| Thomas Henry Braim - New South Wales - 1846 - 334 pages
...a civil or military force. The question I would beg leave to submit is simply this:—How may this government turn to the best advantage a state of things which it cannot wholly interdict ?" It may be interesting to show, that the same view of the general question of squatting was taken at a later... | |
| Thomas Henry Braim - New South Wales - 1846 - 350 pages
...a civil or military force. The question I would beg leave to submit is simply this:—How may this government turn to the best advantage a state of things which it cannot wholly interdict ?" It may be interesting to show, that the same view of the general question of squatting was taken at a later... | |
| Francis Peter Labillière - Victoria - 1878 - 392 pages
...powerful against its restraint. question, I would beg leave to submit, is simply this. How may this Government turn to the best advantage a state of things...advantageous, however distant from other locations, to procure the means of diminishing the evils of dispersion ; and, by establishing Townships and Ports,... | |
| James Bonwick - Australia - 1883 - 678 pages
...is simply this : how may this Government turn to the best advantage of the colony a state of things it cannot wholly interdict ? It may, I would suggest,...advantageous, however distant from other locations, to procure the means of diminishing the evils of dispersion; and, by establishing townships and ports,... | |
| George William Rusden - Australia - 1883 - 760 pages
...convey cattle to Port Phillip and to invest capital there. The problem to be solved was, " How may this Government turn to the best advantage a state of things which it ^cannot wholly interdict ? " He suggested that it might be found practicable by sales of land in advantageous situations " to... | |
| Australia. Parliament. Joint Library Committee - Australia - 1923 - 970 pages
...a Civil or Military Force. The question, I would beg leave to submit, is simply this : How may this Government turn to the best advantage a state of things,...suggest, be found practicable by means of the sale of Laud in situations peculiarly advantageous, however distant from other locations, to procure the means... | |
| Australia. Parliament. Joint Library Committee - Australia - 1923 - 982 pages
...dispersion thus becomes as powerful against its restraint." As a solution of the problem, " how may this Government turn to the best advantage a state of things which it cannot wholly interdict," Governor Bourke proposed the sale of land in advantageous situations, irrespective of their distance... | |
| Stephen Henry Roberts - Agricultural colonies - 1924 - 528 pages
...do so would be "a perverse rejection of the bounty of Providence." The question was, "How may this Government turn to the best advantage a state of things which it cannot wholly interdict?" The Governor's solution was to extend the licence system from the lands within, the Nineteen Counties... | |
| Kenneth Norman Bell, William Parker Morrell - Great Britain - 1928 - 680 pages
...beg leave to submit is simply this : How may this government turn to the best advantage of the colony a state of things which it cannot wholly interdict...advantageous, however distant from other locations, to procure the means of diminishing the evils of dispersion, and by establishing townships and ports,... | |
| James Bonwick - Australia - 1883 - 640 pages
...is simply this : how may this Government turn to the best advantage of the colony a state of things it cannot wholly interdict ? It may, I would suggest,...advantageous, however distant from other locations, to procure the means of diminishing the evils of. dispersion ; and, by establishing townships and ports,... | |
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