Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 27, 1873, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

E ;' ] THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, -APRIL -27, 1873. : [ < | g Vashi ight i 3 and 1817, after the Commissioners had cast | intercourse acts of that Administration made | Washington 1sid ths southeast corner-atone of R ¢ ' * ..} Quckeis cortainly, Zac e | WASHINGTON. Bormen im0 ok e ot | B of, sad bore tostimony that Hadfeld had | monoy 80 scatce that very isls was accomplisnod | tho old Capital, Mr. Walter was boran. Philari| - ITALY.; i S one ssariices, 4 Lava oy ‘ : | T, S i tocimoder and B est | Fitony, bete ol knovletge of ust i | bnpond e e i of e viage; sad, | dfpi, ept £ 1201, a2 v thesmof s bl g o, aod 3+ s ; - - | citizon'of the District. Dr. Thornton always in- fi bohind. 3 . 4 el L e ey o EL TN :To tum to another subjoct : Perhaps.it ma; I jelzen 70 tho original | samo offect. 15 the City Hall, and in tho two ro- , 7mE oAvrron wAs pumve, - - | land, worked with the trowel, supporta 2 b interesting or usafal to eaders to knoy | A Chapter for Architects-—The | aimtortof the Gapioh had so doubt i iciuro | maining doparimont bldigs, of which o con- In 161, Ealmbe T vad st of it | aad boeme Toe w1 door. In 180 o | Disagreeable Characterise.| 1o iseing o etu i yow readesio o s * i o] Admini i B ur, 1 uildis 0BT i 2 ry ) i i Designers of ‘the Pub- O e T e mass of 1o Tho | froastono basoments, b on each ide Of the | {ha Wsstem e e e L | the following year _dosignad . opamensiog tics of European . | .- oo i op Sk Ko oo ] i 1di frandeur, simplicity, and beatity of tho oxterior, | Prosident’s Houso, namely : Troasiry and State, . ingstone, tnd Nicholus J. Joosovolt, his Son-in- | Prison.. His plans for ‘};g“}lc""‘g" et Couriers. : ‘is always hard to tell, in making inquiries abons ! lic Buildings. « filo proprioty with wiich tho apartments aredis® | War and Navy buildings. Ho could agroo with |-1aw by his firat go), hastoned back fo th | coptod, and from 1833 bo 1847 ho suporintendo 5 .| #'placo bofore you go. hore, hgw mach s 20 i : tribited, and tho coonomy in tho mass,of tho | (e Commistloners: but & short time, oo cf |;Caital, and took chargo of its ;ecmtx?'c;;o&: O o I tomako and how much is false. Peoplo may have an iy : : is plen.” whom was Thornton ~nforesaid; - ['a more mel comprehonsive 3 : . sl | y . e that Thoraton's plin has cap- | stead of - diachireing Hsdleld courtoously, | hay of hia s O sto ne . | Gorernment omployed. him to constract & mole : torest, and often o, in making out & place much | 1 B e arda oml Juggmont of Gl «1t5s | It sppetzs by her nutos. that, On May 10, | spaction ot boe ooy e rad sanoried | aud port at Lagusyra, and from 1851 to. 1066 he | The Climate . of Rome and || ot g Ty e Landiorda sre | Hallet, Thornton, Hadfield, Hoban, S moblo, besatifu, oxeollontly distributed, | 1708, fhey gaye notico to & itizen, Mr.mfimyx part of ‘the walls oud all tlo foundations | was tho architae: of tho Capitol, and had an in- 5 Naples.” e m,:'y{mg‘i;‘,’,‘;_myh‘:f’fi fi;,g‘h:j et i Tatrobe, Bulfinch, Mills snd moderate in #izo. . Among its admir- | Brent, to” tell Hadficld that ho was no longerin | sonnd, aud the more delicate work of the | fluence in tho Treasury, Patent-Ofiico, and Post- . Se s blo with them. Tn fact it i very Mtoombmn : atrobe, i y ers no ono i more decided ‘than im whoeo do- | their ‘omploy, Hadfield died in Washington, | interior little injured, although tho incendiaries | Offico extensions, Mr. Walter was nccused of 3 TeTiablo el Vs At T a0 bt * Wal cision is most important,”—meaning Washing- | February, 1826. His successor was James | 13d labored all night to mako the devastation | influencing contracts on the public works in Quiriés beforo going to Home, and heasd of o ter, ton. 3 Hoban, who must have then lived elsowhere,— | complete, using powdar, etc., of their rockets | Washington, and the disposition of funds on the Beautiful S t good denl of illnesn thers, but supposed it i sreszaso's ancmTzcTUnAY, xYowieooy. | probaly in Maryland, whero ho Led marciel | for tha purposo. It was Laitobe who desigacd | Ct ;gémflh fldng was fuinly ccomitiad to, an fiul ‘Sorrente, Brobaby exazgerated, auil so wea o make ouz = ’ s T o g0, visit as we had proposed. But I came to the or he was orderod, May 28, 1798, to superintend | what Madison called i Mr.: Jefferson, at the time above roferred to,. W - 2 % % . & i i i the building of the Capitol, to remove to the TIE AMERICAN ORDER OF ARCIITECTURE, (COST OF THE EXTENSIONS-—XEIGS, . Ft = Talks with Thelr Posterity --- Eighty | pas bad o gx o oyt ot agton | iy, and to: occupy Hadlelds house, or, if 1o | using tho oottonblosors. $he. tobsscorios and | Tho fwst estimato for:the Capitol extension yom Qi O Correependiat. R Do bis aen. yom arheirah She dlimate. Yi f Mind in One Edifice. and was known to havo a fine fancy for tho arts, | did not gob it, to clargo hia ront in gome obher | tho Indian corn, shatt and ear, in his_colimng | Was $2,675,000, and five years' time. In_ 1856, : it o oL Vg M ol o sl ears of Min and to tako & patron's delight in fhe legislative | dwelling to tho Governmont. R and capitols, He madoa porsonal visit to the | Capl. Moigs called upon Jefferson Davis for | Ins previous lotter I aliuded to some of the | peet tofny knowlodge, a great many cu i = edifices of his country. We can gob an ides of * ATCHITECT 50. 3—HOBAX. Catoctin and London hills to find quatries, and-| 62,835,000, and said that the additional cost was | good qualities of oves whera” podnls ca’ nat. avtanly’. Base At this time, Hoban was architect of the Pres- | discovered the breccia, or biue mottled marhle; | On acoount of the: low estimates of Mr. Waltor, * THE EUROPEZAN COURIER; the fover, they are very apt to suffer from his sentiments on art from a lotter which he o c o o he- I 3 5 . 5 5 : idont's Houeo as well as of the Capitol, and he | which is used in the old Hall of Ropresentatives-| &ud in the substitntion of marble, iron, encaustio i i i Scaudals of flie Construction of the Capt W?nflf; éoa’p’;;lc?ll.l o osater the sduption | was allowed o5 tho moment, to draw his fall | and in the corridors, . Tho Hall of Rapresenta. | tilos, et for wood, plaster, and stono. And, Lo “u'; byno means my desire to convey to fi;‘mfigg&gfi‘:fl AL DI e B R tole--Growth of Our Build. of some of thy models of antiquity, which havo | salary on both buidings. Ho received 100 | ‘tives, the Semato Chsmbor, the old Bupreme | ho added, ‘I have labored faithfully and dili- | your readers the idea thiat I regard the race with | iack of vitality in i particularly trylng when the ing Civilization, had the approbation of thonsands of years ; and, | guingas a year for his subsequent sttention to | Courk room, and the old lobbies, as well as tho xenflg to construct this building in such a map- | unmixed admiration; 8o, in this letter, I intend | gocs <t 0cT blowing. o eifect of the cli- - . .| for the President’s House, I should prefor, tho-| tho Presidont's Honso. _ : = | ground-plan of the two wings, wers Latrobe's | ner that it wonld lsst for ages as a creditable | saying a fow words on the other side—the dza- mate on many, people i8 to meke them take no celebrated fronts of modern buildings.';h e Eobnn r;asan&t:\‘va t:i(éi.