Gazette of the United States & evening advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1793-1794, April 25, 1794, Image 4

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    Ph'laiMntola, Marchi, 1794.
JUST PUBLISHED,
si/ MATHEW CAREY,
No. 118, Market Jlreet,
IWE FIRST V,OLUME OF A NEW
StSTEM. OF
vModern Geography :
OR, A
Geographical, Hijlprical, and
Commercial Grammar;
And jreient stare of rhe fcveral
NATIONS OF THE WORLD.
CONTAIN ING,
t. Th* figures* motions, and distances of
the planets, according to the Newtonian fyf
tein 4nd the latest observations
a. A general view of the earth, considered
as a planet; vvith several ufeful geographical
definitions and problems.
3 The grand divisions of the globe into
land ami wafer, continents and iilands.
4. Tt>e tttuation and extent of empires,
kingdoms, states, provinces and colonies.
f. Their climates, air, foil, vegetables,
prnduftions, metals, minerals, natural cui i
olities, Teas, rivers, bays,capes, promontories,
audi lakes.
6. The birds arid beads peculiar to each
country.
7. Observations 011 the changes that have
been in J where obierred upon the face ot na
ture lii ce the most earjy periods of" history.
The history and origin of nations.; theit
forms of government, religion, Jaws, reve
nues, ta*es, naval and military strength.
I). The genius, manners, customs, ar\4 ha
biti of the people.
ro. Their language, learning, arts,fciences,
manutfiftures, arid commerce.
11. The chief cities, ttruftures, ruins, and
artificial curiosities
;2. The longitude, latitude, bearings, and
distances of principal places fromHiiladelphi?
To which are added,
1. ft Geographical Indek, with the names
and places a'p'iabetically arranged
2. A TAbls ot the Coins of all nations, and
their value in dollars a<id cents.
3. ACn*oN»Loore*c Table of remarkable
events, from the creation to the prefeiit time.
By mLLIAM GUTHRIE, E/q.
The Astronomical Part corre<sted by
D RittenAouse.
To which have been added,
late Discoveries of Dr. HErschbll,
ant) other eminent Astronomers.
The FIRST AMERICAN EDITION,
Improved, and greatly Enlarged.
The firft volume contains twenty-one M a P s
and Charts, be fides two Astronomical Plates,
1. Map of the world. 2. Chart of tf'e world.
3. Europe. 4. Asia. 5. Africa. 6. South
America. 7. Cook's diftovenes. 8. Coun
tries round ttae north Pole. 9* Sweden, Den
mark. and Norway, so. Seven United Pro
vyict's. Vi Aufti u'n, Frfen'ch A.nd Dutch Ne
therlands. 12. Germany. 13. Seat of war
in Trance- x' - France divided into depart
ments. 15. Switzerland. 16. Italy, Sicily,
and Sardinia. 17. Spain and Portugal.
l 3 Turkey in Europe and Hungary. 19 Ire
land. 23.*WeA-Indies. 2i. Vermont. 22. Ar
millafy sphere. 23. eopernicao fyfterii.
With the second volume, which is now in
tire press, will be given the following Maps :
1. Russia in Em ope and Alia.
2." ScotHmtf.
•3. England and Wales.
4. Poland.
5. China.
6. Hindoftan.
7. United States.
g. British Amferica.
o. State of New-Hampshire.
,3. State ot Matfachufetts.
ji. Stare of Connecticut.
,i. State of Rhode Island.
t 3. State of New-York.
,4. State of New-jerfey.
jS- State of Pennsylvania.
16. State of Delaware.
17. State of Maryland.
18. State of Virginia.
19. State of Kentucky.
20. State of North-Carolina.
2t. TenneflVe Government.
42. State oVSouth-Caiolina.
23. State of Georgia.
TERMS.
j. This work will be coraprifed in two Vo
lumes.
2. Subscribers pay for the present volume on
delivery, fix dollars, and the price of bind
ing, (56 cents for boards.)
