The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 7, Issue 1John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1933 - Great Britain |
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Page 277
In these , a distinction was invariably made between matters of local interest , which could best be regulated by local knowledge and local understanding , and matters of general moment , which could best be managed by the Government of ...
In these , a distinction was invariably made between matters of local interest , which could best be regulated by local knowledge and local understanding , and matters of general moment , which could best be managed by the Government of ...
Page 281
He sought to distinguish between bills of imperial and bills of local interest , and , when he declared that the Government of the United Kingdom had no right to scrutinise bills of the latter kind , he declared , in effect ...
He sought to distinguish between bills of imperial and bills of local interest , and , when he declared that the Government of the United Kingdom had no right to scrutinise bills of the latter kind , he declared , in effect ...
Page 342
If Great Britain showed signs of increasing interest , so now did the colonies also . Planted first on the Pacific coast of the continent , they had grown up with an oceanic outlook . They communicated with each other and with their ...
If Great Britain showed signs of increasing interest , so now did the colonies also . Planted first on the Pacific coast of the continent , they had grown up with an oceanic outlook . They communicated with each other and with their ...
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