A coach that runs regularly from one stage, station, or place to another, for the conveyanceof passengers.
The transport officer in charge, Captain Woodriff, had to make arrangements for the conveyance of the expected prisoners to Norman Cross, and for the victualling.
Both conveyance (mancipatio) and surrender in court (in iure cessio) are confirmed.
Tedious as this mode of conveyance appears, it sufficed for the traffic in Eastern produce at a period when the whole of Europe had but little time or taste for the refinements of life, and but little means of purchasing them.
She went into further detail about the proposed journey, and asked that some personal property should be forwarded by the conveyance that brought her son.
Behind him rumbled his own conveyance which he was out-walking rapidly.
Nor doth the Lamb of God, by becoming a means, through death, of the conveyance of grace to us, at all darken the nature or glory of grace, but rather doth set it off the more.
Roads were to be opened through a wilderness; bridges constructed for the conveyance of artillery and stores, and forts to be built so as to keep up a line of communication between the Wabash and the Ohio, the base of operations.
He gave orders to his people, also, to take an exact account of the canoes in readiness, and others in the process of construction, for the conveyance of troops down the river in the ensuing spring.
Neither could he open a communication by Cape Fear River for the conveyance of his troops to Wilmington.
In other words, the passengers in a public conveyance in Europe are not only conveyed from place to place, but they are waited upon by the way, and they have to pay both for the conveyance and the attendance.
Whatever conveyance is employed, the hive should be inverted.
Probably the best conveyanceis a wagon with elliptic springs.
It is but justice to add, there is no place in the kingdom of the same distance to which the conveyance is quicker, and the facility of delivery more promptly attended to.
A title by prescription is not a presumed conveyance from this or owner alone, it extinguishes all previous and inconsistent claims.
He first puts the case of a conveyance with the usual clause binding the grantor and his heirs to warrant and defend the grantee and his heirs.
But if the conveyance is more important than the time, and the promisee prefers to have it late rather than never, the law may compel the performance of [301] that.
For although there is no difference in principle between a devise of a piece of land by will and a conveyance of it by deed, the dramatic resemblance of a devisee to an heir is stronger than that of a grantee.
The most familiar mode of gaining ownership is by conveyance from the previous owner.
I have travelled so many years on horseback, that I find any other mode of conveyancetoo fatiguing.
It consists of a number of large covered wagons, not unlike those used for the conveyance of wild beasts.
This is altogether the most disagreeable and dangerous mode of conveyance that can possibly be conceived.
These skins are now generally used for the conveyanceof brandy across the mountains.
The law prohibiting the illicit conveyance of letters was also stricter.
From this, however, the postmaster was excused on the ground that the barge was the safest means of conveyance he could have employed.
Imbued with this notion, he gave up his shop in the summer of 1815, and started a single-horse car for the conveyance of passengers from Clonmel to Cahir, a distance of about eight miles.
It was probably the speed of the express as compared with the tardiness of the post which induced the wealthy, about the middle of the last century, largely to employ this mode of conveyance for their letters.
The House next called for the number of persons who had been prosecuted in the course of the year for the illegal conveyance of letters.
Everywhere," he writes, "endeavour to inform yourself of and suppress all illegalconveyance of letters.
Between Cowes and Southampton the illegalconveyance of letters "is now such a custom that we have seldom any go in the bag.
The son of the deceased, a youth of about twelve years of age, made his escape, accompanied by the Mulana or chief priest of the city, and procured a conveyance to the west of India.
I'll send out a conveyance for you," rejoined St. Genis.
So this important affair was committed to me, with orders to prepare a conveyance for you, which I cannot attempt to do; but shall refer myself to your more solid judgment in the contrivance of it.
Should his Majesty grant the aids requested, and send to our assistance a naval force, you will take advantage of that conveyance for forwarding the articles furnished.
Secondly, the excellence of the conveyance removes a powerful objection on the part on the Ministry against augmenting the first remittance of specie.
In the mean time I have been employed in engaging a conveyance from Holland, which is so unexceptionable as to enable me to demand with confidence an additional sum for the first remittance of specie.
This conveyance being approved by the Ministry, it was proposed by M.
The chief of these, of course, concerned the conveyance of air sufficient for the needs of the traveller during the period of his journey.
Consigned to their care, the case that contained all that now remained to us of the last male heir of the Founder's house was removed for conveyance to the mortuary chamber of the subterrene Temple.
Cavalry and infantry were drawn up before the council house on the Suedermalm, before the principal door of which stood the carriage destined for the conveyance of the baron von Goertz.
There the conveyance stopped and Mr. Templeton directed Muriel to a picturesque cabin half hidden among trees, in front of which ran a shallow babbling stream.
And so this is London," Muriel said one foggy morning as she glanced out of the window of the conveyance which Mr. Templeton had engaged to take them to their destination.
The conveyance of this traffic involved the running of 1,154 special trains, in addition to a large number of others carrying baggage, stores, etc.
In some instances special trains were dispatched for the conveyance of a few hundred men or a few hundredweights of stores.
The organisation for the conveyance of our troops by railway is such a measure.
As for the conveyance of Cavalry and Artillery by train, he declared that this would be a sheer impossibility.
They unloaded some of the consignments and removed them a considerable distance by road--only to have them sent back again to Metz station for re-loading and conveyance elsewhere.
So far as the actualconveyance of troops was concerned, the railway companies themselves did marvels.
On the outbreak of war the railway companies must place at the service of the State either the whole or such of their lines, rolling stock, and other means of transport as may be needed for the conveyance of troops, stores, etc.