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NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1870.—TRIPLE SHEET,\ worse, in the framing and MIDSUMMER RETREATS, | iPamusomscinmmt te coczarat | Woe Sltomuahe wnasie Pe ie DRE! ser cme enn a aly | Erte cpa, a the country should uever be bridged oy an ex) 1, two Jakes, the Cascade, Eagle Clif and man from souree posal encum| Ww aie hat wi <ielecved his hotel. It peg - fitrans Dest fnctitios inthe wenn, and in ‘avin ‘nus. sven, as bI as 8} me, a bf the revenue,” wntche without forte = “rnin npr i : 1d review of the éxtent and ramifications of the | tage to the only r The Season of 1870 at the | Wistisine charger Prt ane ato ee arot tar | The Triumphal March of King | teer production inthis country atiarge, an equally | hiuder the nonest suinafaoturr and invite fraud an White Mountains, el prety IRE OA yr Atihe | fulto obseryonapeckiog fat aund lively as they ares Gambrinus. SNIUE AREWERIES OP NEW YORK AND VICINITY collection of the tax. shes a others ty ean live for two dollars upws Atthe | This is the t collection in America. This house if ‘will not be leas interesting. The subjoined list of Another subject which will come before this next from seven to twenty-five ie! j~and collected, Is ta Among the American Alps—The Rugged Land- | dollars pet wert rt nmense class Of people inty Spires into the country annually just for the sake scape, Flinty and Rocky Domes—Some. | ofresring the ay ‘they ean have! the prestige of is kept by Tolt & Greonleaf. Valued $200,000. Next comes the Orawlord House, accommodating 300; a large, finely kept hotel, by Hartshorn, Wolcott & Thoms. it te surrounded’ by an exquisite land- scape, Itopens the 26th of June. Improvements brewers gives the Pryce ‘of beer for both winter and summer use—the former being called jung or schenk beer, the latter being lager beer proper— each brewer making about an equal quanuty of each, Inthe list below a number of small brewers, convention will be the adoption of the de! Plan Jor the creation and endowment of ny ® A BREWER’S ACADEMY, or high school, for the education of sctentine brewers, ‘The Newark Soavenisions last year, Interesting Statistics of the Lager Beer Traffico— The Next Convention of Brewers—A High thing About Society at Mountains—The living in the White Mountams for an insignificant | are being made. some eight or ten, are not particularized, but taken | adopted the project already in principle, ry & serene’ sum-—Iess than {t takes to lve at home, ‘That other | | The Twin-Mountain House, kept, by the Messrs, School for ‘Beer Apprentices” —Im- in the aggregate:— special committee, consistiny of Messrs! Henry Life of Glittering Fashion—The New Rail- class of less prudent fashionables, who reside in the | Barron, is a new hotel. It can hold 200 comfortably. mense Destruction of Lager EW TORE OFT. Porrey, | Cisusen, Jr. Friedrich Schaefer and ‘Richard road and Routes of Travel—Littleton— rear basement, cover the door knobs and metallic | It is twelve miles from the foot of Mouut Washin, ry Clausen (are ‘9, Katzenmayer, all of this city, was appointed, work in front with fron rust and scatter dust over | ton. It iselegant, nicely furnished and well kept. in the Fatherland. ¢ 10 of 60, charged with preparing a 8] plan to carry Board, Horses and Gay Equipages— their blinds, thus insinuating they have gon» to ‘The other hotels are the Glen House, a magnificent ter Abies. Out the object proposed, This plan was perfected tn ‘3 a Europe or the country, can practice a much cleverer | house on the south side of the mountains, accom. the course of the past winter, and communicated in Staging, Churches, Trout Fishing deception by spreading their old wardrobes on the | modating $400; the Waumbeck House, a splendid os wel Lb tne! Gaeaee detail, as long ago as last April, to the members of 4 Hunting—M, Washi piazza of a cheap White Mountain boarding house. | hotel; the Sinclair House, av Bethieem, now open r @ national beverage 0! lad tne several local societies throughout the country, and Hunting—Mount Washing- ‘there is 30 reason why Ye one should not come integer et . Siping Bours, m1 One may argue to the contrary till doomsday with- tee en of nan Terenas? mars SPDT VIES. Ai il. here who has enough of louniain House, 1e ume House, the ba 1 5 }¥ tom. and the Cogwheel Bail THE TAPER COMMODITY, Top azid Summit Houses-—all Ane retreats, witha | CU! Weakening in the least chis self atime at Davenport will probably ‘adopt it in substan road—The Hotels. and it doesn’t require much, host of boarding houses almost innumerable, All | Tacitus, in nis history of the Roman wars in Gor- and it 18 not violating confidence to give a brief ‘The mountain air is so fresh, so elastic, that it is Fe pra Leger are not expected 2 x OF > ., ive Upon: hough. ere are plenty of vegetables Ware Movyrars, N. H. June 9, 3870 t paisca in the same mountain ‘atmosphere, and they The White Mountains cover more territory than | have a flavor and a bouquet that are dectdedly in- ‘any other watering place in the world. Over 600 digenous to this climate, Food can be enjoyed. It concur ingsaying that the hotels are good, without exception, They will begin to fill up June 10. Many will desire a good breeze from the top of Mount Washington before many days are goue. THE ST, DOMINGO QUESTION. many, refers already & a pecullar beverage which the inhabitants of that “wild country” preparea of barley. It must even then have had the charactor of @ national custom to make and consume beer. That it was so rated and considered also a matter of abstract of what this Brewers’ High School ts to be, It is recommended to locate it at New York city, yoo | this being the great commercial and financial hears sou) | Of the country, and ail questions relating to these branches of our political economy could best be pend studied here, But other cities in the West will put. le. 8000 Rottmann & Eckh ‘A. WEATOHIBTER COUNTY. V4,009 “Goitled Hobott a vs q dn weir claims, and hencestl int 18 te square miles of upland, moorland and mountainous een a, onan L WADE "OES, Yet Enero is bs high importance ta evidenced by the bistoric fact WBO.0 Laden sino | tain. o e us pol yet uncer country lie cradied on the watershed sloping away | They are perfect, and, saying this, nothing 1s Jef¢ tO | Gatey Cush the Demini Treaty=In- | Mat Charlemagne, when he held court in Frankfort- $000 Auton Hueptel. 120.0 | ‘1De object of the institute Is to rear to the Atlantic seaboard. Six thousand feet above | the imagination. So much barden ts put upon this making on the Deminioan Treaty: on-the-Matn, in the year 794, caused all the ‘able 3,000 Michael Kunti 10,0100 EDUCATED BREW! controvertible Arguments. BURG, BROOKLYN, "ERS, the low water of the aca, the loftiest peaks reach | culty at the summer resorts that it requires great who shall not only understand fully the practical coniidence to believe that in time it will not be ut- * beer masters’’ throughout his vast dominions to be | Frederich Fries. 12,600 Gelasor & Steinbauser. 