COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, AND BLOOMSBURGr GENERAL ADVERTISER. LEVI L. TATE, Editor. S2 00 PER ANNUM" "TO HOLD AND TIUM THE TOUCH OP T1VUT1I AND WAVE IT O'ER THE DARKENED EARTH." VOL. 14.-NO. 37. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA-, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, I860. VOL. 24. COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, rUULISHKl) EVERY SATURDAY, UY LEVI L. TATE. IN BLOOMSDURO, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA. o pHc e n Mr nK Itrttk Building, Pppotile th Etthanjre, by $idt o 1$ (rurt llouit. "Democratic Head Qvarttn' TERMS or sunsciurTios. $1 fx) Ip advance, fur otic copy, Tor tti montln. 1 75 In advance, for our copy, one yenr. 3 (XI If not paid within the hrnt three month. V If not paid within the firnt aix month. 2 50 If paid v. it h in tho year. BV No pubucriptiuti takrn for Inn than nix month, f.nd no papir dlicontlnucd until nil arrcuraguselialllmvu tern paid. 37" Ordinary ArvrnnsFMfT insetted, and Job Uobk lecuted, at the established frier. Tho Wind and the Breeze. A mighty wlmlnuntrnging by, Unit awondrom Bight ; Stout trcr Lent thrir br.inchon lufh; IhirK cloudsif dut whirled through the iky, Arid nanglit around in" could 1 spy, Hut trophic of in might. A tittle brcora pawd contly u'er, Irarcil) lizard It tread; Yet freihrtPFi to the flovwra it huts, A nd through the open cottage dour Thrir Iraurancf fl.mtrdin once nut Around the kk inan'i JteaJ. Thou thought I - it m ro (frond, I know, J hi ttronfi pruud wind to he ; 1 ut. bkttt r Jar, uhduid tu go Along th path of human woe, I.iku the rm t J hravz , soioft an J low, In its pwval ministry, machinery?" by c. li. roiiNKY. A deputation of Indians to Washington, a few years since, were conducted through the city to Be such objects as would inter est thcm,aud among the places visited was the Navy Yard, where after an inspect on of the paraphci inilia of war, they were ta ki'ii to a room in which a steam engine was at work. Though they had been examin ing many things that to them were won di'iful, then: was none of them impre.-'scd tliem hj deeply as tho engine ; and after a lulled oli-truitiuii of it for come moments tin rrmarkrd to tin ir iuteipreter, that lli.-y were now convinced that tho pale fa-e-s wrre iii'it in power to the Ciieat Spirit uli'). to them, seemed embodied in the in gfiiimii pit ee of mechaiiNm before them If tin- untutored sons ol the forest are ca pibl- of discriminating works bearing the iiiipriii of mind, from mere baubles and dixpl.iv. those who have been brought up in the lijjht ol civilization, should reitainly t ike an interest in the labors of the meeh auist, and study the amazing powers with which he invests inanimate matter, and the stupendous ret,ults which flow from his devices. Though it has been common to disparage and underrate the degree of in tvlleet necessary to the production of tho useful, and iu many instances, wonderful combinations, that are originated by the jnind of the inventor, and fashioned into material forms by his hands, such works nevertheless, emaiiuato fiom mental re rourees as vigorous and imaginative, as glowing as those that waited on the pencils of Raplieal and Angelo, aud on the muse of Shakspeare and Milton From whence but such an oasis flowed the grand aud imposing ideas, of which we behold the embodiments in the Ocean Steamer, swift )y pursuing its conne over the waves of the mighty deip iu defiance of tho mount ain billows an angry tempests, that stalk about it ; tho locomotive, belching fire and fcinoke from its nostrils, as it rushes on ward with lightning speed, with long trains like huge serpents sweeping after it; the amazing machine to calculate astronomi cal and navigation tables, as well as logar ithmic and tables of tho powers aud pro duct of numbers, a creation replete with tho richest imagery, culled from the pro lific field that yield inventors, whether delineatod on canvass iu a poem, or em braced in a machine : the latho for copy ing statuary, with which tho works of the sculptor, costing the labor of months and years, and bo duplicated in tho durablo materials of marble and metals ; and