fas 111 iggit 6 Ii f \ -- ,-- 4- 417h0 batliii het wee hath tiorrowt . isrlio bath`tton.l ' entlona ? :wile ihtith iliabblingsl who"bath wined, in ithout cause I" ,wh 4 '.-bith: :0140 of eyes t ' .' Whey - • that tarry . long Its, t l ke wine, they thatgo. taaccit sisix :ll4zieh ed wiite.." . ,:l .• i, Evias ',, But let me eiththit Soinheit . cvil resulted 'Maitre. . once. I allude night injury it worksupon the in -.idlest; .t, The batlike dthe mind, during ourinortal^ l e •• (silence, are inn nut IY connected with each ether. They intact updo anti other, Is one diaeasedt The other tooth* Silkicted.- The body becomes worn and Wild and diSeased, when the mind is un., , settled, sad onlth( • other hand, whin the • body . is deceased and tifftieted,t the mind becomes feve rish„mreit. ' excited; weak..l Ris. then, `lntemperance, effecting the limly•as We hiveneeti. must also affect the mind —must 'enter the' trerY, borne of thought and season end imagination, land work Ate devastations there &lOC itt facts * thcanent: 001286 persona in - the Lunatic Assyletn! in itublini 115 were known to have . been tielirkied ior reason by intemperance." 4.. In I'M( years. from t 1826t0 Ina inclusive,. 415 pa- Cents were, admitted into this Liverpoel Lunatic AssylliM; 'and' 251 of them were known to - have brought ,on their ddringenient by drinking; end Hue was supposed to have been the case with many +Ahern" 1 . 1 41. :distinguished gentleman," mays the apperidix to one of the !linperincie Reports, con. tanned in a ;mingle from which we havetaken• these - kW •' who hate bad extensive praCtice with regard to this malidyi state, that more. than one half and '• probablY tbreelfourthe of all the cues of insanity, which have curtail under his notice, were occasioned by excessive deutking," V-. In the -repel Lunatic --4 Asylum in Aliddlesex,• the number of patients. in. - -- - -•nressed in onelyear from 825 to 1100 and 1200; and - prinCimilly by [the increase of the use of gin." . What is the intellect. my hearers, that it should thus become debased and wretched by a vile arid . burning animal I thirSt / • What is the intellect. that man should abuse iktinis,• and wither hi. prospects • of usefulnese;and wring the biter's of Isle kindred, and fill the--Ltanittie (Assylu_m with raving tenants! It is a let linte l God has .bestowed directly and at . Pecially ape men...that elevates him in the.scale of beingx.ithat:ralitte - film above the brute, and distin. , guishenhim as he w,lilks the earth. It is the race!. • ty by which lib measures the stars, end analyse the narth, and explores the waters. It is hie paten for nobility—the 044 his high excelleace. And abet( it be pelluted, and perverted like this? Shall the you** . man okay 'to his mouth a beverage ;that shall disturb! its wondrous powers with fury, ' :and consulate lita .efirlinis organs with Aire t Shall -'`. ithecome so hideous and distorted. that the eloquent • eyit shill lose ithe - light of its beauty, ar.d the breath. ing lip become ;arched and shrivelled, and mood , end jibbet its incoherent' and idiotic phrases? Who is fi that reeling by yea , like one blind—the conte pt of .the streets—tbe joke and scuff of the hearties add unthinking-4 subject•of pity to the benevolenr and ' . the good 7 Can it be a man ?—a area gifted with ' intellect, once, at least, capable of searing and striv. ing with braire' thneghts, and reasoning seith pro. found skill, and conceiving high ideas of.beaoty and or power? Veit, it' s a Man: It is a young man.-- A few months ' ago, perhaps. and they we re very few, whites prospects were brighter. That lefty rea son bound men by lits delighting and thrilling pow er. Rut he • hes fallen;—and how? He put the beaker tlO his, lipr l ,- - Draught followed draught. Property became wasted—popularity was , lost—bu. sines was chnied. I Ilia heart turned to ashes—his brain to fire. He le a lunatic I—They trample-him in the very kennels of the streets,—he will die there, or will drag out hie days in the - Lunatic Asylum. This is not " fancy's sketch." You may go omit in the streets of our large cities and see it this very night. What is the cause? .1N rExr.ERANCE: .'Beware of if. I plead against it nn the ground that it is destruntiiv to the intellect. 'Mich dadva ire goblet I—Put by it. temptings I 'For '• who bath wot who hathaorrowl who hath, contentions? who bath '°'' babblingirf wbo bath wounds without cause? who • bath 'redness of eyelet They - that tarry long at the wine, they lief. go to seek mixed wine." 1,,, ~--..—....... • Fierferm,onent Temperance I/moments. vol.). ID' Social a nd Moral Evils of.lnlemparancs next week. POTTSVILLE. Alorning, Jun e‘G. r REM 17 rANC 1 , 11 BY *AIL " A postmaster may en alose tuon4 in 'a letter to the publittet of a tiewepaper, to pay , the subscription of a third person. and frank the ;letter. if Written by himself. "—Amos Kendall . Some of our < subitcribors may not be aware that they may save th e postage on subscription money, by re questing the postmaster where they reside to frank their _letters contateittesth money. fie being able to satisfy ihimselfbefore a lettr is scaled, that it contains nothing but what refesav(ti subscription. [Am. Former. ii 9 currien free of postage. in advance, wil itay'for three ye 'istibacription to the Miners! Journal sty"litiust:lgivece a Ceardays l tlecypher hi% manuscript: the v4iting looks very like a bash' of flies legi and ikillga• T em pera ffe siß e edid.—.W e have commenced on, astir"ftritt page, end shall continue weekly, in' future, stead 'o4:Toted to the cause of the Temperance Re for:to ;: fr ititt advance of. which must be e it re maly gra . tifying;to over.