| North American review and miscellaneous journal - 1892 - 858 pages
...and frankly said :(" The charge against the protective policy which has injured it most is, that the benefits. go wholly to the manufacturers and capitalists and not at all to the farmer." vAs England alone furnishes the great market for our agricultural surplus, the exports of cattle, wheat,... | |
| Gail Hamilton - 1895 - 808 pages
...be a policy as unprecedented as it would be unwise. . . . The charge against the protective policy which has injured it most is that its benefits go wholly to the manufacturer and the capitalist, and not at all to the fanner. You and I well know that this is not... | |
| Edward Stanwood - Tariff - 1903 - 446 pages
...his friend, Senator Frye, of Maine, in which he said : — The charge against the protective policy which has injured it most is that its benefits go wholly to the manufacturer and the capitalist and not at all to the farmer. You and I well know that this is not... | |
| Ida Minerva Tarbell - 1911 - 408 pages
...himself repeatedly. On July 1 r, he wrote Senator Frye, saying: "The charge against the protective policy which has injured it most is that its benefits go wholly to the manufacturer and the capitalist and not at all to the farmer. Here is an opportunity where the fanner... | |
| Ida Minerva Tarbell - Tariff - 1911 - 478 pages
...himself repeatedly. On July 1 1, he wrote Senator Frye, saying: "The charge against the protective policy which has injured it most is that its benefits go wholly to the manufacturer and the capitalist and not at all to the farmer. Here is an opportunity where the farmer... | |
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