The New York Herald Newspaper, July 20, 1875, Page 4

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4 VDE PARK IN THE SEASON, Seenes im the Park During the Moruing | Hours—London in Its Glory. IFashionable Society Enjoyments - Who Are To Be Seen on the Grounds, ‘THE BARONESS BURDETT COUTTS. i he Earl and Countess of Dudley | Doing Darby and Joan. | Lonpos, July 6, 1875, Napoleon the Great would, we think, never | ‘have died upon a barren rock in mid-ocean If his reat conqueror, Arthur, the first Duke of Wel- Ungton, coula have foreseen the shape in which the effusive gratitude of his countrymen and ‘Women would find expression, When an admir- | ing country bestowea upon the hero of a bundred | fights pa‘atial residence at the eastern end of | ‘Piccadtily it was hard mdeed that the gushing {isterhood of that day should immediately erect a Bratue ofa stone man and call it Achilles, with | mothing on pat an ancient Greek smeld and a | (whort broadsword, to look into the ground floor | Parlor wiudow of the ancieat warrior’s house. | ‘StIll harder was tt that a t20 loving vestry should | have placed a public convenience in front of the ‘ld gentleman's drawing room window, aud when | ENGLAND GENERALLY rected in its own hero's line of vision a statue Awhich has been and still is and ought to be the Tidicule of ali-wno have seen it, then might tL have been supposed that tne height of national ‘and inconsoquential ingraittude had been | achieved, And yet these are the most prominent | jobdjects tha: greet us as we turn from Piccaallly | frouna Apsley House into the far-famea Rotten iRow. Tula fashiouable lounge and promenade jextends along the western side of the park, rom ithe Duke’s bouse to Kensington Gardens, where | the oid red bricé palace, witch 18 now portioned ‘outas & kind of royal almshouse, 1s almost hid- | ou th the stately trees which adorn this veauti- ful site, which said trees, on a moderate computa- tion, bear dally more fies than all the other trees in the kingdom; ior here the Iivegaarcsman doves to roim with the nursery maid and bbe per- @mbulator; here Jack tells Jill tne old, old stor; here Captain de Licquers tells pretty little Mrs. (McMusn’t a tale woich oid Mac, now playing his wrabber of whist at tae Horizontal Cid, would ‘be rather asionigned to hear; aud under yon rately beech there goes tue lovely Ducness of Pentonville, lending no unwilling ear to the good | Jooking scapegrace who won her young heart Delore yet she was offered as a sacrifice to the | ‘Duke, whose age, riches and scandalous repurae tion have given him an European uame, and who ds now busily engaged im procuring for the scape- grace above mentioned an appointment as gover- mor ofthe undiscovered isiands on the Western | coast of Airica for not quite the same reason that Anduced the Marquis of Steyue to flud a governor- snip fur Rawdon Urawiley. THE PARK i bas three different performances per diem, the — Mrst commencing at the opening of the gates at gix A. M., and devoted during the London season | to grooms exercising their horses on the drive; to the latetudinarian who comes for the sake of bis liver, and who of kes up by gorging at his din- per for the eniorced discipline ofthe morning; to Bir Curryan Rice, late member of tne Couneiiin Calcutta, who rides here every morning with his wld friena Mango, late president at tue Court of a Majah, aud whose whole conversation is of the | fJand of the Sun, aud wuose fear is that we may pne day | | | } LEASE INDIA TO AMERICA, | who will teacn us how to make the country pay e@xpenses, These, with the riding class of Mr. Pexter, formeriy & corporal of bussars, looking ut amon his pupils jor a susc*ptivie heiress, aro fhe representatives of the morning attendance. | But from noon to the luncheon hour our park may be said to be in its glory, for at that time Bristocratic London takes its pleasure on horse- | back, and the ride is thronged with all thatis | fashionable. Dukes aod divines, e¢aris and es- quires, barons and barouets, with their own wives pnd daughters sometimes, witn other people's wives and daughters more frequently, solemnly | Fide up and down the Row aatil luncheon time, ‘When they as solemnly ride of. Is is some- | fwhat of a sight when Perdita ana Lais, | daulliessly attired and riding well, make their ap- pearance, generally unatiended (ior he would be @ Dold man indeed who would escurt this sisterhood #n this company), '0 see the furtive glances which stne younger ladies ¢irect at the well known pair, | ‘which giances bear fruit the next aay in an at- tempt to copy the cut of acoliaror tae turn of a curl, While Madames the wi @bour shave no scruples | STARING BOLDLY atthe “hassles” wno are so attractive to their sons and sometimes (0 their busbands, whose at- | tempts not to appear to recognize the fair ones | are too clear to the observant eye, and which will dave to be atoned Jor in Perdita’s boudoir in Park Jane (a locality much affected) by a bracelet at least an hour or two afterward. But of Hyde Park, the crowning giory of the day, w yes to come. RING THE BELL! UP WITH THE CURTAIN ! Beene Hyde Park, any day in ihe season, time hall-past five P. M. Four rows of carriages Stretching from the Marvie arcn to Kensington Gardens, a distance of two miies, We will not take “any day,” but one particular one, and in place Of typical personages real ones, We nave | Just been “setting” at Tattersall’s, where we found people busily engaged taiking about the Bosacs certain royal personages are said to have ‘Made at Nickbridge lat week. We take our way ‘by Albert Gate vo the park, and, a8 we enter, we pee in an elegant Victoria drawn by one hors Powerul high stepper and not afficted with a ‘Dearing rein—a Kiudly looking old tady to whom ‘We take off our hat as we recornize the Baroness Buraett Coutts, a name that is wonored wher- ever civilization prevatla, THE EARL AND COUNTESS OF DUDLEY are doing “Darby and Joan” io a littie phacton Shat is running merrily behind @ pair ef handsome | oan ponies, The Countess is driving, and it 18 | Amposaibie to avoid being struck with,her queenly Jace and beauty. It is, however, of tae cold ‘stamp, and er skin is not so delicate as that of | gome more unpretentious beauties, 1 is, however, a peculiar charm in tie way she benas her head as she replies to the salutation of & | young officer in the undress of ihe “Bines,” who | re stationed at the varracks close by, In @ fumoling barouche is the Duke of Graton, per- haps thioking of his miece, the wayward Mrs. Eaton, who eloped with Major Harford, whom, on | the death of her hasband, she married. The | Queen presented Mrs. Karon, on ner first mar- glage, with a pretty Arab pony, wich the family | aused to be returned to Her Majesty when the | petite sinning beauty