:? " ' " - - , - . , - - - - ' Bzviti to politics, Citcraturc, Agriculture, Science, iltoralitn, an encval intelligence. VOL 15. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. DECEMBER 23, 1851. NO.- 6- Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollar? ar? per annum in advance Two , half yearly and if not paid be- dollars and a fitiarter, half ycarly- lote the end of the year, Two dollais and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid. except .m the option of the Editor. IOAdvcitisements not exceeding one square (ten title. till )rt incArtnH fhrdA -.1 rnt-c I - -. .nllr iml xscnty-fire cents for every subsequent insertion. ' i'lic unarge lor one ana ttiree insertions the same. Alibcr- al discount made to ycarlv advertisers. ni? All letters addressed to the Editor must be post - ' , T--:: JOB PRINTING. Havinc a-cener rai assortment of large, elegant, plain 'or try the almost impossible task of pen LedertSCTrod etrating alng banks of the river, aud ornament to execute -.,-.!. n;w.,il-.-. Tim .Tomis. VntPS.Rlank linen tils n;..U HiTI irAa.fe Vntnc ninnt Tto.-f.ir.tc JuMiccs, Legal and other Blanks. Pamphlets, Ac. terms, AT THE OFFICE OF TEIE JEFF--RORIAX. 3" Answer to the Miscellaneous Enig ma of last week, " Thc Rough Diamond." Home Education. The season has now arrived when the long evenings furnish a most favorable opportunity for mental improvement at home. "Will not parents take special pains to instruct both their sons and daughters in this important work? We ask their attention to the following, from a true friend of youth : Boys out apter night. Among the iiabits "which I lfave observed as tending i j T 1 r raoat surely iu iu.w, i. u,u ui uuuc uiuic prominent than that of parents permitting their sons to be in the streets after night- fajl It is ruinous to stances. They acquire, under the cover m nnhpfilrlifnl strife of mind. ot night, an C I ' practices. A Toy at a crossing having begged , something of a trentleman. the latter told . bad, vulgar, immoral, and profane lang- died at this stage of their journey. Mad uasre, obscene practices, criminal scnti- me Godin lay for the space of twenty , , , . A , .four hours by the side of her exhausted ment, a lawless and riotous bearing. ' rl tfi i ' , and helpless brothers and companions; Indeed, it is in the street, after nightfall, she feltherself benumbed, stupefied, sense that the boys principally acquire the ed- less, yet at the same time tormented by ucation of the bad, and capacity for be-' burning thirst. At last, Providence, on coming rowdy, dissolute, criminal men.-! she relied, gave her courage and . J I strength to rouse herself and seek for a Parents should, in this particular, have a rescue, which was in store for her, though rigid and and inflexible rule, that will ; she knew not where to look for it. not permit a son, under any circumstan-' Around lay the dead bodies of her , . i - , . v : brothers and her other companions, a ces whatever, to go in the streets after . .. v , , , ' ' . sight which at another time would have nightfall with a view of engaging in out( broken hcr beart , She was amost ljak. of door sports, or meet other boys for so- 'cd. The scanty remnants of her cloth cial chance occupation. A right rule of ing were so torn by the thorns as to be this kind, invariably adhered to, will soon ' ,allIJ0,st useless She cut the shoes from Wml.fttrnnlH mvo him PnmPt.Ti.no- k1WOr,d' and apprehension came back. The boy replied : "Your uouur ouiu ui; -uipnuu n juu iu . nair turned gray. how much money I lose by giving credit! It was not till the. second day after she in that wav." jbad resumed her wandering, that she 1 1 .1 I . i .. 1. a a ' t A would-be prophet down South said, lately, iu one of his sermon, that he j j was ; sent to redeem the world and all things therein." Whereupon a native pulled out two five dollar bills on a broken bank, ana asiica mni to ion: over tne specie lor - -. . , , . g. them. A shoemaker some shoe pegs in Connecticut bought wood. made of rotten Not being able to use them, he'fornlcd to the truth ' . . . p iii .1 t- w u u vv- u i v iiuj u. i nui vtg voauu uuiiu t 1 L i took his knife, and sharpened the other from thc mouh of Madarac Qodin her-j priest, and get to Laguna, one ofthea end of them, and sold them for oats. 'self. forcmentioned Spanish mission stations. I C . 1 1. . l. il. .1 c 1 t 1 .I A If.ni Tnil Ion wntrifin m n fin li nr n if.nlnf )Jj Barnum offers two prizes of five hundred dollars, and two hundred and ' r. .111 . 