\‘]kau 'hConnt,;é ‘I:ieolmdé g‘ark.v o ‘Il{“ erectded BSL kgn&;’a Church, Efl&gm&nt of the f:"‘& cél él: A&ts at m’?lx !tdma greeablo side—of the- courier’s character, and I | interest in anything whatsoever. They ‘don't 71 up amongst the i- | who was educatod and ta; @ ‘pro! n of 8 ‘an ess - an rentwo mangions, is country.” ot 6 the ox] iture i o e e, | B et o ; o | ammot ot Y may bo fempled o speak ot | ¥aat o sec ssyiving o Go osihin, o o soy rchi --Their |. i ived 1) enco tho surmise that | the arched gate of the Navy-Yard, and was | Was about 890,000 monthly. . The Romance of the Architects--Their |-tects, which outlived the Exeontive. Mansion waa built, by him from | contarred Wit as to pubm"{mufing!mm’ Capt. M. O, Meigs reported in August, 1856, | ¥on groater length on this mubject than the mind and body. This state of thing is perhaga due, in part, at least, tothe - Ve TMMEN! 2 it the defensive. and Thornton was put upon the ides of Leinstor Houso, Dublin. . His living | parts of the country. that sbove €2,500,000 had been expended on tho | other. ¥ Mutual Criticisms. > THE ARCIITEOTS FALL 30—:. LA ot e S g o th < b: = 1804, Mr. Latrobe nddressed s_repert to| ‘grandson, James Hoban, is possessed of a me TLATROBE QUABRELS. - .| mew winga up to that time; that the workhad | We called o i “ghepherd ;" and he AMOUNT OF EXCAVATION e c.,x:gm& in whénhfl::g d_a}:nuncod. Tb%x;nlonu. '?:"c'ndfi ioethmrdu:uc:'bnym m: ‘D%bhn ?ocxeltg _L;xcmha l;ulbeen on good. lt‘urm;fltlgthu fiam- 2 debts; ugr{ tbfit ;:ggmfislérl bsex:flvbmht wunehaphern;,c::; :!::ih ;-.i?m good title | whichis at pr:ent uig“;rzsrem;l?o‘:m The* From Our Ouwn Correspondent. Ias, and animadverted with some severity upon-| for st style of ornamontal brackots. In | missionors fourteon years, when Presidont Mon- | for cash. The Borkshiro marble shafts, mono- _he | malaria groun: : o s O plas; an of great | 1780, Hoban, still unmarriod, enilod from Tro- | 106 appointed. & oas.armed. Virginia Colonel, | Liths, cost 81,400 each, and tha. shatie For the | 107 Bim, and ono of which I have 1o doubt; ko imaofifi’bfififih the psvin‘{l'—::gfl:u? e 'ASEISGTOX, April 22, 1873. e principle of competition for desij A building, whose f‘:ra:is s housekold orna- L‘&»E?’s\.fiam' iy n)?inl; that, 4 .pfi?t'i:;t,a“ was | land to Charleston, 8. C., whero ho gettled, and | Bamuel 8. Lano, wilh whom he soon came in” | corridor of the south basement $200 each. The | Would be very proud; but one cannot speal - of art of its power; but, where the %tmmd is d d;nhn £ sion upon overy Amar-- nctlplm,’ungsinfimhng that Thorntol’s worl | soon reccived employment on the public and pri- | to collision, and ho resignod in 1817. Remov- | following were the prices of marbles, per cubio | shepherds withont also calling up the ides ‘of ?n.rnad up, of course it is freed and let loose mentand a e the Capitol edifice, | in the promises was morely. pictorial, To-this | vate constructiona of tho place. Routh Carofina | ing to Baltimore, ho built the noted Cathedral | foot: Massackingetts, $2.50; Tennessce, 86; | sheep, and I am in some doubt whether it is very | upon the air. ~For this reason, the hotals dows " ican mind, such only as the Capil . | Thomton rejoined in a pampllet, of which .| has had tho honor of furnishing wo architocts | thers, and s, part of the Commercial Exchango. | Vermont, green, 87; Potomao, broceis, 845 Le- | comm Limentary to's party of-intelligent Ameri~ | smong the narrow atroats of thecity Ate parhaps ! cliould bave found &t some time & FOMANCOr- | copy exists in tho Congressional Library,—n | and a senlptor to Washington,—Hoban and Rob- | His son, Henry 8. Latrobo, had boen sont t6 | vant from Darbary, 85; Italian statusky, §7.95; it Al ek e e healthier than those up npon the hill, whare itis . This hag not beer: the case. purckase with Mr. Jefferson's collection. Thorn- | ert Mills, and Clark Mills. 2 New Orloans to bulld the wator-works, in 1811, | common Italian, $2.75. fankoavelom (6 call fhamn. eheep. Bor -ty ownif o o oy naver have s 6180 oF favor s There exists no suceinet, clear accomnt of the | ton eays L = e At the conception of the Capital City, Mr. | and died there In 1817. Following him upon the | - Meigs-changed. Waltor's dosign somewhat, | Part, I donotlike to bo in the position of that \the Ghello, the Jews' quarter, which is ane of., building on our Continent, and the. ‘*Jr. Halletwas not in ‘the public service | Laurens (Henry Laurens, long IshmcapL{vuln Bame errand, the architect au.fia Capitol met | putting In 192 columns in all, instead of 252. | very usefuland harmless, but somewhat meck | she most disgustingly dirty places I ever wag in, . greatest building on. it is neither com-.| When orsincoX was appointed Commissioner,"| tne Tower of London), gave Froban & lattar of with the same fate, Sept. 3, 1820, ioks, rom all clties, cost from $5.50109.12per | animal, Tho shepherd may securoa most od- | aod where tho stroots are 50 DATTOW you can al documentary matter to malke it is neitt whicl was on the 12th day of Soptomber, 1794. | recommendation to Washington. Ho spoedily | =~ S FAXE. thousand. - To Iny tho bricks cost 95.08 Der | mirbic £01d forme at mieht: but-do T not care | most reach across them. But Bome is s very plete, nor assembled at any one especial place. | 7 Hadfield was appointed to superintend the:| drow the prize for ~the deni’s Palacs, | Mr. Latrobo has left behind him letters, com- | thousand. = -k how goofl 4t 1, ‘and begu i the whole, I | Yisky place, to ssy-the least of it, whatever., There have been eighty years devoted to this | work at the Capitol, Oct. 15, 1795. .~..| and was employed to construct it, which | positions, constructions, and b posterity, which : FIIS. 2 oW g fs, . tiove, on the whole, I | 3 5tel you go to, and Naples is not much better. edifice, and it is not yet wholly complete. It [ Thorntonssys further: ' = - ho did with' great particulnrity, stebility, | will givo him a pormanent fame in the Hepublic. | Tha cost of tho Capitol extension wan abont | Would rather not be folded. . Ila. may .pro- The climat of Naples is very fino,” and Nature from 1792 to 1873, It is the only house in | * Mr. Hallot changed and diminished the Scn- | and speed, so that it wos babitablo in 1799, Itis [ Ho was woll soquainted with the Latin, Groek, | €5,000,000 ; of the now domo, about 21,250,000 ; | vide most admirablo pasture; -but I-think I has ' made the place as healthy as a place could spans from [ ate-room, ‘which. i8 now. too. small. . Ho laid | traditionalin the Hoban family that Presidant [ Hobrow, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, | and of thonew library, enough additional tomake | would rather provide it ‘miyself, " It carries one | be; but- > the Now or the O1d World in which there is S0me |y ary t1g fonndation at the centre building, ex- | Washington took sxoeption to iho stslo aud pro- | and Gerimian Isnguages. on tho entiro cost upwarda of 10,000,000 Works | 5 e . MAN A8 EPOTLT IT ATY. Fs ack to tho days of bis - childhood, boforo Lo wos | . e e e ot e of art aud ornaments made $350,000 more. The . old enough to:look out for himseM, to have & exactly what the troablo is, but &t timos, when . tributo o evéry adventurer, navigator, or physi- | cluding the dome; -and, when Gen. Washin; portionsof the White House as inviting eriticism | . , . TIE FIFTH ARCHITECT - calero of North: America,—Columbus, Cabof, | saw tha extent.of the alierations proposed, ho-| for sovero Ropublicaus, but that ho gavo up the | on the Capitol was Chatles Baldnch, the senior | extensions aro abont 143 by 239 feet onch, ox- ave Da Soto, Sisndish, Washington, Scott. cxprossed his disspprobation in a stylo of snch | point fo ihe architect. I was roviewed. hows | of Latrobe, who had bon born in Boston, Aug. | clusive of porticos, Tho whole Capitol 'has, | man always greatly concorned to 0o that ho hia | fRa r T Hie L Fiom a ertain difection, fhe ho. | The present letter undertakes to revive the | Warmth as his dignity sud self-command seldom | over, by- Jofferson, of whom Tom Moore, | 8, 1763, tho son of & physician. Ho saw the | therefore, cost about 818,000,000 GATE. | his proper three mesls a day, and akmost watch- | tels are filled with the most offensive odors, and, * o presel u permitted. . .