POITTgVILfsIE* , ' Sailfrday 1. wir MCNUTT ANCIO "A postmaster may en eloso money 'um letter to the:publisher ol al newspsper to pay the trabsitiption Of ii.thtrd petsbn, tee letter, if written ti himself. q--Amos Kendall 4 Some Of our, subscribers May not be aware that they May save the pOstage o subscripticht money, by re questing the postmaster VVhere they reside to frank their Mum containing such snoney.- he being able to satisfy himself before a letter is . sealed. thit it contains nothing bat what refhrti to the subscription. „I'Am. Farmer. Iltr A $5 current bill,Tree of postage, in advance, will pay for three year's subscriptinn to the Miners' Journal. ,i-titic'l insig JV'onsinit , tiokts. , .!' ton PRE SIDENT, AVM. H. HARRISON, jini ouio. roll 17 1 , 6£ Wi'RESIDENT. Oils Ilta,Ett, o p pitcaN lA. Mundt: (~E\1.., indebte4 to us will oblige by .attending g wantp:: if 1t is not convenient to set ,wilf answer: We have been patient e uoii hope to sec them liberal /p Tho': VD our preast tle all, a pa with our fr towards as. • , 1 lbiri:—lThe secontl 'number of this ph sassed oniWodriesday the, tfith inst. r .wa \ S printed of the first, which is already r we have - hen . rfore to request our editorial i Lice its Orin 'r'ir.d design, and also the; priblis4ti virtit' no hope Of profit, but! d as far as pOssible in disseminating cor.• tiou in relation to the viewa and efirtrae• Harrison. . . . 1 •mg to thegreat demand for the Log, Cal), , - 1. edition 6f .)14.--1, will be issued in a few i . ![:. .- The tog per ail! be Large *Aldo exhausted : friends to n. terns• It i merely to a rect inform, to of Gep Kr 0 in, a spear dnya, I • are requested i 43 state that 'erufessar Reed's postpotted. had! farther notice. The Cott- Meetnglxvillitie: held as. Lecture is =, [ Tariff etting.-±lO ) meeting on t Monday last, was the I• tirest we have I seen in .onr Court House. since di- year 1832 nothwithstanding, it rained all day. iii d it been [ele s air, the bowie could not have F held the oncourse.i The proceediriga were spirited, k and the 4udience in :greA part coin t i9sea - of working men i abtiut fifty of them] came iii .Wagciss from West ~ Penn, w th a barinr surmounted by an Eagle, and', inscribe uProtection of American !Industry." The • utmost • nanirnity scams to pervade our County onj the all i • portant ;siojet of a Protective Tariff, ands we feel hat Schuyiball !will be truly recreant to her:: • self, if e er she diverge from her •present course Of adhesie • to the Anieric l n System. • • • trance Refor. —We learn that between 6 a n• • rwe • persons nave signe the remperance Pledge (Borough., 'rho exertions of those philantlio ho have orikic.ated this, shOnlif be"cheered by ial approval Of a l II classes a society, Tem and 70 in our pisto the co The weath r ita,s been •tloirig up the equtnoc !handsome yle !since our last. tial in . . 11 Fii.t of Airil.i.--There was . no mistake',' in the lad that our bortnigh Of Pottsville - , was pretty , comfit]. erably in a' bustle lon .I_,ltis day. Our citizens, with a laudable emulatioft to i make themselves worthy of ----, the appellation which 'pertains to:dhe day. , appear to = iin ' • • -have made it Aeneral moving da,n humble imita tion of the first 'of !itai in the great city of New York. Every thing was en the Move, from a frying . pan to a clothes preset, and great' was the confusion there f. Wo hayi3 but a word toy say on' this subject: "do n i get in ,iheiwitkvard habit, of 'making a partic ular oving.day, i for lit creates '.ditfiCiilty all round. • , and ost undoubtedly; tends to keep up the price of, ej rent, by increa. aing tht competition fOr houses; where as, if different seaffona were used'hy 'ditierent persons, the' would be 11.,confusion, and the' mutual cativo ' I nienCe, of the public Would be aftaieed. el Ent—the firstlof April was a . funny day " in ethet• remiliects. The ioungsters;wern eternally pop ping i into our ofl4e tO make enquiyy after . the iile 'of Eve's mother;' of the . Advetitures of Adonis father." One still -eyed damsel; vt?ho is a special fa vorite of ours, balk the trouble .to Call out to us from _ her lattice;, as ofrowore wending inar'matin way to our. sanctum, end inforni us, in a n4,ical voice, that we were about tel hire our packeaundkerchief. We *timed and bovirip', mad placing the thiimb of our right or indtting hap]; upon our prohOsis, c - and flourishing ' our digiit4 we Mn st wittily rejoineal,teyou don't catch "--- this child, Dinka" !"