The North American Review, Volume 135University of Northern Iowa, 1882 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 47
Page 259
... regard for common law principles than if they had no existence . It was a time of great legal confusion , and nothing is more natural than that this con- fusion should by no means have altogether yet disappeared . The confusion as to ...
... regard for common law principles than if they had no existence . It was a time of great legal confusion , and nothing is more natural than that this con- fusion should by no means have altogether yet disappeared . The confusion as to ...
Page 367
... regard to the nature of the government which he was to inaugurate . Washington favored a national government , with aristocratic tendencies ; it looked to the unity of the nation and it was opposed to the sovereignty of the States ...
... regard to the nature of the government which he was to inaugurate . Washington favored a national government , with aristocratic tendencies ; it looked to the unity of the nation and it was opposed to the sovereignty of the States ...
Page 526
... regard temperance reform as the work of per- sonal effort rather than legal enactment , and were reluctant to adopt extreme measures in regard to any question of social cus- tom . It is in the influences which converted so many of this ...
... regard temperance reform as the work of per- sonal effort rather than legal enactment , and were reluctant to adopt extreme measures in regard to any question of social cus- tom . It is in the influences which converted so many of this ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acropolis American army become body called cause Cebrene character Christian Church citizens civil service Cobden Club condition Congress constitutional corset court cremation CXXXV.-NO danger Dardanie DÉSIRÉ CHARNAY dollars doubt duty effect England evil existence fact favor fire force forest Fort Leavenworth give Government Guiteau hand Hissarlik houses human hundred increase influence injury judge jury labor Lacandones land less live Lord Derby marriage means ment meters millions mind moral nation nature never NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW oath opinion organization Palenque party persons political Porter practice present Protesilaus question railroad reform regard result salary second city social society spirit spoils system success temple theater things thought thousand tion tornado trade trial tumulus United wages walls whole woman women York young