FAR TltB iVlRlCAW COLVHIII A. One greot dim. Who vigorous offspring, by Jiil ng ocean, A re kept apart, and nursed in the devotion Of Freedom, which their father fought f r, and Bequeathed a heritage of heart end hand, . And proud distinction from each o hor land. Still one great clime, in full ami free dcfi mce. Yet rear her crest, onconquered and sublime, Abo the far Atlantic Biros. Land of Columbia ! Freedom'e deate-t home, How swells my hjart with pride to call thee mine ; Beneath Heaven'a pure illimitable dome, What nation ' glory has ere equal'd thine 1 From the bright South, to where the Iceberg gleamt, Thy mountain majeaty, and forests wild ; Thy fertile valleys, and abounding stresms. Proclaim thee nature'a bleat and favor'd child. Tct not ft nature's varied gift, tlio grand, Exults my heart in thee, my native land; But for the grand of soul, the spirits high Who hire unfurPd thy banner Liberty ! Now at 1 gaze upon thi beauteous scene, Smiling beneath the bright blue Leaven atecne, The very air breathes of the honor' J dead, And hallow'd seems the earth on which t treed; For power was their, the omnipotence of mind, BectowM by heaven to bless and raise mankind ; Virtue, and liberty, and truth burst forth, And sheil their brightness o'er the realms of earth ; For here the good, the greet, the wise, the free, 9pake to the world in fearless majesty And tott'ring thrones have sii.ee in dust been laid, And tyrants' blood the penally has paid. Patriots and Freemen, may ye never shame Your father's laurels, their immortal fimo, Supreme in virtue, bids the world adore, And do suclfspirits live and act no more 1 Have we, the mighty people of the West, Unmindful proved of our great sires' bequest ! Oh no, my country ! looking to the past, I proudly feel thy troth and power ahull last, Champions) of Freedom-Ac irs to deathless fame, Thy noble free-born sons arc stilt tfee .nv, And countless generations yet to come, Shall Hail Ikee Liberty's unsullied Home. C'lTSIIII'O. Sunbury Dec 5th. to the sniToa or thk axeiiica. Your village may boast of its turrets and lower ; lis belles su enchanting, and beaux so provoking ; But give me again the sweet coltago and flowers. And I eautiful grove on the BanKs of SU itnukin. Tlirre, blot by the smiles of the maid I admire, The joy of each other our cares shall lieguile ; For peace and contentment shall bound our de-ire, While time as he asses, delighted shall sm.le. True pleasure, by reason and duly attended. Doth daily our health and our spiri's renow ; 0r la'or and rest ia judiciously blended With love and devotion that's constant and true. moki Bao. December 1st, 1840. Advice Oralis. , We find in the Boston Post, the following scraps among two chapters of similar Ii recti in. We copy them for the benefit of all conccrneJ : Advice to young girls. Never m irry a biy whose mamma is afraid to have him go on the, water, r whose papa cannot tell the d Terence be tween rtie toothache and the lorkjiw. Advice to young men. Have it fairly umletstoo.1 Wore you wed, whether you intend to mairy an in dividual, or a whole family. Advice lo parents. Do not let a ail'y an.bition hazard the happiness of your children, nor your chagrin at the discovery of your own fol ly betray you into a violation of your olliga. lions. Advice to indiscreet penpk. Never hire a prin Ur to publish your fo ly in a book, foi it ia Wurse than being hung, and a) ing the executioner forty shillings. Mviceto babies. Remain with your mother a long as you can, and do not get married b.fore you are out of leading strings. Advice to judges. Informing an opinion, keep both tars open, and then you can hear on kotk aides. Advice to Ug'slators. Never become the corrupt to.,1 of wealth. Adciet lo any one wht is pleastd tt receive it If you wish to stab a person's reputation, by impu ting to him or her falsehood, treachery, aud the meanest selfishness, you may as well use l!he mcked daggir as to tortuth the blade with Jtowert. Advice to sentimental people. The noblest of sentiment is that which spring from Sincerity, Constancy, Frankness, and Forgiveness. Advice merchants. Advirtise, if you would be prosperous and happy. Advice to politicians. Collect the bets you have made as soon as possible, pay those you have lost, without delay, and never be gudy of uch disrepu table conduct again. AJv'tte tt the temperance party. Offer a reward IVr the best model of a cider milll. Advice