Volltextsuche ändern

7976 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Mering

Über die Volltextsuche können Sie mit einem oder mehreren Begriffen den Gesamtbestand der digitalisierten Zeitungen durchsuchen.

Hier können Sie gezielt in einem oder mehreren Zeitungsunternehmen bzw. Zeitungstiteln suchen, tagesgenau nach Zeitungsausgaben recherchieren oder auf bestimmte Zeiträume eingrenzen. Auch Erscheinungs- und Verbreitungsorte der Zeitungen können in die Suche mit einbezogen werden. Detaillierte Hinweise zur Suche.

Datum

Für Der gerade Weg/Illustrierter Sonntag haben Sie die Möglichkeit, auf Ebene der Zeitungsartikel in Überschriften oder Artikeltexten zu suchen.


The London and China telegraph22.09.1877
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Mr. Isemonger, Police Magistrate of Malacca. This will is propounded as excluding the claims of Tunku Alam, and as Tunku Mahmood is merely a boy of eleven, who is entirely in the hands of the Maharajah of Johore, the whole affair is looked upon with the greatest suspicion [...]
[...] and in fact most of the engagements reported were, if any reliance could be placed on the published statements of the killed and wounded, but mere skirmishes. The native journals spoke of the final crushing of the rebellion in November, when the cooler weather would have set in. [...]
[...] firm, Singapore, at m.37 to 37, Batavia and Penang, m.34% to 35. stocks AND sit Ares. The feature of the week has been great activity in mere speculative securities, and especially in all Austrian stocks, which were favourably influenced by the cheering harvest prospects in that country. This [...]
[...] Missionary Society; Baptist, 75; Presbyterian, 23 Wesleyan, Episcopalian, and others, 23. I he School is not intended for merely secular instruc tion; the spiritual interests of the boys are carefully attended to ; they are diligently instructed in the truths [...]
Nature[Beilage] 20.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 20. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] Problems Resolved by the mere Description of Circles and the Use of Coloured Diagrams and Symbols. By OLIVER BY RNE. [...]
Nature20.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 20. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] both monetary and influential, without which many of the most important scientific researches could never have been attempted. The mere mention of the names of the Institution of Civil Engineers, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Institute of Naval Archi [...]
[...] Much has yet to be learnt about the behaviour of many of the elements during the various processes of the iron manufacture, whether in the form of alloys or merely as substances present in the converter or puddling furnace. It would be well if the Iron and Steel Institute were to [...]
[...] than simpl this, viz., that the E. so called exists in possibility relatively to the body or system that may be in question, that its potentiality merely implies that it is absent from and acquirable by that body or system, and not that it is altogether out of actual existence. - * , , --, [...]
[...] charter on E., Energy is the subject, when it is the conserved E. itself which is to be followed through its migrations. Why should this grand conserved E. be stigmatised as merely potential when it does not happen to be in a certain mass 2 Relatively to that mass it may be some times potential, but relatively to itself [...]
[...] it is, as we shall see, always actual. But we cannot concede that the potentiality of this mode of E. implies merely the above. I believe it is usually intended to mean much more; and, at any rate—whatever those who use the word may intend—it logically involves much more ; and this is [...]
The nation20.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 20. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] story is brought down to the present day. The earlier French and the later German schools are thoroughly discussed in all their bearings, and the aim has been not merely to give an historical ac count, but to fully explain the sources from which they arose, their development, and their logical results. Special treatises, such as [...]
[...] directions assertions, which he himself repeats, that he is not called on to answer the charges of a self-confessed knave like Parker. Perhaps not, if Parker were a mere volunteer who had suddenly appeared on the scene with a string of accusations against a stran ger. But since when has the rule been established that the evi [...]
[...] the Jewish world, the dupe of these illusions. . . . . . The Gospel of Mark is less a legend than a biography written by a credulous man.” As the Gospels of Matthew and Luke arose from a mere revision of the Gospel of Mark, this last assumes an extraordinary importance. Its characteristic trait is the absence of any genealogy of Christ and of any [...]
[...] William G. Hammond was then the head. Having learnt by my expe rience that the lawyers of Iowa are much more severe upon misconduct in the abstract than when committed by particular persons, I merely said that I had a case, stated how old it was, and asked whether it would be investigated if charges were preferred. A year ago last month I received [...]
[...] I said before, it is not my intention to take Dillon into court, because as the history of my case is a long one, it would entail great and insupport able expense. Besides this, a verdict in court would be treated as a mere settlement of an ordinary dispute about money; what I want is that pro fessional misconduct should be professionally punished. I never heard [...]
[...] pleased by the freedom with which the children in Mr. Habberton's books prattle about religious matters. Their puzzling questions are very na tural, and the feeling of dissatisfaction may be mere squeamishness, but any one who does object to what may be considered facetious irreverence will find frequent cause of offence. The same criticism may be made on [...]
