<-- -->

Free Web Hosting : Free Hosting : Troubled Teens : Report Abuse

This Book List Sectory 23
Page 05

Gently tumble dry on a light and feathery This Book List.

This Book List

This Book List Home
This Book List Sitemap
This Book List Sct 01
This Book List Sct 02
This Book List Sct 03
This Book List Sct 04
This Book List Sct 05
This Book List Sct 06
This Book List Sct 07
This Book List Sct 08
This Book List Sct 09
This Book List Sct 10
This Book List Sct 11
This Book List Sct 12
This Book List Sct 13
This Book List Sct 14
This Book List Sct 15
This Book List Sct 16
This Book List Sct 17
This Book List Sct 18
This Book List Sct 19
This Book List Sct 20
This Book List Sct 21
This Book List Sct 22
This Book List Sct 23
This Book List Sct 24

This Book List Sectory 23
Page 05

A further point of importance is the fact that at the very time that the West applied this pressure and supplied Japan with these political ideals she also put within her reach the material instruments which would enable her to carry them into practice. I refer to steam locomotion by land and sea, the postal and telegraphic systems of communication, the steam printing press, the system of popular education, and the modern organization of the army and the navy. These instruments Japan made haste to acquire. But for these, the rapid transformation of Old Japan into New Japan would have been an exceedingly long and difficult process. The adoption of these tools of civilization by the central authority at once gave it an immense superiority over any local force. For it could communicate speedily with every part of the Empire, and enforce its decisions with a celerity and a decisiveness before unknown. It became once more the actual head of the nation.

In considering how the German people may keep up their production of food, the authors find that various factors will work against such a result. In the first place, there is a shortage of labor, nearly all the able-bodied young and middle-aged men in the farming districts being in the war. There is also a scarcity of horses, some 500,000 head having already been requisitioned for army use, and the imports of about 140,000 head (chiefly from Russia) have almost wholly ceased. The people must therefore resort more extensively to the use of motor plows, and the State Governments must give financial assistance to insure this wherever necessary; and such plows on hand must be kept more steadily in use through company ownership or rental. It may be remarked here, again, that the Prussian Government is also assisting agricultural organizations to buy motor plows. The supply of fertilizers has also been cut down by the war. Nitrate has just been mentioned. The authors recommend that the Government solve this problem by having many of the existing electrical plants turn partly to recovering nitrogen from the atmosphere.

Falerii was almost the only one of the Etruscan cities which had assisted Veii, and she was now exposed single-handed to the vengeance of the Romans. It is related that, when Camillus appeared before Falerii, a schoolmaster of the town treacherously conducted the sons of the noblest families into the Roman camp, but that Camillus, scorning the baseness of the man, ordered his arms to be tied behind him, and the boys to flog him back into the town; whereupon the inhabitants, overcome by such generosity, gave up their arms, and surrendered to the Romans (B.C. 394).



[ Dir 23 Part 01 ] [ Dir 23 Part 02 ] [ Dir 23 Part 03 ] [ Dir 23 Part 04 ] [ Dir 23 Part 05 ] [ Dir 23 Part 06 ]
[ Dir 23 Part 07 ] [ Dir 23 Part 08 ] [ Dir 23 Part 09 ] [ Dir 23 Part 10 ] [ Dir 23 Part 11 ] [ Dir 23 Part 12 ]


This document is Copyright © 2008 This Book List. All rights reserved. Do not copy either electronically or otherwise without permission. Links and references to other Websites are not endorsements. This Book List provides no guarantees or warrantees concerning other sites. Links are only provided as a courtesy and for entertainment purposes only.