| 1849 - 660 halaman
...rights of labor. See how transparently it is enclosed in the very first sentences of Mr. Kellogg's preface. " The laboring classes of all civilized nations...something intervened to prevent this natural result." It does not seem to occur to Mr. K., that the reason why " the laboring classes" — that is the classes... | |
| 1848 - 694 halaman
...Dear Sir : Although it is universally admitted that nearly all wealth is the product of labor, yet the laboring classes of all civilized nations have been, and are, as a body, poor. If the natural product of labor be wealth, the natural result of toil would be competence or wealth... | |
| Edward Kellogg - 1861 - 432 halaman
...the world. My book will show what my character was." MKP ELIZABETH, NJ, December, 1874. PEEFACE. TBS laboring classes of all civilized nations have been,...labor is greater than in most others, some cause is operatrng with continual and growing effect to separate production from the producer. The wrong is... | |
| Nelson A. Dunning - 1887 - 290 halaman
...monetary discussions of the last twenty-five years." CHAPTER III. PRICE AND ITS RELATION TO BUSINESS. The laboring classes of all civilized nations have been, and are, as a body, poor. All wealth being the production of labor, therefore, laborers could have possessed it, had not something... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1849 - 658 halaman
...rights of labor. See how transparently it is enclosed in the very first sentences of Mr. Kellogg's preface. "The laboring classes of all civilized nations have been, and are, as a b»dy, poor. Nearly all wealth is the production of labor ; therefore laborers would have possessed... | |
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