Wool-growing and the Tariff: A Study in the Economic History of the United StatesHarvard University Press, 1910 - 362 halaman |
Dari dalam buku
Hasil 1-5 dari 54
Halaman 5
... reason to believe that if the export of wool from the colonies to foreign countries had been permitted , it would ever have amounted to anything . Shipments of woolens from one colony to another did sometimes occur , ' but they do not ...
... reason to believe that if the export of wool from the colonies to foreign countries had been permitted , it would ever have amounted to anything . Shipments of woolens from one colony to another did sometimes occur , ' but they do not ...
Halaman 21
... reasons for the growth of the factory was that the household indus- try , by nature not readily adjusted to rapidly changing conditions , proved unequal to the vast demands so suddenly imposed upon it . Nevertheless , it rose to the ...
... reasons for the growth of the factory was that the household indus- try , by nature not readily adjusted to rapidly changing conditions , proved unequal to the vast demands so suddenly imposed upon it . Nevertheless , it rose to the ...
Halaman 31
... reason why the country did not grow fine wool earlier : it was able to get woolens from England with ease , and it was able to pay for them by the proceeds from the export of food stuffs . But the con- ditions which shut out the woolen ...
... reason why the country did not grow fine wool earlier : it was able to get woolens from England with ease , and it was able to pay for them by the proceeds from the export of food stuffs . But the con- ditions which shut out the woolen ...
Halaman 46
... reason that labor and capital can't be employed , or duties paid , out of less than no product ” ( vol . xxxi , p . 177 ) . ... 2 " The records of our custom houses show that more than four - fifths of the woolen goods sent to this ...
... reason that labor and capital can't be employed , or duties paid , out of less than no product ” ( vol . xxxi , p . 177 ) . ... 2 " The records of our custom houses show that more than four - fifths of the woolen goods sent to this ...
Halaman 47
... reason to doubt that the repeal would have come even if there had been no tariff in the United States . To have retained such a duty on raw material would have been the very reverse of the policy of free raw materials towards which ...
... reason to doubt that the repeal would have come even if there had been no tariff in the United States . To have retained such a duty on raw material would have been the very reverse of the policy of free raw materials towards which ...
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
12 cents 54th Congress ad valorem advance amount Australasia Average Annual Imports Boston broadcloth Bulletin carpet wool cassimeres Census cents a pound cents cents cents chief Civil Class cloth coarse combing wool consumption cost cotton cotton famine dairy decade decline delaines demand Dingley tariff domestic clip domestic wool duty on wool East economic England estimate export fact factor farm farmers favor figures fleece flocks foreign wool free wool gold prices grades of wool greater grower growth Ibid imports of wool increase land less manu manufactures of wool Massachusetts mestiza Middle West mutton nearly Niles number of sheep Ohio period pounds of wool price of wool raw wool region relative Report rise River Plate scoured Sheep Husbandry Sheep Industry situation South South America tion trade United valorem Vermont wheat wool market wool-growing industry woolen manufacture world's wool supply York
Bagian yang populer
Halaman 330 - Bruce, Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century (New York, 1896), I, 572-73; Evarts B.
Halaman 63 - ... it is impossible to say, but there can be no doubt that we are outrunning the constable to a very great extent.
Halaman 286 - ... which has been sorted or increased in value by the rejection of any part of the original fleece, shall be twice the duty to which it would be otherwise subject : Provided, That skirted wools as now imported are hereby excepted.
Halaman 38 - But now cotton yarn is cheaper than linen yarn ; and cotton goods are very much used in place of cambrics, lawns, and other expensive fabrics of flax ; and they have almost totally superseded the silks. Women of all ranks, from the highest to the lowest, are clothed in British manufactures of cotton, from the muslin cap on the crown of the head, to the cotton stocking under the sole of the foot.
Halaman 274 - Up to and including 1880 the country had a frontier of settlement, but at present the unsettled area has been so broken into by isolated bodies of settlement that there can hardly be said to be a frontier line.
Halaman 286 - The duty upon wool of the sheep, or hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals, which shall be imported in any other than ordinary condition, as now and heretofore practiced, or which shall be changed in its character or condition for the purpose of evading the duty, or which shall be reduced in value by the admixture of dirt or any other foreign substance, shall be twice the duty to which it would be otherwise subject.
Halaman 7 - England, sets mens \\itts at work, and tfrat has put them upon a Trade which I am sure will hurt England in a little time ; for I am well informed, that upon Long Island and Connecticut, they are setting up a Woollen Manufacture, and I myself have seen Serge made upon Long Island that any man may wear.
Halaman 6 - Virginia, in this 1669. land people in producing naval stores, to turn them from manufactures. It mentions that six thousand barrels of tar, pitch, and turpentine were sent home that year by one fleet. But that nine years before, the great scarcity and dearness of woolen goods, which sold at two hundred per cent, advance, had forced them to " set up a very considerable manufactory, still in being, for Stuffs, Kerseys, Linsey-woolseys, Flannels, Buttons, &c., by which the importation of these Provinces...
Halaman 62 - ... stones and pearls of all kinds, set or not set; Bristol stones or paste work, and all articles composed wholly or chiefly of gold, silver, pearl, and precious stones; and laces, lace veils, lace shawls or shades, of thread or silk. Second. A duty of fifteen per centum ad valorem on gold leaf, and on all articles not free, and not subject to any other rate of duty.
Halaman 20 - Almost all wool is spun and woven in private families, and there are yet but few establishments for the manufacture of woolen cloth.