compromised herself. Un- joubtedly one of the prettiest sights in the Park $s merry, dashing Lady Ay lesioza, the bosom FRIEND OF THB PRINCESS OF WALES, Phe is ariving a pair of chestnut thoroughbreds jn ber husband’s mati pbaeton. membor of the Coaching Club that can handle the ribands better; and when she is tooling four-in- hand her off jeader thipks of turning round and “sung at her tn astonisnment. Tho Countess is | young, rather dark and nct particularly prevty. | @ fayor'te everywhere, and no wonder, a yery vivacious, and just now her eyes spar je so, as she Is telling sume funuy story, that sh jooks very handsome. She is, possibly, talki bout inen’s. performance at siockbridge | week, When he rode @race “and won it tvo;” ana i oF hodOx breeches hayes been ief behind he i lo “get up” im pantaloons. - sats LORD ROSEBERY, ho is not often seen um horseback, ts sitting on ne chair, with WW On another, so ne most ave paid twopence, ‘many men can follow over t | mitteemen. | w. There is nota | JEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1875.—TRIPLE SHEET, years ho between life ai iB aceldent she mes with 10 to hunting fleid, when her norse feil witu ber, ana, in Ot Bie tort on her bead. It was thougat eveu alter her recovery tuat she wou d be biind for life as weil as disfigured; but it would now be diMeult from her appearance to tell (ne terrivie erdeal she passed turough. dressed in bis 8 hand in the tall Pocket, jolus the pair, anc as all talkers there ts plenty of iaugnce People right and left making way for an open car- riage drawn by two bays that aupereog would phe gen- tiemen ali uncover, and pi Sweet face of the Princess of Wales loyally stand bareheaded to do homage to our furure Queen, Wuom we love so mucu, ‘O have ® smile for every one, and such a smile! Truly “Bertie” ts a lucky iellow, We have not yet come across THE PRINCE OF WALES, POs is noton borsevack so much as he used to In fact, 16 18 not easy to “moun” him, as he He means to make chargers are unde: orders, Sir Robert Pee) looks like the King of Sardinia, ust | lett Tatters where, in conjunction with Lord Rivers, tnat doughty champion of the Ticuborne Cause, be bas been settling di puted cases in betuny, As he walks dowo the promevade gorgeous are the salaams te makes to almost every lady he meets. With t lair sex, however, he does not seem to be such & favorite ag TAR EARL OF HARDWICK, though some ; eople say he ts hotning more than “barber's block.” Tuey are envious. ‘The ladies thiuk he 18 acvarming nan, He is tall, Well made, bas nicely CU Whiskers, and bis attire 13 us fault less 4s big borse, which is perieciton. Toe ani- mal he is bestriding was once a racer but was too slow for the work; @ beauviful bay with biack points, plenty of bone, lym symmetry aud marvellous knee activa. je looks all Over like a thousand guiness, He seems to kuow his beauty, end be and ais rider are, pernaps, the vuinest pair im the park, Taken a8 @ pair they certainly 4 but individuaily they are not Watch that haughty, florid complexioned man seated on an Arab and who, every five minates, looks around to see whether hiwgcoom 18 neither more vor less than cighty yads Devimd. His patent-leatuer boots, admirably fitting coat and that Would make the late Lord Palmerston go miad with envy if he could retarn to the flesh, and lavender kia ll Despeak (hedanay. This gentie- m+n Was Once ine Hoo, Mr, Calthorpe, but a lot | Of people Who were in his way dying, be became B) Lhe same Lime LORD CALTHORP, With @ rent rolt of £40,000 per annum a man can alford to be apytoing. Last year he was appointed one 0: the stewards of tue Goodwood race meet- ing, and in consequence the Karl of Maren las bardiy spoken to his lather, the Duke of Rich- moad, since. Lady Hastings, once such a floc horse woman, bas become quite a ome bird since the appearance of the “caick,” and Is »ot hi weregret to see Lady Westmoreland In the old days wheo Frank’? was in “fe how supero sie w to luok on horseback! and Lady Westmoreland are a credit to the Anglo- Saxon race. Tne Duke of Uambridge, with his jaithiui triend and military secretary, ‘Jim? | Macdonald, seldew miss day irom the drive. They bown, we notice, nave taken 1o somewhat | Blead.er Cattle than they used to ride, THE DUKE OF BRAUFORT. Here comes the Duke ef Beaulort, the finest wip in Europe, spanking along with’ nis coach. Tois reminds us that if we hurry we suall get to “Hutobetts’’ in time to see the “Dorkiug” Cau | a+ ‘windsor’? come in and wall &@ dozen evuers, another letter we will say something about the coacnes—that 1s to say, It you Luink this specimen 01 gossip good enougn, THE FOUR-IN-HAND CLUB. THE LAST MEELING OF THE MEMBERS FOR THE PRESENT SEASON—ARISTOCRATIC ‘‘WHIPS” AT THE MAGAZINE IN HYDE PARK—AN EXAILAR- ATING SPECTACLE—A LONG LINE OF CaR- BIAGES, THREE DEEP—THREE HUNDRED EQUESTRIANS AND A DENSE CROWD OF PE- DESTRIANS. (From the London Globe, July 5.) The last meet of the Four-in-Hand Club this | fearon took place to-day at the sagazine, Hyde Park, The club now numbers fifty-four member: comprising ‘he Duke of Beaufort (!’resident), the | Duke of Sutheriand, Marquis of Londonderr; Earl of Sefton, Euri of Macciesfeld, Lord Lonae: borouch, Lord Wenluck and Lord Aveland as com- Tne remaining members are Earl of | Avingdon, Hen, L. Agar-Eilis, Mr. J. L. Baldwin, | | | Mr. Hope Barton, Earl of Bective, Marquis of Biandiord, Lord Caringion, Mr. Colonel Stracey Clitherow, Viscount Cole, Mr, Cooper, Earl of Craven, Mr. W. G Craven, Colonel Dickson, Mr. H, W. Eaton, Lieutenant Colonel Ewart, Mr. Adrian Hope, Mr. 8. R. Hughes, Marquis of Huntly, Sir J. Lister Kaye, Bart, Viscount Macduff, Count Munster, Lord Muncaster, mr. W. E, Oakley, Mr. R. A. Oswald, Sir Lawrence Palk, Bart., Sir Roger Palmer, Bart., Major General Sir T. Peytoa, Bart., Lord Poltimore, Captain H. R. Ray, ir, C, Biron Reynardson, Sir M. Shaw Stewart, Bart., Mr. Ansirutzer Thomson, Lord Tredegar, Sir H. Tuiton, Bart., Colonel Tyrwhitt, Mr. FP, Viluers, Gojonel the. Hon. C. White, Captain Whitmore, Cojonel Owen Williams, sir George Wombweil, Bart., Mr. H. Wombwell, Marquis of Worcester, and the officers o! tne First Life Guards, the Sec- ond Life Guards and the Royal Horse Guards (Bue). * ‘The mect to-day was fixed for 12:30, and when the first coacb (the Marquis of Worcester’s) drew H. Chaplin, up there was a line of carriages three deep, ex- | tending trom the corner to the Magazine, and far up toward the Marbie Arch, There was a large concourse of spectators, too, and about three hundred eqnestrians, THE SECOND MEETING OF THE SEASON—SEVEN- TY-SIX SPLENDID HORSES TURNED OUT WITH FAULTLESS APPOINTMENTS. {From tne Dally (London) News, July 6.) One sign among many that the London season is on the wane was discerntole in Hyde