Office Sentence Examples

office
  • I've repaired the computers in your office, too.

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  • All my mail goes to a post office box.

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  • From the window of his office, the path was clearly visible.

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  • Alex decided to build a room upstairs for his office, out of the reach of Destiny's exploring hands.

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  • Her father looks in at us morning and evening as he goes to and from his office, and sees her contentedly stringing her beads or making horizontal lines on her sewing-card, and exclaims, "How quiet she is!"

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  • Alpatych went to the shops, to government offices, to the post office, and to the Governor's.

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  • She peeked around the door again just in time to see him walk into the office and close the door.

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  • The return address was the Doctor's office in Chicago.

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  • Well, he has a home office and he goes there pretty often, but I can't figure out what he's doing.

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  • She left the post office feeling better about Russell Cade than she did about herself.

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  • We moved to Howie's office where she spread out the charts and papers.

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  • By the time Eisenhower left office, this had changed, and a dedicated military industry existed.

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  • With every step up to the office where Señor Medena waited, he dreaded the conversation.

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  • Darting down the stairs, she ran to the stage office, arriving as the driver was preparing to climb into the seat.

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  • When picking up her mail at the post office, she often talked to Adrena.

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  • I am in no hurry to resign my office and be planted, you may be sure.

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  • When he reached Kiev he sent for all his stewards to the head office and explained to them his intentions and wishes.

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  • The case, as represented by the offended parties, was that, after seizing the transports, Major Denisov, being drunk, went to the chief quartermaster and without any provocation called him a thief, threatened to strike him, and on being led out had rushed into the office and given two officials a thrashing, and dislocated the arm of one of them.

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  • Since his current office was directly across from their bedroom, it seemed a better place for babies that Alex said could be born early.

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  • As she passed his office, she glanced through the open door.

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  • If I hadn't been summoned to Detective Jackson's office, I would have gone there anyway.

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  • During his campaign and his time in office, the extent of the effect of his polio was kept from the public, but the fact he had the disease was commonly known.

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  • When medical records leave the paper folders of the doctor's office and become highly standardized, more analysis can be done.

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  • He works from home and has a night job remotely monitoring real-time security cameras after hours at an office building.

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  • The system had an office, Overseer of the Poor, in each of 1,500 parishes.

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  • In the offices and shops and at the post office everyone was talking about the army and about the enemy who was already attacking the town, everybody was asking what should be done, and all were trying to calm one another.

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  • Is it for my own pleasure that I am at the farm or in the office from morning to night?

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  • They moved Alex's office upstairs and began work on the nursery.

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  • Señor Medena asked Carmen and Alex to come to his office with him.

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  • She walked hesitantly to his office.

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  • The post office might know something.

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  • This isn't an office.

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  • Cynthia ushered the group down the hall to their office, out of earshot and out of sight.

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  • Looking around, she spotted his office and went in, uninvited.

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  • Dean knew Fred O'Connor was scheduled for release and that necessitated a dreaded trip to the sheriff's office.

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  • He filled a thermos of coffee—no one could drink Weller's brew—and wasted no time in arriving at the sheriff's office.

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  • Beat Fitzgerald in the election and then start your term of office chasing down some ancient murder if you want.

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  • Most of the lodgers were about their daily activities, with Fred off to the post office, Maria doing her duties with her usual exuberance, and the Deans hovering close by.

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  • I took the key from the office and made a copy.

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  • He stood and headed for the door, shutting off the light as he left his home office.

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  • Catching him up on things at the office had been simple enough, as someone was there to visit him several times a week.

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  • Alex was finishing supper with his family when the telephone rang in his office.

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  • He strode to his office and picked up the telephone receiver of the land line.

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  • Alex glanced out the office door cautiously.

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  • She pulled up Dr. Wynn's office number on her cell, tempted to invite him to the beach this weekend instead of Logan.

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  • Dr. Wynn stood in the middle of his office.

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  • With a deep breath, Wynn turned away and retreated to his office.

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  • There was no computer, no office supplies on the other side.

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  • The black lady's tone left no imagination to what she thought of the latest deadbeat mom in her office.

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  • She'd spent several hours in his office talking to a dead man?

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  • The death dealer stood at the edge of the shadows as he had across from the doctor's office, waiting.

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  • She sat in the general manager's office of the fast food joint where she'd worked for six months.

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  • The office was small but clean and smelled of fried food.

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  • On her way back to her room, she poked her head into Kris.s secretary.s office.

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  • Hoping they.d fix his Rhyn problem for him, he entered the castle and headed straight to the office of his personal secretary.

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  • Another idea emerged from his dark thoughts, and he trotted out of the secretary.s office and to Katie.s chamber.

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  • We haven.t been able to record everyone.s names yet, but what we have is in the guestbook in the office, down that hall, last door on the right, the woman replied, pointing to a hallway behind her.

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  • She maneuvered through sculptures and other exhibits on the floor to the small office in the back.

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  • Kevin crossed his office to the small safe and drew out a small pile of cash.

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  • Comfortable in the plush office chair, she propped her feet up on her desk and continued to sketch until the picture began to look as she wanted it to.

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  • He kissed Cynthia good-bye and strolled the sun-lit streets the short distance to Sheriff Jake Weller's office behind the courthouse.

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  • By 1913, the post office was closed and the town had dwindled to two dozen remaining souls, and before long, it was left to indigenous wildlife and the spirits of a boisterous past.

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  • He gave his stepson an I-told-you-so look and retreated to the Dean's office and quarters in the rear.

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  • The trio sat around the office desk, looking over one another's shoulders at the neat handwriting in the old notebook.

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  • She gestured toward the leather sofa against the office wall.

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  • The sofa in the office would be fine and you could leave the door to your bedroom open, just a pinch.

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  • First off, I have to go to the Post Office.

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  • I understand opportunities were limited a century ago but surely she could have been a school teacher or office clerk or something above a brothel prostitute.

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  • They're paying us for tranquility, not to witness your domestic problems, which should be handled in private, in a lawyer's office.

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  • Donnie joined the old man in the back office.

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  • Dean put out the office light and undressed for bed.

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  • I run a good office, but I do it my way, but my way isn't good enough now-a-days.

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  • He wandered back to his office, listening to only silence as he passed Ryland's door.

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  • Sheet-covered, her remains lay in Dean's office, only feet from where she had lain naked against him so short a time before.

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  • Dean tried to ignore Edith Shipton's body as he passed the temporary catafalque erected in his office.

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  • I have to go by a lawyer's office.

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  • Donald isn't coming to the lawyer's office because he doesn't want to see Shipton if he doesn't have to.

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  • He dialed Sheriff Jake Weller's office while Fred continued to question him, but he waved him off with a shake of his head.

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  • No, I should get home to shower and change, then head to the office.

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  • Maybe I'll go into the office for a while.

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  • He's at the office; he'll be here shortly.

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  • He had a few things to do at the office.

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  • I thought I would head to the office around eight forty-five.

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  • The drive to Connor's office passed uncomfortably.

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  • Connor had started back at the office and returned home from court.

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  • With the glass in one hand and the letter in another, he sauntered into his office.

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  • Loosening his tie, he dropped into the leather office chair and picked up the envelope.

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  • Retracing his steps to the office, he retrieved the picture.

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  • The nickname had been given him by three other salesmen at the office.

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  • He just came from the office.

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  • I haven't given you enough to keep the office entertained for a while?

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  • I was concerned that you would insist on checking out too early, so I stopped by the office to see what arrangements could be made for paying your bill.

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  • I went from the office to class and then from class to the plane.

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  • She woke early the next morning and dressed, making a trip to the office before Alex arrived.

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  • Gerald leaned against the office wall with one shoulder, watching him absently.

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  • After he left, Alex picked up the picture and sat down in the plush office chair for the last time.

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  • Few pleasant memories lay behind him in that office.

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  • Alex turned toward the stairs, avoiding the front office.

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  • You need me to contact any of your companions or anyone else from the office?

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  • She wiped her face and whirled, following the doc into his office.

