Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 20 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 63688 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 England 7 English 5 Sir 5 Mr. 5 London 4 King 4 John 3 british 3 United 3 New 3 Majesty 3 Ireland 3 Government 3 France 3 China 2 pay 2 illustration 2 great 2 good 2 country 2 Trade 2 States 2 St. 2 September 2 Parliament 2 North 2 Lord 2 Kong 2 Indians 2 India 2 House 2 Hong 2 God 2 East 2 Dr. 2 Co. 2 Chinese 1 year 1 tradesman 1 trade 1 time 1 thing 1 spanish 1 smuggler 1 sidenote 1 shop 1 property 1 price 1 person 1 party Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2164 man 1866 time 1755 year 1670 trade 1412 day 1387 account 1324 good 1112 country 1107 contract 1100 business 1082 part 1006 person 995 opium 970 tradesman 926 place 890 case 833 money 827 people 812 book 799 property 757 thing 753 stock 738 name 713 law 669 party 668 sea 659 vessel 659 corporation 641 order 638 way 637 note 626 letter 618 ship 618 interest 611 sale 600 state 580 number 551 credit 545 hand 534 purpose 532 amount 527 land 517 manufacture 517 island 503 nothing 500 bill 492 reason 488 merchant 487 house 482 cash Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 27996 _ 1495 | 1078 B 1064 Mr. 1045 Dono 1017 A 992 China 970 England 675 i. 643 English 608 King 557 Capt 546 Ireland 531 . 448 Government 415 Lord 412 C 384 Firando 383 Governor 371 Indians 369 John 366 Hollanders 366 French 360 Chinese 354 States 345 Sir 333 New 328 London 308 Japon 305 ii 292 c. 280 Province 269 William 267 Russians 251 Council 250 Majesty 250 E. 240 Nations 239 Trade 234 James 233 India 232 East 230 Co. 229 Dutch 228 St. 227 Great 226 House 225 Act 221 General 218 America Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8964 it 6867 he 5970 they 4900 i 3469 them 3055 we 1907 him 1852 you 1231 me 1152 us 734 she 603 himself 589 themselves 446 her 220 itself 112 one 69 myself 54 ourselves 52 herself 46 yt 35 yow 27 theirs 25 yourself 20 ours 15 his 12 yours 12 mine 10 ib 5 talkee 4 yourselves 3 yf 3 thee 3 ''s 2 ij 1 | 1 yours.----we 1 ye 1 yakutsk[172 1 ya 1 verdict:--"that 1 upwards.--but 1 traveller.--this 1 this:--they 1 pelf 1 obtained.--[lib 1 non 1 ladders.--to 1 illuminators.--to 1 him,-- 1 hers Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 41131 be 11308 have 3495 make 3191 do 2125 say 2093 take 2033 give 1591 pay 1528 come 1471 go 1295 send 1237 know 1216 find 1206 see 1036 call 951 bring 873 use 831 sell 798 carry 721 follow 704 think 704 keep 677 receive 642 put 610 get 602 show 599 leave 559 pass 506 write 504 tell 489 become 486 hold 442 set 422 let 408 appear 392 require 389 buy 386 deliver 380 lie 380 enter 375 speak 374 run 373 mention 365 employ 355 return 353 mean 342 draw 337 agree 336 look 331 meet Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6812 not 2382 other 2350 so 1694 more 1595 great 1457 very 1345 well 1345 only 1285 now 1262 such 1250 good 1236 as 1228 out 1177 much 1141 same 1120 up 1106 then 1098 many 1039 first 1038 also 971 most 835 own 659 small 648 large 619 long 617 however 600 last 599 even 561 here 545 far 514 there 500 never 496 several 489 new 474 present 473 english 471 too 468 little 461 certain 458 away 458 about 441 on 429 again 425 still 423 thus 422 off 420 indeed 418 less 418 general 404 in Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 326 good 266 most 233 least 152 great 59 bad 50 Most 49 high 34 slight 32 eld 31 strong 31 large 29 near 25 fine 19 low 18 small 18 mean 14 early 13 late 13 cheap 11 old 11 manif 10 rich 9 full 8 dear 7 young 7 choice 6 severe 6 poor 6 easy 5 wise 5 remote 5 intr 5 able 4 simple 4 hard 4 gross 4 deep 4 chief 3 sure 3 pure 3 nice 3 j 3 heavy 3 fast 3 fair 2 wealthy 2 warm 2 strict 2 stout 2 short Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 705 most 37 least 36 well 3 worst 2 hard 1 ¦ 1 strongest 1 radins_[10 1 greatest 1 early Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net 1 www.pgdpcanada.net 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.pgdpcanada.net 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/5/6/17563/17563-h/17563-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/5/6/17563/17563-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/niagaraaborigina00portuoft Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 23 _ is not 17 _ does not 16 _ is liable 13 contract is not 11 _ gives _ 10 _ pays _ 9 _ did