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...another. Increase of population forces nations to seek colonies overseas...to become industrial instead of agricultural and then...once industrialism is accomplished, the industrial states face the new necessity of looking abroad for safe and secure resources of food supplies; and they must also look abroad for the raw materials and the markets essential to their industries...

Author: By Frangis Deak, | Title: The Inside and Outside of Diplomacy | 4/10/1926 | See Source »

Increase of population, colonies, access to the sea, sea lanes, markets, food, and raw materials are thus the principle causes of rivalry between nations. Mr. Bakeless, however, does not content himself with this general statement, but outlines all the possible kinds of friction between various nations today and the potentiality of a new world war in each of them. For there is no isolation in the modern world. Mr. Bakeless foresees that, in the near future, the United States will lose its favorable isolation, as England lost here during the past twenty years. The greatest value of this book...

Author: By Frangis Deak, | Title: The Inside and Outside of Diplomacy | 4/10/1926 | See Source »

Thus, with his nerves jangling and raw after the adjournment of the League without admitting Germany (TIME, March 29), Sir Austen Chamberlain, the erstwhile "hero of Locarno" (TIME, Nov. 2 et seq.), returned to hear the jibe that "he strangled the Locarno peace dove with his own hands."* Cheerlessly Sir Austen sought his home. Two days' rest were vouchsafed to him. He slept, thumbed the recently published Intimate Papers of Colonel House for relaxation, and drafted with a vitriolic pen his "speech of accounting" to the House of Commons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Chamberlain Grilled | 4/5/1926 | See Source »

...sweep rakes grain headers tedders harrows threshers harvest threshers tillage implements hay loaders tractors hay presses hay stackers twine listers wagons, etc. These are made at plants in Chicago, Rock Falls, Canton (Ill.), Ft. Wayne, Richmond (Ind.), Akron, Springfield (Ohio), St. Paul (Minn.), Auburn (N. Y.) and Milwaukee (Wis.). Raw materials come from company-owned iron ore mines in Minnesota, coal and coke works in Kentucky and at Chicago, furnace and steel mills at Chicago, timber lands and sawmills in Missouri, sisal plantations in Cuba. The S. S. Harvester, 10,000 tons, affords transportation economies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Farm Implements | 4/5/1926 | See Source »

...book reflects as does nothing of which I know, the wide range of Coleridge's interests. It gives, moreover, the background of a poet's mind in that it furnishes invaluable clues to the raw materials which were transmitted into poetry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "BACKGROUND OF A POET'S MIND" IS LOWE'S STUDY | 3/29/1926 | See Source »

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