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Page "Postage stamps and postal history of the Confederate States" ¶ 9
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Postmasters and had
Legislation of 1831 had amalgamated the offices of Postmaster General of Great Britain and Postmasters General of Ireland, a jointly held role in the administration of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
Since 1845, there had been a total of 10 Postmasters in the village-Charles Gray being the last in 1991.
The village had 8 Postmasters since the inception of the Post office.

Postmasters and used
During this period part of the building was used as a school classroom, and accommodation for Headmasters and the Postmasters ' families.

Postmasters and postage
The Postal Act of 1825 allowed the governor to fix postage rates and appoint Postmasters outside Sydney, enabling the first organised postal service.

Postmasters and covers
The Canadian Postmasters and Assistants Association covers 12, 000 rural workers, the Association of Postal Officials of Canada has 3, 400 supervisors and the Union of Postal Communications Employees represents 2, 600 technical workers.

Postmasters and from
A little candour and common sense properly applied would make the Post Office authorities understand that nothing short of confusion can be expected from a Department which as the Post Office to the Forces, is sent out in a pitiful state of hopelessness, with a heavy load of responsibility and with no adequate means of labour resources and powers ..." The article then went on to mention the use of soldiers to assist at the Army Post Office " A close and patient enquiry into the details of the Army Post Office has convinced me that not the slightest blame attaches to the two Postmasters Smith and Angell, who are merely victims of circumstances.
" Soon after the publication of this news article two more Assistant Army Postmasters, Mr Sissons and Henry Mellersh, plus seven sorters were despatched from London.

Postmasters and their
In the Commonwealth period this control was extended nationwide, as soldiers of the New Model Army were appointed Postmasters and were required to submit monthly reports on the activities of the communities that their post office served.

Postmasters and stamps
One hundred thousand sheets, totalling 24, 000, 000 stamps, were printed and delivered to the post office stores for distribution to Postmasters.

Postmasters and with
In the United States, many Postmasters are members of a management organization which consults with USPS for compensation and policy.
An 1876 federal law provided that " Postmasters of the first, second, and third classes shall be appointed and may be removed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate.
He made his debut in 1999, and now shows work with Postmasters gallery in New York and Aurel Scheibler in Berlin, Germany.

Postmasters and are
The two management organizations are the National Association of Postmasters of the United States ( NAPUS ) which has approximately 80 % of Postmasters as members and the National League of Postmasters, which is a smaller group.
Some Postmasters are members of both organizations.
Through version 15. 0, individual user passwords were stored in the clear, and available to users who are listed as Site Managers or " Postmasters " in the application configuration, thus allowing unethical managers, or attackers who compromise the site, to easily try to reuse the username and password on other sites.

Postmasters and they
The CUPW put forward several merger proposals to the Canadian Postmasters but, to date, they have been rebuffed.

Postmasters and .
" Post Offices and Postmasters of Inyo County, California 1866-1966 ", Fernley, NV: MacDonald, 2005.
The Postmasters General of the American colonies, Benjamin Franklin and William Foxcroft surveyed a route between New York and Quebec, and contracted Quebec-Montreal mail to a Hugh Finlay, who provided a weekly service at 8d per letter.
Postmasters in Savannah, Georgia, and Tampa, Florida, refused to mail the Jeffersonian, the mouthpiece of Tom Watson, a southern populist, an opponent of the draft, the war, and minority groups.
Postmasters General of Canada, 1851-1929Credit: Agnes Macdonald, Baroness Macdonald of Earnscliffe Collection.
Hoberman is currently represented by Postmasters Gallery in New York.

had and improvise
" He then had sets constructed and worked with his stock company to improvise gags and " business " around them, almost always working the ideas out on film.
Due to the scarcity of available resources, Kolff had to improvise and build the initial machine using sausage casings, beverage cans, a washing machine, and various other items that were available at the time.
However, Astor also had some positive attributes in her campaign, such as her earlier work with the Canadian soldiers, her other charitable work during the war, her vast financial resources for the campaign and, most of all, her ability to improvise.
The scattering of the boats was most evident on the 16th RCT front, where parts of E / 16, F / 16 and E / 116 had intermingled, making it difficult for sections to come together to improvise company assaults that might have reversed the situation caused by the mis-landings.
As described in the original liner notes by pianist Bill Evans, Davis had only given the band sketches of scales and melody lines on which to improvise.
" On the other hand, his sketch comedy background had trained Grossmith to improvise comic business.
The rough cut to which McFerrin recorded his vocals had the words " blah blah blah " in place of the end credits ( meant to indicate that he should improvise ).
Collections prior to Terry's ( except for Davis and Tozer's much earlier and contrived-sounding settings ) had not provided enough verses to create full ” songs, and it is unlikely that performers would venture to improvise new verses in the manner of traditional shantymen.
Cantelon's idea was to have various artists recite the text over primal rock music, but Jones elected to try something that had never been done, to improvise her own impression of the texts, melody and lyric, in stream of consciousness sessions, rather than read Jesus ' words.
" Doughty had Murdy go out to a payphone in Sheridan Square in New York and improvise a long, meandering song into their answering machine.
Certainly, a rural shooter might improvise a formalized paper target but even then, the rest of the shooting experience had the character of plinking.
Bahro was angry and had to improvise.
< center > Confederate hand-stamped cover < span style =" font-size: 8pt "> Richmond, Va. 1862, hand-stamped PAID 10 addressed to: Honorable William C. Rives </ span ></ font ></ center > Although the Confederate government had contracted for the printing of its own stamps, they were not yet available on June 1, forcing postmasters all over the South to improvise .< ref name =" Shortage of Postal Supplies "> </ span ></ font ></ ref > Most of the time they simply went back to the old practice of accepting payment in cash and applying a " PAID " hand-stamp to the envelope.
Lacking specialist ships, it had to improvise a fleet train from whatever RN, RFA or merchant ships were available.
The credit question was further confused by Sellers ' numerous ab-libbed contributions — he would often improvise wildly on set, so Kubrick made sure that Sellers had as much camera ' coverage ' as possible during his scenes, in order to capture these spontaneous inspirations.
A chef named Simon Mahli Chahal first prepared this when he only had half of a Tandoori chicken which he tossed with liberal amounts of butter, tomato, and garam masalas to improvise for an delicious delicacy he was supposed to make for the ruler of Mareelun.
Weech and Chesterford also have to improvise a means of connecting the engine to the rest of the train since the coupling method had greatly changed since Thunderbolts heyday.
In it she had to improvise a scene in which she played a boarding school girl who had been called to the headmistress's office.
They lacked any kind of medical supplies, and the death of Dr. Francisco Nicola left a first and a second year medical student who had survived the crash in charge to improvise splints and braces with salvaged parts of what remained of the aircraft.
Its principal aim is to teach how to improvise in a fugal style, but to get to that point, difficult to the most accomplished musicians of any age, he includes detailed treatments of the rudiments of music, the eight church modes, ornaments, touch, articulation, fingering, and counterpoint, including a categorization of four-note chords, rather similar to what Pietro Aron had written several decades before in Italy ( which work he may have used as a source ).
" Since government officials made many periodic visits to the set to ensure proper Indian film etiquette, the cast had to improvise fake scenes which avoided the nudity and sexuality central to the story.
As usual for small colonies far away, the Danish West Indies ran out of popular values periodically, and the colonial administration had to improvise.
The actors had to improvise on a scenario where they had been grounded and were trying to convince their mother to let them go out.

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