IZA The Deception at Etarristrcirg i i . -- Last week we copied the following - tram e , rir,,,To traiyers.-... Wereurer tat Profession , the legislatiie proceedings : . ,„ 1 - al se' n'tdemeo, 'to Iles announcement of a new tale Mn. STaosr. pre.'nte.l a pVill,on 01 tire 0W11G12. - « ttlit of Tioubtatt &11alev's-PraCtice Just issti;fl by 4 Coal lands, C,wil dealers. Mmeis and others. an 3 , t ;! 3 , ' R ' ~. sad i-,,,, es . 2,, , ay Brothers La* Boosseners, Schuylkill county, connected With the mining of . more than one no,hoo of tons of Anthracite Coal. ' salet 8a.4,e11,'A in-larpr of a tiimeral 'Mining Low. - ••••.„- We ht once pronounced 'it a bare-faced -re Military and Citizens Balt-The N. dec'eption, and the following letter proves , L ini.ntr• Copt. 'PUTT, will gme a-flail at the 1 Town 1121 i next Itlonday Evening. The newer" that we were correct. We knew that Mr. ~ _,,,,a meraber.a . the c‘gorpoiy- snit a is their Strong - was the pet iliflhe Stock-johhers and ; mew :r o eionentrip =dorm.' Judgingtrom pig es- Corporators ii the city-hut we avert. 110 I pefiericr, Ilge•e Who attendmay espeer a handsome prepared to 10-lieve that he would itsort to, enteitsainnent. The new dress of the Company, such a subtyrtoec to tarty al,:fll through Ile t . wilt J id,t an intere , fing as_vrell as, novel feature to theca - air. ~EVery- i iiention. it is ixpected, Will he Legislature. - Here is Iliefletter: vat to -render dee evening agreeable and pleasant iit ' cl ' Err " 6 ' ..4 ''' - .'• 2-: ' t I'''..' - ' to s.l pre-cut w nt lus ill most hkely he the 13.1 Mr 132NOtss - r) `' - ' 8 " I tooted the I. ", dance 01' the season. so tale our advice, lovers tit titions in favor or the Supp'ernrat to toe (:enera.. Alarm:nett:ring Law.' 1 find Ile4 names //3 favor of l the, •• light tantrwtie,".and Ca' .. it, principa Iv from Thaegtove Tremor/ and . Set/MI5:1, Hive,. sod 11'2 - names' from Phdailc. ph a, strl‘; thernse:ven. - Con! land essmer. , 1 • i IR' Torern I.,cenres.-We find the follow :4,, I,st .2 Taver n Lacennes. - franks! at the la.' , hair- not the Itme 4, enm the manes ItSra. nn- ' EvSih:e In' stop the BM in the . llou-e or I 0 Lare four:. la i.e l Ereponusa: '' 1 , MT. Cnsuir_ Ps dlf ,nr7. , 21. Ps:, , ''''"..'"l.q.,,,ti: county er , 'lnded. I . : , `- t -: n . r;l, r i• ' , 1',.! I.trrile-James:ticKont:ra,iir.urr 6,1 a, Niuhal 1 pow •r,p, , f il , !_e• .., , ,,th , 11.0 1.. ,I. ~11, a'••• M honer, JainesGough, 'it .6t. te - Johnson, John ' RA. Wit..t.ier., Est-H. l' •St , 1 perer,ve hv or 1,,,,,,r,„ ,,, •-•-•,. 1 , 4 , 'I - r" 11,11 1 lo‘d .li Rath. Anthony Dengter, Leonard HaSrley, \VI:- the pap,ri of Satinia, that the came 0: the reveal kept .1 ha,-, ,n the }louse unit' 1 rereiv"l In, in-: ham • Sfatz. Ihimel Hill. Peter Wall, George Selz.' . • strike.' lie the Engine crew. was' the supposed forination l'ours Tru:r :Sion:pier An Ilrmher. Mrs isirripon. Vi - m Geist, withholenk of the per cehtnie upon the Moutriam •-' • -, .SA i :013 If A I .IM - ER l'atr:elt Carry. ! • and Tmrnpot Cars. -, The respectable persohs, who cave Mr.. 0,,,, ,, f,,,,, , -I)an , e; Ito , .er, Rerruirg/p6Marher flaring prepared- the Cheek Rolls for Decemier - 'I tars, Seth Levi/m.4er . ' and January, I would mention that lir rout three. 112.or‘tr.r the above infrermation. Aare in, , ,,: -....! C/ a )r-j u nath,,,, J uhristm . NI c „,., p,,t,,,., lion the usual per coinage wan to I..al:owes! acid , L e t ,. mure ..,,,,,,,r4 //,`,. !arts -d/rreilv tl,. I'M-3.4(4,1,er Puleichley, I ft. fleurich fifteen per cent. was added upon all the !ileums n ' ' l',' s „ ', - , • • It.rt C., ri.t, -Iliqh limaley. Patrick Leinsio.i. cats with eight per cent more for such as went to revers , Is Ar en', V . honk it is due to :so:oinan Iten•int, , er. Jr., George Dougherts ' Adams & ileclzscher's - Collieries as far as the `me„ 11Aggfa, Iron hay isT con siderably l'n , ni: ~-Evan Cann, John Zehner. Michiwl e - matelots' books =heated the latter. li d. loon Lorif:, Joseph .13aushavrout There was alto added fifteen per cent upiti all censured by Earth} Cill7rs:ls, [hal,. l ie ,h ou id .., I, /, vilin ibre.,-.lahn • 310cLey, M. D Iler. the Trernout Cars. but - this I kre-mite .h0ua1.1,./ve gir j e 11 / names 01 the parties actin r e se t . h im ls•ri, J:.;•eph M Feuer. George Kau ff man, l'iall/An linen .illy per cent Yearn l inky. ''' a..., , . fo ci r , Thomas Long. John Marones. - - - A. t'. REA. ti ?.e pt- . i hrOrtlintlou. seirli. men unlit to be ~ ‘',;,/ Citaton Ihnsel L. 13,1.er, Stephen 1.4 -,.,it may be proper to add, that Mlt, Rye /5 marked' and watched hy. the t ommunity.- Ilnen'et,Jeremish Focht. , . fi., , ,,er Be•eugh--Jonn 1:: I eager,. Philip not ntmin th esermeot- th e Company. Thi n They of 'course have a right to their own ' K ..,,,„ . b e , ognaLura , ,l y e li. opinions, but they have no right to misrep. ` 'letter's wholly gratuitous, Plner,ore Tosa../np.-John Molt. ' resent the opinions Of others on a iftleStion of ~, . .3 ! ,`,:`:''.l - ;r ir tt - F: i l t i lL i t i c`ra ni u: l i e' l z ,ri d e e n t u n j r r . lires .- fitesdby the recentpubhcat tons rewarding the affairs of the Road. - - . such vital i mp ort ance , involving investments I's.•r. -John Brown, Jacob Kimmel, Jonathan . to the amount of millions-of dollars, in or. M ...e. , • Our attention has been ~, • ,.,,:i,n_co , ,,d (;h 0,,,. 1 ,,,.. ej ii,,,,,,,,,i, Chas olled, In this con nection, icy a communication 'in the Miners- der - to give them a eliaorie c do dispose of wine - ill,' j ftioma. eeitison. Donnish Bensinger, Eli true Bulletin, purporting to base been writ- lands at high newt - - iii St oc k Ji bbin g. and : l if' ; ' ,, e7, ~._ A ,,,i,,,, II wikon, 1 F liar... _kw, : ten by ”Aiii Engineer," to the employ GI tare swindling Corpora , ion.. No wonder there :h., 1 7 ,1,4, 1...uT I'r:eh:es "l' N A ... /: h t . r .e., i- , -. , \ l. \: r nzt its Ile ha ( . 31deen lyiteist.ine. I`,'est Brandi Company. We doubt it ex- was furl/ 0 tremendous cltori made to earls t.. . ,. tberling, ` - simnel ls- Kepner. cecalugly. If he -is, we can assure him that the Poll through the :•:enate, befrae the pen- 14 .„ 1 ,,.. Hi 1 1.... no proceedings of the -Strikers" have at any pie acre became nen t uainteejwith their decr y- ie. l i ; t a irer . ' - „ Da ra n h ir 2iy i }° ,- I ,: n e . roi C ria l'a 7 ' I ". sTlie°bri'ais;rß.qoj ra t c y , lime been handed us for pu bl ication nor ba ,,, , ,, uons and had time to expose theta. . t.t. Metter we ever been advised directly Cs their move-)• Should the Bill . ',Mort ullatel) p ass , ui- I,, :: . 7 i l ; h ra i e r r i" l .% '.' , 7 l ' , - , 5 . 1,1 1 . :,L 1 ""1 nr ,•,./ ( 1 , , ,en 0 r1 . e tir c : , 7,• , meats or "motives" as declared "at Schue I- eluding, Schuylkill count), by weltdisrepu. fan„., Les.in,:naNanna Meyer, Mary Bea, Saian• kill haven," or elsewhere. On the contrary-, table means, and in spite- o,t . our renion- ""itiltilre 10. h m‘ , , , en. H nrN V. s fen. Edniund it seems to us now,Tvierved by the light of strances,iit will become.aboolutely necessary Elli• v d.‘“ - Ke; e !!. ' l-:.lwit'filCars;,l'a . trick Itou,3bert , , „subsequent developinent , , that a studied re- for the People to take a bold stand and for • li.smei Ii Batmen John Bechtel. Joseph Balliet . F • , bran art q-Ileni 15ensinger. Joshua Pot serve and careful screcy, so tar as we are bid any, person attempting to carry the law ‘., concerned, 3vere imposed upon their proceed- into .rffect-dernanding Li, s . u.pension omit rti :T. , 4 l, :cirhilip ii er i .. 1-a : m t uel d llursti, JAMS'. mg.. We published the facts of ihe case as the whole subject -has been Ilt IIY Mvesuga• , I . i'Jrne-Cher:rs Grciver. ( ! hai i l ' es E qum;iei. is they were communicated to us, and our state- ted. and the People of ,he cuun:l have psiese-il , cob ‘l' Hummel, Peter Ilmbeiomer, Bowl Wen meats have so far. been followed up by es I- judgment upon it. No Legislature lia= a ' ' ''',ll.2/..7,,, ) ,--;,;aniitel Miller, Eh Fau.i.. Daniel ;,hence that seem - sito stamp them indisputa- r ight to force any law,pnylking if thei-hat. Frlir .., N .; , /,..' '-bly as truth. That's what we always aim actor that this act does, upon any yeatnt) , iii the face of the opposition of nine-truths ut fhwnr.h-1,01.:-.-Iler. Beni v Ilreanler Abraham at-what we aimed at in .this nartisular 'io ,tarice, and what shall ever guide- us in the the people : it is contrary Yo the spirit of our ~-, t. ; tt.. j i t a r, i :, , ‘,. 