Miners' Journal catlae Cash Systm Owing to the frequent losses which newspriper Editors are lialite i rto sustain—the prevalence of laws at the present nme, which a ekes it alMostk impossible' to collect mnandebts; and the great ea ;tenses and!waste (I.f . timehwe are forced to incur in he collection of dui rubscriptiona. which not 11:11 frequently equals - the amount of the debt; tie hatM concluded to publish the Miners' Journal - hence forth upon the cash principle, to accordance w'fth the lohowing ternuuand conditions I For one Year in advance....... Six Months „ ... Three Months One -Single Copies...:i 01:1313B1NG. In order to accommodate Clubs who wish to subscribe, we willlurnish them with this paper; 4 n. the following iermatnvaiiably , in advance 3 Copies to one address—per annum... 15 .0 00 15 00 25 tiO 6 do.: 10 do Five defiant in _advance will pay' fur three ;ears cubseription, TQ ADVERTISERS Advertisements not exceeding a at:lime of twelve lilies Will be charged $ !or;three insertions, and .50 cents fcir Line insertion. Five lines or looter. 25 cents FOX each insertion: Yearly advertisers will be dealt with on the following terms: . One Colunni...'„, 25 Two squares, Three-ffiurths de... :20 I One 6 ..;..15 I Ilniinesseirds,,slines, 3 For any peri3d E.llorter year aslper Agree All advertisements must be paid;for in adv r ance tin less an 3ccount is opened with the advertiser, or it is otherwise 'arranged.. • ' The charge to Merchants Will' be $lO perannum, With tlientriv•ileie of keeping' one . adiertisctnent not „texceedriig nue- square standtrtg during the year a rrd the insertion of a spaallei one.in each paper: Those who occupy a firge.r ePace wilfbe charged extra. All .not ieesToi Meetings and proceedings ofmeet ingsnotiennsidered of general interest; and many.oth ' •ernotices which live 'been . inserted heretoforegra tuitiousiy, wiih;the • exception' of Marriages and 'deaths. will beeharged as advertisements . - Ntttices 'of Deaths, in 'which invitations ,are•, extended to the 'friends ind relatives ofthe deceased; to a tt enerthe fu -fiend, will he,chrgeda.•• adVertisemeids. Wn confiSettili expect the co-operation of our . rienus in; ails 'our new arrangement. • OLD ESTABLISIIED.FASSAIi OFFICE 100 Pine Street reiLMer Smith &reel. THE Suhsbliber begs leave,to.eail the airentionlof his friends and the ' Public in general, to' the following . arrangements fur 1613, for .the pore of bringing out Cabin, Seeorid Cabin, arid Steeriige Pas:Zengers; by 11ie folloWing ' 'Reg l u In I -Packet Ship; to and from Liverpool. Ships' " Captains Days rif Sailing (rum Names.' 4 New York. G. IVashington, Ein.rows, June 7 Oct 7-Feb - .. United States 1 Britton" . • 13 . 13 • :13 . Garrick i Skiddy 1 • 25 . 25 • 23 , Patrick !luny Dilano ' July '7 Nov 7 Mar, Sheffield • Alien , ' 13 ,' 13 • . Iltisicius O.illins ; • 2.5 . 25 25 '.ln4epetalence' N%e I Aug: .' .7 Dec 7AI 7 Virginian ' . Allen • ' • 13 ' 13 • 13 Siddons, E. 4••0b ' 2S . 25 -. 25 ',Ashburton ' : Flutticatim Sep. 7 )an 7 M'y 7 •Sle'n Whitney Tiumipson . --- 13 . • -1.3 • 'l3 Sheridan . Dcreyster " - 25 ' 25 '' 25 . . : ..: '. Doss of Sa iling from . . • I.iverpool.' • G. Washington Burrows 'Jul} 25 Nov 2.sM'r 25 Unateif,Statcs Britton : ' Aug .1 Dec I A'l . 1 Garrick - Skiddy • . 1 1 3 • 13 • 13 Patrick Henry Del.:..a. ' 25 • 25 • 25 Sheffield • ~;. - - :-1. 1' . ..:- t;1 Jan. I,M'y I Tto'seins . Ot.ol w ' i 3 , " 13 7 13 • Indepcndene 3 :.\ . - e ---7,0,...13 '2s' 25 Virginian A. , - t r , .. i Feb I J'ile 1 Siddona 1,- . Al.' • ' I 1 ' 13 ' 13 Ashburton ", L .1'..:q.....1 • -ri • 25 • '25 Ste"n Whitney 1 . - .t.^,-. •si.,••• _ v H.. Mar :1 J'ly _I Sheridan L_ ... ~ ...i.• ' - .3' • .13.'' 'l3 Regular Packh 0.. .3. : : ,ind ti-ara Loud . Ships' - ', Cuppains - Days!of Stiffing from Names. New. 'York. • Mediator ' Chadwick hue ' i l Oct ..1 Feb 1 Wellington Chadwick • 111 '. .10 . ' 11l • Quebec. ' ' ' Hebert • -- - 20 . r :211' • 20 . Philadelphia- : • Hovey July -I ivov 1 M'r 1 !swiperland -, Chadwick ' • 10 • ' 10 • 10 IL Hudson Morgan •20 . 1 . 20 . 2)' I /warm .- .llradish Ang 11 Dec I,A'l 1 I oronio- .1 Griswold ' 10 •'lo' s 10 Westminster -t. Moore • '2O .. 20 • 20 lit...,L,me's, ' •-• Setiiir Sept...l Jan 1 May 1 Montreal ' Tinker ' • 10 •. 10 • 10 Gladiator ; Britton ; ~. 20 •H 20 .• 2.0: r r Days or sailing from 1 _ • '.' ; ' / a 1 London .. Metiohar Chadwick' July . 17 Nov 17 31'r 17 'Wellington Chadwick •. 27 ' 27 . •. 27 Quebec - ' . Heberd . Aug 7:Dee - 7 A') 7 - l'hillidelPhio. Hovey I • 17 ‘ 17 'l7 Switzerland • Thadwick - ' 27 ' 27 ' '' 2 7 H. Hudson/. Morgan Sep. 7Jan 7 M's Ontario •. I Praili-h ' • 'l7- ' 17 - '-,14 - Ty+il'f& --- 3 7 - 77:- ..tie.wold ' ' .27 , • 27 ' " 21., Westminster Moore 7 Feb 7 J'ile 7 Oct.• St: Jamul ''Sribiir,2 ' - • :17 • 17 - ' 1-1 :Montreal_ ' Tinker - '. f..7_ 4 :. 27 '27 fpliiiiiaMr . --- 11rirkon Nov I'7 'Mar- 7 J'ly ' '' In addition in ilie above Regular Lint s, a nom. tier of Splendid New -York builiii'ransient Ship., s : neli as the •lArlioltidack,' .Scpll Ind, .a„,„„ti • Glover,' and: Deho,•, will continue to sail from Liverpool %Telly in. regular .succession, 'hereby preventing 'the least iim•aibilitli of detcn.ion or delay -in Liverpool: and for the. accommOdi 'on of periZons.vrishing to remit money to their r-i - Ries 0 1 1.0. ends, I have arranged the pavine' t s M c Inv arts on the following' ban ks:— ----- '' ' 4 ,... ...% 1 . - ('The Ulster - Bank, and branches • IZELAI4,D, The Provincial Bank' do. . : 's(l'4 r , : ; a6on,il nok : do. , All Dralls.Payahle'l at sight, it either of the a . hove,lninkk their branches or egenCies. Messrs. Spooner, AtWood & Co ) ENcILA - N D. - bankers, London. • , '1 ••: ' • P. W. Byrnes; Esq. LiVerPool. Pitssengers'ean also b*?. engaged from Liver. popli . to Philadelphia., Boston', and Baltimore, by the cgular packet shipS, unl application being' - "Made personally, or by letter: ( p(Tt.aid,.) ad dressed to • - 1 . .....p JOSEPH 'IMeNII, RAY, : - • 1.00 Pinc street,'corner of Smith, AGENTS.—In Pottsville, Benj. Biinnan, Eaq. • ' In Lowell; Rich. Walsh, &fp ', _ „. • .In Albany, T. Gough. E.,q. . ( . In Newark, John . AleColgan,.. Esq. - ,t- - In' ,Toronto, I.Jj :C:, ' Rogers and, ,'' • ' ~ , Thompson. i [ ; , _,.., - also beg leave to that my friends and the public in- general, that the grealcst punctuality, wit' be observed in the sailing of the above ships, together with all othcrswhich I. may hare, and iha .l passengers will experience no delay on their arrival at the diffvent parte-staler& they mean to embark. - t .; -..