3. They may receive the succeeding volume
in twenty-four weekly numbers, at a quar
ter dollar each, or else, when -finifhed, at
the farae pri<fe as the firft.
4. The fobferiprion \*il|t>e raised on the firft
day of June 1794. to fourteen dollars, ex
clnhve of binding.
5. Should any copies remain for sale after the
completioo of the work, tHey.wili be fold at
fiKteeu dollars, and the price df bindings
6. The names of the fiibfcribers will be pub
lifted as patrons of American literature,
arts,and feienews.
It is wholly uunecelTary to expatiate on the
advantage,to American readers, that this edi
tion possesses, over every imported edition of
any fyttem of Geography extant. The addit
tftm of maps of ih (everal state.«, proenred a.
a very great eKpenfe, and from the be ft ma
terials that ai*e attaiuable, speaks such full
coo Vision on this fubjedk, that it would be
dtfrefpeft to the reader's under&anding to
foppofe it requisite to enter into a detail of
arguments to prove its superiority. In no
Ami tar work have such maps baenever ietro
The emendations and additions which are
mule in this work,are innumerable,and occuj
in every page. The public are referred to
the prefacc for a flight (ketch of a few ot
them.
The publirtier takes the present opportu
nity of returningihis 1110 ft sincere thanks to
those refp<&ablc characters who have favored
him with documents for improving the maps
offeveral of the ftatcs. Ht requests a conti
nuance of theii kindness; and hopes that such
public spirited citizens, as are pofleffed ol fi
raiLur wrll favor him with their
afliftance in perfuming his undertaking.
The extraordinary encouragement with
which he has been favored, has excited
in his breast the warmeit sentiments of grati
tude—-sentiments which time will not efface.
He pledges hiinfelf to the citizens of the
United Srates, tofpare neither pains nor ex
pense to render the preterit edition ofGuthrie's
Geography improved, deferviug of their pa
tronage. waftf
BOOKS.
A CHOICE COLLECTION,
Lately imported, and for sale at
No. 26, Spruce, opposite Dock
Street,
AT LOW PRICES,
Among tvh'ich are the following
FOLIO.
Chamberlain's History of London with plates
Palladios Architecture, 2 vols, in one best edi
tion
Tillotfon's Worlds, 3 v °l s - heft adition
Rapin's History ot England with Tindal's
Continuation, 3 vo'ij.
Shaw's Travels thro' Barbary and the Levant
poftlethwait's Dictionary of Trade and Com
merce, 2 vols.
QU A R TO.
gruce'sTravels, 5 vols, fine plates
Robert fun' 3 History of America, 2 vols.
Maclaurin's Account of NewtonsPhilofophy,
M'Knight's Harmony of the Gospels
Low man On the Revelations
Ledwick's Antiquities of Ireland
Locke on the Epistles
Glass's Account of the Canary Islands
Bell's Travels trough Asia, 2 vols.
Tournefort's voyage to the Levant, 2 vols.
OCTAVO.
The annual vols. from its com-
mencemept
Niebuhi's voyage to Arabia, 2 vols.
Hume's History of England, with SmpllcUs
* continuation, 14 vols.
Crevier's Lives of the Roman Emperor's, 10
vols.
Pennant's Account of London
Reeves'-; history of the Eaglifh Law, 4 vols.
Blackftone's Commentaries, 4 vols.
RaynaVs+riftory of the East and Weft Indies,
7 vols.
Bell's beautiful edition of the Britifli Poets,
109 vols. ' x
LIVRES FRANCOIS.
L'Antiquirfe expliquee avec Figures par Mont
fau£(>n 15 torn. iol.
Les Antiques de I'Egypte par Norden sol. a
vec Drfcription
H'ftoriquc g torn. oft.
Theatre 1 de Voltaire elegt. relie 9 torn.
Romain par Rollin 16 torn.
Le Temple des Muses avec des beaux Tableaux.
CEuvres de Boilcau, Moliere, Helvetius &c.
