326 IIiLLs AND Lakes. 



o'clock. We were hungiy enough, too, and tlie din.' 

 ner cooked by the landlady, after the way of civiliza- 

 tion, the fresh wheat bread and the sweet milk, was a 

 peasant thing to sit down to. 



^his pleasant little hamlet has its history, eventful 

 thougx brief, a part of which has transpired since my 

 guide ^nd myself visited it on this our return from 

 our '' tTim^ in the Chataugay woods." It was a small 

 place thet, and has since been entirely " wiped out." 

 It has, h(^wever, appeared again, and it is now, in 

 1854, a smart, neat little town, remarkable, however, 

 only for one of the finest mills for the manufacture of 

 lumber in tU State— a mill capable of sawing forty 

 thousand feet of lumber per day. I have never seen 

 so extensive an establishment for the manufacturing 

 of lumber, about which everything was so neat, and 

 which is managed with such system and order. There 

 are, perhaps, a dozen or more houses clustered to- 

 gether, conspicuous among which is a large tavern 

 house just being finished. A year ago, this little 

 town was as large as it is now. It contained as many 

 houses, nearly as good a mill, and as many inhabit- 

 ants. It was squatted down right in the woods — all 

 around it was forest. The trees that had been chop- 