6,000 management of a brewery as red be even Alpine summits, and the great rocky domes } tenly destroyed. Ferocious appetites demand One of your dated een Lapa ee sammoned before him, and to be instructed, under | Jorery unger. oe ey Sxperence, but ahould nis be passeanen at least and flinty, moss-grown spires are the architectural | fare. It is given throughout. As persons coine here ie his persona: supervision, in the best methods of | R. sel 4,009 so much of chem stry, botany, and of the physicat ft Fr hi to build up, not to pull down, under a careful system { Caleb Cushing, and in the course of conversation 8,000 and mechanical sciences, of the laws of trade, of the marvels hewn by the hand of nature. From the | of eating the edifice 1s soon crowned, Jearned some new facts of history and policy relative | PF¢Wing a palatable and nutritious article of beer, 8,010 causes aud effects of fuctuations in prices, of poiltl- apex of Mount Washington this wonderful region Over 40,000 people visit the mountains annually. | +5 tne treaty now pending in the Senate of the United Even as varly a the sixth century a certain number $.0V0 » | cal economy in general, a8 would enable them to ean be scen just as it has been furrowed by the om- | This year the preparations are for 50,000. If the of gallons of beer per man were fixed by law as S00 4.000 | elevate the brewery busmess to a higher standard, ” . ¢ tourist 18 making a trip through the country, making | States. The venerable student, as usual, was in the 5,000 Connected with Uns theoretical eourse of instruction nipotent plough. ‘The huge masses of earth and | a hasty stay hewe and there, he alvays stops at the | company of his books, and, notwithstanding the sc- | %° Tegwlar tribate to convents and other religions 8,000 7,009 | 18 to be'a model brewery, where all the students rock have been turned up into long, irregular ranges, | White Mountains. They are as much to be seen a% | vorg daily strain upon ith energies, displayed his institutions, And from century to century exam- WW 2,40 | may go through a practical course as weil, and learo and the columnar ridges, sown with the seeds of | Niagara, Therefore, in addition to the large class pay ples multiplied thatthe rulers of principalities and oi re 2,600 | to apply in practice scientific rules and an umprove- nei who are constantly ‘on the go, there is the regular | natural aifability of manner and suavity of language. Glueck & C 2,000 | ments which science may from time to time discover, vegetation, are luxuriant in rude forest trees— | summer resideat population, Tours embracin; ‘ States and the local authorities of towns and cities (000 re er resideat pop! ‘These outward evidences of satisfactory relations EN ISLAND, In regard to this matter,the brewers of America are spruces, hemlocks, pines and cedars, and bear acres | trip down the St. Lawrence to Montreal and Quebec | being established invited a ve inted opening in- | ‘oughout Germany took special care in having ,000 hte! & 0,000 AHEAD OF GERMANY, upon acres of lesser growth—slrabs, plants and sake) ie pine vente Mountains. Hence everything is pica dis ay pe! pening thetr people provided with wholesome beer in suf- | Rosenband & $9 6,000 | where not even # union of those engaged in the wild fowers. Rude and strangely irregular inout- | “Ve during the Sumer. COMRESPONDENT—Mr. Cushing, 1 supposs you | #leDt quantity, and associations of brewers, being Unio fiiin QUermeDERG, RRO x. 2. fe ar eg Une as most of these mountains are, there are yet | much can be said and much abusively sala. Tshall | 1.04 civen some attention to the St. oat ‘ues. | S7aDted many favors and exclusive privileges, ac- Fe unl: -: eee ae eee ee Git | France the brewers have progressed further than im ome of them which have the same tmpress Ping poe itis learned an eg Pn a rs bevy aie colaion oh tes Ga pitts quired great political influence. thst ¢,000 | the Teutonic home of lager bier, for the French of precision and perfect form as the piilar | tHe dresses are to great breadths, as long as the | to ‘youncal Proposed aunexa- / " Gnder these circumstances it is but natural that 8,000 | brewers have erected ut the town of Charleville & ladies hold the purse strings and the husbands do or pilaster formed by mechanical skill. fom seen rg i spear i bere br! ~ ae , | business. Yet they do it in public—that 1s, they They adorn and dignify the surrounding country, style—and they style 16 fashion. Poor Fashion! tion? Mr. Cusnina—In regard to the successful ratifi- “Brewers’ Museum,” for the public exhibition of all oo | BeWly invented or improved implements, tools, bearirrnt and all oer apparatus either directly the German, wherever he may be on the globe’s sur- face, looks upon lager beer as an inheritance from Bek Protease 000 Jobn Laib! ible Just asa fine church or granite monument 1s orna- | TWose great mountains ‘and deep valleys are also haart hel are rs en eee by his encestors, dating back into remote antiquity and a one Meaaclen “Eut SaN arom Sar eaen ne aro moving, tal to i or city. But as pillars and | thti here, , re ” 4 om 5 c1 pay tlegere ee os of ae Buses they Shorties reel the queen OF high hi ee noe ever, tnat the island is @ desirable acquisition; in- a pxanieg pri pie pot lagu ES Brederick ‘4000 moet enable ciate iid garters 1s soon deposed by the reign of low corsage | deed, 1 consider it necessary to the completeness of jieocereeant A BREWERS’ CONGRESS AT DRESDEN, SAXONY, crumble and fade; but these supernal mountains, | and stunning hats. Thon art the despoler of called a prescriptive right to the name of national ling. « Frederick Haensier. Is ing the 8) er Here is the law of compensation well illustrated. | few tame work uf some choice fabric every tine Persons residing in the city are rarely contented to mere lege raneaeee gaslights eesti rela i 5 . | Besides they have the most bewitching morui Jeave their vast buildings, their magnificent struc- toilews—light, airy, gossomer-like—textures by which tures and live in the midst of a tame and monoto- | they drape their 2gures on a warm day for & warm nous scenery, They want green fields and woods —- aera is aan iM eto hiro ; _ | elaboration. is rich. The table furniture, the and streams and coo) airs, but these all must const: | are. of game, fruits, ices and sweatmeats, the tons tute something more than bills and dales. Moun- | of jll-manners—there are photographed by the open- tains and valleys are demanded and hills and dales ing oe ‘ Rien tale peta tguice topsite wy m3 vie! 3 tis a stray thought to wonder if, in the midst of accompany them. ‘The eye whtet 8 accustomed 10 | such generous polly, the poor of New York, roiste beauty and grandeur cannot feast upon @ dwarfed | ing in nasty, flithy tenement houses are ever given deformity. agreen spot in tle memory where they, too, might ‘There are many persons who during the heatea | SPéd 4 moment amid coolness and plenty. : where, besides the consideration of questio: - ike the granite base on witch they stand, are beauty; the comforter of ugliness, — eee Laban Me che ea: aaa pe ae it is certainly the beer of the Teuton, equally, if not SS eS eae, gay | Ing Mo uDistesaiky itn taxation: wads Gavan esas IMPERISHABLE. It seems as though the ladies cared for nothing | Ur history proves I ingress of the | Fore so, than the wines of the French, notwith- Korb & Kaufman. 