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Page "United States presidential election, 1844" ¶ 1
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By and informally
By the end of the summer of 1631, Williams had moved to Plymouth colony where he was welcomed, and informally assisted the minister there.
By September 1921 the name Sturmabteilung was being used informally for the group.
By the early 1900s, the town of Mammoth was informally established near Mammoth Creek.
By the time Spain lost control of Mexico and Central America in 1821, Britain had extended its control over the area, albeit informally and unsystematically.
By 1839 the Whigs and Radicals in parliament were informally being called “ the Liberal party .”
By extension the term can refer informally to any important person of high status, particularly a wealthy, land owning, long-time resident in an area.
By 1970 she had informally created the organization now known as the New England Covens of Traditionalist Witches ( N. E. C. T. W.
By quietly and informally taking on some behaviors of a cartel, large newspaper chains were able to sustain artificially high profits while driving independent newspapers out of business ( or forcing them to sell their stake to a chain ).
By 1906, the movement enjoyed the support of a significant portion of the army, and its leaders formed the Committee of Union and Progress ( CUP ), informally known as the Young Turk Party.
By the end of its existence it attracted both long-time residents and, by virtue both of its proximity to Harvard Yard and its late opening hours, numerous students from Harvard University, and had become one of the few places where students and residents, and residents from different social and economic classes, mixed informally.
By 1839 they were informally being called " the Liberal party.
By its latter part, the series became widely known informally as Žikina dinastija ( Žika's Dynasty ), which is actually the title of the seventh movie.

By and tying
By tying themselves to the shugo, they were able to ally themselves to the one person in the province who could provide some form of local security.
By sealing a bag more securely than tying or folding over its open end, the clip or tie may preserve its contents longer.
By tying the introduction to the conclusion, it gives the speech a feeling of fluidity.
By tying up the lines, voters seeking rides from the Democratic Party would have more difficulty reaching the party to ask for transportation to and from their polling places.
By bunching fresh yuba or rehydrated yuba, then tying it tightly in cloth and stewing it, the dried yuba sticks will retain their original shape.

By and Oregon
By linking acquisition of new lands in Oregon ( with no slavery ) and Texas ( with slavery ), he hoped to satisfy both North and South.
By the time he died, he owned over 20, 000 shares of stock and three bottling plants: one in Santa Maria, California ; one in Twin Falls, Idaho ; and one in Bend, Oregon.
By the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the government blamed crashing fish populations on overfishing, especially off the Northern California and Oregon coast, which lie directly adjacent to the migration paths of Sacramento River salmon.
By overland travel, American missionaries and early settlers ( initially mostly ex-trappers ) started showing up in Oregon around 1824.
By 1843, when 700 – 1, 000 settlers arrived, the American settlers greatly outnumbered the nominally British settlers in Oregon.
By 1840 the Hudson's Bay Company had three forts: Fort Hall ( purchased from Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth in 1837 ), Fort Boise and Fort Nez Perce on the western end of the Oregon Trail route as well as Fort Vancouver near its terminus in the Willamette Valley.
By 1870 the population in the states served by the Oregon Trail and its offshoots increased by about 350, 000 over their 1860 census levels.
By the early 1980s, Buttrey would eventually operate 60 stores in Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, western Minnesota, Wyoming, eastern Washington, eastern Oregon, Utah, and Idaho.
By 1776 Spanish exploration had reached Bucareli Bay including the mouth of the Columbia River between Oregon and Washington, and Sitka Sound.
In 1852, sixty-three-year-old Elijah Davidson and his family set out for Oregon Territory By 1854, more than a dozen Disciples families from Monmouth, many of them related to each other or to Davidson, had joined him.
By 1900, Pendleton had a population of 4, 406 and was the fourth-largest city in Oregon.
By the time he arrived in June 1956, McKay had resigned in order to run for the U. S. Senate from his home state of Oregon and Fred Andrew Seaton had been appointed to replace him.
By volume most Pinot noir in America is grown in California with Oregon coming in second.
* Sheet music for his song " We'll Be Together When the Clouds Roll By " from the collection at University of Oregon Libraries
By contrast, the smallest Nordstrom store ( as of September 2008 ) opened in 1980 in Salem, Oregon and has a total area of just under.
On June 29, 2011 the band revealed a new song called " By and Down " live in Portland, Oregon.
By 1968 it had become established as far east as Spokane, Washington, and Moscow, Idaho, and as far south as Roseburg, Oregon.
Frey ( 1918 – 1992 ) claimed to have written the song circa 1936 under the title " Come By Here ," inspired, he claimed, by a prayer he heard delivered by " Mother Duffin ," a storefront evangelist in Portland, Oregon.
By river, the dam is 235 miles ( 378 km ) below the Canadian border and 453 miles ( 729 km ) above the mouth of the river at Astoria, Oregon.
By 1995 The Oregon Trail comprised about one third of MECC's $ 30 million in annual revenue.
By 1945, PGE derived nearly $ 400, 000 in revenue from the two Kaiser shipyards in Oregon.
By the early 1840s, when emigrants began traveling along the Oregon Trail, Kearny often ordered his men to escort the travelers across the plains to avoid attack by the Native Americans.
By May 1998, there were 37 McMenamins locations in Oregon and six in Washington, grossing $ 50 million / year in business.