—The ellitid. was sublimely beau tiful ! ' '!:',... I - ~; JUSTICES OF THE PEAC& s , At the eletii;n on: the r2otli ult., , the following persons were el4cted as 3 uiticegi.of the Peace for the County of flelpilkill, for Atte term of five years, viz: Pottsville -4 r . ort4 Wajil---Sainuel D. Leib, *Gee. . i y Ilifisler--§outiv'Ward4•Jaci.i6 Reed, • William F. Dean. . II: , t \ OrtvigshuiFi-•peorge Relish, .'Charles Ifiitman. "r'Easl , 'Brurtstpig+-•beorge Medlar, 'Bernard Kep :: ' . . n!!' il- ,if Ji _l.l 1 West &tour igt*Janies rrice, Joseph Matz. West' Porte-.:4oirthan Kistler, Jacob Lengaere. Wayne—"fceterliKutz, •Ja4eb Mennig. - Schuy/kig-tePhon Ringer, James Fitzsimmons. r Piaegrovel It oriiiigh—• Johii Suirophler, *Samuel Gun. ' .• I H . Piaearoe Tkluviship— lA, 4 Felty, William Horn. Lower I .lLhanfringo—Josei!ii liuntzinger, 'Philip osinitn. 1 IT ' ., I Upper Af4ttringo—•H:lP.Heinzleman,Griiorge Boyer. • 1 il Niriberiati—*George Rei f, n. yder , Jaseph Rubin son. ' I .. ' thiow —,•ltob ZimmerMa I n. Thomas Butler. ' Rah— !9u mon Lindler,ldacob ; feud and Rich iiirtilloikglirr,tuid an equal.hkeiber.eif votes. ' ; Tama -.l4•John FMnklifie, Jatpes D. Drown. Braneft—lthonias B. Ablx4i, Samuel Harman. Birr 4--lE'4ja. Yarnall,,tAiidrew Wilson: , Arot * *tritte.:— sioseph - Weaver, •Blair Welena= an. i i; • • , L I f . 3kiniiiiin,4 o Charles Denger, John Mailiti. • I ty Thor Merited thue,(•) were old JeaticeS. W:Lea toaqurent y : fiee of the above Justices are , . tic Harrisort men--#ltutirfeen Loco-focus: . ' .-.,_ , . , 0 . r, 1 'pod . „ of ?taladelphia ,, wbo was i nd i cted rri vir rthe t ;iuner of his daugtititr, which tragic incident net still afresh in ithe minds of our readers, has e lexinititticin; the grounill'Of insanity. -f, i , ' if 111 The !Attee Book foe April s : ,as usual, is full or most ntirestiiyoreiieties from , tliifinguished pens. We • ' 1 " blind 04artrAngt. page one or gonts7a The Sat), . 'bath," ky ;411.%verett. ! t i • • , • . - The orec(Ternfor,y 7 -The Impression is daily bacomirl. ore general, that 4ie Mame tli ff eult) must toad twill; 4ptine and war._ Recent correspon dence. betereen lilr..Foillyth and th nglish: Minister, Mr. r' 3l , shoiss l i plajnly that pe4its are et issue, which eintsit 1./e l ,crnesMy settled, a dtlnlewia third power. is chosent 4ciesliate, the Arostock iimher to a dustrictiee lwarfare. ji MI *- The elections.througheint OUT staler whin" they have recently been made to ailinan a tiv character, have resulted . most:cheeritertothe eil .de4 of iltefarm and the People. !Mani peranhe -judg ment poneede the state to 'Gen. "[affirm, tiut we think the train bands of Van forewarn ale not so easi ly itolhe broken dawn, antl-that the charge to be suc cessful, mist be 'vigorous and concentrated. „ . :cl3 -- Gen. Barrition's vote. of Thanks.—Much - =rep ceSentation-Vas been used by the graceless Van Bu rs , ttprints, in tel,sOon to the refusal of the Senate of 0113 If. S.: to include the name of Gen. Harrison with Gov. Shelby in a vote of . thanki. The facts are these : 1 at! the time' of the motion, an enquiry was depending before the , House, into the official conduct of Gen. Harrison, es commander of-the North-westerii armY, and subsequently the committee to whom it 'was en - .