1 r il 1 1 Ffv nnlljirs rn9r.pfir.rl it fnr fhr hpsr. nnrl j 1 .j , second best original plays, adapted for (iarraed at it. She would have fled, but parted with for any price. She laid it; g which had been entrusted to him. performance at the American Museum, 'at once reflected that nothing worse than ' carefully away with the slippers whioh bhc even bad allowed herself to be pur and to be sent in on or before the first of ber present circumstances could happen sbe made of her brothers' shoes, and mdcd to take on board the boat from March next. XIj3 Tue barber who dressed thc head of a barrel, has been engaged to 'fix-up tho locks of a canal.' JSiaT" Bonnets are no longer worn on thc head: but attached to thc back hair V- with long pins I r T. . .i . . TT . fP 'CST 1S said that in Houfton, Texas,' ' . lucre is cci.ucr jau nor scuooi-uouse. j. i 1. 1 i.i i. ,o, ( kasc fdiow had with unfeeling cruelty The library of Congress has re- thrown to tho winds his promise to pro- ceived a valuable present in books from curc ciu a boat, and had gone on buBi- .i (-, . p-nTU,:i nf fh qw: ness of his own to OmaguaH, a Spanish tuo government council oi tue owua. without in the least troub- Confederation. ling himself about his pledged word, and 7" i thc rescue of the unfortunates left behind, My Dear An expression used by The honest negro was more true to duty tuan and wife at the commehecrnont of a though he was born and bred a heathen, !-..! U - Al,n. r. Pl,-.;.- "U7U -.i- auorrel It b said that a pair of pretty' o ftpw n,; fr- tnnn fo ! u lu-. ocbz mirror ror a man iu eyes aro shave by. 'Zactly bo; and it is unques tionably tho case that many aman has been shaved by them. j. toy An irishman being m church whero sorted mistress and ber companions. thocollection apparatus resembled elec- Bufc most unfortunately he did not reach lion boxes, on its being handed to him tbc h,ut 7hcro. h-6- had left them before . . , j - it -i . , '(thoyhad carried into execution the un- whispered in the carrier . car that he was ,luy dclcrmination to lcavc tbc hut and uot naturalized,, and could not vole. (RCck their way through thc wilderness- From Glcason's Pictorial. ELDORADO. NO. X. BY THOMAS nULFIXCII. i Madame Godin's Voyage, Continued. mTTT, r t n it AIIE UMortunatO travellers had now . but the choice of two desperate CXpcdi- cnts, either to wait where they were the j termination of their wretched existence,! throuch the unbroken forest till thev me mums 01 me river, lores They miUUb ItdLU --uv.u --uuuuo. J-uuy tuuau irlnn3 Thotr olincn thn latter, but first made their wav back to their lately their lately forsaken hut to take what j little provisions they had there left. Hav ing accomplished this, they set out on their most painful and dangerous journey. They observed when they followed the shore of the river that its windings length ened their way. To avoid this, they en deavored, without leaving tho course of j uuiuau ui the river, to keep a straight course. 13y I. " 1,. i : u entangled forests, and every exertion to find their way was ineffectual. Their clothes were torn to shreds, and hung dangling from their limbs, their bodies were sadly wounded, by thorns and briers, and as tho scanty provision of food was almost gone, nothing seemed to await them but to sustain their wretched exis tence with wild fruit, seeds and buds of the palm trees. At last they sunk iScr their uninler mitted Iabor -Vearied with the hard ships of such travel, torn and bleeding-in every part of their bodies, and distract- cd with hunger, terror and apprehensions, it 1 11 i- ii - iaey 105t IUC sman remnant or tneir en nr morals, in all in- J A , , - m, ' orrv. and eonld do no more H ho-r? crit dowtlj and faad uo poer to rise again- Tn ih ' " uUU4.uoi under her own, and plunged again into the thicket in search of something to al lay her raging hunger and thirst. Ter ror, at seeing herself so left alone in such a fearful wilderness, deserted by all the of a dreadful death constantly hovering before her eyes," made such an impression upon her that 1 1 found water, and a little while after some wild fruit, and a few eggs of bird3. But her throat was so contracted bv Ion"- O fasting that she could hardly swallow. These served to keep life in her frame. ! Eight long days she wandered in this ! manner hopelessly, and strove to sustain flpr UTptoJ irf. PTiktonpo Tf nnn cTirmlrl rea(j ..N.VUN.Wi 1 M -. . VUW.1VU&A in a work of fiction anything equal to it, he would charge the author with exaggeration and violation of probability, j But it is historv: and however incredible her story may sound, it is rigidly con- in all its circum- 'cformoo oc if trnc o ft niTro rA tit-nri Ar, ! cring, tho hapless lady reached the banks othQ Bobonosa, a stream which flows into A AnLl -l.f J ..1. 