| United States. Department of the Treasury - 1828 - 586 pages
...public creditors receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And, having the same interests,...no competition. These circumstances combined, will ensure to the revenue laws a more ready and more satisfactory execution. If, on the contrary, there... | |
| Joseph Gales - United States - 1834 - 646 pages
...public creditors receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And having the same interests, they...; as these, too, can be made with more convenience 1.999 2002 Report on Public Credit. where there is no competition. These circumstances combined will... | |
| JOESPH GALES - 1834 - 594 pages
...public creditors receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And having the same interests, they...will unite in the support of the fiscal arrangements of-the Government; as these, too, can be made with more convenience where there is no competition.... | |
| William Cabell Rives - United States - 1868 - 678 pages
..." If all of them receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same ; and. having the same interests, they will unite in favor of the fiscal arrangements of the government." These considerations were more distinctly avowed... | |
| Henry Cabot Lodge - Puritans - 1884 - 436 pages
...publie ereditors reeeive their dues from one souree, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And having the same interests they will unite in the support of the fiseal arrangements of the government, — as these too ean be made with more eonvenienee where there... | |
| Alexander Hamilton - Finance - 1904 - 520 pages
...public creditors receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And, having the same interests,...unite in the support of the fiscal arrangements of the Government—as these, too, can be made with more convenience where there is no competition. These... | |
| Charles Austin Beard - United States - 1915 - 518 pages
...more closely the union of the States." In support of the proposal to assume state debts he said : " If all the public creditors receive their dues from...And, having the same interests, they will unite in support of the fiscal arrangements of the Government. . . . These circumstances combined, will ensure... | |
| Henry Jones Ford - Biography & Autobiography - 1920 - 404 pages
...creditors," he observed, "receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And having the same interests, they...no competition. These circumstances combined, will ensure to the revenue laws a more ready and satisfactory execution. If, on the contrary, there are... | |
| Henry Jones Ford - Biography & Autobiography - 1920 - 404 pages
...creditors," he observed, "receive their dues from one source, distributed with an equal hand, their interest will be the same. And having the same interests, they...unite in the support of the fiscal arrangements of the Government—as these, too, can be made with more convenience where there is no competition. These... | |
| Peter S. Onuf - History - 1991 - 476 pages
...creditors," he wrote in his Report on Public Credit, "receive their dues from one source . . . their interest will be the same. And, having the same interests,...support of the fiscal arrangements of the government. . . ."* Funding and assumption realized his hopes of making the national debt "a powerful cement of... | |
| |