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The London and China telegraph23.07.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 23. Juli 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] difficult to find a country possessed of more natural facilities for cheap and rapid railway construction than Siam. Here, labour Cºull |. had at merely nominal rates, timber for ties and bridges for almost nothing, and iron rails, engines, cars, &c., can be ob tained in England and America at lower prices than ever known [...]
[...] last clause refers to the last class of deeds or to the class of deeds before mentioned, or to both. The expression “deed,” if taken literally, would not apply to a mere agreement in writing not under seal. But the material question turns on the construction of the 167th section. That section is to this effect:— [...]
[...] to that estate, all the right to be exercised by assignees in bankruptcy? Further, it appears improbable that the Legislature should have intended that a mere deed, or a mere writing without deed, whereby a debtor has conveyed, or has agreed to convey, any portion of his estate to any person under the name of an inspector or otherwise, without the [...]
[...] partly because it refers to an entry in the Hong Kong Government Gazette, which would apply only to instruments described in section 163, and, further, because it could not have been intended that oy merely executing such a deed as has been spoken of under section 165 the debtor should be able to protect his property from process. The next [...]
[...] transaction now impeached constituted a fraud so much exceeding that 9f a mºre fraudulent preference that, independently of any assistance from the Bankruptcy laws, the plaintiffs, by their mere appointment as trustees on behalf of the other creditors, would be entitled to sue to set it aside. Upon this subject their Lordships think it enough to [...]
[...] They were of opinion that probably the mast might have been saved if the weather had molerated quickly, which was improbable ; and they con sidered further, that the mast was cut away, not as a mere incumb rance, but for the purpose of preventing its tearing up the ship and sacrificing the adventure. But they thought that, in addition to the [...]
[...] cut away, the purpose was to save vessel and cargo by preventing the mast tearing up the ship, to which the evidence very strongly pointed, or whether it was cut away as wreck, as a mere incumbrance, or lumber. Their Lordships have made the strong observation that the beneficial objects of the doctrine and law of general average would be [...]
[...] 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 London and China telegraph07.09.1868
  • Datum
    Montag, 07. September 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] market rates. Three or four weeks ago, while fighting was going on, and even at the time of the rumoured approach of Aidzu, no demand whatever was made for arms, and .. mere fact of en quiries being made for that article, now that we are led to sup pose that peace has been established, shows that there is something [...]
[...] who will be replaced by Mr. Loudon, a former Minister of the Colonial Department. According to [the Handelsblad these on dits are put in circulation by the Conservative press merely to annoy the existing Cabinet, and it goes on to state that they will prove equally unfounded with the rumour that Mr. Roest van Limberg would not accept the [...]
[...] ways, he roughly estimated at £27,000,000. Upon this point of cost Mr. Waddington said, “We shall be told that such an outlay is far too great to be thought of But what we have to consider is not merely the amount, but the object to be attained, and whether that is com mensurate with the outlay. If the commercial supremacy of England [...]
[...] the Government. It is a pity that such a bold and forcible representation as this should have been thrown away, but it was hardly to be expected that any considerations of mere humanity would have the slightest weight with those to whom Mr. HART addressed it. [...]
[...] foreign policy. The greater part of the supplementary treaty just concluded, amid such sickening bombast at Washington, we have described as a mere sham, only intended to cover the clause by which telegraphs, railways, or other improvements of any kind are to be for [...]
[...] the system under which the local Government is adminis tered. The Legislative Council, as at present constituted, is a preposterous farce—a mere caricature of a legislative body. No doubt the Straits Settlements Association here will press these matters on the attention of Parliament when occasion [...]
[...] Reduced taxation and reduced expenditure are matters every elector in this kingdom can appreciate, and if, as you justly show, diminished expenditure merely means the getting rid of a mass of inefficient officers, men, and materials, now draining our resources, and giving a fictitious appearance of strength were such strength does not really [...]
[...] Something might be said in favour of our present large outlay in camps and fleets if the mere outward semblance of efficiency—the “pomp and circumstance” without the real preparation for war— would serve the purpose of frightening foreign Powers from ever dis [...]
[...] a Hercules target was stuck up in the Exhibition with a nine-inch plate on it, and so ticketed; and how they have summed us up, after spending so many millions of money, as merely possessing an “egg shell fleet,” which, “in the event of war, would prove a source of weakness rather than of strength to the nation.” [...]
The London and China telegraph27.03.1866
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 27. März 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] rule, these paroxysms of panic usually end in the payment of the mutinying troops, and in the retirement of the Nienfei hosts, which, as a rule, are mere aggregations of highwaymen bands, armed only with swords and spears, and quite inca pable of making an impression on walled places, however weakly [...]
