II J I II I "WE GO WHERE DEMOCSATie PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY ; WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW '. '. -HI ' ' ' " - . -i" .: VOLUME VIII. T K It M S. The "MOl'S'TAIX SENTINEL" is publish J every Thursday morning, at One Dollar and fifty L'tnts per auauui, if paid in advance or within three months ; after three mouths Tuo DJlart will be charged. 'o subscription will be taken for a shorter i criod thun six mouths ; aud no paper will be discontinued until all arrearage are paid. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid ered as a new engagement. IS- ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per square for the first insertion ; 75 cents for two insertions ; $1 for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square for everv subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. All advertisements handed in must have the proper number of insertions marKeu luweou, or thev will be published until forbidden, aud charged in accordance with the above terms. goAH letters and communications to insure attention must be post paid. A. J. K1IE1 . ti THE IVOUIWIOI'SE CLOCK. What a life-like "picture in little" is this by lloon of the "torrent of rugged humanity" that eets toward an English poor-house, at the sound of The Work-House Clock ! Remark, too, rea der, the beautiful sentiment with which the extract closes : There's a murmur in the air, And noise in every street ; The murmur of many tougue9, The noise of many leet. While round the work-house door The laboring classes flock ; lor why ! the Overseer of the Poor It etting the work-house clock. Who does not hear the tramp Of thousands speeding along, Of either sex, and various stamp, Sickly, crippled and strong, Walking, limping, creeping, Frem court and alley and lane, lut all in one direction sweeping, Like rivers that seek the main 1 Who Joes not see them sally from mill and garret and room, In lane and court and alley, From homes in Poverty's lowest vallcv. Furnished with shuttle and loom: I'oor slaves of Civilization's galley And in the road and footways sally, As if for the Day of Doom ? Some, of hardly human form, Stunted, crooked, and crippled by toil, Iingy with atuoke and riut aud oil, And smirched beside with vicious toil, Clustering, mustering, all in a swarm, Father, mother, and care-full child, Looking as if it had never smiled ; The seamstress lean, and weary, and wan, With only the ghosts of garments on ; The weaver, her sallow neighbor, The grim and sooty artisan ; Every soul child, woman, or man, Who lives or dies by labor ! At last, before that door That bears so many a knock, Ere ever it opens to Sick or Poor, Like sheep they huddle and flock And would that all the Good and Wise Could see the million of hollow eyes, With a gleam derived from Hope and the skies, Upturned to the Work-House Clock 1 Oh ! that the Parish Towers, Who regulate Labor's hours, The daily amount of human trial, Weariness, pain, and self-denial, Would turn from the artificial dial That Btriketh ten or eleven, And go, for once, by that older one That stands in the light of Nature's sun And takes its time from Heaven ! ENGLISH DESTISITV. The North American, of Feb. 11, alludes to a superstition of Sir Walter Scott, that the middle of every century had always been marked by some great convulsion or calamity to the British Empire. So fixed was this superstition on Sir Walter's mind, that he confidently predicted, and repeated the prediction but a short time before his death, that England had much to fear &t the middle of the present century. It is curious to go back and mark the grounds n which this singular prediction was founded. In 1743, England was invaded by Charles Ed ward the Pretender, and had he been allowed to liave followed the dictates of his own courage, and advanced on London, the Hanoverian dyna sty might Lave ended. About 1G40, was the great civil war of the Parliament against the KlIJg, who was beheaded in 1G49. Near 1550 m the important struggle between the Protes tant and Romish churches. 1450 was noted for wars of the Roses. In 1350, it would be jufficult to find a parallel. The English were then engaged io. their wars oa the continent under Edward III. and the Black Prince; nor 18 necessary to go further back, for aU that find is the Norman conquest of 10CG. i JJle of the present century has been cied, and finds the English Empire the most cn81Te and powerful in the world, and yet h tie elements of insecurity in her entire onatruction. The inequality of property, the rjing condition of many of her laboring poor, "amense load of debt under which she stag "S' anJ the annual burdens which must be 1 upon the people to meet even the current Peases and the interest on the debt, aU com e'q to weaken the real strength of England, ,Ut Ler gers from within are greater than ose from without, and probably the best means reconciling &n the difficulties of her internal ondiUon, and of bringing each part the more 08ely together, would be the prospect of a "rtifcn. invasion. The North American speculates to a conside rable extent upon the probability of such an invasion, and urges that Louis