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. NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1856, 3 HE SUMMER RETREATS. | #and iu the centro, looking down upon a multitadi- the body be in heulth acd the mind will be fregtrom | pi , ducks, arid all the appurtenances, with the | fererce there was an eldor rent to a tribe of n'% | dubbed bim Profeaso a Dous bea of ridges aud pe re extendiag ou’ in preaXion, ada zest impartes i t ilized Indans just back of us ti 2 t Tait. Now Wnust close. Yee wae a es ane eer ad fon he | eset monde Mr ich hes | res pe hai mnbard tea | Baa st mais turd wit | hye sabi s fa net tt Res GtEN House, Foor Moons WAsnineTon, ment like polished metal—now toweriag up like (a pretmenade which caanot be Mow 4 os” pea, ps ee entertainment closed with | "als: they, the ns, were once a chosen people | jcay,'ng my bed a few momei a Q "ad s ; and tot! matic fro1 of God, but through nt The . Ware Mountains, N. H., August 7, 1256. } sulated cones—now grouped together like loving | Who imagine that in visiting this atte ae pap ee pi ey pen ogg his favor, pr ie ote re a “eg prom cag: fo phe poy feel much etalk lontreal to Quebec—The Gibraliar of America Fiat ri h the not the Lenefit of country air and country prospects, | bas a fine and weil cultivated voice, and | with od bees laboring unver 8 curse; they have been = * ng i i cel so miserable, that 1 have lunder a Cloud—Luzurious Steamboat Travelling | ¢neiniwonce the ceover of the Cees pease | Loud say that they Lecce gy ony = rd o> Ar ida altogether, was a rich a Oo he Be A IETS ‘feel dloposed to make Pe eg —Rusell’s Hotel—Departure for the United | remarkable outlines of the summits of Camel's | wrong impre pare, mieten wont a ‘ les askin gs teeee os ae Deane & i and if it i your * impressions they have been controle ‘The ride hom: i they ure again t» become the fi » cep iny mame in the dark; and if it is yoar Statee—Splendid Ferry Boat--Quebeo to the Bony foc Mansfield mountain being easily distin- Of courte, at this scien tics are an of tho most achat oti pamant axiarsiie, ous while the utiles are {0 be pee edt on paige eXpreas it, and T will endeavor White Mountaine—Grand Trunk Raihoay— { &V*bed when the atmosphere is clear. To the | theme, and here are men of all shades of | and the party te) ,60we to the Spring House, | MNS, pestilence, &c. Bsiore, however, this second | ep you posted up in matters relating to the White Mountain Station—Alpine Housr—Arvi- northwest, under your feet, are the clearings and set- | political opivions. They gravely and quietly con- | (kept by Mr. tne) ae pret ily embowered in trees, | 24¥e0", the Lamanites are to embrace the Gospel— | ania, PUG Ghd The Buieattcn ‘ tlement of Jefferson and the waters of Oherry Pond, | verre upon the political ions, and canvass with | and some to their pleasnat home at Mr, Tuiler’s, in | tat is, Mormonism—and co-operate with the saints | The Monster Wrought 1 Oat atthe Cre serland of America, nd seca distant, the village of Lancaster, with | coolness the merits of tive candidates. | whose kind and warm hearted family one can expe- | i0.aiding God in his designa. This doctrine, you | {rom the Livernoot Albion] oe §c., Se. i ie Ai ae Insets ree, The Connecticut is | I do not cee that there is m attempt to make | nence all the comforts of a home, and alo have the | Wi!\perceive, is liable to have a bad'tendency when Two months the successful experiments at re" pafed ith Montreal with rearet, and | [Sarto grt gnpeens omen | comeiglg any ie bet elven ofan |i ele or wcll ern eoped at the | eden tbat Cle cd Cany | Zatiy tide he lsc dg othe si med down the St. Lawrence in that magaificent | To the north and northeast, only a few miles dis- | feelings which many have, who are considered ul , Py do not understand it, CW they do, tt | tite world, that it was impracticable to constenct » tra ee is more th; . ‘ imen of naval architecture, the Johu Munn, I | tt, rive up boldly the ‘great nor mn peaks of | and intolerant. A cullen from the South will BUDD'S LAKE. and Fert Py pes ra epg | | ry pte i vivir or fi 000 ee a. not remember so mean a concern as the John bidet wie Gein aateca uneite — “ ‘oe casing tat abe ne beige ee bs cgehin 4 Forrat House, \ ly Ae ro — bo gd it to take place directly. | manufacture a similar piece of ordnance 4 the hon ¢ . eo Tagg * * 6 is is not i in American waters. Our berths were about | rocks, A little further to. the east are | solved; and those from the North, with trong pro- Bopp's Laxg,N. J., Aug. 6, 1856. visited them labored lees ‘ol tne ditto | mea ones ee end sag Taha: there. p size of a raisin box, aud the staterooms were { Sten the numerous snd distant sumaite | cliviies to republicanism, are not disunionists at The Journey from New York to the Lake—Beauty | ence between the Morm: 1 ree we ; e , ’ ons and the Ameri —the | iron, from long contin v 5 Aly ventilated packing cases. Orestes was obliged | 0! ,the, mountains of Maine. On the south. the idea of Mr. Buchanan's success; neither does the of the Scenery Passed Through—Romantic Situ- | Morwons being the sworn friends of he ey ized, and the fi gp ey core Bite ae diet Whew sofir the inaie ealoon! A Fouhare’ 1S t, close at hand, are the dark and crowded | Know Nothing feor foreign rule or Papal supre- ation of the Forest House—The Ladies of the | While the Americans were their most inveterate foes. | its tenacity is destroyed.” The Mersey Steel and | aay Pt * . ool ges of the mountains of Jackson; and beyond the | macy in,the event of bis opponent's success. Lake—Trout Fishing, &e., §. “here were many other accusations brought agaias: | Iron Company knew this sta‘ement to be fallacious, 1g fan—the poetess of the Keokuk Daily ae suminit of Kearsarze, standing by itself, on Ove word about hotels, and I desire to say it in Ik not a single rd the elder, and proven by the Indians. Acecordingly, | having sone years ago forged a gua of but little prning Glory—who was toad of gazing upon tho | the outskirts of the mountains; and, further over | justice to all. The three that I have previously how not where 80 wild and beautitul a scene | a portinn ot the people in tne community con. | leas capacity for the United States government. hr, delightful St. Lawrence at un-easonable hours | t& JW Country of Maine, Savage Pond, near Port- | named have their reputation, To those who kaow | can be found, near the metropolis, as in this moun: | Sidered that such proceedings were dotrimental | With an amount of spirit and patriotism which re. a window open, by which Urestes contracted laud. Still fnither. it is suid, the ovean itself has | not where to go, the American affords accommoda: | tain retreat. It can be reached twice a day in three | *° the peace avd TRtereate of the surrounding | flects the highest honor on the firm, they repeated erewatarrh. It is yratiy wie Ce metimes been distinctly visible. fae White | tions which, if not ay tashiouable as the others, has hours on the Morris and y country; that situated as we are with an Indian | ancffer they had previously made when the practi bis not obliged to patra John Akan, | Mountains ave often seen from the sea, even at | w respectability,equal to either, and a degree of quiet rris ond Essex Railroad, taking the | country so nea: us, without ony protection from the | cability o: the satlempt was first di-cussed in the col- Grand ‘Trunk Railwsy 1 thirty miles distance from the shore; and nothing | comfort that cannot be surpassed. cars at Jersey City and journeying for more than | govervmeat,it became necessary to adopt some umnsof the Times, undeituking to construct a 13- a train through at i same price—one dollar avd 4 half ue can prevent the cea from being seen from the moun- half the distance theough a region of romanti> measure or devise some plan to secure our lives | inch wrought iron gun, coupled with a proposition to miles. ‘Vime, five hours, Vi ss ; tuine but the difficulty of distinguishing its appear- - and property. 