The ecclesiastical courts of record /Constitution, objects, and proceedings of the Financial Reform Association ; The Hudson's Bay monopoly.Cooking of the national accounts : what they are; and what they ought to be /National book-keeping : a screen for extravagance, peculation, & embezzlement : being an examination of the annual finance accounts /A letter to Charles Babbage, Esq., in reply to his "Thoughts on the principles of taxation, with reference to a property tax, and its exceptions" /The cost of customs and excise duties /Turkey, Russia, and English interference /The Royal household : a model to parliament and the nation /The war : the war budget /The way the public money goes on place-holders & sinecurists : being an analysis of salaries, pensions, &c. in the civil services of Great Britain and Ireland /The Hudson's Bay Company versus Magna Charta, and the British people /Administrative reform : what is wanted; and the way to get it /Administrative reform : what is wanted : how are we to get it? /Governmental model farming : its history, its cost, and its results /Address to the middle & industrial classes, touching the army and the income tax /Governmental improvidence : its causes, results, and only effective cure /The Advantages of a complete decimal system of money, weights and measures /Addresses on the present anti-income tax agitation : showing how and why direct taxation is preferable to customs and excise duties /Governmental gun-making : its great expense, and small results, excepting as against private manufacturers and the public interest /The draft report proposed by Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., the chairman of the select committee on the income and property tax /Government model farming : its history, its cost, and its results /The Advantages of a complete decimal system of money, weights and measures /