Napoleon may be driven to it from the very necessities of his situation. The French are an excitcable people. They love glory more than liberty, and the re nown of their leaders more than the prosperity of the country. This impulse may drive them to war; and their ancient hatred of the "here ditary foe" force them to attack her. Louis Napoleon dare not trust his subjects to a period of calm contemplation of the. extent and char acter of his usurpation. It will seem better for him to employ the exciteable temperament of. his countrymen against some enemy, than to allow it to gather to a head against himself. An invasion of Eagland would meet the approbation of every despotic power on the continent. On the 2Gth ult the following startling state ment was published by the Morning Chronicle, in the letter of its Paris correspondent : AVI 11 France Invade England! I am credibly informed that at the present moment the President's whole idea is with re spect to the invasion of England; that he has consulted generals, studied the plans of the Bologne expedition, received reports on the feasibility of the passage of the Channel, &c. There is not a man connected with the Elysee that docs not affect to speak of the invasion as an affair that is not only practicable, but which will be attempted. Let it not be supposed that a pretext is necessary. There are, unhappily, too many points, on all of which it would be easy to rouse the feelings of the French nation, and any one of which would be an excuse for war. The friends of Louis Napoleon imagine and I fear imagine truly that the French people want to have their revenge for the defeat at Waterloo, and for the imprisonment of the Emperor at St. Helena. Such a war, they say, would be popular, and in such circumstances why should they not undertake it? I know nothing of the feelings of other countries, but here the belief is that Russia would join in any attack which France might be disposed to make on England. Certain it is that since the 2nd of December the representative of Russia has been the most assiduous in his attendance at the Elysee, and the most honored -of the diplomatic corps ; that Russian nobles are more plentiful in Paris at the present moment than they have ever been since 1848; and that both amongst the French and the Russians it is currently stated that an arrangement between France and Russia could easily be managed, for that Russia would not interfere with the extension of the French frontier to the Rhine, if France would permit Russia to seize on Constantinople. An Apology for Tobacco. Excepting slavery and liquor, nothing has ever been so virulently aud universally abused as to bacco. From King James the First to " Sene ca, " nobody has written about it that has not written against it. Dickens redicules it, Ware abuses it, Greeley denounces it, and "Seneca" would do all, but from the unfortunate inability to do either. Calhoun was the avowed apologist of slavery, Fallstaff enters a pica for a " Sherry sack, ?' Tal ford "old Port, " and Redi, the Italian poet, for liquor generally but nobody has a word to say for that weed, which Indian legends say a god dess produced, and which history says a hero first used. Everybody uses it, but nobody de fends it. Charles Lamb tried his hand at a sort of poetical apology, but the poetry was bad and the defence was worse. Have chewers, smokers and snuffers lost all spirit, that no one can open his mouth for this creat tooth-c.leanpr. bpm. giver, heart-softener, sociability-promoter, and acquaintance maker? "We reckon not, we 'spose not. ,' We use tobacco we love it we avow it Half the great men in the nation use it. Henry Clay snuffs, Joe Marshall chews, John Van Bu ren smokes, and John Quincy Adams used to do all three, but quit, and died ! Tobacco cures the tooth-ache ask any smo ker if it don't and one young enthusiast ex pressed his earnest conviction that it was good for corns. Robinson Crusoe, when he got sick, chewed it, smoked it, and drank a decoction of it in rum, and got welL Every wit at Will's coffee house, from Dryden to Sadwell smoked. Tobacco is a provocative of wit. The Scotch all snuff, and the Scotch are remarkable for the acuteness and - subtlety of their metaphysics, and the rigidity of their right eousness. Tobacco is a promoter of metaphysics and morals. The Germans smoke and the Ger mans excel the world in the extent and minute ness of their Biblical and Classical research, their persevering application, and speculative philosophy. Tobacco nourishes learning, specu lation and perseverance The French snuff and smoke both, and the French are the leaders of taste and the fountain of fashion the best of mathematicians and most skillful of surgeons. Tobacco produces refinement and elegance, pro found reasoning and steadiness of nerve. Eng lish sailors all chew, and their honesty, courage and generosity are proverbial. Tobacco causes the fullest dcvelopement of all the noble feelings. Indians endure torture with more firmness than all the stoics from Zeno to Cato. Tobacco infu ses a lofty contempt of death. Americans chew, EBEXSBURG, THURSDAY MiRfll , 852. smoke and snuff, .and Americans by universal