BOOKS. PRINT Kl) & PUBLISHED <* By Matthew Carey, No i :8, Market Street, I. Charlotte, a tale of truth, By Mrs Row/on, of the NTew-Tbeatrc Philadelphia* , Second American edition —Price j; cents. f.Tljfe rapid tjle of the First Edition of thisinterellmg novel, in a few .uoiHhs, ittiw heft proof of its merit.] £jttraß fram the Critical Review, April 1791,^.468. It may be a tale of t(uci>, lor it is n«t un natu'i!, a dit is 1 tale of real diflrefs— Charlotte by the artifice of a teaches, re tomHCinled tn.a school from iiuuia"ity ra ther than a conviction ot her iniegi it/ oi ilie regularity ot" tiert'.inner conduct, is en ticed iro'U hei govemels, and accompanies n young officer to America—»The marriage ceremny, i! not forgotten, is postponed, and Charlotte dies a martyr to the incon stancy of her lover, and treachery ot his friend,—The situations are artless and af fecting—the descriptions natural and pa thetic ; we fliould fe«l for Charlotte if loch a person ever exiltsrd, who, for one error, scarcely, pirhaps delerved lb feverea pu • ilhincnt. It'it is n fiction, poetic justice is not, we tlilhlc, properly diltrbut d." v 1. The lnquilitor—bv Mrs. Rowfon, Se cond Philadelphia edition. 87 i cents g. Adventuies if lloderic Random. 2 vols 1 dollar and 50 ce its, eo'arfe paper—l dollar and 75 cents, fine. 4- Not«s oil the state of Virginia—by Tho mas Jeffei lon. Price, neatly bound, one dollar and a half. J. History of the French Revolution, from it; commencement to the .death ol the SJueen and the execution of Britlot. Twi dollars. Extract from the Prefacf. " The authors have prefuined to affix to their title the epithet Impartial; and the rsalbn is, became theycanuot charge them felvei with feeling the imalieft bias to any part;/, but that ot truth and liberty ; and thev flatter themselves, that their readers will find nt only every cii camltanfe tairly iepi*l'ented, but every cemurable ai'tion, Whoever were the authors or aiftors, mark ed in its proper colors. If it was necelTaiy to make a declaration of their own princi ple!, they would lav, they are neither tory nor republican—They love liberty as Eng lilh whigs, and execrate every criminal ait by which so noble a caufeis endangered and dii\raced. 111 the present fe'mer.t of the public cannot Hatter themselves with tli« hi pes of feeing this claim uiuverfally at :*nowledged. On the contrary, they are utcil ajjured that the/c pages will not be acceptable ti the'zealous oj cither party. Bur when time lhali ditfipate the clou is of political decep tion, they with some confidence expect that * #erdn?t from public opinion, which candor fcnd moderation feldoin fail to receive. Eli'*ACT FROM THE CRITICAL Review, Januarv, 1794—page 52. '• We haverertainly derived much plea- Jo sure. <md acquired much information from the pe. ufal of tliefe volumes ; and we think th«m, both for matter and ttyle, worthy the attention of altwho interelt themfelvei ! n events which have so jiiftly excited the curiosity a id altoiiithment of mankind." 4. Plowdens history of thi Britilh empire from May 1792, to December 1793. A drill f and a quarter. [This is as inter eftinganH valtwble a publication as had appeared for many years.] 7. Beattie's Elements of Moral jScience 2 vols. One dollar and three quarters 8. Ladies Library. Second American edition. 87 -5 cents. Containing— Miss Moore's ilffays; Dr. Gregory's Le gacy to his Daughters; Lady Penriug [ons uhfoitunate mother's ailvcc to he laughters i. Marfchioneft da rt Advice of a mother toher dau.#rer,, Mrs (iliapone's Letter on the gover iment of the temper; .'Swift's Letter to a Young Lady newly married; Moore's Katies tor the Fentald Sex 9 journal durant un Sejouren France de puis le coininencemeir d'aout julqu'a la midiDec&iribrrj auquelelt ajonte uurecit des evenemens les plus 1 ema 1 qnaWes qui ont eu lieti a Paris, d. puis cette epoque, julqa'a la mort du roi He■ franc*. Bound, 2 t-2 d illars—fewed, 2 dollars. 16. titward's treatiTe on the religious as- Jerttons. Coarte paper, a dollar—fine, 0 dollar and a halt. 11. Rights of Woman—by Mr*. Wolfton craft. A dollar. 12. Sicramenfal Meditations— 60 cents. 13. Bunyan's rtniy War, made by Shaddai ajainft D.nboltis. •4- Short accju it of Alijiifs. Second edi tion, c'llarged—'2s cents. Containing—A description of that coun try—nfthe manners and cviftotns ot the in habitants—and ot'theiil'ev .'