Copyright and Patents for Inventions, Band 2

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T. & T. Clark, 1883

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Seite 59 - Provided also and be it declared and enacted, that any declaration before mentioned shall not extend to any letters patent and grants of privilege for the term of fourteen years or under, hereafter to be made of the sole working or making of any manner of new manufactures within this Realm, to the true and first inventor and inventors of such manufactures, which others at the time of making such letters patents and grants shall not use, so as also they be not contrary to the law nor mischievous to...
Seite 163 - ... or, it may, perhaps, extend also to a new process to be carried on by known implements or elements acting upon known substances, and ultimately producing some other known substance, but producing It In a cheaper or more expeditious manner, or of a better or more useful kind. No mere philosophical or abstract principle can answer to the word 'manufactures.
Seite 163 - manufactures ' has been generally understood to denote either a thing made, which is useful for its own sake, and vendible as such, as a medicine, a stove, a telescope, and many others, or to mean an engine or instrument, or some part of an engine or instrument, to be employed, either in the making of some previously known article, or in some other useful purpose, as a...
Seite 70 - Realm, to the true and first Inventor and Inventors of such Manufactures, which others at the Time of Making such Letters Patents and Grants shall not use, so as also they be not contrary to the Law, nor mischievous to the State, by raising Prices of Commodities at home, or Hurt of Trade, or generally inconvenient...
Seite 102 - ... and grants shall not use, so as also they be not contrary to the law nor mischievous to the state, by raising prices of commodities at home, or hurt of trade, or generally inconvenient, the said fourteen years to be accounted from the date of the first letters...
Seite 207 - But especially care must be taken, that monopolies, (which are the canker of all trades,) be by [no] means admitted under the pretence or the specious colour of the public good.
Seite 169 - The prevailing talent of the English and Scotch people is to apply new ideas to use, and to bring such applications to perfection, but they do not imagine so much as foreigners ; clocks and watches, the coining press, the windmill for draining land, the diving bell, the cylinder paper machine, the stocking frame, figure weaving loom, silk throwsting mill, canal-lock and turning bridge, the machine for dredging and deepening rivers, the...
Seite 102 - State, by raising of the prices of commodities at home, or hurt of trade, or generally inconvenient, but that the same shall be of such force as they were or should be, if this Act had not been made, and...
Seite 302 - Of course I knew, as other chemists did, the explosive material that was necessary in order to produce instantaneous light ; but it was very difficult to obtain a light on wood by that explosive material, and the idea occurred to me to put sulphur under the explosive mixture.
Seite 32 - United Kingdom, or Isle of Man, as effectually as if the patent were originally granted to extend to that place or part only.

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