_JMPJiRIAL _PARLIAMENT
... carried _, them along with jerks _arid jolts to _one which would move _evenly and _steadily . The country now had . a gold . standard _, and to that _standard . tl ) ecuo' ...
... carried _, them along with jerks _arid jolts to _one which would move _evenly and _steadily . The country now had . a gold . standard _, and to that _standard . tl ) ecuo' ...
... what we were suffering, and to relieve us from which, 1 certainly contemplated some probable alteration of thu arbitrary gold standard which had been adopted, ~ , , it is poadble our difficulties might at all be partially removed, much easier than thole ...
... only he prod ce > tiVe of extensive destruction.: -e 1'oped L.t notes 1. ii i would nevcr aaiD be issued, and t1at,39'gold standard 0ould not be cligasn for 'iilver. SF r F. BunnaT presented - peut1io -l from an officert . o badte bronht t Ihht the Ro ...
... be resorted to. A pro- Li position of an extraordinary nature, being in fact a that of an arbitrary alteration in the gold standard, do had been submitted to the Legislature, to whom it wi was suggested to make the octava of gold 3200 reis, dr. instead ...
... revenue is great- tt ly enhanced, and the burdens of the people further aug. pi sriseted. m ' 7; That the return to a gold standard in 1819, fol- ti lowed by the suppression of small notes in England ailI Wales, las materially changed the relative condition ...
... other ; _bed-linen , -there was discovered _mi amount of _^ moriey _to ' lhec&teiitof nearly _. £ 1500 in _' notes and gold . _—Standard . ' _: _! - • . : ' • _^ _ACCIDENT ON THE GBEAT _WESTERN- _RAILWAY . —On , Sunday week , a ' siokcr _^ nained Wilson ...
... specie should reach to upwards of a certain high amount; but he preferred to adhere to the present system of a single gold standard, and a five pound note convertible into gold. you should bear in mind, that all the great writers on the ?? William Petty ...
... itcan only be _done by an order in council _, duly published at _the time in _the _Gdzr . / ft _Though _adherintf to a _gold standard , regulating _tha _iMnea of gold , and _making gold _, as now , _the _only JrJfal _medium of _payments _, _he _thought ...
... for every pound of tho debt, contracted it wan at the rate of 13s 4d.. wo were now paying one-third more, measured in gold standard so unjustly established. quoted from Sir J. Graham celebrated pamphlet, on Corn and Currency.’’ to prove that this doctrine ...
... may expect shortly to hear that the currency of the United States has been assimilated to our own, by the adoption *of a gold standard, and the issue of silver coins under a seigniorage which will keep them in cirj culation.* Sal* op House pROPERTY.*The ...
... Chevalier. The writer believes that since the increase of gold from California there is room for apprehension that the gold standard may be debased in relation to silver, and he thinks that Government will obviate all danger from a full in the value ...
... feeling that gold was likelv come down materially in value, or. in other words, that it would be impossible to maintain a gold standard, and that, as a natural consequence. th« prices of commodities would proportionate I v rise; and woe then betide those ...