Gazette of the United States and daily evening advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1794-1795, June 29, 1795, Image 4

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    Treasury Pepartment,
Revrnw Oficcj April £7, thi
•2*ROFOSA&S "willhe received at thi Office of
the Commissioner of t'ue Rsvexuk for ed.
v. in: I ding be
A Light House t
* c the had land of Caps Katteras on the coast of cu
"* JS r ji tb Carolina of the fallo wing materials, d - an
n jnfiins. </ i / kfcription.
, VPHR forui itto.be oAngon il.— h j founda- th
* JL tion is to be of .{tone, to be funk thirt.e 1 th
feet below th: botto nof the water table or an
the furfu.ee of the earth, and to be comm ni- ui
cei of the diameicv of twenty nine fe".4* - m
Vrinn fu;h commencement to the height of is
tits, f-'-t the foundation is to be hid solidly in
and fr un thence to the bottom of the water w
t.iblv y th * foundation wall is to b.- nine feet
high aiyl nin.* feet thitk.
Tiie diameter of the base from the bottom th
o : thewiter table to the top thereof (where ca
the octagonal pyramid i 3 to com nenee) is to w
be twenty eight feet four inches and the wall
is there to be seven feet thick. The wall of in
jhe oitagona! pyramid 13 to be fix feet thick I
A the base thereof, on the top of the water en
tabic. ef
The height of the building from the bot
tom of the water-table, and from die fur- rj
face of the earth, is to be ninety feet to the bv
top of the stone work, under the floor of the e.<
Vmtern ; where the dia.ll iter is to be sixteen P
and one half feet and the wall three feet.— tc
The whole of the walls* is to bebailt of stone a
The water table is to be capt with sawed ol
stone, at lea*l eight inches wide and Iloped A
zt the top to turn off the water. The out- 0
fide of the walls is to be faced wi/.h hew.ll or ci
hammer drefled ftons, having four windows vv
in the north east andfive windows in the south P
weft. The fa r n-.-s are to be hung with hin
ges, and each sash L> to have twelve panes of ei
glass, eight by ten inches.
011 th? top of the stone work hto bs a tl
framed tier of joi'.ts, boded therein, plauk- a
% ed over with oak plank, extending two feet h
beyond the wall thoKiby forming an eave which t<
i« to be finifned with a cornice, the whole n
having a descent from the ceutre fufHcient U
totlirofv oft* the water, and to be covered g
with copper. A complete and fulficient iron si
lantern in the owtagonal form is to reft there- o
Oil. The eight corner/pieces or stanchions oi L
which, are to be built in the wall to' the o
% depth of ten feet. These stanchions to be v
nearly three inches fquarC in the lower ten v
fset, aad 3 i-z inches by z-i-2 inches above, b
The lantern is to be ten feet and inches b
in diameter, it is also to l>c ten feet high V
from the floor to the bottom of the dome or
root and to have a dome or roof of five ieet tl
and nine inches in height. The whole space e.
between the post? or upright pieces at the an
gles is to be occupied by the faihes, which tt
to be moulded 0.1 the inside and struck lolid: b
Each'fyfn is to have twenty 'eight panes of
glass, fouiteeifby twelve inehes. A part of c;
the fdi'h on tne foujth vJcft fide is to be hung- p
\/uh hinges for a convenient door to go r ©ut 1
on the platfo/m. The rafters of the lantern ft
to be (gained into an ire 11 hoop, over v
whicii is a copper funnel, thro which
the smoke may puis into a large copper Vcn ft
tilator in the form of a man's head, capable t;
us containing one hundred gallons. - si
This head is to be turned by a large vane ; c
Co thai the hole for venting the smoke, may r.
