The Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review, Volume 141846 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 22
... nature has given a peculiarity of surface , as elevation , depression , a dry or a moist soil , etc. , present any correspondencies in any relative proportion of persons , at the different ages , to each other . Though the boundaries of ...
... nature has given a peculiarity of surface , as elevation , depression , a dry or a moist soil , etc. , present any correspondencies in any relative proportion of persons , at the different ages , to each other . Though the boundaries of ...
Page 23
... nature . With regard to the concession that has been previously mentioned , that recent and rapid growth of a state in population , corresponds with a greater relative proportion of persons in early life , in many instances ; it may be ...
... nature . With regard to the concession that has been previously mentioned , that recent and rapid growth of a state in population , corresponds with a greater relative proportion of persons in early life , in many instances ; it may be ...
Page 24
... nature , that , if every death that had ever occurred in it had been recorded , and its age , we should be able to deduce therefrom the true ex- pectation of life , in years , because so great a proportion of the population is young ...
... nature , that , if every death that had ever occurred in it had been recorded , and its age , we should be able to deduce therefrom the true ex- pectation of life , in years , because so great a proportion of the population is young ...
Page 29
... nature subservient to art . The streams have been arrested in their precipitous fall to the sea , and compelled to toil , to spin , and to weave . The boulders and ledges which defaced the fields have been lifted from their beds to ...
... nature subservient to art . The streams have been arrested in their precipitous fall to the sea , and compelled to toil , to spin , and to weave . The boulders and ledges which defaced the fields have been lifted from their beds to ...
Page 50
... natural growth in the manner to which we have referred , the sinking of a strange vessel in the Hudson river , and the dispersion of the crew on its banks , giving rise to the conjecture that it was a piratical craft , may have come to ...
... natural growth in the manner to which we have referred , the sinking of a strange vessel in the Hudson river , and the dispersion of the crew on its banks , giving rise to the conjecture that it was a piratical craft , may have come to ...
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Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
100 catties ad valorem American amount annual bales bank bark bbls bill of exchange bill of lading Blossman Boston brig canal capital census cent China citizens clerks coal commerce consumed consumption cost cotton Court customs debt district duty east England English Erie Erie Canal established export favor feet foreign France German gold Hanse Towns hundred important increase interest iron Island July Kidd labor land Lanfear letters loans manufactured Massachusetts mercantile Mercantile Library merchants miles molasses nations operation Orleans paid Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia plaintiffs population ports post-office pounds present principles produce Railroad railways received revenue river ship silver specie spirit sugar tariff tariff of 1842 thousand dollars tion tonnage tons Total trade treaty United vessels volume western whole wool York Zollverein
Popular passages
Page 562 - ... and may take possession thereof, either by themselves or by others acting for them, and dispose of the same at their will, paying such dues only as the inhabitants of the country wherein the said goods are shall be subject to pay in like cases.
Page 486 - ... in the sum of five thousand dollars, for the faithful performance of such duties.
Page 326 - The days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years : Yet is their strength labor and sorrow, for is soon cut off, and we fly away.
Page 563 - ... and further until the expiration of two years after either of the High Contracting Parties shall have given notice to the other of its wish to terminate the same...
Page 449 - That below such rate discrimination may be made descending, in the scale of duties; or, for imperative reasons, the article may be placed in the list of those free from all duty.
Page 96 - ... to the superintendent of customs, who, in order to prevent fraud on the revenue, shall cause examination to be made, by suitable officers, to see that the duties paid on such goods as...
Page 96 - All which being done, on the arrival in port of the vessel in which the goods are laden, everything being found on examination there to correspond, she shall be permitted to break bulk, and land the said goods, without being subject to the payment of any additional duty thereon. But if, on such examination, the Superintendent of Customs shall detect any fraud on the revenue in the case, then the goods shall be subject to confiscation by the Chinese Government.
Page 96 - It shall be lawful for the officers or citizens of the United States to employ scholars and people of any part of China without distinction of persons, to teach any of the languages of the empire, and to assist in literary labors ; and the persons so employed shall not, for that cause, be subject to any injury on the part either of the government or of individuals : and it shall in like manner be lawful for citizens of the United States to purchase all manner of books in China.
Page 56 - The object of this institute is, as stated in its constitution, " the promotion and encouragement of manufactures, and the mechanic and useful arts, by the establishment of popular lectures on the sciences connected with them ; by the formation of a cabinet of models and minerals, and a library ; by offering premiums on all subjects deemed worthy of encouragement ; by examining all new inventions submitted to them ; and by such other means as they may judge expedient.
Page 255 - During the general lassitude of mechanical exertion which succeeded the American Revolution, the utility of steam-engines appears to have been forgotten; but the subject afterward started into very general notice in a form in which it could not possibly be attended with success. A sort of mania began to prevail, which, indeed, has not yet entirely subsided, for impelling boats by steamengines.