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COLLECTION OF POSTAGE.
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Letter Receiver, all over the kingdom, should be required to keep them on sale: a discount, such as is now given on stamps, would render it their interest to do so. Stationers also would be induced to keep them.

The stamp of the receiving-house should be struck upon the frank-stamp, to prevent the latter being used a second time.

For the forgery of these stamps their low price would leave but little temptation; and the account of their issue, compared with the account of the number of letters passed through the Post Office, (kept as already described by the tell-tale stamp,) would lead to the detection of any extensive fraud.

Should experience warrant the Government in making the use of stamped covers universal, most important advantages would be secured; advantages, indeed, of such magnitude, that before any exception whatever is admitted, the policy of such exception should be very fully considered.

  1. The Post Office would be relieved altogether from the collection of the Revenue, and from all accounts relating to that collection. Distribution would be its only function.
  2. The receipt of letters would be much more simple even than it now is; as the present trouble of receiving money for the post-paid letters would be avoided.
  3. Any necessary exception to the uniform rate of