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ral convention, which framed the present constitution of the United States. Philadelphia, 1788. Gift of Edward J. Cole.

3 Mackenzie's answer to Paine's rights of man; with a letter from Peter Porcupine to John Swanwick. Philadelphia, 1796.

5 Political massacre; or observations on the writings of the present scribblers. Philadelphia, 1796.

1 Porcupine's political censor; or monthly review of the most interesting political occurrences, relative to the United States of America. For March, April, May and September, 1796, and March, 1797. Philadelphia, 1796, &c.

3 Porcupine's remarks on an infamous letter threatening violence to his person, &c. Philadelphia, 1796.

2502 2 Accounts of the treasurer of the United States, of the payments and receipts of public monies, for the year 1796. Philadelphia, 1797. Gif of Samuel A. Otis.

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3 Documents referred to in the president's speech to both houses of the fifth congress, on the 16th of May, 1797. Philadelphia, 1797. Gift of Samuel A. Otis.

6 Reports made to the senate and house of representatives of the United States, on petitions for the settlement of claims, &c. Philadelphia,

1797.

1 Robert G. Harper's observations on the dispute between the United States and France. 3d American edit. Philadelphia, 1798.

2 Hamilton's observations on certain documents contained in No. 5 and 6 of "The history of the United States for the year 1796." Philadelphia, 1797.

3 The pretensions of Thomas Jefferson to the presidency, examined; and the charges against John Adains refuted. In two parts. Philadelphia, 1796.

4 Burke's letter to a noble lord, on the attacks made upon him in the house of lords, by the Duke of Bedford and the Earl of Lauderdale; with a preface, by Peter Porcupine. Philadelphia, 1797.

5 View of the causes and consequences of the present war with France. By P. Forcupine.

6 Erskine's view of the causes and consequences of the present war with France, in answer to Mr. Burke's regicide peace; with a dedication, by Peter Porcupine; and an appendix. Philadelphia, 1797. 2 Speech of the president of the United States, to both houses of congress, on the 16th of May, 1797; also the documents referred to therein. Philadelphia, 1797. Gift of John Holt Oswald.

3 Message from the president of the United States, to both houses of congress, relative to the proceedings of the commissioner for running the boundary line between the United States and East and West Florida. Philadelphia, 1797. Gift of John Holt Oswald.

4 Reports made to the senate and house of representatives, from the heads of the departments, respecting the finances, the army and the navy, and the depredations committed on the commerce of the United States. Philadelphia, 1797. Gift of John Holt Oswald.

5 and 2511 1 French original letters, from Joseph Fauchet and P. A. Adet, to the executive of the United States. Philadelphia, 1794. Gif of Charles Cist.

2511 2 Scipio's reflections on Monroe's view of the conduct of the executive of the United States. Philadelphia, 1798.

2511 3 What is our situation? and what our prospects? A few pages for Americans. By an American. Philadelphia, 1798.

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4 Message of the president of the United States to both houses of con-
gress, April 3, 1798, inclosing the despatches from our envoys to the
French republic. Philadelphia, 1798.

5 Message of the president of the United States to both houses of con-
gress, May 4, 1798, inclosing the communication from our envoys
to the French minister of foreign affairs. Philadelphia, 1798.
1 Considerations upon the state of public affairs, at the beginning of
the year 1798. In two parts. 2d edit. London, 1798.

1 Report of the committee of the house of commons, in consequence of
the several motions relative to the treatment of prisoners of war.
London, 1798.

3 Calonne's letter to the author of the considerations upon the state of public affairs at the commencement of the year 1798. Translated from the French. London, 1798.

1 William Morton Pitt's address to the landed interest, on the deficiency
of habitations and fuel for the use of the poor; with plates. London,
1797.

3 Proposal for supplying London with bread, at an uniform price, from
one year to another, according to an annual assize. London, 1798.
1 Considerations on the state of public affairs in the year 1798.
the third-The domestic state and general policy of Great Britain.
London, 1798.

1 Dumouriez's speculative sketch of Europe.

Part

Translated from the French; with strictures upon the chapter relative to Great Britain. London, 1798.

2608 1 and 2609 1 Accounts of the treasurer of the United States, of payments and receipts of public monies for the years 1797 and 1798. Gift of Jonathan W. Condy.

2 and 2609 2 Reports of committee of claims of the house of representatives of the United States, on the petitions of sundry persons, from the 5th of December, 1797, to the 21st of February, 1799. Philadelphia.

