de sus frutos y producciones, politica de sus habitantes, guerras 1793. Madrid. Quarto. First printed in 1682. 18 CHRISTOPH DANIEL EBELINGS, Erdbeschreibung und Geschichte von Amerika. Die vereinten staaten von Nordamerika. 8vo. 7 vols. Hamburg. This work forms a continuation to Busching's Geography. The volumes were published at considerable intervals, the last in 1817. 19 DE OUDE en Nieuwe constitutie, &c. 8vo. pp. 260. Amsterdam. This view of the old and new constitution of the United States of America, by Gerhard Dumbar, LL.D., and member of the Philosophical Society at Utrecht, contains an impartial examination of what the author calls the old constitution, by which he means the thirteen articles of confederation, settled in Congress on the 17th of November, 1777. This survey is introduced by a concise account of the rise of the war, and of the events preceding the formation of the Union. In a second volume, the author proposes to offer some remarks on the new constitution of 1787. MDCCXCIV. 1 THE HISTORY of the origin, progress, and termination of the Quarto, 2 vols. 15 maps and plans. The situation of Mr. Stedman, as an officer of the British army in America, C C 1794. 2 OBSERVATIONS on Mr. Stedman's History of the American war. By Lieut.-General Sir Henry Clinton, K.B. Quarto, pp. 34. Debrett, 3 HISTORY of the principal Republics of the World: a defence of By Thomas Jefferson. A second edition of this valuable work was printed in 1809. 5 NOTES ON THE STATE OF VIRGINIA. Second American edition. 8vo pp. 336, map. See No. 10 of 1787. 6 A MESSAGE of the President of the United States to Congress, relative to France and Great Britain, delivered December 5, 1793. With the papers therein referred to. To which are added, the French originals. Published by order of the House of Representatives. Philadelphia. 8vo. pp. 103. "This collection of state papers reflects very great honor on the ministers of the United States of North America. Placed by the war in a situation the most embarrassing, pressed on different sides by memorials and remonstrances, from the agents of Great Britain and France, they appear to have conducted themselves with consummate prudence, and the most scrupulous impartiality. Notwithstanding the provoking menaces of Genet, the minister from the French republic, which would have warranted measures of resentment, they persevered in a line of conduct marked with the most dignified moderation, and, at the same time, with a firm and unshaken adherence to what they conceived to be their duty.” M. R. 7 AMERICAN BUDGET, 1794. The income and expenditure of the United States of America, as presented to the House of Representatives, in sundry estimates and statements relative to appropriations for the service of the year 1794, by Alex ander Hamilton, Esq. Secretary to the Treasury of the United 1794. 8vo. pp. 42. 8 SPEECHES of Mr. Smith, of South Carolina, delivered in the House of Representatives of the United States, in January, 1794, on the subject of certain commercial regulations, &c. 8vo. Stockdale, 9 AN ADDRESS from William Smith, of South Carolina, to his conDebrett, stituents. 8vo. Mr. Smith was a strenuous advocate, in his speeches, for a good understanding with England; and in his address defends himself from some animadversions they had drawn upon him. 10 AUTHENTIC COPIES of the correspondence of Thomas Jefferson, Esq. Secretary of State to the United States of America, and George Hammond, Esq. Minister Plenipotentiary of Great Britain, on the non-execution of existing treaties, the delivering the frontier posts, and on the propriety of a commercial intercourse between Great Britain and the United States. In two parts. 8vo. Debrett, These papers comprehend everything necessary to afford complete information with respect to the grounds of the disputes which have arisen between Great Britain and America. 11 THE AMERICAN CALENDAR, or United States' register, for the year 1794. To be continued annually. 12mo. pp. 287. Debrett, Published originally in Philadelphia. It is highly commended in the 12 HISTORY OF THE MISSION of the United Brethren among the Ignatius La Trobe. 8vo. pp. 639. London. 1794. 13 LETTERS on the crimes of George III., addressed to Citizen Denis; by an American officer in the service of France. 8vo. Part I., pp. 80. Part II., pp. 135. The author's name was J. S. Eustace. Paris. 14 A TREATISE on the Fevers of Jamaica, with some observations on the intermitting fever of America; and an appendix, containing some hints on the means of preserving the health of soldiers in hot climates. By Robert Jackson, M.D. Murray, 8vo. pp. 440. 15 AN ESSAY on the Rhus toxicodendron, pubescent poison oak or sumach; with cases, shewing its efficacy in the cure of paralysis, and other diseases of extreme debility. By John Alderson, M.D. 8vo. pp. 34. Johnson, 16 AN ABRIDGEMENT of Mr. Edwards's civil and commercial history of the British West Indies. London. 8vo. 2 vols. In an advertisement, prefixed to this work, it is stated that it was published in consequence of the avarice of the bookseller placing the original work in the reach only of the opulent. Avarice also, most probably, produced this abridgment. 17 HORTUS AMERICANUS: containing an account of the trees, shrubs, and other vegetable productions of South America and the West India islands, particularly of the island of Jamaica. By Dr. Henry Barham. Kingston (Jam.) 8vo. pp. 212. 18 THE CASE of the agent to the settlers on the coast of Yucatan, The agent's name was White. Cadell, 19 A VIEW of the relative Situation of Great Britain and the United States of America. By a Merchant. By the (now) venerable President of the College of South Carolina. 21 LETTERS ON Emigration. By a gentleman lately returned 1794. from America. Kearsley, 8vo. pp. 76. This gentleman is no friend to emigration. He states that, in migrating to America, the artizan may want for employment, and the husbandman may pay too dear for his land; the gentleman cannot live in the cities, on account of the expense, nor in the back settlements, for want of society; and that there is great hazard and expense in crossing the ocean to get there. 22 RESULT OF ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS made in the interior parts of North America. Quarto, pp. 16. Arrowsmith, 23 MEMOIRES HISTORIQUES, et piéces authentiques, sur M. de la A collection of papers and extracts relating to La Fayette. Paris. 24 NOTICIAS de la provincia de Californias, en tres cartas de un sacerdote religioso hijo del real convento de predicadores de Valencia un amigo suyo. (Por F. L. S.) Small 8vo. Valencia. These letters were written a few years before the date of the work; the 25 NOTICIA INDIVIDUAL de las poblaciones nuevamente fundadas Small 4to. pp. 88. 26 INVESTIGACIONES HISTORICAS sobre los principales descubrimientos de los Españoles en el mar oceano, en el siglo XV y principios del XVI. En respuesta à la memoria de M. Otto sobre el verdadero descubridor de América. Por D. Christobal |