1 J a ' - i LUV lUlllVUlUilliUl UilVSUU uuuru . ji.ui.uUu.u Jit. a lift r difltnnrP n nm nnrl wnQ to her. is he took- nonrno-o find went. in. Ar. 4U -.1 1 il J . ! uiuo vuu pjuuc wuvuw iiit; ouuiiu pro- I ceeded. And here she found two Indi. ans, who were occupied in shoving their boat into tho water. Madame Godin approached, and was Ifilirllv reee.VPfl bv tlinm Klin nnnfouni. to them her wish to be conveyed to An- J J V.VUX,JVV- doas aDd 8ood savages consented to ' .-v...-- I-...-. 1. 4- nu ' carry her thither in their boat. They did so. and now behold her arrival at that place which the base and infamous . a(W,r. f At- 1? ., , treachery of Mr. li. was the only cause .... -... j of her not having reached long ago. This . - m vwiii-ijau. nu-i u tuu- trast i "While the civilized and polished French- ; man unfeelingly went away and left his j . , , . . , beneiactrcss ana ner companions to lan- ui-h in the depths of misery, the sable heathen ceased not his exertions till he lififl .Ttrnp.nrp.fi two Indians to go up tho river with him and bring away his de- So he had the pain of failing to find her on his arrival. Even then the faithful creature did not, The good missionary explained to Mad- , mounted on mules, and their baggage of feel as if all was done. He with his amo Godin, after she was somewhat re-! all kinds, including looking-glasses, beads Indian companions followed the traces of cuited from her late sufferings, the fright- j and other trinkets for the Indian?, and the party till he came to the place where jful length of the way, the labors and some supplies of provisions, wore carried the bodies of the perished adventurers dangers of hcr journey yet to come, and 1 also on muleback, under the charge of an lay, which were already so decayed that tried hard to induce her to alter her in-' arricro, or muleteer, who was an Indian, he could not distinguish one from the oth-j tention and return to llio "Bambas, her j The party were furnished with a tent, er. This pitiful sight led him to con-, former residence, instead of setting forth . which often came in use for nightly shcl clude that none of the company could , to encounter a new series of disappoint-! ter, as the roadside inns furnished none; have escaped death. He returned to tho 'mcnts and nerils. IItj nromised in that ' and the haciendas, or farm-houses, which . . . lUh'0.a"aJ bluu lulugs xuauame " n u,u muk ihi iuwt, uuu taiii- , cu luum noc oniy oacn wun mm to An- doas, but trom thence (another touching proof of his fidelity) to Omaguas, that he might deposit the articles, some of which were of considerable value, in the hands of the unworthy Mr. R., to be by him de - livered to the father of his lamented mis- tress. Anf? MOW AlA fVi?u Tl nrrnrf li tt TVTV T? l t, l, i. j -r ,i - , 4 ,f5 , 4, A, . , "l lamcmuuiB ueiuu oi most whom he had so unscrupulously given o-' vessel. The Governor of Omaguas furn- J cloaks, and stretched themselves on the ver to destitution? Did he shudder at !ished the boat and supplied it well with j floor; so that with whites, Indians, nc the magnitude and baseness of his crime? provisions; and that the commander of I groes, trunks, packages, house furniture, U, no 1 Like a, heartless knave he add- ed dishonesty to cruelty, took the things ed of her approach, ho sent a smaller into his keeping, and to secure himself in boat, with provisions, and two soldiers by the possession of them, sent the generous land along tho banks of the river, and negro back to Quito. Joachim, for that betook himself to Loreto, where the gal was the name of this honest and noble , Hot had been so long lying, and there he black man, had unluokily set out on his I waited till Madame Godin arrived, journey back, before Madame Godin ar-l She suffered still severely from the rived at Andoas. Thus he was lost to her, and her affliction at the loss of such a tried inend showed that the creatness ! of her past misfortunes had not made her incapable of feeling new disappointments, In Andoas she found a Christian priest, a Spanish missionary, and the behaviour of this unchristian Christian contrasts with the conduct of her two Indian pre- servers, as that of the treacherous R. with that of the generous negro. For instance, when Madame Godin was in embarrass-, ment how to show her gratitude to the i p-OOri Indians Who hfifl Kn vpf hor litn ! she t: rembered that she, according to the custom of the country, wore around her i neck a pair or gold chains, weighiug about rour ounces, inese were her whole re- 1 mi 1 uiaiuiu" property, out sue uesuaieu not : . i.i.l.