°. . Mr, Hallet was desirous | Hoban's poot-countrymen, wrote in.1803: *The | Battle of - Bunker Hill from the homsa-taps of ‘ing overy mouthful ho takes.- Fow: poople like | of course, fevera are the result. I think thers ! tivea of not merely of altering what might be improved, | Prosident's House, & very noble strocture, i8 by | tho city, snd graduated at Harvard in 1781., FASHION. - that sort of thing. Then, too, no one has a very- | 2re more bad odors in the streets of Naples than - ‘THE ARCHITECTS OF THE OAPITOL. but even what was moet approved. He made | no means suited to the philosophical humility of | Finding life in & counting-honge distasteful, he From the Xew York Eventng Mail b 8- on; 100, i 3 | 8oy city I ever was in. Each streot hng a mo-; made tho tour of Europe fo farther his desire to | Fashionsble note-paper and envelopes aro | 5trong objection to. being led. around, and told | 5oF A 0 CP0L ROl o "one "and then borrows to go here and there, and do this and that, 88 if | ng much as it possibly can from its nel Tho first architect of the Capitol, in the proper | somo. judicious alterations; but, in other in- | its present possessor, who inhabits but a corner u ; stances, ho did injury. Whon Gen. | of the mansion himsolf, snd abandons herest | bo an architect, and, returning to Boston, be | Brobdingnagian in sizo and texture, and pistache he were a know-nothing and s nobody, who could | order to prodaco » delightful sum tof senso of o professional man, was Btephen B. G R 6 D: 8 | T i 2 5 it ‘Washington honored me with the appointment | to a atato of uucleanly dosolation. This grand | married his cousin, Hannah' Apthorp, and [ in color. - i Hsllt, whoso usms ia:sleo epallod. Hallate. | of Gommissioner, o requestod that | would ¥e- | adifice. is encircled by & rado paiiig, through | bocamo at. th sama. timo & conatiusier” meaes | - 20°%s enit-material Like Tuskish toweling is | nof possibly do anything withont the sid of somo | 18 noisy, 800. Most Noapolitans nre } About this gentlema, whoso carcer 0% the pub-.] stors the building to correspondonce with the | which ‘s common rustic stile introdaces tho | chant, and sclectman, It was bo who IAid o0t | very populan. and, 4 £o0m g It gota a JEcle Ietor e £0 100k Mt R, 3 D ORGAN-GRINDEES, . . . -, | Iic buildings was very brief, no recollections, and nn‘Igind lan,” 5 : visitors to tho first man in America.” - the streefs and filled up tho marshes of Boaton, | in the season, will be very uncomfortablo. ALker, g o % and those who do not go into this business go , scarcely o tradition, prevails. , It has been gen- | . It farther soems that Washingtom addressed | ~ As an evidonce of the boorish fooling provail- | built tho Boston Stato-Houso, and was on, Fall veils, covered with pear] beads, are a NOW, OUR COURIER'S IDEA __ about tho streots shouting out the prices of . erally said that ho was-an Englishman, and s | the Commissioners,—Gastavus “Scott; William'| ing botwoon the Commissionars, citizons,- and ‘[ of the pariners to dispatch the ehips | m elty in ovening wear, . .. | of attending to o party was about this: In tho | small merchandise which they want to_ell, and y : Thornton, and Aloxandor White, —Feb, 27, 1797, | architects, wo may mention that David Burns, | Columbis - and Washington to: the Paciflo-| * Wido and very long sashés of colored grena- | morning Lo appears, and gets your:breakfost spend the gv;ga:;gw E:fi"fi’,’, cevinad- ing you. o pre 2-pipos to popll of the colebrated John Nash, of London. | gxpragsing his real sakisfaction with thoft con | whio owuell @ largo pact of tho ground talon up | Ocen, . whereby Capt — Gray —Miscomses | dime marind yery long sashes H : ; 1t is epperent, howevar, from the books of the | duet;" which irivolved an indorsemont of Thorn- | by the city, rosisted tho opening of o cartway | the Odluinbia Riser. Ho twisy Falled o maer | 20 mll b Aphrodite,” or Girdls of Vonus, istho | Tyopery sotupen tho teble. Hlo thon tells Jou | 1 835 omr: Loant aay Which 18 the gorse, - Commissioners, that Hallot was & Frenchman. | ton's ideas. ovor. hia land, to haul stone from the landing | noss, onco by puiting. up Franklin Place, Bos- | nowest thing in balts, Tt ia horrdr 1b1s rendy, and commanda you to ent it, and ba--| Noo SRE ooty ara vary outspoken also, and - | to the Whito - House, and also threatancd to suo | ton, on too ambitious a scale, and sgein in the | —Fancy jewelry ia mach worn on the street | comes {‘B”‘;".'%flgo indignant if yn:fl;!:f; m‘;‘ make aproar” cnough to drown even the hand- | uteslate. He ‘allows you so much time to eo HALLET NaSH'S PUPIL ? i by them ns ¢ Monsienr Hallet,™| : -+~ - was S, 01 s ; ¢ Ho tsaattonmed by thenas * s ronch artist | 3. Hallot's firet design for the- Capitol, na’{ tho Conmissioners, and complained of -Mlr, | andesvor o G up. the. Chatles River matshos, |‘agais och b iy T e s organs, It is not & good place for wesk nerves, ° = epalogize for writing him a lettés, by | Well 83 tho modifications and smendments of the | Hoban for cutting his wood, ssying: * Such | His work is plontiful in Doston, ca in the Couri- |, —Spanish voils era being much worn, fastened | your breaktast, and than he informs you that.| = - "By somneNTo 1. nerven. . They aleo apologize for vriting him a letter, by B0 58P0 1otk O30 And BRenC veryparfect | Pereons are not responsible, becausg they.leave | House and tho North and South Churches. He | in the hair with the bright red r¢ ‘which is in- your carriage is ready. .When'he has got-you | Al! yes, Sarrento is perfect,—wonderfully, ex- sfi: dispensable in an Andalusian toilotfe. 3 isitely beautifal. Ah| tourist depressed by tha ; saying that the difficlty of making explanations | Lnoyledge, - Mr. Clark, as I Lave eaid,—the | Do property anybody can lay houds on, but are | also built the State-Honse st Augusta, Mo. 3 é 4 2 uisi i botween themselves and him verbally suggests | mmmf in -1873,—told me that he'had heard | miserable speculators, and without thriff.” Bulfinch mado tho acquaintance of President- | ' —Suits of gray stuff with stripes that looklike | into your carriage, he mounts beside the coach- iomn sirocco, disgusted by the aromas of Naples, the former manner of communication. = - -~ -{ ihat Hallet was a pupil of Nash; who wag the | IIr. Hoban built tho first Post-Office at Wash- | eloct Monroe in 1816. At thia time ‘ho wasa sponge are worn. B ‘man, and tells. him where o .go.” 8upposs 1o | and deafened by its hand organs, come hero and | Hallot sent hisBlan to the Commissioners, and | lending English architect of his period. There | ington, and many other good buildings; but he | lame man, having crippled_himselt. for life by + Orange blossom faille” is the Inteat mate- | takes you to a gallery, you get out, and he leads | Le happy. . Here tho brij ht bine'ses lies spread ' S st > s is no proof of this, but nono_to- the contrary. | also failod to ‘pleaso tho civil antiiorities, al- | dlipping on_the stcps of Faneuil Hall, and ho | rial for bridal drasses. | you in, and then goes around calling your | befora yon, and, far bolow tho' summit of the : they received it, July 17, 1792. They were struck | nuo1 oo horn in Tondo: in1752, and, aftor un- | though ho reconstructed the White House aftor | was visiting Washington and other citios t0 ob- | —0ld-fashioned miniatures have nsurped the atisntion b0, whate ic he deeires | Cliff on which you stand, its sapphiro waves heap * with the evidences of his professional capacity, | dargoing o courss of training in his profession,.