Excellent CLARET, In tioglheada and in cifet ot $o boitlet ea, V ALSO, A few cases MADEIRA, In pipes, hogsheads and quarter cafki, FOR SALE BY JOHN VAUGHAN, No. Hi, South Fitfni Urcet. Jan. a, 1794. dtf |* a „ia, tielaware, Ma- Virginia, Kentucky North Caro-, Una, the Geneffee Government, South "Ca roll,,a and Georgia. Tbele nwips have ne • Ver been g,ven in any former fyfterfi o ; f Geography, and, it i, hoped, would alone 6e rnthcient to entitle this work to a pre m lto any other edition of Giithrfe. N B. The map of the United States; which IS compiling by Mr. S imuel Lewis, from the refpetftive state maps, will be far more complete than any one yet publilhcd, and be printed on two large (heets of paper, nearly the fizc 0 f the !ate Mr. Mur ray's map. May 3> . . <• The following legion of the law for eftablifhiiig an Health-Office &c. palfed the last feflion of tht Lcgiflature, is re.publilhed tor the information of all concerned. Wm. ALI.EN, Hea'hh-Officer, » for the port Of •Philadelphia, No. 2 ,, Key's alley. * ... Jtine 2, 17Q4.. Sec 7. AND be it furthe, *naftcm monweaiih, or at any other port or place, with the intent to be conveyed into this com- any person or persons, or any goods, wiles or merchandize | or iT aftei" re ceividg fneb certificate or bill of health, he (hall neglea or relufc to deliver tile fame to the health-officer agreeably to the directions ot this aft, such mailer or captain /halt for feit and p»v, for each and ev t ry fucb offence the lum of five hundred dollari to be recover.! tH -and appropriated as hereinafter provided and directed ; and the captain or mafler of each and every fliip or veitel, as fnon as the fame is brought to anchor, orofherwife stayed as aforefaid, (hall fend a fafe and commodious boat to bring the resident physician on boar,' Of hit Ihip orveCfel, and (hall in like man ner convey him back to the health-office alter he has concluded hit official examina tionj and while he is making such examina tion,or in cafe ot any subsequent examination by the health-officer and confuting physician, as the cafe may be, each and every part of the ship ot vessel, and (hall present to his view ea«>h and every person on board thereof, and ftj 1 >l11 general vmv of the earth, conlidered r a planet;withfeverai ufefulgeographical (l i and problems. * The grand divisions of the globe into pe ' land aiid wnrer, continents and i(lands, oj- 4- The (iroatiom and extent of empires, kingdoms,dates, provinces and colonies, ky 5; Their climates, air, foil, vegetables, a ' proauclions, metals, minerals, natural curi -0 olities,feasf, rivers, bays, capes,pi omontories, a _ atid lakes. s , 6. The bitds and besfls peculiar to each o y country. le 7- Obfervationsoll the changes that have an . v where observed upon the face of nature since the 1110 ft early periods of liif wry- s * 8. The biftory «nd origin of nations; r Yheit lorms of government, religion, laws, revenues,taxes,na V al and military flrength ,f 9- The genius, manners, customs, and r _ *bits of the people. 10. Their language,learning,arts, scien ces, manufaclui es, and commerce. - ' 11. The chief cities, (Iruflures, ruins, and artificial curiosities 12. The longitude, latitude, bearings, :, and diftin'efet of principal places froraPhila ', delpliik. " To whiA art addc!d, i. A Geog*aphi'cm Index, with the names and places alphabetically arranged. > 2. ATAbtiof the Coins of all nations, and their value in dollars and cents. 3- A Chronological Table of remarka e ble events,from the creation totheprefent r me. By WILLIAM GUTHRIE, Esq. ) The Aftropomical Part corrcfted by c Dr. Rittenhouse. s p 'To which have been added, ' The late Discoveries of Dr. Herschell, r , And other eminent Astronomers. ti The FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, c Corrcftedi Improved, and greatly Enlar ged. ' The flrll volume contains twenty-one M ;l ps end Chirts,befides two Agronomical t Plates, viz. 1 1. Map of the World. 2. Chart Of the t worle 3. Europe. 