s, 118, 120-121.
Barker, Ernest, article "Crusades," quoted, 23.
Bauer, Otto, quoted on diversified interests of wage-earners in
different countries, 143-144.
Belgium, monopoly of trade with her colonies secured by, 104;
industrial invasion of, by Germany, 116 ff.; truths illustrated by
German invasion of, 256; position of, before 1914, as a neutralised
state, 270.
Birth rate, decline in, the greatest of factors making for
internationalism and peace, 287.
Bismarck, policy of, in encouraging France's colonial ambitions,
109-110.
Boycott, proposed for states violating principles of international
league for peace, 242-244; discussion of, of Germany after the war,
273-274.
Brailsford, H. W., quoted on solution of colonial problem, 265-266.
Brazil, tropical imperialism and the atrocities in, 87.
Bulnes, F., quoted on future relations of United States and Latin
America, 209.
Burgess, "Homeland," cited, 136.
Burgess, J. W., "The European War of 1914," quoted, 253-254.
Business, international evolution of, 279-283.
C
Canada, trade of, with United States compared with that with Great
Britain, 102; present and future relations of United States with,
212-213.
Capital, internationalism of, 279-283.
Caraballo Sotolongo, F., work by, cited, 208 n.
Cartels, description of German, 121-122.
Carver, T. N., quoted on small-scale farming, 179 n.
Children, dangers of neglect of, in United States, 191-192.
China, views of official of, quoted, 75-76; question of America's
policy regarding, 213-216; possibilities of the impending industrial
progress of, 216 n.
Class, increasing internationalism of, 280.
Class policy, imperialism viewed as a, 138.
Coercion, preserving peace by, 226-228.
Colonies, how germs of war are carried in nationalistic competition
for, 99 ff.; tendency of, to trade with home country, 101-103;
preference given to, by tariff legislation, 104; the open and the
closed door policy in treatment of, by home countries, 104; future
advantages resulting from possession of, 107-108; problem of, in plans
for a higher imperialism, 246, 258 ff.; internationalisation of, under
proposed higher imperialism, 263-269.
Colonisation, failure of argument for imperialism based on, 129-131.
Coloured labour and the root of imperialism, 85-98.
Commerce, development of, and the economic motive for war, 23-24.
Conant, C. A., arguments of, for American imperialism, 48-49.
Constant
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