[The Financier by Theodore Dreiser]@TWC D-Link book
The Financier

CHAPTER XIV
8/30

Rather, all they were expected to do, apparently, was to restore the principal and that which was with them when they entered or left office.

It was not understood or publicly demanded that the moneys so collected, or drawn from any source, be maintained intact in the vaults of the city treasury.

They could be loaned out, deposited in banks or used to further private interests of any one, so long as the principal was returned, and no one was the wiser.

Of course, this theory of finance was not publicly sanctioned, but it was known politically and journalistically, and in high finance.

How were you to stop it?
Cowperwood, in approaching Edward Malia Butler, had been unconsciously let in on this atmosphere of erratic and unsatisfactory speculation without really knowing it.


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