- 1 ?i 1 . : i ' a moment, but took them off and gave one to each of her benefactors. They j met the galliot. The joy of again meet were delighted beyond measure at such j ing, after a separation of twenty years, a gift, but the avaricious and dishonest ! priest took them away from them, before j the face of tho generous giver, and gave TT : . V "r V," ;, , r i cioin, wuicn tuey can in tnat country iuk- ujo. And this man was one of those who were sent to spread Christianity among, spread Christianity among the heathen! and one from whom those same Indians whom he had treated so dishonestly, would hear the lesson, "Thou shall not covet thy neighbor's goods. Such instances ought to be recorded, sadly as they make us Christians blush, were it only to teach us that it is not the holding of a right faith, but the disposi tions and actions of a man which consti tute his real worth, and that a man may be a dastardly knave, and as the time, to outward appearance, a respectable mem- j ber of the Christian community; and therefore it is not wise to iudgo of men their outward seeming, and to love or uaiu uivii uccauu ui luuir uencvmg more or less. Madame Godiu felt at seeing such un christian and unmanly behaviour such p disgust, that as soon as she was somewhat recuited from the effects of so many sufferings, she longed for a sight of some boat, to enable her to escape frOTTl tllG GOD1 naniOnsllin of thl3 lUllUSh it i. ... .i t nr 1 rt i of cotton cloth, though Madame i. V" linrl nntliinnrfo olvn. her !n nnvment. But this jacket was to her afterwards aj 1UI II. Sacred thing, that ShC WOUld not have never couia in artcr times lOOK at tue two. wWTinnt nvnnnonpini. -1 viibIi of Qf.fl A? fnn. I . v w -i. aer recollections. At Laguna she had the good fortune to find a missionary of better disposition. This one received her with kindness and ! sympathy, and exerted himself every way he could to restore her health, shattered by so much suffering 1. t.T..ir i j. 1. f- He wrote also on her behalt to the Governor of Omaguas, to bei? him to aid in exDeditinf her iour- ney. By this means the elegant Mr. It. learned that she was still alive, and as o. . . ." she was not likely in future to be burden- i some to him, while he might through her means-get a passagerin the Portuguese vessel, he failed not to call upon her at Laguna. He delivered to her there some few of the things which Joachim had left in his charge, but to the question, "what had become of the rest?" he had no other answer to make but "they were spoilt." The knave forgot when he said il lt..l 1J1 1 !. rr 1 ima, luat gum uruueieiH, siiuu-DOxes, ear- rings, and pearls, or which this property consisted, are not apt to spoil ! I Madame Godin could not forbear mak- ... .... ing to mm tue wen-merited reproach that he was the cause of her late sufferings, and guilty of the mornful death of her brothers and hcr other comnanions. She desired to know moreover why he had sent away hcr faithful servant, tho good; Joachim, and his unworthy reply -was, "ho had apprehensions that he would murder him !" To the question, "how he could have such a suspicion against a man whose tried fidelity and honest dis- W he knew snot what to answer. ' . ,k , .., case, 10 convey ner saieiy ana with com- juh. JJUl llio UUIU1U IVUUIilU J UJtilHUU IUU proposal with immovable hrmness. "uod, , who had so wonderfully protected her so far," she said, "would have her in his 'keeping for the remainder of her way. j She had but one wish romaining, and ;that was to be reunited to her husband ; J and she knew no danger terrible enough 'to induce her to ."ivo un this onn mlinir q . --.- 'rlnclrn -f linv lioorf " The missionary therefore had a boat c'got ready to carry her to the Jortuiruesc the Portuguese galliot might bo inform- injuries which she had sustained during i her wanderings in the wilderness. Par- ticularlv tho thumb of one hand, in Tvlnnli 'she had thrust a thorn, which they had not been able to get out, was in a bad condition. The bone itself was become carious and she found it necessary to have the flesh cut onen to allow fragments of ,the bone to come out. As for the rest she experienced from the commander of the Portuguese vessel all possible kind- ucss, and reached the mouth of the Ama- zon river without any further xuis-adven- j turn Mr. Godm, who still contiuned at Ova-i pock, the same place where on account I of