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Lancashire, England

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CORN LAWS

... CORN LW.S I * o zeE4 ?? of atos liverpooz A To. O q GE£N T L SMZ E ,z ?? serve, on the subjecti.n6 the 'proposed 'togu of. ,the':Corh.LaW54 st-' Sh . . ?? fooj and manufactnrik4htbe aatural foundation and&will: always ,fi1dIj~ gner al'ie'~d interferenceof ...

THE CORN LAWS

... IteC Ii eqp ~i gter~suti, SALUS POPULI LEX SUPRXEf A. FRIDAY, MdARCH 14, 1834. THEZ CORtN LAWS. An attentive perusal of the twio nights' discnssion pa to which this important inquiry gave rise, is not A calculated to inspire us with much respect for the ...

CORN LAWS

... CORN LAWS. , The Legislative bodies during the ?? 9 s:on of Parliament. will be called ?? to discuss, among other questions of importance, the policy OF c permitting or preventing the importation of foreign I corn, at the present very, low market prices ...

THE CORN LAWS

... THE CORN LAWS. To the Editor of the M1anchester Times. SIR,-1 am one ansongst a nIlluber of YoUr many Kibscrn- c bers, who reel grateful for your cndeavouis to enli.ghten : your fellov-countryifell, on a stilject which so materially C concerns them). ...

FARMERS AND THE CORN LAWS

... readers. - The present period seems to be peculiarly propitious n for discussing the question of the Corn Laws; for the I admission of cheap foreign corn in the face of falling markets, ought to go far to convince farmers that they G lcan derive no advantage ...

PETITION ON THE CORN LAWS

... commtinuimgs the Corn Laws, that the Landowners should be relieved troan all ins- posts (if any such exist) to which the other classes of the conmmmmuity are not equally subject. That your P.etitioners, therefore, rondcmenuing the exist- ing Corn Laws as a gross ...

EFFECTS OF THE CORN LAWS

... I -- - EFFECTS OF THE CORN LAWS. I. 1- .. . . .l. .ninceiesi. colo- Air. Pitt, although very desirous to irnlcacte -lipl, nies, and commnerce, rounid it not less lneccssal'Y to encou- rage the lords of the soil ; and about h04, p-lssed a bill givin them ...

FARMERS AND THE CORN LAWS

... had in the abolition of the laws which stinted him in the supplies of food' for himself and famifly. He would niow proceed to show them that so far front farmers being benefited, they lied bean greatly in- jured by the corn law.. Farming had hitherto been ...

ON THE REMNANT OF THE CORN LAWS

... li ON THE REMNANT OF T[IE CORN LAWS. By LIUT..G-Es~rRAL T. PEnioxuT THo:.irsoN. What were generally known as the Corn Laws. incanit, a heavy duty on the importatiou of foreign corn, have beet. done away wvith, attended with an almost ...

DEBATE ON THE CORN LAWS

... containing a vast majority of y, corn-dealers, backed bv a feudal chamber 6f crddled I. legislators vwho possess no title, competency, or l conceivable pretence for making laws, but'that 'which' they derive from the inheriting' of corn- manulactutring estates ...

LORD STANLEY AND THE CORN LAWS

... the man. In his defence of the landlords Lord Stanley was forced to admit that the effect of the corn laws was to raise rents, and to enhance the price of corn, and that the price t of bread had nothing to do with the rate of wages, one r way or other. He ...

PETITION AGAINST THE CORN LAWS

... Certainly not. (Aprplause.) Then lie contended that it was clear the corn laws had been maintained and passed under false pretences. The proper name for them was not corn laws but rent laws. (Hear, hear, andcheers.) It was an ...