1 , tc , / , n a myl Tuldam. . . / 0, ,, n-lohn 'll . Ilebler: Panel I'o -treatment of similar cases. institutions, and SUbwergre of the very Fin'- . ciples upon which our flovErnment is louu- The cotese of the Journal has ever been ~._ ded-,1: ;.. a itionAtrous perrrrsiori rf Lez:ll4- to favor, of the laboring classes-not by pan- tiering toeurrent prejudices, and calling them roost,-the softly kind of le,Thlatiou that eau,- the "dear people" to deceive and betray; 1•u: ed, our Revolution: and when i'l is known by advocating measures insecure them fair too that such legislatvin was inSligaied he and equitable wages-to improve their euta• fraud, deception, and,all kind- ol legislative torts and to elevate their moral, mental and i log-rolling and villainy of tile deepest cli, e.. physical condition : while these pseud.). the People have the undoubted right and ptidanthropists, these demagogiug harpies, ought to resist it until !Idly inevestiga:ed. - m the assumed garb of •‘ An Engineer,"J We are aware that it 1,..a bold sianllio lule would soot"( destroy the victims they fatten" -but - it requires bold antr di_re mimed action upon, by taking , away the ability to p. i y to cheek the_ monstrous corruptions sugen equitable wages, on the Part of the employ- dered by the grasping. reckless, soulless and els: - foul spirit of modopiity. which is sweeping _ . ovq, the land, hlatrtMgvilniest everything it touches: corrupting thin tOuntains.i.ef Justice: buying up the corrupt la w-makercivlio .ei-Is the pious for a livinz, io, nu make money, like cattle_ in-the loathe!. catty, ring out Legislation into a mut kery and a lame, and legiolabiirs into mere puppets, who elatiees-at their Indillng 6it 311intr5' NM! satur4ay .norrOug. March 26. B. BAIiINAIt, rditoiand Prome"or C. LITTLE, Associate Edits* .1 THE MINE HILL STRIKE. having been shown the followmg letter to Mr. Wmor.n some thys ago,' we sohcited a copy for publication:, both as an act of , :ju‘ , -. tire to him and in further explanatton of the lattly mistaken cause . of the difficulty among the workmen on the Rawl: c, As„to the /1:1511:1UallUEIS 11l the cuthmunica uun referred to, about the propriety of offi cers discussing the rate of - wages " among themselves," .w.f would simply ask,—have not employers an equal right to discussamong themselves what-,wirgemliey sedlpay,as the • . - . employed to Olt...meetings and decide- what ~ they will or what theyivill not;talte? It is a bargaill between two 'parties, aid it is certainly. new ethics to us that one shall not hare the right "totfetermine what they will give, as well ;as die other what they wilt take? And ,tt ; an appeal is made to the Titbit: that a Conipany is oppressing the men ip their employ—have not he Company an - equal right . with the employed to pub lish a statement showing -that the charge of oppression is not well founded ? It was no breach of confidence on the part of the Com pany to,publish Ihe list "of wages paid -the men were the first to strike and appeal to I the public, and the charges made against the Company justified them in publishidg the statement iu sey-tletillee. There are always tivo.kiidel to every question. :It was certainly farthest from ourintention,in our remarks last Week, to take sides with either party, or to,i give _offence to any one. 'What we said:was, as we conceived, a simple statement of (arts, to account to The public for,the cause of the 's stake.'' and-the subsequent return of the men to work; and, moreover, we can assure An EngineekAtliat it will take more than i doe column of the Pidletirito convince us Mat -he-expresses any thing like.the general semi ineht with which our explanation was re ceived ly the men on the Road. The cause of the, recent - ,Mllirdity oat Kosii'turns hut to he just. what we stated it last week--the letter above imnfirms the stpright story we made of I hi- whole ntaur r.' ]tr. \V,LrFR may hive hisr faulkylio has _nut !--but vie areassured lv some of this heavy Operators on the West IlranSii. that hut 1 - i• his incessant application to false - less, and his constant and unsparing watclithl ness in'; 'everything that pertains to the inter ests of The Rod, the , eornprinv would have many mote complaintsL,lnefetred against it than 'at present. Hislaosition is by no means an enviable one, anti no man, in a similar situatidn: where so,-much strictness and punctual crscfpline:are reikujrcd,can without riersonal . enernies among theikuhin (lmam officers or men in Ms emplm, . possibility explains, in a measure. the secret of the late trouble. The discontent of a pu iron of the men: Cr: the •mistakeu cause be fore'explained; was takergraxi few vutsrd: ers,some instigated bypersonalmalice toward Mr. W. Rad_ °flips fur equally unworthy motives, and fanned into .'an upecYrlmut.re.-- One of these outsiders, of the first class .men tioned, was lately in •tlip, -Company, but pow, unf9rtu - natefy both fur himself and the 'public Gas atired. to the inanagentient of a nestsrpaper_ In this capa city he undertakea•to Work off some of his rancor toward Mr. Wrtnr.n. and, -- no doubt: pay him off fur certain treasured -old scores" - when they were together on the Road. . Private malice sticks out- too con.picuous :rip the Register's article of Saturday Co _this subject to hire much weight tog, unprejudiced men. The Writers Tilcati msinuation against the honest} of :ITi. - —that he had pocketed the extra pay allow , ed the meals the Compan) to need a refutation. If Mr. W. wi•Leil cheat the Company, he 1s certainly s.oiari enough to adopt some other plan than Oils. where the most casual w„tib! had to detection. LAIFOCO PORTRAIT 1;y way of relmhing the meinories of our il.ocoloco friends, we present below a few portraits drawn by Opposition artists. The Eastc;tl Argys, the Locdfwo oitTeri of North . 2rOpton, in pouring the effort io'ciomioate Mr. lirt.tcrytrr . 113 i 551, (the pre , 4 , nt randitiste for Surveyor Generll) : - J. PORTER EAAQZEY, ei Crawlota Com' ty, is named , bv one or two newspaper•eorms pondents for Surveyor General. He would do very well for WhesAry inspettur. li the "' Democratic party wishes to prosper. at mat ' iromlttote sober and limes: men—men of good character personally and politically " The Tackscn Democrat, now the Fu!tun Democrat, copied the above extract. and -add-, " That's the. talk! Besid,BLAWLEY has a. , been repudiated by the Democracy of his own couniy, and is connected with the rotten fac tion headed by J. E. 3I'FArtr.AND, of Cra w= -. ford county, sufficient in itself to sink soy honest. M3O. RNA ore exreedotg fishy polt 7 tscilans!" ;F TILE EirtlrEllEXT created tD this He gion by the announce ment of the unexpected re 4 and apparently clan destine passage of the General Mining JAW in the House or Repre sentatives at Ilatrisburg. has drawn largely 1 1 - upon Our columns this week and among oth er interesting matter, lotced us a to omit our . p- TILE GENEVA.I. LAS{ • T 111: CORRUPTIoN LEGISIATION 71)1 is n subject at tract seriou, attention not omit in thrq coun try. but in thed-lepresentati‘.e Government of England : \ An in vi rogation is progressing 'to Parliament, which show, that lathery and curiuption is carried to a yeti' great extent in pi curing seats in that in4s iiaation has resulted co fa, t.',, of I, zpiutn?iit s for urnbreied : !, It 1.1. also iiitimated that the number of expulsions Will be tocreasr d. In spead; nig of - this cut.- 'lee!, the Euroi•finrio , , very. prripeilr sib serves; that '' for the honor of sitting fa !hi. British Parliament, men, respee -table. wall stoop to amore' s nd trick'ery evert• description, tone beneath the •dignrr of gentlemen.'' Such hare hecn the d'eeln.. sures' made in thesourse of the investiga tions, that the Tr rnes pronounces the 'Ali+ system tainted ' with , fraud and dishonesty. antrsavN thatithe evil has brume Si, 7ellural and so ti1t.1) , 41.1i , , that it tno,t I,e pin d,rwn, Ofelte the representativ principle and I lie free in,tifutinns tot the. To oisli people pride themselves, ace '.lie c,irrup tion and dernotallition n•ht.:h I.,:low 'law train. Frotu a - work rvi.rii 1•4 u• d from If, Aleskrt. I.Efizineert, liranthO enthied " Potih"r i'llri•nati,." I,vq find the I:!7ttro..:< appended `llJfe author of thr work. Esq., spetit considerable time at 11'acbingiun at, a eoilirnitree-man. tvf believe. -;'ruing in rre. rent a repeal at the Tia aul 1.: 4 r and hid an excellex;ppportuaity of making blrpielf acquainted ;iv : 1111111e prat' :teen oi ow ineuil.ei, of Cong:res.q. ,After sumnunp: up q , lllle vrar:l;,.. fie 'as', There .• yet u lenie.im • co2.,,en gre,, but theitTre hopelessly le. rip•.0.‘ , 1•41 virtue may" ren(tia.l,ll) Wee •••tt iti•• •• d Thev'Thase •: ••• gin th, slighte•t pretence ol a They due mucl4 as lilt their eye. to the sm.,' .1 die. of thee station. The wo-arer the Idea 'hut unri any sway in E ;cr., h e.. real nature. designed kr TR, ed , and the member who v.iture:, • peak csi such subjects. or to ur g e such le.v.datioo. I:ll;e.s'lsr it. known to have some sped.al is,e7a, rded a. superset' weal. e .Cr and enunentl, veadan: Thcv pd, d they .lo despee. all •tirli a. attempt to , e cp r a the dimes of their oation and their oath of other :There run. 11 , 4 m Congress, thee. the -hcloro per ctivatde ea - trent of moral.l or IA or pubic virtue. Tile member% has c rePead their oath ht TM,. and ite•initled then,- Pei% es.of all public oNteal,on The, have ie•o've.l Goagre , n l,, a grand =roes ine varicie. polc parl,eft. which ihnuage tillt l llllll a. the I-turtrol_o! the L,f rts trea.airy and the rilv.nal (lonian, But the (1•1411•Iee and the ia.selocr doe, the c..stink nit all con4dors-oli to, the go. 4, wad 'ex11,1••• I _ ••- • mere Liken!. and I co; in,. he... 1. d by more corrupt leader', they Iwc..me servant. of .mpure and • raft, on , II tally studying how thet• may cr.o.ts 1•11111.1111,1 i 11t• 'We. flier the r11:14 GI -pu l l•iit• • .rioe To roh th, treasTlM of the United 6-1.1 .• prOene.• for u.•l nppr•tiritt!inii. a rphl..cry a..e't or may le en',:cd w - 4 it not for the ..tria - .kle to •zitin •del ‘re Of 'Me Where there is not enonzl. the k r c ,..! l e r a, mg. ci ea, ile.ediry wood •• • ••••,rt I.c ,wept of e•nitenl- And again - Vint .c Mir; ii• we 7 imil...r Ir. iii 1 , ,1 , 2ttetrii.l a , - rll7.lfileral.rin, iiiid ....I . v the, 1,101 . 01, ,:r'"0 . °o " . ' 1 rra. t...q ',II, rlirl ..17e, .7711. vil ...1,1 pr .n. iiii ,norm:l,,, 1. 7 13,w1 rr ' , initial...l to ...,..: iii,,,,,i ,j,,. r011:fe 47 51.71 Ibr I ii,1e.1N..,,e , 3 111 't • .• , 11 ,• 11 11 if tiroilirlil 1. , LOil .ii 1..741r77 ,silrii.ili ..I .1...1.1 IN i.“? priAr.-1. , 11 , 77 - 4. 1 7 -71,10 . 1.1 . 7 ... .17 :.p.... W.l brow on the prrifetrritora .1i.•1. ri .7 , 11. .•1 ~ . 