| 1814, nnd maintained hia influenco in the city to | tnin suggestions for & hospital for Boston. | place of lockets in fominine favor. | e ver plctures. ha ®% | ngainat the rocky wall, and bedeck themselves : snd " invited him to visit the spot as soon as he hd? ractising it for somo time, withdrew unuder | the end. ¥ % L=1%. -President Monroe remewed the acquaintanco J.” —Tho spring wraps are covered with -embroi- | you to look at, and gives you his views about | :3ih garlands of ‘snow-white foam. The music conld. - -These were-the old. Commissioners,— | {he vfehm’nn of spoculation, and lost considora- | . Capt. Hoban died in the year_1831, possested | while making a tour in the East subssquontly, | dory, and are extremely pretty in design and ma- | them. -Orm leaving the gallery, he’ takes you | of the waters riges gently upward from tho h ble sums of money: .When he returned to his | of abont £60,000 in proporty, and Laving lived o |.and was struck with the eloganco of Bul- _tgrin(l). Vored K s . | somewhere else, or brings you back to Ilunch at da&ha balow, and ;;oatk:: ygur ‘Weary na]::"fia: i Ve —Colored "linen is- coming in vogue again S A with 2 song of rest. und you arise 1 = | Tourhotel; dhen. out sgain in the atiermcun, | VILLE B0 0T S0k, 0l N eltoot thaba Johmann, Stewart, and Carroll. It appears-that e 5 da | B 1 " i t fe n, ho met with Ve: ab suc d | comfortabls and useful lifo. He was at first in- [ fincl’s buildings. The architect refused Hallots “plans, which vere several in number, | fonod s offce :in Londo in 1792, Ho de- | torred:in tho old graveysrd of Bb, Tatrick'a | to tako ~Latrabes plaie’ Wntl . tho at: | stmosscoeag s or con ol o il ek to A e s 0y ] ; bad abont commended” him ‘es fhe author | signed and comstructed numerans splendid | Church, but the remeins woro removed at 4 Inter. | tor Lad _rosigne absolately, ... and | —Foathersare to be tho mow thing in over- | 80d lasily back tc o, afkan miLed e moy which Italy's sun can give to her own fair hill- - date to Mount Olivet Cemotery, on_the Bladens- |'then ho proceoded to complezo the wings on La- | gkirts. The idos originated with tho ostrich. low you & lit(le timo alono, but ho does not al- [ sides, - Thio groves of oranges and lomons bask - nilding, and he was employed | mansion-houses - for - tha nobilify....end o - v - S::t .ba acif} when © Dr. 'Ihol;nczn seniryi%Englmfl snd Treland, and performed |- burg turmpike, whero thoy lic at presont. Ho | trobo's plan, and to_ build the rotunds, -old { ~—_The *Plon Plon" is tho nowest thing in | woysdoso. Ho very often has something or | in the sunshine, and the olive-trees clotha all the : i it od laa, | Some of -the most celobrated *sizeot-improve- | loft an cficiont postority,~two sons in tho Uni- | dome, aud library, aud to givo area to the’ west | ladies' wraps. It was Invontod by the Princess | otier to do aboat yourarrangements which takes | sunny slopes. As tho eun sets, all these glorious | sn Englishman, sleo - presented & plad, | oty o0 British metropolis. Ho was an in- | ted. Biates Navy; another, a priest; and a | frontof tho Capitol, which had beon built too | Napoleon, who is now s milliner in London. ‘up part of the evening, too; thongh, by that hills, and mighty Vesuyiue bimself, who looma < which the Commisdloners reques(ed him 10 | ventor as well, and in 1797 obtained o patont for | fonith, James, who was a fis spenkor. and was | near the brow of tho hill by putting up tho gla- | —Virot, tho colobrated Paris millinor, ks sent | UP P ning, gh, bythat time, | o L1y seroks the blus lake, 3 I Tnited Btates Attorney of the District in | cis and architectural terrace, In 1830, wkontho | the ex-Empress Eufienie ono of her new-fashion- | ¥ou are generally willing to spare his society for | ¥ 3pcovls paprase wiTH EASTERN PUmPLE. eavily trimmed with crape. | a short timo at least. . They glow sa' though they were themsalves on ! lodge with the Secretars of Stafe, st Philedel- | improvement in the constraction of arches and & . ¥ a0 ¢ X bia. 2 £ piers of bridges, which lod him to nssume tho'| tho Administration of Prosident Polk, | Crpitol was virtually comploted, Balfinch re- edag!rmg bonnets, ¥ This latter plan, although drawn by an ama- | credit Of introducing the nso of cnst-iron gird- | Hoban's residenco is etill standing at | signed and roturnod to Boston, where he diod | —Russia leather bolts arc now worn of very | Our courier was o decided ) ' fire, and giving out this radisnce from their own ': ol s r re. His work in London has been quito cole- | this writing in T street, in the rearof Fiftoonth, | April 15, 1844, at the age of 81, He built two | palo tan-color, with buckles of pearl. SOk 0 G aEAR brightness. And u,eln the s, in ;ym,,.%,,, To- - linquishes its glorious blue, and. es- : teur, affected both Jefferson and Washington | £ incinding tho fashioning of Rogent | on tho north side,—a land-merk in itsolf,— | other buildings at Washington—tho. church for | © —tWhite and rod leathor stairrods ere tho E 8 to6uch & degree that & lottor was at onco dis- | roect ke e boatial hlockis, the Langiam: | shery, gablod, and very decropit, and pointing | the Tattariso Soctety. of which 1o a8 & ‘mem- | latest, and ars to bo seon now ab all aristocratic | e considered it rathr in the light of a per- | JAC 0 e of°s hua as rosy s tho loads © d after he re- bor, and the old Penitentiary at Greenleaf’s | dwellings in London. sonal insult if we presumed-to collect informa- |* Ghich lightly float in the lustrous sky above. - ‘ tehed to the Commussioners, requesting them | Place Church, the Hoymarket Theatro, the ter- | toward tho ctreot. He marrie T Grea 5 patche Al . Teq) S 3 T o fhe pavilion nt | movedto Washington, and his wifo was ' Aliss | Point, whero the conspirators Were imprisoned, | ~ —Very pretty littla rustic wheat-straw braco- | tion by ourselvos. - Ho seomed to think it did not | Yonder somus the fisherman, cheerily plying ' . his oars, whose every stroke brings him nearer I? ht i i ' s in Regent's Park, ant T e o v o0t | Msaton. Hngland conkums msy suporb nc | Sevl, of Maryland. 1o was a devout Catoli, | iried. snd hanged, in 1ois. lofa aro now used for tho eubstructuro of fash- | ghow 5 proper xéspoct for his svisdom and es.. | . ¢tly recull him at this HADFIELD ON LATROBE AND DULTINCH. ionable bonquets, perience. He did not like it at all if we ventur~ |18 nighrly haven of rest. He, too, and.his b4 todo this with as much delicacy s poseible, and | {78 T3 mpinaing mansion-ouses aceredited | and tidca who more dist Y %0 retain Hallot in the public service. This per- | 107120 X0 JADaHing TaRtowbC . | dz3 aro clorgymon liko Fathers Lynch and Me- |- The criticism of Hadfield, already twico refer- | - —Tho great novelty of the soason is tho bro- e swift-gliding bost, aro glowing with _the : omptory order probably gave the Commissicners THE OLD PLANS INSPECTED. 