to people in general. Subsciibs for a newspaper pay the printer, and mind your own business. Lead ws not tot Ttiapluha t Three Indiana in the vicinity of tir.eu 11 -y In vame converts to the temperance caure, although rtroviously given to put the enemy in their mouth that stole away tlieir brains." Three wMie men formed the rhajitutile resolution of trying their In- Oian sincerity. Tlacing . canteen of whiskey in their path, they hid themselves in the bu.hes lo ob- serve Ihe motion of the red men. The first one re cognised his old acquaintance with an uh !" and making Lig'.i u-p, ha passed on. 1 be srror.d laughed, sayi' g, me know you!" aud walked round. The last one drew his tomahawk, and dash. ing it to piacrs, said, " ugh, JOU conqurr me, n' I conquer you." THE AMERICAN. Saturday, ttrcembcr 12, 1840, MtmacraUc Candidate fat Soremrt Hen, DAVID It. PORTER. ffjf The picket for Coal was delayed on Satur day lust, by the neglect of the driver, in not band ing it to the train conductor. (Jj Service may be expected ia the EriscnrAL Chciu it, on Monday evening next, by the Rev. Mr. Laudorbaek. (TTSome of the Philadelphia papers recommend the issuing of small notes for one year, by the Banks of tl.is state. The puMic.ition of the " Log Cabin" has lieen resumed at Nsw York, under the editorship of II. finely, E.q. M. M.Noah, Esq., of the New York Evening Star, at one time emMlishel his paper, the Enquirer," by placing the "Aik of Public Sifety" at the Lead of its c lunwis. The Log Cabin, we pr. suine, will hereafter supersede the old-fashioned ark in all cases. Cool Trade The amount of coal hiped from this pi ice du ring the season is 15 6(15 tons. Nut season a murh heavier business will lie done upon the rail road in coat as well a in iron. The furnace at Shamokiu will require about 5000 tons of Iron ore, I which will be carried tin the ruud. Heretofore the csr relurnoj to ,hc mine!, cmpty Prrsiilt'iit'j Message We received yeslerdsy morning the Baltimore ' American, containing the President's Mcssarre. which was transmitted to Congress on Wednes day afternoon. The message says, there is but a small deficiency in the revenue of the Post Olliee Deptrtment, which its ample resource will soon restore. The revenue of the government has not declined a was expected, compared with the pri ce ding year, but on the contrary exhibits a small in crease. The message is not as long as tisua'. We will publish the rnvst interesting parts in our next. Tlif Harrixburg Papers. The KsTroc,by Barre.t V Parke, will be pub lished, giving full reports of the legislative proceed ings Of both houses, as follows t During the session semi-weekly, $'l 00 For the year, 3 00 The Stats CtriTor. Giiitti will be published upon the samo terms. The above are democratic papers. The Pissst lvajia Iitblliukscir, (Whig) wil, be published as follows: Daily during the session, $3 00 Semi-weekly do 2 00 Daily during the session, and sem weckly during the remainder of the year, 4 00 Semi-weekly during the session, and weekly during the remainder of the year, 3 00 Music Its fffrrts upon thr mini!. Few people are aware of the power of music u pon the mind, and the mrdicinal virtue which it is said to possess. In rases of melancholy and ex treme depression of mind, its iflects have frtquent ly len astonishing. The bible informs us that David, when a youth, was employed to remove the mental dirai gemrnt of Saul, bv playing uion bis harp. The ancient record many miraclrs, said to have been performed by the aid of music, and maladies that hive baffle I all the efforts of the medical faculty, have sometimes been removed by the soothing melody of the human voire. In modern times, many a youthful swsin can testify to it magic powers, especially when ex erased in the pctson of woman, lovely woman. lis soothing and beneficial elT. c a are so well un derstood, that it is now looked upon as one of the indrspensaUe luxu'bs of ihe great, ljuecn Victoria, it is said, never dines without the accompaniment of an exc II nt band f music, which she haa stationed in an adj lining apartment, separated from the royal party l y large pant ul groanu glass, wuicn pr vents them from seeing in, and at I lie samo time mellow the music for their royal ran. Many sin gular anecdolt a are related of the power of mu.ic Dr. Burney, in his hittory of music, relate an in tance of a lady, who coukl hear only while a drum waa beating, on vth