be always to leeward. Eight dormant \enti- t,
btors a, •to be fixed in the roof, a large cur- r
vtd air pipe is ro be through the floor, t<
and a close stove is to be «roviue<i and li v
ed in the 1 intern. There are to be ei Jit, o
pairs of itairs to ale end to the lantci n, the en- t
trance to which .is to be by a trap door co- i;
vered witli copper. The building is to be t
icrniihed wiui two complete eledirical con- c
t.n«ftors, or ro3e *»vitii points Ihe liters are \
tube laid with plank, of a: least one inch a
knd oiie half in thieknifs. 'x he entrance tp a
the light noule is to be well feeurcd by a b
tbng door upon hinges with a strong
l.ock andiatch con.pkte. e
Also a frame HouiV to be thirty four feet a
in f:ont and sixteen faet deep with a cellar | 5
under it. Thc'ccher .vails to be eighteen in- t
e.ies thick and ieven feci- high. t
The firlt itory of the houie is to be eight A
(set, a.i('. trie f.cond, seven teet arid fix inches <
~^ r i*igh. 'l'he-floors aie to be laid in wJiole 1
Ivrfigtlte, nailed through. Ihe flack of chnn
liies i> to be finiflwi with two plain fire places j
on each floor, one of them large for a kitchen- ,
Iwo windows below, and three above in 1
ji ont andteai\each falh to have eighteen panes ,
o: glass ten by twelve inches. The dovis aie
tv. be hung and furnhhed completely.
T'ae CiJuifeS and fides ot the House arc to
t : p aiftered with two coats ; all the wood
v. ork inside and oat is to be well painted and
tne whole be nauiheU in a plain decent
manner.
An Oil vault i* to be built twenty feet by
t.velvefeet in the cle,rr, arched over and co
x . red with earth 01 land over which a filed is
_ t be built- It is to be furhiflied with nine
f .rong Cedar Ciiterns with covers, each capa
ble or conraining two hundred gallons.
1 i»e ent.ance tu tire vault is to be secured
\i a strong doar. A w6ll is to be funk at a
t uven ien I di'.Unce, and furnilhedwitn a curb,
bucket and rope completely.
I'he baiter to find and pay for all the
tx vterr; s, labor, workmanship, provincns,
and other pbjeets of coit, cliarge or expellee,
f a sum to be agreed upon, and to execute
toe before deicrmed work and every part
t.iceoi in a gooci ami Workman-like maimer.
Convenient payments or advances, on fecu
' lity w.li bemaoc.
Aj. rii l-}. 4 & th tf
7re jsurv Department
Revenue Ojfte, April I\tb 1?9.v
wil be received atthcOflice of
fit Lontmi.jiOner oj the lieVenuc tor buddnig V.
I»hACe.N K'JUSE
on Shell CalVie liiand, in Parrfitico Sound,
rrar "-<• anek Inlet, in North Carbiina, ol'
trie following materials, dimemtoiia anil de
fcri^rinn.
'HK form i» tobe-sn odla^on. —the found
1 arior. is to be of ftnne, to be funk nine feet
' nnH one half Helow the furt'ace ot the earth,
jnrt to be cominenced ot the diameter ol' 1,5
[eet, It is fbe U'd solidly t» the height of
»»o fret From thence to the height of lix
jiiche. above the earth or to the bottom of
•tlieWotfdit the found&titm wall is to
be flight feet fe>gh, and four feet and one h*lf
thick.
The Oot agonal Pyramid is to be well fram
ed, and of stout heart Pine timber. It is to
be twenty two feet in diameter at the base
thereof, where it will reft on the top or the
stone foundation, to which it is to be well se
cured by fixteetf stout iron straps built therein,
and otherwise.
Th« height of the wooden building fronj
the top of the itont; work (fix iuchcs above
the furface of the earth) is t J be fifty four feet
and one half to the top of the wooden work,
under the floor oft the lantern, where the dia
meter is to be twelve'feet. The foundation
is to be capt with sawed iione at least eight
inches wide, and iloped at top to turn ou the
w it'.'r.
The fraiiie of the Pyramid is to be cover
ed witji boards of. oiie inch and one half in
thickness, over which is to be laid a good and
complete covering of shingles, and it U to be
well painted with three caats.
The B aeon is to have two windows
in the East and three windows in the weft.
The falhes are to be with hinges, and
eacii fafti is to have eight panes of glaf* of
eight by ten inches.
On the top of the wooden work of the Py
ramid is to be a strong framed tier of joists,
beded therein, planked over with Oak plank,
extending one fbot beyond the fides of the
Pyramid, thereby forming an eave which is
to be fiaifhed by a cornice, the whole having
a descent from the centre fufHcient to throw
off the water, and to b* covered with copper.