0. * mile vfive hours, Vory well tora siow | guee from that of thesky near the arian te pe Pere mie . Scenery, After passing Milburn tation, you have a ON the reurn of the committee from the vicinity ingen Feyononeniteres te should be : Ve arrived at Quebec in the midst of a tremen- ther to the couth are the intervales of the Saco, and | accident to me yr eitgy 0, eos Ti splendid panoramic view of a wile sunep of country, | Of the Indians, a meeting was called to hear the | “used aguinst the enema” Lord Panmure did rein storm, and after an unpleasant passaze of the settlements of Bartlett and Vheriig the sister a Troy modo rsp van | with Staten Island and she bay ia the Eeetonnd report of said Committee of Examination and to | what he could scarcely avoid—he accepted the offer, ea Woore, ‘Whe:ausy Vie novmen Cie dingy ponds of Lovell, in Fryeburg; and, sti further, the shipment of the Passengers—Exzciting Scene on | aud just beyond Madison, a picture of still greater | adopt meaenres, if true, for our fu safety. After | and sulogized the national spint of Nhe company ng one horse vebicles, with dirtier divers, al emarkable four-toothed summit of the Chocorna, Board the Isaac Newton—Saratoga in the megnificence, commanding several mountain ran- | hearing the sffdavit of the Indians and other wit- | who had proposed so novle a contribyion to the ming, shout‘n; nating : ~ the peuk to the right being much the largest, and i es, burcts on the sight, the farthest and loftiest | neases we were satisfied as to the tru’ - | eflective force of the vi Sronst . either French, (Ga dT Hou walch sharply pyramidical. Almost exactly south are the pode of the Season—A Chapter on Bonnets— | gummita blending thet misty outline with the | port. The house voted to have Ser etriearare pied a eereptcaoun park a ig eon teene three, with a dash of Feiee jast to make Sirti waters of the beautiful Winnipisogee, seen aying for Peeping—Discovery of a New | clouds. At Stanhope, carriages are in waiting to | with the proceedings of the meeting, published in | and the country was calling for larger guns to be tie ‘variety. Nearly all the" publlo cun- | Teh ocrereees cistinotness in’ favorable day. | Spring, Ge., He. » | convey visiters three miles through deep | seversl of the popular , where you will likely | brought against tho-e granite fortidcations, which lances are caleshes—queer lo king concerns ds e couthw ned at hand, are the peaks of the Finding myself under the influence of that mania primeval woods, by an ascending road, to the luke. | reed tre above procecding in counection with many | frowned opposition to our whole. navy. The gum bmbling our chaises, only mich ugher. | cou Wein Tunge o the White Mountains; Mon- | 04 revails to such nih § This Ch about two miles in length, | other thixgs concerning this place. The Mormoua | Was made, tried and found—as pronounced by Capt. le the volante of Havana, aud the jaunting car of | the'r ith itsdwo little alpine ponds sleeping nader P an @: in our principal | and a mile broad, on a higher level than tie summit | endeavor to refute the whole charge brought against | Vandeleur, of the Royal gun factories, who was sent lin, the caleche of Quebec seams to belong pecn- the raeky and pointed summit; the flat gurface of | cities daring the summer solstice, I took my depar. | Of Schooley’s mountain, and shadowed om the op- | thcir elder, but I know and so do many stherathat | by the War Department to prove it—quite fit for lly to the locality. The str ets being very nar- our ry aud rounded top of Pleasant, with | ture from your city for this place, a few days since, posite side by densely wooded hills; while on this, a | at Sait Lake and oa the road there Mormons | service.” But there #28 no longer an evemy, and , and everything situated either on rhe top oc at | Mountuns with ‘heh Beyond these, the Willey | on board the steamer Isaac Newton, via the City of | Btu! terrace sprinkled with forest trees, borders | bave succeded with the Indian tribes in drawing | the original condition of the gift could not be com- ottor pgs Ini, the vebicle le meat convent | Mountain, with ts high, “ridged summit; and, 2 'y Of | the white pebbly beach. Along this the road runs | the line of demarcation between the Americans and | plied with. “hat the gun was ‘a day too late for . Our charioteer, an. uncivilized. ‘youth, Grove beyond that, several parallel ranges of high | the Regency, A few miles below Poughkeepsie, we | foi three-quarters of a mile, affording exquisite | Mormons. This they cannot contradict without Toe fair’ was Lo fault of the makers. They bad Jebu himself, and we rattled through the city | ¥° ot mocniaing Further west, and over all, is | were hailed by the captain of the Troy steamer glimpses of the blue water through luxuriant | lying, which they do not scruple to do when they | commenced it during a time of war, putting upon it killing pace. Up oue height, down auotber, | fucntouin® bare sumifit of Mount Lafayette, in | Commodore, and requested to take off his pasien- foliage. are engaged in the eervice of the Lord. their best worke.eu, and pushing’ it on to speedy ping around sharp curves, throuzh massive | P22ncouls. There is a hotel at the summit, and ? The Forest House stands on an elevotion, a There is ove thing certain, if this elder did not | completion—and this to the neglect of their private 8, under frowning battlements, we were finaly | MBY adventurous individuals sleep there in order | Bers 98 bis boat was disabled, abd unable to pro- | few rods from the lake, surrounded by a thick grove | preach the doctrine which he is ucensed of, he did | busit eas, which they made secondary to the national down at the best hotel, Ruscell’s in Palace | 10,£e¢,the san rise, which is eaid to be very beauti- | ceed further. (She had broken her cross head.) The | Of ovk and chestnut trees, shading a green lawn | uot preach what is termed th firet principles of the | gcod It should also .e borne in mind that they bad t, where we had a bearty uylish breakfast ful , Bhe atmosphere is 80 damp as to saturate the | :equest was complied with, and we were soun on | that Flopes to the water's verge. No other dwelling, | Gospel to the Lamanites. 