- . . P, , S.—Free passage can also be secured from ‘ the various ports in Ireland land Scotland from which steamboats run - to Liverpool. - • • • : JOSEPH - MeMURRAY, • ' 100 Pine street, New York. Gives drafts in sums to pißJApplicants,' on the Provincial Book of !refund/ (sayable at i • " Cork , ',, . Banbridge ; ' Limerielo . Ballymena' Cloninol • i Parsontown • Londonderry Downpatrick 1 Sligo .. Cavan ,:,- Wexford 1 Lurgan Belfast Omagh .1 Muterford • Galway • Dungannon :, Bandon .' Ennis Armagh,,, . j • r, Ballyr,bannon Athlone r Coleraine, ' 1 Strabane, - Kilkermy: Dungarvan 1 Ballina .• . Mallow : ,Tealee , I' Moncymoro Youghali . Cobtehill ' Enhiskillen Kilrirsh Milmaghan. t Eriktroto —Spooner, AN, London, Fiayebte in eviry toi t ' ' . ..'7•:-P•'W-.',l3l*RNEt3, ESqllire,l CITi OF GLASOOVV DANK,I . . . S .- busiit Scotland. .. ' .ts.. ' :New YOrk, January 21, • I ....1 — Nr F t W GOODS : EW,GOODS „ r PRINTED ORLEANS CLOTHS; FIGUR— ED ALPACAS CRAPE DE LAI NS, entire y new artistes fonLadit's I:itessep, just remived, : ) , L nd-for stile by Eepieniber 2, E. Q. A. HENDERSON. , 36- EA - T HE Rs.—Just received and fo Bale, a lot reaihers Of excellent quality by I SILLPIAN & CO, Plata?, 9, CIO I 00 501 VOL . xii' 01 the North .tgrnerical . College of ffealtn This extraoidinary medicine' is founded upon the principle that the human frame is subject td ONLY ONE DISi:ASR. viz ;COrrupt Humors, or in otner,words Impurity of the Blood, and. nothing save Vegetable cleansing, is Wanted in order,th drive disease °revery description froth the body.. If the channels of our mighty rivers shouldibe— come choked up, Would not the accumulated`waters find new outlets, or the country be inundatisit—Just so with the human hody;„if the natural drains become closed, the accumulated impurities will most assured ly find vent instotne!lorin of disease or death will be a 'certain conseotienee. WRIGHT'S. INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS are eininentlY calculated for carrying out this GISAVD PURIFYING PRINCIPI:F.beca!ige they are a 'purgatiVe medicine so justly) liManced and withal So natural to tlic {lnman constittitlaM, that they • cannot possibly injure the most deltcate;th the same time,Fil used' in such a .manner as to produce free evacuations by the, bowels, and repeated a few times, it will be absolute ly pain or distress of any kind to con tinue in the, body. A single twenty five cent box o' .the above named Indian Vegetable Pills will. ii, all cases, giveredief,Simictimes even beyond the power tif words to describe, and if persevered in for a short tne, there is not al Malady in the whole course of hu man ills that can possibly Withstand their astonishing nml wortderfdlint*l)ce. WRIGIIT'SBiIIAN VEGETA !BLE I'ILLS are. a certain mire for 1 COSTIVENESS. , . Because-they completely cleanse' the stomach and botvels from those, bilious 'and'cot rupt lumiors which paraqse And ivriakek the digestive organs, and are the cringe of 'headache, ' nausea, and sickness, palpitation. of the heart, rheumatic pains, in va nous parts of the irony, and many , other unpfeasan . symptoms. r i . , In all dishrdered motions dl' the Rtoculvtalled . Jutermittent, Remittent, Nervims,.lnflanurtatory, and Putrid , 1 1 , 1 FEVERS. ' l%. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills will be fohnd a ce'r rain remedy; becart. , e thy cleanse the stritrith and bowels from] all Lliillious humors and- pittify -the blood; crinseguently, as they remove every kinil-of disease, they:are a bsolutely certain to carecvery kind. of fever. s oo k o w hen morbid !Melon are deposited upon the rnembra n'e and nuisete, causing those pains Orda in:vim' and' Sweling . , called . I - - • Rli Eu \I ATIAm, Gorr, sic:. .Wri g ht's t“ , elzibk l'ills may be relied on as always.certain to 12,me relief, and if persvered with, will most arisuredly, and without fail, mako per fect cure of jhe above painful maladies.—FroM three tolsix at said Indian Vegetable Pills taken every night on ghing.to bed; will. in a short time, completely,rid the-body from all morbid and corrupt humor”'and Hienniatistn. gout, and' pain or every description, w ill disappear, as if by: magic, For the same reason, when, from •sudden changes of the attims'plierm rir any other cause ; he perspira. lion is checked, :mud those huMors which should pass any the skill. are't brown inwurdly, causing headache, natema.m.d.iickrMas, pain in the bones', .watery and intl.,med eyes, sore throat, Imareeners,'critighs. con sumption.rheumatic pains, in various part of thelbcdy and many other symtoms of CATCHING COLD, • ' Wrighfs Indian Vegetable Pills will invariably give into' (hate relief. Three or four pills taken at night on going to lied; and repeamd • a few -times, will reinov, ill the above unpleasant svintoins, and restore the body to. even sounder heahh than before. The same tidy he said of ditlicnity orbreathing„ • • • Writdo's Vegetalle :Pills will lorisen and carry otrhy the slornneft arid - bowels those itititth and phlegtny hionors which stop' the air cells of the and are the untie of the abot'e dteadibYcotn . plafht It "-holed rilso ;he reinetnliered that WRlGirrs IN DIA N VI•X;ETA,I3I.I.; LLS arc;certa in to remove pain in the ride,O4,pressuan, ana sickness,.lott of a V elkS6 ;cam , : untie - 111f the skin and'eye.s., fitid evomn other Eitnputnis of 1 , 1, IP.RCOM P LA. - 1 - Because tlity:porge from the body thweoomipt and sta t Amnt hoUttiars,wlhch when deposited Ott the liver, are the eatise''or the above dangerous, coinidaint They are also to prevent , , APOPLEXY AND SUDDEN DEATH i:lrcause they carry ofl'thoeeihurnours which obsTrite— ting the eir# hit ion, are the.causC•_QFa rustwor deier• 'zonation of ;Mood to the ,head; giddiness, especially on turning sndriehly round. blinditeiS,rdruw.sinet-sluSs of mernory.itoVination of the brain, insanity,"and all disorders ot!the , Tbose wtiolabmor within i doors should remeniber that they II tignent ly breathe' an atmosphere which:Vs wlt6lly unlit l'pr' the. proper 'expansion of the. lungs, and at the same time owing to IA ant of exercise; the bowels are ) , not sufficiently evacuated, the blood hiscoines impure, and head,,ti r he, tathgestiOn,,palpint 7 . bon of titer heart. sod' tria'ny .other 'disaigreeable s2,oninns aresurp to hallow. 