8000 | of the quality of ihe manufactured article, the United States, mm aggregate intelligence, has always been far inferlor to the Executive. ‘That branch of the government on questions rising above the mere detail of local government has in no single instance displayed itself up to the times, or even comprehended the national necessities in their broad interpretation. Take the purchase of Louist- ana, of Florida, the acquisition of Texas and Califor. nia, and you find the Executive far in advance of Con Indee¢, the vast possessions embracing our finest cotton growing and auriferous regions, and necessary not only to complete the geographical ascendency of this nation on this continent, are all due to the advanced position held by the Execuuve. measure lirst broached in this country is to be dis- Besides these there are sundry small brewertes in | cussed, namely,—ihe establishment of a brewers’ various parts of this city and the environs produc- | academy at Weihenstephan, in connection with the ing annually about ten thousand barrels, With these | Royal Agricultural College located for probably more the whole jen eas Ce beer, fa oe la al a than a century at that place, lager beer, in New York city and vicinity for the SOME EUROPEAN BEER STATISTICS. season of 1869-70—brewing having ceased abont the Having given above the quantity of beer prewed Ist of May—amounts to the following total in bar- | in this country, and especially in New York rela:— and vicinity, it will be found interesting, if only Rew Youk cit for comparison, to look over the following short Hoy Zork oly. table of beer statistics from Germany. The first Willfamsbun given 1s of the breweries of Vienna and its suburbs, Staten Islan, the capital of Austria. The manufacture of two years Union Hill, Guitenberg, ae. 1s detailed, first in e/mer, the Austrian measurement, and also reduced to American barrels, at the rate of nearly fifteen gallons to the eimer:— standing that a German poet, in the exuberance of tus spirits, gave vent toa distich, which, roughly transferred into English, may read:— ‘The German hates the Frenchman's pride, But kes to drink his wine, which speaks well for the cosmopolitan character of the German taste. LAGER BEER A CONQUEROR. Under these circumstances it is not to be wondered at that whithersoever the Germans emigrate from the old Fatherland they carry, as tt were, their brew- erles with them, Wherever @ permanent German jewark.. Sundry smail breweries... s Hors . lony is once established a brewery will not long term seek some quiet farmhouse in the interior and | gre given every night atthe best houses; croquet Now here we have history that cannot be questioned colony ‘Total. hi American are satisfled to waste the summer in idle gourman- | flourishes through the day, and for genttém a4 a Bee Te CTE MEDIO Paice peace ie elniste aoe elites Rareenting & Maoaby value, exclusive of ale, einer, barrels, zing, where 7 fat a ent. such iadies as have not had their education neglecte “im 3 . rom being at first confined to the Germans of suc! within a radius of less than sixty miles from the ¥ yatams * dO Gizing, where they grow fat and indolent, That | there are plenty gf foxes. These cunning rogues |, ,CORRESPONDENT—I have noi heard the statement Gity Hail, of at least $8,000,745. Faia reweriae tn 8,414,529. a colony the consumption of beer will very soon work its way among other nationalities resident at the same place, in sptte of all opposition and ridicule witn which it may meet atthe start, thus proving iteolf an almost irresistible conqueror. Perhaps no- where 18 such convincing proof of this afforded as in the city of Paris, the gayand vivacious capital of France, that greatest of all wine countries. Here of these facts before. Its a good point. Some Sena- tors do a great deal of harping upon the inadvisa- bility of acquiring tropical possessions, Mr. CusHING—So | see in the papers. Such argu- ments are i raps Tact, they are no arguments at all—because ney contain neither reason nor the force of facts. Show me a oat nation living to- lay without her tropical possessions. My opinion is that no nation can one ete its greatness without tropical possessions. Spain became great when she ++ 1,652,200 : - * This is pretty good, considering that Vienna, with the city of Newark are properly included in the an = above tabularstavement, siuce probably three-fourtns | SU, Jt suburbs, has @ population not exeseding of the beer manulactured there, at least 150,000 bar- 000. al y in 1369, more than 4 r 340,000 barrels of beer were manufactured by a single els ones aA ag t tte eye taead 4 York. From | prewery, that of Dreher, at Little Schwechat. J In Bavaria, as early as the year 1290, becr was al- STATISTICS OF BEER CONSUMPTION s a tn New York and vicinity yield somewhat starting | Tetdy @ valuable subject of taxation. Additional taxes were Imposed in 1350, 1543, 1673, 1750 and 1811, results, The average contents of u barrel are about | since which last hamed = th ff o thirty gallons, though it is rated generally, aud | Pemained the same. In {oar peyecesd ¥ nneet nae should conta, between thirty-one and thirty-two s made to is not recreation. it 1s stmply adding | are everywhere, [saw several on the highway at to the toils of winter the more ener- | on oes Ee renee, Oey bt for rein- 8 m . summer: ” 4 rcements, cers, splen leers (as well as dears) vating exc ss of summer; for ennui super. be found all over the mountains. Guns are induced by what the popular phrase calls “quiet” ts | therefore m demand. the worst of all excesses. Going to the mountains ‘Trout Oshing, the best of all piscatorial sports, is means true recreation; 11 means also elevation of largely .practi#ed, This delightful Ash abouuds in large schools in gil the streyins and brogks. This mind, sound health, abundance as well for the intel- ree ttt make a summe) Agree ee lect as the stomach and appetites, The White Moun- | Greeley once complained that he had been ie | THE AMERICAN ALPS. cae White Mountains Would be nothing without fen. until she lost her most valuable foot- | wholly confined to the German inhabitants, | manufactured here ig ee timertatg ripple government. ‘There are breweries here manufactor- As the United States is now explored and settied FAGING. joids in the tropics. What would England do | and the quantity used was comparatively slight; | yyicn Gray ‘made up by beer hnported frou Pritt, | 18g from 170,000 to 230,000 barrels (American meus without India? That is easily answered. She would eat herself upin no time. Take the Nether- lands, only you may hant a longtime on the map before you can find her, she 1s territorially so small. But small as she ts she 1s @ power, and only on ac- count of her tropical possessions—the island of Java, the Moluccas and Sumatra. It seems to be a very shallow argument—admittin, it to be an argument at all—to say that we shoul have no tropical possessions. That 18 precisely what we do want now to finish us asa nation in a territo- rial way. {ook over