• ■ Class . Book_ COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT ;;iS;i^^P§lf|iKii;^ »AfA|/'^^Al/^^!AlAfA?Af/:^f/ MMMOnWMMmMi TWENTY-FIRST EDITION '^ as-ceNTS«- » »WW >IC I'IM Ii m»HW vM LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Sheli\ ' UNITED STATE.S OF AMERICA. THE ADIRONDACKS: ILLUSTRATED, CONTAINING NARRATIVE OF A TRIP THROUGH THE WILDERNESS, WITH DESCRIPTION OF THE NATURAL FEATURES OF THE REGION ; HINTS CONCERNING SUPPLIES AND GENERAL OUTFIT FOR CAMP AND TRAIL ; COST AND MANNER OF REACHING THE VARIOUS RESORTS ; HOTELS, WITH CAPACITY, PRICE OF BOARD, ETC.; TABLES OF ELEVATION AND DISTANCES ; MAPS, ETC., ETC. ' BY S. R. STODDA -ishingtc^ AUTHOR OF ^'TlCONDEROGA," "LaKE GeORGE, ILLUSTRATED," EtC. TWENTY-FIRST EDITION. GLENS FALLS, N. Y. PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR. Copyright, 1891, by S. R. Stoddard. 7tH^+ r Information gathered from all available sources, is arranged in the following pages on a carefully considered system. In the net-work of ways with their multitude of branches traversing the wilderness of Northern New York continuity of progress may not be. A comprehensive glance will help you in acquiring necessary details. Here is the key. As a WHole the Adirondacks is considered on page XIII, under head of " Gateways." Following each gate- way are lines leading to particular centres, giving dis- tances and fares, with references to pages where more extended mention may be found. Places and specially noted features are indexed on page IX j hotels, lakes, ponds and mountains are given in special indexes. Ex- penses are touched upon at pages 6 and 208 ; various sug- gestions concerning camp and outfit on pages 208 to 215 ; fishing pages 216 to 223. The advertisements (indexed on page 221) are interesting, for therein each man speaks for himself. Specific Points about which you would learn may be had if you will consult the index. If instead you would wander free as the vagrant bee, gathering honey from every flower, throw the book away — you don't need it. If undecided as to way follow the " Professor " and the writer through the " Narrative " so long as the company please you. It represents an erratic course that covers substantially the most interesting and diverse interior por- tions of the wilderness, noting by the way such changes as time and improved facilities for transportation have brought about since the trip was made, contrasting the old and the new in the procession of changeful years. VI Greeting. 1S91. The preservation of the forests is a question of \ital importance not only to the Adirondack region itself but to the State and country as well. About one-third of the mountain and wilderness region is drained by the Hudson, the remainder by streams that run into the St. Lawrence and it is a curious fact that the section where the great Hudson River and its higher tributaries rise are less known to the public than al- most any other part. It is also a fact that '.his sec- tion is be- ing gradu- ally strip- ped of its valuab le trees far up into rugged Indian Pass and around its ILighc p-irtion shows Hudson River draitage/ wild head waters, except when an occasional narrow belt is left un- touched around the more important lakes All this section, with a good part of the western water-shed, should be under control of the State, and would be cheap at almost any price, iiow^ before irreparable injur}- is done. How near that point has been reached cannot be determined yet, but the gradual annual shrinking in the water supply of the Hudson, with its sudden floods and as sudden dr}'. Greeting, 1891. vii ing-up of tributary streams, are warnings that should not be ignored. The lumberman, engaged in an honorable (and profitable) business is not to be blamed for making what he can out of it. It is a pure matter of business with him as, with dynamite and giant powder, he clears away ob- structions in mountain gorges and wilderness streams, and with dams, floods, and drains the valleys until the retiring waters leave behind them but decay and death. Following the lumberman comes the woodpulp fiend who strips the hills of the softer wood, which the lumberman has pointed to with pride as showing that he did not cut away the forests, until finally the "duff" which through ages past has slowly climbed the mountain sides aftording support to the com- pensating vegetation that in turn deposits more duff higher up — opened to the sun becomes as tinder; then comes the fire, and after that the deluge. The legislature rises to the occasion by authorizing the purchase of wild land at the munificent rate of one dollar and fifty cents per acre. Meantime, the club man and the lumberman and the char- coal man and the woodpulp man and the man with a little money to invest for a rise, are each and all quietly absorb- ing the valuable portions, and the little that falls back on the State comes after being robbed of that which alone makes its possession a thing to be desired. Clubs multiply and large sections of wild land are being acquired by individuals and private corporations to be set aside as " reserves for the preservation of the forests and the propagation of game and fish," and of course, held for their owners' private use. To this the in- digent public can have no reasonable grounds for objec- tion, unless the owners, overcome by greed of gain, become amateur lumbermen and themselves threaten the destruc- tion of the forests they set out to preserve, when the public would be justified in taking the matter into its own hands. I would enact a law prohibiting forever the cutting of any evergreen tree except with the approval of competent VIII Greeting, 1891. authority under the government, on any land in New York State lying 1,800 feet above tide. Then let clubs and individuals struggle for the acreage to their heart's content. Railroads. There are railroads and rumors of rail- roads. Among those projected are an extension of the Chateaugay R. R. to Lake Placid; a continuation of the Adirondack from North Creek northward through the wilderness and another known as the Adirondack and St. Lawrence Railway of which Dr. W. Seward Webb is presi- dent, is surveyed northward through the western part of the wilderness, passing near Fulton Chain, Albany and Smith's Lakes, through the Mud Lake country, thence easterly to a junction with the N. A. R. R. at Tupper Lake and continuing past Saranac Inn and Paul Smith's to Malone. This last mentioned section from Tupper Lake north is materializing and will, it is expected, be in opera- tion in August of the present pear. A branch road is laid out from this main line into the Adirondack League Club's Preserve, another from the Fulton Chain eastward past Raquette Lake to Blue Mountain Lake and a third from Bisf Clear Pond to Saranac Lake. This book is revised and published annually, and, as it is impossible for the writer to visit every portion of the wilderness before publication, it will be considered a favor if anyone noting errors or omissions of importance will call attention to the fact either in person or by letter. Hotel Owners and others proposing to take summer boarders in the Adirondacks are requested to send, annu- ally, before May ist, information as to the number of guests they will accommodate, price for board by the day and week, name and post office address, date of opening and closing, distance and direction from some well known point with particulars as to transportation, stating price and kind of conveyance. The substance of such informa- tion will be published free in the current number of the book. insriDE^c PAGE. Adirondacks In general i Adirondack P.0 182 Adirondack Club 130 League Club 203 Sanitarium 9T Mt. Reserve 165 Euiaed Vlllaee... 127 Adventure, fish ball. . 101 Advertisements 237 Au Sable Chasm 33 Battle of Plattsburgh. 51 Battle of Valcour.. . 45 Beaver River 207-a Bixby, Dr. G. F 53 Bloomingdale 62-b Blue Mt. Lake 192 Bluff Point 47 Boonville 206 Brightside-on-Raq'tte 203 Brown. John 75-82 Brown Tract 206 Burlington 31 Camp suggestions... 211 Carillon 22 Carryinff experience. 118 Cedar Lakes (el. 2,529) 193 Cedar River 192 Chateaugay Chflsm... 52 Champlain Lake 14 Champlain, Sam'lde. 14 Cheatertown 179 Childwold Station . . . 109-a Chubb River 96 Clinton Prison. ... 57 Colden Csmp 131 Crab Island 51 Crown Point Ruins . . 24 Cumberland head 50 Downey's Landing. .109-a "Ea£le'"B Nest," The . . 122 Eliza bethtown 148 Essex 30 Ethan Allen 21 Euba Dam 151 Exrenses estimated . . 6 Fishing, tackle, flies. 216 Fish,where found.... 223 Forestry Laws 224 Fort Frederick 24 Fort Ticonderoga 19 ',ale 99- A Gateways, spec! pages xiii, XIV, xv Guides, relating to. . . 214 Game Laws 222 Henderson, David 126 Hotels, ppe'l index xi Indian Carry 105 Indian Face 168 PAGB. Indian Lake 191 Indian Pass (el. 2,937, 90).... 132 Insect Preparations.. 213 Keene 83 Keene Valley 157-256 Keeseville 44 Lakes, epe'l head. X Lake Placid 89-93 LakePleasent 191 Long Lake Village... 114 Lovirville 206 Luzerne ITi* Lyon Mountain 59 M alone 56 Marion River 203 Maps, epe'l head,, xi Map.MutroQoced 7 Marcy, ascent of 170 Marion River 197 Medicine chest 213 M.neville(el.l,347, 15) 26 Minerva 189 Moose River 205 Mountains,8pe- cial head x Narrative 9 Ned Buntline 122 Newcomb 123 North Creek 189 North Elba 83 Old Mountain Phelps. 158 "On the tramp" 125 Outfit, Suggestions... 4 camp and woods. .. 208 sporting 214 Parks, Preserves^ Aairoudack Glub... 130 Adirondack Mt 165 ^ L C 202 Childwold.'.'...'.'." i09-c Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne 207-b Summer 202 Phantom Falls 120 Peasleviile 62-c Pilot, The 13 Plattsburgh 51 Pleasant Vallev. ..148-152 Ponds, ^pe'l head, x Potsram " 181 PottersAille 180 Port Henry 24 PortKert 31 Railroads Adirondack 189 Adirondack (Nor'n) .57 Ad-k & St. L...109-E Au Sable Chasm «fc . i Keesville 32 PAOX. A. &St. L 207-B Au Sable (branch). 62-d Carthage & Adiron- dack 207-c Chateaugay . .57, 222-238 "D. &H." 226 Fulton Chain 205 Hudson Rivtr 225 West Shore 225 Raquette Falls Ill RaqnetteLake... 112, 202 Raquette River.. 108-109-D Ray Brook. ...... 94 Red Horse Chain. .207-b Riverside 179 Roaring Brook Falls. 163 Rock Dunder 31 Root's 187 Rouse's Point 54 Routes to Gateways. . 225 SaranacLake(village). 98 Sageville 191 Sanitarium 95 Saranac Club 101 SaranacLake 62-b Schroon Lake 183 South Inlet 204 SplitRock, 29 Sporting outfit 214 Stage Lines to ^ Adirondack Loge.. 149 BlueMt. Lake 191 Elizabethtown 149 Keen Vallev 149 Lake Placid 149 Long Lake 116 Pauf Smith's 60 Schroon Lake... 149. 180 St. Regis Lake 62-B Steamboats BlueMt. Lake 196 Fulton Chain 207-A Hndson River 225 Lake Champlain, 10,27,28.55 Stony Creek HI Sweenev carry 108 Tahawa"s(P. O.^ 125 Ticonderoga. Fort... 19 Valcour Island 45 Verorennf s 29 Westport 25 Whitehall 17 Willsborongh Point . . 30 Wilmington 02-D Wilmington Notch... 71 Wood Creek 17 Y. M. C. A 25 Index. LAKES AND PONDS. ELKVATION. PAGE. Albany Lake 1,704 207-b Ampersand Pond 8,078 Auarar Pond 45 An Sable Lake (Lower).. .1.959 169 All Sable Lake (Upper).. 1.993 169 Avalanche Lake 2,856 131 Beaver Lake 1,435 207-a Blue Mountain Lake 1,800 192 Bog Lake 1,755 227-b Boreas Pond 2,046 Bottle Pond 207-c Calamity Pond 2,712 127 Canada Lakes (West) 2,348 193 Cascade Lakes 2,038 83 Catlin Lake 1,583 124 Cedar Lakes 2,529 191 Chain Lake (Seven) 191 Champlain 99 15 Chapel Pond 1,551 164 Chateaugay Lake (Lower). 56 Chateaugay Lake (Upper). 59 ChazyLake 1,500 58 Clear Lake 2,159 86 Colden Lake 131 Cranberry Lake 1,540 207-c Crooked L. (Herkimer Co ) 2,022 Eagle Lake 1.800 197 Elk Lake (Mad Pond).... 1,931 187 ForkedLake 1,753 120 Forked Lake (Little) . . .. 121 Francis Lake 1,457 207-b Fulton Chain— First Lake 1,684 206 Fulton Chain— Eighth L . . 1,803 206 George 343 243 Giant's Washbowl .... 2 233 164 Ha4-knes8 Lake 131 Henderson Lake 1,874 131 Indian Lake 1,705 191 Lake Placid 1,863 93 ELEVATION. PAGE. LeweyLake .....1,738 191 Long Lake 1.614 113 Long Pond 1,581 Loon Lake (Fraoklin Co.). 61 Luzerne Lake 177 Massawepi& Lake 109-c Meacham Lake 53 Mirror Lake 1,856 88 Moose Lake 1,787 207-a Mud Lake 1,745 207-B Paradox Lake 187 Paradox Pond 93 Pharaoh Lake 187 Piseco Lake 192 Placid Lake 1.863 93 Pleasant 1,706 192 Preston Ponds 2,206 131 Ragged Lake 53 Rainbow Lake 62-a RaquetteLake 1,774 121-198 Raquette Pond 109-a Red Horse Cham 1 ,756 207-B Round Lake 1,542 100 Sanford Lake 1.800 104 Saranac Lake (Lower) ... 1.539 96 Saranac Lake (Middle) . . 1,542 100 Saranac Lake (Upper) ...1,577 126 SchroonLake 830 180 Smith's Lake 1,725 110 South Pd. (Hamilton Co.)l 769 184 Sitony Creek Ponds 1,643 111 St. Reels Lakes 1,623 60 Tear of the clouds 4,321 170 Thirteenth Lake 1,953 190 Titus Lake 52 Tapper Lake (Big) 1,554 109-B Tupper Lake (Little) 1,728 111 Utowana Lake 201 West Canada Lakes 2,348 202 MOUNTAINS. (Table of Elevations.) ;ANK. NAME. ELEV. Ampersand 3.432 Battlett .3,715 5 Basin 4,905 Black 2,661 Blue Mountain 3.824 Catamount Mounfc'n 3.128 Cobble Hill 1,936 11 Colden 4,753 20 Colvin 4,142 Crane's 3.289 4 Dix 4.916 17 Giant 4.530 18 Gothic 4,744 6 GravPeak 4.902 3 Haystack 4,918 10 Little Haystack 4,766 Hopkin's Peak.... 3,136 Hurricane 3,763 Indian Face (appr.).2,536 PAGE. 169 19 169 172 1 199 2 62 14 151 131 165 13 1.56 160 16 160 15 172 18 169 i 160 151 161 8 :. NAME. ELEV. PAGE. Mount Jo 86 Lyon Mountain. . ..3,809 59 Macomb 4,371 Marcy (Tahawus).. . .5,344 2-171 Mclntire 5,201 147 Nipple Top 4,684 171 Noon-Mark 3,548 157^ North River 3.758 Owl's Head 2,825 113 Redfield 4,688 Resagonia 165 Saddle 4.536 Santanoni 4,644 Seward 4,384 113 Skylight 4,889 171 Snowy 3,903 St. Regis 2,888 96 Wallface 3,893 146 Whiteface 4,871 67 Index. XI. HOTELS. TAGE. Adirondack House (Keene Valley) 160 Adirondack Houie (Saranac Laice).... 98 Adirondack Lodge. . . 86 Algonquin, The 99-e American II., N. Ck... 189 Aniiere, The 193 Berkele}^ House 98 Blanchard'8 2()0 Blue Mt. Lake House. 193 BlneMt.H. (Bl.M. L.) 195 BrightPideon R'(i't... 200 Burlington, Hotel 32 Call s Hotel 192 Camp Craig 207-a Cascade Lake House. 84 Castle Rustico 95 Cedar I. Camp 207-a Chasm House 52 Champlain, Hotel ... 47 Chazj Lake House. . . 58 Chester House 179 ChildwoldP'KH....109-c Clear Pond H. Big... 261 Cranberry Lake H...207-C Crystal Spring H 62-b Cumberlaiid H 52 Elba House 96 E^tes House 160 Fair A'iew House 195 Fen ton House 207-a Flume Cottage 161 Forge House 206 Fourth L. H 206 Foquet House 52 Gibbs House 25 Grove Ft. H. (Sc'n L.) 183 Grove H. (Long L.).. 115 Grand View House. . . 91 Hathorn's Golden Bh. 200 Hemlocks, The 198 Hiawatha House Ill Hotel Ampersand 99-a Hotel Champlain 47 Hotel Flanagan 56 PAGE. H"l Wlndsor(Ro's'sPt) 54 Indian Point House. . 61 Interlaken, The .... 45 Keene Centre House. 83 Lake Placid House. . . 93 Lake House (Schroon) 185 Lake Pleasant Inn. .. 192 Lakeside House 109 Lake View House 35 Lee House 23 Leland Cottage 187 Leiand House 183 Lewey Lake House.. 193 Lin wood Cottage 98 Long Lake Hotel 114 Loon Lake House . . . 01 McCoy's Rustic L'd'e 105 Mansion House 148 Martin's 96 Maple Grove Mt. H.. 161 Meacham Lake House 56 Merriirs 60 Mirror Lake Hotel. ... 89 Moose River House.. 205 Mt. Morris House 109-p Mountain View ( N. Elba) 84 Mount'nView (Frank- lin County) 56 North River Hotel .... 190 Ondawa House 186 Paul Smith's ( St. Regis) 62-B Pleasant View House 25 Pond View House 99-y Prospect House (Blue Mountain Lake 195 Prospect H. (Schr'n) . 187 Poltersville Hotel 181 Rainbow House 62-a Raquette Falls Hotel.. Ill Ray Brook House 96 Ralph's 59 Redside Camp 109-e Rockwell's Hotel 178 Riverside House 97 page. River View House 178 Rush Point Camp.... 200 Rustic Lodge 105 Root's 187 Sagamore (Long L.).. 114 St. Hubert's Cottage.. 163 St. Hubert's Inn 162 Saranac Inn 106 Saranac Lake House. .99-0 Schroon Lake House.. 195 Stevens H. (L. Placid). 92 Storrs House 62-e St. Regis Lake H 6a-B Tahawus House. . .. 160 Taylor House 182 Tromblee's 108 Tupper Lake H 109-F Under Cliff 95 Valley House 148 Van Ness House 32 Watch Rock Hotel... 182 Wawbeek Lodge 107 Wayside (Luzerne) . . . 178 Westportinn 27 Wells House 181 AA'hite Face Inn 94 White Face Mt. H . . ..62-D Willsborongh, The... 30 Windsor (Elizab'ht'u) 149 Windsor (Schroon L.) 186 Witherill House 52 Albany. Hotel Kenmore... 235 Lake George. Fort Wm. Henrv... 230 Hundred Island H.. 233 Burleigh House 233 Marion House 232 Pearl Point 232 Saratoga. Clarendon 281 Dr. Strongs 261 Windsor 261 Au Sable Chasm 40 An Sable Lake 166-c Biue Mount'n Lake.. 199 Champlain Lake 16 Childwold Park 109-c Elizabethtown 166-a Forked Lake 199 MAPS. Gateways xiii Keene Vallev 156 Lake Placid'. 94 Port Kent Route 26 Raquette River 116 Raquette Lake 199 Saranac L'ke (low'r). 98 Saranac L'ke(upp'ri.. 107 Saranac Inn Co 107 Schroon Lake. 181 Tupper Lake. . .109-F 116 Westport to Lake Placid 160-A GATEWAYS TO THE ADIRONDACKS. (Page reference refers to pa^es in "The Adirondacks Illustrated.") Please to consider Mount Marcy the pivot on which mighty hands turn around over the dial of the Adirondacks, and Platts- burgh will fairly represent I o'clock, Port Kent II, Westport III. For convenience, there- fore, we will call Plattsburgh Gateway No. i, and let others follow in order as the hand turns the familiar way around the en- tire circle. Distances are given here in black figures and are reckoned from gateways in every instance unless otherwise ex- plained. Fares are also given from " gateways " or point speci- fied. NO. 1, PLATTSBURGH, via Chateaugay R. R. to Danne- mora. 70c.; Chazy Lake Sta- tion, $1.20 ; Lyon Mountain, $1.40 (stage to Ralph's and Merrill's, 50 cents); Loon Lake, $2.40; (stage to Loon Lake House, 50 cents);Bloom. CmAWAvoat lakes ^.jqH mount aim ingdale, $3.00 (stage to Crystal Spring House, 25 cents ; stage to Paul Smith's. |i. 00) ; Saranac Lake, )s;3.35; stage to Miller's, The Algonquin and Hotel Ampersand, 50 cents each (page 96); stage to Lake Placid, ^1.25; (page 89); stage to Saranac Inn, $1.50 (page 105). From Plattsburgh via Branch R. R. to Au Sa- ble Station,$i.oo; stage (morning) to Keene Val- ley (page 153) Wilmington, $2.00 ; Lake Placid, NO. 2, P O R T KENT, by K., A. C & L. C. R. R. to Au Sable Chasm. (See ■pages 33 to 45). Au Sable Station, (morn- ing stage), i^i.so; "Wil- mington, $2.50; Lake Placid, $4.00 (page 89). .50 (page 89). Figures ihoM dit*ant9 Gateways. n0.3,westp0rt, stage (connecting with all irains and boats), to Elizabeth! OWE , J^ i . oo ; (page 148). Stages from midday tr.,in and after- noon boat at Westport, run to Keene Valley- passing all hotels to St! Hubert's Inn. Fare $2.50. (See p. 153). Keene Valley to Au Sable Lake morning and afternoon. Stage fare, 75c. Stages from Elizabethtown, morning' to Keen, $2 50; Cascade House, $3.00; Adirondack Lodge, I4.50' Ames', I3.50; Lake Placid, $4. (See pages S3 to 94.) NO. 4, PORT HENRY, stage (evening) to Mineville, morning st^ge from Mine- ville to Root's, $1.50; (Tues- day, Thursday, and Satur- day.) to Newcomb, I3.00. NO. 5, CROWN POINT, C. P. I. R. R. to Hammondville, 60c; to Paradox, $1.10; Schroon Lake, NO. 6, TICONDEROGA from Delano to Ticonderoga mites. (Hotel, Burleigh to Schroon Lake, 20 stage $2.10. Branch Village, 2 House.) Special , __ miles, or Root's, thence to Long Lake, same as No. 4. FORT TICONDEROGA (station); train through Lake George to Caldwell. NO. 7, SARATOGA, to Luzerne, 69c; (page i77)Riverside,$i.5o; stage toChestertown,$2.25; Pot- tersville, $2.50 ; head of Schroon Lake, (steamer), $3-25. (See page 180.) Saratoga to NorthCreek, $1.74; (page 189) stage to North River.$2.25;(page 190), Indian Lake, $3. 50; Blue Mountain Lake, 4.75; (page 193) Long Lake, $6.25; page ir4)through Blue Mt. and Raquette Lake to Forked Lake Carry, by steamer, $6.50. (Pages 121 and 202.) NO. 8, FONDA, Rail- road to Northville, Si. 00; stage to Sageville, $3.00. For WoodhuU Lake and Bisby Chain leave the R. W. & O. Railroad at CROWN to Baldwin, steamer _. Alder Creek Sta- tion, special to White Lake, 9 miles; to Wood- hull Lake, 19 miles. Gateways. ALDER CREEK to Honnedaga Lake. Club preserve), "^o miles, special conveyance. NO. 9, BOONEVILLE. Stage daily to Moose River, 12 miles, $1.00. Rail- road to Minnehaha, 20 miles, $2.00. Steamer to Forge House, $3.00. Steam- er on Fulton Chain to head of Fourth Lake (steamer 12 miles, |i.oo). Page 206. NO. 10, LOWVILLE, stage to (Adirondack League 25 14 ^"^^^^ "Number Four," Beaver Lake, iS miles (special 4 or 5 persons, $6.) To Stillwater, $12. (Page 211.) NO. 11, CARTHAGE, Railroad to Lake Bonaparte, 17 miles, 54 cents ; Oswegatchie, 39 miles, $1.17 ; Benson Mines, 44 miles, $1.32; Cranberry Lake overflow (trail) 48 miles ; Cranberry Lake House, guide's boat, =;4 miles, (See page 213.) no: 12, DE KALB JUNCTION, stage to Clarksboro, 22 miles, special conveyance to Cranberry Lake, 36 miles. (Page 207-c.) NO. 13, POTSDAM, stage daily to Col- ton, 75 cents ; South Colton, $1. To Stark, (Monday, Wednesdav .and Friday, at 7 a. m.), |i .75 ; Sevey, $2.75 ;' Childwold, I3. (Page 109-A.) N0.14, MORIA,R.R. to St.Regis Falls, 50 cents ; Santa Clara, go cents ; Spring Cove, $1.15; (Blue Mountain House, 4 miles from Spring Cove, fare 75 cents;) Paul Smith Station, $1.50; Paul Smith's (siage), $2. (Page 57.) Sar- anac Inn Station, $2; (Saranac Inn by stage, $1); Childwold Station, $2. 50; (Childwold Park House, by stage, $1 ; page 109-C.) Tupper Lake Station, ^2.50; (Wawbeek Lodge, by stage. JfJi.) Steamboat to Tup- per Lake House, $3.50 ; page 109-E. NO. 15, MA- LONE, stage (Mon- day, Wednesday and Friday) to Duane, $1.50; Loon Lake, $3. (Page 55). NO. 16, CHATEAUGAY, daily stage to the foot of Lower Chateaugay Lake, 50 cents. A steamer runs daily, making the excursion of the two lakes, $r. See pages 55 and 59 to 62. JOKOt HILDnRl .pf°*' . IPs 6 64 ioo<^B 1^ THE ADIRONDICKS. CHAPTER I. In General. N wings of thought swifter than the light- ning's flash we sweep away across the drowsy earth, over ■ smoke -polluted cities, sun- scorched meadows, burning plain and high- ways with their flaunting skirts of sand, nor rest until the fragrant odor of wild flowers and the dewy breath of forest trees come like incense wafted to us from below. Come with me up into a high mountain. I cannot show you " all the kingdoms of the world," — but "the glory of them." Over a rippling ocean of forests first, in long, swelling waves now rising, now sinking down into deep hollows ; here in grand moun- tains, crested as with caps of foam, there tormented by counter currents into wildly dashing shapes, like ocean bil- lows frozen by Divine command, their summit-glittering granite, their deep green troughs, gleaming with threads of silver and bits of fallen sky. Now the trees of the valley glide away behind us, then come dark spruce and pine and the sturdy balsam climbing the mountain-side — tall and graceful at first, but growing smaller as they rise, gnarled and twisted, and scarce above the surface, sending their branches out close along the ground, their white tops bleached and ghastly, like dead roots of upturned trees, the hardy lichens still higher ; then comes naked rock, and we stand on the wind-swept summit 2 The Adirondacks. of the monarch of the Adirondacks — " Tahawus," the cloud-spHtter of the Indian. Around their chief, cluster the other great peaks — east, west, north, south, Hmitless, numberless, a confused mass of peaks and ridges, crowding close up to the base of the one on which we stand, and receding in waves of green all down through the scale of color to its blue and purple edge. Pen cannot convey an idea of its sublimity ; the pencil fails to even suggest the blended strength and delicacy of the scene. The rude laugh is hushed, the boisterous shout dies out on reverential lips, the body shrinks down, feeling its own little- ness, while the soul expands, and, rising above the earth, claims kinship with its Creator, questioning not His existence. Standing on this, the highest point in the State of New York, 5,344 feet above tide, we will glance at the country around. The term, at first applied to this cluster of moun- tains, which occupy less than one-quarter of the region, has come by usage to mean the entire wilderness, an area of over 8,000 square miles of almost unbroken forest. The grand mountain region is in the center on the east, dropping off suddenly into Lake Champlain ; around it, and sweeping away to the west, is a vast, comparatively level plateau, nearly 2,000 feet above tide, with here and there a moun- tain peak overlooking the plain, the two regions differing in every respect, save in the dense forests that cover both. If you are given to muscular exercise, climbing and viewing nature from high places, choose the eastern portion. If con- stitutionally tired, or inclined to dream away the quiet hours, then go to the magnificent west, where lakes and streams are so closely connected that almost every mile of that vast tract may be traversed by boat, save short carries from one water system into another, or around some fall. Camping even is not necessary if you prefer hotel life, for there are but few wilderness routes that do not have halting places less than a day's journey apart. In General. 3 The Adirondack wilderness, as known to the public gen- erally, may be divided into three general divisions or sys- tems, which collectively entertain the great bulk of visitors, and are representatives of the whole, namely, the Saranac and St. Regis waters of Franklin county, whose natural gate- way is Plattsburgh and Port Kent ; the mountain region of Keene, North Elba and Lake Placid, in Essex county, with entrance at Westport ; and the Blue Mountain and Raquette waters, in Hamilton county, reached by way of the Adiron- dack railroad from Saratoga. Of these sections the first-mentioned has become the more widely celebrated as a region where fashion and fish- ing is admirably blended, and has its patrons who are looked for as regularly as the seasons. The second is less known in fact, but its grand mountains and lovely valleys have become familiar on the canvas of great painters ; while the Raquette region has an air of newness and morning freshness, as if just awakened from a long and refreshing sleep, and is making rapid strides in popular favor. Each section, while possessing something of the characteristics of the others, has its own individual attractions; and while connected by natural highways, over which the nomad often goes, they still to a considerable extent preserve their indi- viduality, and each is complete and sufiicient unto itself. Among the less noted divisions are the Grass and Oswe- gatchie region, in St. Lawrence county, which probably contains the most game, because less visited ; the Beaver and Moose river region, in Herkimer, somewhat tame, but affording excellent hunting and fishing; and the Lake Pleasant region, in southern Hamilton county, all of them with more or less local interest and a patronage derived prin- cipally from the cities of Central and Western New York. Keene Valley is a favorite resort with artists. Raquette I^ake has the most elaborate, and the Upper Saranac the greatest number of private camps occupied during the season. 4 The Adirondacks. Places of entertainment, from the well-appointed hotel on the border to the rude log-house and open camp of the interior, are found at intervals throughout the entire wilder- ness, all waiting with open doors to receive the stranger, the consideration being from $3 per day down to $5 per week ; for particulars concerning which see under heading of " Hotels," following index. A peculiarity of the Adirondack region is its freedom from rough or vicious characters. Evil finds nothing con- genial in its bright skies and pure, fresh atmosphere. Con- ventionalities that obtain at other resorts are not held binding here; the fact of actual presence is accepted as guaranty of the possession of those mutual sympathies and qualifications which here, at least, make the whole world kin, and makes it possible for gentlemen to wear blue shirts and old hats, and ladies to travel without male escort from one end of the wilderness to the other. Indeed, it is no uncom- mon thing for parties of ladies to make the tour of the woods, accompanied only by the necessary complement of guides to furnish motive power, spending day after day in their boat, and at night reaching one step farther in the extended system of hotels. Outfit. — Full dress is seldom seen, even at the most fashionable resorts, and is exceeded in absurdity only by the conventional stage trapper, who occasionally bursts upon the astonished wilderness in fringed buckskin, and is marked at once as a '* fresh." Your right to enter the best society will not be questioned because of dress. Clothing ordi- narily worn is sufiicient for all occasions, with perhaps the addition of a soft felt hat and roomy walking shoes or boots for boat or tramp. Camp and Sporting Outfit, clothing, supplies, etc., are given in a special chapter, with various suggestions ; how ever, a complete list of articles considered necessary or conv venient should be made out, in advance of the time foii departure, by each individual; then, in committee of the In General. 5 whole, decide on what is really necessary or suitable, taking into consideration the nature of the trip and means of reaching the appointed camping ground. If it be not over- difficult of access, carry anything which will contribute to your reasonable comfort, in the way of blankets, clothing, etc. Do not sleep m the clothing worn during the day, if it can be avoided — it is a positive luxury to be able to make an entire change for night use. The gloriously healthful air of the wilderness will unques- tionably give you new life and vigor, but it labors at a ter- rible disadvantage, if at the beginning your bed of boughs affords no rest; where sleep comes only with complete exhaustion, as is often the case in the first few nights of camp life, and where the early morning finds you pitiably weak and languid, and ready to move simply because motion is a relief to the poor bruised body and aching joints. " Roughing it " is grand in theory, and sounds well in after history, but is bad in practice and often impedes, if it does not entirely defeat the object for which it was undertaken. You are presumably out for pleasure, do not, therefore, make severe labor of it ; have paid help sufficient to do camp work, if, at any time, inclination tempt you to watch the zenith from some mossy vantage ground, or to drift idly among the still waters, absorbing with newly awakened instincts the subde lessons taught by nature. If your party can affi^rd the expense, take your cook along. Guides, as a rule, can prepare an acceptable forest meal, and some are very skillful in that Hne, but the very qualities which contribute to make the successful guide — "the mighty hunter" — often renders him indifferent to the quality of his food, and incapable of understanding the cravings of a delicate appetite ; at all events, carry a cook book. Camp fare is apt to become monotonous after a time, and although familiar with a hundred dishes, when brought face to face with the appalling necessity of prepar- ing a straight meal, your mind becomes a blank and you 6 The Adirondacks. drop weakly back to the same old stew of yesterday— and the day before — and life becomes a burden. Expenses cannot be fairly estimated, varying so widely with the habits and requirements of different individuals. If you travel simply in channels having public conveyance, the cost may be accurately determined by referring to fares, etc., found under their a.ppropriate heading in this book. If you go outside the public lines of travel, or camp, you will require the service of a guide. 25 to 30 cents per day will supply the table with necessaries, and some luxuries even, for each person while in camp. Guides, terms for service, suggestions, etc., page 214. Hotels. — Information relating to hotels is gathered an- nually, and prices charged for board given with notice of house in " Hotel Directorv," at back of book, for which see special index, page vii. " Gateways " will lead you from circumference to centre of the wilderness, with line, distances and fares ; while under the heading of " railroads, steamboats and stages," will be found approaches and general information — for all of which see index. Trout, their habits and peculiarities, with suggestions as to outfit, fishing, etc., is treated at length in chapter XIX. The article is from the pen of A. N. Cheney, of Glens Falls, an enthusiastic votary of the gentle art, and authority in the matter whereof he speaks, and gives, in readable shape more solid information ot use to those who would enjoy the same than a dozen of the ordinary fishing romances of the day, with their sensations, impi^jssions, tingles, thrills and frills. Finally, bear in mind that this volume is designed to give its readers, in convenient shape, information of general interest to the ninety and nine concerning points and places, r,oad,s and regions visited by them, with hints and sugges- tions of the deeper mysteries of camp and trail that may In General. serve to pilot the one-hundredth to points where the intelh- gent guide becomes an absolute necessity, and beyond which direction in book form would confuse, rather than instruct. For the sake of clearness, therefore, we have omitted descrip- tion of the multitude of minor lakes, ponds, streams and trails which duplicate each other over the entire wilderness, and which cannot be followed without the aid of an experi- enced guide. To those who would have a comprehensive idea of the whole region, it is hoped the map, designed to supplement the information contained herein, will be a wel- come companion until it can be safely laid aside for the more specific knowledge of the guide, whose office neither book nor map can ever fill. As the map of the wilderness is introduced, it may not be entirely uninteresting to ex- plain its manner of build- ing. A large portion of the great Adirondack region has never been surveyed with chain and rod, and probably will not be for years to come, but the rapid development of portions and the grow, ing importance of the whole as a summer resort makes necessary a mdp made specially to meet the re- quirements of tourist and sportsman. In its construction, all available sources of information have been brought into requisition. Important points outside the wilderness proper were determined in accordance with official surveys, and connected with the mountains of the interior, whose principal peaks were accurately located by triangulation made expressly MIVIATURE SKETCH OF MAP. 8 The Adirondacks. for this work. Access has also been had to important sur* veys made under State patronage and by private parties, which are now, for the first time, given to the pubhc in map form. In addition to this absolutely reliable material, draw- ings of small sections on an extended scale, covering in the aggregate the entire region, were sent in duplicate to men famihar with the various localities for correction, and were made as full and complete as possible — careful attention be- ing given to proportion and distance — with wild trails, car- ries, ponds and streams, many of which are now for the first time laid down on any map. Reduced to an uniform scale by photography, the result, it is believed, approaches per- fection as nearly as can be, short of actual trigonometrical survey. It gives altitudes, as determined by late measure- ment ; the location of all hotels and principal camps, with roads leading thereto ; shows distance in figures on roads, trails and streams, and indicates also the nature of the latter in important instances. All roads within its limits are care- fully laid down, the leading ones distinguished from those less important by being in solid black fine, and altogetheir showing, by their number or entire absence in places, the cultivated or wilderness nature of that particular region. To the gathering, compilation and reduction of the mass of material made use of, and its final redrawing for the engraver the entire autumn and winter of 1879 were given and finally, with a feeling of tenderness which can be appreciated only by those who, in a labor of love, have seen its object growing under their hands from day to day until completion, it was sent forth for such welcome as it might find. Since its completion in 1879, as above, annual editions have been issued, revised, and corrected, to keep pace with the changes in road and trail, and for the addition of camp or hotel in this rapidly-growing region. CHAPTER II. Narrative. ING up the curtain to low, sweet music, the music of a September night, the blending of the myriad voices of the swamp into one long mono- tone, that seems to make you, wherever you stand and listen, its center. The scene is a dark waste of water, up out of which grow reeds and coarse grasses, that sway back and forth with the surging waves ; over at the west is a low range of bluffs ; on the east are mountains ; near by, dusky white strips run here and there, beyond which a broader one reflects the cloudy sky, dark bodies are moving slowly along and lights twinkle as they pass to and fro ; beyond, and to the south, a high hill rises up, belted with strings of stars ; at its base they hang in clusters ; they sepa- rate and pass up and down, are swung in circles, disappear and appear again in a most curious manner, and faintly comes the voices of the boatmen, the drivers, the lock-tenders, and the busy hum of the distant village. At the north, where the western wall comes down, the solid rock is notched out, ovei which rises the rocky crests of a mountain range, while away beyond winds the marsh-embordered rock-hemmed waters of Lake Champlain. A low, rumbling sound comes from the south, then the solid wall that shuts us in on that side seems riven asunder, and from out the fkartb, with breath of flame, and eve of fire gleaming TO The Adirondacks. out ahead, thunders the night express. Across the mareh. it comes, bringing in its train a host of lesser lights, and with a shriek that clashes sharply and is broken into a con- fused din of echoes, it plunges into the northern wall, through the narrow cut to the other side, and with the hiss of escaping steam, the noisy clanging of its bell, the rattling of iron rods ind links, the trembling, jerking and swaying of the long coaches, as the brakes are drawn hard against the moving Rrheels; then with the dying roar of its subsiding power, the iron monster rests at the end of its journey. Just for the mo- ment we feel the hush. *' the rest of the tide between the ebb and the flow." Then the nature of the sounds change, the quick, sharp words of command, of shouting and confusion, the shut- fling of feet, as streams of life pour out from the various coaches, and convergirg, flow over the broad plank on to the boat that has been waiting to rec eive them ; there is no need of asking the way ; it is plain to all, for while on the left is nothing but darkness and a dingy, uninviting pile of build< ings, on the right rises a great mass of white, with moving forms and flashing light ; windows bright, with stained glass and frosted silver, rising tier on tier, begirt with beams and rods of iron, and above all. coming up from the fires be- low, wave banners of flame, whose fiery particles separating, dance away and are lost in the darkness. Whew I What a storm, not a thunder storm exactly, although there are indi- cations of the sulphurous in the language sometimes heard, but a shower of baggage ; it rains trunks, boxes, satchels, bun- dles, bags, from the car which has been brought to a stop directlv in front of the gang-plank, and a double stream of trucks, drawn and propelled by stalwart men, go down undei huge loads, and, coming up empty, run and wheel and dodge about, appearing always on the point of, but never actually getting run over. Through all the confusion the man who seems to have the least to do stands quietly by the rail, seeing every thing, bat laving nothing, unless occasionally to give a command in a uw tone; then, as the last truck load is on the move, h« Under Weigh ii Umchet acord at hit hand, a bell up in the pilot house tinkles, a few quick ftrokeson the big bell follows, the last man rushes over the plank, which is pulled aboard, and the great hawsers are cast oflf ; then, again, the little bell, up where the pilot stands signifies that the boat is from thence out under his control, and he is responsible for her safety. Now, down along the writes to the engine-room the message goes; we hear the long hollow breathing of the steam as it rushes into the cylinder; the ponderous beam above tips slowly on its center; the wheels seem stepping on the water as they revolve ; the great mass swings out into the channel, and moves away through the night like a great pearl surrounded by a luminous atmos- phere. A little shining world all alone by itself.* Thus we saw it one night in the autumn of '73. We means the professor and myself. Who the professor is, or what he pro- fesses, doesn't matter, as long as this is a non-professional trip ; but it may be of interest considering the field selected for our observations to know that the professor is not actually stupendous, either in length, breadth or thickness, and not particular about his diet; perish the thought I He simply abstains from the absorption of that mysterious compound known as hash, on account of the uncertainty of its origin. Revolts at sight of sausages, as it is unpleasantly suggestive of a dear little dog that he once loved. Can't endure cream m his coffee, because it "looks so, floating round on top," and whose heart bleeds and appetite vanishes if an unlucky fly chances to take a hot bath in his tea. To these peculi- arities, add a disposition to see the fun in his own foilornness, and with boyishness dyed in the wool, the professor stands before you. As for the author of this, perhaps the least said the better. He hasn't the heart to say any thing bad, and a determination to confine himself strictly to facts, interfere! •omewhat with the glowing eulogy struggling to find vent 'Tbe boat is now taken at Hconderoga, making 4ay trips only, toaviog Plattiburgli iu the BionuDg and retumioK in the afternoon 12 The Adirondacks. ■nAce it to say, that nature was very lavish in the bestowml of longitude, although not noticeably so in regard to latitude, giving also a disposition to dare, and a physical develop- ment capable of enduring a vast amount of arduous rest. Going — the dainty professor and ease-loving writer, enthu- siastic sportsman, with neither gun, rod, umbrella or other instrument of death, armed only with sketch and note-book, ind hearts to drink in the glories of the great wild woods — to the mountains for health and strength to frames not over strong. We found ourselves on board the " Vermont," the largest of the Champlain steamers; and as it swung out into the channel, went out forward, up odd little pieces of stairway and canvass side hills ; ducked under and climbed over iron rods and groped along in the darkness on the hurricane deck to the pilot-house. As we entered, our eyes becoming accustomed to the dark- ness, made out the form of Rockwell, the chief pilot, with two assistants, wrestling with the many-spoked wheel, which throbbed and trembled as they forced it over to one side while the lights ahead seemed to swing swiftly past as we «wept around a sharp bend in the channel. A quick, low word of command, and the chain rattled and the wheel spun around like lightning as they jumped away from it. "Now," said the pilot. Six hands pattered on the polished spokes, and the ait seemed full of clawing, jumping shadows. "Over with her." The wheel creaked and snapped with the strain brought to bear on it ; the lights away out ahead, that had passed acrost to the right, now raced wildly back to the left, and we circled around in the darkness, out of which, into the circle of light that surrounded us, came reedy shores and low lines of bushes, seeming almost to brush against us as we passed. "Steady now. Good evening, gentlemen." The last half of the sentence, while it was friendly, was evi- dently intended as a sort of reconnoissance. It had inquiry in it, and said plainly, " I want to hear the sound of youi voice." The Pilot. 13 . We said, " Good evening." •* Up a little — steady — let her run — Oh, yes; I didn't recognize your voice — hard over that light's out again — you are a little hoarse ; ought to take something for that." " We were ; a trip to the mountains ; " and he said it was an excellent plan — ]et her chaw ; the reaction will clear her — -wished he could — luff a point — among the grand things — said she was light aft, and clawed to starboard ; asked if we could fully indorse Tyndall's theory of nebular hegira ; thought the Greek slave a perfect figure ; said she sucked mud through here, sometimes, and they had to be careful of her flues ; wanted to know if we had given the evolement of solar faculae much thought ; descended with Darwin to our remote progenitors ; gyrated among the wheeHng con- stellation ; floated through eternity ; touched on the crea- tion ; paddled around with Noah ; got lost with the children of Israel ; skittered along down through the dark ages ; said it wasn't going to rain, which suggested Sodom and Gomor- rah ; admired Joan of Arc — said she carried an awful head of steam,. but her boilers were good; wanted our opinion as to the probable origin of creative energy and of the cohesive materialism of latent force. Shades of Egypt ! the professor wilted, and we had to admit that Moses himself couldn't have taken us out of the scientific wilderness, and Rockwell thought Moses wasn't much of a pilot anyway. Thus he mixes art, science and physics while demonstrat- ing perfection in navigation ; peering out into the darkness, seeming to feel rather than see the channel ; now circling around a lamp hung out as a guide, then away toward others that seem to pass and repass each other, as we sway to and fro, where in places a deviation the width of the boat to the right or left would bring it on the muddy banks ; at times seeming to hang out over the reeds, anon waking a whole swarm of hissing, chuckling echoes as we run close under a rocky wall ; then onward, into broader strips of water, under the frowning promontory of Ticonderoga; then y*& •went below. CHAPTER III. Lake Champlain. HE first white sporting man that ever visited the Adirondacks was Samuel de Champlain, a Frenchman, who, in 1609, joined a company of native tourists on a gunning expedition to the southern borders of the future State park, where he fell in with a party of Iroquois and succeeded in bagging a satisfactory' number. Samuel, besides being an enthusiastic sports- man, was of a vivacious, happy disposition, as witness his felicitous description of the mannei in which he, at the first shot, brought down three out of four Aborigines, who broke cover, then pursued and killed some others; he should, however, receive no credit as a marksman, for he used a beastly arm called an "arquebus," a remote progeni- tor of the terrible blunderbuss — a shot-gun, which same, 1 think, all will agree is beneath the dignity of a true sports- man to point toward such game. After this adventure, which happened the same year that Hendrick Hudson sailed up the river that now bears his name, and eleven years before the original pilgrims landed on Plymouth rock, he returned home and wrote an interesting account of the affair, calling the sheet of water explored after himself — Lake Champlain. Just two centuries after his passage in a canoe, the first steamboat was launched on the lake. When became, the Indians called it Cani adere quaranU, spelled in various ways, and said by learned authorities who copy it from some one else, to mean "the lake that is the gate of the country." By the early French who did not choose to recognize Cham- plain's right to the name, it was known as Mere Us Iroquois, 01 "Iracosia." A book published in 1659 speaks of it as "the lake of Troquois, which, together with a river of the s'.zm The Adirondacks. name, running into the river of Canada, is sixty or seventy leagues in length. In the lake are four fair islands, which arc low and full of goodly woods and meadows, having store of game for hunting. Stagges, Fallow Dear, Elks, Roe Bucks. Beavers, and other sorts of beasts." In shape it is very like a long, slim radish, with Whitehall at the little end ; then comes the long root and outbranching river fibers. At Bur- lington, quite a respectable radish, then blotches of rock and island, and, beyond that, the leaves spreading out on either side and toward the North. On the east is Vermont, sweeping away from the lake in a broad, cultivated plain, then gradually ascending to the ridgei of the Green mountains; along the southern and central por- tion of the lake, the rocky western shores step down to the water's edge and backward, rising up peak on peak the high- est, misty with distance or hidden by the clouds that gatnei around ; then wild, broken and grand, the Adirondack moun- tains. Here and there are little bits of cultivated land and breaks in the mountain-gateways to the wilderness, then as you near Burlington, they fall away back into the interior, and a level, well-cultivated country presents itsel£ According to the United States coast survey, the distance from Whitehall to Fort Montgomery is 107^ miles; its greatest width across, from the outlet of Ausable river, 12^ miles, and greatest depth (at a point i| miles south-east of Essex landing) 399 feet. Measuring down into Missisquoi bay, on the east side, extending into Canada, and separated from the outlet by Alburgh Tongue, the extreme length of the lake maybe found at about 118 miles. Its elevation above tide is 99 feet. It contains a number of beautiful islands, principally near the north end, the two largest known respectively as North and South Hero, and collectively as Grand Isle, a county of Vermont. The New York. & Canada R. R., extending along the west shore of the lake, is the missing link in the air line chain between New York and Montreal, supplied by the l»J 1^%^ I 6 i? Whitehall. 17 Delaware & Hudson Canal Company, In 1875, and in con- nection with the Rensselaer & Saratoga Railroad and Hudson River at the south, and a section of the Grand Trunk from the Canada line north, is the main artery of travel between the two great cities. At various points, rail or stage routes diverge, leading to the central portions of the wilderness. Whitehall is at the head of Lake Champlain; 219 miles north of New York, 78 from Albany. As we break through the ledges and approach from the south, the valley spreads out toward the east in a fertile plain ; at the right, toward the north, is quite a mountain, girded with outcropping ledges that run up from the east at an angle of about thirty degrees, and are broken off precipitously on the west ; all along this front, houses cling one above another like rows of martins* boxes, and wooden stairways run zigzag up the sides, which, if bought by the acre, would bring the most measured per- pendicularly. Climbing the stairway we look down on the business portion of the village, close, compact and city-like below and thinning out gradually up the hill on the west. Going still higher, a pathway is found leading to the summit which is comparatively clear and affords a wonderfully fine mountain view for a little exertion. Whitehall was originally called Skeenesborough, after Col Philip Skeene, who accompanied Abercrombie in 1758 ; wa« wounded in his attack on Ticonderoga and, after Amherst's victorious advance in the following year, was appointed com- mandant at Crown Point, at which time he projected the set- tlement In 1765, he obtained a grant of the township and, in 1770, took up his residence here. On the breaking out ot the Revolution he took sides with the Royalists, accompanied Burgoyne in his expedition against Ticonderoga and was captured with him at Saratoga ; his property was confiscated by act of Legislature in 1779. Wood Creek, that fi-om its very head, has flown sleepily along, seems to have awakened suddenly and with a quick start, a joyous little run, a little foam and a little racket plunges over the rocks, and dies out in the muddy Iak« mt 1 8 The Adirondacks. our feet. Close to the falls the canal boats and small steam- ere come, and line the banks of the bayou-like lake that leads away to the north through what seems a basin scooped out of the mountains, its marshy bed filled here and there with pieces of " made " land on which are steam mills, and long piles of lumber, representing the principal business of the place. At Whitehall, the train divides, — a part going east and north via Castleton and Rutland, the remainder north, down along the principal street, through the tunnel, out at the north edge of the village to the lumber district, and across the marsh- bottomed basin toward a notch cut out of its farther rim. Just before entering the rock-cut alluded to, we see on the cast a short double crook, in the narrow channel, known as the Fiddler's Elbow, where the large steamers were com- pelled to send a line ashore and " warp " round into a proper position to proceed; here, under water, are the hulks of some of the vessels engaged in the battle of Plattsburgh, in 1814. On the high point of rocks just over and slightly to the north of the Elbow is Fort Putnam, where the old colonial general, — Israel — ^lay in ambush, waiting for the French and Indians under the command of Marin. The steamboat dock, formerly the northern terminus of the road, with its half-demolished sheds and old elevator, is, par- adoxically speaking, left on the right as the train skims over the surface of the marsh on the long trestle, straight as the arrow flies, for over a mile, and over the draw at the outlet of South bay, along which Dieskau led his men to attack 1! Fort Edward, failing in which they turned toward Lake George and fell in with Col. Williams on that memorable 8th of September, 1755. 