4. Asia. j. Africa. 6. r South America. °J. discoveries. , 8. Countries round the nbrth Pole. 9 - Sweden, Denmark, anii Norway. 10. Se , ven United Provinces. u Austrian, - Frehch and Dutch Netberldhas. 12. Ger many. 13. Seat of war in Frante. 14. - France divided into depa)"tniehts. 15. : Switzerland. 16. Italy, Sicily, and Sar ) dinia. 17. Spain and Portugal. 16. s Turkey in Europe and Hungary. 19. lre ' land. 20. Well-Indies. 21. Vermont. 22. > Ar miliary sphere. 23. Copernican system. ■ With the second volume, which is now ■ in the will be given the following ' Maps: . • 1. Ruflia in Europe and Asia. 2. Scotland. 3. England and Wales! 4. Poland. 5. China. 6. Hindoftan. 7. United States. 8. Britifli America. 9. State of N.nw-Hampfliire. 10. State of MafTachufetts. 11. State of Connecticut. is. State of Rhode-Island. 13. State of New-York. ' i - State of New-Jersey. I 15. State of Pennsylvania. ' >6. State of Delaware. 17- State of Maryland. 1 18. State of Virginia. >9- State «f Kentucky. . 20. State of North-Carolina. 21. Tennessee Government. 22. State of South-Carolina. ' 23. State of Georgia. TERMS. 1. This work will be comprited in two volumes. 1. Subscribers pay for the pretent volume ondelivery, fix dollars, and the price of j, binding, (|6 cents for boards.) e 3. They may receive the fucteeding vo- r lumein twenty-four weekly numbers, at a quarter dollar each, Or else, when fi nilhed, at the fame price as the firft. I 4. The fubferip'tion will be raised on the 3 firft day ot June 1794, to fourteen dol- . larsj exchihve of binding. 11 J. Should any copies remain for sale after the completion ot the work, they will be fold at sixteen dollars, and the price of n binding. -ai 6. The names of the fufcfoibers will be published as patrons of American litera- b ture, arts, and sciences. It is wholly unnecessary to expatiate on f, the advantage,to American readers, that n this edition pofletfesj over every imported 0 edition of any system of Geography e*tant. c< The addit tion of maps of the several teftas, a procured a very great expense, and from the bed materials that are attainable, speaks such full convkSion on this fubjetft, 01 that if would be difrefpeA to the read- J? 1 I er's understanding to suppose it requilite to enter into a detail of arguments to 111 prove its superiority. In no fimllar work re have such mapsbeenever introduced. fil The emendationsand additions which 7 ' are made in thiswork,areinnumerable,and occur in every page. The public are re ferred to the preface for a flight (ketch of a few of them. The publiffier takes the present oppor tunity of returning his mod sincere thanks to those refpeflable characters who have ve favored him with documents for improv- L ing the maps of several of the (bates He PHILADELPHIA : -Pm«V«d „ JOHN FENNO, N.. J, So,™ St, s „ P„ A™„„ rcqutftsa continuance of their kindness; and hopes that such public spirited citizens, as are poflelled of iiinilar documents, will tavor him with theijailiftance in perfect r ing his undertaking. The extraordinary encouragementwith which he has been favored, has excited • in his breast the warmest lentiments oi gra titude—Sentiments which time will not ef face. He pledges him felt to the citizens t% of the United Stare*, to ipare neither pains nor expeofe to render the prcfofit euition of Guthrie's Geography improved, deserv ing of their patronage. waftf J4MAICA RUM, >f- LANDING at Hamilton's wharf, above the Drawbridge, out of the ship Baccaus M Opt. Vanneman, from Jamaica, a: FOR SALE BY PETER BLIGHT. to May ib. d 1 Morris Academy. THIS inftiiution is now open for tliC re-' ception of ftudento under the immediate s f care of Mr. Caleb fCafTell', whose abilitie as an inftru The healthy ficuation of this place is fuc as to recommend it to those', who wilh to have their children in the country. Board ing, walhing, mending, &c. will be provid (d in good families, and the morals of the scholars carefully attended to. s > Tlie price including