THE Weft-India Merchant, Fadtor and Supercargoes DAILY ASSISTANT, In the Difpofal of a Cargoe of Merchandize at JAMAICA, MOBILLE, SAINT AUGUSTINE, the Mujfetto Shore, Bay of Honduras, thtSpaniJh Main, or any other Part of the Spanijh Weft-indies, whether configned from Great Britain, Ireland, or any of the Britijh Colonies in North America. I. A Set of Tables (hewing, by Infpeftion, what Price ought to .be put on Goods in ‘Jamaica Currency to gain a certain grofs Profit (on the Original Sterling Cod) of fo much per per Cent, from z l- to too perCent. and the fame applied to Goods configned from Ireland or the Northern Colonies. II. Another Set of Tables (hewing (as in the lad) what Price ought to be put upon Goods to be paid for in Spanijh Monty, to gain fo much per Cent, on the firft Sterling Cod from z \ to ioo per Cent, and the fame applied to Goods configned from Ireland or the Northern Colonies. III. Tables reducing the Monies of Great Britain, Ireland, Jamaica, thofe of the Northern Colonies, and Spanilh Money both Gold and Silver, mutually and interchangeably into each other,' with Tables reducing Spanifh Weights and Meafurej into En^lilh; with two General Intered Tables of Ufe aU over Britifb America; with Tables of Time, 4c. To which is added, A plain Method in which the common Balance is hydrodatically applied to determine the Qualities of Gold and Silver Bars. With an explanatory Introdudlion, containing many ufeful and curious Obfervations and Cautions, fuch as the mod expe^ rienced in the Wed-India Trade, it is hoped will approve, and the unexperenced be benefited thereby. The Whole founded on the Experience of the Author; with a Copper Plate of the Hydrollatick Scale. By J 0 H N WRJGHT, Gent. Author of the American Negotiator, and intended as fuppli- mentary thereunto. LONDON: Printed for the Author, and fold by David Steel, Book- feller, at the Bible and Crown, King-ftreet, Little 'Tower-Hill, and by mod of the Bookfeile.-s in Great Britain. 1765. ; To be had at D. Steel’s, at the Bible and Crown, King-Jlreet, Little Lower-Hill, in 2 Vol. Odavo, neatly printed. Price bound 10s. • A compleat HISTORY of the LATE WAR, or Annual Regifter of its Rife, Progrefs, and Events, in Europe, Afia. Africa and America. And exhibiting the State ot the Belligerent Powers at the Commence¬ ment of the. War-, their Interefts and Objefts in its Continuance. Interfperled with the Charafters of the able and difinterefted Statefmen, to whofe Wil’dom and Integrity, and of the Heroes to whofe Courage and Condud we are indebted for that Naval and Mi¬ litary Succefs, which is not to be equalled in the Annals of this or‘any Other Nation. 'i ^()?( ^gy y^^y ^o^y <>^y i^y T O T H E MERCHANTS, SUPERCARGOES, FACTORS, COMMANDERS of SHIPS, - and others concerned or employed in the Trade from Great Britain and Ireland ; or in the circular Trade by Way of North America, to Jamaica, Mobille, Benfacola, St. Anguflin } the Musketto Shore, Bay of Honduras , or on the Spanifh Main. GENTLEMEN, I HERB prefent you with a little Book particularly intended for your Ufe and Eafe in the Difpatch of your Bufinefs at or in the Places aforefaid. The Tables herein contained, will inftantaneoufiy refolve you many important Queftions, abfolutely neceffary to be known in judicioufly managing the Sale of a Cargo of Goods, both in regard to the Difpatch of Bufinefs, as affifting the Judgment, for without a Merchant, Factor, &c. make the requifite Computations and Redu&ions of the Monies, Weights and Meafure, of the Place where the goods are fold, into thofe in which the fame are configned from, in¬ terchangeably into each other, no certain Knowledge can be obtained, whether the Goods are fold to Ad¬ vantage or not. To iv DEDICATION, To anfwer the Purpofes aforefaid, the Tables herein contained are peculiarly adapted. The Tables, Page the 2d and 3d, reduces the current Money of Jamaica into Sterling, and that they might the better fuit for pra&ical Ufe, the Reduc¬ tion is at one View from oiie Pound to a hundred, rifing one Pound at a Time ; and there is a Column on the Right-hand Page which reduces Shillings Ja¬ maica Money, into Sterling Shillings, for the ready Reduction of the Value of fniall Articles in Trade from the Jamaica to the Sterling Value, which ex¬ tend from 2is. to 5is. Jamaica Currency. Pages 4 and 5, contain the Reverie of the for¬ mer, reducing Sterling into Jamaica Currency with the fame Particularity. The Tables from Page 6 to 25, Ihew the gfofs Gain per Cent, on the Sale of Goods in Jamaica, when the Goods are fold at futh and fuch Values in that Currency, compared with the Sterling Value, which being properly attended to the Advantage gained on the Sale of Goods, can in'-an Inftant be known, and the Merchant or Factor be informed, without any Calculation, what Price ought to be put on Goods to gain a reafonable Profit, or what the Difadvantage is, if he is obliged to fubmit to a bad Market. The Chain of Tables from Page 27 to Page 46, fhew what Profit is gained on the Sterling Coft of Goods, and is to be ufed and applied for regulating the felling Price of Goods fold in Spanifh Money of Dollars and Ryals, in the fame Manner as is done for the Sale of Goods in Jamaica Currency by the foregoing Chain of Tables. This DEDICATION. v This Chain of Tables, both for their Utility they may be of, to all who trade with the Spaniards in America, will engage the Attention of the Curious, as well as the Merchant,. &c. The Tables Page 48 and 49, reduces Bofton Money into Jamaica, and at the lame Time Bofton Money into Spanilh Money. Pages 50 and 51, reduces Jamaica Money into Bofton Money. .Pages ‘52 and 53, reduces Jamaica Money into Pen filvania Money', and Jamaica Money into Spa¬ nilh. Pages 54 and 55, reduces Penfilvania Money into Jamaica, and at the fame Time into Spanilh. Pages 56 and 57, reduces Jamaica Money into New York Money. Pages 58 and 59, reduces New-York Money into Jamaica Money, and at the fame Time New-York Money into Spanilh. Pages 6cf and 61, reduces Jamaica Money into South Carolina Money. Pages 62 and 63, reduces South Carolina Money into Jamaica, and at the lame Time South Carolina Money into Spanilh. Thus you have the Currencies of Jamaica, Bofton, New York, Penfilvania, South Carolina and Spanilh Money alternately reduced into each other, and though vi D E D I C A r I 0 N. though thefe are not all the Britifh American Colonies, yet thefe Exchanges I believe, will fit the who.’e, both the Illarids and Continent, with but few Exceptions. -The Jerfeys are the fame as Phila¬ delphia and New York, Quebec the fame-as Bolton; the Leward Illands correfpond with Penfilvania and New York, and the Currencies of Virginia, Mary¬ land, North' Carolina and Barbadoes correfpond nearly with feme of thefe Tables. The Pages 64 and 65 reduce Spanifh Piltoles into Sterling, and (hews what any Number to i 0000 ought to weigh according to the Spanifh Standard, and at the fame time Ihew the Number of Dollars, both according to the Spaniih Way of reckoning of four to a Piftole, and the Number of Dollars they are worth according, to their intrinfic Value in com¬ pairing Gold and filver together, according to their refpeedive Value in Europe.- Such ■ Computation, I apprehend wiil be allowed to beof Neceflity made by Merchants, and which is here done to their hand at one View. The Pages 66 and 67 reduces Dollars in the fame Manner into Sterling-as the two'preceding Pages do Piltoles, which have their Ufe. , . Page 68 arid 69 reduces Jamaica intoTrilhMoney, and Page 70 and 71 Irilh into‘Jamaica Money, and at the fame Time Irilh Money into Spaniih. Table Page 72 reduces Dollars, -Piltoles, Silver and Gold, by Weight into each otheri -‘‘Table Page 73 reduces Spaniih Weight into Englilh -Avoirdupoife,, and Table Page 74, reduces Avoirdupoife Weight into Spaniih. Page 75 and 76 reduces Spaniih Vars and Engiilh Yards alternatetyinto'each ocher. Page 77 '' » i2 - , and DEDICATION. vii and 78 are two general IntereftTables,, fuited to the Intereft of Bonds and Mortgages in'Britifh America, which with very little Trouble will anfwer the End of the moll voluminous Intereft Tables for the Rates of Intereft they are calculated." The two Tables in Page 26 and 47 are calculated for the particular ufe of the Merchant Adventurers that refide in Great Britain, by which they may eafiiy know on receiving the Account of' Sales from their Faftor or Corrolpondent in the Weft Indies, how- much Profit per Cent has been gained on the Sale of the Goods, and" if the fame have come to a good or bad Market. That in Page 26 is fuited to luch Sales of Goods as are made in Jamaica Currency, and that in Page 47 to fuch Sales as are made in Spanifh Money. The Chains of Tables with the Profits per Cent at the Tops of the Colums will do this, but it will require a little Time to fearch theTable to find out the proper Profit perCent. which by thofe Tables is done directly. Page 79 is a Table of Time fhe.ving bylnfpeftion the'Number of Days from any Day in any Month to the fame Day in any other Month. The Ufe of thefe Tables are exemplified in the Introduction, in ftating the Account of a Bond or Mortgage that has been depending for feveral Years, and Sums paid at different Times, a Thing neceffary to be known by all Accountants, at home as well as abroad, and has fomething more of Judgment in doing it aright, than fmart young Accountants imagine. The cautious Hints, Obfervations and Direflions herein contained, are the Refult of my own Ex¬ perience for many years when I was on the Spot. via DEDICATION. What I have faid in regard to the Trying the Qualities of Gold and Silver Bars hydroftatically by the common Bajlance, jjiay> if carefully put in Praffice, be ufeful in fuch Places where there is no Opportunity of trying them by other Methods. The Principle? tJus Method is founded O.n are the fame as thofe of the belt Writers on experimental Philofophy few many years laftpaft, and in which they all nearly agree. I Ihall trouble you here no more with the Contents of the Book, but leave it to your candid perufal, wifhing that on all Occafions the fame may he as ufeful to you as is my Pefire and Intention,. I am. GENTLEMEN, Your obliged humble Servant. London, Oftob. 1, 1765- JOHN WRIGHT. TH E ( ix ) INTRODUCTION. T HE great Difference there- is . between the Values and Denominations of the current Monies of Great Britain, Ireland, Jamaica, the feveral North American Colonies, and Spanifh Money, and Englifh and Spanilh Weights and Meafures in refpecf to each other, occafion, confequently, Skill, Time and Trouble, to reduce thefe different Monies into each other, and Goods are generally, if not always, invoiced in the Money of the Place from whence they are configned or exported from, fo that to know at what Price the Goods ought to be fold at the foreign Market, to fecure to the Seller a certain Profit of fo much per Cent, will require two Computations; firff, of the prime Coft, as per Invoice, into the Money of the Place of. Sale; and another for the advance Price of fo much per Cent, upon the Money of the Country where the Goods are fold: Or, as in the following Inftances; to make an advance of fo much per Cent, on the Sterling Coft, and then reduce the fame into the Currency or Money of the Place the Goods are fold at. Suppole a'Trunk of any kind of Goods valued at 40I. Sterling, for how much Jamaica Money muft the Con¬ tents be fold to gain 45 per Cent, on the Sterling Coil ? Firft, 45 per Cent, advance on 40I. the Sterling Coft, will be found to be 58I. Sterling; and 58I. reduced into Ja¬ maica Currency at 140 per Cent. Exchange is 81I, 4s. the. Sum in Jamaica Money the' Goods muft be fold at to gain 45 per Cent on the Sterling Coft, which Queftion is anfwered by Infpe&ion by the Table Page 14, and will be found to'be 81I. 4s. Jamaica Money as before. If it was b required x INTRODUCTION. required to find how many Spanifli milled Dollars the fa id Goods muft be fold for to gain the like Profit of 45 per Cent, fuppofing the Spanilh Dollar valued at 4s. yd. Sterling, after two Redudlions the Anfwer will be found to be 253 Dollars, fee the Anfwer in the Table Page 35. As many of thefe neceffary Queftions may be refolved in five Minutes Time by the Tables, as can be done in fe- veral Hours by Computation by the beft Methods: Further Ufesof the Tables anfwering the End will be Ihewn far¬ ther on. I am very fenfible of, and what muft be acknowledged by all, That there is no fuch Thing in the general Courfe of Trade in any Part of the commercial World, as the fixing a certain Price on the Sale of Merchandize, of what Kind foever, to gain a certain Profit per Cent, as the Sel¬ ler may propofe to himfelf; the Plenty or Scarcity, the great or little Demand, the Corruptibility or Durablenefs of the Goods, the Plenty or Scarcity of Money in, or proper Produce of the Country where the Goods are fold, will altogether, or any of them, fo affeft the Price on the Sales as will render it impoffible to fix a Price to gain a ftated Profit. But notwithftanding this Uncertainty, there is, with¬ out Doubt, a certain Price to be expefted for Goods fold at a foreign Market, to afford a fufficient Profit to defray all the contingent Charges incident to the Trade, and at the fame Time fecure to the Adventurer a reafonable clear Profit on the Sales. But what Profit per Cent, may be ex- petted to be made on the Sterling Invoice in Jamaica, &c. to defray all Charges and fecure a reafonable Profit to the European Merchant, is a difficult Queftion, abounding with fo many different Circumftances as to render it very difficult, if not impoffible, to admit of an unexceptiona¬ ble Anfwer; for in Time of War, Goods are dearer in England, &c. than in Time of Peace ; Freight double or more both out and home; Infurance three, four, or five Fold, &c. according as Trade is protetted or expofed to the Ravage of the Enemy: Thefe Circumftances alone fhcw the Difficulty of the 'Queftion before us, but there are feveral others behind that ftill more puzzle the fame, - '•a Goods of the fame Kind and Goodnefs configned from difierent Pcribns at the fame Time, are often charged in INTRODUCTION. , xj the Invoices from 15, 20, to 30 per Cent, or upwards, one more than the other, becaufe l'ome are configned from the Manufacturer, others from the fecond and third Hand Dealer, and if the Goods come from the latter, it is Odds if they will fetch in Jamaica, &c. what they are charged in England, as I have known in many Inftances ; and howridiculous mult a FaCtor or Supercargo look, if he asks an advanced Price on fuch over-rated Goods, is eafy to guefs, and few would care to have fuch Confignments, except they had the Liberty to fell them at a fuitable Price. In the Houfes in Jamaica where Goods come from the Ma¬ nufacturers, or from the next Dealer, and who charge in the Invoices the loweft Prices, fome Eftimate may be made of the felling Price to gain a Profit expeCted, if it can be agreed upon how much per Cent, clear of all Risk, fhould content an Adventurer in the Jamaica Trade. Here fol¬ lows a Computation of the Charges on a Cargoe of dry Goods in Time of Peace, viz. Freight on an Average 2 ~ per Cenf. Infurance out 3 ditto; Commiflion and Storeage in Jamaica 7 i. ditto ; CommifEon on Returns 5 per Cent. Infurance on ditto 4 per Cent, back to Europe; Freight, if the Returns are made in Gold or Silver Coin or Bullion, 2 J per Cent, amounting together to 25 per Cent, to which ought to be added 6 per Cent. Infurance againft bad Debts, will make 31 per Cent, contingent Charges on Sales and Returns .- This laft Charge of 6 per Cent. In¬ furance againft bad Debts, is, I think, quite reafonable, and ought to be admitted, as well as any of the former that are actually paid, and I have known it allowed to One of the greateft Houfes in Kingfton in Jamaica by the En- glifh Merchants ; for which Confideration of 6 per Cent, engaging to make good all out-ftanding Debts occafioned by the Sale of Goods, I am in great Doubt if 6 per Cent, ever did, will, or can (in the general Courfe of Trade in Jamaica if allowed to a Fadtor) fufficiently indemnify him, but that he will be a lofer by taking the out-ftanding Debts upon himfelf on thofe Terms. The Freights and Infurance on Money being as above ftated, 6 J per Cent, would be faved when good Bills are remitted; but fuch are the great Inconveniencies and Difappointments that attend Bills that are fent back protefted, fo that 6 J per Cent. Charges on a fure and certain Remittance, as Calh is, in xii - INTRODUCTION. many Cafes preferable to the Precarioufnefs of Bills; but as bills to a great amount remitted home meet with due Honour, fome Part of the 6 J per Cent, may be taken from the 31 per Cent Charges eftimated as above. Suppofe 4 per Cent, deducted, remains 27 per Cent. Now for the Profit on the Sale of Goods taken from what is frequently practifed: Doubling the Prime Colt of the Sterling Money to receive fo much in Jamaica Currency, that is 200I. Ja¬ maica Money, for tool. Sterling: By the Table Page 3, 2col. Jamaica Money, is equal to 142I. 17s. id. J, which is 42I. 17s. id. 2 grofs Profit, from which take '27I. Charge as above, leaves 15I. 17s. id. 2 Profit per Cent, from which ought to be deduced Hill 5 per Cent. Intereft on icol. for 18 Months, is 7I. 10s. there remains only 81 . 