71..71i, tiOri anti worn no WOlll4 1111: . Ihriii with • repitorri,ni IrOril I% 111 , 1 i 11,1.... 1., ~,,f ri,,. printentian %soul.] a!ifte •iii 1114 u,:.1 0 ..1111.1, 1,.,.• 77 . Tito Fit Litt - m(1 vi toast is published in .- . down..? the Empottutti as having been given at a eel !t is the concurrent testim“n% (!) an 1i 73, eLtaitori al St. Patrick's Day : there is more corrupti,m at Ilayisburg than Cr 1' ct a amoan—The Mine Lamor Law, at Washington, in proportion to the number, 1 , 11 , 1; , tri . :a t :1 . 7 . . ! . . , ..71 r V,.. , 1 , 11 ,,, e n T. , i , 17:n .r . e , f• . lanlowat adv.- pervading. as' It doe-. even branch of the We do not know WIIO'NII. CrNIMAI - uRn Is. Government. - ' - - . but we would advise some Naturalist to pro. - FROM ii IR R TSB I' 11.4 :. cure tinu. (he could be bought cheap, no , doubt.. and preserve him , in a hogshest! of We observe-that; by Ir.VOte of the major': Fririlt as a fair specime o of a "Rununi i . tv, the Commuter on Vtce and Immorality in the Legislature refuses to submit the goes. '! a vote , non of si Prohibitory Livior Law to Ctrs or READING CHARTES EtEc- no — Ns—The election held on Friday last for i of the people. Who are the Pommio t e t.:l fasiybr and other officers for the city of Read- Vice and Immorality ? Such a Committee! tog. resulted in the triumph of Capt.Dirtar. ought to he Immortalized in ou'r State—their i R. CI.I"3IFR, the regular nominee of the Dent. names, or at least the majority of those who -'43cralle party forillayor, by a majotty of 102_ directed the Report ought to be known to the t over 1.,11N S. H ICltAttPi, E ... 311, bills Whig of , - l'''nen h people. Can a man be a Democrat who re- fis t' is close work for the city of Reading, fuses to submit such a question, on the Peti.i ttoit was formerly ' 1 n . tion or upwards of 50,1100 persons, to the ; Item o ctane. of the strongest octane. towns in the State. people'? Is not this Committee encouraging , -a, , - ' ri.CLiT AIONI:IIE3T.—We. observe by Vice and Immorality in the State. instead of trying Co prevent it ?.. N. I one of the city papers, some days ago, that she artist engaged on the statue - of Henry -11:7 ; IIArkier room to talk io the Regortpr Lci ayi preparing for this wiser, fell from the this week-when we have nothing better to scaffolding around the limit, some 1G feet do and plenty of space iii our column., well , high, and was considerably injured. We • pay• our respects to that establishinint. We i hope this may not retard .The Work, as the I premise to do it in proper style, too, when ; base of the Monument 'is 'entirely finished, 1 and the caalinge of the shaft its rapidly we do undertake it—the public may depend on that, ;: . • 1 greasing. • , 1 , \ Ltd Affairs. -7.. i:ke,l,:6, John 'fipple, Limp"; Mc 31' lor, S Troutman, • haru Sun/Juan, tianrel (lab!e, Mows Ileilner .lamb kotoi man. Darnel Itre.sler Rtehard Heath, Mr.. F Wve! Es!wind., bLlah fletuunger. —John W %unmet man. Clark 11.1.3tessmi, Samuel M. Miller • 6 lOhlt K. 11s .Franol.Cfahnher Jr...ph Neal AM/Mani !loch. .1/..tohnin—Artlrur C Feetug. .V.l.l4,,,an—William C. f3srbour It' w.-f, s n—Sainuel Vont, . .V,O Cos tle—Charte!iligling,Jame•Fitzinatilon , , ILondetnoth. !huffy Wasner, John Dunes adrlmou to the al.lo‘e we Lase proeurett a 1/nt 01 IL. looennes bred under atlyrneturnt, and reIM.S.! svloeh 'in as m r, k Herb undesaut 11• , 11,—(• h r:e, Hartman, .tiventl I: , .t.l—tlanuel Rent;, nutter tokusement. , .Reber, Andrew tillmnre, Jo /' :.•—("!u,-ban Ilnerter, Lest Feller, Jo r 11/tunnel o -r. 1:11t. .to i••• /-1: inn,. du vv.— I r..ulri Zerbe - Ja (74,, —John Buz Hoch. .10 "retnple Jo S-viral nrw Lirrn•.•.. were grAnlrd wl.ll-11 ilex! Week :i7"--P1 oft 1/m 1., 1 4 gives anuillyr ruler al u,. Town Hall , Irt;.Tist 0 n.t Enid Magic tricks are lVOrlii I.l4Mintrr ills time AFFAIRS' Sortpty -At a Meet .a IL,. In-1 Ili•t week, il:e tvliuwnng cho•ril tor Ike IVOr 6'ol- M I.N P..uri IRIP CAR CFR . 1 rct , Pr ereide Mtr.. 'V It U1,,1 I,noN, Mics-Dri 111 \ TER , Trea• •••,r, 101,[1 r..urter :1 4 erretary—Mrs F.. 1 I.ll,rarion—M., Maniaa Env., .Mona p.r!--MT.4 1. izan - eth NieNeal, M ,lane f ter. F. L-vre.r, r. Mr, E. Du!.l,. !.1),11 Margo rt-t ii:M3;4.1.,n: 24,4 U F. LauTnaore, ;qrs. it h Browne. 11 u. L Lnulerburn. H Lejoderbtirri Mr • Wm. Mi• I/ Spurr, Mrq Edward Den fimlon MD , (.Imileatl - Report pt the Board .11 NTanagers (annual • pn,../nrnel I. or tollow. • rhe heard of Managers of the Tamaqua Fe Ildoh• !!!,,e1.111.. mini I, that they have reerived the •mo ot .ctt, dollar. and - ion% ernia doter lion- I ',void% Elotuers have been teed to puicha, • ltd-h• re-tome nt. Rvent) relit to the Coin)- ! 11, -••• oov. al Vourville and twenty dollar. and for ' 1. eeut , leaner. la. The Treo•urv, to he used whom tepid,' A !•.;inuottee of Indies have visited aft th e I ono., to thir place, anal all who were found de-ttzter. and W`ditag to recent the Mole have -been , oppoed and d there are any still of hart no have hot been tonna ti thaCorunnntlee, tuck 11.4,1 of Mo. Mtritdo, Ei.ms, 1, kor•on. bn -peaking t,,,any or the Manager. The Lanto•-• Fel Oro then heLsroett thank', to the memlrr- Inn Ise! ~ l.•,„. an d linpr when the call ell tie In odom in meet with the Fame encouragement t s, cleln. to tire' :rep our noi ',dlr!l,l,-11,11:11h,e1,,,oil , rupplanl Ilible•, then .1,-• •1-1 111,1 and then, If We hare any 1:'1.• 1111E1., to wrld 'to the i'erlriPylvicea .un ho.adelplea. We toetiVit lt no genet - al, u t elei-t0,..1. a,l !Who contrdatee to the 1 , .11J- th , L . S. , •et•,, become members. The I.o• Me. tell ea!! on o': memberi..at least twice a ye a r, to r :',,• .leito The Society a note firm'', r-dal. l , t ttli,i I nn It/ ..•tir arri•iance .hall not . „ 111, ou::14 E lerl ton. —The Election in t.I 1,1 %reel,. twilled in the • ••••...• ..t I. iovi tog etteere h.t the efilumg -Corm ii ,, c•••—E A Whahher I: A C. :‘tny,r • .11.41 tun.P. .1 . t••,- Ionr• reFrtin! .4 , ridrni. 015 Thtlittlay 1...0n .1 Ann.-LI John I‘lcliougah uhnnc fourteen teAr...l a4e. .1) Ralelitle'.. Slope had h.% Ir-2 1,-1,91v .iniothed An - 11)1111110n to rumen,- kJ! hrsore the ..i.wratloo could be. perh,nird ,:n t. MINERsVILLE AFFAIRS •r a B , r.tugh Electron io MicerSVille. :.,•t weeL. the to;lowtng °dicer: were 1( s , l /11;—('htrf Burge...— 11L•111 NI. Tr,/,/ (:,,,trtril—Witham N It • h.°. .frteph NVeaver end WiTnam t ' r,Ale—W,lliam T. ge!lt TroJ.urt , —New• ri . 4—T T Jrnic,n. . And,. John Witztnstn. Ler. K ag • A Wouinr I::ITERPRIEE.—A Pros petuus 111 another column announces the forthcoming of a new paper at Schuylkill Itaren, under the title of the " WEEKLY In - 17,-fa "•—to be published by Mr. Jotus u•.>. late Foreman in the Miners' Jaurna! (Alice. Mr. R, has every requisite necessary for the kn:ce‘s of such an undertaking, being a practical Printer and possessing industry at it ibwoitou to business sufficient to secure tb.• ei,nfidenec of the community in which lie . is about to foeate. Schuylkill Haven needs paiwr, and eta erti7rws %twilid fed grateful for sii hellaieial an enterprise in their midst. We commend Mr. R. and his new paper to a fait proportion of public patronage. !MEETING OP THE COAL OPtRATORB or SCRUYLKILL COUNTY. ' ..... PorravrtLe, 21Iurch 190, 1853. Pursuant to a call - of." Man; Citizeni," published to the Minos' Journal Of thisdsf. a large and enthusiastic meetiogl assembled at the Excrtaont Harm. r On motion, Ja.sits Sti.a.tmasi was called-to the Chair, and the following officers duly elected : John Pinkerton, ,Wilfiani Nice; and Jona than Wesley, Vice-Presidents; J.M., Wet li erill, E. (1. "Parry, Secretaries. TbePresident stated the object of the meet--1 mg to be m oppoae'-the extension 'to Schuyl kill County, in the Senate of the State of Pennsylvania, a law, entitled a GENERAL MINING LAW, which law had already pas sell the Louse of. Representatives of the State. 00'mo:ion of S. Sillyinan. Esq.. a Com mittee consistiog of S. Sillyman; Jeremiah Reed, John C. Neville, lames M. peony and William Wolff, were appointed 4 the Pres ident, to draft tr. Preamble and Resolutions, expressive of the sense of the meeting. During the absepce of the Committee, on motion of James H. Campbell. El' 0. Parry deliserek*l? address. exhibitinein strong terms, the evils that had fallen upon Carbon add other counties by the acts of large incor porated mining companies. and those likely to fall upon this Coutfiv- r The Committee on Resolutions returned, and reported the lollowiag, w bichlwere una nimously adopted WHEliteiris, We.-:he Citizens nitd Coal/Op erators of the Schuylkill Coal Region: have heard, with surprise and alarm, or the pas sage of a GENERAL. MINING LAW, melu ding Schuylkill County ,through the Rouse-of Representatives ol , this ,State, Axn 'WHEREAS. The extension of such a law to this Couuty, where individual en= terprise has expended millions of dollars would be most disastrous, we hereby mildly, temperately and firmly demand Ireim the-Le gislature that the law aforesaid will not be extended to the County of Schuylkill. We refer to the past history of the Coal trade to show that in so other portion of the great Cioal fields of Penns) Ivauta has so much -been done for the interests of that trade as in Schuylkill County, where, and where only, individual exertion and enterprise were bro t to bear in lull force upon i t; and' we chal lenge either those concerned in getting up wthis law , or those portions of the Coal fields ere Mines are worked by Corporations[ to show, by competent proof, the superiority of a corporate as stem over individual enter prise. ‘K!.. assert thaflle experience of the Coal trade 'exhibits, beyond all controversy, that where the Coal. as in Schuylkill Co., is mined by individuals, the population increa ses iu two-fuld ratio--the value ul property doubles and trebles itself—the general 'pros perity is four-fold to what it ii in, those re gions . where the Coals, ironed by Compa nies. n , For proof of the first, we refer tour Hon orable bodies to the fact, that in 19'40 Schuyl kill County contained only 29,001) inhabitants and in isfiti, so rapid had been the increase, owing to its immense trade, thecensus show ed a population 0f1,0,060, and is .now 75,- 000—a larger increase, we believes than any other portion of our State, not excepting the City and County of Philadelphia, while the population of Carbon County, although the Lehigh Coal Company, and other Corpora tions have been Mining Coal in Mat County since 1829, just Sr years earlier than it was begun' in - Schuyl k ill County, has not yet reached 18,000. 