what our own soil now pro- duces—there is wheat, corn, beef, &c., cotton, coal, iron, gold, silver, quicksiiver and copper. These are the great ariicles in the world’s consumption. We must now have sugar, coffee and tea; then we complete the cycleof commerce. Then we have everythiag in ourselves. We can do with- out tea, that is our own growth, for the present, no range possesses the same massive attractions, About =e Le ee are enages inital work alone, as agains! of -tive years ago. ‘the same marvellous freaks of nature and the same | 1; iJ ’estimated that about 2,000 carriages ure here facilities tor elegance and comfort. Beyond the | guring the summer, and it would amaze tne fre- merit of antiquity as a resort they show progress in | quenters of Newport and Long Branch to see the everything that renders any place an attractive sum- plegept equipages and the large number of four-in- mer retreat. Being separated by long distances | Churches are extensively attended here, and what- from each other they are accessible by good but un- Py py Be pore een ee bipebeee marie o . ° for 0) eneath he riods of the mdig- dulating drives, and the visitor has something con- nant clergy who inveuh against all that is vain and stantly to see that is novel and interesting. If all | evanescent, the sights do not exhaust an entire season it is only MOUNT WASHINGTON Decause the observer can be interested in nothing paid aoneetthe Bate Saeraat ee woe external. This, it must be admitted, is one of the | |i is twenty-five ee rom Littleton and is reached chief and most durable features of these mountains, | by fine drive terminating at its base. From the ‘When you arrive hére you are ina distinct creation | £00¢ 4 railroad, fitted with a centre railin which are but gradually it found more and more favor among the French, and in 1863 the consumption of beer had reached 883,000 barrels, American mea- sure. From this onward the increase was remarka- ble, footing up 851,600 barrels in 1866, more than twice the quantity used but three years before, and in 1869 the consumption of beer in the city of Paris is stated to bave exceeded 1,200,000 barrels, and the revenue received in France from beer (the tax being two francs eighty-eight centimes per hectoluwre— about fifty-eight cents on twenty-six and a half gal- lons) Was nearly one-sixth of the amount collected from wine. A similar result is observable ure) of beer annually, and the consuinption is enor- pe sen Bena ipanticase ce a8-tar O00 pation: mous, at the king's brewery alone daily retail Tho population of the district of country coverea by | S895 amounting to 3,000 gallons. the radius mentioned above, of sixteen miles from | 15" tax- on beer’ ylelied an. inoress ert nt the City Hall, may be rougnly guessed at about two | Bie ito Baten ler tat reagan ~ and @ half milion souls, snowing that more than a | $250,000, Witten St Tie nae nla or hoor ‘wamdtue, gallon of becr 18 manulactured within these limits BD ote citer eee turea. to be consumed anuyally by each man, woman and child living within them. J In Saxony the production of beer in 1864, for @ But all these are not beer drinkers. One-naif of | Population of about 2,400,000, was 1,600,000 American the population is female, of whom hardly one in | barrels, and in some portions of the kingdom, @spo- five hundred or @ thousand takes an occasional | ty6 aneraal onart Poe taal praye! oe sald a glass, and they are condned almost exclusively rar et an the biaes omar prosperity to the Germans, One-fourth of the entire popula. | fj! Bg pipciaediciet ad gy ee tion are children, who, again, cannot be counted prdletaganyseuna 4 lager beer in Berlin, as beer drinkers. Of the remainder, 626,000, both Prussia, with a population of 650,000, ‘amounted to ‘oung men and grown people, at least “200,000 may | 587 American barrels per day, and has been increas- deducted as belonging to either one of the follow- | 2é trom seventeen to twenty per cent annually ever ing ciasses:—Total abstinence men; second, such IN THE UNITED STATES, showing that the character of conquistadore at- cogs two inches apart, lies up the side, coiled over taches Lo beer not 1n isolated localities onty, put is its ce. believe we will raise that before long; but 1 bt The official ret f the Trea- Frankfort-on-the-Main, with @ ulation of 87,+ made of the uneven surface like a huge serpent. ‘It isa mar- | ‘ough I é 3 general attribute, oiticial returns of the Whose taste for strong splrita has so grown upon D PoP p ing sales by barrels:— Barrels, Barrels. 6 views el tten. So th thirteen inches in three feet and in some places the pei 2 eg Sobe Sm ten. So the | angle of inclination exoeeds forty-five degrees, Cars White Mountains will never have to depend upon | fitted with swinging seats; engines of reduced size, fickle patronage for support as a mid-summer re- | but = no cone pee a gee deeper in the . 68 WI ver be destroyed; | Tear than at the front, complete the rol stock, Se Sent Rone woe bare eee de oie ‘There are three engines in the depot at the base and they have that which are staple articles— | four large cars, accommodating fifty each. Over magnificence of landscape, coolness, mountain airs, | 8,000 people went to ie summit _ rericr Po a els ne ascent is made in one hour and a half, and the fare eee rasta 4 et i she noe ue baste) ae for going and coming 1s three dollars. ’ The distance ‘White Mountains, he mountains made the hotels, | to the apex is three miles. For this great achieve- and it will remain with the hotels whether they wil } ment a the laws ef eae cs daccment a Ss. 2 vill have els, B Marsh, has received flattering inducements from stand or fall; the mountains née) puikstrs bs ut Switzerland, gnd irom capitalists who have money the hotels are here, all large, splendidly Kept, | invested among Alpine snows. The railroad is not ‘and are, of course, famous. In them is developed } now in working order, but will be ready on the 1th one ofthe most peculiar phases of American so¢i- | of June, who [ook upon beer as a vulgar drink; and, foul this amount has been steadily augmenting. Mgentlemen? who inaulge in “gtimulants” only “at Urees Gell Teferences ei the prodigious quan- home” or af their club, and then nothing bat a high | tities of beer used in Germany, notwithstanding priced article of nominally foreign importation will at Over 200,000, gallons of wine are, on an do, Tnese deductions from the total number of Roney cnUeny, grown in the same country, in inhabliants—and they are believed to be correct, | Vineyards covering 389,124 acres. and as near the truth as it is possible to come—leave FANCY NAMES. asteady, reguiar, beer drinking population within Some of the localities in the Fatherland enjoy @ the ctrele of about thirty-two miles ip diameter, | special reputation forthe excellence of their x with the City Hall fora centre, of 425,000 persons, | Several New York brewers took advantage with a consumption for each of about sixty gations | of this lately, and, by copying as near as possible per year. Allowing for errors, it is within the range | the process and machinery adopted in those local- of truth to assert that