2 | Rlioy, : xed to, was written in 1819, i tho period of Bal- |.dorio on relief on spring costumes. Itis quita | o4 o obfect to sny plan for tho dsy whichhe | STUCENINE boh Brs glomleg BER, e much relief, if womay beliovo tho statoment of | It would be interesting only to architects to e ianEss finch.” That artist throws' somo light upon the | 53 oxponsive as it 1 novel. . might havo mado for s, Ho said it was troate. | B Seol SO ot End s e feate : Goorge Hadfield, auothor architact, -who wrote | g0 at longth into a discuesion of the relative |. . During the early buildiug of tho Capitol, tho | cost and siyle of tho edifice. o begins by call- [ —It is very much tho fashion now-a-days for ing him likea little boy if he made plans | ous, weird Im,“»“““‘bu‘dwens,, which seem w’“'i,,’ i P ars later to the following effect - dlevorness of Thornton's. original plan, -of | clerk of {ho works, Lenthall ; Blogdon, the chiof | ing it * a very singular. building,” ascended by | ladies to cirry_ s navy-blue waterproof closk snd then wo did mot adopt fthem. Now, | barmonywith the sunset and the twilight, andall © i awenty yesrs 7 2500 and a | Balle’s plans, and of tho smendod Capitol as | stono-mason, snd & ciiizon, Cocking, wero | * unconth stairs in tho south wing.” Tho plas | nostly rolled and strapped: pogn e lott Amerioe, | thet is dreamy and imaginative. Linger ots : | -Apremiam had boen offered of S50 and | v ges it to-day, thie work of Latrobe and Bul- | killed upon if. of the Representatives Hall, he sata, was takon | —1t is not * the thing» now to woar the bridl |. Yo hind alwsya thonght, bfore wo left Americs, | fhst s droay and Tmaginative. Linger e : i 7 from the remaig of & theatre near Atlions, s | veil over the faco nt all. T¢is twistod about tho | tiat s courler was u servant,—an up) sermnt, | omper-hour. ‘Ao deep, tonse, soft: It is trno,—but wo were ignorant of the fect that |0 3'y o digtance, melt besutifully with the'land- - _building lot for the best design. for a Capitol, &b |’ finch, - i # - Tho stono-quarries used for the carly public g 5 o time when scarcely o' professional ariist was | The building has roceived the general approv- | edifices wore ab Acquis Creek, and at Hamburg, | described by Stowart, an authority. It had gain- | Lead in o manner strongly suggostivo of a bur- e, 3 F e 7 al'of - publio sontiment, and, with tho magnifi--| near the mouth of Rock Creck, —the Jatter witls, | ed * some sdvantago in appearance of form and lesquo sctrese about to have her photograph | your truo, high-spirited courior considers him- | Jno™ong join with the fishorman's song, ' ! S Balt the misstor, and director, and Grand Mogul | poF% 2] JOU PG i€, JROTEINC A0E t0 be found in scy of the United States; which e iff-| [ : v fale b s, cont marble extensions of 3fr. Walter,—which | in tho city Limits. Thoso quarsies for stono and | costlinossofmaterialaovarthoformerhallwhich | aken, is plainly o ba sosh Lroui the pillo.of trash pre: /50 or' s notiorn with the old Capitol,—i8 ono of | ajato wrer purchased vut:}ght, and cost $29,538, | Was, however, more consietent, being all Of na- [ —The “Lady Washington™ is the newest | Of tho 'tvlholu gm-tfi You ue toso‘zlaem Do tells | O ehant of thmonks. It 18 5 tany of rented sa doeigne. 4 € the most _imposing_ buildings in the world. | The sinco colebrated Seneca stone was also usod | tive fros-stone, Tho capitals of tho columns in | thing in polonnises. It has two .vory short | YOu, an oS i Ton e to dowiiat e | ‘BLESSED, BEADTIFUL FEACE. - - . this hall wore' execated in Italy, .“ and aro s | points in front, and the apron meots at the buck | 2¥a and nothing elge. . You aro to purchase at | 'y . 4 Tiict 5od man saems to share her o= - 7 whatever shopshe takes you to, and nowhere | o024 0t From all the Iabor and tho turmoil ! . THE FATE OF BALLET. Thornton's original design of the Capitol had | at a very early period for flagging and steps ; e i : It doea not sppear that Monsicur Hallet re- | but one dome, 8 great eaglo in tho pediment, o | the former cost about 7 s ton,and the lattor-|-copy from the capitalsof tho well-kmown . re- | just holow the waist. . 7wl olan, Tn fact, ho i t ik to g i bt ived i ial ¥ i statae with s club on the top of the pedimont, | gbotit 815, delivered. . ! mains of the Lantern of Demosthenes “at |.° —It begins to look = if the immonse “circus- | else. In fact, ho docs not avenlike you to of tho world:" 3 g 5 ceived in & cordial Wey.this assurance that an ¢ s ) ; 3 : -1t beg T HAVE FRIENDS AND VISIT THEM, 2 . % s e Sials Amatenr- had made a maporior elevation | B21ked by two female statues on the balustrado, ARCHITECT NO. 4—TATRODE. Athens, Had tho entiro columns been in Car: | tant” son-umbrellas of two years sgoworo going |, .~ WAVE FRIENDS AT ViSIT TREN, little | The sun hs set, * The shades of night are en- ' Engli supal VA and oak or Iaurel encompassed tho.rounded top | Thefourth professional architect of the Capi-_| rara marble, they would havo cost less money.” | to bo feshionable again. ‘They are much more "r’: w% : g aat fl‘;" Bt and E’zm:.m ® | wrapping all the- besutifal landscape.- I linget ' Hadflld rebukes the coupling of the four centre | nscfal and far prettier than the club handles. - e :313:“ r:: by ?,“ g ‘fe 15 eg;h sl ) e 1est faint gleam hag aupmgd,w.nd ,1f:u 10 his own, and he drew again and sgain designs, | of the chisf window in each wing. tol waa one of tho remarkable men of the coun- the darimn C. Borrento in the darkness. SW.C —In the genoral crusadesociety is undertaking whilo_Thornton's was also amended after the | :The original ground-plan by Hallet placed | try. His constructions of both a public end | columns, the screen batween the columns of tha S i : - sonndations of the Capitol. had -been raised to | he domo outside Of tlio Toctanglo of tho centro, | prizato character aro numerous ot Washington | peristyls, the gallery-door and tho principal | against everything unartificial, natural flowers éxfi‘:“i'mfii‘ i ‘:;!’lgf‘;‘h*f‘g:;fimfl‘{ troe; 5;;[ the ground-level. The iifuation was further | 804 put the Senate-chamber in thnt rotunds, | and in other cities of tho country. Ore of his,| entrance crowding eacl other, and the scroen of | have been banished from bridal toilottes, and quarters amili JONATHAN'S LESSON TO JOHN, i & - B ‘The centre of tho building was mades square, | sons, B, H. Lutrobe, Jr., was afterwards made'| columns on the south side of - the hall, which | thoir placos supphiod by waxen countorfoits. {paveiing ysh contins wie oy '“fl“'-‘hfi:lmd of:f . i i i embarrassed by Thomton's appointment as one | opon court, with' o covered walk around the | engitiesr of logation 2nd constraction’ of the | **wonld bo better among the ruins of Palmyra.” | ~—Shortsleeves have gono out of fashiin even | them, and live ix daily fear of offending them. |- » ! of tho Commissioners, where he came into con- | eides, and &' carrisge-twrn' in tho middlo, Tho | Daltimore & Ohiy fallond July 1, 1836, Ho | 7TUE WOLD'S OPINION OF T0E OLD carrror. | in full dross. This is vory apk to bo the caso’| Thi is all wrong, and by thia ;mmg Th o6 has 1e45 foks chatied John Birght 4 i ¥ i - 3 eanizing ¢ < Such orticlems o0 Hadfeld losa heir effoct | whou tho {ashiansblo femiuino arm has been ua- | 10 tho eourier, and Tealiog that vithont mihey | nonis Ushios Ammieistng L el flict with his predectdsor i &l administrative ag | Supreme Court took the place of the old Scnato- | wna the genius of that greal mountain-hipls A - chamber; and the_Vice-President’s room was:| Ho had hoon sursion 1y s r:n.mo{m the srcb | npon tho publio mind by their mer minutencss. dergoing tho thinuing-down processof o winter's | JOUIE be CORPIENEN i ‘With a babe in her ‘Young Jonathan hight, - well as s professional way: Mr. Hallet, in' def- : 4, % & arge 5 erenca to Jeorson's suggestion, was_employed | Bgmii-circular, end ficfl the long main corridor, | toct, for lawyer, but took to onglnegring, while .| The building stood for o quarter of a contury | dissipation. insol d overbearing. It is really ridiculous, 1) :which traversed the edifico lengthwise. his brother, John H. L. completo as Bulfinch left it, and meantime per- | —Oxydized silver ornaments are much in use |.insolent and overbenring, eally ridic 5, | on “Dem 5 to the might i . e Datzoho, edionted fax'] 20D ¢ T, |/66 Dormets. . Thas tea a6 form of ahialis, a5 well as pitinblo, to'sos to what extent intell i~ | *'0 s infant gisa arisin : 2t £400 per yéar, Nov. 20, 1793, . More than nine'| :" ¢ would appear that Hallet was in Washing- | an sngincer, bocamsals, imore - | 5ons of every quality, from all parts of the worl i b 8. i moaths proviously, or -April 5, 1793, tho Com:|-ton’ uatl Reb; 23, 17053 for, in tho bunch of.