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The names and prices of all the purchased members of the Irish Parliament were preserved in the Irish Black and Red lists. A selection of a few of them will interest the reader:

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The number of Railway Acts passed during the first half of the century was more than 1,000; and the sums which Parliament authorised the various companies to expend in the construction of railways from 1826 to 1849 amounted to the enormous total of 348,012,188, the yearly average being 14,500,508. The Liverpool and Manchester Company was the first that contemplated the conveyance of passengers, which, however, was regarded as a sort of subsidiary traffic, that might produce some 20,000 a year, the main reliance being on the conveyance of raw cotton, manufactured goods, coals, and cattle. It need not be remarked how widely the result differed from their anticipation. The receipts from passengers in 1840 amounted to 343,910, and it was estimated that the saving to the public on that line[421] alone was nearly a quarter of a million annually. But as yet the system was in its infancy, though the broad gauge had been introduced by Brunel in 1833.
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営業
事業所 宇都宮営業所
住所 320-0071 栃木県宇都宮市野沢町635番地2
TEL 028-666-1000(代) 
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事業所 関東営業所
住所 222-0001 横浜市港北区樽町4丁目8番24号
TEL 045-543-1271(代) 
FAX 045-544-1503 
事業所 名古屋営業所
住所 470-0201 愛知県みよし市黒笹町丸根1099番25
TEL 0561-33-0600(代) 
FAX 0561-33-0621 
事業所 大阪営業所
住所 541-0045 大阪市中央区道修町三丁目4番7号
TEL 06-6210-2130(代) 
FAX 06-6233-2155 
事業所 福岡営業所
住所 812-0012 福岡市博多区博多駅中央街1番1号 新幹線博多ビル6F
TEL 092-413-3100(代) 
FAX 092-413-2212 
事業所 津山配送センター
住所 709-4612 岡山県津山市くめ50番5
TEL 0868-57-7801 
FAX 0868-57-7802 

技術
事業所 大阪技術センター
住所 541-0045 大阪市中央区道修町三丁目4番7号
TEL 06-6210-2140(代) 
FAX 06-6233-2156 
事業所 東京技術センター
住所 222-0001 横浜市港北区樽町4丁目8番24号
TEL 045-540-1668(代) 
FAX 045-540-2059 
事業所 名古屋技術センター
住所 470-0201 愛知県みよし市黒笹町丸根1099番25
TEL 0561-33-0900(代) 
FAX 0561-33-0927 
事業所 院庄生産技術センター
住所 708-0014 岡山県津山市院庄字沢1089番地
TEL 0868-28-2422(代) 
FAX 0868-28-2005 
事業所 倉吉生産技術センター
住所 682-0024 鳥取県倉吉市伊木296番地
TEL 0858-26-7660(代) 
FAX 0858-47-4370 

工場
事業所 西倉吉工場
住所 682-0925 鳥取県倉吉市秋喜243番地1
TEL 0858-28-5111(代) 
FAX 0858-48-2000 
事業所 倉吉工場
住所 682-0024 鳥取県倉吉市伊木296番地
TEL 0858-26-1411(代) 
FAX 0858-26-1421 
事業所 院庄工場
住所 708-0014 岡山県津山市院庄字沢1089番地1
TEL 0868-28-1133(代) 
FAX 0868-28-2004 
事業所 津山工場
住所 708-0871 岡山県津山市中島410番地
TEL 0868-28-0155(代) 
FAX 0868-28-7010 
事業所 宇都宮工場
住所 321-3231 栃木県宇都宮市清原工業団地1番1号
TEL 028-667-5341(代) 
FAX 028-670-1102 
事業所 西倉吉研修センター
住所 682-0925 鳥取県倉吉市秋喜243-1
TEL 0858-28-5111(代) 
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本社
事業所 本社
住所 541-0045 大阪市中央区道修町三丁目4番7号
TEL 06-6210-2102(代) 
FAX 06-6210-2132 