ma ny othor equally ingenious and astounding mechanisms. Ou what productions of a purely ideal noturo has intellect lavished more grandeur, than on thoso enumerated! On nono that como within tho widest range of reading and observation ; aud why then pivn fiirrfliinv in tlin eroneou9 imnressions ofsomofew conservators of musty lore.that mind cau gather but few and meagre tro phies in mechanical pursuits? To young men, especially, wo would say emphatical ly, heed not such an opinion, for it has an In 170U Richard Arkwright obtained his Jarged demand for raw materials, and patent for the spinning frame, by which a particularly for cotton, tho culturo and great number of threads of any degree of j cleaning of which, without the aid of ma fineness and anrdness can bo spun, requir-l chjncry, was tedious and unprofitable. ing no other attendance than feeding with ! Separating one pound of cotton from the cotton i and Dailies, in his work on cotton j Beed by hand, used to bo a day's work for manufacture, estimated tho number of op- eratives, as oarly as 1603, m tho spinning PJills of England, at 150,000, who with the .ngemous machinery, originated by Arkwright, could produce as much yarn as forty millions of spinners would witli tlio old fashion one-thread wheel. To convert the large production of yarn into c'oth, consequent on Ark Wright's inven tions, was a contingency next to bo provi ded for, and this was effectually accom plished by Edmund Cartwright's power loom, patented in 1787. IIo also invented the wool comber, and was distinguished cmauatiou of minds of shallow mould, and of that bigoted class, who look upon tho noblest of tho arts without tho elevating emotion and sentiment that spring from true souls, despite the groisncss that sur round them. Tho age of machinery was inaugurated nearly a century ago by the inventions of James Watt, who found the steam engine a rude, imperfect and impracticable ma chine. After year of experiment and research, he bequeathed to the world the engine in all the perfections of principle that we behold it now j and though it has since his day, been produced in much more extended forms, and adorned with rich trappings, it has not undergone an iota of change in principles since it passed tho or- deal of his fruitful genius. Contrasting ., . ., tho plll-llltl ns if Pfllnii frnut tin, linmla nrl Watt, with the unwieldly and destructive machine it was before he touched it with I the wand of his inventive mind, we are on abled to appreciate the value of his labors, which, if not embalmed in lofty poetry and proau, as is the heroi-m that overcast the face of humanity with gloom, aud is nour ished by the tuarsof Ihe widow and orphan are nevertheless destined to an immortali ty as enduring as civilization itself. T, roM ... r . i I i i an imperfect atinosphereie engine, m which I steam of a slight pressure was used to form :t vaceuui, he transformed it into what its name implies, by using steam of double tho pressure that was employed buforc,and made it act on both sides of the piston in stead of one only,and applied it to the two Pnlil tiiii-nnun nf nvortniff t tirnjanrii !n mm euu ol the stcaui eyunuer, while by con-i detisasiou it is producing a vaccum in the ! , . , . . other end. Instrad of condensing the,0' rieheat pattern., and other styles of slnan, i tho ovllndnr nt lnr. Inc. of ' gOO.1. wbich.bclcro tLoadvCUt of tho Jac te.nnerature. he nrevented that waste bv ' J O I condensing it in a seperate vessel, termed i li e hot will. He demonstrated the feafi-1 bility of using steam of very high pre.-suro through our own countryman, Oliver! Evain, led the way in tha application adapted the engine to rotary motion, and crowned it with the elegant automaton do vice, styled tho govonwr, by which the ihrotlle vtdvi that admits the steam to tho cylinder is worked and the speed of the engine regulated. But as a complete anat oiny of the enijiue would occupy to in spaco here, we commend it to the study of. , , , . i li all who have any pre'cmions to intelligence , . , .... ., . . " e ""J " " doing more to equalie the couditionof men and t ) promote civilization, than all tho tine spun political theories that ever were written. A machine is certainly worthy of scrutiny aud admiration that conveys us with a speed of forty and fifty miles an film Mik-n nil ,iiiiri'T m ;iii n.ri'iu'v iii;ir. w hour, from place to place, coins the bullion of idea through the printing pr.ss into tho currency of information, drives the loom, latho, fan, pump,saw, plane aud other ap- i 1 I - " f .. 