By and boundary
By its terms the boundary between Alfred ’ s and Guthrum ’ s kingdoms was to run up the River Thames, to the River Lea ; follow the Lea to its source ( near Luton ); from there extend in a straight line to Bedford ; and from Bedford follow the River Ouse to Watling Street.
By doing so, they " fill the need of a mostly female audience for fictional narratives that expand the boundary of the official source products offered on the television and movie screen.
By this stage the explorers had passed the southern boundary of the desert, and from then on Henry had one of his wishes fulfilled: the Portuguese had circumvented the Muslim land-based trade routes across the western Sahara Desert, and slaves and gold began arriving in Portugal.
By contrast, later, post-V2 engine designs not employing this alcohol boundary layer cooling show a translucent plume with shock diamonds.
By law, Metro, the regional government, is required to maintain a 20-year supply of land within the boundary.
By the late 4th millennium BC, Sumer was divided into about a dozen independent city-states, which were divided by canals and boundary stones.
By 1950 wild boar had once again reached their original northern boundary in many parts of their Asiatic range.
By 1892, China had erected boundary markers at Karakoram Pass.
By increasing the inertia of the boundary layer, airflow separation and the resulting stall may be delayed.
By proclamation of the Territorial Secretary and Acting Governor, Winthrop Sargent, on August 15, 1796, the boundaries of Wayne County were declared to begin at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River then west to Fort Wayne, then to the southernmost point of Lake Michigan and along the western shore north to the territorial boundary in Lake Superior and then along the territorial boundary through Lake Huron, Lake St. Clair, and Lake Erie back to the starting point.
By 1883, the western boundary of Minneapolis was at France Avenue.
By 1957, the North Richland Hills ' boundary was within of Smithfield, and by 1960 Smithfield had been annexed to North Richland Hills.
By the 19th century, the East End of London had expanded to the eastern boundary with Essex, and the Tower division had reached a population of over a million.
By the time of Henry's deposition in 1461, the chapel walls had been raised 60 ft high at the east end but only 8 ft at the west ; a building line which can still be seen today as the boundary between the lighter stone below and the darker above.
By the end of January, the admission bill, along with the boundary issue, was locked in the judiciary committee of both Houses of Congress.
By 1086 the river was firmly established as the boundary between Cheshire and Derbyshire.
where n is the outward unit normal to the boundary of V. By the divergence theorem,
By means of an inscription, Ross was able to identify the site of the temple ; it lies, as Herodotus suggests, on a low hill beyond the boundary of the town.
By the close of the 11th century the boundary between England and Scotland was roughly delimited on what became permanent lines.
By 1962 a site was found at Beverley Farm, straddling the then boundary between the City of Canterbury and the administrative county of Kent.
By contrast to the heavily built up apron area, the airport's southern boundary is entirely rural with only a few isolated farm buildings and houses close to the airport boundary.

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