1 Winding in and out we continue along the west shore I breaking through rocky points and cuts, where the clay has been sliced down and removed like huge chunks of cheese, I revealing on their face horizontal strata that must at some ™ time have been the bed of the lake. On the east, at inter- vals, are the odd, little light houses and posts where lanterns were hung to mark the tortuous channel. Low reedy islands TiCONDEROGA. I9 and points float outward from the shores, sluC the grand, rocky gateways opening up as we advance, revea3 vistas of wondrous beauty, strips of far-reaching water, and the blue of distant mountain peaks. Between the solid points we cross on trestle work or made land, and which same openings have proved a delusion and a snare to the unfortunate con tractor doomed to wrestle with them. Twenty-two miles from Whitehall, our rope of travel is divided in three strands, the one at the left branching off around Mount Defiance to the foot of Lake George, the mid- dle continuing on by rail along the west shore, and the remain- ing one proceeding in nearly the same direction by steamboat, touching at the principal points by the way.* Fort Ticonderoga is 24 miles from Whitehall on a bold promontory between the waters of Lake Champkin and the outlet of Lake George. Here were enacted the principal events in the play of the .ako ; here savage tribes contended for the country on either nand ; here three great nations struggled for the prize ol a continent, and precious blood flowed like water for this, the key to the "gate of the country," by its position elected to become historic ground ; as such, let us glance briefly in passing. Claimed by the Hurons and Algonquins on the north, and the Five Nations, on the south, Lake Champlain was perma« nently occupied by neither, but the gateway between two sections that were continually at war with each other, the bloody middle ground over which each party in its turn swept carrying ruin in its path. This had driven all who would have occupied it beyond the mountains, and the lovely shores remained in unbroken solitude. Thus Champlain found it when, in July, 1609, he sailed south with the Indians from the St. Lawrence to make war upon their southern enemies, and "encountered a war pariy of the Iroquois on the 29th of the month, about ten o'clock v^t night, at the point of a cape irhich puts out into the lake ou the west side." They each retired until the morning, when a battle ensued Champlair 20 IHB ADIRONDACKS. was kept out of sight until they marched to the attack. Ht says: "Ours commenced, calling me in a loud voice, and, making way for me, opened in two and placed me at theii head, marching about twenty paces in advance until I was within thirty paces of the enemy." •• The moment they saw me they halted, gazing at me and I at them. When I saw them preparing to shoot at us, 1 raised my arquebus, and aiming directly at one of the three chiefs, two of them fell to the ground by this shot, and one ol their companions received a wound, of which he died after- ward. I had put four balls in my arquebus. Ours, in witness- ing a shot so favorable to them, set up such tremendous shouts that thunder could not have been heard ; and yet there was no lack of arrows on one side and the other. The Iro- quois were greatly astonished, seeing two men killed so instantaneously, notwithstanding they were provided with arrow-proof armor, woven of cotton-thread and wood. ♦ ♦ • They lost courage, took to flight, and abandoned the field and their fort, hiding themselves in the depths of the forests, whither pursuing them I killed some others. ♦ ♦ ♦ Th« place where the battle was fought is 43 degrees some minutes latitude, and I named it Lake Champlain."* Ticonderoga is i3^ degrees north latitude and probably the cape referred to •which puts out into the lake on the west side." The French claimed the country by virtue of Champlain't discovery, and in 1731, while at peace with Great Britain, the^f advanced to Crown Point and erected Fort St Frederick. The English claimed this territory by right of purchase and treaty with the Five Nations, and feeling that something must be done to prevent further encroachments of the French on British soil. General Johnson was sent, in 1755, to drive them away, going by way of Lake George, where he halted for a few days, when Baron Dieskau made a dash around French mountain, defeated Col. Williams' party and attacked the main army, in which he was defeated. He then returned to Ticonderoga and began the erection of a fort which he cal»»d " CarilUm:* * Documentary History of New York. + Dr. G. F. Bixby, whcse refearches among historical matters relatirg to the Champlain Vallty lias made him an authority, in a paper read before the N. Y. State Hi&lorical Society in 1839, brought evidence to show that " the cape " re- ferred to by Champlain is the one on which Crown Point ruins now stand. The evidence was accepted by the Society as congiusive. TiCONDEROGA. 2 1 in 1757, it was occupied by Montcalm, who marched thence to the capture of Fort William Henry. In 1758, Abercrombie made his unsuccessful attack on the Did French lines, which resulted in his total defeat, with a loss of nearly 2,000 killed and wounded. The following year Amherst entrenched before the lines, and the French, feeling that they could not successfully resist him, abandoned and set fire to the works, which the English took possession of in the morning. They then advanced on Fort St. Frederick, the French retreating down the lake ; their hold on Champlain gone forever. Amherst repaired and enlarged the works at Ticonderoga tad Crown Point, on a scale of great magnificence, but never a shot from the frowning embrasures was directed against an approaching foe. Peace between the nations soon followed and the forts were allowed to fall into a state of ill repair and were poorly garrisoned when the revolution broke out. Crown Point had only a sergeant and 12 men and Ticon- deroga 50 men all told, when in the gray of the morn- ing of the loth of May, 1775, Ethan Allen and 83 of his "Green Mountain boys," stole in through the wicket gate and demanded its surrender '* in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress." Crown Point was on the same day taken possession of by a party of Allen's men under Seth Warner, and soon after a sloop of war was captured by Benedict Arnold, by which the colonists gained command of the lake. The following year Arnold, in command of a small flotilla, was defeated near the Four Brothers' islands by General Carl- ton, who advanced as far south as Crown Point, then retired into Canada. In 1777 there came sweeping from the north the conceited, the pompous, the brilliant Burgoyne with 7,500 men and laid siege to Ticonderoga. St. Clair, then in command had barely sufficient troops to man the principal works, and when the English took possession of Mount Defiance, from which they could drop shot right over into the fort, he decided to aban- don it and did so on the night of July 4th ; all the stores that could be taken were removed, guns were spiked and at mid- 22 The Adirondacks. night a dusky throng moved away across the chain bridge Unfortunately for the Americans, a house on Mount Inde- pendence was set on fire and the light revealed the fugitive army to the watchful enemy, who immediately pursued. The greater part retreated toward Castleton and were followed, en- gaged and beaten ; the English, however, suffered terribly, it is said, losing ten to one of the Yankees. The rest moving up the lake toward Whitehall were pursued by the British who broke through the chain bridge and reaching the head of the lake almost as soon as they, captured most of the stores and ammunition, the men retreating to Fort Ann ; after this Burgoyne moved south to Saratoga, where his march ol triumph was changed to one of defeat, for he found the Gates too strong for him to pass. After*' Saratoga " the British retired into Canada, but in 1780 the old fort was again occupied by the troops under General Haldiman, at which time occurred those bloodless battles ol diplomacy, where Allen plotted treason with such con- summate sagacity, that his country's enemies rested on their arms and •' peace reigned throughout her borders." Then came another enemy, silent, but resistless as the march of time. Rain and sunshine, frosts to rack and tem> pests to beat upon the old walls, until they totter and fall away, disappearing, one by one, and pointing to the time when naught shall remain but the name it bears, and that uncertain in the mists of the past. " TicoNDEROGA " ♦ — the generally accepted extract and boiled down result of over a dozen different Indian names, all, however, having something the same sound — as Tiendi* roga, Cheonderoga — meant to them the coming together ^ or meeting of waters,i instead of the generally accepted version of " Sounding waters." Carillon, the name given it by the French, meaning music, racket, a chime, may have been suggested by the " Sounding waters " near by. The old battery on the bluff, at the steamboat landing, it ♦ C«ldM, i9«». FowaaO, trr*» Crown Point. 23 said to have been the original Carillon. Back on the higher ground are the barrack walls, trenches, two bastions, and the best preserved portion of the ruins — a bomb-proof room, which some people say was the magazine, while other author- ities contend that it was the humble but equally necessary bakery. On the east, by the side of the road, is the old fort well. Leading from the south-east corner of the parade to- ward this, is the covered way, through which Ethan Allen went in the gray of the morning, in 1775. On the west is Mount Defiance. Between it and the fort the outlet of Lake George enters Lake Champlain. Opposite the point at the south-east, the lake is narrowed down by the near approach of Mount Independence, which was also fortified while St. Clair held command. Between the two points ran the chain or floating bridge. The lake here turns toward the'north, thus washing three sides of the promontory. Among the oaks, just west of the tunnel, is the old French lines, reaching over the ridge and nearly across the peninsula. The trenches and embankments are clearly defined, as are also the outlines of several re- doubts, cast up at about the same date. Across the locust- covered flat, just north of the ruins, from a point near the drawbridge, lay Ethan Allen's- route in 1775; and on the plain, near Addison Junction, according to the best author- ities, occurred the encounter between Champlain's party and the Iroquois. Crown Point is n miles north of Ticonderoga. Here, on the shore, are the furnaces of the Crown Point Iron Company, and the ter- minus of a narrow-gauge railway, which extends back 13 miles to iron mines at Hammondville, 1,300 feet above the lake. Thence, by stage, to Schroon Lake. 24 The Adirondacks. Crown Point Ruins are about six miles north of Crown Point landing. The lake is here narrowed down by the land extending from the west on which the ruins stand, its point marked by a stone light-house, Chimney Point approaches from the east side. Beyond the light-house, at the narrowest place in the passage, are the scarcely visible remains of Fort St. Frederick, built by the French in 1731. This point be- came a noted trading post, where the savages came to ex- change peltry for civilized fire-water and other necessaries. Under the protecting guns of the old fort it developed into a village of 1,500 inhabitants, the remains of lines of cellars and flagged walks, extending back toward the west, still showing signs of its old-time prosperity. The ruins of Crown Point proper are seen farther over at the west, as the boat passes through the narrow opening to the broad lake. It was commenced by Amherst in 1759, and completed at an expense of over ten million dollars. The extensive earth-works, and the walls of the barracks, still in a good state of preservation, indicate the strength and extent of the fortification, from which, however, no gun was ever fired at an approaching foe. Dr. Bixby designates the shore of the peninsula west of the ruins as the probable site of Champlain's battle with the Iroquois in 1609, given in the explorer's own words on page 14. Fort Frederick (landing) is just north of the light-house. A board walk extends from the dock back to the ruins. Re- freshment rooms, a public pavilion, etc., have been built here by the Champlain Transportation Company, for accomodation and entertainment of excursion parties that may land here. Port Henry, two miles north-west of Crown Point Ruins is exceedingly picturesque, with a number of elegant private residences, occu- pied by the iron magnates of that section. The Lake Champlain and Moriah R. R. is seven miles ^ng, extending from Port Henry to the ore beds at Alineville, Westport. 25 1,300 feet above. The grade at one point is 256 J^ feet to the mile. The average is 211 feet. It contains three *' Y's," where the nature of the ascent renders a curve impracticable. Mineville is the centre of the mining operations of the region, and is a wonderful revelation to the novice in mining scenes. The Chever Ore Bed is two miles north of Port Henry, near the lake shore. The Y. M. C. A. of Albany has a small camp on Cole's Island about a mile south of the Barber Point Light House — the summer rendezvous of a large number of Association men and boys, who "rough it" in the most approved style under the general supervision of Frank W. Ober, the genial General Secretary, and the particular care of " Dug " Dunning, guide and hunter. Their accommodations consist of an open camp where they sleep at night, plentifully supplied with blankets, with other accessories to make them comfortable in this out-of door life. Three general regulations apply : Implicit obedi ence to leader and rules, attendance at Bible study, quiet at TOP. M. The days are spent in fishing and boating excursions to various parts of the lake. They are a jolly lot, and wel come visitors with right good will. Westport is a pretty little village, on a deep bay, setting into the western shore, fifty miles north of Whitehall. It is the natural gateway into the mountains, via Eliz- abethtown and Keene Valley (see page 149), and possesses attractions of its own that recommend it strongly to the summer visitor. The Pleasant View House, at the depot, affords a con- venient stopping place for parties arriving by night trains. Capacity 30. Rates about $2 per day. The Gibb's House, formerly the Richard's House, is now under the management of J. Nelson Gibbs. It is situated in \tN«>, AM« S\ -^^ rs*-^ ;^^^ 0<^ M Westport. 27 the northern part of the village overlooking the lake,-and af- fords comfortable accommodations at a moderate price. The Westport Inn stands on the brow of an abrupt emi- nence a hundred feet above the lakes, and overlooks a tennis lawn shaded by fine elms, the picturesque steamboat landing, the great sweeping amphitheatre of hillsides leading away to right and left, the circling shore of the bay and the beautiful chain of the Green Mountains across in Vermont. The house is very attractive. It has broad piazzas, is neat and thoroughly well furnished, has pleasant parlors and a fine airy dining-room, with a large open fireplace. The table is spoken of in the highest terms of praise, and the service most efficient. There are bath rooms, a pure water supply and perfect drainage. During the coming season water will be introduced from a wonderful mountain spring 500 feet above the lake. There is a livery stable under the patronage of the house, and the picturesque drives offer great variety with ever-varying change of scene. The situation also offers the usual boating and fishing facilities, with a small steamer suitable for excursions. Bathing places with good bottom and convenient bath houses are there ; a circulating library. Post Oflfice and telegraph of- fice are near by. There are accommodations in the " Inn,' the "Annex" and the three cottages for 150 guests. It con- tinues under the skillful management of Mrs. O. C. Daniell, assisted by Mrs. H. C. Lyon. Rates, $3.00 per day. By the week they vary from $10.00 to $21,00. Steamer Chateaugay, Capt. Baldwin, leaves Westport at 7 A. M. daily, Sundays excepted, and touching at Cedar Beach, Essex, Burlington, Port Kent, Bluff Point, Plaltsburgh, Gor- don's and Adams', reaches North Hero at 12:20; returning, touches as above, and arrives at Westport 6:45. This boat belongs to the C. T. Co., and was launched at Shelburn Harbor November 1, 1887. It is 203 feet long, and 59 feet wide over all. Water line, 195 feet; beam, 30 feet. The hull is of rolled steel plates, made from Chateau- gay ore, with a wrought iron frame, braced in the most sub- stantial manner, and provided with water-tight compartments. 28 The Adirondacks. The engine is a vertical beam, jet condensing engine, 44-inch |! cylinder, 10 foot stroke. The paddle-wheels are of the new *' feathering " pattern, 23 feet in diameter. The boat draws four and a half feet of water, and will make 20 miles an hour. Steamer Vermont, Captain Rushlow, is of the same line, is a graceful vessel, designed specially for pleasure travel. This boat leaves Plattsburgh at 7 a. m., touches at Bluff Point, Port Kent, Burlington, Westport, Port Henry, Fort Frederick and Crown Point, and reaches Fort Ticonderoga about noon, connecting there with trains for the south and for the steamer on Lake George, returning over the same route reaches Plattsburgh about 7 p. m. Steamboat and railroad tickets are interchangeable between Ticonderoga and Platts- burgh. The " Water Lily," a small steamer, runs from Westport to Vergennes daily on arrival of steamer Vermont from the south, returning in the morning to connect with the south- bound boat. The Water Lily is notable among steamboats as having a lady at the wheel, in the person of Mrs. Captain Daniels, who is said to be the first and only regularly licensed lady pilot in the United States. ******* Calamity Point is on the west, about two miles north of Westport. Here the steamer Champlain was wrecked in 1875 while running north on her regular night trip. The im- mediate cause of the disaster has never been explained, as the night was no more than ordinarily dark, but since that time, day or night, when running, the pilot houses of the sis- ter boats invariably contain two competent men. Captain Rushlow of the Vermont was then in command of the Cham- plain, and it was due to his cool self-possession that no panic ensued to lead to loss of life. Split Rock Mountain extends along the west shore ter- minating in a sharp point 8 miles north of Westport. Barn Rock (a corruption probably of Barren Rock) shows the up- turned edges of strata lying at a sharp angle with the surface Split Rock. 29 in a bold point enclosing a deep harbor. " The Palisades," a little way north, are grand perpendicular cliffs. Rock Harbor, a mile further north, shows an " effort," where Gotham's ex- Boss Tweed, tried his hand at digging ore. Grog Harbor — a charming little cove despite its name — is near the northern end of the mountain. SPLIT ROCK FROM THB NORTH. 1 Grand View Mt., Vt.; 2 Split Rock Light ; 3 Split Rock ; 4 Whalon's Bay, Split Rock is at the northern termination of the mountain bearing the same name. In the uncertain records of old In- dian treaties, it is claimed that this rock marked the line be- tween the tribes of the St. Lawrence and those of the Mo- hawk Valley. Otter Creek enters the lake from the east something over five miles north of Westport. This is the longest river in Vermont and is navigable to Vergennes whose spires may be seen some distance inland. Fort Cassin stood at the mouth of Otter Creek, bits of the works are still visible. Within the creek a portion of the American squadron was fitted out in 18 1 4, which under Commodore McDonough defeated the British Commodore Downie, at Plattsburgh, in September of that year. Vergennes is eight miles back from the lake, as Otter Creek runs, although in an air line but little more than half that distance. It is one of the oldest cities in New England, dating its organization back to 1789. It is also the smallest incorporated city in the country. The Stevens House has accommodations for about loo guests. Board 88.00 to $12.00 per week. S. S. Gaines proprietor. Essex is a small village on the west shore, 10 miles north of Westport. The Boquet river empties into the lake four miles 30 The Adirondacks. north of Essex landing. It is navigable for about a mile. It was a rendezvous of Burgoyne's flotilla in the advance on Ti- conderoga, in 1777, and in 18 12 was entered by British gun- boats to work the destruction of the little village of Wills- borough, a mile inland. WiLLSBORouGH PoiNT is the northern extremity of a low peninsula about four miles long by one wide, separating Wills- borough Bay from the main lake. The Willsborough with capacity for 60 guests stands here. J. Henry Otis, proprietor. Rates $3.00 per day; $12.00 to $18.00 per week. Open June to October. Railroad station is Willsborough, five miles distant at the south. Fare by house carriage 75 cents. The American Canoe Association holds its annual meet this year on the north end of Willsborough Point, opening August 6th, and continuing three weeks. It is an Interna- tional organization with a membership of something over a thousand, composed largely of literary and professional men from all parts of North America. The Association is bound by a code of rules that keeps i t free from what may be termed " professionalism." Its official organs are '^ Forest and Stream " and " Sail and Paddle'^ The initiation fee is one dollar, annual dues one dollar. Waher U. Lawson, of Boston, is Commodore, and Ralph F. Brazer, of Lowell, Mass., Secre- tary and Treasurer. The Association is divided into four divisions, Eastern, Northern, Atlantic and Southern. C. V. Winne, of the D. & H. R. R. is Vice-Commodore, and W. Howard Brown, of Al- bany, Purser of the Central Division, in whose jurisdiction the Meet is held this year. The A. C. A. was organized at Lake George in 1880, and has met annually since that time at Lake George and other places. There are a number of lady members of the Association and their camp is always an interesting feature of the Meet. The entire camp is Burlington. 31 under strict police surveillance. Strangers are not allowed on the grounds except under certain restrictions and on regu- lar visitors' day, at which time it is intended that some of the most interesting events of the Meet shall transpire. The Four Brothers are near the middle of the lake, east of Willsborough Point. Here occured the running engagement between Benedict Arnold and Captain Pringle, in 1776, in which the English were victorious. Juniper Island is north- east of the Brothers, with high, almost vertical walls, sur- mounted by a lighthouse. After leaving Essex Landing the boat passes out into the broadening lake, gradually nearing the Vermont side in the ap- proach to Burlington. Back inland are the two highest peaks of the Green Mountains — Mansfield, 4,360 feet above tide and Camel's Hump, the Leo?i Couchant of the French. Shelburn Farm, the summer place of Dr. W. Seward Webb, is on the east shore. North extends Shelburne peninsula terminating in Pottier's Point. Shelburne Harbor is east of Pottier's Point. Here are the shipyards of the Champlain Transportation Company. It is worthy of note that but one year after Robert Fulton's steam- boat was launched on the Hudson River a steamboat was built and launched at Burlington. It could run five miles an hour without heating the shaft. Rock Dundar is a prominent object, as we near Burlington; it is a sharp cone about 20 feet high, believed by Winslow C. Watson, the historian, to be the famous "RockRegio" so frequently mentioned in colonial records. Burlington is a city of nearly 15,000 inhabitants. It is one of the largest lumber marts in the country, standing fourth in the order of business. The firm represents a capital of $4,000,000.00. One hundred and fifty million feet of lum- ber are sold annually from this market. The Champlain Transportation Company has its general ofiice here. The Lake Champlain Yacht Club has an elegant club house a little way north of the steamboat landing. • 52 The Adirondacks. Among public buildings of note are The University of Vermont, the Medical College, Billings Library Building, Vermont Episcopal Institute, St. Joseph's College, Park Gallery of Art, Fletcher Free Library, Mary Fletcher Hos- pital, and The Young Men's Christian Association building. On the high land back of the city, overlooking Winooski Valley, in the Green Mountain Cemetery, lies the body of Vermont's famous son, Ethan Allen. A monument of Barre granite, 50 feet in height, surmounted by a statue of Allen, marks the spot. Hotels. Hotel Burhngton, a new house, capacity 100, rates, $2.00 and $2.50 per day, $10.50 to $15.00 per week, Delaney & Harrington, proprietors. The Van Ness and American Houses, rates, $3.00 to $3.50 per day. L. S. Drew and H. N. Clark, managers. Port Kent is 10 miles from Burlington, the steamer running almost due northwest from the latter point and veer- ing only slightly from its course to pass around Trembleau Point. Below, the town is not very attractive; but above, along the brow of the hill, are several very pleasant, comfortable- looking houses. Among them is the old home of Elkanah Watson, whose ac- Fifures thswodilanc? from GatCKar count of travefs in 1777 contains the best record we have of the towns and villages at that period. The house may be identified by the tall columns along its front. Au Sable Chasm, three miles distant, is reached from Port Kent over the new K., A. C. &L. C. R. R., which crosses over just below Rainbow Falls, to Au Sable Chasm Station, and continues along the west side of the river to Keeseville, for which see page 44. CHAPTER IV. Au Sable Chasm. U SABLE CHASM is the Yosemite in miniature. The Au Sable River, coming out from the mountains of the south, through the valley past Keeseville, breaks, after many a rush and tumble, over the rocks into Au Sable Chasm, in the beauti- ful Rainbow Falls, then hurrying downward through devious ways, creeping under towering cliffs, resting in dark places where the sun never shines, finally emerges from the gloom into the broad willowy way to mingle later, after many twists and turns, with the quiet waters of Lake Champlain. It is a vast fissure in the Earth's surface, its walls, that now stand apart, were apparently united and solid in the past ; pro- jections on the one side are faced by corresponding depressions on the other ; strata, broken off here are continued over there. Low down are found petrified specimens of the first orders of animal life and ripple marks made whea the rock was in its plastic state — the bed of some lake or ocean — and above these, in successive layers, towers nearly a hundred feet of solid rock. Who can say what ages have passed away since the restless sea beat upon this unknown shore and left the marks of its wavelets for us to wonder at ? Thought is lost away back in the eternity of " The Beginning " when darkness was upon the face of the deep. Later came the dawn of Creation, and in its full light the lowest of animal creatures lived their brief day The Grand Flume. Au Sable Chasm. 35 and added their mite to old Ocean's bottom. Long ages rolled away, and floods swept over the uneasy world that reeled and staggered with the pulsations of its heart of fire. The thin shell bubbled up into mountain ridges and broke like crackle glass, then, cooling, left its marks in ragged heights and fear- ful depths. Then came great icebergs, grinding the uplifted points to atoms in their course, polishing, leveling and filling up the openings. Then the water fled away, leaving the seams and cracks filled with the rich alluvium gathered in passing centuries, holding in its bosom the germs of vegetable life that in time covered all with a mantle of green. The yearly rains descended, and floods swept down from the moun- tains above, washing outward the loose deposit that had filled the great crevices, and revealed this wonderland of " The Walled Banks of the Au Sable." Au Sable Chasm had been of local interest for years, but was little known outside until about 1873, when a couple of Philadelphians, to whose attention it had been called, acquired possession, and built stairways, galleries and bridges, which, with the aid of boats near the lower end, enabled visitors to pass through its entire length. In 1879, the wooden galleries were replaced by stone walks with substantial iron railings, bridges were erected above high water mark or made movable, so as to be taken up at the close of the season and put back in the spring, and new boats were placed in the navigable waters below Table Rock, to carry visitors through the otherwise inaccessible portions. An admission fee is charged according to circumstances. Large parties are admitted at reduced rates. Permanent guests of the Lake View House are admitted free, as the hotel and Chasm are both under one management. The Lake View House stands on the high land over- looking the head of the Gorge, Rainbow Falls and the little hamlet of Au Sable Chasm. The village of Keeseville is some- thing over a mile distant. Farther west is seen the sharp out- line of Whiteface Mountain. Towards the east, field and forest unite in one broad, grand slope to the shores of Cham- plain. Au Sable Chasm. 37 The house is four stories in height, with a tower lifted con- siderably higher, and an open platform on the roof, which gives the beholder a view, sublime in its extent and diversity. The main portion was built in 1874, added to in 1877, and again in 1879. The new part (not shown in the cut) being an extension of the first and second stories toward the north, giving a spacious-dining room and desirable sleeping apart- ments. Along this on the east is a broad piazza, giving a lake frontage of nearly two hundred feet. Connected with the principal sleeping-rooms are bath-rooms, closets, and other modern appliances for the comfort of guests. Water for general use and to guard against the accident of fire, is forced to the top of the building from the river below. The house is lighted with gas. An open pavilion on the west is one of the breeziest of lounging places imaginable. Southeast of the house are the billiard and bowHng alleys and stables. A livery is connected with the hotel, and telegraph and telephone wires enter the office. The house is furnished in a most com- plete and substantial manner, and the beds are of the best. The table is supplied with vegetables grown on the hotel farm. Altogether the place can be truthfully spoken of in high terms of praise. William H. Tracy is proprietor of the Lake View House.* Mr. Tracy's faculty of making friends and keeping them has brought him many guests, who contribute to his success by their continued patronage. That he is efficient and popular is proved beyond question. He will be assisted the present sea- son by Mr. Charles Fury, manager for two years past of the Interlaken at Augur Lake. The rates for board are $3 00 per day, $10 50 to $21 00 per week. Lake View House car- riages meet all trains at the Chasm station. Stopover priv- ileges are granted travellers by the D. & H. R. R. to those who may wish to visit the Chasm. Passing from the Lake View House to the main road a few rods north, and descending the hill toward the west, the en- trance to the Chasm is reached. Admission is gained through ♦As this book goes to press news comes that the Lake View House has been to- tally destroyed by fire. Plans of owner and management unknown. MORSESHOE FALLS. Au Sable Chasm. 39 " The Lodge." a picturesque building, octagonal in form pago- da-like, unique and attractive. Within will be found photo- graphs, books and curios pertaining to the place, and the most gracious of wardens who will show you down the steep stairs that lead through the cleft rock to the bottom. Before de- scending, note the queer effect the stained glass in the lodge windows gives to objects seen through them, where the blue makes frosty winter, and the red the most insufferable of sum- mers of the same objects. Rainbow Falls, at the head of the chasm, flings its mass of water from nearly 70 feet above into the gulf below, and from an equal height, when the conditions are right, a stream like a great waterspout is thrown away out over head from the flume of the works above. Horse Shoe Falls is nearly opposite the entrance. Note its suggestive shape from the lookout, before descending the stairs. Pulpit Rock faces us as we approach the Elbow, which is the first turn below the entrance. Split Rock shows on the left at the farthest point visible as you turn around the Elbow. The rock which stands at the left of the opening made by the splitting off of a large fallen mass is called the Elephant's Head, and with the morning sun hghting up the massive front, the name does not seem inappropriate. Stop when you reach the end of the bridge that crosses here. The Devil's Oven is in the wall which shuts off our farther advance on the right of the stream. Why " Oven " is not so clear, for if you climb the rough rocks and enter its 30 feet of depth, you will not find it the superheated place sug- gested, but rather the reverse. The same trophical imagina- tion that conceived of this and some of the other names ap- phed to places here, gave to the narrow passage-way at our feet the name of Hell Gate, and looking, one does not really wonder at the fancy. From Hell Gate rising in a great sweep heavenward, away from the rushing waters, is Jacob's Ladder. Across the bridge we go, around the rocky abutment toward the left, clinging perhaps to the iron railing which prevents our sliding into the water below, beneath overhanging rocks, Au Sable Chasm. 41 over the seething water, across the bridge which spans the Devil's Punch-Bowl — pausing perhaps to glance into the green depths of the Fernery at our left — down across the worn rocks, then zig-zag up the side to a higher level. Here is one of the most remarkable specimens of rock boring in the coun- try, called Jacob's Well, showing where some vagrant stone, caught perhaps in an eddy when the stream ran here, and whirled about continually, ground its way down through the strata of soft rock, until it wore itself out in vain beatings against its prison walls. Here a bridge crosses Mystic Gorge, to the Long Gallery beyond which, descending, we come to Point of Rocks. Note high up the sides of those rocks the segments of a large bowl similar to Jacob's Well, and back- ward the rapids which, seen from this point, in the sunshine at noon are very beautiful. Opposite this point is Hyde's Cave, named after a venturesome individual who, in 187 1, let him- self down by a ropp from the rocks above and was the first to reach its dual entrance. Below the bridge, which leads to Hyde's Cave, on the same side of the stream, is Bixby's Grotto. Returning to the north shore, Smuggler's Pass, directly op- posite the Grotto, is crossed by a bridge. You may follow along the ledge if you like and lose yourself from sight where, back from the river, this passage winds into quite a large chamber. More stairways are found as we proceed, then comes the Post Office. This post office has neither Post Mas- ter nor distinguishing name in the postal department, but nevertheless does a large business, pecuharly its own, as the observant visitor will notice. No charge is made here for drop-letter or cards and many avail themselves of the privilege. Clinging close to the rocks protected by the iron railing we pass along high up at this point, then through the Hanging Garden, and, descending, cross to Table Rock. From the upper point of Table Rock look backward through the Upper Flume. See Column Rocks at the farthest visible point on the left, and, if the sun be right, notice the Altar- cloth hanging over the water at the right. Turning; the 42 Au Sable Chasm. Anvil is before you, partially hidden perhaps, by the rustic canopy which has been built against it to afford shade for such as may care to take advantage of it when, for the two or three brief hours in the middle of the day, the sun pours its beams down into this open space. Back of the Anvil, Cathe- dral Rocks rise a hundred feet above the level floor, suggest- ing in their broken lines, some vast cathedral's ruined towers and aisles. ''The Sentinel" stands guard at the outer corner of Cathedral Rocks. Through a cleft in the lower edge of Table Rock we descend and enter the large batteaux found waiting here for the passage through the Grand Flume and beyond. Do not fear, for these boats are strong and serviceable to withstand the hard knocks they get at times, and in charge of stalwart boatmen who will guide us safely through the exciting passage below. The Grand Flume reaches from Table Rock for some distance down. Here the water runs straight away, shut in by walls that rise perpendicularly up for more than a hundred feet, while the dip of the rock-strata on either side gives one the queer sensation of running down quite a steep hill. Here, at the narrowest place, the cliffs are scarcely ten feet apart and the sky above seems but a narrow ribbon of blue. The water seems to round up in the middle and actually to run on edge. No plummet has ever been found to sound ijts depths. Over this spot the main road crossed years ago and the place is spoken of now by the older inhabitants as " High Bridge." A story is told to the effect that when after a time the bridge was condemned and the plank taken off leaving only the naked log stringers stretched across, a horseman went over one dark and stormy night, unconscious of his danger at the time, although remembering afterward that as he ap- proached in the intense darkness, his horse had hesitated and when urged, moved forward in fear and trembling. The Lower Gate-Way ends the Long Flume and ushers us into the Pool. The Sentry Box is at the right as we emerge into the open space. On the left there is a larger creavasse in which, leaning, stands the Broken Needle. At the Pool, the river turns sharply to the left and leads downward over danc- THE SENTINEL. 44 The Adirondacks. ing rapids where we go until, rounding to the right, we enter quiet water once more, and finally pass out into the basin where, at the landing, carriages are taken to convey us back to the hotel. It is well to have passed through Au Sable Chasm once in a life time. Such scenes make man realize the puny crea- ture that he is, for — in the somewhat stalwart language of Will Carleton : *' To appreciate Heaven well It is good for man to have some fifteen minutes of Hell." ******* Photographs of the Chasm may be procured at the Lake View House, where large books, showing the series, are on exhibition. Stages leave the Lake View House for Lake Placid every morning, Sundays excepted, at 7 -.30. Fare, $4. The Chasm House is on the west side of the river, toward Keesville. It is a substantial-looking stone building, and affords accommodations for 25 guests. M. Whealon, pro- prietor. Rates, $2 per day, $10 to $14 per week. This house is open the year round. Keeseville is on the Au Sable River, four miles from Port Kent, and nearly two from Au Sable Chasm. It is one of the thriftiest and most enterprising little villages in the state. It contains a number of fine private residences and public edi- fices, built of the beautiful, creamy sandstone which underHes this section of the country. The water-power is utilized in the twine, wire, and iron manufactories, and by the Au Sable Horse- Nail Company, here, and at the Nail-Rod Works, on the road to Au Sable Chasm. It has numerous churches, a graded school, and a wide-awake weekly — the Essex County Republi- can — which keeps the pubUc in a healthy state of agitation. H. M. Mould, druggist and bookseller, supplies many things required in the woods — and the sportsman will do well to consult his needs before going into the farther country. Mr. Mould's assortment of things, ornamental and useful, is large and well chosen. Valcour Island. 45 The Interlaken is at Augur Lake, a charming bit of wa- ter two and a half miles south of Keeseville. It is under the management of M. C. Fuller. The house is three stories high, with extensive verandas, and, as a concession to those who may fear fires, has inside and outside stairways for the upper floors. Accommodations are offered for about 100 guests. The lake affords fine boating and fishing. Beyond the lake rise the rocky walls of Poke o' Moonshine and Bald- face mountains. At the south is the wild Poke o' Moonshine Pass, and near by is Augur Chasm, one of the many wonder- ful freaks of this section, in character like that of Au Sable Chasm. Connected with the house is an extensive farm, from which the table is supplied. In the immediate vicinity of the house are well-kept croquet and tennis grounds, and extensive pine groves are near by. A well-appointed stable affords the means of riding or driving at will. Special conveyance will meet guests at Keeseville on the arrival of trains if notice is sent in advance. Fare, 50 cents. Capacity 100. Rates are from $10 to $12 per week; $3 per day. Open June to No- vember. For particulars, address the manager, at Keeseville. Returning to the steamer, we see, three miles north of the landing at Port Kent, the sandy mouth of the Au -Sable River. '' Au Sable" means " a river of sand." A wooded depression in the ground above shows the course of the river. Across from this is the widest uninterrupted portion of the lake, being here nearly eleven miles wide. Measuring into Mallett's Bay, the distance is nearly thirteen miles. Valcour Island is about six miles north of Port Kent, the steamer passing between it and the main land on the west. Here, Oct. 11, 1776, occurred the first naval engagement of the Revolution, between the British, commanded by Captain Thomas Pringle, and the Americans under Benedict Arnold. The British plan was to send a fleet from the north to capture Ticonderoga and clear the way for a junction with the army of 46 The Adtrondacks. the south, that should come by way of the Hudson. Early in the spring they began the construction] of ships at St. Johns, and the last of September the fleet, consisting of a three-masted vessel carrying eighteen guns, and two schooners with thirteen guns each, with smaller vessels — twenty-nine vessels in all, mounting eighty-nine guns, manned by picked seamen and practiced gunners — moved south to tlie attack. When it be- came known that preparations of this nature were in progress at St. John, Arnold was commissioned to construct vessels to oppose them, and massing all possible help and material at Skenesborough (now Whitehall), set about the work with tre- mendous energy, and in August put afloat a number of flat- bottomed sailing craft and row galleys, carrying altogether 84 guns and 152 swivel-guns. The largest of these vessels was the ''Royal Savage," a two-masted schooner carrying fourteen guns. With this force Arnold sailed north, going as far as Windmill Point, then returning, took up a position in the nar- row channel between Valcour Island and the main land. The British fleet, running before the strong north wind, passed on the outside of the island and some distance beyond, before discovering the position of the Americans. So severe was the wind that the larger vessels could not be brought back to attack and only some of the smaller ones with the schooner Carleton finally succeeded in getting in position. The engagement continued most of the afternoon during which the "Royal Savage " was disabled, and drifting on the rocks was abandoned. During the night it was set on fire by the British and sunk. Portions of the hull can yet be seen when the water is still, resting on the bottom where it then went down. The attacking vessels were recalled and anchored in line at the south to cut off the retreat of the Americans. During the night however, the Americans slipped through the British line and in the morning were discovered making in- dustrious tracks toward the south and safety. The British pursuing, over-hauled Arnold near the Four Brothers and a running fight ensued which demonstrated the superiority of Battle of Valcour. 47 the British vessels and gunners. The remnant of the Ameri- can boats, ahiiost disabled, was grounded in a bay on the Vermont shore near Panton and set on fire, and Arnold and his men made their way through the woods to Crown Point. In these engagements, although defeated, Arnold acquitted Jiimself in such a manner as to win the admiration of his enemies and the approval of his superior officers. Benedict Arnold was born in Norwich, Conn., Jan. 3d, 1 741, and died in London, June 14, 1801. As a youth, turbulent; as a soldier, ambitious, bold to rashness and jealous of his fellow officers; dishonest. The transition from discontented rebel to infamous traitor was easy. He was a brilliant commander? his fall was like that of Lucifer. Valcour Island was the spot selected for " A communal home, based on the principles of social science," where the "Dawn Valcour Community " dawned on the astonished world of 1874, grew into a mighty power (on paper), with " Col." John Wilcox to furnish the intellectual, and " Uncle " Owen Shipman the temporal home ; where congenial spirits were invited to commingle in promiscuity, but all too soon were on the ragged edge of individuality, while the musical auctioneer warbled over the odds and ends that remained to satisfy outside demands. In the words of one of its leading members, the thing "busted;" and the " Dawn" was merged into twilight, to furnish another lesson on the practicability of free love. Hotel Champlain, the superb, is seen on the bold head- land that puts out from the west shore just north or Valcour Island. It does not come upon you suddenly, as a revelation. You have seen it over the lake for miles back on your course,, before the steamer had touched at Burlington, perhaps, or from the car window as the reeling train swung around Trembleau Mountain nearly temmiles away, and at intervals ever since as the road wound in and out along the shore. Now, as you approach, its magnificient proportions come out in grand re- lief against the sky. "Commanding" is not misapplied here. The hotel stands 48 oji a height that breaks away abrtiptly in all directions for a space, then in gentler slope reaches the level of the lower shores north and south, the water on the east, and the valley toward the west wliere the trains of the D. & H. flash like gleaming shuttle tkrough the varj-tintecl web of cultivated HOTKT. Ch.\M1'I,.\(\. ^cj fields and cross-line roiintry roads. l'<^ng colonades; Ijroad piazzas conforming to the swelling contour of facing, east, south and west ; breezy porticos, and balconies hung along its sides or perched high upon tower and sharply sloping roof, give grace and lightness to the structure that rises above the tops of the trees crowning the rugged bluff. Distance gives to it the lightness of a castle built of straws, the closer view reveals it solid and substantial as the most realistic could wish. At a moderate elevation it commands in an unbroken circuit a panorama that for picturesque variety and beauty is equaled perhaps nowhere in the country. Having no near mountain heights to dwarf its own strong setting, it looks out from its own native wilderness over land and water diversified and changeful. It is restful, rather than overpowering with great heights and dismal depths. Right and left runs the valley with its checker-board of field and woodland ; its net- work ofroads; its quaint farm buildings gathered here and there in little knots that form hamlets and prosperous villages^ and beyond, hills rising into the ranges of the Adirondacks that stretch across, pointed at intervals with the grander mountain peaks. Towards the east a broad swath has been cut out through the green trees down to the water's edge, where busy life attends as the steamers come and go. Here gleam the beach of " The Singing Sands" circling in a broad belt toward the south, between the restless water and the thick growing cedars. Toward the north are perpendicular cliffs that attain quite a height — the bluffs which undoubtedly gave to the point its name. They are cleft asunder at one place and made memorable by the tradition of the White Squaw and the Bloody Hand that left its marks on the walls and later as the place where smugglers successfully landed their stores free from suspicion because of its seeming inaccessibility to those who were not in the secret. Valcour Island lies like a garden below, bordered with its varying belt of shrubbery. Beyond stretches the broad lake, ! dotted here and there with islands, to the shores of Vermont 50 The Adirondacks. the Green Mountains beyond rising into the heights of Camel's Hump and Mount Mansfield. North and east are Grand Isle and the Great Back Bay; at the north Cumberland Head, the sweeping circle of Plattsburgh Bay, where occurred that splendid naval battle of 1814, the last, as the Battle of Val- cour was the first, with the mother country — and nearer, the little island where sleep the dead of that eventful day. Within the hotel is found everything that appertains to a — oh, much, and ill-used term — first-class house. Every modern appHance tending to the comfort of guests will be found here, D. & H. RAILROAD STATION. and that its management will be all which time and experi- ence has shown to be the most acceptable to the travelled public, may be confidently expected, for that prince of hotel- keepers, E. N. Wilson, of the Hotel Cordova, St. Augustine, Fla., is at its head. Excursions may be made by steamboat from this point south to Ticonderoga or north among the islands and on to the fishing grounds of the Lake. A fleet of boats, ranging from the light Whitehall skiff to the dainty little steam yacht, are here for charter. Drives are many and varied, and equip- pages here to suit all occasions. The distance from New York is 308 miles; fare, $8.05. To Montreal, 77 miles; fare Plattsburgh. 