2d, The value of real estate is rising as our population increases, and now it is al most impossible to purchase or rent houses to the Borilughs of Pottsvilly, Mtnerstolle, St. Clair and Tamariva, and Coal Lands have risen in value of one hundred - per cent. in the last five years, while in Mauch Chunk, the prices of real estate have beer. stationary for years. sod the price of Coal Lands, being held by Cumpantes, cannot he aseeriaiued, or the Town Lots are soldson ground rents. :41. In places where mines ate worked by lneor porated Com pays every I long -is done, and evert branch of business connec ted therewith is carried on, in the name of such Company. or is controlled by it. -The Compass has its Store, its Machore43hop, its Carpenter and Blacksmith ,Shops--nay, so far is this system carried that, generally, where it prevails:. a regular tax is levied by the company on each inhabitant, for the family of the men in its employment, to pay a physician, (generally some pet of the corn paoy,) while we, in Schuylkill, have our County dotted allover with prosperous towns filled with store-keepers, tradesmed, median its and professional men, all tipio,g business .with their own private and iffflivitlual capi ta(, energy and skill. Again, IA at the working of the two systems io anOver point of view. The Lehigh COD' Company cob menced sending Coal to market in (8220, and from 1933 to 184! the .trade was tilmosfsta tionare—about an average of Ifril,lloo toot sent to market t early. During the same pe riod the Schuylkill trade nearly doubled. hit in 18::3, :252,917 tons were sent to market, and to IS4 I , 584,69:! tons. Last year the Lehigh Co. sent 1,1 l 1.021 Schuylkill " 2,519,193 The contrast is striking, while the Lehigh flegion,with all the advantages of stock and scrip, and from its commencing :n send coal to market lour years earlier than Schuylkill, .._.. yet owing to the impulse given to our trade We extract the following paragraphs from . ,by individual enterprise , skill and capital. he• Florence correspondence 01 the Rostoa ' s There is a dirty lookin vagabond here, otherg We have outstripped die Lehigh Region over 7 artier: 2`ir) per cent. ' An investigation (if all the coal fields will show a like state of dressed in a lum while robe, made like au things to es's:. old lashioued night-gown, that has stood for . Since I:: , .:Pd, every sear we have had to re three months at the comer ul toe of the pew- silt thrtincorporation of Coal Companies for erred, streets, with a greasy Nix iti one band, tbis county. About twenty years ago appli having on it the print of the virgin, whirli cations for such charters were pressed in the he holds out to every man, womatu and child, , Legislature on the ground that individuals as they pass. to be kissed. Some comply de- . could tint develope the resources on this Re vutfily ; others, particularly the neatly dres- von, and a committee was appoosted to to ned ladies, make tip horrible grimaces and ivesfioate the matter, who reported s - through trt io escape,_but he pushes it right-at their their chairman. ,Mr. Packer, rigaint.l the lips ; and many give it a regular Protestant granting of the charter-asked for, and stated gee by. Upon inquiry, I learned that the man in their report. that they saw no'ressou why is stationed there to beg of the devout money corporations should be erected to inine coal for masses for die relief of souls,in purgato- any more than to farm land. That experience ri ; those who give being allowed to kiss the has verified the correctness of that report contribution box; which has been blessed, or I will be amply proved by reference to the ac contains some relic. compant mg table. Thai the present opplb . . - reOZIUTONDISCZ 0? SUL 10111:15 . nivitvar..l • Pau.Anstrisia, Morels 2141, 1833. Sin :=The weather the past - week has been exceedingly mild, and our fashionable prome nades have been thronged with youth Imd beauty. Toe gentler rex were out in utuniters--Philadelphia can justly boast of the tesuty °Cher daughters, and I think can el:wile:iv, a comparison with any city in the Union. Such weather as we have had the past week has been admirably suited to bring out out beauties. I can assure you they have taken ad vantage of it—and he, %eb b would not bare enjoy ed pleasure in a promenade on Cliesmut street the past week must hare been—ol,rfat.,. of th' worst sort. CM. John J. MeCahan died on Saturday boat in this city He was a prominent member of the Oemoenitie Party of l'hiladc:phia, and quite a sari °rite among his political brethren lie has orseupi, eci reveral important statious, and wan more recent ly -scut by Governoi Ih ,r-re 10 Europe in reference to • OommOnweahli Loan The trial at At rut a Spain, for the murder of the two ststers in South wark. was eetnineneed on Monday. I I presunie the ma) ~ril of sour readers are liegltalated wish the part,ulars ~1 lliw,murderl. The most intense ex eiteitsmt prevalls ihrottaltotu the city—and the peo ple hare a greet . curiosity to get i glimpse of him.— trowel is ~great that the pollee (Akers hare to tersart to canons devices to get hint into the Court room—some of v. hich are laughable enough Ziprlng appear. to be afraid ot the crowd—(l rup pn.e he has beard them cry out "lynch him"--they fn it daily) then the bill of indictment wastrel, he answe.ed "Not guilty " It is the general rpr moo that he is the guilty person, nevertheless he al). pears to be quite compo-eel, and charges the mut. , der on his son—while the son is the principal wit twos against his father. The story from first to last one of horror. The result of the trial is looked fir with the deepest anxiety, and the excitement seems tit increase as the trial progresses. Madame 11. Sonur ' .i and her company. have engaged the 'NA , banal Theatre, and will oppesr - in Opera at that as , tablishment on Monday next. She has met with peat success in New York, baring played for thirty nights, the gross receipts ot which, it 'silei t. shimmied, to Sltt4.o(lo. .It she meets with as arear sueee“ in this city 1 presume it will be entirely satisisetory to her Our theatres are all in the toll tole or sturess, and - the lovers 01 the drama hare the opportunity ot scones-Me nightly m o st excel lent pertornianee.. -YOUNG Axv.nic s " LEGISLATIVE From-_the, published record, of our State Legislature, we glean the following, late pro ceedings relating to the atlatru of this eoun- SENATE.---31n. llENoni , .vs presented a petition from Schuylkill county, for a change of the law licvnsiug beer houses. MTALLANI , called up alb:Rase bill changing the place of holding the Borough elections in Port Cliutoa, Schuylkill county. Ma. Ilr.naittic called up the bill to incor porate the St. John's Evangelical Lutheran congregation of the Rarough of Pine Grove, in the county of Schuylkill. Also, a section changing the place of holding eleciiims to Rush township, Schuylkill County. Adop ted. Mx. BARNES presented a petition from Schu01:111 county for it Prohibitor!, Liquor Law. MR. HENDRICKS, one from West Peon township: Schuylkill county, lot a new Schott District. Also, one from the Borough of Pottsville, to extend the limits of said Borough. A Ism three pet awns from Schuyl kill county, in favor of a Prohibitory Liquor Ale. HANLE!, of Vaene, submitted a joint resolution providing for the final adjourn ment of the Legislature uu the 12th da!, of April. 111,,ndav, the SI'EAKER laid before the Senate the Mutual statement of Ille.alralfs of the Little Schuylkill Naargation Rail Road aid Coal company. 1k iirkbw presented a remonstrance of citizens of Luzerne county against being included in the proposed new county of An thracite. M. Iltst en it's called up , HoUPP bill No. 271. relative to t he of Real Estate td S. Thuinrutr, lat,e of N•huylkill county. HOUSE.—Ms. llAN'aga pre,euted a peti tion of Clte2caa of Pottsville for ilie repeal ot part of the law extending Market street : re mucistranee el citizens of West Pella town ship. against the kiniation of a.weriaiu district ; two petitions signed by eighty-nine cuizens of Sehuylkill county. for a Maine Liquor Law there of citizens of said comm, in favor of a geu.ral tntueug law. resented a remonstrance: against Anthracite county. !Air. rp,, NALL presented a bdl to rrect a n e w c,,unly. It, re called uthrJette, out of pail , if and Luiernr M \VA rrt,t.l ul presented two priiunns„ „ signed 11 thirty-fon. voteN ai R town ship. to favor of the new county to be ca et! anthracite. . • HA Wit. it, fitte of the town council and citht.ens of Pottsville for the extension of their Itorongh limits. Slr Erischon prt-ented a supplement -to. an act entitled an act to incorporate the vik I lane of Port Carbon, in the county of Schuyl kill. into a norough, approved the 23d April, 1552 ; relative, to the election of township officers to the township of East Norwegian, .