Afty gallons per yearts the ave- | ities, Go more or less successfully imitate these rage quantum of a regular beer drinker, and for what particular fancy “brands,” if they may be so called, one may consume less another swallows the more. | Thus the ‘‘Maerzen bier” of Liesing, near Vienna, And, aiter ail, this is not so greatan average as it | was introduced here by Bernheimer & Schmid, the ; may appear at first sight. A gallon measures about | ‘Wiener bier’ of Schwechat, Austria, by John Kress; grasp. CORRESPONDENT—I think a speech of this kind might start the opposition out of the rut they have been running in. Mr. CusHING—These are all simple propositions, I do not see that we need any speeches on the sub- ject, the matter, as a question of State policy, is so very clear. I think, judging from the time consumed without coming to any result, that there has been enough speaking. CORRESPONDENT—One of the greatest objections the Senate brings up agalast the treaty is that there 1s a job in it, Mr. Cusnina—Well, I do not know exactly what is meant by a job, though I hear that is one of the sub- Jects very elaborately touched upon. If a job means that somebody will be benefited by the ratification of the treaty I doubt whether any great measure has And f ye has fully reach: 00,000 barrels, which, at the average wholesale price of ten dollars per barrel, represents an industrial product of the country of the value of sixty-five millions of dol- lars, andas the same rate per barrei is but a very moderate figure for the amount of capital perma- nently invested in the manufacture of beer, It may be assumed that the sum of sixty-five or seventy mul- Hons 1s actually employed to produce that quantity of beer per year. But this alone would not tell the whole story. a “ y ag es ‘i b . THE RAMIFCATIONS OF THE BEER INDUSTRY Asses 1 “4 ’ ng via Oe ere Ome en: MEM 2 means tae on Took, Poegan, vio ascent bY peual LeeisaaNansee ham Without some one profiting | extend muoh further and encircle and cover many ea tne saloon. ropes ae “hat “atey gations Sooke, "ant goreral: thane te other jp "at, get into the best society in your country %” inquires | locomotion up the railroad track. You might as well say that the late war | imetoy a ne exiellasa dealie: & patie , per year would not even be tliree such glasses per | fortunately, the people of this country have yet been the astonished foreigner. There is a way not under- WALKING THREE MILES INTO THE CLOUDS, should never have been fought because somebod 4 cl i alls, glance at some of the pursuits of the people, deeply con- nected with the manuiacture of besr, will be sum- cient to show the importance of this branch of our productive industry to the general prosperity of the country. day, an allowance of stimulants to which, in view of petee such German names,for their lager as Bint the very small percentage of alcoliolic properttes in len Kerl, of Boitzeaburg; Scheps, of Breslau; beer, even the most temperate man could hardly ob- | Kuhschwanz, of Delitzseh; Kniesenack, of Dues- Ject. The amount of trow; Klapper, of Hetmstaedt; Dortdentfel, of Jena; _ MONEY SPENT Raster, of Leipsic; Israel, of Luebeck, and many in retait for beer is also somewhat astounding. Re- | other similar—some more, some less euphonious—~ ducing the number of gallons, as given above, there | local patronymics for beer. is drauk the apparently enormous ‘quantity of 419,760,000 glasses in this city and the immediate bs vicinity described, The price charged by retailers— POLITICAL NOTES, and the whole, with but a very slight exception, 1s ' car out a retail ore the Cola pont five cents per Asal glass, making @ total amount of nearly ‘The name of N.G. Marshal, of York, is added to PWENTY-ONE MILLION DOLLARS, ¢ or, to be more precise, $20,988,000, which 425,000 per- the list of Tepublican candidates for Congress from sons pay ae per Shere oe the teres of enjoying this | the First Maine district. to them palatable refreshment, being an average tor rtain B each of nearly fiity doliars a year. oot ing ak tad a Ae oo One item of expenditure which the brewers have, | ticlan a “great demagogue,’? takes it back, and and which also employs a large Fa dle share | makes the amend by saying he is “too small pota- of another branch of productive industry at home, is | toeg to be great in anything.” 108. : Of this commodity the brewers, for the purpose of | Aaron H. Cragin will be re-elected United States reducing Shy the Ire pape of led cane Senator from New Hampshire. Colonel H. 0. Kent, rooms, cellars and vaults, use at the rate of irty le cents’ worth for each barrel of beer manufactured, | = Coos Republican, who never hangs to any. making 2 total paid annually for ice by the brewers | body’s coat tail who is going down, goes for his re- in the United eateat op $51,960,000; snd by sone of | election. New York city and vicinity alone of $262,350. And in this city ihe municipal Yreasury 1s proportionally. | The report that Senator Sumner has expressed & beueflied by this trade in the shape of willingness to serve the Senatorial term which will in wie inept prea sree eatsoashey: ahi expire next year by the completion of Senator Wil- ald ie brewers alone for , és x paola said to amount to about eight. cents per | 98'S term, and thus render it unnecessary for Mas- barrel, footing up the respectable sum of over $24,000 | Sachusetts to trouble herself about sending a succes- Det cee ee Bie Hae otal ieee sor to the latter, is not confirmed by late advices with precedin; ures, thi el me] Papite works wvoutd not like to miss fgorm among its | ffm the Hub. It 1s not yet fully determined items of cash receipts. whether General Wilson will be his own successor or aained behind) tue Kast in tho | "% has not only not remained behind)the Eastin the asl rapid increase of the manufacture of beer, bat has General John T. Averill is a candidate for the re- probably exceeded it, as there are individual brew- | publican noriination for Congress from Minnesota, genes in Cincinnati, in St. Lous, in Chicago and | second district. Milwaukee which turn out neariy twice the quantt in burrels of any single. e-tablishment. in New Yor John Young Brown positively declines running giood by ali. The shrewd money-getter improves his | with measured strides over the ratiroad ties. “It 1s a ‘winter in the city. Tuen is his harvest time; for then | disheartening, bone-aching job, wearying, exhaust- merchandise is very marketable and cash flows to- | ing, almost killing, Tne day was hot—the ther- ward the seaboard. His pockets are full | mometer at ninety degrees. The atmosphere was enough, suppose, Spring approaches. His | almost a fame—a burning ether. A few minutes and wife, daughters and numerous relatives look | all that takes absorbtion trom the body’ was a mass around for a resort. They have money now; then | of saturation, Still it did not savor of enterprise to they want position; fame they will seck aiterwards, | turn back, though such a movement smelled with ‘These are three very desirable things 1n America, | tne esseuce of discretion. The sun Was good for a They are the iegitiniate fruit of republican