A complete and fullicicot.iron lantern in the
o«ilagonal form is to reft thereon. The eight
corner pieces or ftanchior.s of which are to bo
weii secured to the upright timbers of the
Pyramid, or to the tier ol joists, or both.
These stanchions are to be stout in the lo\%
er eight feet, and fufliciently strong above.
The Lantern is to be fix feet high, from
the floor to the bottorA of the dome or robs,
and to have a dome or roof of three feet in
height. The whole l'pace between tha posts
to be occupied by the falhes, which are to be
moulded on the inside and struck lolid. The
falhes are to be furniftied with large panes of
glass ; a part of the fafli on the south welt
fide is to be hung with hinges for a door to go
out on the platform. 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 pals into a large copper
ventilator in the form of a main's head, capa
ble of containing thirty gallons, this head to
be turned by a large vane, so that the hole for
Venting the smoke may be always to leeward.
Eight dormant ventilators are to be fixed in
the roof; a large curved air-pipe is to be pass
ed through the floor.
There arc to be five pairs of stairs to ascend
to the Lantern the entrance to which is to be
by a trap door covered with copper.
The building is to be fumilhed with two
complete electrical conductors or rods with
points. The floors are to be laid with plank.
The entrance int« the light house is to be well
fecurcd by a strong door hung upon hinges
with a ifcrong lock and latch complete.
Also A FRAME DWLLIj^NG HOUSE of One
story," to be twenty eight feet in front and fif
teen feet deep w*ith a cellar under it, if it
ihould be found pra<fticable to make one. The
; cellar walls are to be fourteen inches thick,
and feven'feet high. The story of the House
to be ieven feet and one half in the clear, the
roof to have a re&angular pitch. The floors
, to be whole lengths nailed throygh*
The lioufe is to be composed of two rooms
> of about thirteen feet and one half by four
teen feet and one half on the lower floor. The
Uack of chimnies is to be between the two iit
ting 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 falli is to have twelve panes of glass.
eight by ten inches. Each window is to have '
: a ttrong plain (butter with faftenings and hinej
! ges. The doors are to be hung and*furnifh
- ed completely. The cieling and inner fides of
the Houle are to he piaiftered with two coats,
t All the wood work outside is to be wellpaint
s ed, and the whole is to be fiiiiiHed in a plain
s and decent manner.
An Oil vault if to be built ten by twelve
s feet'in the clear, arched over and covered with
* earth 01 sand, over which a shed is to be built,
i It is to be furniftied with three strong cedar
» ciftern6 with covers, each capable of contain
e hig two hundred gallons.
The entrance to the vault is to be fecurcd
by a strong door.
d The builder i- to procure and pay for all
materials', laboi, work nanihip, provisions,
it and other objects of coll, charge, or expense
for a lum, to be proposed and agreed upon,
y and to execute the before defended wqrk,
>- and every part thereof, in a good and work
i* man-like manner.
Ie Convenient payments or advances, oil fe
i* curity, will be made.
jfffil&j. m&th tf
i F-0 R SALE,
A very valuable ESTATE
ie 5
Called TWI TTKNHAM.
c ' OI TU ATE in the toivnfhip of Upper Derby,
O tin J county of Delaware, 7 '»'les f ront
rt Philadelphia, and half a mile from the n civ Wefl
.r ern road: containing 2%0 acres of excellent Land,
45 °f tire goad "Watered Meadow, 90 (J
U ~ prime Wood Land, and the fejl Aruble of thejirfi
quality. There are on the prem'tfes a good two*
story Urick House, 'with 4 roams on a f<tor, anu
Cellars under the "whole, with a Pump IVell oj
excellent Water in front/ a large frat/te Barn
Stables, and other convert : c#t buildings; a Smoke-
House and ft one Sprinv House ; txoo good Apple-
R Orchards, and one oj Peaches. The hi elds are al.
* in Clover, except those immediately under tillage
and arc so laid out as to have the advantage oj
Water in each of them, -which renders it peculiarly
conneitient for Grazing.
