The Nineteenth Century and After, Volume 83,Deel 2Leonard Scott Publishing Company, 1918 |
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Pagina 713
economic motives , must be considered from a larger point of view . They spring from the necessity of increasing Germany's national and military power to the utmost . Our demands must therefore be considered from the military point of ...
economic motives , must be considered from a larger point of view . They spring from the necessity of increasing Germany's national and military power to the utmost . Our demands must therefore be considered from the military point of ...
Pagina 724
... economic life of the country . Take a circumstance in connexion with the demand for increased wages to the extent of two and a half milliards per annum put forward about that time by the industrial workers and railway men in Petrograd ...
... economic life of the country . Take a circumstance in connexion with the demand for increased wages to the extent of two and a half milliards per annum put forward about that time by the industrial workers and railway men in Petrograd ...
Pagina 939
... economic policy has been powerfully influenced by the teachings of British political economy which stands by itself . Unfortunately British political economy is not national . It is unnational , cosmopolitan . Adam Smith , the father of ...
... economic policy has been powerfully influenced by the teachings of British political economy which stands by itself . Unfortunately British political economy is not national . It is unnational , cosmopolitan . Adam Smith , the father of ...
Inhoudsopgave
NINETEENTH | 669 |
Germanys Friends in England By | 685 |
Coal Ironand the Domination of the World By J ELLIS BARKER | 698 |
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agricultural alien Allies American Army Austria Austria-Hungary Belgium belligerent Bolshevik Britain British British Empire Cameroons capital cent century Co-partnership Dominions Duala East Prussia economic Empedocles Empire enemy England English enterprise Europe excess profits fact favour federal fighting force foreign France French German Gounod Government hand human Imperial important income increased India industries interest Ireland Irish Kaiser King Kootenay Labour land Law of Nations less living Lord LXXXIII-No means ment military mind native naturalised nature neutral never organisation Pan-German Parliament party peace Persia Poland Poles Polish political population position present principle Prize Court production question railway realise reason recognised reform regard Roermond Russia scheme secure ships social Society soldiers taxation things tion to-day trade Ulster United Kingdom Venlo village wealth whole women words Zeebrugge