With many others equally good,
ALSO,
An Excellent Quadrant^
warranted perfect; a few acromatic Pocket
perfp<£live Glafles-; a fine toned German Flute
6 keys and additiou2l joint's ; and a few ele
gant Coloured P?intß,
April
TO BE SOLD,
And entered upon the fiift of May,
*Tbe noted EJlate, called
Johnjon Hall:
Lv'ognnthe IVLohawk country. ftateofNew
York, formerly tne feat of Sir William John
f,,n, containing about fcven hundred acres of
land, which is of the very best quality ; toge
ther with the stock, and farming utei&ls. The
buildings are and convenient, and fit for
a gentleman's feat. The payments will be made
easy, on good security. For further particulars
cuquireof George Metcalf, Esq. onthe premis
es, of Silas Talbot, Esq. at Philadelphia, of
Samuel Ward and Brmhers, in New York, or
of the fubferiber in ProvWence.
Jabez Boiven.
Philad. March 26
On Tuesday the 29th instant
at 11 o'clock in the Forenoon, will be
fold by niibtic vendue, at Mr. Bowen's
Exhibitioft Room, No. 9, uortb Eighth
ftrect,
A COLLECTION OF
Capital Pi&ures,
By the most approved French, Italian, and
Ffemilh Mafteis, coUefted by a gentleman of
taste in Europe, and fupcrior to any that have
ever'been offered f»r,fate-ni America.
TJirfe Pictures maybe viewed at any time
previous to the day bf sale at the Exhibition
Room, where catalogues may be had, and at
the Subscribers An&ion Konm.
LIKEWISE,
A ColicElion of Books,
in foreign languages, ftfch as RufGan, Polifli,
and a few maps in tbe fa id Language*.
FOOTMAN & CO. Atfiaaeen..
April £z. » tuttatatJ?
Scheme of a Lottery,
To raise 39,900 Dollars, on 266,000
Dollars, deducting 15 per Cent, from
the Prizes—this Lottery conjtjls of
38,000 Tickets, in which there are
14,539 Prin.es and 23,461 Blanks,
being about one and an half Blanks to a
Prize.
Diieftorsof the Society for establishing
X Ufeful Manufa&ures, having rrfolved to
eteft LOTTERIES for railing One Hundr id-
Thousand Dol la rs, agreeably to an A£l of
the Lt-gifliturc of the Slate- of New-Jersey, have
appointed the following peifons to superintend
and direst the drawing of the fame, via. Nicho
las Low, Rufus King, Herman Le Roy, James
Watson, Richard Hauifon, Abijah Hammond,
and Cornelius Ray, of the city ot New-York—
Thomas Willing, Joleph Ball, Matthew M'Con
nel and Andrew Bayard, of the city of Phila
delphia—His Excellency Richard Howcllj Esq.
Klias Boudinot, General Elias Dayton, James
Parker, John Bayard, Do&or Lewis Donham,
Samuel W. Stockton, Joshua M. Wallace, Joseph
Bloomfield, and El ftia Boudinot, ot Nt w-Jer
fey, who offer the following Scheme of a Lot
tery, and pledge themselves to the public, that
they will take every aflurance and precaution in
tieir power to have the Monies paid by the
Managers, from time to time, as received, into
the 1 anks at New-York and Philadelphia, to
remain for the pui pose of paving Piiz?s, which
fh 1 be immediately discharged by a check
npon one of the Ba^k*.
SCHEME:
1 Prize of ao.cco Dollars is 20,000
10 JO
2000
3000
8100
1 4)539 Prizes.
23,461 Blanks. First drawn number, 2,000
Last drawn number, 2,000
38,000 Tickets at 7 Dollars each is 266,000
The drawing will commence, under the in
fpe&ion of a Committee of the Superintendants,
as soon as the Tickets are fold,ot which timely
notice will b<[given.
The Superintendants have appointed John N.
Cumming, of Newark, Jacob R. Hardenberg,
of New-Brunfwick, and Jooathan Rhea, of
T enton, as immediate Managers thereof, who
have given ample fecuiity for discharging the
trust reposed in them.
