Population Problems in the Victorian Age: StatisticsJoseph John Spengler Gregg, 1973 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 42
... fact , as to which one should be so sceptical as the greater number of sta- tistical facts and details ; or with respect to which a sound and searching criticism is so necessary . The reader would do well generally to look with ...
... fact , as to which one should be so sceptical as the greater number of sta- tistical facts and details ; or with respect to which a sound and searching criticism is so necessary . The reader would do well generally to look with ...
Page 9
... fact , that the proportion of the " residue , " dependent on those two classes , will not be in the ratio of numbers , but mainly in the ratio of the adults only of each class . 2. That in appropriating , on this principle , the class ...
... fact , that the proportion of the " residue , " dependent on those two classes , will not be in the ratio of numbers , but mainly in the ratio of the adults only of each class . 2. That in appropriating , on this principle , the class ...
Page 3
... fact at all . It was seven years after this that the accident of a wreck discovered the fact that 150 quiet Scotchmen were stealing away to America ; and the wonder and grief with which the fact is recorded , are quite instructive ...
... fact at all . It was seven years after this that the accident of a wreck discovered the fact that 150 quiet Scotchmen were stealing away to America ; and the wonder and grief with which the fact is recorded , are quite instructive ...
Contents
Census of the Population Law of Edinburgh Review Vol 49 | 1 |
State of Defects of British Edinburgh Review Vol | 61 |
The Late Census Edinburgh Review Vol | 67 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
agricultural amount annual ascertained average bigamy bill Blackwood's Magazine Britain burials calculation cause census cent century Church circumstances Commissioners compared consequence Cornwall Culdee decline decrease diminution Dissenters districts effect emigration Empire employed England and Wales enumeration estimate excess fact families females France Free Trade furnished Government greater houses important increase industry inhabitants interest Ireland Irish island kingdom labour Lancashire land less Lincolnshire London Lord Advocate Lord Brougham males manufacturing marriage married matter means ment millions nation nearly number of births number of persons occupations parish parish registers Parliament period popu population present produce proportion rate of mortality ratio registers registrar Registrar-General Report respect returns riage Rickman rural Scotland society Spackman square miles statistical supply supposed taken thing tion towns tural twenty United Kingdom wages whilst whole