51 $2.71. Quick and convenient train service will be main- tained throughout the season north and south. Trains on the Chateaugay Railroad leave in the morning, arriving at Saranac Lake and the various hotels reached by the Chateaugay Rail- road in time for dinner. Crar Island, some distance north of Valcour, is the burial place of the common sailors and marines who fell in the battle of Plattsburgh. North of this, and projecting well out across the lake, is Cumberland Head, from which the shore recedes toward the north and west, then comes back in a wide sweep, embracing the waters of Cumberland Bay. The Battle of Plattsburgh took place here in 18 14. Stripped of detail, the account of this decisive battle is as fol- lows : On a beautiful Sabbath morning, September nth, 1814, the American land forces under General McComb, and the American fleet under Commodore Macdonough, were simul- taneously attacked by the British land and water forces, under General Sir George Provost and Commodore Downie. The engagement resulted in a complete victory for the former, only a few small boats of the enemy effecting a successful retreat At the commencement of the naval engagement, the British* land forces, consisting of 14,000 infantry, advanced against the Americans, 3,000 strong, entrenched at points along the south bank of the river, but were repulsed with a loss of 2,500 in killed, wounded and missing. They also lost immense stores, which were abandoned in their retreat — which served them right for breaking the Sabbath. The ruins of the old forts are to be seen on the south outskirts of the village. The largest — Fort Moreau — is in the centre, Fort Brown, on the bank of the river, and Fort Scott near the lake. This is a regular army post now. The barracks, about a mile south of the village, near the lake shore, built in 1838, are occupied by a company of soldiers belonging to the regular army. Plattsburgh is on the west shore of this bay, a thriving village of 8,000 inhabitants. It is of considerable commercial importance, being on the direct line between New York and Montreal, 311 miles from the former and 74 from the latter. It is the northern lerminus of the Au Sable (Branch) Rail- 52 The Adirondacks. road, and from it the Chateaugay Railroad penetrates the mountains toward the west. Plattsburgh is thoroughly cosm.o- politan, with an opinion to offer on every question of the day, exerting no mean influence through its wide-awake news- papers, the, Daily Telegram, and the Sentinel 2^Vi^ Republicaji — the latter instituted in 1811, and, notwithstand its age, one of the most reliable and ably conducted democratic weeklies in the state. The first settler in this region was Count Charles de Freden- burgh, a captain in the English army. The warrant conveying the land to him bore date June 11, 1769. The property reverting to the state after the Revolution, was granted, in 1784, to Zephaniah Piatt and others, and in- corporated into the town of Plattsburgh, April 4, 1785. A company was then organized which, in June of the same year, erected a mill at Fredenburgh Falls. The estimate of ex- pense contained, among other items, the following : " For bread, $65 ; for rum $80." They used a great deal of bread in those days. In the year 1800 Plattsburgh was the county seat, its terri- tory extending from Lake George on the south to Canada and the St. Lawrence River on the north and west. The village then possessed a population of less than 300, and with- in the county limits were owned at this time 58 slaves. The Fouquet House is at the depot, and affords a con. venient stopping place for -narties arriving late or desiring to take an early train out. The Witherill House is near the post-office. It is elegant in its appointments, its pictures and decorations dis" playing a high degree of artistic taste. The Cumberland stands at the corner of Trinity Square. It is one of the oldest hotels, and has a large patronage. G. S. Corbin, an ex-railroad man, liberal and popular with the traveling public, is the proprietor. A free 'bus runs to and from all boats and trains, and ample time is given parties arriving on the sleeper from the south to get breakfast and a view of the surrounding country, if so inclined, before starting Pl.ATTSBURGH. 53 up the Chateaugay Railroad for tlie interior. Rates, $2 per day ; $ i o to $ 1 2 per week. There is also an excellent restaurant in the depot, under railroad management. Here a good lunch can be had at a moderate price, or a comfortable meal during the twenty minutes usually given for that purpose between the arrival and departure of trains. In a private letter to the author, that enthusiastic sports- man, Dr. George F. Bixby, editor of the Plattsburgh Republican says : *' In the universal rush for the woods and waters of the Adirondacks, Lake Champlain has been shamefully over- looked ; here are islands which now appear in all their original beauty as when Champlain first saw them, the abode of eagles, so secluded are they, and here is better fishing, all the year round, than any other body of water in Northern New York can boast of; big hungry fish, voracious pike, huge black bass, as well as the nuiscallonge — that nearly extinct fish — the noblest and gamiest that swims, ready for the fisherman at all seasons. In their season, water fowl abound — enormous black ducks and wild geese, with smaller game in abundance. Lake Champlain is also, of late, attract- ing the attention of canoeists, yachtsmen (both steam and sail) and camping parties, on account of facility of access from the Hudson and St. Lawrence for all kinds of craft; hospitality of inhabitants ; pure air ; pure water ; delightful scenery, eligible camping grounds and abundant bases of sup- plies, all offering irresistible attraction to those unable to en- dure the fatigue incident to a lodge in the vast wilderness, or that other class who are ' constitutionally tired,' and to whom distance lends enchantment to the view of Adirondack peaks. To such I offer a word of advice — halt near the north end of the lake, in some of the comfortable homes, whose doors will be thrown open for a moderate consideration, or encamp be- neath the friendly shade of some island grove, where the punkies cease from troubling and the weary are at rest." 54 The Adirondacks. Rouse's Point, according to the United States Coast Survey, is 107 miles north of "Whitehall. It is the most important port of entry on the frontier. Five railroads centre here, viz.f The D. & H., leading to New York, the O. & L. C, to Ogdensburg and the Thousand Islands, the Grand Trunk to Montreal, the Portland & Ogdensburg to the White Mountains, and the Central Vermont to Boston and the south- east. Hotel Windsor is on the lake shore a short distance south of the little village, far enough to be free from its bustle and removed entirely from the annoying sounds of traffic and con- fusion at the busy station. It commands a widely extended view of the lake, its islands, and the distant mountains of Ver- mont, whose swelling sides and rounded peaks change contin- ually under the passing shadows hke the shifting forms of the kaleidoscope. Along shore and over among the islands are famous fishing grounds where the skillful angler — and some- times those not so highly skilled — find very satisfactory sport with the voracious pike, the gamey bass, and the dainty yellow perch. A photograph is shown by the proprietor of the hotel, where a string of about three dozen pickerel, pike, bass, and Muscallonge with a certified weight of 130-odd pounds, show *^he result of a single day's sport. A lithographic copy of the photograph has a " fishy " look, but the photograph is proof positive, for " the instrument never lies." The house is nearly new ; fresh and inviting in appearance, the furnishing is good, the beds of the best, while the table is exceptionally nice. The proprietor is Charles F. Beck, of the well-known Florida House at St. Augustine, Florida. Steam yachts for excursions, sail-boat and skifi" for fisherman and idler; riding, driving, and the regulation lawn sports are available here, so that none need lack for amusements. A free carriage runs to all trains. New York morning pa- pers arrive early in the evening. Telegraph in the hotel office. Price for board, $2.50 to $3 per day; $12 to $15 per week. Rouses ToIxNT. 55 The Coquette is a screw steamer with headquarters liere. It is a steel hull, 114 feet long and 22 feet beam, with a cabin on the main deck, a platform with awning above, buffet and other conveniences. Captain Rockwell (Pilot Rockwell of our narrative 73) is the commander. The Coquette leaves the Windsor at about 7:30 in the morning, touching at the island landings, at Plattsburgh and Port Kent, and arrives at Burlington about noon. Returning, reaches Rouses Point about 6, in time for supper and to connect with trains for the north and west. Fort Montgomery, a little way north of the long bridge, is an interesting ruin belonging to the United States. About a mile north of this a belt of woodland marks the boundary line between the United States and^Canada. 7|p ■3K' ^ T^ SJ€ ^fi ^ The O. & L. C. railroad runs west from Rouses Point to Ogdensburgh from which place the Thousand Islands can be reached by boat or rail. For a portion of the way this road runs through wild land and from it several important gate- ways enter the Adirondacks. Chateaugay is 45 miles west of Rouses Point, a somewhat thriving country village of about 700 popula- tion with two hotels, stores, etc. Chateaugay Chasm, ij miles north of the station, rivals Au Sable Chasm in many respects, and de- serves to take rank among the wonders of the Adirondack region. It is about a half mile CHMEAUGAY 1 '^ Lake Ha Ralphs 16 ' 1 in extent, walled in by perpendicular cliffs, through which the river runs, descending in its first leap a distance of 50 feet; thence by numerous broken steps, throughout its entire length. It is rendered accessible to the public by means of stairways, galleries, etc. The Chasm House stands^ at the entrance. It is much resorted to by local picnic parties and by wonder-seekers from a distance. Chateaugay Lake (Lower) outlet is 8 miles south of the station. Stage daily. The lake is about 2^ miles long and is connected with the Upper Lake by a navigable stream about 56 The Adirondacks. the same length. A steamer runs at intervals through the two lakes, and a road along the east shore affords means of transit. The hotels of the Upper Lake are " Merrill's," "Relph's" and " Indian Point House". See page 59. Malone, the county seat of Franklin, is 57 miles from Rouses Point and 61 from Ogdensburgh. It is a flourishing village, and one of the im- portant towns of the state. " Hotel Flana- gan" is the leading house. Rates, $2.00 to $3.00 per day. W. R. & S. J. Flanagan, Proprietors. Lake Titus, 8 miles south, may be reached by special conveyance. This pretty sheet is about 2 miles long, and a quarter that in width. Limited accommodations may be found at the out- let. The Mountain View House is at the State Dam^ on the Salmon River, 13 miles from Malone. Accommodations are here for about 30 guests, R. G. Low, proprietor. Post-ofhce, Malone, N. Y. Rates, $10 to 15 per week, $2.50 per day. Indian Lake is one-third of a mile north, and outlets into the river above the State Dam. From it a trail leads north to the road running east to Ragged Lake (4J miles long, including the "Figure Eight"). The two are connected by a short stream and one-third mile carry. The name of each is de- scriptive enough. Ingraham Pond is about i|- miles west of the head of Ragged Lake. Across from the shore opposite the Ragged Lake House, a trail leads east i mile to Mountain Pond ; thence northeast 4 mifes to the outlet of Chateaugay Lake. Mecham Lake House is 25 miles from Malone, and T2 miles from Paul Smith's Station. Will accommodate 75. Rates, $10 to $17.50 per week; $2 to $3 per day. A. R. Fuller, proprietor. Meacham Lake is about 2^ miles long. Its outlet is the east branch of the St. Regis River. The Northern Adirondack Railroad extends from Moira, 70 miles west of Rouses Point, south to Tupper Lake Station, a distance of 56 miles. The Blue Mountain House (P. O. Santa Clara), near Blue Mountain of the North, is four miles southwest of Spring Cove (daily stage 75 cents), will ac- Northern Adirondack R. R. 57 lUPPlKLfi'^t K0U1» commodate 50. Board $1.50 per day; $6 to $9 per week. H. Phelps, proprietor. Stages are taken at Paul Smith Station for St. Regis Lake (see page 60); at Saranac Inn Station for Saranac Inn, 8 miles distant (see page 106) ; at Childwood Station for Childwood Park House, 7 miles (see page 108), and at TupperLake Station for Wavvbeek Lodge, 8 miles (see page 105.) Steamboat runs from Tupper Lake Station to the hotels on Tupper Lake (page 109). During the summer, a through train service is maintained from New York via the N. Y. C. and R. W. & O. Railroads. ***** ^ * The Chateaugay Railroad extends from Plattsburgh to Saranac Lake, a distance of 73 miles. The first section was built by the State to reach CHnton Prison, at Dannemora, 17 miles from Plattsburgh. In 1880, it was extended to Lyon Mountain, 17 miles further; but the influx of Adirondack tourists was increasing, and the road, that climbed an altitude of 2,000 feet to Lyon Mountain, must go farther into the wilderness. So it was extended to Loon Lake; In 1888, 19 miles more were added, bringing it to Saranac Lake, distributing its passengers by various stage routes that branch from it to a score or more of summer hotels. By it tourists reach Chazy, Chateaugay, Loon, Rainbow, St. Regis, and Upper and Lower Saranac Lakes, Ray Brook, Lake Placid and Mirror Lake, reaching even into Cascade Lakes and Adirondack Lodge. A Wagner sleeping car leaves Grand Central Station, New York, daily the year round, for Platts- burgh, where passengers are given time for breakfast before leawng for the interior. During the pleasure season, passen- gers can leave Grand Central Station 7:30 p. m., connecting v.'ith trains leaving Plattsburgh 7:30 a. m., and reach the vari- The Adirondacks. ous resorts in time for dinner. Passengers can leave New York at 6 p. M. by Hudson River night boats and by the Adirondack special from Albany or Troy, reach Platts- burgh at 12:20 and Saranac Lake 4:30 p. M. the following day. This enables passengers to take the stage ride from the rail- road to the various hotels in the cool of the day. Drawing- room cars are run on all trains. Sleeping and drawing-room car accommodations can be secured in advance at any of the stations. A Sunday train each way will run during July and August. Leaving Plattsburgh, the road runs south for a short dis tance, out past the U. S. Barracks ; then swings around to- ward the west, and crossing the Saranac River 10 miles froir Plattsburgh, climbs diagonally up out of the valley. Dannemora is 17 miles from, and 1,300 feet above, Platts- burgh. Clinton Prison is situated here, and affords a quiet home for a number of people of leisure, who pass their time in meditation, making clothing, and other congenial pursuits. From Dannemora, the road swings westerly, around the south side of Johnson Mountain, and north, near the west shore of Chazy Lake ; then, west and southerly to the mines ; running 17 miles to reach a point nine miles distant in a straight line. Chazy Lake is nearly four miles long and a mile wide. Chazy Lake House has an advertised capacity for 50 to 60 guests. Rates $2.50 per day ; $12.00 to $i6.oo per week. Open, May to October 15. This house stands near the north end of the lake, and may be reached by boat from Chazy Sta- tion. Fare 50 cents. ClIATEAUGAY LaKE. 59 Lyon Mountain is the centre of extensive mining opera- tions of the Chateaugay Ore and Iron Gompany, and exists at the pleasure of that corporation. In 1878 it contained only a few scattered houses ; it now has a hotel, stores, and churches, with about 2,500 inhabitants, and is in a thriving condition. It is peculiarly a mining town in appearance ; lacking the usual accompaniment of gambler and rumseller, for people of that ilk are not tolerated here. The attention of all good people, who believe evil should be licensed, because prohibi- bition can never prohibit, is respectfully called to this spot. The houses are mostly of logs and of uniform size. A day can be spent here profitably inspecting the mines and miners at work, the crushers, separators, etc. Upper Chateaugay Lake is about four miles in length and one broad. It empties at the north, through a winding stream, into the Lower Lake, which is somewhat smaller than the upper. It is picturesque with its surrounding mountains and rug- ged shores. It is reached by stage from Lyon Mountain, 4 miles, and from Chateaugay Station on the O. & L. C. R. R. by a 6 mile stage ride and by con- necting boat through the lower lake and narrows. It has a number of summer cottage camps on its shore. A small steamboat runs through the lower and upper lakes and landing at all camps and hotels. Fare 50 cents. Ralph's, on the east shore 3 J miles from Lyon Mountain (stage fare 50 cents), has capacity for about 100 guests. Open from June 15th to October. Rates, $3.00 per day; $14.00 to $17.50 per week. J. W. Hutton, Proprietor. Here will be found tennis, billiards and bowling, for lovers of such amuse- ments, boats, guides and camp supplies for the sportsman, and fishermen. The house is specially attractive because of its air of neatness that extends from office to kitchen: thq 6o The Adirondacks. beds are of the best and the table equaled by few of the most famous. There is a telegraph office in the hotel and two mails daily. The New York morning papers arrive early the day after publication. The proprietor is genial and obliging and, in short, it is one of the places where you realize that there is Consideration for you not limited by the length of your purse or influence — one of the places where with a degree of com- fort not often met with you are surrounded by a primitive en- vironment that goes to make the ideal summer's outing. Dur- ing the season Mr. Hutton may be found here — a genial boni- face always at his post — when winter comes he is off with the birds to florida, where he welcomes his cold-blooded patrons from the north in a like cheery and acceptable manner. The Merrill House is near the outlet, with accommoda- tions for about fifty. Rates $10.00 to $14.00 per week, with a discount for small children. Post-office (" Merrills," N. Y.) and telegraph office in the house. Oliver Young, proprietor. The house stands on rising ground about 60 feet back from the water's edge. It is one of these long rambling cozy sort of structures that gives you a sense of homelike welcome, never felt in presence of a triumph in classical architecture. The view from the house is beautiful, showing the entire stretch of the lake with the surrounding mountains. Merrill's has been for years a noted resort among old hunters and fisher- men. The smaller game birds and water fowl are here in their season, squirrels and foxes abound, and deer and bear are not uncommon additions to the list of the killed. It gives also by its position near the outlet, a choice of lake or river fishing according to day or season. It furnishes outfits and supplies for hunter and fishermen. It maintains special baited buoys in the lake at the service of guests. For home amuse- ments are billiard and pool tables, a tennis court and base-ball ground. For riding or driving, horses and carriages can be had. For fishing or rowing, boaits, guides and outfits to suit. Stages meet all trains at Lyon Mountain, about four miles dis- tant. Fare 50 cents. Chateaugay Lake. 6i The Indian Point House is on the west side of tlie lake near the south end; capacity about 40 guests. Rates, $1.50 per day, $8 to $10 per week. Post-office address, " Merrill's, N. Y." R. M. Shutts, proprietor. The accommodations are in a group of buildings that have grown to meet the increasing demand of visitors, and the equipment consists of some of the best beds made, and furniture comfortable enough to fill all reasonable desires. It is strictly a temperance house, no liquor being sold on the premises. Steamboats run regularly to connect with the stage at Ralph's and through to the Lower Lake to connect with stage for the O. & L. C. Railroad. Fare to railroad, $1. Mr. Shutts is a veteran hunter and fish- erman, and his house is admirably located for lovers of wild- woods sports. Some of the best fishing grounds of the lake are close by the house. At the back is a dense forest that reaches out into the wild section, through which trails run to smaller sheets of water that are little known exgept to the local hunter and fisherman. All requisites for sport are supplied when wanted. The railroad swings around the west side of Lyon Moun- tain affording a beautiful and extended view of Chateaugay Lake at one point where the woods have been cut away for that purpose. Then come forge and coal-kilns, and beyond, winding west and south, the road penetrates a wild and inter- esting section, hJretofore almost an unknown wilderness, until Loon Lake is reached. Loon Lake extends south from the station, and is about two and a half miles long, with high banks and irregular shores. The Loon Lake House stands on the high ridge which, like the rim of some wide-mouthed volcano, holds the lake within its circHng walls at its south end, while beyond, the land drops rapidly down into the deep valley of the Saranac. The house is roomy, well furnished, and, together with the cot- tages, has capacity for about 300 guests. Price for board, $3.50 to $5 per day, $17 to $25 per week. Ferd. W. Chase, proprietor. Post office. Loon Lake. Stages meet all trains at Loon Lake Station; fare 50 cents. 62-A The Adirondacks. Skirting the western shore of the Lake the train swings around the east side of Round Pond, and winding in and out between other small ponds and among low sand dunes that are scantily covered with tufted grass, reaches Rainbow Station, 6 1 miles from Plattsburgh. The Rainbow House is three miles west of Rainbow Sta- tion. Fifty guests can be accommodated here. Board $2.50 per day; $10.00 to $15.00 per week. J. M. Wardner, pro- prietor. Post office, Rainbow, N. Y. This house has more than the usual number of attractions for the hunter or fisherman, as might be expected, where the proprietor himself is an ardent lover of sport, and combines with a hearty good-fellowship a knowledge of the habits and haunts of wild game possessed by few. Mr. Wardner is cordially seconded in all his enterprises by his efficient help- meet, who counts among her accomplishments that of a taxi- dermist and gives practical evidence of her work by filling every corner of the house with native specimens of the art. The house is finished in a most substantial manner with native woods, and arranged to be warmed comfortably throughout in case of a sudden lowering of the temperature, such as may be expected here by the early fishermen or the hunter who tarries for late shooting. This is noted fishing ground and claims the proud distinction of yielding the largest lake trout on record, one having a weight of 52 pounds. Numerous small ponds in this vicinity yield excellent fishing while Rain- bow Lake, and Wardner Pond (which comes close up to the house) with adjacent waters have been stocked with 800,000 trout fry the past five years, afi"ording rare sport and astonish- ing results, sometimes to even the unpracticed fisherman. Telegraph office and post office are in the house. Carriages run to all trains at Rainbow Station, fare 75 cents. Recent improvements have been made in the surroundings that will be appreciated by visitors. The large farm connected with the house insures a supply of farm products, fresh and healthful. The Adirondacks. 62-B Bloomingdale (station) is 66 miles from Plattsburgh. Here stages are taken for Bloomingdale and Paul Smith's. The Crystal Spring House, just outside the hamlet of Bloomingdale, is one and a half miles east of the station. Stage fare, 25 cents. It is a pleasant and attractive place, with capacity for 30 guests. M. L Baldwin, proprietor. Rates, $2.50 per day; $10.00 to $15,00 ^pr week, with a liberal re- duction to families. The notable spring that suggested the name for the house is here, with water as pure as can be found in the Adirondacks. This place also affords good winter ac- commodations, and a number of guests spent last winter here. The level roads about the town afford pleasant drives, and good quarters are offered for those who may bring their own horses. Mr. Baldwin is manifestly filled with a desire to make and keep friends, and his house is eminently satisfactory. St. Regis Lake House, familiarly known as Paul Smith's, is seven miles west of Bloomingdale Station. Stage fare, $1. Paul Smith came here in 1861, and built a small house among the pines, on Lower St. Regis Lake, for the accommodation of sportsmen. It had a rapid growth in business, and soon reached remarkable proportions. It now has a stated capacity for 500 guests. Rates, $4.00 per day; $21.00 to $30.00 per week. A. A. Smith, proprietor. Post-office, " Paul Smith's." This point is reached also from Paul Smith's Station on the Northern Adirondack railroad, over which during the season of pleasure travel cars are run from Grand Central Station, New York, without change. For descriptive and excuision book of the section covered by this route, address A. C. Allison, G. P. A., Moira, N. Y. Lower St. Re;gis Lake is about two miles long by one broad, and discharges west through the middle branch of the St. Regis River. It is about 1,600 feet above tide. The sur- rounding country is tame compared with the mountain dis- tricts, the only elevation of any considerable importance being St. Regis Mountain. Saranac Lake (village) is 73 miles from Plattsburgh. Fare from New York, by rail, $11.75. For matter relating to this section see page 97. 52-0 Peasleville. Peasleville lies among the hills about ten miles due west from Hotel Champlain on the little river that empties into the lake at the south of Bluff Point. It is a place comparatively unknown to the summer tourist — outside the great pubHc thoroughfares where the pleasure-seeker goes up and down. It is reached best over the Au Sable branch of the " D. & H." railroad from Plattsburgh to Peru, thence by carriage six miles west. It lies between two parallel mountain spurs that pro- ject eastward from the great Adirondack system, enclosing the Salmon River Valley. The elevation is sufficient to give it a pure and bracing atmosphere, and the views from its near heights are far-reaching and restful. On the one hand, the valley stretches away toward old Whiteface till it is lost in the higher land of the Adirondack plateau; on the other, it in- cludes the most beautiful portion of the Champlain Valley, the broad lake and the Green Mountains beyond. At fre- quent intervals the river is fed by little streams from living springs on the mountain sides, with water as pure, sweet and wholesome as the earth affords. Brook trout fishing — good before and seldom indulged in here except by the local angler with the crudest of tackle — has recently been greatly improved by stocking the principal streams, and affords very satisfactory sport to the fisherman, experienced or otherwise. Partridges are abundant on the mountains, and, with squirrels, aftbrd fit targets for the fowling piece which is the only firearm that one needs to take to this section. For amusements, Davis Pond, a mile long by a fourth that in width, gives opportunity for boating while the many picturesque roads that branch out as the valley widens at the east and west ends, afford unlimited extent and variety that cannot fail in some instance, at least, to prove delightful. Accommodations can be found among the farm houses in the valley (or on the mountain sides, if one is inclined to seek the greater elevations) where wholesome country fare, with an abundance of fresh farm and dairy pro- ducts can be had and willing and unstinted service, respecting which address Arnold & Ricketson, Peasleville, Clinton Co.. N. Y., for particulars of names and places. Wilmington. 62 -n The Au Sable Branch R. R. extends from Plattsburgh, 10 miles, in a southwesterly direction, to Au Sable Station. Coaches leave Au Sable on the arrival of morning train from Plattsburgh and stage from Au Sable Chasm, going via Wil- mington Notch, where dinner is had; arriving at Lake Placid at about 3. Fare from Au Sable Station to Wilmington, $1, to Lake Placid, $2.50, A stage runs daily from Au Sable Forks, 13 miles above Au Sable Station, to Keen Valley, 20 miles south, 7na Lower and Upper Jay. When, in '73, the Professor and I made our first visit to this section, there were no palace cars to set us down in the midst of the lake country, nor even a coach to carry us to the interior, but instead we journeyed in a chartered rig, from Au Sable Chasm to Wilmington and beyond. If you will come with us on that trip we will show you a section delightfully wild and picturesque, as yet only partially developed and not appreciated at half its true worth — a section remarkable for striking features, even in a country whose untiring charm is its variety; its strong contrasts, and its rapid changes. Following the route shown in gateway No. 2, we were in due time deposited on the steps of the old Whiteface Moun- tain House at Wilmington, where we were confronted by a big, square-looking fellow, with pants in boots and signs of fun in his clear, blue eye. We enquired if he was landlord. With a quizzical look down at his working-clothes, he re- plied : "Well, I don't know. It's been so long since we had company, that it don't pay to keep a landlord ; but you'd better come in." So we entered, and were soon as comfortable and contented as a good supper and a roaring fire could make us. Wilmington gives marked evidence of former prosperity, and, at some past time, was a centre of considerable import- ance. Now it is a little hamlet, combining the old and the new picturesquely enough, prettily located on the west branch of the Au Sable River, where it flows along under the east base of Whiteface Mountain. VIEWS ON THE NEV YORK AND CANADA RAILROAD SUMMIT OF WHITEFACH MOUNTAIN. CHAPTER V. OLD WHITEFACE. UT off from its kindred on the south by Wilmington Notch, and on the north by one almost as deep, pyramidal in form, although somewhat the longest north and south, its base clothed in inky spruce and balsams, its naked granite head among the clouds " Old Whiteface " stands one of the finest mountain peaks in the Adiron- dacks. " I'll tell you what I'll do," said our warm- hearted landlord at night as we sat discuss- ing pro and con the ascent of "Old White- face," " if you will stay over I will take you two miles up the mountain — as far as we can conveniently set with a wagon — and send a guide to the top with you, ior I Old Whitefacb. 65 It's the grmndcst mountain view to be had in the Aditondacks, and I don't want you to go away without seeing it" Of ':ourse we accepted, only insisting that he go with us. So at nine in the morning, with the thermometer at 48, we set out up the mountains ; we left the wagon which returned to the hotel, with instructions to meet us at sunset, and proceeded up the bridle path toward the summit, traveling about a mile westerly then turning toward the south, entered the standing timber and began the ascent in earnest. At the end of a half hour we had gone another mile and came out on an open space called "Lookout Point," half way to the summit Here the blueberries grew thick, and we scraped whole handfuls from the bushes and ate them — in ten minutes gathering all we cared for. Then we resumed our course and pressed upward through the dark woods, scrambling up the steep path where great rocks alternated with pools of black muck in a semi-liquid'state, trodden and mixed by horses' feet, and we wondered that horses could climb such places with a hundred and fifty to two hundred pounds of humanity on their back ; but Baldwin said to his knowledge not an accident further than being lost for a night, ever happened on the mountain. We reached the shanty, three-fourths ot a mile from the summit, a little past noon, and here occurred a des- oerate encounter between three men on the one side and six slices of bread and butter, supported by other fixtures, on the other, which resulted in their total defeat and destruction. The shanty is in a small clearing, at the highest point where wood and water can be obtained, has log sides, with a root, part canvass, part bark. Within is a parlor and cook stove ; along one side, raised a little above the floor, a platform that looked as though it might do service as Brigham Young's family bedstead, was covered with spruce and hemlock branches, and blankets. A sort of cross between a stairway and ladder led up to the ladies' dormitory under the sharp roof, through which the stars could peep in places. Here, in Ihe bed which was over nearly the entire floor, '• permiscus like," we could discover signs of the tender feeling with which the fair sex was regarded — in the springy moss and fine leaves ^hich had been stripped from the hemlock branches, on wbfcb 66 The Adirondacks. the lords ot creation slept down below. The pipe from the ■tove in the lower room, where a fire can be kept roaring all night, passed up through this one, and altogether it was a cosy, jolly, fun-provoking place to be m, where, as our guide remarked, " if there was any fun in a fellow it was going to show itself." We, in imitation of others before us who had written their names in every conceivable and reachable place in the building, registered and proceeded on our way to th» summit. •* Pretty rough work," said Baldwin, " but hundreds of people come up every year and ride clear to the top. A big doctor came here from Buffalo with his family and a four-horse team that he had been all over the country with — a very valuable team, too, — and when he said he was going to the top of the mountain with them I tried to stop him, and I offered to get horses that were accustomed to the road for nothing, rather than have him hurt his, but no ; ' other horses have been there, have they not?' said he, and when I told him yes, he said, • then mine can go ; ' so he took them out of the harness and put his wife, a woman that would weigh two hundred, on the firiest one of the lot and started, and I felt bad for I knew something would happen, and they rode those • horses to the very top and just turned around and " . We gazed down over the fearful precipice at our feet while out hearts seemed to cease their motion as he slowly concluded — '• and rode down again without getting a scratch 1 ** Old Wiiiteface. 67 "But how can ladies manage to keep on the horses' backs, irhere it seems almost impossible for the horse to get along alone?" ** Manage!" said he, " like a man, of course, astride, and it makes me laugh to see them sometimes when they find that they've got to go in that way. So modest when they start, some of them, that they are dreadfully afraid of showing their feet, but they soon get over that and come down with colors flying. I don't know as they would ever have done it if Mrs. Murray, wife of the Rev. Adirondack Murray, hadn't set the fashion herself She's a dashing, independent sort ol woman, who don't let thoughts of what people may say inter- fere with her plans. Well, after Mrs. Murray set the example, we had no difficulty, and now lots of them go up in that way; as, with the horses we have and a guide at their sides, there is not the slightest danger in making the ascent." The regu- lar price for a horse and guide is six dollars, or four dollars for the horse alone ; but unless a lady is perfectly at home in the saddle, she will be apt to wish she was " at home " in reality. It is needless to add that the Turkish costume is considered the most appropriate for this style of amusement. All the way up we had noticed fresh tracks maae by three several persons — one, a man's, which also appeared to have descended, and two evidently made by ladies — one short and thick, the other slender and dainty in its manner of touching the ground. It had been a matter of wonderment to us, and •• Little Foot-prints," as we styled the owner of the dainty stepping foot, was a constantly recurring subject of specula- tion. "Where is Little Foot-prints? who is she? is she pretty? — of course. And the other — why are they appar- ently alone, when the Big Foot has gone back ? " questions that we hoped soon to solve ; questions that preyed upon the Professor, as the oft-twirled moustache and passage of hia fingers through his auburn locks would seem to indicate. Ot course it was nothing to me, and only out of mere curiosity that I managed to reach the top first, but "where was Little Foot-prints ? " Not there, certainly, for the summit, the sides and the backbone of the mountain up over which we had passed were primeval, unyielding rock They had not r©» The Adirondacks. turned by the path ; they might have plunged down the sides in Bome other direction, but the feeling took possession of us that our " Little Foot-pnnts " had taken wings and flown up among the angels, just a little higher than where we stood. How can I describe it — the wonderful beauty of the day, the clear, crisp atmosphere surrounding us — the great pur- i ple-rimmed basin, in the center of which, lifted up on a pin- it nacle, we stood, while the mighty, sweeping dome of heaven | came down all around and blended with the mountain edges. ^ A keen, wintry blast sweeping past, penetrating even through ,, the heavy blankets that we had brought from the house below ; i the bits of ground frozen nearly as hard as the rock on which 1 they rested; every stunted bush and blade of coarse grass ; which clung to the wind-swept summit gleaming with frost needles and sparkling like spun glass in the bright sunshine i\ while below, the country lay spread out in the glory of its autumnal dress, its gold and crimson, brown and green, its I pearly lakes and threads of silver, its purple hills and mellow i distance, over which lay a mantle of tender blue haze, seen i only in autumn — not smoke — but something that suggests f the thought of the myriad millions of pale, sweet ghosts ol falling leaves and dying flowers. Back toward the north ran the sharp ridge up which we had toiled, naked and dark for a quarter of a mile, then a stunted growth of balsams gnarled and twisted ; a few live branches low down at the surface, the tops dead and dry ; then, as we look further the spruce and cedar grow dark and thick down to the belts of birches and maples below. Away oflf to the east is Lake Champlain, lost in the mist toward tlie north, shut in by the Green Mountains, and beyond, the white hills of old New England. To the south lay the great peaks of the Adirondacks. " Haystack,' " Marcy " — the clond-piercer of the Indians, '* Colden," with the white track of tJie avalanche down its side, and others — a long line of giants, their dark blue crests rising like ocean billows — grand and changeless in their mighty forms, over- whelming in their sublimity. Away toward the west a lower set of mountain waves are seen, over a comparatively level tract of country cut and out- lined with a confused network of ponds and streams, with Old Wihteface. 69 nere and there a broad, shining sheet of water ; Lake Placid at our feet, the Saranacs and Big Tupper's farther away, and a host of others, too numerous to mention, while over the pur- ple rocky rim of the mountains to the north stretched the faint blue of the level Canadas, through which was the silvery gleam of the mighty St. Lawrence. Turning once more toward the grand Indian pass we see the fields of North Elba, and — a mere speck — the home and resting Dlace of old John Brown. From the pass above, the Ausable rises and comes toward us ; here and there we catch glimpses of it, a mere thread, through Wilmington Notch, under the great wall, through the natural flume at our feet, past the little village and away to Keeseville beyond which it plunges down over the rocks at Birmingham, and finds its way out through the dark chasm to Lake Champlain. Seventy years ago an avalanche of loose stones and the gathered moss and vegetable deposit of ages went down the western slope of this mountain and the exposed surface, whiter than the rest, is said to have given it the name ; but there is a more reasonable theory, as the line can hardly be noticed unless covered with snow, that the old giant's naked brow, for so long a period covered with snow, suggested the name of " Old Whiteface." On the topmost point, firmly at- tached to the rock, we found the card of the chief of the Adi- rondack Survey, a metallic disk with this inscription : "White- face Mountain, Station No. 2. Verplanck Colvin, S. N. Y. Adirondack Survey, 1872." All around, the surface of the rock was scarred and chiseled with the names of former visit- ors while on one, cut deep and clear, were the words, "Thanks be to God for the mountains !" ana every heart joined with that grand old mountain peak in saying, " thanks be to God for the mountams." A great, dark, litchen-covered, chaotic mass of broken rock forms the sum- mit ; to the north and south the ascent is gradual, but on either side it is almost perpendicular for many feet, then curves outward and is covered by the dark evergreens. We gazed town from the dizzy height, " We heard the troubled flow Of the dark olive depths of pinet, resounding A thousand feet below." 70 The Adirondacks. We marked our homeward course through the glistening lakes, away around the blue serrated summit of Mount Sew- ard, then started on our descent. A sudden exclamation from our guide brought us to his side, where he was inspecting what we took to be the track of a naked foot. " What is it ? " " A bar — been here since we went up — going down, proba- bly, to the blueberry patch. We may see him if we go careful." And carefully we went, following the track along out to the blueberry patch, and there we lost it We waited, watched and ate berries until the shadow of the mountain like a great pyramid reached out and touched the little village ; then we started. " Maybe you'd better lead," said Baldwin, making a desper ate etfort to keep his feet from getting the advantage of him, while an ax, tin pail and sundry other articles jingled and thumped about on every side. " It bothers me to have folks treading on my heels." So lead we did — the result of which may be inferred from a remark he was overheard to make that night, to the effect that it beat somethin-or-other how tnem fellows came down that mountain, "and," said he, "when I'd get some ways behind I'd drop into a dog trot to catch up, then I'd hear that little fellow snicker and the long-legged one would c^ver six feet at a step." CHAPTER VI. "ON THE ROAD.' '*Joha Urown'a body Ues a-moulderinsr in the gTmT% And hit soul goes inarching on." — Old S»nf, HE morning following our ascent of old White face, he had draped his shoulders in a mantle of mist, modestly hiding his face in the clouds, and although the sun came out toward noon and the clouds went scurrying across the sky like a routed army before the advance of an enemy, a legion still hung around his iron head, skulked in the rents and hollows of his furrowed side and crowded close under the lee of his protecting form. It was interesting to watch this vast host — this wnue-robed army of the sky — seeming almost human in its maneuverings to gain a place of safety from the fierce west winds which tore it into fragments and stiungit out into shreds, and rolled it up into great balls to be dashed against the mountain, and separating, pass on either side to wheel into line beyond, or entering the surface current mount up the steep, and shooting out over the sharp crest, curl downward into the billowy mass below, where it clung like some tattered signal of distress, its ragged, wind-whipped end stretching away out toward the east. After dinner we took a carriage, sandwitched the driver be- tween us, and started for North Elba. Att. Clyne was the driver's name, a pleasant young fellow, wb3 had rather hear or tell a good story than to eat, and that is saying a good deal for him. He inaugurated a series by telling of the wonderful speed of the particular beast behind which we were riding, the truth of which he would demonstrate when we arrived «i 72 The Adirondacks. a suitable piece of road. We never came to that suitable piece. Once we thought we had, and he encouraged her a little with the whip. She felt encouraged for about ten feet, and then rested while we got out and strapped a couple ol pieces of whiffletree together which we had discovered dang- ling at her feet , then we went ahead carefully. About two miles south of Wilmington is the natural flume, a long furrow through the rock like the track of a giant plowshare, through which the water shoots like a flash of light Some call it a wonder ; but, with the fellow at Niagara, we might say " it would be a greater wonder if the water didn't come down, it comes so easy." Our road still led up along the river, now flashing out broad in the sunlight as it rippled over the stones, now quiet, and then plunging over the " big falls " seeming to lose itself in the cavernous depths below. Wilmington Pass is the natural gateway to North Elba from the north, a notch cut out of the mountain, through which the west branch of the Ausable flows, it is one of the finest, if not the finest, combination of river, rock and moun- tain scenery to be found in the Adirondacks, and was especi- ally beautiful in its autumn dress, as we saw it on that early October day. The road ran along up by the river, fringed and canopied by the crimson and yellow maples, the great, ragged, rough-aimed birches, the cone-shaped balsam, the dainty- limbed tamarack and scarlet-berried mountain ash. The pasfl seems to have been caused by some mighty power that turn- ing neither to the right nor left, struck this mountain range and passed through and onward, carrying every thing before it out on the plain beyond, leaving the broken walls on either side to frown down on the torn rocks below, and, when the tempest raged, to thunder back defiance at each other. Then time covered the rocks with mosses, the floods brought rich offerings and dropped them in the bottom-land, trees sprang up and others found lodgment in the cleft rocks, and now all is covered with nature's mantle. No, not all, for at our left, the naked rock rises up, straight up, fully five hun- dred feet, at places even projecting beyond its base and seem- ing ready to fall as great masses have already fallen, through ^nd around which the road p'oes, at times with barely suffic'- On the ivoad. ent room to pass between them and the narrow, swift-nivming river on the other side. Across the river at our right is a narrow fringe of bottom-land trees, then rising, precipice above precipice, and cliff on cliff, is Old Whiteface, his feet washed by the river, his head still among the clouds, and . There stands that fast beast out to the full extent of the reins, with the pieces of broken whifHetree on either side. " Gr — ROOP ! " The sound was richly musical and unmis- takably African for " get-up." We were resting, if you please, three of us in a buggy, right in the middle of the road, the Professor and I rapturously enjoying the lovely scenery and mnocently talking about subjects entirely foreign to the situ- ation, while " Att." sat squeezed in between us, holding on to one end of the reins and using some very choice language in regard to the mare who stood out at the other, looking around occasionally to see why some one didn't make a move to get her back where she belonged. " Gr-roop ! " Letters cannot express the sound. The nearest approach to it is when some sea-sick mortal rushes to the vessel's side and vainly attempts to give up his own din- ner to the fishes. We got out and tied the traces back to the cross-bar, put the broken whiflietree in the wagon and sent "Att." forward to make repairs. " Gr-roop ! " whack / a paii of sorry-looking objects ap- peared over the brow of a little knoll behind us, rising slowly as rises the stately ship above the watery hori- zon, first two pairs of hairy ears, then a pair of venera- ble heads swaying from side to side, then their entire forms loomed above the sandy horizon, and we looked " ^'" """"*'•" up through a swaying thicket of Icjfs and straps and wooden bar* 74 The Adirondacks. "Camels, by darn 1 " said the Professor excitedly, catching ■If^ht of what appeared to be the hump peculiar to the "ship Df the desert" No, not camels. Professor, but ancient specimens of horse architecture; style, gothic, with a tendency toward many gables, and that which you think the hump is a French roof of buffalo skin to protect them, or the harness, or both, from the rain. Framed in nature's noblest mold tha«p beasts un- doubtedly were ; but the party who supplied the flesh wat apparently short of material, or else they were clothed in their summer suit. Their harness fenced them in and bound them round about suggesting suspicion of a latent fire within that might, if aroused, burst forth and rend straps of an ordinary width, as the lightning shivers the mighty oak. — Straps ? they crossed and covered those noble animals until they looked like a railroad map of Massachusetts, and at every crossing was a big patch of buffalo skin. They looked kindly at us, with eyes out of which all coltish frivolity had long since flown. Then the expression seemed to change to one of mild surprise as the wagon gently pressed against them and they found it easier to trot down the hill than to hold back. As they forged up alongside they stopped. They had evidently been driven by a sewing machine agent or some candidate for oflSce, and thought they must stop for every man they saw. We instantly propounded the following co- nundrum to the driver : "Why can't we ride in that extra seat? " He gave it up at once and we got aboard the buckboard. "Gr-roop I " whack I we were under way. The driver was a good-looking fellow, intelligent, well-informed, and decidedly attractive in his way, even if his skin was a few shades darker than regulation and his hair unexplorabie in its kinkiness. We inquired his destination and he told us Nuth Elba. As St. Helena suggests the first Napoleon, so Noit»4 Elba brings with it the picture of an old man with white hair and flowing ^hite beard, crazy some said, but with wonderful method in his madness ; a carpet-bagger in Kansas where he took an active part in the troubles which in 1856 assumed the formid- able proportions of a civil war ; the " Old man of Osawat<>. John Brown. inie," whose presence was marked by dissensions a»d blood- •bed ; who urged men on to murder in the name of freedom and read his Bible all the time- who in 1859, with a mere handful of men, struck the first hard blow at the institution of slavery in the South, and which, probably, more than the eloquence of all the Phil- lips and Sumners in the world, tended to precipi- tate the war by which, through rivers ot blood, four million slaves went free. He was called "a visionary," "an old fool," but men who have given the subject study say that it was the best organized ^ -^ conspiracy that ever failed, cZ-^^A^yiy (/7j^/rUy;ny» reaching out as it did over the entire Southern States. The blow struck at Harper's Ferry was to be the signal for a general uprising of the blacks, but he misjudged his men and — failed. A fa">atic he undoubtedly was. He seemed to feel that he was specially called not only to free but to educate the blacks. He secured a large tract of land here at North Elba to demonstrate his theory, and had established quite a colony. Then feeling that the time had come, he, with three sons, a son-in-law and a few others who had become converted to his belief— twenty-two in all — played at Harper's Ferry — and lost. They were soon surrounded, and the negroes, to whom they trusted so much, let them fight it out alone. One son escaped, another was shot dead, and still another lay dying by his side, while the old man fought on ; and at last, when overpowered and compelled to surrender, he locked the •ccrets he possessed in his breast that his friends might not 76 The Adirondacks. Buffer, and died as he had lived, firm in the faith that iw some manner he was the divinely appointed agent who was to lead his children out of the land of bondage. He murmured not against the people for whom he suffered, who had deserted him iB his direst need, but stopped to kiss a little negro baby on his way to the scaffold, seeming to show by the act, how willingly he laid down his life for them and the cause he had espoused.* Then the body of old John Brown, the convicted murderei • -this felon with the mark of the hangman's rope on his neck — was taken down from the gallows and borne through the country whose laws he had transgressed, while bells tolled and cities were draped in mourning for his sake, to his old home among the mountains — For he had said : " When I die, bury me by the big rock where I love to uil and read the word of God," and there, one terribly cold day in bleak Decembei, a few who had loved the old man, laid his body and covered it up in the frozen ground, ** And his Boul kom marohlag on." Yes, the spirit of old John Brown goes marching on, and with it, keeping time to the musiC of the old song, whole armies marched to battle, and with the victory came that for which the old man worked and died. "Gr-roop ! " whack I Back to the reality of a darkey belab- oring a pair of absent-minded and almost absent-bodied horses, and they supremely unconscious of the fact. We ven- tured to inquire if our driver was one of John Brown's pet lambs, and he with, as Mrs. Partington would say, considerable "asparagrass," gave us to understand that he was not. " He established a colony of blacks up here, didn't he?" " Yes, sah, but they ain't heah now. We are the only family of colo'd folks in town." " Where are they now ? " " All gone." " Gr-roop I " whack / " See dat hos8 — Gone ; nobody knows where." " How many were there of them ? " "Mebbe fifteen or twenty families — don't know, didn't think much of 'em,*' * See Note on page 83. *'On the Road.'* 'j'j •' Slaves, I suppose, that the old man had run in here from the South ? " " No, sah, not one. G'lang ! " " Where did he get them ? " " Oh, from New York, mostly, I guess — not much account- Niggers. Gr-roop ! what you 'bout? " " He was generally considered a fanatic, wasn't he?* " San ? " "You thought him a monomaniac?" "A — yes, sah. Ge-/^, ^'"^^ 'f ! ^^"j^^ the east and north, the picturesque vil age of Lake Placid struggling along its shores, a bit of Lake Placid itself, and Whiteface Mountain beyond, while, stretched along the south- ern sky is seen the panorama of grand mountain peaks. It is a roomy structure, with the necessary comforts of the great Lake Placid. 