1 , 1 ,1 nliencea unnumbered : and vet oulv the: , , . . . , , , .. tliri.slinlil nf it. , ill.. i.in wlin 0111 Imimil In illimitable field of the future achievmonts of the steam engine, freighted as it is to be j with messages of regeneration to the mil-1 lions who are groping iu barbarism boyond tho palo of Christianity, aud destined to make tho circuit of the earth, through sol itude now undisturbed in their primeval aspect, save by tho rude wigwam of the Indian and the hut of tho Caft're. The engine endowed with superior pow er, or created anew . and started on its womicroin maua,it is intercsuug to trace .... the attendants, t iat snrumr ui) nrounu the i tut i great centre of mechanism, in tho forms of, nf u.i.m..larv stmnn not" only as a mechanics, but as a poet and fine literary scholar. Ho was au acquaint ance of Robert Fulton, who, thero are grounds for supposing, was stimulated in his pursuit as au inventor by a model of a steam barge which Cartwright made and exhibited to him, in 1703, whilo Fulton was prosecuting his studici under Bonja min West, iu London. Tho increased fac ilities for spinning and weaving wero fol lowed as a natural conscquenco by an en Ono woman; and prior to the discovery of a machine to do this work, tho American trado iu cotton only amounted to 133,328 pounds, in 1702, whila our export of this staple to Great Britain alone, in 1814 reached 517, G22 pounds. Tho immense iucrcase and prosperous phase of the cot ton trade, was brought about by tho ingo nuity of Eli Whitney, a young man of Massachusetts, who, after having educated himself, on paying for his courso at Yalo College, with his earnings in the way of manufacturing nails and bounct pins, set out for tho South, In the capacity of a teacher. While residing with tho family of Gen. Green, near Savannah, in 1703, he invented the cotton gi;i, which with a motive power, equal to two horses, will clean the seed from five thousand pounds of cotton in one day. Tho genius of Whitney not only unfolded boundless stores of wealth to tho Southern States, but by mcaus of their vastly increased sup ply of cheap cotton, rendered merchanta ble by the gtVi, ho gave impetus to tho overshadowing manufacturing spirit of Manchester and Leeds, and prepare tho way of the supply of cotton for tho spin dle and loom of Europe aud America. In 1797, Amos Whittemore, also of New England, completed his extraordinary card iiinnlitnn wlitnti lit n tnrlno P I it r-A.tt it.i '. , ,, ., , . r , , movements, holds the sheets of leather. ' . ' pierces the holes in it, draws tne wire , , . . , earn Willi :i luunsiuu iiuu uAui-iuuts uuij wonderful ; so much so, that tho Hon. Ed ward Everett said there was nothing to which he could compare the machine but to the human system, and has cushiincd it in his eloquence, aud thrown additional charms around the labor and ingenuity of Whitto- 'more, i no spirit or invention, having star- I.......... l - ' .1 & teu OH lis 1U1SMUU, illlil uuuillluuuuu uiaiiuii- , . .. . ' .'. Mll 113 IU115UI.1111U 1113,1111 UUII bUU 111UV41UI1I of master minds, in different parts of the ! world, was not deterred from visiting France, even when tho reign of peace and the arts was usurped by military despotism. ' No event connected with the reign of Nnpo- 1 1 loon the first, possesses more interest than . r i i 1 I'..- ! 1 A '"-""'c "ueu vu iUU eur of the nniuent alone, but the almost mirucu lous inventive powers of a Frenchman, have placed them within the reach of nearly all classes. This loom was originally intended to weave nets; aud tho Emperor hearing of its magical structure and capabilities sum moned Jacquard, through the Perfect of Lyons, to appear before him. The median ist was hurried off to Paris without an ex' planatiou, and when in the presence of Na- poleon,ho was confounded and shocked by , the impious questions of the notorious Car 10 M """ ulul"r "aa I.