The situation is p leaf ant and healthy, and fron
the high cultivation of the hand, the good neighbor
hood, and the vicinity to the city, it is very fuitabl
for *' Gentleman s Country Seat.
The foregoing is part of the JEflate of Jacot
' Hart*an, deceased, and offered for sale ,iy
2 o j. MQRDKCAI LEWI!
. Surviving Executor.
ins- "f
PHILADELPHIA Punted by JOHN FENNO, N°- 119 Chefr.vt Street.—Price S.x Dollars Psr Annu
In the Chancery of hczb jcrfej• (
, . April 14 <!'■ 1 7p-
Present bis J&cdlf cy Richard Howell,
ChaUellor.
Between Lydia Qnitrdenel, Complainant,
and
Henry Onderdtnei, Defer**-*'
The
thiscaufe, 1
complaint, a certaiircaurestherein
let forth, to be divotced from her Juifband
Henry Onderdonck, the above defendant,and
having made due proof, that the said Henry
hath, after the cause of complaint hadarifen
removed himfelf without the. juriidiAion of
this coui t, (•
be fsrved up
be compelled
and having _ „ .
the fails charged In tliefaid bill.
It is therefore trdercdthat a hearing be had on
the fa&s charged in the said bill, accordingly
on the fir ft day of July next at the dwelling
house of William Hay, Innholder, in the
city of Trenton, at ten o'clock in the fore- 1
noon, a copy of this order, having been firft 3
publilhed in one of ,the public papers of this "
Hate, and in one of the public papers of the 5
Hates of New York and Pennsylvania, or
served on the said defendant tor the space ot r
two months at least, before the said dayaa- t
pointed for hearing. f
Richard. Howell. <
- /fpril Zi eodtj <
To be • Sold, '
And PolTclTion given immediately, i
♦ A i
Two Jlory brick Dwelling House, j
In Arch street near Front llreet, No, 23.
sixteen and an half feet front, and the lot ij
lOZ feet deep. Enquire of
Isaac Snovvden,
South Second Street.
March d6t—eodtf
BOTTLED PORTER,
For Exportation.
ORDERS immediately executed—and war
ranted of the bell quality, by
GILL & HENSHA W,
No. izß South Water Street.
Where private families and tavern-keepers
may be supplied with the* fa*me for immedi
ate use.
May 11. 3awlf
LAW BOOKS.
GEORGE DAVIS rtffpe&fuliy informs
the gentlemen of the profeflion through
the United States, that his late general im
portation is new arranged, and ready for sale
at the fame moderate prices as have hitherto
f» exteufively recommended them.
High Street, No: 313. June 19 tu&f4w
NICHOLAS DIEHL, Jun.
NOTARY PUBLIC, &c.
HAS removed his Office from No. 19
South Fourth Street, No. 30 Wal
nut Street.
June 4 22wtf
Fresh TEAS,
Of SuperiorQoality, viz.
Imperial, or Guupowder
Hyson Gomee,
lit quality Hyson,
2d. do. . uo>
Young Hyiou,
i Hylon Skin, and
> Souchong.
A few Boxes of each, for fate a
- No. 19 Third street' iouth.-
i Deo. 10 eodtf
! TO BE SOLD,
A Lot, containing about
17 acres, on the Wiffahiclcon road, 4 miles,
E trojn the city, and diredtly opposite to the
j house of Mr. Isaac Wharton.
A Lot, Containing xcLnr.rni, in Islington
r Lane, on said road, near the estate of Jasper
_ Moylan, Esq.
A Lot, containing 10 acres in Turner's
j Lane, on said road, and directly opposite to
the estate of Mr. Ternant.
[\ Enquire of Joseph Redman, Woodstock
. corner of Turner's Lane.
April 6 eod.^f
, This Day is Publi/hedy
AND roR SALE BY
. Thomas Dobsoi* t ,
At the Stone House, No. 41 South Second St,
A View of the Evidences
of CHRISTIANITY.
IN THREE PART^.
1. Of the dire# Historical Evidence of
5 Christianity, and wherein it is diftinguilhed
from the Evidence of other miracles.
2. Of the Auxiliary Evidince of Chriftian
-7 ity *
3. A brief consideration of fume popular ;
Objediona. By William Pa ley, m. a.
