The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, July 25, 1838, Image 1

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    EIMINZEI
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ME
ERE
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PittrHP AAID PUJOUS
By BIMAA.MINIIA '
tioLtaita atm Firm , Can'
payable semi tannially in advance. I
bathe yeariLtimiliiie charge) to alt
ceive tha-paper free of postage. To
ligtper annum. Ifnotyaid within the
will be added to the price of subecript"
WEEKLY,
•• •
•
';TV/4 DOLLAR/I' per .annum, payabl
fa i 4 r*e ; If not paid. Within they
be nhaven „ ,
Adrertiaeinentanqt exceeding twel
charged slfor three insertiona--aliti
insertion.' Larger octet de proportion
All advertisements Brill be insert:.
out. unless the tininfor whi ;13 They ar
specified.and will.be charged acco
Yearly ad.ertisera will be charged
including ardiacription ta.t,he paper—w '
of keeping one advertisenaen t not-exce l
standing outing the year; and . the iuse
er one in each pap, r f it three aucces.
kit I ettars addressed to the editor m
otherwise no attention will be paid tol
11 notices foir meetings. &c. and
which have heretofore. been insertad l,
barged 2.5 ea ats each. except - Al arnag
From the Pennsitvanin Int:
Editorihl. Ctiriespo
SCII C YLKILL, HAVEN, Schuylk'
June 1
PoitT tLIIITOIc . is 8 smal
-harbor at the junction of the g
Schuylkill rivers, abput eleve 1,
- -this plate.` ''/Ek railroad; some
in length, constructed by the
kill company, runs along tit.'
the Tamaqua. The compfzet
privilege*, and excludes all in I
ators from its wad, and also, I
the Tamaqua district ; but o
tween thilty and forty thou
coal to market annually, a tit ;
led by that sent by some intl . '
tors in the other 4i,4ricLe.
shipped' at Port Clinton is tha
Schuylkill company: •
Port Clinton is located am;
and the situation has the char!
in its scenery ; but there are
I would prefer as a residenc
a small village—,three taver
stores, arid a few houses.
This place, Schuylkill IV
pleasantl7 situated: Some
and seventy thousand ions r 1
nosily shipped, and all by indi
are , hot harrassed by any mem
ponies. The coal is
the
about ten miles, from the Min;
The railroad has been con!
owned by an incorporated c.
is without mining pritritei
filet accounts for the greet
shipped hero over that iif
where individdal enterpriz•
And paralyzed by a Charter
i wish you to observe. t
Anent particularly.. 14 is on ,
',..eatfirguments in favor of t
Rastas has always taken
cotnpantes ; a course whid
say,! has met my warmest
is the argument sound, t
railroad outlets to cnal shi
not .compensate unless mi
are connected • with them.
from this place to 141inersvi I
lacy; for the stock of,the ro.
stand, divides twelve iper
sidesed here a safe and p
ment.
• ,Tlni people in-iSchuylkil county are gen
erally hostile to the incor oration of coal
companies for mining purp.ses. They are
an Outr,itge on the n ghts u individual oper
ators,-who have opened ti e principle coal
districts; and are nut nece vary to the
ply of the market.. Their operation.
not be fully explained in t e limits I
l i
myself for a letter, .but %hen let
re
occasion may call for a me ar
m
i t a
their manner of .procee g, in c
cases. In the mean iiin let me assure
you, that from all aiipear nces, the elouree
of Mi.lCsEss . in the Hou e of Reprekeata'
l i
tatives last winter, in gins a certain
told company, has "killed him up." Ido
brit bbliCion'he,can be re-e ected. CIL&RLES
Faatt.sit is gone! too. He itgenerally be
lieved hefe to have had.an interest in la cer
tain •bill, that passed irreg ular ly through
his Siertions.. Thos ¢ ,. err both betrayed
the inteiestilofilieii tone itu&its, and took
fular
a course directly conflicti g "of it It their own
opinions. as avowed' on knitter occasions.
They will meet their reward.
Schuylkill county I think, , may be 50 down
for, forter. The majorlity will 4 _very
small. Ido not believeithiti at thelarth
'est-it can exceed) three iuridied. l wild) .
to be candid sand state tile truth, not wish ,
ing to deceive opponents d l, and determined
not to . dei.eltrer - olir frien s. The Locofo ,
cos marnot beat pus 11re so much; but
eight hundred votes . thei majority MI 1335,
are not ertsily , levelled awn. Our gain.
ii
however, is great, ; oho ing at least two
hundred and filly votes hanged - frOin. the
enemy to the friends of t e people, in three
• years. . : -.. , 1
, t
I am v. ithin five 461610 f PotteSille, and
will write you to.morrom'from that , place .