[...] quickened apprehension we judge the work to have an affinity or con sanguinity with the perfection it suggests. In a word, our feeling seems to involve a sort of objective cognition different from the mere subjective satisfaction which sugar gives to the tongue. Mr. Grant Allen attempts to give the same utilitarian answer to all [...]
[...] the vital functions, we call the pleasure asthetic. But as all these differ ences shade into one another, so useful and agreeable, pernicious and un pleasant, delight and pain, are words merely of degree, and the common ground of fact to which they all relate, the only “truth" to which they really testify, is the state of nutritive prosperity of the nerves. [...]
[...] feeling is affected by another existing feeling, and to be itself a third feeling conditioned simply by the form of this affection. Though in the last analysis this may be a phenomenon of mere amount of waste, we cannot yet “scientifically” call it so, so long as we know nothing of its particulars. Mr. Allen's omission of tickling, of the comical, of the [...]
[...] its particulars. Mr. Allen's omission of tickling, of the comical, of the bliss of incipient anaesthesia, of various intoxicants, of the pleasures of a slow crescendo simply as such, and of mere distinctness ; of the intensely disagreeable shock of suddenly interrupting any sensation, or any volun tary or habitual tendency to motion ; his neglect to consider the effects [...]
The London and China telegraph17.09.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 17. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] Retrenchment is, we understand, the order of the day in Perak. Whether acting upon instructions from the Colonial office, or merely upon his own discretion, we know not, but the newly-appointed Resident, Mr. Low, is reported to be making a clean sweep of many offices, and the chances of “getting some [...]
[...] Missionary Society; Baptist, 75: Presbyterian, 23 Wesleyan, Episcopalian, and others, 23. The School is not intended for merely secular instruc tion; the spiritual interests of the boys are carefully attended to; they are diligently instructed in the truths [...]
Nature13.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] “There is one point to which I think I may be per mitted to draw your attention, although at present it rests merely upon an unendorsed observation of my own. I thought it would be worth while to try what would happen if I inclosed specimens of meteorites, taken at random, [...]
[...] each decrease in the brilliancy of the hydrogen lines. On December 8, 1876, it was much fainter than F, while by March 2, 1877, F was a mere ghost by the side of it. On any probable supposition the temperature must have been higher at the former date. [...]
[...] with remains of grizzly bear, wolf, fox, water-vole, shrew, bat, bison, reindeer, roe deer, hare, and rabbit. Omit ting vast numbers of mere fragments, there were more than 3,500 bones and teeth of bison, of which a large number were calves ; 1,200 specimens of reindeer, also [...]
[...] energy which our country has exhibited in the investiga tion of this branch of natural science has been devoted to the mere founding of types, and in consequence but little light has been thrown upon the ever-increasing array of problems which puzzle the biologist. [...]
[...] jthat the observed rise of temperature, and perhaps also th: south-westerly breeze which sprung up at the commencement of the eclipse may be a mere coincidence, and I give the observa [...]
[...] discussion has been carried on for some months in the columns of the Queenslander, on the “Generation of the Echidna and Platypus,” between Dr. Bancroft and Mr. Bennett. I merely allude to this subject to give English naturalists the latest dis. coveries made by Dr. Bancroft in his researches into this more [...]
[...] As to its origin, the most curious opinions continue to prevail among Indian geologists. Some suppose it to be merely a product of the disaggregation of traps; others continue to support the old opinion as to its origin in marshes. Dr. Oldham, who was the first to renounce an [...]
[...] 5. That the permanent remedy for famine in Madras is, therefore, to deal with the rainfall in its cyclic aspect, and to husband and equalise the water-supply, not merely of the individual year, but of the cycle. It is beyond my province to offer any opinion upon the [...]
Nature[Beilage] 13.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] Problems Resolved by the mere Description of Circles and the Use of Coloured Diagrams and Symbols. By OLIVER BY RNE. [...]
The nation13.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] fairs or managed any industrial enterprise before the war he must be about fifty. The men of twenty-five to forty into whose hands the con duct of Southern society has actually passed were mere boys when the war broke out, have but few or faint associations with the hopes and fears and prejudices of the society which preceded it; and I should judge [...]
[...] to throw her upon the defensive. If your correspondent had looked more carefully through his triennial catalogue, he would have found among the graduates of the last fifty years not merely the names of Percival and Donald G. Mitchell, but likewise those of N. P. Willis, Horace Bushnell, Sylvester Judd, Charles Astor Bristed, and Theodore Winthrop. Of no [...]
[...] In conclusion, I may say to those graduates of Yale who are dissatis fied because of the “unliterary” character of their university, that the remedy is in their own hands, if in any one's. They have merely to go to work and write in great numbers all kinds of brilliant novels, poems, essays, etc., and remove the reproach from their college. But, if it is not [...]
