Great Debates in American History: Revenue: the tariff and taxationMarion Mills Miller Current Literature Publishing Company, 1913 - Civil rights |
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Page 1
... importing goods cheaper than he as a rule could make them . And so we decided to encourage manufacturing by taxing ourselves . The amount of the tax decided on was to be only enough to put our would - be manufacturers on an even basis ...
... importing goods cheaper than he as a rule could make them . And so we decided to encourage manufacturing by taxing ourselves . The amount of the tax decided on was to be only enough to put our would - be manufacturers on an even basis ...
Page 22
... imported . Whenever the two accounts shall be fairly stated , the balance against the United States will be found many millions of dollars . Such is the state of things that the change must be to the advantage of the United States . The ...
... imported . Whenever the two accounts shall be fairly stated , the balance against the United States will be found many millions of dollars . Such is the state of things that the change must be to the advantage of the United States . The ...
Page 24
... protecting manufactures was that we might eventually get articles of necessity made as cheap at home as they could be imported , and thereby to pro- duce an independence of foreign countries . In three years 24 GREAT AMERICAN DEBATES.
... protecting manufactures was that we might eventually get articles of necessity made as cheap at home as they could be imported , and thereby to pro- duce an independence of foreign countries . In three years 24 GREAT AMERICAN DEBATES.
Page 36
... imports to a point where the former policy of the country to lay a " tariff for rev- enue with incidental protection ... importing and agri- cultural South , with notable exceptions , such as Senator 36 Andrew Jackson [ Tenn . ] , voted ...
... imports to a point where the former policy of the country to lay a " tariff for rev- enue with incidental protection ... importing and agri- cultural South , with notable exceptions , such as Senator 36 Andrew Jackson [ Tenn . ] , voted ...
Page 45
... imported cloth . Both these are equally the earnings of do- mestic industry , and the only questions that arise in ... imports , and the habit of the Government of collecting al- most its whole revenue in that mode , will enable us ...
... imported cloth . Both these are equally the earnings of do- mestic industry , and the only questions that arise in ... imports , and the habit of the Government of collecting al- most its whole revenue in that mode , will enable us ...
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Common terms and phrases
abroad ad valorem agricultural amendment American believe benefit Benton McMillin bounty Canada capital cent Chairman commerce committee competition Congress Constitution consumer cost cotton demand Democratic side Dingley dollars England export factures farmer favor foreign free list free raw material free trade free-trade gentleman give Government House imported income tax increase industry interests iron Jerry Simpson labor legislation manu manufactures McKinley Means measure ment millions Mills Nelson Dingley opposed the bill party pig iron political present President principle profits proposed prosperity protective system protective tariff question raise rate of duty reciprocity reduce Republican side revenue Roger Q Senate Sereno E South Speaker steel sugar surplus tariff bill tariff of 1824 taxation things tion to-day treasury trust United valorem vote wages wealth wheat William William C. P. Breckinridge William McKinley wool woolen