee | ning a conversation with one of the men, who, | steamer Natty -Bumpe’ for Cooperstome: ara | The Feoenedt hotel ls. the fashionable) resort of | candidate.” Regarding this matter, lesra front | remarked, that “ine shine was\@ll ta the adver |gsssy secs pie “Memeineiel om eke that bad been destroyed by their companions, | With a long, crooked knife and a hammer, was | after an hour or two there returns here in the | the town, and in every way truly desirable. It a conversation with Delegate Maginnis, of Mon- | tisement, he guessed.’ marth? Ategetition with ‘several calls’ met ith the patting together 8 front-door to his house, we | same way by supper time. Bo great Is the he Commanding in Ml fea Beles bat ae gets ae oa Mi Pies seirticlen sl oe pa ne Peon sd ae Sosa] cement seep of tome This period, long as it appears, is very shor a 5 . i a ; with energy dis ursion: nm - vi 5 vi 5 ings % ne I A SI ee reer oe daycat Lin the morning. a party started off aed | the heart must also reach the pocket, prompted by an allusion to Montana's posstbil- | “takes the shine off” of the pamphlets and yet | 5 Compared with the myriads of azes of geolog s A ¥ se +) lag - fin cE f securing statehood during this Congress. | 1 doubt not there are m: curious and inter- | ical development that preceded it, and repre- A Senator with Two Troubles. tribes of Israel. But evidently it was a matter | drove to Cherry valley to breakfast, then went THE TAPPANZEE HOTEL. ities of any (From Sergegnt-st-Arms French's Tecture—“‘Ten | Whilch did not much interest hlm—whether he | on to Sharon springs, where they dined, and | nas a distinct individuality. It isa Jewish ho- conan, Ce ate a ects meek. cating thins to examine at als scare, Hf more sents only the last and the shortest of — ge About the Seuste."") Bee Abeonane rants cathes cobs ie ee ee ow tcua vapane Grove, back | tel. Gentiles are neither solicited or desired. | {x wroportionally republican, ‘Last winter ie Sieber ae ¥ | logical periods. The question arises, How An good data tacoans, ‘lke Poco: | Rok day silat andere ant mores [ering MY MEMHUEKE abot 1” Te We I rhra are wage umber of wealthy Hebrews | Yann couty bos wre" aa atone | powetanencmaered wiNIC | emus rge eny ble toed Tn ove and » good deal ofastatesman. Like Fessen- | trarvels of Bar Harbor, except a littie pleasant | "on sonday evening & moonlight excursion | boarding there. The grounds are spacious, the | ta Dakota's admission, and the presence of Gov. | js situated in the middle of a valley eight or ten | tHe Whole surface of independent originate the Gen, a debater, rather than an orator. A sharp | rowing inthe morning. There was a struggle | was enjoyed by a. party on Canadarago lake, building attractive, and Judging from the ap- | Ordway in Washington, with skillful manipula; | miles wide, between the Blue Ridge mountains | et ae eee men sprang from man. distinguished by great acuteness of dis-| between the tog and the morning sun, and by | There were about twenty in all, eight of whom | pearance they find much genuine enjoyment in | {07s appended, pe (Brean Shap say in | O0,0ne side and the Massanutton mountains on! common cradle, a “mother-region?” On crimination and aecaracy of statement | half past eleven, when we left the dock, on our | were gentlemen, and two martled ladies who | tig exclusive resort. Ab the Taprensoe the | y° conuection tht Gor, Orderay is not paren | the other. |The bed rock is blue limestone, and | tnys point stadenta‘are divided, Agassiz holding pod ga te eps ES it ihe ie pence Gl ee GE gen its peels ao ee ar orgeuned: for, at, this | alarly popular in Dakota Just now. He Roows | anes st, eoteral cone: foek pero aac wos Rene ct meee ote ee Fessenden, but in many traits like him. ea point, the bre part ot the river, (three an very well that just so soon as Dakota or the | them, which is to have occurred as were developed, 3 There was a time, while Mr. Trumbull was | Tocks and. the mountains had to be ad-| moonlight on a pretty steamboat (the T. R. | C01 mites in width) is seen, whore ke the chee south hap becomes a state he would immedi- | 20%, ye 5 trefages and the theologians maintaining the chairman of the Senate committee on the judi- | Journed till the next visit. He Beene (>| wroctie) abe pipe atcha the Lake} suntight like @ polished mirror reflecting a Stary an the climate uncongenial. Why, he Sl il ike proeeanet tanctlbrae 4 ee Sees ee ee Clary. that Benjamin Butler was chairman ot | the tune of the foz