PROPOSALS Humbly offered to the PARLIAMENT For Regulating the coin OF THIS KINGDOM. THE Parliament by Calling in the Broad and Milled moneys, and giving out Bills for the same, which Bills to pass Current in all Payments, as money till Called In Again, will do the public a Great Kindness; for if it be Considered the Broad and Milled money now Circulates not in Trade, and therefore can be no Benefit to it, these Bills will, and therefore must, be an advantage to it, and since the public must bear the Loss of the Clipt-Coyn, it ought to have the Benefit of the Broad and Milled, which being recoined into pieces of the same denomination, and Two-pence less in a Crown then what it's really worth to be Sold at this present juncture: The Mint will gain enough by it to make Good the Deficiency of Five Hundred Thousand Pounds of the clipped, and it may be imagined that when the Broad and Milled money is all recoined it will Change all the Clipt-Half-Crowns in the Kingdom at once; The Clipt-Half-Crowns Melted down and recoined into Shillings, undoubtedly Change all the Clipt-Shillings, the Clipt-Shillings recoined into Sixpences will Change the Clipt-Sixpences, the Clipt-Sixpences when recoined will serve to pay off some of those Bills that were given out for the Broad and Milled-Mony, unless the clipped coin happen to be more then it may be thought to be; by thus doing, the public can Receive no Man●… er of Damage for want of money to supply Trade; for there will be ●… he same tale for tale as there now is( though of a much better Sort of coin,) but will receive this Advantage, it will have the Broad and Milled money Circulating in Bills, which will be as good as money, which ●… efore lay dead: Now a Tax, being settled by the Parliament, on the Mint ●… nd the money that shall arise thereby, to buy Plate or Bullion, to be con●… erted into coin to pay of those Bills, by which means all the Silver ●… oyn of this Kingdom may be regulated with the least Charge and greatest ●… ase to the public that it's possible to be done.