1 1 1 WBIC,II+'S !INDIAN VEG I.:TA Pal: PILLS. Rein , a Ch'anser-orthe stontath and* bowel s , and a dileel psid7rl of the Blood, are ;certain not only to rentove.pain or distress or every kind from the body, ' but it used neeat,ionally, so as to keep the body free freiti those I himiours whkh are the cause of every' mallidv vicided *ln man,. they will turret assuredly prothote such aAuki , . and equal cirenlatimilifthe blood t hat:those V • ho lead a sedentary life, will be able to enjoy sound health, and dr.‘sewe of any: hind will 'be absolutely iiwKlisible. .. _ . I A cI'IO,NS 'I() AG EATS. Countii I agents, . and, others, are' respectfully:. iofornied that, (loin:, to the great popularity, and 'Mere:lsom demand for the above- named Pills, a host of unprincipled persons are busily engaged in 'manufacturing,Mal vending a spurious article in, imitation. ni • - -IV IGll'r^S.l.\'Dfh N FriGl IAIJLE PILL. 'lifey are, als4 - informed thao hare a suit pendln,„ against.ohe V. ‘O. ralek, for onui terfciting 1 the t‘tltpve.nadied medicine. and are caution d.against buyrng•br - receiviniz ini.-dicjne from said', V. O. Falck, I aslhF.e.anbok.by lily . 'possibility have ih genuine WriLtlit's.lndy_WVisetable Ydls fur sale. Alttr;ollitig - agents,.Nvitti genuine .tnediFne are' peeked with- a certificate of aaency,'Ligned by William Wright, Vice President of the N. A.College &health. . Travellers, who cannot ehow a certificate as dhove deserihed , will; be knoirn as base impostors.--Shud them, therefore, as.you would 3 Highway twin, or a Alidni , ht Robber.. OffiCrs. devoted exclusivelyito the sale or Wriglit's Indian Vegetable Pais wholesale anti retail, -No -WO itace2,S . t. L l / 4 ,ilarlilpithb No, 2...48 Greenwich street. BristoW N 13 1 -4erivire ofihe' count'rfeirer in: Third Strset flakidriphid. • ,• _ • AGENTS FOR SCHUYLKILL COUNTY •i•.•••. , ••• Tlink. • :&•ltifies Beatri, Pottsville. • - • Bickel & 111,11,0rwigsliur. 'i Camel S:tyloe,eicliuylkilll Haven. •, ' . • Awn Alfillig, Lkiwzr Mahantongri. I Jacob Baidlinarri, do • • ! , Jonas Kriullinart'; • do , -',.. , • , John Weist, Kii - ngerstown... : - , Caleb ‘Vheeler, Pine grove. John Sruder ‘ Friedensburg. • ; 1 Sinuiel Boyer, Port Clinton. •; - . • . Fettierrdr Drey 4-Co., TusCatora.-: • Wm Tugger, Tamaqua i Moretz Forieder, West Penn township. 11, Shulee&Co., East Brunswick township. • Henry Kisch & Son. McKcansburg:, C. 11. DeForrest; Levecllyn. . • I E.& J. Kaufman, Zuninermantown. , ' Abraham Heebner,. l'ort Carbon. ,• 1 . John Mertz, Atiddleport. F . !. George Rcitanydcr. Ncw_Castle. Bennett 1.7 r Taylor, Minerwille. : •, • •. . Nuraurrike/upd Counly.• ---.. 11. Bi Masser, •Sunliary. • . • • :. . Jacob Haus. Shamokin. F Win Forsythe. Northumberland.l • Win. Ireineni;Milton. , , • • ~.. John G. Kenn, • Lipner MahanoY;i ' • Ireland & Mirzell, AloEwensville. ' 1 od dj co:, iiazater i , wn in Greet Britain. ILiirerpool. • Piyable ,in every Derlnt County. 1: W. Ringer &Co.„ Itgadang,. Stichter, kMeKnig Id; 'do . -Godlried Seidel', Hamburg.' . Octoberl, 1242, 40-- SMOKED . 31t r t A.—Hams and Shout , Eters, goOd:Meat - ilild well envoi', just received and for sale; 81.1.1411 S AN & March 18," • • , . 1 4.,1 innyr ASIG:-..last received apillor sale at the b . Drug store of --* JOHN b. C. MARTIN. cetnbtr. 31— . , , .. •.•::?,,,: :, _ , ...:-.--,.;••z • !rt. „.,.. -. t.• ;.-± ~.,, . -,f k - ~ "Wi ; ,1.- ' ' 9 .. .. , .._ , • . g 4. - - ,;. ' ' ''''' : ' ' . ''. 2 { ..N' - \• ! 'Nfl. 1 ' , , ' ''f . : f -:.,:-.: : .:::-.!: .•. • t : : ~ . . . f . ' I . i,i ,- vinomoimmEllMlllll.lllllll.llllll. , . • ;11 "I WILL ;TEACH TOO TO FF•ItOE SHE BOWELS OF THE EARTH. AND' BLIVG OUT paqm THE'cAvEtts op mouriTAlN3i METALS TiIII/1 LLL, OIVE STRENGTH TO OUR IIA191)5ANo SO/SALT ALL NATURS rr0;01111/ USE:Pixasvas ion.xsox • , : 1-• INDIAN VEGETABLE 1" 1 3 0 WEEKLY BY BENJAMIN BANNAN, Pqt r IISVILLE, SCFITJYLKII,L COUNTY, 'PA I SATURDAY , MORNING, 11Fro . m lh y 4,zur AvilZe fteyublican, '"Sing usu 111 , 4 Song."j---tZainesillle Aurora.] . , r r a 1331)i31 : •—7 , Br J. 617EN:1}711• T4nE'— 014 prdir.lTuCker. The moon was 'shintng ilvei bright, The start with glory Crowned the night, High on a limb"same Old coon" Was singing to him elf Chorus—Gethut the wa , yOu're-all unlucky ; Cleat the track for old' Kentucky: ; • . 'I ' I • Now. in asadliredi arnent I The 1.,...kieS are for President, j They Iltue six horses . in l i the pasture, And don't k now which can Iron the faster I - ! Get Out of the w4yj &C. • • The wagon horse from ennsylvania; • • The Dutchmen tWnlehe's best of ; But , he Must drag hettyY, stages, His federal notions land low; wages: Getout of the w a y; &e. I They §reiudly ,bring upon the course, An old and brokeuldown war-horse; They shOut and sing rutnpsey dumsey Col. Johnson killerli!ectitnSey Get4out of the 'ay, &c. • - - Arid here is Cass, tihougb - riot a dunce, . Will run both side.of the track at or'et: ; - To win the.race wt?l all tyngs cony, Be soinetirne ptg and sometimes puppy: Getout of the , way, &c. souther,n horse Calhoun, Who liatel a Fox and feats a Coati, To toe the scratch -vitt nn be Fur;lll.aity keeps Yin in the stable Cetiout of tLe'way. -! 1 7 AOd lt6ro is Ntattr, trick horse tha In diatly:toor well 'I ite litCp Fux can' ' . Ge(uut the wa The ttalliey horse We'll hdad hian sn ilis•curted "grippi Which Doctor Ufa , - • Get out the i y - The peoide'tt favori [ ie, lIENRY CLAY, now the , Fash to I.':, , ;'the day, And let iltetrack he dry or mucky, •• • We'll Aoke•ntar pile dO 01d Kentucky : Ge. 4 nut the swift and kicky, Clear the trace Old ,Kentucky i ' I Esiviizolicli,3n 3 cut of a t i rat.le American coal • ' crlt4 purope. 41T nicciii Notes stggettedly Ingersoli's ieeent tette' it) gEurapeveith repf I u,k+E No Coa l 54111 quantities import ',llifiminotrs,lyvhielt the are Coal heck' in parts The , F;eneWhave tacilit if not i•uperinr to the fuel." i ! 1 Cdal in Frunce.