1 kuow the ver, gist and | made a previous offer, which, if accepted, would bave then, in spite of the rain, salted out to look at bedclothing, and the romantic is pursued at the | our way again. Meanwhile, our new passengers | €xcept one near the foot of the lake, is in sight, | ‘onl of the doctrine is that the Gentile world is s20n | enabled tuem to finish the gum iu suificient cime to to It is, as you know, oue inamense fortificas risk of the rhevmatic. Next year there will be a | had gathered around the ticket office, somewhat | 9nd the profound stillness ia interrupted | tobe destroyed; that all governments are to be | have it8 capabilities tested at Swratorg, and, per- no stronger ‘site could be imagined—ant 1 | Cariage road to the summit, Said road built ata | anxious to ascwe themselves of the trath of the | ovly by the songs of birds in the trees, or the plain- | crusked and ground to powder, and the government | chance, at Cronstadt Tuough the opportunity for dsuppose that a small, determined garrison cost of £100,006. i |. statement made by the captain of the Commodore tive cry of the loon, plashing near the abore. In | of God is to rule the whole. Nov, this great event | the government fuifliling their part of the agreement bt hold the place against 4 ho-t. If we ever There are many points of interest to travellers; | previous to leaving his boat, which was that they | the rear, the land is partly covered with woods, and | is not tobe ushered in onthe same princfple that | was no longer in existence, the wersey Stee and from with England, I'shail not volunteer t> lea en among others, a celebrated mountain pass called the | would not be subjected to any charge whatever on | the encizclivg hills are crowned with the primidve | the Chriatian world in general expect to bring it | Company hud no intenti n of withdaning from a ich hove against Quebec It is the quaiutest of Notch. In fact, two or three weeks can be pas-ed | the Newton, as arrangements had been made to forest. about. No; by no meame. With the Mormons it is | fulfilment of their promise. All they now wanted fandwol worth a vinit here with much pleasure. It is, indeed, the Switz- | that effect. Just as we were about to leave the The number of light barks mcotiag to and fro on | to be brought about by bloodshedding. Whea Mor. | was that government sbould endorse wins had been ‘The citize “ i 4 bed States will see much haeo bina oad erlané of 4merica, inhabited by bold, independent, | Commodore, the clerk’s office was opened, when | the srooth surlace of the lake, d by ladies in | mouism bas been preached a sufficient length of | proved to the ratistuction of Captain Vandelear, and A hurdy Freezen, wresting by main strength their | the following scene ensued: — aiiy costumes, gives life to the pict ‘Sol T ‘kful for his birthright. Bem 8 BCeK ) » Bives life picture. me are | time to condemn the world, then the wrath of the | the numeicus throng, militacy and civil, who wit- for the apparent copa Pedigree) subsistence from an unwilling soil. They are PassEncex—!'ll take a berth. plucking the pee lilies, that gleam like stars on the | Almighty isto be 1.t loose, and famine, pestilence, | nessed the interesting expertvknts on “as Vanas at the reflection that it is hardly worth having. mt Ny Geacevdants of the Starks and the Gilmans, Crrux—Yes, sir; fifty cents. | water, near the out'et; some are enjoying the bes plagues, fre from beaven, and the co-operation of | Formby, uamely, that they had been successful im is not a plessant place w atain storm, and ond Freedom should be driven from every Passznoxr—I won't pay twice. I paid for one | motion and cool brveze,and a few ace hysioaay the svints with God isto wind up the final scene. | what had undertaken. Two months rovgher cex in taking the fish that abound here. | Wat a great and glorious work for saints of the | and nothing more was heard of this triumph of the yesh other spot on this continent, she will fiad | on the other boat. ot ont of it Tatreiee Gna to el fod a home y the while hills of New Hampshire. Passexaee, on the outside of the crowd shouted caging boggy Aaeisoon Ang Bachar a “Y, | ‘The hotel at which we stop is precisely like all New | “That's right! Stick to that! Don't let anybody ur in the afterggon, ee the Wi the resi England taverns which aspire to the dignity oi first | start it; if you do, we will all have to pay.” +8 small town at the pa-¢ Shite Moun } clyss houses, and oply reach it in point of charges. Cisx—! can’t help that, sir. A an Grand Tronk Ruilway '6 prajecw4t 10 | Orestes said ovr mrandial meal was a “ depot din- Passencen—Well, sir, is my ticket good? oA oe een, wae eine Canada (o | coy F and Le was ‘very héarly éorrect. The house CLE Aicsepeioe! a resume 60, pip aa, & distance ol habe mnaied being nearly new, bas good rooma, and tae ous PassenGEm, excited—Presumptions won't do for ener komhee ain Fone wan. difficulty 1s'that they will attempt elaborate sophis- | me, wt. Is my ticket good? Yes or no—give me a ieteh. ‘The Atinutic and Ge mete ulreat i ties of the cuisine instead of giving their guests | civi! answér. stir to Mentaanh, bos Seen ie ast of the whot they would like much better--piain, simple Cirux—I don't know anything abont it. holders for nine hundred on 4 ainet; meee “ country fare, served without fuss or noise, and well Passencre— Well. that’s civil. Civility is cheaper ipoara belies patd ale car oaet per = —_ years, | cookec. The Glen House is the largest, aud is said | than water—you've got to go after one, the other a fm Quebeo'ws take aferry to Pont cartes th to be the best house in the mountains. Its inhabi- | man can alwoys carry with bim. aide of the St Taree. This boat { e | tants are generally New England people, who are There were calls made for an indignation meeting; to the company. It bec tah ano te at is a cs | unused to lounging, and who look very unhappy. | but while it was being gottup, the powers that were Naik searcely shaliered trom the mag ag The display of female beauty is not brilliant. Oces- | came down, and the passengers triumphed. It was a delieale wines eee. te ol Sine Be - tes, who is presumed to bea judge of the article, | but partial, however, aa not a state room was to be Obliged to seamper throng ant rgd or + | says that the young women who wait upon the table | bad unless paid tor. They were also obliged to ten ‘yards, and itis te WO OF | gre the prettiest in the house. They are certainly | three shillings extra per head on the Northern.Rail- na par pete suena ae ‘n '® | handsome, and have that ruddy mountain glow | road between Albany and the juoction. moking mete aloes jee Y ‘ to which new milk, virtue, fresh bread, labor, a clear It bas heen rather dull here for the last few days, me Reka tenedhen er fo -J ‘a : e oO o conscience, ad mountain alr can only give. Some | owing to the rain. Itis fine weather to-day, how- y Oe d thin beet an eimericat wat There | of our Opera belles would give all their diamonds | ever, though not clear, and the