7s. id". 2 neat Profit on an Adventure of icol. Ster¬ ling fold as above. I fear 18 Months is too Ihort a Time to expedl compleat Returns from Jamaica, fo that the In¬ tereft, 1 think, is not an improper Charge. Sometimes there are lucky Hits, that a greater'Pront can be com¬ manded than here computed ; but I am very apprehenfive, from my own Experience, that the whole Jamaica Trade, in Time of Peace, for the Illand’s Confumption, does not, on an Average of years, exceed the Profit aforfaid. In Time of. War, when Freights and Infurance run high. Goods fhould proportionably advance in their Price, and the Merchant, Fadlor, &c. muft, as much as he can (and as the Market will admit) ftrive to keep up his Goods to a Price adequate to the contingent Charges incumbent on them for the Time being. In the foregoing Computation, I have fuppoltJ the Returns to.be made in Cafti, or Bills, but as the greateft Part of the Returns are made in Pro¬ duce of Sugar, Rum, &c. it may be imagined by. fome that a ccnfiderable Profit may arife from fuch Returns on their Sale in England, &c. and be fo much additional to what may be gained in Jamaica; but fuch as fancy fo, I dare fay have never been Adventurers themfelves, nor much verfed in that Trade; and I doubt if the Merchants in general trading to Jamaica, have much Caufe to rejoice over the Profits of their Returns in Produce, and would always prefer a Cafti Remittance, or Bills that are punc¬ tually paid. When INTRODUCTION. xiii When the Spaniards come to Jamaica with a large Sum of Money to veft in Goods, the Merchants there will naturally he glad to deal with them upon as eafy Terms as with the Inhabitants of the Country for ready Money, and therefore the Profit is the fame. If our Traders from Jamaica or North America are admitted into their Polls in America by Licenfe from their Governors, which is com¬ monly allowed for Negroes and Provifions, and fome times for other Goods, a much clearer Profit is to be expected there, over and above that which could be made in Jamaica, as the Expence of Freight, Port Charges and occafional Demurages, would exceed that at Jamaica, or to pay and make good the fame if from Jamaica. Trading to the Spanifh Main, the South Keys on Cuba, or other Places in the Jamaica Sloops is very precarious, admitting fome Times with lucky Hits, at other Times with great Lofles and Difappointments, fo that no guefs Can hardly be made what Profit is equal to the Rifle, and if the Spaniards fhould be as vigilant with their Guarda Coftas to prevent this Trade, as they have been informer times, I doubt if that Trade could be infured in London at Icfs than 35 per Cent; in many Cafes Infuran'ce could not be made at all without a much higher Premium; and it were to be wilhed, there was no Occafion for this Trade for the future, and it is to be hoped it is now in the Power of the Britilh Nation, to drive on a great Trade with the Spa¬ niards, without having Recourfe to forcing it, as the Term is, which is War in the Midll of Peace, and attended with many tragical Circumftanccs. Let the Spaniards he en- 'couraged to come to Jamaica, Mobilie, Penfacola, or even to Saint Auguftine, to lay'out their Money in Goods at a reafonahle Rate, and that the Spaniards may be invited fo to do, let there be always a.grand Magazine of all Sorts of Goods fit for the Spanifh Market, kept at all thefe Places, efpecially at Mobilie and Penfacola, which Magazines of Goods ought to be furnilhed by Merchants in Great Britain or Ireland that are really concerned in the Manufacture of the'Goods, that they may be afforded the cheaper, that tlie Spaniards may be the more induced to trade with and vifit thofe Places. All Perfon acting in the Capacities atorefaid, in Jamaica or any Part of the -Weft Indies, ir.uk be very circumfpect xiv I N f RO DU C f I 0 N. in regard to the Monies they receive in Payment both it* regard to its Goodnefs and Weight, and to make a proper Choice of fuch as they intend to remit to Europe or North America, for whatever the nominal Value may be in Ja¬ maica or elfewhere, where light Monies pafs current, it will only be valued in England according to its Weight and intrinfic Value. The current Money of Jamaica, both Gold and Silver, hath in Procefs of Time been fo greatly reduced by clipping, filing, £sV. that the Angle Ryals called there Bitts, are fo diminiflied in Weight, that Eight of them were originally equal in Weight to a Spanifh milled Dollar, and paffed current for one eighth Part of the fame; ten of them now go for a Dollar, and do not all weigh fo much as one. It hath been proved by Experiment, that taking 5 1 . in Dollars, 5I. in half Dollars, 5I. in double Ryals, ul. 17s. 6d. in Piftoles, and ul. 17s. 6d. in Doubloons, and weighing the fame, and computing the Value according to the Price of Gold and Silver by weight 43 1 . 15 s. by tale, in all the Sorts of Money before men¬ tioned, were only worth 39I. is. 8d. by Weight, which proves a Lofs of iol. 13s. 4d. per Cent, by clipping or other Means, ufed in debafing the Money. The common Currency being thus diminiflied and not fit to fend off theliland as a Remittance to Europe or North America ; it hath been a Practice for many Years for the Merchants, Faftors, &V. to change their light Money for Money of full Weight, when they had Occafion to make Remittance to Europe or North America. Rich Jews, and others, who had great Returns in Money by trading with the Spaniards, were thePerfons that changed heavy Money for 1 light, arid the Price was ufually 7s, 6d. per Ounce in Jamaica, light Money for Silver by Weight, being a Premium of 4 per Cent. Within thefe few Years they have made a Law in, the Ifland to encourage the Circulation of Money full Weight, viz. that every Spanilh milled Dollars of 17 dwts. 8grs. ihould pafs for 6s. 6d. Currency, which is exaftly in Pro¬ portion to Silver, at 7s. 6d. per Ounce; thefe Dollars that are Weight, are ftruck with a Stamp to denote them fuch; the old Dollars pafs at 6s. 3d. and the Ryals at 7 d. i as formerly. This Law made in Jamaica for circulating the D»Uar full Weight at 6s. 6d. Currency, is confiftent with 1 N ? R O D U C ? 1 0 N. xv good Policy, and the Rules ot equity and Reafon, as well in refpeft to the home Trade of the Ifland, as that with Great Britain, Ireland and the Northern Colonies.—In regard to the Trade with Great Britain, Silver at 7s. 6d. Currency, in Jamaica per Ounce, and 5s. 4d. Sterling per Ounce in England is very near in Proportion as the Par of Exchange, fixed with England, having been for many Years 100I. Sterling for 140J. Jamaica Currency; for if you fay by the Rule of Three : If 5s. q.d. requires 7s. 6d. what will iool. require ? the fourth proportional will be found to be 140 J. By the before mentioned Law they have fixed the circulating Value of the Spanifh Gold that is full Weight, viz. Doubloons at 5I.—two Piftoie Pieces 2l. 10s.—and the Piftoie 1 1 . 5s. and the fhort of Weight to pafs at their old Value, viz. Doubloons at 4I. 15s,— double Piftoles 2I. 7s. 6s.—and Angle Piftoles at il. 3s. gd. On which the following Obfervation may ufefully be made, viz. Firft, although the advanced Value of the Spanifh. Gold that is full Weight may be right in comparing that Value with the circulating Value of the light Silver, that is a Doubloon full Weight may be as well worth 4I. 15s. and the fame Doubloon that is Weight may be intrinfically of fuperior Value to 5I. of Silver in light Ryals or Bitts: but taking what has juft been faid for Each, as I believe it is, yet on Examination it will appear that the Legiflature of Jamaica, in this Part of their Law or Aft of Afiembly, have been very partial to themfelves, and the Intereft of the Ifland, to the Prejudice of the Merchants Adventurers thither from Great Britain or elfewhere, by thus valuing their Gold above the Par of Exchange, and difproportional to the Value of Silver they have rated by the fame Law, which I am about to make appear by a fair Computation, viz. the full Weight of a Spanifh Doubloon is iydwts. Sgrs. being the fame as the milled Dollar, and can never be expefted in a large Quantity of that Coin, to exceed that Weight on an Average, but very little, as has been experienced. Now Spanifh Gold in Time of Peace is feldom valued or can be fold in London at above 3I. 18s. per Ounce; then iydwts. 8 grs. at the Price aforefaid, will by Calculation found to be 3I. 7s. yd. 1 q. and the Sterling Value of 4 Piftoles by the Table Page 64 is the fame, as by thereunto referring will appear. The Par of Exchange xvi INTRODUCTION. Exchange may be thus tried, viz. fay by the Rule of Pro¬ portion, as 3I. 7s. yd.i is to 5I. lo is iool. to 147 1 . 12s. and 8d. which is fo much Jamaica Money for icol. Sterling, being full 5I. per Cent. Sterling above Par, and fo much is the heavy Doubloon over rated above the Value of Silver, at 7s. 6d. the Ounce, and fo much would be the Lofs or difference, in making a Remittance from Jamaica m fuch Gold inltead of Silver. If they had made a Law, that the Spanifh Gold full Weight, fltould pafs at the old Valuation, it would have, been no more than equitable, but by thus ftretching the Value,.it is an Impofition on Strangers to the Amount above, as I hope has fufficiently been made appear, Notwithftanding the over-rating their Gold in. Jamaica by a LaW, is fo prejudicial to Strangers; yet it is efteemed by the fettled Inhabitants not concerned in Trade out of the Ifland, a very patriotic one, tending greatly to the Advantage of the Bland, by making Money more plenty amongft them, for according to. their Maxims of Policy, if there is a certain Lofs in fhipping heavy Gold as well as light Gold and Silver, the Merchants will he thereby forced to veil their Money in the Produce of the Bland, to make Remittance, and let the Money flay in the Bland. But ftretching the nominal Value in any Part of the Globe, or commercial World, above its intrinfic Value, cannot long be prejudicial to Foreigners that trade thither, forlnhance- mer.t in the Value of Gold and Silver in any Place, will naturally produce a proportionable Rife in the Price of Foreign Goods fold at that Market; for a Rife of 5 per Cent, in the nominal Value of Money, fltould naturally produce the fame Rife in the Price of Goods, in the fame Manner and Degree, that Goods fhould be fold for fo much the more money in one or two Places as the nominal Value of Money in one Place is greater than in the other. One inftance will make this clear. In Bofton in New' England th? Dollar is valued at 6s. od. and at New York 8s. od. and in Proportion to thefe two Values of the Dollar, tool, in Bofton Money is worth 1331. 6s. 8d. in New York Money, and the like in any two or more Places in Pro¬ portion is the nominal Value of one and the fame identical Money differs Jn the Places refpeclively; and what holds good INTRODUCTION. xvH good for different Places, holds the fame for a Change in one and the fame Place at different Times. In trading with the Spaniards, whether in their ojvn Ports in the Weft Indies, or in their Creeks and Bays, or with fuch as come with Money to buy Goods at Jamaica, Penfacola and Mobille in Weft Florida, or at any other Port or Settlement belonging to the Englifh in America, great Caution mult be taken in regard to the Receipts of the Monies, for in making a Bargain with the Spaniards in the Difpofal of a Parcel of Goods, if the Seller is kept ignorant in what Sort of Money he is to be paid, and fells his Goods upon aSuppofition that he will be paid in hard Dollars (that are full Weight) and when he comes to he paid'in other Monies that are light, he may be drawn into a Difcount of between S and 20 per Cent, for Inftance, if he is paid in genuine Piftoles full Weight (which ought to be tried by weighing that they are fuch) at the Rate of 4 Pieces of Eight to a Piftole, fuch a Payment is a Lofs of 8 per Cent and upwards, as appears by the Table Page 65, where is fhewn how much is loft on receiving any Number of Piftoles inftead of hard Dollars; but if the Spaniards make Payment in light fingle Ryah, and tenders 8 of them for a Dollar, when 10 of them are not worth one, it is making a Difcount of above 20 per Gent, and is fo much really loft if the Money is brought away and imported into any other Country, and can only be remedied when there is an Opportunity (that doth not always happen) of chang¬ ing the faid light Money with the Spaniards for good Dollars at a Premium from 6 to 9 per Cent, and is ftill fo much loft on receiving fuch light Money, and perhaps the very fame Spaniards that changed the Money will make a Tender of the lame light Money to the fame Perfon in other future Dealings. This Trick of the Spaniards has been greatly encouraged, and fome fay took its Original from the Pradfice of the EnglifhTraders thcinfelves, to the great Scandal of the Perfons concerned therein, and which is pradlifed with Impunity; no Englifh Law as yet made, having made it criminal, or perhaps can, as it is tranfadfed in the Dominions of another Prince and State. The Mates and petty Officers on board the Trading Vefrets that go to the Spanilh Main, often carry eonfiderable Quantities of light Ryals with them from Jamaica, either xviii INTRODUCTION. their own Property or fent by them as a Venture by feme Perfons in Jamaica, which when changed into Dollars yield 14 perCent. Profit: This they are obliged to do with all the Secrecy poffible with the Spaniards, as it is often done on Board the Veffel the Dollais are brought on Board of, to be laid out in Merchandize, v/hich by this vile Trade are intercepted, and the light Money ferve the Spaniards to lay out with the Merchant or Supercargoe to a Lofs to the Trade as above mentioned. The Men on Board the trading Veffels that are found doing this, though it cannot be made a criminal Matter by our Laws, yeti have known them made to forfeit their Wages for the Voyage, for being guilty of it. When the Spaniards are treating about the Purchafe of a Parcel of Goods fefpeciallv intheTrade on boardVelfels) they are for the moll Part very referved and conceal as much as poffible from the Seller what Sort of Money they have, or intend to make Payment in, whether in Piftoles, Dollars, or Ryals, which if Gold or light will be a Lofs as aforefaid. The bell Precaution the Seller can take, I prefume is this, to keep up the Price of his Goods as if he was to be paid in the vvorft Money (light Jarpaica Ryals or Gold) to fecure a fufficient Profit on the invoice Price to allow for the Lofs or Drfcount in taking fuch Money: This Conduft will bring the Spaniard, if he realty wants the Goods, to offer a Price, and if he has heavy, Dollars will offer Payment in fuel}, and haggle hard for a great Abatement, well knowing the Difference between them and light Money, and what Allowances he ought to have in his Price thereupon. I have faid before, that it is on Ship Board, that the Spa¬ niards have the beft Opportunities in paying light Money and impofing it on the Traders, but when they come to Jamaica or elfewhere to buy Goods they bring moftly hard Dollars and Gold or genuine Spanifh Money of the fmaller Sorts, as double Ryals, Ryals and quarter Ryals, that has never been clipped or diminifhed, except a little in the Wear in Circulation (for all their Money is not new, in common with that of other Nations.) In a great Quan¬ tity of Treafure I have feen a certain Quantity of Spanifh filver Money of different Sorts, as fuppofe 100 hard Dollars, 100 Dollars in half Dollars, 100 Dollars in Ryals, 100 Dollars in half Ryals, and 100 Dollars in quarter Ryals, put / ;V r R O'D U C f I 0 N. xix 'put into different bags and weighed, and found to be. Dollars the heavieft, half Dollars fome what lighter, double Rvals as good as half Dollars, Ryals the lighteft, half Ryals and quarters nearly as heavy as Dollars, though by their Smallnefs and Number, there is fome Trouble in telling over any confiderable Sum in fuch Money, good Weights and Scales are therefore neceflary Implements, and the Ufe of them fhould be duly attended to ; what any Quantity of Spanifh Gold or Silver ought to weigh is readily Ihewn by a Table Page 