Farthing, J. (1696). The excise rectify'd, or, A plain demonstration that the revenue now raised thereby, is capable of being improved at least four or five hundred thousand pounds per annum, which is now paid by the subject, but diverted from its proper chanel into private hands. [s.n.].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationFarthing, John. The Excise Rectify'd, or, A Plain Demonstration That the Revenue Now Raised Thereby, Is Capable of Being Improved at Least Four or Five Hundred Thousand Pounds Per Annum, Which Is Now Paid by the Subject, but Diverted from Its Proper Chanel into Private Hands. London: [s.n.], 1696.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationFarthing, John. The Excise Rectify'd, or, A Plain Demonstration That the Revenue Now Raised Thereby, Is Capable of Being Improved at Least Four or Five Hundred Thousand Pounds Per Annum, Which Is Now Paid by the Subject, but Diverted from Its Proper Chanel into Private Hands. [s.n.], 1696.