—Ttie:p art forty-six 'distinct Coal lia.sins !in France ; of 'Which two alone 'em ployed litirtiLiwO / ( thousanil wn!rkmen, in 1836. In the di-itri4:s of)he I. irC and the Nord, th a ex tent tnver4tiy the sevial esiaidishments at work;_. is 42 038 English, ocr .s. 1 Tito quantity of coal 1 furnished by . the coal eldt of ;Franco is annually increasing find that at an ~ enermous rate; haring quadru(dstijin shoot went) , years, "There; are now about tt,res milli ,ins and ri half of tons of coal anlittslly ruiseil there; nnkthe l quantity imparted is upwards iiinne nil fhirii and' a half more. .In' rental nunii!efs at this !Torrent: there are about five inillions of i tons co sot - nett in, France. This, therefole, 'kiln the racy of l one ion of coal to 68-10 persons, in the ,lig;;;regite !Fie i nch population -- We may militiim, in !ithisiplaea, that the ratio of. , 411 ilescriptqins 01 , n6;l. railed slid consumed with in the 17nit t d States* the preent time,is one ton to five persiins. In break. Britain the quantity i s. a s i:: . d is sntn i ewhat'rtioce ihan lone top to each per-! That which is im stood to beifree of al There lap three th lishrtieats in Franca , furnishe lion for- sixty thouse In the year 1.785; minca wastonly. 225,, Fifty years after, 3,228,000 puts, tel drd per ceUt. Thu' snppliestO meet the upon tier domestic. lion of her, mmufac dande in rgecrve,to suit her po:rposes be no mil 1' it 4t worth whether q;,41 cstin toosive use vari In °MET to ascer ing a protital.le cod i Franco, 143 must h liminary An.d.fi(ct:Las,to French nines At tliOtreeerit t aremot at: hand la folloos if Coal of all deocrip't t i bracioi Qua hg rage price whet ton, i Average Price of t herti consume In 1836,!the• pticc the principil In 1811,; the I grelt : port o( Nantzs from the interip In tbe.aarne ye trict f of the Loire iupply Cool to the the mina, and $2, • , At Mac4eil, in at the'atine;s2 milesi • The Orkin! II public, Yclating to further knoiOt uu The priqs of through'out all Fr. ea as follows, per In 1016, 1.826 ~ 1836 . 441 Thii;table, ther what, }NJ: TSVLLLE GE 1111 , neFer idle, • I , tipa 116 bridle; . show liin soon, tli‘CoOti: , kc. , ! - , ry ' ; eall;Jobri Tyler, • in or burst his boat ; i" has seizsd us all WI I 'cUre next !ail : I • l ayi, kri.i ' . Cr TAILOR o rierus'al of the lion. on a Iproject for iuktly. Irania ]Anthracite. ry Friftorc . r.:.exceksaine f iramllßelgium, and that lirench:do not I,ke. 1 here ranCe, Ina not used.-- ieslor Manufactures equal, IthigliAr. But they want • I. ! , . • I=l , ort€l duly. ousatl manufacturing estati tleprlant upon its coal,: aemploynent in its produc-: nd laliouiers more. ihe to al produce of the French . E,IIOO - oris, i in 11339; the milies : yielded: flitg an:lucre/tie of fourteen hun t s s frra'nee atkinented her • ' finer ileinand,consequeol. mprolements, and the wen; area. , Frmce, too,-has shun. be prt i ?ducell whemiver it may low 'lieu can it be said, 'France Fat leaL inr,t a'' cheap • ,experiment. I• tbe troduced into more ex. tub pails of Europe!" I tain t4e pbAbility of establiAi ltradl between America an ye recoura to the essential pre; 1: I.- the l icei of the coal at I !lie . . l' ornent ) comp!ele official return' sr 114 '1833-7 . . - Those arc its • . I .:r, vii biturninow, tin- ite .4 1 . 1 Bovey . Coal, ave. .1, • prodpeed or mined, per . . - 1,52 '72 to same coal at the place d, in 411 France, per ton,' $6 07 s returned from 157 of sl'Bl nes I.os, per tun, manufecturing city 'and •as eat - plod with coal EBM for, per ton, r a large t•onipany; in the Dp3- nferieor,'nfit.red . to contract snine city for $2 28 per: ton . at 140 for ttinsportation, moking'at s . $4 68 per ton. t+ cost of the . Coil 40, or delivered 20 • ' ' • $3 75 per ton. trims, which hive been mi l itia the French 'Coal Trace; gire a ,thie matter. • . it'omin4is Coal, at "the Mines, were 7 ince, et the peziada annex. tun: 03 - American currency. • .2; 05 .du„- do: 2 00 • .( 713 do 2;.28 District of Loire. ofcrre, stilliciently, informs as of to out culcuvation--itho ptices of French coil delivered may coirripitie thcini'at our tei Penneyltradia, at the same p4ri , iIIPORTED 60aL!—.11:1 Frapc demand for this cOmbustiblk and domestic purposes, bas cnuld be. met by tho ruiner in while it has been fcinnd cheipe to mine, in the inteirior. France impcitted, in the year II From Erigland, 1 From Belgium, ! Total, Tu the year. 1839, France imp , Prom Digland . From Belgium, Prom the Basi4 of Saubr Rhoni'ph Prusiia, , In all 4 t En 1840 1841 I 1,500,000 ANTHRACITE IN FRAINCe.--iLn it ' riot bo ea. so tnetillat there is no Anthractte i , in France. pro portions though it does net exist in tha saute relative pro peitions to the Sittoninoue Coal as* does in :the United States, or Ireland or' South Wales, yet it is well knciwn in France, and :is held in growing estimation: quantity of this excellent fttel is net sufficient to ensure an ett.risive cessutatotion; M preference to the Bituminous sarieties.l . In 1836, there 'vent forty mines of Anthracite to operatir in that country, and now they are More numerous. The beds are thick, to some in. stances atrOve feet ; and the amount raised is 'snot's:llly increttet;g.' Fourteen out of the 46 e'oal Wales are now known to contain anthrtcite beds: iha average price! being $2 . 85 pei too, of both kinds of Coal. e r • Previously to that year the price at the mines was 05 eta, $1 30 and $2 110 per ton. In 1836 it was nearly - - 12 60 do :,the demand havi6g been greater for mansfectnring purposes. It is-certainly one proof of the estima tion in which thie useful mineral isheld in France, th it, while the aMonnt of Bituminous Conl,which was raiFed between 1816 and 1838, increased fourfold, the Anthracite mined within the same period increased fourteen' fold in amount, and torentparie fold io aggregate rekoneylvalue. During this time, tht average price, pei ten, at the mines or places of production, of allthe endue , . c:t3 recalited In ..Prance. was'. • ,N, In llit p, $1 67 per ton. , 4 , , 5 126, 190 ,“ . , , • ~. . 4136, 945 c.r 1 . 1438, 2.72 i., . , At which las t date, the a ',Trace price of mina , cite at the plac4 of consuMptionovas $6 07 per I ton. i ' . 1 • • Curd in othei; Conn I riciinf Yerve.