[...] eventful period were comparatively very small. (Hear, hear.) The position of our manager at the time alluded to was a most difficult one, requiring not merely a thorough knowledge of his business, which he eminently possessed, but great firmness of character and tact, inasmuch as, having large funds at the time alluded to under his control, he was beset [...]
[...] more or less of conjecture; and until some survey be taken, no matter how general in its character so long as it is accomplished by competent parties, all such schemes will remain mere paper projects. It is too much the fashion for “fireside travellers ” to sit at home and draw lines across a map, pointing out the [...]
[...] author of the scheme bases its probable success on political considerations, which in this case are of more importance than a mere geographical foundation. On this head he discusses the proposed lines through Burmese territory, assuming that they could be protected by the King of that country to the [...]
[...] we fully concur. Until their sanction is obtained, or a decided expression of their views upon the subject, it is just so much time wasted in planning schemes that are merely futile. Action on this point should be taken by the residents in China memo rialising the British Minister at Peking to bring the subject [...]
[...] class is Dr. Herbert Broom's Constitutional Law, which will be found of great service for consultation by persons holding official positions abroad. It is not a mere laudatory comment on English institutions, but a thoroughly practical work, being a selection from the Reports of the “leading cases,” by which [...]
[...] never shrunk from exposing their lives to the unhealthy influences of climate or the bullets of an enemy. As there would be no opposition to the granting of the committee, he should merely call attention to two or three of the letters contained in the correspondence which had been placed in his hands. It opened with a letter from General Guy, the [...]
[...] ments. The expense, according to the account which he had received the other day as being paid by the Government from China was £29 iOS, perhead for 235 men, or no less a sum than £6,827, and that merely for one detachment. He did not wish to impute to anybody blame in the matter, but it was, he thought, the duty of the House to ascertain to what [...]
[...] IVES instantaneously a delicious Cup of Coffee with boiling water or milk merely. To be had in bottles at 1s and 2s. each, of all respectable Gro cers, Chemists, and Italian War, housemen. [...]
The London and China telegraph14.05.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 14. Mai 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] can Court. We shall then have the anomaly of British subjects paying their rents, as they should, their location having been mere speculation on their part, and if they have lost it is absurd to expect the Japanese Government to bear their losses, and American citizens living rent free. [...]
[...] Japan, noticing the early use of the Dutch, and how, after the Perry Expedition, English became the more sought after, and this not merely as a literature but as a lº tongue. The merchants in Tokio are, says the Herald, complaining bitterly about the depressed state of trade, which they attribute [...]
[...] question is on the south bank of the river, in the Tung-ning district, where the work previously accomplished by means of the labour of the country people was a mere outline of what was necessary, and requiring reconstruction on a larger and more substantial scale, the earth needing to be rammed down [...]
[...] Land, both in Hong Kong and at Kowloong, continues to rise in value. In the former place a large offer has recently been re fused for some lots which would have been sold for a mere song a few years ago. A rather unusual article has been advertised for sale, namely, [...]
[...] in the matter. If danger threatened the foreign settle. ments, the Volunteer force might be of some use. If no danger threatened it would be merely a means of taking good healthy exercise and recreation with the exhilarating feeling that doing so may possibly turn out of 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 [...]
The London and China telegraph25.06.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 25. Juni 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] characterises every forward movement of the Japanese as monkeyish (a favourite term amongst many foreigners), or as merely imitative ; but I would not be content with singling out Japanese as examples of progress to the disadvantageous com [...]
[...] which prevails in Chihli is said to have occurred in the more fer tile province of Shansi, where there has been great destitution, and the price of children has fallen to a sum merely nominal. [...]
[...] perhaps “T.” imagines, while the general morality of European residents in China compares favourably with that of the same class of individuals at home. “T.” may object that this is mere assertion, and attach no importance to testimony other than clerical. If so, let him ask the opinions of military and naval [...]
[...] of the House of Commons, and said the time would come when they would hear him, is given, and is of interest as showing that this is not, as has been supposed by some, merely an invention of the historian. - Wei-ch'i, or the Chinese Game of War.—Under the above title, [...]
[...] has been made there, which, if it should prove practicable, all at once would make all the fleets of the world, and even the most formidable ironclad a mere toy. The inventor is to construct a boat, which by moving under the surface of the water is able to fix torpedoes to the bottom of any ship without being seen, and thus blow the attacked [...]
[...] 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 London and China telegraph09.03.1869
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 09. März 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] merely nominal. Hence the Court has no jurisdiction independent [...]
