Indiana Palladium, Volume 10, Number 4, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 8 February 1834 — Page 1
TWk A, Tf Jit; rJIv cUMlil
I? illl By David V. Callcy. ZYJrMIS $3 i'A'R 334 PER Ci'.Yr. D1SC0UXT MADE OX ADVAXCE, Oil lUi OA" HAW YJ'.AM.Y PAYME.YJii liAWREWCEBURGH, (I A.) SATURDAY, FEBRUARY , 1834
From the JSTew York Jlirror. Xetcspapcrs in America. Rapidity of growth Ins long been considered a peculiar characteristic of every thing American. The clearing, which but two years since contained a few log-huts, is now a good sized village, and another year will ensure its application for city charter. Even so with our newspapers. The little "seven by nine," that, but a week since, wc scarcely thought it worthy of notice, comes to us now with all the dignity of a full grown folio; and this will, in the lapse of another twelve month, double its amplitude. At no season of tho year do these remarkable change s burst upon us with such simultaneous uniformity, as after the first of January. Some widen their columns, others alter their heads; a third party discard their dingy brown paper and elligible types,
and appear in snow-white sheets and with improved character; all, however, are unanimous in abolishing the very elegant embellishments of tho fine arts, which formerly adorned their pages, and made American newspapers so conspicous. Your Galen's heads, your runaway slaves, your "haste, post haste" ridcr3, your houses and ships without number, your vendue-stands, spectacles, boots, shoes, hats, corsets, caps, hobby-horses all have vanished before tbe spirit of improvement and good taste. So too the editors themselves are no longer the race their predecessors were. Men of talent and education now grace the arm-chairs, which formerly were apparently occupied only by an immage, in the form of a sedate-looking man with spectacles on nose, and pot of paste beside him, wielding incessantly a pair of huge scissors, which was never so much plied as when a foreign journal or magazine attracted its cutting propensity. These pipers were made up of"scrip scrap, and scribbage" andsent into the world "with all their imperfections on their heads." Now originality in composition taste in selection variety in matter piquancy, wit and humor in remark more reliance on native rescourscs, and less on refuse foreign extracts neatness in typography good white paper and a fair impression, arc the indisponsiblo requisites to approbation and support. And the paste and scissors scribe : "It was but yesterday they stood All (ex-officio) great and good. Where arc they now With shapes of air, The caravan of things that were, Journeying to their nameless home Like Mecca's pilgrims from her tomb; With the lost pleiad with the wars Of Agamemnon's ancestors With their own years of joy and grief, Spring's bud, and autumn's faded leaf; With birds that round their cradles flew, With winds that in their boyhood blew, With last night's dream, and last night's dew. Yes, they are gone, alas, each one of them, Departed every mother's son of them."
TWENTY-THIRD CONGRESS.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Thursday, January 16, 1834. The Speaker presented the following Message from the President of the United States, with the following report from the Directors of the Mint: Washington, Jan. 13, 1S31. Sir: I transmit to Congress a Report from the Directors of the Mint, exhibiting the operations of that institution during the year 1833. ANDREW JACKSON. To the Hon. the Speaker of the IIov.se of Representatives.
Mint op the United States, Philadelphia, 1st Jan. 1834.
Sir: I have the honor to submit a Report on the general transactions of the Mint during the last year. The coinage effected within that period, amounts to $3,705,710; comprising $978,550 in gold coins, $2,759,000 in silver, $28,100 in copper, and consisting of 10,307,790 pieces of coin, viz:
Half Eagles, 193,030 pieces, making
Quarter Lagies, 4,100
HalfDoIlars 5,200,000
Quarter do. 150,000 Dismes 485,000 Half Dismes 1,370,000 Cents 2,739,000 Half Cents 154,000
10,370,790
o o
to 2
o fcc C3
SIR MATTHEW HALE. Tho character of Sir Matthew Hale, as a judge, was splendidly pre-eminent. His learning was profound; his patience unconquerable; his integrity stainless. In the words of one who wrote with no friendly feeling toward him, "his voice was oracular,and his person little less than adored." The temper of mind with which he entered upon the duties of the bench is best exemplified in the following resolutions, which appear to have been composed on being raised to tho dignity of chief baron at the restoration : ''Things necessary to bo continually had in re-
mcmberance: ' 1. That in the administration of justice I am intrusted for God, the king and country; and there fore, "2. That it be done, first, uprightly; second, deliberately; third, resolutely. "3. That I rest not upon my own understand ing or strength, but implore and rest upon the direction and strength of God. '4. That in the execution ofjusticc I carefully lay aside my own passions, and not give way to lhem, however provoked. ' "5. That I be wholly intent upon the business J nm about, remitting all other cares and thoughts -as unseasonable and interruptions. "o. That I suflfornot myself to be prepossessed with any judgment at all, till tho whole business and both parties be heard. v7. That I never engage myself in the beginning of any cause, but reserve myself unprejudiced till tho whole be heard. "S. That in business capital, though my nature prompt mc to pity, yet to consider there is a pity also due to tho country.