* philanthropist. The impetus which the friendelof this morel improvement, re Europe, has ezterided, i t the efforts of their fellow-laborers in our country, ill be productive of the most beriefi zial results, if the arguments of persuasion are used, and no coercion attempted. Lot the change be gra dual. an& the Mild eloquence of friendship, not harsh tlenuncistigns' . . employed. Then will the fruits he . Cessed, and , e tainted leprosy of drunkenness, which has so tong disgraced our land a lill be remov ed by the-faithfut resort to the pure waters of Tem perance. I i ' , , , i Pailre j ai Wil e._ We adverted last week to the frequent disati ointments, experienced by our cititins • from the nonlarriesi of the Philadelphia mails. A ritearrence.lorlilhe evil th4 c week, again induces us to say a few "#ordl, en the 'subject. Pottsville is but eighty 41; milesdinitt i the Metropolis, and 50 of those . :over a sitiVrotid ;le it not ihenstrange, that we can xtot receive -skied, mail c withoilt this continual series of fapuies 1 tierinn Wednesday until Saturday of last tiriet,[wcil'evereAvithoUt any intelligence south : not Reading, which is - about 35 :miles distant ! Se? , tunfay,', with! many of our. operatives, was a pay .day. and theylwere expecting remittances to meet their engageOerite, WitiTch not being re-eived was the cause lof embarrassment to them, and seliouti die-' appointment ' - e their working men. ...The difficulty must be Avieted, and it is incumbent on not only the inhabiian 46 Schuylkill and Berke counties, but of all the UthAvaoivards the Susquehanna, who suf- Atr.a cotatno iaconvenienee,lo remonstrate against it. 3 . 1 11, 4 - • , . . It cap he iemedied ; by carrylng the,' mail on the' Rail Road tit adlot instead of the Turnpike ; w e . then cmildr l re it in Pottsville, Sof 9 hour, after . ,fit lea in i,flidledelpine. , Our ,buainess tom:nullity, Asset . et ituffei)rilelY from the fail are of Ills 4; mail: — the On'r,njs uPneceoirtiP my, as it does not: arrive il) the o' lalitne- for our, letters. to be an.: mod by,the:, rii mail. the Rail Road will re ; '. i t le-**ell }hese ilifficulttes; and in the course ~:d Si, feWßeaqtbie,liarhen , it pill be completed ,to 'Pori, Chalon, *slimly, obtain oar; daily mail ,by dinner, time. Caunatthen some inconsorrelief be devised?, We have a pe r y, m l , l4lnsteri General, who if dis; petted to 'study the periple's goad, cannot eeerttwir eur ineonvemieneet. let US, they, have a meeting of citizens, and ley before the new dignitary au ex: position'of ;Our wishes. and the Many disadvantage's— ettondhis the present arrangenient 1 and weretllion', winced the public wish will be attended to,. and the contritetorsjtbernaelveS be relieved front the unplea sant eituatten,,nt Which the are placed, by the pre ,, . snit itlimii , Arnis arrangement l s. . '` • 1 . ~ asismngtorsoik ASSMEINIik -it - . , I; et We we .la4tited to d Cba!le! .:2 1 14 I Fri, - , I .6gi l attitif tfpctinlOtik... . , lA* lett e r ,* .4uta tor biss Welk % I Vll4 *aid of soyitig Ot)(1)1 feat of Mast in fit* minitteil, shootd tio!!. „per isbauteots ttwatitet ' . - 3' We ieeiselbal 'billfish Miners' Journ , .ies at length the iroceedingtrof the inthici nn6r, given by . Mr.toteatia . last fall, and bestoWS matter!eommendution on the speeches of MeSentr. 4idd4s and Farquhar ) It considers the atOrit evinel lik indicative of th triumph - .which must altered the great discovery, en a happy omen for the wealth ind !prosperity of our native „state. - She is indeed hiesserl by nature to 4r utmost With ; kt" het Sons k .0, , how to tate adviurtoge of grille gifts, our Situ. a 'on would indeed be louvre' e ' bl ! r-... a that I- 1: . :' m e e heeei nt be o ee th e e m Pr tho used ei:otary"a the rwigshurg, refused blf takaa te e n dollar United testes ank Bill, las: week , aw Sif ng the bank was Wren: ood for nothing, and a monstrous fraud ! Now ova does this tally with . a Joco majority its the Le islaturetompelling that Rink to loan the state four. 'dim tioilan7 ;410e - they to pay off their debts in aribless money, Or 'bag slid PrialionotarY iiii.ii be bind the age, and forgotten that the great loco Pao. people.loving, wages I redneino - bloodhoand employ ng; standing. army 'advocating. sub-treasury defend ing administration, bas token the banks, little mon sHtere and big mohsters, all under their especial Orotoction 1 We think we kirow a gentleman about the suss of our worthy Prothonotary, who will, he ifer° fang, be glad enough to,take almost any kind of money, and drat:will be when he Ands the 'pit. of , . therm is ;he ptlpitte station," . (b . The galler.r pews of the EPiseePal OthtFli are; very judiciously reserved for the free use of •Viettnre enj, strangers. This Swill be art accommodation to that portion of the congregation, who 'ore waiting rot an enlargement of the Church, to obtain pews int the main floor. co. We take pleasure iivacknOwledgingthe receipt 4' a dish spkndid strawberries, from the garden of rriziewl Cid. T. J. Baird. For our mountain region, this prod-mils very early, and affords an evi dence of the improved condition dour gardens. The Borough Cotracil hold their meetings the first and third Wednesdays of each month, and have made i arrangements to occupy the Led* Room of Mr. Peale, so 'that in future our citizens may attend .their deliberations. Equestrian Iran Stalue.