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  • I turned her into something I could use in my office to open more doors for our cause.

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  • Just the barracks and office areas had been attacked.

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  • Few people were out in the streets, but the front office area of the building held several women who had turned it into a living room.

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  • She changed and placed her micro and vault into her pockets then followed Kelli out of the warehouse, through the front office space and into the street.

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  • We were then sent to the guidance office so they could work up a schedule for me.

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  • The motel consisted of 40 units on two floors, ten to either side of a main entrance that led to the office and restaurant.

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  • Dean muttered an apology to his superior and left the lieutenant's office.

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  • When Dean telephoned the office of World Wide Insurance Company, his luck was no better.

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  • Dean, unable to concentrate further on his files, pushed closed his desk drawer, packed a tape recorder in his briefcase, and left the office.

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  • Dean usually devoted the solitary time behind the wheel to sorting out details of a case, putting little facts in their slots like letters in a country post office.

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  • I'm surprised the office even bothered with a send off party.

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  • He replaced me in Scranton when I got this promotion here to the head office.

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  • The office said he wrapped it up Monday—was supposed to take off first thing Tuesday morning.

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  • How often was Byrne out of the office?

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  • Mayer turned to Dean as he and the detective moved back to Mayer's office.

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  • The vehicle was in police custody in Norfolk but the authorities there said it would be released to the World Wide local office shortly.

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  • He was in better shape than half the office, by Mayer's assessment.

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  • Mayer promised to send the full file with Byrne's picture from the now near-closing personnel office, located in another building.

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  • I wasn't even in the office yesterday.

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  • By the time he left the office for the ten-minute walk across the square to the courthouse, he felt com­fortable with the progress of the case.

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  • As Dean climbed the steep steps, Bobby Witherspoon from the District Attorney's office caught up with him.

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  • He got down on his knees, right there in my office.

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  • His office must have mixed his file up with someone else.

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  • That's pretty much the picture the local office gave me.

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  • The two detectives entered the office, and the clerk, a bored and balding retiree, looked up from a crossword puzzle and, recogniz­ing Hunter, frowned.

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  • His last day was Friday but he stuck around because Byrne was coming down from the head office with his last paycheck.

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  • The office confirmed he and Byrne went out to have a drink or three, just the two of them.

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  • The head office didn't think much of him either.

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  • We're checking with the Post Office for a change of address.

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  • The insurance boys at the local office are picking it up tonight.

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  • Looks like he recorded it when he got here, then put another 23 miles on it, running to the office and around town.

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  • We checked a couple of bars local to the World Wide office but they were crazy-busy after-work places and no one remembers diddly.

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  • A little bell jingled in the empty office as Dean entered and an unshaven man in his sixties took his time sauntering out from behind a curtain, hoisting up his suspenders as he moved behind the desk.

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  • The door to Leland Anderson's office was closed when Dean arrived, and Lenny Harrigan was the only detective at his desk.

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  • He turned on his heels and returned to his office.

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  • In view of the lateness of the hour, Dean pulled into a pay phone and called the office to check his messages.

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  • He called Ethel Rosewater first, catching her at the office.

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  • Dean stopped by the office later in the afternoon to clean up a few details as he wouldn't be back in the office for two days— tomorrow, the safe house, Thursday a day off.

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  • Dean wished he'd brought the picture of Jeffrey Byrne that World Wide had recently sent but it remained in the case file at the office.

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  • It's most likely the girl from his office, Cece what's-her-name.

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  • I know that office.

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  • He couldn't keep his hands off half the office.

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  • They parked close to the building and, leaving the engine running, Dean made a dash for the office.

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  • There was an office pool on how long it would be before Willie would float in.

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  • Dean eased into the latest news by first telling of Winston's unsuccessful inquiry about a Post Office forwarding address before mentioning his conversation with Mrs. Glass.

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  • The Jeffrey Byrne Mayer eulogized was a far different man than Mayer had described in his Philadelphia office.

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  • And it certainly didn't help the mood of the office.

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  • Willie Wassermann had popped up, so to speak, on Thursday morning, so Dean was 65 dollars richer from the office pool.

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  • I charge him for the office space and clerical help but we operate independently.

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  • But the wife didn't come to the office so he was probably faking it.

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  • He came in after the office was closed, put his money in an envelope and was gone in the morning.

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  • Sighing deeply, he told Rita he was finished for the day, jogged down the stairs to his car, and fought the late afternoon crosstown traffic to Ethel Rosewater's office.

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  • The two women in the outer office of the Rosewater and Atherton suite looked up and started to say something as Dean waltzed by to Ethel's closed-door chamber.

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  • Dean hurriedly left the office before Ethel showed.

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  • Ms. Nightingale murmured a room number and motioned down a hall crowded with bodies like the day after Gettysburg while white-coated figures strolled among the moaning, clip boards in hand With wide-eyed Fred following behind, Dean ran the gauntlet until he found the room, a small office packed with five men and a lot of smoke, three of them in Philadelphia Police uniforms.

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  • He was like from the head shed— the home office.

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  • When I checked with the Sentinel, they told me the subscription remained open but there weren't any papers lying around unclaimed, yet you said there wasn't any forwarding notice filed with the Post Office.

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  • It was a mistake typing the note—Jeffrey Byrne's office said he didn't type.

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  • You worked for the contrac­tor who built the World Wide office building in Scranton so you were at the opening dedication party there.

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  • Alex wrote a check, pocketed the bill of sale and title, and then they all walked out of the office.

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  • He was heading for his office, so she decided to take the opportunity for some alone time of her own.

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  • Smiling, she went to his office and turned on the computer.

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  • Shutting the computer down, she left the office.

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  • Alex came out of his office, glanced at her and then retired to his recliner to read the newspaper.

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  • That evening he received a call in his office.

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  • When he came back out of the office he was smiling.

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  • She was cleaning out the refrigerator when the land line rang in the office.

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  • He strode back to his office and picked up the receiver.

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  • She sat in the doctor's office waiting for the results of the test, and when he came in smiling, she relaxed.

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  • The open floor plan ran from the living area through a kitchen to a formal dining room area that had been converted into an office on the other side.

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  • Alex glanced up from his computer when she walked into his office.

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  • Call the employment office.

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  • Monday morning while Felipa took the men riding and the children were coloring, Carmen used her new cell phone to call the employment office.

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  • Felipa watched the children while Carmen took Sam to the office.

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  • They were alone in his office at the time.

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  • In fact, he was spending more and more time in his office, working on his computer.

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  • Stopping by the employment office, she contracted for temporary help to put up the fence.

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  • After supper Alex went upstairs to work in his office.

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  • You were working in your office and I've done this before.

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  • She called the employment office and they rescheduled the three men they were going to send to help put up the fence.

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  • Alex was talking to a man in his office.

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  • The office was busy.

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  • Carmen walked out of the office without talking to anyone.

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  • Carmen's stomach twisted into a knot as she followed him upstairs to his office.

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  • He pointed to his office.

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  • We sat right up there in my office the day Morino died and you were the one who mentioned divorce, not me.

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  • The copper tray hit the bottom of the can with a loud clatter, spewing ashes into the stale office air.

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  • Mr. O'Hara wouldn't tolerate discord in the office.

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  • Even the smoggy Los Angeles air outside had to be better than the stale air in the office.

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  • The decision made, she marched from the room and locked her office door.

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  • I work at the real estate office downstairs from your suite.

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  • Was her position at the office merely the creation of a doting father?

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  • That will give me two days to get my office organized.

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  • Things have been so hectic here at the office, I thought...

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  • How are things going at the office?

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  • Mr. O'Hara erupted from his office and knelt beside her.

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  • But Los Angeles wasn't all of California, and Megan was toying with the idea of opening another office further north.

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  • Did you check the office?

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  • She explored one hallway and found two guest bedrooms and an office, all decorated in the same cold, impersonal colors.

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  • Bored after another tour around, she returned to the office to examine the books lining one wall.

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  • It's like going to the doctor's office.