—A;B re gards the capacity of other tEnropean cauntries to supp!y the manufacturing n!atiops, is proportion to the demand, .;se haVe 14space for detail, fur- Aber than that 4-43 knoW dila the production of coal augMents in all. Soot e of ihtm have coal to spore to ihvirjnoighbors. The in censed manu facturing hirdmiss of one re ion , createsia crentantl in another or the raw ni . terial ;. whilli some of these find it to [ heir interes; to, buy itrifuntedcoal for the present, !until their sTsterreaf railroadia and other means ofd internal corunication, new in iprogrTss,:' shall : lb matured., There - being at this moment t2OO Miles of railro, d projected in France, and to be' finisfrod in I.B42—while the German States haVe commenced a system of 28t10 miles of railniaps. Thus we find, by an official return, that the•Crial mice- of Prusa a, produced \ fil 1839, 2,:6,701 English las. Rhenish Prussi4 bad to spar . . • to Frtitice, irtllB4o, 1 - Also to Germariy 'a largo a no l t returned,; 'Belgium had to stisro to from her .ovin home coil tiQn in IS 10',. Franco sold to Belgium • Great Britain s tiad to spare cot!, in ISO, -1,61 Besides small coal not in In Belgium,;:the priers 43 cording , to the proximity . ofi turinefitstrict4, and of late impulse; from the rapid e facturing establishments at These prices, ip the year $1,50 to $2,66 per ton. have advanced ',to $2,28 an now no antics If,aled (in coa for these purp'ctsea from Ur "There are only two obs sending Atillrineire Coal Havre)• One clf*se s On Briti • ref .TC7IC,A tnpo NMI In 1778. the FrMich impot thity t was, .fixed at" In 1813' to Mit in creanQd to .; in tar ii Ivan frank per ipokilog.ram mes (r 222 lbs Since 11;37, thd, im port dtpiesere:ert alised'with those of thePtnglish, or,l , I fs . lid DM I • 2'o .4,froin the irioreosed_ coal, thero ere Jtolitt- H imported for , the err- Same policy is Stir later,,it is TequirepentiO Fi tiesim'poaed B vice di the ril4pufactories. underst IMIE Wish co! . • . - extended to . telgioln w.o l. hlthough. she buys from ngtarid, sells to Trance., These Imports from - 1 elgi o ni;lifti thoie - cf pngland, are annually increasing. In 1813 the. were 90;000 tone; and in 1839 were!74o,Boo toils or coal. Bri!tali4pori Duties, In 11§7,' 168 . 1 0di 1819 6 8 coals ton. 64 0 .48 a • j 8 42, S 1 0 ( 24, g foreign. 1 ". t. 0. 6 . •12 a colonia l . “Otr stone Coal mlght be delivered at Havre for eight dollars ti,fon." Doubtful; But woultLthe Havre merchants pay the Pennsylvania shipper eight dollars a ton, to 04 nothing of the irnp'ert'duty, when they could get for"much less froMlieland, and for, half that price, frdm the Welsh Oork i I Stone Coal has nevcc been higher than $2 00 , per tog' on board collidi vessels at Neatil, Swan. sea, Bidwell', Lagellyj L'oughor, Cardiff, Porth (10 0. Tel)11. Milford Hagen, St. Briley Bay, and probably Newportd P'rOm all these port; ex cept'i!ho latter, is shippep anthracite: - From New porV,is shipped the semiibiitnninous variety of coal; not much Unlike our Stony Creek coal, and that o r rt.i uri d top rnottiotri in Pern-tylvs , i:+- a To -1 ' AL ' ADVERTISER OCTOBER , 28,, 18431 t the mines ply which albriwa by analyaie,en inter mediate and very variable stage between .pure anthracite and fat bituminous' coat; eirCumatances extremely faveurable to its emplojinuint in numerous ways. .lehas Seldom been shipped jet Newport at a higher price than Bs, ti d. sterling, tor $2 04 per ton: Iln 1830 the'freight tol l ondonfrom the Bristol Chen. nel, a,Circuitous voyage Much longer than to a Freneh pert, used 'to be 14 shillings, malting . $5 40 in the Thes ; but it has been. looser Since that time. T hat, same year; Schi7l.:' hill coal !was retailed at dohble that price' In New Fork. The great bulk of the Newport coal, however, then, and probably now, supplied the whole south ern part of Ireland, in every port, from i.,imerick on the west to Wexford on the north. It also supplied souttuwestern coast of England; frern Bristol on the north to Eieter on the south; pay ing a local, duty, cpastwi'se, of Is. 6d. or $0 26 per ton. In 1838, the freight to both these coasts was 6i. Od., or $1 45 per ton ;.while;ita coat price at NeWport was $2 4 00 per ton . :—s3, 15, In the present year,,1843 this IsieWport ors Monmouth shire eoal,.has been ileliered regulirly in Co'rri• wall, for the use of the mining establishmentr in that qU'arter, for the cum H of Ile. which is, in !A. mencan currency,. $2 901 This m 4 be seen . in the weekly returns of prides, , in the bfining doer , nal. ', 'are, with _ Thos .• of time. of late years, for roartufactu more rapid t loperation. Fo to purchase 184,773 to 51,319 to 236,92 ,340,300 740,5e0 .d 0 156,300 1,237,400 to 1,197,500 From 'these Welsh ports, i are antriaallishipp ed • Cyr() millions of tons , of coal. In 1642 common Coal *al shipped at Swansea for slp : 32, end best selected coal for steam purposee at $2 16 per ton. At tlaisrime time, White Haven Dit4minous Coal. Was mild in Dublin ;for $3 12. . • I'As' regards Anthracite!, a fuel not fyet employed Out Of the immediate vichaity of the tegionjor do % enestia purpose, and only lately diricoiered to be I , 1 (applicable to Iron making, it has at i ,.no time been much, in request in the London makiet ; there is very little competition, and but little ever in the market. It has coinmonly brought from 50 to 75 cents per ton mere,.than the avers ie bituminous coals.'• Welsh stone coal general commands $5 00 and $5 25 in the ithamea. E ' A recent article , on this import/tilt coal field, says that ~ it is not even yet opened.", Re,ver. ring to the price at which this stone coal could be delivered in the French perts,..in esee it were thought advisable by England to permit an exten sive export trade to be 'earned on,[it is probable .that it 'mania not exceed $3 50, ekclusive of ex.- port aluties, If any shout' be imposed. ' . ..nglish coal has la i teiy 6een ;subjected !to a heavy export duty ; 8.3 i that it is almost impossi ble to introduce it into France." r i ENGLISTI t /PORT DOTIEB.—The English du-. ties On coal of all iaindsi, expeated,luaed for'many years to be, in foreignships, - 1 • .. 7 r dhliiion.l . . I ' .per ton. For large co I, i 17s gd.- sterl. 1Z egos! to 18 7 Small coal , or enim . . 4 . 1)1' 1 8 6 1 . 7_ 4 - 11_ 1 do. ll 109 inllB3l ;he duties were altered led los pm ton on both: 2 42 payibta by foreign shipping, betiduty free in British; vessels.:, I i ' Sior to 1834,' the tariff was reiimed, and ,the export dotiee,:to any place not being n Baugh possession, were gxedreis follows In Br vessels:ln For. vessels rer ton.; Per tnn. For lar.,e Coals,. 