Government and the American economy, 1870-presentHolt, 1949 |
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Page 72
... courts . Thus no law can have greater force than what the Supreme Court regards as consistent with the Constitution and with the language of the statute itself . Accordingly , the Interstate Commerce Act , as well as regulatory ...
... courts . Thus no law can have greater force than what the Supreme Court regards as consistent with the Constitution and with the language of the statute itself . Accordingly , the Interstate Commerce Act , as well as regulatory ...
Page 108
... courts to intervene and prevent it by injunction and by the ordinary remedial rights afforded by the courts . . ... I might add to the cases cited innumerable cases in nearly all the States and in England , and in all of them it will ...
... courts to intervene and prevent it by injunction and by the ordinary remedial rights afforded by the courts . . ... I might add to the cases cited innumerable cases in nearly all the States and in England , and in all of them it will ...
Page 109
... courts may control their action within the limits of the State , but when a trust is created by a combination of many corporations from many States , there are no courts with jurisdiction broad enough to deal with them except the ...
... courts may control their action within the limits of the State , but when a trust is created by a combination of many corporations from many States , there are no courts with jurisdiction broad enough to deal with them except the ...
Contents
I | 2 |
PHILOSOPHERS Of Laissez FAIRE | 4 |
Attitudes during the Progressive Era | 12 |
Copyright | |
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acres action administration agency agricultural American American Railway Union Baruch bituminous coal capital cars cent Cleveland coal combination commerce Commissioner KERNAN committee commodities competition Congress conservation contract copper corporation cost courts crude oil demand Democratic dollars economic effect employees fact farm farmers Federal forest Free Silver freight governmental increase Industries Board interests issue labor land legislation manufacturers ment million monopoly nomic Omaha Platform operation organization party percent political Populists practice present President problem production profits Progressivism Pullman Pullman company question railroad refineries refining reform regulation Republican road Rockefeller Roosevelt secure Senator Sherman Anti-Trust Act silver soil spoils system Standard Oil Company steel strike supply Theodore Roosevelt timber tion trade trust union United wages War Industries Board workers