The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 142Atlantic Monthly Company, 1928 - American essays |
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Page 13
... leave cash balances , somewhere beyond its own boundaries , on which drafts can be drawn for the payment of external obli- gations . Just as a debtor country must sell more than it buys , so a creditor country must buy more than it ...
... leave cash balances , somewhere beyond its own boundaries , on which drafts can be drawn for the payment of external obli- gations . Just as a debtor country must sell more than it buys , so a creditor country must buy more than it ...
Page 21
... leave the tariff where it is , utilize more of our gold , and take the consequences . The consequences would consist of credit expansion and inflation , which should eventually lead to a decline in our ex- port balance . Under the ...
... leave the tariff where it is , utilize more of our gold , and take the consequences . The consequences would consist of credit expansion and inflation , which should eventually lead to a decline in our ex- port balance . Under the ...
Page 24
... leaves . As if at a signal these leaves began to shift and lift and rub noisily against one another like recently crumpled papers in a wastebasket . The morning breeze had not yet sprung up , and I sat waiting for the elves which haunt ...
... leaves . As if at a signal these leaves began to shift and lift and rub noisily against one another like recently crumpled papers in a wastebasket . The morning breeze had not yet sprung up , and I sat waiting for the elves which haunt ...
Page 26
... leave her burrow except at dusk . She has little or no warmth of affection for them , and only through instinct is moved nightly to wade into the treacherous shallows and flick her growing offspring about- thus aerating them . One ...
... leave her burrow except at dusk . She has little or no warmth of affection for them , and only through instinct is moved nightly to wade into the treacherous shallows and flick her growing offspring about- thus aerating them . One ...
Page 30
... leave the city , or to assemble in any considerable num- bers in the streets . Still they did as- semble to some extent , and quietly talked over the situation . A careless observer , particularly one who read the Roman newspapers , all ...
... leave the city , or to assemble in any considerable num- bers in the streets . Still they did as- semble to some extent , and quietly talked over the situation . A careless observer , particularly one who read the Roman newspapers , all ...
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American asked Atlantic ATLANTIC MONTHLY B. H. LIDDELL HART beautiful beekeeper bees believe Buck Smith bull market called Catholic cent character Chinese Christian Church companies copra course English eyes face fact faith feel feet fiddler crabs foreign France French friends give gold hand Hannibal head hive human hundred industry interest Italian Italy Jesus land less light living look matter means ment mind missionaries modern nature never night novel once perhaps political Porta Pia production Protestant Protestantism puka trees Puka-Puka Pungie Quakers religion religious ROBERT DEAN FRISBIE Roman Rome seemed side story Sun-Eater talk tell things thought tion to-day trees turned village whole woman women words young Zoea