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premises and rented
From 1867 to 1890 the fledgling church, known as the Free Protestant Church, rented premises in a commercial building in Cape Town, and in 1890 a warehouse in the city was purchased and converted into the present church.
In 1913 the London Missionary Society responded to the appeal of the To Tsai Church to provide a Headmaster for the project, sending Arnold Hughes to Hong Kong, and the college was re-opened as a middle school in 1914 in rented premises, first at 9 Caine Road, later at 45 Caine Road, and finally at 80 Bonham Road ( a former German Rhenish Mission property ).
The premises were rented from the government who now wanted to auction them off.
A flying school was also established, with premises at Brooklands, then the centre of activity for British aviation, where Bristol rented a hangar, and at Larkhill on Salisbury Plain, where in June 1910 a school was established on of land leased from the War Office.
Originally founded on rented premises in 1942, Carleton would grow in size to meet the needs of returning WWII veterans and later became Ontario's first private, non-denominational college.
This was created as advertising by a pipe company which rented the premises.
Hines, Armstrong and their drummer, Zutty Singleton, agreed they would be, " The Unholy Three ", stick together and not play for anyone unless the three of us were hired ” but, trying to establish their own Warwick Hall Club as ' Louis Armstrong and his Stompers ' ( with Hines as musical director and the premises rented in Hines ' name ) they ran into difficulties.
box or PO box ), a box rented by the mail recipient to be an independent postal address, located in a post office or in the premises of a company offering such facilities.
In 1896, the head office was moved to rented premises in the new business centre of Stockholm in the lower Norrmalm area.
The first exhibitions were held in rented premises organised by Penrose, ' 40 Years of Modern Art ' was followed by ' 40, 000 Years of Modern Art ' reflecting his interest in primitivism.
In 1891 the hospital moved from rented premises to a building constructed for it at College and Elizabeth streets where it would remain for sixty years.
The Don Bosco High School ( formerly known as The Catholic Educational Institute ) run by them was shifted from the rented premises at Tardeo to the new Don Bosco camp.
from the original rented and converted barn near Bridport, to its new premises, Park Farm, a farm near Uplyme on the West Dorset / East Devon border.
Jones rented the first factory premises in an industrial building owned by J. H.
In June that year the RWB's rented premises were devastated by fire ; the company's entire stock of costumes, original music, choreographic scores and sets was destroyed.
The New York State legislature defined it in the Tenement House Act of 1867 in terms of rental occupancy by multiple households, as Any house, building, or portion thereof, which is rented, leased, let, or hired out to be occupied or is occupied, as the home or residence of more than three families living independently of one another and doing their own cooking upon the premises, or by more than two families upon a floor, so living and cooking and having a common right in the halls, stairways, yards, water-closets, or privies, or some of them.
On the death of Stewart's widow in 1886, it was rented as premises for the Manhattan Club and was painted in 1891 by Childe Hassam The structure was razed in 1901 to make way for the new premises of the Knickerbocker Trust Company.
The Muggletonians moved to cheaper rented premises not far away at 74 Worship Street, to the north of Finsbury Square.
Responding to a demand for business premises, he bought a piece of land and built twelve corrugated iron sheds for offices and rented eleven out monthly and kept one for himself.
Upon its move to London in 1877, the Institution rented premises at No 10 Victoria Chambers, where it remained for 20 years.
Immediately upon arrival in Montreal, Morgan joined with his friend, David Smith, to began preparations to set up a retail dry goods store in rented premises on Notre-Dame Street.
In December 1827 operations began in rented premises in Pitt Street and in the two years following, the Library led a peripatetic existence having been located a few years in George Street, Bridge Street, Macquarie Street and Macquarie Place.
The Cone-Ripman School was first based in premises at Stratford Place in London, but following the outbreak of World War II, it was relocated to Tring in Hertfordshire, using various rented buildings.

premises and may
Yachtel, a relatively new word, indicates a waterfront type of hotel where a yachtsman may dock and find overnight accommodations on the premises as well as other services.
Diplomats themselves still retain full diplomatic immunity, and ( as an adherent to the Vienna Convention ) the host country may not enter the premises of the mission without permission of the represented country.
A spy may break into the premises to steal data.
Though some points above may be arguable, but some key points seemingly aren't giving that it would require one to abide by many of the premises to even make an argument to begin with.
They may, for example, legally search any suspect who has been arrested, or their vehicles, home or business premises, without a warrant, and may seize anything they find in a search as evidence.
Since the Licensing Act 2003 premises in England and Wales may apply to extend their opening hours beyond 11 pm, allowing round-the-clock drinking and removing much of the need for lock-ins.
While the names of saloon and public bar may still be seen on the doors of pubs, the prices ( and often the standard of furnishings and decoration ) are the same throughout the premises, and many pubs now comprise one large room.
This often applies to buildings and properties, and limits the time during which an action may lie based upon defects or hazards connected to the construction of the building or premises.
These fictional premises may also lend to the engagement of the mind and perhaps proposition of thoughts, ideas, art and theories.
Termination equipment that ( a ) is located on the customer premises and ( b ) performs a function that may be integrated into the common carrier equipment.
An intermediate distribution frame ( IDF ) is a distribution frame in a central office or customer premises, which cross-connects the user cable media to individual user line circuits and may serve as a distribution point for multipair cables from the main distribution frame ( MDF ) or combined distribution frame ( CDF ) to individual cables connected to equipment in areas remote from these frames.
" In clinical contexts, what may happen is that notionally the analyst's " interpretation is accepted, but the premises have been rejected ... the actual specificity, the substance of the interpretation ".
Freemasons meet as a Lodge not in a Lodge, although Masonic premises may be called Lodges, as well as Temples (" of Philosophy and the Arts ").
With these valuations, many-valued logic can be extended to allow for fuzzy premises from which graded conclusions may be drawn.
In other words, the conclusion must be true if the premises, whatever they may be, are true.
While the conclusion may be true, it does not follow from the premises: ' Jackson ' could be another type of mammal without also being a human.
While the conclusion may be true, it does not follow from the premises.
While the conclusion may be true, it does not follow from the premises.
While the conclusion may be true, it does not follow from the premises.
Given all of the above premises are true, the angle B may be acute or obtuse ; meaning, one of the following is true:
If a person is arrested on their own property or just after leaving their premises, a Constable may immediately search both them and the immediate area where the person was under Section 32 of PACE.
) If the subject is arrested in a home, police may search the room in which they were arrested, and conduct a " protective sweep " of the premises where there is reasonable suspicion that other individuals may be hiding.
In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, the parish church may play a significant role in community activities, often allowing its premises to be used for non-religious community events.

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