Yours, 4'c. I R. S. E.
PorrsvlLLE, June 13, 1838.
Yesterday brought me to Pottsville—in
describable Pottsville. Giving you a deb
112111513
c 6-•
. L _
_ d c •••••?---,"
I. - " I
-UWILL TEACH .lOU TO M6l= Wit doill*tg.idVillrill.R4lllllllffi
nits or adequate: idt cif theplace, dn .
things around ' it,' iS 'ent rel i. out of t he, qll eslif
tiun. One does not Itiiirai. %here to'begirt;
a descripticirt, inftletail, and if- one begun!
there is no telling,. where'fiCwould end. —
i i
here gOes for a feeble attempt:.
.' 1
Pottsville is located a orir the 1014
near the head waters oft to great Schuylltt,
kill, in a region certbitdy never intended bbl
Nature for the sited ';a` town, but sofienedi
down by the powerful hatid r)findustrY roof:
enterprise, which have foUnd an incenttvii
to 'vigorous action in s the treasures titiriel
beneath the surface or the eakkh:ip. r inexl ,
baustable quantities.- le.population O ,
Pfittsville is about five i (Amami . ituids.--- , ,,
Business of al t kinds flourishei, even in tht4,
dullevt seasons.' .There 'ure in the fowy
about thirty stm-cs, . a' nuniber - of Which till
businesS to the Amount of $60,000 pe!
annum. There are Area hotels or ilia
-largest class, capable of; accommodating
•in the best manner upwards of one {rond o
red persons each, with reading-rooms, &a,
fibc.; and number of smiller tavern* well
kept ffording excellent accommodai
'ions.
ED. .
NAN.
:.• per anoVri,
not paid•wlth
those *ho
ntl sutmeribeis
year, 50 can't,
!.11-
sempannuall
•
r, s 2 50 will
e lines will be
"cents for one
until ordere
to be continue
ingly.
12 per annum:
th the privilege
ing 2 squares
, 1 ion of a small.
ive times
be post paid
thegi.
other notices
gratis. will be
:it and Deaths.
lieencPr.
dence•
Pottsville. now presenth a lively appeal
Brice, bill is dull ! ciUnpared with former sea
son+, and with What 'it will be nett&
town hese business.like tdr;andlhette , till
seem to.rleal un,the .desiratith priticiptei
prompt. liberal •and thr
centre of the'Schuyikilf coal region, and is
a market for a.great deal of the products
of Berke, Lebanon, Dauphm,'Northumbek,
land and Columbia counties. It is then a
pretty fair estimate that . the coal interest 41
Schuylkill county is pearly of as Mach itn
portance- to the St-ate at large as the Agri
cultural interests of-the cripritie.a above meth
tioned.; but I do not knoW that every writer
on political economy wo:uldsoestimate
. Pottsville has suffered Coosiderably frot i n
the pressure in the money market and de
rangement of the exchanges, produced by
the madness of the General Government.
But she appreciates her puuation. and lie
ieen convinced by severe experience oldie
ruinous tendency of Lricofocoism. • She
will show this at the oc4oher poll. by guy
ing,. out of 600 votes a(lettit e 75 or 3(10
majority for Gov Ritner. : The borou4h
i. one of the strongest di•itricts in the State;
mud the township. around are alsotrue.4-
7he colliers-and millers nil rernemlier Go%'.
Ititner, who had the independetic.e to di:
tend their interests: I
111county,,t
1838.
village • and
eatand little
miles below
twenty lodes
ittleSehuyl•
t brai.cb to
has mining
ividual oßer
believe, from
ty sends be
and tons of
!, nth) , equal
! idual opera
lie only coal
of the Wide
ZEN=
of wildness
litany plae. ,
. It is gum
s, one or tw
t:lTllh.uuhll
,one huidred
f coal are an;
•
viduala. who
[waled corn-
on a ratlr.)a
-raville mines
tructed and is
npanv : which
•ra ; and this
The mines, to a strahger. are the miosi
intere-tine of the hogs 41 stet 0101111 Putty
vile. y,.. - Can -ee railr•iads„ an,l bills
.nil c. 111.118 in alino-t Roy part of the Stitee
•iiit the Seim 11.111 (.4)4 mines are 114 flr ,
uotisity, av they are att•OrAtve ' 'rite eriol
homes are gouts on at all •i•lts of this tt0441
null attune six or eight 'Wilbert the hoots
the borough. There to tine opptisite'tie
••Pensii-ylvania Hall" (iii excellent Iltitise
by t;he way,) where 1' am now wriiiiig,
which penetrates udder the Canal baiin
and one of the print:Pal "streets. It 'us
worked by Mr. Samuel. Levitt; The
boats lying in the basin are laden with
coal raised from a distance of slime 250
feet' directly beneath ;them. Mr. L' ; is
burrowing . under the 'basin and tieveral
houses, anlif he should teel inclined for a
"Gun Powder Plus," by way of pastime,
could blow a goodly ptirtion of Pottsvdle
"sky high.;' The basin referred to is part
of the Schuylkill Navigation, and is all life
and bustle, railroads running around in';all
directions tothe"landings" where theenal
is slid down by tneansi of sollutes into the
boats; an operation Which loads a boat
very expeditiously, I ORSUII3 ynii: At any
time you can see• a swarm of small coal
•
cars, in the vicinity of the basin.