Archdeacon of Carlisle. 1
In One large Odtavo volume. Price one dol
lar *nd three quarters, handl'omely bound.
■ la the pr&ent enlightened age, when tree
v f difctUTion lias opened theses of mankind,
" y and the fabrics of Defpotilm and SupeHlition
f" are crumbling to the dull, it becomes an ob
lt" jeiSt of no importance, to diilinguilh
Ui leading Truths from thole Counterfeits which
had ailumed their names and ufurpedtlieir
place, and in the subversion of which, Truth
l y itfelf is too apt to he difcardcd without in
quiry.
3m In the prcfent work, the learned author
' r ~ (who had before dillinguifhed himfelf by his
e principles <tf moral and political Philujbph'i) has
treated thejubje<sl with that ability and can
-0 dour which becomes it, and has exhibited in
a fkort compass, perhaps the clearest and mod
distinct view ©f the proper evidences of chris
tianity ever publiftxed.
May 25 33W4W
City of Wafhingtori.
Scheme of the Lottery, \
N°. 11,
fc'or the Improvement of 1
CITY, j
* A magnificent A 20,000 . Dollars; and
dwelling house, ) calh 36,000 are, '
50,000 c
\ ditto & cadi 25,000 40,000 c
1 dilLO .15, oop oc .calh 15,000 30.000
1 duio ia,ooo ic calti 10, poo 20,000
1 ditto, 5,000 oc ca;h 5,000 10,0.00
1 <Jit'° 5,000 & calh 5,000 10,000
1 Calh ot 10,000 j
2 ditto 5,oo» each, are jc.oco t
10 ditto 1,000 10,000
ao ditto 500 >0,000
100 onto too 10,000
200 ditto 50 io,Oco
400 ditto 25 10,000
1,000 ditto 20 20,000 I
15,000 <lut® 1° 15-,000 1
16,739 Prues
33,161 Blanks
50,000 Ticktti at 8 dollars 400,000
This Lottery will afford an elegant fpeci- ,
men of tne private buildings to t«e eie(sti d iu
the Cny of WafViin^ton —Two l*ciutilul dc-
signs aic already felc 6ted tor the entire jfionu
011 two of the public squares ; hoin thefc
drawings, it is proposed to erect twb centre
and tour earner buildings, as loon as potlible
a tier this Lottery is fold, and 10 convey them I
wkicn comolcte, to the tortunate adventurers, (
in the manner described >n the tcherfe* lot j
thcvHotcl Lottery. A nett dcdutt'.on ot five
per cent, will be made to defray the necel- }
fary expeuces of printing, See. and the iut—
plus wilj be made a pari ol the fund intended
for the National University, to be erected
within the City ot Walhingion.
The drawing will cornnaenccas fooh ■
as the Tickets are fold oft. ——The
money pru.es will be payable in thirty
after it i» finithed, and any prizes for wincli
fortunate wunTtJelTraTTrTiot prtTthrccd watl)ii 4
twelve months after the drawing is doled are
to be confide* ed- as given to wards the tuud
for the University, it being determined to
fettle the whole business in a year from the
ending of the drawing and to take up the
bonds given asfecurity.
The leal fccurities given for the payment
of the Prizes, are held by the President and J
two Directors ot the Bank ot Columbia, and
are valued at more than half the amount of
the Lottery.
The twenty four gentlemen who by ap
pointment of the late Commiflioners allifled
in the management of the Hotel Lottery are
requeued to undertake this arduous task a fe- |
cond on behalf of the public ; a fuflici
ent number of thefc having kindly accepted,
it is hoped that the friends to ;i National Uni
verfity and the other federal obje£s may con
tinue to favor the delign. The iynophs oi
one of the Colleges, to form a branch of the
National Institution, is already in the press,
and will be speedily publilhed, together with
its constitution.
A compleat Plan of the whole of this
Important Inftiiution, compiled from afc
ledion of the best materials, ancient and mo
dern, will be fubmittcd to the public when
ever the fame may have gone through luch
revisions as may be nccelTary to ellablifti the j
perfect confidence and general approbation, f
lo effentialto itsprefent rife and future
tencefor the general good of America. »
By accounts received from the different
parts of the Continent as well as from Eu
rope, where the tickets have been sent for
sale, the public are allured that the drawing
will speedily commence, and that the care
and caution unavoidably nccelTary to insure a
fafe disposal of the tickets, has rendered the
iftort suspension indispensable.
