Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Volume 59Royal Statistical Society., 1896 Published papers whose appeal lies in their subject-matter rather than their technical statistical contents. Medical, social, educational, legal,demographic and governmental issues are of particular concern. |
Dari dalam buku
Hasil 6-10 dari 54
Halaman 185
Royal Statistical Society (Great Britain). ( B . ) - Railway Traffic Receipt in 1895 and 1894 . " Subjoined is an analysis of the traffic receipts of fifteen of the principal English railways during the past two years : - First Half ...
Royal Statistical Society (Great Britain). ( B . ) - Railway Traffic Receipt in 1895 and 1894 . " Subjoined is an analysis of the traffic receipts of fifteen of the principal English railways during the past two years : - First Half ...
Halaman 224
... Traffic . mission on , 1895 Index to Report of Royal Com- Marine and Fisheries . Report of Department of , 1895 Militia and Defence . Pilotage System at St. Report of Department , 1894-95 John , N.B. Report on , 1895 Postmaster ...
... Traffic . mission on , 1895 Index to Report of Royal Com- Marine and Fisheries . Report of Department of , 1895 Militia and Defence . Pilotage System at St. Report of Department , 1894-95 John , N.B. Report on , 1895 Postmaster ...
Halaman 358
... traffic from time to time .. 382 VII . Number of Population ........ 385 STATISTICS , according to some authorities , must be defined so as to relate to society ; but must the society be human ? It is rather in the unprogressive ...
... traffic from time to time .. 382 VII . Number of Population ........ 385 STATISTICS , according to some authorities , must be defined so as to relate to society ; but must the society be human ? It is rather in the unprogressive ...
Halaman 363
... traffic is very much smaller than 30. The presumption is that the modulus for smaller figures is an absolutely smaller number than 8.5 , but a relatively greater percentage of the mean traffic than 85 is of 30 or 40. From summary ...
... traffic is very much smaller than 30. The presumption is that the modulus for smaller figures is an absolutely smaller number than 8.5 , but a relatively greater percentage of the mean traffic than 85 is of 30 or 40. From summary ...
Halaman 364
... traffic of moderate dimensions . The hole having been stopped at some distance — say , three inches - from the surface , each returning wasp rushes down the cul de sac , never to rise again ; followed by fate in the form of a walking ...
... traffic of moderate dimensions . The hole having been stopped at some distance — say , three inches - from the surface , each returning wasp rushes down the cul de sac , never to rise again ; followed by fate in the form of a walking ...
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
Agriculture amount Annual Report Association average banks binomial type Borough Boys British Bulletin census cent Charles Booth classes of defect Colonial Commerce Council Current monthly numbers Current numbers curve Deaths Department Diagrams diseases distribution Donations-Contd Earl Fitzwilliam Economic Election England and Wales expenses exports fact figures France Girls Gladstonian Government Heft Honorary House important increase index number India industrial schools Institute International Statistical Institute JAMES HEYWOOD John Journal labour London majority mean Medical Officer ment method Midlands mineral nerve-signs North Western Officer of Health paper Paris passenger Percentage period Political Economy population present primary groups Professor proportion purchased railway rates ratio reau Receipts reformatory returns Royal Statistical Society Scotland seats Secretary social South Wales Statistical Bureau Statistik Statistique Statistisches Table tical tion total number traffic Unionist United Kingdom volume votes wages West Midlands William
Bagian yang populer
Halaman 22 - An act relating to labor, constituting chapter thirty-one of the consolidated laws," is amended by the addition of a new section numbered fifty-eight, to read as follows: § 58. Industrial poisonings to be reported. 1. Every medical practitioner attending on or called in to visit a patient whom he believes to be suffering from poisoning from lead, phosphorus, arsenic...
Halaman 268 - That is found wandering and not having any home or settled place of abode, or proper guardianship, or visible means of subsistence...
Halaman 53 - Party is a body of men united, for promoting by their joint endeavours the national interest, upon some particular principle in which they are all agreed.
Halaman 516 - Commission it is practicable to prescribe such uniformity and methods of keeping accounts) a period of time within which all common carriers subject to the provisions of this Act shall have, as near as may be, a uniform system of accounts, and the manner in which such accounts 'shall be kept.
Halaman 715 - BUILDING SOCIETY. HOW TO PURCHASE A PLOT OF LAND FOR FIVE SHILLINGS PER MONTH, With Immediate Possession, either for Building or Gardening Purposes. Apply at the Office of the BIRKBECK FREEHOLD LAND SOCIETY.
Halaman 715 - TWO-AND-A-HALF per CENT. INTEREST allowed on DEPOSITS, repayable on demand. TWO per CENT, on CURRENT ACCOUNTS, on the minimum monthly balances, when not drawn below ^100.
Halaman 291 - ... school conducts himself well, the managers of the school may, with his own consent, apprentice him to, or dispose of him in, any trade, calling, or service, or by emigration, notwithstanding that his period of detention has not expired, and such apprenticing or disposition shall be as valid as if the managers were his parents.
Halaman 267 - ... by licence under their hands, permit him to live with any trustworthy and respectable person named in the licence willing to receive and take charge of him.
Halaman 21 - Fellow thereof, the Council shall take the matter into consideration; and if the majority of the Members of the Council present at some Meeting (of which and of the matter in hand such Fellow or...
Halaman 293 - ... prisons found, among other things, that an extremely large number of youths between the ages of 16 and 21 passed through the prisons every year; that under the existing system numbers of these young prisoners came out of prison in a condition as bad or worse than when they went in, and that the age when the majority of habitual criminals are made lies between 16 and 21.