The Argus. (Savannah, Ga.) 1828-1829, February 26, 1829, Image 1
cO SAM emir bautlett— Eonfoic."] THE . 14 A a m snoirair published eveiy day, in Savannah, Geo w L b:isino.;s scaso*, and three times a ! .j'. ir the SU,inner months, at Eight Dollars f®'*' 1 fi nay able in advance. C/; SA VAX NAil MERC UR F, V lkl ( k0 K TUB COUNTRY,) . oU blishcd every Monday, Wednesday, at Six Dollars per annum. This sheet ad* up l * ,e two * nner form* es the fiO e >r? containing all the news, new adver ,s’2X2 AR.TJU3 , npiled from the Savannah Mercury, fill'’ . a election of the leading and most r f r' articles of the Daily papers. Adver iaterestio- g cnera Uy excluded, and the i )P principally tilled with reading matter. tft:i F()U i- Dollars per annum, or Three Dol- T ern in advance. ,f ‘ -a ]n rtisc.me.nls i till be published in both pa &'per square of 1 1 lines for the first ° i37 cents for each continuation. |V yications respecting the business must be addressed to the Editor,post f} tit UJF*I land and negroes by Adinir.ialr.tora . r• or Guardians, are required by law, to R *cm°r- p nesl } a y m the month, between de fcld 011 r . ort o’clock in the forenoon and three at lhc Court-House of the Conn ®*"i; >h the property is situated. Notice of tfinW ‘ ...iiVbe < r iven in a public Gazette to the day of sale. 1 of the sale of personal property must be maimer, forty days previous to the to the debtors and creditors of an estate, published for forty days. E v Mm, application will be made to the court j’\ -.fnary for leave to sell land, must be pub -I*l V months. ’ | r, g a it 4 a Sayasnau, Friday, Feb. 20, 162 J. Dr., Coeds. 55 a 62* cet. “ 10 ‘ ~ # ttiler. Id cts. per lb. Sodium, inftiior quality, 10 a 1> to „W, D-.iet V /'"> 21 ° 22 cts |#*p s o’ ‘p 1C lnnJ,j,Cvgncc, Ottrd, Dupinjl* Cos s. brand, 1 an/aborl far fiat marks. bra, r? *. 4U c ‘ s - rl ‘, ail 50 * to * (W, 7 a ii ends per lb. dull, frdtera, 30 35 per tint. adn. I if,, Ibroaa Green, prune, la; 01/rcr jauZt (;fs 12 u 13- [todies, .Xortktrn MouLl Tallow , 10 a 11 c*.s. “ Georgia, 16 “ Spznni 26 a27 , , fuur, Philadelphia, Baltimore , Runmond ana A'tzuadria. $9 a 0 1-4—C <tua* 10. Ijin, Iblia/id, 90 a 115 “ Sorihtm. \7i * 34 Han, V :i,u Xarthtm, Ist 4o a 00. fyM Tea, .$lO6 a 110 per lb. pun, Swedes SIOO u 10a per ton. Liid , 7 a & ds. Lumber,yellow pine Ranging limber, $3 1-3 a Sleairi sawed Lumber, $lO a 17 Hicer Lumber, Boards, Pianks <y Scantling sl9 Quartered 11 inch flooring Boards, s*4 White Vine Boards, clear, 17 a Id Merchantable, $0 n 10 If 0. Hogsheads Stares, ,915 a H R.O ]oa 12 Uhks’es, rafted, fl * 2 1-2 “ boated, ‘‘ 3 tore/, .Vo. 1, $G 1-4 “ O in “ 3! 94 1-2 busses, lt r . India, 32 a 34 a Sew-Orleans Cmburghs, 0 a 10. hrli,prime, !$i 1 00. Miss, 14 00. hrtir, $3 Le,>/.iu 33-8. kn.Jrmaua, DO a I* cst India —none. •V. Lug land, *33 a ‘34 cts. M P- yellow, 5a 8 cents per lb. ’• cargo sales 46 cts. Havana, white and Brown, Muscat ado , 0 a 9 1-2— St. Croix, %alO l Sew-Orleans, $8 ‘i~4 a 0 fojinid Loaf, 16 1-2 a 18 J-2 —Lump 15 a 16 ! Mucco, Kentucky, Georgia, 4-e. 2j a 4 cts. “ Manufactured do 8a 30 8 a 9 in bbls. 28 ds. 27 c EXCHANGE. * ’ M or/;, 5-8 a 1-2 cf. 1 per ct. dis ‘p d s 5-8 a f ,Vi*c Emission at pnr. p Lhccss do 1 prim JV. Carolina S.B. JVotes, tjdvielphia “ 5 per ct.dis. j ‘ h:ure a State Bank of Georgia, V ; pr c. dix. payable at the Branch ***** US Bill*, i aL cs other than Augusta r *a 1 /?er cent. dis. . FREIGHTS. brtrpool, 11-16 0 3-43 I A*. Forlfl 1-4 per bale. and,m and, 1 3-8 a 1 1-2 I Providence, 1 12. REMARKS. Cotton —There has been no variation in the of this article since our last, and t lie sales of f week have been light. There was some stir ** r vbti in the market on Monday last, and 25 to hags of Uplands went off at 8 1-2 to 9 1-2. 10s ’ vl y at 8 1-2 toB 3-4; a few small lots of strictly ™ were sold at 9 1-2—since which time the has been quiet, and few sales have been The article comes in very freely, and e 8 -°ck on hand is fair. Sea Islands may be •U*d at 18 to 23. ftu p. —The transactions in Rice have been ve- A few sales have been effected at , ; ? 4, mostly at 3 1-4. ors.—Xo cawo alloat; retailing from the *7“ Moll cent* p'^ocekiks.—The business of the past week in jJ bag been very tfifling. Ihe stock ot f/; llieru liquors is heavy, and purchasers rnani ./ 1 backwardness in meeting the demands of •f Mdcrs. Sucrars an dull; a very inferior lot . Ut 7 1-2. We quote New Orleans 8 3-4 a9; • lu 'Cjvad o 9 a 9 1-2. Coffee—there is none in *vet; pii-iio would command 15 cents. A lot //■'don Brown Stout was sold at $3. r * ‘ Eights —To Liverpool, brisk at 3-4d , to r ?' ,c e,l 1.0 cents; to New York, $1 1-4 per bale; 1 Evidence, sll-2 per bale. _ BACON. 