Q Tlvit I tin nnt 1 rn rlrrwl In milfpra mirrdv 1
conscientious, where all the harm is diversity of !
judgment. j "10. That I be not biased with compassion to j
the poor, or favour to the rich, in point ofjusticc. "11. Thit popular or court applause or distaste have no infl icr.co in any thing I do, in point of distribution ofjusticc. "12. Not to be solicitous what men will say or think, so long as 1 keep myself exactly according . to the rule of justice. "13. If in criminals it be a measuring cast, to
incline to mercy and acquittal.
"14.
tvnero no more harm essties, moderation is no injustice. "15. In criminals of blood, if the fact be evident, severity is justice. "10. To abhor all private solicitations, of what land soever, and by whomsoever, in matters depending. "17. To charge my servants, first, not to in- . tcrposc in any matter whatsoever; second, not to take more than their known fees; third, not to give
any undue precedence to causes; fourth, not to recommend counsel. "18. To be short and sparing at meals, that I may be the fitter for business." Under the influence of resolutions like these, the conduct of Hale on the bench was irreproachable. London Atkcn&nw
$903,1. "30 10,400 2,G0H,O00 39,000 48,500 08,500 27,390 770 53,763,710
Ut the amount ot geld coined within the past year, about $85,000 were derived from Mexico, South America, and the West Indies; 12,000 from Africa; 808,000 from the Gold Region of the United States, and about 10,000 from sources not ascertained. Of the amount of Gold of the United States, above mentioned, about 104,000 may be stated to have been received from Virginia; 475,000 from North Carolina; 600,000 from South Carolina; 210,000 from Georgia; and about 700 from Tennessee. The annexed statement exhibits the quantity of gold received from the several districts of United States which have thus far produced it in sufficient quantities to be an object of regard, commencing with the year 1824. Previously to that period, gold had been received at tho mint only from North
Carolina, trom which quarter it was first transmitted for coinage in 1804. During the interval, however, from that date to 1823, inclusive, the average amount had not exceeded 2,500. In the report of 1st January, 1803, it was remarked that the quantity of gold of the United States brought to the mint in the year 1832, was regarded, according to estimates entitled to great respect, as not much exceeding one half the quantity produced from the mines within that year; nearly an equal amount being supposed to have been exported uncoined, or consumed in the arts. Nothing has since occurred to create o doubt of the correctness of that conjecture. It is altogether probable, that the remark is equally true in regard to the last year, and that the amount of gold derived from the United States, within that period, has exceeded one million and a half of dollars. This sum, it is believed, is not less than about one fifth of the amount of gold produced within the same period, from all other sources, in Europe and America, estimated according to the best authorities. I have the honor to be, with great respect, your obedient servant, SAMUEL MOORE, Jircetor of the Jlint of the U. S. To the President of the U. S.
THE WHALE FISHERY. We shall trespass a little on our limits this week, and somewhat on our usual variety, in order to lay before our readears an abstract of a Mercantile portion, of an extremely well written and instructive article in the January number of the North American Review, on the American Whale Fishery. Some attempt at getting up the business from this city as well as from Wilmington, Delaware; renders tho accurate statements of the Review particularly appropriate at the present moment. After a history of the riso and progress of this most interesting trade, which wc cannot even glance at, the writer, who is understood to bo a resident of New Bedford, says, that altogether the number of British Wlnlo Ships, cannot full much short of 250 sail, but tho Americans greatly out number them. The following estimate of the number of Whale Ships employed from the several Whaling Ports of the United States is dciivcd from authentic sources.
