| United States. Department of the Treasury - 1828 - 586 sider
...cursorily exhibited, which may perhaps conduce to a just impression of its merits. These will involve a comparison of the advantages, with the disadvantages,...improperly denominated dead stock; but when deposited in banks, to become the basis of a paper circulation, which takes their character and place, as the signs... | |
| Matthew St. Clair Clarke - 1832 - 856 sider
...cursorily exhibited, which may perhaps conduce to a just impression of its merits. These will involve a comparison of the advantages with the disadvantages,...principal advantages of a bank: First. The augmentation ofthe active or productive capital of a country. Gold and silver, when they are employed merely as... | |
| Matthew St. Clair Clarke - 1832 - 864 sider
...cursorily exhibited, wliich may perhaps conduce to a just impression of its merits. These will involve a comparison of the advantages with the disadvantages,...real or supposed, of such institutions. The following arc among the principal advantages ofa bank: First. The augmentation of the active or productive capital... | |
| Joseph Gales - 1834 - 646 sider
...just impression of its merits. These will involve a comparison of the advantages with the disadvauges, real or supposed, of such institutions. The following...productive capital of a country. Gold and silver, when they are employed merely as the instruments of exchange and alienation, have been not improperly... | |
| JOESPH GALES - 1834 - 594 sider
...cursorily exhibited, which may perhaps conduce to a just impression of its merits. These will involve a comparison of the advantages with the disadvantages,...supposed, of such institutions. The following are among- Iheprincipal advantages of a Bank: ~ First. The augmentation of the active or productive capital of... | |
| Ohio. General Assembly - 1843 - 1074 sider
...Representatives, on the 14th day of December, 1790, laid down the position, that "Gold and silver, when they are employed merely as the instruments of exchange...improperly, denominated dead stock; but when deposited in banks, to become the basis of a papsr circulation, which takes their character and place, as the signs... | |
| Alexander Hamilton - 1850 - 606 sider
...cursorily exhibited, which may perhaps conduce to a just impression of its merits. These will involve a comparison of the advantages, with the disadvantages,...productive capital of a country. Gold and silver, when they are employed merely as the instruments of exchange and alienation, have been not improperly... | |
| Alexander Hamilton - 1850 - 606 sider
...cursorily exhibited, which may perhaps conduce to a just impression of its merits. These wiD involve a comparison of the advantages, with the disadvantages,...institutions. The following are among the principal ad vantages of a Bank: First. The augmentation of the active or productive capital of a country. Gold... | |
| Andrew White Young - 1855 - 1032 sider
...emergencies, to the government itself. Among the advantages of a bank were mentioned the following : First, the augmentation of the active or productive capital of a country. Secondly, the greater facility which it affords to the government in obtaining pecuniary aids, especially... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - 1872 - 730 sider
...to the Treasury, to present a report on the expediency of establishing a national bank, says ': — "The following are among the principal advantages...of the active or productive capital of a country. * * * It is a well-established fact, that banks in good credit can circulate a far greater sum than... | |
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