314d•—$0 8 11 16 s. 81—$1 62 ForculatidsmallColls3 484 0---1---02 14 1844, that part Of the Tariff was altered which subjected ;Brift l ph' Vessel', engaged in the foreign coal trade, to exportatton!duties. Conse quently for eight.yearii at least,ithe export duties weri,wholly_paid by fo l reign vesicle. In 1812„ by the re , ) gnlationsi of the last act of Parßament.: . which rea l ised the Previous Tariff, still further reduCtion took plaits, in the coal du tieSj viz : - F • For large cool 2e. equal to 48 cents, exported in British v;essels; io forei'gn countries. Culm and email screened through a riddle whjne lispiure not more than of an inch -Bann der, la. equal to 24 cts.expolted in British vessels or firreign countries.; i)ence it willbe seen that inl 'every revision of the Tariff, both of imports and exports, of Eng lantl its well as Franco; as regards coal,' there has ,been uniformly a rectutEon of ciptiei, for the last lifts-six; years, at least, The fivorable influence which, this liberal policy , exercised between' the lied c ountries, is manifested by the augmentation of tile French inaportslen the one hand, and the increased emploYmentief British tonnage; in that branch of trade,'on the Other, Esti the Following fig ures will best demonstrate: ' Average of the 40 years' importation of Tons. English coal into France, 1841 to 1843, '1 Ntimber of tons imported trod' Great Britain in 1834, into Francii " 48,000 AlScr, increased to, in 1840, . 304,000 TMal exportation of British coal in 1828, 355,800 *pc/ do •I I do ilB4O, 1,606,313 :he reader will Isen i ee abl4 to judge how far the assertion at-the head of thi4 paragraph.is sus tained. In reverse of thiS, he mill see that, where as; thirty years agoithe combinted English eikort, and the French impait duttesZ 'amounted ti no leis than $6 ton, the Whole amount now is only 48 cents per, tan for large coal, or 24 cents „ 0F.601311 coal j lr 6 300 L, " " mount ra r e 6. MEI 0,000 ▪ 6,300 " large .4 416 .6,313 ." 4. 1 luded in the rentri \a ' f goal [have varied an the mines to Manufao yqari received a great g4miatation fd:rnana • o'me end around her. 1636, averaged from. -ice that year, they d 153,50. 7 4 tire are, rqeeived into Belgium I Brittm. of oat phia to aces inthe way, fceni Made, e French impci.s On Belgian coal sti coaitl - Per ton. 10'. 14.1=32.46. I 1 =?1. C 6 . I 33 11 66 ti $l.OOl !That correct statistical infOrmationAs not al w r ayareadily attainable, even ',Where it has been `most ; industriposly . sought; for we have frequent e4iLleUce ; and the fact is felt by the sincerest t ad vocates for accuracy m detailal Thus we ; - occa sionally remark • ter* extraordinary statements given to the world. t' For instance, semi time ago, a newspaper of considerable cit,culitiop and respectability in Penn sylvania, contained a leading article, headed, "The itmerican Coal Trade—its Winit of protection." This article ontained the following p3s3age:-, ,We impose the trill!Ug (unpoit) duty of 1.98 , per ton on forptgo coal. Gret Britain, on th e Other haild, iatpdsee 'a duty (+upwards of :arm dollars per ton on foreign cod), and thus protects her own coat trade; by makinti the foreign article aquivalent to being contraband." This assertion .; is in singularharrnany with [the - sentence previ: (Maly quoted at the heed of tbif , i division of our sub. jet!. tret the case really stoiAl thus:- 13y the American Tariff of 1842,. the duty on For. eign coals imported into thb United States was ! fixed; at ; $1 75 per ton. By the English TAXI', of 184'4 the duties on foreign eosl importCilk into jEnglami 24 cte. per ton. Do from 01 po'ciiiies • 1,2 cm. do '.l am persuaded that Ameiican Coal, etc., map be disposed of in much larger quantities than at ;present, by turning our attention to tho nations of !Continental Europe;' , ' - A considerable Mass of faCts, those eseential el ; menu; in detamining t the feaiibiruy of this; or any other un4lettaltin'.l tins 141' c-nrienteJ itito the, •t • . . . . - : . , . . . . ' : " : I . • . .., . . , .foregoing pages. Admitting their general 'aCCUrs cy-rfor if the Otri..be untrue, all calculation is a• like futile and 'deCeptive,— it is in the . power of a nyone,l to judge for himself in the rostier.• and to arthe at a redionsblo conclusion. The que,ticn, is an extremely intere.sting one, especially to eve ryr Pennillvanian=.-every American; nor is, that interest alone confined. to this quarter of the France, ranking high mom; the great menu faciuring nation's of the earth, has a rapidly in creasing dema'nd for coal.. Hei mines yield her an annually augmenting supplyi,while at the same time, she is, for a time, competed to to her neighbors. From thence she receives large and equally increasing importations. These are deriv ed from the three great countries which have coil to Spare, namely, from Belgium, Rhenish Prussia and Oieat Britain; as our tables have shown. It is not presumptuous or unjust to say that America will not soon be in a condition to ertter into convention, either with these three countries or with any others in Europe; nor will she be , ca• . pable, commercially speaking, of supplying'other parts of northern Europe: On this subject it was said,; a year or two so, that ..a great rivalry now prevails, in foreign markets, between the English, ..the Belgian, and the Prussian coal. Coals are in countries, brought to bank, at a cost equally Modelate. In one important respect England has certainly the advantage over mher countries, inas much as the.greatest part of her coal lies close to the sea shore." • , . Puisuing this inquiry, therefore, we have calm ly to look to what may be probabilities in favor of, or tha'obstacles that will operate against, the es tabliahment of a European American Coal trade. The obstaclei to be encountered in this trade, and to be 'surmounted in the event of success. now and at all times hereafter; are the vast amount of coal M Eliope, es yet untouched, but available at any moment„; when needed ; particularly in South Wales an'd in Ireland ; the contiguity of those Coal regiohs or countries 'to the seaboard; and their convenient proximity to the markets. The time is not very remote since the fact Was' received with incredulity, and even limited pub licly by rho press and V many intelligent pebple, that anthracite really existed, in anY,quantity,in Great Britian or in any part of Enropc..• The ciri : cumstence that a substance for which them we.