tables were quickly turned in favor of the hog,
which was
rescued, and was in a fair way of re-
covering from its wounds.
I attended Elklands meet-
ing
hunters came in, and, leaving their rifle guns at the
door, behaved in a becoming manner until the
meeting broke up.
I spent this day at my re-
lation's. In the course of it I saw two of
his
men cut down a hemlock tree, which is a species
of pine. This tree
was 4 yards in circumference,
and 50 yards in length; yet it was of but
little
value here. The timber which most abounds on
this farm is the
sugar maple, the beech, the locust,
and the oak. This day I saw a family
from near
Derby, in England of the name of Lambert, who,
I understood,
were likely to do well.
I rode from Elkands
Muncy
pany with J. H.
near the top of the Allegany Mountains, we passed
the company of hunters who had attended the
meeting at Elklands. The principal objects of
their pursuit were deer, although they had no ob-
jection to meeting with a bear or a wolf. In
passing down the Allegany Mountains, we came