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  • He led her out of the open bay into an office area.

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  • But this latter term of office was destined to be even shorter than his former one had been.

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  • In July 1865, when politics had shifted from the basis of the 1861 Constitution, he laid down office, and retired from public affairs.

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  • This office existed in the German kingdom of Otto the Great, and about this time it appears to have become an appanage of the archbishopric of Mainz.

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  • However this may be, during the 12th century the elector of Trier took the title of archchancellor for the kingdom of Arles, although it is doubtful if he ever performed any duties in connexion with this office.

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  • This threefold division of the office of imperial archchancellor was acknowledged in 1356 by the Golden Bull of the emperor Charles IV., but the duties of the office were performed by the elector of Mainz.

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  • He is said to have established the rule that any candidate for the office should meet and slay in single combat its holder at the time, who always went about armed with a drawn sword in anticipation of the struggle.

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  • Wade was appointed to the post of collector in the first instance, and after a short tenure of office was succeeded by Mr II.

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  • During his tenancy of office the system adopted at Shanghai was applied to the other treaty ports, so that when on Mr Lay's resignation Mr Hart was appointed inspector-general of foreign customs, he found himself at the head of an organization which collected a revenue of upwards of eight million taels per annum at fourteen treaty ports.

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  • The establishment of a post office in the town helped the town attract new businesses.

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  • Landing at Nice on the 24th of June 1848, he placed his sword at the disposal of Charles Albert, and, after various difficulties with the Piedmontese war office, formed a volunteer army 3000 strong, but shortly after taking the field was obliged, by the defeat of Custozza, to flee to Switzerland.

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  • No person holding a lucrative office under the state or the United States, no salaried officer of a railroad company, and no officer of any court of record is eligible for membership in either house.

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  • The agency by which these principles were introduced was the edicts of the praetor, an annual proclamation setting forth the manner in which the magistrate intended to administer the law during his year of office.

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  • This office he held until 1836, when he was consecrated bishop of the new see of Ripon.

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  • During his three years of office as resident he was able to render not a few valuable services to the Company; but it is more important to observe that his name nowhere occurs in the official lists of those who derived pecuniary profit from the necessities and weakness of the native court.

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  • Macaulay imputes this reduction to Hastings as a characteristic act of financial immorality; but in truth it had been expressly enjoined by the court of directors, in a despatch dated six months before he took up office.

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  • A new judicial office was created in the name of the Company, to which Sir Elijah Impey was appointed, though he never consented to draw the additional salary offered to him.

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  • A peerage was openly talked of as his due, while his own ambition pointed to some responsible office at home.

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  • With the crystallization of the feudal system in the 12th century the office of vidame, like that of avoue, had become an hereditary fief.

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  • In 1832 he was knighted, and after serving as one of the municipal corporations commissioners, became deputykeeper of the public records in 1838, holding this office until his death at Hampstead on the 6th of July 1861.

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  • He then joined Gambetta's cabinet as minister of commerce and the colonies, and in the 1883-85 cabinet of Jules Ferry he held the same office.

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  • The first series contained six essays, the most notable being that "On the office of a Chaplain," which throws much light on the position of a large section of the clergy at that time.

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  • In 1718 was published a new Communion Office taken partly from Primitive Liturgies and partly from the first English Reformed Common Prayer Book,..

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  • He was afterwards appointed the prince's envoy at Paris, where he remained till the decree of Napoleon, forbidding all persons born on the left side of the Rhine to serve any other state than France, compelled him to resign his office (IS'I).

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  • He resigned office on the 23rd of January 1 793, two days after the king's execution.

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  • An ardent opponent of Catholic Emancipation, he delivered in 1807 a speech on the subject which helped to give the deathblow to the Grenville administration, upon which he became chancellor of the exchequer under the duke of Portland, whom in 1809 he succeeded in the premiership. Notwithstanding that he had the assistance in the cabinet of no statesman of the first rank, he succeeded in retaining office till he was shot by a man named Bellingham, a bankrupt with a grievance, who had vainly applied to him for redress, in the lobby of the House of Commons on the 11th of May 1812.

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  • He was high sheriff of Wiltshire during 1647, and displayed much vigour in this office.

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  • He had been accused of vanity and ostentation in his office, but his reputation for ability and integrity as a judge was high even with his enemies.

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  • When the office increased in importance the mayors of the palace did not, as has been thought, pursue an identical policy.

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  • In this third part Aquinas discusses the person, office and work of Christ, and had begun to discuss the sacraments, when death put an end to his labours.

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  • The term "curate" in the present day is almost exclusively used to signify a clergyman who is assistant to a rector or vicar, by whom he is employed and paid; and a clerk in deacon's orders is competent to be licensed by a bishop to the office of such assistant curate.

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  • Many cases occur where such an office was hereditary; thus the family of Callias at Athens were proxeni of the Spartans.

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  • We find the office mentioned in a Corcyraean inscription dating probably from the 7th century B.C., and it continued to grow more important and frequent throughout Greek history.

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  • There is no proof that any direct emolument was ever attached to the office, while the expense and trouble entailed by it must often have been very great.

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    0
  • His rule was most energetic; but while he favoured the barbarians in the imperial service, and appointed them to high office, Valentinian, openly jealous of his minister, sought to surround himself with Romans.

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  • In 1653 he returned to London, and having denounced Cromwell for accepting the office of Lord Protector he was imprisoned.

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    0
  • Among the principal buildings are the First National bank, the immense Union station and the Saint Vincent hospital; besides several fine office and school buildings (including the beautiful manual training high school) and churches.

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  • He was now firmly established in the favour of the king, who gave him successively the abbacy of St Severin, in the diocese of Poitiers, the office of almoner to the dauphiness, and in 1685 the bishopric of Lavaur, from which he was in 1687 promoted to that of Nimes.

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  • Avicenna was even raised to the office of vizier; but the turbulent soldiery, composed of Kurds and Turks, mutinied against their nominal sovereign, and demanded that the new vizier should be put to death.

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    0
  • The fact that the kings were often absent from England, and that the justiciarship was held by great nobles or churchmen, made this office of an importance which at times threatened to overshadow that of the Crown.

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  • The roll is preserved in the record office, Dublin.

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  • Fenwick Williams. In 1861 he became director-general of engineers at the War Office, assisting General Milutin in the reorganization of the army.

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    0
  • The encyclical letter is accompanied by sixty-three resolutions (which include careful provision for provincial organization and the extension of the title "archbishop" to all metropolitans, a "thankful recognition of the revival of brotherhoods and sisterhoods, and of the office of deaconess," and a desire to promote friendly relations with the Eastern Churches and the various Old Catholic bodies), and the reports of the eleven committees are subjoined.

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  • He also was provost of Edinburgh at various times, and it is a remarkable instance of the esteem in which the lairds of Merchiston were held that three of them in immediate lineal succession repeatedly filled so important an office during perhaps the most memorable period in the history of the city.

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    0
  • In 1582 Sir Archibald was appointed master of the mint in Scotland, with the sole charge of superintending the mines and minerals within the realm, and this office he held till his death in 1608.

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    0
  • The office, Mark Napier states, is repeatedly mentioned in the family charters as appertaining to the "pultre landis" near the village of Dene in the shire of Linlithgow.

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    0
  • The pultrelands and the office were sold by John Napier in 1610 for 1700 marks.

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    0
  • The qualifications for the office were fixed in each town by a special law for that community (lex municipalis).

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  • The decuriones held office for life.

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    0
  • He holds his office ad vitam aut culpam; he cannot demit it or be deprived, of it without consent of the presbytery.

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  • He takes precedence, Primus inter pares, of all the members, and is recognized as the official head of the Church during his term of office.

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    0
  • This has led in some quarters to a desire that the moderator should be clothed with greater responsibility and have his period of office prolonged; should be made, in fact, more of a bishop in the Anglican sense of the word.

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    0
  • The duty of teaching and of administering the sacraments and of always presiding in church courts being strictly reserved to him invests his office with a dignity and influence greater than that of the elder.