| 1o cogioet: becamoe lawyer of Baltimoro, equal- | 5003 of ev et eBoumiam Tpon T For ml_nd§ oiguncds, bucklos, bicds, helmets, .anchors, | KEb: Sosomen abuit, themselves -to thesa Hova et on Fover Jonbsham e s * | years, a_contest raged ‘about the difficnlty ‘of | battle-axes, medallions, filigree ferns, thistles, Tho renl stock courier, who b‘elon@ to ‘the | On i whols, less dispoted to niitate, er couriers unbearably | _Effete John Bull surprising, 1] Pl fo Tatssicn, SThagiatnt dmige sostly consipusd the Ty, S Lirs oF zataons, - Boaring in that aanbjéious-domed, col ir- | and whatnot Jats t has given bia fortial approbation of your plan. [ J¥bich Were donbtiess scnf . thery-| ~, Tho elder, Bonjamin H. Latrobo, was. born in | Boaring in that ambitions-domed, column-oncir- | and what-not jets are also much worn. .~ - London Couriers' Clab, And less in the mood for prizing— > in ot to prove Lis right to the premium,—there- ixo, Tagls h Va5 led . of -Represontatives; but no | . —Among new colors are ainon, a greenish yel- | fiondon Couriers’ Club, . < - P d Yorkehiro, Laglznd, May I, 1767, ‘and Tras the i ot Sthe ba e fps £k OAN'T TOLEBATE ANY INSUBOEDINATION As the scandals and shames of the Tommany Ring, ; Thg changes in Thornton's_design Were, oW | iy one insbribeds & k. faacitull Plan wwd ciooro ! i B B x : 2 = ! o 3 z HA H g is. more ad- |low; alligator, a, lish blue; corbesu, crow b o ! o ‘o even made zonestly like those of Hallote, par- | tion, which the President; having seen sceiden- | = 0f the To. Henry Latrobo, o Moravian cler- | T0700" (odey, and . perbaps’ peoplo. of | color aseres’s lichen & Erosishs bluo; piede ) i bs party. Nothing can bo mero ridicalons | e lobbying wnd log ollng - ; ] eulurly 5 %o the. interior, that Monsieur | tallyin September, 1773, agreed with the Com- | BCS (ondant of oy Macwnir, a0 Ggured 88 | Tisest censure.prefer the involutions, quaint | paon, pencock color s apricots micolo blane ef | than o foo.n party of ladies and gentlemen, | Comers and wire-pullss in full swiag, 2 demurnd to the premium being accorded to Dy, | missioners to havo the Capitol Planned in imite- | 1 Basleod, ) N o | workmanship, economy of &pace, and classical | perle; blanc ot argent; blanc et or, snd blano | With brains in their heads,Jed round Ly one of e vot eada polling ; e i < - Tho ot and 8s an suthor in the Chureh. | Boti ™o COIA foeestons building, to the | ot bl : theds pompous Hetle men-. If any of fhem yeu- | ThowiTlons of dolises patd o Ining siis : ture to e & remark, .and suggest that they mmflflnxmb’m“km_ wf'y Bapanf i/ Thomton. Quatrels onsued, and Hallet with. | B thereof.” - E Tho srchitect was educated at s vill ar ) g T : " ! b ‘Hallet's ““fancifull plan " was surmounted by : g epo J6Ar | marblo wings, which ars modelod upon'the | —Ladios aré again.wearing at.their wrists ark, an - e | Raca o tho Moravien sehool of Nelsky, fn’| e 106" g thoce. old-fashioned little bags i which our | Would Like to 5s0 8 ittlo thing of which thoy may |- And tho genaral confession that, tHod by the test - held his dravings, and wrote s letter to the Com- | dome with a drum, with pillars, and o light, ‘heard, the courier. will- hig han character, Congress e ; . 2 drum ) gt 00en | Saxony, and at the University of Leipsic, ‘He | former plan. st fre i ; missioners, Jwme 28, 1752, saying :. “I claim the | cupols,. Bix Dorié colunng guppoited. tho can: n Diversity of Leipsic, He itol, including the works of art' | grandm used to carry purse and handker- |.B3ve couriac will: wave =d| o x; Oongreas stands confest A e plan. now execating, lm,;vl_finh&phnm:nmu}_paaflin}z’enlt, witha largo | oo ¢ormet of Pruseiun Hussars, bttt btk balangen e, cont Amont Shton,o0n. "t | Enrad ettty P ea D T iy ek L <18 |74 place whither Jaathuz's worst forbip bt - znd beg loave to lay threafter before you and the | €21ein the tympanum,” ani ‘Dbelow were four covered considerably mord than an acre and & —Laco is used in great profusion on the bon- fn Zood titmes: You cannod £ao “"y“"mg T hing m’mm SRR 3 ings of note bofore he returned to .England, in . P resident the proofs i i . | standing.colossal figures of> - -~ {'78e, H i i | Balf of ground. It was 851 foot 4 inches long, | nots of the spring. ~Laco ‘strings Ave sgain in. o A fpm e G s my ght fa b}é?m | i PRk, sTcE; s e, | Englih arelins st Cockrell, an aini- | 70's. 4 b to ths top of tho bulustrade, 145 feck | yoper. Tastened suder. the cbis, wirh 5 Littls el L g5 0 Inulgent e £ O Bl o Sous e s . Ay lans, | Three coiam % ey ; ! ct, i : 5 Bl -boy.. raising the er0 0 £0d Monsient Hallt ralaoed to surrendar them, | four: doors Of Eq:‘llfli‘:?flgfi“fi?" Tigits of | oF s °‘.€A"’,§i_’?"§.‘,‘c§“‘;:’;,;,?,¥z,,gm o o1 dour ;fifin&‘&‘&éfif"v‘r’fifi%fi,“.&&‘fia‘: B e aiie walking-costumes aro | Fould be good; ho might havo his littlo play- | o bigger W“T“‘Z‘?g - ad 2 Ho was then verbelly. scqunluted with theorder | Steps. Bhallow curtaing, with one door and one | et in 1706 ho rosolved to come to Amacien 155 |-show.a suficient odifico for the period to have | of very light colored cloth, trimmed. with. dack I Al o hon 0 oub. TRl s the whinbols |/ lrTees Iidresnt of onee, Yeil it : —that their comection withi him had ceased and | N300, ~oonnscled the"centro with tho: wings, | iyt an ancle, Col. Antes. - The. ship: brogght | been truly o -National Capitol: :The- parts’| velvet bands. Tho skirt is striped lengthways | Jection S inos or toirit ] “smm oied romne oF |~ Aa well as tho sced's broad-caster. o wad. o Tobirer Ta the pabhE e s hich consisted of & basemant and one story. | Jim' o Notfols, wh - | which the British burnt had cost sbout 8700,000; | with velvet bands. SI¥ INSnIens. OF 5! 400 20 Y | He'll sink his thousands his miliions to he was g publit eervice. ) ere, by good = lnck, the noso in this sort of way, enubbed continual- o From this tine forwerd thers fno notiils | Loopatement was of stono, rusticated, and the | ho" 'foll in | with the . Sileer ‘ot | t0 restore thiose parts cost about 8690,000; the | —The new club-handled parasols are common. T B o ke ' s, avi sid foreat i ‘As knowing such seod brings {ncreass in lts b s Yy onorer o “otable | partioo sbove hied four Ionic column, fankod | cugtoms, who - infroduced - him ° ty Jadey | fracstono contre cost about 8630,000, - ‘The park | Thoy wers, stylish a year ago; Tholadies who | 1 troatod liko, » baby and also foread topasy | had e bigyer tho rogus (ko brosder o back— i merition” in the Commissioners’ books of this | by, windows flush:with the portico. In the podi- | Busred Washington, o nophew of Dresidess | inclosing this old Ospitol contained about 2234 | ars mow on their woy back from Europs will | the great o Piaagrosablo; izaolent, O Hodery o 0% 8o manich for tha scourgy as the plastar,. unfortunaté axelitoct, and Thave nothaen ablo [ -Meut of each of the wings was a group of stat- | Washington, whieh lod to his visiting ALt, Yar. | 86Z05. R . -+ [ bring the correct thing. - e aglit £o Do a servant, bat think hime | Lot this effotecld Europegoon =~ = - i 2 b b, | T OGP ng | noy el bokoming o of o sk Yo el | it g bappenc o cai | Sasen s aow vorn Tied vt spotner | 2RSS St M eiahin | SR RESI R, » 2—HADT: s o SATRBAL ACE. g : itol, = o L 80 n- ined wif or buff for instance. 