--lthaa been suggested lb) , 'Mr. Strickland, that the Washington Monument fund be appropriated to the erection of an equestrian statute o, the father of his country, in the Philadel phia Square named after him, and that the material be the. anthacite iron'of our state. Mr. S. very just. ly 'remarks. that t, the iron mestere of our coal region are iiitcested—every body is interested in so noble 1 .. ..,, an experiment and commencement, which is to form 'i a new'titia iti\the arts and prosperity of our mineral liesouraes, as Well es to do honor to whomkhonor is most eminently ilu'e•fromthe citizens of a discriinina. ling metropolis." \ It would indeed be a -meat itriumphant heralding !if the capabilities of our state resources, if this tdea L ,o uld be carried out. From every specimen of work anship we have yet seen, in our ainhacite troll, we litre convinced that the most splendid \ statue, which I;the world pegseases, could be made of thai-piattirial. 1 ts 'peculiar.properties cause ,it to flow as smiethly to silver, and the finest lines of the model co4ke presened to the castings. We trust the enterprize of oar Philadelphia friends, will not let this Matter grow cold, in their hands, and we call on our own Joseph Lyon or lift. J. M. Saunderson, and all , thyse ,woo feel an interest in the iron trade, as well as pride in the accomplishment of the deserver) tri !but In our nation's father, to impress itIT importance nn the pliblic, with that energy for sbich thty ore noted. Coal Companies. Mr. Editor: I perceive that you and your cot 'respondent ere very confident that Lehigh real, coats that company in New-York, much more than 'is generally supposed, in fact much more than ;they ask for it. They offer to sell it at Jersey City at . 1 .;;5 50 a ton, for Philadelphia money ; and their agent in this city effete to deliver it by carts to steamboats : and manufacturers at $.5 per ton. Now, if you are !right about what it costs the company, I would like 'you to give some reason , why they offer to sell it be (,w cost. It seems to me a very strange course, for intelligent, business men to take,- - --and I presume the managers of that company aro such. If you are Iright, they niust be losing money on all the coal they sell here. What can be their motive for that, and how long can they continue to do such a business 1 Ho* is it that they make dividends andsell coal et less than cost, and keep bringing mare .to market all the while You say they beerow money- from year to year. But who will lend' thom money, if it is .understood that they do a loseing business I ..I must think that you are in some great error about the coat of their coal far it seems to be madness for men to go on in this way. Yet they may have a motive for it that I (IQ not understand, and that you may bluble to point. out; and if so, f wish you would, for it is important to my iuterests to know the facts. if our correspondent has perused with attention the articles of .X,' and our previous comments, he need hardly be reminded that our estimates of the cost of Lehigh Coal delivered in, New York, are actually less thanihose fOrnished by the President of the Corn • pany, and therefore at pres •nt selling prices they ac tually offer it below cost. The reasons for such con duct are ameifest to all, who are acquainted with the concerns and views of the company. As early de 1830, J.siah White, Esq. one of the acting man agers of the Lehigh Co. expressed his determination to make the grass grow in the streets of Pottsville.;" and all the subsequent endeavors of the company, under his directions,.-bave been to put down the Schuylkill coal region, two remove all rivalry and com petition, and,pave the way to a mammoth monopoly of the Antltracite Coal - Trade of Pennsylvania. Nor were these ezertinne directertagainst our region a lone ; their neighbors at Beaver Meadows, Hazleton ate. were opposed as lenges possible, excluded from the use of their Cnnal, and blocked out from a mar• list, until the attention of our Legislature woe called to it, and they we'e compelled by the strong arm of law to open .. thei canal to rival regions. But the WO fabric. whic the envy of/wig . /I ,Whits, sought i to erect , was too. .inweildsiAr.e.enlpielikon. Aqui alter years of fruitlessll endeavors, the prhne . mover has (Quad the lasktiopelets. The red ash coal of our Setusyltill gegio has ever commasded a higher price in the N. Y...maticer then ;ha Lehigh rt k ite ash,some times as much as $ 2,60 pe,r ton, and Llinngb. by tm dersolliog our •*roma, .they may..,.have compelled some of them.to abandon .the busintes in despair, yet their rivals !Tye been hydra-headed, and others have epriiiivap in their places. ~A sotbar inducement thee to sell coal Odour cot, was thehope that by throwing t h e L e hi g h white ash tutu maykek nt so mush lower rates than our red ash, consupers would kis induced by principle& of economy .to,buy their'sotyle, They r.;'. (~~_ . '~_ tiOlil THY 21113110/8 ' JOVUNAL A NSW YORK DEALER toct of tO lho git o -attain incialpoly: 7- 414 effiets of *al ka:ikipatxisai, ninPairini4aalikeit*tin4 'WOO Jana, the -quaky - seat . to taadkaa4 tatierplaccd ibemseivassAMAlliCt debt, above thaulasi, cost of dick iratteXcetettlit This se. cleat u figares can mate St thus—the cast of emit vVio vvoths"asic Lehiei Canal, - • ' $1,300,000. `Ma& water Nay. & Rad Road, 1,400,000 70,000 ;13.000 %CON Coal Landi s It. Wad to Elumioit Level . - " to Nesvietwain, . . $ 2,814,000 And the sautous loans ameent .16 addition to the capital loch tci $ 0,45,8,009 or $ 2,77.4g101i more th an the colt of improvements, while $ 1,4 k 00,009 tow ot coat hem been 408 tr o th gir coal lan anlufettunta decreased them in vain 1 The above coat of naiad Water ar, Rail Road," . eludes