not 9 trade is not 8 person is not 7 _ went out 7 account called _ 7 books are closed 6 account is debited 5 account made up 5 contract is complete 5 goods are not 4 _ have not 4 _ is trustee 4 account does not 4 person does not 4 trade carried on 3 _ are not 3 _ call _ 3 _ does _ 3 _ is indebted 3 _ is insolvent 3 _ is principal 3 _ sells _ 3 _ writes _ 3 china is about 3 china is now 3 contract does not 3 contract is valid 3 man is not 3 men were also 3 people are not 3 property does not 3 time is not 3 trade was so 3 tradesmen do not 2 _ are always 2 _ are partners 2 _ gave _ 2 _ had also 2 _ had not 2 _ has not 2 _ is agent 2 _ is good 2 _ is still 2 _ is surety Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 _ is not liable 6 contract is not enforceable 2 _ had no authority 2 time is not far 1 _ are not inclined 1 _ are not uncommonly 1 _ did not expressly 1 _ did not legally 1 _ did not orally 1 _ did not well 1 _ does not promptly 1 _ has no adequate 1 _ has no contract 1 _ have no commodities 1 _ have not already 1 _ is not bad 1 _ is not responsible 1 _ is not thereby 1 _ is not truly 1 _ know no punishment 1 _ received no benefit 1 _ received no compensation 1 _ showed no signs 1 account are not easily 1 book was not legal 1 business has no authority 1 business is not interstate 1 china are not so 1 china had not suddenly 1 china is not sincere 1 contract having no acceptance 1 contract is not illegal 1 contract is not void 1 contracts are not illegal 1 contracts are not sales 1 country have no tanks 1 country is not only 1 country was not compatible 1 country were not only 1 day is not far 1 days gave no security 1 england had no sugar 1 goods are not really 1 goods have no difficulty 1 goods is not absolutely 1 goods pay no duty 1 goods were not only 1 goods were not yet 1 man gets no thanks 1 man is not simply A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 46489 author = American School of Correspondence title = Cyclopedia of Commerce, Accountancy, Business Administration, v. 03 (of 10) date = keywords = Cleveland; Co.; Court; Frauds; John; States; Statute; United; agent; contract; corporation; law; party; person; property summary = Contracts of Infants.= A person under legal age is known in law as make contracts involving the sale or leasing of real property. is the agent liable personally on this contract? is the agent liable personally on this contract? becomes a corporation, it is liable on an implied contract to pay for organization of a corporation by those persons purchasing the property with sale of personal property, and in connection with contracts of Sale Defined.= A transfer of title of personal property is to be a contract by which the title to personal property is transferred to personal property, and a contract to make a sale, must be borne in that in a contract of sale of personal property, title or ownership of personal property title passes to the purchaser, while possession mortgage of personal property is a contract, and must be supported provide that contracts for the sale of personal property involving id = 46545 author = American School of Correspondence title = Cyclopedia of Commerce, Accountancy, Business Administration, v. 04 (of 10) date = keywords = Bank; Book; Co.; Ledger; Stock; account; cash; charge; check; discount; illustration; note; pay summary = of Double Entry --Classes of Account Books--Recording Balance--Sample Ledger Accounts--Treatment of Cash Discounts --Profit and Loss--Merchandise Inventory Accounts--Balance Sheet and Officers--Dividends--Closing Transfer Books--Sale of Stock he pays us money, we credit his account, and debit cash. book are credited to the sales account, completing the double entry. license fees paid on account of property owned or business transacted. sales account having a credit balance represents a profit because it [Illustration: Closing Entries, Trading and Profit and Loss Accounts] Close the books into the proper accounts, showing gross and net profit [Illustration: Cash Book Including Bank Account] _Stock Ledger._ This is the book in which an account is kept with each On the books of a corporation an account called capital stock When this stock is paid for, the entry in the cash book on the debit Make all necessary entries in general books, showing ledger accounts id = 44043 author = Brereton, William H. title = The Truth about Opium Being a Refutation of the Fallacies of the Anti-Opium Society and a Defence of the Indo-China Opium Trade date = keywords = Anti; China; Chinese; Christianity; Dr.; England; English; Government; Hart; Hong; India; Indo; Kong; London; Majesty; Mr.; Opium; Robert; Sir; Society; Storrs; Turner; british summary = years'' residence in Hong Kong.