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Bank^Clerks— Duties— SalarieK— Promotions— Discipline— Training. XII. Bank Book- 



Keeping XIIL Banking Calculations. XIV. Banking Documents— Bonds— Letters of 

 Credit, &c. 



Part II.— Of Banking Institutions. I. The Bank of England. II. London Private 

 Banks. III. Joint-Stock Banks in London. IV. Country Private Banks. V. Country 

 Jomt-Siock Banks. VI. The Banks of Scotland. VII. The Banks of Ireland. VIIL 

 Moral and Religious Duties of Hanking Companies. IX. Ten Minutes' Advice about 

 Keeping a Banker. X. Summary. 



ct 



Mr. Gilbart's works on Banking have attained a just celebrity. Plain and practical, 

 Iney are suitable to the character and the po&iition of the writer, and to the wants and 

 inclinations of the banking and mercantile community, for whom riiey are chiefly in- 

 tended. They are not, however, without much interest for every inquiring mind, while 

 tor statesmen and political economists they are sources of much useful and even indis- 

 pensable information. The present work treats of hanking as an pr/, and its merits have 

 already been recognized by the public. The principal characteristic of Mr. Gilbart*s book 

 is, practical common sense, a due subordination of all the parts of the subject, so that none 

 has an undue prominence ; vvliich, being joined with a perspicuous style, accounts for the 

 favor his works have deservedly met with."— Zo/idon Economist, 



III- McCulloch's Essays on Intekest, Exchange, Money, Coins, &c. 



All in One Volume, octavo^ — 75 cents, 



(1.) On Interest and the Operation of the Usury Diws. Comparison between the Market 

 Rate and the Statutory Rale of Interest from 1714 to 1793. Fernicions Effects of Laws 

 to regulate Interest. The Usury Laws do not protect the Prodigal and Unwary. There 

 were no Usury Laws in floUand. On tlie legal Rate of Interest in France, Hamburg, 

 Russia, Austria, Leghorn. Spnin, and the United States. Usury Laws do not reach the 

 Government. Error of some VVrifers on the Subject of a low Rate o( Interest. 



(2.) On Foreign and Domestic Exchange. I. On Inland Exchange. 2. Foreign Ex- 

 change. 3. Real Exchange. 4. Unfavorable Real Exchange. 5. Negotiation of Bills 

 of Exchange. 6. History and Advantages of Bills of Exchange. 7. Laws and Customs 

 respecting Bills of Exchan^^e. 8. Money** of Account. 



(3-) Essay on Money, Coins, BuHion, &c., with Remarks, on Metallic and Paper Cur- 

 rency, Seignorage, Degradation of the Standard, &c. 1. Origin o^ Money. 2, The Ex- 

 changeable Value of Money. 3. Seignorage. 4. Currency of the Precious Metals. 5. Pa- 

 per money. 6. Standard of the Currency. 7. Standard of Money. Together with co- 

 pious Tables of the Weight, Value, &c., of the Gold and bilver Coins of all nations,— 

 their Assay, Weight, Standard Weight, and sterling Value. Average Market pace of 

 xSullion in every year from 1800 to 182L % 



" Mr. McCulloch has condensed a great mass of knowledge, which men of oil parties 

 ■nould be glad to see so put togeilier. in his 'Political Economy,' ' Exchange/ ' Interest, 

 ^ajtaiion,' ' Paper Money/ and ' Principles of Banking.' "—Edluburgh Review. 



IV. Chronicles and Characters of the Stock Exchange. One 



Volume^ octavo, — 75 cents, 



Dedicated by permission to Samuel Gnmey. Esq.. comprising Sketches of Loans. Lot- 

 teries. Life Assurance, Tontines, Bribery, Corruption, Coniracmrs, Railways, ^arason 

 ^weon, Abraham Goldsratd. Mark Sprot, Sir Francis Baring, David Kicardo, l-rancis 

 ^aily, Nathan Meyer Rothschild, Greek Loan and Joseph Hume, Poyais Loan and 



Gregor iMcGregor, Frauds, Forgeries, Anecdotes, and Legends. 



Atlas. 



book. — London 



r Stock 

 fhia 



The extraordinary frauds which have been perpetrated from time to time by S 

 Exchange speculators, afford Mr. Francis ample materials for the hiMoncal portions o 

 ^ork ; and his sketches of the manners of the Siock Exchange, at the pres^^nt lime, ^how 

 "lat he has made himself intimately acquainted with the customa of lU frequenters.— /.on- 

 ^"^ Banker's Magazine. 



-+ 



V. The Banker's Almanac, 1851, containing 130 pages of valuable 

 Statistical Tables relating to Banks, Bankin^i, Exchange, Coins, Fi- 



nance, &c.~50 cts. J. SMITH HOMANS, 



111 Washington st,, Boston, 



Sept., 1851. 



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