institu- | dozen sunstrokes. That I saw, : tons—at least that 1s what the bookmaker or poli- | The Asedfit Was continued dSver the trestle work tician would say—particularly the politician, upon which the road 18 built from one terminis to ‘A place Js selected for summering. Mr. A. will be | the other. In some places the precipice below 4s there; the accomplish Mrs. B., whose wink is a | fifty feet, particularly at the Jacob’s Ladder. Go} passport to the first circles, has engaged her rooms, | ahead for three hours, then, you Teach the £0) ut and at least half a dozen four-iu-hands are an- | before reaching this delightty physital iusion nounced. This is a good bill, so the candidates for | you have nearly mortgaged all your ty. ‘and put social honors apply for apartments. The season 2 mechanics Hep, your good nature. You con- opens, They are on hand, They make a great sen- | stantly believe you are attainihg the end only to gation. Dresses, frills, powdered pates—these all ee sirétch of railroad on a higher but hid- abound with Deautifal awkwardness. Our new en cliff, At lat you are there—there to enjoy a inenda surprise 6very one, The latest Paris dresses | wondroas scenery, such alone as the gertus of Byron are the envy of the ladies, the diamonds every one’s | or Shelly could fnvest with a ray of fi elity. Then it wonder, the coarseness of manner the unanimous re- | is that you look upon the globe, and then see but mark. But they are stunning people, after all—that | a small segment. is, they have money. This soon becomes apparent. THE TiP OF MOUNT WASHINGTON ‘That lady who has the clearest vision, and adaugn- | is a vast solitude. it is @ fine earthly throne for yer or son fit to be caressed by financial | genius; itis the summit for meditation, Here men cupids soon make the acquaintance of our candidates | merge with things, and things are not what they are. for society, They are ail agreeable, Constant at- | Ail is belittled by distance. How insignificant dendance in the parlors soon makes their circle of | measurement and miles become, Mere clay and friends expand, A few days and our friends are a trees and hills and dales mingle in closing dis- Dig as any one in the big hotel. They coutinue their | soluiion. The immeusity of that above, tne process throughout the summ: Living in te | pueriiity of that beneath no longer illus- ame house With people of culture, continuous inter- | trate the equilibrium of the universe. They ‘course covers them with a thin stratum of pol'sh, | suggest startling incongruities; they flood the mind and when the season closes they go back to the city, | with volcanic thought. From this outlook on fet up an establishment, and their captial stock in | huimanity—better inhumanity—there 1s world of society has increased with strange rapidity. Cards | views, and in the nighttime, beneath the tara of are soon dropped at thetr door, Winter entertain- | stars which set upon the distant mountain crests, ments follow, and the advantage is fortified by gay | this peak is the diadem of all. It rules the range. parties the whiter through. nis is truth, without | ‘Then, the view. The snow ts still lining the slope any garments whatever. 1 do not say that itis ex- | Gown the northern side. It giistens like asiring of empiified more at these mountains than elsewhere; | crystals and covers square miles i large, irregular ‘Dut because of the fine class of people who board | patches. ‘The ocean of mist beyond and below is a might become enriched. I think such talk is apsurd, r. Cushing finished his conversation by saving that the Executive must look to the people. They are the power (o which he is responsible. They applaud the policy of expansion and grow more patriotic and devoted in proportion as they see their country ascending in the scale of grandeur before the nations of the earth. OUR SHSPPING INTERESSS. “Zach” Chandlers Bill for the Restora= tion of the American Merchant Marine= ‘The Petition of New York Merchants. The following is Senator Chandler’s bill for the re- vival of our navigation interests; — A bill to encourage the building of slips for foreign trade jand other purposes, Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Unied States of America, in Congress assembled, Tha: from and after the passage of this act, when any im: porte? materials are used in the construction or equipment of iron ships, built in'the United States, for the purpose of being solely used in foreign trade and, commerce, there shall be allowed and paid to the parties buildlag such ships, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may pre- scribe, a sum of money equal in amonnt to the daties which had been paid on such materiais at the time of importation ; and in case materials of domestic growth, manufacture or production enter into the construction and equipment of such Suipy there shall be allowed nnd paid to the parties buliding the same, under like reguiations, a sum of mono} equal in amount to what the duties on such materials woul have beea had such materals been tnported trom foreign countries. Provided, however, that any ships built under the BARLEY, HOPS, ETC. It is estimated tnat, as an average, it takes three bushels of barley and two and a half pounds of hops to produce one barrel of beer. This gives the ent quantity o7 barley, used in this manufacture, nineteen and o half million bushels, and sixteen million two hundred and fifty thousand pounds ef hops. The average annual yield of barley acre, taking the quality which 1s used for brew- , 13 not far from twenty bushels, and of hops about two bales or 400 pounds. ‘This requires for barley the tilling of 970,000 acres of good agricultural land, and 42,625 acres for hops. The value of barle\ land may be reckoned at forty dollars, and that cui- tivated fur hops at forty-five dollars. There are, hen, in the agricultural jands alone which furnish werles With two of the necessary articles for the manufacture of beer represented the immense mount of capital as follows:— 970,000 acres for barley, at $40. $38,800,000 625 acres for hops, at $45.. 