| United States. President - United States - 1880 - 1080 pages
...regards the sources, amounts, and valuations of the various productions. Statesmen and economists, in whose hands rest the subjects of tariff and taxation,...elaborate effort. England, France, Germany, Austria, Russia, and Italy consider it essential to know, from year to year, not only the source and aggregates... | |
| Geological Survey (U.S.) - Forest reserves - 1880 - 76 pages
...regards the sources, amounts, and valuations of the various productions. Statesmen and economists, in whose hands rest the subjects of tariff and taxation,...other intelligent nation is this so ; on the contrary, mmeral production is stndied with the most elaborate effort. England, France, Germany, Austria, Russia,... | |
| Brookings Institution. Institute for Government Research - United States - 1919 - 186 pages
...regards the sources, amounts, and valuations of the various productions. Statesmen and economists, in whose hands rest the subjects of tariff and taxation,...elaborate effort. England, France, Germany, Austria, Russia, and Italy consider it essential to know, from year to year, not only the source and aggregates... | |
| Mineral industries - 1933 - 844 pages
...regards the sources, amounts, and valuations of the various productions. Statesmen and economists, in whose hands rest the subjects of tariff and taxation,...elaborate effort. England, France, Germany, Austria, Russia, and Italy consider it essential to know, from year to year, not only the source and aggregates... | |
| United States. Department of the Interior - 1880 - 694 pages
...regards the sources, amounts, and valuations of the various productions. Statesmen and economists, in whose hands rest the subjects of tariff and taxation,...elaborate effort. England, France, Germany, Austria, Russia, and Italy consider it essential to know, from year to year, not only the source and aggregates... | |
| Mineral industries - 1933 - 846 pages
...regards the sources, amounts, and valuations of the various productions. Statesmen and economists, in whose hands rest the subjects of tariff and taxation, have no hetter sources of information than the guesses of newspapers and the scarcely less responsible estimates... | |
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