- truhAed, reported u na nimously that he Stood above suspicion, and that he ever: showed himself governed qa 'laudable zeal and devotion for the wintry and ha , interests . It was mathfestly &proper, pending such an investigation to pass a vote of thanks but in { one week after, it was passed unanimously in the &nate, and with only one dissenting vote in the • i • , , . Ihnsse, • This is the whole history of the vote about which so much falsehood has been propagated, and which, id absence of true ground of objection, will be exten sively used by the Loeb party. ! Bub -Treasury Nide B.:lL—This bill has passed the lower branch of Cungrees, by a cote of 110 to 66. Apportionment 8211,—A select clnitnittee of the Legislature have reported a bill, which newly appor tions Tome of the senatorial and representative districts. Dauphin and Schuylkill are to be united for choosing a senator. We doubt its ultimate passage however: 71e Elections.'—A bill•has passed providing for a second election of Justices of the Peace, in case of a do vote. We do not need its oporaticins here, as our successful candidates ran ter opponents out of sight. iry A Registry Law Bill has passed the New Yurk Legislature. Resumpl;on Bill Passed.:—On Tuesday, the Te. &option bill, as amended front Senate, passed the House by a vote 46 to 41. The first section cats for the resumption of specie pay ment-4akt the 15th of January, 1841, allowing the recovery of gold and silver to bill holders by common law. The second section provides for forfeiture of char ter forsuspension after the 15th of January; 1841. The third section provides penalty for false .swear ing by officers of banks, . The fourth section calls for the suspended banks 'to lend within a year, if called for by the common wealth, three millions of dollars, in propo < rtion to their capital. The Small Note section of the Bank Bill was rejected. -lcr• An ineffectual attempt was made last week in the Legislature, to reduce the salaries of our Pres ident Judges. kijournment.—Both branches of the .Legialature have decided to adjourn on the 16th inst. j' The Philadelphia and Reading Rail 'Road Company have issued orders in the shape of bank bills, of the denomination of $lO, $5O and $lOO, re deemable twelve months after date, with interest at 6 per cent. Lenasvilk, (Ky.) was in flames on the 27th ult., - and the'dcstruction is represented as immese, by one who writes to J. R. Chandler, Esq. even before its .'progress was arrested. ,Ty A fire 4,llTew Orleans has destroyed property to the amount of $300,030. (f 20,000 troops are said to be stationed in the Canadas at the present tnnment. Connecticut.—On Monday the stateelection trans pires in this state. We shall in our next show the progress of Harrison and Tyler in the land of steady habits. cc 7. Gen. Evans, a member of our Legislature, lost a child. last week by accidental drowning in the Kis queblinnah at Harrisburg. The louso, with com mendable sytnpathy t adjourned to attend the funeral. Common Schools.—From the Superintendant's re port, we learn, that there are tO5O school districts, 887 of which have accepted the system, • I= IMI Columbia Ruil Read. A committee, of which Mr. Nill was Chairman, appointed to examine the affairs and condition,, of this work, have made a re port, which the locos have been anxious to suppress. They do not wish it known,! that three supervisors are employed now, whgte one was under Gov. Ra nee@ Administration, and that the requisite work is not satisfactorily performed even • then. Norther do they wish Arr. Calderon to he compelled to give up the fuel speculation, which. he is eugaged in at the expence,ot the State. These things will if possible be suppressekalthough it. is known that the bitu minous coal, which comes fromlandsln which Cpm- , eron is - Inter:listed, is totally unfit for locorngtive purposes; that it createl so much blaze, as to b6(noff the.sperk catchers:andt. hrows fiff cinders so fast Wet several accidents hava'iaken placelthis spring. A ' public house, a barn, and one. or two houses have been fired by its use and in one instance,a piece of woodland •was set on fire. And yet it is used, where anthracite is to be klbtained at cheaper rates, merely to allow this favored individual to aquavit: a little more from the poise of this Commonwealth. Another New Bcpublic.