tuition, firewood, n I Soft (helled ALMONDSi* bales r- I Velvet COKKS, in do. | Huflia MAT IS. — I lire 9 d j Ricburd Jvhns In the Chancery Court I 11 ( of the ,s I John Wells and C Strife of Maryland, I Mordecai Cole. J May o,(>th 1794 The Complainant hath fil- I his bill, for the purpose of obtaining a [decree, lo vest in him a complete legal title I to two tracts of land, lying in Baltimore J county* one called con -- I tainiug 100 acres, the other called Profpefr te [ containing 50 acies Hc ftater,that tlie said j John Wells ou the 16th day of March 1774 J- 1 contracted to fell the lartl land to the laid d. 1 Mordecai|Cole,&executcd to him a bond for in I conveyance,that the on the fame I day, executed to the said Wells a bond for id I tl>e pavm< nt ol the purchase amoun gy 1 cing to £675 Pennsylvania currency, that id 1 the said (>)le hath since discharged the whole s. | of the purchafemoney, and hath afCgned I to tlh complainant tht exhihited in this elTay, at the fame time 1 I thai it reprelfes the insolence of office, < I the tyranny of pride, and the outrages of" I | opprelfion ; confirms, in the molt forcible 1 I manner, the necclJity of subordination, 1 I and the just demands of law ful authority. ISo far indeed, from loosening the bands ' |ot f"ciety, that it maintains inviolate, e- 1 I very natural and every civil diftinftion, ' I draws more cloiely every locial tie, unites c I in one liarmomous and justly proportioned j fyllem, and brings men together on the ' j even ground of the inherent rights of hu j man naure, of reciprocal obligation, and F j ol a Common relation to the community. I March 18. tuts One thousand Dollars REWARD. ( | Some tew Counterfeit Post Notes of the I Bank of Maryland, ha.ing been lately disco- 0 I vered in circulation, and 011 tiitcing ihe fame P I were found to come from the back parts of Virginia, where they probably firlt issued ;to B | avoid impoluion it is titceflary to t give the following def'cfipiion of them, by which they may readily htdrtrflid. n They have the letter D, fonhcir alphabeti cal mark, at the left hand fide of the Note. II The paper on whrch they are printed is tl m.re loft and tender, the ftrnkes of the letters, it in the engraving arc in general flronger, and' have a darker appear;,nee ihan in the bills. | 1( The fignatute William Patterlon, is badly | r done, the strokes of the letters, are ftiffand si, labored, and appear to be painted over with n the pen, as well as the Hpurilhitigof ,h e name. The value is Jest blank in the to * be filled up in writing, so the sum may' be ?! more or lels at pleasure. " No true P. ft-Notes of the alphabetical maik, above drfcribed, have been lately if. ' n hud, and »ery few are now in circulation. The above reward of One Thousand dol lars will be paid to 3ny peifon, or persons, 111 who lhall discover, or profrcute to corvi£tion, the feve-al offenders, or ,-,ny of them, of rlie following dele,iptt'on, tu , ' D The person or persons, who engraved the & late. al The printer, or printers ol the said bills, as Kvery prrfon who has aOcd as principal in anv Way in the connterfeuinv and utterine he said bills. William Patterson. Prefid m. of the Bank ol Maryland, Bmpi, April 8, 1794. for sale, BY MATHEV/CAREY, No Maiket-Street, '* Z An EfTay on Slavery DeGgned 10 exhibit in a new >>„ view its effeits on morals, indußr-. of . r ptatt tf jecxciy. Some iafta an { £ 1 !t * are oftered to prove the labor of J , D * much more produdive than that 0 ( j;'° that countries are rich, powerful and ! in proportion as the laboring dco,,!. ero{ e 1 — e The Public are cautioned to * beware of counterfeited Five Dollar R>, d of the Bank of the United Stat 4 Twenty Dollar Bills of the Bank oft£? h d America, federal of -which hax-e LtZlt r tn circulation within a few dan JZ . l e are good general imitation of theiLj 7 r Bills, but may be e MARKS. - Five Dollar BUh of the Bank of th. r United States. t ALL that have appeared have the let. . F, for their Alphabetical Mark. . rhe Texture of the Paper is thiclcpr., j Whiter and it takes theU mor,^ e Mian the genuine paper. * t The O. in the word Company is smaller . than the M. and other letters of that word : so that a line extended from ihe top of the J O, t° touch the top Of the M. would extend . conf.derably above the range of the who!