February 24, 179^.
SAMUEL BLODGET
* # * Tickets may be had at the Bank ot
Columbia ; of James Welt & Co. Baltimore
or Gideon Dcniton, Savannah, of Pc-.ar
Gilman, Boston; of Johnli opkins Rich
mund ; and of Richaid Wells, Cooper'sfcrv !
30 eo.it( |
THIS l)Ar /o' PUlil.lSllY.!),
; By THOMAS DOBSON,
At the Stone Hooje, iV». 41 South Second St
\ DOMESTIC MEDICINE
Or 9 A TreaUfe on lbTPrcv?Tttz.~r. twdl -
s " Cure of Drfcaft'Sr
) By Regimen and Simple jViedicine% with aa
Appendix, containing a DLfpenlary for the
: use of private Practitioner's, By William
Bijchan, m. d. Fellow of the Royal College
of Phyiicians, Edinburgh
Reviled, and adaptcd*to theDifeafes md
Climates of America,
By SAMUEL POWELL GRIFFITTS,
M. D. Efofeifor of Materia Medica, in the
University of Pennsylvania.
t In One Large Volume, O&avo—Price two
dollars axd a half.
r j 'HE best Eulogium on this Valuable
X Work i 6 the reception it has met with
from the Public, before the present very im
portant improvements were added. Between
twenty and thirty large editions of it have
been fold.
Being now adapted to the climate and uifr
l " eases of the United States, it is hoped the
work will be found more extensively ufeful,
at the fame time the price is lower than the
London edition in its unimproved state can
be fold for. jaw4w
May 27
£ Patent Nail Manufafiory,
m «No. 120, Soutli Front-street,
Ijj Philadelpti ia.
h THOMAS PERKINS & Co.
ir HAVING by the use of Machines, for
th which they have a Patent from the Uijitcd
n- States, been enabled to make 3d. 4d. 6d. Bd.
and lod. NAIi.S, etjnal ~0 the beti drawn
or ones, (.mdluporior to them for many pnrp ( >-
lii fes) and from 15 to 30 per cent cheaper fo
a» licit orders in ;hat line, whicli (hail be'exe
n- cutedwlth fidelity by Thomas Perkins and
in Co
N. B. A large afi"ortment. of the above
if- kinds of Nails on hand at reduced prices at
fo Nails for Sugar Hogftveadi.
March 31 „«■
canal lottery.
of a Lottery authorized hy
Oan ail entitled " an aft to enable tfas
President and Managers of the Schuvlki'l
and Sufquehanna and ti.e
Prelidcnt and Managers of the Delaware
and Schuylkill Canal Navigation, to raise
by way of Lottery, the fnm of four hun
dred tlioufand dollars, for the purpose of
completing the -works lu their ifts of in
corporation mentioned."
Dollars*
I Prize of 50,000 dollars is 50,000'
1 30,000
5 tOjOOffl fp l>(» paid to tn:'
poflelTors of the tickets of tli£ five la:t
drawiunuinberj, loo,oco
z 15,000 1.3,000
z 10,000 are 10, poo
6 3>jco , 15,000
1 > a,OOO to be paid to the
I pofiefior of tlie ticket of the firft drawn
j number, - - 2>oco
lo 2,000 20,000
2-0 IjQOO aQ,db>
40 500 ■ ao,cco
100 100 10,000
15,500 11 198,000
16,687 Prizes, joo,ooo
Blank.;, -r<
50,000 tickets at lo dollars each, 500,000
All Prizes {hall be paid ten davs after
the drawing is finilhed, ujpon the demand,
of the poiTellbr of a fortunate Ticket, lub
jecft to the dedud\ion of fifteen per cent.
Such prizes as are not demanded in is
months after thi- drawing is tiniihed, of
which public notice will be given, (hall be
considered as relinquilhed for the ufeof the
Canal, and applied accordingly.
