LORENZO. .storal ELEGY. From POEMS by John Raknie, lately publijhed. YE valleys to which I complain, Now trac'd with the tear-ftrccming eye, I know that my sorrows are vain, Yet love to indulge the fond sigh ! To muse on the days that are flown, To think dearest Lucy on thefi ! My heart must be cold as thy own, Ere loft the remembrance can be. When summer in beauty arfay'd, Shone here with a fplcndour refined, In thee all its charms were difplav'd, In thee all its beauties conjoined. Thy smile, to its lustre serene, The glories of Eden reftor'd : Whose death gave a damp to the scene, Whose death will be ever doplor'd ! Who rose, the sweet flow'r of delight! Of Nature's perfe&ion in bloom : Now loft in the confines of night, —Conceal'd in the shade of the Tomb \ In whom love and friendfhip I found ; Heart-piercing reflexion to me ! O Lucy—each object around, Reminds thy LoßENzaof thee. The winter now frowns on the year, And loudly the hurricanes howl, How lov'd—tor a semblance they bear, To thetempefts that rage in toy foul! All nature isfadden v d to woe, The songsters no longer arc gay ; Deje&ed they fit on each bough, And mourn o'er the season's decay : But nature again shall rejoice ; .And Spring all her beauties restore ; The songsters again raise their voice In melody sweet as before ! The scene that so gloomy appears, Again (hall its brightness resume : Yet I Ihall explore it in tears, Nor raise my fad hopes from the tomb ! The tomb, over which I recline, That cruelly keeps thee from view, Dear Lucy, may shortly be mine 1 That profpett is all I pursue. The sports of the village I wave ; No longer endearing to me r O Lucy my foul's in thy grave,* My withes all center in thee ! * My heart is in the coffin there, with Ccejar; And I mujlpaufe—till it come back again. Shakespear AN accurate STATEMENT OF TROOPS (con tinental and militia) furnifhed by the respec tive States, during the late war, from I77J> t0 1783, inclusive. ofzKgeyzssojga: -T - ob>"n > ■» 2 >1 "1- 5« 5 S ► - H " 2: ? (O m Oi thtoW CJCJ K Co o - «- cr> a>c-» - cr> r -o mco o - Oi 0">CO OOCo O —CO to CO CO — »v»ioiccis>o o con l © a-> > to Cn >- ON Cn »- OO £ o o O Sj to Cr. OiCo Ch « O ►"•MwCrtlO »fc» M t- •"• OO" Jj to oi 00-u co n coo o - 6*3 o ** >*■ O CO Co ooco Co co -3 »■ ■ , . 1 -vi M N» to » "- S to O. ►£- CO OOCo 00 to " R" CO Cr. •- Cn »- M wOICO CO CT) to to Co Go Cr, ** O C> O J® Cr. OOCo O 00 ~ Co ~ OO to <0 o>4* o O O CO M CO to CO M to Co O ►* CO to CO OOCO rfk to to Cn to O OO O »- ►£>• M Oi rf- O OO O CO CO CO C7> *Nj S 5 to»co*- tM a ►£>. o cc co ~ " - o rr. ooO'iwcj "*«> M a OiOl C.l Oi Co Oi CJ M "■ ■ ■ — - ' I O £ CO •> (9 N» ClCr. rfk «-j £.' Go Co CTj gj- M N OC 4* Cl O -- - * " 11 Mt* CVO to Crt Co CJ "» 30 5 I rfk Co '*Q W CO '-3 V 1 CT*~-» M -» Oj W S 1 {.o iO '-O 08Oi ®Ow OCO • I (From the Salem Gazitlc.) K> ~ 0> N> -J 3 oo >» S-. o OCO ►£* 10 tn a O Cn Co 10 ~ <£> 10 to C> -4 v» Oi to Oitn » CTI ~ W r-s M W M (0 C 3 » Oi to *>j co ►*» r?. M -4 004* K» IO M o a o. Oi o oo o to o ►* _.—— — — ~oe — fe Cr» Crt 51' f.K O Ol S' ~ <7> • M M »* »• M M »». -J 3 M K)IO - CO O O OO C> 0"> CTY-O CO 00 - «« j* - o 0010 - corf' AfmpUuud wjy tuttbod .ASHES by ca.ana.ton. —-KC_ _ ■n-nitou equal, if r.ot fupcrior, to that made ,n the „««*»» way, by leaching the aj^cs. TT'RECT a pearling oven made in the c °" ,nl ®" -L form, except vvithtliis difference-undc the hearth ofthe oven there mult be an aich g than the hearth, so as to let the chminty ««nd up behind the oven, and must be w • . to contain a fmallpot-afh kettle, ot ar S , '. which must be about three quarters water, then covered with a lid, or ieat , • still, tight and secure, with an iron P/P e ** ed " the centre of the head, or cover, conunumg th o the hearth ofthe oven, and about two or three inches of the under fide o. the arch ofthe oven ; then put into the oven fiom fix to eight bushels of allies, or a gieaier 01 quantity in proportion to the size or t e oven , then kindle the fire in the upper arch, which will flame all over the alhes, and in time change thent to a liglnifh color, and when the alhes aie burnt to a great degree, stir them with an iron scraper, which will canfe all the common moil ture to pass off; then kindle your fire 111 the low er arch until the water boils freely, which will caufea steam to ascend throughthepipe, that will produce a damp, which, in combination with the particles of heat, will cause the alkalies to sweat out and separate from the earthly parts, which soon evaporate and pass off, leaving the peat la les in a ftateof great perfection, as well as quantity. PHILANTHROPER. N.B. Leached a/hes produce good pearled ajhes, yielding amazingly, a?id work much eaficr than otnei ajhet. (From the Vermont Gazette.) MASSACHUSETTS STATE LOTTERY. THE Managers as the STATE LOTTERY, present the Public With the First Cak of the Majfcchufetts fcmi-tinnual Stale Lot ten, which will commence drawing in the Reprcfentat'ves' Chamber, in Boston, on the Seventeenth of Marck next, or sooner, it the Tickets (hall be disposed of. SCHEME., NOT TWO BLANKS TO A PRIZE. 25,000 Tickets, at Five Dollars each, are 125,000 Dollars, to be paid in the following Prizes, (übjeft 10 a deduaion of twelve and an half per cent, for the life of the Com monweaith. Prizes. 1 of 2 3 6 10 3° 80 9° 100 120 161 200 75 8 5 8388 Prizes. 16612 Blanks. 25000. £3" TICKETS may be had of the fevcral Managers, who will pay the Prizes on demand —of the TREASURER of the Common wealth—of JAMES WHITE, at his Book-Store, Franklin's~Hcad t Court'Streety and at other places as usual. BENJAMIN AUSTIN, jun.l DAVID COBB, SAMUEL COOPER, }> Managers. GEORGE R. MINOT, \ JOHN KNEELAND, J Bojlon y July 28, 8790. Otlober 14, 1790. j NOTICE is hereby given, That Prof)ofals will be received at the Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, to the 30th day ofNovember next, inclusive, for the fuppiy of all Rations which may be required tor the use of the United States, from the firft day of January to the thirty-Grft day of December 1791, both days in clusive, at Springfield, in the State of Maflachufetts, and the Poftof Wejl-Point, in the State of New-York. The Rations to be supplied, arc toconfift of the following Arti cles, rir. One pound of Bread or Flour, One pound of Beef, or j of a pound of Pork, Half a jill of Rum, Brandy, or Whisky, One quart of Salt, } Two quarts of Vinegar, ( Two pounds of SoJp, ( P r " 106 rat,ons ' One pound of Candles, ) Separate Proposals may be made for each place, fpecifying the lowest price pr. ration. No credit is required. r> o M 81 --J vj " I E' S 5 a m ? -a S' INTELLIGENCE-OFFICE, No. 208, in Market, above 6th Street, South fide, WI L L be negociated all kinds of PAPER MONEY and BUSINESS tranfal the Trealurv, until the 3*lt civ .L\ Olßce ot the Secretary of tl»c TrHT fV onsh of December next inclutive, tor thebuildmg of a LIGH 1 HO^SL, nearly of the dimenlions prupofed by the late Com,n.iboncs o. Virginia and Maryland, upon the lot of land on Cape Henry, tu the County ot Princefi Ann, and State of Virguna, lately ceded to. hat purpofeto the United Stale,. It is defircd,th.t