ch account her buslxind hired a drummer aa her servant, in older to enjoy the pleasure of her conversation. An anrcdo e ia related of Farine'li, the famous singer, who was sent for to Madrid, to try tha rllicts of his magical voice on the king of 8tin. Ilia ma jesly was buried in the prof .u dvst melancholy. Nothing could raise an emotion in him ; he sat in a datkrneJ chamber, entirely given up to the ino-t distressing kind of madness The phy .kiaiis Older- ed Farinelli fust to sing in an outer room, and foi several davs this waa done without any visible ef fect on ihe rojal patient. The king, it wasobaer ved, length awakened from hi stupor, and seem ed lo It.um, on ihe ..exi day U. were seen starting in bis eyes the day after he ordered the door of bis chamber to U Ufl open and, at length the ! perturbed tpirtt entirely kft this uiodern Saul, and the medicinal voire of Far.neili iflVcted vthut no other medicine could. Who has not witnessed tho tff.cts nf music tin animal 1 It is indeed, the language of nature, which all anim tej creation stems to understand. ' Vet how different its rfF-rt on the varlnns fnima's The dog, the faithful friend and companion of man, seems most sensibly alive to the tones of music, ee pecUlly to the sound of instrument, while the cat, on the other hand, remains entirely unmoved, and would, apparently, be less effected by the united concert of all the bands on earth, than the well known squeak of the mouse. THE IRON TRADE. If any of the capitalleis of Philadelphia, or else where, who are desirous of clearing en investment of one or two hundred thousand dollars, in the space of fnur or five ycais, would honor this neigh borhood with a vMt, we think we could convince them how the above object might be accomplished. We could show them, be:wern this and Shamnkin, such facilities for the making of iron, such depos'tes of Cost, Iron Ore and Limestone, and that too of a very supeiior quality, all tf which is most conve niently located, that would convince even the most sceptical of the truth of the altoe assert:on A few years more, and th.it portion of the valley of the vail y of the Susquehanna, abounding in coal and iron, will present a scene of industry, wealth and entci prize, that no one could havj con ceived a few years since. The smelting of iron with anthracite coal, will form a new era in the history of Pennsylvania. It will add millions to her natural and productive re sources. Her canals already begin to experience the benefit of the coil and iron trade, the tonnige of which, in a few years, will amount to ten time as much as much a from all other reroute s. The Birmingham and Gloucester Railway Com pany have receive d six locomotive engines from Mr. Norris of Philadelphia and the fnt experiment wis made a few d.iys ago. The r suit, according to the Birmingham Herald, having " surpassed all eiciiitionH." That oleum locomotive ihould be imported from Philadelph:a to Birmingham,! indeed a carrying of coals lo Ni wratl , and o..c of the greatest curioailie of the pie cut cuiious age. The Rrsumptiun or Sprric fuj incuts sittlnl. A LOAM or THHkK AMI! A HALS MILLION OHTAIKKB. We lenrn from the lait Philadelphia p per, that the banks of the ci y and county of Philadelphia will n suine specie payment on ihc 15lh January next. A loan of f U,.Vi00,000 has been obtained in B aton, aud another loan of f 1,000,000 in New York. All mat e.s in relation to those loans have been siti-f.iclority a, ranged, ao that there wi l be no fu ther doubt or difficulty ujHin the sul ject. Hick- nell'a Itrporter says : "In little in re th in five we ks, therefore, we shall have stieeie payments. Of course rno ey wil grow scarcer, and our merchant and traders gener ally slu.uld conduct their atf ,iis according'?. We may men'ion lor the information of our friends ut ; diMance, that the only I h;la c nlua notes in ctr- culation at the present time, are those of tto Bank i of the United Hiatcs. All the other banks pay mil ' the paper of the 'monster,' and receive it ficcly on deposit. Of course when they resume they will pay specie foi il, although, should the resumption movement pa- oil' with little riciti-inent or no a larm, a we anticipate it wi I, wn shall aoon fiod our bank issuing their own note as freely as in former tinit s." gj We copy the following from tlio Baltimore American. 1 he writer has committed a slight er ror in the name of the oc miotive. 