--Opium smoking as practised by the Chinese the Anti-Opium Society.--British and other foreign residents in China hold Anti-Opium Society that British trade with China has suffered from the Indo-China Opium trade, Chinese residing there have better means of iniquity of the Indo-China Opium trade.--Character of the Chinese as Opium smoking in China.--Although the Chinese are a spirit-drinking trade.--Missionaries detested in China.--Indian Opium welcomed.--Saying of the Indo-Chinese opium trade interlard their case with political matters and ruining the people of China, as is alleged by the Anti-Opium Society, hold of the public mind, with respect to opium smoking in China, arose, Calcutta, and Hong Kong, by which all Indian opium for the China trade is Chinese Government, and on the effect of opium smoking on the people of nor the subject of these lectures, which is opium smoking in China. missionaries and the Anti-Opium Society allege, China would not be the id = 17563 author = Chatterton, E. Keble (Edward Keble) title = King''s Cutters and Smugglers 1700-1855 date = keywords = Admiralty; Board; Captain; Channel; Coastguard; Customs; England; English; France; House; John; King; London; Majesty; Mr.; Navy; North; Preventive; Revenue; St.; Thomas; french; illustration; smuggler summary = [Illustration: REVENUE CRUISER CHASING SMUGGLING LUGGER. REVENUE CRUISER CHASING SMUGGLING LUGGER _Colour frontispiece_ with the old smuggling days, the Revenue cutters, and the Preventive Customs officers and commanders of cruisers, General Orders issued to vessels were not known as Revenue cutters at this time, but as Custom luggers manned by armed crews, who carried on a brisk smuggling trade actually on board or in the boats of the cruisers at that time was to keep the officers of the cruisers on board their vessels, and at sea, commander and mate of every Revenue vessel or boat bringing in a large Revenue cruisers, all being commanded by naval officers. service those officers and crews of the Revenue cruisers as by length land the crews of the vessels employed on the cruisers and Naval ships men were found on board, whereas smuggling vessels of this size (about id = 48012 author = Cocks, Richard title = Diary of Richard Cocks, Volume 2 Cape-Merchant in the English Factory in Japan, 1615-1622, with Correspondence date = keywords = August; Bantam; Capt; China; December; Dono; Duch; Eaton; Edo; Emperour; England; English; February; Firando; God; Gonrok; Hollanders; January; Japon; Jno; John; July; June; King; Marche; Miaco; Mr.; Nangasaque; November; October; Samma; September; Shiwas; Shonguach summary = _Aprill 6._--The king sent Oyen Dono to entreate me to let hym have Adams sent me word that the small junck of Jno. Yoosen which went from Cochinchina for Camboja the last yeare is now Hollanders sent to desire hym to goe up with Capt. herupon I went to Oyen Dono, the kinges governor, and tould hym what Dono had advized hym that themperour had sent 2 greate men for Gonrok Donos men, with the King of Firandos _bongews_, came to look on Firando this day; and Gonrok Dono sent me a present of 2 silk And the king and Gonrok Dono sent for me and the Hollandes capt. of Firando, lent to hym, and that the Japons have sent our English men Dono have com at us these 5 or 6 daies, nor soe much as sent to us. id = 35720 author = Colden, Cadwallader title = Papers Relating to an Act of the Assembly of the Province of New-York For encouragement of the Indian trade, &c. and for prohibiting the selling of Indian goods to the French, viz. of Canada date = keywords = Albany; Assembly; Brethren; Canada; Commissioners; Council; English; French; Governor; Heirs; Indians; Nations; New; People; Province; Time; Trade; York; good summary = _French_, and who lie between _New-York_ and the Nations of _Indians_ in All these Nations of _Indians_ who came to _Albany_ said, that the Time, to make a Present to the _Indians_ of the Six Nations now in Town, said Province, shall at any Time hereafter have or maintain any Persons to whom the said _William Penn_, or his Heirs, shall at any Time said Province, to the Number of Twenty, shall at any Time hereafter be