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The Extraordinary deplorable case of several persons who did advance and pay into the receipt of His Majesty's exchequer the sum of 564700l
Upon the faith and credit of an act of Parliament made in the 6th and 7th years of His Majesty's reign, for granting to His Majest certain rates and duties on stone, glass and earthern wares, coals and culm, for the term of five years, for carrying on the war against France, impowering His Majesty to borrow the money; with a clause in the said Act, that what should fall short or be deficient for repayment of principal and interest in the time limited, should be transferred to and made good out of the first aids or supplies to be granted His Majesty by Parliament -
The extraordinary deplorable case
of several persons who did advance and pay into the receipt of His Majesty's exchequer the sum of 564700l. upon the faith and credit of an act of Parliament made in the 6th and 7th years of His Majesty's reign, for granting to His Majesty certain rates and duties on stone, glass and earthern wares, coals and culm, for the term of five years, for carrying on the war against France, impowering His Majesty to borrow the money; with a clause in the said Act, that what should fall short or be deficient for repayment of principal and interest in the time limited, should by transferred to and made good out of the first aids or supplies to be granted His Majesty by Parliament -
Reasons humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons, for transferring the duty now paid by the manufacturers of glass, and earthen-wares, and tobacco pipes, to publick houses, where those commodities are chiefly consumed
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A proposal, with reasons, humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons, for transferring the duty now paid by the manufacturers of glass, and earthen-wares, and tobacco-pipes, to publick houses
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A proposal, with reasons, humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons, for transferring the duty now paid by the manufacturers of glass, and earthen-wares, and tobacco-pipes, to publick houses
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The miseries which must fall upon the glass-makers, their wives and children
If the act do pass for laying duties on glass-wares -
The English manufacture discouraged, His Majesties customs lessened, the glass-makers ruined
and many thousands of poor families depending upon them, by reason of the duties on glass-wares -
An answer to the insinuations and suggestions of the commissioners, for receiving the duties on glass-wares
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Reasons humbly offered by the Corporation and Company of Glass-sellers of London
against passing the bill for laying duties on glass, &c -
Reasons humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons, against passing the bill for laying duties on glass-wares
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Reasons humbly offered against the bill for laying certain duties on glass wares
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Reasons humbly offered against the intended duties on coals and glass
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The miserable case of the poor glass-makers and families by reason of the duties laid on glass-wares
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The hard case of the glass-makers of England
and the danger of losing the said manufacture, by reason of the duties laid upon glass-wares, most humbly represented to this honourable House -
An account of the whole produce of the duties arising by glass-wares, tobacco-pipes, and stone and [E]arthen-wares
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The extraordinary case, of several persons who did advance, and pay into the receipt of His Majesties Exchequer, ...
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Reasons humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons
for transferring the duty now paid by the manufacturers of glass, and earthen-wares, and tobacco pipes, to publick houses, where those commodities are chiefly consumed -
A proposal, with reasons, humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons
for transferring the duty now paid by the manufacturers of glass, and earthen-wares, and tobacco-pipes, to publick houses -
The miseries which must fall upon the glass-makers, their wives and children
If the act do pass for laying duties on glass-wares -
The English manufacture discouraged, His Majesties customs lessened, the glass-makers ruined
and many thousands of poor families depending upon them, by reason of the duties on glass-wares -
An answer to the insinuations and suggestions of the commissioners, for receiving the duties on glass-wares
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Reasons humbly offered by the Corporation and Company of Glass-sellers of London
against passing the bill for laying duties on glass, &c -
Reasons humbly offered to the honourable House of Commons, against passing the bill for laying duties on glass-wares
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Reasons humbly offered against the bill for laying certain duties on glass wares
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Reasons humbly offered against the intended duties on coals and glass