The key of worldly wealth or, a new wway, for improving of trade: shewing how a few tradesmen agreeing together, may both double their stocks, and the increase of their stocks, without 1. paying any interest, 2. great difficulty or hazard, 3. advance of money, 4. staying for materialls, 5. prejudice to any trade, or person, 6. incurring any other inconvenience. In such sort, as both they and all others (though never so poore) who are in a way of trading, may 1. multiply their returnes, 2. deale onely for ready pay, 3. Much under-sell others, 4. put the whole nation upon this practice, 5. gain notwithstanding more then ordinary, 6. desist when they please without damage. And by this meanes this distressed Commonwealth shall be exceedingly advantaged, chiefly in all those particulars expressed in the next page. All which in this treatise is conceived by judicious men to be fully proved, doubts resolved, and objections either answered or prevented.
Dublin Core
Title
The key of worldly wealth or, a new wway, for improving of trade: shewing how a few tradesmen agreeing together, may both double their stocks, and the increase of their stocks, without 1. paying any interest, 2. great difficulty or hazard, 3. advance of money, 4. staying for materialls, 5. prejudice to any trade, or person, 6. incurring any other inconvenience. In such sort, as both they and all others (though never so poore) who are in a way of trading, may 1. multiply their returnes, 2. deale onely for ready pay, 3. Much under-sell others, 4. put the whole nation upon this practice, 5. gain notwithstanding more then ordinary, 6. desist when they please without damage. And by this meanes this distressed Commonwealth shall be exceedingly advantaged, chiefly in all those particulars expressed in the next page. All which in this treatise is conceived by judicious men to be fully proved, doubts resolved, and objections either answered or prevented.
Description
C.f. Wing P3034
Creator
Wiliam Potter
Source
Publisher
R. A., Giles Calvert,
Identifier
546
Collection
Citation
Wiliam Potter, “The key of worldly wealth or, a new wway, for improving of trade: shewing how a few tradesmen agreeing together, may both double their stocks, and the increase of their stocks, without 1. paying any interest, 2. great difficulty or hazard, 3. advance of money, 4. staying for materialls, 5. prejudice to any trade, or person, 6. incurring any other inconvenience. In such sort, as both they and all others (though never so poore) who are in a way of trading, may 1. multiply their returnes, 2. deale onely for ready pay, 3. Much under-sell others, 4. put the whole nation upon this practice, 5. gain notwithstanding more then ordinary, 6. desist when they please without damage. And by this meanes this distressed Commonwealth shall be exceedingly advantaged, chiefly in all those particulars expressed in the next page. All which in this treatise is conceived by judicious men to be fully proved, doubts resolved, and objections either answered or prevented.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3324.