Transactions of the Society Instituted at London for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, Volumes 19-20 |
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Page xxxvi
... In order to finish entirely this part of the subject , Mr. Barry begs leave to add , from a letter read by him to the Society , October 25 , 1801 , that in con- sequence sequence of the application for designs for a new die [ xxxvi ]
... In order to finish entirely this part of the subject , Mr. Barry begs leave to add , from a letter read by him to the Society , October 25 , 1801 , that in con- sequence sequence of the application for designs for a new die [ xxxvi ]
Page 62
... LEAVE THE KINGDOM . IN CASES WHERE THE SOCIETY MAY THINK FIT TO ADMIT EXCUSES FOR NOT ATTENDING IN PERSON , DEPUTIES MAY BE SUBSTITUTED TO RECEIVE THE REWARDS , PROVIDED SUCH DEPUTIES ARE EITHER MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY , OR THE SUPERIOR ...
... LEAVE THE KINGDOM . IN CASES WHERE THE SOCIETY MAY THINK FIT TO ADMIT EXCUSES FOR NOT ATTENDING IN PERSON , DEPUTIES MAY BE SUBSTITUTED TO RECEIVE THE REWARDS , PROVIDED SUCH DEPUTIES ARE EITHER MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY , OR THE SUPERIOR ...
Page 65
... the Papers on different subjects sent to them may be full , clear , explicit , fit for publication , and rather in the form of Essays than of Letters . In case any person should be inclined to leave a F In GENERAL CONDITIONS . 65.
... the Papers on different subjects sent to them may be full , clear , explicit , fit for publication , and rather in the form of Essays than of Letters . In case any person should be inclined to leave a F In GENERAL CONDITIONS . 65.
Page 66
... leave a sum of money to this Society , by will , the following form is offered for that purpose : Item . I give and bequeath to A. B. and C. D. the sum of upon condition and to the intent that they , or one of them , do pay the same to ...
... leave a sum of money to this Society , by will , the following form is offered for that purpose : Item . I give and bequeath to A. B. and C. D. the sum of upon condition and to the intent that they , or one of them , do pay the same to ...
Page 75
... leave to offer myself as a Candidate for that Premium ; and to lay before the Society , the mode I have adopted in planting a field of twen- ty - one acres . The soil is very different in quality . In some places it is a sandy loam ...
... leave to offer myself as a Candidate for that Premium ; and to lay before the Society , the mode I have adopted in planting a field of twen- ty - one acres . The soil is very different in quality . In some places it is a sandy loam ...
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Common terms and phrases
ACCOUNTS and CERTIFICATES acres advantage Annatto Bart boat CHARLES TAYLOR Cheapside colour common copal crop cultivation drilled Drying Oils edulcoration effect English Elms engrafted expense experiments F. R. and A. S. farther feet FIFTY GUINEAS Fish-oil French Burr fruit George girder GOLD MEDAL greatest quantity ground Hemp Henry hitherto Honourable hundred improvement inches Inner Temple invent James John Larch last Tuesday less lever Life-Boat Machine Manufactures method Mill-stones mode Model obedient Servant observations PALLET Paper person placed plantations plants Plate ploughed pounds pounds weight premium is extended Premium offered present preserving produced proper CERTIFICATES purpose quantity of land Richard Robert sample second Tuesday seed ship SILVER MEDAL Society the best Society's soil South Shields sowing sown THIRTY GUINEAS Thomas THOMAS ANDREW KNIGHT tion trees Tuesday in February Tuesday in January Tuesday in November Turnips TWENTY GUINEAS vegetation weight Wheat wheel William
Popular passages
Page 56 - Licences for that purpose under the Hand and Seal of the Governor or Commander in Chief of the...
Page 282 - From this part to the top of the stem it is more elliptical, forming a considerable projection. The sides, from the...
Page 332 - ... scapement then referred to. I beg leave to remark, that the train of wheels in mine is prevented from pressing against the locking, by the whole power of the remontoire-spring; so that the balance has only to remove the small remaining pressure, which does away that objection, and also that of the disadvantage of detents, as this locking may be compared to a light balance turning on fine pivots, without a pendulum-spring ; and has only the advantage of banking safe at two turns of the balance,...
Page 227 - half a pint of water in which an ounce of salt has been dissolved ; and having boiled them half an hour, pour them into a proper vessel, and let them stand till the separation of the oil, water, and lime be made, as in the preceding process.
Page 213 - Lewis's process, without injuring its colour; and this solution was made in the common way. It was much darker coloured in itself, but produced scarcely any difference in effect when mixed with colour. By experiments with each of these solutions I ascertained the following facts, viz.:— " Every colour, and all the tints compounded from it, were more brilliant than corresponding tints and colours mixed with the best drying oils to be procured from the shops. "Colours mixed with amber, after having...
Page 467 - TRANSACTIONS of the Society instituted at London for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, with the Premiums offered in the year 1783.
Page 229 - Transactions of the Society of Arts, vol. xix. 3 P. 688. 4 The recipe is as follows : — " Take 4 parts of balsam of copavi and one of copal. Powder and sift the copal, and throw it by degrees into the balsam of copavi, stirring it well each time it...
Page 320 - ... launches over it with vast rapidity, without shipping any water. It is necessary to observe, that there is often a strong reflux of sea, occasioned by the stranded wrecks, which requires both dispatch and care in the people employed, that the boat be not damaged. When the wreck is reached, if the wind blows to the land, the boat will come in shore without any other effort than steering. I would strongly recommend practising the boat, by which means, with experience, the danger will appear less,...
Page 309 - One prisoner only has died (a woman aged sixty) in the month of October last. At the opening of the spring assizes, 1801, (the time of the greatest numbers) there was not one prisoner sick, or in the hospital ward. " By this statement it appears, that the proportion of deaths is so much below the common average, in the ordinary situations of life, that the healthiness of this abode may be said to be peculiar...