The Argus. (Savannah, Ga.) 1828-1829, November 06, 1828, Image 2

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_ WM ‘i A iTO THURSDAY MORMXG, JVOT.fi, 1823. r -: ■ T-T —--- , -■ -TA Tho votes for Electors were counted out yes terday morning. The following is the state of the polls* TROUP TICKET. Gen. D. Blackshear, 391 A. S. Clayton, Esq, 887 Solomon Graves, Esq. 38G Col John J. Maxwell> 387 John Moore, Esq. 38(5 , a-Maj. Oliver Porter, 388 Robert Reid, Esq 387 Dr. YVm. Terrill, 386 Col. John Rutherford, 3.87 CLARK TICKET, * Gen. Daniel Newnah, 16 - Gen John Stewart, 7 Gen. Henry Mitchell, 7 Cos). John Bcrvett, 6 Col. John Cunningham, 5 Mpj. John Hatcher, 5 * Benj. Leigh, Esq. 5 Map YVm. Penticost, 4 Pitr Milner, Esq. 4 ADMIN'.STRA I'IN TICKET. Col. Thomas Murray, <9O John Burch, Esq. 91 It will be eeen that the friends of Jackson gen erally united in what has been denominated the Troup Ticket. The old friends of Gen. Clark Uniting with their ancient opponents in the great object of the election, saw no reason for weaken ing the strength of the hero, by keeping up petty distinctions, and running different Tickets. In this matter they certainly acted with discretion and liberality, and the compliment of our friend of the Republican would have been more acceptable, perhaps. had it not been accompanied with the slur, ; which seems to show that any thing .else .than compliment was intended. The Tntendant and Council of the eitv of Charles ton have fixed upon Thursday, the 13th of Nov. tnst. as a Day of Thanksgiving, when the Rover- J end Clergy of the city are invited to assemble their flocks, “and in the. recollection of the Di vine chastisements in the midst of mercies, to con secrate tho day to contrition and gratitude.” We have occasionally noticed the advertise ments of Marriage Brokers, in the French papers, but have never met with any quite equal to one obtained in a late number of the Constitutionnel. 1 A rich agriculturalist it is announced, wishes to dispose of two daughters, one nineteen, the other twenty years of age, with fortunes of 450,000 , francs ($85,500) each.— Phil. Ckron. It is estimated that the fishermen of Massachu setts pull four millions of dollaisout of the ocean every year, in the shape of fish, &c. This is a good haul. One inspection in Boston has passed thro* |ts hands 10,000 barrels of Mackerel for the sea- j eon, worth $30,000. I An unfortunate affray occurred on Wednesday ! Jsst at Lucasville. between Dr. Finley of that place, and an individual by the name of Buckles, who died on Thursday evening, in consequence, as report says, of the wounds received. As the alfiir is undergoing judicial investigation, we for bear any comment which might tend to prejudiea jha public mind.— Ohio West. Times. From Portugal. —Capt. Hill, of tho ship Black Warrior, who arrived here yesterday from Lisbon, • (sailed Sept. 13) informs, that the country was I tranquil at the time he left, but how long it would ‘ remain quiet under the Government of Don Yli g ael was extremely doubtful. Don Pedro had protested against the usurpation of his brother,, and it was expected the European powers would advocate his rights. Tiie army is of course with the ruling party, &s the treasury is the only meant to support it, and all the ofltcers suspected of be ing favorable to the Constitution, are imprisoned or dismissed from the service. —Salon Register. . ° t Domestic Industry. —Were it not too late in the dav we would earnestly request our members of Congress and other public functionaries, opposed ! to the protection of Manufactures, to join the multitude in a visit to Masonic Hall, for the pur pose of witnessing an exhibition of American in dustry, ingenuity and skiil. If their prejudices were not as fixed as the laws of the Medes and Persians, they would surrender them all and be eo:ys the warm friends of the American System. • So ue of xmr editorial brethren would find a visit salutary. Witness Major Noah, who became a convert to the cause by a single call, and this * morning gives an animated description of the 1 Fair.—wV. Y. Statesman. “ j 1 A Great Sale. —The house of the late A. H. Lawrence, esq. No. 23 Park Piece, wes sold this forenoon by auction in the public sale room of the Exchange. The building is of brick, 3 stories high, on a lot 23 feet in front and 150 feet deep, with a brick stable on the rear, and after a brisk competition was run up to the stun of $20,fe50, and s-uck of? to C. C. White, esq.