'J'hey ate eillcj the Xorth Star" aud tho Muunla iucr" One of ihe passenger cais is, however, named ' Shamnkin." In relation to ihe IuJian word S,amok!n, we re collect when travelling through the w.mmI in Michi gan, we enenunleird a well-dressed Indi in nn I i poney in full ga lop, with a ten ga'lon cak swung on his back, giving the Kiney the full weight of a heavy stik, which he helJ i hi bind, at ev ry jump. ' eMopil him out el sneer run. any, out the only answer we could get if our repealled ques tions was, Shamt kce man, tvhitk." Which wo inti rpretcd to mean, in plain English, " W'tttc man, whiskey" o, we prcu ne, Shamok'n lakea its name from the erak, a very clear and limpid stream thai irrigates the Shamnkin country, and that Shamukin creek, io tht Indian language, aig- nifirs wh'te crctk. Extract of a letter fiom Northumhotlaiid coun ty, Pennsylvania, to a g mlciimii of Baltiuiure, da- bd D.cember 1, 1N40. " I am aware fiat you know something about the Shamukin ami Muhoimu Void Field, or r.itli. r you hare known what it wns for there "the times are changej, and the mint ure changed with l hem. " Ins eaj of the wagon and horses tncginu ihn e- fourth.r a Ion ofco.il in a d.iv, you iing'it ii.o see, were you here, two locoinot v engines, wi b UK ir resjieciive long Iraius of Coal cars, whir ng along, e.ch making two trips da.ly. As one trip ruin the cml hem ut the town nl Sliamokin to the Susquehanna at Sunburv.and return, is about thir ty tvrii m iUs, each ' Schnioke-wagon, aa our Ocrinana c ill it, irav, U seventy-four in. Us daily, taking down about 100 Ions. To mine ihe 3U0 tons, double or tr hie sets of band i.re occupied lay aud night if day it cm l cal eJ, in the bow el of mother eaitli. - Prrbapa you may n t be aware that one of lhee Schiiiiikewngons" i named fhum kin, a name ill rived, il is snid, ficm the old Indian umnuncia- lion of the English woid Smoking. For this I do not vouch, but if true it is p.opli, tic of Us end 1 lie contrast o) Hie M wagon ami the modern en gine reminds me of the i o.tic il u. ration v. Inch I aber ihus I do not aay amend : " VS ben Yucob strives the coal's vaat we'ght to draw, The hore labor and the team moves slow ; Not so when silt SJiamokin scours the plain. Files o'rt ihe uubeuding iron, and skims along the train. S. much for a arndy of Poie. MYwu will perhsp inquire what becomes of the coal after it reaches Sunbury. Pstt of il is poured into the Danville boats, out of Ihe cars, to foi d the nZn. '.V.TZ consumption, but much the greater part of it i shipped down tho canal towards tide. How much reacho Ilavre-tle-grace and Ualtunore you can learn more ra ly than I, if you do nut know already. "As the Shamokin and Wtslern Mahanoy Coal fiield abounds with iron ore, you wi'd nituraly suppose ilia' iron works aie pioj ciet'l there, and when thee ial and iron lie in such close fellowship, il were strange if they did not waim each other. Accordingly one of the finest furnace stark In the United SMes hss been recently finished. It is 38 feet base by 40 feet in height, and in every resjecl, I believe, eontrucied in the best manner, by Mr. Trego, (he elder. Another ia to be erected along, side of it in the Spring, and one or more Rolling Mills are projected. Perhaps I msy write further soon." Frrdrrirk William, Kins of Trnssia. The following is the speech of the new king of Pru si, who hss just ascended the throne of his anci ators. Prussia, it must be remembered, enjoys a better system of general education th in any other goverment on earth. The people are generally highly intelligent, and as such it will be ae,n hi majesty addresse them : 14 In this moat solemn moment of receiving the homage of my German dominions, of thi noblest race of the most noble ieople, and recollecting the memorable scene, of K mig'hurg, an 1 which ia here repeated, I call upon U.hI to be pleased lo confirm with hi Alm glity Amen the vows which have been just expressed, which I mndd at Konigsburg, and which I here confirm, I now promise to conduct my goverment in the fear ef Cod, and in love to man, with open eyes in inaMer relating to the wants of my people and my ag , wi h eyes closed when justice is to be administered. I will a far as in my power and my will extend maintain peace in my time; I will truly and to ihe utmost of my power, second the noble endeavors of fie great Powers, who for a quarter of a century have lieen the faithful guardians