Bimetallism
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The concept Bimetallism represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Bowdoin College Library.
The Resource
Bimetallism
Resource Information
The concept Bimetallism represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Bowdoin College Library.
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- Bimetallism
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- Readex congressional thesaurus
137 Items that share the Concept Bimetallism
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- World's money. Theory of the coin, coinage, and monetary system of the world, by J. Meyer. Translated from the German by Mrs. C.P. Culver. December 18, 1878. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and ordered to be printed.
- "Hard money" examined. Memorandum by Herbert M. Bratter on Francis H. Brownell's arguments for bimetallism. Presented by Mr. Green. May 19 (legislative day, May 9), 1944. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Agricultural depression; causes and remedies. Report by Mr. Peffer, submitted to the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry February 15, 1894. January 18, 1895. -- Submitted by Mr. Peffer from the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry and ordered to be printed.
- American metric coinage. January 18, 1882. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and ordered to be printed. February 2, 1882. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Analysis of the functions of money. July 6, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the state of the finances for the year 1886. In two volumes. Volume I: Finance.
- Annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the state of the finances for the year 1897.
- Berlin Silver Commission, 1894. Proposals submitted and debate on the proposals. Report of the proceedings, to which is appended the report of the proceedings of the International Bimetallic Conference at London May 2 and 3, 1894. Translated and prepared under direction of the Committee on Finance, by authority of Senate resolution of June 18, 1894. August 18, 1894. -- Presented by Mr. Harris and ordered to be printed.
- Bimetallism in Europe. February 16, 1897. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Branches of the Mint. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting to the Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means a communication from the Director of the Mint, in relation to the establishment of branches of that institution. January 23, 1835. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Circulation of national banks. January 11, 1893. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Circulation of standard silver dollars. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury in response to a resolution of the House of Representatives calling for information concerning circulation of standard silver dollars, and the policy to be pursued as to payment of silver. March 2, 1886. -- Referred to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and ordered to be printed.
- Coinage Act amendments. October 4, 1969. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Coinage laws of the United States, 1792 to 1894, with an appendix of statistics relating to coins and currency. Fourth edition -- revised and corrected to August 1, 1894. Prepared under the direction of the Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate. March 5, 1894. -- Submitted by Mr. Voorhees, from the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Coinage of gold and silver. February 21, 1891. -- Indefinitely postponed. February 23, 1891. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Coinage of silver dollars and fractions thereof of full standard value upon the metric system. February 25, 1882. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Condition of the national finances. Message from the President of the United States, relating to the condition of the national finances. January 28, 1895. -- Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means and ordered to be printed.
- Conferencia Internacional Americana. Dictamenes de las comisiones permanentes y debates a que dieron lugar. Tomo II.
- Continuation of section 10 of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. Communication from the President of the United States, transmitting a request for the continuation of section 10 of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, as amended, until January 15, 1941. January 20, 1939. -- Referred to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures and ordered to be printed.
- Correspondence respecting proposals on currency. January 17, 1898. -- Ordered that 5,000 copies be printed.
- Crime of 1873. February 21, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Currency question. April 7, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Currency question. June 30, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Depression of American agricultural staples. March 2, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Documents accompanying the report of the United States Monetary Commission organized under joint resolution of August 15, 1876. Volume II.
- Final report of the Royal Commission appointed to inquire into the recent changes in the relative values of the precious metals.
- Fixed relationship between the moneys of gold standard countries and silver-using countries. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report from the Secretary of State, with accompanying notes from the Mexican ambassador and the Chinese charge d'affaires ad interim, which seek the cooperation... January 29, 1903. -- Read; referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Free coinage of gold and silver. February 10, 1892. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Free coinage of silver. February 16, 1886. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Future of silver by Eduard Suess, Professor of Geology at the University of Vienna, Austria, Vice-President of the Imperial Academy of Science, member of the Austrian Parliament, etc. Translated by Robert Stein, U.S. Geological Survey. Published by permission of the author and by direction of the Committee on Finance, Senate of the United States. November 2, 1893. -- Presented by Mr. Voorhees, from the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Gold and silver coins. (To accompany Bills H.R. 255, 312, 313.) February 19, 1834.
