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Laws of the United States laying a direct tax, and laying duties on household furniture and on gold and silver watches
with an act to amend the same -
Letter to the Right Honorable Lord Althorp, &c. &c. &c
on Mr. Attwood's motion for enquiry, touching the state of the currency, the cause and key-stone of the late awful disturbances throughout the country -
An impartial enquiry into the late conduct of the city of London, relating to the excise-bill
address'd to the lord-mayor, aldermen, Common-councilmen, and citizens of London -
A collection of the severall acts, ordinances & orders as well of Parliament as of His Highness the Lord Protector (now in force) for the levying of monies by way of excise and new-impost
together with severall orders of the Council, the commissioners for appeals and regulating the excise &c. relating to the management thereof -
Freedom the first of blessings
[Two lines of verse from Addison] -
An impartial enquiry into the late conduct of the city of London
Relating to the Excise-Bill. Address'd to the Lord-Mayor, Aldermen, Common-Council-Men, and Citizens of London. By a Common-Council-Man of the same City -
Excise
Being a collection of letters, &c. containing, The Sentiments and Instructions of the Merchants, Traders, Gentry, and Inhabitants of the principal Cities, Counties, Towns, and Boroughs, in England, to their Representatives in Parliament, against a New Excise, or any Extension of Excise Laws, in what Shape soever. The Whole Alphabetically digested, with the Names of the Members who represent the said Cities and Counties, &c -
The nature of the present excise, and the consequences of its farther extension, examined
In a letter to a Member of Parliament -
Tables of the net duties payable
and drawbacks allowed on certain goods, wares and merchandize, imported, exported, or carried coastwise. Together with a list of the bounties. Published under the inspection of Mr. Edward-James Mascall, of the Custom-House, London. To which are added, a table of the duties, Allowances, Bounties and Drawbacks in the excise; together with the licences necessary to he taken out by those Persons dealing in exciseable Commodities and an alphabetical arrangement of the various stamp-duties in Great Britain. The whole agreeable to the Consolidation-Act of the ayth of George III -
A scheme or proposal for taking off the several taxes on land, soap, starch
Candles, Leather, Plate, Pots, &c. and replacing the said duties by another tax, which will bring in more Money, in a more Easy and Equal Manner, and less burthensome to the Subject: Humbly offered to the Consideration of the Parliament, as also the People of England, for whose Ease and Benefit this is design'd. Plainly proving, That the Duties on Soap, Candles, and Leather, which do not bring in 600,000 l. a Year, cost the Subject more than double that Sum: So that this Method is calculated to ease the People of one Half of the Sum they now pay, on Account of those several Taxes, and at the same Time Encrease the Revenue. To which is added, Some Considerations on the several Duties upon Tea, Coffee, Chocolat, and Salt, which may be also taken off, and replaced by the same Method, with any Thing else, that is either burthensome to Trade, or a Hardship upon particular Persons, of which the Pot-Act is a glaring Instance; and upon any Emergency a larger Sum may be raised