91 hotel of the day. It has ample piazzas and public rooms, electric light, steam heat and an elevator. It is furnished richly and comfortably. It has spacious halls and sleeping rooms with high ceilings, and is capable of thorough ventila- tion with the most perfect sanitary conditions. Within are billiards and bowling. Without, all amusements common to out-door life, are at command. Here grace-giving tennis and the more sedate croquet claim each their admirers, while those who would row or fish can be provided with all that is neces- sary for comfort or pleasure. Riding and driving, staple amusements the world over, may be indulged in here as every class of vehicle common to the mountains, with saddle horses, are found in the hotel Hvery. Those who care to, can find pleasant roads and ways that may be varied at will and found interesting always. Price of board $3.00 to $4.00 per day ; $17.50 to $28.00 per week. There is a telegraph office in the hotel, and mails come and go twice a day. Stages arrive and depart for the railroad at Saranac Lake, morning and afternoon, and run daily to Keene Valley, Elizabethtown and Westport, and to Au Sable Chasm. The Grand View House has reverted to its former owner, Henry Allen, because of which many old guests will be pleased. Mr. Allen is always pleasant, agreeable and obliging, and wherever he is in the management visitors know that the place will be unconventional and popular. This house stands on the summit of a hill west of Mirror Lake. It is appropri- ately named the " Grand View," for not only does it com- mand the view north, east and south, common to other hotels here, but also the quiet of the spreading forests towards the west and the mountains that lie about far-away Saranac Lake; This house with its annex linked to it by a covered walk will accommodate 100 guests. It is nicely furnished and its beds are of the best class. Some of the rooms, particularly those in the annex are very desirable. Pure spring water is brought through pipes into the house. Its commanding position ren- ders drainage easy and thorough. It has its own telegraph of- 92 The Adirondacks. fice connected with the regular line and has livery accommo- dations the same as may be found at all good hotels. The rates are $3.00 per day; $14.00 to $17.00 per week. 12 3 4 5 6 7 THE GREAT PEAKS FROM LAKE PLACID. 1 Gothic. 2 Saddleback. 3 Basin, i Marcy. 6 Golden. 6 Mclntyre. 7 Indian Pass. The Stevens House built in 1886 is on the high land that separates Mirror Lake from Lake Placid. J. A. &. G. A. Stevens, proprietors. This is one of the largest and best equipped houses and commands undoubtedly the most comprehensive view of any hotel in the Adirondacks. It stands 200 feet above the lake, whose surface is 1,863 f^^^ higher than the sea. From this point may be counted a score of the great peaks. In the southwest is distant Seward; further west is Ampersand; just over the water, at the north, is dark McKenzie ; in the north- east, beyond the broad surface of Lake Placid, is the bold crest of Old Whiteface. East and south are Pitchoff, Long Pond, and Porter ; and, stretching along toward the west, a long line of giants, are the Gothics, Basin, Marcy, Golden, Mclntyre, and the mountains west of Indian Pass. Nearer are the cleared fields of North Elba, and the old John Brown homestead. At our feet are the waters of Mirror Lake, and the collection of native and summer cottages constituting the hamlet of Lake Placid. The house has a front of over 200 feet, is four stories high, with piazzas on every side, affording choice of wind or sun, and with recent additions affording accommodations for nearly 400 guests. The parlors and dining-room have each an area of about 3,000 square feet. It is lighted by electricity. A hydraulic pump forces water to all parts of the house, and. Lake Placid. 93 with hose attachment, is guard against possible fire. The bed- ding, carpets, etc., came from Arnold, Constable & Co. The beds are of woven wire, and with hair mattresses. The sani- tary conditions are believed to be perfect. Telegraph office in the house. The Messrs. Stevens are also owners of considerable real estate lying along shore and between Mirror Lake and Lake Placid. This property has been laid out in building lots. Several cottages stand here, others will be built soon, and, in the near future, one may reasonably expect to see this entire slope occupied by elegant villas or cozy cottages, as individual taste may dictate. This is a very desirable place for a summer cottage, being sightly and cool; while its elevated position and the nature of the soil places it above any suggestion of unwholesome air or conditions. Furnished cottages and camps and camp or cottage sites, fronting directly on the lake, may also be obtained of the three companies who now virtually control the shores of Lake Placid on very reasonable terms by applying to Clarence M. Noble, at Lake Placid. Stages : O'Brian & Vial's stages run to connect with all trains at Saranac Lake, nine miles distant. Fare $1.25. Agnew Brothers' stages connect with evening trains, north and south, at Westport. Distance, 35 miles. Fare, $4. The Lake Placid House is at the head of Mirror Lake, east of the Stevens House, with room for about 60, Rates unknown. For particulars address Geo. W. Baldwin. Lake Placid is over at the north and, although distant from Mirror Lake but a Uttle way, the two are effectually separated by the ridge that runs between them. It is in shape oblong, something over four miles in length and about 2 broad, meas- uring through or between the islands, of which there are three, called respectively Hawk, Moose and Buck. Hawk is small, but Moose and Buck are large, beautiful islands in a line from the first toward the southwest, the three dividing the sheet into what are locally known as the east and west lakes. 94 The Adirondacks. Whiteface Inn, formerly the Westside Hotel, is near the southern ext remity of the lake and about 40 feet above its surface. In front, a broad passage leads into the East Lake. Through this is seen the striking b 1 u ff known as the Devil's Pulpit, the mountains around Wilmington Pass, and in the dist- ance, Marcy and oth- er peaks. The West Lake, str etching northeast, forms the middle ground of a picture of which the distance is the rugged and noble contour of White- face — a view pronounced by many the finest of this famous peak. Behind and on either hand is the forest into which run pleasant walks and bridle paths, one of the latter extending to the top of Col- born Peak, a half mile distant. The house is three stories, with spacious rooms, and wide, double piazzas on the north, south and east sides. Mrs. M. S. Elmendorf, who so success- fully conducted the old Lake Placid House for the past two or three seasons, is the manager. It is designed to make this a first-class house in all respects, as it has a backing among in- fluential people which makes such a result possible, even if the experience of the present manager is not a guarantee that whatever is undertaken will be accomplished in the best of shape. Many decided improvements have been made for the opening. Next year it is proposed to tear down the present structure and have a larger and more complete building for the reception of guests. The rates for board are $3.00 per day, $18.00 per week, with special terms for along stay. Ad- dress at Lake Placid. Lakf Placid. 95 Near by is Camp Pinafore owned by E. D. Bartlett. It is one of the most extensive camps of the wilderness and highly artistic as a whole. Castle Rustico on the west shore opposite Moose Island is an immense suructure of logs, rough outside and rustic in finish. W. F. Leggett, proprietor. It is open for the enter- tainment of guests. Rates unknown. Under-Cliff is on the west shore well up towards the head of the lake. The woods here are unbroken save an opening among the trees just sufficient to give place for the various little buildings and the larger central one made common for all guests. Back of it towards the west stretch the virgin forests climbing to the top of Mt. McKenzie. Near by are pleasant coves and streams and woodsy paths. Nature made the place charming with many desirable features and an environment of lovely things. A lover of nature has beautified it and made it available. Dr. Charles D. Alton, of Hartford, Connecticut, is the magician, and his magic wand has opened up one of the charming places of this region. Originally the summer camp of a physician who felt the need of occasional rest from pro- fessional duties it was often occupied by patients who were friends as well, then of others who were not patients, but were attracted by the beauties of the place and the geniality of the host, until making a virtue of what seemed almost a necessity, the camp was thrown open to the public generally, and as such became a decided success, with only so much of the sanatarium about it, as must exist where the controlling spirit unites an enthusiasm for his profession with a natural love for healthful outdoor sports. Under the Doctor's care it grew from a single camp to a little village of tents and rustic cottages, with a larger central building and assembly room, re- sembling some of the larger private camps of note in the Adirondacks. In the words of Dr. Alton, "The beef, iron and wine of nature's laboratory are here ; ozone and electrical change without measure," and in addition will be found a very satisfactory bill of fare with other things in keeping. Address until July i, Hartford, Conn. Through the summer address at Lake Placid. 96 The Adirondacks. Chubb River, the outlet of Lake Placid, runs toward the southwest, and in circling around toward the east approaches^ quite near to Paradox Pond, and soon after joins with the Au Sable to pass through Wilmington Notch. The Elba House, on the main road, two miles south of Lake Placid, will provide for 16 boarders. Rates $2.50 per day; $10.00 to $15.00 per week. Open from June ist to No- vember 15th. R. E. Fisher, proprietor. P. O. Lake Placid. Ray Brook. House, 5 miles west of the Elba House and 3 miles from Saranac Lake, will provide for 40 guests. Open from June to November. Rates $3.00 per day; $10.00 to $17.00 per week. Duncan Cameron, proprietor. Post ofifice address, Ray Brook. The narrative portions of these pages left us tearing our- selves away from the proffered hospitaHties of the John Brown farm, after which we sought entertainment at Lyons' Hotel. The following morning took us to Lake Placid, where we nearly succeeded in getting a cold bath, thanks to our belief that we knew perfectly well how to manage an Adirondack boat, after which, fortified with a dinner, we succeeded in re- moving Att. from the presence of a fascinating divinity in calico, and started for Saranac Lake. Saranac Lake of then and now differs somewhat- It did not impress me favorably at the time, and we went direct to Martin's. The place held no visible promise of its future then, but nature had made it the natural outlet to the great northern lake country, and now — in combination with its porous soil, the Chateaugay railway. Dr. Trudeau, and Milo B. Miller — has it taken a boom that promises to be of the most substantial and lasting kind. It is a pretty little town, of seven to eight hundred native inhabitants, lying low in the valley ; busy and full of enterprise. Around it are protecting hills, and, farther back, mountains. Between the hills run valleys from north, east and south, uniting here so that it is approached by level I 'It Saranac Lake. 9; roads, winding through the lowlands, from either side. It shows a picturesque blending of the primitive forms of old times with the swell structures of prosperous later days, since it went forth that here was the health centre of the wilderness. It has two churches — Methodist and Episcopal — a graded school, water supply for street and dwellings, stores and hotels, and telegraphic and telephonic communication with the sum- mer hotels of the lake region and the outer world. The Adirondack Sanitarium is a practical appHcation of the good to be had here. It is situated a mile below the river, on a bluff, commanding a grand mountain view toward the north and east, and well protected from the prevailing western wind. Dr. Alfred L. Loomis, of New York, is examining phy- sician. The institution is under the immediate supervision of Dr. E. L. Trudeau, assisted by Dr. C. T. Wicker. Appli- cants must be examined either by Dr. Loomis, in New York, or Dr. Trudeau, at Saranac Lake. It is not intended as an asylum for hopeless cases; but to put within reach of sufferers from incipient pulmonary complaints, whose means are limited, the advantages to be derived from the Adirondack climate, a simple, out-of-door life, and good hygienic surroundings, with suitable medical treatment. It consists of a handsome central building, containing dining-room, offices, etc., and outlying cottages, accommodating two to four patients each. The Sanitarium accommodates about sixty patients. A charge of $5.00 per week is made for each. This is below the actual cost pro rata^ but the deficiency is made up by annual sub- scriptions. Dr. Trudeau's experience has made him a strong advocate of the systematic open-air treatment of consumptives, which is carried out at the institution in most cases, and a characteristic scene in mid-winter is that of a dozen or more patients swathed in wrappers of wool and fur, ranged, sardine- like, side by side on the piazza in comfortable steamer chairs, chatting or reading, or engaged in such light occupations as are possible with thickly gloved fingers, often remaining out in what may be called bad weather even, from nine o'clock in the morning until sun-set, excepting during the interval taken 98 The Adirondacks. for dinner. Others drive, muffled in furs, or where strength permits — thickly clad and well protected from the cold — in- dulge in long tramps through the woods or over the hills on snow shoes. This, the terminus of the Chateaugay Railroad, has excel- lent summer service. Commencing June 22, a train will leave at 8:30 A. M., and reach New York city at 8:50 p. m., shorten- ing the time over three hours between these points, including a 30 minute stop at Plattsburgh, for dinner. The Berkeley House, with capacity for twenty guests and the "Adirondack" providing for as many more, are the vil- lage hotels with a local and commercial patronage. Linwoodl Cottage, located on the main street of the village is a modern] cottage of ten rooms, pleasant and attractive. Open summer! and winter. For particulars as to rates, etc., address Frank] A. Mantz, Manager. Martin's Hotel is on high ground, on the road to the lake.i The proprietor, William F. Martin, was the founder of the] famous old Saranac Lake House. He is an enthusiastic hun- ter and obliging withal. Capacity 50. Rates, $2.50 per day;j $10 to $15 per week, open May to December. Lower Saranac Lake is a little less than five miles long by | one and a quarter wide. It is longest from^ Ampersand in a ; 'W#M;^.-«1' HOTEL AMPERSAND FROM THE WEST. Saranac Lake. 99-a south-westerly course to its inlet. Symmetrical as a whole, it is separated into several natural divisions by outspread penin- sulas and chain-like groups of islands ; there being of the lat- ter (counting; as such several huge rocks) one for every week of the year. A lock, built at the rapids between this lake and Round Lake renders the river above more easily navigable than here- tofore. It was intended that a steamboat should run the present season between the hotels of the Lower Lake and Bartlett's at the foot of the Upper Saranac, connecting there with the steamer from Saranac Inn, but the proposed extension of railroad from Tupper Lake to Saranac Lake via, Saranac Inn made the scheme an unpromising one and at this writing the prospects are that travelers will go as heretofore in twos and threes by the always interesting — if less comfortable — guide-boats. Hotel Ampersand, at the extreme northerly end of the lake was completed and opened November ist, 1888. In choosing a name for the new house, the above was deemed fitting and appropriate from the vicinage of the shapely moun- tain that looms up in the south beyond the lake, at whose base nestles a pretty pond bearing the same name, with its outlet in a little stream that finds its devious way at last into Ra- quette River. The hotel was built and opened by the Sara- nac Lake Hotel Company. It is roomy, rambling and artis- tic — full of unsuspected corners and pleasant surprises. It is picturesque in its commanding position on a slight eminence, surrounded by pines, hemlocks and balsams, with white birches gleaming here and there among their more sombre neighbors. During the past winter an " annex " for the accommodation of young men has been added, with a large exercising room. Also an addition of 82 feet to the west wing and 44 feet to the east wing. The hotel now contains 146 bed rooms, 68 of which have fire places. The upper rooms of the new addition have private bath-rooms attached. An elevator makes all floors almost equally desirable. The house is heated throughout • ■■■■'■' <^^ \ >> N\^~ - ^\M't- SARANAC LAKE FROM HOTEL AMPERSAND. Hotel Ampersand. 99-B with steam and lighted by gas. Bath-rooms are on every floor. The main office is a large room with two large fire places. It opens on one side into the spacious dining room and on the HOTEL AMPERSAND, OFFICE. other into a reception room, ladies billiard, reading and writing rooms and parlor. The piazzas are broad, extending along the entire front and the east side of the house. The hotel is open all the year, the protecting trees that shield its winter guests from too severe winds affording a grateful shade to its summer visitors. The Post Office " Ampersand" and tele- phone, telegraph and a general store are in the hotel. A ten- nis court and base ball field afford opportunity for outdoor sports for every one. The accompanying cuts show glimpses of the house in summer and winter and a view of the lake from the piazza. Board $21.00 and upwards per week. Transient rates, $4.00 per day. For special rates and par- ticulars address the Saranac Lake Hotel Company, Amper- sand, N. Y. C. M. Eaton, and his partner, W. G. Young, the managers, represent energy and enterprise and a knowledge of the The Adirondacks. 99-C| minutia of hotel service that ensures good management and smooth working throughout. At the beginning, the Amper- sand took position as a popular favorite. With a generous freedom of management not often equalled it has continued so. It is a house about which little can be found to criticize. The Saranac Lake House is near the northern extremity of the Lower Saranac, one and a half miles from the depot. (Stage 50 cents). It is oftener spoken of as " Miller's " than by its proper name. Good taste is displayed in the general management, and it is justly reckoned among the desirable re- sorts of the north. It is Democratic in tendency, breezy and delightful with its ever changing patronage. Architecturally it is one of the most attractive of Adirondack hotels. Large fire-places have been built in many of the rooms, and the en- tire establishment furnished with necessary conveniences. The greater portion of the sleeping rooms are large, well lighted and ventilated, and arranged in suites of from two to six, com- municating. The piazza fronting the lake affords a pleasant, covered promenade, and the parlors look out on one of the loveliest of quiet Adirondack scenes. Across the bay, at the right, the shore rises abruptly to a considerable height. At the left, near by, is a dense grove of cedar, balsam and tamarack, with pleasant walks and arbors. Beyond is the broad lake? with its islands and distant mountains. The telegraph, tele- phone and a branch post office in the hotel. Parties can leave New York at 7:30 p. m., and arrive in time for dinner. Returning by morning train, arriving in New York at 7^p. m. This house has a capacity for 250 guests. Rates $3 to $4 per day, $14 to $28 per week. D. J. GiLLiGAN is proprietor of the Saranac Lake House, succeeding Milo B. Miller, who has so long and so success- fully conducted it. Mr. Gilligan was formerly proprietor of the Burleigh House and Fort Ticonderoga Hotel, where he proved an efficient and thoroughly competent hotel man, and under him the house must sustain the excellent reputation it has deservedly won under its late management. In the office, old friends will find the ever courteous and obHging clerk. THE ALGONQUIX. Lower Saranac Lake. 99-E H. H. Tousley, late of the Alexander House, whom it is a pleasure to commend. Guides, boats and cam]) supplies and hunting and fishing requisites can be had here on application. The Algonquin (formerly Alexander House) has been pur- chased by and is now under the management of John Harding, a graduate of Paul Smith's famous hostlery, and for the past two years associate manager of the Hotel Ampersand. The house stands on high ground commanding a comprehensive view of the lake, its islands and the mountains beyond. This is com- paratively a new house, finely finished in natural woods, richly decorated^ and furnished luxuriously. The sleeping rooms are large above the average ; the beds of the best. It has high ceilings and large windows. It has open fire-places, affording ventilation, and, on occasion, necessary heat. It has wide piazzas on three sides, giving 300 feet of promenade protected from rain and sun. The grounds are extensive, having three- fourths of a mile of lake front, with a beautiful sand beach, space for out-door amusements in way of tennis court, croquet, etc., and pleasant walks that penetrate the thick woods, afford- ing means of open or covered promenade as may seem pleas- ant. Stages connect with all trains; fare 50 cents. Telegraph in the house. Modern conveniences are here including electric bells. A livery will be maintained by the proprietor 1 and single or double carriages furnished at established prices* I while boats, comfortably large and steady, or of the cranky j Adirondack build, as preferred, can be had, with guides and all the requirements for hunting and fishing. A special feature of the Algonquin, much affected by believers in the efiicacy of out-door air, in shape of commodious tents with carpeted floor and all the etceteras of a well furnished bed-room, will be pro- vided for those who prefer tent life to the accommodations of the hotel. That the table will be first-class goes without ques- tion. Rates $3.00 to $4.00 per day, $15.00 to $25.00 per week. The outlet is about three miles southeast of the Algon- quin, where it enlarges to form Miller Pond, then con- I loo The Adirondacks. tracting swings gradually around and passes through the vil- lage of Saranac. -M This entrance to the lake region, always important, is be- coming better known, and must in time, by virtue of its posi- tion and environment, become one of the gateways on the main line of travel, the other being Blue Mountain Lake ; the two lorming the terminal stations in the grand round trip through the Saranac and Raquette waters, crossing the Upper Saranac at its outlet and leading into the wilder sections about Big Tupper Lake. The morning following our arrival at Martin's (now Mill- er's) we took passage in one of Bartlett's freight boats, which chanced to be going up with brick and other hotel supplies. At the head of the lake, "in the shadow of a great rock," we entered the inlet and sailed up through the lily pads, between lines of tall dead trees, marking what was once the shores of the stream. Something over a mile above we came to the falls — but little more than rapids — where the water shoots down through the rocky channel, with a swish and a saucy curl or two at the bottom. Here we steppcrd ashore, and helped to pull the boat up through the cut, then got aboard and picked our way slowly up stream. We noticed that the boat displaced two inches of water at stem and i8 at stern, and we labored with the captain to con- vince him of certain facts but he allowed that he knew how to load a boat, and we dragged over the sandy bottom into Round Lake and up to Bartlett's finally followed by a series of swells such as follow in the wake of a deep sea propeller. Round Lake is about two and one-half miles in diameter, and, as its name implies, nearly round in shape. It contains several very pretty rocky islands. The shores are bold, and at that time were brilliant in their autumn dress. Passing across, we went out on the west side between two great rocks, and up a slow stream h°alf a mile, to Bartlett's. Upper Saranac Lake. ioi The Saranac Club House (formerly Bartlett's) is at the foot of a short carry between Round Lake and the Upper Saranac. The portage is by cart, costing 50 cents for boat and baggage. The traffic to this point is generally by water, although possible to reach the house by a road through the woods. This property has lately been purchased by a company, in- corporated as the "Saranac Club" with a charter member- ship of 20. The stated objects of the club are, primarily, the health, happiness and pleasure of its members, but while the accommodations of the house will be largely required for the club it will be kept open as a hotel and the public accommo- dated to such an extent as may be without inconvenience to club members. ********* Gentle reader, if your heart does not bound in sympathy with an angler's tale skip this ; it is only a fishy experience. While at Bartlett's in '63, we decided to take a trip through the upper lake and return (as the course we had marked out simply led across the south end), and I thought it would do no harm to put out a troUing line — we might strike something. So, after dinner, I applied to the alleged clerk for the neces- sary articles. He did not appear particularly anxious to spring around and wait on people. He was devoted to his duties behind a little semi-circular desk, which fenced in one corner of the room, and afforded a safe retreat for himself and sundry dark-looking bottles. He appeared tired, but said he would try to rig me up. In the course of half an hour I found him sitting contentedly on the porch, where he had stopped to rest, and was soothed with the information that he didn't believe there was any use trying to trolL I thought so myself, but nevertheless, so long as I had set out with that in- tention I proposed to persevere, so he started again. After another lapse of valuable time, I found him in the guide-house sitting serenely on a dry-goods box, apparently going to sleep. At last, however, with the aid of our guide, I secured the necessary articles and started. We went and returned, and I 102 The Adirondacks. didn't get a bite. I was surprised, for I fished faithfully. Per- haps the velocity of our boat had something to do with our ill 1 ick, as the "gang" to which a shiner was attached would spring out of the water occasionally, and skitter along the sur- face like any thing but a fish, but I thought they might over- look that little matter. The spirit of Isaac Walton moved within me, and I felt the excitement of a veteran angler at the very smell of fish. I had admired Murray for his wonderful skill in casting flies and things ; devoured the contents of i "I go-a-fishing" with avidity, and felt able to play any fish and throw any kind of fly in existence In imagination, with the great piscatorial lights of the age, I had felt my heart thrill at sight of a polywog, and often closed my eyes in an ecstacy of bliss, as I thought of the terrific ravings of a half ounce sucker when fairly fast. With such feelings surging through my breast, we went in to supper. Ah ! can it be possible ? Yes, jy^s, it is ! it is ! ! A school of fish-balls within easy reach ! I will catch one. But what true fisherman can act the part of a butcher? True greatness in that line consists not in the amount bagged, but in the m.anner of doing it. My heart thrilled with the excitement which the angler feels when the gently undulating motion of the atmosphere tells him that his game is nigh. I prepared for a cast. A moment's hesitation occurred, in which the momentous question presented itself whether I had better take my "scarlet dragoon '^ or *'blue- tailed-ibies." I tried both, but not a ripple stirred the quiet depths. Then I tried a spoon. Now I contend that it re- quires a great deal of skill to cast a spoon properly for a fish- ball, especially at this season of the year. Carefully I played it around over the bread; dragged it slowly across the pota- toes, skittered it lightly over the butter, and let it drop where I knew the wary creatures were lying in wait. Slowly it set- tled down, lightly as the dew into the heart of a blushing rose. A gentle ripple stirred the surface. I felt intuitively that the trying moment had come. A thrill shot up my arm, and throughout my body, to the very pit of my stomach, as the Exciting Sport. 103 beautiful creature curled upward and struck — struck hard. Then began the struggle for life on the one side against science on the other — mind against matter. It is an un- doubted fact that an intellectual man, with a good spoon, is more than a match for any fish-ball in existance. Carefully I played him, for he was a gamey fish-ball. The surrounding gravy was lashed into fury, and foamed white as the driven snow, but the cruel spoon held him, and, with a sullen shak- ing, he rested on the bottom — preparing for another run. Now he darts away like a flash of light, and is brought up by my gradually, though firmly-compressing arm ; then he turned? and clove his native element as the thunder-bolt might cleave a 'Summer squash. But the spoon brought him up once more, ar:d he turned directly toward me. It was a critical moment — a moment of terrible suspense. " Give him the butt !" screamed the Professor, dodging be- hmd the teapot; "give him the butt ! — they always do." " Stand firm. Professor !" I cried, wrought up to the high- est pitch of excitement as the enraged fish-ball sprang into the air, and made directly for me with my mouth wide open : "stand firm, and the victory is ours." I gave him the butt as he came, and the delicate rod bent as a reed shaken in the wind. Oh ! the terrific fire that blazed from the eye of that fish-ball will haunt me till my dying day. Rage, agony, despair, all blended in one, as, shaking the spark- ling drops of gravy from his gleaming sides, he sprang entirely over us — plunged downward on the other side. Again and again he renewed the attack. But I desist. Suffice it to say that, in less than an exciting hour and fifty-nine minutes sport, I succeeded in safely landing that heroic creature and laid him — a conquered fish-ball — at my feet. Science had again triumphed. Mr. Murray says, " the highest bodily beautitude 1 ever ex- pect to reach, is to sit in a boat with John at the paddle, and match again a Conroy rod against a three-pound trout." As for vie^ give me my trusty spoon — or even a sharp stick. I I04 The Adirondacks. care not who sits at the paddle, and let 7ne once more feel the deathless joy of a single-handed encounter with an untamed fish-ball, and I'll murmur not, though a yawning legislature opens and sucks me in forever. Pardon this ebullition ; I can never keep cool when excited. And righi here, let me lift my voice against the horrible practice of some coarse natures, whose soul never swept upward to a spiritual conception of flies ; and who, with no excuse, save perhaps that of hunger, can, with a common hook and line, and filthy worms /or bait, snatch a kingly trout bald-headed, and lay him gasping in un- comfortable terror on the ground. I cannot find words of condemnation strong enough to express my horror of this barbarous practice, which is extremely vulgar, contributes nothing to science, and is, in all probability, excessively annoy- ing to the fish. On the contrary, the scientific alurement of a denizen of the aqueous fluid to the one more volatile is an achievement worthy of a great intellect. The skillful playing prepares the noble creature for its final transition, which, if not actually attended with pleasurable sensations to the subject in question, is owing to its lack of appreciation of the important part it is playing in the march of intellect. It is also more christian- like and refined than bull-baiting, because less dangerous ; and we cannot wonder that great minds — divines even — are some- times translated by its wonderful fascinations. Upper Saranac Lake rests at 1,577 feet above tide. It is eight miles long, measuring north and south \ about two miles wide at its broadest places ; and is divided into unequal lobes by points projecting from its east and west shores. It dis- charges toward the east from its south end, making a rapid descent of about 35 feet in 100 rods, to Bartlett's. It contains a number of islands ; those at the south being rounded or level ; those at the north, bold and rocky. The shores partake of the nature of the islands ; are thickly wooded, and rise into hills, which can hardly lay claim to the title of mountains, but which are picturesque and attractive. In the distance, at the Upper SARANyvc Lake. 105 ^04 <« '«. north, is St. Regis Mountains ; away at the east, Whiteface ; toward the south-west, Ampersand and Seward. McCoy's Rustic Lodge, is at the south end of the Upper Saranac, about three miles from Bartlett's. It stands well up ] above the water on the divide between the Saranac, and Ra quette Lake waters which latter Hows from this point toward tlie south. From this point the famous Indian Carry extends south one mile to Stony-creek Ponds, affording a very pleasant walk, and is continued around them at the west, two miles farther, ending at the Raquette River. The house is picturesque, half log, half frame, and has been added to as the necessity for greater accommodations were felt, and with several de- tached cottages of one room each in a line along the ridge facing the lake, has capacity for about 60 guests. It is high^ dry and breezy, wholesome of itself and in its surroundings. It commands a fine view of the lake. MAP OF UPPER SARANAC LAKE. Mails aie brought herc and de- (From Survey by Dr. S. B. ^ ard.) ° part daily by a boat leaving Saranac Lake every morning ex- cept Sunday, during the season. Telegraph at Wawbeek, 20 minutes distant. The Chateaugay railroad brings this point within 20 hours of New York city. The proprietor, E. R. McCoy, is energetic and obliging. The house is open from May I st to November. Rates $2.50 per day; $10.00 to $14.00 per week. SCAUt H/AWATHO ItOOSt io6 The Adirondacks. Saranac Inn is at the head of the lake about 15 miles from Saranac Village, where stages run, connecting with all trains. Fare $1.50. A new road, to be opened up soon, will reduce the distance to a little more than 10 miles. By water from Saranac Inn to Miller's is 20 miles; to Paul Smith's 10^ miles. At present the road runs through a picturesque sec- tion of the country, finally entering the woods, which in places exist in their primeval condition. All the way — except in ex- tremely bad weather — the road is in good condition and the ride a delightful one. The house stands at a point extending out into the lake and commands a broad expanse of water and distant mountains equalled nowhere in the Adirondacks, ex- cept from the high land between Mirror Lake and Lake Placid. The land is dry and porous, the peninsula on which the house stands level, and the woods which forms a pleasant feature in its surroundings, are grove-like, resembling a cultivated park in their shadowy depths. Under its present management the Inn has gained the highest praise. The table is exceptionally nice. This house has a capacity for 125 guests. Board $3.50 per day; $17.50 to $30.00 per week, according to rooms. The season is from May ist to October 15th. A loop of the telegraph extends to this point with office in the hotel. Post- office address " Saranac Inn." D. W. Riddle, Manager. This place is specially attractive to the fisherman, because of the multitude of small ponds and streams adjacent, there being within a circuit of three miles over thirty that are recog- nized as among the best trout yielding waters of the Adiron- dacks. For obvious reasons also, the hunter with limited time, will find this available ground. A good road penetrates the forests ; an excellent house renders the isolated position com- fortable. It is well out in that wilderness which, north, west and south, is almost unbroken and impenetrable save over the watery highways, where the streams and ponds cover the tract like crystal beads on a net-work of silver. Into this labyrinth comes the deer who delight in the still water and the tender food growing at its edge. With them it is a favorite feeding UrrER Saranac Lake. 107 ground and they find none better even in the far west. All these attractions tend to make the Saranac Inn an unusually desirable resort. This is a favorite spot with ex-President and Mrs. Cleveland, and headquarters during their flying trip to the woods. Dr. S. B. Ward, of Albany, is, also, a regular visitor here; and to him the publisher is indebted for a copy of the map in- corporated in the large map of the wilderness and shown in these pages A pretty little church on the hill back of the hotel, erected in 1885, is open for serv- ice during the summer. A number of very at- tractive private camps are on the bay west of the house, and at various points south. Steamer " Saranac " will run regular trips through the lake from Saranac Inn, morning and afternoon, landing visitors at all points along the lake and connecting at Bartlett with boats on the lower lakes. Saranac Inn Station, on the N. A. R. R. is eight miles east of Saranac Inn to which point a stage runs from all trains, fare $1.00. Section of the M. V. & N. R. R., now being built, runs from Tupper Lake to this point with through trains from Grand Central Station, New York city, without change of cars. Wawbeek Lodge is the name of the new hotel at the Sweeney Carry on the west shore opposite the outlet of the Upper Saranac; "Wawbeek" is Indian for big rock and was suggested by a huge bowlder lying on the hill side. It com- mands an extensive view of the lake, a long stretch of water toward the north and another down into the deep arm which forms the outlet towards the east. It is artistic in design and MAP SHOWING THE I5 SQUARE MILES BELONGING TO THE SARANAC INN COMPANY. io8 The Adirondacks. finish. Pure water is there, brought into the house from a distant spring, and perfect ventilation and drainage assured. Furnished tents are grouped around the house for the accom- modation of those who may prefer them to house room. Waw- beek Lodge is reached from Saranac Lake Station through the Lower Lake and stream by rowboat, or by way of the Northern Adirondack Railroad to Tupper Lake Station, thence by stage over the new road through the woods. Board per day $4.00 ; per week, $17.50 and upwards. Open from May to Novem- ber. The manager, T. Edmund Krumbholz, is affable and obliging. P. O. "Wawbeek," N. Y. A telegraph station is at the house. Sweeney Carry extends from Wawbeek west three miles to the Raquette River. For transportation of boat and luggage across, the price is $1.50. Parties of three can ride over on a buckboard for 50 cents apiece. Tromblee's is on the Raquette River, at the west end of Sweeney Carry. Buckboards can be had here by east coming passengers for the three mile trip over, and carrying wagons for the boats and luggage. The river above this point is de- lightfully picturesque, marks of the desolation caused by the flooded flats not being so apparent here as further down. Troll- ing for pickerel is the popular sport and yields most satisfac- tory results. The house is small, affording accommodations for only six or eight people, but it gives an exceedingly good dinner. Board $10.00 per week; $2.00 per day. Mail daily through the season. Open from May ist to November. Oliver Tromblee, proprietor. Post office address, Wawbeek, N. Y. It is about 8 miles from Tromblee's Landing by the new road to Tupper Lake Station. By river to the foot of Tupper Lake the distance is about 1 1 miles. The Lower Raquette near the foot of Tupper Lake is, as the result of a dam built at Raquette Pond, a perpetual protest against the outrages perpetrated in the name of utility, where retributive nature, in pursuance of a well-recognized law be- Gale. 109-A cause of stripped mountain side and barren upland, fails to send its old-time supply of rain. In the spring and early sum- mer, the water sets back away up to Ra([uette Falls and into St6ny Creek Ponds, but later it is allowed to drain low, that forsooth, a saw-mill may be fed, exposing hideous, slime- covered flats and malaria-breeding pits and the skeletons of drowned trees standing and lying prone all along its course. These drowned lands are indicated on the map by parallel lines. See page 109-F. Raquette Pond, terminus of the Northern Adirondack Railroad, now called Tupper Lake is two miles below Tup- per Lake. Seepage 109-D. Downey's Landing is 8 miles beyond Raquette Pond. The stream is navigable except for short carries a'round falls and rapids. It may be done for pleasure or in case of dire ne- cessity, but the more comfortable way is by rail and stage from Childwold Station. Childwold Station, eight miles south of Saranac Inn Sta- tion and 51 miles from Moira. From this point a stage runs daily, west to Gale and Childwold Park, seven miles. Fare, $1. The Pond View House (P. O. Gale), is situated on the shores of Catamount Pond about six miles west of Childwold Station. E. P. Gale, proprietor. This of old was a noted house of entertainment for sportsmen. Later it has been pro- vided with modern conveniences which the old sportsman did not consider necessary to his comfort or happiness, and pro- visions made to meet the more exacting requirements of tour- ists and summer visitors. New parts have been added until now accommodations are offered for about 100 guests. The rates are $2.00 per day; $8.00 to $12.00 per week. Special rates are offered guests who may come for spring fish- ing or fall hunting, and those who stay through the entire season. The house is open the year round. Boats and com- petent guides can be secured here and all the requirements of 'hunting and fishing can be furnished by the proprietor. A large farm connected with the hotel supplies fresh milk and Childwold Park. 109-c eggs with vegetables in their season. The Post office, known as Gale, is in one of the buildings connected with the house, and the proprietor of the house is postmaster. The place as a whole presents the appearance of rustic comfort, which with the reasonable terms offered insures a very satisfactory pa- tronage. Lake Massawepie is the fountain head of Grass river one of the best trout streams in Northern New York — and a noted resort for deer. Mr. Addison Child, to whom this sec- tion owes much of its prosperi- ty, and Mr. Henry G.Dorr, of Boston, to- gether own the whole western half of the township, and have preserved under the state law, 5, 000 acres here, embrac- ing Lake Mas- sawepie and six contributary sheets of water that encircle it, as a game and pleasure park. Childwold Park House is on the east shore of Massa- wepie Lake, flanked by a number of attractive Queene Anne cottages. This place with the opening of the Northern Adi- rondack Railroad to Tupper Lake has been made easily acces- sible. It has natural attractions of broken and picturesque wilderness surroundings, and a broad, beautiful lake with nu- merous small ponds adjacent. The house stands on high ground rising considerably above the water, with piazzas on three sides, and a belvedere, rising 78 feet above the lake. Boats, and hunting and fishing supplies, can be obtained here with competent men for camp or trail. It is reached by stage I09-D The Adirondacks. from Childwold Station on the Northern Adirondack railroad, " 7 miles distant. Fare, $i.oo. Price for board $3 per day; $14 to $21 per week, according to room and length of stay. Wm. F. Ingold, of " The MagnoHa," Florida, manager. Convenient railroad service is maintained from New York and Boston. Wagner sleeping cars leave both cities daily ex- cept Saturday, and run through to Childwold Station without change. A telegraph line and daily mail are in operation dur- ing the season. The Lower Raquette can be reached via Potsdam. There are small houses at intervals along the road and river, where entertainment can be had at from $1.00 to $1.50 per day. The Forest House is at Stark's Falls, 22 miles from Potsdam. The Jordon House is 6 miles farther, opposite the mouth of the Jordan River. The " Kildare Club," of New York, composed of members of the Vanderbilt family and friends, has a hunting lodge near Jordan Lake and a park of several thousand acres lying along the river. Kildare Station, on the N. A. Railroad and a new road thence to Jordan Lake are for the special benefit of the club. Childwold, 3 miles from Childwold Park, 36 miles from Potsdam. It has an elevation of about 1,450 feet above tide in a belt of good agricultural land on which a colony of farm- ers are thriving. TUPPER Lake (village), P. O. and terminus of the N. A. R. R., 56 miles south of Moira, is on the east shore of Raquette Pond, two miles below the point where Tupper Lake hangs like a pocket on the south side of Raquette River. It is a revelation of thrifty and sudden growth, reminding one of those marvelous western towns that seem to spring up TuppER Lake. 1C9-E almost in a night. When John Hiird built the N.. A. R. R. south to this point to subserve his vast lumber interests, this was practically virgin forest. The first train ran over the road ^^ July I St, 1890. Now there are PBPBoftL^B^ grouped about its terminus over a ■ CmS fMOlRA 111 Ij^J I hundred buildmgs of various sizes and conditions. A church (build- ing), three hotels, two school houses (a larger one building), and two steam saw-mills, one belonging to the owner of the railroad with ca- pacity for sawing 200,000 feet of lumber per day and a smaller one belonging to the Hobson Lumber Co., with a daily capacity for sawing 45,000 feet This will be the junc- tion of the N. A. R. R. with the A. & St. L. Ry., a section of which extending from this point to Saranac Inn and Saranac Lake village, will be constructed and in operation in August. Stages run daily to Wawbeek, 8 miles, fare $1.00. Steam- boats to the various hotels on Tupper Lake, fare 50 cents to li.oo. Tupper Lake is 1,554 feet above tide. It is nearly seven miles long and three broad. It has 25 islands, some level and covered with thrifty trees, some barren and rocky, rising steeply from the water. Long, or County Island is the largest, being nearly a mile in length. A precipice on its west side is known as the Devil's Pulpit. The surrounding country is wild but not grand with mountain heights. Mount Morris, at the south- east, is the most important elevation of the section. Bog River comes picturesquely down over the face of the o ugh rocks at the head of the lake where a ruined saw mill marks a past '' effort." Mount Morris House is on the east side of the lake near the outlet. Occupancy uncertain at this writing. Redside Camp is on a high bluff, where Redside Brook empties into the lake, a half mile south of the Mt. Morris I09-F The Adirondacks. House. It stands in a thrifty grove of second growth timber^ and commnds a wide and beautiful view of the lake and the country beyond. Twelve to fifteen guests can be cared for here by Martin Moody. Perhaps Mrs. Moody has more to do with the providing for guests than " Mart," but whoever the responsible party may be, they furnish good, wholesome, substantial fare to make the heart of the hunter and fisherman glad. The Post office called '' Moo- dy" is located here also, and the proprietor of the house is Board costs $1.50 per day; $10.00 to $12.00 per week. The new building in process of construction is expected to be ready for guests by the first of August, when accommodations will be of- fered for 50 guests. Mr. Moody has been noted for years as the mighty hunter, and where he fails in knowl- edge as to the best place for game or the best way of secur- ing it, there is little hope that others will succeed. TuppER Lake House is on the west shore of the lake near its south end. It is about 35 miles, as the way goes, from Saranac Lake (station), and can be reached from that direction during the summer by rowboat, making a pleasant day's journey. The opening up of this section by the Northern Adirondack Railroad, penetrating to the wildest portion of the wilderness, comes as a surprise to people generally and the ex- cellent train service maintained makes it possible to leave New York in the evening at 6:25 and reach the Tupper Lake House TUPPER Lake. 109-G in time for dinner the next day. Fare from New York to Tupper Lake, $12.40; round trip, $22.25. ^^ ^s a source of considerable surprise to visitors who had thought to bury them- selves in this far-away corner of the wilderness, to find a daily mail maintained, the news of the world in their familiar even- ing paper of the day before laid by their plate at tea time, and all the necessaries with many of the perishable dainties from the centres of civilization following them and contributing to their enjoyment of the woodsy things which nature so bounti- fully provides. This may be fairly called the geograi)hical centre of the wild lake region. It is on the eastern edge of the Mud Lake country which is probably the least known and visited of any part of the wilderness. Dr. Alfred L. Loomis says it is "the best location for sport, and as healthful as any in the Adirondacks," and the Doctor is good authority on both questions. The house will accommodate about 100 guests. It is provided with open fire-places in parlor and principal bedrooms, is lighted with gas, has pure spring water brought through pump-logs from a mountain spring, and is furnished comfortably and with the best of beds throughout. John F. Hatch, who for a number of years kept a very ac- ceptable farm house resort in the Au Sable valley, resurrected the Mt. Morris House from oblivion, last year, to make it a popular place once more, now takes charge of larger interests at the Tupper Lake House. If the earnest effort of the pro- prietor, ably seconded by Mrs. Hatch and the accomplished daughter of the house, can make a resort pleasant and agree- able, no place in the Wilderness can rank higher than the Tup- per Lake House, which is saying a good deal. It will be open from May ist until late into the season of fall hunting. Price for board, $3.00 per day; $14.00 to $21.00 per week, with special rates for early and late visitors. The supply and provision store established here for some years will be con- tinued under Mr. Hatch, who will furnish New York goods at ! New York retail prices with the cost or transportation only added. The ^' Lakeside Club," of New York, who own the property, o X < 04 Ed Oi ti Hiawatha House. i i i come here annually and occupy private rooms in the building set aside for their special service. Little Tupper Lake is an easy half day's journey at the south, the most tedious part of this way being the two-mile carry from Bog River into Round Pond, where the thrifty wagoner will charge you $2.00 for boat and luggage. ********** The Hiawatha House is at the south end of Indian Carry, delightfully located among the trees on the north side of the first of the Stony Creek Ponds. Here it is wild on every side. Deer come to feed about the borders of the lakelet, and when followed by dogs often take to its waters. Charles Wardner who came as manager first is now proprietor of the Hiawatha House. He is affable and ready in service, aud has earned for himself very high praise from new guests, and a reputation that calls back many old friends. He has made a success out of this place which, possessing many de- sirable features, was for lack of just such a man for many years a dismal failure. The house will provide for about 30 guests. Post-office address, Wawbeek. Conveyance across the Indian Carry from this point costs 75 cents for boat and luggage. Stony Creek Ponds are three in number. The first and third are small ; the middle one about a mile the longest way. A fancied resemblance to a familiar article has led to their being occasionally called " Spectacle " Ponds. Stony Creek, applied to the outlet of the ponds, is a misnomer. It is about three miles long, slow, sluggish, and winding. Its marshy shores are lined with tall grass and the sprawling, ragged, swamp-maples, which seem to flourish best in a watery soil. From its mouth, down the Raquette to Big Tupper Lake, is 20 miles ; to Raquette Falls, seven. Ra- quette Falls is 12 to 15 feet in height, with one mile of rapid water above. Raquette Falls Hotel of to-day is a much more preten- tious house than the one of old in the days of " Mother John- son." It will provide for 30 guests, and affords a general stop- 112 The Adirondacks. ping place for those who would indulge in the excellent