The enterprise

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Ronald Press Company, 1923 - 667 lappuses

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208. lappuse - An Act to authorize the registration of trade-marks used in commerce with foreign nations or among the several States or with Indian tribes, and to protect the same...
208. lappuse - An applicant or an assignee of the entire interest may prosecute his own case, but he is advised, unless familiar with such matters, to employ a competent patent attorney, as the value of patents depends largely upon the skillful preparation of the specification and claims.
188. lappuse - To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing, for limited times, to authors and inventors the exclusive rights to their respective writings and discoveries; 9 To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court; 10.
202. lappuse - The combination with a road locomotive, provided with suitable running gear including a propelling wheel and steering mechanism, of a liquid hydro-carbon gas engine of the compression type, comprising one or more power cylinders, a suitable liquid-fuel receptacle, a power shaft connected with and arranged to run faster than the propelling wheel, an intermediate clutch or disconnecting device, and a suitable carriage body adapted to the conveyance of persons or goods, substantially as described.
205. lappuse - Hence the trade-mark must, either by itself, or by association, point distinctively to the origin or ownership of the article to which it is applied.
147. lappuse - the people" is so complex that the value they will place on a new article is absolutely unpredictable ; the public buys because a new device or a new toy takes its fancy, whether it be autographic cameras or automobiles. The best that the promoter can do is to distribute his risks by...
190. lappuse - There is a popular impression, for which there is a good deal to be said, that a man who is his own lawyer has a fool for his client.
182. lappuse - ... science, and particularly research workers, were more highly regarded than in other countries. This tendency was strongly fostered by the government, which, by conferring honors and titles, did everything possible to exalt the position of the successful scientist. As a consequence of these conditions, the universities were at an early date provided with the most elaborate and advanced equipment for research work, and attracted to themselves an extraordinary proportion of the ablest young men...
220. lappuse - The federal copyright laws give to the author (or publisher if he is the copyright owner) "the exclusive right to print, reprint, publish, copy and vend the copyrighted work.
182. lappuse - ... technical men, whose services were available to the rising chemical industry. The number of these men was such that the inevitable competition between them for places made the average salaries exceedingly small. Highly skilled service was, therefore, available to the German chemical manufacturer at an extraordinarily low cost. In this respect he had a marked advantage over the manufacturers of any and every other country in the world. These advantages were made use of to an extent nowhere else...

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