| Thomas Henry Braim - New South Wales - 1846 - 334 pages
...district for the Sydney market, in the event of the land there being thrown open to purchase. " Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid... | |
| Thomas Henry Braim - New South Wales - 1846 - 342 pages
...district for the Sydney market, in the event of the land there being thrown open to purchase. " Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid... | |
| Samuel Sidney - Australia - 1852 - 468 pages
...if our Colonial Office had studied and understood the full force of the warning : — " Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables government to become at once more efficient and more economical,... | |
| Samuel Sidney - Australia - 1853 - 446 pages
...foresight which we can now duly appreciate : — " Admitting," he said in answer to Lord Aberdeen, " as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...cannot avoid perceiving the peculiarities which in this colony render it impolitic, and even impossible, to restrain dispersion within limits that would be... | |
| Francis Peter Labillière - Victoria - 1878 - 392 pages
...district for the Sydney Market, in the event of the land there being thrown open to purchase. " Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables Government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid... | |
| James Bonwick - Australia - 1883 - 678 pages
...district for the Sydney market, in the event of land there being thrown open to purchase. Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...; and that it enables government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid perceiving the peculiarities which in this colony render it... | |
| James Bonwick - Australia - 1883 - 640 pages
...limitation of pasturage." And Sir Richard wrote thus to Lord Glenelg, October 10th, 1835 :— " Admitting that a certain degree of concentration is necessary...civilisation, and that it enables government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid perceiving the peculiarities which in this colony render it... | |
| George William Rusden - Australia - 1883 - 760 pages
...forced upon me by (Batman's proceedings) that I am induced to revert to the subject. . . . Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables Government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid... | |
| Richard Charles Mills - Australia - 1915 - 402 pages
...of concentration, and denied that it was suitable to the conditions of New South Wales. " Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid... | |
| Australia. Parliament. Joint Library Committee - Australia - 1923 - 970 pages
...the Sydney market in the event of the Land there being thrown open to purchase. 1835. ' Admitting, as every reasonable person must, that a certain degree...concentration is necessary for the advancement of wealth and civilization, and that it enables Government to become at once efficient and economical, I cannot avoid... | |
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