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Page "Irish Famine (1740–1741)" ¶ 20
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Landowners and such
These concerns are represented by groups such as the Carleton County Landowners Association.
Landowners such as the Earl of Kildare could claim a continuous title that just predated the Lordship itself.

Landowners and food
Landowners could afford to abandon the production of gin, and this fact, coupled with population growth and a series of poor harvests, resulted in lower wages and increased food prices.

Landowners and on
* Landowners dominate the Roman Empire and enjoy the title of senator, which exempts them from the crushing taxes imposed on the rest of the population.
Landowners who allowed their flocks to graze on public land were fined by the plebeian aediles, on behalf of Ceres and the people of Rome.
The Landowners Association leases out the site at the lagoon front to this operator to ply the boats on the lagoon.
Landowners were able to raise the legal rents on their lands ; sometimes as much as ten-thousandfold.
Landowners ' concerns about public liability resulted in suitable land for gatherings being extremely difficult to find and DTE consequently purchased land on Gulpa Creek near Deniliquin in NSW in 2002 and held ConFest on that site until DTE purchased a property on the Edwards River near Moulamein in 2006, which has since been the home of Confest.
In early 2002, the Country Landowners Association ( now Country Land and Business Association ) raised concerns over the security implications of photographs of residential properties made available on the Images of England website.
Landowners began making greater demands on new tenants and began violating existing agreements.
* The Vugalei Landowners Association, which includes members from the districts of Bau, Vugalei, Tai Vugalei, Naitasiri, Viria and Nausori, gave guarded approval to the legislation on 28 June.
" He continued, " Landowners who happened to have threatened or endangered species on their lands or who simply have habitat that might be used by endangered species are routinely prevented from using their lands or property.

Landowners and their
Landowners who grew rice crops would have rice left over at the end of the season and, rather than letting these leftovers go to waste, would ship it to their breweries.
Landowners who donate a " qualifying " conservation easement to a " qualified " land protection organization under the regulations set forth in 170 ( h ) of the Internal Revenue Code may be eligible for a federal income tax deduction equal to the value of their donation.
Landowners frequently cultivated their land themselves, but could also employ a husbandman, or rent it.
Only Landowners and their bona-fide guest may use these lakes or any of the many other amenities.
Landowners had to face the choice of raising wages to compete for workers or letting their lands go unused.
In their absence, Chan's government entered into negotiations with a group of chiefs from the Nasioi clan, headed by Theodore Miriung, a former lawyer for the Panguna Landowners Association.
Landowners also suffered because many of them were deeply in debt and the forced selling of their land left them also struggling to keep their lavish lifestyle.
Landowners and Pasha ... used this kind of democracy as an easy tool for the benefits of a feudal system ... the peasants would cast their votes according to the instructions of their masters ...
Landowners like Mrs Darvall sold parcels of their estates to the colonial government and by 1883 construction was well advanced.

Landowners and .
Landowners faced no meaningful land reform, the regime's control of labor organizers aided businessmen, foreign investors benefited from tax exemptions, and foreign creditors experienced a bonanza from heavy Paraguayan borrowing.
Landowners filed lawsuits over the acquisition and eventually won settlements of $ 22. 2 million which the Rangers failed to pay.
Landowners took 1 / 12 of the sales price if a serf ( mainmortable ) wanted to sell up.
* Gogol wrote an ironic and bittersweet reworking of the legend in his 1835 novella The Old World Landowners.
Landowners began diversifying agriculture in the area.
Landowners at Warwick Castle and Charlecote Park have attempted to claim the river as private property, although the 1636 Orders of Council state that the river was free to Coventry.
Landowners, angling clubs, and others put much work into cultivating waters and lakes to ensure good fishing.
" Landowners " here refers to the consortium of irooj ( chiefs ), alaps ( clan heads ) and rijerbal ( workers ) who have land rights to the places used for military purposes by the United States.
Landowners and developers are being encouraged to put forward plans achieve the vision set out in the SDP.
Landowners as well as park and refuge managers can encourage Wood Ducks by building Wood Duck nest boxes near lakes, ponds, and streams.
Landowners like Helmuth James Graf von Moltke and the members of the Kreisau Circle were part of the German resistance.
Landowners could challenge in court the price set by the acquiring authority.
Landowners were given thirty days ( as the act demanded ) to submit written objections.
Landowners in the Valencia area pay special taxes to maintain landscaping and the paseo system.
Landowners will often participate in subsistence or small scale commercial farming ventures.
The Jökulsárlón Landowners Association is an organization that represents the owners of the land property Fell, which covers the Jökuklsárlón, also known as the Glacier Lagoon.

