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... England and of Austria understand each other's com- mercial interests , the sooner that great and lucrative interchange of commodities will spring up between them which must conduce to the advantage of both . Many causes have long ...
... England , Scotland , and Wales , and the bogs of Ireland , corre- sponding to the Alpine provinces of Austria and the marshes and sandy districts of Hungary . In Austria the proportion of land in tillage is about equal to that in Great ...
... England was able to feed her own people from the produce of her own fields : she now buys grain to the annual value of more than 12,000,000l .; and it is probable that before many years have passed England and France together may be ...
... England of no inconsiderable portion of those supplies of food for which she must now look to foreign countries . The plains of Hungary are formed by nature for the growth of corn . Their present production can be increased immensely ...
... England is therefore placed relatively under very disadvan- tageous conditions for the production of corn , while she need fear no rival in the raising of stock . The demand for meat by a rapidly increasing population is enormous ; it ...