57 and 65. Some Times the Spaniards offer Payment in Bars or Ingots of Gold or Silver, und fome Times in old wrought Plate, taking any of which is ha¬ zardous, becaufe if you are not in a Place where you can have the Bullion allayed and know its Goodnefs, a great Deceit may be impofed in the Bars of Gold and Silver. Wrought Plate may be taken in Payment by Weight, by any Perfon that is a Judge of Silver, which if near Standard has a remarkable inimitableWhitenefs peculiar to thatMetal, which a fmall Degree of Adulteration betrays. The Plate they have in the Spanifh Weft Indies is e'ftfemed good, and I have known large Quantities of it taken in Payment. Virgin Silver, which the Spaniards call Pena, is a fpungy light Lump of Silver that has never been melted, and is nearly as Foft as Loaf Sugar, great Rilk is run in taking fuch in Payment; for it will imbibe or drink up much Water, and if that is nealed out by Fire it may have bafe Ingredients mixed with it, in fhort, it Ihould never be taken in Payment or Merchandize before it is melted down, for I have known a great Lofs of Weight by melting of it. Gold Duft is fome times offered in Payment, but that is as precarious as the laft, as it may be adulterated with a Mixture of Brafs or Copper Filings and other Traflr ; and although there are certain and infallible Methods to deteft the Fraud, yet but few of thofe whofe Intereft it is to guard againft being impofed upon, are furnifhed with the neceflary Inftruments and chymical Preparations that are ufed to de¬ tect fuch Frauds ; or if they have, do not fufficiently apply themfelves to a judicious Application cf them, fo that either from Ignorance or want of Conveniencies, or Ne- gledl, many have been greatly impofed upon in receiving Gold Duft in Payment, on the Coaft of Guinea and elfe- where. Qenuiue Gold Duft that has not been adulterated, XX INTRODUCTION. or which is but little mixed with any Particles of Matter of a bafe kind that may naturally adhere to it, is a valuable thing, and if all neceflary Precautions are taken to be allured it is fuch, may be fafely taken in Payment to any Amount. I knew once above 5000I. worth of Gold Dull melted down at one Time, and favv it weighed both before and after it was melted, and to the beft of my Remembrance it loft about 7 per Cent, of its Weight in the Fire; and the Bars when allayed were found to be little fhort of Standard Gold or nearly in Goodnefs to Guineas. The Value of Spanifh Silver compared with their Gold Was originally as fixteen to one. Weight for Weight of each Metal, and both of equal Quality to Sterling Money or wrought Plate made in England, has varied within a Century paft full Eight per Cent, in America (as aforefaid) Silver having become dearer, compared with the Value of Gold by that Difference from various Caufes which have equally affected the Value of Silver in Europe and other Parts of the commercial World. The firft and principal Caufe of the increafe of the V alue of Silver compared to that of Gold, is the great increafe and Extention of the Eaft India Trade within 80 Years laft paft. The vaft Quantity of Silver exported from Europe to Afia by many of the Nations and States of Europe now carrying on that Trade, give theEuropeans little more than thePleafure of handling a vc'ry great Part of the Silver brought from Spaniih Ame¬ rica, the greateft Part of which is {hipped off again for India. The-.proportional Quantity that ftays in Europe, compared to what is exported to India, is hard if not im- poffible to alcertain, but it is highly probable more than three Fourths of the Produce of all the Silver Mines in Spaniih Amet ’ca tliat has been imported into Europe, has been and is exported to the Eaft Indies, fuch a Drain of Bullion has confequently railed or kept up the Value of Silver in Europe, in Proportion to that of Gold. The Scarcity of Silver Mines in Afia, and particularly in China, (the Chinefc having Gold Mines and fewor butpoorSilver ones) the proportional Value of Gold and Silver there is fuch, that I' have known Officers on Board China Ships, who haVe carried out 10000 Pieces of Eight to change for Gold, make fomething above 40 per Cent Profit by their Adventures; fo that the' private Trade alone has from Time INTRODUCTION. xxi Time to Time carried out vaft Quantities of Silver, and brought back Gold in Exchange, befides what the Eaft India Company lend on their own Account to buy Gold with. _ Peruvian Bark, Cocoa Nuts, Sarfaparilla, and Tortoife- fhell, are Commodities to be found in the Bay of Mexico, and if good of their Kind, and well bought, will anfwer well in Europe. Mahogany is a never-failing Merchandize in Eu¬ rope if good, and bought on adequate Terms; nor is there any Fear of the Britilh Market being over-ftocked therewith, whatever Quantities may be imported. The beautiful Houlhold Furniture made there of growing more and more in Falhionamongftall Sorts of People in Britain, and alfo in the Eaftern Countries ; but if the Quantity im¬ ported fhould exceed the Demand of Manufacture here for our own Ufe, or for Exportation, which Manufacture is confiderable at prefent, it no doubt would find a Vent to other Countries to be exported in the rough Plank.-It is faid there is a great deal of Mahogany growing in the Floridas in the inland Parts of the Country, which if it can, without too much Expence be brought to be fhipped, will be cut down and fent home, and it will be fortunate for the firft Settlers in the Floridas, if they can find fuch a valuable natural Production in any confiderable Quantity, to fhip for Europe to furnifh them with Neceflaries till they can cultivate the Grounds and raife fuch Productions as the Soil and Climate will admit. But whether the Floridas abound with Mahogany or not, the Ifland of Cuba, which is but a final 1 Diftance off, amply abounds with that Com¬ modity ; the Spaniards, perhaps, may be induced to bring large Quantities thereof to Mobille, Penfacola, or Saint Auguftine, to exchange for Merchandize on advantageous Terms. In a great Parcel of Mahogany it cannot be ex- peCted that it fliould be all of the largeft Size, it is a Com¬ modity, like many others, muft be taken promifcuoufly as it runs fmall with large Scantling : The principal Cautions to be taken are, firft, that the Wood is really Mahogany, and not Cedar, which the ftrong Smell of a Chip of Cedar compared to that of Mahogany, will eafily betray, befides the fuperior Solidity and Weight of Mahogany. Secondly, fee that the Planks or Trees are found, and as free from Shake xxii I.Nt RO DUCT 10 M Shake and Splits as poffible. Thirdly, fee that all the Planks or Blocks are brought to fquared Edges, and fawed off fquare at the Ends; for, on its Arrival in England, all the Irregularities are reduced by the fuiorn Meafurers in Favour of the firft Purchafer or Timber Merchant, and it is fo much Lofs in the Freight to lumber the Ship with Wood to be given away. Raw dried Hides in the Hair are no defpicable Article, provided they have been caiefuily dried and managed, and of which Commodity Cuba can furnilh a large Quantity! This Article alone was fo great an Object in Trade to the South Sea Company, that they have imported forty thou- fand Hides in the Hair from Buenos Ayres, in South America in one Year, befides what they imported from other Spa- nifh Ports they traded to. The Cautions to be taken in dealing in Raw Hides arethefe: Firft, that they be of a proper Size of the large Bullock Kind: Secondly, that they have been well dried and carefully managed before they come to your Hands, for if raw dried Hides in the Hair have not had, great Care taken of them immediately after they are taken off the Beaft, they are fubjeft to a fatal Diftemper that will deftroy, and render them good for no¬ thing, the Occafion of which is this; in taking off the Hides, efpecklly if done by llovenly Butchers, a good deal of Flelh is ciit off with the Hide, and if the Hides are not fo perfe&ly dried in the Sun as that the flefliy Sub- ftance becomes fo dry as to crumble off like Snuff or Dull before they are folded up and packed into Bundles; a Maggot will breed, and in Confequence thereof, an Infedl that will eat the Hide in Holes like a Sieve. All Hides bought in America ought to be carefully examined in this Point, for if the Vermin have already taken Poffeffion, though not yet made Devaftation, during the Voyage to Europe they w-ill do their Work effeftually, to the great Lofs of the Concerned. To prevent this laft Accident, before'the Hides are Clipped, let every one of them be opened in a dry Place and thrown over a ftretched Line, or over a Rail, and beat heartily with a Stick both Infide and out with as much Diligence as an Upholder cleans a Carpet, and well brulhed at the fame Time; fuch Operation will clear the Hide of Infedl that, may have already har¬ boured therein, and if the Hides are not already injured by INTRODUCTION. xxiii by the fame, they will arrive in good Condition in Europe, if no Accident happen to them by getting wet in the Voyage. Raw dried Hydes are fold in Jamaica at a Dollar each by the Hundred, which if they arrive in good Order in Europe, may fetch 15s. or more. This Commodity is chiefly dealt in by Captains of Ships from Jamaica, as a perquifite Article in Trade as they came Home as Privilege Freight; but it often happens that the Hides are fpoiled by Vermin for want of the Precautions aforefaid; if they were falted fcon after they are taken from the Bealls Backs, and afterwards well dried, it is probable the Accidents be¬ fore mentioned might be infallibly prevented, but as this is an Expence and Trouble, and in fome Cafes not prac¬ ticable, the Management of this Article in Trade has gone on in a hurtful Way to the great Prejudice of the Advan¬ tage that otherwife might have been gained thereby. / lhall fay little of Sarfaparilla, Havanna Snuff, Tortoife- Shell, and other Articles in Trade to be found in the Bay of Mexico ; the judicious dealing in thefe Articles mull: be referred to a vigilent Look-out of the Merchant Factor, &c. by keeping an uninterrupted Correfpondence with Europe to be informed of the Prices they yield, and the De¬ mand forthofe or any other American Productions in Eu¬ rope. The Packets now regulated carry and bring Advices in the Courfe of every Month from all Parts of Britifh America, fo that nothing by a lhameful Negligence on one Side or the other, can prevent every neceffary In¬ telligence, being properly conveyed between Correfpon- dejjts. U S E of the T A B L E S. The Table Page 2, reduces Jamaica Money into Ster¬ ling. EXAMPLE t. A Planter in Jamaica is indebted to a Merchant there 575I. ios. 3d. Jamaica Currency, for which the Planter draws a Bill in favour of the Merchant on his Correfpon- dent in London, for hew much Sterling muft the Bill be mad® xxiv INTRODUCTION. made out for? by collecting from the Table the Anfwer will be found to be 41 il. is. yd. 2q. as under. Jamaica Currency. Sterling. 1. s. d. 1. s. d. q. 500 0 O 75, 0 0 o 10 o 003 357 53 o 0 2 10 i ” 5 1 7 1 3 021 575 3 4 i: 7 2 EXAMPLE n. A Cargoe of Goods (hipped from Jamaica configned to Great Britain, amounts to 5000I. Jamaica Currency as per Invoice, for how much Sterling mull Infurance be made on that Cargoe, to fecure the Value in Cafe of Lofs ? turn to the Table and you will 'find the Anfwer to be 357 il. 8s. 6d. 3q. Sterling. The Table Page 4, is the reverfc of the Iaff, and re¬ duced Sterling into Jamaica Currency v Here follows two Examples which reduces the Anfwer to the two foregoing Examples back, again into Jamaica Currency, and (hews the Truth of both Tables, and may at all Times be fo ufed to prove the Truth of what may be done by them. EXAMPLE I. A Cargoe of Goods coft 41 il. is. yd. 2q. Sterling, what is the Value in Jamaica Money ? from the Table colledl as' under, and you have for Anfwer 575I. 10s. 3d. iq. Ja¬ maica Currency Sterling. 1. s. d. q. 400 0 0 0 , ii 0 • 0 0 0100 't o 7 0 0002 411 ; I 7 2 Jamaica Currency.- 1. s. d. q. 560 0 0 0 15 8 0 0 0143 0 0 ,9 3 0 0 ° 3 575 10' 3 1 EX- INTRODUCTION. xxv EXAMPLE II. In 3571!. 8s. 6d. 3q. Sterling, how much Jamaica Cur¬ rency ? col I eft from the Table and you will have for An- fwer 5000I. Jamaica Currrency. Sterling 1. s. d. 3000 0 0 500 0 0 71 0 0 080 006 000 0 0 o 0 0 3 Jamaica Currency. 1. s. d. q. 4200 000 700 000 99 800 0 II 2 2 0082 0 OIO 357 1 6 3 5000 o As in large Sums fo in final], the Jamaica Value at prime Coft on any fingle Article in an Invoice of Goods, or the Charges per Weight or Meafure may readily be found, and if it fhould be thought expedient, which I think would be very convenient, if every Article in an Invoice was marked in a Parenthefis as under, what the Sterling Coft is in Jamaica Money, it would help to be a Rule to the Faftor how to rate his Goods on the Sale. Suppofe the following to be Articles in an Invoice of a Cargoe of Goods from England, viz. Sterl. J. C. 1 . S. d. 5 doz. of 5-thread Thread Hofe, at 25s. (35s.) 650 5 doz. of Silk ditto, at 55s. (77s.) 13 15 3 50 yards of Dimity, at is. 2d. (2s.5d.-j) 4 7 4 2 4 7 7 The Invoice of every Article in a large Cargo may be thus reduced into Jamaica Money by the Table in a little Time, and put in Parenthefis as above, or marked in the Margine of the Invoice Book; when done, the Merchant may ufe thus: A Plan ter feV. wants one dozen of the Hofe that coft 35 s. Jamaica Money, as in the Parenthefis above, d how xxvi INTRODUCTION. how much muft be charged him to make 60 per Cent. Profit on the Sale. Multiply 35 by 60, and you have 2ijoo Advance, which add to 35s. makes 56s. the felling Price to gain 60 per Cent. ' But this is done without any Trouble by Table Page 17, where under 60 per Cent. Gain, and againft 25s. Sterling Prime Coft is 2I. 16s, Jamaica Currency, to gain 60 per Cent, on the Sterling Coft. Two or three Examples more by the T-abie that Ihews the Prices in Jamaica Money, to make fo much per Cqnt. Gain on the Sterling Coft. EXAMPLE I. A Piece of Gulix Holland coft in England 5I. for how much muft .it be fold at in- Jamaica Currency to gain 70 perCent on the Sterling. Coft ? In Page 19 look for 5I. Sterling prime Coft, and under 70 per Cent, will be found II 1 . 18s. Jamaica Money, the Price required. E X A M P L E II. Prime Coft of any Goods 500I. for how much Jamaica Currency muft the fame be fold for to gain 50 per Cent, on the Prime Coft? In Page 15 againft 500 prime Coft Ster¬ ling, and under 50 per Cent, is, 1050I. Jamaica Money 5 the felling Price to gain 50 per Cent. More Examples are needlefs. Ufe of the Table Page 26. When Goods are fold in Jamaica at a Price different from what may be pointed out by the Ufe of the foregoing Table, to gain a Profit propofed. When the Price the Goods fold for in that Currency is known, and the prime Coft alfo, to know how much per Cent, was gained on fuch Sale; which cannot be done by the laft.Table, but in fuch Cafes where the prime Coft is an even Number of Pounds, Shillings or Pence; to obtain which, divide the Price the Goods ; are fold for in Jamaica Money by the Sterling prime Coft, and’get three Places of Figures m the Quotient, find the faid Quotient in the Table, and againft it is the Profit per Cent, in Sterling Money on the faid Sale. INTRODUCTION. xxvii EXAMPLE I. A Parcel of Goods coft 75 1 . Sterling, and fold for 153 1 . Jamaica Currency; how much per Cent, was gained on the Sale? 153 divided by 75, and continued to three Places of Figures, the Quotient is 204; againft which in the Table is 45 7, that is 45I, and 7 tenths of a Pounds per Cent. Sterling Profit on that Sale. EXAMPLE II. Onefingle Article of Goods coft 15I. Sterling, and fold for 35 1 . Jamaica Money, what is the Gain per Cent? 35 divided by 15 to three Places, the Quotient is 233, againft which in the Table is 66 4, the Profit per Cent. Here it may be obferved, the Work is the fame, whether the Example be in Pounds or Shillings; If entire Numbers of Shillings or Pounds, one or two Cyphers mutt be added, that the Quotient may have three Figures. This Table will be moft ufeful to the Merchants in Britain, to check and compare the Account Sales of their Factors, with the prime Coft, as in the Invoice Book, by which they will fee what per Cent, is gained on the fame. It is indeed attended with a little Trouble, but if prac- tifed a good deal would be very eafy. The Ufe of the Table Page 27 1046. This Table {hews for how much Spanifh Money in Dollars and Ryals, Goods muft be fold for to gain a certain Sum perCent. Profit, from 24 to 100 perCent. EXAMPLE I. A Parcel of Goods coft iool. Sterling, how many Spanifh Dollars muft I receive to gain 70 per Cent, on the Sterling Coft, fuppofe the Dollar valued at 4s. 7d. Sterling; on which Supposition the Table is calculated. In Page 40 look for xool. Sterling prime Coft, and againft it, under 70 per Cent is 741 Dollars, 6 Ryals, 5 ioths. the Spanilh Money required. EX- xxviii INTRODUCTION. EXAMPLE II. A Pair of Silk Stockings coft Sterling 18s. gd. how much Spaniih Money muft be received for the fame to gain 70 per Cent, as before? From the fame Page againft 18s. is 6dol. 4rs. 6 ioths. and againft gd. ars. 2 ioths. to¬ gether -6dol. 6rs. 8 ioths. the felling Price to gain as aforefaid. When the Merchant is fure he is to be paid in Gold, at 4 Dollars to a Piftole, the expe&ed Price is to be computed by this Table per Cent, higher than if the Payment was to be made in Dollars,- as Gold is 8 per Cent worfe than Dollars, as has been faid before; which in the firft Example Ihould have been 77 per Cent, or rather 78, but there being no fuch Number in the Table, the neareft muft be taken. Ufe of the Table Page 47. This fliews the Profit per Cent on the Sale, the Sterling Coft and the Amount of Sales in Spaniih Dollars being given. Rule, divide the Spaniih Money the Goods are fold for by the Sterling Coft, and get 3 Places of Figures in the Quotient (as was done in the Jamaica Money) with which enter the Table .and againft it the Profit per Cent, will be found. example I- iaol. Sterling worth of Goods fell for 741 Dollars, what per Cent.