11l AfU) LBS.. Georgia Bacon, assorted IvJ \ ) Just Received and for Sals by , GAUDRY & LEGRIEL. f lb2o c 0 noticed the other day a paragraph from the Boston Bulletin, stating a fact as worthy obser vation, that one of the Engines of that city, had been made to force water through a hose to the distance of 140 feet. It has since been mentioned to us, by a manager of one of our fire companies, t hat one of their Engines is capable of forcing, and lias often forced, water through a hose, to the distance of 1550 feet! The Engine was construct ed by Ephraim Force, of New York. \\ e have hastily glanced at the correspondence between Mr. Adamg and several gentlemen of Boston, in relation to the charge preferred by Mr. A m 1328, against certain leading Federalists, who, it was said, contemplated the dissolution of t,ie Union, and the establishment of a separate Confederation. We think that Mr: A’s reasons sufficiently justify him, under the peculiar circum stances of the case, in withholding the evidence required. Ihe gentlemen requesting it, must have been aware, that a compliance would subject nim to an almost endless, and perhaps, ruinous series of implacable prosecutions. We must there fore look Gpbn the course which they have been p.rased to pursue, as altogether disingenuous, and merely got up for political effect The following extracts from Mr. A’s reply, are all our time or limits enable us to make: Flic statement authorised by me, spoke, not of the federal party, hut of certain leaders of that party, lr> my own letters to the members of con gress, vho did me the honor at that agonizinor cri sis to our National Union, of soliciting my confi dential opinions upon the measures under deliber ation, I expressly acquitted the great body of the federal party, not only of participating in the se cret designs of those leaders, but even of bein<r privy to or believing in their existence. I now cheerfully repeat that declaration”. , “ Your avowed object is controversy. You call for a precise state of facts and evidence; not affect ing. so far as you know, any one of you, but to enable you fairly to meet and to answer it. ‘•And you demand, ‘•1. \VIio are the persons designated as leaders of the parly prevailing in Massachusets in the year 1805, whose object I assert was, and had been, for several years, a‘dissolution of the Union, and tlio establishment of a separate confederacy? and ‘‘2. i he whole evidence, on which the charge is founded. ° ‘•You observe that it is admitted, in the statement of the charge, that it is not proveable in a court of law, and 3'qur inference is, that I am of course not in possession ot any legal evidence, by which to maintain it. Yet you call upon me to neime the persons affected by the charge; a charge in your estimate deeply stigmatizing upon those persons; and you permit yourselves to remind me, that my sense ot justice and self-respect oblige me to dis close all that Ido possess. My sense of justice to you, gentlemen, induces me to remark, that l leave.your self-respect to the moral influence of your own minds, without presuming to measure it by the dictates of mine. “Suppose, then, that in compliance with your cad, I should name one, two, or three persons, as intended to be included in the charge. Suppose neither 01 those persons to be one of you. You, however,’ have given them notice, that I have no evidence against them, by which the charge is proveable in a court of law—and you know that I, as well as yourself, am amenable to the laws of the land. Does your self-respect convince you that the persons so named, if guilty, would furnish the evidence against themselves, which they have been notified that I do not possess? Are you sure that the correspondence, which would prove their ffuilt, may not in the lapse 01 twenty-five years have been committed to the flames?—ln these days of tailing and of treacherous memories, may they not have forgotten that any such correspondence ever existed? And have you any guarantee to os ier, that. I should not be callfed by a summons more imperative than yours, to produce in the temple of justice the proof which you say I have not, or be branded for a foul and inalignaul slanderer of spotless and persecuted virtue? Is it not besides imaginable that persons may exist. w r ho, though twenty five years since driven in the desperation of disappointment, to the meditation and prepara tion of measures tending to the dissolution of the Union, perceived afterwards the error of their ways, and would now gladly w r ash out from their own memories their participation in projects, up on which the stamp of indelible reprobation has past? Is it not possible that some of the conspira tors have been called to account before a higher than an earthly tribunal for all the good and evil oftheir lives; and whose reputations might now sulicr needlessly by the disclosure of their names? 