of the said provincial Council shall be chosen to serve for three Years T H A T the Governor and provincial Council shall at all Times have Power that Year, if the said provincial Council shall see Occasion for their T H A T the Governor and provincial Council shall, at all Times, settle T H A T the Governor and provincial Council shall, at all Times, settle shall judge convenient for the good Government of the said Province and id = 36939 author = Common sense (Writer), active 1813 title = Free Trade with India An Enquiry into the True State of the Question at Issue Between His Majesty''s Ministers, the Honorable the East India Company, and the Public at Large, on the Justice and Policy of a Free Trade to India date = keywords = Company; East; India summary = proof of the interest the public take in the question of a Free Trade; follows that the India Company being possessed of a monopoly, does follows that the India Company being possessed of a monopoly, does intending to make a monopoly of the trade to India, there were in fact that the East India Company is a monopoly, and injures trade by The trade to India, in its present state, produces a great influx of consider that the French had an East India Company in 1789, and that by French East India trade, fell, and no one rose in its place, neither India Company, as the articles brought by it have not increased in Company carry British manufactures out to India at about 40_s._ per serve the East India Company, but the country itself--Ministers want In conclusion then, MONOPOLY IS NOT ALWAYS INJURIOUS.--THE EAST INDIA COMPANY DOES NOT POSSESS A MONOPOLY.--GREAT CHANGES will be ATTENDED id = 49637 author = Coxe, William title = Account of the Russian Discoveries between Asia and America To which are added, the conquest of Siberia, and the history of the transactions and commerce between Russia and China date = keywords = Aleütian; America; Beering; Chinese; East; Footnote; Fox; Islands; Isles; Kamtchatka; Kiachta; Mr.; North; Petersburg; Russians; Siberia; St.; Umnak; Unalashka; sidenote summary = Kamtchatka and the New Discovered Islands are sea-otters, foxes, sables, to the Aleutian and Fox Islands: they are called by the Russians Bobry The Russians remained until June, 1754, upon this island: at that time [Sidenote: The Crew reach Beering''s Island in two Baidars.] In spring tribute, calls in his account the first island by the Russian name of sea the spring following--The vessel is stranded in a bay of the island islanders, that a Russian ship, under the command of Ivan Solovioff[53], [Sidenote: Sails to the Fox Islands.] Every preparation for continuing [Sidenote: The Russians winter at Kadyak.] The islanders now appearing [Sidenote: Manners and Customs of the Inhabitants.] The Fox-islands are [Sidenote: Account of the Inhabitants of the Fox Islands.] The any Russian vessels have hitherto sailed, a chain of islands has been An island without a name, called by the Russians [Sidenote: Islands called by different Names in the Russian Journals.] id = 27014 author = Davidson, G. F. title = Trade and Travel in the Far East or Recollections of twenty-one years passed in Java, Singapore, Australia and China. date = keywords = Australia; Batavia; Calcutta; China; Colony; England; Government; Hong; Island; Java; Kong; Macao; Majesty; New; Singapore; Sir; South; Straits; Sydney; Wales; british; chinese; dutch; european summary = unprejudiced European walk through the native towns of Java, Singapore, The Cochin Chinese ships generally bring each four thousand _peculs_ of Proper, visit Singapore every year, from May till October, and bring the vast importance of the Chinese junk-trade to Singapore, and take trade-wind, a ship makes nearly as much westing as she does southing, New South Wales had been for many years a British Colony, before any because China-men always prefer emigrating to a country having frequent Chinese labourer bound for five years, his pay to begin from the day he brought by the native boats every year to Batavia and Singapore, at both and go, land and ship their goods in their own names, hold houses and British merchants to land and ship goods in their own names, and by In the first place, then, British subjects residing in, or shipping place, and ships from the harbour, at a day''s notice, without ever id = 48427 author = Davis, Leslie A. title = Supplement to Commerce Reports Daily Consular and Trade Reports: Turkey, Harput