-is gained? ■' 741 divided by 120 gives 617 in the Quotient, againft which is the Table, or the neareft 615 is 41 1 . which is the Profit of fo much per Cent, on the Sale. When the prime Coft is only Shillings, and the Amount of Sales Ryals, or Dollars and Ryals, reduce the Spaniih Money into Ryals, and divide the fame by the Shillings prime Coft, find a Quotient as before, with which enter the Table in the Column belonging to the Shillings, and againft it is the Rate per Cent, required. EX- INTRODUCTION. xxfx EXAMPLE II. Any Thing 14s. Sterling, Prime Coft is fold for 6 doll. I ryal, what is the Gain per Cent ? Firft the Ryals con¬ tained in the faid Money is 49, which divided by 14, yields a Quotient of 350 again!! which in the Table is 100 per Cent. Ufe of the Tables of the North American Currencies reduced into Jamaica Money, and the Contrary. Thefe Tables are fuited to Bofton in New England, York, Penfilvania and South Carolina, the principal Places to the Northward, that trade to Jamaica; and as the Trade of all thofe Places with the Ifland of Jamaica, is very con- fiderable, amounting annually to a large Sum forProvifions; as Flour, Bilket, Cheefe, Pork, Hams, Indian Corn, fait Codj Herrings, Mackarel, Shads, Lamp Oil, &c. as alfo Horfes, live Sheep, Hogs and Geefe, b'c. likewife Lumber, that is Timber, in Scantling, Plank, Shingles, Boards, Staves and Headings for Building, and for making of 60,000 large Calks to pack the Produce of the Hland in. This Trade being fo confiderable, and the Ifland vifited by a great Number of North American Traders who efta- blilh regular Houfes in Kingfton, I hope thefe Tables will be as uleful to them as the others may be to the Merchants that only trade diredtly from Britain with the Ifland. The .Ufe will be beft Ihewn by Examples. EXAMPLE I. A Merchant of Bofton in New England fhips a Cargo of Goods, and configns them for Sale to Kingfton in Ja¬ maica, amount'ng to 1575b BoftonMoney, as per Invoice, how much is that in Jamaica Money? By the Table Page 49, if you colledt the Numbers out of the Table, as in the Examples of reducing Sterling into Jamaica Money and the contrary, the Anfwer will be found to be 1706b 5s. Jamaica Money. Now luppofe he fells the whole Cargo together, (which is often the Cafe) for how xxx INTRODUCTION how much Jamaica Money muft it be fold to gain 50 per Cent? Anfwer 2559I. 7s. 6d. Jamaica Money; obtained thus, multiply 1706I. 5s. by 50, and you have 853I. 2s. 6d. which is the Gain; the fame added to the prime Coft make 2559I. 7s. 6d. any Angle Article may in the like Manner be reduced, and a Computation of the Profit with Eafe made thereupon. Suppofe the North American Mer¬ chant was to be paid the above Sum in milled Dollars, at 6s. 6d. Jamaica Money each; how many Dollars muft he receive for the fame? By the Table Page 53, the Anfwer will be 7875 Dollars precifely. If the Payment fhould be made in Piftoles, at 25s. each, though full Weight, it would be a worfe Payment by 5 per Cent, than good Dollars; as. has been made appear in this Introduction, which I cannot help repeating again, as it is an Impofition on the People that trade to that Ifland, to take Gold for more than it is worth in Proportion to other Monies circu¬ lating in the fame Place, or the Courfe of Exchange with other Countries; and I muft beg Leave here to add an After- Thought that efcaped me when I ftiewed before the Unrea- fonablenefs of the Law made in Jamaica, in advancing the nominal Value of their Gold above 5 per Cent, which is this, that, though they have made fuch a Law in Jamaica, it is no Law till confirmed by the King and Council in Great Britain, and I have not long ago been informed, that the Confirmation of it in England has been prevented, by Cavits or Memorials thrown in at the Council Board to hinder the fame.—The Table that reduces Jamaica Money into that of Bofton, may be ufed in the fame Manner as above, and though fuch Computations relating to Returns made from Jamaica to Bofton, in Produce may feldom be neceflary, yet that Table may be of Ufe to Com¬ manders of Veffels. to reduce the Poft Charges of the Vellel in Jamaica into Bofton Money, which muft be done when he comes to fettle with his Owners. EXAMPLE II. A Cargo of Bifket, Flour, Staves, &c. coft in Philadel¬ phia 1050I. of that Currency; whatis the fame in Jamaica Money, and for how much Jamaica Money muft the fame be fold to gain 70 per Cent on the prime Coft? By INTRODUCTION. xxxi By Table Page 55, the faid Sum in Philadelphia Money will be found to be 910I. Jamaica Cunency ; multiply by 70, and you have 673 1 . the Gain; add the lame to 910I. the prime Coft in Jamaica Money, you have 1547 1 . for the felling Price in Jamaica; in that Currency, and if paid for the fame in Dollars, will come to 4760 Dollars exactly, as may be deduced from Table Page 53.—Or to inftance in a fingle Article, viz. fuppofe Flour coft 10 s. per hundred weight in Philadelphia, for how muft it be fold in Jamaica to gain 40 per Cent? Firft, 10s. Philadelphia Money is 8s. 8d. Jamaica Money, and 40- per Cent. Advance upon that, done in the Manner as above, makes 12s. 2d. 29. the felling Price.—Having thus given Examples for Bofton and Philadelphia, it is needlefs to give any Examples for Caro¬ lina or New York, as the Tables for thefc Places are ufed exadtly in the fame Manner as in the Examples above, in what relates to th*e Trade to Jamaica with the faid Places. Merchants from the Northern Colonies, that trade with the Spaniards for Provifions, &c. may, from the Table abovementioned, inform themfelves of all fuch Queftions as are done before in Jamaica Currency in Spanilh Money; for in all the Tables of the Northern Colonies there are contained Columns that fhew how many Spanifti Dollars are equal to any Sum of their refpective Currencies, fo that the prime Coft of any Goods may be reduced into Spanilh Money with Difpatch and Exactnefs, and any Advance per Cent, may be computed thereon. A few Examples follow. E X A Ad P L E. A Merchant at Bofton in New England, Ihips and con- figns a Cargo of dry fait Cod Filh, Mackarel, Shads, &c. and has a Licence to import them into the Havannah, or any other Spanilh Port in America, the whole of Coft and Charge in Bofton Money 1257I. for how much Spanilh Money muft the whole be fold, to gain 60 per Cent, on the prime Coft ? Turn to Table Page 49, and you will find that 1257 1 . Bofton Money contains 4190 Dollars Spanilh Money, multiplied by 60 (the Advantage or Gain propofed) produces 25 ^Dollars, which in this Cafe is the (aid Gain, add the fame, to 4190 Dollars, the prime Coft, makes 6704 Dollars, the Money that muft be receiver 1 for that *xxii INTRODUCTION. Cargo. The Value in Spanilh Money of any fingle Ar¬ ticle or Goods by Weight or Meafure, may readily be done by this Table, as fait Filh 7s. 6d. per Cent, is 1 dollar 2 ryals Spanifh Money, 60 perCent. Advance on ditto is 2 doll, per Cent, or Quintal, to gain 60 per Cent. Herrings and Mackerel coft 20s. a Barrel; at how much Spanilh Money muft they be fold to gain 50 per Cent ? Firft, 2os/Bofton Money is 3 doll. 2rls. 7 ioths. and that advanced 50 per Cent, (as is done above) becomes 5 doll, the felling Price. Note, in computing the Advance on fingle Articles, it will be expedient to reduce the Spanilh Money that is equal to the firft Coft, into Ryals, which is eafily done ; and then the Produ£t will be Ryals alfo, what may be again turned into Dollars after the Multiplication, and added to the Prime Coft; by fq doing fome Trouble may be faved to the molt expert Computer, and make it eafy toothers. I (hall give no Examples for New York, Philadelphia or South Carolina, as any Queftion of the fame Kind as the above for Bofton muft be anfwered exactly the fame Way. Method of finding , by the common Balance or Scales , with the AJfiftance of frefh Water , if an Ingot or Mafs of Gold or Silver Bullion be Standard or of equal Goodnefs to Englijh Guineas or Shillings , or if much inferior. "P O R the Accommodation of fuch Gentlemen as in the Courfe of their Trade to Jamaica, Mobille, Penfacola, Spain, Auguftin, the Mufquetto Shore, Bay of Honduras, or any Part of the Spanilh Weft Indies, who may have Bars of Gold or Silver offered them in Payment, and that they may not be difappointed in not felling their Goods by refufing to take in Payment Bars of Gold or Silver, for the fame, for Fear of being impofed upon, from the Precariouf- nefs of not knowing the Qualities and Value of fuch Bars cf Bullion, I have here endeavoured to affift them by offer¬ ing a Method which, if carefully put in Prailice, will en¬ able them to be competent Judges of the Goodnefs of any Bar of Gold or Silver, that may be offered them in Payment for Merchandize. It INTRODUCTION. xxxiii It is not pretended, neither can it be expedled, that this Method with a common Balance can determine the minute Degrees of Courfnefs or Finenefs of Bullion, as is done by allaying it with Fire ; but the Qualities of Gold and Silver Bars may hereby fo far be determined, as to know whether they are nearly fine or Standard, orcoarfetoa great Degree. The Method I have here propofed, is deduced from the Writings of Sir Robert Boyle , and other more modern and efteemed Writers on Hydroftaticks and experimental Phi- lofophy. The Principle on which this Method is founded, is by knowing the fpecifick Gravities of the feveral Metals re- fpedlively, and alfo that of frelh pure Water, which in Martins Pkilofophia Britannica Hand thus “ Fine or pure Gold — 10,640 “ Gold of a Guinea of George II. , 17,150 “ Gold of a Moidore — — 17,140 “ Silver fine or pure — ir,09i “ Silver of a Shilling of George II. xo,000 “ Copper — — — 9,000 “ Pure frelh Water ■— — 1,000 ” Thefe are the Proportions the refpe&ive Articles bear to each other in regard to their Weights under the fame Bulk or Magnitude properly called their Specijick Gravities. To make this plain to Perfons who may not have applied (heir Thoughts to Things of this Nature, the Meaning of the Numbers above are this, that by Experiments made in the niceft Manner by the bell Hydrollatical Machines it has been found that a cubic Foot of frelh Water weighs IOOO Ounces of Avoirdupoife Weight very exaftly; the fame Cube of Silver of the Quality of Englilh Shillings weighs 10,000 Ounces, (being ten times the Weight of Water of the fame Bulk) a cubic foot of fine Silver 11,091 Ounces; the like Cube of fine Gold 19,640 Ounces; the Cube of Gold of the Quality of a Guinea or Moidore (which may be taken for Standard) 17,150 Ounces; and the fame Cube of Copper 9,000 Ounces. Thefe Things being' underftood, premifed and granted, the next Thing to he confidered is how any heavy Body immerfed or covered with frelh Water is affedled in its Weight by the fame. It is a Truth known and demonftrated fo long ago as the Time pf Archimedes , and confirmed by all Mathematicians and xxxiv INTRODUCTION. Philofophers of .all Ages fince, to the prefent Time; Usat a finking Body weighs lefs in Water than in Air, by the Weight of as much Water as is equal to the Solid in Bulk ; or in other Terms to the fame Effect, It lofesjufi fo much of its Weight as is equal to the Weight of an equal Bulk of the Water. Hence the cubic Foot of fine Gold weighing 19,640 Ounces im- merfcd in Water, would weigh in Water but i8,64oOunces, being lefs by 1000 Ounces than the Weight in Air, becaufe Water of the fame Bulk with the Gold weighs 1000 Ounces, and of courfe it rnuft weigh fo much lefs in Water than in Air, confequently 17,150 Ounces of Standard Gold in Air will weigh 16,150 in Water; and 11,091 oz. of fine Silver in Air, 10091 oz. in Water; and 10,000 oz, of Standard Silver in Air 9,000 oz. in Water: alfo 9,000 oz. of Copper in’Air will become 8,000 oz. in Water. The Weight that' any Body diminilhes in Water compared with its Weight in Air,-or the Proportion between the Deminution and the whole Weight in Air, in the Cafe of fine Gold will be exprefled by this Fraction which is fomething lefs than one nineteentlrPart of the Whole, and if the faid Fraction be reduced to a Decimal it will be CO50976, and as Decimals are more convenient for this Purpofe than vulgar Fraftions, fuch Reduction is neeeflary. The proportional Diminution of the Weights of the other Bodies in Air and Water will of Courfe be, viz. Standard Gold -Ifvvsi whofe Decimal is 058343, fine Silver T V S °/ T > equal to .090163, and Standard, or Silver of a Shilling 7b-6-6-S» equal to .iooo or one tenth Part; laftly Copper equal to . 1111. Now as all thefe proportions of the Lofs to the whole Weight arife from dividing the Lofs by the whole Weight of the Body in Air, it con¬ fequently follows, that by taking the Difference of the Weight of any Bullion in Air and Water, and dividing that Difference by the Weight in Air, the Quotients arifing compaired with the above, will (hew whether the Bullion be fine or ftandard, between both or worfe than ftandard. In the Gradations of the Qualities of Bullion from pure Gold or Silver to bafeMetal, as they abound more and more with Alloy, the Specifick Gravity will diminilh, and the faid Bullion will loofe more and more of its Weight when immcrfed in Water. Such Variations determined by the Hydroftaiick Balance, point'out the Quality of the Bullion INTRODUCTION. xxxv t 0 a great Nicety, even if it be much under Standard ; but as this Method with common Scales cannot weigh to that Exa&nefs, proper Condufions cannot be drawn to deter¬ mine the Quality of coarfe Bullion thereby, and though the Degrees of Courfnefs cannot be found to a requifite Exa£t- nefs by the Method before us, yet a fufficient Intimation may be obtained, as may ferve for a Caution to whom it may concern, not to middle with, or receive in Payment, any fuch Bullion, as diminilhes or lofes in its Weight be¬ yond a certain Degree. Though this Way of trying Bullion falls fliort of the Accuracy of allaying it by Fire, yet great Frauds may be detected this Way that cannot be found out by allaying; for Pieces of Iron or other bafe Metal may be call in the Middle of Gold or Silver Bars, the Balance and Water will difeover the Cheat that may efcape the Allay by Fire, for that tries but a Part for the whole, and fuppofes theMafs to be of the fame Quality throughout, which may be other- wife ; and was it only for this peculiar Advantage that try¬ ing Bullion hydroftatically affords, it deferves the greateft Attention to all concerned in dealing in Bullion, cfpe- cially where there is not Convenience to melt it down and have it affayed again, before it is purchafed or received in Payment, Method of ufrng the Common Balance for weighing Bullion In Water. The Scales for this Purpofe, efpecially for trying Silver, muft be large enough to weigh 40 or 50 Pounds Weight, as Ingots of Silver often Weigh that and more; the Beam muft be well adjufted, with a Set of exact Troy Weights of Ounces, Penny-weights and Grains: This will be no extraordinary Expence, as every Merchant, Factor, &c. ftiould be provided therewith for common Ufe in the Courfe of his Bufmefs, The Beam may be fufpended in the try¬ ing of Bullion hydroftatically in the Manner reprefented in the Plate. A is a folid Piece of Wood that may be about 2 4 Inches fquare, fecurely fattened to the Table or Board it lays upon by fome Nails or Pins; B is the Pillar or Upright morticed into the End of the Floor-Piece of Wood, fupported with a.front Bracket, as in the