The National Review, Volume 43, Issue 1W.H. Allen, 1904 |
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Results 6-10 of 100
Page 62
... natural value of land has dis- appeared , and therefore rent represents nothing except a low rate of interest for capital invested . I am well aware of the real direction in which the objection to lessening the taxation on land lies ...
... natural value of land has dis- appeared , and therefore rent represents nothing except a low rate of interest for capital invested . I am well aware of the real direction in which the objection to lessening the taxation on land lies ...
Page 65
... naturally believe from what we have read . Mr. Fisher's whole conception of the Revolution differs from that of Sir George Trevelyan , and agrees in the main with that so ably and so moderately set forth by the late Mr. Lecky , of whom ...
... naturally believe from what we have read . Mr. Fisher's whole conception of the Revolution differs from that of Sir George Trevelyan , and agrees in the main with that so ably and so moderately set forth by the late Mr. Lecky , of whom ...
Page 68
... natural increase in wealth and population , " said Cushing , " will , in course of years , settle this dispute in ... naturally separated people to be independent , according to the rights of man , might be just and sound , but no nation ...
... natural increase in wealth and population , " said Cushing , " will , in course of years , settle this dispute in ... naturally separated people to be independent , according to the rights of man , might be just and sound , but no nation ...
Page 71
... natural device in the world to supply the national want by foreign refuse . Sir George Trevelyan rightly condemns the practice as dis- graceful in its foreign aspects , costly in its economic , ineffective in its military and ruinous in ...
... natural device in the world to supply the national want by foreign refuse . Sir George Trevelyan rightly condemns the practice as dis- graceful in its foreign aspects , costly in its economic , ineffective in its military and ruinous in ...
Page 72
... Naturally , the Landgrave of Hesse did not pick out his best men for us , or carefully avoid sending us his worst . Lecky , commenting on the injury done to our cause in America , quotes from a contemporary Prussian writer- " Les ...
... Naturally , the Landgrave of Hesse did not pick out his best men for us , or carefully avoid sending us his worst . Lecky , commenting on the injury done to our cause in America , quotes from a contemporary Prussian writer- " Les ...
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