concession combine all the good, qualities of all other nations, and possess besides,' an ingenuity and enterprise that none of them have.' This can only be attributed to the fact that' tobacco grows here, and is used in more shapes and more generally than anywhere else. '. ' An English King wrote a " counterblast to to bacco. " He hated it most cordially and he was the firmest believer In the "jure dlvlno" of all the Kings from William the ' Conqueror to William the Fourth. A belief in the divine right of Kings, a most slavish doctrine, and hatred to tobacco always go together. The English aris tocracywori't use it they revile it as disgusting say it is a plebian practice to use it. Tobacco i3 the dread of aristocrats. It was the favorite electioneering tool of Davy Crockett, and a " chaw " will conciliate one of the unwashed quicker than anything but a wink of red eye. Tobacco is a Democratic institution. A dandy will ask a cub-tailor for a cigar light ' wealth will spit in the' same box with poverty and dignity and dirt must sneeze alike if they snuff. Tobaco is a leveller of distinctions. No true patriot and republican with an aver age allowance of brains ever opposed it. Gree ly says hard things about it, but Grcely is a radical and an enthusiast He opposes slavery, and hanging, and liquor drinking,' and all the glorious institutions that our forefathers fought, bled, and all that sort of thing, for. Dickens laughs at it, but he is an English aris tocrat, and of course contemns any favorite of the Democracy. " Seneca " abuses it, bet Sene ca is a twaddler, and wouldn't have made' a bad figure in the Dunciad. But this is not all. Since the introduction of tobacco into the Eastern continent, Science has improved, Literature has been more generally diffused, and we have no doubt ' but that the whole system of Inductive Philosophy owes its origin to this invaluable vegetable. Until about three hundred years ago, the world had puzzled itself with the subtleties of the schoolmen, the chimeras of the alchemists, the absurdities of astrologers they had educated nothing practi cal invented nothing useful. " Sir Walter Ral eigh introduced tobacco then, and not until then Bacon conceived and published Jus system of Philosophy, and the world was many steps farther in its progress. Experimental philoso phy is a result of tobacco. It is 6aid that it stunts the growth and injures the health of the unfortunate individual addic ted to the use cf it. We know better. We have as extensive dcvelopement and as good health as any man, and we use it habitually and from practice. Family Secret. While ascending the Mississippi, some eigh teen months since, onboard the steamboat Hunts ville, the commander of that excellent vessel re lated the following anecdote of a couple of wor thy desciples of old Father Miller: In Coles county there lived a man named Dod son, and his wife, who were both firm believers in the prophecy of old Father Miller ; and not doubting for a moment the correctness of their Prophet's calculations for the eventful clay that was to terminate the existence of all sublunary things. After having- " set their house in order, " the following conversation took place : " My dear wife, I believe I have made every preparation for to-morrow. I have forviven all mine enemies, and prayed for the forgiveness of all my sins, and I fell perfectly calm and re signed. " " Well husband, I believe I am ready for the sound of the trumpet. " " I am rejoiced to hear it. But my dear wife, I have no doubt there are many domestic secret8 which wc have hidden from each other, which, had they been known at the time of their occur rence, might have produced unpleasant feelings ; but as we have but one day to live, I reckon its right to make a clean breast to each other. I am ready you begin husband. " "No, dear, you begin, " " No, husband, you begin I can't. " No you know, my lave, Paul says, " hus bands have the right to command their wives. " It is your duty, as a christian woman, to obey your husband the father of your children so, begin love. " " In the sight of Ged I reckon its right, so I will tell you, dear husband your oldest son, William, is not your child. " "Great God, Mary! I never dreampt of your being untrue to me ! Is that true ? t GoJ forEive me true. I know that I did very wrong, but I am sorry for it ; in an evil hour I fell, but there is no help for it now. " "William not mine! Iu the name of God whose child is he ? " " He is Mr. Graham's the constable. The Lord be near your poor wife ! " So William ain't my child ? Go on " " Well, our daughter Mary, named after me, Ein t yours neither. " " Salvation ! Talk on, Mary come rigut out Who's Mary's father?" . " Mr. Girder, the man that built the meeting house, and went to the lower country. " " Well, as there is but one day more, I'll bear it, so go on if you have anything else. " "Well, there is our youngest " " I suppose Jimmy ain't mine ? " No, dear husband. Jimmy that we both love bo well, ain't vours "Merciful Lord ! Is it so ? In the name of me oaviour wnose is be ! " He is the one-eyed shoe-maker's who lives at the forks of the road. " "Well, my God! Gabriel blow, blow