the propofaU mayK the election, whet, er the buildtng above the foundation ihall be of brick, orftone, and as tlic cost and charges o . terials vary, it is e'xpetted, tint a correfpood.Qj d.lterence wtll be made in the terms offered. -ao/-' f-ini- Tlic foundation ot the Light-Houfc is to be of stone, aa.fank. to the depth of thirteen feet below the wat. r table, over the top-ot which the pavement i. to be laid. The diameter thereof u to be twenty seven feet f.x inches, with a vacancy ot about nine feet m th VhTd,'meter ofthe base isto be twenty fix feet at which place the thicknef. of the walls i, to be f.x feet The height from the bottom of the water table to the top of the stone worlt is to be se venty two teet.wherethediameteristobeftxtecn fee. fix inches,and the thickness of the walls three feet. The lorn, is to be an ot'Ugon having three windows in the eart, and four in the weft. If it be built of brick, it is to DC faced with the glassy kind, it of ftjru, it istobe faced with hewn or haminer-dreired ttone On the top ofthe stone work is to be a floor of jo.fts, bedded therein, planked over and covered with copper, extending about two feet eight inches beyond the wall, thereby forming an eve, which is to be finithed with a cornice, the whole having a defcetit from the centte fufficient to throw off the water. ' The lanthorn is to be supported by eight polls of wrought Iron of three inches square and twenty feet in length, ten tect of wh.t!. aietobe wrought into the stone wall on the inner part at each corner The diameter of it is to be ten tect, leaving a platform on the ouf.de thereof of about fix feet in width. All the work above this is to be of iron and copper. The lanthorn is lo be ten feet hi"h, having a semicircular roof of five feet more, w.th iron raft er? covered with copper. Thewhole space between the potts fop- ' porting the lanthorn, is to be occupied by the sashes, which are to be made of iron, each sash is to have twenty-eight panes ot rUfs, twelve bv fourteen inches. One of the sashes on the Couth weft fide is to be hung with hinges for a door to go out upon the p!atf->im, from the outer part of which to the root of the lanthorij is to be a frame of iron covered with a net work ot strong bras* wire, to prcferve the glass from injuries by hail and flights of birds in the night. The rafters of the lanthorn arc to be well fattened to an iron hoop, over which is a copper funnel, through which the fmoke may pass into a Urge copper ventilator in the form of a man s head, capable of containing one hundred gallons. I his head is to be so placed as to be turned by a Urge vane on the (pir? above it, that the hole for venting the fmokc may always be to the leeward. Eight dormant ventilators of fix inchcs diameter are to be fixed in the roof ofthe lanthorn. A close stove is to be provided and fixed in the lanthorn, which is to be furnifhed with eight lamps, each capablc of containing fix quarts, hung in two tiers over each other tranfverfcly. 1 here are to be fix flights ol flairs to ascend to the lanthorn, the entrance to which is to be by a door covered with copper. 1 lie building to be furnilhcd with two condu&ors, to iecure it from ihc eifedts of lightning. A frame house is to be built for the keeper, twenty feet square, two stories high, with a frame kitchen ; the whole to be finifhed with lath and plaifter. A vault for the lloragc and fafe keeping of the oil isto be built of (lone at a convenient distance, twelve feet wide, and twenty in length. It isto be arched, and covered with eartH °r fa