— lb. A nr.to and safe mode of duelling. —Wo under stand that a negro boy at one of the taverns in thie.city, a few days ago, took up a pistol, which ho. supposed was not charged, placed himself be fore a large mirror, took deliberate aim at his owA image, and pulled the trigger ; when io ! the pis .. toi Urfid and completely demolished the glass. Raleigh Register. v Cunous Musical Instrument. — A novelty of this Jkind i privately handed about at present, and wiij, we think, soon obtain much notoriety ; it is a small engine, (not larger, hanthis paragraph) and: consists of a brass frame, with eight perpendicu lar bars of stiver; It .3 pressed against $e lips, and reatked through by the performer-; ami the consequent vibration- yield sounds resembling those of the rEnlinn Harp, and vvb>ch are wonder full powerful, considering the minuteness pf the inst rument . it goqf; to the extent of an octave, a •<’ •*, ai'iLfica'ioaß of piaio and forte axe &Ito gcth’W surprising, —lJjLqrary Gaj. UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT. “ John A. Cunningham and a!, vs. James C. C. Hell and ul. —Action for damages fi r disobedience cf orders i;i the disposition of a consignment os’ prqpexD’- The plainiiifs it whs alledged, in IH£5, freighted a vessel at Havana with sugar Ac valu ed at *.d‘o pistoles, consigned to a commission house at I-A-ghern, with given msl ructions as to itsd sporah ft. Was alledgad, tint defendants, so far fro-;* conforming to the direction, not. only neg- Sected (Lam, but made actual purchases contrary yoeider; vmcreby the owners suffered, material lo r ’ he c.'*e was ably prepared and managed by V’elsfer, Hubbard and Loring for plaintiffs, Ac. b; V’ Sullivan lor defendants. On Monday, J e Story gaye the care to the jury after an ; a !<* c- . ’■ -e. and they retained a verxT'ct of 3340 y;:n.s for Plaintiffs. A bilk of exceptions is c io idled. —Boston Patriot. Loss of the brigantine Sally, of Baltimore, Free man Snow, master, bound to Martinico. The Sally sailed from Norfolk, on the 9th Sept.; and on the 16th, in lat. 31, 30, long, fifi, 40, the wind commenced blowing and split the mainsail. On the 19th was struck with a heavy sea, which caused the vessel to spring % leak ; all hands as sisted at the pumps, v. hich were soon found to be of no avail. There being now two feet of water on the cabin floor, all hands retreated to tbo fore top. At this time every thing was washed from the deck, both boats stove, and the provisions - and .water washed *-rverboard. On the 20th, cut away .tje masts and jtlirew overboard every thing, in order to, lighten the brig. On the 21st, 22d, 23d,: and 24th, had pleasant weather and were so fortu- J nate as to get provisions from £ho hold. On the 1 25th, at 7 A- M. made a signal of distress to a sail .a head, which was soon answered. She proved to be the ftrig St. Catharine. John Beordi.ne, esq. ; commander, of and from St. John's, N. B. bound to Bermuda. \Y r e were taken on board, and re ceded every attention from tho Captain and j crew. Having represented our situation to R. Higgin-1 bottom, esq. U. S. Commercial Agent at Bermu da, he rendered us immediate assistance, and pro- ( cured us a passage in the British schr. Fryton, Capt. Algato, bound to St. Andrews. From the National Intelligencer. THE OHIO ELECTION. The returns come ip slowly still. YYfe have however, iu tho following extract from the State Journal, pr inted at Colum bus, the Seat of Government and the fount pt information, satisfactory confirmation of the estimates which we have heretofore presented to our readers from authentic i spurces: From the Ohio State Journal, Oct. 23 “The Election. —Although we have as yet received but particular returns of the late general election in this State; yet nough have come to hand to make it ap pear probable that a considerable change has beer, effected in our Congressional Delegation, and that Messrs Irvine, Thompson, Goodenow, and shields, the Jackson candidates, have succeeded in the districts now represented by Messrs. Bee cher, Sloane, “ right, and Woods. This unfavorable result, which the operation