.1V aiurally inclined to`alelviog into strange
places, I to-day- visited the kiWer regiu4s,
in company with an agreeable acquaint
ance, Mr. L----;, of this place. VV tt
descended the mine of Messrs. ,• Porte &
.Biur NAB, and explored some of t he-subger
rineous passages; The mine is enteed .
on an angle of abbot ;.forty degrees, and
the shaft is two bandied and fifty feet, in
'length, below the, water level. A reilrbad
is laid dawn this 'plena, and the t caritfull
of cool ) are drawn up on one track, 'lnd
4etriown empty on anbther, by-means 'O . a
powerful engine on the earth'ssurface.—
We took our seats loan empty car, With
.. a" lighted larriti, alrid went down by steam.
On reaching thibottom, the first •ili*ht
was a miner in full diem, with re• la; in
front of his luau, 'usual lace of ' rp ,
aglig ht irk the ;midrib. Ile looked lithe
• knignt of .the fiamingicockadejo the i life,
burproved a' gedtleinito in his manors,
and politelyipoinied obt to us-,the various
. horizontal; passages, Orrit of siiliiiii ti t rif 70
yards in exteat-i-. Wes-explored .. tw ' or
three. Them' are .ipilrnags • laid ong
them on whiert;,lfte:atqWeArs are wli led
from the extremiiiesi of the mine :to !lite
place of a-cent:l4c z illyr#lis ate biedi for
t
this purpose,t anitarekept,uoder ground
from fro the cothati4tneenittat to thtt‘end . ,d e the.
season. We) ked 'ii . ,.itO their istaW cut
in the solid i'ockianititltogethetr,n-com nit
able looking place foe: thi4 'bitrieirkliv .aii
omtit. It fo.icil4 rittnirided mixt th e .
city of Petra,' so graphically deibri
, ;;t1 in
Mr. Steven's' late work on "Egypt, Arabia
Petrick altdt he. Holy:', Land.' The dark-
Itc.e. of coa
Port
/of
is cramps
monopoly
ab . ove toot
of the Farm u
e course Gov
regard to cou
, I rejoice It
I anetion. Nor
r at the stock of
[ 'ping ports will
ing privileges
The rat road
le proves s fel
d, as I wider
:nt., and is erin
ofitable invest-
sop.
Can
iln*
home
s nn
IMIE
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...-- -PO - KILLE4 , PA, AVEDN,ESDA,V=IIIO ! NtliGi JULY 25.1835:•, . . . .... ... , ' .--, :„ ~ ..=. ---,,,...:. .. -,- •- tr -.- ,J,. . ~......, ON , 1 ^' ~ -. 1 i?i r' , -* •
tress in the tbriners orapassages was "duck
idileedo'he flare,of a hirgeltnip •
wick havitiebut little eael tiptiiot. •
it is lieceiiiry to 'ventilate the
,Mineti,
by Means of 'Air hOles ascending to the,'
surface at various points.' These areinade
from•below; by :working upward.! When
a viorkman has progressed soine Yards up l
%mid, the air, having no, circulation and
becoming eorriipted
.no,
is found
very 'oppressivectirld a pipe , is laid up the
avenUe'fifom* the Wottoni, 'Where :a fan
turned liY a boyoind, s ,:eurrent thus form
ed'imward 10iihin the pifie a6d , di4nward
outside. While groping alotig one of the
passages to day, and 'I heard S Kum!
bling noise ahead, which it'egeined 'to ue
was caused by an approaching Mil': What
bras to be done? .There we ,were—the
passage too narrow for the 'can to pass
without crushing us-:-and no means of es•
cape but a prec►pltate retreat. No aoubt,
if our countenances could have been seen,
they would have shown a colOr ibry dif-
ferent frOm that of the mineral around u
We had no time for thought but gave one
or two halloos, and then hy.lisfe.iing - founll
the noise either stationary or receding; so
we plucked bp courage, and on advancing
were not a little retieved'When we saw a
boy turning!lhe air fan, and inicertainecl
the cause .if our fright. This incident,
nuwe.er unimportant. it may be to others,
was interesting to us. We scion after
seated ourgelves on the front of a • loaded
and rode out to daylight, much grati•
with our subterraneous visit. When
car,
fled
we
reached the• surface the atmosphere
was qiiiie oppressive, so cool had we been
in the mine.