date = keywords = Ger summary = greater part of the interior of Asia Minor, a region as large as all Goods destined for this Vilayet usually come via Samsun, goods now comes from the United States. Trade in this district was not especially good at the beginning of good and after the trade depression of the first half of the year The import and export trade of this region in 1914 was therefore The imported articles and their value for two years were as piasters a box, while the prices of clothes, shoes, and other articles its small trade, there is a slight market here for some kinds of goods. also a good market for calicoes and prints. United States in small quantities might be sold more extensively. year to be used in making rough cotton cloth and native prints. difficulty of importing cotton goods, much more than that amount will id = 14444 author = Defoe, Daniel title = The Complete English Tradesman (1839 ed.) date = keywords = Defoe; England; God; London; Madam; Sir; book; business; chapter; credit; footnote; good; great; hand; like; money; pay; shop; thing; time; tradesman summary = For a young man coming out of his time to have his shop or warehouse come out of their times better finished for business and trade than they there is a kind of slang in trade, which a tradesman ought to know, as The like happens often when a tradesman turns his hand from one trade to In the mean time, the tradesman''s proper business is in his shop or the man lost his trade, his shop was entirely neglected, the time which Suppose the young tradesman buys ten thousand pounds'' value of goods on So easy a thing is it for a tradesman to lose his credit in trade, and necessary people in their trades, and their business is to set goods off OF CREDIT IN TRADE, AND HOW A TRADESMAN OUGHT TO VALUE AND IMPROVE IT: OF CREDIT IN TRADE, AND HOW A TRADESMAN OUGHT TO VALUE AND IMPROVE IT: id = 32384 author = Defoe, Daniel title = An Humble Proposal to the People of England, for the Increase of their Trade, and Encouragement of Their Manufactures Whether the Present Uncertainty of Affairs Issues in Peace or War date = keywords = England; English; France; Ireland; manufacture summary = Henries; manufactures were planted, navigation increased, the people began which England above all nations in the world should improve the advantages On the other hand, the people of England have run up their manufactures to tell us; the trade of our woollen manufacture being evidently increased encouragement to our people, to increase and improve their trade; and the People of England for Increase of their Commerce, and Improvement of goods, and that the demand of English manufactures in particular increases their woollen manufactures; when it is apparent they work up all the wool to ruin the manufacturers, not improve the trade. is it, that we do not improve this trade, and increase the consumption of people of England increase the home consumption of their woollen trade of the kingdom; if our wearing foreign silk manufactures did increasing trade in general; I say I am for encouraging new manufactures id = 48697 author = Edmundson, George title = Anglo-Dutch Rivalry During the First Half of the Seventeenth Century being the Ford lectures delivered at Oxford in 1910 date = keywords = Charles; Dutch; England; English; France; General; Hague; Holland; James; King; London; Netherlands; Parliament; Prince; Provinces; Spain; States; United; spanish summary = the English and the Dutch at this time arose from questions by a common danger, English and Dutch negotiators become more States-General refuse to give the English Resident a seat Ominous political state of England at the time of the marriage of authority in the States-General which placed for thirty years in his Such was the state of things when James I ascended the English Special rights of free fishing in English waters had been granted The step taken by King James had, however, from the English point the refusal of the States-General to admit English dyed cloths in Dutch history between the town of Delft, the States of Holland, of armed support from King James for the States in their renewed war him of King of Great Britain and Ireland, but the States of Holland Dutch, James I of England, and the Protestant princes of Germany id = 38841 author = Hely-Hutchinson, John title = The Commercial Restraints of Ireland date = keywords = Act; Britain; College; Commons; Dr.; Dublin; Duigenan; Duke; England; English; Grattan; Great; House; Hutchinson; Ireland; Irish; John; King; Lieutenant; Lord; Mr.; Parliament; Provost; Sir; University summary = Ireland." Flood entered parliament the same year as Hutchinson, Hussey In and since Provost Hutchinson''s time Ireland has won vast conquests from Ireland; the woollen manufacture was the staple trade, and wool the that time in the woollen manufacture of Ireland sufficient to have raised the trade of England by making your subjects of Ireland to pursue the market had the woollen manufactures of Ireland ever excluded England? speech of the Lords Justices to the Irish Parliament in that year, it The woollen was then the principal manufacture and trade of Ireland. exportation of English and Irish linens from Great Britain; and the bounty value of lands, trade, and manufactures of England, stated in this Act, Acts, formerly made in England, of exporting wool from Ireland except to regard shown by England to the trade and manufactures of this country. linen manufactures, to the great prejudice of those trades in England, id = 31955 author = Porter, Peter A. (Peter Augustus) title = Niagara: An Aboriginal Center of Trade date = keywords = Cataract; Erie; Falls; Gendron; Indians; Lake; Niagara summary = NIAGARA, AN ABORIGINAL CENTER OF TRADE Neutrals"--that is the Niagara--as a Center of Trade; whose location he journey of the Hurons "for trade" had Niagara as its objective point. half-a-dozen copies are known to exist), what the Indians on the St. Lawrence River told him about this waterfall (for he himself never saw Niagara, both as a strategic point and as a Center of Trade. So the first white man known to have been on the Niagara River (in at the point where the river enters Lake Ontario; and marks it, "Falls of Trade, and its "Erie Stones"--Niagara was the best and most widely Niagara, for the purposes of trade,--in 1903 there was opened an Indian the second known reference to Niagara, the fame of the Cataract was the fourth, man ever to refer directly to Niagara Falls. at Niagara since Docteur Gendron recorded that the Indians traded in the Falls" in trade, at Niagara; he had doubtless tried the healing id = 27647 author = Various title = The Economist, Volume 1, No. 3 date = keywords = Cent; Colonel; England; Esq; Government; Ireland; Liverpool; London; Lord; Monday; New; September; Sir; Torrens; Wednesday; West; country; great; market; price; trade summary = trade to slave-producing countries, as it does of the import of their with such countries as use only free labour,--with the Northern States commanded a higher price at home than other countries could supply the in the home market, and though the law imposed an import duty, by way of great class of producers, the price of whose labour, and whose profits, protected to a greater extent than any other trade, and the price of obtain any relief by extending their trade in the great neutral markets increase of imports from other countries; if the demand and price in which year the police force was established; all new houses commenced public buildings; all new streets and squares formed since that period, sold there in great quantities, at a lower price than European goods of do not show any great activity in foreign markets, though the prices of id = 39715 author = Watson, Nowell Lake title = The Argentine as a Market date = keywords = Aires; Argentine; Buenos; Trade; United; british; country; english; export; year summary = the country is naturally, and must remain for some considerable time, a naturally have encouraged a large import trade; but the prohibitive If this were done, a large and important part of the country would railway and the country will realise and overcome their difficulties Argentine Government admit the unsuitable nature of the country for regarded almost as a tropical country, where English labour is out of IMPORTS AND EXPORTS FROM AND TO DIFFERENT COUNTRIES. figures for the principal exporting countries in the year 1822:-into the country of all railway material duty-free. therefore, of the true position of any country''s trade, this privileged countries, the greater part of the demand for imported goods is for expected, owing to the high tariff which probably increased the import trade--a large number of foreign, especially German, houses appeared, have to find with the conditions of trade in that country. Railway material, Importation of English, 34, 35