$3T In order to fecurethe punctual payment
of the Prizes, the Supcrintendantsof the Lottery
have dire&ed that the Managers fhal'l each enter
into bonds in 40,000 dollars, with four fufficient
fecuriti s, to perform their infttu&ions, the sub
stance of which is
I. That whenever either of the. Managers
(hill receive the sum of Three Hundred Dollars,
he (hall immdiately place thefame in one of the
Banks of New-York or Philadelphia, to the
ciedit of the Governor of the Socicty, and such
ofc the Superimendants as live in the city where
the ironies are placed, to remain there nntil the
Lottery is drawn,for the paynint of the Prizes.
11. The Managers to take fumcient feeurity
for any Tickets they may trust, otherwise to be
responsible for them.
111. To keep regular books of Tickets fold,
Monies received and paid in o the Bank, ab
ft-atts of which Qiall be sent, monthly, to the
Governor of the Society.
Pater fan, January 1, 1794.
On application to either of the above gentle,
men, information will be given where tickets
may be had.
February 24.
f mw(&m
Just Publilhed,
In one handsome volume, iamo. Prifce 5s
AND FOR SALE BY
JOHN ORMROD,
At Franklin's Head, No. 41, Second
AN ESSAY ON THE
Natural Equality of Men,
On the Rights that result from it, and on the
Duties which it imposes.
To which a MEDAL was adjudged, by the
Teylerian Society at Haarlem.
Corrected and Enlarged.
By WILLIAM LAWRENCE BROWN,
D. D.
ProfefTor of Moral Philosophy, and the Law
of Nature*, and of Ecclesiastical History ;
and Minister of the Englifli Chuich at LJ
trecht.
mw&li m
Aliquid Temper ad cotamuium vtilitatem af
feremlum Cicero.
The Firfl American Edition.
THE grand principle of Equality,if right
ly understood, is the only basis on which
universal justice, facied order, and perfctt
freedom, cin be fir-mlytbuilt, and permanent
1y secured. Tluj view of it exhibited in this
essay, at the fame time that it repress the
insolence of office, the tyranny of pride, and
the outrages of oppreftion ; confirms, in the
mod forcible manner, the neceflity of fut>or
dination, and the jult demands of fawfol au
thority. So far indeed, from loosening the
bands of society, that it maintains inviolate,
every natural and every civjl dtftin&ion,
draws more clolely every locial tie, unites in
one harmonious and justly proportioned sys
tem, antlbrings men together on the even
grouud'of the inherent rights of human na
ture, of reciprocal obligation, and of acorn
mon relation to tUc community.
March 18.
10,000
IOjOOO
5,000
2,000
10,000
10,000
IO,GOO
I,GOO
s°°
100
Jf»,000
io,ooo
15,000
20,000
30,000
36,000
81,000
262,000
tu&ftf.
Stre.'.ty
ttifcfif
The Public are cautioned to
beware of counterfeited Five Dollar Bills of
the Bank of the United States, atul Twenty
Dollar Bills of the Bank of North America,
federal of which have appealed in circulation,
within a few days °pajl; they are a good ge
neral imitation of the genuine Bills, but tuny
be difiinguifhed by the following
M A R K S.
Five Dollar Bills of the Bank of the
United States.
ALL that have appeal ed,jiave the letter F
for their Alphabetical Mark.
The Texture of the Paper is thicker and
winter and it takes the ink more freely than
the genuine paper.
The O. in the word Company is smaller
thanth«M. and other letters of that word,
so that a line extended from the top of the O
so touch the top of the M would extend cot.'
fidciably above <.1* range of the whole word.
In the word Untied the letters ire narrow,
erand cloler together than tin reft 0 I the bill
The i and/in the word promiib are not
paral el, the/inclining much more lAtwaii
than the i.