I have endeavored to give an idea of a
coal mine to those of our readers who have
never done themselves the pleasure of a
mat to a coal region. The: engines gen
erally. used 'are of great power. In this
place, there, are two manufactories which
make aud.repair them.
Immediately In the vicinity of Potts
villa ten mines have been opened below
the water - level, and all but two by indi
vidual enterprise. The cost of getting
them ready for working has been about
one hundred and forty Ciouseind dollars.
'There are i - wo more in a. state of forward
ness. Who will; after this, doubt the com
petency of individual enterprise and perse
verancet And I would remark here too
that one half of the individual colliers
whose gedius szir the coal business has
done so much, came here as laborers, or
"miners" as they are termed in the par
lance of Ow coal districts. They had no
capital but honesty and a knowledge of
their business to start dponiai i o all CI rcum
stances copsidered, their success has been
truly astonishing, Oue individual came
here id 1580 with five dollars in his pocket;
and last season .sent down 35,000 tons of
coal to market; more than was sent by the
Little Schuylkill Railroad ilnd Mining
Company! 'another assured me _this eve
ning, that when he came here 'five years
ago he commenced as it'"miner," and last
year sent to market 17:000 tons!' And
these-are the men' our Legislature would
. put down by the incorporation of compa-
Dies, to do what their. individual means,
with no protection -but honest hearts and
willing 'hands, have been found fully able
to accomplish.
But I must stop. This letter has al
ready-rum out too long. It will still take
• another before I will get done with Potts
ville and the Lions of the Coal region. -
Yours, &c. R. S. E.
POTTSVILLE, July 14, )838.
A stranger could spend a fortnight a
mong the new
. scenes and clever people
of the coal region here, and think it but a
day. 1 speak of cou'rie of tt sttepger who
would feel an interest in the'great Schuyl
kill coal trade. And he would meet. at
every turn the most convincing proofs of
the superiority of individual over corporate
enterprie. To an observer nothing more
is necesimry to establish the conviction,
that companies with mining privileges will
rettird and wither the coal business, than
to look at Port Clinton, and contrast the
appearance• of the place with Schuylkill
Haven. The former has a
_dull. deserted
look, occasionally viditary eiti load being
tilted inth one of the few boate-in the. Port;
white I'M-latter , has two or three
'streets, ri, basin, crowded` with boats; and
each of tiii,#freetttif,twelitY:biediogs full
of life, a dd moripn...— 1e..my.,, letter, from
i Scheyiki I Haven I noticed the Adrerence
in the a ousts of imil sent t&triarket an
nually, hivir isribeitt-1.40,00 tons in fa
vor of the'railietikwhp4i.coMpatiy beano
mining privileges, but w hich4depends on
indiinduril operatorwro- bring out the min
- orals, wlith.
Mine scilk, from whence the Coal is
taken to Schuylkill Haven, on the railroad,
is "a bmart villige, centitioing • several
.zeores, taverns, -.&c. —l--iii buildipgs• are:
Al new, home of them having sprung up.
rts4ithititi thigielieribed to town-ma
king- in he famous but overrates i i,resteth
• I.torintry.i Its- population is about ; eight
ininare-parliaps one thousand; the men
are industrious and enterprizing, .
.
with that intelligence and liberality pecu
' 4P•
REIM
liar to apiqulitiontitno'ng , tlteamt!e found
tic:oldie - IS and -drones.' I haie milt been ri at
Tamaqua, the' kited nft:tie Little.Sehityl
ill railroad ; buraui tOIB that.B, er'esienti
the same iontrasw: liiliersyille that P. t
i
Clinton does to 'l' Ha 4 veo. But
key kil
blinersiiile is' now thr atened by compa
nies too: The 9flbrtri , n Company- will
operate, (if it evitr epenneti at. all; in its
vizinityvand we annot reel at all certain,
after the outrageous and irregular passage
of that bill, that the whOle Schuylkill re
gion will not be laid wa l e by the .I.lgista
ture, which seeins on te • subject ol_ Foal
corporations to bia deaf all remonstran
ces 'orcomjnen 's use. inid'coattnun justice.
