| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1834 - 600 sivua
...should be reserved as a test of doubtful cases only. We trust that the opportunity will not be lost for requiring the parish accounts to be kept in a methodical...real character of the several payments. At present, all is confusion and perplexity. Each parish — nay, every successive overseer — has his own method... | |
| National Municipal League - 1901 - 364 sivua
...and Villages Act has seen Chicago's population increase sixfold to its present two millions — not counting, of course, an immense floating population....perplexity. Each parish — nay, every successive overseer — has his own method of entering and keeping his accounts, intelligible to no one but himself."... | |
| Clinton Rogers Woodruff - 1901 - 366 sivua
...and Villages Act has seen Chicago's population increase sixfold to its present two millions — not counting, of course, an immense floating population....perplexity. Each parish — nay, every successive overseer — has his own method of entering and keeping his accounts, intelligible to no one but himself."... | |
| 1901 - 364 sivua
...administrative confusion resulting from the presence of this collection of heterogeneous intramural bodies, ahd from the city's crude relations to the county and...perplexity. Each parish — nay, every successive overseer — has his own method of entering and keeping his accounts, intelligible to no one but himself."... | |
| Charles Waldo Haskins - 1904 - 266 sivua
...shake the grasp of the country districts from the throats of the cities." THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS REFORM The question of reform in municipal accounting became...perplexity. Each parish — nay, every successive overseer — has his own method of entering and keeping his accounts, intelligible to no one but himself."... | |
| Charles Waldo Haskins - 1904 - 264 sivua
...shake the grasp of the country districts from the throats of the cities." THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS REFORM The question of reform in municipal accounting became...perplexity. Each parish — nay, every successive overseer — has his own method of entering and keeping his accounts, intelligible to no one but himself."... | |
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