Place; xxxvi INTRODUCTION. C is art Arm that proje&s 8 or g Inches from the Pillar, fupported by its Bracket; the Arm mull have a Mortice of fuch a Size that it may fitexa&ly the Dimenfions of the Upright, fo as to Hide with Eafe up and down, in order that the Arm may be put at Pleafure at any Height fuited to (mail or large Scales that may be made Ufe of in the Ex¬ periment. The Holes in the Upright near the letter B, Ihew how, by a Peg or Pin of Wood, the faid Arm may be fixed at any Height required ; E and D are two Pullies by which a Cord is conduced over the Arm C, and de¬ fending to F, paffeth through a Hole in the Timber A, coming out at G; H is a Pin or Hook to which the Cord is to be faftened as it is occafionally ufed in raifing and falling the Beam. The Left-hand Scale mull be taken off, and a Rod or Slip of Iron 'orBrafs provided with a Hook at each End, one to hang at the End of the Beam, and the other to hang the Bullion to be tried to j this Rod mull alfo have another Hook on its Side or Edge to which a Weight with a Ring onHook muft be hung of fuch a Weight, that the Iron or Brafs Rod, and it together, may exactly Balance the op- pofite Scale: It will be convenient that the Rod be 3 or 4 Inches fborter than the Cords or Chains of the Scale. Things being thus prepared, and the Frame, Beam and Balanced-Scale fet on a Table, a fmall Tub muft be pro¬ vided of 9 or ro Inches deep, and of a fufficient Width for the Length of the Bar of Bullion to be tried, that it may have Room to hang freely \yithout touching the Sides; the Ingot rtuft be flung or tyed round with Pack¬ thread, or any other Twine of a fufficient Strength to bear the fame; and there muft be fo much Length allowed above the Ingot to hang on the Hook of the Rod, that when the oppofite Scale refts on the Table, the Ingot may reft alfo oil the Table, and the Beam be at the fame Time in Equilibrium, or the Side the Ingot hangs on may be fo much Ihorter than the Scale, by the Thicknefs of Height of the Infide of the Tub’s Bottom from the Table: Take the Ingot and put it into the Tub, and hook the Rod to the String, and put the Tub in fuch a Pofition that the Ingot, when fufpended, may hang freely in the Mid¬ dle, and if Allowance has been made for the Thicknefs of the Tub’s Bottom, the Beam will be oil a Balance, Which INTRODUCTION. xxxvii if not properly adjufted before, may now be done; then pour into the Tub pure frefh Water (Rain if to be had is faid to be the beft) to the Height of 3 Times the Thick- nefs of the Bar of Bullion : This done, raife the Beam with the Cord till the Scale is about 5 Inches frorn the Table, and fallen it there; then put the Weights into the Scale by Degrees till you raife the Ingot in the Water, and by a few Times changing the fthall Weights, the Beam may be brought to an exaft Balance or Equilibrium, which Weight in Water muft be noted down as well as the Weight in Air, and 'the Bullion muft firft be weighed in Air as nicely as poffible; both Weighings muft be done out of the Way of Wind, and in as Hill and Cafy a Manner as can be, for Wind ahd Shakes, will much affeft the Operation. Care muft be taken that the Bullion is not drawn up in the weighing, fo that any Part of it may rife above the Surface of the Water when the Beam is brought to a Balance; fo much Twine or Cord as is above the Sur¬ face of the Water when the Beam is even, muft be put in the Scale with the Weights, and fo much of it wet as is of the ether; Air Bubles on the Top or Sides of the Bar Ihould be broke as they help to buoy it up. The Weight of Bullion in Air and in Water being thus found, dedutft the Weight in Water from the Weight in Air, and note the Difference, reduce that Difference into Grains, reduce alfo the whole Weight in Air into Grains, divide the Difference in Grains by the whole Weight in Grains, and extend the Quotient to four Places of Figures, this faid Qpotient compared with the Number before-men¬ tioned, will Ihew if the Bullion be fine, or Standard, or betweeen both, or worfe than Standard ; and the Reafon is plaih from what has been faid before, to which may jullly be added, that as thefe Numbers before-mentioned, and hereafter put down as guiding Numbers, are no other than the Quotient arifing from dividing the Difference of the Weights in Air and Water by the whole Weight in the Quantities that are fet down as obtained by nice Experi¬ ments, it follows of Courfe, that dividing the Difference of Weight in the Air and Water (of any Bullion) by its wh le Weight, that if the Quotients are the fame as in thefe by Experiment, their Qualities arc the fame. E X- xxxviii INTRODUCTION. .EXAMPLE I. Suppofe an Ingot of Gold weighs 9 oz. 16 dws. 9 gr. in Air, and 90Z. 16 dws. 9 gr. inWater, what is the Quality ? The Difference is 10 dws. or 240 gr. and 9 oz. 16 dws. 2 gr. in Air reduced into Grains, is 4713 Grains, which (adding Cyphers) divide 240, as 4713) 240,00000(.05C>92 anfwering very near to the 23565 Quotient for fine Gold, - ' ■ which fhews this Ingot 43500 muff be of the fame Qua- 42417 lity. 10830 9426 EXAMPLE II. An Ingot of Gold weighs in Air 12 oz. 17 dws. 2 gr. in Water 12 oz. 2 dws. 2gr. what is the Quality ? Dif¬ ference 15 dws. or 360 gr. Weight in Air contains 6170, divide as before, and the Quotient will be 05834, anfwer¬ ing to Standard Gold. EXAMPLE III. Suppofe an Ingot of Gold weighs in Air 20 oz. 10 dws. and in Water 18 oz. 8 dws. what is the Quality of that Ingot ? The Diminution or Difference is 1 oz. 2 dws. or 528 Grains; the Weight in Air contains 9600 Grains, divide as before, and you will have a Quotient of .05500 : This Number compared with .050916, which anfwers ten fine Gold'; and 05834, which anfwers to Standard Gold, it is between both, which indicates the faid Ingot to be worfe than fine Gold, and better than Standard, as the Quotient is lefs than that for Standard, and greater than that for fine Gold, for the greater the Number, the courfer the Bullion will always be: and as this Number .05500 is nearly a Mean between thofe for fine Gold and Sta.ndard, I conclude fuch an Ingot as this is one Carat better than Standard, as fine Gold is two Carats better. E X- INTRODUCTION. xxm ■ EXAMPLE IV. An Ingot of Gold weighs in Air 260 oz. 17 dws. 12 gr. in Water 244 oz. 10 dw:s. what is the Quality ? The Diffe¬ rence is 16 oz. 7 dws. i2gr. or 7650 Grains: The Weight in Air contains 125220 Grains, divide as in the former Examples, and the Quotient is .06277, which find the neareft in the Table annexed, will anfwer to 2 Carats worfe than Standard ; and if the Difference had been fo much as that the Quotient had been .06554, the Gold would have been 3 Carats worfe than Standard, but when this Method indicates Gold to be above 3 Carats worfe than Standard, fuch Bullion fhould be refufed if offered in Payment, or for fale. Thefe Examples may fuffice for Gold Bullion. EXAMPLES of SILVER BULLION. EXAMPLE I. An Ingot of Silver weighs 443 oz. 12 dws. in Air, and 403 oz. 12 dws. in a Water, what is the Quality ? The Difference is 40 oz. or 800 dws. and 443 oz. 12 dws. the Weight in Air is 1872 penny Weight, divide the former by the latter, the Quotient is .09018, anfwering to fine Silver. EXAMPLE II. If an Ingot of Silver weighs in Air 505 oz. rodws. and in Water 454 oz. 19 dws. of what Quality is that Ingot ? the Difference is 50 oz. 11 dws. which is ion Penny Weight, and .505 oz. 10 dws. the Weight in Air contains 10110 Penny Weights; the former divided by the latter produce .1000 anfwering to Standard Silver. EXAMPLE III. An Ingot of Silver weighs in A,ir 505 oz. 10 dws. and in Water 452 oz. of what Quality is that Ingot r The Diffe¬ rence is 53 oz. 10 dws. or 1070 dws. and 505 oz. 10 dw. the xl INTRODUCTION. the Weight in Air is ioiio Penny-weight, divide the for¬ mer by die latter, and the Quotient is .10058, anfwering to half an Ounce worfe than Standard. Quotient Numbers, and the Quality and Value of the Ounce Troy of Sifver in Sterling Money , anfwering to the faid Numbers, Standard Silver being valued at 5*, 4 d. the Ounce. Quotients. Value the Ounce s. d. .pgoifj fine Silver —. —--5 9 ,09568 f of. better than Standard 5 b \ •joooo Standard-:-5 4 .10058 f ©z, worfe than Standard 5 1 .101 pf> 1 oz. worfe than Standard 4 jo Note , No Bar Silver ought to be taken that is tried this Way, that yields a Quotient on dividing the Difference of the Weights in Air and Water that is a higher Number than the laft above. Quotient Numbers , and the Quality and Value of the Ounce Troy of Gold in Sterling Money anfwering 'to the faid Num¬ bers j Standard Gold being Valued at 781. the Ounce. Quotients. __ Value of the Ounce. s. d. .050916 fine Gold — — — 85 o .055000 one Carat fine-r- -r- 81 6. .058343 Standard — — — — 78 0 .059500 t » Carat worfe — — 76 1 .060770 1 Carat worfe — — — 75 q .062050 1 f Carat worfe-72 6 .063240 2 Carats worfe — — 70.10 .063631 2 i Carats worfe — — 69 2 ,065540 3 Carats worfe-67 4 THE THE WES T -1 NDIA Merchant, Fa&or, and Supercargoe’s DAILY-ASSISTANT, Containing all the T A B L E S whofe Ufe is explained and exemplified in the foregoing Introduction. Tbt Wtji-Iniia Merchants Jjfyhnt. Jamaica Currency reduced - Sterling. Jama- u 3 ica Cur- Sterling. •3 Sterling. •3 Sterling. 1 . 1. s. d. q. 1 . 1 . s. d. q- 1. 1. s. d. q- | o *4,' 3 4 34 .< 2 4 $ 8 67 47 17 I 3 2 idl 35 i 2 S 0 0 68 4 8 11 5 3 2 2 10 I 3° 2 l l t 3 69 49 5 8 2 4 2 17 I 3 37 26 8 6 3 70 50 0 0 O J .3II ..5 I 3? , 2 7 2 10 5° H 3 2 6 ■< 5 ■ « 2 39 * 2 7‘ 17 1 3 7 2 5- 8 6 3 7 5000 40 28 ji 5 JZ 2 10 I 8 S ‘4 ,3 4 41 *9 5 8 2. 74 52 17 1 3 9 0863 4* 39 0 0 75 53 I* 5 I to 7 i 10 1 43 3 ° i 4 3 76 54 5 8 2 11 7 >7 1 3 4-1 3 i 8 b 3 77 55 0 0 0 II 8; II 5 I, 45 -32 2 10 7 *> 55 '4 3 2 •3 9 5 8 2 46 3 2 -i 7 3 79 56 8 6 3 '4 47 33 1 1 5 I 80 57 - 2 10 1 »S 10 14 3 2 48 34 5 8 2 81 57 17 3 16 n 8 6 3 49 1 35 0 0 0 82 58 II 5 1 '7 Z 2 2 10 I 35 14 3 2 8 3 59 5 8 2 1.8, 12 17 1 3 S« 36 8 6 3 «4 60 0 0 0 l 9 33 “ s « 5 *: 37 2 10 1 85 60 14 3 2 14 5 8 2 53 37*7 3 86 6i 8 6 3 Zl 15 0 0 0 154 38 11 5 87 62 2 10 1 21 ij 14 3 2 55 39 5 8 2 88 62 17 3 z 3 16 8 6 3 5 6 4 ° 0 0 0 8 9 63 11 5 H 17 2 10 1 57 40 14 3 2 90 64 5 8 2 >7 *7 * 3 5 8 41 8 6 3 9 i 6 S 0 0 ■ 2 6 18 11 5 1 59 42 2 10 1 9 2 65 14 3 2 2 7 19 5 8 2 60 42 17 z 3 93 66 8 6 3 28 20 0 0 0 61 43 11 5 1 94 67 2 10 1 2 9 20 I4 3 2 62 44 '5 8 2 95 67 17- 1 3 3° 21 8 6 3 63 45 0 0 0 96 68 11 5 3 « 22 2 10 I 64 45 '4 3 2 97 6 9 5 8 2 3 2 22 17 .1 3 6 5 46 8 6 3 98 70 0 0 6 33 23 II j 1 66 47 2 10 99 70 14 3 2 Jamaica] 3 The Wcjl-lndia Merchants JJJiftant. Jamaica Currency reduced into Sterling. Jamai- cn Cur- Sterling. 1 Sterling. !• ' Stirling. 1. 1. s. d. q. S. d. q._ s. d. q. IOO 7« 8 6 3 1 082 21 15 0 0 200 142 17 1 3 * 151 22 15 8 2 300 214 5 8 2 3 2 1 3 23 16 5 » 400 285 14 3 2 4 2 10 I 2 4 n 1 3 5OO 357 2 10 1 5 3 6 3 *5 1710 1 600 428 1152 0 4 3 2 26 18 6 3 700 500 OOO 7 500 2 7 19 3 2 ! 800 571 8 6 3 8 5 8 2 28 260 0 900 6+2 17 1 3 9 6 5 1 4 9 26 8 2 1000 714 5 8 2 JO 7 1 3 3o 2i 5 I 2000 1428 11 ; 1 7 10 1 31 22 1 3 3000 2142 17 1 3 8 6 3 32 2* 10 I 4000 2857 2 10 1 *3 9 3 2 33 23 6 3 5000 3571 8 6 3 ‘4 •10 0 0 34 2 4 3 2 6000 4285 14 3 2 15 JO 8 2 35 2* 0 O 7000 5000 000 l6 II 5 i 36 2C 8 2 8000 .57*4. 5 8 2 ‘7 12 1 3 37 26 5 I 9000 .6428 11 5 1 18 12 10 i 38 2 7 * 3 10000 7H 2 «7 1 3 '9 13 .6 3 39 27 10 1 20000 14285 14 3 2 40 ' 28 6 3 30000 21428 11 50 8 4i ,*9 3 2 40000 28571 863 5 42 •30 0 0 50000 357'4 5 8 2 43 30 8 2 60000 42857 2 10 1 1 003 44 3‘ 5 1 70000 2 0 I 2 4j 3 2 1 3 80000 57142 17 1 3 3 0 2 1 46 3* .10 1 90000 64285 14 3 1 4 0 2 3 47 33 . 6 3 100600 71428 11 4 3 5 032 48 34 3 2 6 0 4 1 49 35 0 0 7 050 35 8 2 8 • 0 5 3 ?i 36 5 1 9 J 0 6 2 16 : 0 7 1 II 0 7 3 0 0 1 . , 00 1 002 B 2 Jamaica The WeJt-India Merchants AJjtjiant. Sterling reduced into Jamaica Currency. l. ; ,Currency. ;g Currency. n i 2 L i6 -M >P i 2 f s 4 $ ! 9 s.i 2 ^ 12 0 P| 2 ? o 2 ? S ®o?| 2 4 3 3 ?|1J 29 4 fr a 3? Si 4*f 0 o? 3; > 4is 8 J 32 ' 44'■•q u 33 4 6 4 q 76 ’ I.06 8 77, L» 1000 I4OO 0 0 10 0 14 3° 4 2 2000 2800 0 0 11 0 15 4 3 3* 43 4 3 3000 , 4200 0 0 12 0 16 9 2 3 2 44 9. 2 4000 5600 0 0 >3 0 18 2 2 33 46 2 2 5000 , 7000 0 0 0 19 7 I 34 47 7 1 . 0000 : 8400 0 0 *5 I 1 35 49 7000 ; 9800 0 0 lb I 2 4 3 5° 4 3 8000 II 200 0 0 17 1 3 9 2 37 5 1 9 2 9000 12600 0 0 18 1 5 3« 53 Z- 2 ‘ I 4000 0 0 1 9 i 6 7 ' 39 54 7 1 20000 .28000 o' 0 40 5 6 30000 42000 q 0 U 4 1 57 4 3 4OOOO . 56000 0 5 42 5* 9 2 ■7OOOO 0 &- 43 60 -60000 84OOO 0 1 0 0 44 61 7 1 70000 980OO 0 2 0 0 2 3 +5 63 0 0 80000 J12000 0 0 3 0 0 4 1 46 64 4 3 90000 126000 0 4 0 0 S 2 47 65 9 2 100000 $40000 0 S' 0 0 7 0 48 67 6 0 0 8 2 49 68 7 1 7 0 0 9 3 5° 7° 0 0 8 0 0 11 1 5 1 7 1 4 3 9 0 . 1 0 2 10 0 1 2 0 11 0 1 3 2 i 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 Produce 6 The IVeJl-Indta Merchants Jffijlant. Produce of the Sale of Goods in Jamaica Currency t much per Cent, on the Sterling Coll, as under, 0 gain fo Prime Jamaica Cur- Jamaica Cur- J. C. to J. C. 0 Coil rency, to gam :o gam “n Ra Ster- 2 iV Cent. 5#* Cent. r Cent. # ' Cent.’l l. 1. s. d. 1. s. d. M 1. s. d. 1. s. d. I I 8 8 X 9 5 1 0 1 5 O 1 6 2 2 >7 5 2 18 2 0 0 2 3 4 6 1 4 8 2 3 0 4 4 0 4 5 4 S >4 10 5 *7 7 4 0 5 9 0 5 IO S 7 3 6 7 7 5 7 * 7 4 6 8 12 2 8 16 5 6 0 # 7 0 8 7 10 0 11 10 5 10 7 0 10 0 0 3 8 X! 9 7 IX *5 2 8 0 11 6 0 9 9 12 18 4 13 4 7 9 © 12 XI 0 *3 3' io >4 7 0 14 ■*4 O 10 14 4 0 *4 8 20 28 >4 0 29 8 0 II ° '5 9 0 16 30 43 0 44 0 12 © 17 3 0 *7 8 40 57 8 0 5# 16 0 *3 18 7 0 *9 1 5° 7* >5 0 . 73 10 0 *4* 0 I 0 7 6o 86 0 88 4 0 *5 1 I 6 2 ' 7oj 100 9 0 102 18 b 16 1 2 11 - 6 8o 114 16 0 117 12 0 *7 4 5 5 O; 90 129 3 0 132 6 0 18 1 5 10 6 5 100 >43 10 0 •47 0 0 *9 1 7 3 7 II: 200 287 0 0 294 0 0 JOO 430 10 0 441 0 0 8 400 ■ 574 0 0 588 0 0 s. d. q. d. q COO 7*7 10 0 735 0 0 600 861 0 0 882 0 0 I 2 o 700 1004 10 0 1029 0 0 * 3 0 3 0 800 1148 0 0 1176 0 0 3 ,0 4 * 0 4 2 900 1291 10 0 1323 0 0 40 5 3 0 5 3 1000 >435 0 0 *47° 0 0 5 7 * 0 7 1 2000 2870 0 0 2940 0 0 6 8 2 0 8 3 3000 4305 0 0 4410 0 6 7 0 10 0 0 10 4000 5740 0 0 5880 0 0 8 0 11 2 0 11 3 5000 7*75 0 0 735° 0 0 9 1 0 I i 6000 8610 0 0 8820 0 0 10 2 2 | I 2 3 7000 10045 0 0 10290 0 0 11 3 3 I 4 8000 11480 0 0 11760 0 0 0 0 2 9OOO 12915 f 0 0 13230 e 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 10000 14350 0 0 14700 0 0 1 0 0 1 Produce The Weji-hdia Merchants djjijlant. 7 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to gainfo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Coll as under. Prime Coll Ster- Jamaica Cur. to gain 7 i Cent. 1. s. d. Jamaica Cur. to gain 10 ‘jp Cent. 1. s. d. Shillings. J. C. to fc Li 1. 5. d J. C. to iFcew. 1. s. d. j IO I z 10 16 1 0 z 6 0 I 6 2 3 10 2 3 I 7 2 0 3 0 0 3 1 3 i 4 5 6 3 5 3 4 ° t 6 0 4 -7 6 2 7 10 6 7 14 0 5 0 7 6 0 7 8 6 9 0 7 9 4 IO 6 0 9 0 0 9 3 io IO 8 IO ’£ 7 7 0 IO 6 0 10 9 s 12 0 1° 12 0 s 8 0 12 0 12 4 >3 IO II ’3 17 9 0 ’3 6 0 13 10 IS 8 0 ’5 0 0 '! 5 0 3° 16 0 11 0 16 7 0 16 11 3° 45 3 0 46 4 0 12 0 18 0 18 6 40 60 4 0 61 12 0 •3 0 ’9 7 0 0 5o 7S s 0 77 O 0 14 I 7 6o 90 6 0 92 8 0 ’5 7 3 1 7o 105 7 0 107 16 0 16 4 I * 8 So 8 0 123 4 0 17 s 7 9° 1 3S 9 0 138 12 0 18 7 1 7 9 100 150 0 ’54 O 0 ’9 8 7 9 3 200 301 O 0 308 0 0 300 45 1 0 462 0 0 M 400 602 O 0 616 0 0 s. d. q- s. d. q. 500 75 z 10 0 770 0 0 a. 60O 9°3 0 0 924 0 0 I 0 2 0 700 1053 10 0 1078 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 800 1204 0 0 1232 0 0 3 0 4 2 0 4 2 900 >35+ 0 1386 0 0 4 0 6 0 0 6 0 tooo ’jo 5 0 0 1540 0 0 5 0 7 2 0 7 3 2000 3010 0 0 3080 0 0 6 0 9 0 0 9 1 3000 45’S 0 0 4620 0 0 7 0 10 2 0 10 3 4000 0 0 6160 0 0 8 I 0 0 1 0 1 5000 75*5 0 0 7700 0 0 9 1 * 2 1 ’ 3 60OO 9030 0 0 9240 0 0 Io I 3 0 I 3 1 70 00 <°S3S 0 p 10780 0 0 II 1 4 2 1 4 3 8000 0 0 12320 0 0 0 0 2 0 9000 '3S4S 0 0 13860 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 loooo tSoso 0 0 15400 0 0 I 0 t 0 . Producej The Wejl-India Merchants Ajjylan roduce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to gain fo much <{p Cent, on the Sterling Coll, as under. . Jamaica Cur. 5" tS , P' t0 J . .. m gain i z J gain 15 ic ^Cenf | Cent, f Cent, 3° 47 S 40 63 o 5° 78 15 60 94 10 70 110 3 80 iz6 o 90 141 15 100 157 10 zoo 313 o 300 472 10 400 630 o 500 787 10 600 945 o 700 1102 10 800 1260 o 900 1417 10 1000 1575 o 2000 3I5O O 3000 4725 O 4000 • 6300 O 5000 7875 o 6000 9450 o 7000 11025 0 800012600 o 9000 14175 o 96 12 o 15 I 112 14 O l6 1 128 16 O 17 I Ihe Wtjl-hila Merchants AJfiJiant. 10 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to rain fo much ^ Cent on the Sterling Coft, as under. Prime Jamaica Cur. Jamaica Cur. jo m. Cur. 'Jam. Cur. Coft Ster- to gain 22 if* Cent. 23 dp Cent. 1 Cent. ling. r, 1. I. s. d 1. s. d JJ s. d '1. s. d. 1 '4 4 1 '5 0 I 0 I 9.