-al wars again# Spain, France, Knglaml, Holland, Venifce, and other powers of Kurope —from the u farpatlon ofßarbarofla and the invSfion ot Charles V. to the prclent tim». —W'tlia concise View of the origin of tti3 war be tween Algiers and the Ur.ited States. EmbeUi'.hed ivitii a map oi*3ai hary, com prehending Morocco, Fes, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoly. To the present edition is added a very copious index, containing letters from sundry American prisoners in Algietsto their friehds in the Ur.ited States—a lilt ot th; v.flels taVen-i-and many very inteieft ing irt e'es r,Bt in the firft editiqn. 15. ttiair's Left ires on Uhetoric aod Belles Letters Three dollars 33 ctnu. t6. A'muh's Letfts to Main- d Women, on nursing and the management of children. 62 cents. 17. American Farrtier's letters. 80 cert's. 18. Young MilTes Magasiue. 2 vols, t dol lar 33 cents. ConM ; nt«® —Dialogues between * Gove » »e.fs and fe»rra! Voung Ladies ol Quality hr scholars. —Tft vfi'ich each Lady is made tolpeak •ccmdin "to her t>a-«icnl <r jmiihj, te tr.prr and "inclination —Their feverat faul's *re pointed out, and theeafy way to amend hem, an well as to think, and fprak, and £ si p neily i no less care beiftg taken to form their hfarts to gsodnefs, than to en- fc lig'iuu their underliaudings with ufeful- h knowledge. A short and clear abridgment le is alfojjivni of (acred and profane History, n in 1 some letront in Geography. The ufeful 0 is blended ilifuttghout with the agreeable, the whale being interl'perfed with proper re- j, ilexioii j and moral Tales. 0 19. D Jiu an's Elementa of Logic. 80 cents 20. an epic poem-37 »-* cents. 31. Tench Coxe'sexaminationof Lord Shef- field's 62 cents, . n. Ladies' Friend. 37 t-« ccSis. J *8. Smith's hiiloiy ol MewYoik, from its diicovcry to 1732. 1 dollar 25 cents. <4. Complete Atlas for the pi efeiu wai,con taining inaus of France, Hulland, Nether lands, "Germany, Spain, Italy, and the t Well-Intiies. 2 dollars. - • of the United Stltes, v/ith i the Federal Conllitution- 62 1-2 cents. 1 26. Peyton's Grammar for Frenchmen to learn-fcngiiih. 50 cents. I 27 Kpi&en Lnciiiridiori. 31 c 28 Gay's Fables. 31 cents. 1 ?g. Chrifti.ii» iconomy . 25 cents. 30. Charms ot Mel.dy, a cnoice colleQion r of So:igß. 25 cents. a 31. Amecrcan Mufeam, 12 vols, Bvo. Nme. teendollars and 20 ccms. t " The American Museum is not onlyeem- t nently calculated to diffeininate political and other valuable information, but it lias been uniformly condutted with talle, attention, A propriety. It to these important objects bi fuperadded tl\e more immediate, fltfirc o! ' • rescuing public document* from oblivion, ii will venture te pronounce, as my sentiment, that a more ufeful literary plan has never oeen undertaken in America, nor one more j delervingof pub lie encou^gcment." General Wafliington. 23. Poems of Col. Humphreys. 37 1-2 centi. 34. Catechilm ot Man. 18 i-« cents. 35. Tom Pairte's Jests. 18 1-2 cents 36. Carey's account ot the Yellow Fever,4th edition. 50Cents. 37. Devout Christian's Vade Mccum. 25 cents. 38. Garden of the Soul. 50 cents. 39. Think well on'i. 50 cents. 40. Donay Bible. 6 dollars. Nov. 29 ao<?i Treasury Department, | Revenue Ojjicc, April 27, 1799 PROPOSALS 'willbe received at the Office of ' the Commissioner of the Revenue for building A Light House 6h tbe lead land of Cape Hatteraj on the coajl of North Carolina, of the follenving materials, ili- ' men/tons, anddefcription. The form is to be o<9.agonal. The foun dation is to be of stone, to be funk thirteen 1 feet below the bottom of the water table or ' the furface of the earth, and to be commen- ' ced of thi diameter bf twenty nine feet.— 1 From luch commencement to the height of \ four feet the foundation is to be kid solidly 1 ,and from thence to the bottom of the water ' table, the foundation wall, is to be nine feet high and nine feet thick. The diameter of the base from the bottom ' of the water table to the top thereof (where 1 the o&agonal pyramid is to commence) is to ' be twenty eight feet four inches and the wall ' is there to be seven feet thick. The wall of the octagonal pyramid is to be fix feet thick 1 at the base theieof, on the top of the water table. The height of the building from the bot- ' torn of the water-table, and from the fur face of the earth, is to be ninety feet to the ' top of the stone work, under the floor of the ' lantern; where the diameter is to be sixteen 1 and one half feet and the wall three feet.