of the peace of Euioe." (The King's word were receiv, d by the people with the mo.t enthusiastic acclamation.) M Above alt, it sh ill I e my endeavor to secure to my cauntry ihe position to which Divine Providence has raised it through a histo y which has not its parallel, in which Prussia has become the shield of the s.loiy and the right of Germany. In all point I will so govern, that I may lie acknowledged as ihe true son of a never to be forgntton father, of the never lo be forgotten mother, vtho-e memoiy will be blest fiom generation to gi ncration. But ways of Kings are rich in tenrs, and worthy of teats, unless they arc aided by I ho heart and mind of the people. There fore in the enthusiasm of love for mv g'orious country, for my people born in arms in ficcdoin and oliediance. (His M iiety pronounced these last words with sn elevated voice and great enetgy, on which loud and long continued acclamations burst from thejpeople, which did not cease til hia Majesty made a sign to them) I add. ess lo you, gentleman, in tins olemn hour, a solemn qne tion, if, you can, as I hope, answer me in your own mines, in the nam a of tliose who sent you here, Knight, citizen", and country people, and of the innumctahlo crowd hero assembled, who can hear my voice, I ak you. will you, with heart and mind in hand and deed, and wiih your whole soul and the holy fide i y of the G. rmans - with the si. II more holy love of the Christain aid and s-mist me to preserve Prussia as il is, and as it mii-l rem.ii i it will not decline 1 Will you sid and asist me to develop inoie and more the j.lnriou qttal.ties through which I'ru-wi.i, with its popula'ion nf only 14,000,000, is placed in the rank of the great Powers of he earh namely, honor, fidelity, jus'ice and truth a progrc-s in wis dom of sge, and the heroic energy of youth ! will you not leave nor abend n me in these my eflorts will you faithfully stand by me through go. d and evil days 1 Oh, then an-wrr me with the clear, the noblest words of our mother tongue answer uie with an honest ja (yes.) ( The " yes" rea lunded from eety side Ji'ihe crowded square, and the ex pression in the answer pronounced by many thous ands correspondent with the warmth with which thr question had been addiesscd to the people.) The solemnity of the day is imporlunt to the S ato and to the world but youi "ye" was for me that i my own that I will not give up that unites u iudissolublv in mutual love and fidelity that give courage, rnergy, comfort that I will not forget in my dying hou-, I will keep my vow, which I pro nounce here and at Kouig-burg ao help me God. In confirmation, I raise my right hand to heaven complete now the solemn ceieinony and may the fiuitful lile.-ing of (io I ic.-l uu thi hour." ( I he inipre-sioii made by these woids need not and can not lie described.) We taust not omit to mention that the rain, fall ing in tonenls, Ica-enetl, indeed the S lendor of the day , l ut made ihe scene more impressive ; for noth ing but the enthusiasm which animated the whole a-einliy cou'd have made thern insensible to the unpropitii u weather. Hereupon the oath was ad miiiisU'ifd by Privy Councillor M ithio, aud the oath prsnouncid by about SO 000 people resounded not i nly as from one mouth, but a from one heart and one mind. Aftur repeated huzzas to the King, and then lo ihe Queen, amidst the thunder of the artillery and ringing of Mis, the hymn, "Nun ilanket alio ttjit," (Now let all thank God.) was sung by all the rsn present an asaembluge of I lo.wcen fifty and my thousand people m the Park alone." Ma. Eiiitob With your permimioti, I intend occasionally to occupy a small portion of your cc 1 .inns, in giving such views and reflections upon ihe follies and indesrretion of the day, a the wis dom nf age and experience may suggest. True i'olitriim. Many person are disposed to think that true politeness con-i-t entirely in etiquette. This is howevi r, a grout mistake. True politeness is the natural result of genuine good feeling, and benevo lence of disposition ; and it matters but little in what f irm or manner it is ixp essed. The honest yeo man, who remains immovable in his sest while he welcome his guest, by telling him to ''come in and hunt himself a chair," frequently evinces more true politeness than the most refined coxcomb who re ceives hi visitor bowing and scraping, enquiring after the h alth of his family, for which he cares a bout