streets are again Resa Ntaicn ules warn io mina south oie »there | tr thai evior, but it cannot be had. thronged with the gay and fashionable pleasure x , » With Covered passages | Por auusements we have some old newspapers, | scekera. Saratoga is fillea to repletion; there are whist, ten pins, chess, backgammon, and an ama- | not less than seven thousand strangers here. The teur, Who performs on the cornet. He has so iar ad- | United States Hotel, Congress Hall and Union Hall vanced that he can play ‘Pop goes the Weasel,” | have nearly three thousand guests; the other hotels, There is excellent trout fishing in the mountain | most high God to be engaged in! and, then, | engineciing art. We ourselves bad begun to fear tresms hereabouta, and game in the proper season; | what a God! What an exalted, benevolent, | that route had dog its grave and red tapery gives while thoee who love the wild beauty of nature will | hind avd. merciful Sather! Methinks I see | it# secret bunal. It had been removed to Shoebury- be charmed with wolks throngh the woods and along | him row in actusi eervice marshalling the armies of | ness with the avowed object of being submitted the shaded shore. A picturesque ramble through a | besven, with his son manoeuvring those ten thousand | further tests, but no reports were made, and the derse thicket leads you to a fine boiling spring, | saints the Bible epeaks of, (armed, I presume, with | gun lived only in the thoughts of tbe people. where the ice cold water flings up the snowy aund | rifle 8,) pitching their tents here on cur earth, and | if there were a desire te shelve ir, or to bury it, ox like a fountain, Mr. Sharpe, the proprictor of the | gving forth and slaying men, woinen and children, | to take it to Shceburyness to rust into uselessness, hotel, might easily furnish his whole house with The Mormons would nut value their eternal sa!va- | where's the wonder? The monster bad had an un- water from this source. . tion at all unless it was brought about by the total | usual birth. Its midwives hed not walked the _ The pure, selubrious air of this delightfully seclu- | cestruction of the entire human family. They ag a | crooked passages of Routine Hospital, with its Ged spot—many cegrees cooler for its elevation— | mass look forward with fond anticipation tothe time | fevers and chills, and lame old men, aud would alone make it a desirable residence during | when they are to fake vengeance on the earth for | deaf old women. They had had no appoiat- the warm weather. Thcee who wish to vary the | slaying the Prophet of the Most High. They consi- | ment with the Barnac! les—vthey had not evea niet if retirement take occasional excursions to | der thia one act suffivient to darun the whole world. {| “wanted to hnow, you know.” They had not chooley'’s mountain. ten miles, or the Delaware | Ali thoce who bave the priesthood conferred upon | paid the perquisites of official flunkeyiam, and Water Gap, come thirty miles distant. In every | them bave the power of cursing even to the death | ‘ficia) flunkeyi-m straighteed its back, a direction, and for any distence, the scenery will ré- | apy individugl who may in euy way anuoy them or | would take no notice of the creature, but would pay either a walk or a drive. epcak against the priesthood, which is the govern- | lct it dic, becwure at its birth it had not received the ene ment of God. i hav@kuown persons to be cursed | mystic twists 61 red tape decoration. In fact, it had Curious Letter from a Repentant Mormom, | for the trifling offence, for instance, of not being | owed its existence to patriotism, and patriotism is AN INSIDE VIEW OF THE SANCTUARY—scHisma | able to meet their liabilities, kc. Wherever they | decidedly vuigar and unconstiutioaal, inasmuch as SPRINGING UP AMONG THE BLECT. are located they are bound to rule, and that by foul | 1 does not respect the time-honored privileges of the San Brnxarvro, June 6, 1856. and vot by fa meare. — * Barnacles, bat brushes aside all worthless tumber ‘ anal cgeed.| tee inet My opinion is,and it is the opinion of many | and tarches straight to its object. Dear Axp Resrecrep Frienp—I am happy to’ others, that their race im this place is nearly raa— We are glad to find, however, that our fears were learm you have retutned again to San Francisco. It | the sun of their prosperity being nearly eet, asthe | premature. The ominous silence was broken, in the was only afew days [learned by accident of your | Country is becoming gradually settled from differ. | House of Commons on Thursday night by Colonel ng. P road seems to be, with the exception above pretty well mani Groat care is taken, I b a laeesras stoe'ets obpagete bony oF bene 4 twice out a ete og —— bye AS in Bamber, have from forty totwo | retum, ‘The last time I wrote you you did not | $rt Pets itl Ok const eee i. eed peeeinte ‘aon ne aan eet rare ‘d w recel — dred \. 2A “ + cone comfortub.e. The travel is very light. Lhe ng vag” mg Hee Miss Freeland, nals io Mterally & watering place. There's answer me,andas you have for some months re- | God's vicegerent, although pretending to be delegat he epee intended bo do. with the gun ie. a oye rout a nt ger py ee Brooklyn. NY; M. LS. Bowee, New York; Mr. Water, water, averywnere, mained silent, I suppoved you had returned home; EN af = om they oe pepe aang — bee: paint Be LS report boald be Ih of timber, the most magnificent of Pr Aer k avd Mrs. Hooper, Australia; Mr., Mra.,and the Misses nd every drop to drink. but on the arrival of Mr. H—— from the Sandwich retofore they have been enabled to pursue, be- | printed, said, “ experiments with the gun were still cause fheie was no one to ccnfront then, or oppose | In progress, and until they were clo he did not Tslands I was informed by him you had been there | them in their Seay schemes. Los Kagel has know whet would be dave with the gun” This on a visit among old friends and congenial acenes, | alweys been vit them, 'e Fy # their pains a ne 7 “3 one but whee . ig Knows Og mae rear guar or em ati e inches in sur: joel tests are IDE a) the in r. ‘ but I did not understand from him whether you had rounding country, to keep in check any hoatile | statement sinks to fae vel of an onuive auswer t Hilias, Miss Messerole, Miss’ Vallantine, Mr. William | Truly, there is no lack of drinkers; from four t> Kumty, the Misses Kumble, Br oklyn; George P. | eight, and even ten glasses are drank before break- Norrie, Delaware : E.G. P. Wilkins, GW. Jackson, | fast; in fact, drinking is 2 predominant custom, and E. T. _ ‘3 : P, the drinkers are of all sorta and conditions of man E- T. Noble. Mra. Noble, Rev. Joseph P- Thomp-on | kind. ‘This mineral water is held to be every man's trees, the maple, the oak, the yellow birch, thers. At long intervals we see a clearing, single log cabin, tac dwelling of some hardy T, rising up iv the wildersess—a sort of :en- " Mrs. Thompson, Miss Gilman, W. K. pn the outposts of civilization. Welch re. rter, i meat and no man’s poison. Whst wonder, then, | been home or not. movement of the Indian®. All those who squeeze | an awkward question. on croseed the fronticr at avout holf-past nine, pe Rana cies eee rel aot that crowds should annually flock hither, where the A few days ago J——— told me had either seen | out from Salt Lake by the skin of the tech are Whatever farther experiments may be- édopted, helf-past ten arrived ai Ivlond Pond, N. here our trunks were paraded for the inspec fa United States revenue officer. He passed without examination. It ia a great humbas king # person if he has anythiug but werriag el among a If he has not, the qaees} unnecessary—if he has, he certainly will a ledge the corn. The whole business is a” satire on the Custom Honse system, 2 vented, | presume, for the purpose of ant welless, and gis sinecures to numerous Brooke, T. P. Dopson, Philadelphia. This’ 1s not | most blasé may possibly experience a new sensation, much of a place for New ‘Yorkers. ‘There is not | the business man recreation, together with the enough glitter, show, and excitement about it. The | things of this world, and where the medicine o the fact is, it is not to be put down as a fashionable wa- | invalid aud the § vurmand iseolaced by the reflection teriny piace. It is a place of resort for the lovers of | that while restoring their health they’ are also com- ate is grand, beautiful, and sublime in Nature. | plying with the customs of fashionable society. jy} OW, a persou from San Francisco who had seen you, | Called apostates; they are those who have been in- | we trust that the weapon, will mot be yg! on hed sent your reapecta to ws, or this troduced to the elephent, and bave had a closé ac- |.@ Vowtrance—a mode of carrying out you oat 7 Pp " quaintancesbip with the huge monster from stem to process of proving suggested some time ag erson had received a letter from you to | stern. ¥ A government official. This would be but a hat effect. However the case may be, it is enongh As to the question of the payment of the ranch, | sorry re'arn to the Messre Horsfall for the trouble for me to know youare once more in San Fran- | it lays buried in the rubbish of the future. At pre- | anxiety and expense which the manufacture of the cisco, and whether you requested me, or any of us, | sent it is struggling wider a heavy mortgage, with | gun bas cost them. Having given the coantry a to write or not, isa matter of indifference to me. | the probability that it will never be lifted. The con- | weapoa, which, for oftence on defence, is acknow- I shall take upon myself to scribble a little to you, | tinual cry is,money and cattle to pay the interest. | ledged to be superior to anything ever constracted, whether it is likely to prove welcome to you or | The rea! condition and liabilities of the ranch are | it is for the coun’ to it in a tise of peace, not. krown, I presume, toa very few individuals: these | that they may use itina of war, the la'ter being Well, in the first place, your old friend S——n has | are the heads and the High Council. No person haa | a covtingency which may happen sooner than sowe ¢ ladies here are somewhat in regard ty that the sublime should be #0 exces: | + onets. at home they are (the bonnets) ‘next i ne Political—The rain has brought out | to pe in — Save expense; bere they ome fierce political igcussions, and some trials of | are nothing at all. Whether promenading the strength by the sdherents of the several candidates. | Broadway of Saratoga (the priacipal street is so ip as who would otherwise make trouble for the " called here), wending their way to the springs, or ; . py Hang Asem bo ne FT ining a von flirting benenth the ‘trees of the beautifal gronads | become jee yee ly , nd has returned o » any confidence in the security of their property, or | of us anticipate. |t is an avkuo-! axiom thas lodged at Island Pond; had a clean bed and | fi, rilimores A'vote taken here. last night, gave | adjacent to Congress spring, morning, noon or | more to earth, having been heh ng enough. The | energy to make improvements. The in crop en- | the best way to msintsin in te Nt ped for of ‘ide feast for supper aud breaktast, fifty-tive fer Fremont, eleven for Fillmore, and six | night, it is ever the same—not a bonnet is allowed | Mormon doctrine le—I presume you know—tbat in | tirely failee last season, and most of ¢! con- | war; and it is therefore obvious that a time of peace ved st Gorbain at about half-past nine, aad | for Buchanan. 4 . to cumber the beads of the belle sex. There is a | order to obtain salvation, you must suffer by pover- | svmed here for the last six months has been obtained | is the period for preparing for war. We were, some , yh the rain to the Alpine House, a ¥ - marked difference between the visitors here and | ty, bunger, misery, and distress of every kiud. The | from the Monti. This year prevents another failure | years ago, much struck by the force of an-observa- new ard hand-ome hotel reveutly erected by LAKE GEORGE. those of its great rival, Newport—not in the fens larger and heavier the cross, the larger the crown. | of the small grain, but there will he considerable | tion made by the Minister of War at Berlin. Prus- iiway Company. The house is entirely sar- Fort Wiis Hexry Horer ple themselves, as many of them will visit the latter The more you suffer, the better saint you are. | corn grown, if nothing happens. All the resources | sia and Austria were then in imminent of d by Pocnen orf varying in altitude from fif- Laxx Grong, Ang. 6, 1856. ere they return home. This is what they call being fected. I.——con- | of this place, or all that can be produced as barter | collision, and it was ner to him to ry d to two thousand feet. It is nine re * Here there are no bathers. There all visit the | sidered be was perfect enough; therefore he left for | or exchange is lumber ; as for small grain, it will | destructive weapon. “No,” he replied, “there is the Islands. As for myself, if poverty and distress | not average a crop once in five years, All itisfitfor | now no time for the necessary trials. In times of are pop wage into the kingdom of Heaven, I | is what it was formerly, and that was a grazi peace we must pre) for war.” This is asimilar am all right, for1 think Ihave had sufficient to | ranch; every summer the gardens suffer for want o! ext to that on which Sir William F, Williams, of save me, anda considerable sufpins sufficient to | water to irrigate with. This is all brought from the | Kars, so eloquently discourred on a late save quite 8 number of my frfends. I tried to leave | mountain streams some four or five milea in“ seats,” | If our government be really desirous of getting with and retorn to the Islands, but I could | aud the ground in many places being ot rid of the gun, we can, perhops, help them or ispove of none of my improvements for cash to | of locaesand, the “rests” become filled withsand,and | of the diMfculty, Our loving cousins neross the pay my passage, consequently I was obliged to | consequently mnning over and wasting, #0 by the |, Atlantic are about to meke her Majesty's go- remain. time the water arrives in the city there is but a | vernment