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    0
  • They are laymen in that they have no right to teach or to dispense the sacraments, and on this account they fill an office in the Presbyterian Church inferior in rank and power to that of the pastors.

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  • To share with the minister such general oversight is not regarded by intelligent and influential laymen as an incongruous or unworthy office; but to identify the duties of the eldership, even in theory, with those of the minister is a sure way of deterring from accepting office many whose counsel and influence in the eldership would be invaluable.'

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    0
  • Presbyterian discipline is now entirely confined to exclusion from membership or from office.

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    0
  • By them he was to be ordained, after vowing to be true in office, faithful to the church system, obedient to the laws and to the civil government, and ready to exercise discipline without fear or favour.

    0
    0
  • When a church was first formed the office bearers were elected by the people, but there the power of the congregation ceased.

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    0
  • As a rule elders held office for only two years.

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    0
  • Cranmer held that the consecration of a bishop was an unnecessary rite, and not required by Scripture; that election and appointment to office were sufficient.

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    0
  • An act of the New Jersey legislature in 1895 created the office of township president, with power of appointment and veto.

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    0
  • In 1819 he removed with his parents to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he attended the local academy for two years, studied law in the office of his uncle, William Allen,' and in 1835 was admitted to the bar, becoming his uncle's law partner.

    0
    0
  • His term of office is six years, and neither he nor the vice-president is eligible for the next presidential term.

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    0
  • His period of office was marked by the rapid advance of Buenos Aires in population and prosperity, and by an expansion of trade that was unfortunately accompanied by financial extravagance.

    0
    0
  • He assumed office in October 1880.

    0
    0
  • Considering the circumstances in which General Roca assumed office, it must be admitted that he showed great moderation and used the practically absolute power that he possessed to establish a strong central government, and to initiate a national policy, which aimed at furthering the prosperity and development of the whole country.

    0
    0
  • Unfortunately the last two years of Roca's term of office were marked by two grave errors, which subsequently caused widespread suffering and distress throughout the country.

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    0
  • The Union Civica then decided to make a bold bid for freedom by attempting forcibly to eject Celman and his clique from office.

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    0
  • It is little wonder that, in these circumstances, the choice of a successor to Pellegrini, whose term of office expired in 1892, should have been felt to possess peculiar importance.

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    0
  • The population of Buenos Aires assembled in armed bodies with the avowed intention of ejecting the governor from office, and electing in his stead a man who would give them a just administration.

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    0
  • One of the first steps of President Roca, after his accession to office, was to arrange a meeting with the president of Chile at the Straits of Magellan.

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  • First there is the office or cabinet of the prefect for the general police (la police gnrale), with bureaus for various objects, such as the safety of the president of the republic, the regulation and order of public ceremonies, theatres, amusements and entertainments, &c.; secondly, the judicial police (la police judiciaire), with numerous bureaus also, in constant communication with the courts of judicature; thirdly, the administrative police (la police administrative) including bureaus, which superintend navigation, public carriages, animals, public health, &c. Concurrently with these divisions there is the municipal police, which comprises all the agents in enforcing police regulations in the streets or public thoroughfares, acting under the orders of a chief (chef de la police municipale) with a central bureau.

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    0
  • The naval prefect is assisted by a rearadmiral as chief of the staff (except at Lorient and Rochefort, where the office is filled by a captain), and a certain number of other officers, the special functions of the chief of the staff having relation principally to the efficien.cy and personnel of the fleet, while the major-general, who is usually a rear-admiral, is concerned chiefly with the materiel.

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    0
  • The ordnance department of the navy is carried on by a large detachment of artillery officers and artificers provided by the war office for this special duty.

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    0
  • He was appointed in 1911 to succeed Earl Grey as governor-general of Canada, retiring from this office in 1916.

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    0
  • Since July 1899, when the post office in Salem was made a sub-station of that of Winston, the cities (officially two independent municipalities) have been known by postal and railway authorities as Winston-Salem.

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    0
  • Although holding an office of subordinate rank, he was the chief defender of the government in the House of Commons, and during the time that Pitt was in opposition had to bear the brunt of his attacks.

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    0
  • But in 1756, when the government was evidently approaching its fall, an unexpected vacancy occurred in the chief justiceship of the king's bench, and he claimed the office, being at the same time raised to the peerage as Baron Mansfield.

    0
    0
  • His chief celebrity, however, is founded upon the consummate ability with which he discharged the civil duties of his office.

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    0
  • Driven from it in 1795, he was restored by Lucien Bonaparte, during whose time of office he served as secretary to the prefecture of the Upper Marne.

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    0
  • From England he passed to the Low Countries, Germany, Switzerland and Italy, and on his return to the Peninsula in 1796 was appointed official translator to the foreign office.

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    0
  • In 1808 Moratin was involved in the fall of Godoy, but in 1811 accepted the office of royal librarian under Joseph Bonaparte - a false step, which alienated from him all sympathy and compelled him to spend his last years in exile.

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    0
  • The highest office in connexion with the Cinque Ports is that of the lord warden, who also acts as governor of Dover Castle, and has a maritime jurisdiction (vide infra) as admiral of the ports.

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    0
  • The emoluments of the office are confined to certain insignificant admiralty droits.

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    0
  • Walmer Castle was for long the official residence of the lord warden, but has, since the resignation of Lord Curzon in 1903, ceased to be so used, and those portions of it which are of historic interest are now open to the public. George, prince of Wales (lord warden, 1903-1907), was the first lord warden of royal blood since the office was held by George, prince of Denmark, consort of Queen Anne.

    0
    0
  • King in his office of Admiralty, 1831, 2 Hagg.

    0
    0
  • Dr Phillimore's patent had a grant of the "place or office of judge official and commissary of the court of admiralty of the Cinque Ports, and their members and appurtenances, and to be assistant to my lieutenant of Dover castle in all such affairs and business concerning the said court of admiralty wherein yourself and assistance shall be requisite and necessary."

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    0
  • The office of marshal in the high court is represented in this court by a serjeant, who also bears a silver oar.

    0
    0
  • Gesner was then rector, an office to which Ernesti succeeded in 1734.

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    0
  • The principal square is the Plaza de Bolivar, the conventional centre of the city, in which stands a bronze equestrian statue of Bolivar, and on which face the cathedral, archbishop's residence, Casa Amarilla, national library, general post office and other public offices.

    0
    0
  • In England this power was frequently employed during the 18th century and was confirmed by the Post Office Act of 1837; its most notorious use being, perhaps, the opening of Mazzini's letters in 1844.

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    0
  • In 1667 Theophile de Besiade, marquis d'Avaray, obtained the office of grand bailiff of Orleans, which was held by several of his descendants after him.

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  • There are some 6686 post-offices throughout the Commonwealth, or about one office to every 600 persons.

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    0
  • The judicial powers are vested in a high court and other federal courts, and the federal judges hold office for life or during good behaviour.

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    0
  • It was not long, however, before the party itself became divided on the fiscal question; and a Protectionist government coming into power, about half the Labour members gave it consistent support and enabled it to maintain office for about three years, the party as a political unit being thus destroyed.

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    0
  • During the first six years of federation there were five ministries; the tenure of office under the threeyearly system was naturally uncertain, and this uncertainty was reflected in the proposals of whatever ministry was in office.

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  • He served on various royal commissions, and from 1877 was the chairman of the managing body of the meteorological office.

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    0
  • Among other prominent buildings are the court house, the post office and the city hall.

    0
    0
  • Lowe was a rather cut-anddry economist, who prided himself that during his four years of office he took twelve millions off taxation; but later opinion has hardly accepted his removal of the shilling registration duty on corn (1869) as good statesmanship, and his failures are remembered rather than his successes.

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  • In 1873 he was transferred to the Home Office, but in 1874 the government resigned.

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    0
  • The former Royal Dockyard was made over to the War Office in 1872 and converted into stores, wharves for the loading of troopships, &c. The Royal Artillery Barracks, facing Woolwich Common, originally erected in 1775, has been greatly extended at different times, and consists of six ranges of Brick building, including a church in the Italian Gothic style erected in 1863, a theatre, and a library in connexion with the officers' mess-room.