‘ . scarcely any demand, and which from time iiii memorial, had been rejected, or thought .almost inapplicable to the - useful purposes of man, had attracted so 'little attention at home, readily ac counts for the silence that had been so bing maim tainetbrespecting it abrottl. ilt certainly explains, reaionablieno ch, why incisi Americans should be as ignorant of he.sxistence of an onourmous a 'mount of Anthra ite 'in South Wales and no-small i , .., quantify in 'train% as thatt s..tiropeaZis, and even Pennsylvanians themselves, were quite unaware of l.he presence of net accumulations of a similar mineral, within their own l borders,'but a few years . ago. , , • The prevalence, therefore, of such bodies of An. thracite; close' to CIUMOTOI39 seaports 'unit - to the best Continental markets, must fur ages to come, contkinte en insurmountable obstacle to success fun trade ins similar pro'd'uctions; whieh happen to be situated much further inland, and whose pla. ces of shipment-lue three thou.:and miles more distant from, the market. The impokant fict that there exists as lane; if not a larger, amount of Anthracite in the old world than the new, so far at leastaz we possess the means of l comparing,' is.not withaAt its value as an influential ele-rent in a calculation of such a trade: fulfill econom ic view, conjoined with a comparison of fealties of production and transfortation,. these &cum. stances will not be overlooked or undervalued by• the praetical merchant and exporter. By far the greater bulk of the Coal in Ireland consists of pure Anthracite. It hat been but partially opt.' _ ed ; .and in fact, until lately inveatigaYed, was but very little known. It occupies several prolongA basins, - exclusively anthracite, in five or six Coun ties of Southern Ireland, Eevo'nshire, in England. hes a small Anthracite basin ; but that of Wales is perhaps the most extensive in the world. There have been many 'calculations as to the quantity of coal this basin contains. They vary from forty to fifty, and even sixty thousand mil 'ions of tons, estimated to supply the Consump• tion of Great Britain for . two or three thousarid years. With the exception of disnict at the eastern end of this. bisin,, where the coal is par tially bituminous, - or semi bituminous,-and co,rk ink coal, furnishing the fuel for the well known Iron Manufactures, this great field is comparative ly untouched and unopened. We have not 30,000 known of any comparison being instituted, as to the relative magnitudes of \ the Welsh coal Karin, and•tbose existing in Pennsylvania. It is of im portance to de this. It Will be an unexpected fact, startling to many, that this singloWelsh with its numerous gradatitins and varieties of coal, contains three'. times the superficial aria of the principal anthracite coal ,basins or Pennsylvania, united; in fact, for aught any one knows to the contrary, at the present tune more than all the an• tlatacite on the, ontinent of Nentl Americo. as• Let us ex4tnice the grounds on which this sert'ori is fitinded. ThAre have been several es. timates of• the Superficial, contents 'of the IV elkth basin ; the lowest ofthese, we have seen, on the authority of an Official report, estimates the area at 763,000 acres. The highest considers the coal extend over a space of . 896,000 e Pennegketnia Anthracite Regionei • '.These are usually classified in three principal fields'; but in reality, arc made up of several basins, the particular's - . of which aro net yet be. fore the public. • By a detailed statement:published by Mr. S. B. Fisher, a distriet.sarveyor, extensively enga ged in the anthracite regions, dated Pottsville, March 29, 1841, the area of the first or yettsvidle field, contairig coal, eXclusive of the external, Margin; of cengtomeratic is , 67,500 acres. The seooad, or Shamokin Coal . Field smaller baSins ad jaceot; ' 93,975 The third, or Wilkesbarre•re- r , giori, not repotted o y Mr., : ~ ... . ristior, but - used tcicon= . tainl T tri like a ner,: ' 75,525 a • , . t -.........____.. . . A l ma of anthracite, 237,000 acre!. This form of comparison, it is obvious, is by no means conclusive; as we yet have to apply to it the teat of the relative amount .of coal• in each a rea. IThe quantity in,the Welsh basin has been estimated at forty or more thousand millions of tons, SA was before stated. The great number of the Coal seams in the y Pennsylvania series, and the rrittleilt , lr tYrkness of several of them; will • , ME 44 iirohably go Lae towards ritincir g the, apparent inequality, through the ineciteln of the auperficiai rea 9 °WY. - What the 'exact . difference may tid 14, !hie teat. tyhkrit, Of cottlic t o th e only t t ei . , 'me, we have not at tond tktt data . for.determina . .. . . . Be this as it, , may, the reio l li - Merite ,and the coati ticatifity it f a Europe'sn Ccti:ltede, from the cad. tinent,t i rtsolVeti'itt,elf.like sill; practical commeii. dal miestions, 'into a Matteirif defiers:and 'ciantsj to he determitird bi the coe`Sn't not by the lapin: ions Cr the pr. judicei of ant - ,f, In' n Mornentorui queetian like this Oct.-at-lour, a the patribt weigh" • but as ;a f.tathdr i.. - thei halatiiid-; against the inter+ ests:of the renrchant.! f'.,-:. , lithe mean Oiattnic!i . 01441, American Arithrad . cites be 159 !milks from ,liet" - fthipping ports, end if theta ports he three tbititiipd mike froMtlif - EuropCan forts of ildliveay.; : , , While on the othei hand, idthe air rage diatatieel of a deXeri 'Welsh ports be only ten italics fienotithe canine of pro= ductioe; and if thedridi Anthracite be also readi ly i approached and all thi-*, are 'comparatively close to the Eutop.airi - trisrktla—the'cost of tart. ing being i :up,poied hi berritiiiter on both sides the Atlantic, Mid's!! expart tird iMport 'duties the •sanynn s each tiase SaM i S ! ill - Will le impossible td establiteh a potifilesle 'trade -iiii.Coal. between 014 Unites! States and turopk •. 1 '', ' ' *Let 'the Leninhiture of - o.qnsylvania appropri= nta from $3,060 to t5,:,00., t- with this sinallauatt 'I let a dompetent agent bur "'hundred tons of the beat seleetethAtithrt,clie,Coata gate, and a coal stove., The r agent with intiCoal,-mina( go to France, and di; bls u inos'; ii -6h the assistance of the mibistet, to ei pl .in, tritu4ste, and recominend it' in every way. , The minister, Win:saucier] to tat the people that this coal# air chesp as dirt in _ . many 'parts of his own century,: end that if the French Will but conseht to tiesitin theirs; it would be a vast impinvernear io than industry; eektifbrti •• health; and ec:Orfoiny.l' : - ..1: - ' , . . ' ' 't.To the auggt , sted ntissien'tir instructing Euro.. peal - rap the ert s,s well pittfe:exed, in this countryi , thrb.hila all its, various Modr;Sef apPticetion'to thd Ou'rpolcs of derriesti&ecorto'nny...no possible object; lion earl be uigri4; unless liy,a rigid economist ad this side. . Theinformationtio muchinetvled, and now