- . 1.- .1.- 1 Illilll 11 liu 1.UUIU UU , 11.11 til- --UllllM.. tuum . , . . i not. ''lie a knot in a strctchcl stnn." In this conservatory of the jilacc, Jacquaru was pu. i- u, wu.iu .1.3 .... ...I", ...i-i. i. -...i --..i . , . 111 .i.lnA., WHICH 11. JUUUIll-U .11111 1!1I)LU1-!1 .lb ill. same time to weave a shawl for the Em press Joscplicue ; and the machine so alter' ed and constructed, under the very shadow I of a throne, is tho one of worldwide ecleb- 1 r!ta"J wI!!cU h" cnfcrre;!',loroL;,cfit'!, on Franco than all tho warlike exploits of her renowned Emperor. Other inventions, ..... . .,. 1....1. ,,,! il. lll.-l...l SU-l. ill IUU 11 III U.-1.111. l'l U.I3.1IIU -.1U11-.1.11 U i 1 1 ' .atho for turning shoe lats and g"n stocks, o J plaining, morticing, diilling and nail ma chines, might bo included iu this catalogue, with tho interesting and instructive inci dents connected with their invention, but to attempt such a history in my rambling sketch, would bo as vain as tho effort to crowd the noblest triumphs of civilization, of tho last hundred years, within thg same .t-(.iim-.!liA.l mill iinvrnw litmfq -, .I,, -. . e it . From tho standing point of tho present . , . . ,. , . takinc a rctrospectiAoi;lancc, swccpui" over , lull n lmlr ffintiiri- linu- pnlmil'ililn t in linn' - , -....v .v-, , ,. iliiii- that are grouped ,n proiue.on on tho field of vision, and easily recognized as tlio ncu i . . . . .... ' J O . ,. , t ... fruits of machinery. Amongst them wo behold fields more thoroughly cultivated . t ,-. a -i l l HUM. Ill uu tint! u ui.vt IU 1111 .llllt U1IUUII IU1I1- municatiou between communities. States aud nations, wearing apparel of various textures of cloth, tilks and sattins, fur nished at prices that enable all classes, in our country especially, to appear in vest ments, which before tho era of the spinniug jenny, power loom and cotton gin were confined to tho uso of tho opulent; and ether similar advantages and blessings. If the great movements of industry and and progress, that derive their pulsations fioni machinery, aro eusccptiblo of inter pretation or point to any thing, what else can it bo, but the rapid approach of tho time, when the bond of pcaco and brother hood will exist between all nations, and when mind shall be clothed universally in the free oujoyucut of its noble attributes and lofty aspirations ? To aid in this great work is tho duty of every ouc, and partic ularly of thoso who arc young and vigor ous in mind and body, who should gather inspiration from tho hum of industry that greots us on all sides, and oontributo their aid, cither of head or hand, to the great aggregato of effort that is demanded by tho ago, to promoto the accomplishment of tho moral and physical improvements on tho tapis j and in tho languago of Osgood, Work for tome good to It ever an flowly. t'li'riili tome llawt'r bdccriiluvtly. Labor I A!l labor fa noble anil holy. Lebanon Courier. Blessings of a Rural Life. Cultivate a love for tho country; tho scrcuo joys which a rural lifo can afford are prsferablo to tho noisy, and alas, too ; oftcu, vicious gratifications which wo sock amid tho whirl of a city life. Tho city as it were tho soul's affections to the earth the business too often hides from our eyes the fair face of Nature, and lead us to forget the glorious God that made us, and to whom we are indebted for life, aud all things. Vapid, empty and artificial are tho joys of a city life when compared with tho sa cred delights which a rural residence can ivo to a mind rightly constituted. Soli tary communion with Nature is ono of tho holiest dclii-hts which the world can be- stow a delight which is sure to benefit the world which enjoys it. Purity is en- stamped on Nature's form, and communion with her is pure, and lovely aud of good report. In every season of the year a residence in the country has a bcneCcial effect ou the human soul. In Spring when trees again put ou their singing robes, and mur mur forth the praises of Him who made them. Spring has a tendency to give buoyancy to the spirits that heart is cal lous which does not