• - Schuylkill county. MR. Sur - Fri:moved a new-section to au.. r thori7e the executors of Pr. Jacob Wageu seller to sell or lease certain coal lands in Schuylkill county: which was tigreed to. ' Me. Diormow presented a lull to Inconel - - ate Port CarhOn into a Borough. llorts;, a further supplement to . no r act to incorpotate the Danville Rail Road ! Company, passed and approved the 10th day of April. A. D. tslu. MR. IListsteti read to place. au act to erect part of Union township. county, tutu aditiparate school Dt , truct, to lie called Catawissa &strict. ROMANIS)! NT HOME , Educated Italians, I find, though firm Ca- cation, to include, Schuylkill County, origi tholics, are as irreverent in their mockery of Dates with that class of speculators in coal these ahommations as the most sceptiCal he. lands. and for the purpbse of issuing stock relic. In the church of St. Mark there is based do the appreciated value of such lands, one of those terribly agonizing images of the who have heretofore made- similar attempts, suffering Saviour, which if tt awaken any Iwe have nu doubt. This argument is one emotion more powerfully than acuther, , strengthened front the fact that bill one or it•is that of disgu.t. It is in a tabernacle two persons actually engaged to mining coal with glass doors: the interior is filled with are in favor of this proposed GENERAL offerings, the aggregate value of which iv MINING LAW being extended to this coon. very great. They are mostly sacrifices of fe- ty, while onwards of one hundred persons, male vanity—ribbons, jewels, itc.;• knives actually and largely engaged in this business, that hare done some crime are sometimes to are dearly hostile to any change ib the law be found. I counted more than twelve ;on this subject, believing, from past experi. watches and innumerable silver, medals. etre, that no such law is required for this There are magnificent pearl net klaces„to- . county, and that the Legislature shbuld nec• pares and other precious stones, and puma- er grant a charter unless it is dearly sails tarty a very'valuable diamond necklace,whieh tied that the business to be carried !on under not very lung since occ a sioned great scandal it is beyond the scope of individual enterprise, to the clergy of this church. energy and capital. It seems one of the monks was in the ha- , Therefore, Rewired. That the Cpal Opel , bit of confessing a lady, who finally conks. ators, Store-keepers, Miners, Laborers. Me sed among, other sins, her lave to him. The ChaniCs. iluatmea, Professional-met) and cit, et-tansy:epee was—as coital. In his grate- izens of this county generally, areiltogetlt tude he was stupid enough to subtract 11,,, er opposed to the v.:tension of the OENER necklace from the tabernacle, and present it Al. MINING LAW to this county. to his fair paresioner. It was missed at oucc, R‘volccii, 'I hat we aye, equally opposed to but nu one smpected a fluty father of befog - the grant in: by the Leg,filature of any Char the thief. Some months passed without a ter to any Company for the purpos4 of Min clue,.until at some fete this lady was uoticed mg Coal in Schuylkill county. ; • to wear if necklace that greatly resembled itraoired. That we believe the p'ttssage of the lost one. It was w e ll k nown that her any •uch laws would materially depreciate furtune would not permit such a purchase. t h e va l ue o f our real and personal property, The police were put on the scent, and finally , would be 111111009 to dur capital now invested they entraped her into a confession as wham , in the coal and other branches of tra d e in whom she received it. As it ww, solely au ' 1( 1 , e „, in t y, wou ld break down our, present alba of the church, the necklace was re- pro ,p eni , our population, and in place around the neck sit the wooden Christ, , the end drive eves} man who desires to and the Priest scot off " probably to Place make his living independently of th'e control him out of temptation." tif Corporations out of our county. Reielred. That we believe the LEVER. At MINING LAW. was introdticed into the Legislature under its present harmless name for the purpose of obtaining favora ble hearing therefrom, and disarming the op- position which the persons getting it up well knew it would receive, if it was intro duced as a direct application (or a Charter for Mining purposes for this county; for it is well known that the people of this Region bave.been resisting successfully all applies• lions for such charters for upwards of teen tit .years. and that any law for such purpo ses would always receive Iran our citizens the most strenuous opposition. Resolved, That we seek no legislation on the inbject of Mining Coal. That what our citizens do want oo this subject is,. that for which they have earnestly and determinedly battled in our Legislature over twecity-two years, to wit :—TO as LET ALONE. Resolved, That. Jeremiah Reed, Samuel &Lyman and John Pinkerton be a Committee to prepare and circulate Petitions for signa ture', to be presented -to the Legislature against the extension of this law-to this county. Resolved, That James H. Campbell, J. M. Wetheell, James M. Bratty be a Committee to proceed to Harrisburg, and resist by all fair and proper means the passage of any law on this subject for Schuylkill county. • On motion of Mr. Campbell, it Resd red that these resolutions be published in all the papers of the County, and e- (rimy for• warded to each Senator u 4 Representative in As Stitt, loirillature. L . % TFLEGRAPRIC.- -The following !able exhibits the annual receipts of "The Mag netic Telegraph Company, - extending trout Washington to 'New York. which was the first organized in this country • From Jan 117. 15111, to July 1 b 4,1:t29 77 • July I, 1846, to Italy I, 1517, 1:1,510 :18 1847, 1545, 52,252 81 • 1815, ' 1519, 1 13.7,7 (II . . 1515, • ) 1 3ft0, 1 , 1.391 98 • 151,6, Ibsl, 4. . - .,131 12 •• 1551 15%2, 103,900 Bi Tntal amount ret,elytt. lup to , 1M,C41 42 The number of messages sent over this line in the six months ending Dec. 31, 1852, was 154,511, producing $68,493 23. 0:7 For the collection of the Revenue at the port of Roston and Charlestown. IGS per t sons are employed, with the following sale :—Collector, 5t3,400; Naval Officer. 65.- ) oust ; Suriiyhr, s4.9twl; two Deputy'Collee folll, $2.500 esels ; one do., 81,500 ; 26 Col lector's Clerks, at salaries from 81.800 down to $1;600 ; 56 Inspectors, at 34,095 each. Da- A general railroad law has been pass ed by the slissoun Legislature, which fixes the gauge or width between the rails of all wads to be constructed in the State at five feet six itches. ~. 0:7 F4rs da has a white population of less than fitly thousand—smaller than any other of the thirty ; one Suites—yet St. Augustine i is the oldest town in the United States, hay ing been bounded in 1561. , irr has'esid that Geo. Scott has determio ed to :mates the headquarters or the, arm y frog Wi.‘Shisillm to Zit*/ 'rink. Addresses were delivered by Jai. 41. Camp-. bell, Esq., Rev: Jame Neill and John Ne yule. Es, the latter of whom moved - That t he Chair appoint a Standing Com mittee—of five, for the purpose of obtaining information from the Legislature, as to alt matters relating to the County of Schuylkill. James Neill. Samuel &Hyman, Johu Pin kerton, James M. Beatty and Jeremiah Reed, were appointed that Committee. On motion of Samuel Sitlyman. the Presi dent and Secretaries were appointed to ad , dress a letter to our Senator and members of the Legislature. communicating in hricf the proceedings of this meeting. On motion., adjourned. [Signed by the Offirers:l- REIIO!IBTRA,NCF The following Remonstrance, 'setting forth the reasons why the extension of the Gener al Mining Law to Schuylkill County is op. : , posed by our Operators and citizens, was unanimously adopted at the Meeting repot.- ted above, and has since been generalls , dis tributed for signatures: Toth' , llohorable,tl, ours and 11,u •e Rep .resrmtattuo.l of the C0nen...m.c....111. or Pr. , .. , 11- I.IIJ. to Geurials,ol.s.lsr aver . The undersigned, coal Operator.. MinelS. La borers. Mechanics, and Business Men of Sohn.' • lilt county, do moo eanteoly protem against ill; passage of t he Amendment to the General !itanu factorms Law, extending it ro as to include the bfining of Coal : and we make this appeal to your honorable bodies, n o t t o puns rai d amen d ment against the wishes and against the fnteresl. nt this Counts. Should any Of the other Coal Mining Camille. 