of local causes, and tho peculiar formation of some of these districts, had led ns, in some measure, to anticipate, is hoyyever, more than counter-balanced, by the already as certained facts, that there will be a clear Administration majority in each House of the General Assembly, and that Governor Trimble, against whom the Opposition had directed their principal efforts, has been re-elected, by a very handsome vote: and as the gentlemen returned to the next Congress will not. in all probability, be requested to take their ss#is till long after the decision of the Presidential contest, the part they may have taken in tlie strug gle will be of little consequence, provided that, when called upon to act, they be found faithful to the trust reposed in them hy their constituent The majority cf Judge (Admin istration) to succeed. Jail*. JM. JLean iu Con gresses about a thousand votes. The majority of General Vance, f Ad ministration) is over two thousand votes. Tbe majority of mr. “ hitilesey (Ad ministration is between four and five thou sand votes. The majority of mr. Creighton, (Admin istration) is over three hundred votes. „,The Districts of mr. Vmtou and mr Bartley, (both Administration,) have given Urge majorities for ibsm and the Adminig- j tration. TV cio Emission of counterfeit Bank Bills. —YY r e have now before us a $5 cuun- 1 terfeit bill of the Mechanic’s Bank, and a ; $2 of the Phenix Rank of this cit y, both palmed off upon a young man from. New Jersey, yvho took them in-Fultou market tjjisjnorning for poultiy There appears lo be anew emission of this spurious money The young man above mentioned is not the ouly one who lias been imposed upon, and robbed of his hard earnings.— YVe hav# heard of a number of these bills that were passed in the course of the morn ing id countrymen in Fulton and the other markets. The villains seem to have made a simultaneous move upon the city in a body ami we fear betore the gang can be overtaken and broken up, will cheat many a poor market woman of her last shilling YVe are not sufficiently conversant with the distinguishing there are, ) jof the genuine from the spurious bills, to j point them out The counterfeit $5 hills] on the Mechanic’s bank are made payable , to J. Van Nest, dated July 4th, 1828, lei— J ter. D The counterfeit $2 bills on the Pnenij bsmk are made payable to J Hud- I •on, dated July 4lb,4BS7 # !etiet C, They ’ no doubt are all from the same manufac tory — E. PosL [YVe were in the Mechanics Bank, yes terday when a young country man, no doubt j tbr person alluded to in the above ar : tide, presented a $5 to be changed, which the teller immediately crossed. The coun terfeit bill was made after an old plvUe, the notes of which were some time since with • drawn from circulation—they can, of course be immediately detected hy any person at ail conversant with tbe hills of this bank. : Tho young man also had a $2 counterfeit ! note of the Phenix Bank. Bills of this 1 description have been circulated for some .time back, but they are so bunglingiy exe e uteri-that the most casual-observer can in sUsutly detect them.] —N. Y. Gaz. fl'he ** American System * is beginning io dawn in East Tennessee —YVe are mucTi gratified to learn lliat David Campbell, fnrtnerjy a merchant of this place, and Mr. Baker, lately a merchant of Kentucky, (gentlemen as we have understood, able to command considerable capital,) have form ed a paruiership for the purpose of erecting a Hemp Factory, in the vjcin \iy \if this place, YVe cannot on this occasion, refrain from an expression of our cordial wishes for the success of this undertaking, bv these public spirited gentlemen, and als. congratulate iiie farmers of Last Tennessee with the flattering prospect before them.— They can now obtain the cash feu all the hemp that they can raise, which, in on.- humble opinion, will iu a short time, do much towards relieving them from their present pecuniary embarrassments. Agri culture tnd manufactures mutually sustain and support each other, and if ihe present administration of the government continiuifc, East Tennessee, instead of being ’as at present, impoverished and her citiyidns bow ed down to the earth with debt,w ill be rich, happy and flourishing. YVe have been for so‘me rime past convinced, that our farmers to save themselves from inevitable min and bankruptcy, must change the presenj mode | of farming and 14 getting along)} by turning 1 their attention to the cultivation of such articles as would command the cash—ma nufacture morfe of their own cloathing and ‘curtail iheir expenditures with our mer chants for foreign fabrics. — Ten. paper, s * ?’ 