awake and sing when all things around are beaming with hopo aud promise in Summer, the blushing flowers arc I seen amid the rural retreats, and seem, methinks, like stolen glories from Para disc ; then the singing birds trill forth melodies, the purest and sweetest ever heard on earth, which may .well raise tho tlioughts.away from this vanishing world of ours to the glory land beyond. In Autumn tho country teaches us wis dom lessons ; the whispers that are heard when tho leaves are falling, seem, me thinks, sweet echoes from tho angel world, telling that wo, too, must fade and vanish like the leaves of the forest, and be found no more on earth at all. In winter, wo are led to revere the wis dom and power of Him who docth all things well who hath hid tho flowers bo- ncath a snow mautlo to enhance our joys on again beholding them ; and who sends .i... n. l. .i m f e lluafll,u tjtlUO!-. IIIM liillU tU Ml.dZ iVlili f .t . u To the thoughtful mind, reflections such as aro suggested by a rural life, which should not be decried as listless and lin Llcasant Communion with Natnrn can - t, f , in the pursuit of the pleasure of a city i;f0l The Ciioctaws. The Choctaw Nation seems to be a model community. All lands, it is said, arc hcid in common, and each Indian, or those connected with him by affinity or consanguinity, settle down, aud uo ono is allowed to como noarcr than a quai tcr of a mile of this enclosure ; and that is his claim, and he is protected in his possession by the laws of the nation, as though it wero his in feo simple. Mer chants, mechanics, professional men, ma' , cuiuiats, tc., are auoweu 10 nvo mere ov , ' ', ... 1 permit from tho Council, but no one is al- J , ' , IU 11 L.I tV- l'l UMIIV. .11. J till Jill 111UIU til. lit JO , 11CCC . for the usc of himself aml hU ...-,,. n,.,: Hiiiiiil viiuriwu vi ma iiuuu ui inuiviaiuiii q ifa family outiido of his trade or profession. u. n uioii ui eiiiiiiu-jua iiuuui is u lunuu IA 1... .IP..- . A.CnA..t.,Il . , . ' , ...... , tU LIU 1111V1. MIIUIl Ut tl .tUOIlUt ttlH tUtUULlll , , ..B . ; ' , , , , ,lin Whnm -in.1 nil llm. ,d fni.nrl 1... ll.rt i . ' , . , J officer is poured out, and iffouud in any . . wagon, water-craft, or on horseback, tho ' whole establishment is confiscated to the use of the Nation. A Sheriffs officer was sent to execute a writ against a Quaker. On arriving at the houso ho saw tho Quaker's wife, who in reply to tho inquiry whether her husband was at home, answered in tho affirmative, at the samo timo requesting him to be seated, and her husband would speedily sco him. Tho officer waited patiently for somo time, but tho Quakeress coming into the room, he reminded her of her promise, that ho should seo hor husband. "Nay friend, I promised that ho should sco thee. Ho has seen thee, IIo did not like thy looks, therefore ho avoided thco, and has left tho house by another path," Tlio Princo's Visits to tho Uni ted States. i.vritEssroxs of ekousii observers. From the Correspondence of the London Tlmef . THE JOUIINEY TlIROUCm PENNSYLVANIA. Harrisburg, Oct. 2d. Pittsburgh was reached in tho night. Thero was an immenso crowd waiting to see 'the Prince,' as a matter of courso, who escorted him rather boisterously up to tho handsomo and comfortable hotel whore ho was to stay for tho night, and which takes its namo from tho banks of the river on which Pittsburgh is built, tho Monongahcla House. This was much inferior to the Durnet House, at Cincinnati, iu external appearance, as it was superior iu real eom fort, which is saying a great deal in a few words. From daybreak next morning, tliero was an immenso crowd round tho hotel, which for a time prevented all ve hicles coming to tho door. At last, how ever, tho Prince got into his carriage, and would have driven round the town, but for the mistaken politeness of tho Mayor, who turned out some fine compauies of the malitia to precede tho cortege with their bands at a slow march. An arrangement to which, as a kind of State reception, his Royal Highness was disinclicd, aud which as affording all i'lttslmrgli an opportunity of keeping pace side by side with his Roy al Highness, must have been in the highest degree uncomfortable