° 1 9 3 8 7 3 3 3 6 • S II 5 5 0 3 0 5 4 6 '7 2 7 0 4 0 6 10 0 7 5 8 II 6 8 '5 0 5 0 8 7° 8 9 6 5 10 lo 0 b 0 4 6 7 I 12 5 0 7 0 0 a *3 '4 5 •4 0 8 0 '3 9 0 '4 9 •5 8 8 '5 >5 0 9 0 '5 5 0 •5 9 ro >7 3 0 '7 IO 0 10 0 '7 2|0 '7 6 20 34 6 0 35- 0 0 II 0 18 '9 3 3° ; 5'. 9 0 52 10 0 12 0 7 1 40 68 12 0 7° 0 0 13 2 3 2 9 5° 8? '5 0 87 10 0 M 4 4 6 60 102 18. 0 103 0 '5 5 9 6 70 <120 0 122 IO 0 16 7 5 8 80 *37 4 0 ■ 140 0 0 »7 9 9 9 90 *54 7 0 ''57 10 0 18 6 100 *7* IO 0 '75 0 0 *9 12 7 '3 3 200 343 O 0 35° 0 0 300 5'4 5=5 400 686 O 0 700 0 0 s 500 S57 IO 0 8/5 0 0 ft* d. q- s. d. q- 000 1029 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 700 1200 10 0 1225 0 0 2 0 • 3 2 Q 3 2 80O t 37 2 0 0 1400 0 0 3 0 5 1 0 5 1 900 1 543 10 0 '575 0 0 4 0 6 3 0 6 3 «000 «7'5 0 0 '75° 0 0 5 0 8 2<0 8 2000 341° _ 0 0 35°° 0 0 6 0 10 3 0 10 3 3000 5'45 0 0 5250 0 0 0 0 4000 6860 0 0 0 0 8 3 3 5°oo 8575 0 0 8750 0 0 9 3 3 6000 10290 0 0 0 0 10 5 0 5 0 7000 12003 0 0 12250 0 0 11 6 3 6 3 8000 13720 0 0 14000 0 , 0 i 0 0 0 900c '5435 0 0 15750 Q 0 0 3 0 0 3 10000 '7'5° 0 0 17500 0 0 £ 0 1 0 1 Produce! The Wcjl-lnd'ia Merchants Affiflmt. Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to much ‘(p Cent, on the Sterling Colt, as under. gain fo Prime Jamaica Cur. Jamaica Cur. Jam. Cur. jam. Cur.l Colt to ;am to gain Ster- i 7 l 4 2 18 5 b 0 20 9 0 10 11 7 12 9 11 12 >4 10 7 0 12 6 0 12 9 >4 5 7 14 11 2 0 >4 3 0 >4 7 9 16 16 7 7 9 0 16 1 0 16 5 10 17 l 7 0 18 4 0 IC 0 17 10 0 18 2 20 35 H 0 36 8 0 0 19 8 0 0 30 53 21 0 54 0 12 * 5 1 10 4 ° 71 8 0 72 l6 0 •3 3 2 3 8 5 ° 89 5 0 9 1 0 0 >4 5 0 5 6 6o 1 °7 2 0 109 4 0 *5 6 9 7 4 7 ° 124 19 0 127 8 0 It) 8 7 9 > 8o 142 ib 0 145 22 0 •7 10 4 90 1.3 0 163 16 0 18 12 2 12 9 100 178 10 0 182 O 0 l 9 13 u *4 7 200 357 0 0 364 0 0 9 10 4 I 2 20 4 c 0 5 >9 8 6 X 10 30 6 c 0 6 1 7 *9 7 8 2 5 40 8 c 0 8 1 9 *9 6 3 0 TO -> 6 M 19 5 3 7 60 120 12 2 7 *3 *9 4 «4 4 2 70 14 0 0 14 3 >5 >9 2 16 5 0 8 0 16 0 0 9 »7 19 I 18 5 5 90 17 n 0 >8 3 >9 19 0 6 39 18 40 12 H 1 11 3o 59 17 0 60 18 0 40 79 l6 0 81 4 0 3 1 5 11 I 6 5 5° 99 >5 0 loi 10 0 1 4* 7 H I 6o 119 H 0 121 16 0 5 I 9 11 1 10 5 70 '39 13 0 I42 0 1 61 11 11 I 12 6 So *59 12 0 162 8 0 1 7 1 13 n 1 14 6 9° 179 11 0 182 H 0 1 n 15 11 I 16 6 100 1 99 10 0 203 0 0 1 9 i 17 11 I 18 7 200 399 0 6 406 0 0 300 . 598 30 0 609 0 0 1 400 79« O 0 8j 2 0 500 997 10 0 1015 0 0 u ' s. d. q. 600 1197 0 0 r 218 0 0 10 20 700 159b 10 0 1421 0 0 20 40 0 800 1596 0 oj 1624 0 0 ; JO 60 6 0 900 >795 10 1827 0 0 ] jo 8 0 ( 8 0 IOOO >995 .0 ■o| 2030 0 0 1 ; 0 10 01 10 0 2000 3990 0 4060 0 O ( 0 0 3 GOO 59 8 5 0 oj 6090 0 6 ; 'I 20 2 0 4000 7980 0 0! 8120 0 0 i i 1 40: 4 0 1 5000! 9975 0 0 10150 6 0 c 1 1 60: 6 0 1 6coo 11970 0. 0 1218a 0 0 IC ii 8 0 i 8 0 i 7000. 3905 0 0 14210 0 0 11 ; 1 10 0 j 10 0 t'CQO; 1 5960 0 0 16240 0 0 ^ : 0 02c 0 2 9000,17955 0 0 18270 0 0 { ; 0 I0< 1 0 tcooo 19950 0 0 20300 0 ’ 0 1 ; 0 I 2]< 1 2 Produce The tVeJl-India Merchants AJJiJiatit. \-j |Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency, to gain fo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Coll as under. Jamaica Cur. 57 -I-# 1 Cent. 1. s. d, 4 8 Jamaica Cur. 6o ^ Cent. J. C. t |tr& 661 io 88a o 1323 o <543 <° 1764 o 19S4 10 2203 o 4410 0 6615 o 8820 o ! 11025 0 13230 o <5435 0 17640 o 19845 o 4 9 6 14 5] 8 19 n 4 <3 8 >5 >3 ., 17 18 5 44 > 6 67 4 89 12 112 O 134 8 156 16 <79 4 2Cl6 2240 4380 6720 8960 [11200 <3440 I5680 122400 S 9 0 6 0 10 10 22 is z 3 0 2 9 3 I 20 4S 0 46 4 0 3° 68 s 0 69 6 0 7 4 7 9 40 9 1 O 0 92 8 0 '3 9 7 5° “3 IS 0 “S 0 '4 10 12 4 6o 136 138 14 2 14 8 70 IS9 s 0 l6l 14 0 16 So 182 0 184 l6 0 18 8 19 3 90 204 IS 0 207 0 2 0 II 1 7 100 227 0 z 3i 0 2 3 3 3 “ 200 4SS 0 0 0 0 300 68 z 10 f o 6 93 0 0 u* 400 0 0 924 0 0 s 5° 0 1137 IO 0 “SS 0 0 s. d. q- i3 6 5 0 0 13S6 0 0 0 2 0 700 1592 10 0 1617 0 0 0 4 0 4 2 800 1820 0 0 1848 0 0 3 0 6 3 6 3 900 2047 10 . 0 2079 0 0 4 0 9 • 9 1 2275 0 0 2310 0 0 0 n 1 11 2 2000 4S5° 0 0 4620 0 0 6 1 2 1 3 3000 6825 0 0 6930 0 0 7 3 3 4 0 4000 9100 0 0 9240 0 0 8 6 6 2 “375 0 0 “55° 0 0 9 8 8 3 6000 13650 0 0 13860 0 0 10 10 3 11 0 7000 15925 0 0 16170 0 0 n 2 1 1 1 8000 0 0 1S4S0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 90002047 5 0 0 20790 0 0 \ 0 r 1 . 0 1 0 1000CJ2Z750 0 0 23100 0 0 0 1 2 I 2 Produce | The Wcjl-India Merchants JJjiJiant. 20 The Weji-In&a Merchants Jjjiflaxt. Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to gain fo jpuch 3 9 16 6 4 0 9 8 0 9 10 5 6 5 0 ? I 0 6 H 9 10 *4 »4 0 6 0 14 6 0 14 8 7 16 18 1 17 3 0 7 0 16 II 0 17 2 8 19 6 s l 9 12 0 8 0 19 4 0 19 7 9 ■ 21 ,14 8 22 0 9 I I 9 2 I ' to ?4 - 3 0 2 4 IO 0 1 4 4 6 20 48 6 , p 49 O 0 11 i 6 7 6 11 3° l\ .. 9 0 73 10 0 12 1 9 9 5 4° . 0 98 O 0 >3 I II 5 11 10 5° no .15 . 0 122 10 0 •4 1 13 10 14 4 6o »44 ?8 0 *47 0 0 !? I 16 3 16 9 70 169 . .1 0 47i 10 0 16 I 18 8 8o *.93 .4 0 196 0 0 l 7 2 I 2 1 8 9° *«7 7 0 220 10 0 18 6 2 100 241 10 0 2 45 0 0 «9 2 s 11 2 6 7 200 483 0 0 .490 0 0 . 300 724 10 0 73? 0 0 400 •pfi6 0 0 980 p 0 5°9 1207 40 0 1225 0 0 s. d. q- d. q. 000 *449 0 0 1470 Q 0 I 0 700 1690 jo 0 *7*5 0 0 2 0 4 3 0 4 3 ■ 806 1932 0 0 i960 0 0 3 0 7 0 7 1 900 2173 10 0 2205 0 0 4 0 9 2 0 9 3 . 1QQ0 241s 0 0 2450 0 0 s 0 0 1 2QC0 4830 . 0 0 4900 0 ■ 0 6 1 2 2 2 3 ' 3000 7?45 ' 0 0 7350 0 0 7 r 4 3 5 0 4000 9660 0 0 9800 0 0 8 1 7 1 7 z 5000)12075 0 0 12250 0 0 9 1 9 3 600014490 0 0 14700 0 0 0 1 7000 0905 . 0 G 17150 0 0 11 2 2 2 2 3 Sooo ,9320, 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1)000121735 . 0 ; -° 0 0 0 1 0 10C00I24150 , 0 0 24500 <> 0 1 2 I 2 Produce) The WeJl-lnAia Merchants Affifta Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to j much jJP Cent, on the Sterling Coll, as under. rain fo Prime Jamaic a Cu r - Jamaica Cur Jan a. Cur. am. Cur.! Coil to gain to gain fcJO gam Ster- 77 i V Cent 80 ^ Cent 77iTC 80 fc. ling. 1. 1. S. d. 1- s. i . Uj . s. d. . s. d. l z 9 8 z 10 5 1 2 6 2 6 2 4 *9 5 5 0 2 5 0 5 0 3 7 9 11 3 7 5 7 7 4 9 18 I 7 4 0 9 n 10 2 5 8 6 12 5 12 5 6 »4 18 2 ‘5 2 6 0 u 11 15 . 7 '7 7 11 «7 12 0 7 0 *7 5 17 « 8 >9 «7 7 20 3 0 19 n 0 2 9 22 7 4 22 13 9 2 4 2 8 10 24 «7 0 25 4 10 4 10 5 2 20 49 *4 0 5° 8 11 7 4 7 9 3° 74 11 0 75 0 12 910 10 3 4° 99 8 0 l6 0 15 12 4 12 9 5° U4 5 0 126 0 0 H 14 9 15 3 6o »49 2 0 »5« 4 0 *5 *7 3 17 9 «73 19 0 176 8 0 lb 19 9 2 0 4 So 198 j6 0 201 12 0 17 z * 3 2 2 10 9 ° 223 13 0 226 l6 0 18 2 4 9 2 5 4 IQO 248 IQ 0 252 O 0 >9 2 7 2 2 7 “ ZOO 497 O 0 504 0 0 3°o 745 10 0 759 0 0 4co 994 0 0 1008 O 0 500 10 0 1260 0 0 2h s. d. q. 600 1491 0 0 1512 0 0 1 0 0 700 ‘739 10 0 1 764 0 0 2 0 5 0 0 5 0 800 1988 0 0 2016 0 0 3 0 7 2 0 7 2 900 2236 10 0 2268 0 0 4 0 9 3 0 9 3 1000 2485 0 0 2520 0 0 5 l 0 1 0 1 2000 4970 0 0 5040 0 0 6 I 2 3 2 3 3000 7455 0 0 75 fi 9 0 0 7 1 5 > 5 1 4000 9940 0 0 10080 0 8 I 7 3 7 3 5000 ,2 4 2 5 0 0 12600 0 9 l 10 1 10 , 6060 149 10 ' 0 0 15120 0 2 0 3 2 o 3 7000 *7395 17640 3 3 2 3 3 80OO 19880 0 0 20160 0 0 2 0 9000 22365 0 0 22680 0 I 1 0 1 1 I00C0 24850 0 0 25200 0 > 1 3 0 1 3 Produce 22 The Wejl-Iniia Merchants AJJlJlant, Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to gain fo 1 much 3 4 7 >5 5 3 0 7 8 0 7 9 4 10 4 5 10 7 4 0 10 3 0 10 4 * IZ iS 6 12 19 0 5 0 12 9 6 15 6 7 J s 10 0 6 0 15 4 0 15 6 7 *7 17 8 18 2 7 7 0 17 11 0 18 2 8 20 8 IO 14 5 5 1 0 9 . 9 22 19 11 ?3 6 9 3 1 3 4 10 2 5 11 O 2 S 18 0 10 5 7 1 5 11 20 5 » 2- 0 Si 16 0 n 8 « 1 8 6 3 ° 76 13 0 77 14 0 12 10 8 I 11 I 4° 102 4 0 ,0 3 12 0 >3 13 3 1 13 8 5° 127 is 0 129 10 0 >4 15 9 1 16 3 6o ^3 6 0 >5 5 8 0 »S 18 4 1 18 10 7° *78 17 0 181 6 0 16 2 0 11 2 1 5 8o 204 8 0 207 4 0 «7 2 3 5 2 4 0 90 229 19 0 2 33 0 18 2 6 0 '2 6 7 100 2 55 l° 0 2 S9, 0 0 »9 2 8 6 2 9 2 200 5” O 0 S»8 0 0 . 300 766 10 0 777 0 0 400 1022 0 1036 0 0 V 5OO I277 10 0 ,2 95, 0 0 d. q* S. d. q. ■ 600 >533 0 *554 0 0 1 0 2 2 700 1788 10 0 1813 0 0 2 0 5 0 050 800 Z044 0 0 2072 0 3 O 7 2 0 7 2 900 2299 10 0 2 33i 0 4 O 10 1 0 IO I 1000 2 555 0 0 2590 0 5 0 3 I 0 .3 2000 Sno 0 0 5180 0 6 3 1 1 3 1 3OOO 7665 0 0 7770 0 7 5 3 1 5 3 4000 10220 0 ' 0 10300 0 8 8 1 8 2 JOOO I2 77S 0 0 12950 0 9 zi 0 1 11 0 6000 1 533 ° 0 0 1554° 0 10 2 1 2 1 2 . 7COO 17885 0 0 18130 0 11 2 4 240 8000 20440 0 0 20720, '0 0 0 0 0 2 9OOO 2299; 0 ;0 23310 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 10000 25550 0 0 25900. 0, 0 1 3 0 1 3 Produce The Weft-India Merchants Ajft/iant . 23 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency to gain fo much <{P Cent, on the Sterling Colt, as under. Prime Jamaica Cur. Jamaica Cur. cn Jam. Cur. Jam. Cur.l Coll gain *ain gam gai Ster- 87 ^ y* Cent. qo Cent 87 -rc. 90 r ling. 1. to I. s. d. s. d. I. s. d. s. d. 1 2 12 6 2 13 2 I 0 0 2 8 2 s 5 0 5 6 5 2 0 5 3 0 5 4 3 7 *7 6 7 >9 7 3 0 7 10 0 8 4 10 0 4 0 0 8 5 >3 6 >3 6 0 5 0 >3 2 0 •3 4 6 >5 15 *9 6 0 15 9 0 15 II 7 18 7 6 18 5 0 18 4 0 18 7 8 21 0 21 5 6 8 I 0 I 3 9 2 3 12 6 2 3 18 10 9 3 7 3 II Io 26 5 0 20 12 0 6 3 6 7 20 5 2 0 53 4 0 11 8 10 9 3 30 78 0 79 16 0 12 11 6 II 11 40 105 0 106 8 0 13 14 1 «4 7 5° *3* 5 0 1 33 0 0 ‘4 16 9 17 3 60 >37 0 1 59 12 0 "5 *9 5 19 , 70 183 »s 0 186 1 1 0 16 2 2 O 2 2 7 80 0 0 >7 2 4 7 2 5 3 90 236 5 0 239 8 0 18 2 7 5 2 7 11 100 10 0 2 66 0 0 ■9 2 9 10 2 10 6 200 S 2 5 0 0 S3 2 0 0 300 787 10 0 798 0 0 si 400 1050 0 0 1064 0 0 § 5 00 *3 12 10 0 1330 0 0 a. d. q. d. q- 600 1 575 1596 0 2 "00 *»37 10 0 1862 0 0 0 5 1,0 5 1 800 0 0 2128 0 0 3 0 7 3 0 7 3 900 2362 10 0 2394 0 0 4 0 0 10 1000 2625 0 0 2660 0 0 5 1 2000 5250 0 0 5320 0 0 6 3 3 6 1 3 3 3000 7875 0 0 7980 0 0 7 6 4OOO 10500 0 0 10640 0 0 8 9 0 9 0 5000 > 3 i 2 5 0 0 13300 0 0 9 II 2 11 2 6000 1575 ° 0 0 15960 0 0 Io 2 2 Z 2 1 7000 i8 375 0 0 18620 0 0 II 2 4 3 4 3 SOOO 0 0 21280 0 0 i 0 0 2 0 0 2 9OOO 23625 0 0 21280 0 0 i 0 I I 0 1 1 10000 26250 0 0 26600 0 0 l 0 ' ° 1 3 Produce 3 + the JPljl-Irtdia Merthanti Ajjljlant. ___:_ ! Produce of the Sales of Goods in Jamaica Currency 0 gain f 0 much'jp Cent. on the Sterling Coil, as under. Prime 1 Jamaica Cur-| Jamaica Cur-| 1 J. C. to J. C. to Coil rencv. to gain! ency, to eain| hj gain 924 gain 9 5 [Ster- Iq2v. Cent. 1 95 tf* Cent. ¥ Cent. Cent. ling. ■H £ J. s. d. I. s. d. CO 1 . s. d. . s. d. i 2 13 11 2 >4 7 1 2 8 0 2 9 2 5 7 10 5 9 2 0 5 5 0 5 6 3 8 1 8 8 3 10 3 0 8 1 082 4 10 15 7 10 18 5 4 O IO 9 0 Jo 11 •3 9 6 '3 13 5 0 13 6 0 13 8 6 10 3 5 16 7 7 6 0 16 2 0 16 5 7 18 17 4 *9 7 0 18 10 0 19 1 S 21 11 2 l6 8 1 1 7 1 1 10 ? 2 i 5 1 2 4 I! 5 9 1 4 3 « 4 7 to 20 19 0 2 7 6 10 1 6 11 1 7 4 2Q S3 18 54 11 1 9 7 1 io 0 80 17 0 81 18 O 12 1 12 4 I 12 9 40 107 16 0 109 4 O *3 1 15 0 i 15 6 5° *34 i> 0 136 10 0 »4 1 17 9 1 18 3 6o lb * >4 0 163 16 0 *5 2 0 5 2 011 70 188 13 0 191 2 0 16 2 3 1 2 3 8 •8c 2IJ 12 0 Zl8 8 0 •7 2 5 10 2 6 5 90 242 11 0 2 +5 H 0 18 2 8 6 2 9 2 100 269 10 0 2 73 0 ■9 2 II 2 2 II IO zoo 539 0 0 546 0 0 300 808 10 0 819 0 0 400 0 IO92 0 s 500 *347 10 0 i3 6 5 0 s. d. q. s', d. q. 600 1617 0 1638 0 0 2 3 0 2 3 700 1836 IO 1911 0 0 5 1 0 5 4 800 2156 0 21S4 0 3 080 0 8 1 900 2425 10 2457 0 1 'i 2 0 10 3 1000 2695 0 2730 S 2000 539° 0 5460 0 6 1 1 41 1 4 1 3000 8085 0 8190 0 1 63 1 6 3 4000 10780 0 10920 0 11 92 1 9 2 500 C 13475 0 > 13630 0 9 oooc 1 16170 0 > 16380 0 > 2 23 2 2 3 700c > 18865 0 > 19110 0 u .2 52 2 5 2 800c > 21560 0 ) 21840 0 0.02 900c > 24255 0 ’ 2 +57° 0 ■0 - •0 II 0 1 ■ 1000c > 26950 0 3 27300 0 ’ 0 15 io 13 Produce 26 ' The Wejl-h&a Merchants AjftjlaHi, k Table for finding the Gain ty* Cent, in Sterling Money When the Goods are fold in Jamaica Money, I 1 Gain.. f Cent. Sterling. 1. loth 1 Gain f' Cent Sterling. .1. 10 th 1 ^ Cent. Sterling. ,1. 10th *£ S f'Cent Sterling. I. 10th 141 0 7 181 29 3 221 57 8 261 86 4 142 . I 4 182 30 222 S« 6 • 262 ! 7 •43 2 183 3° 7 223 59 3 263 87 9 •44 2 9 .84 3« 4 224 (JO 264 88 6 •4? 3 6 •8? 3* X 22 5 60 7 26? 89 3 146 4 3 186 3* 9 226 61 4 266 90 o •47 5 -0 187 33 6 227 6a I 267 90 7 148 5 7 ' 188 34 3 228 62 9 268 9i 4 •4$ 6 4 189 33 229 63 6 269 92 1 150 7 I 190 35 7 z 3° 64 3 270 9 Z 9 •S' 7 9 191 39 4 *3« \ 5 0 27 1 93 6 152 8 6 •9* 37 232 tl 7 272 94 3 •S3 9 3 •93 37 9 z 33 66 4 *73 95 0 •54 10 '0 •94 3« 6 z 34 67 1 274 95 7 •S5 10 7 •93 39 3 z 35 67 9 27S 96 4 •S 6 II 4 196 40 O 23b 68 6 276 97 x •S7 12 I •97 40 7 2 37 69 3 277 97 9 158 12 9 198 4« 4 a3« 70 0 278 98 0 •59 •3 6 •99 4 Z 239 70 7 279 99 3 160 •4 3 200 4* 9 7> 4 280 xoo 161 •s 201 43 6 2 4 t 7* X 281 100 7 162 • S 7 202 44 3 242 7 Z 9 282 101 4 , 163 16 4 203 45 z 43 73 0 *83 102 • 164 •7 1 204 4S 7 ' 244 1 74 3 284 102 9 16'j •7 9 205 46 4 Z +S 7S 0- 285 103 6 166 18 6 206 47 246 7 i 7 286 104 3 167 •9 3 207 47 9 2 47 76 4 287 •05 0 168 20 208 48 6 .248 77 288 • OJ 7 169 20 7. ; 209 49 ‘ 3 249 77 9 289 106 4 170 21 4 ; 210 5° 0 250 '78 6 290 107 • • 7 1 22 21,1 S° 7 25 • 79- 3 291 •°7 ? •7 2 22 9 212 5*' 4 2 52 80 0 292 I08 6 •73 *3 6 z, 3 S z 1 z 53 so 7 293 IO9 3 •74 z 4 3 2H S z . 9 2 S4 81 4 294 110 0 •75 2; 0 215 S3 6 z 55 82 1 295 7 176 2 S 7 216 54 3 256 82 9 296 III 4 •77 26 .4 217 S3 0 z 57 83 6 z 97 112 • 178 27 218 55 7 258 1 O 4 3 298 112 § • 79 27 9 2'9 5 6 4 j z 59 o 5 299 |H3 6 180 28 6 57 1 260 1 g 5 7 300 I114 3 Produce] The Wejl-hdla Merchants AJfflant. :2 7 Prodace of the Sales of Goods to gain fb much ^ Cent, or in Spanilh Dollars and Ryals, the Sterling Coll as under. Prime Spanilh Money, Spanilh Money, £ Sp. Mon. Sp. Mon. Ster¬ ling. am' Cent.. to gam 5 <{p Cent. *4 P c. to gain 5 r c. doll, ryals lot doll, rvals tot •/> dol. r. 10 dol. r. 10 I 4 3 8 " 4 4 6 1 0 1 8 0 1 8 2 8 7 6 9 3 2 0 3 6 0 3 7 3 >3 3 3 ‘3 6 0 3 5 4 0 5 5 4 l 7 7 I 18 t> 4 0 2 0 7 3 22 9 22 7 3 5 0 9 6 2 6 6 7 ■ *7 3 9 1 6 1 3 1 3« 5 3 Z 6 7 4 5 1 4 8 8 35 6 3 36 5 2 1 6 3 1 6 7 9 40 4.1 9 9 2 0 s xo 44 5 8 45 5 9 2 2 3 89 3 6 9i 5 n 3 7 * 4 1 30 *34 5 137 3 6 12 5 5 2 6 0 40 178 7 3 183 2 13 7 3 2 7 8 5° «3 5 229 0 7 h 3 3 ‘ 6 60 268 9 z 74 7 3 ‘5 3 8 3 3 5 70 3*3 0 7 320 5 8 16 3 4 6 3 5 3 80 357 6 5 366 4 4 >7 3 6 4 .3 7 1 90 402 4 4 4 12 9 18 4 0 2 4 1 0 IOO 200 300 500 447 894 I34i «7?9 2236 4 6 4 5 7 9 458 9l6 1 374 1832 2290 1 4 5 7 5 9 4 8 3 '9 s £ 4 4 2 8 600 268; S 2 7 49 7 1 0 0 0 1 700 3*3° 7 3 3207 0 0 0 0 3 800 3578 1 5 3665 3 6 3 0 0 4 004 900 4025 3 6 4123 l 1 4| 0 0 6 006 1000 447z 5 8 4581 6 5 5 0 0 7 0 0 7 2000 8945 3 6 9'63 5 1 6 0 0 9 009 3000 13418 1 5 >3745 3 6 7 0 0 0 1 0 4000 17890 7 3 18327 a 2 8 0 2 0 1 2 JOOO 22363 5 0 7 9 3 0 1 3 0000 26836 2 9 27490 7 3 1° 0 $ o 1 5 7000 31300 0 7 32072 5 8 11 0 6 016 8000 35781 6 5; 36654 4 4 0 0 0 000 9000 40254 4 4 4 J2 35 2 9 4 ° 0 1 0 0 1 10000 447^7 45818 E S 5 0 0 1 Produce j 8 *Ike Wejl-India Merchants AJfiJlant, [Produce.2 s 62 6 4 4122 7 63 o 5 V 33 1 53 2 7 3 14 3 3 5 3 4 0 7.15 3 5 S 3 6 90 44 i 6 '5 45 1 5 i ;i8 4 334 40 too 49 ° 7 3 5 °i ° 5 19 4 534 60 200 981 6 5 1003 5 tj . 300 1472 5 ' 8 * 5°5 3 6 8 400 * 9 6 3 5 1 2 °° 7 ' 2 z !" 500 2454. 4 4 2509 ° 7 1 600 2945 3 6 3010 7 310 020 02 700 3436 2 9 3512 5 820 030 03 800 3927 2 2 4 0l 4 4 4 , 30 070 05 900 4418 1 5 45 l6 2 94 ° 080 07 1000 4909 ° 7 5 01 8 1 5 5 o 050 08 2000 9818 1 S ioo 36 2 961 100 to 300014727 2 215054 4 4 7° 1 20 t 2 4000 19636 2 9 20072 5 880 130 13 900 4418 1 5 45 l6 2 9 4 ° 1000 4909 o 7 501.8 1 5 5° 2000 98f8 1 S i°°36 2 961 3000 14727 2 2 15054 4 470 4000 19636 2 9 20072 5 880 5000 24545 3 6 z 5 ° 9 ° 7 3 9 ° 6000 29454 4 4 3°'°9 0 7 10 0 700034363 5 * 35 i2 7 2 2 n ° 8000 39272 5 8 40145 3 6 i o 900044181 6 5 15163 5 1 jo 10000I49090 7 3 50181 6 5 | 0 J9 7hi Weji-India Merchants AJjiflant. Pfocjuce of Salesof Goods inSpaniih Dollars and Ryals, to gun fi> mpSh^ Cent, on the Sterling Coll, as under. Prime Coil SpanilhMpney SpafliH Money 4 Sp. Mon Sp. Mon. Ster- t to gam >7i^Cent. to gain 20 $ Cent,, to gain *7#C to gain 20«rC. dol. ryals loti dol. ryals iptl w dol.r. 10 dol. r. lot ' 5 > S 1 9 1 0 2 0 2 1 a 10 z c iq 3 ; 8 0 41 042 ■ is 3 >5 S 3 0 6 ° 6 3 ’• - ao 4 0 20 7 6 4 10 2 1 0 4 - 2 S ,5.o 26 I 5 5 . 6 30 6 1 31 3 3 6 1 4 i .4 6 1 6 7 7 35 , 7 . 1 36 5 2 7 1 6 4 -8 41 0 1 4i. 7 1 8 204 2 0 8 9 46 1 2 47 1. 0 9 2 2 S 2 2 9 ' lo Si 2 2 52, 2 9 2 4 5 2 5 0 1 r JO 102 4 4 104, 5 8 I 1 266 2 7 1 !., 30 *53 6 5 *57 0 7 12 3 0 6 3 1 1 , 40 205 , 0 7 209 3 6 13 3 2 7 3 3 2 ' 1 ° 2 j 6 , 2 9 26r 6, 5 14 3 4 7 368 3 S 3 oo *97 7 5 ; 1 314 I: 4 m 3 7 4 79 35* c 7 3 366 4 4 16 4 ‘ 0 8 415 r, 8o 4»o t « S 4i8 7 3 17 4 2 9 4 3 6 go 461 3 6 471, 2 2 18 4 4 9 4 5 7 : »Q0 200) : 300j 400 500 5‘ 2 ,5 * 1025 3 6 *53* 1 S 2050 7 3 2563 5 1 523, 5 1 IO47- 2 ? IJ70 7 2 2094 4. 3 2618 I 5 *9 & £ 4 7 0 4 7 8 600 3076 c 2 9 3*4* 6 , j 1 0 0 2 002 . 700 3589 0 7 3665 3 6 2 0 .0 3 003 800 4101 6 5 4189 0 7 3 OO5 005 900 4614 4 4 47i2 5 8 4 0 0 7. 007 .1000 5127 2 2 5236 2 9 5 6 0 0 9 009 2000 10254 4 4 10472 5 8 0 1 0 010 3000 ici8i 6 « 15709 0. 7 7 3 I Z 4000 20500 0 7 2094s 3 6 8 ; ■: t 0 I 4 •yooo 21:636 2 9 26181 6 j 9 0 1 6 6000.30763 t 1. 