' Port Carbon t a anion two miles.up the
Schtrylktll froth ottsvi le, and is the.head
of the Schuylkill' Nnvi„, Lion. lfs popula•
tion may be estimated .at 1000. There
are a branch 'of 'the Schuylkill Bank, sev
eral hotels and 'Owes, with the shops inci
dent to a coal! shipping, Port .` Several
1
railroads have their termmations.at Port
Carbon, andla -Yeavy iitiantity of coal is'
annually shippe d from 4he landings, some
of which arerreachect by tunnels hundreds
of feet , through ia hill, 'the excavation all
solid rock. Ile locittiole, like that, of
Pottsville and Minersville, was not intend-
.
ed for a town, but nature heft yields the
palm to art. 'there iti . a good. deal of bu
siness done in tbis piaci),
Mount Cciro 'n may , be considered part
of the lower ou skirts *if Pottsville. It is
on the Bchuyl 'lt, has;some warehouses,
coal landings, acid one of the finest hotels
in the State—(be building I mean, not
having been in It to test the accommoda
tions, which Fithve beep told are excellent.
There is a frimcpleasiire garden attached
to the hotel.
This morning I rode out through part
of the region northwest of this town, and
visited the tunnel being driven by Messrs.
Mann and Morris into Mine gilt. - They
have already Penetrated upwards of four
hundred and xty feet and will go nine
hundred more. ; 1 ,Thi* coal - veius have
already been ot, and they expect,dailv
to strike one of, abOut thirty feet in thick
ness, those beSire alleded to only, being
from four toeight. :These veins dip a •
trout forty- - five )desrees from a horizortal
line, as do almost all the veins in the an
h recite regioil The coal is always-found
between a floor apd ioof of slate, and is
-best-illustrated by the description of a
practical collier, who compares it to the
leaves within the cover of a book—a very
compfehensivti and just comparison, to
which 1 would add that it will be long be
fore it will beisaid of the coal books, as
Fianklin's epitaph said of himself—the
contents are de torn but; for I verily be
heve the Anthracite coal to - be inexhausti:
Wei in whicWopitiron, the most intelligent
colliers of the region Fully concur. •
1 forgot ye.iterday to tell you that Potts
ville has two preshyterian Churches, "one
Catholic, one Protestant pis opal and one
,Methodist; beihdes three Welsh churches
in which there is regelar service in that
language, and to which Sunday Schools
are attached. 'Thereat-E. also in the neigh
ben hood of Pottsville several more Welsh
ohurches. Welsh parents here have their
children taught theiriown ianguage,in or
der that they , may be better able to con
verse with them, and remark very justly
that they will learn the English fast enough
from their neighbori.
In the coal regioni.within ten miles of
Pottsville there are 4 number of small vil
lages which: have sprung up in the
roughest country from the influence of the
coal trade: a trade which has been unusual
ly dull this season, owing in the first place to
the infamous folly of the General Govern
ment, and next to the sapient -action of the
State Legislature. List year Schuylkill
county senti to market upwards of five
. hundred and twenty thousand tons of coal,
at an expense of upiVards of two million of
dollars. This season she will not exceed
four htindredthousand tons; business
should revive and the manufactories to the
eastward open in vigor again, we may safe
ly
.calculate ;on shipments next season to
the amount of six.lifindred thousand tons.
;In a ymehtbor twol however, things - here
Wilt present a different appearance from.
whatbey . de no.w,,.though Pottsville now •
does . a business, which in any other place ;
would be-ccinsi.lered brisk in the. extreme.,
. Yours. lye. •• R.:;.9. E.
Rare Occurretieee.--Tbe wife of .ii
. . . ,
fisheirrian ip .Not} I . 3fotk—Mi.. 'tydliptn ,
"tinker—presented. Jilin, not long since
withlthree iitilefeinale tinkers!
kfdrs. berm, of Detroit, ieciently,\ (.
pre-,:
senttri r her' loved, lord , With, ' three
.1414" .
Diana! These are nol i tbe woist . Lind
of dons. 1 - N, ' 1
• ' Mrs. •B. !. . cannon, ofNew Salem; has
piesnted er 'hustiand with four isall
'
cannon's! T.liii,fi'Oe'litile PIA ofiiitillery
•,.
- is•said to hr. in excellent condition..
~, Bien* e•is,dailpattire And :snore generally
-Ackliowleil 4.1, -
and
ait,thi true Indoor conduct. •The
g l d
maxim - and Jet, era live," soon t be Anpei .
ceeded'hylt 11 noblerprineipie, a eptunt"Live
, and help to liVii." . - •
The small pox is raging in Lcmdori to an a
larming extern, among adults as well - is among
children: •
=I
MEESE
E N G .