2610 and 2611 1 Report of the secretary of the treasury on the memorial of sundry merchants of Philadelphia, respecting the erection of piers in the river Delaware. Philadelphia, 1798.

2 Reports of the commissioners of the sinking fund, inclosing a report of the secretary of the treasury, on the subject of purchasing the public debt. Philadelphia, 1797 and 1798.

3 Letter from the secretary of the treasury accompanied with his report of the estimates of the sums necessary for the service of the year 1798. Philadelphia, 1797.

4 Report of the secretary of the treasury on the claim of General Kosciusko. Philadelphia, 1797.

5 Report of the secretary of the treasury on the acts of limitation. Philadelphia, 1798.

6 Report of the secretary of the treasury on the act regulating foreign coins. Philadelphia, 1798.

7 Letter from the secretary of the treasury, accompanying a plan for regulating the collection of duties on imports and tonnage. Philadelphia, 1798.

2610 and 2611 8 Letter from the secretary of the treasury, accompanying a statement of the several contracts, made for the subsistence of the army. Philadelphia, 1798.

9 Report of the secretary of the treasury, on the petition of Jonathan Jackson, &c. Philadelphia, 1798.

10 Letter from the secretary of the treasury, exhibiting a calculation of the quotas of the respective states, in a tax of two millions of dollars. Philadelphia, 1798.

11 Report of the secretary of the treasury of the sums necessary for the service of the year 1799; with a statement of the receipts and expenditures at the treasury of the United States, for one year preceding the 1st of October 1798. Philadelphia, 1798.

12 Letter from the secretary of the treasury, accompanying a plan for digesting into one act, and amending, various acts relative to duties on spirits distilled within the United States, and on stills. Philadelphia, 1799.

13 Letter from the secretary of the treasury, inclosing sundry statements respecting the mint. Philadelphia, 1799.

14 Letter from the secretary of the treasury, transmitting a statement of goods, wares and merchandise exported from the United States during the year 1798. Philadelphia, 1799.

2612 and 2613 1 Report of the secretary at war, relative to the running of a line of experiment from the Clinch river to Chilhowee mountain. Philadelphia, 1798.

2 Report of the secretary at war, relative to the protection of commerce and the defence of the country. Philadelphia, 1798.

3 Report of the secretary at war, of the sums necessary for the quartermaster department. Philadelphia, 1798.

4 Letter from the secretary of the navy, relative to the vessels of war employed in, and prepared for, the service of the United States. Philadelphia, 1798.

5 Report of the secretary at war, relative to the military establishment. Philadelphia, 1798.

6 Letter from the secretary of the navy, on the naval establishment. Philadelphia, 1799. Gift of Jonathan W. Condy.

7 Reports of sundry committees of the house of representatives of the United States on various subjects referred to them, from December 6, 1797, to February 21, 1799. Philadelphia, 1799.

2614 and 2615 Messages from the president of the United States, communicated to both houses of congress, from the 17th of January, 1798, to the 28th of January, 1799. Philadelphia, 1799.

2616 and 2617 1 Reports of the committee of the house of representatives of the United States, appointed to prepare and report articles of im peachment against William Blount. Philadelphia, 1797.

2 Reports of the committee of privileges, relative to the motion for the expulsion of Matthew Lyon. Philadelphia, 1798.

3 Return of the whole number of persons within the several districts of the United States. Philadelphia, 1791.

4 Report from the commissioners of the city of Washington, exhibiting a view of the receipts and expenditures of all monies entrusted to them. Philadelphia, 1797.

5 Memorial of the commissioners of the city of Washington, repre

senting the situation and circumstances of that place. Philadelphia, 1798. Gift of Jonathan W. Condy.

2616 and 2617 8 Specification of the various post-offices of the United States, and of the compensations which have been allowed to the deputy post-masters. Philadelphia, 1798.

11 Remonstrance and petition of the legislature of the state of Tennessee. Philadelphia, 1797.

12 Reports respecting the mint of the United States.

1797 and 1798. Gift of Jonathan W. Condy.

Philadelphia,

2618 11 Judge Addison's observations on the speech of Albert Gallatin, on the foreign intercourse bill. Washington, 1798. Gift of the author.

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12 French originals of all the documents which accompanied the message
of the president of the United States, of the 18th of January, 1799.
Philadelphia, 1799. Gift of Charles Cist.

