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ssss1 Many facts in point have also been collected in a little book, Made in Germany, by E. E. Williams. Unhappily, the facts relative to the recent industrial development of Germany are so often used in a partisan spirit in order to promote protection that their real importance is often misunderstood.

ssss1 Francke, Die neueste Entwickelung der Textil-Industrie in Deutschland.

ssss1 Cf. Schulze Gäwernitz, Der Grossbetrieb, etc.—See ssss1, ssss1, ssss1.

ssss1 The imports of German woollen stuffs into this country have steadily grown from £607,444 in 1890 to £907,569 in 1894, and £1,822,514 in 1910. The British exports to Germany (of woollen stuffs and yarns) have also grown, but not in the same proportion. They were valued at £2,769,392 in 1890, £3,017,163 in 1894, and £4,638,000 in 1906-1910 (a five years’ average).

CHAPTER II.

THE DECENTRALISATION OF INDUSTRIES—(continued).

ssss1

Italy and Spain—India—Japan—The United States—The cotton, woollen, and silk trades—The growing necessity for each country to rely chiefly upon home consumers.

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