Citation |
PJ.773.061
3 Nov 1773:41 (1613)
Nicholas Brooks, the second door above the coffee-house, in
Market-Street, has just imported, from London and elsewhere,
a curious collection of various goods, --amongst which are .
. . silver whislte bells with coral . . . table bells . . .
best Roman fiddle strings, just imported from Rome; a
variety of new musick of the most approved tunes; a large
assortment of German flutes, and mouth pieces for the same,
which renders the blowing very easy; blank musick books to
copy tunes in; musick, in sheets and half sheets . . .
N.B. As Mr. Brooks has a very large quantity of elegant
pictures, maps, copper-plate writings, and music, he finds
them too numerous to insert in a news-paper, and will
therefore furnish the curious with proper catalogues in a
short time.
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