- Gold coinage. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 510.) March 26, 1836.
- Gold coins of the United States. February 22, 1821 [i.e., 1831]. Read, and, with the bill, committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Goloid coin. June 8, 1878. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Goloid dollar. Statements before the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures upon the subject of coinage and the goloid dollar. February 5, 1878. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and ordered to be printed.
- Hard money, by Francis H. Brownell, Chairman of Board of Directors, American Smelting and Refining Company. Presented by Mr. McCarran. May 8 (legislative day, April 12), 1944. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Honest inflation. Mr. Wheeler presented the following article from Scribner's Magazine of January 1934, entitled "Honest inflation," by Edward Tuck. January 11 (calendar day, January 19), 1934. -- Ordered to be printed.
- In Senate of the United States, March 29, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Smith, of Maryland, made the following report: The Committee on Finance, to which was referred a Resolution of the 30th December, 1829, directing the committee to inquire into the expediency of establishing an uniform national currency for the United States...
- In relation to coinage. March 1, 1882. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. 15th December, 1830. -- Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 1,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- In the Senate of the United States. April 11, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Stewart submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, directed to inform the Senate what is the aggregate cost of the silver bullion and standard dollars coined therefrom purchased under the act of July fourteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety...
- In the Senate of the United States. April 29, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Teller presented the following letters from Mr. Ben Butterworth, of Washington, D.C., and Mr. Samuel J. Ritchie, of Akron, Ohio, upon the silver question and upon the general financial policy of the government, as of late pursued.
- In the Senate of the United States. August 11, 1894. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Teller presented the following: The evidence of a crown colony on gold and silver prices -- bimetallism in relation to agricultural depression. [An address delivered before the London Chamber of Commerce on the 24th July by E.E. Isemonger, Colonial Treasurer and member of Council of the Straits Settlements.].
- In the Senate of the United States. August 14, 1893. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Gordon submitted the following resolution: Whereas in this government of the people the popular will is sovereign in its character, and when clearly expressed should be authoritative with Congress...
- In the Senate of the United States. August 14, 1893. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Stewart presented the following editorial, printed in the New York Recorder, of August 13, 1893...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 12, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Chandler presented the following: Bill to provide, in connection with other nations, for the unlimited coinage of gold and silver at the ratio of one to fifteen and one-half, and letter of Mr. Robert Stein in relation to the bill.
- In the Senate of the United States. December 16, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Stewart presented the following paper on the silver question...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 16, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Teller presented the following paper on gold monometallism...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 18, 1894. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance, to accompany S. 2439, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Manderson presented the following: A statement to accompany S. 2439, "A Bill To Provide for the Establishment and Maintenance of a Bimetallic Monetary Basis and To Secure the Adjustment to Business Requirements of the Volume and Distribution of the National Currency, and for other purposes.".
- In the Senate of the United States. December 19, 1894. -- Referred to the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, and ordered to be printed. Mr. George presented the following resolutions adopted by the Farmers' National Congress of America at its annual meeting at Parkersburg, W. Va., October 3-6, 1894.
- In the Senate of the United States. December 27, 1895. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. Mr. Cullom presented the following resolutions adopted by the Farmers' National Congress of the United States (composed of delegates appointed by the governors of the various states) in annual session at Atlanta, Ga., October 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, and 16, 1895, thirty-six states being represented...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 6, 1877. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Matthews submitted the following resolution: Whereas, by the act entitled "An Act To Strengthen the Public Credit," approved March 18, 1869, it was provided and declared that the faith of the United States was thereby solemnly pledged to the payment in coin or its equivalent of all the interest-bearing obligations of the United States...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 1, 1895. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. Mr. Turpie presented the following memorial of Anson Wolcott, of the Town of Wolcott, Ind., on the state of the national finances.
- In the Senate of the United States. February 11, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Hill submitted the following resolution: Resolved (if the House of Representatives concurs), that it is the sense of Congress that the true policy of the government requires that its efforts should be steadily directed to the establishment of a safe system of bimetallism...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 12, 1894. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. The Vice-President presented the following letter from the Secretary of the Territory of Utah, forwarding memorial of the territorial legislature in favor of silver coinage...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 17, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Teller presented the following resolution of the Camden County, N.J., Farmers' Institute favoring the free and unlimited coinage of silver.
- In the Senate of the United States. February 19, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Wolcott submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that it is the sense of the Senate that the welfare and prosperity of the United States require the enactment of a law for the free and unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 6, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Teller presented the following papers. The real causes of agricultural distress...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 15, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Gibson, of Louisiana, submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby requested to report to the Senate...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 19, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Stewart presented the following papers relating to the paper currency of East India.
- In the Senate of the United States. July 25, 1892. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Vest submitted the following resolution: Resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives concurring, that for the purpose of securing and maintaining the uniform value of silver as a money metal throughout the world...
- In the Senate of the United States. June 9, 1890. -- Presented by Mr. Teller and ordered to be printed. Monetary contraction and the present crisis. By Emile De Laveleye.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury in response to Senate resolution of April 27, 1892, relative to the purchase of silver under the law of 1890. May 2, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to Senate Resolution of August 16, 1893, relative to the redemption of Treasury notes issued under the Act of July 14, 1890, and also relative to the exchange of gold coin for silver dollars. August 18, 1893. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to Senate inquiry of the 9th instant relative to the redemption of silver certificates in gold, etc. October 19, 1893. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to Senate resolution of September 5, 1893, requesting information concerning the redemption in silver of notes issued under the Sherman Act; and other information concerning the subject of silver coinage. September 12, 1893. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to a resolution of the Senate July 30, 1892, relative to the currency receipts and payments, the amounts of deposits and reserves in the depositories of various countries, and the possibility of maintaining bimetallism as it was established under the administration of President Washington. December 6, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. March 18, 1896. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. Mr. Stewart presented the following memorial of Anson Wolcott, of Wolcott, Ind., to the Congress of the United States, relative to the monetary laws and monetary condition of the United States.
- In the Senate of the United States. March 2, 1877. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Jones, of Nevada, from the Monetary Commission created under the joint resolution of August 15, 1876, submitted the following report: The commission created under the joint resolution of August 15, 1876, submit the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 31, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Morgan submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that the Committee on Finance is directed to make examination and report to the Senate as soon as practicable-- First. What has been the effect on the price of silver bullion of the provisions of the act of July fourteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety...
- In the Senate of the United States. May 14, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Vilas presented the following speech of Hon. John G. Carlisle, before the workingmen of Chicago, April 15, 1896.
- In the Senate of the United States. May 2, 1894. -- Laid on the table. May 25, 1894. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Palmer presented the following memorial showing the reasons why Senate Bill No. 1917 should become a law at the present session of Congress, by John Cowdon, of New Orleans, La.
- In the Senate of the United States. May 23, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Cockrell presented the following: Speech of Hon. John P. Altgeld, Governor of Illinois at the Auditorium, Chicago, May 16.
- In the Senate of the United States. May 29, 1890. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Teller submitted the following concurrent resolution: Be it resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), that it is the determined policy of the United States government to use both gold and silver as full legal tender money under the ratio now existing in the United States...
- In the Senate of the United States. May 7, 1888. -- Presented by the President pro tempore and ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Letter of the Director of the Mint, transmitting statistics relative to circular values of foreign silver coins, in response to Senate resolution of April 30, 1888...
- In the Senate of the United States. October 17, 1893. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Teller presented the following paper from the Journal of the Society of Arts. Proceedings of the Society.
- In the Senate of the United States. September 15, 1893. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Voorhees presented the following resolutions adopted at a convention of representatives of business organizations praying for the immediate and unconditional repeal of the purchasing clause of the act of July 14, 1890.
- In the Senate of the United States. September 29, 1893. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Cameron presented the following memorial from the business men of Philadelphia in relation to tariff and financial legislation.
