Doing Us Good and PlentyC. H. Kerr, 1914 - 172 sider |
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Side 6
... reason why meat was dear . There was an import duty on wool ; that was the reason why clothing was so dear . There was an import duty on sugar ; that was the reason why sugar was high and all articles into which sugar entered cost us so ...
... reason why meat was dear . There was an import duty on wool ; that was the reason why clothing was so dear . There was an import duty on sugar ; that was the reason why sugar was high and all articles into which sugar entered cost us so ...
Side 10
... reason never disclosed ) we entrust our government . It was all well enough to have a working class perpetually on a lower social plane , but if that working class was every year being worse fed and worse housed , and was getting con ...
... reason never disclosed ) we entrust our government . It was all well enough to have a working class perpetually on a lower social plane , but if that working class was every year being worse fed and worse housed , and was getting con ...
Side 47
... reason to question it . I will , therefore , cite three instances from the records , and with them illuminate the situation of labor as it really is in America under the secret rule of accumulated wealth , the greatest power in the ...
... reason to question it . I will , therefore , cite three instances from the records , and with them illuminate the situation of labor as it really is in America under the secret rule of accumulated wealth , the greatest power in the ...
Side 49
... total wealth of the United States . These two Groups also own or control or can muzzle most of the newspapers and news gathering agencies of the country . That seems to be the reason why civil war can WHEN WORKINGMEN PROTEST 49.
... total wealth of the United States . These two Groups also own or control or can muzzle most of the newspapers and news gathering agencies of the country . That seems to be the reason why civil war can WHEN WORKINGMEN PROTEST 49.
Side 50
Charles Edward Russell. That seems to be the reason why civil war can rage in the United States , armored trains can shoot up sleeping villages , battles can be fought and the Constitution abolished and the mass of the public know ...
Charles Edward Russell. That seems to be the reason why civil war can rage in the United States , armored trains can shoot up sleeping villages , battles can be fought and the Constitution abolished and the mass of the public know ...
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abolished AFFIDAVITS amendment anti-trust law armed guards Associated Press Big Business Calumet and Hecla capitalist cent chance Colorado Commission companies condition Constitution copper cost of living crop Democratic deputy sheriffs dividends dollars employers fact farm Federation of Miners fire free list gentlemen gunmen Haven Higginson & Co increase in wages industry Interstate Commerce Commission investigation killed labor unions land Linderfelt Loeb & Co Louis Tikas MacNaughton Mellen ment militia millions Moyer nation never newspapers Oil Group operation organization paid Painesdale Parasites party Pennsylvania Railroad persons President profit prosecuted public opinion Pullman Company railroad rebates reform rifles secure Seeberville Sherman act Sherman law South Range Standard Oil Standard Oil Company strike strikers sugar Supreme Court tariff tents thing tion to-day Unconsumed Surplus vote Western Federation Wilson workers workingmen
Populære avsnitt
Side 165 - or horticultural organizations, orders or associations instituted for the purposes of mutual help, and not having capital stock or conducted for profit, or to forbid or restrain individual members of such organizations, orders or associations from carrying out the legitimate objects thereof.
Side 165 - read as follows: That nothing contained in the Antitrust laws shall be construed to forbid the existence and operation of fraternal, labor, consumers, agricultural or horticultural organizations, orders or associations instituted for the purposes of mutual help, and not having capital stock or conducted for profit, or to forbid or restrain individual members of such organizations, orders or associations from carrying out the legitimate objects thereof.
Side 166 - instituted for the purposes of mutual help, and not having capital stock or conducted for profit, or to forbid or restrain individual members of such organizations, orders or associations
Side 18 - It is said that the man who makes two blades of grass grow where one grew is a public benefactor, but we are offering mighty poor encouragement for the two-blade production if the two blades bring less money than the one would have brought.
Side 111 - Until these things are done, conscientious business men the country over will be unsatisfied. They are in these things our mentors and colleagues. We are now about to write the additional articles of our constitution of peace — the peace that is honor and freedom and prosperity. In
Side 124 - the attempt to control utterances of the press by subsidizing reporters; payment of money and the profligate issue of free passes to legislators and their friends; the investment of $400,000 in securities of a New England newspaper; the regular employment of political bosses in Rhode Island and other states, not for
Side 166 - shall apply to fraternal, labor, consumers, agricultural or horticultural organizations, orders or associations instituted for the purposes of mutual help, and not having capital stock or conducted for profit, or to forbid or restrain individual members of such organizations, orders or associations
Side 125 - for $1,032,000 of the funds of the New Haven entrusted to him in carrying out the Westchester proposition; the story of Mr. Mellen as to the distribution of $1,200,000 for corrupt purposes in bringing about amendments of the Westchester and
Side 123 - Marked features and significant incidents in the loose, extravagant, and improvident administration of the finances of the New Haven as shown in this investigation are the Boston & Maine despoilment; the