Park yes- verday morning, when toe Four-in-Hand Club met for the second and probably for the last time this year. in the number of coaches assemoled at the Pow- aer Magazine, there being nineteen as against twenty-six Which met on the lst of June, but the spectators were not nearly so numerous as on the previous occasion; nor aid they present such a goodly snow as a:the first meet of tue Coaching Clabin the month of May. Ubat the comparatively early hour for whic« the meet was appointed had something to do with the falling off of & portion of the eompany, for of equestrians who take their morning ride in Rot- She seems | irousers, hat | 1 | | there has rarely been a better dispisy than thas of yesterday. Tuere was bardly a bac or ansouna borse amoug the whole seventy-six, ana the ge eral appointments were simply fauitiless, from the two grooms standing at the head of the | wheeler and the leader-pair dowa to the pole bars and the giiiteriug chain fronts. A look over the teams brought out at these meets is enough to convince the most unbelieving that the revival of coaching bas ,not been a mere Caprice of faskion, the profitable only to carriage buildors and Wea End horse dealers, but that its effect—whatever may have been the intention of those who brought it about—has already been to ald in improving our national breed of norses. It ts Known that gen- Uemen will not buy light-boned, flashy animals to horse their coaches, and thus dealers, anxious to have n stock what their patrons will require, cast about for strong, uselul horses, wherever they are to be found, Iu this way a demand is created, and belore many years have elapsed we ma) expect to see the 8.pply more plen iful than it pow is, Certain it is that tae members ofthe two clubs and the gentlemen who bave Started coaches on the digerent bigo roads are doing much toward this desirable end, and they are entitied Lo as much gratitude from British Public as the subscribers to Lord@ Cultnorpe’s stallion fund, Jt is repeating @ thrice-told story to relate that the Duke of Beaufort, who Is president both of the Coaching and of the Four-t)-Hand Club, took nis Piace at the vead of the line yesterday, but be nad @ somewhat different team this ume, the wheelers being a gray and @ bay, while the leaders were a brown and @ bay. The Presideat was one of the last to arrive at the trysting place, Lora C:aven With bays and grays crossed and Lord Sefton with four magnificent browns being among tue earliest arrivais, It baa been already mentioned that there were twenty-six couches at tue first meet three weeks ago, but Sir Lawrence Paik, Mr. Oakeley, Sir Joun Lister-Kaye, Colonel White, Lord Carington, Lora Blandiord, Sir T, Peyton, Mr. Whicmore, Coionel Ewart and Mr. F, Villiers were not present yesterday. The muster of yes- terday consisted, therefore, of fiteen coaches which took part in the first gathering, the total of nineteen being completea by those of Lords Macduff, Craven and Pol'imore, and tpat belonging to the First Lule Gaards. Captain Tatoot held the rib- bons upon the box of the regimental arag, and his mixed team, consisting of a roan, two vrowus and @ bay, Was by no means the worst on the ground. There was some little delay in starting, but at about a quarter before one the Duke of Beautort led of, iollowea by Colonel Dickson and Lord Aveland, Colonel Dickson’s browns were Magnificent, and Lora Aveland, with bis three browns and a roan, had reason to be proud of a turnout matchless in every particular, Lord Mac- duff, who came jourth, had @ well matched team of one brown and three bays; and another Scotchman, Mr. O-wald, of Auchincruire, had three blige roans anda brown, Lord Worcester, whose coach, like that of his father—the Duke of Beaufort—nad yellow lower body and wheels, with black capper body, was driving four very neat ba 8, and he was fol- jJowed by Sir Henry Tulton, with a whole team of browns, Captain Perceval was driving the coach belonging to the Second Live Guard: for the three vousehold regiments are all members of the Four-in-Hand Club—and he had a mixed team of agray,@ brown, a chestnut anda bay. Lord Muncaster had two browns and two bays, and Lord Wenlock, with a gray and chestnut wheelers, and @ roan and bay as leaders, was remarkably well horsed, Aiter the team belong: fog tovhe First Life Guaras came that of Mr. Eaton, with jour bays, and it isto be remarked thath.s team, uke that of Lord Londesvorough | and two others, was driven without bearing reins, Lord Craven came next, and Lord Abingdon, whose brignt bays were simply perfection, was ‘ followea by Lord Poltimore with & vrown and turee bays. Count Muns‘er, the German Ambas- sador, isa stanch supporter of coaching, and his four tmporied chestnuts came very near perfec- tion; nor was there wuch fault to find with Lord Macciesfield’s gray and tiree browns. The rear was brought up by Lord Londesborough, who was driving the same team which #e had at Sandown Park, and (his may, pervaps, account for the ab- sence of his bearmug reins, From the trysting Place the route lay along the banks of the Ser- pentios to Hyae Park corner, and thence back to the Marule Arch. From the Marble Arca most of the coaches proceeded prt oO. the way to Alex | andra Park, but'a few only completed the whole Not that there was any great diminution | It may, perhaps, be | ten Row there was @ strong muster, while the | concourse of people on oot was suMicientiy large | to give the police active employment in keeping them from turning the eminently respectable coaches into so many cars of Juggernaut. Still there were many outward signs and tokens that the season is no jonger in its prime. The heavy Tain with which we have beem so abundantly favored has prevented the trees from losing their primordeal veraure, and the gi is | gTeener than Hyde Park grass is wont to be in the first week ofJuly. But the horses, not £0 | Much those in the coaches as those which do | duty im the family barouche or the more go-ahead | park phaeton, give evidence of having nad plenty of work these last two months, and the occupants of many Of the carriages loos as if it Were time that dissipation at Ascot and Horling- ham, nine o’clock dinners and two dances an ing, shoald be replaced by & couple of months atone of the German 8: or @ plunge into the mists of Scotiand. To one or other of these places many of the peopie present at the Powder Magazine will soon be flitting, and more tuan one popular memober of the Four-in-Hand vind was plying bis saimon rod in Norway yesterday, while bis colleagues were on their way to Alexanara Park and Oniswick. Talking of Chiswick, oy tn | Way, it may as well be mentioned that the Four- in-Mand Cinb was to have had its second mect last Thursaay, but as the Prince of Wales’ garden | journey. Svme few did not go veyond Baker street, Lord Macduff, Colonel Dicksou and Lord Wenlock being among the Mrst to return tor an- other drive round the Park, Those that did go to the Alexandru Palace had little time tor Juacheon if they would be back for the garden party at Chiswick, But this feat they managed to accom- plish, and as the sun for once condescended to | shine upon London this summer, the secona meet of fe Four-in-tHand Ciub lost notning by its iour days’ postponement, DUFFERIN ON THE DOMINION. THE GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA ON THE GREATNESS AND PROSPERITY OF THR NORTH AMERICAN COLONY—ITS RELATIONS TO THE UNITED STATES—A GRAND COMPLIMENT TO | THE FRENCH HABITANS AND THE FRENCH REPUBLIC. {From the London Times, July 8.] The Canada Cluo entertained tne Karl of Dut- | ferin, Governor General of Canada, and a select party of o\ber guests at dinner in the Albion yes- teiday evening. man and Mr, Charies Churchill Vice President, and the company inciuved the Duke of Manches- ter, the Eari vi.Kiwberiey, Lord Lisgar, Mr. Gos- chen, M. P.; Mr, Childers, M. P.; Sir Clintun Murdoch, K. 0. M. G.; Lieutenant General Sir Hastings Doyle and many other distinguished personages. * ln proposing the toast of the evening, “Tne Health of tne Governor General of Canada and Prosperity to the Dominion,’ the Chairman ex- pressed the opinion that @ more successiul ad- ministration than Mis Exceliency’s had seldom been witnessed iu that part o: the Empire, LORD DUFF&RIN’S SPEECH. jenaid entettainme:t, and for the kind and | orabie and go dearly prized @ reward, Mr. G@. T. Brooking was Unairr ; 29 teir patriotic and personal devotion to t lang within whose ampie bosom they have been burtured. and wich they justly regard as more largely dowered with all that can endear @ couatry fo its sons than any other in the world, (Cheers.) And here, perhavs, I may ve permitted to remark on the extraordinary ability aad sntel- ligence wit® which tue Freuch poriton of Her ayesty’ mbjects in Canaaa joln with their britiso fellow countrymen to working and de- Veioping Lue Coustitunoual privileges with which, thanks to the initiative they were the first to | take, their country has been endowed. Our | French fellow countrymen are, Mamentary than the KBugtien th | i | the various jortunes of the color | ever been wantlug French state: | Hence to claim an equal share with their British colleagues in suaping the history of the Dominion, Whatever may be the case elaewhere, in Uanada, at ail events, the French race has learved the goiden rule of moderation and the necessity of arriving at practical results py the occasioual sacrifice of logical symmetry aud the seitiement of uisputes in tae spirit of @ generous compromise, (Cheers.) ‘The truit of th Jappy state Of thitgs 18 observ- able in the fact that nowuere do those differences of opinion waich divide tbe political world of every country separate the Canadian nation either into reiigious or ethnological iactions, Ke- ligiop and race , Of course, Observable forces acting within our body politic, bus aa far ag I have remarked the divisions of party dicular rather than horizontal, and in @ county aad bor- ouga election as often not Catholic wilt found voting against Catholic, Oran: Orungemwan, Frencaman against Fi what, pernaps, Will Cause less su against [risnman, Lam certain ther been any tndividaais Why have had gr and opportuoities for appreciating these charac- teristics 01 & populur assembly than tuose persons who, like my predecessor and my- self, have baad the good foriune to pre- side over the free Dominion of Canada, (Uneers.) And, my lords and gentiemen, these | cireumstauces to whicu | have briefly aliuded are, tam uappy to say, continnaily receiving @ more marked recoguition at the Bunds, not merely of the people Oo this country, but wuat 1s evea of greater importunee, at those of the ingabitants of tue United Sates, Nothing, tm iact, can be more frieudly than the relations and feelings which prevail becween tne Canadsan people and their neigubors across the frontier, Whatever may have been the case in former times, every taought- ful cluzen of the Unitea States is now convinced that the fate of Canade has been unaiteradly Mixed and deterauned, aud that she 18 destined to move Within her own separate and individual orbit, So Jar trom regarding this wita lousy, the publiv Ol tke United 8 ates coutemplatey with @ gener- ous enthusiasm the daily progress of Canada’s prosperous career, In fact, they are wise enough Lo uuderstaud that It ts ludnitely to the aqvaniage | of the human race that the jepressing monopoly 0! political ‘houghts on the American Continent should be varied and enlivened by tae deve'opment of @ political system skin to, yet Giverse irom, their own, productive of a frienuly emol.ti n, and offering many points of contrast aud comparison which tney already begin to tvel tuey can study with advantage. (Uneers.) My Jods and gentlemen, I nave to apologize ior hay- ing de alnea you at so great a length, out before 1 sit down I’ cannot help expressing my deep obligation to the gentieman who proposed m: health for the kingly apa irienaly terms in whic! he has been good enough to ailude to me 4s an inatvidual. avuity and talents 3! with the desire by whica I am possessed o! ren- dering it effectual service. Mappily, how- ever, 18 present condition, tue fortunate consummation of all those aspirations which have been crowned by confeseration under the powerful auspices of one of my pre- decessors, and the satisfactory impuise given to its young life by the wi ministration of | another, have superinduced so balcyon an epoch | ag to hive rendered it @ comparatively easy task | for @ successor Oi less eminence anu sherter ex- | perience than theirs to carry om the tusk wich | they so happily inaugaratead, Ili, theretore, | at the end of the next three years 1 8.all be avle | to compléte my term under the same happy cir- hoes whic have hitnerto Characterized | ts durauon; if 1 can earry away with me bowe to | England the consciousness that the peopie of | Canada regard me as having been at all events minion; it envugn to e merited the approvai of my ereign and countrymen st home, | shali consider few public servants will haye ever reaped so hon- (uoud cneers,) oa tne Health of the Guests” was then drunk, and the Earl of Kimberley ina few woras responded jor them, Suhertiy afterward the compuny broke up. A SCENE IN THE FRENCH ASSEMBLY, | daitaiui, THE PUBLIC POWERS BILL BELATED IN THE | VERSAILLES LEGISLATURE—WHAT MACMAHON WANTS AND WHAT THE MONARCHISTS HOPE— QUESTIONS OF RELIGIOUS INVOCATION. [Paris (July 7) correspondence of London Times.) Ineed scarcely say that to-day’s sitting of the Assembly was Wiat may be called, in theatrical | language, @ grand exira performance, and that | both tribunes and galleries were filed with a more than ordinary crowd, voth of spectators and Deputies, For the last week, in 4act, peopie have | known that the debate on the second reading o1 the Puolic Powers bili would come on to-day. M. MAROOU SPEAKS IN OPPOSITION. M, Marcou alone, one of the five or six unais- ciplined members of the Assembly, made a long Speech against the bilL At ball-past two M, Maicou mounted the Tribune to expound an amendment, which consisted in maintaining the principle of we permanence of the Assembly, 1 think it scarcely necessary to reproduce the barangue of M. Marcou im eztenso, Ottoyen Marcou, to use his own familiar appellation, weil Known [or his letiers lu the Fraternilé of tue Aude anu who 18 tue delight of reactionary newspapers, ig one of the five or six gentiemen aforesaid who have constituted themselves the guardians of tife immortal principie vl We great Kevoiation, CITOYBN MARCOU'S AMENDMENT consisted in muainvaining the hundred times con- demned instituion of Vermanent Committees, with tne power of couvoking the Assembly, He and his friends, he declared, were warm partisans of tne Dissolution. “hey Wisuod the country to | give ite opinion, but not alter baving sified its | voice by a moath’s holiday, They did not want a | dissolution without having given Municipal Councis the right Of cuoosing the Mayors aud | without having suppress-d wwe State 01 S.exe. | M. BUFFET’S BXPLANATION OF THE POLICY OF & LIBERAL GOVERNMENT. M. Buffet tuen asked leave t» speal silence reigned in the Assembly. | speech Will be re-echoed not oaly in France, but aso abroad. M. Budet showed that the present Ministry are desirous at once o! supporting tne | prerogative of the Kxecutive and defending tue | laws of February 25, M.-Buffet said :— cludes the the Assembly, without the President, cannot ve £ouvoked except by halt plus one of each Chamber, ‘The committee nad reduced this uuMvEr Lo a third 01 cace Assembly, M. Dufaure ascended the tribune tmsupport the government propoxal, He explained that It would ROt de More Giffeult to collect a bal tuan 4 third ol the Chaarbers, aud laid stress on the principle 0; Mojorities, M. Laboulaye declared that the Commitee would not persist ip its resolution iu or hat the greater part of the Assembiy might be assocl- ated with young @ law, wuien, Oace voted, Would de a rea. Consecration of the Kepublic, ON CLAUBB 3, M. Amat, a republican Deputy for the Bouenes du Rhone, deiended, in moderate language, an forty ura y coe, = oon ® shall Feas- ory e event oF resideat’s resigna- tion or death during the recess, . AN KXOLTING SCENE, Tnis induced & very angry discussion, On clause 9, preciudiog the President from declaring War Without the consent of both houses, the Duc Deiarochefoucauid Bisaccia proposed amend- ment giving the Marshalexceptionally the rigut 1 declaring war. le read the ieilowing lara~ My friends and T do not vote for the law. The Monarchy alons can give France the greatness it needs to recover her rank among the nauons (Disturbance ou the Left The constitution once voted it will not be Jong before is attacked on all sides. We do not dis- guise from ourselves that the law will be voted with or Without us, We wish to warn you of the danger anend, for rrance has no friends more loyal or more cere than the royalists, (isturbance.) We ourselves: that thi right ought only tw be given to hal MacMahon, for who knows who wil be the tuture Presiden: of the Kepublict Perhaps one of thoss men who at Bordeaux, despite the exiia f the country aud of its resources, wished to continue the war. (Noise on the Lett.) I think, in fact, that itt im. | pradenttogive these attributes to others. Ihe President of the Kepublic has nei her authority nor strengh sul- ficient to create alliances tor bimselt,’’ (Cries oo the est odieux, chest un mauvais cituyen.") Duo d’Audiffret Pasquier—The remark ts indeo- orous. ihe Duc de Bisaccia—Allow moto finish. Tsay that he eapnot make allia because he cannot treat as an equal wich the sings d emperors by whom he is sur- Founded. { think the clause is conformable to the repub- Hcan idea, and L thereiore accept at for the future: but Marshat’s prudence and valor are well knowa to all | the world. It is not necessary to impose on hum the shackles implied by ‘ of modern mobilization, and I beg you to give the Marshal a iresh 1 Gunfldence, (or ae head of a great republie Surope, he is already exposed to @ marked tage. (Uproar on the Lett), We all want peace. Assembi: Peace; that is why he must be accorded the right of de- claring war without the assent of the Chambers. Linughter). Be assured these words eman: om areaiily Frencd head. (Uproar, appiause on ihe Extreme Kigot). ‘The ameudment was then put to the vote and rejected by 433 votes to 177. Uiause 9 Was tuen adopted, EXTREME 1RRITATION. The deelaration has produced lively irritation io all moderate groups of the Assembly, THK QUESTION OF A DISSOLUTION. It was now six o’ciock, From anti-dissolution benches were cries of “To-morrow |” while there was excitement om the Left, The President re- marked tat five clauses without amendments re- mained to be voted. There were renewed cries of “To-morrow |” but the show Oi hands was in favor of going on. Clauses 10 to 14 were adopted with- eee whote bill was adopted by 547 to. 97. ‘Tois is a great step toward the dissolution. THE HAYDEN SURVEY. t ws , the country and’ the Marshal are Lent on ihe LOFR IN A MINING VILLAGE—A NEW DAILY ESTABLISHED—DETAILS OF A HORRIBLE MAS- SACRE—DIFFICULTIES IN OBTALNING PHOTO- SAN Juan Orry, GRAPHIC VIEWS, ANTELOPE Pakk, July 9, et Continuing my narrative of vesteraay’s day. A intle above our camp, im the very bosom of the mountains, lay the transparent, cool, sparkling lake, a beautilul sheet of water possessing a beau- tiful name, San Cristoval Luke is perhaps two miles long and nalf a mile in width, with a sandy beach sloping gradually tuward, until at length its pebbly bottom snakes @ precipitous descent and all ovjects are jost in its immeasurable depth, Romantic islands dot tts surface, on wich grow clusters of trees and lovely wild fowers, Around its margin high promoutories and rocky biuffs jut out, from which can be obtained a fine view of the mountain val ey. the Lake Fork of Gunnison River, which, a hulf mile below, makes a fail of seventy feet, roaring, foaming and _ botling like a huge cal- dron of suds, eating out caverns in the walls of the solid rock as it whirls aroand and around Jorev:r. In the right bank, just at the foot of these falls, is a natural cave extending into the niliside for seventy-flve feet. These Ar- genta Falls, us they are called, are arched over whenever the san shines by a brilitant rainbow, and