4 | We find the following gravely published in the London Morning Herald, of Sep < tember lj2lh; *‘ So homely and economical are some of the American legislators, that a mem ber of Congress from the Middle States w ill send home his dirty linen and worn out pantaloons, franked by the mail, to be 1 returned to YVashington by the same con veyance when washed and mended.** Thanks to the most licentious press that ever cursed any nation, for such facts being published of us abroad. Providence , Oct. 23—Pirst boat from Worcestcr —The canal boat Lady Car lingtoii,arrived on Monday, from Worces ter, loaded with domestic goods, butter, cheese, coal & paper. The domestic goods were consigned to Messrs. Josiah Chapin & Cos We learn that the canal is now finished, and that b lats may at all times pass up its wlnde length. It is expected that large quantities *<f wood will be made instmmen tal in reducing the present exhorbitant price of an article so necessary for our eomfort in winter The coal from YY ror cester has been tried in the counting room of Mr. Joseph M anton, and approved of, SCOTL.I.YD. —Particulars respecting the late • melancholy accident on Loch Lomond, by a gentleman who was saved. “I went up Lorli Lomond with the La dy of the Lake on Friday, in company with a brother in law, and iu going into the steam boat we were joined by a mutual acquaintance. YVe had a most delightful sail to Taibet, where we landed in order to spend an hour or two till the return of the steam vessel from the head of the loch. Iu the interim we went to see an ancient burying place in the vicinity, and while sauntering about among the moss-grown tombs of those beings who had long since ceased to have concern iu this world’s bu siness, we got notice that it was time to proceed to Tai bet, as the boat was coming down. arrived just in time to get birth in the unfortunate yawl, which was on the point < f leaving the shore, for the steamer, Without making any particular reflections, after the hurry we had been put to, I recollect wt!! that there was a general feeling after we had left the shore, that the boat was much overloaded, and I am sure many of us then would have jumped out had we had an opportunity. On nearing the steamboat, her engine stopped, but my [impression is that owing to ihe smooth -1 ness of the lake, she was making consider able way when our boat ran in under the I protection at the paddle box. To save ; their heads, tbe passengers on that side started up, and in an instant the boat upset and we were all plunged into tbe water, — As I had been sitting with my face to the steamer, and as the boat capsized outwards from it, I was of course thrown in the lake on my hack, and must have sunk to a con siderable depth before l could recover my self. .Even here, and in ail the hwfulness of the moment, I did not lose my recollec tion, but I shall candidly coufess that a strong desire of self-preservation was my only feeling. Being a tolerable swimmer, 1 made as much way under the water as I possibly could before T came to the sur face, as I was well aware of the danger I ran if I should get entangled with those who were drowning aro&nd me On my way to the shore which I thought : was an immense distance, a man that I ] could not avoid caught hold of the tails of ; rny coat, and before I got to the ground he ( had actually, in ihe desperation of his fears j managed to get frilly on my back, with his arms around my neck. Being a good deal * taller than my unwelcome guest, whenever i |J. got ground 1 persuaded him to get off my shoulders;,;.wiiich having done he plump ! ed over head and ears, but I picked him up and got him fairly to the ground in Safety. Our mutual gratitude to heaven was here offered up with all that fervour which the circumstances of the case naturally called , for. Bui I remembered now for the first time, that my friends in ail likelihood had gone to the bottom, and seting a man a little way off, £ swam for the spot, and sue- , ceeded in getting him ashore, hut be was 1 a stranger to me Being in agony for the I safety of my brother in law, I observed a hat floating as a it had beeu on some per—; son’s head, but after swimming ocu to it 1 1 found it was empty, its ownvr having sunk forever t they made foi the shore, where to my unspeakable joy l found both my frieucs, they having saved themselves by clinging to the boat, until picked up. At this time there were eight dead bodies lying on ihe beach. My feelings cannot easily be imagined, when I saw the indivi dual who had clung to me and whom I then learned was Mr. Harvey, sitting beside the jearless corpse of his mother, tho very pic. | ture of grief and despair After an hour s • exertion, doing all that lay in ojur power ; lor the resuscitation of the unfortunate peo ple who had been brought on shore, un happily without success, six or seven of us • who had been immersed in the water, went on board -lh& steam boat where we. trot our wet clothes dried, and where w.e , ■ eceived a good deai of kindness, especially from a wright lad who managed to procure gieat coats and mantles for us from tbe passengers, and who from all appearance, would readily have given off his own shirt, could it have tended in any degree to mi nister to our comfort.” ANIYIAL MAGNETISM. Sir, —Having been advised to make a short tour this summer for the bebefit of my health, I visited Paris, and among my letters ofintroduction was fortunate enough to obtain two or three addressed to the principal medical gentleman who practice animal magnetism in that city. Tin? gen erality of your readers being I believe but little acquainted with this interesting sci ence, it may not be unacceptable to them to receive a plain statement of a sow facts connected with it, which came under my own immediate observation. My name, if it can add any weight to the narrative, may be learned by inquiry at your office. I carried from London a lock of hair be longing to a sick frieud. His disorder was of a bilious nature resembling jaundice, es pecially in its having thrown a dark hue, approaching to black over the whole sur face of his body. Th** bile, as I under stood had taken a wrong course, and mixed not as it ought to do, with the blood. A physician of the first eminence, who at tended him, informed when leaving Lon don, that his recovery was all but hopeless. Dropsy was supervening on the disorder of th liver. Twelve days elapsed between tbe cutting of the lock of hair and my presenting it to Madme Gillaud, a somnambulist, at the apartments of Dr. Dupotet, in the Rue des Saints Peris, at Paris. The doctor ha ving, by the process of magnetisiug for a few seconds produced in this woman the extraordinary kind of walking (or rather talking) sleep, called somnambulism; she received from him the hair, fo|t it for a while with attention then (Very differently from her usual manner in other consulta tions which I had witnessed,J slit dropped upon her breast and fell into a state ofcorn pjete torpor from which her magnetiser had great difficulty in arousing her. At length she recovered, raided her her bead a little and said slowly—“Je me’n Vnis—je vais mourir. * She proceeded to tell us that the patieut was drawing towards the close of his career, that tie had the maladie noire that his blood was corrupted, that there was no use in ordering any thing for him, but that he might be allowed to do what he !ir ked best himself. In answer to the ques tion, whether magnetising would be of any service to him she replied that it might prolong his life a little, I had carefully abstained from giving any hint either to Mr. Dupotet, the respectable physician himself <>r to his somnambule, which might guide either of them to u previous knowl edge of this case ; you may judge therefore of my astonishment on discovering the ac curate acquaintance she had internally ac quired of its nature and speedy termination j A few posts aftei wards I leanxd that my j friend had actually paid the debt of uature \ on the very day preceding this consulta* tion. | It may be objected, that if the clear-* sighteduess of this somnambulist was per- f feet, she would have known that the per-j son in question was no more, at the mo- j meal she was consulted about him. But, you