3*418,1 j 10 3 1 7 0 1 7 7000U589P ,7 3 36654 4 4 U 3 1 9 0 1 9 8000!14018 1 5 41890 7 3 f 3 0 1 0 p , goooj 46145 3 6 47127* 2 2 > O l p p 1 1000051272 .5 8 5 2 363 5. * i 3^ 0 2 Produce The Wejl-hdia Merchants Afftjlar.t, Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spanifh Dollars and Ryals, It gain fo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Coll, as under. P ri r|Spani(h Money Ispanifh Money I £\ S ^ ^? n The Wejl-lndia Merchants AJijiant. 33 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spani'lh Dollars and Ryals, tt gain fo much Cent.'on the Sterling Coif, .as under. PrimelSpanilh .MoneyJSpanifh. Moneyl Coll ] to gain Ster- hz i G ling. . *-'• ’ dol. rya 35 ^Cem. dol. ryals ic ■S ■* -5 3 *3» 2 2S9 o 34 6 7 l l 7 5 47 1 578 i 1156 2 *7-34 4 2312 5 2890 7 3469 ° 4047 2 4625 3 5 20 3 5 5781 , 6 11563 s *7345 3 23127 : 2 3469b 7 3 9 53° • Sg. Mon. kSR- ■Sp; Mon bsf'tv 4 6 '6 9 5 S»9 9 11 78-' 1 + l 1767 2 ~ 2350 2 2 945l 3 3534' 4 $1 41 2 3 5 '■%] 4712. 5 8] 5890 - 7 11781. 6 17.672- 5. 23563. 5 29454;- 4 . ...35345 ' I40472 5 8 41236, 19 5 3 9 5 4 8 ; [46254 4 47 I2 7 9 53°'8- 5 5895$ S 4 The Weji-India Mtrcbtmts Ajfijlant. Produce of the Salts of Goods in SpaniQt Dollars and Ryals, to j gain fo mueh'jp Cent, on the Sterling Coil, as. under. iSpaniih Money 1 ti> gain 37 t-t Cent, jSpaniffi Money 40 dfi'Cent. ,Sp. Mon. to gain 37irrC. Sp. Mon. £f'c. The JVeJl’-lndla Merchants AJfiftant. 35 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spanilh Dollars and Ryals, t gain £o much Cent, on the Sterling Coft, as under. |Prime ( Spanilh Money jSpanilh Money 4* i ^ Cent, dol. ryals toth 248 5 8! 497 3 6 j 559 5 1 621 6 5 1 1243 1S65 . 2487 3109 373o 43J2 4974 5596 6218 • 2436 18654 '.4872 31090 373°9 43527 49745 55963 62181 4on. Sp. Mon. ain to gain Pc.45 ‘Fc. 63 126 189 13 379 442 569 632 1265 1898 2530 3163 3796 4429 5061 5694 6327 12654 18981 I*5309 .J3 i6 3 6 7|3’9 6 3 2 44290 6 50618 M56945 5,63272 3 3 43 3 8 3 5 83 6 4 3 >6 5 17 6 18 2 84 5 34 The Wejl-lncl'.a 'Merchants AJijiant. (Produce of the-Sales of Goods in Spanilh Dolhrs and Ryals, to gain fo mujeh.^' Cent, on the Steiling Coft, as under. jPriine|6paniih Money jspamih Moneyj 50 ^ Cent, dol. ryals lothl I 79 643 . 1287 *93° Z S74 3218 3861 45°; •5 '49 i 79 r 6436 12872 *93°9 Z 574S 32*81 . 3S618 [45°54 '51490 ,57927 164363 644 13 o '9 5 438 5 2 3 589 654 *3°9 *963 2618 3 Z 72 3977 1 45 s 1 5236 5890 - 6 545 •8 13090 7 *9636 6 z6i8i 32727 39272 45818 52363 158909 >5454 5° fC. 1 5 4 Si: •The IVeji-India Merchants Jjji/tant. 37 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spanifh Dollars and Ryals, to gain fo much Cent, on the Sterling Coll as under. Prime [Spanifh Money Spanilh Money Sp. Mon Sp. Mon. to gam to gain 1 to gain to ling. 55 ‘F Cent - 52 ^ 0 . 55 c. | doll. Tyals 10 doll, ryals 10 do! r. 10 dol. r. 10 I 6 5 3 6 6 1 0 2 O 2 *7 >3 5 «3 4 2 0 5 3 O 5 4 : 7 7 20 2 3 I 0 2 + 26 4 9 27 0 4 I 2 6 1 2 8 5 33 33 6 5 I 5 3 l 5 5 6 3 ? 7 4 40 4 7 2 Z 7 46 4 7 47 2 2 6 2 2 9 8 53 9 0 9 2 5 3 2 5 6 S 59 7 60 7 0 3 0 3 4 10 66 4 4 67 5 1 3 2 6 3 3 20 ‘33 7 J 35 2 2 w 3 5 3 3 5 8 3° *99 5 202 7 3 2 4 5 4 ° z66 5 27O 4 4 >3 4 6 4 3 5 ° 332 5 8 338 1 5 H 4 5 3 4 5 9 6o 399 6 5 1? 5 6 7 °i 465 6 5 . 473 3 6 l6 5 6 3 8o 53 z 9 111 0 7 17 5 5 3 5 6 0 9° 59S 7 3 608 5 8 l8 , 5 9 6 O 7 665 3 6 676 z 9 *9 6 6 6 5 1330 7 3 1352 5 8 300 1996 9 0 7 400 1661 6 5 Z 7°5 3 6 , g 500 33 z 7 z 3381 6 5 600 39 92 5 8 4058 • 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 700 4658 5 4734 4 4 2 0 0 5 0 0 s 800 5323 5 1 5410 7 3 3 0 0 7 0 0 900 5989 7 6087 0 0 9 0 0 9 6654 4 4 6763 5 1 5 0 I 0 I 2000 13309 7 •3527 6 0 I 4 0 I 4 3000 >9963 5 1 zozgo 7 3 7 0 1 6 0 I 6 4000 26618 5 27054 4 4 8 0 1 8 0 I S 6°°° 33272 5 8 33818 1 5 9 0 2 0 0 2 0 39927 z 40581 6 5 10 0 2 3 0 2 3 7000 46581 6 5 47345 3 6 11 0 2 5 0 2 5 . Sooo 53236 2 9 54109 £ 0 0 c 0 1 9000 59890 7 3 60871 5 8 0 0 1 0 0 1 10000 66545 3 6 67636 2 9 0 0 z 0 0 2 Produce 3 » Tht Wsft-Inila Minhants AJJiJlant. Produce ofthe Sales of Goods in SpaniflTDollaM and Ryals, to gain Jo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Coil as under. Prime Coft Spanifii Money.l Spanilh Money, Sr, Sp. Mon. Sp. Mon.l Ster¬ ling. 57 Cent. 60 V Cent. 57 i ¥ 60 Fc- doll, ryals lot doll, ryals lot cn dol T. 0 dol. r. 10 1 6 7 0 6 7 9 1 0 2 7 0 2 8 2 13 6. 0 *3 7 7 2 0 5 5 0 5 6 3 20 4 9 20 7 6 3 0 4 4 27 3 9 27 7 4 4 3 3 2 5 34 9 34 7 3 5 5 8 6 0 6 4* I 9 41 7 1 6 5 0 8 7 48 O 9 48 7 0 7 1 3 3 5 8 54 7 9 I s 6 8 8 6 3 9 61 6 8 62 6 7 9 3 0 8 3 1 10 68 5 8 6 9 6 5 10 3 3 5 3 3 9 20 *37 3 6 '39 5 1 11 3 6 3 3 6 7 3° 206 5 209 3 6 12 4 4 5 4° *74 7 3 279 2 «3 4 3 7 4 4 3 5° 343 5 1 349 O 7 •4 4 6 5 4 7 6o 412 9 418 7 1 •5 5 5 9 7° 481 0 7 488 5 8 16 5 4 0 5 4 7 8o 549 6 6 ' 558 4 4 - •7 5 6 8 5 7 5 9° 618 4 4 628 9 18 6 5 3 6 3 100 * 68 y 698 5 >9 6 4 6 5 l 200 *374 4 4 1396 9 300 206l 6 5 2094 4 4 c 400 *749 0 7 2792 5 8 £ SOO 3436 2 9 349° 7 3 600 4123 5 4189 0 7 . 1 O' 0 2 0 0 2 4810 7 3 4887 2 2 0 0 5 0 0 5 Eco 5496 4 ss 8 s 3 6 3 0 0 7 0 0 7 900 6185 3 6. 6283 5 1 4 0 0 9 0 0 9 : 1000 6872 5 8 6981 6 5 i 5 0 1 0 2 2006 *3745 3 6 13963 5 6 0 1 4 0 4 3000 20618 i 5 20945 3 6 : 7 0 1 6 0 6 ' 4000 27490 7 3 27927 8 0 1 9 0 9 5000 343^ 5 .34909 7 9 0 2 0 i 6000 41236 v9 41890 7 3 10 0 2 3 0 2 3 : 7000 48109 0 7 48872 5 8 11 0 2 6 0 2 6 8000 54981 6 6 S5«54 4 4 0 0 1 0 0 1 : 9000 61854 4 3 62836 9 .4 0 0 1 0 ' 0 1 10000 68727 69818 1 5 0 0 0 0 2 Produce The Wejl-Ind'ia Merchants. AJfiflant. 39 Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spaniih Dollars and Ryals, to gain fo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Colt as under. Coft 6 Ster¬ ling. Spaniih Money, 6z °f^Cent. doll, ryals lot Spaniih Money, to gain 65 ^ Cent, doll, ryals lot ,:]Sp. Mon. c I «> gain 5 62.I p. C. 5|dol. r. 10 p. Mon. 5j°f C. lol. r. 10 - 7 0 7 7 1 6 028 029 2 >4 « 5 14 3 2 0 5 7 0 s ! 2148 1 0 5 1 0 6 28 2 C> 28 6 4 4 1 3 3 » 3 5 3S 3 6 36 0 0 5 1 6 2 1 6 4 6 42 4 4 43 * 6 6 2 I 0 2 1 3 4? 5 * 50 3 2 7 2 3 8 S 56 5 8 57 4 8 8 267 9 63 6 $ 64 6 4 9 3 « 5 3 1 ^ IO 70 7 3 72 0 0 3 4 3 3 4 8 zo 141 6 5 ;n 0: 11 3 7 2 3 7 7 2t2 5 8 12 4 2 6 283 5 I 288 0 0 '3 448 4 5 4 5° 354 4 4 425 3 6 360 0 0 14 4 7 7 5 0 3 6o 432 0 0 5 2 5 5 3 2 496 2 9 504 0 0 16 5 5 3 5 6 1 8o 567 2 2 576 0 0 >7 6 0 2 6 1 0 9° 638 1 3 648 0 0 18 6 3 0 6 3 S 2dO 3°o 500 709 O' 7 1418 1 5 2127 2 2 2836 2 9 3545 3 6 1440 0 0 2160 0 0 2880 0 0 3600 0 0 19 £ 6 5 9 0 6 7 000 4254 4 4 4320 0 0 l 700 4963 j 1 5040 0 0 0 0 5 800 5672 s 8 5760 0 0 3 007 OO; 900 6381 6 5 6480 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 1 c 1000 7°9° 7 3 : 7200 0 0 5 0 1 2 0 I 2 2000 14181 6 5 : 14400 0 0 6 0 1 4 O I 4 3000 21272 5 8 ; 21600 0 0 7 0 1 7 0 1 7 4000 28363 s 1 ; 28800 0 0 8 0 1 9 0 1 9 5000 35454 4 4 ; 36000 0 0 9 022 022 6000 42545 3 6 43200 0. 0 10 0 2 4 024 7000 49636 2 9 | 50400 0 0 11 026 026 8000 56727 2 2 j C7600 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 9000 63818 1 j i 64800 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 10000 70909 0 7 62000 0 0 Produce 42 ‘Tie Wejl-India Merchants Jjfiflant. Produce of Sales of Goods in Spanilh Dollars and Ryals, gain fo much <{p Cent. On the Sterling Coll, as under. toj ColT Ster- h dpattifh Money 77i^ Cent -. do', ryals Joth Spanilh Money to gain 80 “{P Cent, do!, ryals 10th Shillings. Sp. Mon. to gain 77il?C. dol. r. 101 Sp. to 80^ dol pc. , 6 O 7 6 8 i 0 3 1 0 3 2 *5 3 9 *5 5 7 2 0 6 2 0 6 3 3 2 3 I 9 23 4- 5 3 I 3 I 4 4 30 7 9 3« 3 3 4 1 4 4 I 4 6 3» 5 8 39-; 2 5 * 5 I 7 7 8 .46 3 8 47 0 6 2 6 •2 9 54 - 54 7 7 2 5 7 2 ’ 6 0 8 61 7 62 7 8 3 8 3 1 6 9 5 7 70 5 5 9 3 3 9 ■3 4 3 10 77 3 6 78 4 4 10 3 7 0 3 7 + 20 154 7 ’ 3 >57 0 7 II 4 1 4 3o n ? 2 9 2 35 5 1 12 4 2 4 5 7 40 309 6 5 3'4 A | ■3 3 5 9 5° 387 2 39 2 D *4 5 3 4 5 4 ° 6o 464 5 8 47' 2 '5 s 6 5 5 7 I ? o 542 5 549 5 16 6 ■ 6;6 3 8o 619 ■ 5 628 2 9 '7 6 4 7|6 5 9° 697 7 706 7 3 18 7 87 0 ICO 774 : 4 4 785 3 *9 7 9 7 3 7 200 >549 7 *57° 7 3 300 2323 5 z 35 6 2 9 400 3op8 I 5 3*4* 5 t 500 3872 5 8 39 2 7 . * .L, 600 4*47 4712 5 1. 0 0 0 0 3 7OO 3421 6 5 5498 1 5 2. 0 . 0 5 0 0 5 800 6196 9 6283 5 •j 3 0 0 0 0 8 goo 6970 7 3 7069 0 7! 4. 0 1 0 0 1 0 1000 7745 3 6 7»S4 4 4! 5 0 1 - 0 1 3 2000 15490 7 3 15709 7! 6 0 I 0 1 6 3000 23236 , 2 9 23563 5 1 7 0 1 8 0 1 8 4000 30981 6 5 3*4*8 1 - 5 8 0 2 0 2 1 5000 38727 39 2 7 2 5 8 9 0 2 4°. 2 4 6000 46472 . 5 - 8 47 I2 7 2 2 10 0 2 60 2 6 7000 54218 1 5, 54981 6 5 11 0 2 0 2 S 8000 51963 5 62836 9 •j 0 0 0 0 1 gooo 69709 7 70690 7 3 i 0 0 1 1° 0 i .’7454 4 4 78545 3 6 l 0 0 0 2 Produ il 'The IFeJl-India Merchants AjJiJiant. 43 Produce of Sales of Goods in Spanilh Dollars and Ryals, to gain fo much ‘^'Cent. on the Sterling Coft, as under. Coft Ster- ling" 1. Spanifh Money. Spanilh Money to gain j to gain 82I Cent. 85 Cent, dol. rvals 10th dol. ryals 10th 1 Sp. Mon. to gain Saip. C. dol. r. tot Sp. Mon. 8j°$'C. do!, r. lot 0 6 2 15 7 4) 16 I 2 2 0 6 4 0 6 5 3 23 7 M 24 1 7 3 I b I 1 7 3' 8, 32 ■ 2 3 4 I 4 7 I 4 9 39 .6 5, 5° 9 5 7 9 6 6 3: 48 3 5 6 2 3 2 3 4 7 55 6 5 6 4 1 7 2 6 3 2 6 6 63 5 71 64 4 7 8 3 5 3 9 7 1 5 4; 7* 5 9 3 4 7 3 5 * 10 79 5 1; so 5 10 3 7 9 4 0 3 20 *59 2 161 3 6 11 4 3 0 4 I 1 ■3° 2 3« 3 242 1 5 12 4 2 4 6 8 40 3>« 4 4 322 7 3 •3 5 4 5 2 0 5° 39 8 5 403 5 14 5 4 5 2 6o 51484 2 9 *5 5 0 ° 5 3 6 565 0 7 l6 6 3 0 6 | 7 8o 0 7 645 6 5 >7 6 6 2 6 b 9 9° 716 5 8 726 4 4 18 7 3 7 2 2 too 796 9 ?°7 •9 7 4 5 5 4 200 1592 5 8 1614 * 4 300 2 3«9 7. 2421 5 3185 3 6 3229 0 7 39 s * 6 5 4036 2 9 4778 1 s' 4843 5 1 0 O 3 0 700 5574 4 4 5650 7 3 2 0 0 5 0 0 5 800 6*70 7 3 6458 5 3 0 0 8 0 0 8 900 7167 2 2 7265 3 6 4 0 1 1 0 i 1 tooo 7963 5 1 8072 5 8 5 0 1 4 0 1 4 2000 15927 2 16145 2 6 6 0 1 6 0 1 6 3000 23890 7 3 24218 ° 5 7 0 X 9 0 1 9 4000 3*854 4 4 32290 6 3 0 2 0 5 000 398*8 5 4°5 6 3 4 9 4 2 4 6000 4778(1 6 5 48436 9 10 2 7 7000 55745 3 6 56508 7 7 n 0 3 9 "5 0 8000 63709 7 64581 5 5 1 0 0 0 0 1 9000 71672 5 8 72654 3 4 . 0 c 0 0 1 10000 79635 9 80727 G 2 10 0 2 Produce 44 The TVeJl-lndia Merchants' Aflijlant. Produce of Sales of, Goods in Spanilh Dollars and Ryals, gain fo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Coll, as under. Spanilh Money to gain 87 t^Cent. dol. ryals tothl ipanifh Money to gain 90 Cent. 654 9°] 736 1 -818 1636 z +54 3272 5 001 4090 ' 49°9 S7 Z 7 ■5 900 & 8181 16363 3ooo| 2 454j 4000^32727 5000^40909 600049090 7000:57272 800065454 9000:73636 10000,81818 580 66} 746 829 1658 2487 33i6 4*45 4974 5 8o 3 6632 7461 8290 16581 6 24872 5 33163 7 41454 7 3'49745 5 8 58036 4 4,66327 2 974618 1 5,82909 93 5 53 5 4 46 7 67 Tie JVeJl-Indla Merchants Ajjdlant. [Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spanifh Dollars and Ryals, j to gain fo much ^ Cent, on the Sterling Cell as under. Prime Cod Spaniih Money, Spanifh Money, Sc S fo Mon. Sp. Mon. Ster¬ ling. to gain 92J ^ Cent. 95 ^ Cent. l 9 2 i C. 95 f c. 1. doll, ryals lot doll. yals lot dol r. 10 dol r. 10 1 8 '2 8 4 .1 1 o~ 3 4 0" 4 2 16 4 *7 0 t 6 0 3 2 5 2 5 4 2 3 2 1 2 4 33 4 34 0 3 4 5 4 6 5 4 2 0 0 4 4 5 8 0 6 5? 5 1 0 4 6 4 2 4 4 7 8 58 4 59 4 5 7 7 5 8 67 68 0 6 8 9 9 75 4 76 4 7 9 6 6 fo 8+ 0 0 «5 0 7 10 4 6 4 20 168 0 0 170 1 5 n 4 5 0 4 4 5° 252 0 0 2 55 2 12 3 8 40 336 0. 0 34° 2 9 ! 3 3 7 4 2 5° 0 0 4 2 5 3 6 >4 7 6 6 o 504 0 0 5 to 4 4 '5 4 0 588 0 0 595 5 1 16 5 8 5 So 672 0 0 680 5 8 '7 7 1 i 7 9 9° 756 0 0 765 6 5 18 7 4 5 7 3 840 0 0 ,85° 7 3 '9 7 7 200 1680 0 0 6 5 300 2520 0 0 2552 5 8 ii 4OO 3360 0 0 3403 5 1 8 500 0 0 4254 4 4 1-1 600 S°4° 0 0 5105 3 6 1 0 0 3 0 0 3 700 5880 0 0 5956 2 9 2 0 0 6 0 0 6 800 6720 0 0 6807 2 2 3 0 0 9 0 0 q 900 7560 0 0 7658 1 5 4 0 1 0 1 1 loco 8400 0 0 S509 0 5 0 1 4 1 0 i 4' 2000 16800 0 0 1701S t 5 6 i 0 1 7 1 7; 3000 25200 0 0 25527 2 2 7 0 0 2 4000 33600 0 0 34036 2 9 8 0 2 3 0 2 3 5OOO 42000 0 0 4 2 545 3 6 9 0 2 5 0 2 5 6000 50400 0 0 51054 4 4 O 2 8 0 2 s; 7OOO 58800 0 0 595 fi 3 5 1 U 'i 0 3 1 0 3 i 8000 67200 0 0 68072 5 8 i] 0 I 0 1 9OOO 75600 0 ■0 76581 6 5 0 0 l 0 0 1 10000 84000 0 0 85090 7 5 1' 0 0 2 0 0 2 | Produce 46 the Wejl-India Merchants AjftjlanU Produce of the Sales of Goods in Spaniih Dollars and Ryals, to gain fo much Cent on the Sterling Colt as undei. CoT Ster¬ ling. Spaniih Money, Spaniih Money to gain I to gain 97t Undent. 100 ^ Cent, doll, rva's tot* doll, rvals 10 1 Sp. Mon to qain 97 ifC dol. r. 10 Sp. Mon. 100 I'd. dol. r. 10 8 4 9 8 5 8 0 3 0 3 5 •7 » 9 17 3 6 0 6 070 3 z 5 6 8 26 5 3 1 2 1 2 s 4 ■ 34 T 8 34 7 3 4 1 5 8 1 6 0 4 43 ° 7 43 5 2 * 5 6 5» 5 7 . 52 9 6 2 4 2 4 9 7 60 2 6 61 7 3 0 8 68 7 9 69 6 5 8 3 3 6 3 3 9 S 77 4 4 ' 78 4 4 3 7 3 7 4 10 86 • 5 87 4 2 5 429 20 >7 Z 2 9 *74 4 4 11 4 5 5 464 3° 258 4 4 26l 6 5 12 5 1 4 5 1 9 4° 344 5 8 349 0 7 •3 5 4 8 ■5 5 4 3° 430 7 3 436 9 *4 6 0 3 609 6o g>7 0 7 523 5 15 6 3 7 6 4 41 7° 611 7 3 16 6 7 67 8 ! 8o 689 3 6 698 5 17 7 2 6 7 3 a! 9° 775 5 1 7«5 3 6 18 7 6 0 7 6 8; 861 6 5 872 5 8 l 9 8 1 5 8 2 3 200 1723 5 1 *745 3 300 z 5 8 5 3 6 2618 5 8 00 3447 2 2 349° 7 3 S 500 4309 0 7 4363 5 I Ph 600 5*7° 7 3 5236 9 1 3 003 700 5 « OIO9 7 2 0 0 & 006 800 6894 4 4 6981 6 5 3 0 0 9 ° 0 9 goo 7756 z 9 7854 4 4 4 0 I 2 1000 8618 1 5 87 z 7 2 5 0 I 5 0 1 s 2000 17236 2 9 *7454 4 4 6 0 I 7 0 1 7 3000 Z S854 4 i 26181 6 5 7 0 2 0 4000 3447 z 5 8 34909 0 7 8 0 2 3 ° 2 3 5000 43090 7 3 43636 2 9 9 0 2 6 0 2 6 6000 5 ! 7°9 0 7 52363 5 1 10 0 2 9 0 2 9 7000 OO327 » 3 7 3 n 0 3 2 0 3 2 8000 68945 2 6 69818 1 5 i 0 a 1 0 0 1 gooo 77563 4 » 78;45 3 6 0 0 1 0 0 1 lOOOO 86181 5 5 87272 5 8 0 0 2 002 A Table! The Weft-India Merchants JJftflant. 47 A T»ble for finding the Gain Cent, in Sterling, when the! Goods are fold in Spanilh Money of Dollars and Ryals. & Gain rCent. Sterling. & Gain f Cent. Sterling. 1 ■^ G Cent. M Gain Cent. Sterling. 44° 1 6I5 4 1 790 81 166 2 i 445 2 620 42 794 82 169 5 449 3 624 43 798 83 174 7i 454 4 628 44 803 84 178 10 45« 5 6 33 45 807 182 12 i 463 6 637 46 811 86 186 15 467 7 - 47 816 87 190 i 7 4 47' 8 646 48 826 88 194 20 475 9 6^o 49 828 89 198 22j 480 10 055 5° 829 90 202 25 484 11 659 5 1 833 9‘ 206 2 7 4 489 12 b&3 5 2 838 92 210 3° 493 >3 668 53 842 93 214 3 2 ‘- 497 14 672 54 847 94 218 35 502 *5 676 55 8?i 95 37! 506 16 681 56 855 96 226 40 Jto 17 685 57 860 97 230 42 4 5*5 l8 689 58 864 98 235 45 519 *9 694 59 868 99 239 471 524 20 698 60 873 243 5° 528 21 703 61 877 101 247 52! 53^1 —2 2 707 62 881 102 251 55 537 23 711 63 886 103 255 574 54i 24 716 64 890 104 259 60 545 2 5. 720 65 894 105 263 6 zi 55° 26 724 66 899 106 267 65 554 27 729 6 7 9°3 107 67 4 5 f 28 733 68 967 108 2 75 563 29 737 69 9j* 109 27 9; 7*4 567 3° 74i 70 110 283; 75, 576 3 1 746 7 1 9 2I hi 287 774 3 2 750 72 925 112 291 80 58° 33 755 73 929 113 295 824 585 34 759 74 934 1 H 299 85 589 35 764 75 938 1 ‘5 3°3 874 553 36 768 76 943 116 307 90 598 37’ 772 77 947 117 3*i 9*4 602 38 777 78 95 1 m 3 3*5 95 606 39 781 79 956 ”9 3*9 974 6ll 40 785 80 960 120 323 _ The 4 8 the mjl-lndia Merchants Affiftalii. The Currency of Bolton in Currency, the Dollar New England reduced into Jamaica 1 n Bolton 6s, in Jamaica 6s. 6d. 1 1 s? Jamaica Jamaica Jamaica If Currency. 1 0 Currency. |r Currency. 1. 1. S . d. I. 1. s. d. i. 1. s. d. 1 1 , 8 34 36 16 g 67 72 II 8 2 2 3 4 35 37 18 4 68 73 '3 4 3 3 5 3<> 39 0 69 74 15 0 4 4 6 37 40 8 70 75 16 8 5 3 8 4 38 4* 3 4 7 1 76 18 4 6 6 10 0 39 4 2 5 0 7 Z 78 0 0 7 ii 8 40 43 6 8 73 79 i 8 8 8 13 4 41 44 8 4 74 80 3 4 9 9 4 2 45 10 75 81 5 0 10 10 16 8 43 46 11 8 76 82 6 8 11 II is 4 44 47 M 4 77 83 8 4 12 *3 0 45 48 *5 7» «4 ; >3 •4 1 8 4 b 49 16 8 79 85 11 8 '4 '5 3 4 5° 18 4 80 86 i3 4 ! > 16 y 0 48 5 2 0 0 81 87 15 0 16 '7 6 8 49 53 I 8 82 88 16 8 17 18 8 4 5° 54 3 4 83 89 18 + ■ 18 '9 10 5« 55 5 84 9 l 19 20 11 8 5 Z 5<> 6 8 *5 92 1 8 20 21 *3 4 53 57 8 4 86 93 3 4 21 22 54 58- lO 87 94 5 0 22 23 16 55 59 11 8 88 95 6 8 23 z 4 18 4 56 bo 1 i 4 89 96 8 4 24 26 0 57 61 J5 90 97 25 z 7 1 8 5 s 62 16 8 9' 98 11 8 26 z8 3 4 59 6 i 18 4 9 2 1 99 >3 4 z 9 ■ 5 , 60 6 S 0 0 93 [ 100 1 5 0 28 3°. 6 8 61 | 66 1 8 94 ! 101 16 8 29 3i 8 4 62 | 67 3 4 95 i !° z 18 4 3° 3 2 10 0 63 1 68 5 96 10+ 0 0 3 1 33 u 8 ; 64 69 6 8 97 1 '05 1 8 32 34 13 4 6 s 7° 8 4 78 106 3 4 33 35 15 0 66 7* 0 0 1 99 , 107 5 0 Bolton The Wejl-India Merchants JJftJlant. 49 Bollon Money reduced into Jamaica Money, and the Number of Dollars in Bofton Money, at 6s. each. Bolt. Jamaica Number of I . Dollars in 1 £ Jamaica dumber fDollars Mon. Currency. 1. s. d. Bofton Money, u: Currency. n Bofton 1, doll, ryals tot 05 1. s. d. Money, dol. r. 10 i 1 1 8 3 2 7 0 1 1 0 1 3 2 2 3 4 6532 0 2 2 0 2 7 3 3 5 0 10 0 0 : 0 3 3 040 4 6 8 >3*7' 044 0 5 3 5 8 4 16 5 3 5 0 6 7 6 6100 20 0 0 066 I 0 0 7 7 n 8 23 2. 