Exchangel at oil, on London
-Si per cent.7pretniuni:
ootracishetireen DrinkinateroafSheMbilil
an nswortb, Coinsbormtgh r for .21,20 came
off - . 7rtbe Doncaster race-coarse on Thursday,.
the fhends a the Former Staking 270 to the oth..
ere 250. The distance riser was six miles, the.
men starting, eta part of the course 'between the
tear mile starting post 'end of the rails. The
number of persons, assembled was estimated at no'
Jena then 10,000. 'About ball past 1 the Men pre
pared themselves for the . race. On stripping,
Drinkwater apFareil bein the best condition.
'being more mascular, and in much better spirits ,
• than his youththl competitor. They were started
by Mr. Lockwood. when Farnsworth took the
lead. bad made the Tanning until coming to the
hill in the laid round. Mere Diinkwater,
,isho
it was evident had the race in his own hands,
advanee4. and gained 'on his opponent at almost ,
every step, eventually winning by about 100
yards. The distance was run in 34. minutes 55
seconds, and the last two miles in 11 minutes.—
May 30.
By the Brighton Improvement 521„ no person
can go oat in ins own pleasure-boat witobt being
accompanied by two watermen, under a penalty
of 40a. and cost of information.—Brighton Guar.
Nelospapeis.—Since the reduction of the duty
the anneal cdn...mutiun of stamps hue .risen in.
London from 191101 1 ,000 to 29.000.ono; in the-
English provincial towns from 8 009.000; in S' erg,
land from 2,500,000 to-4,000.000; and in. Ireland
only from 5,10e,000 to 5,200,000.
Carious .Suicide--An inquest was held on
Thursday (says UK. Chelmsford Chronicle) on The
body art girl of sixteen, named Eliza Bau,n, who.
it appeared. had thruwn herself into a fish-pond ;
and was drowned. The mother of deceased stated
that she hid struck her for dressing herself in
boy's clothes, and going round the village. ol
Loughton ; and from the accounts of other wit
nesses, it seemed deceased had bold another girl
that she had been turned out doors by her
mother, and they had mutually agreed to drown
themselves, and it was arranged that the deceased
•should place her apron by the pond to indicate
the spot where the other girl should jump in.—
The latter, however, did not do so. The jury re
tained a verdict °fide ed se. May 30.
Roiltaay Speel....... , Sixty Miles in the Hour.—
The extreme rapidity of reaped travelling was,
Perhaps, never so strikingly exemplified as on
Saturday; on the Landon and Southampton
An engine was appointed to follow tin, tspin
which conveyed the directors and their friehds,
and in going, as it went almqst immediately alter
the train, of cottrie it could not go faster - than the
train; but in returning it was found. that this en
gine would not be wanted, and it remained at the
end of the line..so far as it is at presentopened.
two hours after the carriages. with the directors .
&c. had started. This engine then proceeded to
London, and it accomplished the entire distance
of twenty-three Miles in no longer a time thaia
twenty five 'ninnies. Popping once by lbe way
to take up a pa•tmneer. RD that it may be 'Laid to
have travelled at the rate of vrcry nearly sixt
'tole% per hour. We do not be .-Fe that an in
-lance of greater, rapidity is on re. cod.
A WaroinE.L-11:y. Thomas Jarrold. of %lab
whoi about -two years nett, ttai north
5.5.000 hits just been discharged to. the 1.1-oiveot
court at Lancadter. having lout all Ilia property
by eallroada and other epetulattous.
Humour —A '
,short time ago, one of the Irish',
labourers op the Oheffielri end Rcitherhamfailway, `
we! very severely hurl by a fall of earth. How
ever he complained not, bEit desired .lie might'
have a will or tobacco. He was then hurl on a l
board, and hoisted On font men's shueldera fur l
the purpose of being conveyed to the infirmary.,
Upon moving, "Arrah, my honey," he exclaimed;
with all the chatactenrdia humour of his country,
"little did I expect in live to see my own funerpL"
The importation of French wince into England
has been-370,446 gallons in 1835; 523,241 gal,
lons in 1836; and 725,140 in 1837. Thus thc
importation of French wines into England, has
increased in two years, whilst that of Portugal
wines has ditniniaSod in the amine proportion.
On Monday,•May, 21st, a purim. containing one,
hundred sovereigns, and a_pilver inkstand. value
£l5, was presented,hy the inhabitants of Cook
and neighborhood. to the Rev. John Wilson, on
the termination of his duties as minister of the
Ephicopal Chapel in that place, and for the Chrh.
tialvattention which ho haS at all times manifest
ed to the poor tiering his residence orscven years
among therri.—i-Leeds Mercury.
