American Institutions and Their Preservation, Volume 1Norwood Press, 1929 - 833 pagina's |
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Pagina 96
... shows that for the most part the founders of their families came from plain people , just as happens now throughout the country . And they represented the commercial instincts of the English who intermarried and intensified the ...
... shows that for the most part the founders of their families came from plain people , just as happens now throughout the country . And they represented the commercial instincts of the English who intermarried and intensified the ...
Pagina 165
... shows how Americans will stop rather than compete with a race of different methods . MacLean writes , " A study of the richest agricultural lands in California shows 3,893,500 acres under irrigation and it is on these lands that the ...
... shows how Americans will stop rather than compete with a race of different methods . MacLean writes , " A study of the richest agricultural lands in California shows 3,893,500 acres under irrigation and it is on these lands that the ...
Pagina 376
... shows that we never did depend upon France for our liberty . It was not until the Ameri- cans had proved , by compelling a British army of ten thousand men to surrender as prisoners of war , their ability to maintain their cause alone ...
... shows that we never did depend upon France for our liberty . It was not until the Ameri- cans had proved , by compelling a British army of ten thousand men to surrender as prisoners of war , their ability to maintain their cause alone ...
Inhoudsopgave
CHAPTER | 1 |
WHAT ARE AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS? | 16 |
1 A written constitution | 18 |
Copyright | |
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