--Late advices from Texas give information, that the Federal army, after an un successful. attack on, litonteray, retired to Guerrero ar.d Laredo on the Rio Grande, where they organized a new government called the Republic of Rio Gran de, and inal.Oled a ,General Council. Jesus de Car denas, a lawyer of Tamaudipar, is Fresident, and Gangea chief of the army. The new government is calling, for volunteer aid, and expects to recieve it from Texas and the United :states; it is said that it will be wire liberal with the 'guantuni of bounty land than any other governnient ever was. The property of the; Church and 'Con vents, includrug their large landed estates ; will be appropriated for the pay and bonnty or the. volun 7 tears. 1 Teiga is presume& that President Lamar will assume the offensive againit Meriee, as the forces of the latter are still on their own side ef the Rio Grande: Dr. Archer has been appointed Secretary of War, and Felix Houston, Major peneral. There will. be slcdrp twilit in this quarter before long." • . - : • A ridu` re of Poverty M'Elwee stated on the flo'ar of the 'House of Repreientatives, when the bill pnivitling fora loan of a million of &Alan was under Consideration, that twenty thousand dollars of Warrants were , lying at the 71 , easury which the Stole Was tinableid ineci - = ETopoisteaf,k+A taco. readiog, is 'file of papers of the year Isl 3, &scribing the brilliant victories of Harrison, and the opposition of Van Horeb to the lest mai. =I yr fete been given in, New ylitk - • to wi*r leirphi..4 to -honcie to r Acteetf‘rictoritlii rar - , 4 \ owd situ rive. ;_ , •:)=."_x~-s - _ ;.,~k~ ..:.2C.1:~5L'? `—~, _ -.':'..S'C'J~..w..~; w_i+s!_~e'~> ... «~ti"~6Zl TO' A meeting callekat Nei York;- 4 tr:itbatet'd... tiaclion of party, to act on a Registry *ls Alio tatted :and broken up:by,imib of knaiithitables; aoap locks Sad other loafer - , the Mayoralty of the city were is geo4-hatida, we should hear of no'snrch disgriceful ltaufactiorts. ca. The Washington (Pa.) Reporter expresses the opinion that General Harrison will have a Majority of faij n 800 to 1000J/oleo in that county.. And Speaker Hopkins, the man u without nerve " will have leave to stay at Imam in dignified retire ment. . . - . The _Sea Gull, attached to the Exploring Expe liti. n, it is feared, has been List, and all oi board Perished. She has not been heard of eineeigne last, When she left Cape Horn, about which . tiata a se 4iere gale happened. Symptoms of 2.i & ri'fittion.—Mr. Ritchie the loco cdi or of the Richmond Enquirer says, to his politica friends: ..We are in the midst of : a crisis. Every democra must exert himself, or the cause of democracy is crush ed forever.' This looks like fear of yciults, and well may They be dreaded : the Von Buren sceptre bias passed from Van Buren, in Virginia, and Harrison is now the people's candidate. Culumbia Counly.—Meetingc in favor of the peo ple's candidates, have been held at Berwick, -Cana wisse, and other places. and on Satan's the 18th inst. delegates to the Baltimore Convention will be appointed: Amalgamation.—The Legislature of Massac bus etts has, by a vote of 168 to 184, permitted the inter marriage of whites and blacks. The vote was very nearly a party one—nearly all tie whip voting for the amalgamation project, and nearly all the demo crats against it.--Krystone. We may perhaps, be excused the indecency of re faring to the above vote, for the purpose of exposing the gross falsehood of the comment attached thereto. The misrepresentation is as black as the subject war rants, as black as the principles of the men who at tempted it; as hluok as the heartlessness of the loco-fo co party. It is well known that for many years, a class of fanaties, disgracing the name of humanity, have existed in the eastern states, who have advocated the odious policy of amalgamation to its fullest extent. The general intelligence of the dnminant Whig par ty in Massachusetts, has for a long period kept them down, until last year in an evil hour for decency, the