1 put these cases to you, gentlemen, a* possible, L- shew you that neither my sense of justice nor my self respect dnes require of me to produce the evidence for which you call, or to disclose the names of persons, for whom you have and can have no right to speak.” He then goes on to illustrate the ground he has occupied;—and, afterwards, by reference to exist ing documents, proves that Mr. Jefferson errone ously imputed to him a statement which had been made, implicating certain citizens of Massachu setts in treasonable negotiations witli the British government during the war It seems, however, that this imputation arose from an infirmity of memory, which led Mr. J. unintentionally, tocon fouud dates. The prevalence of the rumor in the South, at the time alluded to, was, no doubt, the cause of the mistake. After this, he again refers to of dis memberment, and says: “With regard to the project of a separate N >r thern confederacy, formed in the winter of 1803 and 4, in consequence .ftho Louisiana cession, it is not to me that you must apply for copies of the correspondence in which it was contained To that, and to every other project of disunion, I have been constantly opposed. My principles do not admit the right even of tho people, still less of the legislature of any one state in the Union, to se cede at pleasure from the Union. No provision is made for the exercise of this right, either by the iederal or any of the state constitutions. The act of exercising it, presupposes a departure from the principle of compact and a resort to that of force.” The following sentiments are deeply impressive. No honest disciple of the Jeffersonian school can doubt their orthodoxy. We recommend them to the calm consideration of the members of the Athens Caucus , and to those political Hotspurs of a sister Slate, who recommended her to close her ports on the general government: “I therefore hold it as a principle without , ex ception, that whenever the constituted authorities of a state authorise resistance to any act of con gress, or pronounce it unconstitutional, they do thereby declare themselves and their state quod hoc out of the pale of the Union. That th~re is no supposablc case, in which the people of a state mioht place themselves in this attitude by tho primitive right of insurrection against oppression, 1 will not affirm; but they have delegated no such power to their legislatures or their judges; and if SA VANN A 11, THURSDAY MORNING , FEBRUARY 26, 1829 there be such a right, it is the right of an individu al to commit suicide—the right of aa inhabitant of a populous city to set fire to his own dwelling house * In conclusion, Mr. Adams remarks: “It is not improbable, that at some future day, a sense of solemn duty to my country may require of me to disclose the evidence which I do possess, and for whiehyou call. But of that day the se lection must be at my own judgment, and it may be delayed till I myself shall have gone to answer for the testimony I may bear, before the tribunal of your God and mine. Should a disclosure of names even then be made by me, it \* ill, if possi ble, be made with such reserve, as tenderness to the feelings of the living, and to the families and friends of the dead may admonish. “R*t no array of numbers or of power shall draw me to a disclosure which I deem premature, or deter me from making it, when my sense of du ty shall sound the call.” In the retirement of Mr. Adams, we may speak of him freely, without incurring the imputation of flattery or prejudice. His administration was a boisterous one, and he had to contend with an opposition, powerful in talents, in number, and resources. That the contest in which he has bcec overthrown, was conducted in every instance, with an eye singly to the public good, no one in those enlightened days of Machiavelian policy, is scep tical enough to believe. In speaking of it, the fu tuie historian will say—it was a struggle between the ins and outs for the loaves and fishes; and such was the public excitation it