of course des Wilkes: bane Road, which :clans about $ 300,000 more to complete it, cud then will never pay the cost of au perintend.ance, being,ene of the wildest and most vie ionery schema ever started in our pouritu. The whole amount of toll that can ever be realized, will hardly defray the expences of their stationary engines erected to surmount hills, and force an outlet that nature never contemplated. We - may also remark, that the company hijerealized on town lots sold at Mauch Chunk and other building places, enough probably to pay for the improvements, made in the Coal Region. But from the whole as pect of the above facts, the inference is plain, that the actual loss on their Coal operations, has been the difference between .the amount of their loans and - capital combined, and the cost of their improvements, and this vast awn has been meandered in . attempts to bolster up on immense monopoly, This state of thiugs has long been known to p— m: have ever bad a watchful eye on the operations of the Lehigh Co. and have been ever prepared to repel such difficulties as were thrown before the on ward course of our regioq. Situated as the represen tative of a rival interest, we have ;shamed from noticing the rash course of that Company, until the magnitude of the interests involved, has brought it before the public horn another quarter. Now, all reserve is removed, and we feet it our duty to expose the system, which has so long been used as a means of deception and stock-jobbing speculation. a , A New York Dealer" may see at a glance, how they have declined dividends, and why they keep hringlng incee coal to market, They must continue their loosing game, as Long as loans can be raised, or exposure is the consequence. And it is on the brink of that ex posure they now stand—the public are on their guard; loans can no longer be raised, without the assurance that a sinking rued is devoted to thi?ir liquidatien; the Coal business is now so -well known, that precise es timates can bo made by business men, to detect the paper profits of such air bubbles, and _confirm Won has been piled on confirmation that every cent of the capital stock has long been- sunk, and that the value' of their improvements would not cover their loans. We cannot dismiss this subject, without expres sing a hope, that our Legislature will see the neces sity of reforming this abuse, of declaring dividends onto( capital stock or from loans. It is a fraud in the broadest sense of the word, and community should be protected from - such imposition, by a law declaring it a penal offence. Coal Iron Rail Road.—We have thus far delayed making any comments, on the cast iron rail road, laid on the Greenwood addition to the Mount Carbon Rail Road, more than the mere mention of its com .letien. This was for the purpose of obtaining the es mates of its cost and . other data which we Presumed would be of interest to our friends: these have been politely furnished us fly Andrew Russel, Estegetit for the Greenwood property, and by their aid w 4,. lay the following facts before the publics The length of the road from the Mt. Carbon Road to the Steam Mill, which has Leen telsid with cast iron rails is .1200 feet, a douldetrack, making 4800 lineal feet or 1600 yards of rail. In this distance there are 9 - full turnouts or crossing places, which re quire 486 lineal feet or 162 yards of rail,- exclusive of the plate. The Rail is called the house joist pat tern, And is cast in lengths of six feet; the pattern was first made for 70 lbs. of iron to.the yard of mil, but was altered by increasing the size and strength of the flangesto about 8011 w. to the yard. The quan tity of rails used in constructing the whole road, was about 62 tune ; they are laid on sills which are 3 feet apart from centre to centre; these being again sup ported on the graded road by square blocks of stone under the end of each sill, where the rail rests on it. The sills cost 42 cents each, and the cost of laying the road, including grading, of which but little was required, it being laid on the old track, was 80 cents per panne! of 3 feet. Cost of putting in each turn out, for labor end workmanship $ 45. The road has now been in 'use some we e k s , an d heavy trains of loaded coal cars have passed over it, and it does not appear to give way in the least, nor has a single rail broken. It is believed by all .to be strong enough for any road, where horse power alone is used. What effect the frost in, the fall may have on it, is yet to be lested. Taking the forgoing data, ae the basis of a eaten lation,-a mile of Rail Road, laid with these cast trim rails, will cost as follows: 1'7.60 yds, .80Ibs to a yard, is a fraction over 62.5--10 font, which for double track is 126.6-10 tone, costing say $ 44, per ton. $ 5,400 80 1760 pounds of 3 feet at 80 cts 1,408 00 1760 sills at 42 cts. 739- 20 36001b5, about, of bolts ..,and spikes at 10 cents, Coutingenciv; Cost per m.le These rails were cast by Mr.•iVilliam Lyman, at hie furnace on the Island: it was originally. contem plated to make them at the blast furnace, but as that blew out shortly after the-contract was made, Mr. erected a small cupola, -fur .the purpose,, and made them Anthracite Iron of his awn smelting. cO-The recent forgeries on tbeFttiladelphia Banks, have been traced to Dr. Eldredge, a person of edu cation, whose career in crime bag been of no ordinary grade. From ell accounts,,ba,baslor the last 15 or 20 years been a depredator on tlmpublic, v but _justice has at length overtaken bun. A Novel Charge.