whistle, at one t Libs’ | Memes ata inthe aun bridal of earth and sky, it goes _on its jon | could not poll enough votes to get the position | and ornamentation’ began; the former, ‘being, | the Same in ali the essential characteristics the judiciary committee of the House. It was | Crossing Copet a eae rye WASHINGTON Visirons. silently amd swiftly, saying, in Nature’s lan- | of a county commissioner. dissolving ac. | the species, has advanced into ail the habitable during this period that 2 delegation from one of [oreo Sania And then. dissppeared: then. | nga number of Washington people here, | guage. ‘Men may come and men may go, but I a aiaseoe oa Gee ste ha parts of the globe, and that 7 Seer peop ae saber orp ba desk = ue we just ped tere Sai pony Captain | though some had already gone before I arrived. | flow on forevér.”; On the opposite shore in bold . and when provided with all the resources Dee wi relief is see! Nearly every dayI am in receipt of letters | and coursing through previously formed fissures the federal judge of their state. They inter- ring was in the pilot-house much of the |The Minister fru. the Argentine Republic, | Télief a theelegant ib 7 mn that and inventive genius could viewed Mr. Butler as to the proba-| time. But, about an hour later, we in the rocks. The latter is composed of lime— —— eastern inguiring about Dakota, and at his disposal, but when still Senor Dominguez and bis wife and seven child- “ BOME OF JAY GOULD. Som Poonle Teins'a | carbonate in form of stalactite, growing down- Foung aol tgneeet "Rt ems ‘thon than 3, ‘The tuttéts affd towers of his castle Clark In particular. Now, if there is anything | wards; also, growing upwards, bility of carrying such a measure through | ‘2 again to Sedgwick dock, where were a gay | ren spent a month here, and went last week to e turfet suggest a Dakotaian does delight init Is to be asked about a "sale ton § + | weak and almost naked, having only just that session. “1 don’t know,” was | Party of young folks waiting to bid adieu to | Niagara, and will visit other points of interest. | cathedral.on the Hadson. Oncethe Gould man- shoot bash spn leery ‘ce that it got Ste and s fow rede arms with which to de- Mr. Butler's reply. “I am__ chairman | Some departing friends, and who finally went | “admiral and Mrs. Almy and danghtere, who | sion was qalled {The Folly,” for its grandeur | his particular town or section of the country. ag — fede reed fend itself and procure food, the human race Of the judiciary committee of the House. The | biling, two or thre stories high, upon the stage | have been here all summer, will go September | rnined the. ereator, but now it may be ‘called | ABd itise.poor settler that has not the finest | seven milions of yeare to form Tecollection | Conquered the world and itself hecessary action can be had here. But Lyman | Coach, and.as we left the dock, disappearing up | jst to Saratoga for a vis “The Si ‘for the fact 1 shed. | 0VernT nt claim in the country or own town | largest columns ve. lon ‘Trumbuil is chairman of the Senate committee, | the hill. Did not we wish ‘we were young |" Gommodore Pattison. late commandantot the foe jnobess, Bie — is acoompll lots where the court house or a university Is | a1 Seowiolgn et adequate to verify this and Judge Trumbuil is troubled with two things, | #ain? Quly, they do not realize that their | washington navy yard, is here, with his wife | ‘“The owner owns It. most likely to be erected. markable the dyspepsia, which makes time miserable; and | »4pplest time Is now! and daughter, and the health of both the latter |. Not far¥rom the Sentt castle is Sunny Side, | ‘To those who are suffering with broken down | ow THE EXCURSION MAY BE MADE AGREEABLE. a conscience, whieh w him uncertain. In| Weare back again to the quiet picti ue- | is greatly improved. Miss Beale, daughter of | the charming home of Washington Teving. ‘His ‘The scenery from the Point of Rocks is very these modern ties there may be many others | N€8’ of our less fashionable Deer Isle. Con- | ex-Surgeon General Beale, of the nave is with | honored pame has given the pretty little town rs well as by dogma, that we have to explain, or at rebar indlirsatidhe sh Nene | tented? Yes. The mountains here are in the : Hassell Mae | the namepf Irvington. Poetry and wealth have | Soir rac ecenk . fine all the wayto Luray, and with good man-| Pan to make ‘and that in an age when be pay daronteperend eo Waren caneee distance, and we climb them only with the eye. Lhe he dane mths to iemertntion Bote aoe eae agement and amuch better arrangement and | /¢ i only nee reagan ee rll ‘i a ere are no city sounds. The air fs just as daug! Hudson. “Tarrytown is opposite Nyack, and | The air is dry and the winds invigorating. ‘The lanning by the railroad and the Luray Co.’ Sanleaee pacpie ake tn Cot en eon pare as tet Hab eis place no ane hea | soperintentent af the eee eee oe connwetea by 8 well regulated ferry-boat, dd is winters are hot severe, though the winds are thioes excursions might Be made very agreeable 6 e er * col imes. 10 ve honor the man ail the more. Wao will tenuate one class of city Jrntiend = Lnpeinee pat ee me) The cap of André is monumentalized at this | (24 404 agai eonatey Those As they are now conducted, however, I would The ee . advise no one to go; bunt if they do go, the; LETTER FROM FROSTBURG. sions for another of similar intensity, we have | and her daughter. Mrs, Mitchell's son te also | Place. church Sonne attended is should ide themselves with plenty of vend = nothing to offer. But to those who wish for an | with them. ‘The widow of the late Gen. Michler | #8en now as then, and in the old churchyard is Wi vislons for the entire trip, and also rubber shoes A Maryland Mining ‘Town—Good Air, | “Mtite change for body, mind car Sagal tooe | leading a very secluded life here. A eon ere ot dees ee speak and a good stock of “imposition-proot” patience Good Water and Only One Folice= | with Nature in her gentler to hear her | south Carolee ee ee es eal known | tte to hie memory. Mignon. y, BoE eee ce Soba tmgeellion af the | sate | 1 ‘papers ly corporations who control and manage on Sweetest sounds, to breathe Tost healing | Washington for several years before her reeent A Father Who Forgot Hw Baby. pa taieasy BaMBLER. = breath, with just diversion en for health; Correspondence of Tux Evrxixe Stan. who bring their own suificlont ‘oclety, who | titted ‘Potetinee ot he tae Tinsbaud at thor | 770m the Obicaso Herald: Ba) Frostsvxe, Mp., August 10th, 1888. | have books and can be happy with them; who | country seat, Shrublands in Suffolk. ‘the —_ “Yes, we find 8 great_ many things,” sald the Knights and Ladies. Tam up here among the mountains enjoying | DOw and then like a sail or a fishing excursion, | of the house there is Admiral Sir George Brooke | conductor, as he looked over the contents of a | and several blan! ‘From the Boston Traveller, Aug. 11. the pure fresh air, and wonld like to et the | Without ex DY all odds, give us Deer | widaieton. lady's purse which he had foundon s seat in the We see it stated tnat 70 ladies of Pennsyl- people of Washington know, through your | /#!2, 19) a earth ce hae on, wh next cat om do with them?” vania have gone with a body of Knights Templar paper, something about this part of the coun- <p pu 7 cpa oon ‘over to the chief at ad a try. Frostburg isa mining town, situated on| A Smccesufal Roach Trap Discovered. ride the end of the trip. ‘There is always a fase which differen- the line of the Cumberiand and Pennsylvania | T° the Editor of Tax Everres Stan: kickea up and he ge is owners fo! settling in other Fallroad, and about one hour's ride from Cum-| Please publish the following for the benefit of here, things. Yea, pees penkopen popper pon — ance Comber your readers, who are loudly calling for roach travelling, have been el | land 2 a ou can { go to the top ot Dan's mountain and look down | SP%-. That much-needed article has been in- 7 on one of the most picturesque sights that ever | Vented by some Ingenious fellow, and after oon Leyes beheld, comprising vest soo the | Siderable search I found it in a 7th street store. inion old Potomac and a great extent of Lraapeing stipe in_ the evening, with a small ‘ land. pl f cake a little molasses, and you will ' _ The town has about 3,000 inhabitants ana only | find it the most enticing balt that can be used. Fequires one policeman, which, I think, speaks | Place it where the ‘very well for the order of the place. Tne | and in the morni town is supplied with gas and water. The| having your Feservoir is ie in the mountains and | pesta. catches the supply from the mountain stream | collection will be done for. and {s as clear as crystal. So if anybody wants man would get hold of the trap to have a good time in general come up to| a Frostburg, where good accommodations on rea- | be benefited by it. ‘sonable terms can be hud. J.B. T.. i it ef il i

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