320 letter from yuridtcas. May 2. 



has every thing there in the most elegant stile, treats 

 them like a nobleman ; and, to conclude the businefs 

 properly, does them the superlative favour to order 

 two or three hundred pounds worth of goods, in pre- 

 ference to many others who have been applying for 

 his custom. Thus do both parties separate with mu- 

 tual satisfaction. 



The above is all that is required at the outset ; 

 but a little more addrefs becomes necefsary in a fhort 

 time. Bills must be granted for the goods received, 

 and these bills mustbe retired regularly when they fall 

 due ; this requires a degree of attention and a know- 

 ledge of businefs that cannot be at once acquired. A 

 clerk properly qualified, must therfore be procured : 

 And luckily this kind of businefs has been so long 

 practised here, that there will always be some of this 

 description to be found, who have been regularly 

 bred to it, who may be engaged. These necefsary 

 accomplices in businefs must indeed be well paid 

 for their trouble ; but the emolument their employer 

 derives from their labours is such as to entitle 

 them to a very genteel allowance. These gentlemen^ 

 acquainted with all the fictitious modes of supporting 

 credit, which the superlative refinement, ingenuity, 

 and taste of the present age have devised, take care 

 for some time to provide a constant supply of cafli to . 

 answer all legal demands with the utmost punctuality. 

 "No matter if this cafli be obtained at the enormous 

 expence of forty or fifty per cent, lofs on certain tran- 

 sactions ; as they well know that this lofs must ulti- 

 mately be sustained by others, and not by themselves, 

 iet these others look to this, it is none of their own,] 