—A military court oteqquity is sitting in Baltimore, to ezamine into charges.prefer red against Major Dandrew, Commissary, and Capt. Duseubury, Q. M. by Samuel Harker, a loco editor of that city. These charges are that the officers have purchased supplies for the army from Whigs, instead of• partizans 'of the administration ! Suppose, by way of comment on the above, we had Van Buren and Forsyth's standing army of 200, 000 men, forced upon us, where woild be our repub lican liberties, where would be our equal rights! Sold is the shambles re the highesi loco•bidder, at the same time with the army contracts. J. Jahn gantend the Architect, oboo! to . Inc! a neve 013 on a jlerryisburg,.. =I Cr 4102 ff&e' . Si=vsx ing.miNE4 , llolotiptAt:' 360 00 $7,008 00 92 00 $B,OOO 00 itat*lnrg Chronichs tionnechtd Witkpai ,begialative fit* 'not 0* 194; -seimcgs.,_ mien, bap era . and HaYa,ind Mews. Neff Ra ge end field 44,44tatiejablyfaisited . Litqlitilown 4'11'01644h r thei'etipitaL.' - WhileAtleO AY. Nett rt tkoti of a singtr; xtpii'n Which he Proiedto tow vity adept, that 000 of j 1 audience ezpiftsed the wisittolinow where he bad beeente so skillet) on the drum. He said that Ite . was,ti 'Orninmer in tiie last war mid& Gen, Her , . risen. „Mitch curiosity 'was watttrallY.lfeit to bear something about aid Tqqiecatre exßaiting he pos lessettafficientregati foible own .44:aiter and the military fame of the coantty, and that his regard for truth atidiustic. ; Would induce him to kale, what ev, cry Wart in whittle bosom Angered one spark of cour , age or generosity, who ever served under him, has lalteerftilly . 'testified to. Thit they *ere deceived in his character, or rather lie showed them that he was sttletlf i feeldess-of stay inch' burdentscsnie appendage its character. In answer to awinquiry as to General Harrison's, ponduct in battle, he stated that his prat. Licewas to order hia soldiery into bank while he withdrew to a place of sofdy N9W we need hardly, say, that this asse,ction was a falsehood from first to last, Neff is probably gout 30 years old, so that in IBM he was t dine year old tifo!ntoot• We suspect with the 'Chronicle, that be was born .• drummer, asibe Hon, Mi.; Frundy was born a, veteran democrat. One "GAM suppose ftom the distinguished figure he cuts in the House. that he was a remarkable baby. With what five effect he might commence some of his eloquent speeehel Mr. Speaker, I wan born • baby, I have lived a baby, end by the blessing of God I well die a baby!" The, Rev. Dr. Whatingham, Profesior of Theol ogy in the N. Y. Episcopal Bezninary.has been elec ted Bishop afrbe.diocese of Nary, land„ at a recent Conception of the Protestant Episcopal (11. The remains of Godfrey, the infantar of the guadrant, here beet, removed, - with other bones of his buried ancestors . ' frqm near Germantown, and de. posited in:Laurel Hill Cemetry. Mons Adrian jr., well known to the public, has been the victim of. Lynch law. It appears that at Montgomery, on the Alabama river, ..a Mra. Dr. Mc• Leod, made wanton overtures to Adrian, which were at first resisted, but at length the Joseph " of his nature oozed out, and he consented to an . elopement. The husband followed, fired at, and missed him, when the unfortunate man jumped overboard, and was drowned. Gen. Rogers, lute Speaker of our Senate, has been dangerously ill. Anoflirr Congressional Fracas.—Kenneth Rayner, and Win. Montgomery of N. C. have had a flay cuff in the Rotunda, originating from seine quarrel grow ing out of a publication in the Globe. Can nothing be done to silence the libels and falsehoods 'f the of ficial sheet I Hardly a week passes without the time of Congress being consumed by enquiries into gar. bled reports and misrepresentations, which have oc cupied its columns. Barefacedness.—The Reading Democratic Press, republished, on Tuesday last, the stale slander that Gen. Harrison voted to sell debtors at auction, to serve out their indebtedness, even after the N. York Evening Post, and other papers of the party, have retracted the accusation as unfounded. r' What is the uae of getting married ?—Nor ?Lich Aurora. , When a man au-Tends the use of his senses by falling in love, it legalizes the suspension. Express Mails! —The New York Courier and Enquirer, of 22d May, reached ua on. Wednesday, after eleven days travel. How rt journied we know not,as there was no Philadelphia mail at all that night. Tomato Mine .has been made in Connecticut from the medicinal qualities of the plant we may in fer its value to invalids. Consisfeney.—The objection made by the locoa to Mr. Penrose's resolution in favor of a uniform bankrupt system, was that they were opposed to the doctrine of instruction! Since when, we wonder, were the locos averse to this system 1 Perhaps Senators Grundy and Anderson can give us the in formation. The, Improvement Bill, which passed the House by a vote of 48 to 41, appropriates over $3,000,0450. It requires the United States* Bank to loan four mil lions ,at 4 per cent., on pain .of ferfeitieg its charter. Whether this bill will ultimately be a law, is of course doubtful, for the Warwicks of our Legislature are complete S , setters up and pullers down." cos-. Walking is the best possible exercise. Habi tuate: yourself to walk-very Mr.—Jefferson's Me mo:7f. This is perhaps one of the tenets of that Jeffer , minion democracy" which has habituated" the a dministration sub-treasurers to perforin such wtall" walking. Henry Frick, Egg., has withdrawnirom the Mil lonian,, which he established in 1816, and conducted to the present time. Philadelphia Loan Co—Bills of indictment have been fumed against George Schott end Theo. M. Moore, tate President and Cashier of this institution, charging them with conspiraby to defraud. Dfred Tax.