hunt- ing and fishing of this section. It usually divides the long stretch between the Saranacs and Long Lake with a substantial dinner (75 cents), or a welcome night's rest to the round trip- per. Now instead of the old stone-boat drawn by oxen, buck- boards on which the voyager can ride comfortably under the shadow of his inverted boat, cross the intervening i^ miles to the navigable waters above. Each passenger is charged 50 cents, and each boat with its baggage, $1.50. Board $2. per day $12. per week, Wm. McClelland proprietor, P. O.Wawbeek. Resuming once more if you please, the thread of our oft- broken narrative, we will proceed on our journey southward. When we followed the ox-sled over the carry in 1873, a steam- boat whistle had never been heard in this region ; since then they have signalled each other across the cany, and a regular UP THE RAQUETTE. line is a possibility of the near future. The river is wonderfu| in its solemn beauty. The water in the shallows is amber, a|| a greater depth red, then a rich brown. Here it appears almostj, like ink in its blackness. Sluggish in motion, it fills its bed an# seems fairly to round up in the centre. Great, shaggy, twisted ! cedars line its banks, their branches reaching out toward the light and downward toward the water, the sides away from the river limbless and verdueless. So still it runs that it appears more like a river of black glass than water. It has undermined the trees until they have fallen over and stand at every con- ceivable angle, and, while yielding, they have curled upward with the even sweep of a scimeter, while the smaller limbs, seemingly alarmed at their too near approach to the water, grow back upon themselves and hang in great hooks and solid festoons from their leaning supports, the whole mirrored in the . I The Adirondacks, 113 glassy surface where we seem to float midway between the heavens above and the heavens below. About five miles abov^e Raquette Falls, Cold River, coming down from Mount Seward on the east, supplies by considerable, the largest volume of the two streams which here meet. Above this we pick our way carefully. We have left the cedars, passed through the maples, now stripped of their foliage, and come out on a natural meadow, where the coarse hay is cut and piled up on platforms, there to stay until the ice shall render it accessible. Over the shallow outlet we go, through the tall grass, where mounds of sticks and reeds show the presence of a colony of muskrats, out into Long Lake, past the Lsland House, where a jolly party of spiritual fellows are having a loud time, and well on into the night, rap for admission at the door of the Long Lake Hotel. Long Lake is nearly 14 miles in length and about i mile in width at the widest part, which is near its outlet. It runs in a northeasterly direction, receives the waters of the Raquette River at its head and gives them up to the Raquette River at its foot, which, flowing northward, and passing within about 2 miles of Upper Saranac Lake, turns toward the west, touching the foot of Tupper Lake, thence northwesterly past Potsdam to the St. Lawrence. Long Lake contains several islands ; one, nearly midway in its length, is called Round Island, and resembles Dome Island of Lake George. The Island House, near the outlet, affords entertainment to such as may at any time from choice or necessity be at this end of the lake. Owl's Head Mountain, near the head of the lake, on the west, is marked on the map as being 2,82^ feet above tide ; but as Long Lake is 1,614 above tide, this isn't much of a mountain after all. To the west the country is comparatively level ; on the east is Mount Kempshall ; on the north is seen the blue serrated summit of Mount Seward, 4,384 feet above tide. A number of private camps are scattered along the lake, notably those of Senator Piatt and of Rev. Dr. Duryea, near the north end. Toward the south end some considerable attempts have been made at cultivation. The land, however, while apparent- ii4 The Adirondacks. ly promising well, is cold and poorly adapted to farming pur- poses. The Lake House appears first on the left as we approach , from the north. It is one of those quiet lakeside resorts that | supplies the sportsman with all the necessaries of life, and is the gathering-place of the hunter, the fisherman, and of the sturdy guide. The house is three stories high, with a double piazza, facing the lake. It has an advertised capacity for 60 guests. Rates, $2.00 per day, $10.00 to $12.00 per week. The house is under the management of Mrs. C H. Kellogg who for a number of years has very exceptably filled the position as hostess at this place. Stage runs daily to Blue Mountain Lake to North Creek to connect with the evening train south. Fare to railroad, $4.00. In front of the house is a sandy beach, that extends down into the water, at the north, the long stretch of picturesque lake, while just south is a pretty little bay, protected on all sides, where the children can boat and fish to their heart's content. The road from the east crosses the lake here, over a long, floating bridge, which has a raised section to admit of the passage of small boats underneath. The Sagamore, which stood on the high bluff south of the Lake House caught fire November 30th, 1889, and was totally destroyed. It is expected it will be rebuilt and ready for occu- pancy in 1 89 1. Long Lake (village) is on the east side of the lake a half mile away, and three and a half miles from the south end. Long Lake lumbers some, farms some, trades a little, hunts and guides extensively, and makes sporting boats of recog- nized build and superior quality. From its somewhat isolated position and its lack of proper transportation facilities and accommodations in the past, Long Lake has been neglected by the sportsman. The Long Lake Hotel, Helms & Smith, proprietors, is situated at the village. This house is open the year round and provides for man and beast at a moderate price. Mails Long Lake. jic arrive and depart daily. Stage (Concord wagon, Theron Smith, proprietor) runs to Blue Mountain Lake during the season, leaving in the morning and returning in the afternoon. Travelers may leave New York on the 6:25 Adirondack sleeper, and reach Long Lake the next day at about 6 p. m. The distance to Blue Mountain Lake, by stage road, is nine miles. Fare, $1.50. A number of gentlemen have secured for a Preserve 4,000 acres ofland lying on both shores of the lake some distance north of Round Island and offer through their agent, camp and villa sights of lo-acre lots each, including the game and forest privilege of the entire tract, on a three or five years lease with the privilege of purchasing at from $250 to $500 any time during its continuance. Application for purchase or lease may be made to Hazard Stevens, Esq., 85 Deavon- shire Street, Boston, Mass, or to M. R. Sutton, Agent, Long Lake, N. Y. The Grove House is about two miles south of the float- ing bridge in a grove of tall pines on the abrupt eastern bank of the lake, seven miles from Raquette and nine miles from Blue Mountain lake, capacity of house, 50, rates, $2.50 per day, $10.00 to $14.00 per week, David Helms, proprietor. Pleasant features of the place are its open camps and cottages with open fire places. Special rates are offered to parties re- maining any considerable time. Mr. Helms is a noted guide and hunter and his house is a favorite resort for hunters and fishermen, who know that his experience and advice may be rehed upon. He knows where the trout, the bass and the pickerel are to be found in their season ; where the duck 5wims, and the partridge hides, and the deer runs, and his knowledge is freely placed at the service of his visitors. The distance from the Grove House to Blue Mountain ake, through Forked and Raquette lakes, by boat, is ibout ^^ miles. For the last-named route a guide will be re- [uired as far as Raquette Lake, where steamers are taken for Mue Mountain Lake. CHAPTER VIII. The Schoolmaster E SENT our Saranac guide back, ana m- quired for one who understood the Ra- quette Lake region. " I know the man ycu want,'* said oar host, in a way as though he felt himself re- sponsible for our future happiness; "Chai ley Blanchard knows all about it, just came from that region day before yesterday. I'll send for him." He did so, and soon a little fellow in a Garabaldian shirt stood before us. Think- ing of the work a guide is expected to do, It seemed as though this one was meant for a jcfke or an orna- mental head that we would have to carry over the rough places. Kellogg must have noticed the look of surprise oa our faces, for, taking me aside, he said : " Oh, he's all right ; knows the country better'n I do my house, and will take you right every time." •• Carry a boat too ? " I asked, incredulously gazing at the slight figure. " Yes, sir! carried a boat, oars and all, over the same route a day or two ago. Then he can learn you something — tell you all you want to know. There's no need of his gliding at all, only he likes it I tell you what, sir, he's qualified for bet- ter things. He's — a — school — master ! ! ! " Of course we were overwhelmed, and engaged the school- master at once, finding him a willing worker, a pleasant companion and an exceptionally good g^ide — thoroughly ac- quainted with the region through which we were traveling. Four miles from Kellogg's we came to the rapids. Here the professor and myself took the loose articles, and the school' ii8 The Adirondacks. master started off with the boat over his head, looking like a huge, inverted, pickle-dish on a pair of legs. Reader, did you ever assist over one of these portages in the forests, where the path never dries, and the decayed leaves and vegetable mould makes a bottom of black muck, with rocks land roots projecting above the surface; which 'same are stepping-places for the skillful, but Jfearful traps for the unwary? The guide takes the boat, and you are ex- pected to carry the lighter articles. You ad- mire him as he starts off lightly along the slippery way. Your soul swells with conscious freedom, and you snuff in inspi- ration and black flies by the mouthful. You gather up the oars, paddle, guns, fishrods, etc., and step out determined to show .that you, too, are a natural woodsman. How exhilar- ating the action ! You spring from rock to rock, watching your feet that they may not get the start of you ; for the solid bottom may be anywhere from two inches to two feet below the surface. Soon you are busy dodging the bushes, that scratch your hands and slap your face without the slightest provocation; and, after a while, you observe that the oars and other things are getting heavy, and are on a tender place. You change, and make it worse. Then you find they have got into a disagreeable habit of spreading out at various angles — of going on one side of a tree when you had de- signed to pass on the other; and you back up for another start. You wrench your back and get a crick in the neck in the struggle. The guide is disappearing through the trees in the distance. Surprise, perspiration, determination, and cob- webs, appear on your face ; and the things on your shoulder hurt more, and sprawl about worse than ever. You are con- scious of an expression like anything but a master of the situ- ation; and your load looks, for all the world, like a fully-ex- tended umbrella denuded of its covering. You try in vain to dodge the various branches that are making unprovoked The Carry. 119 lunges at you. The vines trip you, the stones sh'p from be- neath your feet, and roots that look solid give way and let you down. You are getting careless of results, and take chances that do not always turn out well. You step on one end of a root, and the other end comes up and pitches a quart or so of mud in your face. You forget to select a safe place for the next step ; your foot glides gently down, and disappears in the inky depths; and, in resurrecting it, the other one goes under. The chances are that about this time you begin to talk to yourself; and the tenor of your remarks depends something on how you were brought up. Grimly you plow forward now ; for you are certain that the worst has come, and care nothing how many trees you over- turn in your course. Then a sapling on either side catches an oar, and they shut up on your aching neck like a pair of shears, a friendly limb lifts your hat, and drops it in the mud right where you was going to step, and, to save your hat, you make some playful passes in various ways, one foot gets on top of the other; then they wander off in different directions, and you sit down. It is a delightful sensation to sit aown — .n the wild woods — after violent exercise — and rest. Gentle zephyrs steal re- freshingly across your brow, and black mud insinuatingly through the pores of your trousers, /t such a moment as this, f ee from the thraldom of civilization, in the solemn still- ness of the mighty forests, with a soul attuned to its inspiring harmony, some well-remembered passage, learned in youth- tide, comes welling up from your joyous heart. Sometimes, however, Bible quotations get somewhat mixed, and a disin- terested beholder would be apt to misconstrue your devotional expressions. At such an hour as this, the most a man wants is undemonstrative sympathy. Such episodes, however, are the spice that season the dish of glorious things served up here among the mountains and lakes of the great wilderness. I20 The Adirondacks. A half-mile carry brought us to still water; then a short dis- tance of boating to Buttermilk Falls (which also lays claim to being Murray's "Phantom Falls") where the water dashes and foams down over the rocks, making a descent of about 20 feet — and the name, though not very poetical, was prob- ably suggested by the churning it gets in reaching the bottom. "Murray talk about shooting these falls in his boat, in pur- suit of the phantom form, is a very probable story for a min- ister to tell," said the schoolmaster with a shrug. "Why, I drove a brood of ducks down over there once. The old one knew better than to go — she flew up stream; but they — a dozen of young ones — went over, and only three came out alive. He talk of doing it ! There isn't Baptist enough about him to do it — but there's one thing he can * shoot;' that's the long bow." Alas for Mr. Murray's reputation for veracity ! The beautiful creations of his fancy, the bright pictures conjured up by his fertile brain, are held as witnesses against him, simply because he, in his lavish generosity, has enriched the common occurrences of every-day life in the woods, wi(h the precious incense of conceptive genius, and left a dazzled world to separate the real from the ideal. The guides took him literally as he said; and, although then in the high tide of his popularity, had come to the conclusion that if his preaching was not a better guide to heaven than his book to the Adirondacks his congregation might have managed to woiry through with a cheaper man. We put the boat into the deep, quiet water above the falls, and went upward a mile and a half; then a portage of the same distance brought us to Forked Lake. Forked Lake is a lovely sheet of water, about five miles in length, and appropriately named. The shore is compara- tively straight along on the south side; but on the north it is an irregular lire, which, as you approach the centre, opens up into a far-reaching bay — itself the main branch on which is strung a succession of deep bays, with intervening points ex- tending from east to west. " The Cedars," belonging to F. C. Raquette Lake. 121 Durant of New York, situated near the head of this bay, is one of the elegant private camps of the wilderness. Forked Lake House looks into this north bay from the south shore. This is included in the property recently ac- quired by the Hamilton Park Club, which takes in the north- ern half of township 35 and all of 36, extending beyond Lit- tle Tupper Lake. Transient visitors can procure meals here, but no permanent guests will be taken except members of the club and their friends. It is intended that a handsome struc- ture shall in time take the place of the old house. David Helms, of the Grove House, is manager. For the Bottle Pond route to Tupper Lake Region see page 209. Raquette Lake is at the south. Its outlet is through the long arm, which extends east, nearly parallel with the south shore of Forked Lake, into which it empties. From the Forked Lake House the road crosses to the steamboat land- ing on Raquette Lake, about a half-mile distant. It is a great mass of bays, separated by far-reaching points, extending nearly east and west. Its greatest length is but about f\ve miles, measured through islands and intervening headlands ; yet so irregular is its shape that the shore line, in its devious windings, is over 40 miles in extent. It is said that the first house built at Raquette Lake stood on Indian Point; the next one at Wood's Point, where an effort was made at farming. A twenty years' struggle, however, ended in its abandonment ; and, when we passed by, in 1873, only one lone man— old Alva Dunning, hving Robinson Cru- soe like on Osprey Island,— reigned monarch of the beautiful lake. Then the Sabbath stillness was broken only by an occa- sional party in camp or passing boat. There was no puffing steamer to carry us to our destination— only our gallant little pedagogue— who conducted us over the waters of the Ra- quette, up the tortuous windings of the Marion River, along through Utowana Lake, across Eagle Lake, in the gathering darkness ; and finally, up the uneven slope, to find weleome and rest in the " Eagle's Nest," once the wilderness home of Ned Buntline. CHAPTER IX. "The Eagle's Nest." Where the silvery gleam of the rushing streui Is so brightly seen on the rocks dark green, Where the white pink grows by the wild red roM And the blue bircf'^ings till the welkin rings. Where the red deer leaps and the panther creeps. And the eagles scream over cliff and stream. Where the lilies bow their heads of snow. And the hemlocks tall throw a shade o'er all. Where the rolling surf laves the emerald turf. Where the trout leaps high at the hovering fly. Where the sportive fawn crops the sofl green lawn. And the crows' shrill cry bodes a tempest nigh- There is my home — my wildwood home. Ned Buntline,* author of the above sweet lines that seem to rise upward like the joyous song of a wild bird, bringing thoughts of wild violets and the fragrance of dewy forests in it^ train— this strange man, with the blending natures of the tiger and the lark— came here in 1856, and here wrote, and hunted, and filled the mind of the public with wild reports of his erratic doings to his heart's content. He made the " Eagle's Nest " his home for some time, married a wife and buried her here, and then he tired of the old place and drifted out into the world again. *"The Life and Adventures of Ned Buntline," by Will Wildwood is now being published in serial form in M^i/d^vood s Magazine. "^''^^o^a, is now "Ned Buntline.'* 12 Ned had earned his spurs in Florida and Mexico, and when the war cloud broke over the houth, his restless, ven- turesome spirit called him to the field once more. Five wounds by sabre and bul- let, one of which has made him lame for life, testify to the service done for the country he served proudly and gladly, while with fine scorn he refused tiie prof- fered pension, and since, at intervals, as novelist, dram- atist, actor and temperance advocate has filled the pub- lic mind like — no one un- the sun but only -'Ned tline " the irrepressible. But the old eagle had flown, and other birds of prey occupied tlie nest when we came, guided by its wel- come light, through the October darkness to claim shelter for the night. It was then the only house of entertain- ment on the Eckford Chain, of which Eagle Lake is the middle link, and afforded a stopping place for sportsmen dur- ing summer and for lumbermen in winter. This lake is very ^^^-^sfe. £ NED BUNTLINH. • Edward Z. C. Judson (" Ned Buntline ") was born at Stamford, N. Y., March 20^ 1823. His adventurous career began in early childhood. He killed his first dee when eight years of age, ran off to sea at eleven, was promoted to midshipman when only thirteen, the same year fought seven duels with fellow-midshipmen who refused to mess with him on account of his supposed inferiority, and threatened to deplete the whole budding navy unless he was acknowledged as an equal ; the navy wilted. He served with credit in the Seminole war, in the Mexican war, and in the great Re- bellion. His first story, " The Captain's Pig, ' was published in his fifteenth year. As a writer 'of " Frontier Fiction " he was unexcelled. Buffalo Bill, Texas Jack, and Wild Bill were made famous by his stories of border life. His income as a story writer amounted to $20,000 annually. His literary productions would make more than two hundred large volumes. He was foremost in organizing the order of " United Ameri- cans" and the "Patriotic Order Sons of America." He died July 16, 1886, at hii mountain home, the " Eacle's Nest," in Delaware Co.. N. Y 124 The Adirondacks. pretty, and about one mile long. It receives the waters of Blue Mountain Lake at its east end ; and this stream, which was then too shallow to float us in our loaded boat, is now the thoroughfare of the little steamers that ply these waters. (For matter relating to Blue Mountain and Raquette Lakes, see page 199.) Across Blue Mountain Lake we went, and rested on its west shore, 35 miles from Long Lake by the roundabout way which we have come, but only about five miles away over the mountains. The schoolmaster decided the question of which rouLe to take back by shouldering his boat and starting up over the mountain. The path was a gradual ascent for a distance, then led through a long reach of swamp and open meadow- land, where the springy surface of matted grass and interlaced roots shook and bent over unknown depths of black muck; then we descended into the forest-embowered waters of South Pond ; across South Pond to its outlet ; thence to Long Lake, and, by boat, to the hotel ; after which we chartered seats in a farmer's wagon, and went east to Newcomb to spend the Sabbath. Newcomb is 14 miles from Long Lake, 27 miles from Root's and 29 from North Creek. Stages run three times a week. At Root's, connection is made with stage to and from Port Henry and Schroon Lake. Newcomb is one of the oldest settled sections in the wilderness ; is quiet and comfortable, and affords good hunting and fishing. The Wayside Inn and The Half-way House aftord limited accommodations for visitors. Price of board unknown. Washington Chase is postmaster, job printer, and dealer in drugs and general merchandise, and one of the enterprising men of the town. There is a water route, leading from this point, through Rich and CatHn Lakes, to Long Lake, striking the latter near its outlet. I CHAPTER X. *' On the Tramp." HUS far our travels had been principally by carriage of some kind or by boat. We had passed almost around the great peaks but had not been among them. The mountains that now looked down on us from the north we had viewed from the other side and from the west. We had made a loop of over 40 miles in the trip to Blue Mountain Lake and back to Long Lake, then east to Newcomb. Now we must trust to our feet to carry us where neither boat nor horse could go, and thanks to the pure air, and our initiatory struggles over the various carries, we felt equal to the task. So, on Monday morning, with knapsacks strapped on our backs, we left Newcombs for Adirondack, the ruined village among the mountains, eighteen miles distant. Soon we saw an old friend, the Hudson River, here so nar- row that in places we could almost jump across it. From the north it came, moving sluggishly along between dark balsams that lined its banks. Away over beyond rested the faint blue crest of Tahawas, *' the cloud splitter." " Tahawas," so called on the maps and in the postal depart- ments, is generally spoken of here as the "lower works," to distiguish it from the upper Adirondack village ; once there were extensive buildings at this place ; a long dam across the Hudson, here called the " North River," flooding the valley back to the outlet of Lake Sanford, and barges floating be- 126 The Adirondacks. tween the upper and lower village, carrying provisions up and the ore down. There was but one house standing there when we came. This was occupied by John Cheney the " Mighty Hunter " who we had hoped to see but could not as he was away hunting at the time. This house was burned the year follow- ing (1874) and the Adirondack Club House, where entertain- ment is now offered to the passing visitor, built afterwards. After dinner we followed along up the road on the west side of the valley. About halfway up, the foot of Lake Sanford is reached. This lake is four miles long with low marshy shores here and there, punctuated by round hills and knobby points. Just above the head of Lake Sanford is the " new forge." The huge building that inclosed is gone now, but the great stone furnace, forty feet square at its base, stands firm and solid as when made. The history of the place is brief and sad. In 1826 Messrs. Henderson, McMartin and Mclntire, who owned and operated iron-works at North Elba, were shown by an Indian, a piece of ore of remarkable purity, which he said came from a place where ''water run over dam, me find plenty all same." The services of the Indian were secured at once, at the rate of two shillings and what tobacco he could use per day, to conduct them to the place spoken of. They found, as the Indian had said, where the water literally poured over an iron dam. Has- tening to Albany, a tract of land embracing the principal ore beds in that vicinity, was secured, forges built, and a road cut from the lower works to Lake Champlain. The ore was rich but the expense of transportation to market swallowed all the profits, the enterprise proving a financial failure. Still it was persevered in until the death of Mr. Henderson, who was killed by the accidental discharge of his pistol. He had always had a nervous fear of firearms and at this time his pistol was carried by the guide in a pack which he laid down to perform some service required of him. Thinking that it lay in a damp place, Mr. Henderson picked the pack up and dropped it on a rock near by. With the motion came a sharp report from the pistol, the hammer of The Adirondacks. 127 which had probably struck the rock in faUing. Mr. Hender- son fell to the ground, saying " I'm shot," and soon breathed his last. The body was borne out on the shoulders of work- men, and afterward a beautiful monument placed where he fell, bearing the inscription : " Erected by filial affection to the memory of our dear father, David Henderson, who acci- dentally lost his life on this spot by the premature discharge of a pistol, 3d Sept., 1845." The place has since been called Calamity Pond. In the death of Mr. Henderson the motive power was r e- moved, and three years after h i s death the works were abandoned. When the writer first visited that ADIRONDACK IN 1873. sectioii there was an old Scotchman and family in charge, who cared for the property and took in strangers. And well do I remember the night when they sent us to sleep in one of the deserted houses which had the reputation of being haunted. We did imagine that curious sounds were heard during the night ; but whether of some uneasy spirit or some poor dog that had been robbed of his nest we could not tell. We quieted our fears and consciences, however, with the reflection that if it were a ghost it would never think of looking for human beings in that bed ; and, if a dog, he certainly hadn't lost anything worth mentioning in the operation. To-day but little appears of the ruined village. All but two or three of the buildings that stood therein 1873 have been removed or destroyed. The ancient school-house now does duty as a fish-hatchery, and the old kilns are overgrown with vines and shrubbery. There was something gruesome about the place when we approached in our tramp of '73. A quarter of a century had passed since the hum of industry LAKE SANFORD The Ruined Village. 129 sounded there. Where once was heard the crash of machinery and the shouts of children at play, was heard the shrill bark of the fox or the whir of the startled partridge. In place of the music of voices, was silence, solemn and ghostly. Over the mountains and the middle ground hung a dark funereal pall of cloud, across which the setting sun cast bars of ashen light, that fell on the nearer buildings, bringing out their unseemly scars in ghastly relief, and lay in strips across the grass-grown street which led away into the shadow. On either side stood cottages stained and blackened by time, with broken windows, doors unhinged, falling roofs and crumbling foundations. At the head of the street was the old furnace, one chimney still standing, one shattered by the thunder-bolt in ruins at its feet. The water-wheel — emblem of departed power — lay mo- tionless, save as piece by piece it fell away. Huge blocks of iron, piles of rusty ore, coal bursting from the crumbling kilns, great shafts broken and bent, rotting timbers, stones and rub- bish lay in one common grave, over which loving nature had thrown a shroud of creeping vines. Near the centre of the village was a large house that at one time accommodated a hundred boarders, now grim and silent. Near by at the left stood the pretty school-house. The steps, worn by many little feet, had rotted and fallen, the windows were almost paneless, the walls cracked and rent assunder where the foundation had dropped away, and the doors yawned wide, seeming to say not " welcome" but '* go." " O'er all there hung a shadow and a fear, A sense of mystery the spirit daunted, And said as plain as whisper in the ear. The place is haunted." As we advanced a dog appeared at the side of the large house and howled dismally, then, as if frightened at the sound of its own voice, slunk away again out of sight. We knocked at the door, but no sound save a hollow echo greeted us from within — that was also deserted. Then we went out in the middle of the street where, suspended in a tree, hung the bell that used to call the men to work, and, on the Sabbath, per- I30 The Adirondacks. haps, the villagers to worship in the little school-house near by. Clear and sweet, pure and fearless, its tones rang out over the forests, away to the mountains, then back to us, dying out in soft echoes. And with it went the cloud that had oppressed our spirits. We invited ourselves to enter, passed through the sounding hall to the rear, foraged around until we were satisfied that there was no danger of immediate starvation, then we built a fire and set about preparing our evening meal — at which point the rightful owners entered and went through the form of making us feel at home. This is now the headquarters of the Adirondack Club, who have leased and hold the surrounding territory as a game and fish preserve for the use of themselves and friends, and while their rules proclaim them a " close corporation," no one under- standing the circumstances can find reasonable objection. Stringent regulations apply equally to all members of the club. No member is permitted to hunt or fish outside the season as established by law, or hunt at all except on regularly appointed occasions. The small house at Tahawus and the larger building at the Upper Works are under competent manage- ment, and although primarily intended for the accommoda- tions of the club, provide excellent fare for the chance visitor. Price of accommodations is fixed by the club at $3.00 per day for all persons except guides and servants, and no person not a member of the club or their guests, will be entertained for more than a single night unless under pressing conditions. Parties who go through Avalanche Pass from the north and return by Indian Pass, or via versa, usually find the way too long for a single day, but breaking the trip at the Upper Works divides it evenly enough. Those who come are made welcome and entertained at the Club House in excellent shape. Myron Buttles the manager, is a walking encyclopedia of fact and figures, tireless in the discharge of his duty as manager and unremitting in his attention as host. Lake Colden. 131 Calamity Pond is 5 miles toward the east and reached over a road which is used for lumbering in winter but which in sum- mer is passable only on foot. Lake Colden is two miles further, over a mountain trail. This is one of the wild lakes of the woods, and next to Avalanche Lake gives the wildest water view in the wilderness. On the west shore is a log house belonging to the Adirondack Club where a forester is kept to guard the interests of the Associ- ation and see that laws respecting the preservation of game and fish are properly carried out. North of this log camp a few rods is an open camp where parties going or coming may make themselves reasonably comfortable for the night. Avalanche Lake is nearly a mile north of Lake Colden, the trail passing also along its west shore. Its altitude is 2,846 feet above tide. Its waters are cold and its walls of rock are perpendicular on either side. It is half a mile in length, and but a few rods wide. Between it and lake Colden are the debris from two immense slides that decended the mountain long before the place was known, imprisoning the waters of this lake. A trap dike here shows a section of Mount Colden, split downward for a thousand feet, its outflowing rocks nearly bridging the lake. This lake, and, past it, Colden, is best reached now by trail from Adirondack Lodge, five miles north. See page 86. Lake Henderson is about half a mile north of Adirondack. It is two miles long with its outlet near the center, on the east. From its head a trail leads to the Preston Ponds, lying west of Wallface Mountain — the head of Cold River, which flows west into Raquette River. Toward the north we look up a gradual slope through Indian Pass ; the dark green sides of Mclntyre on the east, mighty Wallface on the west. Up this slope we went on the morning following our night at the Iron Works. CHAPTER XI. Indian Pass. HAD expected to find a ^evcl, fertile, grove-like way throui^h which we could walk with little; exertion in the shadow of great rocks on either side, but how different the reality. For three ^^T^^^rl "i''^s the rise was gradual, then we began to <™^ ^i7T<3fA c|i,|^5^ crossing the rivulet back and forth as we went upward, at times making long detours to the right and ascending the mountain some distance, then a level stretch along its sides until the wildly dashing torrent was reached once more; then onward, upward, the path growing wilder and more dilficult, the brooklet bounding from rock to rock, then lost in some dark cavern, anon trickling down among the huge boulders, gurgling in muffled music beneath our feet, then bursting out to rest a moment in some mossy basin, pure crystal in an emerald setting on which floated fairy ships of Autumn leaves, then onward in its long jour- ney to the sea. We had caught occasional giimps 1 Giant, a little more than a half mile distant. ^J^^^ II n.ake a descent of nearly 300 feet in '^/---^Y;;;™^^^ * hardly touching at each step to gather for the next succeeding 164 The Adirondacks. plunge ; then flashing swiftly down the almost perpendicular rock for the last fifty feet, through a trough worn out by its action, to rest at the bottom ; and out, in pretty little falls and dashes, across the Chapel pond trail, and downward toward the north to join the Ausable. Chapel Pond is one mile farther, in a gorge, southwest of the Giant — a nearly perpendicular wall of rock descending abruptly to near the water's edge. It is one-half mile long and perhaps one-fourth wide ; its dark surroundings give an im- pressive air to this lonely sheet, and make it seem more fitting as a place for solemn meditation than for angler's sport. It is 1,602 feet above tide. The Giant's Washbowl is at the northeast, on the side of the mountain. It is said you can stand on its edge and throw a stone over into Chapel Pond, more than 500 feet below. The Chapel Pond road leads from St. Hubert's Inn east along the side of the gorge, past Chapel Pond to Euba Mills. at the head of Pleasant Valley; thence to Mineville, 15 miles, or to Root's, 17 miles from the starting point. The road is good, considering the country traversed, and between the two valleys is exceedingly wild and picturesque. A day can be profitably spent in making this excursion. Russell Falls are but a few rods distant, and may be reached by paths through the woods west of the Inn. To the top of Noon Mark it is two miles; Mount Colvin, five miles, the Giant about four miles ; Hopkins Peak, four miles. A trail was completed in 1885 from the Ponds road to Mount Colvin. It crosses McCrea's Brook over a sub- stantial rustic bridge, and passes near the Wizard's Washbowl and the high falls of Gill Brook. The steep ledge at the sum- mit is now easily scaled by means of stout ladders. Starting from the Inn, an average pedestrian can reach the signal in about three hours. A trail from the Lower Lake to Indian Head was opened in i888, and a branch trail connecting with the trail to Mt. Colvin. A new trail to the top of the Gothics was opened in 1887. Keene Valley. 165 Resagonia Mountain is in the southwest, its serrated out- line suggesting its local name of " Saw-teeth Mountain." East of this is the round, knob-like crest, known as " Indian Head ;" which, sphinx-Uke, looks out over the waters of the Lower Au Sable Lake. Mount Colvin rises beyond, sweeping back towards the south and east, to its sharp, clean-cut summit so named in honor of Verplanck Colvin, superintendent of tlie Adirondack Survey. The Adirondack Mountain Reserve is incorporated under the laws of New York, with the following officers : \Vm. G. Neilson, Philadelphia, president; S. Sidney Smith, New York, secretary; Wm. C. Alderson, treasurer. The board of trustees are Wm. Alexander, S. Sidney Smith, C. C. Cuyler, and Frederick J. Stimspn, of New York, and Wm. G. Neilson, Richard C. Dale, and Edward I. H. Howell, of Philadelphia. This corporation has purchased the tract of country lying south of Keene Valley, including within its limits the Au Sable lakes, and the great mountains surrounding them, ex- tending southwesterly to take in about one-half of Mount Marcy. The declared objects of the association are the pre- servation of the forests, lakes, and streams in their natural beauty ; to restock the water with fish ; to protect the game ; and to render more accessible, by roads and trails, the points of interest within its domain. To this end, has been built, practically, a new road, along the heretofore almost impassable line, from Beede's to the Lower Au Sable Lake, and opened to the public. Toll will be charged as follows : For season tickets, $1.50; two-horse carriage and passengers, trip $1,00; single rig, 50 cents; horse and rider, 25 ; pedestrian, 10; au- thorized guides and children under 10, free. The receipts for toll are to be expended in repairing and improving the road, and in making new trails up the mountains and to miportant lookouts. A stage will run regularly, during the season, from the village to the Lower Au Sable. Fare from Adirondack I The Adirondacks. 166-B House, 75 cents, round Irij), $1.25; from Si. ilubert's Inn 50 cents, round tri}) 75 cents. Some of the rules established by the A. M. R. may seem over-rigid ; but they have been adopted after a careful consid- eration of the case, and witli a view to the best interests of all concerned. The fact that the owners themselves are bound as rigidly as the veriest stranger, is reply enough to those who would suggest anything but the best of motives, and the move- ment is to be commended by all right-minded persons who may not consider fishing and the taking of animal life as the only pleasurable sensations to be experienced here among nature's grandest scenes, A rustic gate-house is at the entrance to the Reserve, just south of the Inn. At the Lower Lake, a boat-house and cottage have been built, where refreshments, boats, and gen- eral information, with camp supplies and privileges, can be obtained. Cutting green timber, peeling bark, or defacing the prop- erty of the company in any manner, is forbidden. On Sun- days, boats will not be rented, nor will goods be sold by the agents of the company. No malt or spirituous liquors will be 1 345 UPPER AU SABLE LAKE. 1. Haystack; 3. Saddleback; 4. Gothic; 5. Resagonia. sold on the company's reserve at any time. Hunting will not be permitted this season. Fishing allowed only by special permit. All the camps on the lakes are owned and controlled by the company, and no one will be allowed to occupy them unless accompanied by an authorized guide. Permission can l66-c Keene Valley. be obtained at the boat-house cottage, at the Lower Lake. Twenty-five cents per night will be charged each visitor for the use of a camp. Following is a list of the authorized guides of Keene Valley — an organization bound by rules of its own making, where membership may be accepted by the public as a guarantee of capabihty. Address, at Keene Valley. Horace E. Braman, 3/4 ^i '/4. ONE MILt 5CAU CH/^i. ettet : JU)«tK C AMP5 [JP'PIR /\u5ABL[]AKt. Arthur C. Trumbull, Melville J. Trumbull, George W. Han- mer, Oren E. Beede, Charles E. Trumbull, Charles Beede, Edmund F. Phelps, James Owens, George F. Beede, Harry S. Stetson, Melvin A. Hathaway, Le Grand Hale, Frank C. Par- ker (Forester), C. Wesley Lamb, Fred. E. Lamb. ******* We saw what was to be seen in the valley ; then, guided by old Mountain Phelps, with basket on back and lit- tle hatchet in hand, went to South Pass, where St. Hu- bert's Inn now stands, and up along brawling Gill Brook, Lower Ausable Tond. 167 MT. COLVIN. AUSABLB FASS. RESAGONIA. over a path that is sometimes dignified by the name of wagon- road, but over which but few would attempt to ride. "All things is possible and nothing ompossible," said Phelps diving into the bushes on one side of the road, and soon re- appearing with a piece of band iron which he stowed away in his bag, '* like as not I will need this to mend an oar or some> thing ; old Phelps is such an easy old critter to get along with, that they take his boat, bang it 'round as much as they want to, may- be break an oar, and he never'll make a fuss about it; shouldn't wonder a bit if they had it off somewhere now." After what seemed a long four mile tramp through the woods, we came out in a little opening near the brow of a hill, and were just rising to look out when a fierce gust of wind from the other side set the old man's hat whirling back toward us ; we succeeded in spearing it, then as we turned and glanced out ahead, were surprised, almost dazzled by the wonder- ful beauty of the scene that flashed out so suddenly and un- expectedly on our astonished sight Ausable Pond in all its Swiss-like beauty was before us We stood at the end of our road on the brow of a hill whosr front had apparently been undermined, and ran sharply down to the water's edge, gleaming, drifti ig, unstable sand. On the left, close by, was old Indian Head, the side toward us all in shadow : rough and jagged, standing like some grim sentinel to guard the narrow pass at his feet — beyond was Mount Colvin, the sides rising in places straight up from the water, then backward to the sharp ridge over 2,100 feet above. seemingly crowned with a coronet of diamonds that flashed and glittered as the water trickled down over the rocks, and LOWER AUSABLE LAKE. Au Sable Lakes. 169 mountains were passing slowly, like some great glacier, to- ward the plain. Now, among birches that have grown at the outlet since our first visit, stands the boat-house cottage and refreshment- room, and a road, circling around the bluff where I speared the old man's hat, leads down to the water's edge ; but grand old Indian Head still looks out toward the dark green sides of Resagonia, and rivulets glisten on the side of Mount Colvin the same as then. From the head of the Lower Au Sable, a walk of something over a mile along the stream that connects the two brought us to the shore of the Upper Au Sable, where Phelps entered the bushes in search of the boat which we had left there. "Just as I expected," said he, with a whimsical triumph in finding matters as he had anticipated. " 'Taint there. Old Phelps's boats belong to everybody but himself. Wall, we haven't got much farther to go to my shanty, that's one satisfaction ; and maybe they'll let us stay there all night, considering that it belongs to me." So we skirted the west shore a little way, and came out at the shanty, where we found the hunting party jubilant over the fourth deer they had taken in three days, and preparing supper, to which we did full justice. Upper Au Sable Lake is about two miles in length, and a half mile wide. Without being the very wildest, it is, per- haps, the most picturesque of all Adirondack lakes. It re- flects, in its waters, a number of the most striking mountain- peaks, which, seen from this place, are varied and extremely beautiful. Some are thickly wooded slopes; others naked rock, seamed and scarred. On the east is the Boreas Moun- tain, a long, heavily wooded ridge, terminating at the north in Mount Colvin, and extending south about 10 miles. At the west is Bartlett Mountain, a high ridge, near the lake. Over its south slope is seen the sharp cone of Haystack, which hides Marcy, the highest of the Adirondacks. Toward the north, comes Basin, Saddleback, the Gothic, and Resagonia — a grand circle of giants, on whose sides we can mark the I/O The Adirondacks. course of mountain torrents and the white, gUstening paiti of the avalanche. The shores of the lake are thickly wooded to the water's edge. This is favorite camping-ground, not only for hunters in the hunting season, but throughout the warm weather, among those who come here to enjoy its beauty and the unfettered life of the woods. The camps are mostly open in front to face the campfire, and are built and owned by the authorized guides of Keen Valley, by authority from the owners of the Reserve. The ascent of Marcy from Keene Valley is oftenest made from this direction, going by boat up the Au Sable inlet to Marcy Brook ; then up along the west side of Bartlett Moun- tain. We can hardly do better than give the trip in the words of tjie "Old Man of the Mountains," who stands ready to relieve ;us. So we will stand aside, and give him the floor. Ladies and gentlemen — Mr. Phelps. "Well, I guess I kin show you the way, fur I've been up there near a hundred times, I s'pose. Let's see, we're in Panther Gorge now, I believe, and, before we go up Marcy, I want to show you a sight up here, from the side of Haystack, that is worth seeing, where we can look right down into the gulf below. See that precipice on the Marcy side ? It is one continuous wall of rock, a mile in length, circling around to the head of the gorge, with Castle Column at its head. That is one of the wildest places in the Adirondacks, where, after a heavy rain or in the spring, streams pour down it from all sides. You see that water-course over there in the centre ? I have seen an almost unbroken sheet of water, six feet wide, pouring over that to the bottom of the gorge, almost a thousand feet below. Now we will pass on up the trail once more, just stopping to notice those shafts of rock across on the Haystack side. There are three of them, entirely detached from the wall near by, about ten feet square, and one of them near fifty feet high, with a loose cap-stone on top of it. The soft I'HE ADIRONDACKS. 17 1 rock mubt have crumbled away between them and the mair ledge while they were left standing. Now, out at the upper end and we begin to climb Marcy, striking the John's Brook trail that goes down to Keene Flats near its centre. Up here, on the side of the mountain, we find a little marsh, which is the head of the longest branch of the great Hudson River, and the largest branch of the Ausable ; but our trees are getting stunted and we will soon be able to see over the tops of them; it's about like going through a thrashing machine trying to get along before they are chopped out ; but here we are at last at the top, and you see this is the place to see things*, down there at Marcy Brook, where we turned to go through Panther Gorge, comes the other trail up this way, running spirally up the south side from east to west until it strikes the smooth rock that has been swept clean by the avalance ; then up that, across back and forth to its head. It is about as steep as the roof of a house, and when it is wet and slippery it's bad getting along, but when its dry it sticks to your boots like sand paper. In making the round trip the trail goes down the north side a ways to the head of the Opales- cent, then west through the valley and out by Lake Colden and Calamity Pond to the Adirondack Iron Works. The summit of Tahawus is comparatively level for 6 rods north and south, and 15 rods east and west, a few loose boul- ders lie about promiscuously. At the west end ol this flat is a mass rising up some eight or ten feet that contains the high- est solid rock in the State of New York. Tahawus has some- thing of a ridge-like appearance, running north-east and south-west, although its whole formation is a comparatively round mound of rock. The upper thousand feet is bare, and clear the farthest down on the south-west side ; the west side of this mountain has more the appearance of a pasture hill- Bide than a mountain above vegetation, its partial covering ol Alpine grasses and other plants and shrubs give it a domestic and agricultural appearance. The whole south side is covered with bristly balsam up within a few rods of the top, and is the steepest and longest side, sloping away i}4 miles at the rate ol 2,000 feet to the mile, to the foot of Panther Gorge. Large oortions ot the south side have been swept off by avalanchesi l^Jl The Adirondacks. The east is far the roughest part of the mountain. It drops easily off the first i,ooo feet, and then takes one final leap of I, GOO feet into Panther Gorge. On the north side, it drops down to the head of the Opalescent Valley, more or less broken with precipices and ravines." North from Marcy, over beyond a mass of mountain ridges, is the cleared fields of North Elba. Turning toward the northeast, we look down John's Brook Valley into Keen Val- ley. Beyond is seen Lake Champlain and the Green Moun- tains of Vermont. East is Haystack and the Gothics. To- wards the southeast is the deep valley of Marcy Brook. Be- yond is Boreas Mountain, and the mountains that cluster about Schroon Lake and Lake George. Away off in the southwest is distant Blue Mountain and the Raquette Lake region. At our feet lies little Tear of the Clouds, — the high- est body of water in the Adirondacks, and the fountain head of the great Hudson River, — ^4,293 feet above tide. North of west is Mount Golden, Mclntyre, and others of less note. " I once saw the clearing up of a thunderstorm on Marcy,'' continues the old man. "There was a tornado sweeping over the top of the mountain, and the fog-clouds, broken into patches, were running at lightning speed. When one of those clouds would strike the mountain all would be shut in with fog for perhaps two or three seconds, when it would open, giving a view of a dazzhng, brilHant orange-tint over the whole western sky. This could be enjoyed from two to four seconds, when the enveloping fog would come again — to save one from going crazy, I suppose. "A thunderstorm in the night is an awful sight from the summit of Tahawus. I once saw one at near midnight, ap- proaching from the west, when it was all below me, and I could look on the top of the cloud and see the streaks of light- ning darting in every direction. It appeared like a mountain of serpents writhing in every conceivable manner. When Camp Phelps. 