your horn! I want to go NOW!" ; -,idd TIIK COUNTRY PARSON. Taalatc lamented. Praed whose poems have been-publishedln a collected form here, but not in Ids own country i9 beginning, at length; to be talked of in England. The excellent humo rous, poem which we pubUsh, from his facile and felicitous hand, is among the choice morceaux in Mis Mitford'j work. The reader will find it exceedingly graceful and amusing.. Journal. Some years ago; ere Time and Taste - Had turned our parish topsy-turvy WheikDarnel Park was Darnel Waste,' Ael roads as little known as scurry The man who lost his way between Salary's Hill and Sandy Thicket, Was always shown across the Green, guided to the Parson's wicket. Back flew the bolt of lissom lath ; Fair Margaret in her tidy kirtle Led the lorn traveller up the path, Through cleau-lirt rows of box and myrtle ; An Don and Sancho, Tramp and Tray, Upon the parlour-steps collected, Warged all their, tails, and seemed to say.: "Uur master knows you ; yrou're expected.'.' Up rose the Reverend Doctor Brown, Cd rose the Doctor's "urlnanma mnn.n.t The lady laid her knitting down. . new nosoaua clasped bis ponderous barrow. Whate'er the stranger's caste or creed, Pjmdit or Papist, saint or sinner, He" found a stable for his steed, Aud welcome for himself and dinner. If, wfen he reached his journey's end, An warmed himself in court or college, He hid not gained an honest friend, An twenty curious scraps of knowledge! If he departed as he came, ... With no new light on love or liquor, Good sooth the traveller was to blame, Au( not the Vicarage or the Vicar. His ikk. was like a stream which runs . Wifc rapid change from rocks to roses; It slijjped from politics to puns ; It passed from Mahomet to Moses 4 Beguiling with the laws which keep Thj planets in their radiant courses, And Ending with some precept deep F01 dressing eels or shoeing horses. He ws a shrewd and sound divine, Of Joud dissent the mortal terror ; And jrhen by dint of page, and line, lle'stablished truth or startled error. The Baptist found him far too deep ; " TU4 Deist sis-hed with Mvincr snrrnw ' O O - w . . 1 AniJ ilie lean Lcvite went to sleep auj areamt 01 eating pork to-morrow. His sermon never said or showed That earth is foul, that heaven is gracious. Without refreshment on the road I rom Jerome or from Athanasius ; And sure a righteous zeal inspired The hand and head that nenntsl nnd nlonno.1 For all who understood admired, them, Aud some who did not understand theiu. He did not think all mischief fair, Although he had a knack for joking; He did not make himself a bear, Although he had a taste for smoking. And when religious sects ran mad, He held, in spite of all his learning, That if a man's belief is bad It will not be improved by burning. And he was kind, and loved to sit In the low hut or garnished cottage, And praise the farmer's homely wit, And share the widow's homelier pottage. At his approach complaint grew mild, ' And wheu his hand unbarred the 6hutter, The tlammy lips of fever smiled The welcome that they could not utter. He always had a tale for me Of Julius Ciesar or of Venus ; From him I learned the rule of three, . Cat's-cradle, leap-frog, and Qua? genus : I used to singe his powdered wig, To steal the staff he put such trust in, And make the puppy dance a jig When he began to quote Augustiuc. Alack the change! In vain I look For haunts in which my boyhood trifled; The level lawn, the trickling brook, The trees I climbed, the beds I rifled ! The church is larger than before, You reach it by a carriage entry ; It holds three hundred people more, And pews are fitted for the gentry. Sit in the Vicar's seat, you'll hear The doctrine of a gentle Johnian ; Whose hand is white, whose voice is clear, Whose tone is very Ciceronian. Where is the old man laid ? Look down And construe on the slab before you "Hie jacet Gulielmus Brown, Mr nulla non donandus lauro." Kldd, the Pirate. In old times, just after the territory of the New Netherlands had been wrested from the hands of their High Mightiness the Lords States General of Holland, by Charles the Second, and while it was as yet in an unquiet state, the prov ince was a favorite resort of adventurers of all kinds and particularly buccaneers. These were piratical rovers of the deep, who made sad work in times of peace among the Spanish settlements and Spanish merchant ships. They took advan tage of the easy access to the harbor of the Man hattoes, and of the laxity of the scarcely organi zed government, to make it a kind of rendez vous, where they might dispose of their ill-gotten spoils, and concert new depredations. Crews of these desperadoes, the runagates of every coun try and clime, might be 6een swaggering, in open day, about the Streets of the burgh ; elbowing its quiet Mynheers; trafficking away their rich outlandish plunder, at half price, to the wary merchant, and then squandering their gains in taverns; drinking, gambling, singing, swearing, shouting ; and astounding the neighborhood with sudden brawl and ruffian revelry. At length the indignation of government was j arouseu, ana it was determined to ferret out this vermin brood from the colonies- Great