—We have but room tNstate that the Bill,' _directing a tax to be levied directly on certain artices has passed both houses. Its operations and effects will be noticed next week. 1 ' Angusta;"(Ge.) has been inundated by a freshet in the Congaree. ore Fuhzates.—Four furnaces for making iron with 'Anthracite Coal sre.now prOgreas of erec tion{ on the line of Mons Catmint or near btanhope, 36 Lililea from Easton. Otanwkit3.—A letter from this place says -that 4! bUsiness has . rearmed mearambly in .Shamokin. One locomotive hasbeen making two tr ipe, per day for a week past ; and in a few days annther Locomo tivei will ho running. Miners have pit into employ ! me t' atter a long rest. Rapid.preparations are mak ing for the erection of two Anthracite , Furnaces in theiplace ; one of which will be put in blast, perhaps in' ptember neat. Iron oreLhas lately been e.iscov er; neer the ate of said Furnace. Strangers have begun to flock in from different parts, bpiness no doubt will be brisk ,end active for the 58089/1. " 9ieestions fur the late Poet Nader gene:rd.—Mr. ['Kendall says, in- his letter, that he “ has not been 4u fo nate enough to accumulate wealth in a public o . ."1 We have a different impression, which, if elneous, we should be pleased to have corrected ; an .we, therefore, being humble searchers after truth, rctfttlly enquire if Col. Aturar, a mail contrac to has not teen travelling through Illinois and other pa r of its -the West, purchasin g farms for. the head of th Post O ffi ce Department? viliet ~ttio said high fu clionary would take for a certeinfartn. bought by hi agent of Mr. Wm.. ; L. May, of Milli/ill I Arid finally, whether he would consider $300,000 a fair equivalent for his share in the, profits of the Missis sippi Land Company g--N.,Y. nmes. az? a , What have we seen at the resent session Congress I"—KendalPs G'Atbe Address. hio investigation of the. Post Office accounts!. ‘i . . ca. Philnds' Ipt4ts Spirit 'of the Tithes, the organ of the es k st* lecuitse and Post Office, speak. irig of Genatorrison,i hue tho :following piece of seuffilitYr=. , which 'WO Ostroct as S. specimen - of the foulinetif toirtnA the _ ' Von Buren press, is com pelled to, resort, for caOtal in the pending _ contest. - We 'Entire:duo to coyish° article was either penned by o British too!, ' ; or the son of one, - -who keeztly feels tile' drubbing - his father :mated at the Thames! But:hear the unmanly and meadscious libeUer : ti Always a cOaraur, alWayS a TO* TO ?KZ Pao- PLY, *lweys as ZAPAI4OIIB AS VSIIIIIIS, and as IN FAMOI:18 AQ ARNOLD.. wp know not whether most to scorn his imbeeility, to hots his principles, or, wonder at his impudent eirrontery." We do not feel dispels' ed to say much on the atro city of this paragraplif it is in perfect k,ezping with the Vongitten, mode of warfare-..they use no argil, went blackgilardiem and falsification are their only weapons: We, however, offer : to the:thing who pinned 'the above, following teinarks from the „ American Sentillel,'r-a paper which has suffered much abuse from' its 'administration coadjutors, be cause it has dated to bS candid and afraid to stoop to falsehood and detraction. Its .eilitor .saya : " W 4 have been fretfully complained of. also, for declining that method of political warfare whict ec lies chiefly upon personal abuse of opposing candi dates, and of distinguished men in the adverse party. We dare not wur after thst fashion. We can choose our man and with bedoraing zeal alvocate his ele vation tp trust and power, hut we dare not abuse the great and good men who may compete with him. Every such man is the propeity of his country; his talents,,his fame, his deeds of wisdom in the cabinet, or of valor in the field,' all are his country's--and she, the proud mother of these children, is never more injured, never more afflicted with Rachel-like be. reavoment,,than when trutfianiam would pluck them from her ,bosom and tarnish their glou." Vile Slander Refuted. • SELLING WHITE MEN FOR DEBT This infamous charge against Gen. HAL:news which has again and again been shown to be 41ests tude of a particle of truth, is Gull, we bear, .repeated by some of the unserttpuleus demagogues in the ser vice of the Administrition. We once again, at some inconvenience, republish a letter written by General Harrison himself in 182!, when the charge was first made, and nailing the falsehood to the counter. To any man who shall hereafter repeat this calum ny; .we beg to say to him as the Louisville Journal does: in Imagine us at your elbow, and whispering in your ear, whal you have said is false, and you know it to be false.' "—Richmond Whig. To thi Cincinatli Advertiser Sir: In your paper of the 14th instant, I obser ved a most violent attack upon eleven otter members .of the lute Senate and myself, for a supposed vote given at the last session for a passage of a law to sell debtors in certain cases.", If such had been our conduct, I acknowledge 'that we should not only deserve the censure which the writer has bestowed upon us, but the execration of every honest man in society. An act of that kind is not only opposed to the principles of justice and euinanity, but would be a palpable violation of the Constitution of the State, which every legislator is sworn to support ; and, sactioned by a House of Representatives and twelve Senators, it would indicate a state of depravity which would, fill every patriotic bosom with the most alarm ing anticipations. But the fact is, that no