— ' The whole of the walls is to bebuilt of stone ' The water table is to be capt with sawed 1 stone, at least eight inches wide and Hoped 1 at the top to turn off the water. The out- ■ fide of the walls is to be faced with hewn or < hammer drefled stone, I aving four windows ' inthe north east andfive windows inthefouth 1 weft. The falhesareto be hung with hin- ' ges, and each falh is to have twelve panes of glass, eight by ten inches. ( On the top of the stone work is to be a framed tier of joists, beded therein, plank- ' ed over with oak plank, extending two feet - beyond the wall therebyformingan eavewhich 1 is to be finilhed with a cornice, the whole 1 having a defeent from the ceutre fufficient r to throw off the water, and to be covered I with copper. A complete and fufficient iron 5 lantern in the oil agonal form is to rclt there- ' on. The eight corner pieccs or stanchions of < which, are to be built in the wall to the ' depth of ten feet. These stanchions to be <■ nearly three inches square in the lower ten 1 feet, and ,} 1-2 itjehes by 2-1-2 inches above. ' The lantern is to be ten feet and nine inches I in diameter, it is also to be ten feet high 1 from the floor to the bottom of the dome or 1 roof and to have a dome or roof of five feet and nine inches in height. The whole space t between the posts or upright pieces at the an- « gles is to be occupied by the falhrt, which re to be moulded on the inside and struck lofid. t Each falh is to have twenty eight panes of I glass, fourteen by twelve inchcs. A part of the falh on the south weft fide is to be hung ( with hinges for a convenient door to go out 1 011 the platform. The rafters of the lantern are to be framed into an irtn hoop, over I which is to be a copper funnel, thro'which 1 the smoke may pass iflto a large copper ven tilator in the form of a man's head, capable I of containing one hundred gallons. t This head is to be turned by a large vane ; 1 so that the hole for venting the smoke, may < be always to leeward. Eight dormant venti- - lators are to be fixed in the roof, a large cur- t ved air pipe is to be passed through the floor, 1 and a dole Uove is to be provided and fix- t ed in the lantern. There are to be eight pairsof flairs to ascend t6 the lantern, the en- ( trance to which is to be by a trap door co- I vered with cop er. The building is to be 1 furniihed with two complete electrical con- t duclors, or rods with points. The floors are 1 to be laid with plank, of at least one inch ■ and one half in thickncfs. The entrance to ; the light house is to be well feenred by a strong door hung upon hinges with a strong 1 Lock and latch complete. Also a frame House to be thirty four feet 1 in ftont and sixteen feet deep with a cellar under it. The cellar walls to be eighteen in ches thick andfeven feet high. The firft llory of the hool'c is to be eight mu ,,. -If t*-* ■ — -«•.- J* . • - ■ ■■ ■Ki* ' - -'' f - feet, and the second, seven feet and fix niches high. The floors are to be laid in whole lengths, nailed through. The stack of chim nie> is to be finilhed with two plain fire places on each floor, one of them Targe for a kitchen. Two windows below, and three above in front and rear, each fafli to have eighteen panes of glass test by twelve inches. The doors ire to be hung and furnifhed completely. The cielings and fides of the House arc to be plaiftered with two coats ; all the wood work inside and out is to be well painted and the whole to be finifhed in a ph/in decent manner. An Oil vault is to be built twenty feet by twelve feet in the clear, arched over and co vered with earth or sand over which a shed is to be built- It is to be furnilhed with nine strong Cedar Citterns with covers, each capa ble of containing two hundred gallons. The entrance to the vault is to be secured by a strong door. A well is to be l'unk at a convenient distance, and furnifhed with a curb, bucket and rope completely. The builder to find and pay for all the materia's, labor, workmanship, provisions, and other obje&s of cost, charge or expence, for a sum to be agreed