Cobbett, W., & Bradford, T. (1796). A little plain English, addressed to the people of the United States: On the treaty, negociated with His Britannic Majesty, and on the conduct of the president relative thereto; in answer to "The letters of Franklin." With a supplement containing an account of the turbulent and factious proceedings of the opposers of the treaty. By Peter Porcupine (Second edition. [Eight lines from Shakespeare].). From the free and independent political and literary press of Thomas Bradford, printer, bookseller and stationer, numbers 8, South Front Street.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationCobbett, William, and Thomas Bradford. A Little Plain English, Addressed to the People of the United States: On the Treaty, Negociated with His Britannic Majesty, and on the Conduct of the President Relative Thereto; in Answer to "The Letters of Franklin." With a Supplement Containing an Account of the Turbulent and Factious Proceedings of the Opposers of the Treaty. By Peter Porcupine. Second edition. [Eight lines from Shakespeare]. Philadelphia: From the free and independent political and literary press of Thomas Bradford, printer, bookseller and stationer, numbers 8, South Front Street, 1796.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationCobbett, William, and Thomas Bradford. A Little Plain English, Addressed to the People of the United States: On the Treaty, Negociated with His Britannic Majesty, and on the Conduct of the President Relative Thereto; in Answer to "The Letters of Franklin." With a Supplement Containing an Account of the Turbulent and Factious Proceedings of the Opposers of the Treaty. By Peter Porcupine. Second edition. [Eight lines from Shakespeare]. From the free and independent political and literary press of Thomas Bradford, printer, bookseller and stationer, numbers 8, South Front Street, 1796.