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You searched for: linen with filters: Period="post-Madison Presidency"
Results 1-10 of 37 sorted by date (ascending)
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of 20. years of age who has been brought up a linen-weaver, and who is willing to devote a year to learn the stocking weaving business, which is more likely to succeed here than his first trade. supposing he is to be discharged at the end of a year,...
...deeply partake, occasion me to view this subject with increased regard. British machinery and our cotton ginning invention have made great revolutions in the industry of countries remote from both. Saxony, for example, with Silesia, the greatest linen country in the world in 181⟨3?⟩, has, since that time, commuted two thirds of its linen branch, for the cotton branch. I have this on the...
stones were large rocks large enough for us all to set on together with the greatest ease but above all what gave us the best idea of the heighth was a linen tube reaching from top to bottom, looking out of the window we thought it must be a great deal smaller at bottom than at top although it was so long but we found it was the same size all...
...had the greatest effect on my mind, & will add greatly to the chances of consideration of the paper. The immense increase of cotton machinery keeps up the price of the raw material, and the substitution of cotton for linen, and in some degree for silk and wool contributes to the same end, but
...Calico & your Bill, in which I find Several mistakes which I Shall point out as I proceed. when you purchased me the Bombazet, I enclosed ten dollars. You bought me 7 yd 2 Skeins of Silk Some linen, one pound Tea 6 pd currents & 3 pd of coffe, the last of which I took tho I did not Send for it. all these articles of Groceries you have omitted in Your Bill—I then Sent...
Present my Compliments to Miss Welsh and tell her I think she had better take some of the shortest of John’s Shirts for your use as he has a piece of Linen laying by at his Grandmama’s I am sorry to learn that he is still inclined to be a little rebellious I do not approve of his taking his night Shirts into wear in the day—Let me caution you...
which is not pasted on linen and mounted on Rollers.—The Agent of the map resides here; but he has If you will instruct me to purchase a linen mounted one for you, at $10, I will try to put it up in any way you may direct.—I need not say how much pleasure it will give me.
’s map without linen or rollers, and as it is indispensable to have one at the meeting of the I must pray you to get me one of those which you say can be had with linen & rollers. I should prefer
...as I left him a very large stock which were mostly new the day we left England—when I had those made, I wished to have plain collars for them but he would not hear of it—I have some linen of Charles’s which I will send on by the first favorable opportunity and will thank you to get it made up for him—
2. maps in sheets. to be pasted on linen, without rollers.