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    0
  • This charter provided that no war could be declared nor marriage concluded by the sovereign, nor taxes raised without the assent of the states, that natives were alone eligible for high office, and that the national language should be used in public documents.

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  • At the time of her accession to office Charles changed the form of administration by the creation of three separate councils, those of State, of Finance, and the Privy Council.

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  • During his term of office he aided Publius Clodius in bringing about the exile of Cicero.

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    0
  • The Straits Settlements - Singapore, Malacca and Penang - were ruled from India until 1867, when they were erected into a crown colony under the charge of the Colonial Office.

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    0
  • Notwithstanding this, in 1849 he accepted the office of minister of religion and education, which he held in 1860 under the autocratic and centralizing administration of Schwarzenberg and Bach.

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    0
  • The crisis of 1860, by which the office he held was abolished, was the end of his official career; for the rest of his life he was very prominent as the leader of the Federalist party in Bohemia.

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    0
  • There was a gild merchant and also a town bailiff, but the latter office was of little real significance and was soon dropped.

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    0
  • Women have the right to vote in all elections relating to schools and school officers in cities, towns and graded school districts, and also the right to be elected to any local school position or to the office of township clerk.

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  • Died in office on the 7th of February 1870; succeeded by the lieutenant-governor.

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  • A large part of the modern town lies south of the square de la Republique; in this quarter are the law courts, hotel de ville, post office and other public buildings.

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    0
  • On retiring from office Seward returned to the practice of law.

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  • The Protector and the council together were given a life tenure of office, with a large army and a settled revenue sufficient for public needs in time of peace; while the clauses relating to religion "are remarkable as laying down for the first time with authority a principle of toleration," 2 though this toleration did not apply to Roman Catholics and Anglicans.

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    0
  • By a bull of 1264 Urban made the festival, hitherto practically confined to the diocese of Liege, obligatory on the whole Church,' and a new office for the festival was written by Thomas Aquinas himself.

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  • A post office was established here in 182 9, and the village was incorporated in 1861.

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    0
  • Connexion is made into the office (or to the underground system, as is often the case) from the aerial wire by means of a copper conductor, insulated with gutta-percha, which passes through a " leading in " cup, whereby leakage is prevented between the wire and the pole.

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    0
  • The perforation of the paper when done by hand is usually performed by means of small mallets, but at the central telegraph office in London, and at other large offices, the keys are only used for opening air-valves, the actual punching being done by pneumatic pressure.

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    0
  • An experimental printer constructed about the middle of 1908 by the British Post Office, operated successfully at the rate of 210 words (1260 letters) per minute.

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    0
  • Scudamore, second secretary to the Post Office, to inquire and report whether the electric telegraph service could be beneficially worked by the Post Office, and whether it would entail any very large expenditure on the.

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    0
  • With regard to the statement that the companies had installed competitive systems and had expended capital needlessly, it was found by the Post Office authorities that in 1865 less than 2000 m.

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    0
  • The excess expenditure caused the Post Office during two or three years to make temporary application of Savings Banks' balances to telegraph expenditure, an expedient which was disapproved of by both the Treasury and the House of Commons.

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    0
  • Probably no more arduous task was ever thrown upon a public department than that imposed on the Post Office by the transfer.

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    0
  • At that date the superintending and managing staffs of the Post Office comprised 590 persons, the staff of the old companies with only about one-third of the traffic having been 534 persons.

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    0
  • A further cause has been competition offered by the telephone service, but against this the Post Office has received royalties from telephone companies and revenue from trunk telephone lines.

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    0
  • The offices of the Submarine Company in London, Dover, Ramsgate, East Dean and Jersey were purchased by the Post Office, as well as the cable ship; and the staff, 370 in number, was taken over by the government.

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    0
  • In 1868 the International Bureau of Telegraphic Administrations was constituted at Berne, and a convention was formulated by which a central office was appointed to collect and publish information and generally to promote the interests of international telegraphy.

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  • In these circumstances, when, as frequently will be the case, the person calling desires to be put in communication with a subscriber who belongs to another section, connexions must be established in the office between the two sections; this necessitates additional switchboard arrangements, and also increases the time required to put subscribers in communication with one another.

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  • When one of two subscribers connected together by this arrangement talks, the Exchange From the Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal.

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  • At the Post Office a record operator replies and takes particulars of the connexion, and these are entered upon a ticket.

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    0
  • Both the Bell and the Edison Companies opened negotiations with the Post Office for the sale of their patents to the government, but without success.

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    0
  • The licences were for 31 years, expiring in 1922, without any provision for purchase or compensation, and were subject to the payment of a minimum royalty to the Post Office of 10 per cent.

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    0
  • The Post Office at the same time established several telephone exchanges in provincial towns so as to enable the PostmasterGeneral " to negotiate with the telephone companies in a satisfactory manner for licences."

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    0
  • The Postmaster-General (Mr Fawcett) declared that he would issue no more licences unless the licensees agreed to sell telephones to the Post Office.

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    0
  • The Post Office proposed to engage in active competition with the telephone companies, but the Treasury at that time opposed this policy on the ground that the state should at most be ready to supplement and not to supersede private enterprise.

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    0
  • The licences within restricted areas having proved unsuitable for the growing business, public opinion appealed to the Post Office to issue new licences applicable to the whole country.

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    0
  • The Post Office reserved the right to compete either directly or by granting other licences, and it was under no obligation to grant wayleaves.

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    0
  • The National Telephone Company again applied to parliament for powers to lay wires underground; public discontent with inadequate telephone services was expressed, and at the same time the competition of the telephone with the Post Office telegraph became more manifest.

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    0
  • It compelled the companies to sell their trunk wires to the Post Office, leaving the local exchanges in the hands of the companies.

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    0
  • The trunk wires were transferred to the Post Office in pursuance of the policy of 1892, but for all practical purposes the local authorities had vetoed the permission of the government to the company to lay wires underground.

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    0
  • While considering that a really efficient Post Office service would afford the best means for securing such competition, it recommended that general, immediate and effective competition should at once be undertaken either by the Post Office or by local authorities.

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    0
  • In short, all-round competition was authorized, and the Post Office decided to establish a telephone system in London in competition with the company.

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    0
  • The Telegraph Act 1899, while providing for intercommunication between the telephone systems of the local authorities and the company, did not give the Post Office the right to demand intercommunication between its exchanges and those of the company.

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    0
  • The Post Office co-operated with the London County Council to put difficulties in the way of the company which had placed wires underground in London with the consent of the local road authorities.

    0
    0
  • The government policy of 1899 was abandoned in London, the Post Office making an agreement with the company in regard to the London business.

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    0
  • The company consented to free intercommunication between its subscribers and those of the Post Office, and undertook to charge rates identical with those charged by the Post Office.

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    0
  • The Tunbridge Wells and Swansea municipal undertakings were subsequently sold to the National Telephone Company, and the Glasgow and Brighton undertakings to the Post Office.

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    0
  • The effect of the unsettled policy of the Post Office until 1905 and of the difficulties created by the local authorities was that the National Telephone Company was never able to do its best to develop the enterprise on the most efficient lines.

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    0
  • Telephone subscribers may also obtain the services of an express messenger by telephoning to the nearest post office connected with the exchange.

    0
    0
  • The gross income for the year 1907 amounted to £2,702,228, of which £257,920 was paid to the Post Office in respect of royalties.

    0
    0
  • Free intercommunication was established by the agreement between the subscribers of the company and those of the Post Office, and a scale of charges was adopted or arranged to be agreed as binding on both the Post Office and the company.

    0
    0
  • It had paid the Post Office in royalties already £1,848,000, and the Post Office under the agreement would step into the business in 1911 by merely paying for the plant employed.