173 it finally reached me, it appeared very natural, with the exception the thunder seemed very near by. There are a great variety of fog scenes ; I saw one of three-fourths of the orcle about me, a level ocean of fog and the other quarter clear ; it made me think of a big pie with one quarter taken out; another one was of fog driven over Skylight in a bright moonlight night, it pitched over the east side like a mammoth water-fall, which it was, not of a river but a cloud ; anothei majestic sight was the gathering and passing up of what we call a quick south storm ; when I first saw it, it was some forty miles distant, coming on at the rate of a mile in two minutes ; a massive cloud with the driping curtain of rain reaching down to the earth ; as it passed up nearer it threw out some of the most wonderful shades and colors ; in the centre it was ol a clear gray ; some six to eight miles to the east and west, of a bright purple, growing lighter to the extremes, and to the east and west softening down to a sunshine hazy light ; it passed over to the St. Lawrence lasting near two hours." Camp Phelps, on the upper Ausable, is one of the most complete in its appointment and management of any shanty in the Adirondacks. The structure is of an elegant design, and built of magnificent logs cut and curved artistically with knots of various and unique patterns in has relief. The main floor is about 2% by 5 feet, swings outward, and is locked with a 1 HE AdIRONDACKS. String; It contains an immense reception room, drawing room, private parior and sleeping rooms en ^uite, with ward- robes sticking out all around the sides. The grand dining hall is situate out on the lovely lawn, which is quite exten- sive, and splendidly furnished with hemlock extensions and stumps. This spacious structure is six by ten feet on the ground, and between four and five feet high, and is sur- mounted by a Yankee too{ of troughs in two layers, the upper covering the crevices in the lower so as to exclude the rain but separated far enough to give perfect ventilation. Thii chef (Tafuvre of TixchiitciuvQ is first class in every respect it IS luxuriously upholstered throughout with spruce boughs, in the culinary department is a stupendous range which floods the drawing room with light, and, in short, it contains all the modem improvements, including hot and cold water, which is carried to every part of the establishment in pails. Here we gathered, Crawford's party ot seven, and ours, ten in all, be- side two or three dogs, in a space about six by eight feet square, and while the fire snapped and flickered, filling the shanty with dancing shadows, stories of hunting and fishing adventures were told that all were expected to believe be- cause they were personal experiences, although occasionally one would have a familiar sort of sound with the exception of names and dates. Stories of personal prowess which cul- minated in one of a man who could pick up a two barrel iron kettle by the edge with his teeth, and the assertion by another that he knew a man who could perform the same feat sitting m the kettle himself when he liaed it. which was making light of serious subjects, and so Phelps told his bear story, how one day near the Boreas, he saw a big bear coming on the run after him and he, armed with only a little ax. then when the bear got within twenty feet of him he yelled "halt." which stopped the bear — he couldn't prevaricate, he did it with hia little hatchet — he didn't feel scared any. only stirred up like but the bear reversed ends and made off as fast as it could wabble. Then Uncle Harvey told all about how he killed a bear with a pitchfork once, and a moose with a club, after tir- ing him out in the deep snow. " But. by gawl, boys." said he. - When Dick Estus tumbled over backward on his snow shoes i Breakfas*^ 175 BBd the cntter gave a lunge for him, I thought it was all up »eith him, but I just gave command to the boys, and at him we went, and, by gawl, the way we laid it on his old hide was a caution, and there lay Dick, square on his back, looking up, thinkin' that every minute was his last, and, by gawl, I just managed to get a lick at the critter that fetched him just as he was standin' over Dick so," and the old hunter assumed a posi- tion, indicative of an enraged moose preparing to come down on an unfortunate little chap on his back in the snow, who couldn't turn over on account of his snow-shoes. Thus each had their stories to tell until time to turn in, when four of the party went across the pond to another camp, leaving six of us to occupy a space six feet long by six feet wide, and where we slept on edge, like a box of well-packed sardines, until day- light, when each man got up and cut a chunk of venison, salt pork or bacon as taste dictated, and each man for himself waltzed around that stove in the six by ten shanty until he had warmed it through enough to suit, or disguising pieces ol raw material in an outside coating of bread, proceeded to stow it away with that appearance of keen enjoyment dis- played by the average boy in taking a pill ; then a part rushed away to put out the dogs, others to the various runways. The old man gave his attention to some sort of a stew, which, as he had made no calculations on staying out all night, and the camp supplies had run low in the particular materials needed, was partially a failure ; the professor, with ft home-sick sort of expression on his face, was picking away at an ancient piece of bacon, while an enthusiastic individual who had wallowed in an ecstacy of imaginative bliss, theoreti- cally, over venison stake, broiled at the blazing camp fire, was engaged in preparing a savory strip of the same, which as he forgot to apply salt, and got hold of a piece just moderately warm — not cooked, at the first bite, roused a rebel- lious feeling within him, and he felt the full force of those saddest of all words, "it might have been (done,)" but it was not ordained to be, and at last, as his mind kept running on accounts of ship-wrecked people who had to eat each other or starve, and cannibalism seemed imminent, one of the ^ides came in like a dove bringing — not the olive t7^ The Adirondacks. branch exactly — but a bag of oat-meal, which he made into pan-cakes, and those pan-cakes went to our hearts and stomachs like the blissful ecstacy of love's young dream. We were saved ! And while we ate he baked and brought them forward and the more we ate the happier he seemed to feel about it, none of your little patty-cakes, but great big fellows the size of the frying pan, light as sea foam almost, and making, with maple sugar, a breakfast, the which when suggested, makes my mouth water to this day. It was but a little act of simple courtesy, offered, perhaps, without a thought of return; but it showed the willing disposition, and those pan-cakes touched a chord in the breast of one individual at least that will vibrate for all time, and if ever permitted to go there again he will ask for nothing better or if reports be true, a truer guide than Theo. White of Keene Flats, author of those glorious pan-cakes. After breakfast Phelps took us up the inlet, with its dark | borders of balsam and tamarack, to the Elk Lake trail, where ] THE GREAT PEAKS FROM THE SOUTH. I Golden ; 2 Allen ; 3 Skylights ; 4 Marcy ; 5 Panther Gorge ; 6 Haystack 7 Basin ; 8 Saddleback ; 9 Gothic. bidding him a regretful adieu (for we had become attached to the cheery Old Man of the Mountains in our short acquaint- ance) we started on our tramp of sixteen miles, out through the woods to Root's, feeling that we were nearing friends who would be glad to welcome us home ; clearer in thought and stronger in body than when we entered ; glad to go back but sad at thought of leaving the mountains, over which we saw the storm cloud gather, break and roll away, leaving them bathed in the loving sunshine, clean, grand, strong and seem- ingly eternal, as The Hand that made them. I CHAPTER XIV. Luzerne and Chestertown. UZERNE is situated at the junction of the Hudson and Sacandaga rivers, twenty-two miles north of Saratoga. It is inclosed by picturesque, rounded hills, heavily wooded to their summits, save here and there a break where some ledge looks out on the valley below. On the west are the Kayaderosseras mountains, on the east the Palmerton range, that has its rise at Lake (jeorge, and falls away into the level of Broadway at Sara- toga; toward the north they are broken, rocky and pictur- esque. These are the outreaching spurs of the Adirondack that rest so grandly away to the north, from which the Hudson comes flowing quietly along until it gathers among tiie great round boulders, then bounds, foaming and spark- ling, over the rocks in the exquisite little falls of Luzerne, a.nd hastens forward under the bridge and downward to its union with the Sacandaga at Ti-se-rafi-do, " the meeting of tlie waters," From this down the river to Jessup's Landing is six miles of still water, then sweeps around almost north again. At Palmer's Falls it is gathered in a narrow channel, then with a multitude of little leaps and breaks, churned and beaten into foam by its fall, it rests at the bottom sixty feet below. Luzerne Lake is a pearl set in emerald, lying at quite an elevation above the village proper ; a crystal drop on the hill side, kept there by a narrow embankment through 178 The Adirondacks. which the outlet finds its way, and after amusing itself among sets of water-wheels, it passes out into the Hudson and to the sea. The Wayside Inn is just north of the village, facing the lake. It has connected with it a number of cottages which can be rented for the season, affording altogether accommoda- tions for about 200 guests. It is an imposing structure with numerous gables, porches, piazzas and balconies. The in- terior is in keeping — roomy, rambling, airy ; with pleasant of- fice, dining-room and parlor, and with a charming outlook over the lake and forest, and the rolling meadow land around. It has telegraph station in the office, and an excellent livery within call. Guests are transferred to and from all trains free. E. C. King, for some time chief clerk, is the manager. Rates, $3.50 to $4.00 per day; open June i8th to October ist. ■I Rockwell's Hotel, famous for years under the management of the founder, George Rockwell, and his son George H. Rockwell, and notable as the school from which H, J. Rock- well, of the Hotel Kenmore, Albany, and C. L. Rockwell, of the Rockwell House, Glens Falls, graduated — is now no more. It burned to the ground. May 18, and its re-building is a ques- tion not yet decided upon. The River View, standing just south of Rockwell's Hotel, will provide for about 80 guests. E. M. Garner, proprietor.^ Rates unknown. There are many beautiful drives around Luzerne. One es- pecially lovely, is down along the east shore of the river, that' is here almost always in a quiet mood where the trees that hang over the glassy stream appear no more perfect than the reflected image, to Jessup's Landing, where you may cross, inj the primitive style of olden times, in a scow that is held from] floating down with the stream by a rope stretched from shore; to shore. Another, to which a full day should be given, is to Lake George, and still another over the mountain to Glens^ Falls. \ ClIESTERTOWN. I^TQ Luzerne is on the old Indian trail from the great villages of the Mohawks to the head of Lake George. Here King Hendrick and his braves encamped when on their way to join Johnson at the lake in 1775. North of Luzerne the road runs along the river, at times crowded close against its brink as the valley narrows down and the mountains grow more abrupt and precipitous. Riverside is 28 miles from Luzerne, and 50 from Saratoga. Here the cars are left for Chestertown and Schroon Lake, otherwise the place is of little interest, save in the graceful suspen- sion bridge which is thrown across from shore to shore. Chestertown is a thriving little village of about 200 inhabitants, lying six miles east of Riverside. Its environment is picturesque, with lakes and valleys and with rolling hills that rise in places to be con- siderable mountains. The roads about it are interesting, and riding and driving the popular amusement ; but, still, only a short walk is needed to reach woods where partridges and the smaller game are found. The lakes near by afford superior bass fishing. The Chester House is on high ground in the village. It is three stories high, with pleasant piazzas, and is fronted by a nice grove of maples. It was for years popular under the management of M. H. Downs, when it earned the reputation of spreading one of the best of tables. It is now under Harry S. Downs, son of the former proprietor, who, with consid- erable experience in the business, adds a pleasant presence, an obliging disposition, and youthful zeal and enterprise. This house will care for about 150 guests. Rates, $2 per day; $10 to $12 per week. CHAPTER XVII. ScHROON Lake. CHROON LAKE is undoubtedly one of the most popular semi-wilderness resorts in the country ; it is surrounded on all sides by m cun- tains, not high, but wild and rugged, and broken into curious fragmentary masses, grow- ing smoother as you approach the north end. It is nearly ten miles in length, perhaps two wide, and divided in two nearly equal portions at the narrows. It receives the waters of Paradox and other lakes and streams at the north and empties through Schroon river into the Hudson at Thurman. The shores are low, receding in g;entle slopes for a distance, then rise up into the mountains surrounding it. Near the southern extremity is Pottersville ; 3,t the north the village of Schroon Lake. It is reached usually by the Adirondack Railroad, from Saratoga to Riverside, then by stage to the outlet, and by steamer to the village at its head. Distance from Saratoga, 65 miles ; fire, $3.75. The Leavitt Stage Line, between Riverside and Schroon Lake, is not unworthy of special notice, the ride affording a pleasant change from the cars, giving variety, without con- tinuing long enough to become wearisome, followed by the halt for dinner, and the race to the steamboat in the open wagons. The four-horse coaches used here are of the well- known Concord build. The stock is first-class, and the drivers are of the most reliable, Eugene Leavitt, proprietor of the line, being considered one of tne best whips in the SCHROON T.AKE. iSl country. Six-horse, tally-ho stages run to tlic iiiaiu trains, and hghter wagons of this line connect morning and evening, with the "sleeper" at Riverside. PoTTERSViLLE HoTEL is six mlles from Riverside. it is the regular dining place for passengers going or coming, and furnishes a wholesome and most substantial dinner. John B. Wells, for sometime its manager, is now owner and proprietor, having secured this property by purchase. Mr. AVellsis a young man, full of energy, and brings to the business experience of value from the Wells House on Schroon Lake. The house is comfortably furnished, and affords pleasant ac- commodations to those who may prefer this to the northern ex- tremity of the lake. Trout Brook, running close by the house, affords very good sport, while river and lake fishing-ground is easily readied. At the northwest the country is extremely wild. Rates for board are $2 per day; $7 to $10 per week. The Steamboat Landing is at the outlet of Schroon Lake, something less than a mile from Pottersville. Here the *'Efifingham," Captain Sam Russell, waits the coming stage. The sail through Schroon Lake is delightful, and not so long continued as to become tedious. Fare 75 cents. Adirondack is a hamlet on the east, four miles from the outlet. 1 82 The Adirondacks. As the little steamer swings slowly around and starts away on her nine mile trip through the lake we see that the moun- tains are all around, and although other lake gems may have a grander setting, there are few with greater variety and none with lovelier shores. On the southwest are the great rough mountain ribs and knobs that gather around Pottersville ; to- ward the north they soften down for some distance ; then be- yond we see the sharp outlines of the Blue Ridge, and catch glimpses of Mount Dix, the Dial and the numberless, name- less peaks that cluster around Tahawus — the cloud splitter — seen at one point, faint and blue with distance. Adirondack is on the east side, on the stream of the same name. It is four miles from the other, quite a stirring Httle place, fragrant with the odorous smell of tanbark and popu- lar with a good class of summer visitors. Watch Rock Hotel is just beyond the northern border of the little village in a luxuriant grove that extends towards the north along the lake and backward to the mountains. Its environments bespeak a thrift and enterprise that has placed it on a par with the leading hotels of the Adirondacks. It has connected with it several cottages, some of them occupied by their owners, while others form a part — and a very delightful part — of the hotel accommodations. One notable feature is a series of springs of fresh mountain water, famous for purity, coldness and healthful properties, taking rank as such among the uncommon ones of the mountains. Accommodations are here afforded for about 124 -guests. Rates $3.00 per day ; $14.00 to $18.00 per week. Open from June 15th to Octo- ber. George Cecil, proprietor. Steamers connecting at the foot of the lake with stages for the railroad, land at every trip. Fare, 50 cents. The Taylor House and Cottages are located on Lake View Point, nearly opposite Adirondack. In addition to the main building used as a general dining, room, parlor and of- fices, there are fifteen or more cottages of various forms and The Adirondacks. 183 sizes scattered among the trees and presenting altogether a very attractive picture. Capacity of all about 175. The house and grounds are lighted h^ electricity. The accommo- dations and fare are excellent. Rates from $14.00 to $21.00 per week ; $2.50 to $3.00 per day. C. F. Taylor & Son, pro- prietors. P. O., Taylor' s-on-Schroon, Warren Co., N. Y. The steamboat lands on all trips to and from the outlet. Fare, 50 cents. 34 5 schkodn lake village fkom south. 1 Dock; 2 Ondawa House ; 3 Lake House ; 4 Windsor; 5 Leiand House. ScHROON Lake in general, we have spoken of. Schroon Lake in particular means the collection of little houses and big hotels at its head. Like the inhabitants of Caldwell, who embezzled the entire name of Lake George, for postal purposes, the little village here has swooped down and gobbled up " Schroon Lake," without regard to the rights or feelings of those who may locate at different points along its shores, and who, when they have occasion to say they live at Schroon Lake, find it necessary to explain that they mean only near the water thereof. The little village is, however, worthy of the best name on record, if beauty of location and general appearance entitles one to such. The main street through which the road runs to the north is a fine shaded avenue, the land sloping down to the edge of the lake, displaying the whole in a very pretty manner. It is a thoroughly wide awake town, show- ing a degree of enterprise that many larger places might well be proud of; daily mails are maintained throughout the year; the telegraph brings it in direct communication with the great cities. The churches are good — although Schroon ScHROON Lake. Lake doesn't rely much on its churches. The hotel accom- modations are first-class, while the enterprise of their propri- etors, together with the fine •natural attractions of the place, has earned for this a world-wide reputation, standing secc nd only to Lake George — ahead of it, even, with those who de- light to point the rifle or cast the fly. The society here is of a refined class, scarcely any of the rowdy element finding its way in, for the bright skies, the waving fields, the far-reaching forests, and the grand freedom of the mountains, possess little that is congenial to the tastes of such. The Grove Point House is about a half-mile south of the village, and the steamboat lands here on its regular trips. The house is attractive of itself, and is picturesque in its sur. roundings. It prospers because its manager is thorough, en- ergetic, and withal, obliging. It contains many of the con- veniences and appliances of the modern hotel, including elec- tric bells. Accommodations are here ofl"ered for about 75 guests. Rates, $2 per day; $8 to $12 per week. An illus- trated circular, giving particulars, will be sent on application. Captain W. A. Mackenzie. As we approach the village, the most prominent objects are the hotels — the Leland House, on the high ground at the right; the Schroon Lake House, near the water's edge; over this, the Windsor House, and the Ondawa, among the trees at the left of the Lake House. The Leland House is the leading hotel of Schroon Lake. From its commanding position it overlooks the lake in three directions — south, east, and north, and, on the west, the village and the hills beyond. On its south front is a broad, high piazza, double at the ends; and, in front of this, a grand -^ort-coachare — a pleasant and duly appreciated feature of a sunny day. An observatory on the top of the building is 107 feet above the lake, and gives a view of rare beauty and con- sidvirable extent, showing the full reach of the lake at the south, and a charming picture of Schroon Valley toward the 1 86 The Adirondacks. proportions. Its rooms are large and well furnished. New mattresses have been added during the past year and the usual refurnishing done throughout. A pleasant feature of the house — hibernically speaking — is its open platform outside over- hanging the lake shore, and itself overshadowed by wide- spread trees, affording one of the most delightful imaginable resting places of a sultry afternoon or evening. Underneath this platform, in the bank, is a cold spring from which the wa- ter is forced up into the house. The hotel, as conducted by Mr. Riddell last year, has been spoken of in the highest terms by old guests. A generous policy marks the new manage- ment and can not fail to attract visitors and bring success. The Ondawa is just west of the Lake House, among the trees that nearly hide it from sight when viewed from the lake. It will provide for about loo people. Board costs from $2.00 to $2.50 per day; $10.00 to $14.00 per week. Open June I St. Maurice O'Connor, proprietor. This is one of the old- est houses of the section. It has always maintained a high reputation for wholesome fare and comfortable accommoda- tions, and has been for years a resort of note for sportsmen visiting Schroon Lake. On the side towards the water are comfortable piazzas looking out on a small park belonging to the house, shaded heavily with stately maples and elms and shut out from the outer world by a magnificent hedge along its entire front. The proprietor is obliging and indicates a dis- position to do everything possible to sustain the good standing of the house. Those who have been his guests in the past will need no recommendation to come again. The Windsor Hotel is west of the Leland House. C. L. Hunter, proprietor. It has capacity for about 60 guests. Rates, $2.00 per day; $10.00 to $12.00 per week. Open June to October loth. There has been an entire change in the management here with a general refitting and added im- provements. E. E. Hunter, formerly of this house and later of Hotel Emmett, is manager. C. W. Bur well, late of the Ondawa, clerk. I I ScHROON Valley. 187 The Leland Cottage, on Main street, has accommoda- tions for about 25. Rates, from $6.00 to $9.00 per week. J. M. Leland, proprietor. The Prospect House, also on the main street of the village, will provide for about 30 guests at $9 to $12 per week. J. A. Pitkin & Brother, proprietors. Stages run mornings from Schroon Lake to Hammondville, 1 1 miles distant. Fare, $1.50. Connec. tion is made over the Crown Point Iron Co.'s railroad, with afternoon train on the Delaware and Hudson Railroad. Paradox Lake is four miles north o^ CROWH Schroon. It is four miles long, measured east and west. At its west end the shores are low and smooth ; at the east, abrupt and rugged. Paradox House, on the south side of the Lake, two miles from its outlet, is noted for trout dinners. Root's Hotel is nine miles north of Schroon Lake, 27 east of Newcomb, 23 south of Elizabethtown, and 17 west of Port Henry. A stage will run between Root's and Port Henry daily from June 2d to September 8th. This house has a new proprietor in the person of A. Carson, who promises to revive the ancient glory of Root's with the added conveniences of more modern days. Hunting and fishing are to be made the great attractions, and facilities for sport are not wanting. Repairs have been made on the house with a general renova- tion and refurnishing. Accomodations are offered for 75 guests. There is no more delightful or picturesque point in the noted valley of the Schroon than right here where stands the famous old "Root Inn." Toward the west, between the mountain whose jagged sides come down to the edge of the valley, runs the road to the Boreas region, Newcome, and Long Lake. Elk Lake is reached by leaving this road five miles east of Root's, and proceeding northward thence, by a good road, five miles further. From this point the trail leads over Boreas Mountain to the head of Upper Au Sable Lake, about six miles distant, for which see page 168. VIBWS ON THE ADIRONDACK RAILWAY. North Creek. 189 North from Root's stretches the beautiful valley of the Schroon, until the gradually approaching mountains on either side come together at Deadwater, where the waters of the Schroon River, here a mere brook, are gathered and begin their winding way southward. At Euba Mills, 13 miles north of Root's, roads diverge— the one bearing toward the riglit leading down through Pleas- ant Valley, to Elizabethtown, 10 miles; the other toward the left, upward through Chapel Pond Gorge to Keen Valley, about six miles distant. For these points, see pages 148 and 152 respectively. North Creek is the terminus of the Adirondack Railroad, and the point of departure for Newcomb, the Adirondack Iron Works, via Minerva, and for Blue Mountain and Raquette Lakes. Through the summer trains run twice daily each way, and a night train, with through sleeping car attached, leaves Grand Central Depot, New York, at 7.30 p. m., arriving at North Creek early in the morning. The American, a short distance from the depot, is the best hotel at North Creek, and provides good, substantial fare at the very reasonable rate of $6 to $10 per week; transient guests, $2 per day. John Mclnerny, proprietor. Mr. Mcln- erny will also furnish horses and light or heavy carriages, for interior places, at reasonable prices. Parties for Aiden Lair, Newcomb Lakes, or the section around the Adirondack Iron Works, not reached by daily stage, will find it advisable to make arrangements for conveyances at this point. Minerva is eight and a half miles distant. Stage runs on arrival of noon train. Stage leaves Minerva for Long Lake Wednesday and Saturday, via Aiden Lair, eight miles — a "gamey" country, and a very good fishing locaHty — and New- comb, 14 miles farther, for which see page 124. Stages leave for Blue Mountain Lake on arrival of trains at North Creek, morning and noon. The morning stage con- iQO The Adirondacks. nects at Blue Mountain Lake with steamer for Raquette Lake, all landings — and with stage for Long Lake. Stage leaving on arrival of noon train reaches Blue Mountain Lake for sup- per. Stages, fare, North Creek to Blue Mountain Lake, $3. Patent canopy-top buckboards, may be had by paying an ad- ditional sum, for which apply to the stage agent at either end of the route, personally or by mail or telegraph. The North River Hotel is five miles from North Creek. W. IT. Roblee, proprietor. This is the regular dining place for all passengers over this road in going in or coming out of the woods, and provides a meal seldom equalled in its wholesome- ness and hunger-satisfying nature. Stages run as far as this point, on arrival of the evening train from the south, bringing such as may desire to remain over and be fortified with a night's rest and one or more of mine host Roblee's excellent meals for the longer ride of the morrow, and it is recom- mended that those not over robust break the journey here, taking buckboards for the interior in the morning. A day or more can be spent here to advantage, either for rest or sport. The surrounding country affords excellent fishing and the smaller game, and is within easy walking distance of pomts where the larger kinds may be found. The house will provide for 40 guests. Rates, $2.50 per day; $10 to $15 per week; meals, 75 cents. Connection with the Western Union Tele- graph is made at this point. Thirteenth Lake is four miles west, and is reached over a very good road. It is about three miles in length by half mile wide, and 1,952 feet above tide. It affords excellent fishing, and the wild country around it is noted hunting ground. A short distance above North River we climb up through a high notch at the west, rising a thousand feet in something less than four miles, then descending gradually, cross a stretch of burnt land to Indian River. The Indian River Hotel, with capacity for 40, is at the crossing, 11 miles from North River. Frank Moody, pro- prietor. Indian Lake. 191 The Seven Chain Lakes are at the north, about seven miles distant, and reached over an indifferent road. Bonney's little hotel is on the third lake, which is the largest of the group, being about two miles in length. From the fifth lake a land-and-water route leads north to Newcomb, something over ten miles distance. Indian Lake (P. O.) is one mile west of Indian River. A few houses at intervals along the road, and a very comfortable looking hotel called the Ordway house, with stores, and a post-office, constitute the village. Indian Lake (that is the lake proper), is about two miles south of the village. The original lake was about three miles long, but its overflow sets back in times of high-water, increas- ing its length to something more than twelve miles. Lewey Lake is twelve miles south of Indian Lake Village. The overflow of Indian Lake at times reaches back to the falls at outlet of Lewey Lake. In low water the river between the two is navigable, with the exception of a short carry around the falls above mentioned, A little hotel at the head of Lewey Lake is kept by J. McCormick. Will accommodate about 40. P. O., Indian Lake. Cedar Lakes are reached by a rough eight-mile trail from this point west, or by road from Lake Pleasant, or via Cedar River route, from the Blue Mountain Lake road. The West Canada Lakes, belonging to another system, and discharging into the Mohawk, may be reached from the Cedar Lakes by short carries. •t^ ^l^ 5|c ^(t -Jit v V Lake Pleasant can be visited best via the Fonda, Johns- town and Gloversville railroad to Northville, thence by stage to Sageville. Sacandaga Park, at the terminus of the railroad, one-fourth mile from Northville, has a commodious and well kept hotel, and a number of handsome summer cottages be- longing to private parties. Sageville, the county seat of Hamilton County, is a scat- tered village or 40 or 50 families, centered at the southwestern 192 The Adirondacks. extremity of Lake Pleasant, and between it and Round Lake. The Lake Pleasant Inn, formerly kept by George A. McCoy, is now under the proprietorship of J. D. Morley. The amount of energy infused into the business under the new management bids fair to make it one of the noted resorts of the wilderness. Improvements have been made, and new furniture added. Accomodations are now offered for 50 guests. Board $2.00 per day; $9.00 to $12.00 per week with special rates for early and late visitors. Open all the year. Telegraph and Post Office in the house. Northville stage runs daily connecting with trains. Fare $2.00. Ar- rangements may be made for special conveyance by address- ing the manager of the house. Guides and necessaries for hunting and fishing can be secured here, and livery rigs for land excursions. Fred. H. Smith, manager, P. O. address, Sageville, N. Y. " Kun-Ja-Muck," formerly Call's Hotel, under the manage- ment of Mrs. Anna A. McMartin will provide for 50 guests. Lake Pleasant is about four miles long. At the norths western extremity of the lake is the Sturgess House. PiSECo Lake is about six miles southwest of Sageville, and "•fiords good fishing. Cedar River is 20 miles from North Creek. From this point in to Blue Mountain Lake, 10 miles, the road is through almost continuous forest save the occasional opening made by some stalwart settler, and the to-be-expected "Half-way" house where the horses are watered and allowed to get their breath while the expectant landlord stands invitingly ready to serve the passengers with stronger liquid. Note in passing the devastation caused by the cyclone of '88. Blue Mountain Lake is fairly in the Great North Woods. It is the opening of communication by boat with the magnifi- cent system of lakes and streams which cover so large a por- tion of the Adirondack wilderness. It rests 1,800 feet above tide, is an irregular oval in shape, extends nearly three miles Blue Mountain Lake. 193 its longest way, and empties at the west, through Eagle and Utowana lakes into Raquette Lake. Blue Mountain Lake House is on the east shore of the deep bay which first appears as we approach from North Creek. The first hotel at Blue Mountain Lake was built here in 1874, by Dr. G. R. Martine, of Glen Falls, N. Y., to whose energy and far-sightedness much credit is due for the initiatory in opening up this now popular gateway into the Adirondacks, and for whose unswerving belief in the valuable curative properties of this high mountain region, many have reason to feel grateful. The old house was burnt to the ground in 1886 ; but, with the same energy which has characterized the management in all its undertakings, arrangements were imme- diately made for its rebuilding on the old site. This new house is spacious and attractive. The main part is four stories high and 150 feet long, with fine, broad piazza, facing the lake, and a rear extension, almost as large as the main building; giving, with the cottages, accommodations for over 300 guests. It stands on an elevation, overlooking a grove of native trees, through which paths lead down to the sandy beach, from which the steamboat starts on its daily trips down the lake. Ten outlying cottages, among the trees, afford very desirable quarters for those who may prefer apartments re- moved from the stir and bustle of a great hotel. Telegraph office connecting with the Western Union system, and stage and steamboat ticket offices, are in the hotel. Stateroom and sleeping car berths can be secured here. Board, $3 per day, with special rates for the week or season, according to rooms and accommodations. John G. Holland, proprietor. Mr. Holland is the pioneer hotel man of this section. He is genial, accommodating, and popular, winning the esteem of his guests ; so that those who have once enjoyed his hospi- tality are generally his warm advocates thereafter. With him the old house had a patronage greater, perhaps, according to its capacity, than any other one in the wilderness, and under him the new one must likewise prosper. Blue Mountain Lake. 195 The Blue Mountain House is about a mile nortK of the Lake House. It stands on the side of Blue Mountain, 200 feet above the lake, to which the surface of the ground drops sharply. The view is one of the loveliest imaginable, reveal- ing the lake in its entirety, the island studded plain at our feet, the receding clusters of islands, the sinuous shores lead- ing away to the outlet, and over beyond it the lengthened reach of Eagle Lake, with a glimpse of Utowana and the verdant slopes that compass about the shores of the queenly Raquette. A path leads down through the thick forest to where a fleet of dainty Adirondack boats lie snugly in boat house or at rest on the sandy beach. Accommodations are provided for about 80 guests in the main building and ad- joining cottages. The fare is wholesome and abundant, cleanly and appetizing, the service kindly and willing from the proprietor down. Its altitude makes it a desirable place for those who suffer from hay-fever. A free carriage, conveys guests to and from the Blue Mountain Lake House, to connect with the stage, and stages pass the house daily for Long Lake, eight miles distant. (For Long Lake see page 113.) Altogether, the Mountain House possesses more than the average number of favorable counts among Adirondack hotels. Rates here are $2 to $2.50 per day; $10 to $15 per week. Open from June ist to October 15th. Telegraph of- fice in the house. D. H. Hall, proprietor. Mr. Hall, coming to this section for the benefit of his health, records his opinion in the most practical way by set- tUng permanently. He brought experience of value to the house and now succeeds Merwin & Hall as sole proprietor. Fair View House is in the gathering village of Blue Mountain Lake, on the road that leads from the Lake House, around the shore, to the Prospect House. It has mostly a local patronage and is moderate in price. The Prospect House, built in 1881, vs one of the largest of the Adirondack houses, and is, considering the difficulty at- tending the work at the time of its erection, a marvel among hotels. 19^ The Adirondacks. The Prospect House will accommodate 500 guests. Price of board, $4 to $5 per day ; $21 and upward per week; ser- vants half price. During the winter, guests are entertained in a larger cottage under the same management. George W. Tunnicliff, manager. A small boat of the Blue Mountain and Raquette Lake Steamboat line, the " Toowahloondah," of light draft, that it may pass easily through the shallow streams connecting the lakes, leaves the hotel docks morning and afternoon, and passing through this and Eagle and Utowana lakes and streams, connects at Marion River Gary with steamer for Ra- quette lake landings. The mere fact of going on the little steamer, with the vast and reverberatory name, is not all there is in this trip, although of itself a pleasure. The excursion is one of the most delightful ones of the wilderness, a source of continued surprise and enjoyment, introducing as it were, the traveler to the wild woods and lakes in the mildest manner possible, and giving him just a suggestion of the difficulties of portage between waters that he will find later on. The line belongs to W. W. Durant, ex-President of the Adirondack Railroad and owner of a number of townships around the lakes. It is thoroughly equipped and adapted to the particu- lar needs of the traffic, and while working on systematized lines with clock-like regularity, is not obtrusively formal and fits in admirably with its surrounding conditions. Extra boats are subject to charter and afford interesting means of explor- ing the nooks and by-ways of lakes and tributary streams. J. G. Thompson, Superintendent. As we pass out into the open lake Blue Mountain rises in graceful outline behind us. On its western slope, high above the water, are the Mountain House and cottages ; nearer is Thatcher's Island, the property of Ex-Mayor Thatcher, of Al- bany, with the cottage at its east end. On the point project- ing from the south shore, near the outlet, is the attractive summer place of Colonel Duryea, of New York. 1 Eagle Lake. 19; Passing through the outlet with slackened speed, responding, perhaps, to the request of the Commodore to come out for- ward to get her stern up away from the bottom, and by aid of steam and pikepole we round the short bend, pass under the bridge, and out into the waters of Eagle Lake. Eagle Lake is about one mile long, with low wooded shores, except a clearing on the north side. The old log house standing near the shore is the " Eagle's Nest," where Ned Buntline came years ago, and under the tree, near the house, lies the bride he brought and buried there. A somewhat longer stream than the one we have just passed out of, leads through drowned lands, from Eagle into Utowana Lake. This lake is about two miles long, narrow and straight, running away toward the west. Passing into its outlet we soon reach the landing, where we find the rustic waiting-room and the dam, which has raised the water, making navigable the streams between the lakes. From this landing a road leads to the head of navigation, on the Marion River, one mile distant. You have noticed, perhap*, that the steamer whistled some ways back, and as we approach, a one- horse wagon, with a rigging something like a hay-rack, makes its appearance. Into this the baggage is tumbled, the boats tied on (if any are there to be carried), and the weaker mem- bers of the party, or those who may prefer to ride, take their places. But few do care to ride, for this carry is simply an excellent road through the woods, resembling in no respect the slippery carries of the back country. At its west end, we find another steamer, somewhat larger than the one we have just left but belonging to the some family, as you will con- clude from its jaw-breaking Indian name, which is considered the proper thing up here. The Marion River, from this point to Raquette Lake, is one of the crookedest rivers in the whole world, and, for some distance, taxes to its utmost the abiHty of our pilot and the circling power of the little steamer. It flows sluggishly along its reedy shores, wandering back and forth between the low hills, in a succession of loops, that makes the way traversed, iqS The Adirondacks. which is about two miles in a straight line, double that dis- tance before open water is reached. This is the largest feeder of the Raquette, and enters it through a gradually widening estuary, beyond which is seen the islands and the broad lake. How different now from the days when the Professor and I passed through in 1873 ! Then it boasted of but one resi- dent, and he a squatter. (There are squatters there now, but they come in state and are a credit to the section.) Now it is teeming with Hfe. A fibre from the throbbing mass of travel has pierced these depths ; the shrill whistle of the com- ing steamer calls forth a joyous crowd for their daily budget of news from the outer world, and comfortable hotels have sprung into sudden and thrifty existence to meet the requirements of the season. Raquette Lake Post Office is on Long Point, at the left as we emerge from Marion River and pass out in the gradual broadening lake. Mail addressed to Raquette Lake is delivered here, unless, as is customary, each separate hotel, camp and cottage has furnished its individual mail-bag which the accommodating steamboat captain gathers and delivers daily. The telegraph office is also in this building with the post office. "The Hemlocks," formerly known as Raquette Lake Hotel, is just a little beyond the post office. This house has been thoroughly renovated and refurnished this year. It will provide for about 60 guests. In addition to the main build- ing, are the cottages on either side, the one formerly occupied by Madam Gerster at the east, and the Cotterell cottage on the west. An unsuspected clearing back in the woods, now under a high state of cultivation, will supply fresh vegetables during the season. Open July i to October. Price of board, $3 per day, $17.50 to $25 per week. " The Antlers " is on Constable Point, in plain sight, al- most due west as the steamer leaves the mouth of the Marion River. The location is a delightful one, and commands an extensive view of the lake north and south, as well as into this Raquette Lake. 199 deep bay, from which the approach is made. It is a hotel on the colonization plan — a collection of camp-cottages, which may be rented at room rates, and a larger, central build- ing, containing the general office, dining-room, and public rooms, the idea being a collection of camps in which guests shall have all the privacy of their own homes, relieved from the annoying but quite necessary details of the preparation of their daily food. This plan of separate buildings of one or two rooms each has proved a success here. It gives the tem- porary proprietor of each a sense of independence and own- ership that is very pleasant, resulting in each structure taking upon itself a degree of individuality and character according to the taste and disposition of its occupants, interesting to ob- serve. Provisions are also made to entertain transient guests here on the same general plan. Accommodations are offered for about 75. Rates, $3.00 per day, $17.50 to $25 per week. Special rates for the season. Boats, guides, camp supplies and fishing necessaries can be had here. The steamboat stops here about an hour and a half to allow time for dinner. The open camp, a pleasant feature of the Adirondacks, is shown here to great advantage. The logs piled high and blazing at night, flood the interior with pleasant warmth, thaw- ing the most crusty into genial friendHness ; here gather the minister, the author, the playwright, the musician, and even the haughty broker, to melt and become better acquainted in an evening than by a four weeks' intercourse in a hotel parlor. The Hemlocks and Antlers are both under the management of C. H. Bennett, builder and proprietor of the Antlers. Mr. Bennett is genial, attentive and obliging and has made many friends. His executive ability is considerable and his success as a hotel keeper beyond question. The two places, con- trasting very strongly as they do, offer a choice of extremes pleasant to contemplate, the Hemlocks full of shadows sug- gestive of comfort in the warmest of weather, the Antlers flooded with light and sunshine, offering healthful warmth to the delicate on whom the winds may not blow too rudely. As 200 The Adirondacks. the Antlers has become noted for the excellence of its table we may expect the same generous completeness in all details at the Hemlocks as well, and the best of entertainment to all who may become guests of either place. Brightside-on-Raquette is on the south side of Indian Point, under " The Crags." The main building is finished in native woods with a degree of elegance that bespeaks the artistic feeling of the builder who is also the proprietor, and is nicely furnished throughout. It stands among the trees afford- ing a delightfully retired stopping place for those who would withdraw from the more public places of entertainment on the lake. Altogether the accommodations offered are sufficient for forty guests. Rates $2.00 to $2. 50 per day; $12.00 to $18.00 per week. Although new to the hotel business the complete- ness with which every part of the house has been furnished together with the well-known character for thoroughness possessed by Mr. Bryere, indicates that whoever finds a harbor here will have no cause for complaint either as to service, table or accomodations generally. Mr. Bryere is noted for artistic skill in the manufacture of rustic furniture, and his services in this particular line are at a premium in the woods. " Hathorn's Golden Beach," at the eastern extremity of South Bay, two miles from the landing at the postoffice, con- sist of a log house, containing dining-room, kitchen, etc., log cottages of rustic finish, and several detached, bark-covered, box-like sleeping-rooms, set up among the pines, along the line of beach, and open camps. Capacity — grand total — 30 guests. Board, $2.00 per day, $9.00 to $12.00 per week. Open June ist to November. Chancey Hathorn, proprietor. Parties for Hathorn's leave the steamer at the post-office dock and take row-boat to this point. Rush Point Camp, near South Inlet, kept by honest, big- hearted Jo. Whitney, accommodates 10. Uncle Jo's flowers are alone worth going there to see. Blanchard's Wigwams, on Green Point, west of Camp Stott, C. W. Blanchard, proprietor, offer entertainment for 25 guests. Raquette Lake. 201 Unique and pretty features of this lake are the two churches, one of the Roman Catholic faith, standing among the trees near the Post Office, and the other (Episcopalian) on a small island south of Osprey Island, where services are conducted regularly throughout the summer, the congregation coming by steamers and row-boats. The officiating clergyman of the last named church occupies the rectory on the island during the season. The rustic camps of Raquette Lake are elegant affairs, and although built of rustic material found ready to the hand, it is apparent that twisted cedar, shaggy spruce and silvery birch, in their native vestments, were not chosen because they cost nothing there. Some of these camps are works of art, and filled with dainty bric-a-brac; generally, however, pertaining to woodsy things, and in keeping with their native environ- ment. The pioneer camp of this section, and one of the most artistic in the woods, is " Camp Pine Knot," on South Bay. It was commenced in the winter of 1876-7, by its pres- ent owner, W. W. Durant, and completed — well, to tell the truth, these camps are never completed really, for one of the fascinating features of the camp is that it is bound by no rule of time or architecture. It expands and blossoms with the passmg seasons, and is never exactly the same one year that it was the year before, but it is always finished enough for com- fort — it is " otetiwi." Echo Camp, on Long Point, west of the Raquette Lake House, tasteful and artistic, belongs to ex-Gov. Lounsbery, of Connecticut. " Camp Otetiwi," (always ready), belonging to Dr. A. G. Gerster, of New York, is on the large island west of Camp Pine Knot. " Camp Fair View," on Osprey Island, belonging to C. W. Durant, of New York, is an excellent speci- men of ornate rustic architecture. Deerhurst Camp, on Ken- well's Point, belongs to Mr. Wm. Strange, of Paterson, N. J. ; the cottage standing on the north side of this point is that of Senator McCarthy of Syracuse. Senator Henderson has a pleasant camp on the south side of Indian Point. " Camp 202 The Adirondacks. Stott," the summer place of Com. Frank Stott, of Stottville, N. Y., is on the long point north of Kenwell's Point. A camp belonging to James Tenyck, of Albany, and " Camp Has- brouck," are on the north shore near the outlet. Happy the favored visitor to one of these camps, and happy the owner. The fact cannot be disguised, say what you will, we are all children and enjoy playing house ; only, at sixty, we need a ten-thousand-dollar lodge in a vast wilderness, when at six, a piece of old carpet, stretched over a corner in the rail fence, satisfied all our earthly desires. Sumner Park is held as a private game and fish preserve by the owner of Camp Pine Knot. It consists of township 6 with portions of township 5 to include the whole of Summer Lake and Mohegan Pond, the South Inlet and the southern shores of South Bay. It is all under police patrol and the public is warned against trespassing under penalty of the law. Raquette Lake owes much of its prosperity to Mr. Durant, and only the most rabid of communists can question the justice — as it is unquestionably his right — of reserving this part, forming less than half of his possessions in this section, for his personal use. The Adirondack League Club Preserve lies at the southwest of Raquette Lake, partially in Herkimer and par- tially in Hamilton Counties, as shown in the accompanying maps. This is one of the largest private sporting preserves in this country, the forest lands owned by the Club in fee com- prising nearly 100,000 acres, while it has leased the exclusive hunting and fishing privileges of about 80,000 acres more, ad- joining its property on the east and south. The Club's tract has an average elevation of 2,200 feet, and over twenty-five lakes and ponds, including what was once known as " Jock's," now Honnedaga Lake, the West Canada Lakes and Creek with numerous other noted streams and ponds. The region has long been celebrated as a hunting and fishing resort, its inac- cessibility having hitherto tended to protect both game and A. L. C. Preserve. 203 fish. The Club members have now arranged for the building of a railroad connecting with the Central at Herkimer, that will bring the edge of the tract within nine hours of New York City. The present approach is by wagon road from Alder Creek on the R. W. & O., a thirty miles drive. olo for ADIRONDACK LEAGUE CLUB PRESERVE. The Club was organized in 1890 by a number of gentlemen of sporting proclivities, for the purpose of establishing a game preserve in a chosen quarter of the Adirondack wilderness. One of their leading motives was the desire to put into practice the system of rational forestry prevaiHng on the continent of Europe, which reconciles the preservation and continual re- production of forest areas with a continual and increasing in- come. The experiment was undertaken under the most favor- able conditions, the Club owning over 93,000 acres, covered with a magnificent virgin forest of birch, spruce, pine, maple, cherry, cedar, hemlock and ash, and its success has already more than demonstrated the wisdom of the undertaking. Prof. B. E. Fernow, Chief of the Forestry Division of the De- partment of Agriculture at Washington, is one of the Trustees, 204 The Adirondacks. and the forestry adviser of the Club, and its Chief Forester, Edward Reusch, Ph.D., a graduate of the German schools of Forestry, is in the active management of its forest policy. A contract for the removal of the spruce above 1 2 inches in diameter at a stumpage price, which already guarantees the Club an income from this source of $35,000 a year for the next fifteen years, is in operation, and this income, it is be- lieved, could be increased to $60,000 a year without detriment to the tract as a hunting or fishing preserve, and with positive benefit to the forest. Prof. Fernow estimates at a round mil- lion dollars the value of the merchantable timber which could be removed to the forest's immediate advantage. All cutting is done under the supervision of the Chief Forester, in such a way as to bring about the complete renewal of the lumbered portions in 15 years, so that the process might go on forever. The plan of the Club contemplates a possible membership of 500. The price of the membership shares was originally placed at $1,000, but as the great value of the shares, regarded simply as an investment, became more apparent, the Trustees raised this price to $1,250. Each share is unassessable and entitles the holder to an undivided five-hundreth interest in the property, with all its hunting and fishing privileges, to all dividends which may be declared, and also to a five acre site wherever selected, for a camp or cottage site, which is deeded to each member in fee. Most of the sites so far selected have been on Honnedaga or Moose Lakes. The Club House, formerly the "Forest Lodge," kept by A. D. Barber, Jr., is on Honnedaga Lake. Mr. Barber is a member and the steward of the Club, and furnishes accommodations for Club members, their families and guests. Guides, boats and all the accoutrements for hunting and fishing are here obtainable. The trustees of the Club are Hon. Warner Miller of Her- kimer, Mills W. Barse of Olean, O. L. Snyder of Buffalo, Judge Warren Higley, Judge Henry E. Howland, Henry C. Squires and Robert C. Alexander of New York City, A. G. Mills, President of the New York Athletic Club, Henry Pat- Fulton Chain Lakes. 