| Richard Wigginton Thompson - Free trade - 1888 - 576 pages
...but such wealth always presupposes their existence. He viewed the words in the most enlarged sense. Without commerce industry would have no stimulus ;...When separated entirely and permanently, they perish. . . . It is admitted, by the most strenuous advocates on the other side, that no country ought to be... | |
| Political science - 1892 - 704 pages
...but such wealth always presupposes their existence. [He viewed the words in the most enlarged sense.] Without commerce, industry would have no stimulus...When separated entirely and permanently, they perish. ... It is admitted, by the most strenuous advocates on the other side, that no country ought to be... | |
| George Benjamin Mangold - Labor - 1908 - 134 pages
...separately, is the cause of wealth. It flows from the three combined and cannot exist without each. — Without Commerce industry would have no stimulus;...to a great extent, that effect and hence the great embarrassment that fol* Messages and Papers of the Presidents, 1: 567. 8 Calhoun, Works, 2: 166. lows... | |
| George Benjamin Mangold - Labor - 1908 - 130 pages
...separately, is the cause of wealth. It flows from the three combined and cannot exist without each.—Without Commerce industry would have no stimulus; without...to a great extent, that effect and hence the great embarrassment that fol7 Messages and Papers of the Presidents, 1: 567. 8 Calhoun, Work*, 2: 166. lows... | |
| Social sciences - 1909 - 558 pages
...separately, is 'the cause of wealth. 1t flows from the three combined and cannot exist without each. — Without Commerce industry would have no stimulus;...to a great extent. that effect and hence the great embarrassment that fol' Hestaget and Papers of the Pretidents, li 507. •Calhoun, Workt, 2i 166. lows... | |
| Guy Stevens Callender - United States - 1909 - 852 pages
...but such wealth always presupposes their existence. He viewed the words in the most enlarged sense. Without commerce, industry would have no stimulus...a great extent, that effect ; and hence the great embarrassment which follows in its train. The failure of the wealth and resources of the nation necessarily... | |
| George Boughton Curtiss - Commercial policy - 1912 - 590 pages
...but such wealth always presupposes their existence. He viewed the words in their most enlarged sense. Without commerce, industry would have no stimulus;...the wealth and resources of the nation necessarily involves the ruin of its finances and its currency. It is admitted by the most strenuous advocates... | |
| Wilbur Henry Siebert - American loyalists - 1913 - 422 pages
...individual misery and producing national poverty; our agriculture cut off from its accustomed markets The failure of the wealth and resources of the nation necessarily involved in the ruin of its finances and its currency When our manufactures are grown to a certain perfection,... | |
| Ohio State University - History - 1917 - 168 pages
...individual misery and producing national poverty; our agriculture cut off from its accustomed markets The failure of the wealth and resources of the nation necessarily involved in the ruin of its finances and its currency When our manufactures are grown to a certain perfection,... | |
| Rosalie Jones Dill - Chinese - 1923 - 396 pages
...Agriculture, manufactures and commerce were the three sources of wealth, for Calhoun argued that " without commerce, industry would have no stimulus;...without agriculture, neither of the others can subsist." * REASONS FOR FREE TRADE POLICIES OF THE SOUTH Calhoun, about 1816, advocated protection. However,... | |
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