At a meeting of the President and Managers
of the Schuylkill and Snfquehanna Canal
navigation—and the President and Ma
nagers of the Delaware and Schuylkill
ClamL i&dliefday, May 13, 17'H-
Relolved, ~~ —
That IJavid Rittenhoufe, Joseph Ball,
John Steinrretz, Standifti l'prde, & Francis
Welt, be a Committee to arrange and di
re# the mode of disposing of the Tickets j
which Committee ftiall deposit the tyloney
in Bank, to l»e carried to the credit of an
account to be opened for the Lottery.
Extract from the Minutes,
I'. MATLACK, See'ry.
to the joint meeting of ihe two Boards*
(f3* The drawi.ig of this Lottery will
positively commence on the firlt day of
I September next:—Tickets may he-had at
the Company's Office near the Bank of
the United States, and of either of the
fubicribers. '
DA FID RITT.ENHOUSE, "J
JOSEPH HALL, j
JOHN STMINME7Z, } Manager*.
STAN-DISH FORDE,
FRANCIS I VEST. J
June 2. 2awtf,
JAMES YARD
Has fV sale, at his ltore on vVahiau-llrcxt
—7- —. —
j St. Croix Rum and. but ar of fupcrio.r qua
lity.
St. Domingo Indigo.
Laguira and St. Domingo Hi<Je».
100 Fofkets of line Cotton.
June 25. 3taw4vr
r | 'HE fuhferiber tffrrs for sale, a FARM #
JL containing about JCO acres ; diflant from tlx
City oflVaftington and George- 'Toivrt between 8 or
<) miles. A Plot of this L,ai\J is In the hands of
jMr. Peter Cnfanw. e of George- Toivn, I'iiciv 'ife
of Air. 'Thorqaj lutzjimons, in Philadelphia, an!
Air. Robert IVal'c* in Baltimore.
The Land 'will be jhewn to any perf oh , by ap»
plying to "fohn I,ydaw, -who lives a 'joining. It
lays in a tncjl healthy country, and a good nO/r
---bood. 'There are on it a common country liueiu.ig-
I hotife, a 'urge tobacco-ijoufe, and an qrchard of sifd
| fruity a conflanrft ream icth a great fall runs uro'
j it, and between 40 a.t ts "f goc I meadow may
be eeiftly made, 'Tue lines of the above induce about
40 a*res of wpodland. Cj,t ae/iient credits mill bit
, ajforded to toe pu, chafer if dejired.
DANIEL CARROLL.
- . jvc 1, XJJS.
A r . 13 TIxImJ 1' 1 1 iirrrrfiiTt f
i mills, /me djfdkt about a mile, iLt other ulniofl ad
' /«"<«£- - June 15, lS§f'
[ " :
; •!
Mordecai Lewis,
Has for Sale at his Store, No. 25 Great
Dock Street,
- A few bales of £aft India Goods, coSuft
ing of Baftas, Colfas, Emerties, Hinn
> hums, and Book muslins.
A Bale of Nillaesand Penialcces
f Ruflla Sheetings and Sail Duck
Ravens Duck
China Silks
II A cafe of Diapers
c Barcelona f tandkfs. in Boxes
Roll Brimstone
Souchong T«a in small uoxos
* a quantity of Grind Stones.
1, Jsne 9. 1795. f.dm
e —
11 pURSUANT to an aA of Congr«fs at
.IT rifmg the Renewal of Loll Certific
notice is hereby given, that the felloe
_ ' ccitificate of fix per cs.,t flock, was rem '
r jby the (hip Kensington, itJi March, I .
> but never arrived. at jit? S
No. 10582, dated January, 14, 179 1
favor of William Pnlteney, of l.ondon,
for dollars 24974, 5 kxits.
ROBERT MORRIS
j 7 urt e 12, 1795. lawGw
4 - LATELT PUBLISHEi),
o And to be had at H. 1)A VlEd'j h
Store, No. 68 IXt^b-flnct,
Del Pino's Spanijh Gramm
id Q is added, an English Gramraai
the use of Spaniards. At the fame {
may be had, a few copics c,f
I- Beyer*s French & EngJifh Diciiona
London Edition.
Junt 22 iiuxii