will recollect that the hair had been! severed from his head 12 days before, and j the magnetic fluid contained in ti could ! only convey to her perception a sensation of the patient’s then state, viz. that of a dying man, which she certainly expressed in a very unequivocal manner Nor let it] be allegedjirat this was but a lucky guess I on her part; for I consulted her at the ‘ same time on the cases of two other ffis- : tact friends, through the medium of ihtdr t hair, & received proofs of her inteilige iu e j equally surprising; especially where, frona \ describing the physical stateof one of thesvej persons, she made a sudden digression, to j paint some traits in his moral character’— j traits perfectly familiar to his friends— j which had caught her admiration. During my stay, at Paris I had also; frequent opportunities of seeing, at M- i Fossocs, in ihe rue Mondovi a somnam bulist of ihe namo of Paul, who has the j faculty of reading with his eyes shut; an! experiment which I repeatedly investiga-j ted and fully verified, myself holding his I eyedlids firmly closed, while yarious books : were taken and opened at random before * him,out of which he read fluently. I forbear i giving the detail of these experiments, be ; cause similar ones, which took place be fore the committee of investigation appoint ed by the Royal Academy of Medicine, iu Paris, have bejen recorded in the Her- ] mes. Not two months ago, mr. jEditor, I fool- j ishly declared, that nothing would ever in- : duce me to believe the wonders related of animal magnetism; because, forsooth,l had never seen nor heard the like: now, I am free to acknowledge, that there may be : l more things in .heaven and earth, than I were dreamt of in my philosophy; or ra ! ther, I am more than ever ready to declare | with the sun of Jesse, that the works of i the Lord are great—worthy to be studied and held iu remembrance—-sought put of all them that haye pleasure therein. JErxal _ Etcursion —The New York Statesman gives an interesting account of the ascension ot Mr. and Mrs Roberson in a balloon from Castle Garden on Wed-1 nesday eveniug. The Winnebago Chiefs were present. The balloon ascended in the finest style imaginable. A more serene land favorable evening could not have been j desired. The sky was perfectly clear, and ja gentle breeze blew from Uie south west. Just at sunset, the balloon war filled, and Mr. Robertson in a gallant manner banded . to the jcar the adveuturous companion of ; his voyage, who was tastefully dressed in : pin.k, and manifested the utmost self-p s j , sion, appearing neither “ rash nor d.fii dent * Her collected courage drew forth i hputs of applause, end excited the lively’ ’ tynr.pathies of the immense concourse of spectators. After one or two gyrations in the area „f tbe castle, the balloon rose with a slow ai l( J majestic ascent above the eastern bau| ev ments and mounted tho blue air, to t|, r sound of music and the roar of cannon \] Robertson stood erect, waving the star, spaisgied banuer, while his lady kissed W - har. and, and bade farewell to the mulm U( jy in the most graceful manner. She boi e j,, her ‘hand a while flag, inscribed with t|, e name of “ Lafayette,” which was Bee . ( fluttering in the breeze till lost in the dis tancL ‘ The direction of the Voyage Wlls towards Coilaer s Hook, at least to ft 1 ( height bf half a mile above the city, afford, ing a glorious view to the aeronauts, as w t .|| as a girand spectacle to our citizens, n <,t less th qn 30,000 of whom were assembled upon the Battery. YVe were near the delegation of t|„, YVinrn ibagoes, who are now in the city, ail .j attended the show. Never was astonish, mentinore perfectly personified, than i n the far.es & actions of these children of the forest. * They seemed gazing at au exhibi. tion of supernatural powers; and the recol lection; of the scene will doubtless produce a salut try Impression upon their They were also apparently lost in \vond(> r at the immensity of the throng of hurn, n beings collected on the Battery. VV| lat will be jheir narratives to their tribe oij a return to the wilderness ! YY e learn that the balloon, by a descent somew Hat too rapid, iu the £ ag , river, :i few rods from the shore, near\V||. lia.nsb urg Ferry. The water was ankle deep i.n