a present of the restored and reso- Of all the places that I have ever been inthis is | amall quantity to water two wiles square. vated arctic pio Resolute, There is here a famous the worst. The first year I was here there was a They have made an effort to obtain artesian water, | opportunity for her Majesty's goverument to _ little work going on, but since then there has been | which bas terminated like all the wondrous and, | lice itse!f by an act of self abmegation far outrivalling nothing duing. The fact is this, the Fog 4 and | wire plana. They procared last spring the necessary | that of the Americans, We have a secre’ for the course putsued here by the heads of the church | tools for boring, rigged their shears, and penetrated | ears of ber Majesty's Ministera. We know, from a tends to stagnate all kinds of business. The whole | to ‘hy wonderful depth of, 1 believe, about sixteen | source on which we rely, that Mr. Steers, the builder place is laboring under a curse, brought upon it by | feet. Here they were brought to a dead stand, for of the eee America and the new mail s’earusbip the imbechity and _ 1 nce of there who assume | the want of a little sheet iron to make tabes to fol- | Adriatic, is constructing for the United States gov- to themselves the right to rule and control the af- | low the aoger. The shears stood about two months, | ernment a large fleating battery, somewhat similar fairs of the Territory. The elections ure always | as a monument of their folly, when they were blown | to our lading s'age, to be protected by formidable prong open the people the Sunday before the elec- | down by the wind, where they lie, perfectly un- | iron plates, and mounted wi wig iron guns, to tion. Thatis to say, the heads tell the people who | conscious of the great part they were to have acted | be provided My American houses, il they can make they bave nominated for the offices of city | on the stoge of the great city of San Bernardino. | them. Now, it would + nlybe a handsome retarn for sud county, and they, the people, are ex- | They were to have no connection with the rest of | the Rerolute if her Lise fa advisers were to pe pected to siand by this nomination. ‘Tuis nomina- | ‘he apparatus, wut were to have penetrated the bow: | sent this 13 inch wrought iron gun to the Yankees, . ton is made by the High Council of the church, with- | eis ot! Tie earth avd brought forth the liquid stream | #* a proof that they never intend to hurt them, and out any regard to the feelings or wishes of th =F which was to have made the desert blossom like the | trust to their geverosity not to use it as a powerful pie. SH good saints are expected to vote the ticket; | rose. araument against ourselves in the ultimate settle ard if there are any who do not coincide with them, It ia a doubt with most people whetber they will | ment of the Central American dispute. Let there ‘hey are requested to remain neutral; and if they | be ble to obtain water by boring. Amongst the | be no deicacy about the matter. The guu is fairly dare to get up an_o} ition ticket, they are dis | sceptica, I believe, are scientific mien who | the nation’s, ‘and its makers, who geve it to the owned and branded from the pulpit, with ail the | who bave made these things their study But mans | nation, have no more canse to feel annoyed at the low and vulgar epithets that would make a pro- | knowledge is nothing to be compared to God's, and | uation giving it away than trying it 4 Uoutrance. ficient in Bit ingegute slang blush. their knowledge they receive direct from God him- | Or, in event of thee vee Tittle impediments There are & few bere who have had moral conra, Cousequently, they must be right. If Moses | in the way of adop'ing this course. there is our cnongh to shake themselves free from the shack cmite 8 rock and obtain the cooling beverage, | ueble lly the Emperor of the French. He is de- of priestly rule and ineposition and take: an inde. | it isa pity the saints cannot obtain it by boring, | lielted with any improvement in the implements of pendent stand; that is, they have dared t> cail | when they claim all power ever given to man, and a warfrre, aud has made good use of many meetings, acd question the past and present policy | little more. j {uvertiors which our government have passed coldly connected with this place. They have made ‘When the Mormons contend they are loyal to the | by. We know, for instence, that ae eminent Eng- bold to inquire whether things have been done | constitution of the United States they utter a base | li b engineer, after in vain submitt ng an invention The Wreather—Amusements— Visiters— Tubleauz | \ingdom of Neptune. Here water is the internal Vivants . Reasons for Preferring Colored Wait- | restorativee There it is an external one. Here ers, §c., Fe. everybody ‘8: promenades are the hiner Rain, rain—nothing but rain since Monday. We | There one would lose caste by a similar exercise o their jwls; and yet they are the same people have been wishing for it,and now we have got it | around their own firesides. How true it is that with a vengeance. Notwithstanding the bad weather | foebion makes slaves % us ei she tod ~e manage to enjoy ourselves on this lake of colo- ae byte eoengy tt bas Neth Theis Prrnyrys 4 nial events, In the morning we have music in the | part, Fans and work-baskets for the ladies, canes ball room, and at night we bave a regular hop. pro —_ ape fho oe for jnveniles, - a jing artic’ le, &@ new source of gain, The lose of the steamer John Jay has — vate Tarauis is hid palsaties Gay ae - wary travellers from visiting this beautifal plice; loped & few days since. perty of ladies and gen- but notwithstanding, the Fort William Henry has | tJemen, who visited their camp last week, had their two hvndred boarders and the Lake House one hua- | curiosity aroused by a woman who was sitting on dred—the latter being full. the ground, spart from all the others. She had a Among those at the Lake House we have met the | something in ber lap; what it could be none of the Van Vechtens, of Albany; Dr. John N. Campbell | party were able to divine. At length one of Eve's ond fomfly, ef the came place. and the David fami- Sapabters undertook to discover. She accordingly ly, of Philadelphia, at the Fort William Henry we d the red+kin what she had in her lap. liave the Van Rensselaera,of albany, the Walshes, A baby,”’ was the reply. “ Won't you let me see of New York, and the Porters, of Montreal. Mr. | i¢ “Yea, but you must pay sixpence a head.” Norris and Indy are uleo here from Philadelphia. Here was proof positive that the Indians had not Foilowers of the great Meriam say that we shall | failed to profit by the lessons of their white brothers. have clear wentLer this afternoon, and the believers On my return to querters I dropped in toa bowl. i these weather philosophers have engaged their | ing saloon. I had been told that “everybody bere boats for arow on the Inke after tea. On Friday | rolied tenpins,” and I was convinced that such was evening next we are going to have fableanz vivonts, | the