as little as he does for the man in the moon, while hi cold formalities plainly betray that the me chanical motion of h'a lipa have nothing to do with the sjiontaneou emotions of ihe soul. I Jo not pre t nd tossy that ttiquelte should be entirely abo lished. A certain degree of etiquette is absolutely he.'esxary, and a certain routine of form and cere mony will alwaya be adopted in all societies. Of this I do not comp'ain. But this cold, unmeaning. and I might aay, hypociitiral pantomime, which the shackels of fashionable society imposes upon it Votaries, and which impels them to express what they do not mean or (eel, is ia the highest degree censurable, and should be avoided. liiJrpcutlrurr. There i a species ol Independence, which young men frequently assume, that sets with an ill grace upon their persons. I mean that eelf-willcd obsti nacy, which they would fuin Itlieve was real inde pendence, that fiequeutly induces them lo declare that thry "don't careawhat the people say or what the people think. The man who professes a totul disregard for pub lic opinion, is generally a great slave lo his vicrs or passions, and pote less rial indejvendci.ee than his more circumspect neighbor. Ha who i really a highminded and truly Independent man, so far as a man can be independent, will generally show it by his conduct and actions, not by his vain boast ings. There is prebably not an inmate in any of our penrtentiarics, who haa not boasted more of his personal independence,' or more properly, his disre gard of public opinion, than any of hi honest neigh CENSOR. Iron Ore. The recent opesings of ore mines in the vicinity of Danville, but st-engthens the opinion heretofore formed, that this i thcVentre of the ore region in this quarter of the State as we have it hero in m luniains of the iuret quility. There is not on ly enough lo supply all the furnaces erecting and projected here for agea to come, but plenty t ) meet the wants nf those who arc embarking in ihe busi ness at the Shamokin coal region, and other less favored places. We understand that Biddle, Cham bers St Co. have conttacied for the sale of four or five thousand tons of ore from tlieir mines, to the company who have erected iron works at Shamo kin, to lie used next season. An exchange of ore for coal, and coal for ore, between Shamokin and Danville, must become an extensive bu iness, and a source nf great profit to all concerned in the trade. Such exchanges will soon induce cipitalists lo make a short rail road to connect these coal, ore, and iron regions, Danville Iniclligrncer, Danville Steam Mill. The magnificent new steam flouring mill, erect id on the site of the Canal, at Danville, in 1839. has tended materially to promote the growth of the town, and add lo the comfort and convenience of il citizens. The people, not only of the town, but from the country, sensibly feel, and eagerly em brace, the advantages alTrrded by the ateady opera tion of this new steam mill. The establishment has encountered some accidents, such as the break ing of cast iion wheels. Slc. but the emrgy, indus try anj euterpiize of the gentleman who carried the project into ilT.tct, soon accomplished the repairs, so that those who depend upon ihe mill for tln ir wotk or fl tur, have always been accommodated Thc excellent chancier of tho mill, however, at tracted " more bag" till the power of thc ma '.hinery was found insuiTicicnt lo do thc work. 200 bushels a day, on an average, would no longer suffice. Consequently the proprietor is now having another boiler added to the rest, with a view to putting on Moit steam ! si as to run four pair of burs con stantly, if required. These additions and improve ment will be completed in a few days, when all who will, may sell grain, buy fl ur, or have it man factured. The fixtures in the mill are compb te for makin? mer. hant work, but it is worthy of remark, that all the flour now manufactured at the mill, is sold lo the citizens of the town, and vicinity, a f jt as it is bolted, a id ready for delivery. And last spring the proprietor sent 4,000 bu-hels of grain to the city market, the mill being so much engaged at country work thtit it could not flour all the grain taken in. At this establishment the producer his s good and steudy market I ear homr, and the con sumer c iuld not have a better arrangement to keep up a constant supply of fl ur for family use. Our citizens are indebted lo Peter Baldv, E-q., now the olde-t and mo.