aud cmbarrassin As with everything clso, however, tho Prince bore this slow, trying ordeal, with hundreds staring close into his faco for j more than an hour and a half, with a mod- est, good humored courtesy, which won, the hearts of all certainly, I have never seen his frank, dignified kindness appear to greater advantago than it did ou this occasion. In Pittsburgh itself, of course there was nothing to see beyond a popu- lous thriving "coal and iron town," whero the air aud buildings are blacker, theugh i with far less cause than those or Sheffield, aud where she sooty mud is paramount in all the streets. At 1 o'clock tho Royal train started for Harrisburg, tho band of the fine campany of Malitia playing a- maioje ne t.oublierai." that beautiful Ca nadian air with which all the British towns in North America took lcavo of their Roy - al guest. This day's journey of 230 miles was by tho Pennsylvania Central Railway, not only through Pennsylvania, but actually up aud across tho Allegheny Mountains, j always at so stoop an incline that, even with propably tho most difficult route for a the brakes on, the train blides down at al railway that ever was attempted, and ' most full speed. Round Ketauning Point certainly ono the cencry of which is not to there is one incline with two awfully sudden bo equalled from any railway in the whole curve., where in little more than a mile tho world. For a few miles tho land through which the line passes is neither very rich looking nor very picturesque, being merely fields dotted with autumn foliascd trees, and here and there a huge black smoky mound near tho shalts of coalpits. After passing tho great Cambria Ironworks, however it and the other cast, soon changes, and the track lays for miles J At tho pretty little village of Altona, between mountains, and up a gorge, cloth- l where tliero is ono 6f the best railway ho ed from baso to summit with tho densost tcls in the kingdom, the party were to have foliage. At any timo of tho year such a ' slopped for dinner. This intention, how- ravine would bo grand and beautiful, but now, wh;u tho coming winter has roused tho forest into a quick warm life of color and robed the mountains in celestial tints like rainbows, thero was a solemn gorge ousncss about the past that is utterly inde scribable. The eyo ranged over mount- aiu and valley till the mind was saturated Juniata river, and thence by the broad, j but theso were the rare exceptions to cou with their burning richness, and you turn- shallow stream of tho Susquehanna, filled . duct. The dresses of very many certainly cd as if for relief from the great sheen of .with its thousands of little marshy islands, showed an utter dinregard of the ordinary tints to look upon tho soft unfathomable At 1 1 tho train reached Harrisburg the , usages of society on those cceasions; but bluo of the distant ranges, or watches the legislative capital of Pennsylvania, aod, I mere dresses mado very little difference, stripes of fleecy mist gathering with tho like most legislative capitals in this coun-1 and, after all, it must be remembered that fall of night, draping the hills in silvery streaks, like the hazo over Turner's gorge ous paintings. This was the entrance which begins tho asccut of tho Alleghany Mouut ains, up which aud amid such scenes the train began to wind. For long, long miles it puffed and toiled, aud struggled painful ly upwards, but always shut iu between these masses of colored hill3,strctching up wards on each sido like feathery tapestry. At last tho train emerged from the gorge ous degle ncr Kittannicg Mountain, half way up tho summit of tho Alloghanics,and nearly 1,800 feet abovo the levol of the line at Pittsburg. What a view was got hero I It was liko looking down through a prism upon tho landscape from the summit of the Rigi Kulm, Distance had softened off tho warm, deep, bright glow of tho chang ing trees iuto a rich mazo of gentle color, so varied yet so equal iu its yariations,that it seemed liko ono grand arabesquo of na turo, a vast pasture, which covered the very mountains, and shono up through the oft blue mists that gathered in tho valleys n glcaim of color liko jowela