just over them a rustic bridge of spruce branches has been thrown by some appreciative miners, Descending the rapid river we find an- other cataract (Granite Falls), which descends over a mass of lava rock fifty-eight feet. As the top the water 18 compressed between rocks scarcely two yards asunder, and the whole yol- ume rushes through and spreads out like a gigan- tic fan of feathery mist ere it reaches the bottom of its sudden descent. Just a mile below this lat. ter fall in the river is situated Lake City, a town of log huts one story high, containing but one or, at the most, two rooms, At present there are about forty houses within the limits of the mining Village, and, considering that the place nas sprung up in three mouths, it deserves much credit for its enterprise, Already it can boast Of a liquor saloon, a restaurant, grocery store, two buicuer shops, & barber saloon, an as- sayer’s oMice, a recorder’s oMice, and last, but by no means least, @ printing office, in whica is pub- lished, once a week, @ brigh', pithy little sheet, called the Silver World. As yet there have Leen but two issues, though, from the character of these, there can be no doabt that the paper will be asuccesa in the course of time, but how tt can be supported by the town is more than can bo readily understood, and as there ts no regular mail to connect this out of the way place with the rest of the world the paper cannot expect much foreign help for the preseut. Tie olice of the Silver World 18 a log cabin of one room, where the forms are prepared and the priating done by @ hand press. Tue roof is made of thick poles, To whom does M. Marcou address his reproach of | Covered with mud aud sand, which comes rattling working underground? He has dwelt on the dangers of the law of the 26th of Feoruury ; but if worse dangers | der diMicuities, bat the company bas already nego- ed Lag rath late in ao day eeoint yoy it | ¢ lence 0 Ioi e law 18 passed, Sud at it is duagerous, that dangers trremediabie, nas | sated for a more substantial editce, which will be M. Maregu cousigered, in demanding whit Aweinblice ; Commenced As s00n as the saw mill 18 completed, should adjourn themssives, that there are two vhat | bers, and that the; ay not ayree on that pone? which will furnish the lumber, Our camp in this j ie, one, to Rave, the power: of sitting without | valley was pitcued about turee miles above the toe ONT owers given to. the President, ‘The | sOWD, and searcely # hundred yards from the the princip! ution of the aiun of February, | Scene OF the | rine jon of the 26th o ary. | Mi wareou's ideal iseviaently one sole Assembly, con: a eaene It may be remembered that ag a branch of the United States Geological Survey passed through this section last summer they met a party of artists who bad just discovered the bocies of five { murdered men, Upon investigation it proved that they had been kiiled by one of their com- | rades. This bap ened nearly two years ago, pre- et ower of tntrusting to ttive power. Under such a system the Assembly should always be present. Of our consutution, how- ever, gives the President the right of “dissolving the As- Seinbly, of governing alone for three months. What be- | comes, iu view of this right, of the system of permancnce? It there is danger of a coup d'état it would be at that mo- ment; but I put that contingency aside, tor I belleve no Constituuonal arrangement can provide aKainst a coup Wat, ‘The constiution of 1843 accumuated pre: nu id trating all dial man.er in Which my fealth hus been re- cautions and guarantees, but the only gual ceived, I hope be aude ‘siood that, however fs'to give the country @ government which does not Vious 10 the settiemens o/ the district. We all deepiy'l may feel tue vompliment thus paid me— | pear to it toe much ont of Rarwony ite at raids | went over to tie grove where the flendish act aud Words would Jail to expre: that | expert | aoe cried power. When it dovs not see thisitisaptto | bad been committed. It was a likely spot for ence on that score—my persunal gratitude and Batisiaction is aosoroced anu los. in the prouder cunsciousiess that this brilliant assembly and the distinguishea men | see arvund me are met, Hot so muh tor the purpose of exteuacing a wel- cu Oo & mere indiviaual like myseli, ont that they have been brougut together by the desire to pay a tribute of respect to the great Dominion over wuico I have the ponor to presid id to testify their sympathy in the most mui nerous manner with that nubile community, cir KivsuieL and fellow citizens, WHO OM the & thi | otuer Bide of the Atiantic are engaged in vuilding | party was fixed for that day a@ postpone- ment until Monday was deemed desirable, In the meanwhile the bad weather had compelled postponement of the garden | Party until the same dat and as the | Four tn-Hand Club could not well make cond | adjournment it was decided that the meet, | tustead of taking place in tne aftervoon, should bé at haif-past tweive o'clock, In thia way those members who weré invited to Chiswick—and they formed the large majority of the nineteen em- | bied—were able to take part in te “cavalcade on wheels,” and to,et back in time to change borses and go down tothe garden party. Opinions must always differ as to tne excellence | | of the horsen to be seen on such occ i befure. but it Was almost generally admitved buat ions | Avil ¢ | Compared With What may have been wicnessed | ponte s issues, their joalous pride of the legisiarive jonallly Goguate to their own, insunce same bigh spirit of constitutional iree- ant determiued w prove itsell a powerlul | throw itself into the arms of a dictatorship. M. Louis | Blane contended on the first reading that peace did not aud out for an acciaent the massacre such a de revail in sngiand until there was @ consti | would not have Leen known to thisday. Ina nal monarchy, & king subor to the Cham- Bera. Macau however, declares that the tuarts } low, damp holiow, scarcely one hundged feet loug, | Were unpopular because they delegaicd power to min- | hounded on one side by tue river and on the owed his popularity to tors, and that William 11 | the fact that he reser of intervening in right u pubic affairs, and eve Absoluie direction Br two branches of the government—tho navy and | uafairs. the strengtu of Asseniblies reaily con- | OreieD the sapport of public ‘ovimon,. witch is” with drawn from them when they appear ‘a source of agita- ton, and transterred to the executive. Permanenc* is the most fatal gif. thatcan be made to Assembues, for lar. Whon a country a strengin, bub ined adinivistea- | an ill-advise | control and a fore: and worthy member of ihe Bri Empire. | oe “ sue ee wise in (Cheers) My lords and gentlemen, it is this | ¥ the Assembly should be seven mouths Cousideration alone * lich can give importance | witnout siting, but Assemblies have a thousand means a significance to the demonstration of to-nieh of prolon. ng their existence. (ironical laughter on the @nd lo proceedings which will ve scanned an Leru) As to coups deat, however, you will have dealt discussed With unspeakaoie pride and pieusure by | them a st blow the day Whea Assemblies ap- thousanas of your lellow subjects in their distant | pear as allies and not as persi,tent adversaries of the Canadian .omes—(“Hear, near!)