-t successful merchant in the place, for this indispensable addition to our notable im proveDients -Danville Intel. Steam and Anthracite. On this suhjtci a lite nun. her of the National Gazette, says: " We recently spoke f the importance of the min'ral wealth of Pennsylvania the vast resources of her Coal and lion. We might at the same time have adverted to the mammoth iron steamship men tioned yesterpay, now building by the Great Wes tern S.camship Company at Br'stl, England, to ply between that city and New York. This iron steamship i to register 3000 tons, her actuJl ton nage la exceed 3G0O tons, or about COO tons nv re than any other ship. Her engine are to bo of 1000 horse power." it is calculated that h r tripe will be made in ten days. The screw propeller haa been adapted to her construction. Gigantic as this undeitaking may at first vie appear to be, it cannot be understood unless we look at the real working power. The engine is net to do the work of only 1000 horses il is lo do the work of 3000 horses for it woiks through the c secutive 24 houis of the day, and therefore will per. f rm ihe labor of three a 'la of 1000 horses each- supposing that a hoise cm perform eight hours of labor per diem and maintain hi strength. Let us now loi.k at the probable consumption of coal in this vast machine thi insa iable vole mo of com bustion. It may be presumed that about 1200 tons of coal would lie required on rach passage, and that she. might m ke twenty-four pass iges pel annum This would give for the whole yeai's consumption 28,000 ton. lu her outward paasage she ought to use Ptnn ylvania coal (for we have abundance of bi tuminous and aemi-bituminoua coal, if anthracite be not successful) and thi would give 14,400 tons, which, at seven d dlar per ton, would make 100, 800 dollar per annum for the supply of this single steamer from oar own mineral resource. The Xovelly Iron works. In company with a select patty of ladies and gen tlemen, we were pri senl at the casting of a large cylinder, by Mesrs, Waid, Stillnun it Co., the proprietors of the above work, on Tuesday after noon, and can truly say that we were never mure gratified than by this really sublime spectacle. This cylinder is one of the larger! ever cast in tbia country, and is intended for the Russian steam vessel Kamschalka, lately built and Uuuchid from the yarj of the " Novelty Works." When finiibeJ, would be 13 feet t inches long, 02 inches internal diameter, I 1-3 inches thick, and re quired ten tons of melted iron to fill the mould. This is eon.tructcd principally of brick, built up on and secured by Urge quantities of iron work, and when the whole is finished nd perfectly dry, it is sunk into the floor of the ca.t n-houe its whole length: so that a per sou not acquainted with suih matins would hardly suspect the exis enc of the space beneath his feet prepared to receive the large amount of liquid iron which meets his visw on enteting the fjundry, a short time kfure euch casting is made. The iron was melted at the rate of 3 or 4 tuns per hour and collected in a larga ve, sol placed near the mould, and when the required quantity was ob tained, a passage was opened for it at the bottom, fiom which it flowed in a beautiful sparklina stream, of about 8 or 10 feet to the mould, and Ihe wl.ole os?ration of casting completed in between two and and three minutes. Kew World, Itnxes nt the Post OtHcr. The New World say: as reform is to be the or der of the day, we would suggest one with regard to the Post office, in seison f. r " the next adminis tration" to think about it. The prices charged for boxes to the merchants is, considering the emolu ments derived therefrom by the city Postmasters, cltogether too exorbitant. In the New Yoik oHloe for example, there are twenty five hundred boxes, for which the meichunls pay four dollars a year each. Thus accrues a perquisite i,f ten thousand dollars per annum ! Enormous! Daes this goto thc Postmasters 1 We ask for information ; having an indistinct remembrance that there was or waa proposed some act of Cungress restricting the sal,-. ries of thc Postmasters lo a certain sum. Removals front Office. We hope among the removal from office, which the ins seem to apprehend, and the ou's to claim, one man in particular will bo tfpared. He is a po.