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Show 212 AcTs RELATING Part II. Sefi‘t. IX. TO THE Commas. 213 plantations, fliaIl be imported (lircCtly to " his majefly's fubjeéts rcfijfrzg in Great Great Britain, and not elfewhere. " Eritain, navigated according to law, and By another aét, copper ore is fubjeétcd " having cleared outward in any port of to the fame regulation 1". In the reign of George the Second an a€t was paged 1‘, by which the prefervation of pine-trees in the plantations, is {till farther provided for * By another act [| all rice in general is again declared to be among the enumerat- " Great Britain for the province of Caro" lina, may {hip rice in the {aid province, " and carry the fame direétly to any part " of Europe to the fouthward of Cape Fi" nilierre." Another aft *‘ of the fame reign per~ mits the importation of all non-enumerat- ed commodities, which are to pay a tax ed goods from the plantations to Ireland. on being tranfported from colony t0 colony, and which cannot be carried directly to any foreign market. The aét then ef- ta‘oliihes an exception to this general rule; and allows that " any of his majefiy's " fubjefts, in any {hip or wild, built in Hops were among the non enumerated " szz Britain, or belonging to any of goods. Clearly, therefore, by the terms of this aft, a right was given to the Ame- ricans to import hops of their own growth into Ireland. But this was not theintention. In the next fellions, therefore, an :16: was palied, ranging hops among the enumerated goods ‘1. The the other hand, that favour might go ' =11d in hand with reflriflion, premiums are re- KIJVCCJ or extended to the importation of malts, yards, rm, pitch, fee. from the plantations. " 4 Geo. II. c. 15. The title is-" An m7 1+ 5 Geo. II. c. 2c}. " to explain, and amend an (152‘, intituled an at? "‘ fgr kip-ailing from his majefiy's plantations 5| 3 (ico, II. c. 2?}. P 3 " his in " America, |