From New Bedford and its vicinity.
Nantucket, Edgartown, Falmouth and Fall River New London and Stonington, Sag Harbour, Bristol, Warren and Newport, (R. I.) Nowburgh, Ports, north of Capo Cod,
The calculation is now, however, considered by the shrewdest merchant?, to have been too sanguine, and they already begin to anticipate a reverse. Tho market for common Whale Oil ere now pre
carious. They fluctuate with the fortunes of tho Greenland Fisheries, and prices are more or less dependent on the ".Tops and manufacture of vegetable oils in Europe.1' Again, ''Wo have not mentioned one important branch of the Whalo Fishery the more important it threatens to direct tho British Southern Fisheries to another part of the Earth. The settlers of New South Wales, h ive carried it on for several years with great spirit and success. At the port of Sidney alone in 1K30, sixteen vessels were actually e mployed, and nine new ones were building. Their proximity to the most eligible fishing stations, enables them to perform three voyages while the English and Americans perform two, while they reach tho grounds in DO days; the latter are frequently 7 months in performing the passage. The freight of tho Oil from New Holland to England is estimated at only one tenth of tho
amount they can realise, by being employed in the? fishery, during tho time thev would consume in
12 ' oin to and returning from England themselves.
an honored gruv. B it B trr Inscontemphted hi own ruins for more than a quarter of a century--lias had during that long r.nd bitter term, tho poisoned choice prrntt d daily Jo his lip, lna rat and drank ;uul hh'pt with the his'S JS of I ho vo:U ringing in his cur.
Commodore Birron t f the United States N uy, Ins presented u memorial to rnngrcM netting for.h tint U ) h is invented strain phu!i-s!i:p cakul ited forth, destruction of all clasps t,f ships of war
that can co-m within iholim-t- .f !,m
ivers of the United States.-. H'Vi. Virgin!,
er riv;
inds
Hilt.
181
Citation. The public are cautienrd again?! receiving notes of thj Xorth ur.Uer.i Hani: of IiVginiit, at Wheeling, altered form Fives to Tni.--lhey are of the obi plate, and may easily bo detected by observing tint tho ignettc of ihc Fives is a Pha-nix rising from its ashes whilst that of tin tens is an Eagle holding m its b'ak a ch tin ; to which a shield is attached. Kiciull.
- o7
V'i the V xo York liccnin P.nt. 1 :fiUn:'t1 fit Wi 1 rii ?i niejpmt.'r ipii'ki! In
Ihe New Hollanders anticipate a monopoly of the J ,im ..!ir ivrnviv ,,.!, v f ,m,, !..
a i ; trade, and already British sh-ps have gonu to en-; t!u, (jm.ornor of lI0 i,, lli4, ntl dissolved the pro.U gage with them mthe fashcry instructed to act up- j v;llcIal i j.ltlin5 ; 1nlN,i;,1Plli,1, ,,f in-dr raf.n,!
121 ion tho nrincinlo of shinning their oil homeward and ii,. .t... .,,.,,.,.... i ... :,,..,r ...
7 iu iiti." iii'i ill ..ai k iaii ill i au iiiui i in i i in :
in -r:. r. . n ... j . "
' out ut uii; jiiiiMi i iiiu
(.)
refitting from tho colony." These stateme
II 1.1- 1 1 s
may oe uesigneu 10 uiscourage trie emirarumg ot !0f the
Several ships now building will raise the aggrcgato to four hundred. To show how actively and cautiously the pursuit is kept up, the Reviewer states that of tho 131 vessels from New Beford district, 171 navigated by 42-12 men, were cctually at sea on the 30th September last, and about the same proportion from other ports.