- The state bed in the York Mansion house,
which was bought for dew .. .purpose of lodging
Lord prougham on his being invented with the
freedom of that city to 1830, in Which his lord
ahip slept two nights, and which cost £2OO, was
put up to auction las week, and sold for - X . 25.--
Ra Packet. •
Lord 'S'offriy• Hounds!—This splendid peek
of hounds %Minh Lord Suffield has lately pure:his.
ed of Mr. -bambino for £3.300, arrived= at .tlik
kennels- at ,Quarodon, Do' Thursday last. : We
understand that it is hia.LordshiWa *IMM - its:On
lurnt twice 'a
-week on the Harborouih aide, and
three 'the Lohehlicihnieh
coo t -
Leicester Mire.
MELAND.
.
. . ~ . , „ ,
, . Deolli ef driiiiir:Tript Pniso.nde,-Thei g*I. T .
miesi of Oreuihde'etpued early' oulruesday mor
ning, at O'Dettues Hotekefter - ati illness ,orthir.4
:tam dam !radical-14 . i serrifir edldi" , its !mid;
*MP filicerh4;tdOcEatidomiilof Ormohdeitruf
Osscfy, „aud the inferior-trieb. dignitiiiwatAtiii
deeitie pc his brothet, 10th August, PMead draw
created it' Peron of the United Kingdom, 17d
Ju1y.4825f .-His aotieeiiriatiOhn I'artlifO -, fy„.,
.The Marquees ot Ormotufe-was . liereilitasy , leir:
BUtler.„ofirelatta. lkigitight4r St:., !shriek.
ti:Ote un gt r .,Aithe,.efumly : and Colonelpf - the...: ' : Ili
keuri:mtlitta. • ITe, was m his - 63d.year,, ?dud,. his;
suceessoriiiin'his 30th. 4 1.;ordbeifatd; it is laid.
will succeed toibeliittbottottait. Piliiali--Dabliii"
Reg. MO A • - , - ; " r 0 '
ribe ' de to thi. - .oleinary lifiiiiiii#Ao44 3 er'ren.-
-itittell beetrpdetelniiriiii Abet -Alb . -oohsliiiiii'
at i mmeent.subainihett.,skattlit *Polies!' to eases:' ,
.94M1.3.1M.Pittireultirktheoitunitery attroik:
peet - ;n*' Glisnestp,iihore the *mains at thit
ithiiiini , ItiMiseitioi:t h 4 ' hein removed from
gititianib ere'uoielriteriditeelid that the `iii eriltis
of the suliseription' fund bekomt that sum shall ke,
apPlied-th erect at menutlal Milanp conipieho'
place in Dublin.
: •••' '
I - aftsl
f 74. f ft;
.; t *lc •
• • 1 , 45i , ! 7:%1 1 : , 44 .1.1.;:!
„v.!!
4.4 a
MEI
7141gtheV,Ziart , tuitai
&erect - vas ritonabbeed irju : st irdkir
the ;Ric E. ; Dcnnp.
ba_lia_FrOut
' 4 ,llie' ( !t*Av l B,4 4 o l : T
- ,
-WEE&
OW
PiiiitHeilite'lliklatif.!geeialritheat •
in this county geneVellkiirekerleilli'doAiWpfir.
s vnutablireppearamkf Ittim Wan
,neesed - ...fiketyeare; in fact s ,euelkeras'ilAi*M.dirion
'of riomm,;pecies °Lydian, owing thir remarka-
Veeeverity of the winter,, and Abe-Unpropitious
spring thet_ have been plaughed•np, and other
crepe sibstriated.-' The rrelielliing shoatizit, how.
;ever. , have : literally '"renewed tlie - fifil - sttattlie
ea rift," 'and both grain and reesdakenecre`a
mere cheering - aspect. In The horlii g rit,:the
yeting Mee looks strong and healthy; and -pre.
smut a promising:appearance. Ale bark werieon
Which has only jest partilly.commence4iis this
year. trite as late as • last, when May. was fai
advanced before it became general. Thirfircharde
premise a Tull blossom; and the cherfka*ir plum
ttes never exhibited a finer bloom.thawit pre.
sent:-.-I . fiteriford Journal. 3 .
•
We ondenstand the sum of..Cd.ROCl:hill keen_
paid to Capt. Rees, of Ilke Star steautptiAtet; BR
a reward to himself . andnrcw. for the, wetly . and
perilous cocertlons they made in saving.llo,Estra
hand of Greenock; and lowing her in - ilaty into.
Itinpatow harbour, of which we took notice some
Time since. The cargo saved is said- tw have
been' Worth upwards of .£100,000.--Pristo!
