Refine Search

Newspaper

Aberdeen Press and Journal

Countries

Scotland

Access Type

2,052

Type

2,033
13
6

Public Tags

More details

Aberdeen Press and Journal

London and Provincial Grain Markets

... accepted office. and succeeded in forming f Ministry, which we'presum; will be followed up by a total abolition of the present Corn -Laws;. has teiided to increase the depression which has affect- ed our trade for the last two or three tweeks, so much so, that ...

MR JOHN BRIGHT ON FAIR TRADE

... larie for the capital employed upon tbem. Under the corn laws land was made to grow corn I which should have not grown it, and now, with low prices, must cease to grow it. With free tiade in I corn, land must depend on its own quality, and on I the capacity ...

FIARS PRICES—CROP 1849

... soon arise. Landlords can assist their tenants in a far more substantial form than by telling them that the repeal of the Corn Laws has brought on all the present dis. tress. This is sympathy, no doubt, of one sort-and the affirmation may be true, in a ...

OUR COMMERCIAL PROSPECTS

... themn diring the lost year. At ?? we hove had a vast number of our manufarturers rolling vehemently for a rc. peal of the Corn Laws, and otbers of tite same class demanding the equilization of the Sugar Duties on the same grouins-as the only meanls of ...

THE STATE OF IRELAND

... detailed the various measures passed ,f by Co'servative Governments for the benetit of the working classes-the repeal of the corn laws, extension of the burgh fraiichise, ant Sir Richard ) Cross's Factory Act. He criticised very severely the efinancial anrd ...

FAIR TRADE VERSUS FREE TRADE

... land laws, that if agriculture won't pay you must turn to something else. But these laws are the sadue as those under which you E formerly lived and prospered. Alter them as you will, l and abolish rent if you will, you cannot even then - grow corn to compete ...

THE MONETARY CRISIS

... the position of the country. This has . been followed by repeated reductions of customs' duties, and the abrogation of the corn -laws. Of the wisdom of this po- licy, I do not mean here to speak; but, I may generally re- mark, that increased importations ...

London and Provincial Grain Markets

... night, that her Majesty's Government did not conteanplate any alter- stion In the existing Corn Laws, has inspired the holdpra of al'l rtish, and free foreign corn with more firmness, and we were enabled to ni*e to-day an adsaiace of ls to isper qr. on ...

PROFESSOR FAWCETT, M.P., ON FREE TRADE AND PROTECTION

... the maddest of all the mad wri. in thing towhich he had ever had to listen was wrorkin sly the proposal to. abolish the Corn Laws. Adam to bank Ise Smith and Ricardo had even then penned replies ap- duff of sly plicable to the modern opponents of Free ...

ABERDEEN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

... Liberal chamber, and that both the city and the chisosber had renl embued with the free trade idea since the abolition of the Corn LawS. Some very strong reasons must lhve Inmduced the Glasgow Chamber to make a depar- i turs from its former attitude. Last year ...

FAIR TRADE CONFERENCE IN LONLON

... Stanley of Alderley said they should not be satisfied with anythinga less than a ten shililing duty on corn. If they did not get that the repeal of the corn laws was passred under false pretences. Mr D~rove (Henley) moved an amendment that the qnestion be made ...

Lord Randolph Churchill visited Wolverhampton yesterday in response to a long

... misrepresentation of the most t gigantic character to maintain that as the f cheap loaf has come since the abolition of the Corn Laws, it came because of them. Yet this sweeping perversion of history, phil- osophy, and fact has been one of the most powerful ...