1 he ships employed arc generally from 300 to
capital by others; wc only notice them as new
views which it will be well to investigate. The bounty allowed to Whalers by the European Government are stated in tho articb', and under this protection sin American gentleman is now deeply engaged in the French Whale Fishery. The French Whale Fleet at the present time may be estimated at forty sail, three-fourths of
winch sail, from the port ol Havre.
ami.nt for the emancipation
laves. Tho Governor had sent munitions
Taking
of war, and provisions in vesse ls of war, from Port lloyal, to the diiVerent ports in the Lland, anticipating u revolt on the part of the nogioc?. Hehral
J expressed to tho Assembly his determination to
rest on tho security of the troops of the line, whK'h hid been reinforced, and one portion of tho inilitii, alluding, of course, to tho white.. Several families had undo arrangements to avail thems Jus of
350 tons burthen. The Greenland shins. aro built i consideration, the shin?; that sail from the fiorman
witli all the strength and durability with w hich j ports, with the English French and American Fleets, wood and iron can be combined, to enable them wc shall find that more than 700 ships are engaged to withstand the rude concussion of the ice. So-j in pursuing these mighty inhabitants of tho deep, cond only in maratime importance among nation?,! That a squadron of 700 vessels, scour every sea our country has already outstripped all others in the ! and bay, in the eager and unremitted pursuit," withWhale Fishery, our ships may now be seen linger-1 out exterminating, or apparently diminishing the ing for supplies in all the western ports of South ! species, leaves us to wonder at the cxhaustless re-
America, and one hunored ot them annuullv re-1 sources ot nature.
cruit at tho Sandwich Islands. During the lato Tho whole article in the Review is rculcto with
,nl j the first packets for this port
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CO" The play of 'l'ccumi !i, or iho buttle ofliio Thames, was represented at tho Baltimore theatre on Tuodiy night last, w hen according to the play bills, tho representatives of Tccumseh wore the same dress worn by the Indian Cbirfon tho day he was killed and tho representative of Col. Johnson "used the same pistol with which the hero slew his savage foe." Phil. Ir.v'uer.
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war the business met with severe losses, most of the Whale SI lips in the Pacific having been captured, lte-caplured by Porter and Downs, many of them it is true returned, but the greater part were burnt, sunk, or turned into transports from the British Navy. The island of Nantucket alone, lost twentyseven ships! Since then the business has advanced with unprecedented rapidity, and port after port has launched her ships inio tiie Pacific. The business naturally divided itself into the Sperm and common Whale Fisheries. Inthe first are employed about 250 ships, whose average voyages aro about 30 months. Each of these ships may be valued, with the outfits at $35,000. In the right Whale business are employed 150 ships, each of which, with tho outfits cost $1S,000, and the average length of the voyage is ten months. Thus is employed a capital for nearly 12 million of dollars. Tho imports of 1831 were about 110,000 barrels of Sperm Oil, 11S,000 pounds of Whale Bone. Tho imposts of 1S32 wero about 80,000 barrels of Sperm Oil, 175,000 barrels of Whale Oil, and 1,350,000 pounds of Bono, and from data, the writer estimates the annual income of tho fishery for the last three years, at four ar.d a half million of dollars, and remarks that if tho voyages prove as successful and prices remain as higfi the annual income for the coming years, including tho present, will be more than six million of dollars. There are between 50 and GO Sperm Candle Manufactories in the United States and the quantity annually made, is about 3,000,000 pounds. The common Whale Oil, and the Bone is mostly exported to Eu
rope. Ihe average tonnage of our 400 Whale Ships, is 339 tons, and each employs about twentyfive men making the aggregate of 132,000 tons of
shipping, and 10,000 men! These arc employed directly and exclusively in the pursuit, and a vast amount of capital is indirectly dependent on it. On tho books of the Custom House at New Bedford the 30th September last, were recorded 190 ships, S2 brigs, 50 schooners, 103 sloops, and 1 steam boat, in all 3S5 vessels, whose aggregate tonnage was 79,S2S tons, giving employment to 5,500 seamen. At the same time in the Nantucket books 141 vessels, with an aggregate tonnage of 29,000 tons, giving employment to more than
2000 seamen. Carrying out tho calculation, cmbracing tho wdiolo tonnage employed in transporting oil and so forth, wc should find that 810 vessels of various descriptions, measuring 170,000 tons, and navigated by 12,000, seamen, were dependent upon the business, or about one ter.ih of the whole navigation of our country. AhoutSl
interest, and should be read by every merchant, us well as all who thirst for general information. Philadclj)7iia Price Currc.it.