the car before assistance could bo rende red by Mr Waterbury, who took the adventurers to land in his boat. They would however have been kepi afloat and reached the strand in safety, had no ahj been a JTorded. A slight immersion w* s the only injury sustained: and at 10 o’clock last evening the aeronauts returned to t|| o city in the carriage of Mr Griswold. The bajloou was too much exhausted, to allow Mr. R tibertson to make a second ascensioQ by mo'Onlight, as he anticipated, he an< J his fair companion realised s<me. thinj; handsome for their daring enterprise, There could not have been less than 4,000 spectators within the walls of the Castle. W e understand Mrs. Robertson is a Spa. nish lady from the Havana, and that this was first ascent, From the National Journal. ThMti scaffolding and sited which have so concealed from the public eye the tyaipanumof the Capitol have at length I been removed, and the lover of the fine I arts cannot but be truly gratified with the [ bea>atifnl production of tlie chisel which has I beco disclosed. Mr. Peisico has sliewu I himself lo bean artist of the superior class, I and by the admirable execution of die I gremp, has given the utmost effect to a I design as chaste and eloquent as ever en* I ter ed into the imagination of man. The I central and principal figure represents the 1 g'juius of America, designated by the ;*p- I propriate emblems about her, and the bird 1 |of Jove at her feet. On her left, Hope, 1 diiects the attention of the Genius to the I bright prospects which open to her, while I tile Utter, pointing to the majestic figure I •on her right, representing Justice, indicates I the righteous restraint which a pure moral- K tfy has created to regulate the conduct us I uaiions as well as men. The beautiful I idea* stands before us m a form as classic hs I the conception which originated it, and I elevates to a kindred lame the designeraud ■ the artist. I Ali the figures of the group aro gigantic, I being about nine feet in height. A perfect I , symmetry has beeu given to the farms,and I | the attitudes are at once graceful and el- I 1 pressive. \ r icwed with the eye of an I | anatomist, the minuter part of the human I i structure are developed with a distinctness I | and truth which, while it displays the labor I ’ which the artist has directed to the produc- I tion of these details, exhibits also the extent I ‘and correctness of hisscientiffic acquire* I ments.. In the draperies of the figuiesH there is great felicity of execution; the ful- 1 ness, the folds and flow of the mantle ex- ■ hibit Surpassing excellence. The eagle ■ will, however, be regarded us tlie chetd ■ oeuvre ol the artist. Great kbor h<is b^ ll l exhausted in that requisite finish necessary I to produce the feathery effect which stantly strikes the eye of the spectator.-! The attitude also is strikingly true ts a * ture; and the symmetry of the bird isthsß most pel feet of any we have seen. 8 The iimsmost advantageous for thef- l amiuatioo of this piece of sculpture is the sun is tint so elevated us to throw dcH j shadow effthe broad cm nice winch stifß ; mounts th & tympanum over the grcup e, H j YVe part w ith regret from Mr As an artist and a man, lie is entitled sincere respect and admiration. It give us pleasure to see his future . put in requisition to execution those pi eCf of sculpture which at e still necessary complete thui original design of the arc* tect who plained the budding. Niches ■ pedestal s(*il remain to be occupi l ™ /W select spec*mens of statuary: and, pg l1 * from the success with which Mo I has executed the group of the tyup a y 1 jwe are of the opinion that no tnd iVl f I ■ could be found to whom the this part of the oiiginal design couk ■ more properly and adtaatageousl)’ el K ted. ft ! Italian Physician . —An Euglhb g e man at Florence had a fall from bis J besides some flight bruises, he > L ‘‘ l pain in ope of his thumbs, which JM attended with inflammation ; and geon continued to dress his iliumh __ other hurts were cured. One day .attended in his stead ; * Have you ‘ || , tho Signor JnuJese 2 said the hiD 1 sou iu the evening. 4 Y S I “ :|V ® pM i out tlm Abort*, and— ’ ‘T.*zzu cat ■cried the f ther, ‘ecca fie afa la j Blockhead that thjni art ! Ui're if ■ I of the s Italy, | jin? (Jo’ aft