produced, that our only surprise is, so little remains to condemn in the general conduct of affairs, by the then ex isting government. That the successor of Mr Adams will adhere to ; the great contested points of constitutional right ! which he advocated, is highly probable—and it is more than probable that he will, before the expir- j ation of his term, come in with his predecessor, for an equal share of contumely and abuse. Alas, poor human nature. Through the politeness of eson, of ship Minerva, the Editors of the New York Morning Herald have been fa vored with a Bristol’ paper, of 27th Dec. from which they make the following ex tract : Extract of a letter from Falmouth , dated December 20, “His Majesty’s ship Ledpole, on the Post Office station, which sailed from this port about 36 weeks since for the Brazils, has not yet returned, although several ves sels which sailed subsequently have arrived indue course. It is said that the Redpob had about two tons of specie on board, an. it is feared that she lias been lost at sea. ? * Commendable. Ae learn bv the Hamp shire Sentinel, that the rnilitia officers of that country have resolved to dismiss tiie use of spirituous liquors on occasions oi public meetings. The Buffalo Republican says that a brace ot large and beautiful swans recently made their appearance in Niagara river above the falls. One of them eventually got into the rapids, and being unable to extricate itself, was carried over the falls, and so badly wounded, that those who caught it, saw fit to destroy it. It measured 9 feet 6 inches from tip to tip of the wings, and 5 feet 8 inches from the point of the bill to the end of the tail. Deranger, the celebrated poet of France has been sentenced to nine months impris onment and a fine of 10,000 francs for rid iculing the French Governmet and State Religion in several songs not yet published. An immense crowd assembled to witness the trial. Boudoin who was to have published the songs, was sentenced to six months im prisonment, and 500 fraucs fine. Witch Story. —Tho last Portsmouth Adveitiser contains a most horrific story about a child’s being bewitched iri £llio(, Me. Hundreds of people have flocked over to see Iho mysterious incantations: and it is said the old maids are actually affrauf to sleep alone . But the proprietors of the bridge are in a fair way to make a good dividend by it. Washington City, Feb. i2. In Senate y * < may, Mr.Chambers, from ihe Select Committee to which was refer red the memorials of sundry citizens pray ing indemnification for spoliations of their pioperiy by the French, prior to the year 1800, reported > bill for the relief of those citizens. At 12 o’clock the Senate proc eeded by the Vice President and the Se cretary proceeded to the House of Repre sentative's for the purpose of examining and counting the votes fr President and Vice President of the United States. After their return, Mr. Tazewell was appointed a Committee on the part of the Senate to notify Andrew Jackson of his election as President of the U States In the House of Representatives, yester day, the amendment to the Constitution offered by Mr A. Smyth, was again taken up. Mr. Smyth having been interrupted 111 his observations on Tuesday, rose, ami stating it to be his desire to have the ques ti n taken without further debate, waived his right to make any further remarks in reply, and called for the previous question, u? the call was not seconded, there hem <ui a division—ayes 60, noes 90. Aim • lion was then made to. postpone the cm, sideration of the resolution until today, - - 4 w hen Mr. J. C. Wright spoke against p- s - until his observations were u terrupted by the termiuaiion of the tom A message was then sem to the Senate t<. Inform that body that the House was ready to proceed to die counting of the votes for President and Vice President, and inviting the attendance of that body. In a few moments the Senate, headed the Vice President of the United States, entered the Hall, and the Vice President look his seat on the right of the Speaker, while the members occupied the Clerk’s table The tellers, Messrs. Tazewell, Van Rensselaer and P. P. Barbojr, then ptoceedcd to read the certificates of th* 1 elector- and at the close the Vice President announced that Andrew Jackson, ofTennessee, was elected President of the United States for the next four years, and that John C. Calhoun, of South Carolina, was elected Vice Pcsi dent for the same term, from the 4:li of Ma rch next. The Senate then retired and the House adjourned. General