upon, and to execute the before described work and every part thereof in a good and workman-like manner. Convenient payments or advances, oh secu rity will be .made. April 17. m & th tf I reasury Department Revenue Office, April 24th 1795. PROPOSALS will be received at the OiEce of tbe CommiJJioner of the Revenue for building B BEACCN HOUSE on Shell Castle Wand, in PamftUo Sound, near Otcacoek Inlet, m North Carolina, of the following materials, dimensions and de scription. The form is to be an oflagbn. The foun dation is to be of stone, to be funk nine feet and one half i>elow the farface of the earth, ana to be commenced of the diameter of 23 feet. It is to be laidfolidly ta the height of two feet. From thence to the height of fix inches above the earth or to the bottom of the wooden work, the foundation wall it to be eight feet high k and four feet and one half thick. The O&agonal Pyramid is to be well fram ed, and of stout heart Piae timber. It is to be twenty two feet in diameter at the base thereof, where it will reft on the top of the stone foundation, to which it is to be well f«- cured by fix teen stout iron ftAps built therein, and otherwise. The height of the wooden building from the top of the stone work (fix inches above the furface ef the earth) is to be fifty four feet and one half to the top of the wooden work, under the floor of the lantern, where the dia meter is to be twelve feet. The foundation is to be capt with la wed Hone at lead: e.ght inches wide, and Aoped at top to turn off the water. The frame of the Pyramid is to be cover ed with boards of one inch and one half in thickness, over which is to be jaidagoodand complete covering of {hingles, and it is to be well painted with three ceats. 1 he 13 aeon House is to have two windows in the East and three windows in the weft. The faihes are to be hung with hinges, and each falh is to have eight panes of glass of l eight by ten inches. On the top of the wooden work of the Py ramid is to be a strong framed tier of joiits, beded therein, planked over with Oak plank, extending one foot beyond the fides of the Pyramid, thereby forming an eave which is to be finilhed by a cornice, the whole having a descent from the centre fufficient to throw off the water, and to be covered with capper. A complete and fufficient iron lantern in the Octagonal form is to reft therein. The sight corner pieces orftanchionsof which are to be well secured to the upright timbers of the Pyramid, or to the tier ol joists, or both. These ftan.cliions are to be stout in the low er eight feet, and fufliciently strong above. The Lantern is to be fix feet high, from the floor to the bottom of the dome or roof, and to have a dome or roof of three feet in height. The whole space between th» polls to be occupied by the falhes, which arc to be. moulded on the uiLide and struck solid. The failles are to be furnilhed with large panes of glass ; a part of the falh on the south weft lide is to be hung with hinges for a door to go out or. the platiorm. The iron rafters of the Lantern are to be framed into an iron hoop, over which is to be a copper funnel; —through which the smoke may pass into a large copper ventilator in the form of a man's head, capa ble of containing thirty gallons, this head to be turned by a large vane, so that the hole for venting tne smoke may be always to leeward. Eight dormant ventilators are to be fixed in the roof j a large curved air-pipe is to be puff ed through the floor. There are to be five pairs of stairs to ascend to the Lantern the entrance to which is to br by a trap door covered with copper. The building is to be furnifhed with two complete ele&rical conduflors or rods with points. The floors are to be laid with plank. The entrance into the light hpufe is to be well secured by a strong door hutg upon hinges with a strong lock and latch complete. Also A FRAME DWELLING HOUSE of OHe (lory, to be twenty eight feet in front and fif teen feet deep with a cellar under it, if it lhould be found pra&icable to make one. The cellar walls are to be fourteen inches thick, and seven feet high. The story of the Houie' to be seven feet and one half in the clear, the roof to have a rectangular pitch. The floors to be laid in whole lengths nailed through. The House it to he composed of two rooms of about thirteen feet and one half by four teen feet and one half on the lower floor. The stack of chimnics is to be between the two fit tiiig rooms and it is to have two plain fire pla ces, one of them large for a Kitchen, to which is to be joined an oven. There is to be an outer door in front between the two rooms and in the rear, in the Kitchen. There are to be two windows in each of the rooms. Each falh is to have twelve panes of glass eight by ten inches. Each window is to have a strong plain ffiutter with faftenings and hin ges. The doors are to J>e hung ed completely. The cie'ling aud inner fides of the House are to he plaiftered with two coats. 