205 ton of Albany, Alexander R. Harper of Philadelphia, Prof. B. E. Fernow of Washington, D. C, and S. M. Dodd of St. Louis. A handsome club book containing maps, illustrations, and other interesting matter, has just been published by the Club. Applications for membership should be addressed to the Secretary, Ole L. Snyder, 40" Wall Street, New York. The Club house address is Wilmurt, Herkimer County. tK V 't* tI? 7|t TfC 'fr The Fulton Chain of Lakes may be reached through the Brown Tract Inlet, which enters Raquette Lake from the southwest, but is usually approached from the west via the Rome and Watertown Railroad, leaving at either Boon- ville or Port Leyden. Moose River is 1 1 miles from Port Leyden and 1 2 miles from Boonville. Daily stage from either place, $1. Moose River House is the regular dining place for travelers entering this^ gateway. It is on the western border of the great wilderness and affords good fishing and hunting for those who do not care to penetrate deeper. The house will accommodate about 30 guests. Rates, $2 per day, $7 to $10 per week. C. M. Barrett, proprietor. The Fulton Chain Railw^ay is interesting as beginning and ending in the woods, and having no connection by rail with the outside world. It is a marvel in railroads and rolling stock, worth traveling a long distance to see, and somehow it seems more a part of the great wilderness than the conven- tional iron monster and steel tracks that one is accustomed to in the outer world. The track is of wood, 3 feet guage, the locomotive a nondescript, but it gets there with the traveler, and none are found to wish it otherwise. The road was built especially to meet a long-felt need — a boon from Boonville — that a thumped and jolted public is not slow to appreciate, and for which thanks are due to G. W. P. Gould and Dr. A. H. Crosby of that section. It is 8 miles in length, extending from Moose River to " Minnehaha," foot of the Stillwater, from which point a steamboat runs to the Old Forge. Fare by rail and boat, $2.00. 2o6 The Adirondacks. The Bronvn Tract, comprehending the land around the head of Moose River, was so called after a John Brown of Providence, Rhode Island (who must not be confounded with that other John Brown, the " Old Man of Ossawatamie," who lies buried at North Elba). The property was bought in 1793 and a large forge built below the first of the Fulton Chain of Lakes. The manufacture of iron was attempted, and 30 to 40 families gathered here at the time, but the venture proved a failure, and little besides the more substantial portions of the old forge remains now to mark the spot. The Forge House is at the old forge dam, below First Lake, and affords accommodation to 40 or 50 guests. Alger & Keets, proprietors. The Fulton Chain of Lakes are eight in number. The old forge dam, two miles below First Lake, floods back into the Fifth, giving uninterrupted navigation from the Forge House to this point. The First, Second and Third Lakes are closely connected and collectively three miles in length. The Fourth is nearly six miles long, and contains a number of pretty islands. A half mile stream connects Fourth with Fifth Lake, and a half mile carry leads into the Sixth ; a mile of rough boating or portage along the stream leads from Sixth into Seventh Lake, which is about two miles long ; thence by stream one mile, and portage along the stream another mile into Eighth Lake. This one is also about two miles in length. At its head a trail ij miles long may be followed toward the northeast, leading into Brown Tract Inlet, which, followed downward four miles, brings the voyager to Raquette Lake. Total from the Forge House about 26 miles. There are several public and private camps along the shores of the lakes, the greater number being on Fourth Lake, Some of these camps may be rented " furnished " with the services of the proprietor and necessary help. Fourth Lake House at the foot of Fourth Lake, has ac- commodations for 60 people j rates $io.oo to $18.00 per week. C. S. HoUiday, manager and proprietor. i Beaver Lake Country. 207-A Cedar Island Camp near the head of the lake is kept by W. C. Augur. Rates $2.50 per day; $10.00 to $15.00 per week. This whole section is in its transition state and develop- ing rapidly. Steamer " Fulton " Captain E. L. Sheppard, runs two trips daily, leaving the head of Fourth Lake morning and after- noon. Fare $1. Camp Craig is on the east side of Big Moose Lake, about 6 miles in an air Hne north of Fourth Lake of the Fulton Chain. It may be reached through Bub's, Moss, and Second Lakes of the North Branch Chain. It is a furnished camp where guides are expected to do the work for their individual parties. Supplies furnished by the proprietor. Rates $1.50 per day. H. H. Covey, proprietor. A trail leads west into Twitchel Lake thence north to Beaver River. Beaver Lake Country is entered generally from the west via Lowville. Special conveyance carrying parties of four or five to Fenton's cost $6. It will be well to make arrange- ments for transportation in advance. Address, Charles Fen- ton, Number Four, in advance. The Fenton House stands on an elevation, overlooking Beaver Lake, 133 feet above the water. In addition to the main building are cottages suitable for famiUes, with an aggre- gate capacity for 150 guests. The proprietor promises 'Ho show from one to five deer around the lake, within sight of the hotel, toward the close of any day in the early summer." The powerful " Beaver River Club," whose tramping ground this is, is opposed to " hounding." As a result, deer that have been driven from other sections by the dogs seek this quieter place ; and the true sportsman never lacks for game worthy of his skill. Superior trout-fishing is also to be had in Beaver River ; and, in short, " Number Four," which is the post office address, offers a combination of excellent sport with reasona- ble ease of access. This house is open all the year. Rates, $2 per day, $9 to $10 per week. Charles Fenton, proprietor. The Adirondacks. 207-B Beaver Lake is about ij miles in length. A smaller body of water, closely connected on the south, is called Beaver Pond. Crooked Lake may be reached by boat, ij miles, and carry to the north if miles. Francis Lake is about one mile south, and is something over one mile in length. Beaver River is quite rough above Fenton's for 9 miles, above which is found good boating for twenty-five miles ; then alternate boating and carries for six miles brings us to Albany Lake. Albany Lake is four miles in length. Its main inlet, entering from the north, is two miles long, navigable most of the way, and brings the water of Smith's Lake. The latter is nearly three miles in its longest diameter. The house kept here for- merly by James La Mont will be closed this season. The Adirondack & St. Lawrence Railway, Dr. W. Seward Webb, president, now under construction, is expected to be in service in 1892. The line leaves the N. Y. C. at Herkimer and extends through the western part of the Adi- rondacks in a north-easterly course to Malone. A section of the main line from Tupper Lake northward, will be in opera- tion about the first of August. Vestibule trains will run solid from New York via the N. Y. C. & H. R., the R. W. & O., and the N. A. Railroads to Paul Smith's and the Saranac Lakes. Time about 13 hours. The plan contemplates branches from a point a little north of Fulton Chain Lakes, eastward to Raquette and Blue Mountain Lakes, and from Saranac Lake to Lake Placid. Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne Park is the latest large acquisition of Adirondack land by private parties to be set aside for a pre- serve. Dr. W. Seward Webb, the railroad magnate is at the head of the Association and authorizes the statement that hotels will be closed this year, that no camp will be allowed to be built on the property, and that the forest, fish and game will be preserved. The Park covers an area of about 160 square miles, in the northwest portion of Herkimer and the northeast corner of Hamilton Counties, including in its terri- Cranberry Lake. 207-c tory the Red Horse Chain, Albany, Smith's and other lakes of that section. Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne is Indian for *' Crossing on a log." 'K ^ ^ Tf ^ ¥: ^/: ^ The Carthage and Adirondack Railway extends from Carthage to Benson Mines, a distance of 43 miles. Lake Bonaparte, 17 miles from Carthage, is of some note as a sum- mer fishing resort, with a comfortable hotel, and was first brought into notice as the retiring place of Joseph Bonaparte, the nephew of his uncle. Oswegatchie Station is 39 miles from Carthage. From this point it is six miles to Fine, where boats may be taken by prearrangement with guide, for Cran- berry Lake via the Oswegatchie River. Star Lake is 2|- miles south of Oswegatchie station, where two good hotels sup- ply necessary entertainment. Benson Mines is the terminus of the road. From this point a trail leads south to the head of the overflow of Cranberry Lake and another to the outlet. Cranberry Lake was originally about six miles in length, but a dam built at its outlet increased its area considerably and changed its shape. Its altitude is 1,540 feet. Cranberry Lake House stands near the outlet, and can provide entertainment for 50 guests. Rates, $ i o. 50 per week ; $2 per day. Mrs. E. J. Bishop, proprietor. P. O., Russell. Camp supplies and boats can be had here and guides secured by notice given in advance of arrival. Fine fishing is found on the river below the lake, and on the various brooks and ponds emptying into it. As good hunting, probably, as the Adirondacks afford, can be found at the south, at points easily reached. The " all land " route to Cranberry Lake is from De Kalb Junction, but the stage service is uncertain, and it would be well before going to address Mrs. Bishop for particulars. ******* I wish you a pleasant journey and a safe return. CHAPTER XVIII. Outfits, Supplies, Guides, etc. 'OR Camp Outfit and genera, woods iile the following is recommended : A complete change of underclothing; two pairs of ser- viceable socks, but slightly heavier than youi habitually wear at the season (soft wool is preferable) ; pair blue flannel shirts with widei collars, confined at the throat by a substan- tial silk handkerchief. If the unaccustomed material chafes the neck, the shirts may bel put on outside the garment ordinarily worn, in which case linen collars must not be forgotten. The: pants and vest should be of some strong woolen goods,, the coat the same, cut rather short and to button close: up to the neck. Have pockets ample and numerous, with covers; you will find use for them. Wear a soft felt hat with a reasonably wide brim. By grasping it in a manner easily learned the rim forms a convenient drink- ing cup. Do not commit the too common error of pro- curing new shoes or boots for the occasion. A pair of laced shoes, roomy, but not too loose, well broken to the foot, with broad soles and rather low heels, is best. The uppers should be of rather light grained kip or water- proof leather. Have leather or canvas leggings, strapped under the instep and buttoning, or to lace at the side well up toward the knee. Boots may be used in place of shoes and leggings, if preferred, but the evidence is largely in favor of the shoe. It is well to have a duplicate pair for alter- nate* in wet weather. Rubber boots, although coxivenient Outfit. 209 at times, are not suitable for general wear or for traveling. A ligl^t overcoat will be found very comfortable at times. Among the necessaries should be included rubber coat and overalls for use in rainy weather, for the best fishing is often found under dripping clouds. Have also a light rubber blanket to throw over the knees and feet when in boat, or to protect you, in sleeping, from moisture below or above. For sleeping or lounging in camp take a pair of common canvas slippers and sew on them cloth tops to come up k around the ankle, and tie outside the pants. A light cloth le cap will be found comfortable for night use. I- Ladies' Outfit contemplates a subject in which I would u not presume to dictate ; I have learned better. I humbly is submit, however, that it is your first duty to make yourself e as attractive as possible, subject only to the requirements of 1- place and season ; and I would suggest that, whatever may d be allowable in the way of " fine " dressing, it is not consid- e ered necessary, or even in good taste. Often the sweetest ii girls that ever brightened the wilderness with their presence { reign queens of the evening in the same bewitching costume ii in which they boated and climbed mountains in the early e morning. Consult some lady friend who has spent a season in the woods as to what constitutes a suitable outfit. In t absence of such source of information the following is sug- ] gested for boat, camp and tramp : Underclothing, such as , experience has shown best suited to the season and your , individual comfort, giving fine flannel the preference in all but the very warmest of weather. Underskirts should gen- . erally be of dark flannel, although, if much walking is done, . one of dark cotton will be found an agreeable substitute. A becoming dress may be made of blue or gray flannel or I ladies' cloth. It may be pleated back and front, gathered at the waist, or fitting loosely to the form, but should in any case allow perfect freedom in the use of the arms. The skirt should be not overfull, and cut a finger shorter than the ordinary walking dress; trim but little, in shades of same 2IO The Adirondacks. color as body ; a cord at wrist, collar and waist-band, with a knot of ribbon or a wild flower at the throat, is sufficient. A dainty bit of ruffling or old lace about the neck transforms the morning into an evening toilet. Wear a soft felt hat with wide brim ; trim with forest leaves. Wear a lady's hat, if they differ from men's — don't ape masculinity in dress ; the average Adirondack sportsman does not admire it, although, if confronted by the horrid fact, he is too much of a gentleman to tell the truth. Wear dark, serviceable hose and substantial, roomy Balmoral boots, with broad soles and low, broad heels. Wear Lisle thread, cotton or doeskin gloves. They may be made with long wristlets to button or tie outside the dress sleeve, to guard against pos- sible attack of black fly or mosquito. A chatelaine belt and pocket, with tin drinking cup, etc., is convenient. A light sun umbrella of the walking-stick pattern is a comfort in rain or shine. A shawl will often be found acceptable of an evening following the warmest of days. Carry a rubber or waterproof circular with hood, a pair of light rubbers fc r the feet, and a piece of light rubber cloth to throw over the lap and feet if surprised in a boat by one of those fast-mov- ing Adirondack showers. In rough weather sit or lie low in the boat ; never, at such times, grasp the sides to support yourself. A skillful boatman will manage in safety one of those light Adirondack shells in the roughest of water, if j| allowed entire control of boat and load. Go fearlessly into ^ the woods. It is stated on the highest authority that not a., noxious plant or venomous serpent exists in the Adirondacks. || Camp and Outfit. — A bark or bough camp will do in absence of anything better, but is nothing like as comfort- able or convenient as a tent. An "A" tent, seven by eight feet on the ground, affords comfortable sleeping room for four, and on occasion five or even six. A rope, passing ; through lengthwise at the top and out at the ends, takes the place of ridge pole, and may be fastened to convenient trees or over crotched sticks, cut the proper height and tied to The Camp. 2ii stakes. The material should be of cotton, water and mil- dew-proof, and complete, need not weigh more than nine to twelve pounds. In making your bed of boughs, remember that solid wood, if fitted to the form, is as comfortable as a bed of down. Apply the fact by burrowing or hollowing out cavities to fit the projecting points of hip and shoulder. Cover the boughs with a rubber blanket, in addition to which each member of the party should have a pair of heavy woolen blankets. A small bag, to be fidled with leaves or moss and used as a pillow, is an improvement on a pair of boots, but not all that nature desires; and at the risk of exciting ridicule — from idiots — I am free to recommend a small, well-filled feather pillow. It pays for itself in a single night's use. A few yards of mosquito netting drawn across the front of the tent after a good smudge is a luxury which declares a big diurnal dividend. For long, forced marches, a hammock made of cotton duck with a cover of the same, but somewhat shorter, buttoned over at each side, and forming a sort of pocket, is, with the addition of rubber blanket, bed and tent combined. A little ingenuity will suggest manner of arranging hoops over the face to cover with canvas or mosquito netting, as circumstances may require. The Camp. — In selecting a camping place during warm weather, choose an island or an exposed point free from underbrush where the wind will, to a great extent, free you from the mosquito and fly. In cool weather, it is needless to say, choose the thicket ; in either case, remember that a cold spring or. brook and material for the camp-fire adds very much to your convenience. In pitching the tent, if on a side hill, dig a "A" shaped trench to lead running water on either side the tent; if on the level, ditch all around. A wall tent is better than the one already described, or if a long stay is anticpated, it pays to build log sides on which to mount the tent, and cover with a " fly " to insure certain protection from rain. A sheet-iron camp-stove caji be pro* 212 The Adirondacks. cured of the dealers, or may be easily made to answer every purpose, if your stay in one place be long enough to warrant the trouble of transportation. A champagne basket, covered with waterproof cloth and provided with shoulder loops for carrying, makes an admira- ble pack basket. A rubber, or waterproof bag, or an ordinary two-bushel grain bag, with carrying loops of webbing, may be used for extra clothing, blankets, etc. Let your load rest well down on the back to carry. The Camp Kit may consist of a long-handled frying pan, a deep stew pan with cover, a nest of three or four covered tin pails, for water, tea, coffee, etc. ; pint tin cups, tin plates, a wire toaster of the gridiron pattern, a ladle or large iron spoon, table and teaspoons, knives and forks, and last but not least, soap, dish cloths and towels. Carry a pocket compass with you at all times — the best woodsmen are temporarily at fault. An ordinary lantern for camp use (for hunting Boudren's jack lamp is probably the best), candles, matches (a few wind and water-proof), towels, tooth brush, comb, pocket mirror, pins, needles and thread, a few extra buttons to match those worn, oil or tallow for your boots, stamped envelopes or postal cards (?), light hunting knife in sheath (?), light axe in sheath, and a supply of light reading of the convenient Franklin Square or Lakeside pat- tern. Take no large boxes with sharp corners, nor any article too heavy or unwieldy for one man to handle. Don't expect your guide to double carries habitually, rather reduce your baggage or get extra packmen for its transportation. Camp Supplies may be had from hotels generally, but many prefer to carry their own. Veterans need no advice ; but to the novice the following suggestions are made : First, consult your cook book, see what is needed in the preparation of proposed dishes and provide accordingly. The following list contains the staple articles : Wheat, Gra- ham flour, corn, and oatmeal, beans, Boston, and soda Supplies. 213 crackers, lemon biscuit, baking powder, self-raising flour, maple sugar, loaf sugar, tea, coffee, condensed milk, bottled horse-radish, mustard, vinegar (?), pepper and salt in boxes with perforated covers, dried fruit, canned fruit (?) and but- ter, packed in salt and inclosed in hermetically sealed cans, which can be anchored in spring holes or under cold run- ning water. Bacon is extremely nice when sweet, as is also "oork, unpoetical but palatable, and on occasion taking place of butter and all the seasonings. Dried beef is an important item; "jerked venison," one of the best things imaginable to carry when setting out for a tramp ; ask your guide to show you how it is prepared. For relishes — shades of mighty trout and speckled beauties forgive us — take a box of smoked red herring. Bermuda onions fill an aching void which nothing else can equal. Canned beef, pork and beans, corn, tomatoes, condensed soup, etc., may be added. Fresh vegetables and potatoes can be had from the hotels. Carry no liquor ; if wet and cold, Jamaica ginger has all the heating properties of whisky; while strong, black coffee is a better stimulant, with none of the evil effects following. The Medicine Chest need not be extensive. It should, however, contain cathartic pills — a piece of Turkish rhu- barb is good ; cholera medicine of some kind ; a small bottle of collodion (composed of equal parts of alcohol and ether, with gun-cotton added to make it about the consist- ency of heavy varnish) ; applied to burns and small wounds, it forms an artificial skin, impervious alike to air and water ; ammonia, to allay irritation arising from bites of insects ; cold cream or glycerine, for chapped face or hands ; court- plaster, seidlitz powders, ointment and adhesive plasters, lint and bandages, to use in case of emergency. To stop the flow of blood from wounds, bind on equal parts of flour and common salt ; for burns, apply wheat flour or collodion. Insect Preparation may be procured of the druggist, 9r compounded by yourself. The most convenient and 214 The Adirondacks. effective, perhaps, as any, is composed of six parts of mutton tallow to one of oil of pennyroyal, with a little camphor added. In the proportion of two ounces of sweet oil and one of oil of tar is good. " A coating of the grease from ham rinds, well rubbed on, is the best yet known," says George K. Holmes, of Great Barrington, Mass. Annoint exposed portions of the person with either of the above, then stand back and mark the frenzy of the baffled punkey. Sporting Outfit. — Do not rely on what books tell you. If you know nothing about the subject place yourself under some one that does, and trust them until you can judge for yourself. The most enticing of fancy flies in the hands of a greenhorn will not yield much sport — except to outsiders — and the grandest achievement in modern firearms requires some skill in using. If you have the requisite skill, carry a rifle ; if not, a fowling-piece is better. For general use there is per- haps no more convenient or serviceable arm to carry into camp than the "pocket" rifle, manufactured by the J. Ste- vens Arms and Tool Company of Chicopee Falls, Mass. A 12 to 1 5-inch barrel, 32-calibre, is recommended. The weight is less than three pounds. A shot-gun barrel is also made to fit the same frame, so that either may be used at will. Are you artistic ? Carry a camera of the Kodak pattern or with small plate. A plate large enough to make a lantern slide yields a larger per-centage of comfort than any other size made. Guides receive $2.50 to $3 per day, furnishing boat and necessary cooking and table utensils. They cook and do other necessary camp work, and row and " back " the boat over the carries, where there are no other means provided; (in cases where horses are used the employer is expected to pay for transportation.) One guide and boat is ordinarily suffi- cient for two persons, but for independence in fishing and hunting each sportsman should have his individual guide. There are two classes, known respectively as '' ho- tel" and "independent." The former are engaged for the season by hotel proprietors, who relet them to par- « Guides. 215 ties ; the latter must be dealt with personally. There are eciually good men in both classes, as the nature of the sur- roundings usually determines to which they shall belong ; therefore it is impossible to give rules for the selection of a guide, or to discriminate between them, as only experience can determine their suitability for your peculiar wants. As a class they are a noble set of men, who, aside from the natural deference due the employer from the employed, ad- mit of no inequality, and reflect back their usage ; although there are exceptions to the rule in man as in master. If only reasonable service is asked, there can usually be no complaint; if fawning servility is expected, there is a rea- sonable doubt as to the result, for one who knows enough for the profession knows when he is well used. The best guides are often engaged for a year in advance, and some VTOuldas soon think of going without a gun as without their favorite guide. Some parties have attempted to do the Adirondacks by aid of map, compass and book, and with- out the aid of a regular guide ; this, however, is full of hard- sliips that are easily avoided by those accustomed to the country, and, if comfort, distance and time lost in out-of- the-way places are taken into consideration, attended with I but little economy. I Lists of guides heretofore published are now omitted, as the title is no longer an indication of fitness for the position. The office is one of responsibility and it is due to those who ire competent and honest that a distinction should be made between them and others who claim the title without possess- ing the necessary qualifications. The safety and comfort Df the traveler depends largely on his guide, and some guar- mtee should be furnished by the one employed. A guides* anion could provide for this, or certificates might be granted 3y competent authority, but until some such provision can 3e made both the public and the profession must suffer. I CHAPTER XIX. Trout Fishing, N the year 1880, it seems hardly necessary, in speaking of trout and trout fishing, to say that speckled or brook trout — the salmo fonti- nalis of our early years, now, by authority of the Smithsonian Institute, savelinus fonti- nalis — has a square tail, and that his sides are speckled with yellow and red spots, and that he is a cousin of the lake or salmon trout, which has a forked tail with mottled sides, and which the Smithsonian Institute insists shall be called cristiro- mer namaycush ; for the love of angling has so grown during the last few years that it is not now considered a proper definition of fishing to say, it consists of " a stick with a string at one end and a fool at the other." On the contrary, those whose love of this sport will draw them to the brook side, or to the lake or pond, are men of all profession and occu- pation, and any one of them will tell you, if you ask him, that it requires skill and a knowledge of the habits of the trout to fill your creel. I doubt if the book was ever writ- ten that will make one a finished angler. To be sure one may gain something sometime from the written experience of others, but experience gained by time and patience on the stream is far better than any teacher. There are some general hints that will apply to the Adirondacks, but if it were attempted to enumerate all conditions for all times, half the anglers would say I found it so; the other half would say, /did not. When the ice has gone from the streams and ponds, and the sun has warmed the waters a trifle, brook trout will be Trout Fishing. found in the deep water and holes of the brooks, and it is iiard work to get them to rise at a fly. They probably mow that flico are out of season at this time. If the fish- ng fever is on, you must take a plebian worm and let it lay )n the bottom until it is sucked in by some lazy trout, then ' yank." A little later, when the snow water is a thing of he past, and the fruit trees are in bloom, and the black fly nd the May fly are out to devour and be devoured, and he lazy trout, by exercise on the riffs and in rough water, .as become an athlete, then take your rod, attach the patri- ian fly, and cast ever so gently at the head of the riffs, diere a stone makes a little eddy, working down gradually 3 tliie pool at the foot of the rapids, where tke heads of the imily " receive," if they have not already anticipated your isit by going up the riffs like a quarter-horse, and taken our fly with a leap that shows you what you have to con- jnd with. As the weather grows warmer they will drop ack to the deep shady holes, invigorated and fattened by leir visit to the graveled-bottom rapids. It may be that ou will now be obliged to advance backward to the worm ^ t will not be sucked in now, and you will not be in doubt 3 to whether you have a bite or no), or to a live chub or liner, or the tail of either, that when it is let down into the ble with the current and drawn up stream, it will whirl like a ling of life ; I say you may be obliged to resort to this, for lere are holes in streams where it would be folly to attempt ) cast a fly. If a person wishes to pass them by because ley never fish with other than a fly, some one not so fas- dious may come after and bring to basket some of the Idest inhabitants of the brook. Should you fish one day id find that the trout are all seeking the seclusion which le deep hole grants to themselves, their sisters and their lusins and their aunts (I will pay my fine to any authorized arson), and the evening, night or next day brings a shower slightly raise the brook, as soon as the shower is over try again, but fish the rapids, for the trout have come out to The Adirondacks. see what the flood has brought for them to feast upon A Httle later the deep holes get warm by reason of 1om> water and continued hot weather. The trout have theii resorts at this season as well as the" angler, and so they take their families and travel to some portion of the stream where a cold spring comes in, or some spring bubbles up from the bottom. At these " spring holes " they will be found in hot weather in great numbers, if the game law has been observed. | As to flies, most people have their own ideas; but as this- is written for those who have just joined the brotherhood, it \ may be well to say that out of the countless number of flies, j some of them unlike any thing under the sun, the red, black, brown and gray hackles,* tied both as a hackle and palmer fashion. Coachman,* yellow professor,* light and dark fox,* black gnat, Romeyn Abbey, Seth Green, White Miller, Grizzley King,* and Queen of the Water,* constitute a good supply if one takes a half dozen of each. Even this number is considered by some too many. My fly books con- tain more than two gross of flies, but many kinds have never been used, and in all probabilities never will be. I think I am safe in saying that the largest trout are caught at dusk or during starlight or moonlight nights; if I am too broad in making this assertion I will modify it by saying /arge trout |l may be caught at this time by using a white miller, or a fly in which v/hite predominates; and, too, you must use a larger hook than the one you used during the day. If you have noticed a large trout in the stream during the day, and been unable to catch him, try him at night, if it is bright, and you may be reasonably sure of his rising to your light colored fly. Sometimes you may catch an obstinate fellow by going above his resting place and slightly roiling the stream, and as the muddy water passes over, let your fly float as naturally * Those indicated by a star are important, and should be in every collection. Trout Fishing. as possible with it, and the chances are in favor of your get- ting the trout. He probably knows that roily water means a freshet, and a freshet brings with it insects upon which he feeds. The latter portion of May and the month of June are considered the best portions of the open season for fish- ing in the Adirondacks, and morning and evening the best portion of the day, as the trout are then seeking their natural food; but the ways of the trout are past finding out, for there are times when they will bite at nothing. Although bait fishing is not to be sneered at, use a fly if possible ; you will have more satisfaction with half a basket caught in this way than with a full one taken with bait. If, however, you must use bait, take your angle or earth worm after he is scoured in damp moss, and pass your hook through the neck half an inch from the head, then gathering up a loop of the body and pass through again and again until you have the shank, as well as the beard of the hook, well covered and half an inch of " worm " over, should your worm-loop, or head, or tail be taken of and the fish not taken in, put on a fresh bait. Unless you have some decided objection fish down sirea7it. If you use live bait, (minnows) pass your hook through its back under the dor- sal fin, but not so low as to break the back bone ; should you use a portion of a minnow, cut off the tail just at the dor- sal fin ; put your hook in at the tail, and along the back bone, until the point of the hook nearly reaches the place cut ; your bait will then be curved to correspond with the bend of your hook, and will whirl nicely when drawn against the current. As to direction for flyfishing, I give it up. The best way is to go out with some one who uses a fly, and, in one day, you will learn more than from written directions studied faithfully for a month. There are many flies besides those mentioned above, should the angler desire a more extensive stock in his book. It may be well to mention a few, such as Gray Drake, Silver Black, Adirondack, General Hooker, iHE ADIRONDACKS. Scarlet Ibis, Shoemaker, Jungle Cock, Oak Fly, Brown Hen, Hoskins, King of the Water, Green Drake, Montreal, Moose, etc. As to tackle get a split bamboo, hornbeam or ash and lance wood rod of three joints, about eleven feet long, weighing eight to ten ounces. This with an extra tip or tips, one a little shorter than the others, will answer for both bait and fly, unless you propose to " yank " your fish, in which case you need heavier timber ; a click reel to hold forty yards of braided silk, tapered line waterproofed, a half-dozen leaders or casting lines nine feet long, of best round silkworm gut, and smaller hooks or flies tied upon O'Shaunesey or Sproat bend hooks, with a landing net of coarse mesh, will constitute an outfit for brook trout in the Adirondacks. It is poor economy to buy poor tackle ; if you get any get the best, even if you get less. The lake or salmon trout, alt' ough he will take a fly at times, is usually caught by trolling. The fnodus ope7'a?idi is as follows : With a stiftish trolling rod, a balance multiplying reel to hold loo yards of braided silk, or linen line No. 4, leaders 12 feet long of single gut, and a minnow gang, which is made by tying 6, 9 or 12 hooks in groups of three to a length of single gut with a single hook about one and a half inches above the upper group of hooks for a lip hook, a gaff hook, and a pail of minnows completing the outfit. I am too fast ; you also require two or three pounds of lead. Lake trout fishing is in order as soon as the ice leaves the lakes, but at this time the trout are at the bottom, so put your rod together, put on your reel, pass your line through the standing guides of your rod, attach your leader and minnow gang, put the lip hook through both lips of the live bait, bend the bait and put one of the group hooks through the back of the bait behind the back fin in such a manner as to make it revolve when drawn slowly through the water, ten or twelve feet from the joining of your casting line or leader and your fish line, tie on your sinker with a piece of line 6 or 8 feet long, weaker than your fish line, so if you Trout Fishing. catch on the bottom you will lose only your sinker. Your sinker must be heavy enough to carry your line nearly to the bottom. You can fish by letting your sinker strike bottom and pulling in only to let your sinker strike again, but you need to know the kind of bottom upon which you are fish- ing, as grass would soon use up your lead. This kind of fishing can be better shown than taught by writing, and as it is not necessary we will pass it. About the first of May the trout begin to rise to the surface, and the higher up they are the less sinker you require. Soon they are at the surface to stay only for a few days. Now you require only enough sinker to keep your bait well under water, or even no sinker at all, for wherever the trout are, bottom or top, the boat must be rowed very slowly. Buoy fishing is done by anchoring a block of wood, as a land-mark, or water-mark, in some deep portion of the lake. Morning and evening, for' two or three days, bait your buoy by throwing overboard bits of fish cut up about the size of a butternut ; this will sometimes attract the fish and keep them around the buoy. When you think it baited, put on your hook a piece of fish like that you have used, or a live minnow, and drop it over, and keep your bait moving up and down by a shght motion of your hand, until the sun gets too hot, or your seat gets too hard, or you make up your mind that there are better ways of fishing. If this last happens, stick to it, and let some one else jig their line in loo or 125 feet of water, with the result: "Oh, a trout just breathed on the bait, but that was all !" Buoy fishing is not practiced now nearly as much as in former years, but trout are yet caught in this manner. The open season is from April ist to October ist, brook trout, April I St to September ist. I have of necessity omitted much that might be said about trout fishing, and perhaps written what could as well be omitted; but will say in conclusion, let the " sign " be in the head or in the feet, the next time you try them, may your baskets be filled with fair-sized trout, but leave the little ones in the water to grow. A. N. Cheney. Game Laws. The open season for game found in the Adirondacks is by law as follows : Ruffled grouse, commonlv called partridge, from September ist to January ist; wiia fowl, September ist to May 1st; woodcock, August ist to January ist; hares or rabbits, November ist to February ist; squirrels (black or gray) August 1st to Januar}'^ ist; deer from August 15th to November ist Deer may be hunted with dogs (except in St, Lawrence County) from September ist to October 20th. No person shall kill more than three deer in one year. No deer or venison shall be trans- ported from the Adirondacks by any person or common carrier, ,| except from the 1 5th of August to the 1 5th of November, and between such dates but one deer or carcass can be transported for each owner, and it must be accompanied by the owner. No fawn shall be killed at any time. The penalty for the violation of any of the provisions of the deer law is $100. The open season for brook trout, California and brown trout in the counties constituting the forest preserve is from May ist to September 1 5th; lake trout and land-locked salmon from May ist to October ist. Elsewhere in the State the brook trout season opens April ist and closes September ist, and in Lake George, lake trout can only be taken from May ist to October ist. No trout or salmon can be transported from the Adiron- dacks except when accompanied by their owner. Black bass can be caught in Lake George and Brant Lake only from August ist to January ist; in Schroon Lake and River, Paradox and Friends Lakes only from July 15 to Janu- ary 1st; elsewhere in the Adirondacks from May 3010 January ist. Black bass under eight inches in length or one-half pound in weight must be returned to the water uninjured. No one is permitted to deposit any fish in the waters of th« Adirondack region unless the fish so deposited are indigenous to the particular water where placed, except that non-preying or non-destructive fish which constitute lood for fish of the salmon family may be deposited. A. N. Cheney. Where and Where Not to Fish. In 1882 Mr. Fred Mather, the well known fish culturist, ex- plored a great portion of what is known as Adirondack waters for the purpose of making an ichthyological report to accompany the report of the Adirondack survey. Mr. Mather's researches have only recently been given to the pub- lic, and no part of them will prove of more interest to the sum- mer visitor to the great wilderness than that relating to the dis- tribution of the fishes known to the anglers as the "game fishes ;" such as are captured by rod and line. For the names of the lakes, ponds and streams that are used in the report, he relied upon Stoddard's map of the Adirondack wilder- ness. Mr. Mather supplemented his summer's work of per- sonal exploration and examination by reports from guides and others regarding waters that he had not the time to visit. So that his report, so far as it goes, is reasonably correct and trustworthy. Brook trout are not found in the following waters : Metcal, and T Lakes, tributaries of West Canada Creek, Spectacle, Dex- ter, Spy, Oxbow, Metcalf, Coal, Scuts, Willis, Murphy, Warner, Remson and Bug Lakes. All others are supposed to contain them. Lake trout, commonly called salmon trout, are not found in the following waters : None of the lakes of West Canada Creek except Spruce, Indian, Ferris, Christian, Morehouse, Jersey- field, Goodluck, Oxbow, Metcalf, Sheriff, Canada, Coal, Willis, Nicks, Little Woodhull, Stone Dam, Wilmurt and the Eagle Chain of Lakes. By implication the other lakes in the Adiron- dacks do contain lake trout. Black bass are found in Raquette, Forked, White, Fourth, Bisby, Sucker, the Blue Mountain Chain and the Fulton Chain of Lakes, Moose and Black Rivers. The Rainbow (California) trout have been placed in -Fulton Chain, Bisby, Woodhull, Pleasant, Round, Horn, and Jones Lakes, Moose, Oswegatchie and Black Rivers, and Silver Lake. Land-locked salmon have been planted in Woodhull, Mur' Sand, Little Moose and the Fulton Chain of Lakes. 2i8 Forest Commission. The Forest Commission, hiaving charge of the forest preserve, was created by Chapter 283 of the laws of 1885. The commis- sioners now in office are Theodore B. Basselin, Townsend Cox, and Dudley Farlin. Charles O. McCredie, Secretary. The warden is Col. William F. Fox. It is a responsible office, as upon the efficiency of the officer rests largely the ques- tion of success or failure in what is yet but little more than an experiment. The result so far has shown that the one item of trees which the honest but giddy lumbermen cut annually by mistake on land belonging to the State, amounts to 'thou- sands of dollars. The lands constituting the forest preserve are the lands now owned, or which may hereafter be acquired, by the State of New York within the counties of Clinton (excepting the towns of Altona and Dannemora) Delaware, Essex, Franklin, Ful- ton, Hamilton, Herkimer, Lewis, Saratoga, St. Lawrence, Oneida, Warren, Washington, Greene, Ulster and Sullivan ; "and the forest preserve shall be forever kept as wild forest lands." The Forest Commission has power to appoint a forest war- den, forest inspectors, guards and fire wardens. The forest warden, forest inspectors, foresters and other persons acting upon the forest preserve under the written employment of the forest warden, or of the Forest Commission, may, without warrant, arrest any person found upon the forest preserve vio- lating any provisions of the act creating the commission. It also has the same power to bring action for trespass and to recover damages for injury, or to prevent injury to the pre- serve which any owner of lands would be entitled to bring. The fire wardens have power to call upon any person in the territory in which they act for assistance in suppressing fires, and every person refusing to act when so called shall be liable to a fine of not less than five nor more than twenty dollars. Any person who shall wilfully or negligently set fire to any forest lands belonging to the State, shall be liable to a fine of not less than fifty nor more than five hundred dollars, or to im- prisonment of not less than thirty days nor more than six months. Routes to Gateways. HOW TO REACH THE ADIRONDACKS is naturally the first question asked, and to be answered here. The object of this chapter is to get the traveller from the great city to the grand old wilderness. The New York Central and Hudson River Railroad carries the larger proportion of the people who go up out of Gotham to the lakes and mountains at the north. Without ostentation, it provides its patrons with the best of service at the minimum of cost. Special fast trains leave the Grand Central Station for Saratoga and Lake George during the season, one leaving at about 9 a. m., reaching the points mentioned early in the afternoon. Another at about 3,30?. M., reaches Saratoga at 9 o'clock, and on Saturday night runs to Lake George, returning on Saturday evening. A train leaving at 6.25 p. M., with through sleepers attached, connects early in the morning at North Creek with stages for Blue Mountain Lake ; at Westport with stages for Elizabethtown and Lake Placid ; at Port Kent for Au Sable Chasm, and at Plattsburgh with trains for Au Sable Station and Saranac Lake. For time tables or any desired in- formation address George H. Daniels, General Passenger Agent, Grand Central Station, N. Y. The West Shore Railroad, during the season of summer travel run? through trains from Washington to the Adirondacks. Pas- sengers and baggage are taken from Jay and 42d Streets, New York. The Day Boats are the '' New York" and " Albany " — new and splendid specimens of shipcraft, with iron hulls 300 feet in length, accommodating 1,800 passengers, and claimed to be the fastest steam- boats in the world. They were built exclusively for carrying passen- gers. The spacious cabins are finished in highly polished woods, are furnished luxuriously, and adorned with statuary and paintings. The dining-rooms are on the main deck, where the traveler can en- joy an excellent dinner, which is served on the European plan, and lose nothing of the view of this most charming of American rivers. They leave New York and Albany at about 8:30 A. M., touching at the principal landings on their way, meet near Poughkeepsie, and ar- rive at their destinations at about 6 p. m. A pleasant feature is an orchestra on each steamer. During the season, fast trains run to and from Saratoga to connect with these boats, and on Saturday night run through to Lake George. Fare, |2. F. B. Hibbard, G. P . A., Desbrosses Street Pier, New York. The People's Line Steamers, " Drew" and " Deai Richmond," form the night line between Albany and New York. They have few, if any, equals in size, equipment, or accommodations, combining all the conveniences of a first-class hotel, and well deserving the name, so often bestowed, of floating palaces. Meals are served on the Eu- ropean plan. M. B. Waters, General Passenger Agent, Albany, N. Y. The Citizens' Line Steamers, " Saratoga" and "City of Troy," are also fine specimens among this distinctive class of river boats. They are of light draft, and fitted up with a view to speed in traveling. The state rooms are commodious, heated by steam in cold weather, and are complete in all their appointments. Meals are served on the European plan, in a style equal to Routes to Gateways. the best of hotels. Free transportation carriages between the depot and steamboat landing at Troy attend evening trains and baggage is transported free. Geo. W. Gibson, G. P. A., Troy. It is advisable to secure rooms in advance by either of these lines during the height of the season, which may be done by telegraphing their respective passenger agents at Albany or Troy, or on applica- tion to the offices at the terminus of the lines. The Dela-ware and Hudson Canal Company, by its absorption of the Albany & Susquehanna, the Rensselaer & Saratoga and the New York & Canada Railroads, has become one of the most important carriers of summer travel in the country, and is using its great re- sources most energetically and effectively for the development o( that part of New York, including Saratoga, Lake George and the Adirondack Wilderness, with which it is the chief channel of com- munication. During the season of pleasure travel extra fast trains are run from Albany and Troy to Saratoga, Lake George, Platts- burgh and Montreal. The appointments of the road are all that can be desired, the cars being specially fitted for pleasure travel, and so comfortable that drawing-room cars are not so much a necessity as they may be considered on some roads. Southern connections are made at Troy with Hudson River railroad and Citizens' line steamers for New York, and with the Troy and Boston railroad for the east. At Albany with H. R. and West Shore roads, and day and night boats for New York ; with Albany and Susquehanna railroad for Howe's Cave (39 miles), Sharon Spings (58 miles), Cooperstown, on the beautiful Otsego Lake (91 miles), and to Binghampton (142 miles), and with New York Central railroad for points west. Northern connections (with fare from Albany). — At Mechanics- ville f6o cts.) with Hoosac Tunnel route for Boston ; at Saratoga ($1.17) with Adirondack railroad for Luzerne, Schroon Lake and Blue Mountain Lake (see Gateway No. 7) ; at Caldwell ($2.58) with steamer on Lake George (Gateway No. 6) ; at Whitehall ($2.34) with trains from Rutland and the east ; at Ticonderoga (I3.00) with branch road to foot of Lake George; at Crown Point ($3-3o) with C. P. L Co. s railway (see Gateway No. 4) ; at Westport (I3.84) with stages for Elizabethtown, Keene Valley and Lake Placid (Gateway No. 3) ; at Port Kent ($4-65) with stages for Au Sable Chasm and Keeseville (Gateway No. 2) ; at Plattsburgh (.f 5.04) with Ausable Branch and Chateaugay railroads (Gateway No. i) for the Saranac, St. Regis and Chateaugay Lakes, and at Rouses Point ($5-75) with Central Vermont railroad for the east, and the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain road to points west. From Whitehall north to Port Henry the route is substantially the same as described on pages 17 to 23; then the road bears away until Westport station is passed nearly a mile inland, after which it crosses and follows down the valley of the Boquet, passing along nearly two miles distant from Essex, situated on the lake shore. As the head of Willsborough Bay is neared, it rises gradually to more than a hundred feet above the water at times on some shelf cut in the sloping wall ; then over solid arches of stone spanning a mountain torrent ; anon plunging through deep cuts, and at one point diving into the inky darkness of the tunnel ; then out along the beetling cliffs, while below the deep waters dash against the perpendicular walls, and upward a hundred feet the red rock rising, slopes away to the mountain height above. INDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS. HOTELS — Adirondacks.— Augur Lake, page 237; Beaver Lake, 245 ; Big Clear Pond, 261 ; Bloomingdale, 241 ; Blue Mountain Lake, 253, 254; Bluff Point, 238; Cascade Lakes, 257; Chateaugay Lake, 241; Chestertown, 253; Childwold Park, 245; Clear Lake, 250; Clear Pond (Big), 245; Cranberry Lake, 245; Crown Point, 252; Elizabeth- town, 236, 237; Indian Lake, 247; Keene Valley, 248, 249; Lake Placid, 245, 247 ; Lake Pleasant, 258; Long Lake, 257; Luzerne, 251; Moose Lake, 246; Moose River, 246; North Creek, 258; North River, 258; Peasleville, 239; Pitts- burgh, 237; Pottsville, 251; Rainbow Lake, 241; Raquette Falls, 257; Raquette Lake, 256; Raquette River, (Tromb- lee's), 245; Root's, 253; Rouse's Point, 237; Saranac Lake, (lower), 242, 243; (upper), 244; Schroon Lake, 252, 253; Stony Creek Ponds, 245 ; Tupper Lake, 246; Westport, 236; Albany, 235; Lake George,— 230, 231, 232, 233; Saratoga, 261. RAILROADS. — Chateaugay, 240; Delaware & Hud- son, 229 ; N. Y. C. & H. R., 228. STAGES. — Blue Mountain Lake, 239; Elizabethtown and Lake Placid, 236; Riverside and Schroon Lake, 237. LIVERY. — Lowville, 245 ; Saranac Lake, 241. I STEAMBOATS.