1,918,126 1,012,625 acres + e seoe «$40,718,125 Amount Invested in breweries, real estate, Machinery, &¢ Meeceeseceeseeeees 65,000,000 has + $105,718,125 PERSONS EMPLOYED. Calculations by well informed statisticians, based upon thoroughly tried experience, go to prove that the labor of 28,980 pergons is required to produce the requisite amount oi barley from the 970,000 acres, and also that it takes 8,526 persons to grow the 16,600,000 pounds of hops. An actual count, a8 nearly correct as it could be under the circumstances, altering aimost daily, made by the officers of the Central Associa- tion of Brewers of the United States, gives the num- ber of men employed in the various breweries in this country during the last brewing season, from Octo- ber, 1869, to May, 1870, at 8,124, and besides these Total... provisions of this section shall be allowed to engage in the coasting trade of the United States upon the repayment of the moneys which had been paid by the United States on the construction and equipment of such vessels only. ‘Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That all ship stores and coal to be used and consumed by ‘any vessel on ite voyage from any port of the United States to any foreign port, may, in such quantity and under stich regnlations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe, be taken in whole packages in bond, and disposed of for such purposes, froe of impost and intérnal duty and tax, here at the hotels it is an inevitable consequence. A | sheet for the plunging clouds, which seem to ride Sxo. 8. And be it further enacted, That for and during | there were employed in the malt houses in the sev- | ana its suburbs. Even California bas fully kept pace | for Congress from the Kentucky Second district. large summer hotel is nothing but upon it; the craggy Cliffs, the prectpices, the dis- shes organ ee at oa me Cee thie. act ~~ nee. eral cities oe Jess VER Klages This righ Syed ft with it, and wReDh Ds ‘The patently ‘Sentinel, in describing the admix- A SOCIAL MACHINE. tant villages, the dancing cascades oversweep a ter- | Tite ’amertcan regisiers (0 fron-bulle. anipaot altkings pur. | PUmMber of Persons directly Aependent for heir iiv- 7 ing upon the beer industry of the country to foot up as follows:— In bariey culture In hop culture..... In breweries. In malt houses. TOIL. ....00sssserersececsecereesecsecsesess But this, large though it be, does not even ap- proximately give the entire number of persons con- nected in various ways with the manufacture and gale of beer, but which it 18 SAN FRANCISCO has laid tn during tne last brewing season, from ture of whites and negroes at the radical convention October, 1860, to May, 1870, a stock of 140,700 barrels | that Was held at Mount Sterling lately, says the of lager beer, of which 34,206 barreis were manufac- | former lookea like “chunks of light bread fanked is ey be ete ee oe known in the by scorched jam.’? ‘ en Ci u fe a ake bat MARLEY? ‘pee ‘The St. Louis Republican and other democratic All the brewers east of the Rocky Mountains have, | papers in Missouri are taking strong grounds against ever since the suspenston of she reciprocity treaty, | running @ democratic general ticket next fall. been energetic in their appeals to Col ess for ihe avolition of the importdmy on foreige especially | What folly! Think of ninety thousand democratic Canada barley, which latter, on account of the soil | majority in New York, and organize for 1872, chased by citizens he United States in forelgn countries, and owned by them, with the condition contained in auch Fegister, however, that such ships shall not be used or em- ployed in the coasting trade of the United States The following petition ts on the desk at the Corn Exchange. In order to secure the immediate action of Congress, gentlemen are requested to sign with- out delay: To the Honorable the Senate and House of Representa- tives of the United States, in Congress assembled :—We, the undersigned merchants, shipowners and others interested 10 the American carrying trade, an industry which has been It manufactures the man and woman of the world | ritory of 200,000 square miles, all visible to the eye. ‘out of crude material. Those who prevail in Ameri. | The overlapping mountains, the foliage, the ocean can ety to-day went through the same process— } away to the horizon are all prominent. or their ancestors did for them. So there 1s much On the mountain’s top are two hotels, the Summit nonsense about Knickerbockism, patroons and ‘old } House and the ‘Tip a House, both built of stone, families.” There 1s nothing of the kind in America. | with wooden roofs 1 on rafters. ‘hese roofs are Democracy cuts the throat of caste, If aman stands | chained down to the earth, else a brisk breeze ‘upon birth or lineage get down under thesuperstruc- | would land them 6,000 feet below. There are aiso ‘ture of his pretence and ten chances to one you will | two fine, large barns in the vicinity. The top of the find a good-natured buckler or one Who could split | mountain does not cover over two acres, all a mass rails faster than his posterity could spend money! | of rocks—dark granite. These hotels accommodate Aristocracy is made of bologna sausages and pork seventy-five ple. re is fine -way to the Glen House at | noarly destroyed by foreign competition, bey earnestly toad. | mext to impossible to ascertain. For instance, a } and cooler climate belng better adapted to its growth, is atated that a Know Nothing erganization 1a onthere ave various siete, 4 fue carriage. way, to the, Glen House at | Wocatstneontenscof the il tgeucotragethe bullaog of | very considerabte portion of the brewers” capital is | is considered euerior to tha v grown inthe United | , Jposeow fh A nace pore hirer WAYS OF REACHING THE WHITE MOUNTAINS bridie path ascended by ‘pontes from the Crawford | *8{0é for foreign trade, and for other purposes,” introduced | inyested in casks and Kegs and tubs, in machinery, \ States for the manufact ure of beer. Of the crop of Pi inthe Senate Uy Hon. Z. Chandier, as a truly patriotic and Impartial mearure. ‘The first section grants to American ship-bullders all that they can poralbly demand. The justice of the provisions of the second section can be disputed by none. And the third section meets the requirements of our anipowners and of the general pubiic. The bill is a fair and statesmanlike compromise, and we sincerely trust that your honorable bodies will not adjourn without testifying your interest In the commercial prosperity of our couniry by the Speedy passage of thie bill.” THE WHEREABOUTS OF GENERAL JOHN S. MOSBY, in wagons, &c., all of which require quite an army ) 1869 there was impor ted of Canada barley to this Miss Ann Winningham has been appointed Post- of cOpeTS, machinists, smiths, masons and other | country 5,295,131 bushels, against 3,601,008 bushels mistress at Twenty-one Mile House, South Carolina. artisans to’ be employed for the greater part of the | 10 1868, most of whichis purchased and used by ti ee tulating themselves year, cither in making anew or in repairing what is | brewers in this State, New Jersey and Eastern Penn- South Carolina papers are congratulating needed. And if the retailers of the manufactured | eylvania; of tne importation of 1869 the quantity so | upon having the sweet sixteenth amendment coming: article were taken into account the 20-called saloon | used being. Le a ar or about that way. keepers—the number mi swe! to the neigh. | Sixty per po! bdorhood of a milion. In this calculation tt anoula ton of Canada barley has rapidly tucreased, the Humphrey Marshall is talked of as Congressional Dot be omitted that brewers, to dispose of every | receipts at the port of Oswego alone showing the | candidate for the Louisville (Ky.) district, He isa 12,000 barrels of beer, have need of at least ten | following interesting agures:— man of weight. horses, giving an aggregate used in this trade over from New York. ‘The traveller cau either cut across | House. Going down the railroad I found it neces- rom Sarotoga and down to White River Junction, { sary to adopt the ‘and then to Littleton and thence to hisselected hotel, “SLIDING” or he can come by way of