[...] foreign goods at Shanghai from the foreign merchants, W. there receive them from abroad, to buying them through second foreign sellers at the outports. The mere operation of buying goods in their own country is one for which the Chinese have always been considered thoroughly qualified. It was a merely temporary con [...]
[...] coast. But the advantages to trade will be none the less, although the number of foreign sellers employed may not be greatly in creased ; and in all operations beyond those of merely buying and selling, the Chinese in the interior will be as dependent (although it is not quite certain when the fact will come into full play) on [...]
[...] voked is so general—that we feel impelled to recur to the subject. The purity and the independence of the bench are synonymous terms. Where the judges are the mere creatures of authority they are likely to be its servile tools. In th s country the profound confidence which everybody feels in the judiciary is based upon the knowledge that it [...]
[...] ing statements contained in the first, it being explained that the Christians had not, after all, been put to death, but merely torn from their homes and families and deported to a distant province. These accounts were not only published in the Nagasaki Times and the China papers, but were confirmed [...]
[...] be looked upon as in any way binding me to treat the matter as one of debt, as I shall hold myself perfectly at liberty to deal with the matter as one of a much more serious character than a mere debt, if it be not at once satisfactorily arranged.” Mr. Kaye, the resident manager of the other bank, had had a con [...]
[...] tain it (Lick barrow v. Mason, 2 T. R., 70). But in this case, at the time of the assignment, Maclean had not possession of the documents; nothing was advanced on the faith of them. There is merely a general description of documents expected to arrive, without knowing their contents or how far they might be limited or qualified. The property [...]
[...] that ships were taken out and in the dock by men employed for the purpose by either the owners of the vessel or shipwrights, and that the dockmaster merely gave a general superintendence. For the defendants, Mr. Simpson was called, and he stated that on the night previous to the accident, he had told Captain Winchester, [...]
The London and China telegraph22.10.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 22. Oktober 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] being struck, and finally surrendering in a body—as it is now stated—without any final struggle, were mere decoy, ducks. That they had instructions to act in this manner, leading the Imperialists to suppose that they were following Saigo's real [...]
[...] all the world to herself, provincial jealousies and hatreds were the yeast which kept her from stagnation and decay, but when she rose to the dignity of becoming a nation, instead of a mere cluster of islands in the Pacific, national unity became of more importance to her than whether Choshiu should carry [...]
[...] 10,000, with 800 to 900 men employed in the gardens, but when they commence to turn out gambier something like 4,000 men will be required. The present plantations are mere experiments, and should they be successful there is no reason to doubt that there will not be less than 2,000 to 3,000 gardens shortly planted [...]
[...] memnon (str.), George Croshaw, Bon Accord; for Hamburg, Lord Macaulay ; for New York, Gold Hunter, Johanne, William Cobb, Gras mere, Aberlady; for San Francisco, Jubilee, A. S. Davis. At MANILA.—For London, Janet Ferguson; for Liverpool, Merwan jee Framjee; for Liverpool, via Cadiz, Leon (str.); for Santander, [...]
[...] the case, there can be no doubt that the opium question as raised by the Chinese Government is, in its most imme diately practical form, merely the question whether the Provincial officials or the Imperial authorities shall ob tain the squeezes raised upon it. If there is an increase [...]
[...] those who are bond ſide their suite, such as their secretaries, attachés, &c. but it seems out of all reason to claim the same privilege for a man who is merely in the position of a servant, and who is brought up for a breach of peace and good order, i.e., for a purely municipal offence. I very much doubt whether Am [...]
[...] who, on the resolution being taken in the year 1859 to rescind the interdict, were still forbidden to smoke the drug—the restriction has been regarded as a mere form of words, and a state of ignorance of any restriction being in force has continued to prevail. It is neces sary to observe, therefore, that the interdict against opium was [...]
[...] and exhortation. Beyond all this, if within a period of twenty years the practice is to have been wholly given up by the entire people, and actual results are to be obtained, not mere idle words, it is indispen sable that vigorous effect be given [to the resolution taken] without in sisting upon immediate results. This being the case, it must follow [...]
[...] 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 London and China telegraph04.01.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Januar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] operate exhibited by the lot holders mainly interested. 6. Irrespective, however, of any decision of the Supreme Court as to your mere legal obligations, his Excellency sees nothing in your com munication of the 29th ultimo, or in previous correspondence, to induce him to regard the marine lotholders as having yet fulfilled the original [...]
[...] remission of premiums or reduction of old rates. The construction of an insufficient wall has not morally cleared that obligation, nor would the mere fact of an inadequate wall having been constructed at a cheap rate without protest by the Surveyor-General terminate it. The actual test of experience could alone determine the sufficiency of such a work, though [...]
