. COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE JOURNAL (CANADA) 1917 pt. 1. The regulation of the individual branches of foreign and domestic trade, thegrain business, the timber trade, etc., etc. 3. Revision of the commercial laws. 4. Solution of the question of establishing chambers of commerce and industry. JSatural Resources. Measures for promoting the utilization of natural resources and the developmentof industrial life in the north of European Russia and various districts of AsiaticRussia. Measures Relating to State Dominions. 1. Measures for the extension and improvement of forestry. 2. Means for the explo


. COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE JOURNAL (CANADA) 1917 pt. 1. The regulation of the individual branches of foreign and domestic trade, thegrain business, the timber trade, etc., etc. 3. Revision of the commercial laws. 4. Solution of the question of establishing chambers of commerce and industry. JSatural Resources. Measures for promoting the utilization of natural resources and the developmentof industrial life in the north of European Russia and various districts of AsiaticRussia. Measures Relating to State Dominions. 1. Measures for the extension and improvement of forestry. 2. Means for the exploitation of oil-bearing land, salt springs, gold bearing areasand other State property. 3. Question of introducing the system of monopoly in regard to some branches ofindustry and trade. The last section of the program of the financial economical committee is devotedto measures connected with the resolutions of the Paris conference regarding theeconomical coalition of the allies as far as such measures enter the sphere of the abovementioned WEEKLY BULLETIN 81 ENGLANDS TRADE WITH FRANCE. The mutual commercial interchange between France and England has increasedsince the war began to over three times what it was previously. This increase, it isclaimed by the British Export Gazette, is not wholly due to war supplies. In fact,Trance has had to find other sources of supply for the nearly £50,000,000 worth ofgoods formerly purchased from enemy countries. With the pronounced preference inFrance for British commodities at the present time, Canadian manufacturers alsoshould be able to export increasingly to that country and play their part in the com-mercial expansiveness now taking place in Anglo-French trade. THE HUGE INCREASE IN ANGLO-FRENCH TRADE. To appreciate this statement at its full value, it is necessary to grasp some of thedetails of the positions prior to the war and what it is to-day. British exports toFrance increased uninterruptedly from £22,165,622 in 1908 to


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