3 2 e fon - Jo , " s encconsor sos Geora Hadfield, W5 doi- |4 16 sosessmndr tho portioo wora'thron 1a5g | *'Rithaind Va.. s bioa rupidly groming, xnd | PUDII: . Evory Roor, snd 100by, and recons of gt | Soacs 2 blaelinad wi ong eingang 1oom 1o hotd | go Bt thete 1a snather objection, and & very | "y prindorabisof thioing | sfmed on tho wak utl sy 10, 1998, Somigus i roliof, over tho threo doors Which | Latrobg dosigned the Ponftuntire and toveral | 1 fall Of remibisconde. - Attempta aro now b~ | up the pond of s drecs. S O R ms Corittammons |t . .| Bquaremiles with diamonds broad-cast sewn, s e o aliaad ry ounting to up- | Pend nipon tho pertico. Hallet’s *fancifull | ffng private mansions. In1735, s s estabe | o5, mads, on the score of architectaral harmony, | P P vulgor custom of displaying wedding | which all high-spirited couriers oxpect to:'malke, | _Sait thom, for fata decelving; - - § ihe comer-sbnes 8 ono of -the architects, and | * W6 sy congratulate oursalves that the pres- L’{‘;‘?&‘;gzvflflf and %flmfi%’*fiuflfi?fi tako place “until evorence ahd innovation, tho | —Tho mousseline ribbon has bocome very pop mfi;fi'}i bt el Lk, O veality 728 BA%.| And tho Bank of England's own pocket pick— £ B s it ot DA Groat mieas- | ent state of tlio arta aud tho unity of ofivial di- | designed tho Bank of tho Dot btates, whics, | Bistorical and the artistio ‘apirit, havo.a full do-| BlaT; it wesra far botter, than gros grain. . by's gentleman resident in Rome, who had sagn | _-o° Prindlerssublime echleving ! 4 s Date on the subjoct, in which the country-can | -Matarisls formod of alternate stripes of satin | 7 BF%c0or' conriprs, .that, moat of thim exe. | How ahort tha OLd World of the New oe folls ‘ 4 it R 80 prove, to the end of tho chanter ; pect to'get & commission of 10 per cont .on all mm“'v“h, O1d Bagland’s 15 ami falls ure vindicatrd his clsim a8 u principal suggestor | rection in fhis: sonnt > - b ; 2 e U , d ey prevont such scandals in | “was built by bis pupil, Strickiand. 1tiafo be | Phio o8 the, eubj and velvet are very fashionable for skirts. A : —Tho fado tints are going out, and the old- | Lurhscag —30s, and hotel-bills, t00,—on every- FGuy Ol Fogieatly b of the puildng, ~About soventy years after bis | public construcing. g attended the building of | remarked robe was the precepior of . SIXTI! AROMITEOT—MILLS, disappesrace from the public View, a 80n of B. | the old Oapitol: 3* does “not i St 8 th 1 builder i o | e ? Dot appear that suy.| Btrickland, Strickiand was the procoptor of. Wal- |- e 3 3 . e f 2 o nh-ab‘v e ‘real ‘builder of the wings, re- | batmony prevailed, and- dishoneaty wag often ter, and Walter of Clark. Aghngohu availed The_successor of Mr. Bulfinch was Tobert | fashioned, bright, positive colors are being worn thing, in‘(fict,.whinhiu expended by the ""‘{‘; n};’,‘ o’;n Amorical oxp - S tuneq to Washington Hallet's drawings. 3. | charged, and somotimes praved. i orny e ; g L y Zeawi g itao! c g 7 - L. ly Com- | himself of tba services of Hrdfleld, thore has |.Mills, Who was appointed. Government Architect |-8gain. 5 . and he gave one or two_ examples, which b 4 Fariiret Gongraas b tapa. g over 10 (o LE | missiongrs scenaed LiEinfonk, Foberdert, and | bagaa close austemmas of B e BaS | e e dath. Mo wen o et | et hair polonaises will bo 83 much worn | coma wiihia his $wn porsonel experienco of the | 15 ¢ Hetes Ty 7 1% Wy all, ., ke eketch-copies of Hallet's plans, and Afr, | ““infamous faisehoods to the prejmmiio,SPot | order and of mutual. inspiration at work o the | mediocre talents, whose opportunitios allowed | this spring os cashmere overskirts were two years | moat flagrant extortion and imposition practised | And last, not least, thy swindles rias Clarki eame into the Library while I ivas drawing | éharactor” - Haiteld sach mm“&?::‘fim Capitol for eighty yoars. -Few buildings ‘in the | him to impress himsolf favorably upon the conn- | ago, T by couriers upon: their employers. I donot |.To2 grandens that dazales Old Werld eyes, from these plans; and expressed his opinion that | ports wore taken to Gen. Washington of Thas- | World have commanded tho-services for solong - Mo was bom in Charleston, 8. 0., snd | "_Golored ribbons sbout tho neck, witli a bow- | think our courier got-10 per cant, but e cer. | A2d Lords of industrial enterprise Sy, O g gt was tho first architect, and that what he | 100’ groand-plan, and b ston - | 5 time of men who Iniew cach other, - | placed under tho tuition, of James Hoba, in | in ront with diamonds thereon, are much worn | tainly o+« ¢ £ v s e ; . |, "MaXeihicacwho; as rogues, hors trapped arel - r caefi i fancifid plan *"1nd boen boreoved | Fioed B ot p erd o was ignormolly o | adelnhia, Tatrons morsied s decond | 1600, . With: whom - o zomained v yeirs in full-dress, g P . Gor A amEAT.DEAL. - . Punch., g e calle e ef o elevations and change tho in- | yim. ) Mr. Jefforaon introduood him to Latrobs. He | ™ yr oo ot atoel buttons are the Iatest Couriers o nat cousider it dishonest todo so, | » A Womderful Photogra; by Thornton, and ehanged {0 gucl o doguce (hat | forior plans. “Tho comer-stono had. Tio soonor | By oo dsughter of Robert Hazlelurst. who had | I oiiiged I 5 f is b 3 % 3 .| bad - very extsnsive empleyment in the ot ) E F iy ) ot e Gvertion 1y o promies Josand thtn Secuabbles bogan: citeronces, | wior Sokaceof fobert, Morre th oul gpee | 030, S ChnnteiSq SRR Tt Pl | dormmant o ladie e, ey e | Torkats of Tho shopmen oot Eosmoonl | gy 1o 507 Fropcis Bxamper. . " fiut; of courseryou pdy. it | the horss O’:c‘x;dénr, which was made famous : DID HALLET OB THORNTON MAKE TEE PLAN ? - -| factions, and broils wero the order of the dn & i ; R ions from i - s in g alled sy ationtion fo this. memorsacum | 1 contractor for the Touniation wss dielaccd | bove potemats oge tho tmo eminent sons | ings, 45 manslons from Fopusyiviaia to' Goor. | ol Cointo citering porte. . Catvod goodas, | S04 act oot of yourm in Hallet's bandwritings = for anothor muson, who used what ia eallad {ho | from Philadelpiioir; Lotydbe was summoned | gia: Hotuibihe second ‘hressuep, o Patesy| buttons aro also worn. : & -in the end, for shop-men and hotél-keepers, | from having bean beaton in s racs with the Gold- *‘ A gronnd plan accompanied this (elevation), | continental trowel, which was wheelbarrows Buildings at Washt o Surveyor of the Publio Ofico and tho General Post-Office,—all threo of | . —Ono of tho latest Parisian fashions ia arfi- | LDOWing" they must give s commission'to the | smith. Maid, desired to have a photograph of .the ;"l;fhin pre. 351;“@ gentfor, togethor with my Eg;z 55".;',‘;‘“&‘:2“’;3;21‘:‘“1 xflm :l::d ?m;‘,f,d Port ab the heganm“"-‘"né‘”“fl—‘&is‘}fii,ufizg‘;’;;’;: i mmmm of his gtyle. He | ficial flowers of eilk and satin for ornamentin fiZ‘é"bfiI;g.,, 8 you, lccord.mglyd. Go f:‘;:m l.{one nnimda'ltnkan wh%;! sfidag et going at {‘:gz X il 2 g 2 i3 s 2 % en the foundation. | ihi A A y ry 2 ts, hats, and tho hair. 22 talian tradesman down is low= | spoed... Mr. Ma e, .the artist, wasa; < 4.5 20ather demving tho folloving memorsa- | w48 complled, o ety 9, fio wholo o m:,‘f o oo - fverae Bl in- hien tho ftonse’of | designed the Washiogion &zfigg pmidain | Bomuots, hate) end he bate ey srs bothnore] g5t prico, when he is ignoraat of tho fact (it | to, but hop}x}jpreisedgisdoubks thit Jt could be, of 5 ol v econd_ cont 3 OF conti- | g part of the perm: it buildin, Mo t Church nt Richmond, the State Capi- | Breen sill leaves, and scarlet satin vines. It is I8V €r, ken send your courier to pay | ‘done. Ho began oxperimenting, howover,and : “Skotch of the_groundworks; part of - the.