The engraving is badly cxeeuted,the ftrukct
of all the Letters arc stronger and the devi.e
111 tliemargin particularly i s much toa, i, i ~ d
appears darker than in the true bills. S,m.
counterfeits bear da;e in i ry ._\Vi,cc_
as the Bank was not in operation till Decern
ber, and no five dollar bills were ilTueti in
lhat y- ar.
Twen/j Dollar Bills of the Bank of l\, tb
America.
ALL that have appealed have ihe letter
B. tor the;r alphabetical ma k.
They are printed on a paper nearly fimiiar
to that-of the counterfeit Five Dolla. N«tes
above described; tie engraving is belter exe
uctcd, and they approach nearer to the ay.
pearance of the genuine bills.
The fine ruled lines through the word Tut a
?v, ini the body lot the bill, are in inimber thir
teen in the genuine L>-lis, and but twelve in
:he counterfeits.
The word Company is n>och like the (ame
word in the Five Dollar B lis fes defer ibed a
bove, the o being let's than the «, and others
following.
There is no stroke to the t in the word North
whereas in the genuine bills the stroke is well
defined.
The letters ent in the word Twenty, to the
left; hand at the bottom, do not come down to
the line, but are so cue as to give an irregular
appearance to the word, the 7w and thej* go
ing below them.
The signature J. Nixon, has the appear
ance of being wrtueli with Umb-bhck and
oil, and differs from other inks used iu
printing the bills and the calhier's iignaturc.
It is fuppoled these forgeries were committed
in some of the Southern States, as all the coun
terfeits thai have appealed, have cotne from
ihence, and two perfoni have been apprehend
ed in V irginia, on suspicion ol being ihe authors
of" ihem.
The reward of ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS
will be paid to any PeHdm or. Pc rfons who {hall
discover and profccute to convi&ion the Crveral
offenders of ihe following dcfci iptions or any
of them, viz.
The person or prrfons, who
the paper on which the Bills aie primed.
The person or pet tons, who engraved the
plates. 1
THc printer or prifrers, of the bills.
tvery pcr(on who has ailed as apr rc'pal in
any other way, in the counterfeiting ai.u utter
ing the said bills.
Philadelphia, March 28. ty
Jpril 22, 1794,
Other counterfeit bills
ol the Bank of the Uuit/d States Have appeared
in circulation.
The denomination is of TWENTY DOL
LARS,and the alphabetical mark is the let
ter B.
Tbey may be diftinguilhed from the genu
ine by the following MARKS :
The paper of ihe counterfeit! is of a more
tender texture and gloiley furfacc than i!,e
genuine, and there is no mark in them.
The letter c. in the word Ca&ier, in ilie
true bills is strongly marked, whereas in tlx
counterfeits, .he whole letter i. a fine hair
trokc, evidently in ?.a unfinifhed state. T!*
letter a in the word demand, is ba-.lv f.rm.d
and the whole word ill done, and there is no
comma at the end of it, as there is in tlx
genuine bills.
""H 1 * marginal device, is much dajker 'a
t ie faile, than in the genuine bills owing to
the (hide [trokes beingcoaifei, n-.uch i caier
together, and conlequently much more nu
merous. Ihis difference fti ikes it* eye at :.rji
v >ew.
rfwartl of ON E THOUSAND
DOLX.AKS, will be paid for apprehending,&
pr.Wecutiiig to conviftioii tlie several ab.ve
ck'lcnb.'d offenders in leipecl to t'ais, as ta
the last described bills.
THOMAS WILLING, P.cfidcot
of llit- Bank United States.
JOHN NIXON, Pulyienc of «he
Bank. of North Adicmcj.
By order of the Commiuca of ih« Rcf
peftivc B<yrds.
(£/" This Gazette Jball be enlarged 9 at it
receives encouragement—The Subfcriptiou
encreafes daily—Adverttfmg Favors are
folicited —Thfe conjlitute an ejjaitial Item
in dimini/hing the Debit fide of the Accent.
PHILADELPHIA :
Primted bt JOHN FENNO, No -x
9
SoutE Fourth-Sireet.