Breckinridge, J., & Stuart, A. (1785). To the freeholders and inhabitants of the counties of Botetourt and Montgomery: Gentlemen, Actuated by the same motives which first induced us to engage in your service, we now beg leave to call your attentions to a subject, to which, from your local situation ... you must hitherto have been strangers. We mean the state of our public debts. ... In order, gentlemen, to give you a more perfect idea of your proportion of the national debt ... and of your balances of taxes which are still due, we have subjoined the following concise table. .. [publisher not identified].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBreckinridge, John, and Archibald Stuart. To the Freeholders and Inhabitants of the Counties of Botetourt and Montgomery: Gentlemen, Actuated by the Same Motives Which First Induced Us to Engage in Your Service, We Now Beg Leave to Call Your Attentions to a Subject, to Which, from Your Local Situation ... You Must Hitherto Have Been Strangers. We Mean the State of Our Public Debts. ... In Order, Gentlemen, to Give You a More Perfect Idea of Your Proportion of the National Debt ... and of Your Balances of Taxes Which Are Still Due, We Have Subjoined the Following Concise Table. .. [Virginia]: [publisher not identified], 1785.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBreckinridge, John, and Archibald Stuart. To the Freeholders and Inhabitants of the Counties of Botetourt and Montgomery: Gentlemen, Actuated by the Same Motives Which First Induced Us to Engage in Your Service, We Now Beg Leave to Call Your Attentions to a Subject, to Which, from Your Local Situation ... You Must Hitherto Have Been Strangers. We Mean the State of Our Public Debts. ... In Order, Gentlemen, to Give You a More Perfect Idea of Your Proportion of the National Debt ... and of Your Balances of Taxes Which Are Still Due, We Have Subjoined the Following Concise Table. .. [publisher not identified], 1785.