The unPub:ished .Bardie remains of,Welah
Literatnranre now ins fair Way to 'biought
to light. the Grace the Duke oftbleikeistle is.
said to be .deeply interested in the progress of the
Aneient British MSS. Society i ens, !nether .
with the Marquess of Bute; Lords , Doerr', and
MoStVd, Sir Chinks Morgan, Bart, and several
other patrons of the Institution, have commenced.
such inquiry as are likely to lead to mese. inter..
eating results. A grc at body of historicadiknowl
edg, from the 13th to the 15th centuries', ii(knowit
to be contained. in the unpubluthed 'writings of
Wales daring the ware of the 'Rival Mises, and
at least as far down its the year 1500.' FIX=
these doCutuente, a very intimate aciptaintanca
with the state ofsociety during the above - period
may-be confidently expected to be gained.
- •
As the English add Welsh reprcsentations ex
ists, the number of members returned for cities,'
and boroughs, exceeds in fcalful ;disproportion,.
those who represent counties, for which *coup
try*pulation of 10,100,000 in round numbers,'
with a constituency of 510,000, retertf - but 159
!members; a borough population, o not quite
5,000.000, with 288,000 electors, return. • 341.
Representatives. • •
.Nets Chura, Glasbury, Breconshire.="ltis neat
i.and substantial building, through - thirtiertionis
of 3. W. Alorgan. Esq. we understated-' was •
opened for divine, service on the ,294 A*, A
fide peal of six Musical bells '
wcigVitg alert SD
awt.,,C.aat at the foundry 'of Messrs- Teirenes &
Price of Allis city, together with • aqiiiiittitt eight .
day clock, will be . fixed in the tower, iind'opened
at the same .
rhilip "Wilk . •'•
GU AC UM A:KETC.4.I:
tip ESPECTFULLY 'announces - to I.ns.. friends
and the public in:general, tfiat44likligain
commeneed the Coank.„%laking Brisincr,cUAliar
wcgian' 'Street, three doorabplow,t* Afeedeiir
the borough or Pott&VAlC;..„where _be is tally to
manufacture to order all kinds of ee'hicka at the
shortest notice ' of the: best .materialii„lileat the
lowest - cotes . He has: also-on hand, Tea* made,
fla touches ' carryalls,„ Phretous; - ', ChailotLes, -
'Coachees, Buggies, &c. which be inyitetk,the pair
he to call and exiintr.o firlheaniclrci., • Vie ar
ticles ate all" manufactured under . fill'PrAorial
inspection, and ho will warrant. them W-be Mind'
to any manufactured elsewhere.
Repairs 3f every description done at
cat notite, and on the most.reasorable
N. 6. Coal taken in payment' for *Vele& .
• aprd,lB . . ::'?‘"Bllf.Z23at
Cou'Miry Viarkel4 Thad. - L ull ns.
300 n YARDS Plaid lure' Pi'114 7 % . 109 - liney
. Flanel—Atair, a quaigity or Country
Fla.% Libons. for sale at reduced - prieeritirr•
•
SAMUEL- ILARTZ,.
Po*Me i 7aly ,M,1838.
CALL AND SEEM- ,
TEST RECEIVED a splendid'imiortatent' at
off Spring and Summer Gdoda,-, doosiiiiiog. irk
part of'
Dry Goodi l
Grocericih,
Queenm*are t „„,{, 1 , •
Liquors, &me ,
whict4l" sin prepared to sell clie4ei then .e of
offer. in: thie-merket for call. telt" liieliaage
or country produce, at the highest miirks-44Vice.
• t
/VIM PAMPHLET LAWS pc teekeeeshnk
'or.ther Legislature. have beee.renehrekat the
gvothorvotavy's. Office of.6chuyikili,4lo41 1 and'
a ioTo o dy to bedelivered•teihomentitletto them.
;•
183kD:
iElObitiiiiiVille4aesamotsflii Le
liter% a'paceThe - ed
at the Consmisaicamee
and are:teedy telbldiaptoet telhofie eAtided to
. • v,tft f e .t Ako fattaltiti!.
;
• orwigabarg July.2l, ten. 6.0-4.,,,Ar3.
...Z.% 1' 4 * dill',
or Adinuastrattou - tutatug mew
=granted' uP?it the 'eittete"Of );Tutelifeire
Goetuttich,-docessed, Igre,t'of PottavillOtotios I.
hereh/..givee•te alltheeCitigieteetflAiertetet
to make alid..llt liti
41aigius akainO'raikestataVfillaiiiiiilmaisitheur
aittletnent
At &weather at tip! lallii:of-;*0,?It:Ueitglitair ut!
taltiOitintit and Attiii-theAdituniet
trauma wiD,tettia„ag,acdpoots,::**Viituitluto#4
cated. =
- tßEoftOttebirlt„...!
• I),M - YOEN.G_4 I I 4I4 !; --
Yotunille, July 18;11338.7.
IN
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