—Jor tt there is | executive por one preuiiection more marked thau anotner in the Canadian peuple, i there 18 One passion—if 1 may #0 Cali it—which precomloates over every other feeling im their Ureasts, ii toere 18 one «pecial Message WhiCN 4 person in my sicuation is bound Mit irom iHem Lo You, It 18 Luis: tuat they to Waintain Iutact and unimpaired their on with tis couniry; thar they an iueradicable conviction of tae pre-eminent value oi the poitical system under which tuey live, and that thes | are determined to preserve pure aud uncontaml- | Bute sli the traditional cuaracieristics of Enge | lana’s prosperous polity, (Uneers.) But, my | lords ald genvemen, I shiuia ve conveying to you a@ Very Wroug impression if | gave you to an derstand that the enthusiastic loyaity of me Canadian people to the Crown aud persou of oar gracious Sovereign, their ten and almost | yearu.ng love tur the movhe untry, their de- | Bire to claim their part in the juture fortuaes of | the Brivisn Bmypire, and to sustain all the obliga. tous 6Uch & position may imply, Was born ot aay weak or Ouworthy spirit of devendence, (“Ilear, hear.”) So jar trom taat bens the case no charac teristic of the vational feeling is more strongly marked (han tue rexuberant Confidence io gueir y tv Shape voeir own destinies to their ap- autonomy Witu Which they Baye boeu eauewed, Prolonged applause followed trom ali sides, dur. | ing wich M, Bullet was congratuiaed by inany Deputies. Cries of ‘Au voix, au vois,” were toon | heard, and TOR BALLOT COMMENCED. Twenty-three Deputies sapported M. Marcou’s amenamen', 604 voted agalistit, xtreme radi- calisM tas Consequently received auovuer crusn- 1 feat in the Assembly. ¢, breugnt forward by M. de beicastel, that a mass calling for the biessiug of God upon the work of the no pemy ould be salu a the jemmencement of eac! Ms The argaments of M, de Belcastel may be guessed. He declared that he defended a caus which he was woworthy of defending. In tne midst of the noise Which arose | heard him cite the exampie of England, where he said the name 0} God was inscribed at the head of tae Magna | Ae bs Lavonlaye, the reporter of the Committee of | Thirty, wisea to leave every one at iiberty to pray alter his own Jasnion, but the Assembly car- aM. de Belcastel’s motion by 841 to 262, the ra- euit being received by app'ause irom the royalist bencues. A OONSTITUTIONAL POINT FOR CONSIDERATION, Clause 2 Was when discussed, Thum ciause im- other by @ bluff some, thirty feet nigh, standsa thick, dark grove of spruce tree: Here io the dead of the bight, when all his companions were lost in sleep, Al Packer, the murderer, sent tnem all suddenly into another world, witn no prepara+ tion or Warning. As »@ entered tue wood and oo- served the remnants of ciothiag and biankets lying around in five distinct spots, marking the very places where the massacre bad been perpe- trated, & cold Chill of horror crept over us, We gained the following account of tne event from one of the old miners Wuora we met in tue neigh- borhood:— A party of men, twenty-one tn all, left Salt Lake | City tor the mines, sume repairing to Pueoio, ovn- ers 10 Saguacue, to winter, waile a third party, consisting Of 4X men, direc\ed their steve toward the 5un Juan mines, While they were camping at ‘this piace one Of Lheir Number killed the remainder ot the party and rovbed tocm of $1,600, He went to Saguache and toid 8» many flioting ores: @buut bis Companions haviog veen murdered shat was arrested on picion; but nobing bern proved he was relcasea, Lue story that he relate most irequently was to the effect that thi bad suffered from banger and not being procure food of any kina drew lots, sort, tu determine Who should be sacrificed. bu: one after anotn was literaily eaten up by tm rvivors until taere were but two left. One was @ stout muscular Man and tie Otner, A! Packer, small man. In order to save nis own lile the lat wurdeied the filth man and taen crossed to the settlements. This story was so improbal that no one bdelteved it, for, baa there bee shadow @/ truth ip it, many believed (hat the dean | 01016 Man would have prevented the rest from | starving through the woole winter, As tiie party O; urtists Was passing along an open track just above the scene cf the iragedy, @ Dad Wita Wem ran down inte the hollow and Bet ch @ barking aud aowling thas they were dye the BDO Where sound a) Through the lake tows + | down through the crevices, This is printing un- | mg which they | | was entirely gone. $$ $$$ posal of the government, by which | tons, with a littie dried Gesn on each, four of thent lying @ few yards apart around tne place where their cawp fre bad burnt, ati crusned in the bead With some heavy binat uistrumnt, and the sixta tied to @ tree, with its arm broked and he id now Where to be found, Just above tis secluded place stand five posts, with the foiowing inserip- Uows written iu lead pencil: t OOOO OE OODLE LE RO LELE TE IE EEE MERE OEEETE ETE LE LEH IBRAEL SWAN, Formerly from Misseurl, Aged about 45 years: SOO CEROROTE RE IDEELE TELE DE EDEL UE TEOEPODEDE HELE DEED OOO Le TATE RE LOAEEE ELE TEL re EE LEIE TEDL ELLELE OD GEORGE NOON, Aged 10 years, Supposed to be from valtfornia. AOORIERORCLELE TELE MELELE DEED LEE OLIEDE DE PELE DEDEDE none ne re nent nee rt te oe ne abe rene ELLE EOELELE ETE, SHANNON WILSON BELL, Supposed to be from Onto, Supposed to be aged about 30, AO ROLE RELL LEDIOEDOLELEDLEDEDELE DELETE TELE EEDE LE DELO none cece ee sent ne he he: enone ceeeed ne te or be note FRANK MILLER, Aged about 33 years, A German, CORDONED ROE DCIENLELELOLEDEDENELOLE TE tO eenerecteteeee ertaeeets PLETE tee ca rebt cb rerete ot JAMES HUMPHREY, From Pennsylvania, Aged about 24 years. OCONEE RELELETELE LEDERER RE EEE: take ig tnis inscription :— POLE EPLDOOLOET EEL LE OPI DOE eee nenene re. On another Move renees ee eee: ‘The remains of Cye men, who started with @ party of twenty-ome mipers irom Salt Lake, Novemoer, 1873, for the San Juen mines, and were killed below the biui at this:potat by one of ther party, AL. PACKER. The remains were jound August 13, 1874. Inquest and burial Ausust 21, 1874. 