The Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review, 5. köide1841 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 60
Page 5
... Danish Sound Dues ... The United States Tariff of 1841 ... Silver Currency of Cuba .... Regulations for the Commerce of Yucatan .......... 369 465 ............... ............................ 466 ........................ ......
... Danish Sound Dues ... The United States Tariff of 1841 ... Silver Currency of Cuba .... Regulations for the Commerce of Yucatan .......... 369 465 ............... ............................ 466 ........................ ......
Page 10
... silver must cease to be the medium of exchange . How can they adapt themselves , he argued , to the exigencies of trade ? Our commerce extends every day , but if it is stretched out and nailed down on a rack so contracted as that which ...
... silver must cease to be the medium of exchange . How can they adapt themselves , he argued , to the exigencies of trade ? Our commerce extends every day , but if it is stretched out and nailed down on a rack so contracted as that which ...
Page 11
... silver from the market , and finally , by running over the Channel , and becoming the basis on which the continen . tal currency would be regulated , they would in the end secure to Great Britain the entire command of the moneyed ...
... silver from the market , and finally , by running over the Channel , and becoming the basis on which the continen . tal currency would be regulated , they would in the end secure to Great Britain the entire command of the moneyed ...
Page 12
... silver , ( two pounds sterling , ) was equal to one hundred and forty - two millions sterling . As stated by Stewart in his Political Economy , ( vol . II . , p . 236 , ) seventeen hundred and fifty millions of livres of the whole ...
... silver , ( two pounds sterling , ) was equal to one hundred and forty - two millions sterling . As stated by Stewart in his Political Economy , ( vol . II . , p . 236 , ) seventeen hundred and fifty millions of livres of the whole ...
Page 18
... silver , and remitting them abroad for security . In the splendid era also which was about to dawn upon the country , men of wealth disdained the homely utensils with which they had once been contented , and converted the coins which ...
... silver , and remitting them abroad for security . In the splendid era also which was about to dawn upon the country , men of wealth disdained the homely utensils with which they had once been contented , and converted the coins which ...
Contents
338 | |
342 | |
346 | |
380 | |
381 | |
393 | |
411 | |
444 | |
162 | |
168 | |
187 | |
201 | |
206 | |
220 | |
229 | |
243 | |
267 | |
281 | |
297 | |
473 | |
476 | |
477 | |
489 | |
507 | |
530 | |
536 | |
548 | |
569 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
agricultural American amount average bank bbls bill Boston Britain British British West Indies bushels capital cargo cent coast colonies commerce corn corn laws cotton court creditors Danish West Indies debt debtor dollars Dutch West Indies duty East England English enterprise established Europe expense exports fact favor flour foreign France freight French furnished Gibraltar gold Gulf Stream hhds hundred imported increase India interest islands labor land less Louis XV manufactures Mazagan merchandise merchant miles millions Mississippi Morocco nation navigation person Petersburgh population portion ports possessions pounds present principal produce protection quantity Rabat received revenue river rouble Russia ships silk silver soil South Carolina specie sugar Tangier territory tion tobacco tonnage tons trade United vessels West Indies wheat whole York
Popular passages
Page 178 - Contracting Parties reciprocally grant to each other the liberty of having each in the Ports and other Commercial places of the other, Consuls...