under water Tho sun had set but its train of rainbow light was still brilliant in the west, shed ding a farewell fervor over tho hills, and gliding down tho valleys in silent yellow beams, filling them with an atmos phere of gold. On one side in tho distance all was light and life, and gorgeous rays ; while up iu the cast remorseless night camo crowding on, stifling out the brilliant wood land with a dull gray haze, and making tho mountains loom heavily through tho darkness from tho heavens like clouds of a coming storm. Close and sheer abovo the train rose a precipice, worried and riven into such fantastic ruins as only tho decay of mountains show staiucd with raw blotches, whoso watercourse trickled down into old gray pinuaclos, draped with a si lent moss, and here and thero long cree pers dropping softly down from stono to stone iu rills of vegetation, rustling and waving gently with tho wiud. Abovo tho rock, like sunset clouds, tho forest roso in all itjs glory, with festoous of glowing weeds, like old tern banners, hanging in melancholy grandeur from their boughs, with clumps of underwood, and sweet wild flowers still alive with bloom, with hum ble, timid willows, bending in low obei sance before these severe lords of the woods; tho dark, tall, sombre, unchaning pine. Maple and sumachs, swamp ash and hemlocks, oaks, sycamores, larches, chestnuts, and aspens, all crowded togeth er in every form and hue of leaf, in every shape of branch, huddling their tinted leaves together like a huge pavillion, to screen in and shroud from view tho deep, i long, silent vistas that wandered into j darkness between their stems. There was such a life of color, such a death of sound ,upou tho scene, that even the rush of the river below came up hushed like a fading breeze, aud it seemed as if all nature, with tho coming darkness, had sunk to slumber. There were no stars iu the heavens, but little dots of light shone out like spangles over tho plain below, marking where cot tages stood, with here and there a little constellation, showing where a rising vil- lage straggled loosely round in picturesque confusion. Tho Prince saw the whole of this graud panorama, to tlio very best advantage, for 1 at the commencement of the ascent ho left his carriage and proceeded to tho engine, on which ho rode till tho whole of tho Allechanies had been crossed, lho des- cent from tho summit is 12 miles in length, j way descends 1)0 feet. This path, wind- ug rouud the edge of a tcrrifio precipice, is o-ieof tho most awful railway passages 1 . cvor saw or heard of. Some idea may be formed of the sharp nature of the curve 'when two trains travel for miles in the samo direction, though one is going west j ever, was abandoned, for it was nightfall and Harrisburg was still somo lbO miloi distant, so the train was pushed on through 11. n ...11.1 nArl ,...llwl It Tl.la V lUU 11 lilt IU Ulllt lUllt 1UDU tUlltll U ItUlt I .11' rows," amid much the same rich magnifi- ceueo of scenery as on the Hudson, at West Point. From this it traversed along the try, small, quiet, and rather faded look - mg. Unly a short stay, merely to get a night's rest, is to bo made by tho Royal party, and to morrow tho endless jonrney ing commence with the routo to Washing ton. ThE I'lUNCE's IlECKrTION AT WASH INGTON. Tho Princo has arrivod at this strauge city, whose streets of ill-built houses connect the most noble public buildings, and where one has to admiro the city as a city always in tho future tense. It will and must iu history bo one of the gaeatcst capitals that tho world has sceu, but as yet it seems to want a deal of buildiug, altera' tious, and improvements boforo it can be a worthy legislative centre of this great em pire Another hour, however, must suffice for recording my impression of this great, strange, unequal city, for I havo barely timo now to do moro than jot down a few incidents of the prince's reception. That there was a great crowd at the station may of courso be taken for granted but it wa3 well railed off, and no hustling, J as with Iho mob3 of Detroit and St Louis, was allowed at any lime. General Cass, Secretary of State, with Mr. James Buchan. an and James Buchanan