combined agency of the fifteen gallon law, and the abolitionists succeeded in electing a more than ordi nary number of representatives of this mongrel school, and elected to the gubenatorial chair Marcus Morton, an open avowed abolitionist. This placed the open ing codily,esin the grand Johnsonian design of inter marrying blacks and whites, and the consequence has been the passage of the above law, through one branch of. the Legislature. But the peculiar atrocity of the above article is, the unbbishing mendacity, with which the accusa tion is made, that nearly all the whigs voted for it, whe:n it is beyond doubt, that the e Morton party" wi re its zealous supporters and successful advocates. It is sickening to observe the attempts of the dying serpent of lociifocoism to e spit its poisons" on all around, to seek to attach`odium me others, for deeds performed under its sanction, and to misrepresent and pervert every action of those who have so long stri ven against their pernicious influence. The Whigs of the Bay State are no amalgarnati mists: they are no e northern men with southern principles;" they are no followers in precept even, of the practice of Richard M. Johnson, Vice President of the United States, or of his party-colored party. The law, le galizing the . marriage of blacks and whites, if it does disgrace the Statute look of that state, will pass under the domination of a Legislature, containing almost a plurality of men, who were elected on anti-temper ance and abolition principles, and who, with the out ward name of o democrats, " are the scum of Hart ford Convention federalists, and the refuse of all those patties, which have brought in moral deformity to aid their outrageous schemes of political duplicity. The friends • of Reform, need not distrust Massa chusetts ; she cannot tie persuaded that the BLAC nESS of Van Buren's character can be compared with the pure while of Harrison, and when the approach ing contest does arrive, she will nobly perform her allotted duty to the cause of Harrison and Tyler. cry We copy the following from the N. Y. Cou rier and Enquirer, for the purpose of showing how democracy ' f values the Germans of our country, and how they turn with derision upon all those who will not follow in the track, prescribed by their patty leaders.: Mr. Leask, who the loco focos ere endeav- wring to ridicule, because he speaks broken English, committed the unpardonable offence of opposing the Sub-Treasury scheme, and coming out in favor of a National Bank : , ‘Mr. Lasak and the German Demoerais.--We sta ted the other day. on the authority of the Pennsyl vania German,a journal just established in Philadel phia by Francis J. Grand, that the Germans of the• great West ere coming out in a body fora One Pres dential Term, " - and General Harrison. Mr. Grunt! voted at the last election for Mr. Van Buren, but he is persuaded" that the great majority of his country men in. Pennsylvania add Ohio are of the same way of thinking as himself; in regard to the monstrous e vils that flow out of the re-eligibility of the,Pre.iden -dal incumbent, and be is enough of a democrat to go with the majority of the People. The Harrison contagion seems to be spreading a mong the ( General Democrats ifi I the State. From the denunciations uttered by the Loco Foco press a- gainst Lasak, of the assembly, we should imply that ho also is carried away with the general enthu- sham of his countrymen of the Great West. All the literature," at any rate, is very much shocked at the bad English of aspeech of ,Mr. LusaleB. and undertakes to caricature it in the Democratic,[! New „era: Mr. Mucky, one of Mr. Lasak's Loco Foco coneigues;is , said by the livening Jouiwal, to the author of the following builesque of the re• marks to which we tefer: . - ti Mr. Chairman, we once had good currency ; we have, now no not got it. li're must not sinker one" do currency ;' I dont want to creep up to the cunning wedder cock and see how de wind blow. Do people's put down de l ank in 1834.