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    0
  • Inasmuch as the debenture stocks and preference shares would have to be redeemed in 1911 at premiums ranging from 3 to 5 per cent., the state would have to pay the company £253,000 in excess of the total of the outstanding securities in order to enable the ordinary shares to receive par, and in the council's view this payment would diminish the p robability of the Post Office being able to afford a substantial reduction in the telephone charges.

    0
    0
  • The total number of subscribers to the Post Office provincial exchanges on the 31st of March 1907 (excluding those in Glasgow and Brighton) was 10,010, and the number of telephones rented was 12,006.

    0
    0
  • The sum received by the Post Office as rental in respect of private wires was £183,000.

    0
    0
  • The years' working of the whole telephone system of the Post Office showed a balance of £451,787 after payment of the working expenses, while the estimated amount required to provide for depreciation of plant and interest at 3 per cent.

    0
    0
  • There were 425 post office call-offices in the London area.

    0
    0
  • In addition to an initial endowment by the state, part of the annual income of the fund is furnished in various forms by the state (principally by making over a proportion of the profits of the Post Office Savings Bank), and part by the premiums of the workmen.

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    0
  • Owing to the comnaratively small amount of letters, it is found possible to have a travelling post office on all principal trains (while almost every train has a travelling sorter, for whom a compartment is reserved) without a late fee being exacted in either case.

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    0
  • Victor Emmanuel regretfully signed the peace preliminaries, adding, however, pour ce qui me concerne (which meant that he made no undertaking with regard to central Italy), and Cavour resigned office.

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    0
  • The French regular troops were withdrawn from Rome in December 1866; but the pontifical forces were largely recruited in France and commanded by officers of the imperial army, and service under the pope was considered by the French war office as equivalent to service in France.

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    0
  • The secretary-general of the Italian foreign office, Baron Blanc, who had accompanied General Cadorna to Rome, was received almost daily by Cardinal Antonelli, papal secretary of state, in order to settle innumerable questions arising out of the Italian occupation.

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    0
  • Pressure from all sides of the House, however, induced the ministry to retain office until after the debate on the application to Rome and the Papal States of the Religious Orders Bill (originally passed in 1866)a measure which, with the help of Ricasoli, was carried at the end of May.

    0
    0
  • By dint of expedients he gradually overcame the chronic deficit, and, owing to the normal increase of revenue, ended his term of office with the announcement of a surplus of some 720,000.

    0
    0
  • During his three years of office he laid the foundation upon which Brin was afterwards to build up a new Italian navy.

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    0
  • Depretis thereupon reconstructed his administration, excluding Nicotera, Melegari and Zanardelli, placing Crispi at the home office, entrusting Magliani with finance, and himself assuming the direction of foreign affairs.

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    0
  • Hardly had he assumed office when the unexpected death of Victor Emmanuel II.

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    0
  • Though brief, Cairolis term of office was momentous in regard to foreign affairs.

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    0
  • Depretis then succeeded in recomposing the Cairoli cabinet without Cairoli, Mancini being placed at the foreign office.

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    0
  • Count Hatzfeldt, on behalf of the German Foreign Office, informed the Italian ambassador in Berlin that whatever was done at Vienna would be regarded as having been done in the German capital.

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    0
  • They hastened Mancinis downfall (17th June 1885), and prepared the advent of count di Robilant, who three months later succeeded Mancini at the Italian Foreign Office.

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    0
  • In their anxiety to remain in office Depretis and the finance minister, Magliani, never hesitated to mortgage the financial future of their country.

    0
    0
  • The most successful feature of Crispis term of office was his strict maintenance of Order and the suppression of Radical and Irredentist agitation.

    0
    0
  • None of Rudinis public utterances justify the supposition that he assumed office with the intention of allowing the alliance to lapse on its expiry in May 1892; indeed, he frankly declared it to form the basis of his foreign policy.

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    0
  • On the 29th of June Rudini was succeeded in the premiership by General Luigi Pelloux, a Savoyard, whose only title to office was the confidence of the king.

    0
    0
  • Soon after taking office he completed the negotiations begun by the Rudini administration for a new commercial treaty with France (October 1898), whereby Franco-Italian commercial relations were placed upon a normal footing after a breach which had lasted for more than ten years.

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    0
  • Shortly afterwards his term of office was brought to a close by the failure of an attempt to secure for Italy a coaling station at Sanmen and a sphere of influence in China; but his policy of active participation in Chinese affairs was continued in a modified form by his successor, the Marquis Visconti Venosta, who, entering the reconstructed Pelloux cabinet in May 1899, retained the portfolio of foreign affairs in the ensuing Saracco administration, and secured the despatch of an Italian expedition, 2000 strong, to aid in repressing the Chinese outbreak and in protecting Italian interests in the Far East (July 1900).

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    0
  • Upon the fall of the Saracco cabinet (9th February 1901) Visconti Venosta was succeeded at the foreign office by Signor Prinetti, a Lombard manufacturer of strong temperament, but without previous diplomatic experience.

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  • The latter accepted the task, and the new administration included Signor Tittoni, late prefect of Naples, as foreign minister, Signor Luigi Luzzatti, the eminent financier, at the treasury, General Pedotti at the war office, and Admiral Mirabello as minister of marine.

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    0
  • For this unfortunate combination Signor Sonnino himself was not altogether to blame; having lost many of his most faithful followers, who, weary of waiting for office, had gone over to the enemy, he had been forced to seek support among men who had professed hostility to the existing order of things and thus to secure at least the neutrality of the Extreme Left and make the public realize that the reddest of Socialists, Radicals and Republicans may be tamed and rendered harmless by the offer of cabinet appointments.

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  • In November Signor Gianturco died, and Signor Pietro Bertolini took his place as minister of public works; the latter proved perhaps the ablest member of the cabinet, but the acceptance of office under Giolitti of a man who had been one of the most trusted and valuable lieutenants of Signor Sonnino marked a further step in the dgringolade of that statesmans party, and was attributed to the fact that Signor Bertolini resented not having had a place in the late Sonnino ministry.

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  • He was described to Pepys on his acquiring office as "one of a broken sort of people that have not much to lose and therefore will venture all," and as "a beggar having £1Too or £1200 a year, but owes above £10,000."

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    0
  • His office brought him in L20,000 a year,' and he was known to be making large profits by the sale of offices; he maintained his power by corruption and by jealously excluding from office men of high standing and ability.

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    0
  • He had for some time lost the real direction of affairs, and in May 1699 he was compelled to retire from office and from the lord-lieutenancy of Yorkshire.

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    0
  • In November of this year he obtained a renewal of his pension of J350o a year from the post office which he was holding in 1 The title was taken, not from Leeds in Yorkshire, but from Leeds in Kent, 41 m.

    0
    0
  • In the House of Lords he was prominent as a determined foe of the prime minister, Lord North, who, after he had resigned his position as chamberlain, deprived him of the office of lordlieutenant of the East Riding of Yorkshire in 1780.

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  • As secretary he was little more than a cipher, and he left office in April 1791.

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  • In the reign of Tiberius he held the office of praetor, and was appointed to the superintendence of the roads and bridges.

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  • Brissot received a good education and entered the office of a lawyer at Paris.

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  • He also spent some time in the Foreign Office in Berlin.

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  • Many names and customs were introduced into his court from that of Constantinople; he proposed to restore the Roman senate and consulate, revived the office of patrician, called himself "consul of the Roman senate and people" and issued a seal with the inscription, "restoration of the Roman empire."

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  • He was of good family, and after studying at the university of Naples he entered the public service, and was for many years employed in the office of the administration of finances.

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  • The 123rd Novell (c. 21) provides that if a clerk be accused of a secular crime he shall be accused before his bishop, who may depose him from his office and order, and then the competent judge may take him and deal with him according to the laws.

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  • If the prosecutor have first brought him before the civil judge, the evidence is to be sent to the bishop, and the latter, if he thinks the crime has been committed, may deprive him of his office and order, and the judge shall apply to him the proper legal punishment.

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  • How far the official principal had jurisdiction in criminal matters by virtue of his office, how far it was usual to add this jurisdiction by special commission, and what were the respective limits of his office and that of the vicar-general, are questions of some nicety.

