Major Documents in American Economic History: From an agrarian to an industrial economy (1785-1900)Louis Morton Hacker Van Nostrand, 1961 V. 1. From an agrarian to an industrial economy (1785-1900)--v. 2. The problems of a world power (the 20th century). |
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Page 58
... capital of only $ 11 million , which was found fully sufficient to enable it with dispatch and safety to perform all the func- tions required of it by the Government . The capital of the present bank is $ 35 million - at least twenty ...
... capital of only $ 11 million , which was found fully sufficient to enable it with dispatch and safety to perform all the func- tions required of it by the Government . The capital of the present bank is $ 35 million - at least twenty ...
Page 101
... capital for all purposes . Our annual productions are shown by the census to be $ 1,900,000,000 a year . The aggregate wealth of this people is over $ 12,000,000,000 . The actual capital that is now in the hands of the people , seeking ...
... capital for all purposes . Our annual productions are shown by the census to be $ 1,900,000,000 a year . The aggregate wealth of this people is over $ 12,000,000,000 . The actual capital that is now in the hands of the people , seeking ...
Page 109
... capital than two hundred thousand dollars : Provided , That banks with a capital of not less than fifty thousand dollars may , with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury , be or- ganized in any place the population of which does ...
... capital than two hundred thousand dollars : Provided , That banks with a capital of not less than fifty thousand dollars may , with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury , be or- ganized in any place the population of which does ...
Contents
Economic Provisions of the Constitution of | 7 |
The Land Ordinance of May 20 1785 | 13 |
Establishing the First Bank of the United States | 21 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
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37th Congress acres aforesaid Alexander Hamilton American amount authorized bank benefit bill bonds canals carpets census Central Pacific Railroad cents per pound cents per square centum ad valorem citizen or citizens Congress conspiracy Constitution contract corporation cotton criminal debt demand deposit directors duty employed established exceeding Federal fifty cents foreign furnish further enacted gold and silver Government hereby hundred immigration important improvements increase industry interest iron issue labor legal tender less manufacture ment millions of dollars National Banking Act national currency operation paid paper money payment person production public lands purchase purposes race railroad roads Secretary sections SHERMAN ANTITRUST ACT ships or vessels silver coin square yard stockholders taxes thereof thirty per centum three-dollar piece tion township Treasury twenty twenty-five per centum U. S. Statutes United States notes vote wages wire gauge