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Some brief remarks upon sundry important subjects
necessary to be understood and attended to by all professing the Christian religion. Principally addressed to the people called Quakers. By John Griffith -
A letter from Elizabeth Webb to Anthony William Boehm, with his answer
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The epistle from the yearly-meeting in London, held by adjournments, from the 4th of the sixth month 1781, to the 9th of the same, inclusive. To the quarterly and monthly meetings of Friends in Great-Britain, Ireland, and elsewhere
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Dissertations on the nature and effect of Christian baptism, Christian communion, and religious waiting upon God
To which are added, a few reflections on the observance of publick fasts and festivals. By Joseph Phipps -
An Act to continue several laws relating to the opening and establishing certain free ports in the island of Jamaica
to the allowing the free importation of sago powder and vermicelli from His Majesy's colonies in North America; to the free importation of certain raw hides and skins from Ireland, and the British plantations in America; to the allowing the exportation of provisions, goods, wares, and merchandize, to certain places in North America, which are or may be under the protection of His Majesty's arms, and from such places to Great Britain and other parts of His Majesty's dominions; to the clandestine running of uncustomed goods, and preventing frauds relating to the customs; to the preventing the clandestine running of goods, and the danger of infection thereby; to the encouraging the growth of coffee in His Majesty's plantations in America to the preventing the committing of frauds by bankrupts; and to revive and continue several laws relating to allowing the exportation of certain quantities of wheat and other articles to His Majesty's sugar colonies in America; to the impowering His Majesty to prohibit the exportation, and restrai the carrying coastwise, of copper in bars, or copper in sheets; to the allowing a drawback of the duties on rum shipped as stores to be consumed on board merchant ships on their voyages; and to the allowing a bounty on the exportation of British corn and grain in neutral ships -
A letter from Elizabeth Webb to Anthony William Boehm, with his answer
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An address to those of the people called Quakers, who have been disowned for matters religious or civil
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The discipline of the Society of Friends, by some styled the Free Quakers
unanimously agreed to in their meeting for business, held in Philadelphia, on the sixth day of the eighth month, 1781 -
From the Monthly Meeting of Friends, called by some the Free Quakers, held by adjournment at Philadelphia, on the 9th day of the 7th month, 1781
To those of our brethren who have disowned us -
The Monthly Meeting of Friends, called by some the Free Quakers, (distinguishing us from those of our brethren who have disowned us.)
Held at Philadelphia, the fourth day of the 6th month, 1781. To our friends and brethren in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and elsewhere -
A sermon, preached at Horslydown
Southwark, London, the nineteenth of the eleventh month 1769. By Samuel Fothergill -
Some brief remarks upon sundry important subjects
necessary to be understood and attended to by all professing the Christian religion. Principally addressed to the people called Quakers -
To the representatives of the freemen of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in General Assembly met
Divers freemen of the said commonwealth beg leave to shew, that, by the laws of the state, religious societies of people are entitled to hold lots of ground for the purposes of erecting thereon houses for worship, school houses, and for burying grounds -
Meditations and soliloquies with religious experiences, by John Rutty, M.D. Extracted from his Spiritual diary
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Truth's principles
or, those things about doctrine and worship, which are most surely believed and received by the people of God called Quakers, viz. Concerning the Man Christ, his Sufferings, Death, and Resurrection, Faith in his Blood, the Imputation of his Righteousness, Sanctification, Justification, &c. By a servant of the Lord, John Crook. To which is added, something concerning the difference between the persuasions of reason, and the persuasions of faith