Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Military Benefit Association was established with the objects and purposes of, ".
"They do not include the statistics on the Allied Benefit Association."
"A separate corporation was formed, known as the Allied Benefit Association.
He was president of the Workmen's Benefit Association.
His funeral services were conducted in its auditorium by the Employees' Mutual Benefit Association.
To date it has remained the Number 1 mutual benefit association in the Philippines in terms of assets and legal policy reserves.
Hester appealed to local authorities to change this policy, and was supported by the local Policemen's Benefit Association.
He was a lifetime member of the Young Irishman's Literary and Benefit Association.
In 1963, the name of this organization was changed to Military Benefit Association (MBA).
Buram says he doesn't want anything printed, right now, about the Allied Benefit Association."
Newburyport Mutual Benefit Association organized.
A nonprofit, mutual benefit association founded in 1938, HMSA covers more than half of the state's population.
Many of these cooperatives in the state of Illinois joined to form the Farmers' Mutual Benefit Association.
A significant unit larger than that of close kin is the voluntary religious and mutual benefit association known as "the society" (shomaj or milat).
One was a simple, low-cost insurance policy offered through the Military Benefit Association, a nonprofit organization in Chantilly, Va.
This prize, which was awarded at the Monaco Benefit Associations Night, is the highest honor awarded to personalities for their work on social issues.
The Farmers' Mutual Benefit Association grew out of the agricultural unrest of the 1880s in the United States.
Nickerson accepted the job, which was as an underwriter for the Dallas-based Southern Mutual Benefit Association, an insurance company.
He also served as treasurer on the Grand Council of New York State, Catholic Mutual Benefit Association.
The Railway Mail Mutual Benefit Association, (MBA) traces its origins to 1874.
It's handled through something called the Datamonger's Guild: 'A mutual benefit association of those involved in infosystem development and maintenance.'
He was Louis Buram, manager of the Allied Benefit Association, subsidiary of the Avenue Club.
Insurance companies, religious charities, credit unions and democratic governments now perform many of the same functions that were once the purview of ethnic or culturally affiliated mutual benefit associations.
According to the existing legal system, they can function in a form of cooperatives, civic associations, public benefit associations, church legal entities, Ltd., stock companies and sole traders.
Wistert's mother, Josephine, used money from her husband's war pension and the Policemen's Benefit Association to keep the family together and to educate her six children.
It was just a benefit club and a meeting place for one's fellows.
The existing plan has a two-tiered payout that benefits clubs below the industry's average local revenue.
The event will benefit Club Aspire, an organization that helps autistic children.
In addition to dances, the hall also hosted basketball games, Dayton Benefit Club meetings, local school events, and political functions.
Foucart also states that these clubs did not function in any sense as benefit clubs, or offer relief to the sick and needy.
Today the H.C Smith Benefit Club utilizes the building to host many community events.
I was in the "Great Brighton Benefit Club Forgery".'
And the "Great Brighton Benefit Club Forgery" case, which is where I got my vast knowledge of typewriters.
Little direct evidence has been found of systematic organisation in the eighteenth century, a period in which trade and benefit clubs among other working men in Britain abounded.
These benefit clubs collected membership fees into a central fund that they used to care for members who were too ill to work, or unable to pay for their funerals.
Charities which she founded included a maternity hospital, a Female Benefit Club, and a Penny Bank for children, which developed into England's first savings bank.
Many years ago I scored a notable victory in the' Great Brighton Benefit Club Forgery' case, and it was during those proceedings I acquired my vast knowledge of typewriters.
Thank you for the re-post on the Goldman Sachs retirement benefits club known as Circle Helath, Michael, a working example of the fact that only Tories think they can get everything right all the time.
Though they may not offer large-print statements or early-bird specials, some, like Fleet Bank with its Prime Benefits Club, offer special deals for those born before the first commercially produced ballpoint pen was sold at Gimbels (1945).
The members of this family cannot ride in busses or trams, cannot write letters, take outings, go to a "tu'penny gaff" for cheap vaudeville, join social or benefit clubs, nor can they buy sweetmeats, tobacco, books, or newspapers.
It was the band of the Benefit Club, which had mustered in all its glory-- that is to say, in bright-blue scarfs and blue favours, and carrying its banner with the motto, "Let brotherly love continue," encircling a picture of a stone-pit.
If these two classes are provided for, the remedy will so far reach to the full extent of the case, that what remains will be incidental, and, in a great measure, fall within the compass of benefit clubs, which, though of humble invention, merit to be ranked among the best of modern institutions.
THE great dance was not to begin until eight o'clock, but for any lads and lasses who liked to dance on the shady grass before then, there was music always at hand--for was not the band of the Benefit Club capable of playing excellent jigs, reels, and hornpipes?
More significant, having demonstrated their contempt for charity, they began to develop their own benefit clubs for mutual protection, among them the "Sailors' Fund" founded at South Shields in 1798 and intended to aid "those that shall suffer by shipwreck or capture or be afflicted with any sickness, accidental misfortune, infirmity or old age".
Some local societies which had previously formed branches of that organisation may have survived as benefit clubs but nothing of substance is known about these, nor about such non-affiliated organisations as the Liverpool based British Mariner's Association which in 1857 was to be found at 6, Columbian Buildings at that port.
Das DIKI-Wörterbuch verwendet Technologien, die Informationen auf dem Endgerät des Benutzers speichern und abrufen (insbesondere unter Verwendung von Cookies). Durch das Betreten der Website akzeptieren Sie die Datenschutzrichtlinie und stimmen der Speicherung und dem Zugriff auf Daten durch die Website https://www.diki.de zu, um das Surferlebnis auf unserer Website zu verbessern, den Verkehr zu analysieren sowie personalisierte Werbe- und Werbeinhalte anzuzeigen.