sickness he had been obliged to stop, ; was no sooner miormeci or the approach j of his wife, than ho went on board a ves- i or uis scl and coasted along the shore till he and after so many calamities undergone, ! was, as may well be supposed, on both ! sides, indescribably great. Their reuni- V " , , " """" ; dead, since both or them had more than , once given up all hope of ever seeing tho other in this life. , other in this lite. , The happy husband now conveyed his wife to Oyapock, and thence to Cayenne whence they departed on their return to France, in company with the voncrable Mr. De Grandmaison. Madame Godin remained, however, continually sad, not withstanding her present ample cause for joy, and every endeavor to raise her spir its was fruitless; so deep and inextinguish able an impression had the terrible suf- ferim g she had undergone made upon her ' mind. She spoke unwillingly of all that oiii! uau suuereu, anu even ner nusDand found out with difficulty and by little and ' little the circumstances which wc have ! narrated, taken from accounts under his ! own hand. He thought he could thereby j infer that she had kept to herself, to spare ; his feelings, many circumstances of adis- ; tressing nature, which she herself prefer red to forget. Her heart, too, was, by reason of her sufferings, so attuned to pity and forbearance, that her compasion even extended to tho base and wicked men who had treated her with such in justice. She would therefore add noth ing to induce her husband to invoke the Ivnnrroaneo of r.hn. l.iw nffn,W tl, f;tl,lOB 1 ITristan. the first. nasof .,11 l,rtr ml.fnr. . . . ----- - tuDCS who ha,d converted to his own uso J wuiiuuipiupw a- """ v " "u"uwvl """-J luu UlCan-SOU.ed Mr. 11. So true is it that adversity and suffer ing do fulfil the useful purpose of render ing the human heart tender, placable and indulgent. NO. XL Valley of the Amazon, In the month of August, 1850, Lieut. Herndon. of the United States Naw. he- ing on board the frigate A andalia, then lying at anchor in the harbor of Valpar- . - aiao, received information that he was des- ignated by the Secretary of tho Navy to J explore the valley of the Amazon. On thc 4th of April, being then at Mima, he 1 received his orders, and on the 21st of May commenced his land journey to the highest point on tho Amazon navigable , for boats, which is about three hundred 'miles from its source, in which distance there are twenty-seven rapids, thc last of l.:l. 11... ,1. T y 1 11 1 hihuu la uuueu me xongo (or iailS) ue Mnnseriche. Over these tho water rushes with frightful rapidity, but they are pass- cd with great peril and difficulty by means r i? 4i.iy j t. Wl j- ium m.iuugu uu uuusunuuu Lieut. Herndon states that an unbroken channel of eighteen feet in depth may bo found to thc Atlantic Ocean, a distanco f three thousand miles. The party cousisled of Lieut. Herndon, commander, passed midshipman Gibbon, a young mastor's mate named Richards, a and young Peruvian, who had made tho voyage down tho Amazon a few vears he- fore, Don Manuel Tjurrn, who was cm- as I position were known to him?" ployed as interpreter to the Indiana, nnd Mauricio, an Indian servant. Thev were ,i , ' r. tney sometimes avaneu tuemseivcs or, ai- ' iuiucu UUb IJUUl UUUUUJ11IUUU11UU. J. 11U ronowing picturo or the lieutenants hrat night s lodgings, not more than teu miles from Lima, is a specimen : " The house j was built of adobe, or sun-dried bricks, ; and roofed with tiles. It had but one : room, which was the general receptacle for all comers. A mud projection of two feet hioh and three wide, stood out from Ci 7 flm rnnlla nf flin vnntn fill nrminrl finrl served as a permanent bedplace for num- ' oers. utners laiu tueir DiaiiKccs auu , game cocks and guinea pigs, wo had quite a caravanscra appearance' The lieutenant found the general an swer to his inquiry for provisions for his party, and of fodder for their animals, ; tains caught a glimpse of the wild and shy was " no hay" (there is none). The re- j vicunia. They go in herds of ten or fif fusal of the people to sell supplies of these j tceu females, accompanied by one male, indispensable articles was a source or con- ! tinued inconvenience. It arose probably i from their fear to havo it known that they had possessions, lest the hand of authority should be laid upon thorn, and their property taken without payment. The cultivators, it must be remembered, i aro native Indians, and thev are under ' the absolute control of their Spanish masters, and have uo recognized nhts protected by law. While this state of things continues, civilization is effectually 'debarred progress The usual day's travel was twelve to hffpnn mi pi I ho rnnfn ncnonrloi-I roni!