01 the State desire such an enactment, is not our purpose to interleie--we would, nn the contrary. sav, let them have it. &the% ask tor it , but for Schuylkill county we. would ask—and in the name of the people of -aid County, we demand to Le let alone—we demand to he exempted from the operations of the taw referred to We would respectlully offer a few reasons why we protest around the creation of Mining Corporations in our County. Piro. We believe that three Or four persons who have originated the measure, end who are presets:lg it belote,the Legislature are prompted on ly by motives of speculation, and that no public rood is designed to-be secomplished; and as, be beve further, that the sole end which the measure., is intended to subserre, Is to enable a test , parties to dispos, ot lands at enormous prices by means of Stocks. We ran conceive of no other object ; I there a another, _lt has been very successfully kept front the knowledge of the citizens of our County. for 110 petitions have been circulated on the subject, unless privately and in a clandestine manner. Se, oad. Because the legitimate purpose of Cm- I P'srations is the eoncentration of capital upon smell I objects of a public and benefietal character. as are beyond Individual mean. Rut we allege--and we have the whole history of the Coal trade 01 Schilyl• kill County. from its commencement to the present time..to confirm the allegation—that the mining of Goal is nut an object beyond Individual- insane In dividual, have been equal to it in the gunner of the trade, and much more are they equal to it now, when it has attained vigorous youth. We assert that Individuals, without corporate privileges, are equal to all the means required for the mining ol- Coal, both above and below' the water lei el, ot which there in abundant proof on every lell-side• tu every valley, and in every ravine of the Coal formation of 'the County,—and we wart with equal eniphasis, that Individual means and enter prise, without corporate privilege, are equal to all the demands of the market for Coal The past ho tory of the trade verities this beyond the possibeits of a doubt . If, thee. Individual means 'and enter prise are adequate to till The eXpellibillreo iii the mining of Coal, and to all the demands of the mar ket for Coal, where is the necessity for the creation of Corporations among ' Under the system which has been pursued during tbs. last twenty years, in our County, the system of luilividnal en terprise. we have become highly prosperous. Our population in the last ten years ha, doubled it•elf.— Large towns have taken the place of primeval lor ries. Wealth has arcumulated--not the wealth 01 overgrown Corporations, btu that which in .thstre timed among the masses of the community, has sufficed to render almostall who were willing to be so, comfortable and happy. Our statistics show a continually increasing Coat tonnage for the last twenty years, until in Priit this teenage has amoun ted to '1,519,4113 tons. All this has been done ex clusively by individual enterprise We could point to other counties. where, with superior advantage, in mineral fermations, nothing like the results that have taken place in our Comity, have been achiev ed; for this tart we know no eXlitatilition lint the very system ol Iquility Corporations, igamplained of Tit,/ Bin we not only consider Corpiiratoons unnecessary, but we regard them ass notetto the Coal trade of Schuylkill Count} to every branch of business which is now c on by In dividuals in it S. lurylkdl 1 'omits a County of Individual enterprce ~ F .i'ery man in it starlit. upon his own rapacity for-busines-- upon his own esertions, enerey, and industry for the door to eompetence and to fortune, is Open lo all alike We have no lines drawn round about us to limit its in o u r Ineinleio. In our trade., and iii our and we leco- no competitors ea, b of hit—and there id no power among us to dealroy Such is Schuylkill Ceunly now and such weds—ire it to reinainz. Hut we believe ilia! woul,l inevitably Mani% and independent ...audition 01 the people We believe that they week] blight The lair p r o.; iiectsorthe Conrity forever Wr believe that 'or. poretion• and Individuals cannot live together ui the Caine liminess. One must destroy the Mlle, - And why should Corporation, be strewn Li and iaist mingle us to destroy ' Why should our Mine, be closest CORPORATION MIN Ezti ' Why intr 'morel be culled It Ctift.Pi ATION S'fORF:S ' Why should every branch 01 Business he stopped by Ndli.PORA'lll TN ESII'AIII.1:411 MENTS ' Why 'slioutil our LAB( itt be reward ed oil}' by CORPORATION ORDERS on their Stores, at their own prices' We remonstrate against all this, and we ask of war honorable_ bode TO Wit us from the operation ot a law Wnieh wcadd millet these evils upon us And we will ever pray, ike lIIPORTM AND EXPORT?: The Imports at the P6rt of New• York for February show a large increase over - the same month last year, as. well as over the same month in 1. ,. 2.51. The amount thrown upon market is one hundred per cent. larger than in February, 18' , 2, The figures, copied from the Tritiu - rie, are as follows: IMPORT`, NEW-YORK, FEBRUARI. 1631. 1852 ISI3 4119.40.4)07 07.024,02 1114.574,144 1.901,03 t; 1.1111 014 1767 90+1 161.031 110,197 191,410 - Dutiable Mthi Free Mgr( bands Poet (a a ad fln Withdrawn fin %Vara house IT= *II 'N.1.1412 CO 05,101 •17 2hi.04 1340.:C1V 1.003 ]tl3 1.612.01 Total WareboumeJ The export; of produce and Merchandise du not vary materially tram those at Febru ary last year. but in cuin there has been a material decline. Erporri, VVIV-YonA, eesu ARV 1851. 1851 14'.3 1) , ..1 ,. .1 , P ,0 4 , 3r. $2.585.78ai $3.111.9 1.1 $1 115,01 is Forplga —lre... 60,930 133,932 63,1 , ,t7 FO rpiga—dollable 1.95.51:17 312,1.7'2 171.12.5 elpr et• aud !Wilma 1,007.6..9 3.351,543 1.1:11.050 13.9-14,47 111,3W.Coti 1.650)47 EiES The aggregate imports of January and February show a largo locrease over the same months al the previous year. whsle the aggregate exports show a c'un,nlerable de cline. The figures are 19.11. 1453 In muket .25,5%.11.:81 C 1.35,1146 $31..15.:Kpl Wariebnaord', 11,102.1b6 2.1154,1/771 1.654,1513 ( This statement shows an increase in Im ports thrown on the market of over ten mil lions of dollars as compared with 1352, and five millions as compared with 1851. lo the amount warehoused there has been a large ! decrease, as the activity of business has ta ken up nearly all the imports. The aggre gate exports have been : =I 1431. 1.01 I A. 53. Produre and tdda. e 6.569.005 16,573,340 $6.M2,255 flpeelenad Bullion 2373,4T0 41,420,50 I 1,b6.5.609 1111.942.1173 •u 1191,e191.5,727 .934 EMU The exports of produce, &c., show a re markable uniformity, but• of specie they show a large decline. To this we add, by way of further com ment on the Free-Tiede policy of the coun try, a statement, lately prepared from the books of the Treasury Department, showing the amount of duties received at 'the princi pal ports of the Uoi•ed States, excluding San Francisco and all the minor ports, during January and February, 1952, and 19. l : January. February. 1851. 1052 1115.3. 1..51 Naw•York 1,13/,0412,609.000 3,E05,107 1,1115010 Beaton 501530 455,500 0.48.63 400,000 Phll2,lolslns. 219.7:3 311,000 010,421 1811,00 B1111,0nr• 34.011 35,000 . :11.660 MAC New-Orleaoo 315,500. 123,000 113,11451 1107 Wu Charlemur, 45,000 43.000 22,1100 20,000 4,4e4381 3,626,000 5,?...p1.21.1 1,636.000 EMI The total receipts for the first two months of 1953 are . $9,50.1„5.42; for the correspon ding period of 1953 they 'were 57,252.nnt1. The excess for the current' y ear is or somewhat more than thirty-three per ceot. 'This exhibits a very active, and it is to be feared, a very morbid state of trade in foreign goods; and if it should continue' throughout the year, our foreign importa tions far the present fiscal year cannot fall short of rico hundred and esghly siarthow dollars. flow shall the balance of trade which thia:rwill make against us be met ? Answer, ye, Free-Traders. Q7 . I.OCOFOC O ECONOUT. —The following table represents the increase of salaries of vartoUp Government officers, as regulated by. the j i ve Congress. It is worth perusing: Lan Sol ' 14cr. Sat Mtnistern to England,France, Rosati and Spain, oarti 50,000 CilVati Vice-Presillani, .5,000 6.000 Secretary of State, - 0,000 8,000 •• of the Treasury, 6.000 8,000 of the !Manor, 16,(70) . 8,000 of War. , ;,00n 9,000 .... oi thel 4 javv, r,,000 • - t 4,000 Postmaster-Gegen! i 4,000 0,000 Malting a total increase of the Governmen; expences, annually, of ss7,ooo—the increase in the salaries ot the icor Foreign Ministera mentioned, alone, is $44,000. ' • QT During'lBs2, eighteen patients were admitted into the Indian; State Lunatic Asy lum, whose disease is attributed to the spirit rapping delusion. There are two patients in the Institution at Harrisburg, brought there by the same cause. . fl There are pelittons before the Masll3- choseus Legislature, calling for additional Hank Capital to the amount of over serentent mill i ons of dollars, FOREIGN ITEMS . . , . 'i.---A singular crime hasiustcome to light in the little principality of Lippe Scholia* berg, Germany. A. country gentleman of large property to that principality died, leav-, ing'one daughter and two sons. The daugh ter, who was heiress to the greatest' part of the property, soon after disappeared, no one I knew whither, and consequently the two brcithers becamesole heirs of theestate. Now, -alter the lapse of some 15 or 20 years, acci dent ,bas brought to light the tact that the daughter still lives, and has been kept im-, prisoned by her two, inhuman brothers du• ring all this time in a cellar. The matter has already come into the courts, and the on sters will get their deserts. • ---- The inventors of gun-conon, ioll Selioulxnu, of Basle,' and Prot. 