'XT rr\nrrv \r All the wood work ouriide is to be well paint ed, and the whole is to be finilhed 111 a plain and decent manner. An Oil vault is to be built ten by twelve feet in the clear, arched over and covered with earth or faud, over which a Ihed is to be built. It is to be furnilhed with three strong cedar cisterns with covers, each capable of contain ing two hundred gallons. The entrance to the vault is to be secured by a ltrong door. The builder is to procure and pay for all materials, laboi, work nan (hip, provisions, and other objeas of coil, charge, or expense for a sum, to be proposed ahd agreed upon, and to execute the before described work, and every part thereof, in a good and work man-like manner. Convenient payments ot advances, on 10- curity, will be mads. April 27. m&th tf Fresh Fruits &c. To-Morrow Morning will be Landed, At Stamper's wharf, from on board the schooner Eliza, T\ Arnold, mailer, diredt from Malaga, 300 Qr. Casks old Mountain WINE, of In peri or quality. 500 Qr. Barrels Bloom Raifios. 100 Boxes Lemons. aoB Boxes mufcatol Raifms. 19a Jars ditto ditto. 48 Sacks foft-lhell'd Almonds* % Kegs Figs, ike. For Sale by PETER KUHN. May 7. dbt —miutf To be Sold, And Poffeflion given immediately, A Two Jlory brick Dwelling House, In Arch ftrect near Front ftrect, No, 23 sixteen and an half feet front, and the lot is 102 feet deep. Enquire ol Isaac Snowden t South Second Street. March 30 d6t—eodtf TO BE SOLD, A Lot, containing about 17 Icres* on the WiiTahickon road, 4 miles, from the city, and tlire.Aly op'pofite to the house of Mr. Isaac Wharton. A Lot, containing jo acres, in Islington Lane, on said road, near the estate of Jasper Moylan, Esq. A Lot, containing 10 acres in Turner** Lane, on said road, and dire&ly opposite to the estate of Mr. Ternant. Enquire of Joseph Redman, Woodstock corner of Turner's Latoe* April 6 3rdt Genteel Boarding, At the Corner of Eleventh and Sprues i Streets. djw W~K N"T~E~T>, ; A WET Nurse, who can be well re commended—Enquire of the Primer. June 16. «1. 1 1 To be Sold, By Public Vendue at the Coffee-Houfe, . on the JirJl of July next, tf not fold before at Private Sale, FIUR TENEMENTS, with the Lots I thereto belonging, situate in Biddle's ' Alley, leading from Market street into El bow Lane, and dirciftly in the rear of the House now occupied by Hilary Baker, Esq. the whole ground is sixty feet front on Bid die's alley, and sixteen feet deep. Any person inclining to purchase the pre mises, or any part thereof, may know the terms by applying at No. 73 Walnut street. J""e " eodtij Fresh TEAS, Of Superior Quality, viz. Imperial, or Gunpowder Hyson Gnmce, lit quality Hyson, 2d. do. do. Young Hyson, Hyson Skin, and Souchong. A few Boxes of each, for fate a No. 19 Third street, south. Deo. 10 eodtf 120,000 lb. Prime Green COFFEE, For f.le by LEfINUS CLARKSOIf. June 14 tth&stf- FOR SALE, 500,000 Acres of LAND, Lying contiguous to the Waters of the Potowmac, in Virginia. Also, 50,000 Acres Virginia Mili tary LAND. Apply to the Printer. 7 une tt&f THIS DAT IS PUBUSHEDT By J. ORMROD, Franklin'j Head, he 41, Chefnut-Jlreet, AN ADDRESS TO THE Citizens ot Philadelphia, RESPECTING THE GOVERNMENT ofTOUTH, By Matthew Clarkson, Esq. Mayor. June 10. ; City of Wafiiingtorw- Scheme of the Lottery; : n°. ii, For the Improvement cf The FEDERAL CITY. ' I A magnifidcnl 20,d00 Dolliif, i, n( f dwelling hoHle, calh 36,000 are Jo,oee , 1 ditto 15,000 &ca r>i *5,000 40.000 : 1 ditto 15,000 <5c cash 15, 000 30,030 , 1 ditto I®,ooo & calh 10,<Soo io'oca , 1 ditto 5,000 &ca:h 5,000 10 000 ' 1 ditto 5,000 &calh 5,000 10.0.0 1 C.ltP"«»l 10,00 2 dit' o 5,00 a each, are ' ,o )0 0 1 o ditto 1,000 io,oco 