Word: xxv
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Harvard Christian Association. A Test of True Living (Matt. vii. 15-23; xxv. 34-40). Mr. H. H. Morse. Phillips Brooks House, 2d floor, east...
...Harvard Christian Association. A Test of True Living (Matt. vii. 15-23; xxv. 34-40). Mr. H. H. Morse. Phillips Brooks House, 2d floor, east...
Affirmative.Best general references: On present defects-Bryce, Am. Comm., I, XV, XVI, XXV; Wilson, Congressional Government, (see index), Committee, Cabinet, and pp. 294-333; Wilson, Overland Monthly, III, (January, 1884); Contemporary Review, XLVIII, (December, 1885), p. 864; Exposition of Cabinet system, Bagehot, English Constitution, Chaps...
...most desirable. - (a) Silver and gold the only suitable money metals: Mill, bk. III, ch. 8. - (b) Gold is insufficient: see above I, (a) 1. - (c) Silver in relation to commodities a more stable standard than gold: Amer. Jour. Soc. Sci. XXXII, 27; Sen. Stewart in Cong. Record, XXV, App. 158-159 - (d) Silver and gold together a non-fluctuating standard: McCulloch, p. 21. - (e) Silver will eventually become standard money metal of the world. - (1) Exhaustion of gold mines. - (2) Increased use of gold in the arts: Suess, 100-101. - (f) Present suspicion of silver unjustifiable. - (1) Silver...
...alone might safely coin silver at a proper ratio: A. S. Stokes, Joint Metallism; W. C. Oates in Cong, Record XXV, App., 152-155. - (a) The proper ratio would be that which would most nearly coincide with market ratio. - (b) This ratio is ascertainable. - (c) There would be no tendency for silver to drive out gold. - (1) A silver dollar would contain a gold dollar's worth of silver. - (d) Our present silver money could be gradually recoined at new ratio; meanwhile government's fiat would maintain it at parity with gold as it does...