- I tiuk a physi cal agent are dispensle. I vent a large bank. It maybe de tyranics, but I hold de sword to the gen. demon' from Delaware, I 'contend that Congress may and ought to establish. It must be ,a National, 'Batik, in' hich the States must have the stock accord ing to the representatives and de officers by de Sou; ate and.do Assembly. I vish to tiod L lip in Con gress. I would vote die minute (or the Sub-Treasury, 'cause vy When.times go down to de bottom, den, by-by dey_comerto the top: Do welts for de depend eut `Treasury' will' do very well for de Bank.afterwards. Dc Secretary of deTreseury he.hai ono shylock and de apprentice'boy would be murdered. ,Die bill, fur the Currency is: ikel - dit• petitions against.the me- ebonies in de Staie-prison.- . It - dis like stepping de door ofile Alma Howie; and feeding de people out - side,- to preveoani more corning inside, "I new stop—and do I know de guilhinirof de, newspaper in Newt York Will amputate any 'ilia." We do not know that - W. Lank can speak. Eng lish sititis.vci 'Much fluency arid correettiesa,as Mr. .Rose4,lVir. Moday, or some other of hisceillcaguos;, -bra ibttweeilltr.-Laitak awl lit6:YariotayeAookit, certainly be disposed s° takt odds in. favet,pc Leask" Fll= l ==== E' . 7 40 shove bpen Invested to i ikrtick!t, Whi4 l ' orii!nabY'llilleare d N : papers ; on the Efrabjec l X of co) [ .. rt the fiist this day, Om .., show, lion .to comply with the . desire. calm:taro in his general adonis.' our experience has led pa to adopt ; enees between`.. oux,former pubtish -4-m 'exist, they are in the; aggregate: Coat - FOLijr series o in the' PhiLadelp .; Coret►auiea, and.r in; our determin The authii m X ' ,bons, with Ahotte and if a few diffe ed remarks and' We coincide with him after a most .f the series, in the views he has we We , ever bellevedonid often nearly the same, attentive perusal :set forth"; in. .ion,.that all the goal Companies rotten, speculative concerns, and locum a rival; region and the _ as interested, bar prevented us apticit in our public condemnation the corporate institutions of Penn- expressed the op of our State Icor nothing but our fear of being cha from-teing wore of these biciti on dome worm of gratification to lvatris. It is • •sitiou emanate, from another quar t t believe that them'exists, with, the lof the Dela Ware Company, a sin the kind in our' State which was red and carried on fdr purely spec- The causes which influence the i ' are to be found to the untiring en ! • • ient,und in the fact that be is virtu 'y, and that though now under cor !-, the business is carried on without [awe manner as when conducted by I.kq.. before its incorporation. Here the same, as if an individual atterid ,.. and traus-shipinent of the Coal : it e whole which ensures success, when endeavors of a Board of Directors lead to loss. Let the Delaware Co. a Board of Directors, as otheiCorn n, and the same fate will attend it. have in geueral, greater opportuni- . money 'facilities than individuals: . are connect id both with the bank and the Coal Companies, and those trs of the former, to frequently pos. l ee to cause individual paper at short •cted fur discount, while the Comps. ed with large sums at long dates. Of • anagement equally judicious, the ad- us, to see the ix • 1 i ter, , for we canes', solitary - e %cc ptio i l gle institution lo not started, mat ulative purpose exception panic orgy of its Pres ally the Comp 1 potato privileg ,l ch .jthoeh a n no g p e, in eur a ftiiiot t eci he , 60 ed to the,minio is the unity of tl l the discursive would inevitabl, be governed by panics have be , , Corporation ties of obtainin; many caPitaii., ing Institution who are direct' secs an ulnae 1 dates, to be Tej : hies are indul_ 'course, under vantage wool be in favor of the former, but we see the Lehigh ompany, which is the strongest and possessed of the greatest facilities of •all, actually worse off, th n the individual operator in these times of depression We therefore are compelled to reit erate our oft expressed opinion, that