— Blue Mountain and Raquette Lake, 255; Lake Champlain and Lake George, 234; Hudson River, (day boats), 256 ; (night boats), 259. MISCELLANEOUS.— Books, 258 ; Forest and Stream, 262; Maps and Photographs, 263, 264; Cottage Sites, (Lake Placid), 251; (Long Lake), 257; Kodaks, 260; Photographer, 249 ; Photographic Goods, 259 ; Webster's International Dictionary, 259. 228 Passenger Rates from New York iziK • • • NEW YORK CENTRAL AND HUDSON RIVER RAILROAD AND CONNECTING LINES. NOTE. — Through tickets to the following points are on sale at all New York offices of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad. Excurs- ion tickets are issued at prices given in the column of figures under "And Return " For further information apply to George H. Daniels, General Passenger Agent, Grand Central Station, New York. And TO Return. Albany $3-io $6.00 Au Sable Chasm 14 -5° Au Sable Station 8.60 15.85 Blue Mountain Lake. . 8.95 17.00 Baldwin 6.70 Caldwell* 5.55 10.25 De Kalb Junction 8.61 Elizabethtown 7.80 14.50 Forked Lake 10.70 20.50 Fort Ticonderoga 5.95 Glens Falls 4-80 8.80 Gouverneur 8.21 Lake Placid: via Plattsburg & Cha- teaugay R, R 11.60 22.50 Lake George* 5.55 10.25 Through and return via Ticonderoga.... Loon Lake 10.90 Lake Luzerne, (Hadley) 4.86 13-15 20.30 8.80 TO Malone $9.90 Montreal 10.00 via Lake George. . . . 12.00 North Creek 5.94 Northville 4.98 Paul Smith's 12.00 Plattsburgh 8.00 Port Kent 7.60 Potsdam 9.21 Raquette Lake 10.20 Riverside 5.70 Rome 5.30 Rouse's Point 8.70 Saratoga 4.20 Saranac Inn 12.85 Saranac Lake (lower). 11.35 Schroon Lake 7 45 Troy 3.15 Westport 6.81 And Return. 18.25 20.25 II. 21.25' 14.7s 14.00 19.50 10.50 750 23-25 21.15 14.00 12.45 * During the season a Special Excursion Ticket is issued for $8.56, good on Saturday to Caldwell, and return following night. •^THEf^ TO THE ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS, MONTREAL-; QUtBtC, Lake George, Lake Champlain, Au Sable Chasm, Saratoga, Round Lake, Howe's Cave, Sharon Springs, Cooperstown and the CELEBRATED GRAVITY RAILROAD, between Carbondaie and Honesdale, Pa., 6T miles shorter than any other line, between New York, Albany or Troy to the St. Regis Lakes. ONLY AN HOUR'S STAGE RIDE TO LAKE PLACID. The completion of the Cbateaugay R. R. from Plattsburgh to Saranac Lake, opens up the very heart of the Adirondack Moun- tains to direct Rail Communication. Loiy Price Excursion Tickets To all the famous Adirondack, Lake George and Lake Champlain resorts are on sale at the Company's offices, Albany, Troy and Saratoga, during the season of pleasure travel. H.C.YOUNG, 20 VICE-PRESIDENT. J. W. BURDICK- GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT, ALBANY. N. Y. 231 CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT. -W^^ FQItT-WiLLinn '- - Lake George. 0. D. SEAVEY, of the Hotel Ponce de Leon, and Alcazar, St. Augustine, Fla,, Manager. This Hotel, which is the only "Great Hotel " at Lake George, is one of the largest and best appointed summer houses in the world. Its lake frontage is three hundred and thirty four feet, along which runs the finest and broadest veranda on the continent. Its grounds are spacious and elegant. The furniture and all the appurte- naces are of the best, a fast running elevator, a first-class orchestra, and every other convenience and luxury which the choice or taste of guests may demand, are provided. The new railroad station and steamboat landing is only a few rods east of the hotel, and an omnibus will meet every train and boat. In the office of the hotel tickets are sold and baggage checked to all points. The general telegraph office for Lake George is located in the hotel, and furnishes free stock quotations daily. Board, per day, $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00 according to room. 232 THE MARION HOUSE, LAKE GEORGE, N. Y. Located on the west shore of the lake, about six miles north of Caldwell ; stands on a slight eminence, a little removed from the water ; commands a view of the broadest portion of the 1 ake. Elevator, G-as, Electric Bells, TelegTaph in the house. Four daily mails ; sanitary conditions perfect ; pure spring water. Jersey Milk, Cream and Vegetables from the Hotel Farm. Delightful drives. Good fishing. Every facility for amusement. Accomodations for 400 Guests. Rates, $3.50per day ; $14 to $25 per week. Send for illustrated book. D. W. SBERMAN, Proprietor. H. li. SHERMAN, Manager. Address at Glens Falls until June 20, after that date, at Lake George. Searl f oint Mouse, Lake George, N. Y. One of the leading hotels at the Lake. Twelve miles from Cald- well, on the east side, in THE MOST ATTRACTIVE PART OF THE LAKE, known as the "Narrows." It has all the requisites for pleasure seekers, and its FLEET OF SAIL AND ROW BOATS is the largest on the lake. Capacity, 150 Telegraph in the house. Four daily mails. Rates, $3.50 per day ; $12 to $21 per week. I D. W. SHERMAN, Proprietor. ^ 233 BURLEIGH HOUSE, TICONDEROGA, N. Y. E. J. WOOD, - - _ Proprietor. This new and elcfjant hotel is pleasantly located midway between I^ake Chain plain and Lake Georg^e. The Building: is of brick, 80x40, 4 stories above the basement. Mansard roof, 100 commodious rooms, newly furnished and supplied with an abundace of Lake Georg^e water, heated by steam, lighted by electric light, hot and cold water baths, complete fire protection on each Hoor. All the appointments are first- class. Burleigh House is within three hours ride of Schroon Lake. Shortest and most direct way to the Adirondacks. Attractions include many points of historic interest within short range of this hotel, among which are the extensive fortifications of FORT TICONDEROGA, built by the French in 1755, and surrendered to Col. Ethan Allen, May 10th, 1775, who demanded it "in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Con- gress. Mount Hope, where heavy redoubts and fortifications were made upon which to erect batteries to bear upon the Fort. Mount Defiance, which rises 750 feet above Lake Champlain. Gen. Burgoyne ascended this mountain from the north, July 4th, 1777, erected a battery of heavy guns upon its summit, completely commanding the Fort, and dislodged the Ameri- cans. Lake George, (the " Como " of America,) with its many delightful resorts, and thousand enchanting views. Lord Howe's Monument, erected near where he was fatally wounded by a French scout. Fort Frederick, built by the French in 1731, much of which remains in a good state of preservation. And many other localities of interest. FI RST-CLASS LIVERY connected with the house. GOOD BOATING within few minutes walk on either lake. Fine opportunity for fishing, where tons of trout and bass are annually taken. Hunting grounds between Lake Pharaoh and Lake George, abound with deer and small game. Teleg:raph and express office in the house. Rates of Board $10 to $20 per week. Transient, $2.50 per day. ^ paND^ED ISLAND pengE, R. G. Bradley & Co, Proprietors. SHELVING ROCK, N. Y. Rates, $10 to $17.50 per week ; $2.50 to $3 per day. Post-office in the house. Particular attention given to invalids. Telegraph office within five minutes' walk. Fresh milk and vegetables from Shelv- ing Rock Farm. 234 ^JIKE ©iJIMPtJIIN StE/IJ^ERS- STJMMKR ARRANGKMENT. SEASON OF 1891. "VERMONT," Capt. Ruislnlow, will leave Plattsburg at 7:00 a. m.; Bluff Point, 7:15 a. m. Port Kent, 7:35 A.M.; Burlington, 8:40 A. m.; Westport, 10:10 A. m.; arriving at Fort Ticonderoga, 12:25 P. M., connecting with trains for the South and Lake George; returning, leave Fort Ticonderoga on arri- val of trains from the South and Lake George, 1:30 p. m.; Westport, 3:30 P.M., for Burlington, Port Kent, Bluff Point, and Plattsburgh. " Cftateaugay," Captain BaldT^rin, will leave Westport at 7:00 A. M., touching at Essex, Burlington, Port Kent. Bluff Point, Plattsburg, Gordon's and Adam's, reaching North Hero, 12:20 p. M.; returning, leave North Hero 12:20 p. m., touching as above, arrive at Westport 6:45 p. m. NO SERVICE ON SUNDAYS. ^J1K.E (iEOKGE §TEJlMEI(g. "HORICON," Capt. Nlanville. ^ill leave Caldwell on arrival of train from Saratoga and the South, 9.40 A.M., for way landings and Baldwin, connecting with train for Lake Champlain ; returning, leave Baldwin i P.M. for Caldwell and the South. "TICOKDEROQA," Ca.pt. Arbticlcle, leaves Baldwin 7.30 A.M. for way landings and Caldwell, con* necting with train for Saratoga. Albany, and New York ; leaves Caldwell on arrival of train, 4.30 p.m. for Baldwin. 9IEAL.S SERTEO ON BOARD. GENERAL OFFICE, P. W. BARNEY, S»rtfMgl0mf Vi, Gtwfl Su^«rimt§nd$iu 235 The leaqins hotel OF- -^iLjB.iL.i^^r, IN". '^- JUST ADDED at an Outlay of over $100,000, /OO ELEGANT ROOMS, GRAND DINING HALL, (Handsomest in the State.) LOBBIES, READING ROOIMS, ETC. CKNTRALLY LOCATED, Convenient to State Capital, and other public btiildings. FSEE OMNIBUSSES in Attendance at all Trains and Boats. F. W. ROCKWELL, Manager, H. J. ROCKWELL. Proprietor. 236 Abtrnnbark iKloutttams, ^ n *» Centrally situated on the routes to the Saranac Lakes, Raquette Waters and St. Regis Lakes; Au Sable Chasm, Keene Valley and Mt. Marcy; Schroon Lake, Lake Placid, John Brown's Grave and the Indian Pass, etc. Ticket and Telegraph Office in house. Located amidst some of the finest mountain scenery in the Adirondacks. Good drives radiate in every direction. Guides, Horses, Carriages, and every requisite for mountain excursions at reasonable prices. Fine Orchestra for Dancing. The Hotel has been enlarged and improved, and has every appliance for health and comfort. An elegant line of Tally-Ho stages connecting with all trains and boats at Westport, and with stages at Elizabethtown for Keene Valley, Lake Placid, Saranac and St. Regis Lakes, etc., etc. RATES, $2.60 to $3.00 per day. Special to parties making a protracted stay. ORLANDO KELLOGG, Proprietor, ELIZABETHTOWN, N. Y. TP WEgWe^T INN, Westport on Lake Champlain, New York. Mrs. 0. 0. DANIELL, Manager. Mrs. HENRY 0. LYON, Assistant. A thoroughly well appointed house, with good table, pure water supply and excellent drainage, wide piazzas, with a superb view of the Lake and Mountains. Capacity 150. Rates, $3.00 per day. $10.00 to $21.00 per week. Good boating, fishing and fine drives. Livery stable near the house. It is within two minutes' walk of the Lake Champlain Transpor- tation Company's wharf, two minutes from the Library and Post Office, and ten minutes' drive from the Telegraph Office and Depot of the D. & H. R. R.'" Stages to and from interior points in the Adirondacks twice daily. Addresa 'Westport, N. Y., or 1^9 St. BotolpH Street, Boston. J37 MANSION HOUSE, ^^'^^f^'T^^X^^^' I M Situated at the (fatoway to tho i»opular summer resorts in the, Adirontlacks, seven miles from Westport 600 feet above tide water. Finest mountain scenery, purest air and best water. No malaria, no hay fever. TabU^s unsurpassed ; av)point- meuts modern: sanitary arrang-ements perfect. Write for circular. Open May to Oc- tober. Valley House under same manasemcnt, open all the year. C. W. JENKINS, MANAGER. CUAiBERLAND FfQUSE, Plattsburgh, N. Y. Located on Trinity Square. Richly furnished. Every conven- ience. Table unsurpassed. Special attention given to Tourist,'! and Sportsmen. Free carriage to all boats and trains. Rates, $3.00 per day. Special for extended stay. S. G. CORBIN, Proprietor. ROUSE'S POINT, N. Y. Lake Champlain and Adirondacks. Is delightfnlly situated on the shore of the beautiful Lake Champlain, near its northern end. Its Location makes it a very desirable residence for parties to whom acquatic exercises and excursions are a source of pleasure, united with charming land trips and amusements The air is invigorating and health-giving while the nights are always cool and delightful, and free from that oppressive and depressing sultriness eo common to summer resorts. 3 1-3 Hours from Ottaira. The Pleasantest and Healthiest Spot in North'n New York. Neither malaria nor insects; no hay fever. Everything new and clean. Sanitary arrangements perfect. The Angler will find at Rouse's Point every facility for enjoyment. Experts with rod and reel find here the gamiest of fish, there being an abundance of Black Bass, Pike, Pickerel, Muscalonge, Yellow Perch, and other vanities of the finny tribe. The Huntsman will find for his game bag Woodcock, Snipe, Plover and Duck in abundance. Steam Yachts, Boats, Carriages, and Saddle Horses. Two daily mails from New York. Morning Papers received in the evening. TERMS: $2.50 to $3.00 Per Day. A Liberal Reduction made for Parties remainingbythe Week and Season. CHAS. BECK, Hotel Windsor, Also Florida House, Dec. to May, St. Augustine, Fla. Rouse's Point, N. Y. FOWLER'S LIVERY, g ARAN A^TTTV. IN CONNECTION WITH HOTEL AMPERSAND and THE ALGONaUIN. Carriages to meet parties at depot on arrival of all trains, W. S. FOWL.ER, Proprietor. 238 "TI?e|1ot^lQl7a/nplai9" (LAKE CHAMPLAIN.) On the Line of the Delaware & Hudson R. R., Three Miles South of Plattsburgh, N. Y. •'-^::»f^- -^ miles from station, fare 25 cents. The best of barns for guests' horses at liberal rates. WINTER BOARDERS SOLICITED. M. L. BALDWIN, Prop'r. Bloomingdale. N. Y. 242 HOTEL AMPERSAND IN WINTER. The JleW ph\ J^mpei'^and OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR. Adirondacks . Lower aranac Lake, , — 5j^. p. 0. ADDRESS, Ampersand, Kra.n.k:lin Co., N. Y. One and a quarter miles from Saranac Lake Station, Chateaugay Railroad. Tally-ho Coach meets all trains. Fifteen hours from New York, via New York Central and Hudson River Railroad or Hudson River steamers. During the past year a large extension has been added to the hotel also an annex building, especial- ly for young men. The entire house is heated by steam and lighted with ^as. Electric Bells, Elevator, bath room on each floor and private bath rooms adjoining large front rooms. Open fire-places in all public rooms and large bedrooms. Cuisine and service of highest standard of excellence, Farm in connection with hotel. Especial inducements for young people. Tennis Court, Base-Ball Field, etc. T3ra,33LS±©32L-bs S^.OO j^gjc cia3r. Diagram of rooms and illustrated book free on application. Other information cheerfully given. Lake Steamer lands at hotel dock, also connections made by Stage, Boat and Rail for all resorts. Trout Fishing from May i. to Sept. 15 Deer Huntinf from August 15. to Nov. i. Fox and Hare shooting during Winter Months. General Store in hotel, Boats, Guides, Fishing tackle. Camp outfits and supplies furnished. EATON & YOUNG, Managers. 243 S ARAN AC LAKE HOUSE, Saranac Lake, Adirondack Mountains, New York. AN UNSURPASSED SUMMER RESORT FOR SPORTSMEN if FAMILIES. Situated on the east shore of the lovely " Lower Saraiiac Lake," at an elevation of 2,000 feet above sea level. Deer, the trout, wild duck and other fjame are plen- tiful, furnishing^ a constant succession of sports from May to November. The hotel is one of the largest and most commodious in the Adirondacks ; nearly surrounded by a broad piazza, with 1,000 feet of promenade ; has accommodations for 250 guests. ROOMS LARGE AND WELL VENTILATED. The table is the best in the mountains, and has all the delicacies of the season — as good as the best at Saratoga. Trout and Venison at all times. THE LOCATION AND CLIMATE is such that it is highly recommended by eminent physicians for those suffering from lung and pulmonary diseases, etc. Malaria and hay fever are unknown. Telegraph, Post Office, Boats and Livery connected with house. FIRST-CLASS IN ALL RESPECTS. For terms and further particulars, address, D. J. GILLIGAN, Proprietor, H. H. TOUSLEY, CLERK. Saranac Lake, N. Y. I70 • ^Igor^qdirp/' (FORMERLY ALEXANDER'S,) ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS. Located distant from Chateaugay Railroad Station and Village of Saranac Lake one and a half miles, on an eminence above the Low^er Saranac Lake, and commanding a most superb view of Mountains, Woods and Water. THK IDEAL IVIOUNTAIN RESORT, and acknowledged to be one of the prettiest spots in the Adirondacks. Extensive amusement grounds, including a good dirt Tennis Court, etc., in connection with the house. Good walks. First-class Livery. Safe Boating. Cuisine and service the best. Rates from $13 to $25 per week; $3 to $4 per day. Telegraph and Poet Oflice address : SARANAC LAKE, N. Y. JOHN HARDING, Proprietor. Late of Eaton & Harding, Hotel Ampersand. 244 5ARANAe»INN UPPER SARANAC LAKE. Post Office Address, SARANAC INN, Franklin Co., N. Y. THE COUNTRY OF FISH AND GAME AND HEALTHFUL RECREATION. TERMS AT THE INN, - - $3.50 Per Day. Special Rates t>y tine AVeelc. Trout Kislning from May ist to September 15th. Deer Hiinting from August 15th to November ist. Boats, Guides, Fishing Tackle, Supplies and Camp outfits furnish- ed at the house. Correspondence solicited. Circulars and Maps sent on application. D. W. RIDDLE, Manager. W^WBEEK II0D6E, Adirondacks. The new house on upper Saranac Lake. Open from May 1st to October 15th. For further information please address T. EDMUND KRUMBHOLZ, Manager, Telegraph and Post Office. WAWBEEK^ N. Y. McCOY'S RUSTIC UOPG^, UPPER SARANAC LAKE. Fourteen miles by water from Saranac Station on Chateaugay Railroad. Daily mails. SuPHRB Fishing and Hunting. Rates, Si3.50 per Day; iSlO to *14 per Week. For Season Rates apply at Office. Open May ist to October 20th. Guides, Boats and Hunting and Fishing Supplies furnished. Pleasant walks. Good drives. Telegraph communications within twenty minutes walk of the house. Post Office address, Sakanac Lake. £. R. McCOY, PROPRIETOR. HI A \;t/ AXHA HnilSLP stony Creek Ponds, Adiron. ir\YV/\l Iin IIV/UOL» dacks. On tlie celebrated Indian Carry between the Upper Saranac and Raquette waters. Newly furnished and surroundings beautified. Will be kept in first-class manner. We will make every effort to please the sporting people. Deer seen almost daily from the house. Abundance of trout in the pond and brooks within thirty rods of the door. CBC-A_S. "W-A-ItlDZSrEI?,, 3Pa?OI537let;OX'- 245 CHILDWOLD RARK HOUSE, AND COTTAGES, Lake Miassawepie, Ctiilciwolci Parle. Is an exceeding-ly attractive Game and Fish, Preserve charmingly located in the Wilderness of the Adirondacks. The Park consists of upwards of five thousand acres, embracing Lake Mas- sawepie and a group of fine, charming, mountain lakelets. THE CHILDWOLD PARK HOUSE was erected in 1889 by the owners of the Childwold Estate. It is located in a fine grove of majestic forest trees, between two of the Park Lakes and commands an uninterrupted view of Lake Massawepie. The House is thoroughly constructed, pleasantly and conveniently arranged, and admirably adapted to promote the comforts and heatlh of its guests. The table will be supplied with the best the N. Y. and Boston markets afford. The hunting and fishing is excellent. Canoes and experienced guides can be procured at the hotel. The soil is of a gravelly nature and readily absorbs moisture. The lakes are peculiarly free from 'fogs. Malaria and Hay Fever is unknown. Dr. J. A. Thessell, of Boston, occupies a lodge in the vicinity of the hotel, and may be summoned at any time should the services of a skillful physician be required. Childwold Park House is reached from BOSTON, via Central Vermont R. R. From NEW YORK, via N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. WAGNER CARS FROM BOSTON AND NEW YORK TO CHILDWOLD STATION. Also reached from PLATTSBURG, via Chateaugay R. R. and Saranac Lakes. Terms, $3.00 per day. Special Rates by week or season. Send for illustrated book. Daily Mail, and Telegraph at hotel. WM. F. INCOLD, MANAGER, - - CHILDWOLD, N. Y. IPOlSriD "VIE-V7" HOTJSE, GALR, N. Y. The Hotel will be abundantly supplied from the adjoining farm with milk, cream, fresh eggs, berries and game in their season, and vegetables. Every effort will be made to insure the comfort and welfare of .quests. The Hunting and Fishing is the very best. Catamovint Pond is directly opposite the house. Boats and competent guides can be had at all times. Livery in connection with the hotel. Accomodations for 100 guests. Terms. S3. 00 per day : jSS.OO to .*13.00 per week. Special rates for the season. Address E. P. GALE, Prop., Gale, N. Y. RAILROAD FACILITIES. The Pond View House is six miles by stage from Childwold Station, North- ern Adirondack Railroad. PULLMAN CARS BOSTON TO CHILDWOLD STATION. WAGNER CARS NEW YORK TO CHILDWOLD STATION. CRANBERRY LAKE HOUSE, 1,600 feet above the sea. Best Sporting Grounds in the Adirondacks. Guides, boats, etc., furnished. Board, ^10.50 per week ; S'^.OO per day. MRS. E. J. BISHOP, Russell, N. Y. FENTON HOUSE, "^^"^1e^.?^co.„t,.. I More Deer and Trout than in anj' other part of the Adriondacks ! Cottages and ample playgrounds make it a most desirable place for families during the summer. As a health resort it is conceded to be at the head. BOARD, $2.00 PER day; $9.00 TO $10.00 PER WEEK. Address, CHARLES TE NTON, Nu mber Foui-. Lewis Co., N. Y. WlD£IWRr»"PP'^ R»qnette River, south end of Sweeney Carry. Daily mall and ex- Uf-J^UJuBUEir* p, press to Saranac Lake. Splendid river fishing. BOARD, $10.00 per w^ek ; $2.00 per day. Open May 1. to November 1. Eight miles from Tupper Lake Station, N. A. H. R. P. O. Address, OlilVER TKOMBLEE, Wawbeek, N. Y. 246 JOHN F. HATCH, ^ ^ ^ PROPRIETOR. P. O. Address, Tupper Lake, Franklin Co., N. Y. Recommendation.—" The best location for sport and as healthful as any in the Adirondacks." — Dr. Alfred L. Loomis. This House is located at the head of Big Tupper Lake, at an elevation of 1,5T5 feet above the sea, and is in tlie very center of the Lake Region, to which Dr. Loorais in his lecture before the Medical Society of the State of New York, called the attention of the profession (Vide Med. Rec, Vol. 15, No. 17, April 26, 1879). It is spacious and eleganL containing accommodations for one hundred guests. It contains large bedrooms, ranging in size fiom 11x12 to 15x17 feet, and has open fire- places in the parlor and principal bedrooms, Cold veater is brought into all the floors of the house from a mountain spring. ADVANTAGES TO GUESTS. Located at the entrance of the GREAT MUD LAKE COUNTRY, this house offers advantages to sportsmen who desire to camp near their families, and yet be in the part of the Adirondacks where deer and trout are found in abundance. To those seeking rest and recreation it offers with its large, airy and well ven- tilated rooms, superior location and benefits, there being fine lake trout fishing in Tupper's Lake, and brook trout fishing in the adjacent lakes and rivers, no fatiguing journey is required for a day's sport. The temperature in the hottest months seldom rises above 80 degrees. No mosquitoes. The house is supplied with vegetables fresh from the h&^el garden. Kates ^3 00 per day ; $14 to $31 per week. Special for a longer term. In connection with the hotel-is a supply and provision store atocked with the best goods the New York market affords. Campers can rely upon getting at all times, in tliis store, everything needed in the shape of provisions and groceries, both staple and fancy. The proprietor buys his goods of first hands in New York and will sell at New York retail prices with freight only added. Daily mail after June Ist. Steamer runs to connect with trains on the North- ern Adirondack Railroad, Tupper Lake Station. Through Cars from Grand Central Station, Nevr York. REDSIDE OAMP, East Side Tupper Lake. Hunting and fishing resort. Rates $1.50 per day ; $10 to $12 per week. Steamer daily to Tupper Lake Station. Through trains to New York $12.70. Post office in the house. Address MARTIN MOODY, Proprietor, 3yCoo<3-3r. 'Ficeb-r^ T^Ixjzl Co., 3Sr. "X". T^OOSE Ri:^ER HOTEL. Western gateway to the Adirondacks. On the way to The Fulton Chain of Lakes. Accommodation for 30 guests. Board $2 per day ; $7 to $10 per week. C M. BARRETT, Proprietor, Address for Special Conveyance into the Woods. ••••• CiLLIP CRAGr. • Situated on Big Moose Lake, one of the finest bodies of water in the Adiron- dacks. Accommodations for 20 sportsmen. Prices $2 per day ; $10.50 per week. P. O. Address, Old Forge, Herkimer Co., N. Y. 247 |5s.E)IRONE)A(S;KS MII^I^OR hJlW 10TE&, Aceonf|rTLOc]atioax^ for 4^© €yuex^fA. ALLz IMPROVEMENTS. ELECTRIC LIGHT, STEAM HEAT. ELEVATOR, TENNIS, BOWLING, BILLIARDS, BAND,P^^ORCHESTRA. ^are*^,fat:of4per4a^; f i^.dO fo f 28 per coecjC. Address, C. E. IVIARTIN, 248 LAKE PLACID, Essex Co., N. Y. Overlooks Lake Placid and Mirror Lake. Large rooms. Sanitary arrangements perfect. Pare spring water. Telegraph in hotel. Stages meet all trains on Chateau- gay R.R. at Saranac Lake. Terms, $:j.00perday. $14.00to$lT.50perweek. HENRY ALLEN, Proprietor. •0iiA£HITE + F^KOE ••• INN, ^ £'ornierly the "Wayside." Change in Management. THE ADIRONDACK COMPANYy Oivners. Capacity 100. Rates $3.00 per day. $18 OOperweek. Open June IStn to November. Mrs. M. S. ELMENDORF, {Late of the Lake Placid House.) Manager. JP. O. Address, LAKE PLACID, N, Y. UNDER-OLIFF : < V ^ t > — : ON LAKE PLACID. The private camp of a physician enlarged by additional cottages for families and ; single parties, a genera) assembly room, and a central dining hall,f or those seeking the ■ benefits of mountain air. It is in no sense a sanitarium, and every appearance of in- ' validisnaig^carefully avoided. Accommodations for 50 guests. The Attractions are: The sUiiauvc benefits of (omfortable camp-life with a simple, generous, care- fully served table; quiet and rest in surpassing mountain-lake scenery; wild woods, boating and fishing. Lake Placid village, with hotels, stores, telegraph and post office, is four miles across the lake, accessible by steam and row boat. Until July 1st, I After July 1st, HARTFORD. CONN. | LAKE PLACID, N. Y. Replacing the "Beede House," ^ -^ V (Destroyed by fire March 3d, 1890.) Formerly the "Widow Beede's." > ' ' - BEEDES, ESSEX COUNTY, N, Y. The above well known hotel properties have been purchased by the Keen Heights | Hotel Co., and will be conducted under one management. ST. HUBERT'S INN, which was built in 1890, has replaced the former Beede Hpuse. ' Spacious rooms, open fire-places, steam heat, pure water, and perfect drainage are all provided for. Cottage opens June Ist. Innopens July 1st. Address for rooms and terms. f> E, H. HATES, Manager, KEENE HEIGHTS HOTEL CO., .rr; I ■ Beedes, Essex Co., N. T.\ 249 TKHKiA^US HOUSE, KFKNK VALLKY, NKU YOKK. The best of beds, tlie best of tare. Telegraph ofhce at post otVice, close by. RATES, $2 per day ; $< to $12 per week. Open June ist to October 15th. Dining room enlarged. New Cottage connpcted with the house. Five Cottages to Let. Accommodaiions for 75 guests. GEO. EGGLEFIELO, PROPRIETOR- TOv\\% WTOVTO ^W^\^ VA\\„.,v.,v XaOToSC ^v\1^ ^1^%^ ;,.„..v ',..;,, •^ViN^TO'.^ ..tT, ,.,..,vwc igs Keene Valley, Essex Co., N. Y. MARTIN BAHLER, A.M., Prop. RATES, $[o.oo per week ; $2.00 per day ; full price for children over 5 years. No transients. No Hebrews. Accomodations for about 35 Guests. Open from ist of July. The most magnificent mountain scenery of the Adirondacks is found in and around Keene Valley. Flume Cottage is beautifully situated on a grassy ridge at the entrance of "Washbond's Flume." Special attention paid to home comforts, and unusual facilities afforded for visiting points of interest. Tabic first-class, with an abundance of fresh vegetables. Running'^Water^from'the'high mountains in the rear of the premises. Conveyance sent to meet parties at Westport. Daily mail. Telegraph and express. Send for descriptive circular with full particulars. Address, until June 2oth,^SUMMIT, N. J. MAPLE GROVE MT. HOUSE, HENRY WASHBOND, Proprietor. Is situated in the central part of Keene Valley, on high ground, commanding a view of " Giant " and " Noon Mark," two cf the principal mountains of the Valley. In the rear of the house is a delightful maple grove, affording good shade. It is only a short distance from church, post office and telegraph office. The water is pure. Can accommodate about 40. Terms, $1.50 per day; S8 to $10 per week. A good livery connected with the house. Address HENRY WASHBO ND, Keene Valley, N. Y. G. F. MARVIN, Photographer, and Publisher of ADIRONDACK AND AU SABLE CHASM VIEWS. KEESKVILLE, N. Y. PORTRAITS in all the popular styles and sizes made with greatest care. All FIELD WORK, VIEWS and INTERIORS promptly executed. "Will be in KEENE VALLEY, from July 21st to August 1st. BEEDE'S, from August 1st to August ISth. LAKE PLACID, from August 15tli to Sept, 5th. SARANAC LAKE, from Sept. 5th to Oct, 1st, 1891. All orders promptly filled and work done in any part of Adriondack region, orrespondence solicited. 250 ADIRONDACK LODGE/ CLEAR LAKE. NORTH ELBA. The Largest and Handsomest LOG Building in the United States, AND The Most Comfortable House in the I i ADIRONDACK REGION. Tastefully built, in rustic st> le throughout, it is thoroughly comfortable, and fitted with EVERY MODERN IMPROVEMENT. i IX)CATED In the Midst of the Various Attractions of the Adirondack Mountain!^ TRAILS RADIATE From the Lodge directly to the following points : THE INDIAN PASS, AVALANCHE PASS. MOUNT MARCY, MOUNT McINTYRE. MOUNT JO (or "The Bear"). MOUNT GOLDEN. SOUTH MEADOW BASIN! All of these trails' have been carefully cut by experienced; guides, expressly for the Lodge, and others will be added 1 during the Summer. The Lodge is the headquarters for mountain climbing is the Adirondacks. The grounds of the Lodge comprise an area of 1280 acres For particulars, address, HENRY VAN HOEVENBERGH, Proprietor Adirondack Lodge, Oascadeville P. 0., Essex Co., N. X Or N. T. Agency, 106 aud 108 Liberty St., New York €itv. 251 FURNISHED CAMPS AND COTTAGES, Cottage and Camp Sites. In the Adlrondacks. Apply to NOBLE & FFROUSON. 33 Pine St.. N. Y. Wayside InnTanf Collages, ^^-^T"'"^ Located at the confluence o£ *'« f ^^nda^a and Hud „ River. ;„_^FBET s?ad"°^;s?s\nSr¥i|.s|iftr|^^^^^^^ dations; cuisme unexcelled, fine drives. *3-5o ^^ king. MarLager. rates for June and September. B. C. KiiN<-^. ivxan^K _^-3^ FOOT OF ^ Hunting and Fishing Res'^I^I!>Di^ place for Schroon Lake pas- sen""err\^ates |..oo%r day il^T-OO .o^-c« Per^w^ek.^|pec.al for the season. J^^ i^roprietor- p. O. Address, Pottersville, N. Y. '^ t- ^ " ""■" " r^ T • Riverside to Schroon Lake. Eugene w side on arrival of all trains from the i^''«T5l4so^rprt1S»lS°e.,, carriage, or! Special ri.^:of any Wad, c. secSJcMChoa reasonable terms by aadressing at Pottersyille. 252 SCHROON LAKE. HIS POPULAR HOUSE which contains first-class accommodations for 200 guests, will be re-opened June 15th. Hotel grounds extend to the Lake on two sides, and are ornamented with trees, shrubbery, summer houses, etc. Delightful Location, Fine Scenery, High Elevation and Pure Water, Finest Boating, Bathing, Driving, Fishing and Hunting in the Adirondacks. Carriage, Boat, Express and Telegraph Office in the Hotel. Good Stables. The pleasure of rural and forest life are here combined with modern conveniences and social privileges in a greater degree than in any other place in Northern New York. Terms, transient per day, $3.00 to $3.50 ; by the week, $12.50 to $25. Special arrange- ments for prolonged stay. Send for circulars and diagram. L. R. Sl E. D. LOCKE, Proprietors. -A_3Dii2,onsriD-£i.CK:s. and 15 Cottagse locatjeci TKVLOR HOUSE on Schroon Lake, aiiiong the pines. Capacity 175 Guests. Electric Lights. Pure Spring water, all sanitary arrangements complete. Amusements* Music fur parlor hops, BiUard Parlor, Bowling Alley, Lawn Tennis and Croquet grounds. Rates, $2.50 to $3.00 per day; $14 to $21 per week. For full particulars and illustrated circular, address C. F. TAYLOR A SON, Prop's. J*. Q. TATLOR'S-on-SCHItOON, Warren Co., N. T. Grove Point House, Schroon Lake. — Terms $2 per day; $8 to $12 per week. Pleasantly situ- ated in a shady grove, on the west side of the lake, half a mile from the village. Steamer Effingham will land you at the house. The rooms are large and well furnished. Table one of the leading features. Send for circular and cut of house. Capacity 75 guests. W. A. MACKENZIE, Jr, Proprietor, ^ LKKe HOUSE, t^ Schroon Lake, Essex Co., N. Y. Open from June 20th to Oct. ist. Terms per day $2.25 ; adults, per week $10.50 to $14; children, and nurses $7.00. E. E. RIDDELL, Proprietor. (Formerly of the Riddel House. Luzerne. Warren Co., N. Y.) BEST OF REFERENCES ON APPLICATION. Special rates'to excursionists. 253 CHESTERTOWN, - - N.Y. Open all the Year. High dry land. Pure air. Mountain Spring Water. Fine Drives and best bass fishing in the Adirondacks. A First-class Livery con- nected. Terms, $2 per day ; $10 to $12 per week. V(iIcK*Hocfc*HolQl AND COTTAGES, ON SCHROON LAKE. Opens June 20tli, '91. GEO. OEOIL, Owner and Prop'r. Adirondack, Warren Co., N. Y. rm Season of Ninety-one. Capacity 100. Board $2 to $2.50 per day. $10 to $14 per week. Open June 1st. Table first-class. New piano. New parlor furniture. Complete renovation of house and grounds. Lake side completely shaded by stately elms and maples and park enclosed by a magnificent hedge. Address MAUEIOE O'OONNOE, Proprietor, Schroon Lake, N. Y. HOOT" Scliroon River, N. Y. Nine miles north of Schroon Lake. Under new management. Repaired and refurnished. Accomodations for 75 guests. Unsurpassed for hunting and fishing. Dry sandy soil. Air salubrious and invigorating. Scenery beautiful. Daily coach from Port Henry from June 20th to Sep. 8th. A.CARSON, Prop'r-, P. 0. Solu'oon Eiver, N. Y. BLUE MOUHTAIH HOUSE .s situated at the head of Blue Mountain Lake, on an elevation of 200 feet above *ts surface, and 140 rdos distant. The view of the surrounding lakes and mountains from this point is unequaled in this section. Blue mountain is 3,824 feet above tide water; an excellent path leads to its sum- mit, from which sixteen lakes can be distinctly seen. Tine Hunting and Fishing is Kaccellen.!. A line of steamers make daily trips through Eagle, Utowana and Raquette Lakes to Fort Lake Carry, making the most delightful excursion imaginable. The climate is invigorating and owing to its elevation and bracing air the place is vrell adapted to those aflflicted with Hay Fever, as many can testify. Sufferers here find almost instant relief on arrival, while those who come in ad- vance of its anticipated attack, are not troubled with it at all during their stay. Passengers by Adirondack sleeper leave Grand Central Depot, N. Y. at 7.30?. m. arrive here next noon. Leave Saratoga Springs by morning train, arrive for supper. TERMS : $10 to $15 per week, $2 to $&, 50 per day. Open fkom June 15th to October ist. All communications should be addressed to D. H. HALL, Blue IVIountain. Lake, TELEGRAPH IN HOUSE. Hamilton County, N. Y. J^"Be careful and address Blue Mountain House, instead of Blue Moun- tain Lake House. JOHN G. HOLLAND, Proprietor, Blue Nlountain Lake, Hamilton Co., N. Y, Blue IVIountain Lake is thie Cem of the Adirondack Lakes, and is located in the Heart of the Great Wild- erness. 1 ,800 feet above tide. The New Blue Mountain Lake House is a large, durable structure, located on a dry, s andy elevation 50 feet above the Lake, and with it« outlying Cottages, furnishes ample accommodations for over three hundred guests. Main Parlpj" 80x40 feet ; Dining Room, 125x40 feet. Everything new, plain, cleanly, comfortable and home-like. First-class hair mattresses and woven wire springs in every sleeping room. Pure IVIountain Spring Water, Perfect Drainage, Absolute Freedom from Malaria. Positively proof against all forms of Hay Fever. The Surrounding scenery is a poem of beauty, and the pure, dry, invigorating atmosphere is Nature's life-giving tonic. The breezes blow over pine, spruce and other gummy and resinous trees, which statistics prove conducive to health and longevity. Table first-class in every respect. Vegetables and milk fresh from the hotel farm. Open, from April to Novenat>er. RATES, $3,00 Per Day. Per Week, according to location of rooms. Daily Mails. Telegraph office in the Hotel. Large Fire-places in Parlor and Office. Steamers leave Blue Mountain Lake House dock daily for all points. 255 B^o^ ® /Hoorit^^ri ^i^ ^1 K N o 1^ 5TEnnD0nT • Line. o o o o tJ. G. THOMPSON, Superinlendenl $i)-Pue Mouafain Tsafee. "THE ANTLERS" and "THE HEMLOCKS." SEASON OF 1891. Under the Management of C. H. BENNETT. The ANTLERS opens May 1. The HEMLOCKS, July 1. The Antlers is centraly located on one of the finest points on the Lake, and comands beautiful Mountain Views of the Surrounding Country. It is built on the colonization plan, having in connection several Cottages that can be rented entire or at the usual room rates. The table is the Best that can be found in the woods. Boats and Guides in connection with House. Wines served at table only. For further Information Address, C. H. BENNETT, Raquette Lake, Hamilton Co., N. T. THE '• HEMLOCKS," Formerly Kaquette Lake Hotel. The Hemlocks is situated Long Point and is centrally located between the South and East Bays of the Lake. The Hotel is situated on a Bluff and commands one of the most picturesque views of the Lake. It has been newly furnished throughout in the best possible manner. Telegraph and Post Oflfice within two minutes of Hotel. There are also several Cottages in con- nection with the House that can be rented for the season. Boats and Guides in connection with the House. Wine served at table only. For further Information Address, C. H. BENNETT, Raquette Lake, Hamilton Co., N. T. BRISHTSIBE 0N RAQaETTE Raquette Lake, ' " Hamilton Co., N. Y. J. 6. n. BI^YERE, PROPRIETO]^. This house which has been enlarged will be open June i. Terms $12 to S18 per week. $2 to $2.50 per day. The house is built on the South Shore of Indian Point and commands a fine view of the surrounding Mountain scenery. NEWYORK AND ALBANY. STEAMEKS LEAVE RETURNING LEATE Desbrosses St. Pier, N.Y. 8.40 A.M. Hamilton St., Albany, 8.30 A. M. 22d " " " 9.00 " SEE THAT YOUR TICKETS READ VIA •'DAY LINE STEAMERS." Through Tickets Sold at our Offices to all Points and Baggage Checked to Destination. I 257 ^liiFon^acR Forestry. A number of gentlemen have secured, and will preserve intact, a tract of nearly 4,000 Acres of unkroken forest on both shores of THE HEART OF THE ADIRONDACKS. with miles of beautiful shores, sandy beaches, bold points, sheltered coves and the magnificent forest stretching back of all. Limited number of Choice Camp and Villa Sites in 10 acre lots for sale, cl uding Game and forest privileges of the entire tract, to unexceptionable parties, at $250 a lot. (A few of the best held at $500.) Any of these lots may be leased for three or five years at $25 or $50 and taxes per year, with privilege of purchasing at above prices at any time during lease. Also, Forked Pine Camp to let for season. Roomy, rustic lodge, with big fire-place. Kitchen and dining room seperate. Landing, Beach, Spring —everything complete. Applj' to Trustees, HAZARD STEVENS, 85 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass. OSCAR B. IRELAND, Springfield Mass. GEORGE E. TERRY, Waterbury, Conn. Or, M R. SUTTON, Agent, LONG LAKE, HAMILTON COUNTY. N. Y. at iad Pond and Mountain, to which a good trail will be opened the coming season. Owl's Head Pond is said to be one of the best grounds for trout fishing in the Adirondacks. Buttermilk Falls is only 2 miles distant, where good bait fishing is to be had. Plenty of pickerel is also to be found here, and good deer, partridge and duck shootmg in their season. Guides, boats and car- riages to and from trains at North Creek furnished on application. Boats' per day, S2.50; per week, $10 to $14. Dinner, 75 cents : Supper or Breakfast 50 cents. Open May i ; closes Nov, 15. DATID HELMS, Prop. E/-JLK.E HQ O^E J ^^^^ I.AKE, Hamilton Co., N. Y. Boats, Guides and Supplies furnished. BOARD, $2 per Bay ; $10 to $12 per Week. Special Sates for the Season. MRS. C. H. KELLOGG, Proprietor. raque:tt^ fauus hoteu Is on the direct routes from Paul Smith's and the Saranac Lakes to Long Forked, Raquette and Blue Mountain Lakes. This Section is noted for ex- cellent Hunting and Fishing. Guides, Boats, Supplies, etc., furnished on application. Board, $10 to $12 per week : $2 per day. Correspondence solicited. See page 113. Address, W3I. McCIiELIiAND, Wawbeek. 258 NORTH CHEEK, Wiiireii Co., N. Y, JOUiN MclNERNY, Prop. Main Street, three minutes' walk from Adirondack Company's Depot. Refitted and furnished throughout in first-class style. BOARE $6 to $10 m weel(; meals 50c. Triiit and Game in their season. N. B--A first Class Livery attached to the House. Parties wishing private conveyances to the wilderness, at reasonable prices can be accomo- dated. Address, JOHN McINERNY, North Creek, N. Y. NORTH RIVER HOTEL is on the Hudson River, 5 miles from the terminus of the Adirondack Rail- road, at North Creek, on the Direct road to Bine Mountam Lal^e, and is tlie regular dining place for passengers going and coming. TELEGRAPH connection with the Western Union. Stages and patent Canopy-top Buckboards carry guests to and from all trains. MEALS 75 Cts : $2.50 per day; $1 TO $1 5 per week. Buckboards run to this house on arrival of afternoon traint at North Creek and can be had for Blue Mountain Lake next morning. W. H. ROBLEE, Prop. North River Hotel. F.O No til Eiver.Warren Co- ^j), JDEIjIGriaiTIFTJXj ^m mm f) in the south part of Hamilton county, thirty miles from Northville, the terminus of the Fonda. .Johnstown. Gloversville and Northville Kailroad. These lakes are about four and five miles long respectively, connecting with various other small lakes, surrounded on all sides by the rtnest natural scenery, and is a famous resort for pleasure seekers. The Lake Pleasant Inn is situated between Lake Pleasant and Round Lake, and com- mands an uninterrupted view for miles around. It has recently been improved, and newly furnished. How boats, Game of all kinds and good fishing aboiind. Trusty guides furnished. Stage fare from Northville S2. 00. Parties will be met with conveyance at the station, if desired. Terms :— $2.00 to $2.50 per day ; $9.00 to $12.00 per week. Special rates for parties and families. Cottage Sites on Kound Lake for sale. A new cottage adjoining the inn accommodates 15. Lawn Tennis and Croquet Gi O inds. J. D. MOKLEY, Proprietor. FRED. H. SMITH, Manager. SAGEVILLK, HAMILTON CO,, N. Y. Telegraph and Post Office in the House. ARE YOU GOING TO THE ADIRONDACKS OR ELSWHERE? And do yon wifh to receive your papers and magazines regularly ? Our periodical department is perfect equipped. Subscribe through us, and you will be sure to receive your papers and magazines promptly. You can, moreover, be sure, that in patronizing us, however often you may change your abode during the summer months, your papers will always reach you regularly and in good order. We make no extra charges. * * * Do you require American or Foreign guide books? We always have in stock a complete assortment of Baedeker's, Murray's, and all the continental guide books, as well as of those for the United 'States, Canada, and South America. Lists flent upon application. " Send 10 cents in stamps for a sample copy of Book Chat, the brightest literary magazine published. $1.00per year. BRENTANO'S, Also of: 5 Union Square, New York. CHICAGO-804-206 Wabash Ave., WASHINGTON-1015 Pennsylvania Ave. PARIS-17 Avenue de I'Opera. LONDON-43 Strand, W. C. 250 FFiotograpMc Outfits, The old establislifd Photopiapliic Stock House and the nearest to plaecs described in this book, offers tourists and travelers the laiprest assortment of jjoods to select from to be found any where in the state outside of New York City. Orders by mail tilled piomptly on day of receipt, and the excellent express connections insure immediate delivery. Best material and lowest prices. I keep a dark room where plates can be changed and developed, and all preparations made for a journey. All the standard plates, developers, and preparations used, always on hand. J. N. IVIcDONNAlvD, Opposite Union Depot Arcade, U BROADWAY, ALBANY, N. Y. WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL JUST Published by G. & C. PUBLISHED— ENTIRELY NEW. The Authentic "Unabridged," comprising ig- sues of 1864, '79 and '84, (still copyrighted) is now Thoroughly KKVISED and ENLARGED, and as a distinguishing title, bears the name of WEBSTER'S International Dictionary. Editorial work upon this revision has been in active progress over 10 Years, not less than 100 paid editorial laborers having been engaged upon it, and not less than !8i300,000 having been expended before the first copy was printed. Critical examination is invited. Get the Best* A Grand Investment for every Family and School. Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pannphlet free. MEKRIAM & CO., Springfield, Mass., U.S. A. You will enjoy a very pleasant trip by lak.ng a sail up or down the Hudson River on the Pupular Steamers ii DREW »» or ii DEAN RICHMOND," -OP THl PEOPLE'S EVENING LINE. You will enjoy all the comforts of j^ood living. Tables supplied with the best the markets afford. The excellence of the cuisine is a feature of this line. This is the tourist's and pleasure seeker's route as well as the business man's. A steamer leaves Albany for New York (every week day) 8 p. m. Leaves New York for Albany (every week dav) from Pier 41, N. R. foot Canal Street, 6 p.m. F^are, ^1.50. Round Trip, ^3.50. M. B. WATERS, C. P. A. Map of the J^dii'ondact; Wildeifne??. REVISED ANNUALLY. FOREST AND STB EAM.—" it is the most complete map of the Adirondack region ever published, and is just what is wanted by a party intending to camp out." SHOOTING AND FISHING.— "State officials consult it and the Fish Commissioners depend upon it for use of the State Game Protectors." Pocket Edition on Map- Bond Paper, Post Paid $1.00. Address S. R. STODDARD, Glens Falls, N. Y 26o TKe F^od^k C?^mQri^. '' You press the hit- ton, we do the rest,'' (Or yon cau do it yourself.) Eight Styles and Sizes, ALL LOADED WITH Transparent Films. A system which admits of the practice of photography without the least knowledge of the art is presented by the "Kodak." Anyone can use this camera. The operation of making a picture consists simply of pressing a button. No dark room or chemicals are necessary. One hundred pictures are made without reloading. By the aid of the "Kodak" a complete illustrated record of every day incidents^ a picturesque diary of every trip, beautiful bits of lanscape and hundreds of interesting scenes may be readily obtained. A handsome leather carrying case with shoulder strap is a part of each outfit, and the operator is thus enabled to carry about and use the Kodak as easily as though it were a field glass. THE EASTMAN COMPANY, Roclnester, N. Y. For Sale by all Photo. Stock Dealers. Send for Catalogue. 26l THE WINDSOR HOTER, Saratoga, R. ^/. A quiet hotel of the best class. Late dinners. Music. White servants exclusively. ^Yi]l remain open until October 1st. Send for illustrated pamphlet to ^WILLARD LKSTER, IVtanager. CLARENDON HOTEL, This aristocratic hotel opens June 25th, 1891. Coolest house, highest grounds. Special rates to early comers. Send for circular. AVERILL <& GREGORY, Owners and Proprietors. DR. S. E. STRONG'S SANITARIITM, AND SELECT FAMILY HOTEL. A popular summer resort. Open all the year. Table and appointments first class. All th« best remedial appliances. NEW IN 1891, Reception Hall, Hydaulic Elevator, Sun Parlor and Promenade on the roof. Illustrated circulars free on application. "Q^^/TIF LIFE" Twelve Photo-Gravures of Camp and Hunting Scenes in the Adirondackg, by S. R. Stoddard, size 10x13 inches. Price $3.00, post paid. Address S. R. STODDARD, Glens Falls, N. Y, 262 Sportsmen Never Enlarge the Truth More enthusiastically than when telling of the antlers the old buck carried off, or of the big fish that got away. But about a thing in hand exaggeration is less easy; it speaks for itself — for just what it is. (the weekly journal of fishing and shooting) Stands that test. We cannot begin to tell you all its good points. It speaks for itself. You will like its breezy sketches of sport with rod and reel and dog and gun; its stories of camp life, its accounts of tramp and cruise. Ask your dealer for the current number or send to us. Sample copies, lo cents. Per year, %\. Adirondack Number, June iS, iSgi. Price loc. Dontmissit. We will send free (on mention of this advt.) our illustrated Catalogue of best Bjoks on Shooting, Fishing, Camping, Yachting, Canoeing, Boat Building, Dog Training, Natural History, Outdoor Life and Field Sports. Address rOREST AND STREAM PUB. 00., 318 Broadway, N. Y. ~2Q^^||| MAPS, BOOKS AND PHOTOGRAPHS, PUBLISHED BY S. R. STODDARD, GLENS FALLS, N. Y. GUIDE BOOKS. The Adirondacks, Illustrated.— 10 mo., 272 pages, pseudo- cloth cover, 25 cents. f a % t- Albant Evening Journal.—" Routes, fares to diflferent points, time-tables, maps, guides, and whatever else the traveler is mos? concerned in knowing, are treated clearly and intelligently " New lOKK Times.—" A book that may be read through from beginnino- to end at any time, and be found full of interesting readineniatter '" Troy Times.-" A delightful book, well spiced with anecdote and a i venture." Saratog-a, Lake Georg-e and Lake Champlain, historical and descriptive lb mo., 200 pages, pseudo-cloth cover, 25 cents Contains colored map three feet long, outline cuts of mountaias. islands, etc., as seen from the passing steamer. MAPS.-Map of the Adirondack Wilderness. Pocket edition on map-bond paper, in board cover $1 00 Forest & Strkam.— " It is the most complete map of the Adiron- dack region ever published, and is just what is wanted by a imrtv intending to camp out.'' Shooting and Fishing.-" State officials consult It and the Fish Commissioners depend upon it for use of the State Game Protectors." Map of Lake G-eorg-e. Scale 1 mile to an inch. Pocket edition on map-bond paper, board cover 50 cents. Map of Lake Champlain. Scale SJ^ miles to an inch, with smaller mapsof the Richelieu River, and routes and distances to im- portant points. Pocket edition on map-bond paper, board cover, SOcts. BOOKS OF PICTURES. Lake Gaorg-e. Twelve photogravure plates 10x12 inches comprising over 50 choice bits of Lake George scenery. Bound in torchon board, with illuminated title, $1 50. Ainone- thfi Mountains of the Adirondacks.-Ten plates. SamI style and size as Lake George, $r 50. Through the Lake Country of the Adirondacks.— Same as above, $150. The Hudson A ^o^'i.^^°^,3^^ Source to the Sea —Same as above $1.50 ^3^-,^^°J® Chasm.— Photogravure, twelve pages of pictures 5>^s, inches. Illuminated title. In mailing box, 50 cents. SOUVENIRS OF THE NORTH. (Price 75 cents each, contain troiu eighteen to thirty representative views of sections in- dicated by their titles, reproduced by the Photo-Gravure Company Size5V2XMnclie8.) Saratoga, Lake Georg-e, Bkie Moun- tain Lake, Baquette Lake, Long- Lake, Tupper Lake Region, Luz9i'ne and Schroon Lake, Wild Lakes of the Adirondacks, (Au Sable Lakes, Tear-of-the-clouds, Ava- lanche Golden, Sandford. Henderson, etc.) Elizabethtown ^^ Fl^u ® o^a^ley, North Elba and beyond, Lake Placid, The Saranac Lakes, Winter at Saranac Lake. U-iens i'aUs, Howes Cave. In mailing box 75 cents each. PHOTOGRAPHS of the Adirondacks, Lake George, Lake Champlain, the Hudson River, West Point Military Academy, Ho^es Cave, Mount Desert Island, the Bay of Fundy, etc. Prices per d02 Crystal Stereos, $2 00 ; Boudoir Views (5x8) $3.60 : Im- perial Views (7x9) S6 00 ; 10x14 Views, $1.00 each : 16x20 Views (unmounted) in mailing tubes, $2 00 each. I^a-iitern Slides. Any subject in my collection of views at 50 cents each. Transparencies in nickel frames 5x8 inches, SI. 25 : 8x10 inches, $2.50. > -tp • '^ • All goods above (except lantern slides and transparencies) sent postpaid on receipt of price. Address. S. R. STODDARD glens Falls, N. Y. MAP OF^ THE ADIipNDfiGK V^ILDEI^NESS, BY S. R. STODDARD. [Light portion shows Hudson River drainage.] Size 25x31 inrhes. Scale 4 mles to an inch. Colored in counties. On imp-bond pap r in cloth covor for carrjinj^in the pocket. $1.00. Oi heavy plate papor for friminj;, ii mailing tube to prevent creasing, $1.00, post paid on receipt of price. ' 8. R. STODDAED, PubUsher, Glens FaUs, N. T. t 1 «».■<■ BU<,ER & TAYLOR. -''•'^»^* ^ C'.wa.-y of vuur maps, n,^ v/ell as the reliability of vuur df*.cvipi;5o:-i5rs of w-hich they treat," 71iE UNION NEWS COr-""Th(^ O'J.hi Dn;-; tjja-it c-ovf.r t'nfc s«cUoas indicated in a sai ji;fii< ! ';>:v ruamier, ^' THE ALBANY NEWS CO.-" We cuviii,:i^" vheFft the l>est." TH03. COOK & SON.-" We know of no bpjttfifr or snoiv convcrieDi bfx>ks published for these r«sofrl4.'' , FOREST AND STREAM.- '*It i'; the m^-nt ccmpbte and .eliable work of the NEV*-' VOHK TIMES, -"it h a. bock that may b:;; read through from beg-miaing to end a? any t;)Ti?, ,?iid b€ found full oi mt&rest- ing r^i^djngk'talter.'^ TROY TIMES. --"It i" a delightful bouCv,, v.=fcll $pf,ced wUh anecdote atsd adve»i;ure." ALBANY EVENING ^OXJR- NAL™*"''' ^•-''-'tttes, f&2i's to difff-rent poiats, timfi-Uoles^ rarps, i^uides, sjsd <*'hate^er eke the (traveler is i».o:;Uoncernedin.knowfri,g, ar« treated ck^d>^aad m^$Uiij:eatly." O- s^r( f^/ f