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THE CORN LAWS

... THE CORN LAWS. Mr. Ibbotson, of Sheffield, lectured publicly on the project, and proved it to be the interest of all classes—of the landowners themselves, as much any—that the Corn Laws should be repealed. Mr. Ebenezer Elliot, in rising to move a vote ...

CORN LAWS

... CORN LAWS. The London and Provincial Papers have with creditable acclamation inserted Sir T. B. Lethbridge's letter to the '* Landowners and Occupiers of West Somerset which appeared in our columns on the 21 st ult. The comprehensive nationality of view ...

THE CORN LAWS

... THE CORN LAWS. A RAILWAY GLANCE AT THE CORN LAWS : OR, FEW WORDS WHICH PASSED, BETWEEN WATFORD AND TRINO, ON THE 20TH OF JANUARY 1839.. From Fhaskr's Macauvb.] Birminftum Manufacturer. Let as have little conversation on the subjectof the ...

CORN LAWS

... d to join their ranks (and who seek only their own ulterior objects) exclaim against the corn laws. can they for one moment believe that a free trade in corn would do good to the country? Where we say that the nsanofactoring interest shall by this means ...

Published: Saturday 15 September 1832
Newspaper: Bristol Times and Mirror
County: Bristol, England
Type: | Words: 1828 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE CORN LAWS

... THE CORN LAWS. (From the Times, Tnesday, Febrnary 10.) ' °^TL aSt on the Corn Laws has ceremonial has begun. Every hDC()n ...

THE CORN LAWS

... Althorp in his proposed Bank Charter measures of 1633. The Corn Laws, then, form part of the artificial system to which this country is forced by the National Debt. It said that the Corn Laws are a monopoly for the benefit the landowners. Why, so is every ...

Published: Thursday 27 June 1833
Newspaper: Devizes and Wiltshire Gazette
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1208 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

CORN LAWS

... CORN LAWS. Petitions were presented from various parts of the country for alteration in, or revision of, these laws, and many of a contrary tendency, praying that no alteration whatever might be made in the present system. Wednesday, April 27. A t four ...

CORN LAWS

... expect worthy encouragement from patriarchial Government, bat our corn laws have tendency tbe very reverse ; for, if the confiding farmer holds his grain over for another year, the foreign corn-dealer, no customer ol his, lying in ambush for convenient rise ...

CORN LAWS

... these blessed corn laws. The remunerating price of the agricultural interest is 60s. a quarter for wheat; and it is pretended that the corn laws are cunningly contrived that the price shall not long be above that mark, as foreign corn ...

CORN LAWS

... CORN LAWS. [From Tub Globe.] The straw is be'ng moved. The' Food Exclusives may read with advanage on the one band the Marquisof Londonderry's Address his Irish tenantry, and on the other the address of the Leeds Pari amen rary Reform Association to the ...

CORN LAWS

... CORN LAWS. [From the Globe.] That the present scale of restrictive duties on the importation foreign corn could last longer than the state of the harvests this country rendered recourse to foreigners for any very considerable supply of corn unnecessary ...

THE CORN LAWS

... the Corn-laws were enacted and whom the accursed system still maintained ' His was easier task— far more creditable, honourable, and, would add, virtuous and religious duty • h.r though lie had litileabilityloadvocatethe repeal of the Corn-laws, thank ...

Published: Thursday 04 May 1843
Newspaper: North Devon Journal
County: Devon, England
Type: Article | Words: 5492 | Page: 3 | Tags: none