O O b CO 1 ) 22 r; T) a -' - - ?N -a 53 co ao (.tj a:- oc qd go go go oj
Death of Col. Clinton. Our own correspondent at Havanna had prepared us for tho news which it is now our melancholy office to communicate to the public, viz: the decease of Col. Do Witt Clinton, who is said to have died at Matanzas on the ISth of December. Tho deceased was the second son of the late Governor Do Witt Clinton, and was a young man of high promise. Having a talent for engineering, he was in the days of his boyhood placed by his distinguished father under the instruction of the Engineers upon the great Eric canal and in that department of scientific occupation he has continued ever since, having been for the last four or five years attached to the corps of the United Stales Engineers. At r.n early ago ho evinced many of tho elevated qualities of his illustrious parent, and as he grew up, his features and form were developed as from the same noble mould. He was exemplary in his morals, and the qualities of his heart were such as to endear him to all with whom he became acquainted, and wc sympathize deeply in tho alllictiou of his relatives .and friends. Col. Clinton was about twenty-nine years of age. He had been indisposed, at times, for several years indeed almost from the time he left the engineer service on the canals in Pennsylvania. Some time in October he was attacked with bcemorrhagc at the lungs, and bled copiously several times, He
sailed for Cuba in November, in tho hope vain ns it has proved of benefitting his health by change of climate. For upwards of loo weeks previously to his departure, the bleeding has ceased, and hopes of ultimate recovery were indulged. But the hecmorrhago returned with still greater violence after his arrival at Matanzas resulting in his speedy dissolution. The anguish of his relatives is soothed by tho information that ho died among friends, who paid every possible attention to his comfort in his last hours. Ar. Y. Commercial Advertiser.
Tho Philadelphia Bank, behvrcn tho hours of closing on Saturday rftemoon, ai:d tho opening of tho doors yesterday morning, was robbrd of juolrLly about Sixty-four Thousand Dollars, in Bmk notes. Among tho notes taken, wo understand, were about Thirty-eight Hundred Dollars Doylstown Bank, nearly an equal amount in Trenton notes. The rest was in noti sof Philadelphia hauls; including thoso of every denomination except Thousands and JVrr huudrcds. The number of
! Ffties stolen is very small.
Alter getting withm the Bank, the robber must have opened with fabc keys, tho thrco doors of the vault one of wood Mid two of iron, and td tho iron chest in which the notes were kept. .411 these doors were found koso wl.cn tho vuult was first visited this morning. Chronicle.
From the Philadelphia IntilUgenciV. AARON BUUlt. The long and troubled career of this gifted, but wretched man, approaches it3 close. History in its lenghened gallery, has not a single portrait on which the student may gazo with more admiration and regret or the philosopSicr with more surprise and doubt than that of Aaron Burr. To this moment he
Among tb( papers stolen uemPhibuh Ipl.ia B'u.l., on Sunday last wero eve hundred a:d ffty Hundred dollar Xotcs; amounting ujytcai Thousand J)ollars. We have rsccrtair.nl tho truth of a it maskable circumstance k ported on .Monday but ninth doubted. A few weeks ago the Mayor received ;u anenvmous letter from LvuUrillc in Kenticlv. informing him that, on tbe first fair tiuuday, iiftf.r the time when the letter would probably reaching, an attempt was to be made, by c.j ciienecdiV skilful rogues, to enter and rob one of the Philadelphia Banks. Tho intelligence thus conveyed to Mr. Swift, was immediately sent by him, to ihc Cashiers of all our Banks; though both he ami they then thought it not impicbablc that tho writer was a hoaxer Tho Bank offers a reward of Three Thovtond Dollars for tho apprehension of tho thieves and the restoration of tho money. J)aily Chronicle. 7 Vom the Washington (Hole. We have seen a very beautiful scarf, n tiuo of gold, andii'rrr, and t ilky presented by the famous traveller, Kn.uv, to Gen. Tn-io., Senator fiom Indiana. Tho coloring of tho bilk surpasses even the splendor of the metals with which it is interwoven. As a specimen of the oris among tho barbarous p?oplo, it is worthy a place in a mu3cumif curiosities.
The b
to Gen.
is anuzzle. The carl v nail of his earner w;s all
per cent, of the whole income of the business is brightness; even up to the moment when caught
It is computed lhat not less than 5000 persons have met with accidents in travelling the last year 'by flood or field;1 15G0 of whom have been killed or seriously wounded by tho explosion of steam
In criminals that consist merely in words, ; boilers.