関連会社
事業所 島根電機(株) 大田工場
住所 699-2211 島根県大田市波根町800番地3
TEL 0854-85-9310(代) 
FAX 0854-85-9315 
事業所 大原電子工業(株) 津山工場
住所 708-0871 岡山県津山市中島410番地
TEL 0868-28-0154 
FAX 0868-28-0250 
事業所 大原電子工業(株) 大原工場
住所 707-0415 岡山県美作市宮本48-1
TEL 0868-78-2370 
FAX 0868-78-2823 
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The age was remarkably prolific in female poets and novelists, some of whom have taken as high a rank in literature as their sex have done in any age. Lady Blessington and Lady Morgan were not young at the death of George III., but many[438] of their most celebrated works were published during the two subsequent reigns. The former, soon after the death of Lord Blessington in 1829, fixed her residence in London at Gore House, which became the centre of attraction for men of talent and distinction in every department. Even great statesmen and Ministers of the Crown sometimes spent their evenings in her circle, which was then unrivalled in London for the combined charms of beauty, wit, and brilliant conversation; and besides, all the celebrities and lions of London were sure to be met there. The ambiguous attachment that so long subsisted between her and Count D'Orsay, one of the most accomplished men of the age, however, excluded Lady Blessington from the best society. The heavy expenses of her establishment compelled her to work hard with her pen, and she produced a number of works, which were in great demand in the circulating libraries of the day. They are no longer read. Debt at length broke up the establishment at Gore House, and all its precious collections passed under the hammer of the auctioneer, to satisfy inexorable creditors. Lady Blessington removed to Paris, where she lived in retirement for some years, and died in 1849. Lady Morgan (Sydney Owenson) was before the country as an author for nearly half a century. She was born in Dublin, in 1783, and died in 1859. Before she was sixteen years of age she was the author of two novels. Her third work, "The Wild Irish Girl," brought to her the fame for which she longed, and made her a celebrity. In 1811 she married Sir Charles Morgan, a Dublin physician. Her principal works as a novelist were "Patriotic Sketches," "O'Donnell," "Florence M'Carthy," and "The O'Briens and O'Flahertys," which was published in 1827.The Budget excited extraordinary interest throughout the country; but the proposed sugar duties were, in the eyes of the Free Traders, objectionable, as maintaining the differential rates in favour of the West Indian landlords. Though well received on the whole, it was impossible not to see in the Budget traces of the anomalous position of the Minister. One newspaper described his measures as combining the most glaring inconsistencies that ever disfigured the policy of any Minister, and arranged in parallel columns illustrations of its assertion. Sir Robert Peel was charged with proposing at the same time a tariff whose[516] express object was declared to be to cheapen the necessaries of life and corn, and provision laws whose sole object was to make the chief necessaries of life dear; with professing great concern to relieve trade and commerce, for the sake of which a property tax was proposed, combined with a still greater concern to uphold the rent of land, for the sake of which trade and commerce were loaded with a bread tax; with devising taxes for the mere purpose of revenue; with levying taxes for the mere purpose of protection; with repealing the duty on slave-grown cotton, while imposing prohibitory duties on slave-grown sugar; with encouraging Brazilian coffee and cotton, while refusing Brazilian sugar; and with admitting cheap slave-grown sugar to be refined in Britain, and sold to Continental nations, while forbidding the selfsame cheap sugar to our own working people. Still, there was progress. The Corn Law was untouched, but statesmen of all parties had spoken despairingly of its continuance.[See larger version]The king attended the theatre one evening, and by his desire the drama of Rob Roy was performed. The theatre was of course crowded to excess, the boxes presenting a dazzling galaxy of rank and beauty. When the approach of the king was announced, there was a pause of deathlike stillness; then an outburst of deep, honest enthusiasm never to be forgotten. "A prolonged and heartfelt shout, which for more than a minute rent the house," a waving of handkerchiefs, tartan scarfs, and plumed bonnets, testified the joy of the assembly and delighted the ears and eyes of the "chief of chiefs." Sir Walter Scott in a letter to his son gives a vivid description of this royal visit. For a fortnight Edinburgh had been a scene of giddy tumult, and considering all that he had to do, he wondered that he had not caught fever in the midst of it. All, however, went off most happily. The Edinburgh populace behaved themselves like so many princes, all in their Sunday clothes; nothing like a mobno jostling or crowding. "They shouted with great emphasis, but without any running or roaring, each standing as still in his place as if the honour of Scotland had depended on the propriety of his behaviour. This made the scene quite new to all who had witnessed the Irish reception." The king's stay in Scotland was protracted till the 29th of August. On the day before his departure, Mr. Peel, who accompanied him as Home Secretary, wrote the following letter to Sir Walter Scott:"My dear sir,The king has commanded me to acquaint you that he cannot bid adieu to Scotland without conveying to you individually his warm personal acknowledgments for the deep interest you have taken in every ceremony and arrangement connected with his Majesty's visit, and for your ample contributions to their complete success. His Majesty well knows how many difficulties have been smoothed, and how much has been effected by your unremitting activity, by your knowledge of your countrymen, and by the just estimation in which they hold you. The king wishes to make you the channel of conveying to the Highland chiefs and their followers, who have given to the varied scenes which we have witnessed so peculiar and romantic a character, his particular thanks for their attendance, and his warm approbation of their uniform deportment. He does justice to the ardent spirit of loyalty by which they are animated, and is convinced that he could offer no recompense for their services so gratifying to them as the assurance which I now convey of the esteem and approbation of their Sovereign."
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