Boston or Springfleld. By | process much in vogue there. ° It consists In uniting these two latter routes New York can be left in the | a narrow strip to @ .wide plank, and then inserting ‘morning and the passenger will arrive here the same | the strip in the siat of the middie ruil. Getting might; or, if this route is too tedious, he can lay over | aboard of the board—thus giving force to that much ‘might at Springfield, having let. New York in the | used word—the narrow Plank travels over the aliernoon. Through trains are to be put on the ores circular boits and carries you down with a routes from Boston and New York and the cars are to reak-heck velocity. The danger is in bre too be very elegant ‘The ride trom either city | fast, you lose control of the machine. I do not ad- Bushes. ———_—_————, thro @ fine iandsca| region, flooded | mire this fast kind of life—for there is soon an end From the Albany Argus, Ju! : the whole country 01 at least 5,420 horses, valued at | In 1863. (the treaty; Sin iesn breezes. Te White Wiountain | toi ast came near dnding out several times, A | 1p having been asserted in teveral quarters that | O¥€?, 20000; and the amount of teed coheumed by H Ta 1862 | being ¢o76sta GENERAL NOTES. jw Hampshire Railroad have fints! thetr | mile a minute is often made by this e: John 8. Mosby, so famous for his raids in Virginia * <! ae onl: ont eine les beyond Littleton, It now reaches | leads with equal certainty to the bottom—and the | ‘and Maryland during the rebellion, was eng: pia 4 in 1888. 1 About @ week since fifty colored people left Lynch- of it aiding in the maintenance of another large portion of the farming population. But’ one of the burg, Va., for the South. Their destination was the: More important items to be considered in this con- Whitefield. There is some talk here about this yove- | grave. Several serious accidents have occurred in cotven plantations of Misetesipp on which they re the late Feniav invasion, Much curiosity was felt to ment. Some say it will injure Litvieton, Others | this way. know the truth of the matter. Mr. Henry Brock, of <oniend SRS IERIE nN iphayeeta }roteh; at: Eieeesor ik @ fine an mialineatin | ile ae eee a eee vicina Tenee aa coat, y ane Raresie eee at hay 5 jetoi 2 ts one of tho oldest and, most beantifal of ail the | travellers stop. "It isa winter and summer house, Siangurry {0 that gentleman and received the folOW- | 4 «prac diamond,” whicl! has been such a mighty THE NATIONAL CONVENTION OF BREWERS. ‘Amare belonging to Mr. B. L. Norcross, at the agency in the remarkable development of the re- ‘The Ninth National Convention of the Brewers of | Trotting Park, in Augusta, Me., on the 29th ult. pro- sources of all nations, The average rate at which coal | the United States, or as they themselves please to | quced two handsome colts at one foaling. ey 4s used in brewertes in America is aboutseven tons to | call it, the ‘Brewers’ Congress,” met at ped are both smart and active and are of tne ‘Fear- every three hundred barrels, or about one hundred | N. J., on the 2d day of June last year, remaine: naught” breed. and fifty-five thousand tons for the whole production | im session for three days, and the readers of the ‘The Aroostook (Me.) Pioneer of May 31, says:— 4 of beer in the country. During last winter in this | Heraup will yet remember the full Te vor tie “About two inches of snow fell here on Tuestay laat > ¢ White Mountains. For many years | and has the reputation of being the best lu New Eng- sae eon the only station to northward of the | land. A fine table is spread; the rooms are ele- ‘mountains where tourists could alight for the moun- | guntly furnished; the house abounds in fine statuary wins, This travel and its natural advantages | aud paintings; has croquet grounds, large parlors, ‘have made it what it is. Now boarding houses and | dining hails, and is always full. It has been kept by hotels abound in Littleton, and they are frequented | Mr. Thayer for twenty-one years. The tourist seeks WARRENTOWN, Va., May 80, 1870. Drax BRook—Yours of the Mth instant'T have just re- ceived requesting to know if Ihave any connection with the Fenian myasion of Canada. I hi en engaged for the last two weeks in trying causes in court, and can assure you that Ihave no sort of connection or syrapathy with Fenian raids or Cuban dlivusters. I am,in baste, very traly our ef acco! is are ! e cars. iterations are bein HIN te city and vieinity the average price of coal paid by | proceedings as published at the ume. Ti by sine people, and ai ete =o rear | teres ae eae ae peng | friend, Eres Soy. Mosh the brewers, ascertaiaed oy actual Inquiry, was | touth annual “Congress” will convene in the city of | 8d remained tne nest diy, Posse none mae 8 dle how to A hotels. The largest house and the one best known to New VIOLATION OF THE PASSENGER ACT.—The State of | about seven dollars per ton; while in localities | Davenport, Jowa, on Wednesday, the 8th day of Fhureaay night we had a severe frost. nearer to coal minea, as St, Louis, for instance, the | June, and from’ present appearances its doings price may have een less, it was higher in others | promise to be more generaily interesting. The re- ‘The murder of Senator iW. Stephens, of Caswell, more remote, like Milwaukee, The New York rate | port of the chairman of te “Committee on Agita- | N. C., has been confirmed, The Charlotte Observer may therefore be properly taken as an average for | tion” is anxiously looked forward (0, as it is ex- | of the 24th says that two young meg by the name the whole country, which would give the entire | pected to show up in terse and convincing manner of Hubbard were arrested on Sunday at Betnel California, through Horace D. Dunn, Commissioner of Immigration, has commenced suit against the steam- ship Idaho and her consignees to recover $155,000 for an alleged violation of the Passenger act, In landing on these shores 155 passengers not citizens The w railroad shortens the distance to the | Yorkers is the Profile House, which opens the 10th of Pe Mont eu diemabait Houses by five miles. | Juve, twelve miles from the depot. It Is the first Wis a decided improvement, and one over which all | permanent resort sought by New Yorkers. In every joice at the mountains. Those returning to New | respect it leads the mountains. It accommodates 425 K e a 2 morning and eople; has 125 servants; numerous parlors; very Pe a J Mee Naw. Tore. a8 Gan ar Hlgnte sure. con Tostly and extensive refrigerators, laundries, offices | of the United States, and for whom they refuse to | amount pald by brewers for coal during one single | the complete i : Le aed eats gg tg J Sections and fast going. As for oiler railroads— | and general outbuildings. A cottage is adjacent built | pay the required commutation tax.-—Alta Calor | brewing season $1,035,000, Aud how many persons IGNORANCE OF CONGRESSMEN charge LJ connection w nobody bere dgsirey them, ‘They will be ay Myury by Al, Brige®, of New York, About the Profle | nia, May 22. employed in wiuing tills coal, in transporting It by | and Senators, or their utter carclessness, Which is atill assassination of Mr, Stephens,