such prop osition was ever made in the Legislature, or even thought of. The act to which the writer alludes has no more relation to the collection of u debts" than it has to the discovery of longitude. It was an act (or the " punishment of offences " against the State; and that part of it which has so deeply wounded the feelings of your correspondent, was passed by the House of Representatives and voted for by the twelve Senators, under the impression that it was the moat mild and humane mode of dealing with offenders tor whose cases it was intended. It was slopted by the House of Representatives as a part of the general system of tha criminal law which was then under going a complete revision and amendment. The ne-, ceasity of this is evinced by the following facts. For several years past it had become apparent that the penitentiary system was becoming more and more burdensome at every session; a large appropriation was called for to meet the excess of expenditure - above the receipts of the establishment. In the commence ment of the session of 1820, the deficit amounted to near $ 20,000. This growing evil required the immediate interpo sition of vigorous legislative measures. Two were recommended as•being likely to produce the effect: firat.placing the institution under better management; and, secondly, lessoning the number of convicts who were sentenced for short periods, and whose labor was found, of course, to be most unproductive. In pursuance of the latter principle; thefts to the amount of $10 .. 0r upwards were subjected to punishment in the penitentiary instead of $lO, which was the former minimum sum. This was easily done. But the great difficulty remained, to determine what should be the punishment of those numerous larcenies below the sum of $5O. By sou.e, whipping was proposed.; by others, punishment by bud labor in the county jails; and by others, it was thought best to make them work on the highvgpys. To all these there ap peared insupearable objections. Fine and imprison ment were adopted by the House of Representatives as the only alternative; and, as it is well known these vexatious pilferings were generally perpetrated by the more worthless vagabones in society, it was added that, when they could not pay the fines and casts which were always part of the sentence and punishment,.their services should be sold out to any person who would pay their fines and costs fer them. Tats was the clause that was passed, as I believe, by a unanimous tote of the House, and stricken out in the Senate, in opposition to the twelve who have been denounced. A little further trouble in exam ining the journals would have shown your corres pondent that this was considered es a substitute for whipping, Which was lost only by a single vote in the Senate, and, in the House by'S small majority, af ter being once .passed. I think, Mr. Editor, I have said enough to show that this obnoxious law would not have applied to unfortunate debtors of sixty-four_yeare," but infa mous offenders who depredate upon the property of their fellow-citkens, and who, by the Constitution of the State, as well as the principle of existing laws, were subjected to involuntary servitude. I must con fess I hid. no; very sanguine oxpectattens of a bene ficial effect. film this measure, es it would apply, to convicts who bad'attained the age of maturity; but I hed supposed that a woman or a youth s whe, con victed of an offence, remained in jail for the payment of the fine end cost imposed, might , with grept ad- Vantage ,be transferred to the residence of some de cent, virtuous private family, whose precept and ex amplewetildsently.leed them back to the, paths of rectituile. I would appeal to the candor et your correspondent to say whether, if there were an individual confined under the circumstances .I have mentioned, for whose fate he, was interested, he would not gladly see him transferred:from a filthy enclosure or ajad, and _still more filthy inhabitants, to „the comfortuhle mansion of some virtuous citizen, whose_actmonitions would check his visions propensities, and who authority over bins would be no more than is exercised over thousands of apprentices in this country and those bound servants which aretolerated in ouress well as , • in every ewe in the Union. larfroptadvocaling 1,1i.-i'- , 1: j . : ' I'oNJ,- - 1,.. the niriftlinabk . priptipla 01 corresperukiii, ittiols apt i t under any mms Unai ge,o kdgad, is at war tUith COnatitution, and:Ought to 0 N V Z Num Dena,' L ac.?l, 18 • A CANDID IREFI The Editor of, tie Grunts Vanßuren paper s .pUblished in tidied the infamous slander ag HARMON, that tur voted to se for debt, in Ids neat pa Per m cavitation, and , icknowledges "ntsasrairstommem" ••The piece which appeared itt last week's Repub.. hese, with respect to Gen. H names voting to all white men, was Marled with ut our knowledge and during our absence. liiarin seen a letter of thit gentleman, declaring thaiJibe alien alluded to was part oft bill for the pun sbm t of.sarintinals.", we and kept the Matter under ad isentent, add had re. solved not to Meat it anti) further information. We regret that the piece shield have appeared in the Republicse , which not even e daily violence, aldry and slang Of our op tuts, shall -tempt no knowingly to convert into an instrument or misrep resentation." I . It may perhaps gntifyi to die patriot pride_ of Americans, to know that th person who originated this charge, was a prisoner ea lured by Gen. Barri,. on at the battle of the Tha es ; and the libeller now holds ,offies under Van' uren'u administration, and of course is ono of the 0 ritish tories." The Lbrerenee.