- ly, and the river Kimac, along whose banks their road lay, was reduced to a mountain torrent raging m loam over the iragmcnis oi tue rocKy cinrs which over- hung its bed. Tho road occasionally widened out and gave room for a little cultivation. ir. mi ii ..i. height of 10,000 feet above the level of the sea. Here, the traveler foels that be is lifted above the impurities of the lower luay j.t. j.ney iiaa now reached a regions oi uie acmospuere, and is oreatn- ing air free from taint. The stars spark- led with intense brilliancy. The temper- aturo at ni.rhfc tvns iw.t.in-. mnl nn H,r. aturc at niht was getting cool, and the travelers found they required all their ' foreign matter, is worth fifteen cents the blankets. But by day the heat was op- j pound in England, where it is refined. prcssive until tempered by the sea breeze, ! Theic is a mine of fine coal near the ha whioh set in about eleven o'clock in tho 1 cienda, which yields an abundant supply, morning. 'jg travelers passed other mining dis- The productions of the country are Iu- tricts, rich in silver and copper. A large dian corn, alfalfa, a species of lucern,and portion of the silver which forms the cir potatoes. The potato, in this its native culation of the world is dug from the range country, is small but very lino. They saw here, for the first time, a vegetable of the T.-Mfn kind called oca. Boiled or roast is very agreeable to thc taste, in jt flavor resembling green corn. Who knows but this may serve as a successor of the true potato, if that is destined, as some think, to die out? Here they entered upon the mining rc- ion. "The earth here shows her giant skeleton bare; mountains, rather than rocks, rear their gray heads to the skies, ; and proximity made thc scene more strik ing sublime." Lieut. Herndon had bro't letters to thc superintendent of the mines, who received tho travelers kindly and hospitably. Tho establishment is mana ged by a superintendent aud three assis- l 1 .1 .. L ?l-. ." L J uima auu aoout l0Tl woraiug nanus. illo laborers are Indians strong, hardy hni.1nn J looking fellows, though low in stature and stupid in expression. xhe manner of getting tho silver from the ore is this. ihe ore is broken into pieces or the size of an English walnut, and then ground to a fine powder. The grouud ore is then mixed with salt, at the rate of fifty pounds of salt to every six hundred of ore, and taken to thc ovens to be toasted. After being toasted, tho ore is laid in piles of a bout six hundred pounds upon the stone floor. The piles aro then moistened with water, and quicksilver is sprinkled on them through a wollcn cloth. The mass is well mixed by treading with thc feet,, and working with hoes. A little calcined iron pyrites, called magistral, is also ad ded. The pile is often examined to see if the amalgamation is going ou well. It is left to stand for eight or nine days un til the amalgamation is complete, then carried to an elevated platform, and thrown iuto a well or cavity; a stream of water is turned on, and four or five men trample and wash it with their feet. Thc amalgam sinks to tho bottom, and tho mud and water are let off, by au aperture in the lower part of the well. The am algam is then put into conical bas of coarse linen, which are hung up, and the : weight of tho mass presses out a quantity of quicksilver, which oozes through tho linen, and is caught iu vessels below. Tho mass, now dry and somewhat harder than putty, is carried to the ovens, where tho remainder of the quicksilver is driven off by heat, and the residuois-tafl jw., or pure silver. Tho proportion of pure silver in tho amalgam is about 22 per ceut. This is an unusually rich mine. Returning from tho mine tho party met a drove of llamas on their way from the hacienda. This is quito an imposing Mght, especially when thc drove is cn- countered suddenly at a turn of the road. The leader, which is always selected on account of his superior height, has his head decorated with tufts of woollen fringe, hung with Jittlc bells; and his great height (often six feet), gallant and grace ful carriage, pointed car, restless eye and quivering lip, as he faces you for a mo ment, make him as striking an object as one can well conveivc. Upon pressing on him, he bounds aside cither up or down the cliff, and is followed by tho herd, scrambling over places that would be im passable for tho mule or tho ass. The llama travels not more