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  • But jurisdiction which was not necessarily incident to the office of the official principal, that is to say voluntary jurisdiction, such as the granting of licences and institution to benefices, and criminal jurisdiction over clerks (and probably over laymen), the bishop could reserve to himself.

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  • A clerk in like case might be suspended from office.

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  • On the Scheldt, near the Place Laurent, is the Geerard-duivelsteen (château of Gerard the Devil), a 13th-century tower formerly belonging to one of the patrician families, now restored and used as the office of the provincial records.

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  • In 1858 he resumed this office in Lord Derby's second administration, being returned to the House of Commons as member for Stamford.

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  • He is only to meddle in his own vocation; and to remember that his office is only to be the physician's cook."

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  • Within a twelvemonth he became more widely known by his Castigo y Perdon, and by a more humorous effort, Los dos Guzmanes; and shortly afterwards he was appointed by the Moderado government to a post in the home office, which he lost in 1854 on the accession to power of the Liberal party.

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  • He took part in the revolution of 1868, wrote the "Manifesto of Cadiz," took office as colonial minister, favoured the candidature of the duc de Montpensier, resigned in 1871, returned to his early Conservative principles, and was a member of Alfonso XII.'s first cabinet.

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  • He occupied the post of surveyor of the royal works for fifty years, but by a shameful cabal was dismissed from this office a few years before his death He died in 1723, and is buried under the choir of St Paul's; on a tablet over the inner north doorway is the well-known epitaph - Si monumentum requiris, circumspice.

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  • Either as a concession to the senate, or perhaps with the idea of improving public morality, Decius endeavoured to revive the separate office and authority of the censor.

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  • But Valerian, well aware of the dangers and difficulties attaching to the office at such a time, declined the responsibility.

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  • Early in 1683, however, through the influence of the king's mistress, the duchess of Portsmouth, Sunderland regained his place as secretary for the northern department, the chief feature of his term of office being his rivalry with his brotherin-law, George Savile, marquess of Halifax.

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  • The first seat of the Holy Office was in the convent of San Pablo, where the friars, however, resented the orders, on the pretext that they were not delegates of the inquisitor-general.

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  • In the next year he ceded to Diego Deza, a Dominican, his office of confessor to the sovereigns, and gave himself up to the congenial work of reducing heretics.

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  • The dead even were not free from the Holy Office; but processes could be instituted against them and their remains subjected to punishment.

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  • The sovereigns, too, saw the stream of money, which they had hoped for, diverted to the coffers of the Holy Office, and in 1493 they made complaint to the pope; but Torquemada was powerful enough to secure most of the money for the expenses of the Inquisition.

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  • At Saragossa Peter Arbue, a canon and an ardent inquisitor, was slain in 1485 whilst praying in a church; and the threats against the hated Torquemada made him go in fear of his life, and he never went abroad without an escort of forty familiars of the Holy Office on horseback and two hundred more on foot.

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  • They often used to visit him at Avila, where in 1498, still in office as inquisitor-general, he held his last general assembly to complete his life's work.

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  • Other prominent structures are the U.S. government and the judiciary buildings, the latter connected with the capitol by a stone terrace, the city hall, the county court house, the union station, the board of trade, the soldiers' memorial hall (with a seating capacity of about 4500), and several office buildings.

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  • He resigned in 1894, and in 1900 was appointed president of the House of Magnates, an office which he resigned on the fall of the Liberal party in 1906.

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  • For several years Wakefield continued to direct the New Zealand Company, fighting its battles with the colonial office and the missionary interest, and secretly inspiring and guiding many parliamentary committees on colonial subjects, especially on the abolition of transportation.

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  • Finally a clause said that "no person born out of the kingdoms of England, Scotland or Ireland, or the dominions thereunto belonging (although he be naturalized or made a denizen) except such as are born of English parents, shall be capable to be of the Privy Council, or a member of either House of Parliament, or enjoy any office or place of trust, either civil or military, or to have any grant of lands, tenements or hereditaments from the Crown to himself, or to any other or others in trust for him."

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  • The Post Office, at the corner of Exchange and Middle streets, is of white Vermont marble and has a Corinthian portico.

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  • A knight of the Garter, he was in 1621 created earl marshal for life, and revived the jurisdiction belonging to the office.

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  • In 1553 he had the office of lord admiral of England, and in the next year the Garter.

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  • In the modern Roman Catholic Church, outside monastic services, the office is usually said on the preceding afternoon or evening.

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  • His tenure of office was marked by an increased zeal for missions in Protestant lands, and by the removal of the society's headquarters from Rome to Fiesole near Florence in 1870.

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  • He afterwards resided at Naples, Corfu and Monopoli, and in 1503 removed to Venice, where he held office as a minister of state till his death in 1508.

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  • The office of Gaon lasted for something over 400 years, beginning about A.D.

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  • The last three holders of the office were also distinguished.

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  • After holding a subordinate office (1876) in the department of public works, he became successively prefect of the Tarn (1882) and the Haute-Garonne (1885), and then returned to Paris to enter the ministry of the interior.

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  • Ribot at the end of that year, when the Panama scandals were making the office one of peculiar difficulty.

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  • To meet the charge he resigned in March 1893, but again took office, and only retired with the rest of the Freycinet ministry.

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  • It is familiar in the titles, showing the colour of their wands of office, of the gentlemen ushers of the three principal British orders of knighthood, the ushers of the Garter and St Patrick being "Ushers of the Black Rod," and of the Thistle "Green Rod."

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  • This office he held until 1547, when he was sent by Henry II.

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  • One of his first acts after entering on the duties of his office was to cause the parlement of Paris to register the edict of Romorantin, of which he is sometimes, but erroneously, said to have been the author.

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  • But, in spite of his strong personality, he was not easy to work with, and difficulties with Sir Robert Borden led to his sudden resignation of office in Nov.

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  • During his term of office he appeared in a case before the United States Supreme Court, where his knowledge of civil law so strongly impressed Edward Livingston, the secretary of state, who was himself an admirer of Roman Law, that he urged Legare to devote himself to the study of this subject with the hope that he might influence American law toward the spirit and philosophy and even the forms and processes of Roman jurisprudence.

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  • After the Revolution of 1830 Enfantin resigned his office of cashier, and devoted himself wholly to his cause.

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  • When Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's cabinet was formed in December 1905 he became foreign minister, and he retained this office when in April 1908 Mr Asquith became prime minister.

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  • In 1881 Sir George Airy resigned the office of Astronomer Royal and resided at the White House, Greenwich, not far from the Royal Observatory, until his death, which took place on the 2nd of January 1892.

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  • Hawes, however, never discharged the duties of his office.

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  • On leaving the lyceum Gorchakov entered the foreign office under Count Nesselrode.

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  • Not long after his accession to office Gorchakov issued a circular to the foreign powers, in which he announced that Russia proposed, for internal reasons, to keep herself as free as possible from complications abroad, and he added the now historic phrase, "La Russie ne boude pas; die se recueille."

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  • What we may call the nobility of earlier occupation makes way for the nobility of office.

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  • Then one law admitted plebeians to one office, another law to another.

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  • This nobility consisted of all those who, as descendants of curule magistrates, had the jus imaginum - that is, who could point to forefathers ennobled by office.

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  • Just as the old patricians had striven to keep plebeians out of high offices, so now the new nobles, patrician and plebeian alike, strove to keep "new men," men who had not the jus imaginum, out of high office.

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  • Servius made voting power depend on income; by Solon the same rule was applied to qualification for office.

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  • At Rome down to the last it made a difference whether the candidate for office was patrician or plebeian, though the difference was in later times commonly to the advantage of the plebeian.

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  • But we see no sign of the growth of a body made up of patricians and leading plebeians who contrived to keep office to themselves by a social tradition only less strong than positive law.

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  • Nor was it strictly a nobility of office, though it had more in common with that than with either of the other two.

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  • The Catuli and Metelli, among the proudest nobles of Rome, were plebeians, and as such could not have been chosen to the purely patrician office of interrex, or of Jupiter.