such and widow
After complimenting Morgan and the riflemen and saying he was praising them to Congress, too, the ardent Frenchman added he felt that Congress should make some financial restitution to the widow and family of Morris, but that he knew Morgan realized how long such action usually required, if it was done at all.
Externally, political activity on the part of Ásatrú organizations has surrounded campaigns against alleged religious discrimination, such as the call for the introduction of an Ásatrú " emblem of belief " by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs to parallel the Wiccan pentacle granted to the widow of Patrick Stewart in 2006.
One such nurse was Ada W. Bacot, a young widow who had lost two children.
Only an insane person would do such a thing to his widow and children, it was successfully argued.
" One such work was published in 1974, at the urging of the widow of the French poet Robert Desnos, titled " Les pénalités de l ' enfer ou les nouvelles Hébrides " ( The Penalties of Hell or The New Hebrides ).
Not only was she his father Amadeus ' first cousin, in such a way that her rights would naturally descend to this line, but also she was the widow of Charles's paternal uncle Louis of Savoy, Count of Geneva ( d. 1482 ).
The widow Conolly and other philanthropists created menial jobs, such as building an obelisk, paving, fencing, draining, making roads or canals, and cleaning harbours.
He was not above threatening Meyerbeer with blackmail by writing satirical pieces about him ( and indeed Meyerbeer paid Heine's widow to suppress such writings ).
Brown ), 1865Widows were expected to wear special clothes to indicate that they were in mourning for up to four years after the death, although a widow could choose to wear such attire for the rest of her life.
At one such party, he catches L ' abbé de Vilecourt ( Bernard Giraudeau ) cheating at a game of wits, with the help of his lover, Madame de Blayac ( Fanny Ardant ), the beautiful and rich recent widow of Monsieur de Blayac, who was to have been Ponceludon's sponsor at court.
The book offers memories of Plimpton from among other writers, such as Norman Mailer, William Styron, Gay Talese and Gore Vidal, and was done with the cooperation of both his ex-wife and his widow.
A widow could carry on her late husband's business and consequently be accorded certain rights, such as the right to enter guilds.
Newton also was not able to find any information that Mrs Pepitone ( identified in some sources as Esther Albano, and in others simply as a " woman who claimed to be Pepitone's widow ") was arrested, tried or convicted for such a crime, or indeed had been in California.
Adele and Albert Herter spent a good deal of their time in California at " El Mirasol ", the grand family estate bought in 1904 in Santa Barbara where his mother Mary Miles Herter had entertained friends such as Robert Louis Stevenson's widow Fanny Vandegrift ( who later retired to and died at " El Mirasol " in 1914.
:( i ) any widow along with the body of her deceased husband or any other relative or with any article, object or thing associated with the husband or such relative ; or
:( ii ) any woman along with the body of any of her relatives, irrespective of whether such burning or burying is claimed to be voluntary on the part of the widow or the women or otherwise
All such incidences are purely voluntary and the women may choose to live as a widow.
In 1242, when the manor was passed to Ela Longespee, the widow of Thomas de Beaumont, 6th Earl of Warwick, it was named as Sutton-in-Coldfield, and again noted as such in 1265 when Ela married her second husband Philip Basset.
The urban legend ostensibly stems from the fact that the daddy long-legs spider is known to prey upon deadly venomous spiders, such as the redback, a member of the black widow genus Latrodectus.
One such woman was Marcella of Rome ( ca. 335-410, a widow who became a monacha, after she rejected the proposal of a Roman consul, saying: " If I had wished to marry and not to commit myself to eternal purity, I would search for a husband, not heritage.
# Yebamoth: ( יבמות, " Levirate marriage "); ( or Yebamot or Yevamot ), referring to the mandated marriage of a widow to her brother-in-law, deals with the Jewish law of levirate marriage () and other topics, such as the status of minors.
She also appeared successfully in such dramas as the original 1931 film version of The Maltese Falcon starring Ricardo Cortez as Sam Spade, in which she played Miles Archer's treacherous widow.
These movies contained themes such as widow remarriage, abolition of untouchability, self-respect marriages, abolition of zamindari and abolition of religious hypocrisy.
For example, in 1837, the federal government purchased former U. S. President James Madison's manuscripts from his widow, Dolley Madison, for $ 30, 000 ; if this is construed as covering copyright as well as the physical papers, it would be an example of such a transfer.

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