than nine or ten miles a day, his load being about one hundred and thirty pounds. He will not carry more, and will be beaten to death rather than move when is overloaded or tired. The males only arc worked; they appear gentle and docile, but when irri tated have a very savage look, and spit at the object of their resentment. The guanaco, or alpaca, is another species of this animal, and thevicunia a third. Tho guanaco is as large as the llama, and bears a fleece of long and coarse wool; tho vicunia is much smaller, and its wool i3 short and fine. So valuable is it. that it : brings at tho port of shipment a dollar a pound. Our travelers saw no guanacos, but now and then in crossing the moun- ! wno is ever on tue alert. un tue ap- ' proach of danger, he gives warning by a shrill whistle, and his charge make off - w with the speed of the wind. On the "31 st of May the thermometer stood at 3G deg. at 5 A. 31. This, ir, must be remembered, was in the torrid zone, in the same latitude as Congo, iu Africa, and Sumatra, in Asia; yet how dirierent the climate: lhis is owing to the elevation, which at this water hed of i the continent, which separates the rivers of the Atlantic from those of the Pacific, was about 16,000 feet above tho level of the sea. The peaks of the Cordillera presented the appearance of a hilly coun try at home, on a winters day, while the lower ranges were dressed iu bright green with placid little lakes interspersed, giv iug an air of ouiet beautv to the scene. C3 I ' The travelers next arrived at Morbcco- cha, where thev found corDcr-minin- to be the prcvaihug occupation- The cop- . per ore is calcined in the open air, in piles consisting of ore aud coal which burn for ' a month. The ore thus calcised is taken to the ovens, and sufficient heat is em- ; plovcd to melt the copper which runs off ! into moulds below. The' copper in this ' ; :,: n e state is iranure. containing 50 ner cent, of of mountains which they were now cross ing; and chiefly from that slope of them which is drained off into the Amazon. Their descent after leaving the minin'r country was rapid. On Juno 6th, we find them at the head of a ravine leading down to the valley of Tarma. The height of this spot above the level of the sea was 11,270 feet. As they rode down the steep descent, tho plants and flowers that they had left on the other side began to re-appear. First the short grass and small clover, then barley, lucern, Indian corn, beans, turnips, shrubs, bushes, trees, flow ers, growing larger and gayer in their colors till the pretty little city ot larma, embosomed among the hills, and envelo ped in its covering of willows and fruit trees, with its long lawns of alfalfa (thc greenest of grasses) stretching out in front, broke upon their view. It is a place of seven thousand inhabitants, beautifully ! situated in an amphitheatre of mountains, which arc clothed nearly to the top with waving holds ot barle'. The lieutenant gives an attractive description of this mountain city, whose natural productions extended from thc apples and peaches ot the temperate zono to the oranges and pine-apples of thc tropics, and whose air is so temperate and pure, that there was but one physician to a district of 20,000 people, and ho wasobligcd todepend up on government for a part of his support. The party loft Tarma on the IGth of Jnne, and resumed their descent of tho mountains. Tho ride was the wildest they had yet had. Tho asceuts and de scents were nearly precipitous, and the scene was rugged, wild aud grand be yond description. At certain parts of the road, it is utterly impossible for two beasts to pass abreast, or for oue to turn and re treat; and tho only remedy when they ;mcet, is to tumble one off tho precipice, ot to drag him back by tho tail until he reaches a place where tho othor can pass. Thoy met with a considerable fright in this way, one day. They were riding in single file, along one of those narrow as cents, where thc road is cut out of tho mountain side, and the traveler has a per pendicular wall on onn hand, and a sheer precipice of many hundreds of feet upon tho other. Mr. Gibbon was ridiug ahead. Just as he was about to turn a sharp bend of tho road, the bend of a ball peer ed round it, on the descent. Whuu tho bull oamo iu full view ho stopped, and tho travelers could see the heads of other 6at tlo clustering ovor his quarters, and hear tho shouts of tho cattle-drivers; far be hind, urging on their herd. Tho bull, with lowered orcct and savugo, sulleu b -1 -.- . '. IS : - . met . 4 - ; 1 f , . - wi... -!'- IH iJ . 0