Tariff Hearings Before the Committee on Ways and Means...1908-09...U.S. Government Printing Office, 1909 |
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Página 2173
... foreign cutlery . We still find foreign manufacturers able the present duties on butcher and household knives and under- self us on both high - grade and cheap goods . We do not think that the present tariff is any too high on cutlery ...
... foreign cutlery . We still find foreign manufacturers able the present duties on butcher and household knives and under- self us on both high - grade and cheap goods . We do not think that the present tariff is any too high on cutlery ...
Página 2193
... foreign export price . Mr. NICHOLSON . We do . Mr. HILL . You keep it up and expect to make it a part of your business just as you do your business here ; and you can compete and make a profit ; is not that so ? Mr. NICHOLSON . I do not ...
... foreign export price . Mr. NICHOLSON . We do . Mr. HILL . You keep it up and expect to make it a part of your business just as you do your business here ; and you can compete and make a profit ; is not that so ? Mr. NICHOLSON . I do not ...
Página 2198
... foreign trade and larger output ? Could you not make them just as much cheaper if you had a larger foreign trade than if you sold more in this country ? It is not a question of foreign trade so much as a question of the quantity you ...
... foreign trade and larger output ? Could you not make them just as much cheaper if you had a larger foreign trade than if you sold more in this country ? It is not a question of foreign trade so much as a question of the quantity you ...
Página 2204
... foreign business or the foreigner to go for foreign business . Mr. UNDERWOOD . I understand that ; but I am asking a question from my point of view , not from yours . Mr. NICHOLSON . It would show a loss . Mr. UNDERWOOD . How much loss ...
... foreign business or the foreigner to go for foreign business . Mr. UNDERWOOD . I understand that ; but I am asking a question from my point of view , not from yours . Mr. NICHOLSON . It would show a loss . Mr. UNDERWOOD . How much loss ...
Página 2210
... foreign countries , you mean ? Mr. BOUTELL . Anywhere . Mr. NICHOLSON . Yes ; but not to the extent in foreign countries that it does in this country , because we have not been before the public there before the consumer - to such an ...
... foreign countries , you mean ? Mr. BOUTELL . Anywhere . Mr. NICHOLSON . Yes ; but not to the extent in foreign countries that it does in this country , because we have not been before the public there before the consumer - to such an ...
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Términos y frases comunes
14 cents 45 per cent abroad aluminum American manufacturers amount automobiles average bismuth BONYNGE BOUTELL British Columbia BRUSH bullion calamine calks Canada Canadian cars cent ad valorem cents a pound cents per pound CHAIRMAN CLARK COCKRAN Coeur d'Alene Company competition consumer copper CRUMPACKER DALZELL difference Dingley tariff export fact factory facturers figures files FORDNEY foreign forests freight Georgian Bay Germany GOODYEAR grades GRIGGS HILL HINES IHLSENG imported increase industry Joplin district KNAPPEN labor cost land lumber lumbermen machine machinery manu material metal Mexican Mexico mica mills miner mines Missouri NIBLEY NICHOLSON November 25 paragraph pig lead pine present duty present tariff profit protection question RANDELL reduced respectfully SCANLON sell SERENO E SHERRILL short tons silver smelters smelting sold statement stumpage supply thousand timber tion to-day tons trade UNDERWOOD United Washington Weyerhaeuser WHITE York zinc
Pasajes populares
Página 2754 - Manufactures, articles or wares, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act, composed wholly or in part of iron, steel, lead, copper, nickel, pewter, zinc, gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, or any other metal, and whether partly or wholly manufactured, forty-five per centum ad valorem.
Página 2263 - In all tariff legislation the true principle of protection is best maintained by the imposition of such duties as will equal the difference between the cost of production at home and abroad, together with a reasonable profit to American industries.
Página 2306 - ... tinsel wire, lame or lahn. five cents per pound and thirty-five per centum ad valorem; laces, embroideries, braids, galloons, trimmings, or other articles, made wholly or in chief value of tinsel wire, lame or lahn, bullions, or metal threads, sixty per centum ad valorem.
Página 2799 - Philosophical and scientific apparatus, utensils, instruments, and preparations. Including bottles and boxes containing the same, specially imported in good faith for the use and by order of any society or Institution Incorporated or established solely for religious, philosophical, educational, scientific, or literary purposes, or for the encouragement of the fine arts, or for the use and by order of any college, academy, school, or seminary of learning in the United States...
Página 2589 - Lead-bearing ore of all kinds, one and one-half cents per pound on the lead contained therein: Provided, That on all importations of lead-bearing ores the duties shall be estimated at the port of entry, and a bond given in double the amount of such estimated duties for the transportation of the ores by common carriers bonded for the transportation of appraised or unappraised merchandise to properly...
Página 2458 - Cotton thread and carded yarn, warps or warp yarn, in singles, whether on beams or in bundles, skeins, or cops, or in any other form, except spool thread of cotton, crochet, darning, and embroidery cottons, hereinafter provided for...
Página 2688 - We favor the establishment of maximum and minimum rates to be administered by the President under limitations fixed in the law, the maximum to be available to meet discriminations by foreign countries against American goods entering their markets, and the minimum to represent the normal measure of protection at home...
Página 2698 - ... the actual market value or wholesale price of such merchandise as bought and sold in usual wholesale quantities, at the time of exportation to the United States...
Página 2613 - ... bonded warehouses or otherwise. On the arrival of the ores at such establishments they shall be sampled according to commercial methods under the supervision of Government officers, who shall be stationed at such establishments, and who shall submit the samples thus obtained to a Government assayer...
Página 2846 - What will happen when the forests fail? In the first place, the business of lumbering will disappear. It is now the fourth greatest industry in the United States. All forms of building industries will suffer with it, and the occupants of houses, offices, and stores must pay the added cost. Mining will become vastly more expensive: and with the rise In the cost of mining there must follow a corresponding rise in the price of coal, iron, and other minerals. The railways, which have as yet failed entirely...