fact, as 1 saw three of the sacred calling engaged ond from what! have seen of the preparations, | in the game. I have had a weakness this way my- thes give promise of being well got up. In the way | self, and confess I was of the opinion that it was a © »musements, we have Mr Harrison, the impro- | pastime for the sinful only, put the idea was ini. visitore, and his daughter, who give converts eve: gerous to New York and Boeton, whereas this is Sa- evening in the Court Houze at Caldwells. The at- | ratoga. tondanee for the last two days, owing to the wea- ‘An experiment of rather a novel nature is in pro- ther, bas been slim. ceaa of developement about one hundred yards west We heve colored walters now at this honse—a | of the far famed Congress spring; it is no leas than great improvement upon the female waiters of last | -n attempt to discover a new apriogs and its pro; yeur, *hen an old bachelor, like myself, could not | iors are confident of success; y have sunk a wet attended to, the attendance being given to young | chaft rome thirty feet, about sixteen of which is rom Portland, two hundred from Boston, au miles from Mount Washington, the hy it pi land between the Atlantic and the Mussis- Near the house runs a brawling, noisy, beau- branch of the Saco, with an ugly -the Peabody river. A man of this name the night in‘an Indian cabio, and was ronsed rushing of a torrent, which was found to yeken out from a spot where no spring was a known. ‘This river courses along to ‘asbington, and the carriage road is upon being no sign of feir weather, we re- at the Alpine House one day snd The inmates were clietly New England ) and passed their time in that h, agntentions, proper, discreet, respectab'e Jancholy manner which the sous and dyavh- the Puritans call “enjoying themselves.” No they “erjoy themselves,’ but it is very cer- it no one enjoys them. The people are well well charged, bat not weil fed, at the Alpine ‘The charge is two dollars per Jay; aud for four crackers ond two bottles of ale—we paid Har. It was a spleadid meal, at a cemunera- a queer vehicle that conveyed us and our the Glen Hovge. and we were two hours aud making the eight miles. With tie capidity rraceful to some New Englanders, the driver d upon overloading the atage The road is a d one, and was-made wor-e by a four days’ Altogether the ride was very oncomnfortable ; hd fog— fog and rain ; the muuntaias are hid ds which drop their fa:vess anceasingly. We very much like to see the sun. A little while had too much of him. A litle while ago we away in white linen, with the thermoweter y six. Now our vvercuats are necessary, and roury stands at sixty. We have arrived at a ct too damp. nd handsome men. } ; the expenses thus far, for labor } constitutionally or not: and having heen convinced | falsehood. They pretend to be loyal to outsiders; | to the Brit +h government, proce to Paris, was a the aude tragedicnne ‘vas acting in New ak dea CIT Sine clans anant of twelve hundred dol- the have not, and there having been g aystem of inti- | but at home, among themselves, they glory and long at «nce introduced to the Emperor, «ho immediate- last September, a gentleman from Vike SARATOGA, fare, and the result, judging by the water that perc- | midation and. coercion practised inYeard to the | to sre the time when our glorious institutions ly ed him to build works for the carrying out California, arrived in town with a pocket full Amentcan Horet, | lates through the rock upon which they are yet at ~ Land arere cr. Solan bye od with crumble os rs to Ly pee. On tile protiction & ra Mig, Beng he ee 4 * ae isspor. 4 ‘ vent | 0 56.5 natui itical affairs, they have come con: | is God's kingdem to puilt up. nt nature. o Py ya Boon taste, tbe ee Pe es Vad bol Santee . Srasion to tuke = stand ‘ainst such mea- tran fired bare lact winter, ‘which T bannot forbear | preeent of the gun, for he seema to be fully alive to , 80 that he could say he had been there, the an from Pike desired to see Rachel. He ac- rehased a three dollar chance in the or- ‘he usher condacted him te nis s% Be- -P Ex-President Martin Van Buren is at the United Pro | states. Daniel Ullman and the Hon. Abijah Mann Gre at Congress Hall. The Weather—Crowded State of the Hot menades— Politica, §c. The Springs were probably never gayer than at cures. Consequently at the last city election those of | mentioning. There wasa returned clder from the | the importance of modern im ‘The ces- independent irtoct pen held meetings and regularly | Kast Indies, hy the name of Tait, gifted, as he as ration of hostilities has not top to his schemes nominated the men for their diderent offices, The | verted, with the interpretation of tongues. At | for possessing a formidable navy force, for we hear Mf, the « t season — preme. RICHFIELD SPRINGS. results of the election presented by the returns | the time of bis arrival prayer meetings were | that Krupp, the emivent iron and steel manufac- Se on making par opuendll extrense ta pr a ae bere age) ba ow oe 4 Ricurieey Srrines, thowed I believe, twenty-eight fodependents toone | all the ge, and some two or three pre | turer, of Rasen, is rolling lates of steel of nuprece- “Jetbat her?” inquired Pike. “Yes,” anid we are in the full tthe of Clasipation: The weather Orsrao County, N. Y., Ang.5, 1856. hondred and thirty Mormons. But this does not | tended to speak in strange —— One evening | dented magnitude for t tection of the Bm- e usher. “That's enough; I've seen ber; | bas been lately unpropitions, It has been raining | pr ursion to Schuyler’s Lake—A Lucullus Feast | show the true state of things. There are ia the city | at a meeting for prayer and freeing the mind, there | povor's gunboats ond floating Leong These your serioon?” and the geutlemen from Pike | since Monday last; but every indication is now given | h ised—A Pleasant Wind vy twice ‘hat number of independents who are not en- | happened to be seg an elder pa who L I : en gt and baer Ay a te the premises. Lam afrand tha’ our experi- teat i. ‘wna Up. titled to vote, and a great many outeide of the city | just returned from a five years’ ence at the Ur, perhaps, better ate LS hiegerer we Re to ve that the sun will shine stesdily, and that the Pleasure excursions from watering places are so dark clouds which now earroand our house, will be constantly the theme of newspaper correspon: scon dispersed. : dence, that the subject has become a trite and hack: The United States, Congress Hall and the Union neyed one; 80 that good taste would recommend are all crowded to excese; and still they come. Of silence regarding ordinary occasions of this kind; all the gay company at each, ft would be improper | 1.4 when one occura go rarely and peculiarly delight- to particularize; suffice it to say, the judicl ful as took place from the Springs House this morn: ond bar are well represonted. Senators and legisla- ing, one is induced to take up the pen and turn chro tors, both ex and present, are recruiting from the | picter, ) Militating effect of over exertion, and preparin, 7 rhe revere. labors ‘which