Hansard's Parliamentary Debates |
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Side 69
... increase of our mer- cantile marine , showing that the increase in her Majesty's service , though that must , in a great measure , depend upon our mer- cantile navy , had , nevertheless , not been made at the expense of the mercantile ...
... increase of our mer- cantile marine , showing that the increase in her Majesty's service , though that must , in a great measure , depend upon our mer- cantile navy , had , nevertheless , not been made at the expense of the mercantile ...
Side 71
... increase of 4,0301 .; one item of which increase was a sum of 1,9001 . , occasioned by buildings which had been carried on in the naval yards in Canada . Under the head of naval stores there was a slight decrease , not from any ...
... increase of 4,0301 .; one item of which increase was a sum of 1,9001 . , occasioned by buildings which had been carried on in the naval yards in Canada . Under the head of naval stores there was a slight decrease , not from any ...
Side 73
... increase of 44,138 . No. 19 was a new head , " The Post Office Depart- ment ( Contract Packet Service ) . " It had been thought by the Board of Admiralty , that it was better , when any item of ex- penditure became large , that it ...
... increase of 44,138 . No. 19 was a new head , " The Post Office Depart- ment ( Contract Packet Service ) . " It had been thought by the Board of Admiralty , that it was better , when any item of ex- penditure became large , that it ...
Side 81
... increase of your guns , or the size of your ship , so you must proportionably increase the flat- ness of the floor below to give ease and buoyancy . The first frigates Sir W. Symonds built were the Vernon and Pique on the models of his ...
... increase of your guns , or the size of your ship , so you must proportionably increase the flat- ness of the floor below to give ease and buoyancy . The first frigates Sir W. Symonds built were the Vernon and Pique on the models of his ...
Side 93
... increased gradually . ] Not very gradually . out of all rule , such for instance as had There had been certainly of ... increase of their pay which the position to encourage any plan to intro- House of Commons might think advis - duce ...
... increased gradually . ] Not very gradually . out of all rule , such for instance as had There had been certainly of ... increase of their pay which the position to encourage any plan to intro- House of Commons might think advis - duce ...
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Admiralty agricultural alteration appointed Baronet begged believed bill Board Board of Admiralty British brought burdens Captain charge classes commercial committee consideration considered consul consular consumption Corn-laws course deficiency diplomatic distress effect Elton England estimate Exchequer existing favour feel felt fixed duty foreign French gallant Officer Gentleman give hoped House importance income increase inquiry interest Ireland Knaresborough labour land learned Friend Lord Brougham Lord Chancellor Lord G Lordships Majesty's Government manufactures Marriages Ireland matter measure Member ment minister motion naval naval Lords navy necessary noble and learned noble Earl noble Friend noble Lord noble Viscount object opinion opposite Parliament parties Peel persons present principle produce proposed proposition quarter question received reduction reference respect revenue right hon ships Spain Syria thought tion trade truck system Viscount Howick Visct vote wished
Populære avsnitt
Side 895 - country. He would be apt to abandon the country in which he was exposed to a vexatious inquisition, in order to be assessed to a burdensome tax, and would remove his stock to some other country where he could either carry on his business, or enjoy his fortune more at his ease. By removing his stock
Side 447 - that of your fathers, who, with a mutiny at the Nore, a rebellion in Ireland, and disaster abroad, yet submitted, with buoyant vigour and universal applause (with the funds as low as 52), to a property-tax of 10 per cent. I believe that
Side 737 - motives affecting the safety of the lives and liberty of all the foreigners here present in Canton, and by other very weighty causes, do hereby, in the name and on the behalf of her Britannic Majesty's
Side 445 - of maturely considering and finally deciding on the adoption or rejection of the measures I propose. We live in an important era of human affairs. There may be a natural tendency to overrate the magnitude of the crisis in which we live, or those particular events with which we are ourselves conversant; but I think it is
Side 599 - humble Address be presented to her Majesty, that she will be graciously pleased to give directions, that there be laid before this house, copies of
Side 735 - cutters, and otherwise rigged small craft, either habitually or occasionally engaged in the illicit opium traffic within the Bocca Tigris, should proceed forth of the same within the space of three days from the date of these presents, and not return within the
Side 421 - propose, that for a time to be limited, the income of this country should be called on to contribute a certain sum for the purpose of remedying this mighty and growing evil. I propose, that the income of this country should bear a charge not exceeding 7d. in the pound; which will not amount to 3 per cent, but speaking accurately,
Side 895 - of revenue both to the sovereign and to society. Not only the profits of stock, but the rent of land, and the wages of labour, would necessarily be more or less diminished by its removal.
Side 421 - of reviving the taxes on salt or on sugar,—it is my duty to make an earnest appeal to the possessors of property, for the purpose of repairing this mighty evil. I propose, for a time at least, (and I never had occasion to make a proposition with a more thorough conviction of its being one which the public interest of the country
Side 895 - The quantity and value of the land which any man possesses can never be a secret, and can always be ascertained with great exactness. But the whole amount of the capital stock which