The Quarterly Review, Volume 226John Murray, 1916 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 73
Page 136
... increased ; on the contrary , we should have to buy from the foreigner larger quantities of bread and meat . There is no magic in size , great or small . It is economically best to have holdings of all sizes , from the allotment to the ...
... increased ; on the contrary , we should have to buy from the foreigner larger quantities of bread and meat . There is no magic in size , great or small . It is economically best to have holdings of all sizes , from the allotment to the ...
Page 145
... increasing its home - grown supplies of the staple articles of food . Whether this greater degree of self - supporting independence is at the present moment the paramount consideration for this country , or whether it is less urgent ...
... increasing its home - grown supplies of the staple articles of food . Whether this greater degree of self - supporting independence is at the present moment the paramount consideration for this country , or whether it is less urgent ...
Page 147
... increased com- petition in the supply of flowers , fruit and vegetables will result in a lower range of prices . The fall may possibly be accentuated by a decline in the purchasing power of the nation when peace is declared . Presum ...
... increased com- petition in the supply of flowers , fruit and vegetables will result in a lower range of prices . The fall may possibly be accentuated by a decline in the purchasing power of the nation when peace is declared . Presum ...
Page 150
... increased by the differential rates against home - grown produce . Nor is it a complete answer to say that a great part of the imported produce does not compete with home - grown supplies , because it arrives before the English stuff is ...
... increased by the differential rates against home - grown produce . Nor is it a complete answer to say that a great part of the imported produce does not compete with home - grown supplies , because it arrives before the English stuff is ...
Page 152
... increasing her power and enhancing her prestige . This statement of an incon- trovertible fact , the relevancy of which will be seen later , will serve to introduce a study of recent events and developments in China , undertaken with ...
... increasing her power and enhancing her prestige . This statement of an incon- trovertible fact , the relevancy of which will be seen later , will serve to introduce a study of recent events and developments in China , undertaken with ...
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Achæans advance agricultural Allies army attack Austrian banks battle battleships Britain British Canal capital century China colonies connexion course Danube defence Disraeli Disraeli's Dobrudja Dominions East Eastern Egypt Empire enemy England English fact favour fighting fleet force foreign policy France French front Georgian Poetry German Government Greek guns hand harbour Heligoland Homer House Hughes Iliad Imperial important increased India industry interest Ireland Irish Volunteers Kiel Kiel Canal labour land less Lord Lucan ment miles natural naval never North Sea occupied Office opinion organisation Palestine Parliament passed peasant poet poetry political Pompey position possession present produce question railway realised reason recognised regard resolution result Rumanian Russian Senate Serbian Serbs ships small holdings South success Thiepval tion to-day trade Treitschke Trojan Trojan War troops Troy Turkish Volhynia whole Wilhelmshaven Wordsworth wounds Yuan Shih-kai