--..Self first and the country after. wards," seems the robrof actien which goicrita Van Buren ; but,with Gen. Harry n , It has ever_been, ~ our country first, and sell the last consideration 1". Van Buren, plans no scheme without first wtighing how far it will benefit hie personal advanament, and the strength of the party ; he makes thoi fluidic convenience bat a amtingentito the preservoiliOn of power, and the people may st?Ter under the pressure of these various schemes, without hopes of redre ss or. amelioration. Hut the whole lyre of Gen. Ha rrison' si;re has been one of devotedness o the u safety, honor, acid welfare" of the people; his personal advancer meat has never been regarded but with a dingle ey e . to the public good, be : has teadily punned that path moat conducive to the nerd happiness, and to the establishment of the br ad, principles of poli tical freedom., The contrast ltetween the selfishness of Van Buren, and the patriotism of Harrison is ed. hibited in every prominent action of the mea t and must have its effect upon eve friend of hie coun cil. cc:r. The Sul>.Treasury Bill which was first intro. iuced ny our worthy and en 'ghtened' President f ,is growing so fast into the good graces of the people, that the federalists are enclea oriog to depnve Arr. Van Buren of all the merits, and placing them to their owe credit.—Democrats Press. By the federalists" our fiend does not mean Buchanan er Ingersoll, but the opponents of Martin Van Buren, and says they ar trying to deprive Van Buren of all the mails of this scheine ! This' is the moat reckless attempt at iterversion we have yet had pressed upon us: The is not an opposnitn print in the Union which docir not condemn the sub treasury,' as dangerous to ouri, liberties, and placing ,ari irresponsible power in . the hands of the Execu,.. five. To deprive this bill of its " merits " would indeed be a magician's work, fur merit it' has none : it is the office holder's scheme, to obtain control over all the revenue of our country, and then grind down the laborer and mechanic, rediice theit wages to six pence a day, and place our country on a pat with those whine bondage and slavery are hereditary. We seek not to place inch things o to our own credit " we war against the scheme—wlrich of all others orig inated by the present administration, is the most odious and corrupt. What nee . 7 —t. Tippecanoe" Steel Pens are made in New York.—Richmond Compger. They will be used at Waahington, investiga ing the corruption of the different depattments. The latest humbug of the Whigs is 'i Tip pe Walking slicks."—l r oco paper. They are premonitory or Van Buten walking papers' c o. ..A flood of demoralization has swept ovetoui and."—Kaulalra Address. True, for the conntr as been flooded with Globes, and _we shall soon lise an eztra•llood. Contempt for the People lies at the bot tom of their whole scheme of electioneenng.—Ken. dolts Address. How low must you bellegraded then, who lie below the contempt of the pleople! a• I he locos are nettled at the idea of Harrison Conventions being counted tpy the acres. We should presume such reports would prove heart-achers to them ! A Log, Cabin has heen raised at Berwick the cause of Harrison and Tyler is doing well there. At Kingston, •Wilksbarre, and Tunkhannock, Lo zerne Co., these emblems of the people's determina tion have been erected, and harry dismay to the foco locos. Whip them back !—Thai loco leaders say, (hue are apparent changes for Harrison in Schuylkill "County, but they will make all right before the el ec . don— they will Whip and drive the refractory into the traces ! Shoot the deserter's ! " has ever been the loco cry, but let them beware, the deserters now outnumber their standing Simi, and perhaps they may demand retribution ! Hints to the Working C asses.—The reason why our exporting manufacturers" demand a repeal of of the corn law. is, that a : repeal of them would equalize the price of, conti4ental labor. 4rQur ex porting manufacturers" cl r now, on the average, only thirty pet cent. on all the capital which they employ. They lung to clear a hundred or two hundred per cent. Now for the price of "continent al labor." Mr. Gregg, the !Manchester repealer, states it to be in • France, ' Switzerland, 5, per week of 72 hours, 49 51d .. 82 .. Austria, Tyrol, Saxsmy, I Boon, om . the Rhine, 2s Being an average of 3s 1 id per week, of 79 hours. The same Mr. Gregg stow the existing wages t I Englishmen to range from 15t to 305.1 i week. Look at this, ye " working elasse l'' l: The wages of American laborers+, in the same de scription of money, range .prom lds to 24a-per week: " Reduce," gays Mr.. Buchanan, a our nominal to the real standard of priceti.throtighout the world !" What think you Americank laborers, of coming down to 8s a week 1 low,,viiill 'you American firmere, like to have your pricer in theearne"' proportion` ( 11 You, American de.btoni,,y ur•means reduced in pro portinn to the , proximd . r duciion of wagea, while your,ilekla_ remain the £l.. 0 I J; C.L. qenerai Apt!, g vir ILLS, Dectve Bon v instruments Of writ, Ineolvent Bonds and ballaaced—Accounts adj *sirs. Hen dersoi!s SW . May 30 'Maio as by you y . entfor dek. ;It gave fritudioal t prineipko of our abolished.' ..11. RAWSON. A.TION. - • rough Repuotican. 111, baths, baying pub-. hat WlLZlAlrlissas the poor white man kes the following re. the charges to be a id .. d it 1114 Ai 76 " 88 " 72 .. a .. 84 " , 1 d Cont;ey,aneer. a, Mortgagee, and other ng!Tirefuify dtawn.„ etitions prepared-4304s sted, 11) . 4 11