"visited in the family, made proposals of mar-’ 
$8 
since tlie’artificlal actial fluids began to be: 
adiministéred as remiedies to the human body.’ 
"Fhe uncertainty, and the errors of the early’ 
apolications, rendered the progress of the 
practice’ slow and doubtful ; nor has the expe- 
xienze. or the success, of recent and mare’ 
numerous 
determine 
fluids, or 
still’ entertained concerning their use. A 
desire . of “extricating’ the subject from the 
confi cts of contrary opinions. established pre- 
jadicesy’ aid opposite interests, induced Mr. 
Cayalloto his last publication $ and’ his prin- 
Cipal aim’ in its compilation’ has been, to 
exhibit.a concise view of ascerteined facts, 
to separdte them’ from’ suppositions and hy- 
potheses, and to point out the ways of inves- 
tigating’ the? farther’ uses of factitious airs. 
Mr. Cavallo'was also the author of'several 
papers, publisied at different’ times’ in’ the 
Philosophical Vransactions of the Royal So- 
ciety of London! 
In> Sti Martin’s-street, '' Leitester-fields, 
Mrs. Fones, but whe had ‘fer some time '‘resu - 
medoher muiden-name of Miss’ Paris. She 
was the daughter of Monsieur Paris, a Fresch 
emigrant of rank} who, together wich his 
wife and child, was’ protected by the benevo- 
‘Tence and litetalivy of Mr. Pearce, member 
for Northallerten. Her father has been dead 
seme years: her mother diedlately. Miss Paris 
was placed py this gentleman ina respectable 
school, meat Urunswick square, and one even- 
ing: at'the Foundling Hospitai formed an‘ ac- 
guaintance with a’gentleman of the name of 
Jones, aivery respectable young man, serving 
in the navy.’ Having found out his lodges, 
without imvitation on his part, she eloped to 
him in the dead-of night.-He received her, 
but respecting’ her situation, and with a ten- 
derness which is ‘creditable to him, restored 
her to her governess.’ Shortly afterwards he 
practitioners, been sufficient to 
the precise power of. the aerial 
riage; was accepted by Mr. Pearce, and, in 
his presence, and by his consent as her guar- 
dian, he was married to Miss Paris.. Some 
trifling settlenient, not exceedingsixty pounds 
per ahnum, was made by Mr. Pearce upon 
this young lady, and we beliewe that Mr. 
Jones received scatcely any pecuniary advan- 
lage by the marriage. He was in the navy, 
and the’son of a weaithy and respectable 
tradesman, we believe an army clothier. He 
took his*wife to’ his-father’s house; who re- 
geived Her with parental attention, and of--. 
fered to contribute every thing to her hap- 
piness. But such was the perverseness and 
unhappy iadiscretion of this young’ woman, 
that she soon’ quarrelled with her husband’s 
family; and obliged him’ to remove her to 
lodgings, either in’ Camden Town, or Edges 
ware road. They lived here about a month, 
‘when, having‘reason to ‘be dissatisfied’ with 
hief, extravagance-and conduct, he procured 
her to be watched, one evening, 
house; ané she wes trated; in company-wath 
Deaths in and near London. 
to: dissipate the doubts which are 
- Justice to those who survive her. 
out of the’ 
(Feb. 
a ‘young’ officer; whose atti''she’ appears €- 
have’ seized castially in the street, tq a neto- 
rious brothel. In. the se.circamstances, Mr. 
Jones proceed: d_ with remarkable tenderness $ 
buty upon taxing his wile with hex infidelity, | 
she ‘fade no justification, acknowledged it! 
without reserve or hesitation ; “protested Her’ 
insuperable ‘hatred and contempt of her hos-* 
band 5 ‘slighted’ his prebere? conditional for- 
giveness ;, eloped from his house, and imme> 
diately went -uper the town. Her ‘prostitu- 
tion was undisguised and promiscuous ; she 
became, with respect to personal virtue, 
wholly abandoned; and the consequence was, 
that'she’was compelled, very lately, to take’ 
refuge in a hospital—the asvlum of criminal’ 
disease, and indigent indiscretion. — Upon 
being restored to health, she disdained all 
invitation to repentance, which the Kindhess* 
Of her friends induced them to make. She 
again’ bruke out into her profisgate cenrses 3’ 
avid it is to be feared, that mortification end’ 
violence of passion, concurring, with intem- 
perance, upon a mind wholly vatant and un- 
impressed with moral and religious’ principles, 
induced her to shorten’ her course, afd ter = 
minate- her. career of profligacy by poison: 
It. is; however, but charitable’ to conclude 
that. her mind was’ diserdeted. Her person 
was extremely beautiful, her age seventeen 5> 
her figure light and delicate, ame her manners" 
truly prepossessing. She sung, and understcod' 
music well, and possessed many of the cus= 
tomary accomplishments of females 5 ‘but of ' 
real solid education, of mental improvement,’ 
of moral.and Christian: knowledge, she had’ 
not the faintest vestige——never was ‘Savage in? 
this respect more’ unenlightened, This state-: 
ment is made, from. personal knowledge, in 
With re. 
spect to her déath, the circumstances are’ 
truly dreadful. She had prepared’ three’ 
phials of opium, twoof which she swallowed 
and she is said to have died with a spirit of” 
dreadful——-we should altost says. diabolical’ 
perverseness; for no persuasion nor’ force’ 
could make her, when seized with the nausea 
of the poison, to take any antidote to: the. 
draughts. She would not suffer the medical 
mea to approach her 3 and though after stu- 
pefaction came on, they administered every 
known medicine, they all failed of effect.’ 
~ 
_From the concurrent testimony of several 
witnesses, at the coroner’s inquest, held to 
inquire into the circumstances of her deathy 
the jury, without hesitation, returned a vere 
- dict of i insanity. 
Ii Great Russell-street, B Biccutanite! Caps 
tain- Donald Stewart, of the Bord Nelson’ 
Harwich packet. 
In Cleveland-row, Westminster, after a 
jong illness, the Rev.-C. De Guiffardiere, 
rector of Newington Butts, Middlesex, and’ 
of Great Berkhamstead, Herts, one of the 
French preachers at the chapel at St. James’s, 
and a prebendary in the ip ei Church of 
Sarum: 69, - 
PROVINCIAL 
