Brown, taylor and habit-maker, Number 11, Ludgate-Street; The Numbers of Persons that Attempt to serve Gentlemen under Price, and many having been served with an inferior Commodity, has been the means of not paying that Attention to their Interest they might have done. (I George Brown) in justice to myself and the Public, do assert, they may throw aside all Diffidence, as it is from the extensiveness of my Dealings, and not the largeness of Profit I have, and hope to continue to deserve the Indulgence of the public. He earnestly Invites those Gentlemen who are disengaged to make trial, when they will find an (elegance in sitting) superior to most, and he thinks he may venture to say, inferior to no one in the Trade.
- Brown, George, taylor and habit-maker.
- Date:
- 1775?]
- Books
- Online
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About this work
Publication/Creation
[London : s.n., 1775?]
Physical description
1 sheet ; 1/20.
Contributors
References note
ESTC T224124
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.