| nuntal trowelist, wau dismisaed.” - | et of the permanont building.. T am, how- | Monument 84 Richm b s (o0 e0toms i SHa et st tho bill, acd seo if he comes back good-nstured. | after a while was ablo o catch objects onthe foundations wero laid by somo time in.August, | 1t I very cartdin that tho foundations of th | fhat the whors Ly” ey Of Fepraduting to you | tol ot Harrisburg, the Philadelphia Mint, and | pethaps superfiaons ph °0 oW | Qurs ‘did nol, as I, know.by personsl | wing with groat success ; : 1793, now scless on account of ‘tho alterations | firat Capitol wore condemned, .and obliged to b | faaydogins o0, of - tho masonry, from the very | ¥as the Engineor of South Curolina when the | Will soon B Iace e experionce. . The couriers sccousts ars atways |- Afew dia e itisod o the aambpati s 4 I L3 O, | ebmilt.. Aftar the firss o ¢ oundation, iy of such bad workmanship nnd Charleston & Hamburg Railrond was_construct- | —The “poodle” and *banged” styles of izht, : ks oo CIgH aRp o STmounc sinee introduced. S, Hauen | el Al the fint rop i ay jomioners | teriala that it would hava beon danferons to hase | o, botmeon 1890 and 1805, Mr: Milla eom | front bair have gono ot Tho e 1 2acs, of | sl right,—that isan easy matter,~and a cate: | Occidagt tust b Delloroq. ho sou'd rake fho ple- it Smge by M Halle were Indonsed bl B S enld anay o Ton foa ok sosoranrio-| 8ssembled within tho bulding, hatinot tho wals | platod Ballinehs work on the “Capitol, but. g0F | mnt 1s tho old sy oF Parting it x too s o, | Moaako, whia did not look, s o .| pue, Ho:procusd all tha stisets fo petalin, “The ground-floor of 4 plan -of tho . Capitel, | or bad kept 1o responsible neeounts whntcv:: f,’.';flv strongly sapportod by ehores from with- | into & 1ouogle _shout the Patent-Offico, | and wearing it smooth ovor the forchead. u:noyt':;nun}n:obubyla ll':ng n?‘;?;rfi.gfi‘ 2:;:‘?{"“’02‘?.‘32&?5?&&; e {xn:%:cogn B tor, faid ofofs tho Boart in Oclober 1758 | Jir: Hadilold,'co whom wo chal como Gechy” | “Stter aao tmspoct rtod | Tobabited - n it Gk, O " ook | —Powdered hair ia sgain in fashion. Diondo | Fuira man hetern you snd eviiy ot to mrors | B, rer this Octidont was trained totros, Plan of thc ground and principal oot sent’ | Who resided in tho ity until hs death, sad lived | et o piNeetiony M2, Latrobe reported | wanna gtk honse on Now | and white are the favorito styles, At the Ben--| you aro paying money, you never know how | trial. -The grest difficulty was to transfix an im-- from Philacelphiz to the Board in. July, 1783.” bl :‘pn‘z:‘:cogfgtsfice; x:zfiffi?m“ mflfi'np?gmd building from the §n‘;fl°;n§;g§g} foplied so- i,fw“{hingm‘:‘ihgflmmgmmmn%‘s dle) Dett-Darry wedding on I{i:u; avenie; on lglas- much gaes where you want it to go, and how | pression while tho horse was moving at the rete THORNTON, THE AMATEUR. at the ti led - | solyed - 9 7 dyscewne. Bive Al y, one-] 8 iuhea in ess oir ch'tops by e thirty-eight 1 e ex- Dr. Willism Thornfon came to America, Jike | fice, with theso admissions & + upona ”f"m“;;fl of the onter plan, Mt }xtfl: connection with the Capitol buildings, | hair profusely powdered. 3 " Ihave S:iuyeltxh . g:lgl denl at langth upon this ;:rimene-m .fihg;::fugafi‘fi"ifig:g tho cfi?}tlaon. o Aloxender Hamilton, from- the West Tndia | : . “rmpnovEnwAY - - Ied £0 tho criticia rom 15 2 B e ST atiar 1t complatian, thevs 4 el subject, becauso it i3 a matfer of considarablo |tho first day lett no result ; tho second day, with. » Talands, Tro was n man of & good deal of amn- | 4o havo built tho Gepitol was o have offered an | * that thars 1o c‘enromn,'sxffff,?,“‘ lt!hndfield, "l': et %m n m“‘gga ‘::“;;lfl. ?f: towran: | - _pr, Hayes, the Arctic éxplorer, sxid in a loc- | importance to many families going abroad; and | izcreased velocity in opening aud closing, a. teur talent, and his introduction to Jefferson ‘adequate sum to the most eminent architees in | ward parts and the interior of- the E:l: u:l Dtlllzbe- gm“' & i of Con- | tarein NewYork, the other evening, that he onca | ‘alao because it is, in large measure, due to the | shadow was caught. On the third day, the artist, - < tally Do " saw an iceborg—escaped from the great glaciers, | extravagant and careless habits of .American having studied the matter thoroughly, contrived. . of Greenland—that rose 817 feet above the sur- | travelers that couriers have. become of late so | to have two boards slip past each other by, touch- brogh high o lve on tho Cerital sito, whero ho | any of the Eqropsan aities o furnish tho deeign | oriinal designa jving bean totally digrepare. SEVENTI ARCHITE e remainder of his days, Ho | and working drawings, and also:a person o ed.” . Particularly doss Hadfleld g 7 CHITECT~WALTIR. would appear to have been of - an officions, buos- i intend the work. In-that | raising of the enth Sponnce *¢ the (.- Few Statos were, however, admi to i i O “Alm think, | i A i ighth. snt, persevesing dlsposttion; and, atter S | o0 e Gasmrol sorld navo ‘boen long agocom- | 1og, Toom the gronad Story aroughout the bulld. | Union, ani tho increase of pop\'gm:rl:linm‘tgz' {:fi:&‘x:}‘:{'fi;&ufi‘rg“ S L Tt | s pled. oaE oveny posy, I R o et e e th ol Tolioved as Commissionor, he gathered togather | plofod, and for Lulf the sum 'that has been ex- | cver the casement, excluding the ‘}}E{,‘i“"‘ onler | Statos multiplied Congressmen, o that, in 1850, | We shonld like fo Tay itf: s o?mmomx' ters N, A oaxd sruiiiy :',22“;"5:" e hossa. L:sodve;n;%y;n-mngp o . , 2 i catacombs of tho Basament, and tuinihg an' 28 | 188 determined to "extend 'the old wings by |- consisting of such Taatly: pacics Srorond | oo culy keeps him becrusa ho 15 afraid to try | ment of"double leasse: erossad, seoured & ROGh-- | models and-curiositiea in-an” abandoned hotel ded t work.” which stood on the sito of tho present Gonersl | 2o to O Hhe proees L Post-Office, and thesa curiositics were spared, nt 5 Lis iritercession, from the Britieh incendiary, and | an Englishman who had been requosted to tome | old freestome Ospitol, in-masa as we ace it, a8 |t priGoomth o hiroEos Thomas U. Walter. | matchos, 8 halt-pint flask of pure & for [ noed of in traveling all over E; hisky noed of a courier in traveling’ all over Europe ; 4 : turning an in: w“ o .. - LIFE OF HADFIELD. forior part of the edifice info the superior uges™ | Srenier, "i38% named * extenslong™ to bo coa- | sugsr, sborry, lemons,” ofd. Reberte bed ] n s, cro roda noger- ¢ Tho seéond architecs in order is Mr. Hadield, | Wo may regard the east front aad wings. of ‘e | Sicted o planr® goranle materials, and upon - tcort-corgi1¥ autmogs, ‘old Bonspen” Sl T ‘1"“"1';_,;‘22,,'1 ot ey | S e e et The moonal Fame- i o foreunato soman U Wgtend. | Seoteh slo, bipes and tobincco, old 176, & box. of. | fain Amotnt of common setise, e nak she lesst | avas 60 saetl thgt the Bpokss of the ahaela of tha- i sulky Were caught 88 if they wero not in motion- beeame the nuclous of the present Patcnt-Gfiice | out to this country and give some responsitility THE DESIGN OF MB. LATROBE, Ho held and keeps the rank of i i o e S Yhi Tl o ook, T | I 1 ok b pels b, ey | pholod e ancs 1 M ot | i aoinc At Bhet Tt | bt g o 2 St | B8 ST it T ) | Sl et L ey i og W28 Y n]sy o b mn;u e X ceived tshe indorsement uI 1 Botaeen | Thomton's’ de The agant praise of | of the additions was laid by President Fillmore, | small lot of temperance friends oimm:r th: and perhaps be subjected to some inconven- | photographing ever yot achieved, and the artist o wes lso tho founder of the firs} race-track | genius, Lairobe, Who, emploge sign. embargo wnd non- | July4, 1851, more than ffty-nine years After | ialand an fhat o poutey Conrion just auch sa ifi;:&%:fimxgfl::?;w:n W"}hlg possibly a Pr{mfl ?:khm discovery a3 the Governor is of L rnak. than courier. 0 picture en. \

Other pages from this issue: