AUTHOR OF "JOINT-METALLISM” HON. DAVID A. WELLS, LL.D., D.C.L., etc.-Your plan is certainly novel and ingenious. HON. JOHN E. RUSSELL, Member of Congress from Massachusetts.-The importance of the question you so ably discuss cannot be overestimated. The Right Hon. LORD PLAYFAIR.—It is certainly a much more honest system of bimetallism than the schemes already propounded. PROF. W. SMART, LL.D., Glasgow.-It is a most suggestive contribution to a subject which is now creating as much interest in Great Britain as it does in its parent country. W. T. HARRIS, United States Commissioner of Education.— In my humble opinion the best book on this subject—a subject of vital importance to the prosperity of the people of this country. RIGHT REV. H. C. POTTER, LL.D., etc.—Much impressed by your argument. REV. DAVID H. GREER, D.D.—I think your statement of the question most admirable and convincing. HON. CARROLL D. WrighT, United States Commissioner of Labor. Your theory attracts me very much. It seems to me that there is within it the solution of the difficulty. PROF. FRANCIS WAYLAND, LL.D., Dean of Yale Law School. -If it has not brought complete conviction to my mind, it has certainly shaken some of my pet beliefs. JOINT-METALLISM A PLAN BY WHICH GOLD AND SILVER TOGETHER, AT WITH THE COMPLIMENTS OF THE AUTHOR PART II.-JOINT-METALLISM VS. BIMETALLISM AND MONOMETALLISM PART III.-HISTORY OF THE SCIENCE OF MONEY AND COINAGE PART IV. THE APOTHEOSIS OF CREDIT-OBJECTIONS PART V.-FREE-COINAGE DEBATE; LETTERS; AFTER THE TL2801025 Econ 4528.76.7 LIBRARY HARVARD COLLEGE L JAN 1 1897 CAMBRIDGE, MASS. The Auction же COPYRIGHT, 1895 BY ANSON PHELPS STOKES Entered at Stationers' Hall, London The Knickerbocker Press, New York INTRODUCTORY NOTE TO THE FIFTH EDITION. In this revised edition the statistical tables in the Appendix have been brought down to July 1, 1896, and additional tables, etc., have been introduced. The Appendix occupies pages 77 to 118 as in previous editions. Pages 207 to 233, containing Extracts from Saratoga Free-Coinage Debate, Proposed Currency Plank, Letters to the Springfield Republican, and After the Election, What? are added new matter. NEW YORK, November, 1896. |