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Manual of Ship Subsidies by Edwin M. Bacon
page 9 of 134 (06%)
are thus enumerated:

1. Certain named articles of European produce could only be
imported into the United Kingdom for consumption in British
ships, or in ships of the country of which the goods were the
produce, or of the country from which they were usually imported.

2. No produce of Asia, Africa, or America could be imported for
consumption into the United Kingdom from Europe in any ships; and
such produce could only be imported from any other place in
British ships, or in ships of the country of which the goods were
the produce and from which they were usually imported.

3. No goods could be carried coastwise from one part of the
United Kingdom to another in any but British ships.

4. No goods could be exported from the United Kingdom to any of
the British possessions in Asia, Africa, or America (with some
exceptions with regard to India) in any but British ships.

5. No goods could be carried from any one British possession in
Asia, Africa, or America, to another, nor from one part of such
possession to another part of the same, in any but British ships.

6. No goods could be imported into any British possession in
Asia, Africa, or America in any but British ships, or in ships of
the country of which the goods were the produce; provided, also,
that such ships brought the goods from that country.

7. No foreign ships were allowed to trade with any of the British
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