| Samuel Hazard - Pennsylvania - 1828 - 432 pages
...will set better examples, and make all ashamed to follow such old and injurious practices. I trust the day is not far distant, when we shall be able to offer a good premium for the best cultivated farm in these four counties. I would urge on the members... | |
| 1840 - 1176 pages
...is flung to the winds, and peace forgotten or despised, there we shall hold no terms. And we trust the day is not far distant, when we shall be able to rally around us all that is honourable and right-minded in the community, prepared — " In every honest... | |
| Economics - 1846 - 594 pages
...capital, therefore, invested in the manufacture of iron in this country, is a further guarantee that the day is not far distant when we shall be able to compete successfully with Great Britain, even under a reduced tariff. Meanwhile, the coal and iron... | |
| j.d.b. be bow - 1853 - 658 pages
...according to treaty stipulations, doubtless South Florida to dav would have boasted of thousands <*f inhabitants, busily engaged in developing the rich...say to the multitudes abroad who are waiting to make Smith Florida their home, that the Indians are gone, and the entire country open to settlement without... | |
| Scotland free church, gen. assembly - 1857 - 632 pages
...in kind as far as we can. Men we have none to give ; we must look to you to aid us with men. I trust the day is not far distant when we shall be able to supply an adequate number of ministers for home work in England, as well as to furnish our fair quota... | |
| Anglican Communion - 1864 - 676 pages
...efforts upon the part of the Churchmen of Vermont in behalf of the Theological Department, we trust the day is not far distant, when we shall be able to announce under the Divine favor the complete success of both Departments of the Institute. By order... | |
| James Hunt - African Americans - 1863 - 82 pages
...fully admit, however, that the psychical distinction is simply a question of degree and not of kind. The day is not far distant when we shall be able to analyse the mental character of the Negro far more minutely than we can do in the present infant state... | |
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