To a thriving agriculture, and the improvements relating to it, is added a highly interesting extension of useful manufactures, the combined product of professional occupations and of household industry. Such, indeed, is the experience of economy, as... Cobbett's Political Register - Side 51redigert av - 1811Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| United States. Congress - 1853 - 720 sider
...its substantial and increasing prosperity. To a thriving agriculture, and the improvements related to it, is added a highly interesting extension of...change is justly regarded as, of itself, more than a recompense for those privations and losses, resulting from foreign injustice, which furnished the general... | |
| United States. President - 1854 - 616 sider
...tribes, also, the peace and friendship of the United States are found to be so eligible, that the general disposition to preserve both continues to gain strength....change is justly regarded as of itself more than a recompense for those privations and losses resulting from foreign injustice which furnished the general... | |
| Rufus Choate, Samuel Gilman Brown - 1862 - 532 sider
...protecting duties and prohibitions, become permanent" And of Mr. Madison, in his message of 1810 : — " I feel particular satisfaction in remarking that an...change is justly regarded as, of itself, more than a recompense for those privations and losses resulting from foreign injustice, which furnished the general... | |
| Rufus Choate, Samuel Gilman Brown - 1862 - 540 sider
...Debates, old series, vol. ip 116. In his message of the fifth of December, 1810, after adverting to a " highly interesting extension of useful manufactures,...professional occupations and of household industry," he observes, " how far it may be expedient to guard the infancy of this improvement in the distribution... | |
| Horace Greeley - 1870 - 386 sider
...products of professional occupations and of household indus1 November 8,1808. 2 December 5,1810. try. Such, indeed, is the experience of economy, as well...change is justly regarded as, of itself, more than a recompense for those privations and losses, resulting from, foreign injustice, which furnished the... | |
| George Bailey Loring - 1881 - 88 sider
...portion of our industry and capital to internal manufactures and improvements. Said Mr. Madison in 1810 : To a thriving agriculture and the improvements relating...the combined product of professional occupations and household industry. Such, indued, is the experience of economy, as well as of policy, in these substitutes... | |
| David Hastings Mason - 1884 - 170 sider
...too, when he had become President. In his second annual message, December 5, 1810, after adverting to a "highly interesting extension of useful manufactures,...professional occupations and of household industry," he observes, "how far it may be expedient to guard the infancy of this improvement in the distribution... | |
| John Robert Irelan - 1886 - 580 sider
...tribes, also, the peace and friendship of the United States are found to be so eligible that the general disposition to preserve both continues to gain strength....change is justly regarded as of itself more than a recompense for those privations and losses resulting from foreign injustice which furnished the general... | |
| Richard Wigginton Thompson - 1888 - 576 sider
...this that, in his second message, in 1810, he thus expressed himself — enforcing his former views: "I feel particular satisfaction in remarking that...change is justly regarded as of itself more than a recompense for those privations and losses resulting from foreign injustice which furnished the general... | |
| United States. President - 1896 - 646 sider
...of its substantial and increasing prosperity. To a thriving agriculture and the improvements related to it is added a highly interesting extension of useful...change is justly regarded as of itself more than a recompense for those privations and losses resulting from foreign injustice which furnished the general... | |
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