366 Dowmestie Intelligence. 
square, a bronze statue of Sir John Moore, by Flaxman, of 
London, has just been erected ; and a proposal has been 
afloat for some time, to erect a monument, of some kind or 
been made of one also to the memory of Watt, the im- 
prover of the steam engine, whose death you will have seen 
announced by the time this reaches you ; he was a native of 
lasgow. 
I found on my arrival a Columbian Press at work. Cly- 
mer, the inventor, is in London, and has supplied a consid- 
erable number of them to the printers, who think the Ameri- 
can are superior to any others, in ease of workmanship, 
and fineness of the work produced. Presses of every kind, 
however, will, in all probability, have to give way soon be- 
fore a printing machine, which has been almost perfected in 
ndon, and performs about the work of six presses, with a 
man and a boy to put on and take off the sheets, and work 
“the machine. It operates by a combination of cylinders, 
and can be driven by a steam engine, or any other moving 
. It promises to effect a complete revolution in the 
art of printing. 
Bou 
DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. 
Abstract of the proceedings of the Lyceum of Natural His- 
tory, New-York. 