-t-mant.rin Maine, near the Aroostook line, who, when Col. Barry took command of the Poftoffice Department, and waa sweeping all before him in the shape of reform, addressed him a letter which ran in the Ihe following vein : " My D.ar Colnel : The sound nf ynur broom which is now sweeping ihe Augean stabl s i echo ing among these distant hills; village and forest are alike fi led with dismiy ; the bird forsake the woods, the trembling infant flics to its mother's arms, and even strong men find their joints give way ; they shoke like Belshazar at the visonary hand that wrote his death-doom. I tremble for my office I hove eleven i-mall children, and nine of thern are gills It yield me now three dollars thirty-sevtn and a iialf cents a year this enal les me to buy them sog r plumbs, jwsharp, piccanin nies, besides a ' thanksgiving' goose. I cast m self on your clememy. Ever faithfully your.." .Ymc World. AtriM-lous Outrage. The De'roit Advertiser of the 26th ult. give nn account of a most atrocious outrage, which took place at the town of Highland, Oakl nd county, whereby a Mr. Phineos L. Davi had the whole of the fine stock on his farm killed, destroyel, or ta ken away. He had succeeded in making hi farm one of Ihe best stocked ia the country, by procu ring the best and most expensive b.eeds of animals. It appears that on Sunday morning of lat week, be fore day-light, twenty-five men, armed with knivc and othar missiles, came to the farm in wagons, and witl.out nny ceremony, proceeded to the barns and out houses, and killed some twenty bogs, drove t i some twenty or thiily others, four fine horses, one double wagon and harness, one bull, twenty-three heep, six hundred bu-hels of oaU, three hut.dred bushels .f corn, besides several harrows, plou;lw, and other firming utensils; and, worse than all, ripped open several fine breeding sows of the Berk shire breed, by which brutal act between six'y and eighty pigs were destroyed ! Mr. Davis immediately, on hcaiing of his misfor tune, look cctive measure to am st the perpetra tors, anil in a short time, succeeded in arresting nineteen of them, and great hopes were entertained of bringing to justice the lemainder of the gang. It is said that thi outrage could not have occurred, but for the peculiar character of the She-ilT of the county, who ia believed lo Iss an arrant scamp During the investigation into the outrage, he intuit appraisers of two of the robbers, and in anothe instance, took one oftlte thieves us bail for the soft return nf one of the horses he had stolen, Th Sheriff has :ince ran away. A writer in the New York Mercury, who si ni himself Dow, Jr., and every week manufacture i short, patent sermon" for the benefit of the read crs of that racy sheet, never fail to hit the righ' nail on the head. His setmon are quaint, humor ous and of a good moral tendency. Listen to wha he saya of two kinds of inebriates t Behred FriciuLt : I know of another of tin fail human race. whi is now in the prime of life and the empire i f whose mind ha been planted b; nature with those trees which hear ,he fruit of prin ciple, rather than the fascinating h!o-aoms of sent: men! ; bui ths blight of dissipation ha thuseirl fell upon his fair pro peels and now one of the no blest woiks of God is falling lo ruin, for the wxn of a moral prop to support it in its last st ige of di cay. He is now, as it were, slipping down greased plank to peiditt n. He often stick in hi clutches, and tries to hold on, but finding his phy. ical faculties in a state of prostration, he call tlou for Joe to bring him another glass of brandy an water to strengthen his nerves to enable him I meet his fate with that courage which t'le erU r quire. The little black bot'le which be places i his bedside to allay all nocturnal delicious irsn blinds, will aoon aland empty by his coffin, an with a triumphant smile, proclaim Twaa I ih did the deed ! I hand him over to the protectii of a merciful Piovidence, I know another, who I venerate for his gray hair, and respect for hi u banity sf manners, who I su find of " dogs' nose that I fear the latter end of his existence will I chopped off a square a a saw -mill log, instead tapering to thai almost imperceptible point to whh the prudent and the temperate extend. Instead repeating the prayers which hi mother taught hi in his youth, i re he retires lo hia slumbers, be cla a )i'rua night-cap on hia head, ainga the aong " Begone Dull Care," and bid good night lo Irr Lie unuiindiul whether the luoirowhhalt fiud h