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  • This is what the nobility of office, if left unchecked, naturally grows into.

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  • The whole noble order was disfranchised; to be noble was equivalent to being shut out from public office.

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  • Only the Roman commons, great and small, never shut out the patricians from office; they were satisfied to share office with them.

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  • In both cases the older nobility gives way to a newer; and in both cases the newer nobility was a nobility of office.

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  • Under a kingly government office bestowed by the sovereign holds the same place which office bestowed by the people holds in a popular government.

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  • This new nobility of office supplanted, or perhaps rather absorbed, the older nobility, just as the later nobilitas of Rome supplanted or absorbed the old patriciate.

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  • The older nobility is independent of the possession of land; it is independent of office about the sovereign; it is hard to say what were the powers and privileges attached to it; but of its existence there is no doubt.

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  • But in no part of Europe can the existing nobility trace itself to this immemorial nobility of primitive days; the nobility of medieval and modern days springs from the later nobility of office.

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  • That institution at once set up a new standard of nobility, a new form of the nobility of office.

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  • That is to say, traditional feeling may give the members of certain families a strong preference, to say the least, in election to office.

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  • In 1763 he visited Berlin, and on that occasion finally refused the office of president of the Academy of Berlin, which had been already offered to him more than once.

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  • The office was revived by Napoleon I., was abolished in 1830, and again created by Napoleon III.; it existed till 1870.

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  • The office of hereditary grand almoner is now merely titular.

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  • He is a general officer and at the head of his department of the War Office, which is charged with all duties relative to personnel.

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  • So intensely aristocratic (hence his nickname 6 AoXoiSopos, "he who rails at the people") was his temperament that he declined to exercise the regal-hieratic office of 1 3avLAeus which was hereditary in his family, and presented it to his brother.

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  • Their interest for the laity lies ' An ukaz of 1879 gave the governors the right to report secretly on the qualifications of candidates for the office of justice of the peace.

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  • In these statistics, the third item, " other persons," includes post office and customs officials and other persons connected with the railway service, as well as railway officers and servants off duty.

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  • In 1887 a committee reported that the coupler question was the " knottiest mechanical problem that had ever been presented to the railroad," and over 4000 attempted solutions were on record in the United States Patent Office.

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  • It is to be noted that his own letters contain, both at this time and later on, express disproof of that miraculous gift of tongues with which he was credited even in his lifetime, and which is attributed to him in the Breviary office for his festival.

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  • Ataide appears to have objected not so much to the mission as to the rank assigned to Pereira, whom he regarded as unfit for the office of envoy.

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  • He pursued the study of law, partly in the office of Bellamy Storer (1798-1875), a leading lawyer and judge of Cincinnati, and in 1853 he was admitted to the bar.

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  • He had but one acquaintance in the place, the clerk of the federal court, who permitted him to occupy a desk in his office and place at the door his sign as a lawyer.

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  • The only office he held was that of reporter of the supreme court of Indiana for two terms (1860-1862 and 1864-1868), and this was strictly in the line of his profession.

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  • He was somewhat reserved in manner, and this led to the charge in political circles that he was cold and unsympathetic; but no one gathered around him more devoted and loyal friends, and his dignified bearing in and out of office commanded the hearty respect of his countrymen.

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  • After completing his education on the Continent of Europe, he obtained a clerkship in the War Office in 1857.

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  • Dunmore became a station of the Scranton post office in 1902.

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  • He had entered the war office in 1870, and in 1880 became general secretary, in which capacity he introduced many useful reforms in the army.

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  • He resigned office in May 1899, but was again entrusted with the formation of the ministry.

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  • The Public Safety Bill for the reform of the police laws, taken over by him from the Rudini cabinet, and eventually promulgated by royal decree, was fiercely obstructed by the Socialist party, which, with the Left and Extreme Left, succeeded in forcing General Pelloux to dissolve the Chamber in May 1900, and to resign office after the general election in June.

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  • Eli, the head priest at Shiloh in the early youth of Samuel, held an important position in what was then the chief religious and political centre of Ephraim; and the office passed by inheritance to the sons in ordinary cases.

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  • In 1550 he succeeded his father in the office of secretary of state; in this capacity he attended Charles in the war with Maurice, elector of Saxony, accompanied him in the flight from Innsbruck, and afterwards drew up the treaty of Passau (August 1552).

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  • After graduating honourably in 1814 he entered his father's office as a student of law; but in January 1815 the uninjured eye showed dangerous symptoms of inflammation.

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  • In his sixteenth year he entered the office of his father, who was partner and manager of a firm of engineers.

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  • All Cyprian's literary works were written in connexion with his episcopal office; almost all his treatises and many of his letters have the character of pastoral epistles, and their form occasionally betrays the fact that they were intended as addresses.

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  • At thirty, still a dependant, without a settled occupation, without a definite social status, he often regretted that he had not " embraced the lucrative pursuits of the law or of trade, the chances of civil office or India adventure, or even the fat slumbers of the church."

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  • A note of Fox, however, on the margin of a copy of The Decline and Fall records a very distinct remembrance of the historian's previous vituperation of the ministry; within a fortnight of the date of his acceptance of office, he is there alleged to have said that " there was no salvation for this country until six heads of the principal persons in administration were laid upon the table."

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  • The constitution as adopted limited the suffrage to adult white males, but this provision was annulled by the fifteenth amendment to the Federal constitution; and in 1880 amendments to the state constitution were adopted striking out the word " white " from the suffrage clause and adding a new article granting rights of suffrage and office holding without regard to race, colour or previous condition of servitude.

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  • The governor and lieutenantgovernor must each be at least twenty-five years old at the time of election to office.

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  • After graduating from Amherst in 1895 he studied law in an office at Northampton, Mass.

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  • He filled the office of vice-treasurer from 1660 till 1667, served on the committee for carrying out the declaration for the settlement of Ireland and on the committee for Irish affairs, while later, in 1671 and 1672, he was a leading member of various commissions appointed to investigate the working of the Acts of Settlement.

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  • In the same convention he served on the committee which drafted the first constitution for Virginia, and was elected governor of the State - to which office he was re-elected in 1777 and 1778, thus serving as long as the new constitution allowed any man to serve continuously.

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  • He graduated at Harvard in 1863, continuing to study languages and philosophy with zeal; spent two years in the Harvard law school, and opened an office in Boston; but soon devoted the greater portion of his time to writing for periodicals.

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  • In the arduous and successful work of that office he took his full share.

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  • He became president of a consumers' food council in Dec. 1917, so that the office might keep in regular touch with the needs of the public. When Lord Rhondda died, in June 1918, he succeeded him to the general satisfaction.

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  • In consequence of the decision of the Labour party to terminate its support of the Coalition Government he resigned office in Nov.

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  • In the autumn of 1841 he was succeeded in office by Lord Ellenborough, and returned to England in the following year.

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  • In 1846 he was made first lord of the admiralty, which office he held until his death, on the 1st of January 1849.

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  • In his last sickness Celestine wished to resign his office, but the cardinals protested.

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  • The oldest trustworthy sources know nothing of his having exercised the office of Inquisitor during the Albigensian war" (Griitzmacher).

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  • She was a woman of great ability andstrong character, and during the years which followed the death of the emperor Francis was probably the most influential personage at the Austrian court; for the emperor Ferdinand, who succeeded in 1835, was physically and mentally incapable of performing the duties of his office; as he was childless, Francis Joseph was in the direct line of succession.

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  • After three months' tenure of this office he was returned by the department to the Constituent Assembly, where he voted with the Mountain, and brought forward the celebrated motion for the abolition of the presidential office.

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  • When Capo d'Istria was murdered in 1831 Metaxas became a member of the provisional government which held office till the accession of King Otho in 1833.

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  • He had an ambition to become registrar-general; and when that post became vacant in 1879, he was so disappointed at the selection of Sir Brydges Henniker instead of himself, that he refused to stay any longer in the registrar's office.

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