conster nation took place among the pirates on finding justice in pursuit ef them, and their old haunts turned to places of peril. They secreted their money and jewels in lonely out of the way pla ces ; buried them about the wild shores of the rivers and sea coast, and dispersed themselves over the face of the country. Among the agents employed to hunt them by sea was the renowned Capt. Kidd. He had long been a hardy adventurer, a kind of equivocal borderer, half trader, half smuggler, with a tol erable dash of the pickaroon. He had traded for some time among the pirates, lurking about tne seas in a little rakish, musquito built vessel, prying into all kinds of odd places, as busy as a Mother Cary's chicken in a gale of wind. This non descript personaee was pitched upon by government as the very man to command a vessel fatted out to cruise against the pirates, since he knew all their haunts and lurking places acting upon the shrewd old maxim of "setting a rogue to catch a rogue. " Kidd accordinslv sailed from New York in the Adventure eallev gallantly armed and duly commissioned, and steered his course to Madeiras, Bonavista, to Madagascar, and cruised at the entrance of the Red Sea. Instead, however, of making war up on the pirates, he turned pirate himself captu red friend or foe enriched himself with the spoils of a wealthy Imdiaman, manned by Moors, though commanded by an Englishman; and hav ing disposed of his prize, had the hardihood to return to Boston, laden with his wealth, with a crew of his comrades at his heels. His fame has proceeded him. The alarm was given of the re-appearance of this cut-purse of the ocean. Measures were taken for his arrest; but he had time, it is said, to bury the greater part of "his treasures. He even attempted to draw his sword and defend himself when arrest- ted; but was secured and thrown into prison, with several of his followers, They were car ried to England in a frigate, where they were tried, condemned, and hanged at Execution Dock. Kidd died hard, for the rope with which he was first tied up broke with his weight,' and he tum bled to the ground ; he was tied up a second time, and effectually ; from whence arose the tory of his having been twice hanged. Such is the main outline of Kidd't history : bnt it has given birth to an innumerable progeny of traditions. The circumstance of his having buried great treasures of gold and jewels after returning from his cruising set the brains of all the good people along the coast in a ferment. There were rumors of great sums found here aud there ; sometimes in one part of the country. sometimes in another ; of trees and rocks bear ing mysterious marks, doubtless indicating the spots where treasure lay hidden; of coins found with Moorish characters, the plunder of Kidd's eastern prize, but which the common people took for diabolical or magic inscriptions. Some reported the spoils to have been buried in solitary unsettled places, about Plymouth and Cape Cod. Many other parts of the eastern coast, also, and various , places in Long island Sound, have been gilded by these rumors, and have been ransacked by adventurous money diggers. Curious theory relative to the deluge. A clergymen of Cincinnati, the Rev. Mr. Stuart, has broached a somewhat novel hypothesis re specting the scriptural account of the deluge. He insists that it is an allegory, and assumes that the ark is intended to represent the church established by Noah and his posterity, into which was incorporated every principle of doctrine and duty necessary for the salvation of man at that day. To enter the ark was to be confirmed in the life of religion which it represented. The flood of waters he considers the emblem of an inundation of evil and impiety, and refers to various passages in Daniel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and the New Testament, for the purpose of showing that the encroachments of fallacious reasoning and false principles are not only coi- pared in- the scripturos to floods of water, but are actually called floods and the overflowing of rivers. This, he argues, is the real import of the flood in the time of Noah. The perishing of the millions by the deluge is to be understood, he says, in a spiritual sense, as the perishing of souls by the overwhelming influence of sin. In a lecture uport the subject, delivered by Mr. Stuart, he advances many plausible arguments in support of his theory. A literal flood, like that described by Moses, the reverend gentleman says could not have taken place. Men of science reject as an absurdity the idea of a universal deluge having occurred since the creation of man. Geology utterly confute this supposition. The learned Dr. Buckland, the orthodox Dr. Hitchcock, and many others equally worthy, have abandoned it, and none stand out for the literal flood except a stubborn few who make the omnipotence of God the scape-goat of phy sical impossiDiiitics. These are Mr. Stuart's views as we find them reported in a Cincinnati paper, and we give them as somewhat startling innovations upon the general belief, without J cxpresMng any opinion as to their soundness. NUMBER 21. Tne Valley or the Amazon. Of more than twice