'longer, of Frankfurt, •have made .uve! their process ,i , preparation to the Austrian Government - •or I :iO.OOO florins. twathirds of which fall to the 1 share of the former, as having the prioritv.ol I Invention. The money has already been ! paid in Frankfort. It is believed that the 1 : - Ausirian Government has communicated to i the Governments of the various States of the I German Bead its willingnessto admit them to a knowledge of the secret. . —A judgment whtchsavours more of the i dark ages than the nineteenth century, has just been ' , rendered by the Imperial Court at - Rouen. - A !ad of 17 has been sentenced to six months' imprisonment fur •• sacrilege :" I his offence being that he presented himself at theconmuniun table duringa midnight mass, without having previouOy been to cerifesNou, and d-iihout haring received the saerameuts for the first time in due form. --The women employed in the tobacco manufactory at Marseilles, 1.,200 to cumber. alt left their work a few days since, in con sequence.of an order hartng been given that they should, for the 'Mitre, use a knife instead of a pair of scissors, in cutting the ends of the agars. - It was found necessary to call in an armed force to quell the rtot, but the women have not since resumed their work. —Welearn direetly,sod Irom the very best author:iv. Says the N. V. Courier, that the family difficulties, which were recently said to hare determined this distinguished artist to return to this country, do not exist in the least degree; and that there is uo present prospect of our hearing her again from any cause w ha teyrr. At Berlin, a successful experiment has just been made, to heat the newly-built St. Philip's Church by gas. The budding contains 90,900 cubic feet of air, and a-con sumption of only 7041 cam .feet of gas suf ficed to raise the temperiture t?" 2 degrees Valir. for the whole-duration of divine service. - -Signals.—The lamps used un railways in England are of three colors—Red, to.sig- MB* dariger ; Green, to denote caution : and White .ro indicate safety. Applied to trains in motion, While implies that full speed may be attained ; Green, proceed slowly ; Red. stop. Rome contains p population of 175, 000, and amongst Meth are 29 bishops. I, 250 priests, 2.02 monks, and members of religious orders, 1.698, nuns, and 517 eccle- siastical pupils. Rome ought to be a very exemplary city. Is it ? The expenditure for the relief of the poor in Ireland, for the year ending the 29th of September last, had, decreased .£230,700, or 82,403,500, compared with the preceed ing year, when the ,total amount disbursed was 11,186,944, or 85,634, 770. --So perfect were the Egyptains in the manufacture of perfumes, that some of their ancient ointment, preserved-in an alabaster rase in the museum at Alnwick.still remains a very powerful odor, though it must be front 2000 to 31_00 years old. The number of paupers in England, on the Ist of January. 155:2, in receipt of pour law relief, was 835,31;0. Oa the Ist of Jan uary, 1553, it was 791,143, showing a de crease of 35,917. The decrease of adu it able bodied paupers in the year was 11,(08. --- Within a railus of fifteeivrodrs front London. tliere are ttvothundred ition , aod aen•s of land m the hands of markt.. aard..ner., all labonoglor the London market. Nearie every barrel of Hour ustd to Cuba is imported from Spain ; the duty up on Ameirran flour being nine dollars a bar rel. - The American artists at Home have opened a reading-room for their own use. The laws of :;pats require that an ed- Itor he, at lest, twenty-five years ol age. -- There are twehty-three theatres 111 Loudon, and twenty-seven in Paris. A FAIR CALCULATION A shrewd friend of ours, who is accustom ed to look at things in a 'business poem of view, thinks that the out-cry so often •made about expenSive preaching is without found ation: He argues thus : •I have," says he,t_ta family of Sig persons, who attend church. - I pay twenty-four dol lars a year for pew rent: I hear two sermons on' the Sabbath, an.lt tine during the_week -- making one hundred and fifty - lectures" during the year. I obtain, therefore, for my self and-family, nine hundred lectures tqr twenty•four dollars : or in other words, I pay about two: mid a hall,cents a lecture. Peo, plc glee front twenty-five to fifty cents fur a 'lecture on Astronomy, and almost every oth er subject you can name, except the gospel : surely. for a gospel lecture" ought to h, wnling to give-at least two cents turdatalf." The thought thus expressed is - ceriatoly just. and might. with great advantage, he carried out still further,—Whee/trig Q"? It ,4 .gazd that th4L'New York Tribtor i s to be enlarged to the iize of the London T mi c,, and to be printed On similar type ; that he establishment is now worth 53011,- 00u, that one of its advertising columns'is reckoned to be worth from 52,5A0 to Sfl,ft&i per year. and that its rates of advertising have recently been advanced tr0m.7.5 to lou per cent. And another saying is, that one of the members of the publishing house of harper S Brothers, has become interested in the publication of the New Yuri: Daily 'Amur ,--the new partner to have charge of the bu siness department of the paper. EOM t II'II.SELVES, and f perhaps no other per. son, ever knew a ~et of medicines to gain such unitersal confidence as Dr. J W Cooper's Insba P,,i.siratio,is, prepared only by C I'. I lewes , neither have we ever 'known any Medi rines to he so tin iversally successful in the cure of of the 111,dre for which they are reoininended They-are also different Crum mod other prepare. tions before the public, inasmuch an they are offer rd fur the cure of but one di.ease, and we until say, that even if we knew nothing of their won derful inc.-es., the simple fact of their being re. commended each to cure hut one disease, would give us more confidence in them, and be suilicient to induce us to give them a trial. m preference to any others, for we must nay that we have but little onntiiknee tn any medicine which is recommended to cure more thin one disease But this is not all : the univkrsal Sifecenss and wonderful cures which these medicines are every day performing, is suffi cient to warrant any person who may be afflicted with any - of the diseases fur which they are re commended, m gtvgig them a fair trial. They consisf.of Dr 1,. W. Cooper's liohan Vegetable Cough; or Consgmplive Syrup, for the cure of Cor! , :irs, Cups and CONSINIPT'ION Ur J W. Cooper's Vegeiab'e Dyspepsia Biller. They are/ 51, errain and never-tailing cure for Dyspepsia. even in its worst forms. 'Dr. .1 W- Cooper's Va. • tieutuatic Drops" "I lie, ..perale upon a principle eulirely ildrerent loins all oil., Rheum:ill-in Medicine-. and are nni%er-ullv so , orsslol ut eil...•ting a cure. 1/r J W. f - Veq , ./.' , / , I Vet:, 11.1 Ague Pt/i' 'I ties I. is ore a I Pt tent and never-tailing clue 1., this disrasr. in from three to succia)r. Dr. J. \V • per Vry•ra ,. ..b . [L e ona P for the ,1,•• • of Worms, and plea.ant for children hi InLe lur 1 W:Cuoper ' s Airs, Dy.p,pr ra for The core olcostivenetta, and for all disease. , rr tuvmu a pnrgalire medicine. !hey , annot ter sot ',sword Pie , operate without eau-ing the slightest rim 1 hew ineanrines are for ,ale by Jobs S. C Marini, ( ) mayo.!, PollaVille., Who is agent fur the Proprietut I llewe , and by II Shi.,ler, Port • - CIIANGE:i OF WEATHER AND CATCH. rttl.l) aboulti bo remembered that a cough IA an cadence that f lionta ttnpnrov lodged in the lungs. V. a ret,We P,Il. ye one of the very lie+t medicines in the world for carrying oti a cold, because they purge rrom the body !hope morbid humors which are the came of coughs, eostrempthm, dulleulty of breathing, watery arid inflamed ayes, sore throat, rheumatic pains in va rious parta of the body, and many other dangerous Three or four .of Wright.' Indian Vefitable,Pills, taken nogoing to tied, will to all cases give relief, and. it the med!cina be repeated • few times, the blo'cd will be completely purified, the digestion will be improved, and. the body will tie restored to even sounder health than before. Iliveare of Counterfosto..—Tht , genuine rs fnr aele.hv Mre. E. M. DEATTY, J a BROWN, and N. llETSLER,Pottartlle , andby the Arects giver' In another column. Wholetele Office, 160 Race Street, riuladelpaia. " I DIGEST.”—Such is the true meaning of the word Pepsin," or of the two Greek words from which it is derived. Thu is the significant and ap propriate title of the True Digestive Fluid, or thus. trie Juice,-prepared by Dr. I. S. Ifouonrotr, of Philadelphia, from the fourth Stomach of the On for the cure of indigestion and Dyspepsia. It m Nature's own remedy for an unhealthy Stomach No art of man can equal its curative powers. It readers good eating perfectly consistent with health. See the figura of.the Oa, in another part of this pa per. POTTIVILLIg PIARKZTN. connect's!) WEEKLY FOR THE JOURNAI Wham Floor. Rd . 415 5O 1 Dr'd peacbc• piled. $3 SO gi* do do 4 00do do onpok'd . 13 ) I Wheat, busboll,lo •1 15 Ord apple. paired ICO Bye, , do so Egg., dozen 13 Corn. ' do . 65 nutter 17 Oats. '..do 10 Shoulder•, 10 Potatoes, do ' • 40 e5O H.,,,,. , Mt., 13 Timothy Seed, 725 flay, toe 19 50 Clover do \ 350 Plano,. 500 MARRIED Wakilmrn,llectoe of Trinu) I'Lurcn, en Turaday . , 1 4 MITH. raN 1,, ELIZABETH KANT:NEI!, of l'ottsvino, l'a. o h the 13th tnet,,,by Rev. :tram P. Ulf , . JAVOII BATI11)11r„to M IHV ANN \ MILLP.II,IIhth of Plof.- . 11n the 211111 last , by Rrr W 11.. 1.1♦? I lIC£F 11AN, to M ARAI! 1 URN Ell. both ol lons rarborl tly the e.t me • on the 21.1 tits' GORDON EM ERI to ANNA It [loth of Portnille On the , 21111111SL by R.V. I). ewrk. i.. H 8111:AR EH, to KI.17.1131: Crk pottstrille MrgrrUlTTT'7l 114INITY ciirrtrii, (EPISCOPAL) —Set v tee held regularly in this Church every 14Unday Morning. at 101 o'clock. Aftetemuti.st 3i Except the first Sunda, of earl) iu..ntb. when sac sire Win he held In the evening ei 74 o I,,clk.iii•reed of the enema-in. ro The Eight of t'onfrnisulu i will be ad non tote red by Theo. Re• Emboli Potier. on TUESDAY EV EN ISO or ki, (29Lli 1 dr', we to rornme ore At• 7e o'clock. or> FREACHING In the Acrorilic Rrftlllll rrea Kr . byterlan Church, Market Street. Rev. John B. Warner. every Sabbath mOrnlng and cyeling. • THERE INIIIX`Bi - ehina in the Ell2lirt: Intevra n Church, Merkel - ris+cel, «very Sunday morning' and evening. -- - a r m THE BAPTIST CMRCH.