[...] to suppress investigation into his public acts. In making the remarks we then did we felt that in advocating the publicity of the debates in the Legislative Council we were merely expressing the common sentiment of all enlightened Englishmen; yet it affords us pleasure to be able to cite so great an authority as [...]
[...] tirely diverted from their original purpose, or to perish of inanition. The formation of such a body was not necessary, we should think, for the mere purpose of petitioning Par [...]
[...] may be referred to direct; but they can hardly expect Govern ment to sanction such a monstrous breach of etiquette, with nothing better than mere common sense to plead in extenuation of it. It is specially worthy of remark at a time like the present that all the memorialists agree in taking a hopeful view of the [...]
[...] Great Britain had been profitable neither to the North China Company nor to the underwriters at home, and if they had been profitable to the “Canton" (as the general agents averred) it must have been by a mere matter of chance, since the business of the “North China” and of the “Canton" are conducted on exactly the same principles as regards ac [...]
The London and China telegraph13.07.1874
  • Datum
    Montag, 13. Juli 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] season for this class. We have not as yet seen enough of the crop to be able to express an opinion as to the quality of it, and would at pre sent merely remark that we consider the Chonsowkis nice Teas. The steamers Agamemnon, Glenfalloch, Glenartney, Hong Kong, Cawdor Castle, and Gordon Castle are here waiting to load for London ; £5 10s. [...]
[...] late Administration of the Straits from a thorough investi gation, or who would refuse to produce the correspondence and papers which could throw light upon it, merely pleaded ilty to it. The Earl of KIMBERLEY, the late Colonial ś, in reply, said that Lord STANLEY had evidently [...]
[...] office had been watchful over its interests. With regard to the question of presents, he would only observe that the defence offered by the noble earl (the Earl of Carnarvon) merely stated that which was stated in the letter to the Straits Times, which he himself had read to the House ; and he did say that if the Government believed that letter to be a [...]
[...] served too much the purposes of pleasure yachts, and the item of “travel ling expenses” in the Colonial Budget was one which required the atten tion of the Colonial-office. But it was not merely the large sums thus taken from the public purse for private purposes which attracted atten tion and excited universal reprobation, there was the manner in which [...]
[...] lation still more than liquor in England ; and the conduct of the British Government in this respect had been very severely commented upon by French writers. Now, in all that he had said he had merely repeated what had been matter of public fame for a long time in the colony and among colonial men at home, and he trusted that he should [...]
[...] ministration of the Straits from a thorough investigation, or who would refuse to produce the correspondence and papers which could throw light upon it, merely pleaded guilty for it. To say they would have no inquiry meant that the late Straits Administration was unable to [...]
The London and China telegraph17.04.1871
  • Datum
    Montag, 17. April 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] in direct correspondence with those of the Russian Navigation and Trading Company, as well as those of the Austrian Lloyd. Taken merely per se, this intelligence is highly gratifying. It shows that the spirit of Muscovite enterprise is fairly aroused at last. It clearly proves that Russia has sufficient courage and foresight to bear without [...]
[...] love of sharp dealing, the same sluggish, unwarlike temperament, the same childish superstition, the same jealousy of innovation and of foreign influence, nay, even the same mere animal love of gross pleasures, of eating ſat substances, and drinking vast quantities of tea. Between two such races the bond of brotherhood is already [...]
[...] promised) is erected. In discussing the question of the second sum of Tls. 130,000 the bishop gives way to his indignation, and says that the mere idea of receiving this “price of blood” makes him shudder. “We will not accept this,” he says, because “when missionaries or Sisters of Charity [...]
[...] that Protestant missionaries, from the supposition that they are weak in numbers and devoid of influential support at home and abroad, are made merely a convenient object for accusations which would light better on the heads of others. Allow me in very brief recapitulation to notice these charges. I [...]
[...] by the opium wars. And the Tientsin massacre was, I believe, merely a sudden outburst of a long-cherished hatred against all foreigners, merchants, and missionaries alike. [...]
[...] It is, no doubt, a matter for grave doubt whether Christianity gains by rights extorted through war. But as cautious policy is the order of the day in dealing with China, I would merely suggest that it is ex tremely hazardous and impolitic to attempt to invalidate, either by newspapers, by anonymous letters, or in high debate, the rights gua [...]
[...] in China are regarded by the officials. But the writer before us thinks the missionaries mistaken in assuming that they are ob jects of hatred merely as foreigners, and not especially as mis sionaries, and equally so in believing that, even granting some of the hostility is directed against missionaries as a body, those of [...]
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