are alll before them. | The day,thongh apparently unpropitions at its There ia nothing to destroy enjoyment. The sea ion | Commencement, turned out the reverse, and the ob- jc free from sickness or apprehension of sickness, | scured eun served to render the cherming drive from ond with the medicinal properties of the Congr ss, | the Springs to Schuyler’s Lake still more delightful. Columbion and Empire Springs, invalids are rap dly | The sir was cool and plearant, and the lotely acene- ones g. Notwithstanding the crowds, the peo | 1y combined every attraction which could gratify Je are still coming, and it ig a mystery where they e eye and taste of the most fastidious lover of na- ave put ard how they are fed. "s heauties; rich, rolling flelde, dotted with com- limita. The independent party also have lectures | Sandwich Islands; also one of the native sisters from | renta every pene’. be all a a principles, reli- | that piace. Apes ne — aud exnetwotione, } ay \ A ea ions, ities, &e., are put into the erncible and | the eldcr’s wile referred to above arose and gave an | inch gun ts the on’! i u flere tented. ‘This is alo source of much trouble | exhortation in Bnglieh, at the close of which she | ured with effect against the ae war | to the other party. Until lately come of their nura- | kept rin the Sandwich Island tongue, to exhort | ard others whi could be ma “ ike it mig! it jer attended; but a few Sundays ago their attend: | the native sisters present, without giving any inti. | herenfier be the preand of prem wafm Hy ca ance Was prohibited by the aj je, Gren. Rich, from | mation to th nee. ‘Many prevent, and among | tion the key of the bac ¥ ee to St. Y phe 3 the stand. Lhappened to attend and heard what | the rest Pider Tait, being ignorant of the presenye | The experince of, 06 fate hben = aie ' he said. He told his congregation that there was a | of the native sieter, and also of the fact of the elder's | Formby wor oF bg | “ S tae A, im party crowing up here, Fmamp my) the same spirit | wife being able to converse in any lan: age except | preenal anak ae " ~ % : = that’ poreessed those who drove the saints from Nau- | ber mother tongne, supposed she had the gift of | prevent whe 2 he} A ~ ; yn vo, nd they were holding meetings here on San- | tongues opon her. Elder Tait being the oniv profes: | # aproll eb 4 ; P a hy ie By he 4 Qaseand other days. They, eaid he, are pursuing a | sor of the desd languages pre-ent, considered it his | irches by vet ne a ‘ inches hy conree Which will eventnally work their dostrac- | duty to enlighten the dark and benighted un Jer: | ele ne 17 cwt. rg to similer Pi jose 08 Hen, And now, he added, Ihave a word o coun- | siandings of his brethren reapecting the revelation | {)> floating }y tte ies, ond tt was supporte vel for the satate. TI have been sent hore to | just given in tongnes. Accordingly he arose and nine halke of timber, tinbedded in the sand. Jan ch you: and if you think I can tersh you | proceeded to the task. T was not present, but those shattered ino @ Shousand splinters. No re shing, 1 will leaye, and send some one from | who were told me that it was abe autiful translation. | Lattery in the world could resist the power ot thal » Lake who will take my place, but { can tell Pint the beet part ef the farce is to come, | aun fired nt long —- ae “ —- » you obtain all the knowledge Tam ta | The elders wife for some time remained | Ovr fire coke sniboe ute baaieeies woelk be Ges - the monn ains will be abont the same as his dge of the Queen of the Drama. The three ke—Mouant Washingion, #ix thoasand ndred feet; Jefferson, five thousand Aght d; Adams, five th 1 seven bundred. respectable bills, t write, the rain has ceased, and the mountains d in cloudy nightoapa, with natural lace ever draped a beauty’ oovom, Thess ra notonly make a very (ioe effect, but tel! werball have more rain tomorrow. Now, are sixty or seventy fair women and brave ho have been waiting two days for fine wea- order to ascend Mount Washington, this is tress! But in this part of the country, he rain is of no great pse to anybody, it ” days ont of three. ithstanding this slight drawback, the moun- re interesting, and we wilt have some ac Hthem. The term White Mountains is ap- As this wrought fron 13- piece of erdnunce which can be the group in Coos (Indian erookud I) ts a-grent mistake to suppose that Sarr‘ow hie farm houses, and fine orchards, bold, ewell- | sion of you will he a happy and power mute with a ishment Co hear her simpi ae be gir : Se 00 hfotaand ey ofl Hew Hampshire, exccading over forty | preente m Uhing Of interest TPenteriatament mit | ny bile, etucded with clumpa of forest trees, and 4 ond now respecting their meetingy I re « tion turred itito tongues. Kor a while she did not et eae aaa ag Pg mehr tiles of territory. TI the » and show. That these are supreme no o be gem of all, the beantiful Inke, nestling ainong | keep away from them, for if vou mix ys: bit Tait understood the Randwch Tsing ieee. waa presuut at the trial to which w and most romantie ree ny lt: ard that they are the principal enjoy nent | ‘he green hills, like a diomond set in emeralds wich sinking things you wiilaleo stink. 19 nt but she epon dlecovered there wen ‘On site elog the effect of the shot he ox ds of crystal streare, at | action to many, is equally true; yet the jvi But a ehort time sufficed to take ns to the Lake | For! not he seen talking wt: , | between the translation and aah +0 eee eed | or A f ‘hat sueh a ehot, from such a gun le rueh of countless te The asceat of | rel ving may find Lore real, substantial co ifort | House, where ovr gentlemanly host, Mr. Lewis, was fo become contaminated ani ingly, ee mustered wp conrsee e ae thet ~ i 2.) Usa gates stances would be sufficient. to de Washington js how made on . | ihe etndy of human natare alone, as presented |) the | in readiness for us,and but another short interval | smcored. . tell Proveeror Tait he nag ge gee: oy to the we cuny featirg. battery in the service, and that ch difficulty, and folly compensates for the | .rowded hetel, is in itself an intesesting and vttrio- | elapsed ere a merry party of twenty-reven were reat. At cother tinge from the stand he made ws pet the, giitof ponlts We feodwick toland longue. oye tt the ba ey did not Gok in © uence 0 tive sutject. ‘These far famed. waters impart to | ed at the well filled board; ‘te repast was adinnerof | this urgiati Saab TS or ame’ panpte, hl bet int ccme. ttle dionlty the Professor understood | the brea h, the aplinters, flying in all directions, the summit the eye commondathe ciroumfer- | the eretem an exhilaration and vitality which cannot | game, and the viands were (he most delicious of their | 'o take my life and the life of my people hid bet , . * PS tt i ive to the crew. the entire group of moun alas, You eas b>} proanee high spirits and happy feelings. lat {inds_freeh troutsbass, pickrel, with woodcock, snipe, ter ait up nights and watch. Again, Last Con. | jt, and caved in. It js for this reasou that we haye | would prove ter. ibly destructive to the eee