Instructions to the envoys extraordinary from the United States of A-
merica to the French republic, their letters of credence and full pow-
ers, and the despatches from them relative to their mission.
delphia, 1798.

Phila

2625 and 2617 7 Bills to establish an uniform system of bankruptcy throughout the United States. Philadelphia, 1798.

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2 Report of the committee of secrecy of the house of commons.
dered to be printed the 15th of March, 1799. London, 1799.

Or

1 Report of the select committee of the house of commons, on the subject of a new police in the metropolis, &c. and the convict establishment. London, 1799.

2694 2 Penn's timely appeal to the common sense of the people of Great Britain in general, and of the inhabitants of Buckinghamshire in particular, on the present situation of affairs. London, 1798.

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1 Carnot's reply to the report made on the conspiracy of the 18th of Fructidor, 5th year, by J. Ch. Bailleul, in the name of the select committee. 2d edit. London, 1799.

5 Speech of the right honourable William Pitt, in the house of commons, January 31, 1799, on offering to the house the resolutions which he proposed as the basis of an union between Great Britain and Ireland. 6th edit. London, 1799.

2 Eden's estimate of the number of inhabitants in Great Britain and Ireland. London, 1800.

4 Selections from the correspondence of General Washington and James Anderson, L. L. D. in which the causes of the present scarcity are fully investigated. London, 1800.

1 Emigration to America, candidly considered in a series of letters from a gentleman, resident there, to his friend, in England. Lond. 1798. 2 Political essays on popular subjects. London, 1800.

1 Letter from the secretary of state, inclosing the returns of registered and impressed seamen. Philadelphia, 1799.

2 Report of the secretary of state, on the communications from the agents employed for the relief of American seamen. Philad. 1799. 3 Report of the commissioners of the sinking fund. Philadelphia, 1799. 4 Report of the secretary of the treasury of the sums necessary to be appropriated for the service of the year 1800. Philadelphia, 1799. 5 Report of the committee on a system of national defence. Philadelphia, 1800.

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6 Report of the committee on the letter of John Randolph, jun. to the president of the United States. Philadelphia, 1800.

7 Report of the committee of commerce and manufactures, February 10, 1800. Philadelphia.

8 Report of the committee of claims on the petition of the corporation of Rhode Island college. Philadelphia, 1800.

9 Report of the committee on the lands north west of the Ohio. Philadelphia, 1800.

10 Report of the committee of ways and means on the subject of a loan for the service of the year 1800. Philadelphia, 1800.

11 Report of the committee of claims on the petition of Stephen Sayre. Philadelphia, 1800.

12 Report of the committee respecting the purchase of a tract of land on the south side of Lake Superior, which shall include the Great Copper Bed. Philadelphia, 1800.

13 Report of the committee, respecting the cession of the Western Reserve of Connecticut. Philadelphia, 1800.

14 Report of the secretary of state respecting the expense incurred in each state by publishing the laws therein. Philadelphia, 1800.

15 Report of the committee on the subject of Judge Symme's purchase. Philadelphia, 1800.

16 Report of the committee on the establishment of trading houses with the Indian tribes. Philadelphia, 1800.

17 Report of the committee of ways and means on the subject of further revenue. Philadelphia, 1800.

18 Report of the committee of claims on the petition of Charles Pettit. Philadelphia, 1800.

19 Report of the committee on the subject of appropriations for the Indian department. Philadelphia, 1800.

20 Report of the committee on the subject of the refugees from Canada and Nova Scotia. Philadelphia, 1800.

21 Report on the petition of Cato West and others. Philadelphia, 1800. 2802 1 Speech of the president of the United States, December 3, 1799. 2 Answer to the said speech, reported December 6, 1799,

3 Message from the president on the subjects of the insurrection in Pennsylvania; the renewal of commerce with St. Domingo and the mission to France. Philadelphia, 1799.

4 Documents transmitted by the commissioners of the city of Washing ton Philadelphia, 1799.

6 Report exhibiting the expenses of the national armoury at Springfield, Massachusetts. Philadelphia, 1800.

7 Message from the president relative to the mint of the United States. Philadelphia, 1800.

8 Message from the president respecting a military system. Philadelphia, 1800.

9 Message from the president on the subject of the claims adjusted by the commissioners under the twenty-first article of our treaty with Spain. Philadelphia, 1800.

10 Statement of the goods, wares and merchandise, exported from the United States, during one year prior to the first of October, 1799. Philadelphia, 1800.

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