Jackson arrived in this city yesterday morning, about 10 o’clock, es corted by the Central Jackson Committee, and proceeded to Gadsby’s where a suite of rooms had been prepared for hut*. SUPREME COURT. Wednesday February 11 1829. It was erroneously stated in the report of the proceedings • f this Court on yester day, that Mr. Chief Justice Marshall deliv ered the opinion of the Court in No. 36, Thomas F. Townsley, vs. Thomas K. Sumrall, whereas that opinion was deliver ed by Mr Justice Story. Pursuant to adjournment, the Court met this morning at the Capitol. Present as on yestetday. Pioclamation being made, the Court was opened. No. 54. John F. Satterlee, plaintiff in error, vs. E. Matthewson. The argument of this cause was continued by Messrs. Sutherland and Peters, for the defendant in error, and by Mr. Sergeant, for the plain tiffin error. Adjourned till tomorrow, 11 A. M. New York F**h. 10. Colombia —The packet brig Tampico, which arrived yesterday, sailed from thagena on the l6th ult. Letters from Bo gota to the 20th December stale that Bol var was soon to depart to prosecute the *'ar against Peru; Tturbide, (son of the late Emperor of Mexico,) who recently left this • ountry, would accompany him. A large <>dy of troops was to proceed on the expe diiion, it was said 8000 were ordered from the department of Venezuela*—The re bellion in Popayan, was suppressed. General Santander remained in prison at dip castle near Carthagena The family t Posadas, and that of Donna Vicente Narvaes, have been banished from Colom bia; much distrust existed, and no one dared* to express an opinion on the state of af fairs. The frigate Colombia sailed from Car thagena on the 25th of Dec. lor Santa M ir llia and Porto Cavello to complete her crew, and would proceed thence for Guay aquil. The Falmouth sloop of war remained at Vera Cruz or the 17th ult, for orders from M Poinsett, who was waiting for the ra tification of the Treaty The Grampus 1 was still at Tampico. Important Decision in the Court of 1 Chancery. —ln the matter of proving a paper, purporting to be the last will of the late John G. Leake Esq. ‘His Honor the Chancellor has decided on an appeal from decision of the Surrogate of the city and county of New York, that the decree made thereon bv said Surrogate be reversed— that said paper is null and void, and not a Will, and that letters of Administration on the estate of the deceased, be granted to the Public Administrator, &c. We understand, that the opinion of the Chancellor is elaborate and very able, and that he has given this important case a most industrious and solemn consideration. N. York Mer. Adver. Extract of a letter from a friend of Mr. Sanderson’s, of the Philadelphia Coffee House, dated Santiago de Cuba, January 3, 1829. “We regret a most flagrant outrage committed on one of our citizens this day, and the only consolation we have is the probability of removal from command of the offender, which will no doubt be done by bis Excellency the Governor and Gen eral Lorigo, both worthy officers and sensi ble of the respect due h) the flag of the U. States, and the justice required when j degraded by an officer under their control. The schooner Widow's Son, Capt. orris, j of Elizabeth city, N. Carolina, from Turk’s j Island, bound to New Orleans, with a cargo of sail, failing short of water, hove to off the Moro: the captain landed in his boat, and made application to the com mandant of the Moro for permission to proceed to the city with two casks for water, which he understood w'ts granted, not un derstanding the Spanish language. He proceeded up, and was arrested as soon as he landed on the wharf—was taken back by the orders of the commandant of the Moro, and in his presence, and by his au thority, received twenty five lashes, in a most barbarous and inhuman manner, be ing placed on a platform, made use of for criminals, and his bocy lacerated in the nost shameful manner—add to which, iptain Morris is in a bad state of health; .1 when taken to the place of punishment, so ignorant was he of any misconduct, that impression was they won- robh-.s, . )t | nmedialeiy pro hi v **d sail the u>- , < ;, e .}• * with bun for his liberty. Wo expect nothing less sh n the ariosi of fli roin mancfctiit and tiis dismission. January 4. P* S—Tin* commandant is a- . and the popular feelings will in some de gree be subsided by Ins dismission, which, there is no doubt, will be (he result. 