- In the Senate of the United States. September 6, 1893. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Allen presented the following memorial of A. Wolcott, of Wolcott, Ind. No international bimetallism including Great Britain is possible.
- Independent bimetallism or Bolshevism? Mr. Wheeler presented the following article by Hon. Jonathan Bourne, Jr., former United States Senator from Oregon, relative to S. 2487, providing for the free coinage of silver and gold at the ratio of 16 to 1. June 15, 1932. -- Ordered to be printed.
- International American Conference. Reports of committees and discussions thereon. Volume II.
- International Bimetallism. June 23, 1897. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- International Monetary Conference held at Brussels in compliance with the invitation extended by the President of the United States, and in pursuance of the first section of the Act of Congress of August 5, 1892. Report of the Commissioners on behalf of the United States, and journal of the sessions of November 22, 1892, to December 17, 1892.
- International Monetary Conference held, in compliance with the invitation extended to certain governments of Europe by the government of the United States, in pursuance of the second section of the act of Congress of February 28, 1878, in Paris, in August, 1878, under the auspices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of France.
- International monetary conference held, in compliance with the invitation extended to certain governments of Europe by the government of the United States, in pursuance of the second section of the act of Congress of February 28, 1878, in Paris, in August, 1878, under the auspices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of France.
- International monetary conference. February 22, 1897. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Issue of Treasury notes on deposits of silver bullion. March 26, 1890. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed. April 10, 1890. -- Ordered to be reprinted.
- Issue of bonds. February 1, 1895. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Japan and the gold standard. July 7, 1897. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Japanese competition. June 6, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed.
- List of papers bearing on the silver question. June 6, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of John M. Mott, of Chicago, Ill. April 1, 1897. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of William Wheeler Hubbell upon the subject of the suspension of the further coinage of silver, legal-tender notes, bi-metallic coinage, and an increase of the volume of United States money. January 6, 1880. -- Referred to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. February 12, 1880. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of sundry banks of New York, praying that certain foreign coins be made a legal tender, that the value of gold coins be regulated, and that the means of coining at the Mint be increased. May 26, 1834. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the Boston Board of Trade, praying the passage of a law providing for the appointment of commissioners on the part of the United States to meet such commissioners as may be appointed by the several European governments in convention, to consider the expediency of remonetizing silver coin, and remonstrating against making silver coin an unlimited legal tender. January 10, 1877. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-eighth Congress. December 5, 1843. Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed, with the accompanying documents; and that 3,500 additional copies of the message, and 1,500 additional copies of the message and documents, be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, recommending an appropriation for the payment of certain expenses of the commissioners appointed to attend the conference provided for in the act of February 28, 1878, to authorize the coinage of the standard silver dollar and to restore its legal tender character. June 13, 1878. -- Read, referred to the Committee on Appropriations, and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-eighth Congress. December 5, 1843. Read, and ordered that the usual number of copies of the message and documents be printed and that 10,000 copies extra of the same be also printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, transmitting, in response to Senate resolution of December 9, 1885, report of the Secretary of State, with information relative to gold and silver coinage in Europe. January 7, 1886. -- Read and referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Message of the President of the United States, and accompanying documents, to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the third session of the Fortieth Congress. Part I.
- Message of the President of the United States, communicated to the two Houses of Congress at the beginning of the first session of the Fifty-third Congress. August 8, 1893. -- Read, ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Mint at Saint Louis, Mo. May 14, 1884. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Mint of the United States. Report of the Director of the Mint, in relation to that establishment. December 11, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Minutes of the International American Conference.
