The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.
as may be inclined to invest their money in it,” &c.

Farther down in the prospectus we are told—­“It may here be stated, that the scheme for the formation of this Company has been mentioned to some of the principal Merchants and Gentlemen of the Country, and has met with decidedly favourable notice:  and it is expected that the shares, a large number of which have been already taken, will be rapidly disposed of.”

The same paper, the Morning Journal, from which we make this extract, informs us:  Nov. 2d—­

“The shares subscribed for yesterday, in the Marine Fire and Life Insurance Company, we understand, amount to the almost unprecedented number of One Thousand Six Hundred, with a number of applicants whose names have not been added to the list.”

The Morning Journal of October 20th in remarking upon this project says:—­

“Jamaica is now happily a free country; she contains within herself the means of becoming prosperous.  Let her sons develope those resources which Lord Belmore with so much truth declared never would be developed until slavery had ceased.  She has her Banks.—­Give her, in addition, her Loan Society, her Marine, Fire, and life Assurance Company, and some others that will shortly be proposed, and capital will flow in from other countries—­property will acquire a value in the market, that will increase with the increase of wealth, and she will yet be a flourishing island, and her inhabitants a happy and contented people.”

Now men desperately in debt might invite in foreign capital for temporary relief, but, since the compensation, this is understood not to be the case with the Jamaica planters; and if they are rushing into speculation, it must be because they have strong hope of the safety and prosperity of their country—­in other words, because they confide in the system of free labor.  This one prospectus, coupled with its prompt success, is sufficient to prove the falsehood of all the stories so industriously retailed among us from the Standard and the Despatch.  But speculators and large capitalists are not the only men who confide in the success of the “great experiment.”

The following editorial notice in the Morning Journal of a recent date speaks volumes:—­

SAVINGS BANK.

“We were asked not many days ago how the Savings Bank in this City was getting on.  We answered well, very well indeed.  By a notification published in our paper of Saturday, it will be seen that L1600 has been placed in the hands of the Receiver-General.  By the establishment of these Banks, a great deal of the money now locked up, and which yields no return whatever to the possessors, and is liable to be stolen, will be brought into circulation.  This circumstance of itself ought to operate as a powerful inducement to those parishes in which no Banks are yet established to be up and doing.  We have got some five or six of them fairly underweigh, as Jack would say, and hope the remainder will speedily trip their anchors and follow.”

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.