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which we amused ourselves of iU vast TWENTY.NINTH CONGRESS. Mitiiturri. COMMUNICATIONS. ttlU wu chfcraeteristK-, ami IluX occurred the one we bad followed on otir return in 1849I den by tufa of grass, development mineral wealth noon on We chimed near the Table mountain, at thi9 in and about for more eVery nill-aide M> moke with italic democrat* in not in bloom. We halted at the mrtatfrequertily Very removing searching highly furnace., in [Member* yet elected.] are some of them in il» ^ ( Whigs ronton.) Far th« Ualou. fork of Laruttie river.a handsome stream aboutWes'eraaoutbern extremity ofthe 'South Pass,' which it neair impregnated springe. They deep Valley vicinity to resound in ),«. ILUNOII. and traversed r and of various sizes.sometimes several in hammer and the sixty (bet wide and tbro (bet deep, wi'lh blear bratot twenty miles in width, alrbedy yards forge. Cumberlaad . SENATE. FREMONT'S EXPEDITIONS. na aS couldbj and in bonstant motion columns nus row will be 1. Robert Smith, 5. Stephen A. Douglass, and a swift current, over a bed composed entirely of several different roade Selecting well 1 , diameter, kept by (and for yeare, nolwiihi- MAINS. 8. John A. 6. Joeeph P. collected hia party ami maths all hia boulders or storms. There was a in the ascent, what might of ohe quart of the or of the MeClemand, Hoge, Having roll large open scarcely distinguishable escaping gas. By analysis, expectation*of |«,,i George Evans, John Fairfield. 3. Orlando B. Ficklin, 7. John D. bmktr. at the mouth of the Kanaaa river, Capt.arrangemeniaboftqm here, on which .were many l« considered the dividing-ridge in thia remarknbl< ter contains as follows: wa9 iylvania) the and £|H on lodge-poles lying 4. John Wontworth, Frdmont commenced hia aaeond expedition the in the of the ill the ntountali). T took a barometrica * Cliaitu also, is tne destined terminus ofthe rai|rnM NEW HAMMHIRB. was about; end edge surrounding limber degression I'l,,,, ALABAMA. 29th of May, 1943. Hia Ural expedition by were three forts that to haVe been observation, which Kara 7,490 feet for the elevaiioi1 of 13-10 Okip canal; and, until thai work is , Charles G. Atherton. the of tha the aecond strong appeared will remember that Sulphate magnesia to (Ilia the 1. Samuel D. Dargin, 5. George S. Houston, valley Platte, (Nebraakat) by recently At this place I became Aral above the Gulf of Mexico. You * Sulphatf of tunc 2.13 |)oint, capital already ex|>eiid«d NilliCICIITTI. 6. Reuben the valley of the Kanaaa river. Thia change from occupied.with the in of I estimated the elevation ofthii' 3 So atructioii liaa been vainly invested. 8. Henry W. HiUimrJ, Chapman, better yitmpuA, (bnWkum graveoUni,)acquaintedmy report 1849, Carbonate of lime.. ^ Daniel mister. Join Davis. 3. William L. 7. Felix G. McConnell. the former route wax made to acquire a which I (bund dbr Snalte woman in Cm at about 7,000 feet; a correct observation with t1 3.23 located at the foot of Yancey, an river engaged Carbooyle of magnesia andhandsomelyia the of ' MODI ISLAND. 4. William W. Payne, of the country, and importantknowledgeI, Ih 'be low-timbered buttons of the creek. romcter enable* me togive.it with morn pcewion Chloride of I N Jif-tiy entitled to ira name of to deter* * caleiun^. (the Kanaaa,) but little knownt and, atao, the Indians the lu as the gate through which coiQitlera of 1-19 City." Li Ilea in 'he valley, and James f Simmons, Albert C. Greene. Miisooai. mine if there were not a better and More touihern Among along Rocky mountains, importance, Chloride magnesium in a natural looksas if B. and more among the Shoshonre or and travelling hereafter |him, between the Chloride of sodium 2 24 lovely basin, surrounded on CONNKCTICUT. James Bowlin, John S. Phelps, route than that to the Rocky particularly may and the north hills covered with James H. Re Sim me. generally punrtied Snake Indians, in whose it is of thb Mississippi Pacific, juatifieivalley extractive matter, &c 0.85 by loAy wild verdure Me, Leonard H. . route Waa not on the territory very Vegetable from one of these Jobes W. Huntington, John M. NUea. mountaina. Hia immediately abundant. this is considered the best the a notice of its locality and distance fromJ mountain u Sterling Price, border of the but for eome among precise resemblance to heights, . Kanaaa, diataii'^ uppn roots usea for Trt tilt, U was an interrsting in addition to this statement of if ' 26 84 Reading, Pa., not ABBANiA*. I * of hiUa aouth of it. the food, leading points, i half aa Its though ranga hm hen, in littlh link between the sarage and civilised elevation. As stated in the report of 1849, its lati large. vicinity abounds m Samuel 8 Phelps, William Upkam. an of pjant-r#. we scenes for the of the Archibald Yell. vary outaat, icsUncA 6t tha danger havinfr lite. Here, among the Indians, its root is a tudeat the where crossed is 42° 24' 39" in the pencil artist; and I NEW TORE. volunteer; ,n |Uch ikho will act for point 26' its distance from thi "The carbonic acid, originally contained that the of Weir, and oolT^^M MICMIOAN. expedition^ article of food, which they take pleasure incommonits longitude 109° 00"; J was genius other Dix. aubmit to the common , water, hnd mainly escaped before it subjected has not its skillfu|,5^M Daniel 8. Dickinson, John A. '-namaelvas, And prho will hot readily to while with us, in a considerable mouth of the , by the travelling' sought, among beautiful I. Robert McClellan, 3. James B. Hunt. We the ac- strangers; offering ofthe to analysis; and it was not, therefore, taken into for the exercise of their taleuu. views, ' Pdlide And discipline of the cahip. give of America and the seeds are uaed route, 962 miles; from the mouth Great Platte The 8. John S. portion Europe, consideration." of the citizens art Chipman, cttllni of it in Capt. Frlmont's own worda: to flavor It more and in along the vnlley of that river, according to our many neat and reai

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