REPORT OF THE TRADE AND COMMERCE OF THE BRITISH NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES WITH THE UNITED STATES AND OTHER COUNTRIES

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Side 56 - ... a previous agreement for that purpose with the inhabitants, proprietors, or possessors of the ground.
Side 91 - A Report to the Navy Department of the United States on American Coals, Applicable to Steam Navigation, and to other purposes.
Side 455 - Household effects, old and in use, of persons or families from foreign countries, if used abroad by them, and not intended for any other person or persons, or for sale.
Side 56 - American fishermen shall also have liberty forever to dry and cure fish in any of the unsettled bays, harbors, and creeks of the southern part of the coast of Newfoundland hereabove described...
Side 4 - And whereas it is highly expedient that the intercourse between Great Britain and the United States should be established on the most enlarged principles of reciprocal benefit to both countries, but, from the distance between Great Britain and America, it must be a considerable time before any convention or treaty for establishing and regulating the trade and intercourse between Great Britain and the United States of America upon a permanent foundation can be concluded: Now, for the purpose of making...
Side 4 - States, any merchandises or goods whatsoever ; and such merchandise* and goods, which shall be so imported into, or exported from, the said British islands, colonies, or plantations, in America^ shall be liable to the same duties and charges only, as the same merchandises and goods would be subject to, if they were the property of British natural born subjects, and imported or exported in British built ships or vessels, navigated by British seamen.
Side 4 - That during all the time hereinbefore limited there shall be the same drawbacks, exemptions and bounties on merchandise and goods exported from Great Britain into the territories of the said United States of America, as are allowed in the case of exportation to the islands, plantations or colonies now remaining or belonging to the crown of Great Britain in America.
Side 87 - The General Mining Association, as tenants of the Crown, and of his late Royal Highness the Duke of York, are lessees of all the mines and minerals of every description in the province of Nova Scotia Proper, and in the island and county of Cape Breton.
Side 46 - As all nations have equal rights, and each may claim equal advantages in its intercourse with others, the true theory of international commerce is one of equality, and of reciprocal benefits ; this theory gives to enterprise, to skill and to capital, their just and natural advantages; any other scheme is artificial; and so far as it aims at advantages over those who adhere to the open system, it aims at profit at the expense of natural justice.
Side 4 - ... established on the most enlarged principles of reciprocal benefit to both countries, but from the distance between Great Britain and America, it must be a considerable time before any convention or treaty for establishing and regulating the trade and intercourse between Great Britain and the 1783. said United States of America, upon a permanent foundation, can be concluded...

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