20 ditto 500 10,00© roo auto 100 lO,OCO goo di'f 5° io,yco 400 ditto *.5 10,000 1,000 dtfirr '2<9 5>0,p?0 15,000 dmo ** 150,000 *6,739 ? nics 33,261 Blank* 50,000 Tickits at 8 dol'ars 400,000 Tills Lottery will afford an elegant fpeci* men of the private buildings to be crest <1 io the City «f Wafhipiton—Two biauiifu! de fighs arc already tele £led for the entire Ifoiui on two of the public Iqmaies ; from ihefe drawings, it is protpoftd to erecb two ccnne and tour*corner buildings-, as fopn as poflible after this Lottery u told, and to convey tinm when complete, fo-t'u. iortunate adventurers, in the manner described in the heme lor the Hotel Lottery. A nett deduction of five per cent, will be made to deiVay the neccf fitiy expences of printing, See. and the I'm-. plus will he made a part tb fund intended for the National UniWirfiity, to be ere&cd within the City of Wa.'hmgton. Ifcg" The- drawing will commence as soon as the Tickets are fold oft. The money prir.es \>e payable in thirty day* after it is finiHicd, and any prizes f'>r which j fortunate numbers are not pu>du«d wktilft < welve mouths after the drawing is doled arc to be conlidetcd as given towards the -fund for the Uuivtrlity. it being determined to fettle the whole business in a year from the endir.tr of the drawing and to take Mp the oomis given asfecuiity. The »eal fed orities given for the payment of the Prizes, are held by the Piefident and two Dirc6>ork oi the Bank ofpolurttb's, and , are at more than li-*lt the amount of the Lottery. The twenty four gentlemen who bv ap pointment of the late Commillioners aflifted in the management of the Hotel Lottery are, roqueftedto undertake this arduous talk a fr i eond time on behalf of the public ; a fu?*'" ent number of these having kindly icc it is hqped that the friends to a verfity and the other federal obje<sf^ fta )'. con ' tinueto favor the Tlv of one of the Colleges, to form branch of the; National Institution, is a"^ ac ty in the press, and will*bo fpetidily py*rtifue«l, togetlier with its confritution. A com pleat fiXN the whole cf this Important lnftittfion, compiled from afe le&ion of the beJt materials, ancfeiit and mo xicm, will be iubmitted to the public when ever the fame nia/ have gone througfi fudi cevifions as may be ncceffiry to eftablilh ttio perfe«st cpnfidence and general approbation, so eflcntiilto itsprcfcnt rife and future exif tonce for the general good of America. By accounts received from the diilcrcnt parts of the Continent as well as from Eu rope, where the tickets have been sent for falc, the public are affure^that the drawirrg will speedily commence, and that the care and caution unavoidably necessary to inftirc a fafe disposal of the ticket , has rendered the short fufpeofion indilpeniable. February 24, 1795. SAMUEZ JbLODGET * # * Tickets tnay be had a ihe ban*. ot Columbia ; of Jame&W it Sc C< . B iinino C or (iidcon Denifon, Savannah, ot Pe f Gil'nan,,Bolton; ot IbnnH opfctn* Rch mond ; and of Richard Wells, Cooper'sfery Aug 30 eocitt J ust Pubiifhed, And to be fold by Mr. Ormrod, No. 4* Chefnut ftrect, Mr. Dobfon, 41, Second ■fticet, Mi. i>arir.i, flicct,-aTld bytheEditor, 119, Chefnut street, " An ALPHABETICAL LIST OF THi DUTIES Payable by Law, on all Goods, Wares & Merchandize,imported into the United States after the lafl day of March, 1795.—Pricc l-Bth Of a Dollar. March 19 New Hosiery. Bartholomew Conolly, At his Hosiery Store, No. 48 ChefnUt street, RESPECTFULLY informs hi* Friends the Public in general, that he hps jiilt received by the snip Liberty from X,jverpool, a further fuppiy of Men's & Women's Silk and Cotton Hosiery. Among which are a very ex.enfive affortmcnt of Gentlemen's plain white, fancy, and Silk, fuperfine fancy plated silk and cotton, fine white, plain, and ribb'd cotton —?. very large afTortment of fancy Patent and fine random fancy cotton, &c. which he will fell ( upon the most reasonable terms by the dozen or single pair. A L i O, A General Assortment of every r art : "'" of DRV GOODS, newly imported. Thofc gentlemen who pkafe to fayor B 1 with their commands, will meet vitb, at store, a moll elegant, extenfiv ', end chosen assortment of every description of 1 ' fiery. Alfa, a reat Variety of Gentlemen*s Qui Sizes. June 4 eodt m
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