[...] in Paris, is represented somewhat after the same fashion in the same work, and has been supposed to have a cuneiform derivation ; but in fact the strokes are merely ornamented at the ends with cross-dashes, like those at the ends of a Roman I or H. There are still other examples of the sort, but it is not necessary to go into particulars. The decipherers gene [...]
[...] salaries, likewise loses nothing of its pertinence by time, and the same may be said of his numerous speeches on the tariff and on reciprocity. We commend these not merely for the economic interest that attaches to them, but because they reveal the disastrous effect of Protection on na tional legislation and the morals of the whole country, as well as of Con [...]
[...] landmarks, the lines of division are scarcely susceptible. There can be no doubt that the Whig and Democratic parties, once essentially divided as to measures, have now become mere factions. By factions I mean, as contradistinguished from parties, to designate bodies of men not separated by well-defined principles, but only by political animosity, or [...]
[...] reported by the carpet-baggers, or about the electoral muddle in Louisi ana, and that the Administration was obliged to send “watchers” and “commissions” merely to ascertain facts usually considered within the province of the reporter of the daily press. In the several speeches of Mr. Clingman, and still more in the histo [...]
[...] only has to cite names. Principal Tulloch, indeed, has not designed to treat his subject in controversial, but merely in expository fashion ; yet it is one so far-reach ing and so all-embracing that he cannot, in spite of himself, resist the temptation of assailing, here and there, the rationalists who have in [...]
The London and China telegraph08.09.1877
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] when the criminal code is mockery and the law powerless, wrong and right lose their proper meaning and become confused ; that they feel fully capable of continuing the war; that the mere assertion of the Admiral's proposal to ask for their pardon only angers them, because they all know how to die for a great cause, [...]
[...] present year 1877 arrived at a solution of the problem propounded more than a century ago by Jean Jacques Rousseau as to the precise amount of criminality which attaches to a person who by a mere effort of volition puts an end to the existence of a mandarin at Pekin whom he has never seen, and against whom he cannot possibly entertain a [...]
[...] it be reckoned as one of our national sins and scandals that we so en courage him in his detestable vice, merely because it suits us to in crease the Indian revenue by selling opium to the Chinese ; or are we justified in letting him alone, on the careat emptor principle, just as we [...]
[...] Missionary Society; Baptist, 75; Presbyterian, 23 Wesleyan, Episcopalian, and others, 23. The School is not intended for merely secular instruc tion; the spiritual interests of the boys are carefully attended to; they are diligently instructed in the truths [...]
The nation06.09.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 06. September 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] The extreme caution of the Tennessee representatives led them at the outset to announce that they had no power to make any terms, but merely to report what was proposed to the State. A long discussion ensued, in which it appeared (and this is true also of Virginia) that the repudiationists regarded the abolition of slavery as destroying so [...]
[...] our Secretary of the Interior a Jack-of-all-trades and master of none, affording him some excuse for transmitting the reports of his several chiefs of bureaux with mere perfunctory notices instead of an intelligent and original presentation of facts and plans. The second marked characteristic is that, while the higher officers [...]
[...] According to the German traveller, Dr. W. Reiss, no recent eruption of Cotopaxi has ejected more lava than that of 1854, the eighth. The ninth took place in 1855, but this was a mere suggestion of power on the part of the volcano—a grand pyrotechnic show—for although it poured out torrents of fire, water, and stones in a state of incandescence, no [...]
[...] the plain of Callo into an immense lake, covering up the hill of the same name, which is thought to be the work of man, although Reiss discards this opinion and regards the eminence merely as the result of some internal convulsion of nature such as produced the “Panecillo of Quito.” There is but faint hope that the ruins of the palace of the Incas, described [...]
[...] conduct during the recent crisis, he did not put it in a shape which would bear lasting fruit. The $100,000 which he ordered to be divided among them will, as a mere gratuity, amount to nothing at all—hardly more than a shilling thrown to a tramp. It may make good the ten per cent. reduction in pay for a month or two. Had it been given, however, [...]
[...] those entrusted with their interests should devise some more practical and satisfactory solution for the difficulties that have lately confronted them than seems likely to be evolved out of mere Government meddling, or even the creation of a National Bureau of Industry. That solution, however, certainly will not come either from the politicians or their candi [...]
[...] tribute all of the evil in the world that cannot be traced to original sin. He speaks of the press, as we notice most of the gentlemen who deal in “creative” work do, as if it were no mere product of human ingenuity and combined labor, but as a sort of devil having a personal existence and directing the course of events of its own will. [...]
[...] which American city governments suffer are attributable to such deep rooted causes, that it is the merest charlatanism to hold out any expecta tion of very important results from changing mere methods of adminis tration, personnel, or departments.” A restriction of the power of making appropriations of money to those who furnish the money is the only legi [...]
Suche einschränken