Word: foreigner
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...general government should regulate trusts. a. They could otherwise move to the most favorable State. Ex. Sugar trust from N. Y. to N. J. b. The Federal government alone can deal with resulting interstate and foreign questions. Constitution, Art. I, Sect, VIII, 1, 3, 4, 17, 18. Sect. IX, and c. Alone can make a law having uniform application...
...that conference. To Northfield it is probable that there will be delegates from France and Germany and Sweden, and from seven of the universities of Great Britain. Harvard University raised through a committee of twenty about $600 to assist in defraying the cost of the entertainment of the foreign guests of the Northfield Conference. It is quite certain that Harvard will have a General Secretary next year, the needful sum having been raised. A strong attempt has been made to have an elective course in the English Bible offered next year. This has been found impossible, but some special conferences...
...brief that the bill now occupies over sixty pages; that it discriminates between certain industries Several arguments are given why we should have Protection: That it affords an easy way of collecting revenue. Although this is true to a certain extent, yet if we should become engaged in a foreign war we would lose our foreign trade and therefore our revenue also. Second, that this tax is paid by foreigners. Not so; it is paid by the consumer at home. Third, that it benefits the farmer. Now the duty amounts to a virtual bounty, and this bounty is paid...
...Lincoln, '93, continued for the affirmative. He showed that England had had protection from 1350 to 1846, while we have had it only about 30 years. England had kept the protective system until she found that she could control the markets of the world, and then she wanted every foreign country to allow her a free market for her productions. We have, as a nation, always been more prosper oust when we have had protection than when we have had free trade. The bil should pass because it is fair to all parties...
...question of fur-bearing animals is foreign to the subject. (a) The expediency of protecting the fur-bearing animals is foreign to the question of "a right to exclusive territorial jurisdiction," for expediency is not right. (b) The fur-bearing animals, however, can best be protected by international agreement: Atlantic M., Feb., 1890, p. 186; Forum...