- Monetary Commission. March 2, 1877. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Monetary laws and monetary condition of the United States. February 10, 1899. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Monetary question in Russia. March 2, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Monetary standards. January 28, 1897. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Move for international bimetallism. The war has made international bimetallism an imperative necessity. Article published in The Annalist of New York of January 7, 1918, by Hon. John F. Shafroth, United States Senator from Colorado. Presented by Mr. Thomas. January 31, 1918. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Our free-silver law. January 22, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, transmitted to Congress, with the annual message of the President, December 1, 1890, preceded by a list of papers, with synopses of their contents, and followed by an alphabetical index of subjects.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, transmitted to Congress, with the annual message of the President, December 3, 1889, preceded by a list of papers, with synopses of their contents, and followed by an alphabetical index of subjects.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, transmitted to Congress, with the annual message of the President, December 9, 1891, Preceded by a list of papers, with an analysis of their contents, and followed by an alphabetical index of subjects.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, transmitted to Congress, with the annual message of the president, December 1, 1879. Preceded by a list of papers and followed by an index of persons and subjects.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, with the annual message of the President transmitted to Congress December 6, 1897.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, with the annual message of the President, transmitted to Congress December 2, 1895. Part I.
- Printing memorial Bi-Metallic Coinage Association. March 16, 1886. -- Referred to the Committee on Printing and ordered to be printed.
- Reassembling of the Paris Monetary Conference. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report from the Secretary of State, in response to a resolution of the House of Representatives, touching the reassembling of the Paris Monetary Conference during the current year. July 3, 1882. -- Referred to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures and ordered to be printed.
- Reform Club's feast of unreason. July 8, 1897. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Relative value of gold and silver coins of the United States. Communicated to the House of Representatives, February 2, 1821
- Repeal of the Sherman Act. February 7, 1893. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury (in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, of the 29th of December, 1828) respecting the relative value of gold and silver, &c. May 29, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a resolution of the 2d May last, transmitting returns of the condition of the state banks. June 7, 1838. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Report made by Edward Atkinson, of Boston, Mass., to the President of the United States, upon the present status of bimetallism in Europe. October, 1887.
- Report of the Committee on the Currency, on the expediency of increasing the relative value of the gold hereafter to be coined at the Mint of the United States. February 2, 1821. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House.
- Reports from the consuls of the United States. Vol. XXIV. October-December, 1887.
- Reports of the silver commission of 1876. (Being a reprint of Senate Report No. 703, 44th Congress, second session.) March 2, 1877. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Resolution by the House of Representatives to appoint a commission to inquire into the change which has taken place in the relative value of gold and silver, and the causes thereof, the policy of restoring the double standard in this country, and of continuing greenbacks concurrently with the metallic standards. August 7, 1876. -- Read, referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the National Board of Trade, held in the City of Saint Louis in December 1871, in relation to the resolution of specie payments; limit of taxation and the liquidation of the national debt; the shipping interest; local quarantine regulations; the light-dues paid by vessels in Great Britain; the Treaty of Washington and the fisheries; direct importations to interior cities; freedom of trade with the dominion of Canada; revision of the tariff; protection of the telegraph; the abrogation of state inspection laws; and the improvement of the Mississippi levees. March 2, 1872. -- Referred to the Committee on Commerce, the Committee on Finance and the Committee on Foreign Relations, and ordered to be printed.
- Silver and the foreign debt payments. Report on an investigation relative to the use of silver coinage in the European countries whose governments are indebted to the United States.
- Silver and wheat. January 25, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Silver certificates and coinage. June 6, 1882. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Special consular reports. Money and prices in foreign countries, being a series of reports upon the currency systems of various nations in their relation to prices of commodities and wages of labor. Vol. XIII-Part 1.
- Stabilization of gold and silver. Mr. King presented the following statement of George W. Malone, chairman of the Silver Committee created by the governors of 11 western states to assist in the stabilization of the relation of silver to gold in the monetary system of the world. January 11, 1934. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Standard of value, etc. January 31, 1899. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Veto of the silver bill. Message from the President of the United States, assigning reasons for withholding his approval of the Bill (H.R. 1093) entitled "An Act To Authorize the Coinage of the Standard Silver Dollar, and To Restore Its Legal-tender Character." February 28, 1878. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Wilson bill and the Panic of 1893. Mr. Kern presented the following address by Hon. Franklin MacVeagh, delivered in Chicago, Ill., September 1, 1894, in opening his campaign as democratic candidate for United States senator. July 19, 1911. -- Ordered to be printed.
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