302 



Politics, (American.) Address on the past, present and event- 

 ual Relations of the United States with France. 8° 

 New York, 1803. (Van Rens. Coll.) P. 168. 



Address of the General Committee of the Republicans 



of Connecticut 8<> 1803. (Clinton Coll.) P. 391. 



Cato to the People of the State of New York. (Web- 

 ster Coll.) P. 209. 



Remarks on the late Infraction of the Treaty of Orleans. 



By Coriolanus. 8° New York, 1803. (Clinton 

 Coll.) P. 351. 



Address to the GoYernment of the United States on the 



Cession of Louisiana to the French. By a French 

 Counsellor of State. 8'' Phil., 1803. (Clinton Coll.) 

 P. 351. 



Monroe's Embassy; or, the Conduct of our Government 



in relation to our Claims to the Navigation of the 

 Mississippi considered. 8« Phil, 1803. (Clinton 

 Coll.) P. 351. 



Reflections on the Cession of Louisiana to the United 



States. By Silvestris. 8° Washington, 1803. (Clin- 

 ton Coll.) P.4L 



Plain Sense; or Sketches of Political Frenzy, and Fede- 

 ral Fraud and Folly. 8° Washington, 1803. (Clin- 

 ton Coll.) P. 41. 



Facts are Stubborn Things; or Nine plain Questions to 



the People of Connecticut; with a brief Reply to 

 each. By Simon Hold-Fast. 8" Hartford, 1803. 

 (Clinton Coll.) P. 45. 



Essay on the Liberty of the Press. By Hortensius. 8" 



Phil., 1803. (Clinton Coll.) P. 41. 



Observations on the Conduct of our Executive towards 



Spain. ByVerus. (Clinton CoU.) P. 375. 



' Address to the People of Connecticut on sundry Political 



Subjects, and particularly on the proposition for a 

 New Constitution. By Jonathan Steadfast. 1^ 

 Hartford, 1804. (Inst. Coll.) P. 468. 



British Influence on the Affairs of the United States 



proved and explained. 8° Boston, 1804. (Clmton 

 Coll.) P. 45. 



The Quid Mirror. First Part. 8» Phil., 1806. (Van 



Rens. Coll.) P. 167. 