3. Verdict rendered according to the above. OROII OIE RE LE LOTE CELE DEMEELELELELEDEDE NE GREE PHOTOGRAPHIC ViEWS OF THR SURVEY, Few persons who have seen the photographie productions Oi the survey oan realize the ameunt ol nard labor, the difficulties and the hardships some of them represent; yet it is a fact that some of the views have required @ week or even more to photograph them. Take, for mstayece, the pho- : 3 | tograph of the Mount of the Holy Cross. In order | to get a satisfactory position from whieh to take 1s the photographer was occupied ten days in as- cending @ neighboring peak for this purpose. Our object in visiting the Uncompahgre Range was, in part, to obtain a view of the great Uncompahgre Peak, which had never been photographed, Om the 26tu day of June Mr, Jackson, accompanied by @ packer with three pack auim@ls to carry bed- ding and instruments, ascended a lolty peak to the east of the great mountain, partly for the pur- pose of making a #ma'ler negative, and also to in- Vestigate the way for the transportation of & larger camera to the same point on his returo. Sturting off beiore sunrise, be {ound no great dif. culty im making @ trail up the side of the mountain, halting a Jiltle past noon at timber land to camp and make prepara. tions for the next day's work. After hobbling one of the animals and staking the rest to prevent their return to the berd in the valley below Mr. Jackson slarted off to the summit of the peak on @ tour of inspection, while Bill reconnoitred around in search of game, He had scarcely gone a mile wnen a flock of Rocky Mountain sheep, numbering about twenty, came into sight. Pick- ing outa large ram he fired, and, instead of ni~ ting it, brought down one of the smaier males, whose horns were hardly six inches long, but the Test had disappeared ana it was useless to follow. A bear cub and three elk were also seen, but not within gun range. On returning to the camp our packer made the diseovery that allof the stock had vanished—stakes, hobbies and all—so, with- out a mule toride, he started out on footon the back trail, knowing that the missing animals had returned to our main camp velow. Alter walking eight miles-he found them, wound up by their lariats, in the brash at the foot of the mountain, and, as {twas growing late, and the sun waa sinking in the west, there was nothing to be done but to drive them on and spend the nightin the valley, leaving Mr. Jackson keeping wls lonely mountain wateh, and wondering what had oo- curred to rob him of allcumpauions, Tne next morning before sunrise the stock was driven back to the mountain, where they made several unsuccess(ul attempts Lo break away again daring the day amd ensuing aight. The weather being favorable, SIXTEEN FINE NEGATIVES were taken of the mountain from different points, and the tourists resurned to camp, via Godwin Creek Canyon, late in the afternoon of the third day. Thua it willbe seen that with everything fayorabie it required three days to get an impres- sion of Uncompahgre. Godwin Creek is quite @ large stream, flowing through some of the most Tugged, most picturesque scenery anywhere to be seen in the mountains. The canyon sometimes falls toadeptn of 1,000 feet, and in places the walls overhang the creek for tnirty or forty feet. This entire section of the country is rich in magnificent scenery, and the photographic party wili remain 1n the vicinity as jong as possinle. WATERING PLACE NOTES. Among recent arrivais at Niagara Falls are :—F. A, Draperand wife, R.G@. Ralston, M. E, Davis and-wile, Miss Beigel, of Now York; A. M. Hol- brook, of the New Orleans Picayune, and wife; MH. T. Ransom, W. L. Ransom and A. Denham, of New York; José Pachero and wife, of Buenos Ayrgs; D. W. Baker and ©. A. Fitch, of Jersey City; F. C. Beiden, of Syracuse, New York Ventral Railroad (at tne Spencer). A pretty bevy of Boston beauties ars domiciled at the Spencer, Niagara Falis, Thoy are the Misses Ruth Morris, Mary E. Perry,~Julla KE, Peet, and Emily and Helen M, Swain. It takes the swatns to form a perfect picture of watering place beatitude, Dr. Carnochan, of New York, is at Congress Hall, Saratoga. Says the Saratoga Sentinel:—‘‘Already there ta talk of the crews fur next year. Cornell calcula! to send jour ol the preseut winners and fill the vacancies with selections from the Freshmen srs. King and Ostrom will, if notping be tne leading spirits in the crew o 4876, as they have been in that of 1875."" Harvard may take the premium go Jar as scull work is concerned, and that is “good enough,” That's wiat colleges are mace for, Preparations are making for a grand regatta on the Mohawk at Amsterdam on Wednesday next: Instead of shells, painters, soows and tubs will be used, and the contestants and judges include domintes, doctors, editors and other dignitaries, Bishop Jagzer, of Ohio, out of health, has gone to the White Mountains. Ithacarneiian is the Dame of the color of striped hose worn by the Ithaca belles in honcr of the victories of the Cornell boys, their gallant towns. beaux. Lieutenant J. J. Yates and R. P. Scheverin, United States Navy, are at Congress Hall, Sara- toga. About 300 summer tourists have already ar rived at Mount Desert, M@., and it is probable a larger number by several hundred will visit thore this season tuan at any previvas year. Plepty o! room at Lake Mahopac, Collector Arthur and family are at Coopers. town, How to depopularize Saratoga—Fence in the Park and clarge-for admittance, Moses ‘taylor, of New York, 1s at the Interna. tlonal, Niagara Falls, So are Mr. Mackay and la- dies, of Giasgow; Mr, A. J, MoWhaler, of Nasn- ville; George F, Sherman ana wife and £. W, Dewes aud wife, of New Orleans. Miss M. Parsons, Mra, Buss and daughter, Dr. Joun All and agi Sloan, of New York; George Liopincott and wife, of Poiladeiphia; Mrs. Joun M. Ganson, widow of the iate Senator Gan- son; P. 5, Boland and Misa J. A. Boiand, of ire- land; Generai George F. Sherman, 0) New Orleans Mr. W. Stackpool, of San Fraacisoo; J. Taxen an three daugniers, of Uregon; ® quartet ol lady school teachers {rom Cambridge, Mass; Willlam Gillette and Caaries Lyon, of England, aod J. BL Saudenscht r, Of Russia, are among the re- ais wt Niagara Falls,” guests at the River View Hotel, Mil- ford, Pike county, Pa., are A. Duplan ana wife, of the Upera Boule bompany New York; A. Braiven and He oreighton ani samily, of Brooklyn. Falls Keister says :—*An Elmira ex- Mr. William Ryer, Miss O, W. Mackrell und Miss Allen, Miss Ditto, 01 Eric, ts do-ing Ntagara, alls, of New York, ditto uttto, The Canadian auraorities are called upon to erect a stone wall along the bank of the river, \ from Taoie Rock to Cilitoa, The sooner the vet- ver. J. L. Toole, the finglisn comedian, was obliged to tarry a litte loner than Re %xpecied at Niag- 4 Fails, la order to have his baggage Liat rectly

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