Coal Compa nies are useless. rotten and dangerous, and we ad vise capttalis.s to have nothing to do With them, as they must lose both time and money in the associa tion. It is evident, if we compare the means and fa cilities of tle Lehigh and Schuylkill regions, that c l the Lehigh Company must lose 50 cents on every ton of coal hey ship to New York, and this deficit , is mode up by new loans, out of which dividends are made t decieve the unwary and cntrop those who wish t make investments. The Delaware and Hudson Cral Company have in all, shipped about 800,000 tons of card, and from their own reports they have sunkmore than one dollar on every ton. At .the time o the stoppage of the Schuylkill Bank, the Beaver M dow Co. was indebted mit $ 77,000, and the impro ments, requisite to carry on business this season, wi , cost from 30 to $ 40,000, while they can- I not at any event mine more than 30 to 50,000 tons of coal, a d it is generally believed that their entire capital sto k is already eaten up. No mor i lamentable example of mismanagement of Coal tmpanies can be found, than the North Co. For many 'ears, experienced miners rsa men have had the agency of its affairs, 3 were located with every advantage; their Joel was unequalled in richness, ' and yet sunk the entire capital of $ 250,000, and miely doubtful whether their property will lore than enough to cover their indebted- American and busm • I then land hotly of they baa l it is es& sell for t IMO are indisputable facts, which show that apanies cannot do a solvent business : the ire of the mining business requires the do ;don of individuals, unremitting industry, field skill ; these are lost when a Board of i set down before their round green table, on chairs, with drawings before them, and .e to mine Coal on paper. There must be ntration of the available labor, directed imme o- the work,and prepared to meet the many flcies which await the miner in the prosecu work. This is the true :secret of the ill of those Coal Companies, which have eau : en to do business—but a majority of them ;en no way anxious about profits from mining. nly desire the appearance of prosperity in or relistuck in their humbug concerns, and we rid, that one by one, they will break up, show moat reckless mismanagement of their busi- Ind !cove the field to the tree, untrammelled aithy perseverance of individdat labor. These Coal Co vory oats seat alto 'and prat Director cushion naert uu a in coze dte canting lion of SUCCCS3 ally ste have be They o I der to ahall fi ing the nem, and lir No. I. TO JOSIAH WHITE, ESQ. of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co• Schuylkill Navigation Company's Canal cost Rhona seven hundred and eight thousand !undyed and thirty-six dollars—thus, shares of capital stock at . Direct Th three nine 33,31' $5l per share, 1'665,600 00 s loans, amounting to 2,043;136 00 E 1521 e annual cost thereof is 110 Ilurreutespchses, ig for repairs of Can'al, • • g peths,'.Dams : l.ocits, gee, &c. &c. wages !of It-tenders, and salarieS of rs.,(e•.lual to $1,23914 mile for' 108 miles,) at on $ 2,043,336 00 oins at say 5 per cent. And asfl i To • Bri l Lo PC ote annual cost exclusivel of ital stock, - .. I 'r receipts for tolls during 4 9, were -.- i $ 504,904 12. int a surplus, applicable to: dividehils on the :1 'stock Of $258,621 18, Or abciitt • 1 lbi ~ •per QM ca The 18: Shat Car cent.l e Lehigh Coal and Savigatton Company's Ca• l ost throa milliaea sisvoti hundred end seven thou. one hundred and-eightpeight ddllars—thus, I 0 shares of minter stock at 0 per share, Us loans, amounting to nal w salad, 20,0 Vari ;111e annual cost tht relit is foilciww-carient expensea, Ii '.- gng for repairs of Canal ; i 1g wineatlis, Dams, Locks, ' % idges; Ac.*,c., wages of • k-tendere, and salaries of MI ®' • re,equalto.slysl,229,-' • r . • 'Oct inile,* which for. 72 ' est- is i ; $ 89,261 28 : :rt on $ 2,707,188 00 of an% at an average of per of, ' • - Laoiiunl: iost exclusive of • pital sto,k- ~i Irt.ceix4s. c 9! toßs.4'uFin;. ,: ,:,