the size of the Mississippi valley, the valley of the Amazon is entirely in tertropical. An everlasting summer reigns here. Up to the very base of the Andes, the river it self is navigable for vessels of the larger class. A natural canal through the Caciquiari con nects the Oronoco. Giving draining and fertili ty to immense plains that cover two millions of square miles, it receives from the north and south innumerable tributaries, which it is said afford an inland navigation up and down, of not less than CO sr 70 thousand miles in extent Stretch ed out in a continuous line, the navigable streams of the great water-course would more than cu circle the earth around at its largest girth. All the climates of India are there. Indeed, we may say, that from the mouth to the sources of the Amazon, piled up one above the other, and spread out, Andean like, over steep after steep, in beautiful unbroken succession, are all the cli mates, and all the soils, with the capacities of production that are to be found between the re- " gions of eternal summer and everlasting snow. The valley of the Amazon is the place of pro duction of India rubber an article of commersc which has no parallel as to the increase of de mand for it, save and except in the history of our own great staple since the invention of cotton gin. We all recollect when the only uses to which India rubber was applied was to rub out pencil marks and for the manufacture of trtpp balls for boys. But it is made into shoes and hats, caps and cloaks, foot balls and purses, ribbons and cush ions, boats, beds, tents and bags; into pontoon, for pushing armies across rivers, and lifting ships over shoals. . It is also applied to a variety of other uses and purposes, the mere enumera tion of which would make us tedious. New ap plications of it are constantly being made, soundless forests of the Saratiga tree are found upon the banks of this stream, and the exporta tion of this gum from Jhe mouth of that river, is daily becoming a business of more and more val ue, in extent and importance. In 184G 7, pontoons for the British army in -India, and tents for the American army in Mex ico were made in New England from the India rubber of the "Amazon. It is the best in the world. The sugar cane is found here in its most luxu riant growth,1 and of the richest saccharine dc velopement, It requires to be planted but onco in 20 years. There are produced of excellent quality and in great profusion coffee and tobacco, rice and indigo, cocoa and cotton, with drugs of virtues ' the most rare, dyes of hues the most brilliant, and spices of aroma the most exquisite. Soils of the richest'loam and the finest alluvi ans arc there. And there too, lying dormant are the boundless agricultural and mineral ca pacities of the East, and West, all clustered to gether. If commerce were but once to spread its wings over that valley, the shaddow of it would be like the touch of a Magician's wand : those immense resources would at once spring into life and activity. In the fine imagery of their language, the In. dians call the Amazon the " King of Rivers. " It empties into the Ocean under the line. Lieut. M. F. Maunj. j"" An lucltlcut for HUlory. Circumstances have been developed, by the arrival in this city within the last few days of a family from California, which arc characteristic of our time and country. They are these : lit the spring of 1849 an emigrant party started from their homes iu Western Missouri for the land of gold. They were among thousands of other hardy adventurers whose white tents cov ered the Plains for many months, and made the wild prairies of the northwestern territory ap pear like the camp of an immense army. Du ring the ascent of the Sierra Nevada a daughter was born to one of the emigrants, and the occa sion was celebrated by a general halt of the party, aud the devotion of a day to such festiv- ty as the place and their stores would permit. The litttle stranger was named after the great mountain near the summit of which iho first saw the light, and the emigrants resumed their toil some march. The placers were gained towards the close of the year, and a busy multitude were soon engaged in withdrawing from the rich val ley of the San Joaquin the rewards of their toil. Our little cmigarnt party became iu a short I'ma the centre of a large population ; houses were erected and streets laid out, and the period ar rived when a new city should be incorporated and named. The incident near the summit of the great Sierra was not forgotten ; and as the little girl, whose birth was celebrated there prat tled upon the knees of the founders of the new city, they declared it should receive its name from her, and it was called Nevada. It is now a populous and a thriving place, and surrounded v by sources of wealth ami future greatness ; while the little girl, whose birth occurred whin it was a wilderness and from whom the nrroe of the great mountain descended to it, is, after having traversed California, sailed the Pacific ocean, crossed the Isthmus and the Gulf of Mexico' still fondled in her mother's arras as they now ascend tho Mis.MSbirri towards that mother's early heme. riccrune. i -