• Divine wor•llii , may be espeg led eliete , slttbath lutlf Ulttg end tvening, 10110 emery tirgoalli,j'Ay oven I SI g. ttra.yl hour, NOTICES 4.-"> A STATED MEETING of Pottsville '44' No. 41. C of T , will 1.. hold •t their Hall on MOND* V EVENING. Marsh 'Ps. 1^.53. et n•rlork Puert nal aileadJare la required as ail rlnllloh fur Mt.'s, will take place By order of the galloon. Beasts A Russet:. o..ey. TIIIi POTTSVII.I K. I ITERA QV AOCIETi .11 , %111 hold UP ttcht regular meeting at Fottler'o , ‘Vt-Juriday evenlttg, lklautt 311, at 7 3 o t luck Lettlitc—By S. D. Ball, E.,1 Item!er--4. Dego Queitiott:-•• I. It eat...alertl tl, u oar natton have the !nen of tatett.,att,to tt , tli i - ts t t acid , lithatte ettnte•taoy .1111. I'• Affirmative --INta 1,. r A% !tithe., .Mtn , Napa tic.- J A N , tool, Ur A Heger Ity Order ttf the Sue iv( y Iluaau 1.1,11KA 0 SCHUYLKILL t OCNTY At:lip ULTURYI.' gtot IF:T1 —A 'PIC ti I. 1• Alerting nl Society will rake place nn Hill Y. Ih. vitt of blarrh. Ai 2 o'clock. P. M.. at the Pothltr ilnu•e of 114 n !el Lloyer,Orwig.liii/4. when It la rontrtnt4ted that a 1,1•1 or Premium, Si wait :nen to, at lola f r . the Call Pth.hlllnn, writ he agreed mi. It I. thirreitite hutted ittat members will feel it their In tereal to attend. Hy miler nr Ito = WANTED. ‘A 'ANTED. -A •Ingle man lo take t !large Of a pate of 1101 - St• and 3 anti web. will lae willing to niake liinevel/ generally °vend about the Molar To oischit Petition good wage+ and re /11133•41/ employment 13.11 i he given. if application t.e matte, iininedialely Reference., triaulte.i U PROWS. M. D Port Carbon, North 516,:10r.2 12 2i 41111t r tintl ill tt :"tore or vi at 8 I .414.exy Co.labloohnsent, ur r, (art tor a.V kind or tooOlitsa. Good recounrooola , to.l lan be g,V ell nit 1 . 0 character, capar Direri In Y 7., St. tatr 1' 0. t 1 a h , 13 3t V ANTED.—A GARDENER capable of mting V` LRArze of a Gatd•A. alma!! 4 not,. from Roth,- vine None hue a competora par•uo need dcek thr woutiote. Apply at 1111; Ohre. MMIM I' t!Tntw learn Paper 1130: 1711 :Itl..:ea. or. agn Norte but steady boy., of rood .haratAri. nerd apply ==IM SITUATION WANTEII.--A /enc.-man wt... 14 famtitar with the r.ntlnstt and (i.itaan lingua goa and has had swish ea vn.ute . frishe• notarn a altuatton as Ulerk nr A•sistant in a Atm!, Railroad riffle. Coal Establishr,ent. or other pi., of trial elallaraClOry testimonial. as to r hararter Arid tittatlti cations et 111 be stern. Pelsor . deatrms his serrice.. will please rail at tile Intree 01 the Mine,' Journal. Alwrh IA 1•53 11.1 t A N T e E O.—a Mar If•thilli. to if horn good wa ge, and ronsturtl etneMytnant will he totem, A pntzlo man preferred Apply to MEM A . AI F.:l4e—A Storekeeper irlir 44101 r Alt •peat, (. t .rman, and rs•urh,,tirly Arriltairoe" tserth Ac .4111,4 Address Hoy 40 I ., d.PSille l'ord Oar , , 12. 1 , •53 7.11 117 ANTED. !term., fol tho Mime% A r V my, nt thr• P.l Ole Rendezvouo Nov 27, 1t4n.2 lA/ANTED—A PERei,ti 'Ft, PEICINTENt) I V I, coal Mlll.•, , Prell 11111131eii in ‘N •••••ern E/p0,1•11, in V in ing 311•1 ref•••••••• • • ••• 11, 1.,•••••••. • harm. to r•• A. 1•1 1 .••••• 1•,•• eql, CIF) 1•••••1 (Hr. e, duo". '4M/fig •1114111,..1 Aug 2, 1451 r ,I. Itgenrr VV M A Ii N :N T , I. % : V p li ' a ' sti ( l ' ' ill i ‘ r ' ns riiiiiloynioni, Dlg end 1011 , . yonng anil Iloilo and female; end also. all norm - um wishing , TO f T IOTTIITy Ait nn and dill "Ida "I 'Winds SI.ItV NTel udl resi•lvr 1.111•hil {Or,. a, by nail in el In. iitfire of tie ;tier in 3.I. O tIINCT 1.1:11Nts noideritle N M Wll.treN; J A,Tent 31,4 Getter:el roller tor 11 I), April 5 1,451 X 7 ANTED TO LEASE air it of toal land, • lying 111 rods no t , ihe Le2sett•ii Gap Railroad Thlr property has been opened In several Wares, the roei ,s of ,opprior totality, ‘'ellts lying horizon tal. and pan b• workout ,or tunny years above wa ter level This Property Iles the nearest point to the Road, and affords an excellt nt oppottiolliy (..r an enterprising Operator for theOreat We•tern Yitartet To a tint nut Tehunr, a favorable Lease aril be given, no other Peed apply address the subscriber at No. 2, New _Street, New York, 1.T0.11 4641 =II BI SIN CARDS. / Sncli stid DOntd, or ou gang and for •sle hy Ih. Subscriber. JOHN 11 JAN I E" 4. Market street Abot• TrOth. Furr+rr lie 1453. 9-tr - - - CARlL—Mar•ei Street Sniper's. for Solo. Inquire iir JOHN 11 JAAIESI, Ag't Markttt Street nbove Tenth, Viitisville Feb. tt.Cn I n 53. 41( irTITLOS. ItI,DGIN AY. Alt.. A M., I OCIfrT AND AIININIL FiNGIS KER. ban Luken nn (Wire ai %line r.vn 111 Ntirre he %111 tie plcased I. tereive ntl nrilet.i in lit: gu.ifi•ti.loin tuurh ao nsakine Invertiini.as ttl 1-.,11l I.. llll l 4 .ArLttmA It.d.. iinrure bog Nil. 1.. It I nit Engineer C. 14111....) nig atid Drafting execo . i..q pronitttly unit 'irately et- Monthly et lonia Ont.. made t• 1 Mines, 101 IN C. NEVII.LIK, ATTIIIIN Er AT LAW re will a tirn.l to all Irrelneer Mims:cl In lion with 4111 igrocr amt care Olts r (*rot, orrr, nett;lira Ir orl Ither P 011.% Ole. MIMI I ICORGE: I(;(.: A N & SON, Illnvrs of Ilea 4, I Ant, coni. Jan ri. Iv l ACOD OF TI1E: PEA uFf w 111 atiend in the errllemno &1,1111111111. &i prinspily, no,' all I he die,,. app. 'laming in Ina etre • Von "Mc. Der 'l5, IrSd.. 54- Iy• rIIOPIAS K. lIA NN A Ai aIIt)ItNEY at LAW. Office In Centre Street, r,ppiry 're the El, opal Church, Pott•ville Pennyylt4 nta souv. 20, 1552, I y S. lIANCK. rOTCT CAItFOIN. PA.--Itest• ..Lletece - Street, yecond door Nitre, the Lu theran Church; ire 1 WV. hen door 1,51 r Shisrlcen Urn,/ Stele Ott. 16, 1152 C 01:, No. 13 North WATER st. lusvortet and Dealer to Ensllsh and Aniernan /ion Constantly an hands large and gen eral assnrintent nt ITO and ATEEI.. in all their as riett•a, at The inv.,' pr Or I. !?:!. N. 5/ N°. N. WAGE:NNE:I.I.ER & CO., Bank. J er• nod Dealer. ta Exchange, Tamaqua. Penn'. Cunning attended to, and dram for sale oil all the principal ritie• of the lininn. Alto. llr.Ra paya hie at all the principal Banking Ilona• ita Englaud. Ireland, rtcotland and Wales. July 17,18,59. 29-if IRON & CUTLERY. TIDIT RECEIVED. 23 dozen 0. Ante.' Ihn Inno & Hardware Store. nwar Mat z•• lintel. l'otttotni, Hart It 5. 1,53 In.tf SUPERIOR. Elltaltt• of Itollor litvont alma*. . — I. on hand at GEORGE SI1114111"s new Iron Store corner of Nor*. egtan ,- and Flail Street*. Mare!. 5. 1N53 104 f A m e , 1 , 1 , 1 , 11 , 7 r !P a !: .11.;111ait sk Nowell*..n do 4 Hall !Load rite eta 111 IiONENOALE lII(DRAULIr CE11111.:NT. - An nvrnlin 01 arlirin h., tilling ewer., Vaults npring linnara and t rhar•,nnd knnping damp ne.l from wet and expoled Will. F.., sole by E%l 1434E1/1 Iv HON. N tor or Front 4. Willow 1916, (Rallr.lad.) Phila And Or sale also by F J I'AEVIN, riatiny.Or. Penns IhEn = QI 4 OPF: CII T;lr f , 1,3 .3101 q-lo mch Sle•pr Übangi the 4 " One • G E I Vat•iwate F‘t.pre.l..fm, 51-tf Mr= ATENT STRAW; Ali AND CORN. P tiTALK ri•TTERA, toe Wear 14:011GIE I/aolwore Ptnte, I', litre, SI below s!3lz's limp! Dec. 1., J 452. 51 tf M RH lt C UTLEt T ne lee. ute'ii al ibit 'eryo‘erailitl'r hat r:llWearailahad. lfollaasortment to se, In handsome Mahogany enact, fully warranted In all ease.. Mont a. represented, ran he returned, and nth en given In earbange. ll•ntlannle prei.erwo for the 1101.daya. f[{ AN - K POTT Dee 11. ISO. nE APIS WRITING AND VETTER t , PiPER. Mao. emnnorrelat Sole Papers, va tylog In prire fr.= It: S 3 to 04 per Ream ; very lope. rl6 - 'r Paper •tol.l rates, although the price has advan• red Io the cities. at R. lIIINNAMII Cheap Paper and etatloutry Store March Id, 13— A SEASONABLE AtiTICLE.--Partees A Foretture GinvA for rOtanine. reviving and bean tlfyia; Cabinet Vitrefture, Chairs, Ate giving a tleb glossy appeaisore,•nperinr In re verorebiug For Sale at B. HANNAN'S Bong sod Vattery Sloe. - %tell 20.1833. • 13— 100 Je REAMS WRAPPI XO PAPER.— er received arid for able *Wen!. sod retail at H. HANNAN'S CLieap Paper slid Honk Store. March 20, 1873. 13— IMPORTANT TO TIIE LAIIIIOI—A NEW ARTICLii.—The subitcril , er has jdst ret bead an sew:num:it of Avila ehtelJ. or Gotta Yereha Drew —wort, to ply,,tvcS thrssr• from •tame by perrplratlno. It. lIANNAN. March Yt. I a 52.- A i V ARTICLE FOR CURTAINS.— ./ICortalouptinted on Laura. jest received and (or sate, erbolceale and reitill,at 11. DANNAN'S COsap Voisin and Paper Fitore ,Marcti Ma. LEGAL NOTICES.:, - ,- VOTICg. — The Citizen. of Pott,'; mile are hereby nntukd that all Boors. amnia,' &n., Which Lae now or may be berealter left on t side walk, roust be removed upon earb PaturdaY af ternoon or night. flroomiy h o w,„ ate also ooithsd to repair their pavements immediately; and the Po. lice are requested to keep the corners of the streets clear, and to dlone'ree the Boy. into are In the habit of •inndinz at the Chore', doors upon entiliath hight, Alt hem.s found triosgressirg the bans, nr the ordinances of the Borough, alter this nonce, will be proper used with the nimbi •elveriiy 1.1.12011 KLINE, rtii, , t R,, e ,„... ' linlnl, I , J, 1553. 12 3t • 1 . • NT °TIC K. - The 4 I`nrlviersltip di j ~ .1.4, ,,,, ....in,: IN brive....n 'V win," 13rmti and , ' .!'”,"" V ,, e , . IT. i ding ...Jr, Inn firm of fin., ‘ 1 . 41 ••• 5 • 1 .• ii , ii .1.n.5iv0..1 by inninal 10,...,11. , 1.4 e r ,,,, 0 , Mauch. in. Th.. •10(3)5 ma (If Ile, 11 a will be Fettled by Viy C;c. aa f . . % 1 1,1.1\}F CR.I:FT 11.11 A NI VOlilt ER. 11 3, • March I. 1' STATIC ON JACOB 1, 0 4 11T11. deed given. that Letters leet•ntenlely ov thn Estate of the &tre 'heeled d. , rased. late