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Making your capital work hard has never been more important than
it is today. Investment trusts, often over looked as an investing
vehicle, are a key tool in getting better returns on your money.
The Financial Times Guide to Investment Trusts is your
concise and jargon free introduction to one of the City’s best kept
secrets. It explains how investment trusts differ from unit trusts and
OEICs and explores the pros and cons of investment trusts including
their superior performance. It also helps you identify your investment
objectives, discusses the basic principles of successful investing, and
how to run a trust portfolio.
Whether you are a novice DIY investor or have many years’ experience
and wish to question the experts; the FT Guide to Investment Trusts:
- Provides a detailed overview of what investment trusts are and
how they differ from other funds
- Examines the factors which help to explain the better performance
of trusts – including cheaper fees, discounts and gearing
- Analyses the stepping stones to successful investing
- Shows you how to construct and monitor a trust portfolio
- Highlights the workings of two live and benchmarked portfolios
which John has been sharing with Investor Chronicle readers over the
years.
Written by his friend, the physician John Baron (1786-1851), this
laudatory biography of the 'father of immunology' did much to
enhance the reputation of Edward Jenner (1749-1823) upon its
publication in two volumes between 1827 and 1838. The work covers
Jenner's personal and professional life both before and after his
development of the vaccine for smallpox, as well as touching on the
vaccine's reception and use around the world. Thoroughly explaining
the history and facts of vaccination, Baron established himself as
an authority on the subject. Although criticised by some for its
unquestioning praise of Jenner's genius, the work is valuable for
its use of primary sources, drawing heavily on correspondence and
personal notes, excerpts of which appear throughout the text.
Volume 1, published in 1827, focuses on Jenner's early life and the
history and science of vaccination.
Written by his friend, the physician John Baron (1786-1851), this
laudatory biography of the 'father of immunology' did much to
enhance the reputation of Edward Jenner (1749-1823) upon its
publication in two volumes between 1827 and 1838. The work covers
Jenner's personal and professional life both before and after his
development of the vaccine for smallpox, as well as touching on the
vaccine's reception and use around the world. Thoroughly explaining
the history and facts of vaccination, Baron established himself as
an authority on the subject. Although criticised by some for its
unquestioning praise of Jenner's genius, the work is valuable for
its use of primary sources, drawing heavily on correspondence and
personal notes, excerpts of which appear throughout the text.
Volume 2, published in 1838, covers Jenner's later life and the
global reception of vaccination. The appendix lists the various
honours bestowed upon him.
The subject of smoking and the hormone disorders associated with it
are of relatively recent interest. Its importance increases as the
average age at death of the population increases and many of those
people will have had a lifetime smoking. The book provides
summaries of the present status of research into the effects of
smoking and the apparent protection offered against certain
diseases. Some research workers have suggested ways of predicting
trends of disease patterns such as osteoporetic fractures. Not all
the disorders discussed are adverse effects of smoking and these
have provided impetus for developing non-tobacco methods of disease
prevention. As the smoking population diminishes and the
availability of lower tar brands increases, a reduction in many of
the adverse disorders is expected and will form the basis for
continued monitoring.
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