1 * Unpleasant Intelligence. —The follow ing distressing intelligence is contained in a, Bristol (England) papei of December 27, brought by tlie ship Minerva from that port, arrived at New York. “By the brig T m Cod, just arrived at this port from Afnca, we have die follow ing intelligence from Cape Messur and, On the 18th of November 1 st, an exp <■. r tion was preparing by the American si ti< rs at that place, to destroy a French ship . nd factory at Dishy, a p!ac about 30 ; U* distant, when during the night, the *• c.a zine in which they were making car'* „tjs, blew no, and horrible to relate, Mi Lot Carcy t (the Governor) and nine of his people were destroyed. * Another Bristol paper of that date, gives the same account in the following terms: e learn fro n a vessel arrived >t ibis port Yesterday, fom Liberia, ('die Ameri can colony on the coast of Afric J hit a French vessel being cruizing off th i place in quest (if slaves, the authorities wero making preparations to attack her, and in preparing cartridges, &<-. for that purpose, fiie accidently communicated to tin- ammu nition, which exploded. The Governor, with several of tlie principal men of tho place were killed, and most of the town destroyed.* We sincerely hope that this m. y turn out to be a false report: first, herausi wo wish well to the colons; and s< c ,1 iv, because it would be ih < ,ur colonists, who seem to have imlnln ra ther prematurely, a taste f. , chivalry, should have been so little arqu; :v* ui h the dangerous properties of gun pew .• which without proper care will rte'-tr<y those who use u as weli as those it is used against.— Aorfolk Herald. From the New York Daily Advertiser. LATEST FRO M ECHO EE. By the Virginia, C-p:. Colins, from Vera Cruz, we have received from out cor respondent, papers frtmi that port to the 16th ian. General Victoria, in his speech on open ing the ordft ry sessions of inn General Congress, Dec. remarks that the ratifica tions of the treaty of boundaries with .In I . S. could not be exchanged at W. sim , because the term fixed had expired before they reached that capital. The deca use if Mr. Obregon it is said cannot.produce 3 nv any interruption in the business of the lega tion. Treaties are about 10 be ratified with Denmark, Hanover, and the L ;wer Countries. O • the 17 f h JaiK Commissioners from Tacotalpam, met others from Alvarado,and agreed to suspend hostilities, to disperse their troops, that agriculture may not bo interrupted; to forget their animosities, ami to promise fie.e cominer e and passage (o strangers. The Chamber ol Representatives appear to have founded their declaration in favor of Guerrero as President only, and entirely on the constitutional ground, that he was legally elected by the States. They have set aside the returns ferwarded by Vera Cruz Mr. Thomas Campbell on being instal led Rector of the University of Glasgow, proposed to the ungowried students and graduates a gold medal a prizi* fur the best English Essay mi on the evil of intoler ance toward those who differ with us religion ’ In bis remarks on tins subjec? he used the following beautiful illustration: “I use tliis circuitous phrase from disliking to couple the epithet religious with that spirit of intolerence, which teversing the sublime spirit of religion, bows down tho mind from its celestial aspiration to the anxieties of this world, like the Indian tree, which after bearing its head loftily in the sky, turns down again its branches from the sunshine of Heaven to be blended with and buried in the dirt of the earth/ 1 Much as Walter Scott is rend every where, in no country of the globe is iho enthusiasm fur him carried to so high a pitch as in Denmark. A single number of the Copenhagen Journal contains the an nouncement of three different translations of one of his works, and a professor of theologj’ has even gone so far as to recom mend to his pupils the study of the v\ aver ley Novels, ns the surest way of attaining that knowledge of mankind, so indispensa ble in ministers of the Gospel. London p per. Cement in Imitation of Marble —A me son in Boston, Joseph Brown, advertises a ‘marble cement imitation * for the outside of buildings It resists the moisture of the atmosphere and the rff cts of smoke, and, indeed, the severity my climate, fur a long time, and can be washed like the natu ral marble. Marble of any color can bo very closely imitated, and at a cost not exceeding that of fine panned brick. Iu the interior of houses it precludes the ne* ea sily of oil painting, an operation disagreea ble and unhealthy. The proprietor re commends it to combine • mjiy, aud economy,— Balt . Auer* [>*•- 49.