| Joel Chandler Harris - Journalists - 1890 - 676 pages
...and held it until a sewing-woman in my city, working for ninety cents a week, had to pay him twenty cents tax on the sack of flour she bore home in her...millions. The Czar of Russia would not have dared to do these things. And yet they are no secrets in this free government of ours ! They are known of... | |
| Joel Chandler Harris - Journalists - 1800 - 338 pages
...sewing-woman in my city, working for ninety cents a week, had to pay him twenty cents tax on the sack of Hour she bore home in her famished hands. Three men held...one man cornered pork until he had levied a tax of *:* per barrel on every consumer, and pocketed a profit of millions. The Czar of Russia would not have... | |
| Henry Allyn Frink - Drama - 1898 - 376 pages
...million English homes. Last summer one man cornered pork until he had levied a tax of three dollars per barrel on every consumer, and pocketed a profit...millions. The Czar of Russia would not have dared to do these things. And yet they are no secrets in this free government of ours ! They are known of... | |
| Abraham Howry Espenshade - College readers - 1901 - 232 pages
...and held it until a sewing woman in my city, working for ninety cents a week, had to pay him twenty cents tax on the sack of flour she bore home in her famished hands. Three men held the cotton until the English spindles stopped and the lights went out in three million English homes. Last summer... | |
| Abraham Howry Espenshade - College readers - 1901 - 236 pages
...and held it until a sewing woman in my city, working for ninety cents a week, had to pay him twenty cents tax on the sack of flour she bore home in her famished hands. Three men held the cotton until the English spindles stopped and the lights went out in three million English homes. Last summer... | |
| Abraham Howry Espenshade - College readers - 1901 - 226 pages
...and held it until a sewing woman in my city, working for ninety cents a week, had to pay him twenty cents tax on the sack of flour she bore home in her famished hands. Three men held the cotton until the English spindles stopped and the lights went out in three million English homes. Last summer... | |
| Elocution - 1920 - 436 pages
...until a sewing woman in my city hail to pay him twenty cents tax on the sack of flour that she carried home in her famished hands three men held the cotton...spindles were stopped, and the lights went out in three million English homes."8 "Let me tell you what the coal dealers of Atlanta say about their retail... | |
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