| sir Archibald Alison (1st bart.) - 1853 - 420 pages
...on the solid basis of these domains, to an ordinary paper currency, possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property — the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based on subjects of real and durable value, as... | |
| Sir Archibald Alison - Europe - 1853 - 448 pages
...the solid basis • of these domains, to an ordinary paper currency, possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property — the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based on subjects of real and durable value, as... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - 1856 - 682 pages
...on the solid basis of these domains to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property, the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based on subjects of real and durable value, as... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - Economics - 1858 - 636 pages
...on the solid basis of these domains to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property, the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based on subjects of real and durable value, as... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - Economics - 1858 - 626 pages
...domains to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real pioperty, the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based on subjects of real and durable value, as... | |
| Arthur Latham Perry - Business & Economics - 1866 - 552 pages
...the same. For about two years their value kept up above ninety per cent., and then began to droop. The government, in alarm, while issuing on the one...took strong measures on the other to prop up their market-value : the use of coin was prohibited; a maximum price in assignats for everything was established... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1874 - 520 pages
...on the solid basis of these domains to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property, the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based on subjects of real and durable value as... | |
| Arthur Latham Perry - Economics - 1875 - 590 pages
...John Law. solid basis of these domains, to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property, the most secure of all...of the Revolution, which quantities were swelled by skillful counterfeiters in the prisons and elsewhere, took strong measures on the other to prop up... | |
| Arthur Latham Perry - Economics - 1875 - 582 pages
...John Law. solid basis of these domains, to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property, the most secure of all...possessions, the land on which we tread." Nevertheless, aud though all assignats were legal-tender, they drooped. The government in alarm, while issuing on... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - Economics - 1875 - 546 pages
...on the solid basis of these domains to an ordinary paper currency possessing a forced circulation. They represent real property, the most secure of all possessions, the land on which we tread. Why is a metallic circulation solid ? Because it is based upon subjects of real and durable value,... | |
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