propiisctltdbe do Istnt,Olki hestaledi.deselleg the grateful thanks of, shipPers of anthracite and owners of athhinntite Jamie. throughout Europe: It : i will he them ire aceeinnble whin aceornpanbrd with' • the aistirant, thnt we rennaylrpoians take thd ,'trouble and cests upon ottr,'4Ves„ white we throw' '',the bdnefits into the hands , orhur rivals. ' ' . • ' In ' eonclu-iUrt—let.these'elecunateneca two eire= . fully reviewed ; making!ever§ fair allowance for - unintentional Contraction nr 'itatpansion of the data we have here collected tocether. The reault, ISO think; will still chew; the d 094. impracticability of the project, on any important...7..4'6le; coffin:lendable; as may be the interifirn of'ihn,l Swarthy promoter. • :That the deo oestid,, applicon of authraCite if infinitely l better entlersiMuC•iii the' United Stateri than in any part of turopV'-'im one c'inhesitati to admit: That there is eien ti of anthracite itX ' Penrisylvanitt.to supply fore;ong Jim 6 die , de: - mamba of the northern cOO lea of Europe; id whom a knowledgi ef the pia, pr.:seethed of em= plOying it would bee real tile:r . ag, ti a truth ez quolly .undeniable. ,We SW.; dote tt.at th ere ar e . mountains of rich Iran ore td)lissiuri, capable of supplying the Pennsylvania fhoacealor . edlituriet; But We need it not.: We ea*l rig it ' o u t of out own ( mountains cher then: then - ,.. irtaouri can dell it j td u4 l ; and wit thereby emp*our own' defied in.; - destrY„. So Ish , o,'Onlese ::.OAste • hors finesented - ail te convince thd in'est: 4/dont convert to the practicability of a foreign coarorade, the European' ' pos4ss abundant resources gttbcir i own. They' can Mine, they can buy, sardetnnaell ensongst their neighbors, m@ mock as the'y ir . ritiine, without moi l ' ting! to the new world, for agr:a to some. t v : . , The ivriter:of the foregailintfinntunid'atlan need. scsn'ecty•ha' add 'a 'word for!hiiiirielf—oe tet,Xsy: that ' he can have no destine to enittirrete the Rollie of Paniisy Woofs resources,' pliftrinhirly of .I;i4t- with which, for ruMy 3qsrs, he te,,t":gie . en ‘ iiiligiately 'Alai ..1 , ~ ~ ... soet a ted ' r,l w so) et aseCettOy cogunercialone • , • ' andlon been an treated.' :':llS:hari not ireoght„ tab- ' ge4rausly,';ni 'help -. the ,leUdsbli eiertions of I 1 theie who strive to extend, orii!sominerce, and seek - new markets .fet.ptir naturabriOluetions. . It is not nowise; tic,e-tert4ti building the fatti-t't ' ric !attractiv'e:niiit 'has been Oi'tsCited to' act, first. I • : to tit down and relent the eo n}; to sr/amino well i- ' • . , ... into the dile. and to prove thiidt,shility of the fouio .,, , . I die i on ore which the comtnercie snperstruature is proposed tc be ereemd. : . - , d . . . - concaving . tlos . to tto'a. oi:6i:elide admitted by all Bien—mare especially hp' -N;mmeieiet mitts- , the w riter hoe not :permitted:4'9W to doubt; that an 'contrihulion toceerde' atOtter knowledge of= . thh r r imp:enfant atibject, wit' ';i4 acceptable, to the p, roes idlur.lialOy. note'reeleVi, , • • .- , ~, .. If intelligence,tperseverant and industry;. be , held essential to pablie mercantile success, ad to ' inifividual prosperity, in' no ceVittrj do these Atte. „ merits ah,euriptire than in trim; Without resatling '. to the influence arid .palronnii,eV• govurnmeete: .. , Hit Perinsylvneta Len an her ii;omm mil, - a vainly , . more profitable erode at apprcie4ating her , m ' treSsures, than ins the rnere'renchilg the raw mate. fiats abroad for the employ re tto of "European - pp. erritives. *stead of the hazzirOus'eiperiment of a foreign coal rind iron wadi , ' ,th,t futility of which (the formai , at least.) we haVe;ifcmonstratad, let I ' be l t:employ he r end end her ii:'itt at - ho ne. Let ' her line theh t , Schi •,' ooka of the Ailf and the 11 1. - • aware with faetor'es for .the feiiricati in ol cotton of American igEo-iith, through . o agency of Penn , syliania coal:,. Let her riot ne-iid away from 4irr shores theSe fruitful in.itertialifi her wealth and t . prasperityl i .' let hersurround.Pkiladelphia with . „establishments fir - converting, tha production's ' which Proaideoce has bestowdd.upen her so totm dently. 1... et lier - thunatirail' . :pround ,her thou; sands of Mtixtriv, and enceersAther home &Maar fictures, and prepare the proditefien of her indite. 'try for her own 'Population; fo'rther oeighbOrs,aod,,. in due tune, f at.theinernote reti ! aysef the earth:, '. The writer c.Mitemetd these-notes without any intention t.,f intrading his narrie They have, in - the progress of tie imp.nry, accapauleted so much that thei4arcritiyzb may peretiii!' e he dernan ded design him lor their design . Heattily die. • • liking annoy manS , criticism-4.4. - j ecing thattruths. mint or mercantile, tie soorieso;oer mined through. ' the needy of ayowed, withar . tlik'y of ficlitiiine adii • vocatce, he appands life nanip:Oltheioregoing. -- -. t RICH'IrV TAYLOR. - - P/idarfeiiiiiiri; Oen'ibe ; 1843. , • 1 '.. ~,. 1 ,„, , , a (IT 1:...-. , V e once referrcd tet ; fruesis as one of the greateliirorlileing CouirtAri of Euriipa, but have it,iiio than her jUstice Oi . :zi'i: the.arnouut.,' le. `' i ' tlt he 4ten that she lte.efis Itagwith other coon.; tries in tin; branch of intluAtis:; , • in the 20 year. lirecedini our ,"last rt•turn-I:4t for 'lB39—the quantity jk . rnincd increased 27 {der cent. In, the , 1 latter rear the amount of •C•ielmised was 2,442. 632 tong; besicli, , s near . 1,000,40 tons 'of lignite. nr Bove Coal. Tkis p*:opni 3 On 1..0nt3 ton of to• oil to four persona. 162,169 Piitecins were suppoo., ted by this branch of industri4risini from'. 364 mines. : l'lni exports aro : cl - rsii,rfiy. to iliiilencl,- FfEiliCe, inhontehltlavaria and4tio Grand Duchy' of fladon.-; , •.• • ~; •;•;•.:- - , 0 , _. ~.. ITI3O increasesi production oi:totoirscillain rend• nylsaitil' in ilivitlO year's pree#pg 1843, is at the rale of 1919 - per cent. • : : 2,t, - - • . • : The pod of kat.,Cri the 2i)ae4ra from iBl?ics 1€438—p26 perceat. :;;-... Ditto, of Prlfssia,ms hefore.strza, 1 . 8 19 to 1839 9 !272 porkcent.! ' r '!'. ' •- - . :. In 1841, the es aof Mittsh Cott% 'amounted 4 art., to 1,848,291 tette. •- . ,s,•l ' , • - • .. -;,:: In 1842, the everogo prietiof exporteallerge or "round" Cont,.(Bittuninous)%2l the ehfpping torte. was, 7rj—sl 68, and of, - eare ;Coat, Is. !314• :x{ cm's. I , - . _ • .. -
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