| 1889 - 758 páginas
...may be considered as having no solid foundation, and may therefore be dismissed from the question. The crux of the whole matter lies in the fact that the secret of the invention has been revealed either by workmen employed by the firm, or it has been discovered... | |
| William Thomas Stead - 1901 - 742 páginas
...the Army Clothing Department, for instance, it may be possible to introduce many minor economies ; but the crux of the whole matter lies in the fact that an army recruited by voluntary enlistment must be paid a wage equal to the standard wage for unskilled... | |
| Albert Shaw - 1901 - 1024 páginas
...the army clothing department, for instance, it may be possible to introduce many minor economies ; but the crux of the whole matter lies in the fact that an army recruited by voluntary enlistment must be paid a wage equal to the standard wage for unskilled... | |
| 1901 - 792 páginas
...the army clothing department, for instance, it may be possible to introduce many minor economies ; but the crux of the whole matter lies in the fact that an army recruited by voluntary enlistment must be paid a wage equal to the standard wage for unskilled... | |
| Colin St. John Wilson - 2000 - 260 páginas
...approach to import a corresponding building language. 9.8 Secondly, Summerson went on to say that: The crux of the whole matter . . . lies in the fact that the conceptions which arise from a preoccupation with the programme have got, at some point, to crystallize... | |
| William Hannibal Thomas - 1901 - 482 páginas
...has been perpetrated, and one that merits universal condemnation at the hands of all right-thinking men. But the crux of the whole matter lies in the...means to the educated, industrious, competent negro. Black is deemed a symbol of ignorance and inefficiency. The unknown negro of capacity and integrity,... | |
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