We are requested to give publicity lo the fol
lowing clause m the Post Oflice laws: "If any person shall enclose or conceal a letter, or other thing, or any memorandum in writing, in a newspaper, pamphlet, or magazine, or in any package of newspapers, pamphlets, or magazines, or make any writing or memorandum thereon, which he shall have delivered into any post oflice,
or loany person for that purpose, in order that the same may be carried by post, free of letter postage, he shall forfeit the sum of rive dollars for every such ofiencejandthe letter, newspaper , package, memorandum, or other thing, shall not be delivered to the person to whom it is directed, until the amount of single letter postage is paid for each article of which the package is composed.1'
distributed among the Whaling Crews on their ar
rivals. Taking into considerarion tho manufactories, wharves, stores, &-C. and other investments, we shall find, continues the writer, that $70,000,000 of property are involved in it, and that 70,000 people derive from it their chief subsistance. The former contributed to its supplies pigs, cattle, and ship timber from our forests finds a ready market in the Whaling Ports, 45,000 barrels of Flour from Philadelphia and elsewhere; 33,000 barrels of beef and pork; 000,000 lbs. of copper and copper nails; 1,500,000 staves; 2,500 tons of iron hoop?, large quantities of duck cordago ship stores and whale craft, are the necessary annual outfits of tho Whale Fleet. These arc most curious and valuable facts which are worth preserving. We next meet with the following paragraph, which wo give in the author's own words. It deserves the consideration of those who desire to embark in the business. " It would seem impossible to stretch the business to any greater extent, from this country. In 1S24 too great a supply of Sperm Oil, produced a ruinous depression of prices, but
tne demand was still thought to warrant a steady and
in the toils of a superior mind, he w as dashed to the
earth, blasted and destroyed we knew not whether more to admire or condemn. Even if his "uilt
were written on the page of his country's history !
in colors too glaring to be doubted his penance has been along and bitter one. He has lived to see his name shrouded in infamy: coupled with tho imprecations of his country, and held aloft as a beacon light to guard tho unwary from the wreck
of ambition he has lived lo soe end feel all this,
to creep where ho has soared, to bo
praying and insulting curiosity, or
scornful distrust, the centre of all 1
served of all observers
He had trod, silently and tibstractcd, around the walking crowds of the metropolis of his country
earning n:s ua:n uiuau in umerncs3 ol soul, and
history of it is given in tho following letter . Tuto.j accompanying the present :
Wasiunuio:;, Sep. 17, 1KUI. I) run Giakr w.: Accompany this, will bo banded you a Moorish scarf, sash "or girdle. It w:;.s made from the raw silk of Spain, ur.d woven in with ihread offinc gold and silver, at Fez, the capital of the Empire of Morocco. Mr. Will sh;rc, who ransomed mc from slavery, in lSll'sprcsentrd to me at Mngadurc, July 'J5th, lS'Jb. 1 br you to accept this so uf, Mid show it to your neighbor, as a specimen of tho crts cf coloring and weaving, as well as of the costumo of a barbarous people, and, permit me to add, cs a testimonial of the hijjh esteem Untertuin for your txulted public and orivato chaiactcr.
2 tho object of j Utczl consideration ar.d regard, 1 have tho of averted and !l,onor lo ir )aur dovcted fiiem! andeh dieut hopes, tho eh- scrvant JAMES KlhEY. Hon. John Tirvox, Senator in Conjris.
schooling the high and
soaring
-pint to endure
its depredation, the mockery and scorn of his county, end his age. History has no parallel for such picture. Camillus1 disgrace was brief, and terminated by a glorious reward. Marius left the ruins ot Carthage to feed fit his revenge upon his enemies and even Belisarius was doomed to be
gradual incrcasa 'of the Sperm Whale Fishery. Uiis obolus for a few days, when death hid him in
7r. A fiiei:d ofi:mju? t rcturrd from Cincinnati informs ns that a firo broke out on Wednesday morning 20ih inet. about half past l oYhu I;, in the Livciy tiiabld belonging to Mr. l.ippincoti, oji Sycamore, between Fioiit Mid Columbia tt.-'-. and bcfoio it could lo got l.mh r, cpniemfd thu stable together with ceveral adjoining buildhi, among which tho new Amphi-Tiieatio recently erected bv Mr. L. Our informant )." horut and I :t occurs innlahod in th ihiuc.Iii:uigSvu,