Henry, nephews of tho President, wero on tho platform, and received his royal highness aa ho alighted from the train. Thero was a very brief pause wkilo General Cass, on the part of the chief magistrate of the United Statos, cordially welcomed tho royal udtor to Washington, and a few introductions took place, but there was no ceremony or delay of any kind, and tho party at once entered tho President's carriage and drove t. tho White House. They arrived at tho czectl tivo mansion soon aficr 4 o'clock. Tho President, as regal and as venerable in his appcaranoo as any king who ever woro a crown, stood just inside the portal of tho White House, and as the Princo stepped forward shook him by the hand with a cordiality of welcome that was unmistak able. It was more a meeting between pri vate friends aud gentlemen than a really historical reception given by tho chief of the greatest republic to tho heir of tho greatest monarchy in the world. Tho Presi dent led his guest at once to tho blue draw ing room, whero he introduced Miis Lane. his uiecj, and Mrs. Ellis, niece of tho lato Vice President King. But beyond theso few facts I know nothing, except that all tho guests at the White House are staying there without formality, and as any other party of distinguished travelers whom it might please tho President to entertain. Only ouo exception is made to the general rule of affairs at tho executive raa-Bionj and that Is while the Princo stays thero it is no longer an open honso to all, but police aro stationed round it, and nono except those invited aro allowed to enter. Many m.mbers of tho royal suite, who could not be accommodated at tho President's man sion, arc staying with Lord Lyons. This morning his royal highness went over the Capitol, aud visited tho Senate Chamber and Chamber of tho Hall of Representa tives, with some other of tho magnificent public buildings hero. Afterwards thero was a levee, at which everybody came that wanted, and to which many camo that wero not wanted, if one might judge from their extremely negligee costumo. Tbero were plenty of ladies there in bonnets and shawls, and some individuals who sauntered into the room with their bauds in their pockets, aud who otherwise conducted themslvcs in a way which, certainly, as far as I have . seen, in not useful among the American gentlemen who unfortunately do chew to bacco. The President did not remain in any special place, or take a prominent pirt in ihe reception at a'l. Like his chief guests, he was dressed in black, tho' not in full dress a sort of male rlcmi toilcltc, which was quite sufficient for tha occasion. People passed in gazed at tho Prince, bowed to him and tho President and then passed out. Iu fact it seemed , li" a reception than a mixed deputation, I Ironi winch ladies were not excluded. It was not agood time oftheyearin which to give such a levee, for Washington is almost empty now,comparcd to what it generally is. There was a total absence of formality or restriction either as to dress or person of any kind, and yet, as a rule, thero was a quiet decorum iu manners, which, con- siitenng that all who chose to come might fin KA irnn l lllt-a inn. l.A..nH I- I tt.w t-U.U UUUU IJUIlUt IU HUJ Cl.- j oral asdeinblago in Europe. Hero and there could be seen something very cutre, . and as I have intimated, even offensivo, , it was oarly in tho day. A Vermont horsejockcy, boasting ono day of his horse, gravely asserted that when ho was but thrco years old, tho lightning killed the old mare, and chased the colt all round the pasture without gel ting in a striking distance of him, A cutb Yankee, iu Kan?as, sells liquor in a gun barrel, iustead of a glass, that ho may avoid the law, and made it appear, beyond dispute, that ho is telling by the barrel. A good minister in a country villago lately prayed fervently for those of his congregation 'who were too proud to kneel aud too lazy too stand.' Always do as tho sun does look al tho bright side of everything. For while it is just as cheap, it is three times as good for digestion. If you wish to cure a tcolding Trifc, never fail to laujrh at her with all vonr might until che ceases then kiss her. Sure cure,