| 1893 - 942 pages
...may fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woollen manufactures would be a national blessing and advantage and no real injury to the poor. By this...our rents, and reform the people into the bargain " (Smith's " Memoirs on Wool," vol. ii. p. 308). Compare with this Arthur Young's frequent suggestion... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1894 - 906 pages
...may fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woollen manufactures would be a national blessing and advantage and no real injury to the poor. By this...our rents, and reform the people into the bargain" (Smith's " Memoirs on Wool," vol. ii. p. 308). Compare with this Arthur Young's frequent suggestion... | |
| 1894 - 880 pages
...may fairly aver that A reduction of wages in the woollen manufactures would be a national blessing and advantage and no real injury to the poor. By this...our rents, and reform the people into the bargain" (Smith's " Memoirs on Wool," vol. ii. p. 308). Compare with this Arthur Young's frequent suggestion... | |
| John Atkinson Hobson - 1901 - 436 pages
...may fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woollen manufactures would be a national blessing and advantage and no real injury to the poor. By this...our rents, and reform the people into the bargain." (Smith's Memoirs on Wool, vol. ii. p. 308.) Compare with this Arthur Young's frequent suggestion that... | |
| Herbert Heaton - 1922 - 304 pages
...may fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woollen manufactures would be a national blessing and advantage, and no real injury to the poor. By...our rents, and reform the people into the bargain." But whatever the question at issue, the prevailing plea was for non-intervention. Bentham said that... | |
| Anthony Giddens, David Held - 1982 - 664 pages
...We can fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woolen manufacture would be a national blessing and advantage, and no real injury to the poor. By...trade, uphold our rents, and reform the people into the bargain.28 Indiscipline, in other words, meant that as wages rose, workers chose to work less. In more... | |
| Victor D. Lippit - 1996 - 416 pages
...We can fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woolen manufacture would be a national blessing and advantage, and no real injury to the poor. By...trade, uphold our rents, and reform the people into the bargain.65 Indiscipline, in other words, meant that as wages rose, workers chose to work less. In more... | |
| 2001 - 564 pages
...We can fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woollen manufacture would be a national blessing and advantage. and no real injury to the poor. By...trade. uphold our rents. and reform the people into the bargain.66 Indiscipline. in other words. meant that as wages rose. workers chose to work less. In more... | |
| Richard L. Tames - 2005 - 232 pages
...We can fairly aver that a reduction of wages in the woollen manufacture would be a national blessing and advantage, and no real injury to the poor. By...our rents, and reform the people into the bargain. High Wages in England DOCUMENT I08 N. Senior, Ground and Objects of the Budget Quoted in Coats, 'The... | |
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