7 077 « 1 3 8 8 >3 4 26 5 3 0 8 8 1 2 7 9 9 ’1 0 3° 0 0 lo 99 1 4 0 10 10 16 8 33 2 7 1 0 10 10 > 5 3 21 13 4 66 5 3 1 0 II 11 1 6 7 32 10 0 100 0 0 1 2 0 13 0 2 0 0 4° 43 6 8 >33 2 7 1 3 0 14 i 2 1 3 54 3 4 166 5 3 1 40 15 2 6o 65 0 0 5 0 16 3 2 4 0 75 16 8 233 z 7 1 60 17 4 2 5 3 8o 86 13 -i 266 5 3 1 7 0 18 5 2 6 7 9° 97 10 0 300 0 0 1 80196 3 0 0 108 6 8 333 2 7 1 9i 07 200 300 400 500 216 13 4 32; 0 0 433 6 8 54i. >3 4 666 5 3 1000 0 0 < >333 2 7 c "i S ' d ' q 0 000 6 s o 0 c 0 0 I 700 758 6,8 2333 2 7 20 21 0 0 2 8 00 866 13 4 2666 5 3 30 31 0 0 3 goo 975 0 c 3000 0 0 40 41 0 0 5 1083 6 8 3333 2 7 So 52 006 2000 2166 13 4 6666 5 3 60 62 007 3000 3250 0 c 10000 0 0 1° l 2 008 4000 4333 6 * 1 13333 2 7 80 8 5 [ 0 0 9 500c 5416 13 4 1- 16666 5 3 90 9 ; [010 600c 6500 0 c 10 0 1C 5 [Oil 700c 7583 6 i 1 -23333 2 7 11 0 li ; J 0 I 2 800c 8666 J3 t 4 26666 5 3 Jo 0 : 10 0 0 900c 9750 0 < 3 30000 0 0 Jo 0 : 2 0 0 0 1000c 10833 6 1 5 33333 2 7 | o 0 ; 3 0 0 Q H The 50 The IVeji-InA'ia Merchants Affijlant. The Currency of Jamaica reduced into the Currency of Bofton in New England, the Dollar 6s. 6d. in Jamaica, and 6s. in Bofton. Jamaica Currency. Bofton Money. l! S £ Bofton Money. s § Bofton Money. 1. !. s. d. q- 1. 1. s. d. 1. >• s. d. 1 0 |8 5 2 34 3 1 7 8 67 6l 16 11 2 1 j6 11 0 35 3 2 6 1 68 62 '5 4 3 2 15 4 2 3 6 3.3 4 7 69 63 13 10 4 3 >3 10 0 37 34 3 1 70 64 12 3 5 4 12 3 2 3« 35 6 7' 63 10 9 6 5 16 9 O 39 39 66 9 7 •6 9 2 3 40 36 18 5 73 67 7 8 8 7 7 8 1 4i 37 16 11 74 68 6 1 9 8 6 1 3 42 3« >5 4 75 69 4 7 10 9 4 7 0 43 39 *3 10 76 7° 3 . u 10 3 0 0 44 40 12 3 77 7 1 6 12 11 1 6 0 45 4i lO 9 78 7 Z 0 0 *3 12 0 0 0 46 4 2 9 79 7 2 18 5 >4 12 18 ' ; 0 47' 43 7 8 80 73 16 11 >5 13 16 11 0 48 44 6 1 81 74 '5 4 16 14 ij 4 0 49. 45 4 7 82 75 13 10 >7‘ 15 13 10 0 5 °. 46 3 1 83 76 12 4 i8 16 12 3 6 S 1 47 6 84 77 10 9 >9 17 10 9 0 l s 2 :: 48 0 85 ?8 9 18 9 2 6 53 48 18 5 86 79 8 21 19 7 8 b .54 49 16 11 87 80 6 22 2cf : 6 ’ i 0 s%. 5° >5 4 88 81 4 7 2 3 21 : 4 7 0 s° 5i >3 10 89 82 3 1 2 4 22 :‘ 3 - 0 0 *7,1 S z 12 4 9° 83 1 6 2 5 *3 1 6 0 ,5 s * S3 10 9 9' ; 84 0 0 26 24 0 0 0 59 54 9 92 84 18 S 2 7 24 18 5 0 60 55 7 8 ’ 93' 85 16 11 28 25 16 11 0 61 56 6 1 94 86 •5 4 29 26 i s 4 0 62 57 4 7 95 87 13 3° 27 13 10 0 63 58 3 « 96 88 12 3 3 l 28 12 .3 0 64 59 1 6 97 89. 10 9 32 z 9 10 9 0 6 a 60 0 0 98 90 9 3 33 3° 9 2 0 66 60 18 5 99 9 r 7 8 ...!. . Jamaica J2 The iftejl-India Merchants Afftjiant. The Currency of Jamaica reduced into Penfilvania Money, Dollar 6s. 6d. in Jamaica, and 75. 6d. in Penfilvania. the 'U Penfilvania S'* Penfilvania 'f ? Penfilvania .11 Money. li Money. h Money. 1. 1.; S> d. 1. 1. d. 1. i. s. d. I li il I 34 39 4 7 67 77 6 ! 2 z j: «> 2 35 40 7 8 68 78 9 3 3 3M9 3 30 4' 10 9 69 79 4 4 41. * 2 4 37 4* 13 10 70 80 5 s S 15 ri .4 •38 43 lb 11 7' 81 18 6 6 6j ’ IS • 5 . 39 45 ' 0 7 2 83 6 7 8:'- ii 6 ' 4° 46 1 73 84 4 7 8 9i:;i4 7 .4* 47 6 2 74 83 7 8 9 , ,0 i:!i7 8 42 48 9 3 .75 86 IO 9 10 n 1 ^0 9 ' 33 49 12 4 yb 87 13 io M - 12 3? 10 44 5 °, '5 .4 77 ' 88 lb II 12 ij| 16 11 45 5* 18 *,§ 78 90 0 0 '3 ,'5 0 40 S3 I b 79 9i 3 1 *4 i6r "3 I 47 54 4 7 •80 92 6 2 '5 '7, 2 48 55 7 s 81 93 9 3 16 ,8 i ;i9 3 49 5<> 10 9 '82 94 12 4 •7 4. 5° 57 *3 10 83 95 >5 5 18 *°l - Js 5 S' 58; 16 II H 96 18 6 '9 21 1 ;j8 5. 5 2 60 0 0 85 98 6 20 2 j| > 6 . 53 61 3 1 86 99 4 7 21 z 4 : , 14 7 54 62 b 2 87 100’ 7 8 24 2 5' ;7 8 55 6 l 9 3 : 88 IOI IO 9 2 3 1 26' ‘ io 9 5 6 64 12 4 89 102 '3 io *4" 2 7/ >3 10 57 6 5i '5 4 90 IO3 16 H 2 s: 28- 16 11 S 8 66 18 5 9' 105 0 0 26' 30 io 0 59 6S 1 6 9 2 106 3 1 2 7- 31 3 1 60 69 4 7 93 107 6 2 28 32 .6 2 61 7° 7 8 94 io8 ; 9 3 29 33 9 3 62 7' 10 9 95 . 109 12 4 3° 34 ' 2 4 63 7 2 '3 10 96 110 *5 5 3' 35 '5 5 64 73 16 11 97 , Hi 18 5 3 2 36 18 5 65 75 0 0 98 ■ "3 1 6 33 38 1 6 66 76 3 1 99 114 4' 7 Thej The Wejl-India Merchants Ajjiftant. 51 The Currency of Jamaica reduced into Penfilvania Money, and the Number of Dollats contained in the Jamaica Currency at Six Shillings and Six-pence each. Ja c7 Mo- ney Penfilvania Money. 1. s. d. Number of Dollars in Ja maica Money at 6s. 6d. each, dol. ryals 'oth 1 Penfilva¬ nia Mo- 1. s. d. Number ofDollars in Jama¬ ica Mon. dol. r. lot , 1 3 1 0 £> 0 1 2 0 1 2 2 2 6 2 6 I 2 0 2 4 0 z 5 3 3 9 3 9 X 8 3 0 3 5 0 3 7 4 4 12 12 2 5 4 0 7 0 2 9 5 5 >5 4 >5 3 5 5 9 6 2 6 6 18 5 18 3 7 0 0 11 0 7 4 7 8 I 6 21 4 3 7 0 8 1 0 6 8 9 4 7 2 4 4 9 0 9 3 1 8 9 10 7 z 7 5 5 9 0 3 1 io II 10 9 3° 6 10 11 6 4 3 20 z 3 I 7 6l 4 3 II 0 12 8 2 2 3o 34 12 4 9 Z 2 5 12 0 13 10 6 8 40 4 6 3 I 123 0 6 >3 0 >5 0 2 0 0 So 57 •3 10 1 53 6 H 0 lb 2 2 X 2 6o 69 4 7 184 4 9 »5 0 l 7 4 2 2 5 7° 80 *5 5 215 3 16 0 18 6 2 3 7 So 92 6 246 17 0 ! 9 7 2 4 9 90 103 16 II 276 7 4 18 I 9 2 6 2 100 1 '5 7 8 3°7 5 ■ S \ l 9 1 1 11 2 7 4 200 5 6I5 3 3°0 34 6 3 923 0 6 u 400 461 9 1230 6 w 500 57 6 18 5 >538 3 7 * S. d. q- 000 692 6 2 1816 X 2 0 I I 0 0 1 700 807 «3 10 2153 6 8 2 ;° 2 I b 0 2 800 923 1 6 2461 4 3 3 0 3 2 0 O 3 900 1038 9 3 2769 1 8 4 0 4 2 0 0 4 1000 1153 16 11 3076 7 5 0 5 3 0 ° 1 2000 z 3 07 •3 10 6153 6 b 0 7 0 0 0 6 3000 346« 10 9 9230 6 7 0 8 0 0 0 7 4615 7 8 12307 5 5 0 9- 0 0 0 8 5000 5769 4 8 '5384 4 9 9 0 10 2 0 0 9 6000 6923 7 18461 4 3 10 0 11 2 0 1 0 7000 8070 iS 6! 2I 53 S 3 7 11 I 0 3 0 1 1 8000 1 9230 5 24615 3 1 \ 0 0 1 0 0 0 9000 10384 |5 4 27692 z 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 10000I 11538 9 3l 30769 1 8 0 0 3 0 ° 0 3[U „ - .Penfilvania 54 7he Wejl-India Merchants Ajjijlant. The Wejl-lndia Merchants /.ffxjUmU 55 Penfilvania Currency reduced into Jamaica Money, and the Number of Dollars contained in the Penfilvania Money, at Seven Shillings and Six-pence each. Penfil Number of Number vania Dollars Jamaica of Dollars Mo- JamaicaMoncy. in Penfilvania Money. inPenfilv. Money. Money. 1. 1. s. a. dol. ryals lot s. d. dol. r. lot i 0 '7 4 2 5 3 1 0 11 0 1 i 1 '4 S 7 9 3 2 12 0 8 3 7 032 4 3 9 4 10 5 3 4 3 6 042 5 4 6 '3 7 5 4 4 0 s 3 6 5 4 16 0 6 7 6 4 18 5 7 6 I 8 6 18 8 21 7 6 11 1 0 4 9 7 16 O z 4 0 9 7 IO ' ' 5 io 8 13 4 26 5 3 10 8 1 2 6 20 «7 6 8 53 7 11 9 6 3 ° 26 0 0 80 0 12 10 5 1 4 8 4 ° 34 ‘3 4 106 5 3 '3 11 3 ‘ 1 8 43 b '33 7 '4 12 1 6 9 6o 5 Z 160 '5 '3 0 60 '3 4 186 5 3 16 '3 IO 8o 69 6 8 2I 3 7 '7 '4 9 2 2 0 78 240 0 18 '5 7 2 3 1 loo 86 '3 4 266 5 3 <9 16 5 2 4 2 Zoo ’73 6 S 33 7 300 800 4oo' 346 ‘3 4 1066 S 3 g 500 433 6 8 •333 7 D- d. q- 600 520 1600 0 I 0 3 0 0 1 700 606 13 4 1866 5 3 2 1 3 0 0 2 800 693 6 8 2133 7 3 2 0 0 3 900 780 2400 0 0 4 3 2 OO4 *000 866 *3 4 2666 5 3 5 4 1 0 0 5 Zooo '733 6 8 5333 7 6! 5 1 005 3 ooo 7' 6 006 4ooo 3466 13 4 10666 5 3 8 7 0 0 0 7 Sooo 4333 6 8 '3333 7 9 ! 7 3 0 0 8 6000 5200 0 16000 io! 8 3 OO9 7000 6066 13 4 18666 5 3 II 9 8oooj 6 933 6 8 2 i 333 7 1 OOO 9000I 7800 0 0 2 OOO ioooo ! 8666 is 4 26666 5 3 j* 0 3 OOO Jamaica The Weji-India Merchants AJJiflant. s& Jamaica Money reduced into New York Currency, the Dollar valued at 6s. 6d. n Jamaica, and 8s. n New York. S c New York 5 2 New York 1 s New York 1 = Currency, j b 3 -.O Currency, j = 3 Currency. 1. 1. s. d. 1. 1. s. d. 1. 1. d. X , 4 7 34 4» l6 11 67 82 9 3 2 9 3 35 43 6 68 83 13 3 3 13 10 36 44 6 2 69 84 18 6 4 18 6 37 45 IO 9 70 86 3 1 5 6 3 1 38 46 >5 5 71 87 7 8 6 7 7 8 39 48 O 0 7 2 88 12 4 7 8 ii 4 40 49 4 7 73 89 l6 11 S 9 16 11 4 1 5° 9 3 74 9 1 X 6 9 1 6 4 2 >3 10 $ 92 6 2 12 6 2 43 5 2 18 6 93 10 9 ii '3 10 9 44 54 3 r 77 94 15 5 12 H 15 5 45 55 7 8 7« 96 0 0 •3 16 46 5 6 l6 4 79 97 4 7 >4 '7 4 7 47 57 11 80 98 9 3 >5 18 9 3 48 59 X 6 81 99 13 16 '9 13 10 49 60 6 2 82 100 18 5 *7 x8 5 5° 61 10 9 o 3 102 3 1 i8 22 3 * 5 1 62 >5 4 84 103 7 8 '9 23 7 8 5 Z 64 0 0 85 104 12 3 20 2 4 12 4 53 6 | 4 7 86 105 16 21 2 5 16 11 54 66 9 3 87 107 6 22 2 7 1 6 55 67 13 10 88 108 6 1 2 3 28 6 2 56 68 18 5 89 109 10 9 2 4 2 9 10 9 '57 70 3 1 90 no 15 4 2 S 30 •5 4 58 7 1 7 8 9 1 112 0 0 26 32 59 16 4 92 113 4 7 27 33 4 7 60 73 11 93 114 9 3 28 34 9 3 61 75 6 94 >>5 *3 11 29 35 13 10 62 7 6 6 1 95 u6 18 6 3° 36 18 s 63 77 10 9 96 118 3 i 31 38 3 1 64 78 15 5 97 n 9 7 8 3 2 39 7 8 6 5 80 0 0 98 120 12 4 33 r 12 + 66 81 4 7 99 121 16 .... Jamaica] 57 58 7 he Wcjl-lndia Merchants AJft/lant. New York Currency reduced into Jamaica Money, the Dollar being valued at 8 s. in the former, and 6 s. 6d. in the latter Place. ■x 1 £ « Jamaica £ £ Jamaica £ ir Jamaica Currency. Currency. H Currency. i. 1. »• d; 1. 1 s. d. 1. 1. s. d. , 0 16 3 34 27 12 6 67 54 89 2 I 12 6 35 28 8 9 68 55 5 0 3 2 8 9 36 29 5 69 $b 1 3 4 3 5 0 37- 30 1 3 70 59 17 6 s 4 I 3 3« 30 •7 6 7« 57 13 9 6 4 >7 6 39 3« >3 9 7 2 58 10 0 7 s 13 9 40 3.2 10 73 59 6 3 8 6 >0 6 4« 33 6 3 74 60 z 6 9 7 • 6 3 42 3.4 6 ' 75 60 18 9 to 8 i 6 43 34 18 9 76 61 ij 0 II 8 18 9 44 35 *5 77 62 11 3 12 9 >9 P 45 39 3 78 63 7 6 13 10 II 3 46 37 7 6 79 64 3. 9 H II 7 6 47 38 3 9 80 65 0 0 •5 12 3 9 48 39 O 81 65 >6 3 l6 '3 9 0 49 39 16 3" 82 66 iz 6 •7 *3 16 3 5°; 49 12 6 83 67 8 9 18 *4 12 ?> 5» 4> ■8 9 «4 68 5 0 19 'S 8 9 S 2 4* 5 8 5 69 » 3 20 16 5 0 53 43 I ■5 86 69 17 6 21 *7 1 3 54 43 >7 6 87 70 *3 9 22 ! 7 >7 b 55 44 >3 9 88 7> 23 *3 9 5 6 + i 89 72 6 3 24 *9 10 0 57' 46 6 3 9° 73 2 6 z 5 20 6 l 58 47 2 6 9« .73 18 9 26 21 2 0 59 47 18 9 92 74 15 0 2 7 21 18 9 60 48 *5 93 75 M 3 28 22 *5 0 61 49 11 3 94 7.6 7 6 29 23 n 3 62 5° 7 6 95' 77 3 9 30 24 7 6 63 5> 3 9 .96 78 3* 2 5 3 9 64 S 2 0 97 78 16 3 32 26 65 52 16 3 78 79 12 6 33 26 16 3 66 53 12 6 99 89 8 9 Newj The Wejl-lndia Merchants Jfiiflant. 59 New York Currency reduced into Number of Dollars contained ir at 8 s. each. Jamaica Money, and the the New York Currency, ^Jpu/ Number of 1 1 Number York Dollars in tL Jamaica | ofDollars Mo. [amaica Money. New York Money. I n N. Y. Money. £ Money. 1. 1 . . d. dol. ryals iotl UJ s. d. dol. r. lot I 0 16 3 2 4 0 0 10 0 I 0 2 1 12 6 5 0 0 2 I 7 3 2 8 9 7 4 0 3 2 5 0 3 0 4 3 5 0 10 0 0 4 3 3 040 S 4 1 3 12 4 0 5 4 O 0 5 0 6 4 17 6 15 0 0 6 4 10 0 6 0 7 5 13 9 17 4 0 5 8 8 6 10 0 20 0 6 6 t 0 0 9 7 6 \ 22 4 0 9 7 4 I 1 0 16 8 2 6 *5 0 0 10 8 I 0 20 16 s ° 5° 0 0 11 8 11 I 3 0 3° *4 7 6 75 0 0 12 9 9 i 4 0 40 3* 10 0 100 0 0 13 10 7 1 s 0 5° 40 12 6 ,2 5 0 0 >4 11 4 1 6 0 6o 48 IS 0 i S o 0 0 is 12 1 7 0 70 5 6 17 6 »75 0 0 16 •3 0 So 6 S 0 0 200 0 0 17 *3 10 2 O 90 73 2 6 225 0 0 18 14 7 2 2 0 100 81 5 0 250 0 0 '9 «5 5 2 3 0 200 >62 10 0 500 0 0 300 *43 IS 0 750 0 0 8 400 3*5 looo 0 0 s 5O0 406 5 0 1250 0 0 cu d. q* 600 487 1500 0 0 I 0 3 0 1 0 7OO 568 15 0 1750 0 0 1 3 020 800 650 2000 0 0 3 2 2 0 3 0 9O6 73» 5 0 225O 0 0 4 3 1 0 3 0 lOOO 812 10 0 250O 0 0 5 4 0 040 2006 1625 0 0 5000 0 0 6 5 0 050 3000 *437 JO 0 75OO 0 0 5 3 060 4000 3250 0 0 10000 0 0 S 6 2 070 5000 4062 10 0 I2J00 0 0 5 7 1 080 0000 4875 0 0 -15000 0 0 K > 8 1 0 8 0 1 7000 5687 10 0 I75OO 0 0 1 ] 1 9 0 090 8000 6500 0 0 20000 0 0 0 X 000 1 900 C 73 «* 10 0 225OO 0 0 1 0 2 000 [ 10000 1 8125 0 0 1 25OOO 0 0 3 000 1 _ I JL Jamaica 6o The Weji-lndta Merchants Jfftflani. Jamaica Money reduced into South Carolina Currency, the Dollar paffing for 6s. 6d. in the former, and 31s. in the latter Place. e s Au 1. South Carolina Money. I. s. d i 5 Au 1. South Carolina Money. 1. s. d. •3 51 E S Au 1. South Carolina Money. 1. s. d. t 4 •S 4 34 162 3 o 67 3 >9 10 9 2 9 9 35 166 18 4 68 3?4 6 .2 3 • '4 6 2 39 >7« 13 9 69 3 2 9 16 6 4 •9 6 37 176 9 7° 333 S ■ 2 3 16 11 38 181 4 6 7 1 338 12 3 6 28 3 39 • s 5 •9 11 343 7 7 7 33 7 8 40 190 •5 4 73 348 3 1 8 3» 3 4 1 •95 10 8 74. 352 18 4 9 4 2 18 5 4 2 200 6 O 75 3 I 7 •3 8 10 47 •3 IP 43 205 16 5 76 9 I II S 2 9 2 44 2O9 10 77 3 6 7 4 5 12 V 4 7 45 214 12 2 78 37' •9 IO 13. 61 •9 II 46 2I9 7 7 79 37 6 ‘5 3 H 66 •5 4 47 224 80 381 9 •5 7« IO . 8 48 228 18 4 81 386 6 1 16 76 6 49 2 33 • 3 9 82 39 1 l6 6 ‘7 81 I 5 5° 238 9 83 395 10 18 »5 i6 9 . S 1 243 4 7 84 400 12 3 '9 90 12 2 5 2 248 0 0 4°5 7 8 20 95 7 8 53 252 •5 4 86 410 3 O 21 3 © 54 2 -57 10 9 87 4H 18 5 2? 104 18 5 55 262 6 88 419 •3 23 109 •3 . 9 i S 6 267 1 7 89 424 9 2 . 2 4 1 H 9 57 2 7 I 6 9° 429 7 2 5 U 9 4 6 58 ?7° 12 3 9‘ 433 •9 11 26 I2 3 •9 59 281 8 8 92 438 •5 -4 128 • 5 4 60 286 3 93 443 10 8 28 '33 8 6l 290 l8 7 94 448 6 1 29 >38 6 62 295 •3 11 95 453 1 16 5 3° •43 1 6 63 300 9 3 96 457 10 31 •47 16 1C 64. 305 4- 8 97 462 12 3 3 2 •S 2 12 3 3«° a 0 ; 9? 467 7 7 33 •57 7 7 66 3'4 ‘5 5 99 47* 3 0 jamai x_a T he Wejl-lndta Merchants Ajfiflant, 6e Jamaica Currency reduced into South Carolina Currency, the Dollar in the former Place valued at 6s. 6d. and in the latter 31 s. and the Value of Dollars in South Carolina Currency, at the Value above each. Ja-_ Mo- ”T South Carolina Currency. 1. s. d. Value of Dollars in South Carolina Money. 1. s. d. 1 South Ca¬ rolina Currency. 1. s. d. 1 4 J 5 4 l 11 0 0 4 9 2 9 10 9 3 2 0 0 9 6 3 *4 6 4 13 0 : 0 14 4 4 *9 1 6 4 0 0 19 l 23 16 7 >5 I 3 10 6 28 12 3 9 6 0 X 8 i 33 7 •7 0 7 l ! 3 4 8 3« 3 12 8 0 s I 18 2 9 42 18 5 *3 19 0 9 2 2 II 10 47 13 IO 15 10 0 10 2 7 8 20 95 7 8 3' 0 0 II 2 12 S 30 143 1 6 46 10 0 12 2 17 2 40 15 4 62 0 0 I ^ 3 2 0 50 238 9 3 77 10 14 3 6 9 60 286 3 93 0 0 15 3 11 6 70 333 16 11 108 10 0 36 3 16 4 80 381 10 9 124 0 0 ■7 4 I 0 90 429 4 7 139 10 0 18' 4 5 10 100 476 18 5 >55 0 0 19! 4 10 7 200 953 16 11 310 0 0 300 *43° >5 4 465 0 0 g 400 1907 ! 3 10 0 0 s 500 2384 12 3 775 0 0 s. d. q. 600 2861 10 9 93° 0 0 I 0 4 3 700 3338 9 3 1085 0 0 2- ! 0 9 2 800 3815 7 8 1240 0 0 3 I 2 I 900 4292 6 1393 0 0 4 1 7 0 IOOo 4769 4 7 1550 0 0 5 1 11 3 ZOOO 9538 9 2 3100 0 0 6 2 4 - 3000 >43°7 >3 10 4650 0 0 7 2 9 ‘ 4000 19076 18 5 6200 0 0 8 3 5000 23846 3 1 775° 0 0 9 3 7 0 6000 28615 7 8 9300 0 0 10 3 11 3 7000 33384 12 4 0 0 11 4 4 z 8000 38153 16 11 12400 0 0 0 1 1 42923 6 I 395° 0 0 0 2 z 1000c 47692 6 2 i 53co 0 0 4 0 3 3 62 7he Wejl-lndia Merchants Affijlant. Sooth Carolina Money reduced into Jamaica Currency, the Dollar in the former Place valued at 31s. in the latter 6s. 6d. __ S. Carolina Money. Jamaica Money 1. s. d. Carolina ‘ Money. Jamaica Money. I. s. d. w S. Carolina Money. Jamaica Money 1. s. d. , 0 4 2 34 7 2 5 67 >4 0 9 % O 8 4 3s 7 6 8 68 «4 4 3 0 12 7 3 6 7 10 IO 69 *4 9 2 4 0 16 9 37 7 >5 0 70 14 13 s 5 O 11 3* 7 : '9 3 7« 14 17 8 6 : I 5 2 39 8 3 5 7 2 IS 0 7 I 9 4 40 8 7 8 73 IS 6 2 8 I 13 6 4« 8 11 10 74 15 10 4 9 I >7 9 4* 8 16 O 75 IS 14 6 IO 2 11 43 9 2 76 is 18 9 II 2 6 I 44 9 4 5 77 16 3 12 2 10 3 43 9 8 7 78 16 7 *3 2 14 6 46 9 12 9 79 16 n 4 >4 3 18 8 47 9 16 11 80 16 IS 6 '5 3 2 10 48 10 1 2 81 > 16 19 8 16 3 7 o' 49 10 5 4 82 17 3 10 >7 3 n 3 5° 10 9 6 83 17 8 18 3 >s 5 S« 10 *3 9 «4 17 12 3 >9 3 19 • 7 s 2 io ‘7 u 85 17 16 S 4 3 10 S3 11 2 86 18 8 21 4 8 0 S4 6 4 87 18 4 10 22 4' 12 2 55 11 10 6 88 l8 9 0 23 4 16 4 11 *4 9 89 18 13 2 24 5 0 7 57 18 4 90 18 17 S 2 $ 5 4 9 5 8 . 12 3 9* 19 1 6 26 5 8 11 59 12 7 3 9 2 > *9 S 8 5 13 1 60 12 11 6 93 «9 9 10 28 5 >7 4 61 12 >5 S 94 -19 14 0 29 6 1 6 62 12 >9 10 9S ; 19 18 2 30 6 5 9 63 *3 4 0 96 . 20 4 3' 6 9 11 64 13 8 2 97 20 6 6 32 6 *4 1 6c 13 12 5 98 20 10 9 33 6 18 3 66 *3 16 7 99 20 >5 South The IVcJl-Indla Merchants AjJiftant , 63 South Carolina Money reduced into Jamaica Currency, the Dollar in the former Place valued at 31s. Currency, and 6s. 6d. in the latter, with the Number of Dollars contained in the South Carolina Money. South Caro¬ lina Mon. 1. Jamaica Money. I. s. d. Dollars, &c, contained in the South Corolina Currency, dol. ryals 10th Shillings. Jamaica Money. s. d. Spanilh Money. ry. 10th t 0 ' 4 2 o' 5 1 1 0 2 0 3 2 0 8 4 I 2 3 2 O 5 O 5 3 0 7 1 7 4 3 0 7 O 8 4 0 16 9 2 4 6 4 0 10 1 0 S 1 O 11 3 e 5 I X 6 1 5 2 3 6 9 6 I 3 l 7 1 9 4 4 4 7 I 5 I 8 8 1 >3 6 5 3 8 I 2 9 1 •7 9 5 6 4 9 I II 2 3 10 2 10 6 3 6 10 2 1 2 6 20 4 3 10 12 7 11 2 3 30 6 5 10 «9 8 12 2 6 8 1 40 8 7 9 2 S 6 4 >3 2 9 3 3 S.o 10 9 8 3 2 '4 2 11 6 6.0 12 11 7 3« S 6 •5 3 2 . 3 9 70 H >3 6 45 16 3 4. 1 80 16 «5 6 s« 4 8 >7 3 6 4 4 90 18 *7 5 S 8 0 5 18 3 9 4 . 6 • 100 20 *9 4 64 4 1 *9 3 11 4 9 200 41 18 8 129 2 3Q0 62 18 0 •93 4 3 U 4OO 8 3 «7 s' 258 3 500 ,0 4 16 9 322 4 6 d. 3* 000 12c 16 3 g 7 7 0 O 0 7 op 146 >5 6j 45* 4 8 0 2 , 0 1 Soo 167 H 1° 516 1 0 3! O 2 0 I $00 188 >4 2 580 5 0 4 0 3 0 1 1000 209 •3 6 645 3 5 I 0 I 2000 419 7 6 6 1 0 2 3000 629 8 *935 3 8 7 1 0 2 4000 838 «4 2 2580 5 1 8 I 3 0 2 5000 1048 7 9 3225 6 4 9 2 0 3 6000 . 1258 1 3 3870 7 7 2 0 0 3 -7900 1467 >4 10 45'6 H 2 1 0 3 8000 1677 8 4 5161 2 0 0 9000 1887 1 5806 3 6 |j 0 0 0 0 10000 2096 *5 6451 4 9 0 1 0 0 _ A Table 64 Wejl-lndla Merchants djjiftani. [A Table of the Sterling Value of Spanilh Pifloles of 4dws.i » 8grs. each (the Spanilh Standard-weight) eftimated at the Price of Standard Gold the Ounce, at the Royal Mint in the Tower of London. Value in Sterling. Value in Sterling, s. d. q. Value in Sterling. 4! 4 Si 1 sl 18 7' i? «| 9 JiiifS 7 12.13 6 1 3:10 4 'Hi 7 3 K. 4 2 16 1 1 16 18 o «7 10 i‘S n 9 j'9 8 8 20. 5 7 21 2 6 *1 10 4 22 l6 3 23:13 2 |24' 10 I II 6 o| 5 Z 43 53 44 54 45 1 55 40 56 47 57 4? 58 49 59 49 60 50 ; 61 51 62 52 63 53 64 54 65 54 66 ss 5 i.° 3 | 18 9 15 8 67, 5 6' 12 3 2 68 i 57 9 21 69 ;8 6 1 o| 79 59' 3 0 01 74 59 '9 10 3 72! 60 16 9 2 73! 61 13 8 1 74 62 10 7 0 75 63. 760 70 6 4 4 4 3 77 65 1 3 z 78 65 18 2 1 ss; 66*; 15 i 0 67 ; 12 0 0 69.: 7! 91.76 9 Z 77 93 78 94 95 96 97 98