- . word. , In the word Vnited the letters are nar r theVlC BdClofer togetller tl,an I he'eft of ; Tl ?. e f a " d / in ' he w °ri promise are not parallel, the/inclining much moretorwari | than the t. . The engraving!, badly executed, the ftrokesof all the Letters are ftronge, and the dev, * in themargii, particularly is mU ch coarser and appears da, ke, ,han in bills. Some ot the counterfeits bear date i„ . 79 ,-Where the Bank was n«t in opera. tio ß t.U JJeeember, and no five doll., bill, were issued in jhat year. Twenty Dollar Bills of the Bank of North -America. ALL that have appeared have the letter B. for their alphabetical mark. They arc printed on a paper nearly fimi iartothat of tlie counte-feir Five Dollar Notes above deferibed j the engraving is outer executed, and they approach nearer t0^ he " f) P earance of * he genuine hills. The fine ruled lines through the word Twtnty in the body of the bill, are in num. ber thirteen in the genuine bills, and but twelve in the counterfeits. The word Company is much like the fame word in the Five Dollar Bills as described above, the o being Jess than the «, and o* thers following. There is no stroke to the / inthe word Ntfrtii whereas in the genuine bills theftroke is well defined. The letters cnt in the word Twenty, to the left hand at the bottom, do not come down to the line, but are so Cut as to give an irregular appearance to the word, the Trv and '.hey going below them. The figfiaiure J, Nixon, hasthe appear ance ot being written with lamb-black anA Oil* and differs from other inks used in printing th bills and the cafhiei's ligo*- t/ure. It is supposed these forgeries were commit ted in fame of the Southern States, as all tht counterfeits thai have appeared, have come Irom ihcnce, and two performs have been »p ---piebendcd in Virginia,on suspicion of being ihe author of" them. The reward of ONE THOUSAND DOL LARS will be paid to any Person or who lhall discover and prosecute to convc tion tht fcveral offenders of the following de*rripijons or any of them, viz. The person or pcrfons, who manufa&ur* ed the paper on which the Bilk are printed. The person or persons, who engraved the piatei. printer or printers, of the bills. Every person whohasafted as a principal many other way, in the counterfeit ing k and uttering ihe said bills. Philadelphia, March 28, 1794 Jtyr'tl 22, 1794, Other counterfeit bills of the Bank of the United States have ap peared in circulation. The denomination is of TWENTY DOLLARS, and the alphabetical mark is the letter B. Fhey may be diftinguiflied from the ge* nuine by the following M AIiKS : The paper of the counterfeits is of a more tender texture and glofley furfac; than the genuine, audtheie is 110 wat«r ilrark in them. The letter C. in the word Cashier, ii he true bills is strongly niaikvd, whereas in the counterfeit?, the whole letter is a fine hair l!roke, evidently in an unfini/hed Hale. The letter a in the word demand, is badly formed and the whole word ill dore and there is 110 conma at theend of it, as theie is in the genuine bills. 1 he marginal device, is much daiker ;n the iall'e, than in the genuine bills o\v tng to the shade strokes being coarler, much nearer together, and consequently muck more numerous This difference strikes the eye at firff view. The fame reward of ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS, will he paid for appreh nding, •k prosecuting ro conviction the fevfcra: above Offenders in refpert to tli'n, as to I aft delcribed bills. THOMAS WILLING, l'icfidec.t of the Bank United Sldtts. JOHN NIXON, President of the Bank of North America. By order of the Committees of the Ref peftive Boards.